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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 1, 1955)
FOOT MEDTORD (OREGON) UH1 TEvarybody In Southern Oregon Heads Tn Mau Tribune Published Daily Except Saturday by MSflrORD FfU-NTJ-NU CO. 27-29 North Fir St. Phone 2-glil ROBERT W. RUHL Editor HERB GREY. Advertising Manager I. C. FERGUSON. Managing Editor HARRY CKTPMAN. Telegraph Editor KJCHAHU JEWETT. Sports fcailOT OLIVE STARCHER. Society Editor JACK JACKSON. Sunday Editor GERALD LATHAM. Circulation Mgr. An Independent Newspaper Entered aa second clan matter at Medlord, Oregon, under Act ox March 3. 1897 SUBSCRIPTION RATES , Rt Mull In Advance: Per CODV IOC Daily and Sunday One year $12.00 Daily and Sunday Six months 6.50 Daily and Sunday Three mm. 3.50 Sunday only one year sj.ou. Rf ram-- In Advance Medxora Ashland. Central Point. Eagle Point Jacksonville. Gold Hill. Phoenix. Shady Cove. Rogue River. Talent. nri on mntor routes: Daily and Sunday On year $15.00 Daily and Sunday One month 1-25 Carrier and Dealers 6c per copy All Terms Cash in Advance Official Paper ol the City of Medford Official Paper or daemon lonniy United Press Full Leased Wire MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION wrsT.Hni.i.inAV rOMPANY. INC Offices in New York. Chicago. De troit. San Francisco. Los Angeles. Seattle), Portland, fat- 1XU1S. suura. Vancouver B.C. NATIONAL EDITORIAL AsTbcfATllo.N NIWSPAMI MISUSHIIS ASSOCIATION Flight or Time Medford and Jackson County History from the files of The Mail Tribune 10, '20. 30 and 10 years ago. 10 YEARS AGO Sept. 1, 1945 Q (It was Saturday) Bettys Hutton announces engagement to Ted Bristin, Cbi ocago. From Arthur Perry's' Ye Smudge Pot column: Democrats all over the state last week held picnics, separate and apart from the one they have been enjoying since 1932. 20 YEARS AGO Sept. 1, 1935- (It was Sunday) Mrs. Harold Ickes killed In New Mexico by hit run driver, St. Mary's opens for winter term Sept. 9. 30 YEARS AGO Sept. 1, 1925 (It was Wednesday) Public meeting at Elks temple to mark close of 52nd annual Oregon Medical association meeting here. More than 100 doctors attended. Shortage of labor in the coun ty. Thirty-five jobs unfilled. 40 YEARS AGO Sept. 1, 1915 (It was Thursday) Corbin Edgell of the Eagle Point district spent today in the city attending to business and the circus. Dove hunters of the valley bag two cows, one horse on first day of season. What's the Answer? Can You Get 4, of the 7? Copr. 1955, Editorial Research Report 1. A W.O.C. means in Wash ington someone who works on contract, serves the Govern ment without compensation, wears old clothes,-watches our Congressman, or is a woman sol dier? 2. The average trip by bus is about 30, 60, 90, 120 or 150 miles? 3. More textile workers are employed today in New England, the Middle Atlantic states, or the South? 4. Clare Boothe Luce has or hasn't had a private audience with the Pope since becoming U. S. ambassador to Italy? 5 Roulette wheels carry be tween 21 and 30 numbers, 31 and 40, 41 and 50, 51 and 50 or 61 and 70? 6. The Empire State Building in New York in a 90-miles-an-hour gale moves out of line less than iy$ inches, about 11 inches, more than 1V4 feet, or not at all? 1. A hautboy is found in a res taurant, baseball park, orches tra, furniture store, or news paper office? The Answer: 1. Serves Gov ernment without compensation. 2. About 60 miles. 3. The South. 4. Has. 5. 31 and 49. 6. About IVi inches. 7. Orchestra (old name for oboe). Large Sign Announces Father's Sixth Child Burlington, Vt.OJ.PJ Passing out cigars just wasn't enough for Robert Giroux whose wife gave birth to their sixth child. A few hours later there was a 10-foot sign with block'letters in front of their home reading: It's a Big Girl 8 lbs. 7 oz. Daddy Survived . . . " Mother is Well. . f ri.X MAIL TRIBUNE . The Oregonian Is 100 Right On this page today is reprinted the lead editorial from the Oregonian of August 29th. We urge every one interested in the controversy between public pow er and private power to read it. For it is, m our judg ment, the strongest argument for the federal develop ment of Hells canyon ' or any other river with a similar power potential that we have seen, and we have seen a good many. The following final portion of the editorial is es pecially convincing, quote : The Hoover Commission asks why the taxpayers of New York, Pennsylvania and New Jersey should help pay the reimbursable costs of new hydroelectric plants on the v Columbia river. Well, why should the people of Nebraska pay for