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Flight o' Time.
Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10. 20. 30 and
tO years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
August 1. 1945 -
fTt was Wednesday)
0Bears reported plentiful in
Union Creek-Prospect area;
!rest service says several have
Sjroken into homes and cars in
jearch of food.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
SmuHse Pot column: Henry J.
Kaiser, the shipbuilding wizard
and industrial go-getter, plans
to riioneer a low-priced auto, in
the post-war era. The Kaiser go-
cart promises to be better than
the Ford, in its youth, and time
alone will determine if the
stories about it are any worse.
20 YEARS AGO
August 1, 1935
(It was Thursday)
Evahs Creek dog "Ring" gets
bit by a ratfle snake and lives
to bark about it.
Postal receipts at Medford
post office total $7,431.63 for
July, an increase of $313.92
above the previous July.
30 YEARS AGO
August 1. 1925
(It was Saturday)
Four Medford boys runaway
from home, caught in Roseburg.
From Local and Personal
column: Fruit growers get in
touch with government free em
ployment bureau, Medford
Chamber of Commerce, for
pickers.
40 YEARS AGO
August 1, 1915
(It was Sunday)
Adams, club favorite, and
Egan, downtown favorite, to
meet in finals of Southern Ore
gon Tennis tournament at the
Country club this afternoon.
Jackson county divided into
eight districts with eight regis
trars to carry out recent law
passed by legislature for com
pulsory registration of births
and deaths.
What's the Answer?
Can You Get 4 of the' 7?
Copr. 1955, Editorial Research Report
1. Which group of nations has
more people, the Communist or
the free-world bloc, or have they
about the same number?
2. Most men who smoke cig
garettes at all smoke less than a
pack a day; right or wrong?
3. Half, more than half, or
less than half of all feature mov
ies made in Hollywood last year
were in color?
4. Which state extends furth
er north: Maine, Vermont, Mich
igan, Minnesota or Washington?
5. Relatively many or few
new stock issues were floated in
the first part of this year, or
about the average number?
6. In this week's elections in
Israel the Mapai candidates are
pro-governemeni or in the Op
position? 7. U. S. ambassador to Great
Britain is Walter Sifford, Jo
seph Kennedy, James Conant,
Winthrop Aldrich, or William
Howard Taft III?
The answers: 1. Communist
bloc has more. 2. Right. 3. More
than half. 4. Minnesota. 5. Rela
tively many. 6. Pro-Government.
7. Aldrich.
Kelso, Wash. (U.R) The body
of Lester Holbom, 55, Kelso, was
found early yesterday after he
was struck by a northbound train
on Northern Pacific tracks here.
MAIL TRIBUNE
Something Better
O for a Muse of fire, that would ascend
Q The brightest heaven of invention,
A Kingdom for a stage, princes to act
And monarchs to behold the swelling scene!
It was thus that William Shakespeare invoked
supernatural assistance as he wrote the prologue to
"Henry V." . ' -
We wish he could be in the Elizabethan theater in
Ashland this evening, when "A Midsummer Night's
Dream" is presented to open the 20th year of "our"
Shakespearean festival.
THE "Muse of Fire" was Shakespeare's own, and
has indeed ascended the brightest heaven of in
vention. But the stage is new, and while it is a reproduction
of the .type of Elizabethan theater used in Shakes
peare's day, it has advantages of which he could
hardly have dreamed. '.
The lighting, for one thing, makes an evening
fairyland of the colorful costumes and stage effects
which were impossible in Elizabethan England. Tech
nical improvements (smoke, fire, lightning, wind,
thunder) produced by the mechanics and chemists of
the 20th century would fill Shakespeare's audiences
with awe.
MAYBE we don't have "princes to act," but we do
have some of the most highly competent young
actors in the United States which is probably bet
ter. These young people are devoted to their art, and
make a way of life ofQmaking the plays come alive.
We could not expect more nor demand less wrere
they real princes.
S for "monarchs to behold the swelling . scene,"
we have better than
year after year, come back
devotion to the "Muse of
of new devotees from all over the western world.
