Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, September 06, 1955, Image 4

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rOTTR MTDFORD (OREGON)
ltoFORTkTRIBUWl
"everybody In Southern Oregon
Reads The Mail Tribune
Published Daily Except Saturday by
MEDFORD PRINTING CO.
87-29 North Fir St. Phone 2-6141
ROBERT W RUHL. Editor
HERB GREY. Advertising Manager
X. C. FERGUSON. Managing Editor
EHIC AI.LFN JR. City Editor
HARRY CHIP MAN Telegraph Editor
RICHARD JEWETT Sports Editor
OLIVE STARCHER. Society Editor
JACK JACKSON Sunday Editor
GERALD LATHAM. Circulation Mgr.
An Independent Newspaper .
Entered as second clan matter at
Medford. Oregon, under Act of
Marcn j. 1031
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NATIONAL EDITORIAL
AS SO CI AT HON
I
rii!"B"IJII'JllJ1
NfWtPAPlI
ASSOCIATION
Flight or Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail TribuneG10,' 20. 30 and
40 years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
Sept. 6, 1945
at was Thursday)
Bear bites woman on hand
and knocks her down when she
tried to scare him away from
picnic lunch.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: Another
sign of fall has appeared. Broad
shouldered, long-legged youths
wearing sweaters, with an "M"
over their solar plexus, have
started making yardage through
trreate afternoon traffic-
20 YEARS AGO
q Sept. 6, 1935
(It was Friday)
Nudist wearing nothing but
a pair of socks on Peach st. cast
Into the city bastile.
Butter hits 32 cents per pound
with heavy sales. e
o
30 YEARS AGO
Sept. f , 1I2S
Sheep show to be feature of
county iair this year.
Southern Oregon Older Girls'
' conference opens at Baptist
church.
40 YEARS AGO . Y"
Sept. 6. 1915 o
Secretary of American Road
Builders association spends day
on roads, reaches Medford by
Pacific highway. To take train
for San Francisco.
Yeggs attempt to blow safe of
Medford Lumber company.
What's the Answer?
Can You Get 4 of the 7?
Copr. 1955, Editorial Research Report
1. Children of elementary
school age average about 5, 10,
15, 20 or 25 hours a week watch
ing TV?
2. Arthritis (rheumatic) afflicts
more men than women, more
women than men, or about the
same number of each?
3. Eisenhower, Taft or Stassen
led on the first ballot at the 1952
Republican convention?
4. Average fares since before
the war Save gone up more for
planes or for trains?
5. Consumption of beer in the
U.S. comes to about 3,
for 7V4 pints a week for each
person over 19?
6. The race horses Swaps and
Nashua are of the same age, or
Swaps is older, or Nashua is
older?
7. Davy Crockett was born in
territory now included in Ken
tucky, Tennessee, Ndrth Caro
lina, Maryland or Texas?
The answers: 1. About 25 a
week. 2. Many more women.
3. Eisenhower. 4. For trains.
5. About 3 pints a week. 6. Of
the same age (three). 7. Ten
nessee. Brain Waves Do Not Tell
Which Hand a Man Uses
v Orono, Me. (U.R) Two1 Uni
versity of ' Maine scientists say
that brain waves do not give a
clear indication of whether a
man is a righthander or a south
paw. Psychology Profs. A, Douglas
Glanville and Joseph J. Antonitis
measured brain-wave records of
50 students to test the theory
that the strength of the waves in
the right and left halves of the
brain would indicate which side
a person favors.
The professors said their meas
urements gave no validity to the
theory.
MAIL TRIBUNE
Baseball Attendance Problems
As the major league baseball races settled down
for the stretch run of the last 30 days, the suspense
was concentrated on the American league, with the
top four, contenders separated by fewer than four
games. In the senior circuit, the Brooklyn Dodgers
appeared likely to win handily, if not exactly going
away. Even the Brooks, who lost the National league
title to New York in 1951 after enjoying a 13-game
advantage on Aug. 11, 1951, seemed unlikely to blow
a lead like this one.