river and harbor improvements in New York, Pennsylvania and New Jersey? . Why should residents of the cities pay for farm price supports? Why should people who travel only In automobiles help pay subsidies for air lines and steamship lines? The examples are many of all taxpayers contributing to development of regions and industries. THE FUNDA- ,. MENTAL REASON IS 'THAT SUCH CONTRIBUTIONS3 ADD TO THE NATIONAL WEALTH AND SECURITY, PROVIDE NEW JOBS FOR NEW POPULATION. But the federal government and the Hoover Commission do not recognize the validity of this concept for power, which the government develops only under the legal fiction that it is - "a necessary by-product." The nation needs a more reasonable policy with respect to development of electricity from water. Water is the re source. All its uses must be developed in the national inter est, and to the utmost of tneir worth. This is not a question of monopoly, or socialism, or. private enterprise. A sound federal water policy would encourage private and publicly owned utilities to participate in development to the best of their ability. But the stigma of illegitimacy should be re moved from federal power, and its place in national growth recognized. A MEN to that! "That is precisely the taken from the outset. This is NOT a question private enterprise. All that another part of the Power Lobby propaganda to con fuse the voters and arouse the fears and prejudices of the uninformed. Water is the fundamental resource and to develop ALL its uses and to the UTMOST of its worth, in the public interest, is or should be the universal aim. That is the reason and the only reason, the Mail Tribune has so strongly supported a Federal High Dam on the Snake over the two or three low dams proposed by the Idaho Power company. We don't believe there is a competent and impar tial hydraulic engineer in the country who would deny that the federal project at Hells Canyon would deliver the "utmost" of the Snake river potential to the people, and the Id&ho Power company project would NOT. Even William J. Costello, official examiner for the Federal Power commission after weeks of public hearings admitted this, and only because he claimed the congress would never allow funds for the high storage federal dam, did he agree to recommend the inferior project, and then he favored only one of the 3 low dams proposed by the private power company. But the F.P.C., for reasons that have never been satisfactorily explained, not only ignored their own "examiners" recommendations, but went over board completely for those of the We can conceive of no ing sincerely m the doctrine of ustmost use m the public interest," endorsing such action. JUST as a federal high storage dam on the Snake. would no more be "socialism," than federal farm supports, federal flood controls or federal irrigation projects, so as the Oregonian points out there is no issue of monopoly involved. There are comparitively few river districts in the country, where new federal multiple-power projects are at all feasible, probably Snake river is the last in the northwest, and oneof the few undeveloped po tentials in the entire country. How these projects could secure anything AP PROACHING a power monopoly is difficult in fact impossible to imagine. But it is not so difficult to see "how the Private Power combine COULD secure absolute control of electric light and powei in the United States if the Hoover plan of not only "denying the people any more TVA's" but destroying those now in operation were carried out. The Private company control is now estimated between 75 and 80 per cent, and private companies are extremely prosperous and constantly growing. e -"But why consider a federal project at Hells Canyon or anywhere else when the congress refuses to appropriate the funds after all an inadequate project that CAN be secured, is better than an adequate system that CAN'T be." TTHIS is, and for some time has been, the favorite argument against Hells Canyon federal develop ment. , How do these defeatists KNOW what the next session of . congress will do or won't do? After all the Eisenhower administration hopes to secure an appropriation at the coming session three or four times greater than that proposed for Hells Canyon. The purpose is to develop the Upper Colo rado river. Why should there be no chance of doing far less on the Snake? They are identical, as far as the federal versus the private power issue is con cerned. FINALLY these multiple power projects are not to be built for a day or a year, but for all time. If they