In Shakespeare's day, the audiences, standing in
the orchestra, were difficult to play to, to say the
least. They were demanding, and raucous in their dis
approval. Perhaps, since it was they for whom Shakes
peare wrote, they are partly responsible for the last
ing, down-to-earth value of his plays.
Yes, we think that were Will Shakespeare to join
us tonigftt, he would find something better than his
hoped-for stage, his princes and his mpnarchs. E.A.
Good Luck, "E. H. "
In his 30 yetirs of service to the schools and the
people of Medford School District 49, E. H. Hedrick
has not infrequently been the focal point of heated de
bates over the rights and wrongs of one theory of
education or other.
But he has "worn well," and has steadfastly car
ried out his job according to one undisputed criterion,
wH&t he thought was right. He has received strong,
loyal and continuing support both from his staffs of
teachers and administrators and from the majority of
people in Medford.
I
T IS a matter of justifiable, pride to "E. H." that
never in his vears of
down a proposed budget or bond issue for the schools.
We have a strong hunch that this impressive record
is due in no small part to the qualities of the man him
self, who is so obviously honest and straightforward.
And whether or not one agrees with his concept
of what constitutes a good primary and secondary ed
ucation in these days of raging educational debates,
one cannot help but have a monumental respect for
the integrity which he has imparted to the school sys
tem. AS Mr. Hedrick leaves the system (and w doubt
that he'll wander too far away), he is richly de
serving of the thanks of all of us for his years of
service to the children of the community.
Because we are sorry to see "E. H." go does not
mean that we do not welcome his successor, Leonard
Mayfield, who himself is well-known and highly re
spected for his years in the Medford system as high
school principal.
We are fortunate o have a worthy successor to
a worthy superintendent, and we wish both of them
all kinds of luck. E.A.
Congratulations, Mr. Mayor
We would like to extend our congratulations to
Mayor Earl Miller for a notably simple and sensible
action in vetoing the hasty and unconsidered action
of the city council of a few weeks ago.
In a succinct message, he cut through the dispute
which surrounded the Kenwood avenue paving mat
ter, placed it in proper perspective, and removed the
council from an embarrassing position.
" v.
THE council was exasperated at a neighborhood dis
" agreement over paving, which has been in and out
of the council chambers over a period of months. Be
cause of this its action is, "perhaps, understandable.
But, understandable or not, it was wrong. The
mayor corrected the error. E.A.
Police Crack Down on
Portland (U.R) A sudden
surge of teenage rowdyism
prompted Police Cheif Jim Pur
cell today to order increased
personnel, including- women to
help combat delinquency.
Purcell said a special patrol
detail composed of officers in
the city's women protective divi
sion -and the police juvenile
Monday, August I, 1 955
that, too audiences who,
to Ashland to renew their
fire," and a constant, supply
service have voters turned
Juveniles in Portland
division would be formed. He
said women have been used in
this type of work before and
have been "most effective."
Purcell's announcement came
after a series of week end in
cidents in which teen-agers were
cited for traffic violations, beer
partying and disorderly con
Matter of Fact By Stewart
ON A COLLECTIVE FARM
Dnepropetrovsk The feeling
that you . don t really under
stand, and never could under
stand in a mil
lion years, is
one reason why
a visit to the
Soviet Union is
such an oddly
oppressive ex
perience for an
American.
jn ownere is
the feeling so
strong as on a
kholkoz, or col
lective farm.
Stewart Alsop
Take, for example, the pig pen
on the Stalin kholkoz near here,
wnicn this reporter has just vis
ited. Comrade Lepscha, the shy,
eager, thin-faced vice-chairman
of the collective, could hardly
wait to show off his new pig pen.
And indeed, it turned out to
be a veritable regular Ritz of
pigland, a porkers' paradise,
every, spotless sow in her own
.spotless pen. There were several
peasant girls about, acting as
solicitous pig valets, scrubbing
the pens, or washing and brush
ing the sows and the little pig
lets. But why? Why this heavy in
vestment in effort and woman
hours to keep pigs in such a state
of unnatural cleanliness? Why
was it worth it?
