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dOX-CDroft9 (OBEGON)
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Flight o' Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of The
flail Tribune 10, 20. 30 and
10 years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
Oct. 14, 1945
(It was Sunday)
Seth M .Bullis, president of
Jackson County Civic Music as
sociation, announces plans for an
nual membership campaign.
From Arthur Perry'sYe
Smudge Pot column: New grass
is coming up on the sunny hill
sides. Everybody is too busy to
have any of it grow under their
feet. : .
20. YEARS AGO
Oct. 14, 1935
B. E. Harper, president of
Jackson County Chamber of
Commerce, invites several naval
officials andlanes to visit here
Navy Day, Oct. 28.
Travelers discouraged from
attempting to visit rim of Crater
Lake because of foot of snow.
SO YEARS AGO
Oct. 14, 1925
Circuit Judge Charles W..
Thomas sustains demurrers of
the cities of Medford and Jack
sonville against, W. S. Barnum
and Medford Coast railroad.
Attendance at Medford public
schools increases 10 per cent over
last year.
40 YEARS AGO
Oct. 14, 1915
(It was Thursday)
Rebonding committee agrees
to new rebonding plan with city
paying half the cost and property
owners half.
, Fruit growers of area plan
active campaign against orchard
diseases.
What's the Answer?
Can You Get 4 of the 7?
Copr. 1955, Editorial Renarck Raped
' 1 . About one-fourth, or three
fourths of fatal traffic accidents
occur on straight, level roads?
2. The Taft-Hartley act forbids
mass picketing by strikers; right
or wrong?
3. Farm prices as a whole have
fallen less or more in 33 months
of this Administration than in
last 33 month under Truman, or
about the same?
4. President of the U.N. Gen
eral Assembly now is a Russian,
North American, Frenchman,
Latin American or Hollander?
'. 5. The Government now is or
isn't directly restricting oil im-
carasj i i
m
. ports?
6. More cigars are sold today
in "drug stores or in tobacco
stores, or is it about 50-50?
7. A hemophiliac lives in a
-dream world, can't stop bleeding
easily, drinks too much, steals
all the time, or is addicted to
drugs?
The Answers: 1. About three
fourths. 2. Wrong. 3. More. 4.
Latin American (from Chile). 5.
Isn't. 6. More in drug stores. 7.
Can't stop bleeding easily.
LEARNS OF DEATH
Salem (U.R) James Gun
ston, Salem, has been notified
that his brother, Army Sgt. Win
ston L. Gunston, 40, was shot in
the back and killed Oct. 4 while
on guard duty' in Kyushu, Jap
an. Army police said they were
investigating the slaying.
PROMOTION AUTHORIZED
Denver (U.R) A $2,500,000
promotion campaign for wool
' and lamb has been authorized
by the American Sheep Produc
ers coucil, according to R., A.
Ward, Portland, council director
and general manager of the Pac
ific Wool Growers association.
mail tribune
Atomic Electricity
"Whv" wp asked a California Oregon Power
7 ' w
company official recently,
an atomic energy plant?"
The question was asked only nan-joKingiy, ior
electricity is now being generated by atomic power
in several locations. One
that Pittsburgh would have atomic electncity by
- . til i i r r l j 1 i
1957, that .Boston would nave it oy iyoe, ana mai
Detroit, New York and Chicago would by 1960. It
stated that within the next few years there would be
atomic powered merchant vessels and warships (in
addition to atomic submarines, which we have now),
and A-powered planes (perhaps like Buz Sawyer's).
By 1980, it said, two-thirds of all electricity would be
atomic in origin. ,
In addition, think of the publicity for southern
Oregon if it became the first non-metropolitan area
to receive power for general use from the atom. .
THE Copco official agreed that it was a good idea,
but pointed out the catch money. At its present
stage of development, atomic power transformed
into electric energy is immensely expensive, com
pared to the hydroelectic energy which we receive
from Oregon's tumbling waters.