This late in the season,
urban transportation and
the pennant races as a source of baseball controversy
and speculation. Owner Walter F. .0 Malley of the
pennant-bound Brooks set off a chain reaction on
Aug. 17 in announcing that his team would play seven
regulation games and at least one exhibition game m
1956 in Jersey City.
fYM ALLEY wants a new stadium, preferably in
Brooklyn. But if New
Borough officials can t help the Dodgers get the one
site in Brooklyn wanted by O'Malley, he refuses to
rule out the possibility of a move to another city in
1958.
. The day after O'Malley's Jersey City bombshell,
Horace C. Stoneham, owner of the New York Giants,
said that he too would like city aid in getting a new
stadium. O'Malley had emphasized the need for "ac
cessible rapid transit" plus adequate parking facil
ities. Said Stoneham: "Milwaukee doesn't have any
subways at all and they do pretty well. What a ball
park needs now is parking space more than anything
else."
The Los Angeles City Council on Aug. 22 author
ized two of its members to approach both O'Malley
and Stoneham with a view toward bringing big-league
baseball to the West Coast. Los Angeles officials hope
to meet with the baseball
Sept. 22.
THREE major league franchises have been trans
planted in recent years. The former Boston Braves
moved to Milwaukee in 1953. In their first year in the
Beer Belt they played to a paid attendance of 1,826,
397, or more than six times as many people as had
paid to see the Braves in Boston in 1952. In 1954
Milwaukee led the National league in attendance,
with a total of 2,131,388, though finishing only third
in league standings. The St. Louis Browns more than
tripled their attendance by becoming in 1954 the
Baltimore Orioles. The Kansas City Athletics this
year are doing better both in attendance and in league
standings than they did as the Philadelphia "A's" in
1954.
Major league baseball attendance in 1954 was 15,915,
167, more than 1,500,000 larger than that of 1953, but still
way below the 1948 peak of 20,972,601. O'Malley points out
that the Dodgers, though they've won four pennants and
tied for the flag twice since 1946, have faUen off in attend
ance from 1,807,526 in 1947 then a National league rec
ord to 1,020,531 in 1954. This year, he says, attendance
won't go over the million mark for the presumptive Nation
al league champions.
CO good baseball alone isn't the answer to baseball's
attendance problems. Nor is television the chief
villain, though big-league baseball television has crip
pled the minor leagues. The O'Malley-Jersey City
gambit aroused some speculation that big league
teams might play more home games away from home
that the Yankees, for example, might choose to play
the Boston Red Sox, who draw well throughout New
England, in Hartford or Bridgeport rather than in
New York. And at least one baseball writer has sug
gested that not two or three but five major leagues
be established, with teams representing the 33 largest
U.S. cities plus Montreal and Toronto. E.R.R.
Is That So?
SHORT VERSION
t
A quiz it is for quizzical quid
nuncs! Score 90 or better and you
are an Outdoor Expert, 70 a
Woodsman, 60 is stiU plenty
good. Answers and their values
follow questions.
I. Animals are now prepar
ing for winter's cold and scarcity
of food and water. Concerning
these statements, underscore the
correct ones:
1. The longest mammalian hi-
bernator, perhaps, is the ground
squirrel which has been known
to sleep for 33 weeks out of the
year's 52.
2. As winter sleepers go, bears
are light sleepers particularly
the Arctice polar bear.
3. To keep warm, nonhiberna-
ting birds and mammals always
eat much more in winter than
in summer.
II. The blue whale, also known
as the sulphur-bottomed whale,
is perhaps the most astonishing
of all mammals, past and pres
ent. To give him his rightful
due, underscore the correct state
ments: 1. Although this whale may be
come 75 feet long within three
years, he started life from an
egg which was no larger than
that which produced a one-ounce
mouse.
2. At birth, the whale's calf
Tuesday, September 8, 15S
however, the economics of
television are vying with
York City and Brooklyn
owners in New York on
By EUGENE BURNS
Ranger-Naturalist
may be 24 feet long and weigh
eight tons.
3. The eye of the 75-foot long
adult whale is only slightly
larger than a horse's.
