FOUR MEDFORD (OREGON)
UN!
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Flight o' Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30 and
40 years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
Nov. 18. 1945
(It was Sunday)
Mr. and Mrs. Carlos Morris
.return from Toledo, Ohio,
where they purchase new ambu
lance, first such vehicle to be
delivered to coast since start of
World War II.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: Quite a
few people are fighting colds
and nearly getting licked.
20 YEARS AGO
Nov. 18, 1935
(It was Monday)
' "Four-vear-old eirl dies of po
lio; another case reported to
county health omce.
Planning commissions from
Jackson, Josephine and Curry
counties meet to discuss BrooK
lngs harbor development.
80 YEARS AGO
Nov. 18, 1925
(It was Wednesday)
City council forms municipal
railroad company to take over
Medford - Jacksonville railroad,
purchased recently by the city.
Ashland stores continue deco
rating for Christmas season.
40 YEARS AGO
Nov. 18, 1915
(It was Thursday)
Rogue Valley orchardists ask
cooperation in building irriga
tion system.
Home Telephone and Tele
graph company here asks 10
cent toll for calls between Jack
sonville and Medford.
What's the Answer?
Can You Get 4 of the 7?
Copr. 1955, Editorial Research Report
1. Christmas packages for U,
S. soldiers abroad should be
mailed no later than Nov. 8, Nov.
15, Thanksgiving or Dec. 1?
2. The price of hogs per hun-
dredweight at the end of Octo
ber was the lowest in three, five,
eight or more than 10 years?
3. French is the official lan
guage in which independent
American state?
4. U. S. state with the biggest
population gain in the last four
years is California, Florida,
Michigan, New York or Texas?
5. Which President of this
century was Secretary of War
just before being nominated?
6. Many more than half, about
s half, or many less than half of
our armed forces are stationed
overseas?
7. A lawyer named Jerry
Geisler appears in many promi
nent divorce actions in Reno,
Miami, New York City, Los An
geles or Chicago?
The answers: 1. No later than
Nov. 15. 2. More than 10 years,
3. Haiti. 4. California. 5. Tafi in
1S08. 6. About half. 7. Los An'
geles.
Soldier Bitten by Bat
Treated at Hospital
Fort Polk, La. (U.P.) Sgt.
Francis Mower of Fort Carson,
Colo., was bitten by a bat during
Exercise Sagebrush and, was
flown to Brooks Army Hospital
at San Antonio, Tex., for treat
ment, authorities reported today.
Mower was bitten about the
lips and face Monday, it was re
portel. He was brought to Fort
Polk Hospital from the field by
helicopter Wednesday and given
anti-rabies serum.
The bat was described as non-venomous.
MAIL TRIBUNE
A Thorn
A heart attack this week removed one of Amer
ica's most useful thorns-in-the-flesh. Bernard DeVoto,
historian, journalist, caustic commentator, educator,
humorist, and practically anything else you can name,
will no longer be around to stick pins into stuffy con
ventions and official idiocy.
His widest audience probably was composed of
readers of his column, "The Easy Chair," in Harper's
magazine.
Ironically, the current
marked the 20th anniversary of that column. And not
only was his column this month devoted to a discus
sion of his aims and objectives, but the editor's coL
umn, too, was largely used for a critique and com'
mentary on DeVoto and his life and works.
flOSTLY, what he said
the way he said it. But
himself was a big part of the man, and in large meas
ure accounted for his place in American life. The
last paragraph of what may
was revealing of the man and his manner. Here it is :
I hope that what I have said has been said gracefully,
and that sometimes it has been amusing or informative or
useful. No one has got me to say anything I did not want
to say, and no one has prevented me from saying anything
I wanted to. The Easy Chair has given me a place in the
journalism of my time. No one knows better than a jour
nalist that his work is ephemeral. As I have said elsewhere,
It is not important, it is only indispensable. The life or the
half-life of an issue of Harper's has never been calculated;
the magazine has durable covers but even the copies
kept in doctor's waiting rooms wear out and are dumped
in the bay or ground up for pulp. But a historian knows
that a lot of writing which has no caste-mark on its fore
head gets dumped in the bay too, and that he can count on
finding bound files of Harper's in library stacks. He has to
use them; he cannot write history without them.
HTHIS is a rather remarkable self-written obituary
from a man who was only 58, penned not as an
obituary but as a comment on an anniversaiy.
DeVoto has written history. And he has made it,
too. in the auiet but effectual way that some journal
ists are permitted to make history.
His crapo-v and unreeimented mind, and his un-
00l CD
orthodox but easy-to-read
of the sort that America should never be witnout.