With the magazine's forecast in mind, and no-
timncr ntfior rprPTir. TIPWS nf atomic developments, is
it not logical to wonder how
energy from atoms will light and neat our nomesj
Cnnnn iteolf is inr.prp.sted. and is one of a group
of electric utilities which is
development program m
THIS newspaper the other
OUCVX VV-rVJ. VWM
Washington U.R) A handful of America's most bril
liant scientists are striving to create an artificial star ca
pabil of generating limitless supplies of energy for power
hungry man. . . . Their artificial star would be a "thermonu
clear machine. ..."
that it is now considered pos-
sihlp. within the foreseeable
conceivable heat of hydrogen fusion.
Developments m solar
HpHvpH Hirectlv from ravs
rapidly. The first, primitive solar "batteries" are al
ready in use.
1I71TH all this, then, it would seem likely that the
W vinlpnt. arDnmients about hierh. dams vs. low dams
for hydroelectric power,
. - - 11
quently heard, may wen Decome preiry raucn acau
emic before too many years have passed.
If this is true, dams will still be needed, for flood
control, for irrigation and for watershed management,
but with electricity eliminated as a major factor in
planning the dams, the entire problem would be
vastly altered, and ine arguments, wv, wuum uiaugc
J s E.A.
10,000 Letters
Mrs. DwiVht TV Eisenhower must be a very cou
rageous, very thoughtful and very hardworking woman.
Wp ramp to this conclusion the other day when we
read that she has announced she will sign, personally,
the bulk of thank-you notes sent out in response w me
multi-thousands of get well wishes which have ar-
rived m Denver since the
WE ONCE had something to do with preparing tor
rv.oi'Knrr o vatli nf pflrrJs which totaled some
XlXO,Xi C wvw v..
7,500 in number.
The physical task of
into an envelope, sealing
it, was monumental.
Mrs. Eisenhower's determination to see that tne
letters of good wishes are answered, many of them
personally, does her credit, but it is a tremendous job,
even with adequate assistance. At last reports, she
had completed some 10,000 of the responses.
Mrs. Mamie Eisenhower must be an exceedingly
nice person. E.A.
Simple Precautions
Nobody wants to have a fire in his home, but too
few take the simple, logical steps which would do
much to prevent one.
Elsewhere in the Mail Tribune this week have
been a series of articles containing hints as how best
to avoid home fires. It is to be hoped residents have
taken note of them, for they are designed to save
both property and lives.
LJUNTING is properly thought of as a fairly hazard
ous sport. Yet it could be pointed out that deaths
from fire in Oregon are about five times as numerous
as deaths attributable to hunting.
And it is a fact that last year in Oregon property
loss caused by fires (not including forest fires) was
some $10,000,000, of which nearly half was in dam
age to dwellings and apartments.
This is National Fire Prevention week, and a good
time to take a few moments to consider if each of us
is taking the easy,-simple precautions which are so
important in protecting us from the great destroyer.
' " E.A.
More Spud Pickers Needed in Oregon
By UNITED PRESS
One thousand more potato
pickers are needed at once to
complete the Oregon harvest be
fore bad weather sets in, Ben
Davidson, administrator of the
Oregon Potato commission, said
today.
Davidson said about 600 pick
Friday. October 14, 195S
c
"why doesn't Copco build
recent magazine declared
far away the day is when
sponsoring a research and
i .
nuclear energy.
day earned a story which
future, to harness the in
energy, m wnicn power is
of the sun. are also moving
now so bitter and so fre-
11 T J
.President's mness.
checking each, inserting it
the envelope and stamping
ers were needed in the Klamath
Falls area and 400 more in cen
tral Oregon.
Redmond high school is sched
uled to release students to pick
spuds next week and efforts are
being made to obtain, seniors
from Bend high.
Ike's Offer
Proposal by
Tops News
Br CHARLES M. McCANN
United Press Correspondent
The week's good and bad news
on the international balance
sheet:
THE GOOD
1. President Eisenhower, in a
letter to Premier Nikolai A. Bul
ganin, offered to accept a Soviet
proposal that
the United
States and Rus
sia station in
spection teams
at military
c o ncentration
points in each
others' coun
tries. The pur
pose would
be to guard
against sudden
chanes Mccann aggressive mo
bilization. The President hinged
his offer on Russia's acceptance
of his own proposal for an ex
change of blueprints of military
establishments. The President's
letter seemed to reflect hope
that he saw the possibility of
some progress, however slow,
toward eventual agreement on
disarmament.
