Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, December 30, 1955, Image 4

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FOUR MB&iFORD (OREGON)
5 r?i w o
Everybody la Southern Oregon
Reads The Mall Tribune
bliahed Daily Except Saturday
MEDFOHD MINTING CCFj
by
Phone 2-SHl
ROBTRT W RUHL. Editor
HZRB GREY Advertisinjt Manager
(&Z. FERGUSON Managiag Editor
TTtC AiXEN JR.. City EOor
HAKRY CHIP MAN. Telejrfaph Editor
RICHARD JEWETT Sports Editor
OLrVE STARCHER Society Eriitgr0
GERAfeP LATHAM. Circulation
Mgr.
An Independent Newspai
Sper
Entered as second class matter at
Medford. Oregon, under t Act of
March 3. 1897
O SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Mail In Advance: Per copy 10c.
Dsuy and Sunday one year iz.uu
Daily and Sunday Six months 6.50
Daily and Sunday Three mos 350
Sunday Only One year $3.50.
Btf)Curier In Advance Medford.
Ashland. Central Point. Eagle Point.
Jacksonville. Gold Hill. Phoenix.
Shady Cove. Rogue River. Talent,
and on motor routes: O
Daily and Sunday One year $15.00
Daily and Sunday One month 1.25
Carrier and Dealers oc per copy
All Terms Cash in Advance
ftfflrial PiDer of the City of Medford
Official Paper of Jackson County (Z
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Meaiora ana jac&suu wuuy
History from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10.(20. 30 and
40 years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
Dec. SO. 1945 0
(Ii) was Sunday) o
Willamette river forces 1,000
trom homes in Eugene area;
Jackson county rivers receding
after halting traffic near Sav
age Rapids dam temporarily.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: The New
Year starts Tuesday. Many au
toistsavon't, the way they have
bn driving, the Safety Coun
cil forecasts.
YEARS AGO
Dec. 30, 1935
(It was Monday) ,
Snider Dairy annoupes pur
"Lchase of Gold Seal Creamery,
making the Snider enterprise
largest creamery outside Port
land metropolitan area.
Dwight E. Alderman, state
commander of Veterans of For
eign Wars, to speak Ht Ashland
organizaSonal meeting.
is:
30 YEARS AGFD
Dec. 30, 1925
(It was Wednesday)
Annual e d f o r d district
school cenais shows 138 more
students than last year's 2,600.
Medford completes best year
n record: fruit, lumber, sther
productsefirougtegabout $5,000,-
www hivw "a-va ij
40 YEARS AGO
Dec. 30, 1915
8 Itas Thursday)
County court fixes 14 mill levy
for 1915; schools get 2 mills;
J&h school and library, .5; (gat
ficfi-highway intereS-Sun M
sncKgeneral county expense lgj
eluding state, 10 miiS. ,
Wiyir. irow) is inersi
saloon in staie 10 ciose aoors as
result of impending igphib)
uon; a final rush of "wets" puigi
chased all his stock; remodeling
starts Jgjmake sodg,fountain and
cigar Buuie.
-
or
What's the Answer?
Can You Get 4 of ih 7? 0
jCopr. 1955. Editorial Rearch Rsocl
I
1. If a perso,'itg(S) $4,000
Micome wins $32,000 o a CQuiz
program, ut Qie-ird, tpne
half,r two-thirds of j$ fges ior
federal income tax?0
2. Gi. -Eisenhower foace
served as Army ch&$ 9 staff;
ght or wrong?
3. With whjeh of'Sfce. sp&ts
is the name of Sfeob" Zuppke as
sociated: Football, asebSU, bas
ietbaU, (orse (gaig, ie
hockey?
4. More than half, ab& half
or less than half of all Ameri
cans taking a winter vacation JS
Florida spend it at Miami
Beach? 0
5. The country (jvith the larg
est fleet of merchant ships is
Great Britain, Norway, the U.S.,
Japan or Russia?