4. This whale could easily
swallow a fur-bearing seal in
one gulp.
Answers: I. 1 and 2 are cor
rect, 3 is wrong. Birds and
mammals put on a heavy coat
of fat or blubber and eat much
less in winter than in summer,
despite the cold. 60 points.
II. 1, 2, 3 are correct; 4 is
false. Because of the strainers
in his mouth, this huge creature
would have difficulty in swal
lowing anything larger than an
orange. Some other whales,
however, would have no trouble
whatever in swallowing a whole
fur-bearing seal. 40 points. To
tal your score if you were low,
you'll have another chance in
two weeks!
(Released by McClure
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 you letter to: Is
That So! care of Medford Mail
Tribune, Box 575, Sausalito,
Calif.
Dead line Sunday Classified Is at
noon Saturday: 10 am. Monday for
Monday; tether dan 5:30 previous day.
Today and
By Walter
THE REVIVAL OF JAPAN
Only a remarkable man could
have carried himself as did the
Japanese Foreign Minister dur
ing his visit to
Wash i ng t o n
last week. For
between him
and this coun
try there are
things that
men do not
forget on our
part the
treachery at
Walter Uppmann
Pearl Harbor,
on his part Hiroshima and his
own imprisonment after the war.
Shigemitsu was every inch the
Foreign Minister, friendly but
not in the least effusive, tactful
but unusually candid.
He covered much ground in
his spech to the National Press
Club. But he made it plain that
the burden of his mission was
that "the time has now come"
though "we cannot make
changes over night" to "review
our defense relationship." Why?
Partly, to bring about the with
drawal of American forces from
Japanese territory to "elimi
nate," as he put it, "such fric
tions as are bound to arise from
the presence of foreign troops on
our soil." But there was more to
it than that. Shigemitsu was here
to tell us that the eventual with
drawal of American troops
would be only an outward sym
bol of a radical change in the
status of Japan a change from
being a protected nation, a client
and dependent nation, to being
once again a principal power in
East Asia.
We have agreed that as Ja
pan's own military forces are
built up, the American forces on
Japanese soil are to be with
drawn. We have recognized that
the time is coming for us, as it
came not long ago to Great Bri
tain in Suez, when our strategi
cal planning must be based on
the evacuation of our strongest
military position in the western
Pacific. Shigemitsu did not ask
us to leave now..He asked us to
get ready to leave, to begin
thinking and talking about our
leaving and, by implication, not
to make the kind of mistake
which France made . in Indo
china.
THE Washington talks it
seems to have been assumed
that a satisfactory build-up of
Japan's forces would take about
six years. This tnen wouia mean
that the American withdrawal
would probably be carried out
gradually within a period of six
years. But long before that, in
deed beginning at once, it will
be necessary, and ' indeed most
wise and very useful, to begin
treating Japan as a principal
power in east Asia. The real ques
tion raised by Shigemitsu is not
the mechanical question of how
many Japanese military units
are needed to replace the Ameri
can military units- The real ques
tion, which is implied rather
than stated in his speech, is
whether we are going to begin
recognizing Japan 'as a principal
power which has interests, which
needs to be consulted, when we
form our policies for the future
of Korea, for our relation with
the two Chinas, for Southeast
Asia.
The joint statement issued, in
Washington says that Japan
should "assume primary respon
sibility for the defense of its
homeland and be able to con
tribute to the preservation of in
ternational peace and security
in the western Pacific." Against
what is Japan herself to assume
primary responsibility? The an
swer must be for defense
against' internal subversion and
insurrection. Japan, no matter
how well armed, cannot defend
herself against nuclear weapons.
She could, when armed, defend
herself against a sea-borne and
air-borne invasion from Siberia
or Manchuria. But as no such in
vasion could be attempted with
out precipitating a world war,
it is not really against invasion
that Japan is arming. Primarily
she is arming against conquest
from within.