2. Iran, abandoning its long
standing neutrality, announced
that it would join the important
Turkish - Iraqi - Pakistani - Brit
ish military alliance. Iran thus
linked itself with the vast sys
tem of Allied defense- against
Communist aggression. Soviet
Russia's reaction, as expected,
was immediate and angry. The
Kremlin told Iran that its action
threatened peace and violated
Russian - Iranian treaties. The
State Department warned Russia
to keep hands off Iran.
3. The Paraguayan govern
ment ordered ousted Argentine
dictator Juan D. Peron interned
in the interior of the country
and threatened to expel him if
he violated the conditions of the
asylum he had sought. The action
was a safeguard against any at
tempt at trouble-making.
THE BAD
1. Communist China announc
ed in a radio broadcast from
Peiping that it is "groundless"
for the United States to hope
that any missing American serv
icemen are still held in China.
The United States is convinced
that the Reds are holding nearly
500 Americans captured during
the Korean war. The Chinese
Reds also dragged their heels, in
negotiations in Geneva, Switzer
land, after their promise to re
lease imprisoned American civil
ians.
2. British Foreign Secretary
Harold MacMillan joined Secre
tary of State John Foster Dulles
in warning Russia that it is en
dangering peace in the Middle
Babson . . Crop Situation
By ROGER W. BABSON
Babson Park, Mass. Special
to Mail Tribune) Although pro
longed drought and heat, togeth
er with hurri
canes and
floods, have
sharply cut
yields of corn,
soybeans,
grain sor
ghums, tobac
co, vegetables,
and other
crops, I still
oger W.'BabMa look for a to
tal U.S. crop outturn this year of
near-record size.
A number of summer crops
already have been harvested,
and the final official tallies prob
ably will not differ materially
from the published estimates. Al
though the total wheat crop of
nearly 917,000,000 bushels is
down 20"per cent from the 1944
1953 average, total supplies for
the current season are huge,
since the carryover last July
topped a billion bushels by a
sizeable margin. Most of it, how
ever, was in government hands.
This fact, plus the government
loan on the 1955 crop, may re
sult in higher average wheat
prices later in the season.
The barley crop is the second
largest on record some 386
000,000 bushels. This is enough
to go around. Flaxseed also is
in plentiful supply, with the crop
the third largest on record. The
record total hay crop 108,500,
000 tons should easily meet all
requirements. Another record
breaker is oats, with an outturn
of 1,636,000,000 bushels and,
incidentally, the highest-quality
crop in years.
Outlook for Corn, Soybeans
The unfavorable weather con
ditions also harmed the coun
try's corn crop this summer. But
corn . is sturdy and weathered
these beatings well. Despite
sharp losses, the indicated crop
of 3,113,467,000 bushels is a lit
tle above the 10-year average.
Total supplies for 1955-1956 will
be unusually large, in view of
the substantial carryover. This
should keep prices from kicking
over the traces, and make for
favorable livestock feeding ra
tios. Efficient hog and cattle pro
ducers should benefit.
Soybeans "Johnny - Come
Lately" wonder boy among U.S.
grains also took a drubbing
from the elements this summer,
but came through with flying
colors. Barring further damage,
i
'
To Accept
Russia
for Week
East by letting Communist
Czechoslovakia sell arms to
Egypt.
The State Department believes
that Soviet bloc countries may
offer to supply Israel with weap
ons, thus adding to tension. In
pursuance of the Kremlin's new
and determined attempt to pene
trate the Middle East, - Soviet
ambassador to Egypt Daniel L.
Solod said Russia also is willing
to give "technical help" to all
Arab and Asian countries which
want it.