One possible answer of course
immediately suggested itself
that the pig pen was a sort of
porcine Potemkin village, erect
ed to impress the gullible foreign
visitor. But this thesry .could not
hold water. The decision to visit
the collective farm had been
taken at the last minute, when
it turned out to be. impossible,
for the usual mysterious reasons,
to visit the famous Dnepropetro
vsk dam. Besides, Dnepro
petrovsk is well off the usual
route for foreigners there' is
nt even an Intourist hotel and
it just does not seem likely that
the Russians would build a beau
tiful pig pen and stock it with
beautiful pigs just in case a stray
foreigner happened along.
Part of the answer was vis
ible, instead, in the almost fa
natic pride in Comrade Lep
sche's eyes, as he surveyed his
gleaming pig house and his
gleaming pigs. The porcine Ritz
was clearly a sort of private hob
by, a personal maggot of Com
rade Lepscha's, built without any
of the usual dreary prior calcu
lations of the corn-hog ratio
which American farmers are
forced to make.
AND another part of the
answer was found in Com
rade Lepscha's carefully re
hearsed lecture about the Khol
koz, which he gave in his tiny
office under the inevitable pic
ture of Stalin in an agricultural
momejit. According to Comrade
Lepscha, there are 14,000 acres
on the Stalin kholkoz and 1400
people.
This works out, of course, to
one person per. 10 acres. The
comparable ratio on American
farming in a good district, is
one family to 160 acres with
father doing almost all the work.
It was obvious to the naked eye
that there were plenty of people
about on the Stalin kholkoz. And
with plenty of people, it is not
difficult to keep large numbers
Is That So?
Although your garden may be
drooping for lack of moisture
during a hot day in August,
strangely enough the air may be
full of moisture soggier, actu
ally, than when the air is full of
rain in winter.
And, oh man! can it be humid,
even though the weatherman
may deflate you by saying:
"Why, look, the relative humid-
ity today is only 50 per cent!
What does this "relative hu
midity" mean? Frankly, next to
nothing, because its meaning
changes from day to day.
To explain: when the tempera
ture readings are 90, 70, or 50,
with a relative humidity of 50,
the moisture content differs vast
ly. Actually, at 90 it will con
tain twice as much moisture
than at 70, and four times as
much as at 50.
Recognizing this ridiculous
state of relative humidity, one
weatherman called it "the me
teorological equivalent of abso
lute humbug."
'As for the amount of moisture
the air holds, temperature is the
deciding factor. Thus it is quite
possible for the air to contain
iess moisture on a rainy day in
midwinter than on a hot 'dry
day in midsummer. But should
it be a wet day in midsummer,
then the ' air may hold almost
three times as much moisture.'
How does moisture get into
the air in the first place? Most
likely by evaporation. In the
southwest, one can get some idea
of how rapid this evaporation
can be. There, in a year's time,
an exposed body of water may
AIsop
of pigs unnaturally immaculate,
of the local powers that be, like
Comrade Lepscha, decide that
keeping pigs immaculate is a
good thing.
This may explain the mystery
of the immaculate pigs. But in
Russia the explanation of one
mystery only leads on to another
mystery. For how does this in
credible system, in which there
are no normal economic incen
tives or economic sanctions, man
age to work at all? You can see
that it works, after a fashion,
with your own eyes. To be sure,
the corn looks thin, the brown
cows seedy, and the pasturage
terrible. But the wheat looks
fine, the fruit is abundant and
delicious, and the people of the
kholkoz are certainly healthy
and vigorous.
Some of the people 'even seem
happy. Take 'Ivan, the tractor
driver. Comrade Lepscha says
that Ivan has piled up a record
number of "norms," the norm
being the unit of measurement
in the speedup system which is
universal in the Soviet Union.
(Another mystery: how can you
measure with any real accuracy
the normal output of a tractor
driver or a pig trader?)
At any rate, Ivan the tractor
driver is one of the two or three
top earners on the farm. Ivan
is a big brawny man with an
enormous grin and stainless steel
teeth. He proudly invites the for
eigner to visit his house. From
the outside, it. looks precisely
like every other house on the
dusty, rutted Kholkoz street, and
like every other house, it is
surrounded by a couple of acres
of carefully tended private land.
"EROM the air, you can see
V-- the pattern of the Russian
land endlessly repeated lush,
heavily cultivated private plots
around the little houses, giving
way td huge, scraggy-looking
collective fields).