The joint statement speaks
also of "contributing to the pre
servation of peace and security
in the western Pacific." We may
read this, I should suppose, bear
ing in mind that we intend to
withdraw our own ground
forces immediately available
and not those that could be sent
there across the big ocean. We
shall have no ground forces near
at hand as we had, for example,
when the Korean war broke out
in 1950. Therefore, when we
withdraw from Japan, the only
allied forces capable of inter
vening inside Korea would be
the new Japanese forces that are
now being raised.
The protection of South Korea
against aggression from the
north would be the American
guarantee of massive retaliation.
But the defense of South Korea
against an internal revolution
win come to depend upon the
intervention of Japanese forces.
VfTE ARE used to thinking of
" Japan as a defeated, occu
pied, and controlled country that
it is a bit startling to begin
thinking of Japan as an inde
pendent power with interests
which have to be taken into ac
count, whatever we do in the Far
East. Between the lines of his
speech Shigemitsu was telling us
Tomorrow
Lippmann
that Japan is concerned with
Korea, with Formosa, with
Southeast Asia, and as our ally,
with -our relations with the Chi
nese mainland and Soviet Si
beria. He was telling us that the
role we have played since he
signed the surrender papers on
the deck of the battleship Mis
souri has been abnormal, and
cannot last.
For we have not only been
occupying Japan. In foreign re
lations we have, as it were, acted
in the place of Japan. That
Korea should not be Chinese or
Russian is an ancient vital in
terest of Japan. But Korea was
never until we occupied Japan
and were in fact the government
of Japan an American vital in
terest. Formosa was for more
than half a century a Japanese
colony, and before that it was a
Japanese interest that Formosa
should be in friendly hands. As
the power which defeated, occu
pied, and governed Japan, we
have been standing in Japan's
shoes.
The time is now coming, said
Shigemitsu, when we should act
with Japan, not in place of Ja
pan, in dealing with Korea and
East Asia. It is good advice. For
no settlement in East Asia can
be permanent in which Japan
does not participate as a princi
pal power.
Copyright, 1955
New York Herald Tribune Inc.
Laconia, N.H. (U.R) There's
an island for every day in the
year at Lake Winnepesaukee.
Of its 365 islands, 274 are habit
able. In The Day's
By FRANK JENKINS
Business note from Korea:
A Kentucky congressman (his
name is Chelf) has just register
ed a vigorous complaint about
the taxes South Korea levies on
U.S. business men operating in
that nation. In a letter to Presi
dent Syngman Rhee, Chelf says
South Korea's tax structure is
highly discriminatory.
The American chamber of
commerce in Seoul (South Ko
rea's capital) says that as of now
some 41 Americans are being
denied EXIT PERMITS which
means that they are being held
in the country against their will
because of a dispute over
taxes.
TI7ELL, that's war for you.
About the only rule that can
be deduced from modern war is
that when it's over your allies
will turn out to be your enemies
and your enemies, as like as not.
will become your buddies.
I7TTH a few outstanding ex
ceptions, war always has
been foolish and unprofitable, but
MODERN war is beginning to
border on the absurd.
TJEADS of the big
stock
changes at New York, Chi
cago, Los Angeles, San Ffancis
co and Montreal, meeting at
Vancouver, Wash., offer some
good advice FOR FREE to the
average investor.
They say:
"The man of average means
with some money to invest
should concentrate on INVEST
MENT and not on speculation.
They add:
"Such an investor should for
get all about the fast killings,
because there Is no easy way to
riches on the stock market."
Their general advice to the
average man seeking a short cut
to a fortune on a $5,000 Invest
ment can be boiled down into
two words WATCH OUT!
rpHE stock exchange heads are
- talking to us little people.
Thev could RAISE THEIR
SIGHTS and still be within the
facts.
FTHE gambling city of Monte
Carlo, capital of the tiny gam
bling principality of Monaco,
down on the French Riviera, the
biggest bank in town closed its
doors the other day, throwing
the whole postage-stamp-size na
tion into a financial crisis.
It happened like this:
A little while back the bank's
upper brass, seeking a short cut
to wealth, PLUNGED on televi
sion stocks. When the stocks
slumped instead of soaring, cagy
depositors hastened to the bank
and withdrew their money.
