FOUR MEDrORD (OREGON)
"Ierybody la Southern Oregon
Read The MU Tribune"
Fubliabed Daily Except Saturday by
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ROBERT W. HUHL, Editor
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X. C. FERGUSON. Manacicf Editor
rori in wia TD ri-m t.4i.(W
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RICHARD JEWETT. 6 porta Editor
OLIVE ST ARCHER. Society Editor
JACK JACKSON. Sunday Editor
GERALD LATHAM. Circulation Mgr.
An Independent Newspaper
Entered as second claas matter at
Ifedford. Oregon, under Act of
March. 1897 .
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NATIONAL EDITORIAL
lASSpcfATlfoN
J U
pUSUSHIIS
Flight o' Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10, 20. 30 and
10 years ago. '
10 YEARS AGO
July 13, 1945
' (It was Friday)
Temperatures 10 degrees
above average and high humid
ity cause discomfort of Rogue
Valley residents.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot colUumn: A county
official is creating a minor sen
sation. By taking six-foot steps
to save a $15 pair of shoes, he
ripped the seat of-an $18 pair of
pants..
20 YEARSAGO
July 13, 1935 - .
. (It was Saturday)
Four Mile lake road opens;
reports indicate silversides, rain
bow and brook trout are plenti
ful. Some 150,000 acres of Jack
son county timber land closed
to entry except with permit
from fire warden.
30 YEARS AGO
July 13. 1925. ...
(It was Monday)
Thirteen forest fires reported
to Crater National Forest serv
ice; nine start from electrical
storm in mountains.
A branch of United State Em
ployment service will open in
Medford for three-month period.
40 YEARS AGO
July 13, 1915
About 50 men employed in
constructing Fish lake dam, ex
pected to be complete before
snow falls.
State highway advisory board
to be in Medford to study plan
to state road work on different
basis. ' "
What's the Answer?
Can You Get 4 of the 71
Copt. 1955, Editorial Research Report
1. Persons over 70 get their
driving permits renewed ' auto
matically in every state of the
Union; right or wrong'j.
2. The number of youngsters
brought into juvenile court for
delinquency has been increasing,
decreasing or 'staying the same?
' 3. The public debt is now some
what higher or low than when
President Eisenhower -took of
fice, or about the same?
4. War veterans make up about
one-third, one-half, or two-thirds
of an xeaerax employees; .
5. The cruzeiro is the money
unit in Argentina, Rumania, Den
mark. Brazil or Japan?-;
6. Which two of these had the
highest population rate increase
in last 15 years: Arizona, Cali
fornia, District of . Columbia,
Florida, Nevada, Oregon?
7.- Most, people in the world
can or can't read and write?
The answers: 1. Wrong; must
take examination in some; 2. In
creasina steadily; 3. Somewhat
higher; 4. About one-half; 5. Bra-
ail; 6. Arizona and Nevada; 7.
Most can't.
Aleutian Air Base
Will Be Reactivated
Anchorage, Alaska U.E
The Air Force has decided to re
activate the Aleutian island base
of Shemya -"on a very limited
temnorarv basis" for meteorlog
ical studies, the Alaskan Air
Pnmmanri announced todav.
Shemva is approximately
1,600 miles west southwest of
here and about 2,000 miles from
Tokyo on the great circle route
MAIL TRIBUHE
Annexation --Again?
Before some opponent of annexation objects on
principle to the Medford Planning Commission dis
cussing two new annexation plans, it might be well
to point out a couple of facts.
First, it has been the understanding all along that
if the "mass annexation" of the 3,000 acre area failed,
the city was prepared to make available city services
to smaller areas, as the time came and as it appeared
appropriate. Even the annexation opponents, many
of them, acknowledged this is necessary.
, e e e
CECONDLY, there is no getting around the fact,
which again was pretty well universally recog
nized, that annexation is the only way in which some
of the areas can get needed services without too long
a wait. -
Some people, on both sides of the late unlamented
dispute, have had the feeling that 'that's that," and
there is no. need to worry our little heads any more
about such tilings as streets, lighting, sewers, water
service and so on.