6. Cruelty, mental, (physical
(Jjx both, is grounds3 for diyrca
in every oneSbf (Sjie 48 stes;
9igt r wrong? 0
7. he "Keeley ure is iPor
Shoplifters, drugddicts, alcohol-
j ics, sex perverts, or bad drivers?
The Answer 1. About halfe
2. Right. 3. Football (Illinois U.)T
4. Less than half. 5. U.) 6.
Wrong. 7, Alcoholic)
VETERAN LEGISLATOR DIES
Portland U.R) Dr. F. H.
Dammasch, 76-year-old veteran
state legislator, died late last
nht in a local hospital. 0
0
MAIL TRIBUNE
Flood Sins Removed 6
We drove down to Rogue River the other after
nod. The sun was shining brightly, the grass was
green, and only the barren trees and the frost in shady
spots wjergi signals that winter is still here.
Our mission wjis to take a look at some of the
havoc wrought by' the floods of the pre-Christmas
eek, floods that caused damage which will total
probably more than $800,000 in Jackson county alone
let alone3 harder-hit sections of Oregon, and the
devastated areas of California. .
YBLE evidences of flood damages-were confined
to a relatively small area. This does not mean the
residents ( other lower-lying portions of the area
eot off liehtlv. for a flood can tear ud the inside of
.ya home or business without leaving noticeable scars
on the exterior. 0
In one or two places people were shoveling not
sweeping mud and silt out of windows; furniture
was'Set out to dry; houses-were being realigned. Over
all there wasn impression of purposeful busy-ness
which spoke well of the courage and determination
of the residents. ..'..
o
A PERIOD of emergency is, somehow, easier to
" bear, than the long and tedious task of recon
struction and rebuilding, ofjnopping up and cleaning
ou 0
When danger threatens, people respond with in
stinctive bravery and helpfulness. They show con
cern for lives and property of others, and will go to
great lengths to be helpful.
When the danger is past, however, too often that
ibirit departsowith tbS emergency.
"
FORTUNATELY man, an organizing type of social
creature, has organized for such contingencies,
too. In the Red Cross, the civil defense agency, vet
erans and other groups, we have' volunteers who
pledge themselves to be of assistance in just such
cases not only when ganger threatens, but in the
long pull, too.
Only infrequently have we in Jackson county been
sufficiently unfortunate to require the active and
all-out ministrations of the National Red Cross. Now
is one of the times, and we can all be glad that they are
ready to assist our neighbors who are, literally in some
cases, pulling themselves out of the mud.
FLOODS are spectacular things, but there is little
that is spectacular about the aftermath. A road
is washed out here and there, as in the case of the
Rock Point underpass, with pavement broken and
tumbled about like a child's blocks; debris is piled
up on the upstream sides
and weeds show now high the water was on a road
side fence; 'buildings, tumbled and twisted, are
spotted where they do not belong.
That's about all. The spectacular damage is done
quickly, and signs of it are
people affected remember
Flood Sidelight
As the water reached
a bureau of reclamation engineer estimated thafrBear
creek was flowing through
pi uahucilci.y U)IUuv,uvp. " j i ------
inp; to comDare this fieure to the dQ second, ieet which
the awao-e f low of Big
i-u ttt oHtATi i-nr oil
purposes. ' r '
TViis wmilrl nrnhaMv have been much hiffher had
$not Emigrant reservoir filled up, holding back several
thousand acre-feet of additional water.
Whirly
O
d5hly infrequently is 7 a
iies above Medford. But
caonally, and they ve been so much m the news re-
cently Lhat most oi us are generally laminar witn me
cumbersome-looking things.
They're weird,
rThey"also must look like ungainly angels of mercy
to flood-marooned people as they come whirling to
the rescue.
CA PILOT friend of ours was telling us the other day
" of some of the hazards of flying the whirly birds.