Pear
Experiments designed
cull pears were conducted
ago. Attempts were made
fodder by making ensilage
them.
Pear growers in the Hood River valley have hit
upon another solution which, we believe, is similar
to an idea once considered here. They are using pears
in the manufacture of vodka. '
TODKA, according to our encyclopedia, "is a fiery
Russian beverage, distilled from a fermented
mash of rye, barley, and corn." For many years it was
made only in Russia, but more recently it has been
produced commercially in this country in quantity,
and in qualities which those who should know com
pare favorably to the Russian manufacture.
This is the first we had
vodka of fruit, but it is being done in Hood River, and
we received a picture in the mail, showing a couple
of distillery officials and Miss Pear Blossom of
1955," to prove it.
TTHE distillery has long made fruit drinks, such as
apple, cherry and plum brandies, processing about
4,000 tons of fruit each season. The plant has been
expanded for the production of vodka, and a major
portion of the tonnage of fruit will go into this prod
uct. With a recent upswing in popularity of the horrid
stuff, vodka has become one of the major distilled
liquors in this country. How well the first of it made
from fruit is accepted remains to be seen. E.A. '
Christmas Seals
The purposes and use of Christmas seals are so
well known that it hardly seems worth while to go into
the story again how they have been the chief finan
cial support of the continuing battle against tuber
culosis, which is now closer to success than ever be
fore. The income from the seals, too, has a very real
meaning in Jackson county, for it is paying for the
x-ray units at both hospitals, which in turn have
been responsible for finding a number of hidden
cases of TB, thus saving lives and money and protect
ing others.
THIS is just a reminder that the seals are in the mail,
and if you haven't gotten yours yet, you probably
will soon. Before you forget about it, enclose your
donation in the envelope provided and drop it in the
mail. f
It is one of the cheapest forms of insurance there
is. E.A.
Rogue River School Plans Cosfume Parly
Rogue River Activities at
Rogue River elementary school
include preparations for a holi
day party, an essay contest, and
a Thanksgiving play.
The seventh and eighth grades
are planning a costume party
for the holiday season. Theme
of the party will be "Hard
Times." Committees were or
ganized last week by Rita Mil
ner, social chairman.
Seventh and eighth graders
have started basketball practice
Friday, November 18, 1953
Removed
issue of the magazine
was more important than
his manner of expressing
have been his last column
I
prose, represented a talent
E.A.
Vodka
to find additional uses for
in this area a few years
to convert them into beef
or by chipping and drying
heard of anyone making
for their first game Dec. 8 with
St. Mary's of Medford at Rogue
River.
Sixth grade pupils wrote short
essays recently on "What Veter
an's Day Means to Me, and
essays by Marshall Lingren and
Dan Steinhart were judged first
place for the best thought.
Another project of sixth grad
ers is writing a Thanksgiving
play, which will be presented
in the room next Tuesday, when
a Thanksgiving party will be
held for fifth and sixth grades.
Babson School Costs
RaVicnn Park. Mass. (Srjecial
to Mail Tribune) So many let
ters come to me, from both
i iini in J ii mi teachers and
t a xpayers
that I would
like this week
to answer
them all in
this column in
a n impartial
manner.
Let me start
out bv saving
ojer W. Bsbsoa
that mv svmDathies are distict-
ly with the school teachers and
especially with the school prin
cipals. It is true that truck
drivers are getting more pay
than school teachers. Morally
this seems unjust, but the fact
that the employers have substi
tuted motors for horses and big
trucks for wagons. .These trucks
carry as much in a day as the
old horses and wagons carried in
a week. In other words, the em
ployers have adopted methods
which enable the truck drivers
to have increased wages.
Painters today are paid dou
ble what they were 20 vpars
ago; but employers have adopt
ed sprayers in place of hand
brushes. Carpenters are getting
double; but the employers are
supplying them with electric
saws instead of hand saws. The
school committees and the city
fathers, on the other hand, have
not done much of anything to
help the teachers do more effi
cient work. As an employer, I
pay my typists double what I
used to pay them; but with elec
tric typewriters and other ma
chinery they give me double the
work. The doctor costs us more
a visit; but he is makine us live
longer. Hard-covered books cost
more! but we can get the same
thing for half the nrice with
paper covers. Radio, washing
machines, and TVs have all im
proved in quality, and hence
profit returns offset the wage
increases.