Ivan's wife, .a big cheerful
woman who has lost one eye to
trachoma, is touchingly proud of
her house. It has three tiny
rooms, with a front parlor which
looks amazingly like a miniature
of a front parlor in an old-fashioned
American farmhouse.
There are prim wedding pictures
on the wall, and hand-crocheted
antimacassars, and, as befits
such a successful, man as Ivan,
a new radio.
As he says goodby after show
ing his house, Ivan smiles, his
broadest smile, and repeats a
phrase you have been hearing
all over the kholkoz: "Our greet
ings to the simple peasants of
America." Better than anything
else, the phrase suggests the vast
gulf which separates the Soviet
and the American systems.
Yet somehow, mysteriously,
messily, uneconomically, with
little comfort and no priyate val
ues at all, this system 'works.
The food comes out of the
ground, and unless all Russians
are consummate actors and this
reporter a complete fool, there
are Russians, like Comrade Lep
scha and Ivan the tractor driver,
who take real pride and pleasure
in this incomprehensible way of
life. ... '
Copyright, 1955,
New York Herald Tribune Inc.
This is the second of a series
of reports which Stewart
Alsop brought out of Russia
when he left Moscow before
the Geneva conference.
By EUGENE BURNS -Ranger-Naturalist
lose 100 inches oi water by evap
oration that's over eight feet
and almost 10 times as much as
the mean annual rainfall.
Rate Less in Winter
How much per day? On a dry
summer's day the surface level
of a lake may be lowered 3A of
an inch, which means that in
this month alone, loss may be
23 inches. (The winter rate natu
rally would be less even in des
ert country; it would probably
be less than half.)
Open water does not alone pro
vide evaporation surface; trees
and plants do, also. During the
peak of the growing season, a
single corn plant may lose up to
10 pounds of water in a single
day more than a gallon!
As a matter of fact, a plant
covered area with a damp soil
can be almost as effective in
moistening the air, in the warm
er months of the year at least,
as any open body of water.
Add it up, and this evapora
tion by open water, damp soil,
and plants equals millions of
tons of water being converted
into water vapor daily. And that,
even reckoned at the weather
man's ambigious 50 per cent rel
ative humidity, is a lot of mois
ture. (Released by
McCIure Newspaper Syndicate)
Free: By special arrangement
with the editors of the Encyclo
pedia Americana, my panel of
judges will award each week to
the reader who sends me the
best true-life nature adventure,
the best nature observation, or
the best question on nature and
wildlife, a complete 30-volume
set of this world-famous refer
ence work in a handsome Seal
craft binding. Each week, new
submissions will be considered.
Sorry, I simply can't answer
your many friendly letters.
Please address your letter to: IS
THAT SO! co Medford Mail
Tribune, P.O. Box 575, Sausa
lito, Calif."
In the Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
The other morning our Presi
dent had breakfast at the White
House with 238 Republican sena
tors and representatives. He
told them he is interested in
unifying the Republican party
behind a set of principles the
people can accept without mis
givings. He added:
The GOP can control the fed
eral administration FOREVER
if it is unified on principles the
people can accept with trust and
confidence.
LET'S TURN that around.
-SO COULD THE DEMO
CRATS. In our way of life, nothing is
truer than this: What's best for
our COUNTRY is best for ALL
of us.
That goes for Republicans
and Democrats alike.
I'M SUCH a hopeless optimist
as to believe" the time will
come when the people of our
country will discriminate in
their voting in favor of construc
tive, able candidates who stand
on SOUND principles and
against glib and glamorous de
magogues who will espounse any
screwball doctrine that seems
to have vote-catching possibili
ties. If and when that time comes,
candidates will soon learn that
the way to be elected and re
elected (which, is what states
men, as well af mere politicians,
want) is to do consistently, even
though it calls for great cour
age, the things that are best for
our country.
THERE IS evidence that this
hope isn't - utterly futile.