At an altitude of between 250 and 750 feet, if the en
gine fails, an "auto rotation" can be set up in the
rotors, bringing the machine down gently. But at ex
tremely low3 altitudes, an engine failure means a
crash, and the helicopter is not designed to stand up
under the shock of a drop of more than a few feet.
He said he has great respect and no envy at all for
the pilots who jockey the flying windmills. e o
A DRAMATIC picture in Wednesday's issue of this
paper demonstrated perfectly what we have in
mind. It showed a 'copter hovering over a water
suiTOitoded house, lifting a 0 mother and6 child to
safety in a basket attached to a long rope. Later,
fafSer jaid ssn also were rescued.
These eranky, ugly, awkward-looking machines
nave proven their worth time and time again. E.A.
Three Die in One-Car
Portland (U.R) A spectacu
lar one-ca- accident resulted in
death (fc three persons early to
day when the car struck a pow
er pole, shearing it ff near the
bottom.
, The) deaS were identified as
Richard Boyd Taylor, 27, a sail
or on leave; Lester O. Ambers,
27, Seattle, and Laura Mattis,
39, Vancouver, Wash, faylor's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. R..Tay-
-
Friday, beeember 30, 19SS
of trees; washed-up grass
removed quickly. But the
it E.A.
its highest level last week,
Medford at a rate of ap-
Butte Springs water used by
nrtmocnn arm m immny
- Birds
helicopter spotted in the
they do show up here oc-
Accident in Portland
lor, are from Vancouver, Wash.
County police said there were
no witnesses and that they were
unable to tell which way the car
was traveling. The Car was
found in a diagonal position
across southbound, lanes on Den
ver ave.
The deaths brought Multno
mah county's 1955 toll outside
of Portland to 21, the same num
ber killed last year.
Writer Balances Good and Bad
In Foreign News of Past Week
By CHARLES M. McCANN
United Press Co-respondent
The week's good and bad news
on the international balance
sheet: , v
The Good
1. The German Communists
apparently changed their minds
about prosecuting Americans
accused of committing offenses
in East Berlin. An Air Force ser
geant, alleged to have caused a
traffic accident, was returned
to West Berlin by the Russians
in keeping with agreements for
control of tbe city. The German
Reds assert they now have "sov
ereign" status. But they and
their Russian masters appear
not to be ready for a showdown.
2. Prime Minister Jawaharlal
Nehru seemed disappointed at
the way Soviet Premier Nikolai
A. Bulganin and Russian Com
munist party leader Nikita S.
Khrushchev abused his hospital
ity during their recent visit to
India. Nehru is reported to have
told both members of his cabinet
and leaders of his Congress par
ty that he had been embarrassed
by tlje attacks the Soviet visitors
made, on Western countries, es
pecialy on Great Britain. Nehru
was quoted as accusing the Rus
sians of twisting history.
3. The Indochina Communists
failed in an attempt to force the
voters of the state of Laos to
boycott an election for a Nation
al Assembly. The Reds threat
ened reprisals against those who
voted. But more "than 300,000
out of 360,000 registered voters
went to the polls. Only in areas
controlled by their troops were
the Reds successful.
The Bad
1. Speeches made by the Krem
lin's two top leader's at a meet
ing of the Russian Supreme So
viet (parliament) in Moscow
were both hostile and threaten
ing to the United States and its
Tax Reduction Seen
Danger To Economy
Washington (U.R) A bipar
partisan congressional subcom
mittee has warned that a tax cut
next year would be dangerous
in the face of a booming econ
omy. A Senate-House subcommittee
said yesterday any budgetary
surplus next year should go to
ward cutting the national debt
unless the economic boom tap
ers off
The subcommittee said after
a month-long study that tax cuts
during the boom might be in
flationary.
Secretary of Commerce Sin
clair Weeks said this week he
expects the boom to continue at
least through the first half of
1956.
Klamath Rancher
Cattleman of Year
Prineville . (U.R) Lawrence
J. Horton, .a Klamath Falls
rancher who parlayed a boat into
a 1000-head sDread of Hprpfnrds
last night was named Cattleman
of the Year by the Oregon Cat
tlemen's Association.