3. Chancellor Konrad Adenau
er, West Germany's "grand old
man" suffered an attack of
pneumonia. His illness, which
probably will keep him in en
forced idleness for weeks, was
a matter of concern to the United
States and its allies. It came
while preparations were being
made for a Big Four foreign
ministers conference in Geneva
on Oct. 27, when German prob
lems will be the chief topic for
negotiation. Adenauer's counsel
will be missed. The chancellor's
illness was a matter for addi
tional concern because he is 79
years old and has refused to
build up a political heir.
UN Week Subject
Of SO Roundtable
"The United Nations Its Ef
fect on You" will be the topic
under discussion at the Southern
Oregon Round Table, presented
Sunday, Oct. 16 on television
station KBES-TV at 5:30 p.m.
Octr 16 is the beginning of
United Nations week, and the
program will be in a series of
events to commemorate the 10th
anniversary of the founding of
the U.N. in San Francisco in
1945.
The program, sponsored by
Southern Oregon college in Ash
land, will have Hugh Simpson,
public relations director at the
college, for moderator. Giving
the viewpoint of the student
body will be Jim Kennette and
Bob Matthews.
Representing the Medford
chapter of the United Nations
association in Medford will be
Mrs. Harlan Bosworth Jr., and
Mrs. Herbert . Sampert, mem
bers of the group. They will be
assisted by Bruce Manley and
George Rode.
GENERATOR ON LINE
Walla Walla (U.R) The
10th generator was put on the
line at McNary dam this week,
adding another 70,000 kilowatts
of power to the Bonneville Pow
er administration system.
a record croD of around 388.000.-
000 bushels is in the works; this
would be 13 per cent above the
1954 outturn and 62 per cent
over the 10-year average.. Over
all supplies of this versatile bean
appear somewhat heavy to me,
and I doubt that prices will make
sustained progress on the upside,
over the near term at least.
Cotton, Other Fall Crops
Despite record small plantings,
the U.S. cotton crop may amount
to 12,873,000 bales, which would
be only moderately under the
10-year average. 1 Including the
Aug. 1 carryover of some 11,
100,000, bales, total supplies for
the current season are top-heavy.
They, however, may not prove
burdensome since the bulk of the
carryover is in government
hands. Free supplies will dwin
dle as the season works along
and prices probably will average
higher.
Dry beans promise to do well
this year, with an indicated out
turn of around 18,900,000 bags
9 per cent above average. This
means plenty of the Boston spe
cialty for all hands! The U.S.
rice crop may amount to about
48,700,000 bags an amount eas
ily sufficient for all require
ments. The late potato crop
(grown in 29 states) of 313,527,
000 bushels is about average size,
and should have no difficulty
meeting late fall and winter
needs. Prices should work high
er later on.
Farmers Should Do Well
All this adds up to fairly good
times for the American farmer,
although prices of farm nroHnrte
for the first eight months of this
year averaged about 5 per cent
lower than in the corresponding
period of 1954. Efficient, well-
managea larms are still making
money, despite the fact that the
cost of thines the farmer hnvs is
still relatively high. The going,
or course, is tough, and always
has been, for the small, ineffi
cient farm; but, as I view the sit
uation, American agriculture is
doing well.
Since 1956 is a presidential
election year, the farm
being will top the agenda when
Congress reconvenes in January.
Whether high, rigid supports will
be restored, or the flexible sys
tem further extended, remains tn
be seen. I again forecast that the
real need is for a long-term solu
tion. Meanwhile, farmers should
continue to work faithfully,
serve tneir God, and vote in ac
cordance with their basic con
victions.
Washington
(Editor's jiote: Walter Lippmann,
regular Mail Tribune columnist, is on
a trip to Europe. In his absence, the
New York Herald Tribune is circulat
ing Roseoe Orununond's "Washington"
column.)
THE CABINET DIVIDES
Washington The first serious
breech in the ranks of the Cab
inet since the President's illness
is now visible in Washington.
Today the most highly placed,
influential officials of the Ad
ministration are split practically
down the middle over whether
to stand , resolutely behind the
Eisenhower-Benson farm policy,
or to throw it to the winds in a
politician's panic over declining
farm prices.