are worth doing at all, they are worth doing RIGHT. We entirely agree with the Oregonian that the ONLY way to do them RIGHT is to do them from the standpoint of developing all their uses in the "national interest and to the utmost Thufhdar September I, 1953 line the Mail Tribune has of monopoly, socialism or sort of double-talk is just Idaho Power company. newspaper or voter believ of their worth."s--R.W.R. In the Day's News . Br FRANK JENKINS World tension note: Secretary DuUes says in Wash- ington there have been reliable reports of Russia offering arms to some countries in the Middle East. He adds that supplying arms to a troubled area will not con tribute to the relaxing of world tension. w E-E-L-L-L If you saw a couple of guys warming up for a fight and went around and slipped one of them' a gun, it wouldn't contribute much to the cause of peace. That's what Secretary Dulles suspects the Russians of doing in the Middle East. v B -U-U-T-T-T, If you saw a big- guy getting ready to" mop up on a little, guy, with the idea of taking his house arid lot and his' car and selling HIM into slavery, and you slip ped the little guy a gun. to pro tect himself, you'd figure you were doing a- Christian deed. That's what we-ve been doing in Western Europe. Circumstances, you see, alter cases. WHILE we're on the subject of " Russia, a Moscow school in spector tells his countrymen to "spare the hand and save the child." He adds: "Too many parents think that a child can be brought into line with a slap ... Physical punish ment usually, moves children away from their parents and de velops reticence, falseness and cruelty." AND- One should add here The LACK of a tap or so with hand or hairbrush or shingle often ruins 'em for good. The TRUTH, I suppose, lies somewhere between the two ex tremes. THE nation's two biggest inde pendent coffee roasters have raised their wholesale prices three cents a pound. Trade sources said they expect other roasters to follow suit. The dispatch adds that the boosts reflect increases in green coffee prices during the past month. Since late July, both Brazilian and Colombian types of coffee have advanced about four cents a pound in New York. .T'S the pitch? The truth seems to be that the coffee industry is lucky. Every- That Woods We have been reading the "Water .Resources and Power" answer td an old question: Why is it that the government, in its laws and in its thinking, draws a line between federal assistance in developing rivers for power, on the one hand, and irrigation, navigation and flood con trol, on the other? The answer was' not apparent, although the commission traced the history of government's entrance into all these fields and the record of use of hydroelectric power revenues to help pay for irri gation. (And, of course, the power benefit makes possible flood control and navigation, in many historically, are "non-reimbursable" i.e., paid for out of general tax money.) The Hoover Commission accepted the distinction with out explaining it a difference report, Water Resources and Power." The majority report of the says this about federal power projects: "It is obvious . . . that the federal taxpayer is subsidizing these projects. The burden, however, is very unequally distribut ed. When these present federal population dirctly benefited will be less than 10 per cent of the whole population. This subsidy ' is even more sharply, illustrated in the case of the states of New vania, which have 20 per cent of the total population, and pay 29 per cent of the taxes and receive no federal power." - . But the report had this to say under the heading "National Interest in Irrigation": "The justification for federal interest in irrigation is not solely to provide land for farmers or to increase food supply. These new farm areas inevitably create villages and towns whose populations thrive from furnishing supplies to the farmer, marketing his crops, and from the industries which grow around these areas. The econ omy of seven important cities of the West had ;ts base in irriga tion Denver, Salt Lake City, Phoenix, Boise, El Paso, Fresno and Yakima. Indeed, these new centers of productivity send waves of economic improvement to the far borders, like a pebble thrown into a pond. Through irrigation, man has been able to build a stable civilization in an area that might otherwise have been open only to intermittent exploitation." That is undeniably true of irrigation. But why it is not equally true, of hydroelectric power, which creates industries and employ ment? Do not the aluminum