There is Senator Byrd of Vir
ginia, for example. He has been
in the senate for more than 20
years. There is senator George
of Georgia, who has been there
more than 30 years. There is
Russell of Georgia, who has been
in the senate more than 20
years. " I
These are Democrats, and
Southern Democrats at that. But
they are sound thinkers. Very
often they are against panaceas
that are momentarily popular
especially Senator Byrd, who
has come almost to be known as
Mr. Economy. The good Lord
krfiws economy hasn't been very
popular anywhere in recent
years.
But Senator Byrd . has been
consistently elected and reelect
ed, as have his distinguished col
leagues from Georgia. -
17XAMPLES of continued pub-
lie support of men who guide
their political actions' by what
they conceive to be best for
their country are not lacking
among Republicans.
There was Senator Taft of
Ohio. He was a conservative, but
not a reactionary. Very often in
deed he was opposed to the pop
ular trends of his time. Because
he conceived it to be right and
in the best interests of his coun
try, he was one of the authors
of the Taft-Hartley law, which:
brought down upon him the ire
of organized labor over the
country generally and specific
ally in his own, state. Yet he
was reelected to the senate aft
er a bitter campaign and anal
ysis of the Ohio voting made it
plain that he must have received
the support of considerable num
bers of labor union members
who admired his forthright
courage.
His untimely death, after suf
fering defeat by Dwight D. Ei
senhower for Republican nom
ination for President and then
turning in and giving his loyal
and able support to the man who
had beaten him, was universal
ly mourned.
T ET'S turn to the Republican
" of a different stripe Senator
George W. Norris of Nebraska.
In the later years of his long
service in both houses of the
congress (from 1903 until 1942)
he diverged increasingly from
the strict Republican party line.
During many years of the New
Deal he was more praised by the
Democrats than by the Republi
cans. His divergence became so
'sharp that he was defeated for
the senate in 1942.
Yet for nearly 40 years he
commanded the respect of the
people of Nebraska. They re
spected him (and kept on reelect
ing him to the congress, first
to the house and then to the
senate) because they believed
that what he did he did because
he conceived it to be for the
best interest of his country.
AT any rate, I'm sure President
Eisenhower was right when
he told Republican leaders that
the GOP can control, the feder
al "administration forever if it is
unified on principles the people
can accept with trust-and con
fidence.
Chittagong, the principal port
of East Pakistan, is 'a bustling
city of 260,000 people. It has
trebled its population since 1941.
In 1946-47 the port handled only
5,566 tons of jute. In the fiscal
year 1950-51 it handled 370,
000 tons.
Dead line Sunday Classified is at
noon Saturday: 10 a.m. Monday for
Monday; other Cay 5:30 previous day.
Red China Premier
Pleased Over Talks
With U.S. At Geneva
By CHARLES M. McCANN
United Press Foreign Analyst
r-Vx-in Fn-lai thp riartfferouslv
pleasant premier and foreign
- . - - i. -n.:..
jTi!-n,5Te- nr iommumsi ina,
is pleased over
the talks which
started today
in Geneva.
tey are on
the "am
bassadorial level," as it is
called be
tween the
United States
ambassador to
Czechoslovakia
and th Chi
cuarles Mclaun
nese Red ambassador to Poland.
The program for discussion is
limited "... thp
United States civilians detained
in v-nina . . . ana settlmnt nf
other practical matters now in
issue."
The State Department, in an
nouncing that the talks would be
neia, emphasized that they will
not involve diplomatic
tion.
Step Upward
But the talks are a sfpn imwarH
from 1hose on the "consular
level which have been eoint? on
in Geneva quietly for months.
t-nott wants United States rec
ognition of the Peiping govern
ment. A major plank in his
platform toward that end has
been direct talks with the Unit
ed States.
Chou knows that United
States recognition practicaUy
would eliminate any chance for
Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek's
Chinese Nationalists ever -tore-take
the mainland.
President Eisenhower said at
his press conference last Wed
i i
Communications
o
Letters to the Editor must bear the name and addrefs of the writer, altrgugh
under certain circumstances the use of a pen name or initial for publication
is permissible. The Mail Tribune reserves the right to edit all letters with a
view to clarification and condensation. Letters submitted for publication must
not exceed 400 words.