Because the division is so deep
and the pressures from farm
bloc Republican Congressmen to
out-bid the Democrats for the
farm vote so sharp, it has thus
far proved impossible for the
Cabinet to put an agreed recom
mendation before Mr. Eisen
hower.
Thus the White House is faced
with this blunt dilemma:
1. Only the President, by act
ing decisively and soon, can
stand off the growing demands
of Republican politicians to grab
farm policy away from the Ad
ministration and Tide off in all
directions.
2. But because opinion within
the Cabinet is so hotly contested
and because any present pro
posal to Denver would have to
reflect this division, Sherman
Adams, the assistant to the Pres
ident, has ruled that such a
"controversial position paper"
cannot be put before the Pres
ident at this time.
TK5 THOSE who understand
something of how earnestly
the political professionals can
rationalize their economic pol
icy and can turn them inside out
with ease and without any
change of countenance when the
political tides seem to be shift
ing and an election is in sight,
it is not difficult to identify
those within the Administration
who are reaay to scrap the Ben
son program piecemeal and who
want either a pliable Benson or
no Benson at all.
Those who know the facts of
the present controversy are
aware that the leading advocates
of diluting the Eisenhower-Ben
son farm policy to a give-the-
farmer-anything - he-wants eleo
tion approach are Arthur Sum-
merfield, former Republican Na
tional Chairman and how Post
master General, Harold Stassen,
a Presidential aspirant himself,
and Attorney General Herbert
Brownell, a faithful Dewey man
who has a variety of honest
political stakes in his custody.
Leonard Hall,. Chairman of the
Republican National Committee,!
is the target of the most frantic
political pressure, but he will
strongly support whatever deci
sion the President finally makes.
At the moment Vice-President
Richard Nixon is sieering such a
meticulously neutral course that
the Benson supporters feel that
he may well be their ally and
the anti-Benson advocates feel
that, despite his correct words,
he has raised a friendly and sym
pathetic eyebrow in their behalf.
All other members of the Cab
inet are on Mr. Benson's side.
The upshot of the matter is
that a high level Administration
committee is to be appointed in
an effort to resolve the disagree
ment among the President's ad
visers or to produce a compro
mise which will be genuinely ac
ceptable to both sides. No such
agreement, no such compromise
is anywhere in sight.
Vice-President Nixon and Sec
retary Benson will logically be
the first to go over the make-up
of the committee. But the final
decision on its personnel which
will almost certainly determine
its ecommendations wall be
made by Presidential Assistant
Adams and the Vice-President.
THERE IS no tendency within
the Administration to min
imize the reality of declining
farm prices, or to belittle the
political consequences of declin
ing farm income when the in
come of every other major group
in the nation's economy is gcing
up. But Mr. Benson and his sup
porters hold that while many
farmers are worried, they are
not panicked and that the Ad
ministration should not pursue
a panic-retreat from the policies
it believes economically sound.
It is true that farm income is
down 34 per cent since 1947 and
that fanners are hurt by a price
cost squeeze at a time when the
chips are down for the 1956
election.
But it is also true that because
of the decline in farm popula-
tion, per capita income from all
2 31
MUTTON
I ROAST
I Wu.
By
Drummond
Roseoe
sources of a now smaller farm
population is actually up 16
per cent over 1947. Fanner in
come from all sources is only six
per cent less than the Korean
war-time price peak of 1951. It
is also true that income per
farmer is actually 11 per cent
more than it was in 1950 and
that the total value of all farm
assets is $163,000,000,000
down only 1.8 per cent from the
all-time peak. The future of
farming is so sound financially
that land values ' are going up,
are at a record high. v 1
Secretary Benson's known
position is that the Administra
tion can hold the majority sup
port of the American fanner if
the Republicans do not panic
and try to run on everybodys
else's farm program but instead
unite and go into the election
without reversing themselves.
There is no doubt that Mr.
Benson will not stand by and
permit a farm policy of selling
out to the highest bidder.
But the pressure to do so is
growing and only relatively
early and decisive action by the
President can hold the Admin
istration and his party together
on this issue.