plants, chemical plants and the mul titude of other manufacturing units made possible by low-cost electricity also send "waves of economic improvement to the far borders?" Of course they do. The Hoover Commission asks why the taxpayers of New York, Pennsylvania ' and New Jersey should help pay the reimbursable costs of new hydroelectric plants on the Columbia river. Well, why should the people of Nebraska pay for river and harbor improvements in New York, Pennsylvania and New Jersey? Why should residents of the cities pay for farm price supports? Why should people who travel only in automobiles help pay subsidies for air lines and steamship lines? " The examples are many of aU taxpayers contributing to de velopment of regions and industries. The fundamental reason is that suGh contributions add to the national wealth and security, provide new jobs for new population. But the federal government and the Hoover Commission do not recognize the validity of this concept for power, which the government develops only under the legal fiction "that it is "a necessary by-product." The nation needs a more reasonable policy with respect to development of electricity from water. Water is the resource. All its uses must be developed, In the national interest and to the ut most of their worth. This is not a question of monopoly, -or social ism, or private enterprise. A sound federal water policy would encourage private and publicly-owned utilities to participate in development to the best of their ability. But the stigma of illegiti macy should be removed from federal power, and its place in national growth recognized-Poitluid Oregonian. Today and By Walter DOWN FROM THE CLOUDS Last week, addressing the Bar Association in Philadelphia the President expressed some sec ond thoughts on Geneva. They were de signed to cor rect the im pression that we have gone soft, - and that intoxica ted with the spirit of Geneva, Walter Uppmano we m a y be wiUing to sign away our interest in Germany and in Eastern Europe. Such false impressions are what come of talking about foreign affairs in resounding moralistic inaccurate rhet oric rather than in cool, matter of fact, and precise lan guage. There never was any ex cuse for letting the impression arise that Geneva would soon be followed by a settlement of the big issues of the cold war. There was never any excuse for raising the false hope that the Soviets were about to surrender their main position in Europe or the false fear that we were about to surrender the Western position. IT IS often said these days that nnthinp of substance was changed by the Geneva meeting. It should be said, I believe, that Geneva reflected and registered the very great change that has taken place during the past two years in the relations between the Soviet Union and the Atlan tic community. The change is in the realization oh both sides of what has become official doc trine and policy that with mod ern weapons and in the existing balance of power there is, m the President's words, no alternative to peace. What was affirmed at Geneva was the recognition of this military stalemate. This Stalemate has and will go on hav ing far reaching consequences. Mr. Dulles, who is now pre paring for a foreign ministers' meeting in October, is faced with the consequences. A big problem was posed at Geneva. It is how, body in the modern world is drinking coffee. That gets the stuff CON SUMED. THE basic purpose of foods and feeds is to be consumed. No sound economic purpose is serv ed by stashing them awy from year to year JUST TO KEEP PRICES HIGH. In time, it leads to heavy trou ble. Wheat, for example. Colt, Power Hoover Commission's report on with the hope of learning the instances, although these uses conveyed even by the title of the Hoover Commission, for sample, programs are completed, the tejtal York, New Jersey and Pennsyl v to, Tomorrow Lippmann if force and the threat of force are renounced, the Soviet Union can be induced to make a settler ment that it is not willing to make. What is to prevent the Soviet Union from standing pat on the partition of Germany and on its satellite empire in East ern Europe? Mr. Dulles himself since his return from Geneva has proclaimed as the American i ideal the doctrine of no-force. Yet he is also calling for the uni fication of Germany on terms which would demand the most radical concessions by the Soviet Union. The problem of how to bring ! about changes in international relations, particularly changes in the control of territories, is known as the problem of "peace ful change." It