That stopped the clock. -
THERE'S an odd little lesson
in this particular incident:
This bank that gambled heav
ily on long shot stocks (and
guessed wrong) is located in an
area that lives on gambling. Its
upper brass caught the fever. In
the end, they were taken for a
ride just like the veriest suck-
SUN LIFE ASSURANCE
, .
FLYING into office of Ber
nard H. Moran, Navy Depart
ment, Wash., this pigeon de
cided to make desk his home,
will not leave. (International)
Stolen Bandit's Gun
Found by Teen-Age Boys
Oshkosh, Wis. (U.R) Two
teen-age boys found an 1851 Colt
revolver recently and returned
it to the Oshkosh Public Museum
from where it was stolen last
February.
It was wrapped in a plastic
bag when the boys found it on
a river bank and was in as good
condition as when it was stolen.
The Navy model Colt had been
the property of Thomas Coleman
("Cole") Younger ,a member of
Quantrill's Civil War guerUla
band. Younger later was an asso
ciate of Jesse James.
James E. Lunsted, curator at
the museum, said the gun would
not be placed on display for some
time.
News
er who goes to Monte Carlo (or
Las Vegas) with the idea of get
ting rich quick with little effort.
rTHAT'S the trouble with gam-
A bling as a short cut to riches,
You can play penny ante and
nickel limit FOR FUN and get
away with it as long as it is
pure fun and stays penny ante.
But when you get to thinking of
gambling as REAL MONEY
you're headed for trouble.
Whenever some gambler wins,
some other gambler loses. It's
different in the case of legiti
mate business. In legitimate
business, BOTH SIDES
profit from a sound deal.
can
rpHAT'S what the heads of the
big stock exchanges, gath.
ered up in Vancouver, are try
ing to tell us.
A Nichol's Worth of . .
Comment On
By HARMAN
United Press
Atlantic City, N.J. (U.R)
Like I said once before, you can
have the young cuties in the Miss
America busi
ness I'll take
Lily Mae.
It still goes.
Miss Lily Mae
Caldwell of the
Birmingham,
Ala., News has
been covering
the Miss A pag
eant for 20
years or more.
Harmon Nichols
She won't say
how long, real
ly. More important she has been
escorting pretty young girls up
here for many moons. If you can
add it up, you know by now
that Lily Mae is no young chick
herself. But she knows a pretty
girl when she sees one.
Chaperons the Girls
One gal she brought up was
Yolande Betbeze, who became
Miss America. Yolande later, un
der the thumb of our little gal
Lily Mae, became a judge here
at Atlantic City and I loved that
gal dearly because she thought
Neva Jane Langley of Georgia
had better than a fair chance to
win in 1953.
Yolande was kidding, of
course, but I went out on the
twig and who won? Miss Geor
gia.
Well, anyhow, my Lily Mae
CaldweU may have 'another
comer. She is Patricia Byrd Hud
dleston, a 21-year-old brownette
from Clanton, Ala. Pat has what
it takes plus Lily Mae, which
should put the young lady up
there where she belongs. Close to
the top. Pat is a serious musician,
soprano, who would like to
continue the study of music.
As Lily Mae told me over a
cup of coffee, Pat is a "mature"
singer. She even sang soft-like
and pretty-like over her iced tea.
Three Tests for Crown
The contestants will get all
nrpttipH iin tnnieht for trip Viiff I
parade down the boardwalk.
WORRIED ABOUT THE FUTURE?
life assurance will guarantee you a retirement
income which you cannot outlive, end also
provide for your dependents if you die at an
early age.
Don't just worry about your family's future or J
your own. See me about it today,
CHARLES E. JONES, Local Agent
Phone 2-9772
COMPANY OF CANADA
Russians May Find
Adenauer Tough Man
During Conference
Bt CHARLES M. McCANN
United Press Correspondent
The Kremlin's team of diplo
matic negotiators had better
study up some more, in the next
few days, how
to wi nfriends
and influence
people.
That is, if
they really ex
pect to get
anywhere in
their talk with
tough old West
German Chan
cellor Konrad
Adenauer star
ting Friday in
Charles atccann
Moscow.