Legislation Increasing Costs -
Let us consider who benefits
from the increased costs of mod
ern school buildings. Twenty
per cent of this increased cost is
due to unnecessary classroom
space, glass windows, unused
ventilation, and rules or regula
tions put through by the labor
unions and similar associations
Fifty per cent of the increased
cost is due to nlumbine. electri
cal work, modern kitchens, fan
cy gymnasiums, auditoriums to
please the voters, not to lm
prove education. Thirty per
cent has been due to the in
creased costs of materials, of
which Uncle Sam takes fifty
two per cent in taxes. In a gen
eral way, this also explains the
increased costs of most houses.
School committees, by catering
to the voters, are largely resnon-
sible for these high-cost school
buildings. They should not
make the teachers carry the bur
dent Of these costs bv accenting'
low salaries.
The doctors are not onlv de
livering better services for in
creased fees, but they are form
ing associations to conquer can
cer, heart disease, and even
polio. We. however, do not
know of any PTA which is de
veloping new systems of instruc
tion to assure the teachers bet
ter salaries. We hear of very
few cities where the classrooms
are giving double service, with
half of the students coming in
ine morning and the other -half
in the afternoon. We hear of ex
periments with radio and TV.
Unfortunately, however. too
few parents are interested in
better teaching. Too many Bar
ents want to work outside the
home, and use the schools for
parking places for their chil
dren.
Horse-and-Buggy Days
Unfortunately, the teachers'
future probably awaits some
very important research. The
schools are spending billions a
year to park and lunch children,
but unlike our lamp indus
tries are spending very little
on fundamental researrh Wp
understand the psychology of a
Communications
Thanks
To the Editor: The Vpfprans
day parade committee wishes to
extend to all organizations, musi
cal groups and all others who
took part in the Nov. 11 parade,
a warm and grateful "Thank
you." We also are grateful to
the Medford Mail Tribune for
its fine publicity, and to the
radio stations, and to the S.P.
railroad for keeping the cross
ings clear during the parade.
M. A. Beneke,
Parade Chairman.
Mt. Markham, highest known
peak on the Antarctic continent,
is approximately 15,100 feet.
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cow better than the psychology
of a child. Those who control
education do not know the dif
ference between a "brain" and
a "mind," to say nothing about
the probabilities of extrasensory
perception and the use of num
bers rather than sentences. Pos
sibilities of the mind are tre
mendous. But teachers may be
obliged to supplement their
teaching by giving pupils pre
scribed diets, or new undiscov
ered drugs, or electric impulses.
Education also may take an ac
tive interest in eugenics. As
Sir George Thompson is report
ed to say, "What the brain can
foresee presents the greatest
promise that lies ahead." Sure
ly, the time required for a con
ventional education will be cut
75, schools will graduate far
more efficient pupils, and teach
ers will be paid what they are
worth, or else they will be re
placed by UNIVAC machines. .
Return of Youssef
As Morocco Sultan
Tops News of Week
By CHARLES M. McCANN
United Press Correspondent
The week's good and bad news
on the international balance
sheet:
THE GOOD
1. Sultan Sidi Mohammed Ben
Youssef of Morocco returned in
triumph after
two years' ban-
ishment by
France. He
was ousted be
cause of his
pro- nationalist
leanings. Now
he is prepared
to cooperate in
a program of
home rule.
During his ex-
1 T f
cnanes MclaiiD xoussei
had become a symbol of Moroc-
co's fight for independence. His
restoration gave hope that peace
might come to the long-turbulent
protectorate. Morocco now
has its own government and
France has promised to build it
up economically and modernize
it.
2. Agreement seemed nearing
on admission to the United Na
tions of countries long denied
membership as the result of dis
putes between West and East,
Italy, Japan, Spain and Austria
are included. The one remain
ing stumbling block, among 18
applicants, was Outer Mongolia.
The United States objected
strongly to its admission, on the
ground that it is not a nation
but a Soviet satellite created by
the Kremlin from an area which
really belongs to China.
3. The United States was re
ported to be considering a big
loan to India as a means of de
feating Soviet Russia's determ
ined campaign of penetration. It
would be calculated to combat
the spread of Communist influ
ence in Southeast Asia with a
weapon which has proved effec
tive, the American dollar.
THE BAD
1. The "spirit of Geneva" born
last July at the meeting of the
Big Four heads of government,
died at the Big Four foreign min
isters' conference which grew
out of it. The foreign ministers
failed to reach agreement on any
of the issues referred to them
by President Eisenhower and his
fellow "summit" leaders. Three
issues were European security
and German reunification, dis
armament and development of
friendly contacts between West
and East. The "summit" meet
ing ended on a note of good will
and hope for agreements on
world issues. The foreign min
isters' meeting ended in dead
lock. No date was set for a
further meeting.