is the crucial and it is the hardest problem in the organization of international peace. Neither the League of Na tions nor the United Nations has found a good solution to the problem as witness Indochina, Korea, Palestine, Kashmir, North Africa. With very rare exception the maintenance of peace means the maintenance of the status quo. Now, as regards the Soviet Union it is the West that most wants to change the status quo. The ad ministration policy,' as stated by the President at Philadelphia, calls for the withdrawal of the Red Army and of the Soviet political power from Europe. This is what the unification of Germany on Chancellor Aden auer's terms plus the liberation of the satellite means. All this would-be very desirable. But it would be a very big "hange in deed. How is it to be brought about, especially since it was es tablished at Geneva that the Soviet Union cannot be com pelled to withdraw from Eu rope? " Not, we may be sure, by talk ing tough once more, or by choos ing to scowl rather than to smile. The situation of the great pow ers is a situation of fact they are in a military stalemate though the issues between them are deep and unsettled. This sit uation of fact cannot really be altered by making speeches by zigzagging between Eisenhower's exuberant optimism and Dulle's pessimistic forebodings. The main result of the zigzag is to give an effect of instability, of uncertainty and immaturity, in U.S. foreign policy. YlfHAT could the Administra tion have done, what could it still do, to avoid such con fusion? It could explain the mil itary stalemate to our peopl that it means that we have the power to prevent the Soviet Union from expanding its orbit but that we are prevented by Soviet powers from forcing the Soviet Union to roll back. We can, for example, defend South Korea and Formosa against overt aggression. But we cannot drive the Communists out of North Korea or the Chinese mainland We can defend West Germany and West Berlin. But we cannot compel the Soviets to withdraw from East Germany and East Berlin. How under these conditions does change come about? By diplomacy, or failing that, by the passing of time in which a whol ly new situation develops. In conducting diplomacy, as Mr. Dulles is now doing, in the Geneva climate of no-force, the chief means of reaching satis factory agreement is to trade. Something can be done by ap nealine to world ODinion. But not much. For world opinion is unlikely to back us strongly. The net result of Geneva is that, with force stalemated, agree ments now depend on negotia tion, and in this contest negotia tion is just another name for giv ing something for something and of trying to strike a mutually profitable bargain. THE President would prepare the country for what is com ing if he explained to the coun try what negotiation means. He would then come down out of the clouds of those brave ab stract principles and - down on to the hard earth where we must live with and must deal with the Soviet Union. It does no good to mystify the reality of things by talking as if we ex pected by a non-violent cru sade" to convert the Commun ists to the principles of Thomas Jefferson and Woodrow Wilson. It is no good allowing Mr. Nixon to talk as if we could get every thing for nothing merely by our blowing our own horn loudly enough. -That can do nothing but mislead our own people. Copyright, 1955, New York Herald Tribune Inc. Woman Placed in Jail Each Sunday, To Teach Memphis, Tenn. flJ.PJ-- Mrs. Leon Pettit goes to jail every Sunday, but not for any breach of the law. She hurries down to the city jail immediately after she fin ishes teaching Sunday school class and gets locked up in the dormitory with all the women prisoners. "Once inside " she said, 1 open my Bible and we study it together." , - Matter of Fact fHE BATHTUB METHOD Rabat, Ivlorocco What is the Moroccan Nationalist movement all about? What manner of men ' are its leaders and what do they really want? Such questions are hard to an swer, because there are sev eral Moroccan movements and each move ment has sev eral leaders. Stewart Alaop But this reporter" at least had a chance to catch something of the flavor of Moroccan nationalism at a luncheon meeting with the leaders of the illegal "Istiqlal," much the most powerful of the Moroccan independence parties. In the Moslem fashion, we sat on divans around a low table, mutton from a big plate in the plucking delicious chicken or center. Of the six men present, the three most impressive were Doubid, ben-Barka and Majoub Seddik. Bouabid, ben-Barka