Premier Nikolai A. Bulgan-
m, Communist Farty boss imik
ita S. Khrushchev and Foreign
Minister Vyacheslav M. Molo-
tov did pretty well in the re
cent Big Four negotiations . in
Geneva.
Now they are going to take
up directly the biggest issue in
Europe. That is the future of
the country they fear most next
to the United States.o
Three Point Program
The Russian invitation to
Adenauer to visit Moscow was
given on June 7. The program,
as specified later by the Krem
lin, consists of three points.
They are the establishment of
diplomatic relations, the conclu
sion of a trade agreement and
the establishment of cultural re
lations. But the Russians may find the
going tough. Adenauer is deter
mined to talk about tne unifica
tion -of Germany and the return
of thousands of German pris
oners stiU held as slave laborers.
The Russians will not be able
to butter up West Germany's
"Grand Old Man" a grand old
man who, at 79 years of age
works like a man a generation
younger. They will not be able
to give him the vodka treatment
because he drinks only German
wines, and those lightly.
If Adenauer runs true to
form, he will want to know when
Russia is going to get out of East
Germany, and whether it ever
intends to give up the 47,000
miles of rich German territory,
east of the Oder-Neisse rivers
line, now occupied by Red Po
land. There are even hints that Ade
nauer may refuse to. establish
diplomatic relations unless he
gets some satisfactory answers
.
This and That
W. NICHOLS
Fester Writer
iucicg noinmg nner even in
Alabama. The judeinc starts on
Wednesday night with the kids
squaring off with competing in
uuce wiegunes. r.acn girl ap
pears eacn night Wednesday
through Saturday. One night she
win sing, yodel or whatever in
the talent division. ComDetition
the other two nights is the bath
ing suit and evening gown di
visions.
Saturday night, 10 finalists
will be listed . . .. this list will
be cut in half and five kids will
be on the spot. There is only one
big winner, and she will get a
$5,000 scholarship and a chance
io see the world and pick up a
bagful of long green along the
trail.
LONG TIME NO SEE
' Grand Island. Neb. U.R)
When Ernest Frank struck up a
conversation with a counle
whose table adjoined his in a res
taurant, both he and the stran
gers decided they had seen each
other before. It developed they
had sat at adjacent tables five
years ago in the Metropolitan
hotel in Brussels, Belgium. The
couple stopped here en route to
government assignment in
Vietnam.
Since 1 908 o
PERL
Mortuary
o
Phone 2-S675
FINER
FUNERAL
SERVICES
in every price range
to his questions.
The Western Allies, are not
worried over the possibilities of
Adenauer's talks. Their only
concern is how long, at his age,
he can last. For he runs a one-
man government, and no suc
cessor to him is in sight.
At 79, Adenauer is stUl ram
rod-straight. He is tall and keeps
his figure. He rises at 6 a.m.
and works 12 to 14 hours a day.
Unlike Winston Churchill,
who alone can be compared to
him among world leaders, Ade
nauer was unknown internation
ally until he was made chancel
lor in 1949, at 73. He was elect
ed by one vote his own in
parliament. For years, he had
been a provincial politician in
his native Cologne. Now he is
practically Mr. Germany, and
if the-Russians are smart they
will keep that in mind.
Do You Like Martini
Wit Your OiVgs, Sir?
Chicago (U.R) A survey
conducted at a downtown bar
indicates that most martini
drinkers, when given a choicer
will take two ouVeQser drink.
The survey -was conducted
by the Green Olive commis
sion, which could be biased.
Nevertheless, the month
long study at a do-it-yourself
bar where customer are al
lowed to mix their own drinks
offered the two-olive evidence,
it was claimed.
MR
INSURANCE
Fred
Brennan
I have Plate Glass Insurance on
my store windows, but no Busi
ness . Interruption. A plat? glass
loss might run $200, but being
out of business by fire, tornado,
etc., could cost me - $3000 per
month. Does Business Interruption
Insurance cost only three or four
times what Glass Insurance costs?
For Information Call
MEDFORD INSURANCE
AGENCY
Phone 2-4940
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foomel
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