' Horton began his ranching ca
reer in 1914 by trading a boat
to an Indian for a Hereford
Shorthorn cross heifer. The
Horton spread has since grown
from one cow and a rented farm
to 1000 head of registered Here
ford cattle and 7500 acres of
deeded land.
Communications
Letters to the Editor must bear
the name and address of the writer
although under certain circum
stances the use ot a Den name or
initial for publication is Dermis
lible The Mail Tribune reserves
the right to edit all letters with an
eye to clarification and condensa
tion Letters submitted for nublica
tion must not exceed 400 words.
Credit io Crews
To the Editor: Would like to
take this means to express my
appreciation of the way the
State Highway department takes
care of the roads, especially dur
ing these stormy, wintry days
and nights.
We of the Greyhound Lines
really do appreciate the way
they are always "standing by in
case of danger to the road in
any way. We can look up to the
Siskiyou mountains, see it
snowing, but we know that those
boys will be there with their
sanding equipment, to make it
safer for everyone. Believe me,
we really appreciate it.
Please give the road crews all
the credit in the world, due
them. Also the Oregon state po
lice, who are also there when
needed. Wish I could say the
same on the other side of the
line.
o Donald E. Tackley
Greyhound Lines
Medford, Oregon
PICTURE TUBES
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o
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For further information CALL
Electronic Service
18 N. GRAPE
PH. 3-1971
allies. Communist partr ehief
Khrushchev accused President
Eisenhower and Secretary of
State John Foster Dulles of
"crude interference" in the af
fairs of East European Commu
nist countries by 'broadcasting
Christmas messages to them.
The messages expressed hope
that the countries might be freed
from the Russian yoke. Khrush
chev also boasted of the power
of Russia's H-bomb. Premier
Bulganin hinted that Russia
might now have an inter-continental
rocket one which might
be fired, for instance, from Rus
sia to the United States. So far
as is known, the United States
has not perfected this weapon.
2. A long-scheduled confer
ence between the chief ministers
of Malaya and Singapore oa one
Today and
By Walter
ENTANGLEMENTS AND
FOREIGN AID
We know now, so it appears,
that there is to be no revision
of policy to meet the new Soviet
c h a 1 lenge in
South Asia. In
stead, Wash
ington will for
the next few
months be en
gaged in a run
ning fight over
what the Ad
ministration wants Con
gress to au
Walter Llppman thorize in the
way of foreign aid. This dispute
got off to a bad start. After the
Cabinet and Security Council
meetings at Camp David and the
White House meetings with the
Congressional leaders, it was
said that the Administration did
not plan to spend much more
money next year than this. The
statement was a half truth in
view of the fact that the Con
gressional leaders have had the
firm impression that our policy
is set towards a gradual but
rather prompt termination of al
most all foreign aid. They seem
to have it in their minds that
foreign aid would run out as the
authorizations previously made
were used up.
.tor tnat 9 reason they were
surprised and annoyed to find,
a few days after their meetings,
that while the Administration
is. not planning to spend much
more money this year than it
did last, it is planning to go on
spending at about the same rate
for an indefinite number of years
to come.
TT IS fair) I think, to ask why
the Congressional leaders al
lowed themselves to believe the
half truth, and to assume that
foreign aid was coming to an
end. Do they not approve the
commitments to help arm Ger
many, to help arm Japan, to
subsidize the So.uth Korean
army, the Forirfbsan army, the
Vietnamese army, to underwrite
with American money and arms
the SEATO pact in South East
Asia and the METO pact, other
wise known as the' Bagdad pact,,
in the Middle East? How did
the Congressional leaders sup
pose that these global military
commitments could be met if
the foreign military aid program
is to run out and be terminated?
If they believe in the military
pacts, then they must not act
with pained surprise when they
get the bill. Why, on the con
trary, did no one at the White
House briefing ask the briefer
how the Administration planned
to finance its military pacts?