(Copyright, 19S5,
New York Herald Tribune, Ine.)
Editorial Comment
LEGION HANDLING OF
THE UNESCO CASE
About a month ago The Jour
nal commended the American
Legion for its approach to the
question of the aims and deeds
of the United Nations Economic,
Scientific and Cultural Organi
zation.
First the Legion had appoint
ed a committee and then the
committee spent 18 months in
investigation, coming up with a
40,000-word report which gave
UNESCO a clean bill of health.
The Journal was commending
this approach to the problem
not necessarily the findings of
the committee as contrasted to
the all-too-frequent system of
maKing accusations based on
hearsay or the testimony of un
identified informers.'
The Legion, meeting in Miami
in national covention, has turn
ed down the recommendatons of
its UNESCO investigating com
mittee. To quote from a United Press
dispatch, "By an uproarious
voice vote, without debate and
with dissent of only a few weak
nays, the delegates threw the
Legion's prestige behind a reso
lution that slappd at the stanch
support given UNESCO by the
Eisenhower administration and
by congress.".
Again, we are not arguing the
merits of the UNESCO case. But
it does seem that an issue as im
portant as UNESCO deserves
more than a voice vote without
debate.
The resolution condemning
UNESCO upon which the dele
gates voted was approved by the
Legion's foreign relations com
mittee in a secret meeting.
The Legion is a major organi
zation and it is dealing with
major problems. It will continue
to be a major organization only
if it adopts a mature and re
sponsible attitude toward the
problems with which it deals.
Oregon Journal.
Advertising Elephant
Costs Firm Damages i
Los Angeles (U.R) An auto
mobile agency which "parked"
an elephant in front of its build
ing as a promotion stunt got a
$14.95 damage bill from the city
Thursday.
. The city charged that the ele
phant knocked the head off a
parking meter.
- Great Britain's combined car,
ous and truck production topped
the million mark for the first
time in history in 1954.
"Oil THE DOT"
twice a year generous earn
ings are paid to our inves
tors. It's an unfailing thrill,
this attractive rate of pay for
the use of your hard-earned
dollars.
o
FIRST FEDERAL
SAVINGS & LOAN ASS'N
of Medford
27 North Holly
An Institution DodicattW
To Hum Who Sara
EAST SIXTH 5T.
BEEF BEEF
ROAST
33lb.
LIVER
29
Harvard Man Silent
On McCarthy Charge G
Boston' (U.R) Harvard
president Nathan M. Pysey re
fused today to comment on Sen.
Joseph R. McCarthy's charge that
the university was "a sanctuary"
for Fifth Amendment Commun
ists. McCarthy made the charge
yesterday while testifying for the
government at the contempt of
Congress trial of former Har
vard psychologist Leon J. Ka
min, 27.
Kamin, an admitted former
Communist, was cited for con
tempt because he refused to
name fellow Reds at a Jan. 15,
1954 hearing of the McCarthy
committee in Boston. -
Don't Hesitate To Caff
Firemen, Chief Advises
Medford. Fire Chief Gordon
Barker has urged residents not
to be embarrassed to call the
department for an investigation
immediately if smoke is smelled
or there is possibility of fire in
a home.
Chief Barker, reminding citi
zens of NationalcFire Prevention
Week, said calling the depaw
ment for investigation is calling
i it to do the job it is trained &
perform. Officials appreciate
alertness of residents in detect
ing and preventing fire, Bari&r
said.
The chief pointed out that
many residents believe they can
do-it-themselves and too ofte
lose
everything, sometimes
life.
HUNDREDS OF STITCHES
A lot of thread and stitching
goes into a pair of Goodyear welt
shoes. In fact, some 370 stitches
are used on the sole alone. -
Nothing in th rifcf
nights is half , so 48ciA'ng ;
as the new 956 D$P. :
Out Wednesday, Oct. 1 & '
at the Dick Knight C,
your De Soto Deafer.
(Freely translated from (he Arabic) '
SLICED
BACON
3 Lb.
Lb.
-7
O
8
i-1