2. Israel rejected a British of
fer of mediation in the danger
ous Palestine dispute because it
implied territorial concessions to
the Arab countries. Israel at
the same time asked the United
States to sell it weapons "under
the most lenient conditions of
credit and price" to offset those
Egypt is buying from Communist
Czechoslovakia. Egyptian Prime
Minister Gamal Abdel Nasser's
reply was: "Every bullet for
Israel would mean death to an
Arab citizen . . . we would have
no alternative but to try to get
more arms.
3. The situation in Argentina,
in the wake of the overthrow
of Dictator Juan D; Peron, be
came troubled. Provisional Presi
dent Eduardo Lonardi was forced
out of office by his fellow army
leaders. The labor unions, which
had supported Peron, called a
general strike which was really
a revolt against the government.
American Envoy To
Greet Morocco Sultan
Rabat, Morocco (U.R) Sultan
Sidi Mohammed ben Youssef
takes up formal relations with
the United States government
today when an American envoy
conveys greetings and congratu
lations from President Eisen
hower. Ben Youssef, who returned
only Wednesday after two years
in French-enforced exile, today
marked the 28th anniversary of
his original ascension to the
throne. It was a day of wild re
joicing for Moroccans.
Mr. Eisenhower's message will
be delivered to the Sultan by
U. S. Minister Julius C. Holmes.
Holmes, who is accredited as
U. S. "diplomatic agent" to
French Morocco, is flying here
from his headquarters in Tan
gier. He will meet also with
French Resident General Andre
Dubois.
It was only partly effective. But
the government seized the head
quarters of the General Confed
eration of Labor and arrested
hundreds of union leaders.
torunr-NaturalU
Who am I?
I am all-American to the core.
My pulse is right around 100 a
minute. We've been known to
stampede. Females average about
a foot shorter than males. I
make an excellent "watchdog."
When Columbus landed in
America, I was here and no
where else on earth. At one time
I was seen in .droves of 500 in
New England but by 1840 my
colorful calls were no longer
heard m that area. Today I in
habit inaccessible regions but
with wise game management, I
lt-ia-
am making a comeback particu
larly in Texas, Virginia, and
Pennsylvania
Although persecution has made
me extremely cautious, I am
alert by nature and have mar
velous eyesight and hearing. I
use flight mainly as a means of
escape. I can run 20 miles an
hour. I'm lucky to reach five
years.
My vivid red legs are naked.
My diet is mainly leaves, fleshy
fruits, berries, nuts, grain, seeds,
and insects mainly grasshop
pers. I sometimes attain a length
of four feet with a wingspread
of five.
In dawn's early light, we gath
er and begin a high-stepping
stone during spring. But no
sooner does the sun show above
the horizon than the dance ends
abruptly. Males show off their
rounded tail-fan pompously as
they strut to impress their hens.
I sometimes weigh 20 pounds.
To humans my appendages may
seem somewhat peculiar a
"beard" of black bristles grows
from my upper breast. Below
my throat hang red folds of thin
naked skin; and from my naked
head a fleshy pointed knob.
Raise my ire and these parts fill
with blood and turn a brighter
hue. My dress glints in the sun
light with bronze, reds and
greens.
The male's famous challenge
can be heard a mile away. If he's
lucky, 5 to 10 hens may select
the male's company, putting up
serenely with his ludicrous strut
ting and yodeling. Mid-April the
hen lays 8-16 thick-shelled eggs
in a shaUow scratched-out nest
lined with grass or leaves and
hidden well away from her mate
and predators. During the four
weeks incubation she seldom
leaves the nest to feed, dust-
bathe or drink but when she
does so, she carefully conceals it
with grass and leaves. Young
poults can make short flights
within a month.
55 N.
Today and
By Walter
THE POST-GENEVA WORLD
Whether or not we are to
think that the spirit of Geneva is
dead depends on what we think
the spirit of
Geneva is.
There are
some who
seem to think
that because
the Russians
had made
them selves
more agree
able, they
were promis
ing to agree
Walter Lippmann
with us.
Dulles, supported by Messrs.
MacMillan and Pinay, chose to
act as if he thought that being
agreeable and agreeing were
much the same thing as if the
spirit of Geneva meant that step
by step the Soviet Union would
accept our terms for the reunifi
cation of Germany and the
liberation of the satellites. It is
most improbable, of course, that
Dulles actually thought the So
viets would accept our terms.
But when he went to the second
Geneva conference, he led the
American people to suppose that
he expected the Soviet Union to
begin acting as they were going
to accept our terms.
If the spirit of Geneva meant
that our terms were going to be
accepted, then of course the
spirit of Geneva is dead. But the
fact is that in this sense the
spirit of Geneva never existed,
and to suppose that it did was a
dangerous delusion.