But the needs of a growing area cannot be denied,
and we feel that the Planning Commission was doing
no more nor less than its job to accept, without ill
feeling and without any sour grapes, requests that
new and smaller annexation proposals be discussed.
THE late election demonstrated pretty well (by a
5 to 1 vote) that nobody is "forcing" anybody to
join the city. And with that lesson learned, perhaps
these new proposals can be debated on their merits,
rather than on the proposition that the city is trying
for a "grab" of more property.
One member of the commission put it pretty well
when he said, in effect, that the city's prior "invita
tion" had been first misinterpreted and then rejected,
but that the problems which brought about the elec
tion are still there, unsolved.
Only through cooperation and level-headedness
not through suspicion and ill-feeling will they
be solved. E.A.
Typos
A typographical error is a thing of evil. ,
Perhaps the average reader doesn't know what
a "typo" is. But newspapermen know. They know.
A typographical- error,: dear reader, is when, a
wedding story says "the bridge and bridegroom came
down the aisle," or when a classified ad. tells of
"monkey wenches" for sale. And so on, and so on,
ad nauseum. '.--..
COMETIMES they're funny; frequently they are
desperately unfunny; occasionally they're almost
tragic v
The English language being , the odd, malleable
thing it is, often the deletion of one letter can com
pletely change the meaning of a sentence, which,
when a newspaper is dealing with things of vital im
port to people, isn't good.
So what is a typographical "error? The answer
involves just a bit of explanation.
AFTER a story is received in the newsroom, or is
nrnfran Yvir a Mnnrfw if i'o ernA W an AKfnv
Vf a, AWbVU J J C A vvl Vvl f lb
a head is written for it, and
department of the paper.
Here it is assigned to a typesetting machine. This
contraption looks like nothing else on earth, big and
ungainly. At the front they have keyboards, similar
although larger than the keyboards on a typewriter.
Here the operator sits and punches the keys. As
he does so a metal "matrix," or mat, slides down a
chute each time a key is pressed, winding up far' a
collection chamber where a series of them are held
together to form a line of mats, each of which has a
le --character impressed in it This line of mats is
then moved next to a chamber of molten metal, which
is squirted against it, forming a "slug" of metal as
it cools, with the letters standing out along the edge.
This is known as a "line" of type, and is the reverse
impression of each line one reads in a story as printed;
..... - . . - e e e e " . '
"THESE lines are assembled to form a story, and
finally are placed in metal rims, or forms, which
are then processed to prepare the finished page for
the press another step which has nothing to do with
typos. -' . - ,- ' . "... :
: It is when the mats fall into the lines that' is the
crucial point For sometimes one can stick, or hang
iip, or ,a wrong letter come down," or two caij come
down in reverse order. This is far too common an
occurrence, and, since neither . machine nor man-is
perfect, ;a system of checking is used . -This
is known as "proofreading," and consists of
producing a 'Jproof ' of each story that is, a prelim
inary trial printing before the stories are assembled
in a page to be read and checked.
. e e : - e v ..
UQWEVER, when one remembers that in an ordin-
ary day a newspaper such as the Mail Tribune
may have anywhere from 40 to 65 columns of printed
matter other than advertisements, it can be seen that
proof-reading is not altogether as simple a task as it
might at first thought seem to be.
In other words, errors are made, and while every
effort is made to catch-them before the $aper comes
out, they do get by, too many.
This is neither an apology for these errors, nor a
defense. But the errors do happen, and this is why
they happen. E.A -
GRENADE KILLS TWO - -
Agrigento,. Sicily CUJD A
World War II hand , grenade
kyied two boys and severely
injured three others in nearby
Spinasanta Tuesday. The small
boys found the Italian grenade in
field. .
Wednesday, July IS, 18S5
AO kJ J C1A VUlVVi f
it is sent to the printing
JUDICIAL ROBE LOST
- New York (U.tt Magistrate
Neal P. Bottiglierl explained
Tuesday why he held up the
opening of felony court for 30
minutes. He said he couldn't
find his judicial robe.