And when the Administration
bill for the new authorizations
is put to Congress, the real issue
will b whether or not to con
tinue to maintain the whole
elaborate structure of the pacts,
or whether to dismantle some
part of it. For these pacts re
quire much money, not spent
once merely but continually.
j
THE coming debate on the new
authorizations for the old
military pacts should be kept
distinct in our minds from the
talk, which is still up in the
air, about a new and massive
economic program to meet the
Soviet challenge. 0
Indeed, I would go further
and say that while our existing
policy about the military pacts
is dominant in Washington, a
big program of economic aid is
unworkable. The men who be
lieve in the military system that
we have put together do not
believe in the economic program
and would not be interested in
administering it. The military
policy, as we now operate it,
NOTICE!!
Beginning January 1, 1956, and until the completion of
our new building THE MEDFORD FEED & SEED will do busi
ness temporarily in the old Co-op building at the corner of
4th and Fir streets. Across 4th Street from where wo are
now located.
.The telephone number will remain the same
GeoC. Barr, Mgr.
Medford Feed & Seed
hand and Malayan Commueist
ehief Chin Peng broke up in dis
agreement. It had been hoped
that agreement might be reach
ed to end the eight-year guer
rilla warfare. Chin made de
mands which the ministers
would not accept.
3. French troops failed to sup
press the terrorism which has
caused nearly 200 deaths in two
weeks in Algeria. Algeria politi
cally is a part of France itself,
not a colony. It is represented in
the French parliament. But con
ditions were so turbulent that it
was decided not to include Al
geria in the election to be held
next Monday for a National
Assembly. Nevertheless, the out
lawed Algerian Communist par
ty called for uprising on election
day.
Tomorrow
LippKuna
is incompatible with the kind
J of constructive economic aid
tnat so many ot us inside and
outside, the Administration .be
lieve is necessary.
" The basic . trouble with our
military program in South Asia
and the Middle East is that it
has led us into entangling alli
ances. Our theory has been that
we would c arm the countries
which were ready to stand up
and declare openly their opposi
tion to Soviet and Chinese com
munism. The fact, as opposed
to the theory, has been that
these military alliances between
small Asian countries and the
distant United States have been
regarded in Southern Asia as
political intervention in the dis
putes of that area.
VUE HAVE become entangled in
the disputes within the re
gion, and this has earned us the
suspicion and dislike of the
countries which border upon
those countries which we have
been arming. Thus, as the re
sult' of our arming Pakistan, we
have incurred the distrust of
both of Pakistan's neighbors
India and Afghanistan. All that
Bulganin and Khrushchev had
to do was to side, with India and
Afghanistan in their disputes
with Pakistan.
To make matters worse, Paki
stan, alarmed by the fact that
her two neighbors are now back
ed by the Soviet Union, is com
plaining to us that we are not
backing her fully in her dispute
or giving her enough military
aid. We have alienated India and
Afghanistan by our meddling
and we have not made secure
the adherence of Pakistan..
This, in the full and literal
sense of the term, is the kind
of entangling alliance which it
should be the first rule of states
manship to avoid.
T DO NOT know anything more
than has been printed ifl the
newspapers about Mr. Rockefel
ler's resignation; But I venture
to say that unless something
radical is done about these entangling-
military alliances, no
program of economic aid can
effectively counter the Soviet
incursion in Southern Asia. The
damage done to the American
position by the Pakistan entan
glement alone is enormously
greater that what can be done
to repair the damage by more
economic aid.
It is often said that Mr. Dulle's
pacts in South Asia lack "teeth."
As against Russia and China
they , do indeed lack teethBut
they have teeth enough to make
their neighbors in the region
fear that, not the Communist
countries, but they themselves
are going to be bitten. As long
as .these pacts are the core of
our South Asian policy, there
is no prospect of our being able
to conceive, to unite behind, and
to execute successfully .an imag
inative and constructive eco
nomic program.