THE real spirit of Geneva is,
howpver. very much with us.
as much today as before Molotov
made his statements, and it af
fects deeply and radically the re
lations between the Soviet sys
tem and our own. It has been
said before, but it cannot be said
too often, that at the summit
meeting in July a public accord
was reached that neither side
would, because neither side
could, resort to thermo-nuclear
war.
The real spirit of Geneva is
the result of that accord, of the
fact that it is impossible to
threaten war and therefore un
necessary to fear war in which
the great powers participate.
This accord was not a bit of
Soviet tactics or a public rela
tions stunt devised by the Pres
ident's psychological - warriors
The heads of the governments
were drawn and pushed towards
the meeting 'at the summit when
the news about the hydrogen
bomb had spread among their
own peoples and the masses of
mankind. They had to purge
themselves publicly of all sus
picion that they might be toying
with the idea of a thermo-nu
clear war.
fN BOTH sides of the Iron
Curtain it had become a vital
interest to convince the masses of
the people about the intentions
Aztecs first domesticated me
and we were eaten at banquets
long before the Spaniards ar
rived. We graced the Pilgrim's
first Thanksgiving day table.
I am: A. Guinea hen; B. Tur
key; C. Goose; D. Peking Duck;
E. Roadrunner.
I am, B. Turkey.
(Released by McCIure News
paper 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
th 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 ad
dress your letter to: IS THAT
SO! co Medford Mail Tribune,
Box 575, Sausalito, Calif.
January 3 WHITER TERM January 3
Enrollment Can Be Made Now For the Winter Term
Class at the Robertson School of Business. Modern
Facilities are available for a new class of 20 students.
PLAN NOW TO KNOW HOW
ROBERTSON SCHOOL OF BUSINESS
40 North Riverside Medford, Oregon Phone 3-4264
Tomorrow
Lippmann
of the big governments. Both
sides had much to gain from
making a public demonstration
that they were not thinking of
war. The Soviets gained by it in
that they were able to reduce the
fear of military aggression; it
has been this fear which, more
than anything else, has held to
gether the Western military
coalition. We gained by it be
cause our position among our
closest aUies had been seriously
undermined by a fear that we
might resort to a preventive war.
But whether we gained or lost
by it, whether the Soviets gained
or lost by it, there was no alter
native to making the demonstra
tion which was made in July at
Geneva.
rpHIS was the true spirit of
- Geneva a realization and an -
acknowledgment that the ' big
armaments were at a stalemate
and were neutralized. The nec
essary consequence of this was
that the unsettled questions, like
Germany, could not be settled
by attempting to force one side
or the other to give in.
The terms that Dulles took to
Geneva would have been excel
lent if the Soviet Union had sur
rendered unconditionally. His
terms ignored entirely the true
spirit of Geneva which was that
since nothing can now be settled
by force, it is necessary to ma
neuver and to bargain and to
trade. The Western terms at
Geneva had in them no room for
maneuver, no material for bar
gaining, no chance for trading.
'PHIS miscalculated absolution
-- has played right into the
hands of the Soviets. For while
they have rejected the Dulles-
MacMillan-Pinay proposals, they
have left themselves plenty of
room to maneuver in West Ger
many. We have worked our
selves into a position where we
cannot unfreeze our terms with
out loss of face in Germany;
without endangering Dr. Ade
nauer's position, and without de
structive repercussions in NATO.
Dulles may have out-talked Mol
otov in the debates at Geneva.
But the Soviets have gained and
we have lost ground in Germany.
It is now a gra-tffe possibility
that the West will be elbowed
out of the negotiations for the
settlement of the German quesr
tion.
This is almost certain to hap
pen unless let us hope in agree
ment with Dr. Adenauer we
can find some way to make our
German policy negotiable. We
shall be elbowed out of the Ger
man settlement because the Ger
mans themsefves are certain to
negotiate. They will do this with
our support if that is possible,
without our support if it is nec
essary. When Dulles returns frijsm.
Geneva there will be, we must
suppose, no attempt to make it
appear that we have won a diplo
matic victory at Geneva. We '
have had a very bad setback.
from which we can recover only
if we make a thorough-going re
appraisal of our position and our
prospects in the post - Geneva
world.
(Copyright 1955, .
New York Herald Tribune, Inc.)
INVESTIGATE
whether you are earmarking your
savings to provide security for later
life, extra cash income now, or are
just starting to accumulate an
emergency fund, ft will pay you to
investigate here.
FIRST FEDERAL
SAVINGS & LOAN ASS'N
of Medford
27 North Holly
An Institution Dedicated
To Those Who Save
i