Today a nd
By Walter
THE EISENHOWER
DULLES DUET
It was naughty of the sub
committee of the House Appro
priations Committee to publish
just now what
Secretary Dul
les told them a
month ago
about the eco
nomic troubles
of the Soviet
Union. Having
been warned
by" Mr. Khrus
chev that the
waiter uppmaaa Soviet Union
is unwilling to let its conces
sions be interpreted as weakness,
the White House had to an
nounce that Mr. Dulles had not
meant what his words said. And
in fact, he had not meant what
his words said. He had been
telling the sub-committee that
part of the truth, somewhat or
namented, which he thought
most quickly would persuade
them to vote the appropriation
for foreign aid. He was telling
them the ... kind of truth he
thought they would like to hear.
This is by no means the first
time that the President and the
Secretary have seemed to be say
ing different things. Again and
again, they have been found say
ing things which differed very
much in the tone, and occasion
ally in the substance. The Presi
dent, looking at the shining face
of the moon, would say it was
cheerful; the Secretray looking
at the dark side of the moon,
would say it was chilly. For this
point counterpoint of Eisenhow
er hopefulness and Dulles wet
blanket there have been a num
ber of explanations: for ex
ample, that Eisenhower never
reads the fine print whereas
Dulles is an expert on fine print
or that Eisenhower believes in
the natural goodness of man and
that Dulles believes in original
sin. ;
e e e
BE that as it may, the best ex
planation is, I think, that the
Eisenhower-Dulles duet is a har
mony of two parts. The one is
addressed to the majority of cur
people, and to the world. The
other is addressed to the Re
publican Senators who were pre
dominant in the first half of the
Eisenhower administration. The
two voices which had so often
sounded so unlike have been
devoted to the same end. That
end i to - neutralize the ; once
powerful right wing Republicans
in order that the basic Eisen
hower policy of .disengagement
and conciliation could proceed.;
i During his first two years the
President never felt that he was
himself equipped by previous ex
perience or that he had' the po
litical strength to make nimseii
the leader of his party. In that
period it fell to Mr. Dulles to ap
pease and to finagle and to di
vert the efforts of Knowland,
Bridges and their coterie to take
over the conduct of foreign pol
icy, particularly in Asia, and of
McCarthy and his" crew to ter
rorize and dominate the person
nel of the Executive Department.
It was not what one might
call, a game played openly and
above board. But in view of the
fact that the President was un-J
willing or unable to assume the
leadership and to assert' the pre
rogative of his office, it was Mr.
Dulles who had to hold the Presi
dent's political enemies at bay.
He fed them and he kept them
quiet with negative policies, with
announcements of what could
not and what would not ' be
done, and with 'very stern words.
; He worked largely because
the right wing Senators were,
despite all their war-like, talk,
isolationists under the skin.
They wanted to breath fire at
the Chinese Communists; at the
same time they wanted to bal
ance the budget and to reduce
taxes. Mr. Dulles breathed fire
for them whenever the Presi
dent seemed to be talking mod
eration. And so" Mr. Dulles held
them off until -in the mid-term
election of, 1954 they .lost their
power to interfere with the Pres
ident's policy of disengagement,
retrenchment, conciliation, and
co-existence. -
', e e - - '
rpHE remarks which Mr. Dulles
A made in private to the House
Sub-Committee K,were mteant .to
make the Congress feel that they
should vote the money for for
eign aid even though the Soviet
government was talking peace.
Until this year, the case for for
eign aid had been argued on the
basis of the imminent threat of
an aggressive expansion of the
Communist power. Faced with
the change of Soviet tactics, Mr.
Dulles was out to persuade Con
gress that the Communist power
is now retreating because of the
success of the policy of which
foreign aid is an important ele
ment.": ..