OK. Let the Debates Decide
To the Editor: Regarding the
Coon-Neuberger debate which
you mentioned in your editorial
of July 28:
As of Julv 23. Sam Coon has
accepted twenty-one invitations
to debate Mr. Neuberger only
twelve.
Why? . f.
From the rate of acceptance,
we might assume that it is the
Junior Senator, not Mr. Coon,
who is reluctant to debate.
Or is it that the Junior Sen
ator is so engrossed with great
National issues, such as squir
rels on the White House lawn,
that he simply hasn't time .to de
bate issues of importance to
those whom he supposedly rep
resents.
Oklahoma Woman
sect of Search
Oklahoma City (U.R) Okla
homa crime bureau chief O. K.
Bivins called on peace officers
across the nation today to aid
him in a search for the widow
of a former Oklahoma governor
oil millionaire whom he fears
may be a victim of amnesia.
The whereabouts of Mrs. Lydie
Marland, 56, is as much a mys
tery to her relatives as to Bivins.
It was only after conducting a
private search on their own that
they called on Bivins to help
them find the missing woman.
' After unsuccessfully trying to
find her in California and Ore
gon, Bivins ordered her physical
description broadcast to all 48
states. The order was carried out
today.
0 Mrs. Marland was last seen in
Lbs Angeles in March, 1953. It
was from there that she disappeared.
FUNERAL
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Since 1908
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O
nesday that the United States
government might "eventually"
have to agree to a ''conference
between Chou and Secretary of
State John Foster Dulles. Dul
les himself hinted at the same
possibility.
There have been reports for .
three weeks that the big powers
are secretly discussing the pos
sibility of a Far Eastern confer
ence within the next few months.
Premier Edgar Faure of France
suggested last week that the
Western powers get together
and recognize Red China.
British Recognition
France has stuck with the
United States in refusing to
recognize the Chinese Red gov
ernment. Britain recognized it
in January, 1950, when the
Labor party"was in office.
No one can deny Chou En
lai's reputation as a smart man.
Polished, smiling and attrac
tive even to anti-Communists
who do business with him, Chou
is rated . the No. 3 man in the
Chinese Red government.
He follows Mao Tse-tung,
chairman of the Central People's
Government Council and chair
man of the Communist party,
and Liu Shao-chi, chairman of
the Standing Committee of Con
gress. Fourth man is Gen. Chu
Teh, who is vice-chairman of
the government council.
Though Chou is premier, he is
unlikely ever to be the No. 1
leader of the Red government,
Peiping now has a sort of com
mittee rule, like Russia. If Mao
died, Chu Teh probably would
succeed him as chairman of the
government council and Liu
would become Communist party
chairman. However, Chou is
doing well as he is.
a
Or perhaps he does not want
to hold up his negative, obstruc
tionist attitude to public view.
His opponent, afer all, has a long
record of working for his district
and his state. Mr. Neuberger's
accomplishments, thus far, have
been the very" thorough publi
cizing of Mr. Neuberger.
May I suggest that you with
hold your sympathies until after
the debates and let these de
bates be decided on their merit?
Luella S. Stine,
Route 2, Box 424
Medford, Oregon.
Jungle Men Also
0 GEO. N. TAYLOR
When the folks near-by or the
head-hunters, cannibals or any
others of the faP-off jungles have
faith to receive
Jesus Christ as
Lord and Sav
iour, they are
saved from
eternal death.
God commands
His people to
give the Gos
pel to all men
everywhere, so
that each may
know that God
had a Son who
died for his sins. They who
receive Christ Jesus as dying
for their sins are the saved. God
writes their name in his Book
of Life and Christ takes up in
their heart to give them new
life. God alone has the date
when Christ is to raise His who
sleep in death. And also His
then alive. It is faith in Christ
as dying for your sins, that
saves. Education, invention or
science as such do not save. If
you would have a part in the
spread of the Gospel by news
paper write oubfUiu ysi
NEWSPAPER, 2385 87th Ave.
S-W, Portland 1, Ore. Adv.
PERL'S every family
may make funeral ar
rangements which are in'
keeping with its means. A
selection of services in
very price range is of
fered to satisfy individual
preferences and to meet
all financial circumstances.
Convenient Tergis?
Certainlyl