OR an indispensable condition
the success of an economic
development program is that it
should apply to a whole eco
nomic area, and should bring
with it the cooperation of the
separate nations of the area.
This was one of the secrets of
the success of the Marshall Plan,
that it brought unity and not
divisive alliances into Western
Europe, that it brought not a
sword but peace.
The same fundamental prin
ciple applies to South Asia
where for no reason except our
own diplomatic errors, the So
viets have now taken possession
of the banner of peace.
Copyright 1955,
New York Herald Tribune Inc.
QuotQQ f rsralBeJevs
00 ' 6 p........... .9...
Br UITBD PSi
MoaecsF Nikit Xhrushchev, Communist pay0boss, criticiz
ing President Iinhower' Christmas message of hppe to theeo
ples of satellite nation: n O
"To pray for a change of rtgimes in th jpeoples democraciesNEs
a crude inteferenee in the internal affairs of these countries."
Vaki fern. Uibe Mansfield (D.4ont.) Khrushchev
statement: ? . j
"This is giving a great deal of importance to a prayer for lha
eaptive people fron the American people. I hotjk thjij signifies
Mr. Khrushchev k oa the way io getting religion."
Washington Sen.. John J. (Sparkman) D.-A1&) dy&i(djlng2presi
dent Eisenhower agSinst Khrushchev's attack:
"The President did nothing except state what thg) whole world
knows to be our feeling." '
Galveslon,3Tex. U.R) Dr. H. W. Paley on the condition of
Mrs. Babe Didrikson Zaharias, already suffering from cancer, who
now is -suffering from pneumonia: . '
"We don't, ejepect it io get serious."
Greenwich, Conn. flJ.R) Karen AnnMcGuire, 12year-old girl
who got a consolation horse after she bier $24.03 for the racehorse
Nashua: . ,- 0
"I never dreamed I'd get a beautiful horse like thS. I'mPthe
happiest girl in the world."
Washington Averell Harriman, now governor Ql New YonL
la aa April, 1945, communique o President Rooseftlt advising
him thai the Russians were beconttng difficult:
"Aside from the major questions which are causing concern in
our relations with the Soviet Union, there has been an accumula
tion of minor incidents which started some six weeks ago."
o (?)
Memphis, Tenn. Wailiam H. uskelley Jr., 18-year-old gun
man who was caught a few minutes after he robbed a tiekery of
$226 while his wife and baby waited m a getaway car:
"I told Betty therg was nothing else to do but pull a holdup. We
got up. She drove. The baby was on the seat between us."
Q .
Montreal L. M. Edwards, adviser io the four surviving Dionne
quintuplets on a lift between the girls and their family:
"They have authorized me to say they would like to be able io
sit down with their family and straighten this whale thing out.
They want it Jcnown that this whole thing is a tempest in a teapot."
ICC Approves Request
Portland The Intefstate Com
merce commission hi approved
an application by Dean S. Axtell
of Grants ' Pass for irregular
route common carrier.
The application was to haul
lumber from points in Jackson
and Josephine counties to points
regardless of pric .
ordered with coat and
suit f topcoat, or . .
Without Extra Pants Qn Oof e,
BIG SPECIAL!
If MP
CONSTRUCTION
EQUIPMENT FOR RENT
Motor Cranes Back Hoes Motor Graders
Draglines Clamshells Q0 Shovel Fronts
Crawler Type Tractors with Dozers
o
105 Air Compressor 315 Air Compressor
Wagon Drill Paving Breakers
Jack Hammers
MACHINE TRENCHING
Gas Watero Sewer Drain Installation or Repair
fl C. LINIIiGER & SOUS
MEDFORD, OREGON - PHONE 2-5336 or 2-5897
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Herb Specialist
0 CHARLIE CHAN
OFFICE OPEN SUNDAYS ONLY
12 NOON TO 4 P.M. "
CHINESE MEDICINE & HERB Cf.
624 S. Riverside Medforf &
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