The . question, we might ask.
ourselves, is 'whether the Presi
dent's power at home and the
situation abroad have not brought
us to a point where it is possible,
and indeed necessary to .. stop
talking down to the Congress
and to begin' talking publicly
as Informed and responsible men
are talking and thinking pri
vately. The great majority in
Congress would prefer to be
Tomorrow
Lippmann
treated sincerely and as adults,
and the extremists no longer
count for very much.
No good can come of teaching
our : people to believe that; we
now have the upper hand, and
that we can therefore compel the
Soviet Union to make conces
sions. The Communists are a
tough lot. We are, for example,
far from having the upper hand
in Eastern Asia. We must not de
lude ourselves . into thinking
that we have won the race of
armaments. And even in the eco
nomic comparison-, the advan
tage is by no means decisively
with us. To be sure, the Ameri
can free enterprise system and
the mixed economy of Western
Europe are stronger and richer
than the Communist economy in
Russia-and in Eastern Europe.
But in the vast under-developed
areas, of the world the Western
way is not regarded as the only
way. For free enterprise and
democracy are much slower and
more difficult than is the strong
centralized, ruthless way of
Communist dictatorship.
'
(TVER the whole world situa
" tion there now impends the
enormous, epochal, . . absolutely
unprecedented fact that the mod
ern nuclear weapons, though
they cannot be abandoned or
abolished, cannot be used with
out intolerable risks. He would
be a bold man who thought he
knew the political consequences
of this kind , of military stale
mate. It seems clear enough
that both sides are deterred from
using these weapons as instru
ments of their policy. But it is
not at all clear what this will
do to their policies.
One apparent -effect of the
stalemate, is, it seems to me, to
loosen up the Soviet satellite
system in Eastern Europe and
the American dependency sys
tem in East Asia. The weak
countries would be entirely in
defensible in world' war, and
the moral obligation to attempt
to defend them is a military lia
bility which almost certainly off
sets whatever strategic value
they may possess. This is as true
of Poland as it is of South Korea
and Formosa. They are all hope
lessly vulnerable, to nuclear
weapons. Because of this ulti
mate and controlling fact, their
role as outpost in the great mili
tary .coalition, is diminishing,
and their future is more likely
to lie outside of the military sys
tem of uie great nuclear powers.
Copyright, 1955,
New York Herald Tribune Inc.
Thornton Rules on
Underground Water
Salem (U.R) Oregon at
torney general Robert Y. Thorn
ton ruled yesterday that the state
engineer has the authority , to
control, underground water sup
plies and their appropriation.
State Engineer Lewis Stan
ley requested the opinion after
Robert Lytle, a Vale attorney,
claimed that one of his clients
who bad drilled three wells did
not have to get a permit for use
of the water.
A hearing wiU be held in Vale
within the next 30 days on the
case' in question.
. The attorney general said that
until August 3 when a new state
water code goes into effect, 'any
one can drill a well without a
permit, but must have a permit
before appropriating the water.
Under the new code, permits
must be obtained before drilling
any but small domestic wells.
Gain Seen in Private
Hells Canyon Project
- 'Washington (U.R) The U.S.
Chamber of Commerce said to
day taxpayers would gain $487,
000,000 if private power were
allowed to develop the Hells
Canyon dam site on the Idaho
Oregon border.
It said another $400,000,000
the cost of the proposed federal
project, for the Snake river can
yon, also would be saved.
- The ' chamber told the House
Interior committee in a state
ment that the Idaho Power Co.,
which wants to develop the site,
would pay About $10,000,000 a
yeay in federal, state and local
taxes during the 50-year period
of company operation provided
bylaw. '-- ' -
It said this would total $487,-
00,000. V'.. :' v:r'
, New York The collapsible
tubes which contain 'toothpaste
and other products may be made
of aluminum," tin, or lead.
bosh no:.iE FunnisiiriGS
SALE
Drexel Rembrandt, Craddockv DsytfroiH, Mohawk
Carpet and ether famous brands! t - -
sT k i : This Sale -WO
3 More Days h i. ..
Communications
Letters to the Editor must bear
the name and address of the writer
although under certain circum
stances the use of a pen name or
Initial for publication is permis
dble. The stall Tribune reserves
the right to edit ail letters with an
eye to clarification and condensa
tion Letters submitted for Dubll ca
tion must not exceed 400 words.