and Majoub ly regarded as the No. 1 man in the Nationalist movement here. He is very thin, with an intense face, mocking eyes and an air of authority. Ben-Barka is the party's theoretician, or idea man. He is a mathematics professor, intelligent and likeable he looks a little like a smaller edi tion of Vice-President Nixon. Seddik looks, by contrast, like a professional r e v o 1 u tionary, which is what he is. Unlike Boua hid and ben-Barka, who are prod ucts of the small Moroccan mid dle class, Majoub Seddik was an illiterate railway worker who climbed to the top of the illegal Moroccan labor movement by sheer force and passion. He a violent manner and strange, angry eyes the whites show all around the pupils. As they talk ed, the contrast between Bouabid and ben-Barka on the One hand, and Majoub Seddik on the other, became more and more striking. They had, of course, much in common. All three were ready to risk everything for the move ment All three had already spent months and years in jaiL And the experience had left its mark on all three men, but especially on Majoub Seddik. -, . . HE SHOWED scars on th tops of his hands, administered, he said, by the French police. But, he said, there is something much worse than beatings the "methode baignoire," the bathtub method. The bathtub method, as Ma joub Seddik described it, is very simple. The police tied him on a plank, with his head hanging down over one end, and then put the plank on a sawhorse. There was a bathtub filled with dirty water, under his head. Whenever he gave the wrong answer to a question, or no an swer at all, the plank was tipped so that his head was immersed in the bathtub. A policeman with a stopwatch gave the signal to tip him back again just short of the drowning point. When Majoub Seddik had fin ished his description of the bath tub method, there was a short silence around the table. Then Bouabid and ben-Barka began talking about the attitude of the Moroccan Nationalists to the French. The Nationalist leaders knew, they said, that Morocco had to have French technical help, French capital, French political support. There was no question at all of pushing the French out of Morocco, or destroying French interests. Moroccans wanted only the right to rim the affairs of their own country. "When Bouabid and ben-Barka said these things, they sounded sincere. Majoub Seddik said nothing. Then the conversation shifted again to the economic ex ploitation of the country by the French, and Majoub Seddik be came passionately eloquent, and the whites of his eyes showed. The workers were lucky to get 65 cents a day, he said. They could not strike. They could not even join a union he himself was not a Communist, he said, but he had first joined a Com munist union because only the Communists were then doing anything for. the workers. And always, there were the police, searching workers as they left their work, ' beating them for Yours FREE; Without Obligation "Facts Every Family Should Know. About , Funerals and Interments," published bythe Association of. Better Business Bureaus. Phone, write, or ask for your copy! - Frank Morgan - Harold Snodgrass FUNERAL DIRECTORS CHAPEL MORTUARY Across from the Courthouse Stewart Alsep i nothing, jailing them for a word. There was or so it seemed to this reporter a bitterness and a hatred in Majoub Seddik, not only toward the French but to ward the whole economic and political system, that was not in Bouabid and ben-Barka. And this suggests the nature of the real choice that confronts the French. AT PRESENT, the vast major ity of the Nationalist leaders are of the same stripe as Boua bid and ben-Barka products of the middle class, moderate men, revolutionaries only by force of circumstance. If such men are given positions of real authority, and a sense of pride and partici pation, the essential French in terests in this tortured country may well be preserved. The alternative is the bathtub method applied country-wide a campaign of the most ruthless suppression. In the end, this is sure to produce a whole crop of Majoub Seddiks. In the end, it could only mean a terrible fight to the finish, which the French could never really win. If the French were the cynical and logical people they are sup posed to be, instead of the senti mental and illogical people they actually are, there is no doubt which way they would choose. Meanwhile, they have been in capable of choosing at all, and it is already very late. (Copyright, 1955, New York Herald Tribune, Inc.) 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