How Ridiculous Can He Bef .
To the Editor: I have read the
many half-lies, or worse, put out
by our Senators recently with
some sense of frustration. How
can the ordinary man who
knows the truth, keep that truth
before people when these two
professional writers or public
ists, with their further advan
tage of public office, are busier
spreading false' propaganda than
they are looking after our in
terests in Congress?
The last headline, "Neuberger
Blames Administration for cut
in Talent fund" really tops them
all. Just what are the facts?
Any such project has to go
through two stages: authoriza
tion and appropriation. Both are
necessary; one as much as the
other. In the last Congress with
Administration, House, and Sen
ate all Republican, the Talent
propect was authorized through
the hard work of Senator Cor
don . and Representative - Ells
worth. The whole Oregon dele
gation was Republican then ex
cept for Morse who was still
deciding where he would land.
This year things were differ
ent. The Democrats had a. ma
jority in both House and Senate.
The Democratic House, in spite
of hard work by Ellsworth, as
sisted by Republican Governor
Paul Patterson, held the appro
priation down to $154,000. I
have watched Appropriation
bills in Congress for years and
there is about the same pattern
for Interior Department appro
priations. The House, controlled
by a majority from the heavily
populated industrial centers
(mostly Democratic), holds such
appropriations down drastically
The Senate, with proportion
ately larger representation from
the West, regularly raises these
appropriations. Committees from
the two then confer and if the
backers of such projects have
influence, the final figure is
about half-way between ihose
passed by the two.' This happens
in Congress after Congress.
Of course, if the backers in
the Senate are asleep or inef
fective,, the House wins. In the
case of the Talent Project this
year, in a Democratic Congress
with two Democratic Senators
from Oregon, the usual pattern
was not followed, but the House
figures were accepted. Perhaps
if our Senators had put in the
effort working for our interests
that they do phoning and wiring
alibis, in order to push Morse's
reelection next year, we'd have
more appropriations.
And where is the Administra
tion , to blame? Did it veto an
appropriation made by a Demo
cratic Congress? No, apparently
it was to blame because it didn't
have more influence with a Dem
ocratic Congress than our own
two Democratic. Senators.
How ridiculous can you be,
Senator Neuberger?
D. H. Barber,
Trail, Oregon .
Thanks to Observer Corps
To the Editor: On July 14,
1955, the Ground Observer
Corps will -celebrate the third
anniversary of "Operation Sky
w a t c h," the . around-the-clock
watch for enemy bombers. This
watch forms a valuable part of
our nation's warning system by
plugging .some of the holes in
our radar defense system.
Our self-preservation depends
upon our .maintaining retalia
tory action. The ground observ
ers watch for unidentified air
craft flying at low levels in areas
not covered by .the radar detec
tion network, insuring an early
warning in case of an enemy at
tack. The people of southern Ore
gon are to be commended for
their part in this important proj
ect. Jackson Acounty has 24 ob
servation posts, some of which
operate 24 hours - a , day.- These
posts are manned by civilian vol
unteers of the Ground Observer
Corps. Their effort receives no
rewards other than the recogni
tion by their fellow citizens of
a truly patriotic service.
It gives me great pleasure to
extend to each Jackson County
Ground Observer Corps volun
teer my personal, as . well as
official, congratulations on the
third anniversary of Operation
Skywatch. : ; ;"; V
Joseph H. Hicks
; Maj. Gen, USAF (Ret)
GARBO AT CAPRI
: Cami. Italy(U.R) Swedish ac
tress Greta Garbo arrived .here
today aboard the yacht of Greek
shipownlng magnate r Ansxoue
Onassis for a one-day visit Hid
den behind - dark glasses, Miss
Garbo refused to talk. . .
In The DayVNovs
By FRANK JENKINS
In Washington the senate agri
cultural committee is tackling
(reluctantly, in all probability,
as we aU do when we approach
ticklish jobs that we'd rather put
off) the tough problem of what
to de with American crop sur
pluses. V ; '
It has just voted to DROP a
long-time requirement that all
foreign . shipments of surplus
farm products be made in U.S.
SHIPS. Its idea, of course, is to
get our huge and growing sur
pluses Into the hands of foreign
consumers as quickly as possible
and as cheaply as possible.
Foreign shipping charges are
as a rule cheaper than American
shipping charges. ....
Fr HAS a ruckus on its hands
already. American shipping
interests and American maritime
unions are strongly opposed to
the idea of permitting foreign
ships to carry American surplus
crop cargoes to foreign destina
tions. ,
THE senate's agriculture com
. mittee, wrestling further with
the problem of surplus disposal,
has approved a bill giving to
the secretary of agriculture more
authority to accept foreign cur
rencies or barter deals in dis
posing of surplus farm products.
The bill ups the limit on such
transactions from $700,000,000
worth to $150,000,000,000 worth.
Again, you see, the committee
has in mind the thought of get
ting more, of our surplus farm
crops consumed abroad.
TVHAT brings up a recent pro-
a- test by Representative Walter
Norblad of Oregon's First con
gressional district. He says our
army and navy are using Danish
and Australian butter. He wants
that practice stopped and Ameri
can surplus butter used instead.
This is Norblad's second pro
test. He kicked up a disturbance
about the butter business last
month' to the then secretary of
the army Stevens. He is repeat
ing it to the present army secre
tary Wilber M. " Brucker, who
succeeded Stevens. .
TIE'S right, of course.
a When it is reduced to its
fundamentals, the situation is
absurdly simple:' The surplus
butter is owned by the federal
government. The federal govern
ment employs .the army . and
navy. Because of the nature of
military service," it employs them
on the same basis' that, hired
hands used to be employed on
farms so much per month and
"found." Ordinary . common
sense dictates that when the fed
eral government owns good food
for which there is no market it
c
THIS IS A
"SHADY";0El
That-Paid Off
t
The
LELAND CLARK
INSURANCE AGENCY
Has settlecl in full the fire lost of Wayne
"Shady" Wakefield Drapery Shop in the
Medford Furniture Building, owned by Bill
. Hansen of Medford.
All insurance on; the building and the
Wakefield Drapery Shop is carried by the
Oregon Mutual Insurance Company which
has offered up to 20 savings on fire in
surance for ever 60 years..
' ' : : "Signed by ' T:;;.;
7 "Shady" Wakefield and Bill Hansen
L EL AN DC L A RIt
-." - .... . - '
: Insuraiico
7 Ne
should feed this good food to its '
employees instead of going out
and BUYING MORE FOOD from
somebody else. Especially sine
the federal government faces al
ways the possibility that because
of lack of storage, or because ox
spoilage, it may have to THROW
AWAY the food it already owns..
Such a practice violataa all the
principles of sound business. Any
private person who followed it
in his own business would need':
to have his head examined. ; J
rDC federal government has a
vast amount of taxpayers'
money tied up in surplus farm
products. WHAT TO DO WITH
IT is a growing acute problem.
Common sense tells us all that
the thing to do with it Is to get
consumed. The only way to
get it consumed is to dispose of
it at a price that consumers will
be willing to pay. . .
WHEAT is presently our. most
" troublesome surplus.: We
have more of it stored up than
we know what to do with. And
a NEW crop of it is now being
harvested. We've run out of stor
age space for it on land, and are
stashing it away ON THE
WATER in surplus ships.
Here in Southern Oregon and
Far Northern California, where
we produce comparatively little
wheat but a LOT of livestock,
we think we know what ought to.
be done with the wheat surplus.
It should be disposed of at prices
competitive with corn and other
field grains.
We could then feed the surplus .
wheat to our livestock, thus help
ing to get the wheat consumed.
The West consumes more meat
than it produces. Thus we would
be putting the surplus wheat to
a sound, economic use.
But that's business.
Politics is something els'
again.; "' . ',
CIUESTBATE
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