Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, January 20, 1956, Image 4

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    FOUR MEDFORD (OREGON)
MEDFOBDtMIOBUNE
"Everybody in Southern Oregon
D..j)a TVi Mail TVihllT,"
Published Daily Except Saturday
27-29 North Fir St. Phone 2-6141
Di-vor-DT W OTTTTT. ITHitor
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ERIC a i . i . k r jtt, iKLanaEinK iAii""
HARRY CHIP MAN, Telegraph Editor
R1CHAKU JEWtll, apori
OLIVE ST ARCHER, Society Editor
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Flight o' Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10, 20. 30 and
JO years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
Jan. 20, 194S
at was Sunday)
Paul B. Rynning elected head
of County Highway Officials'
division of American Road Build
ers' association at meeting in
Chicago.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
'Smudge Pot column: Ground
Hog Day comes Feb. 2, a week
from next Sat., and will tip off
the Older Girls, whether or not
their Easter hats get rained on.
20 YEARS AGO
Jan. 20, 1936
(It was Monday)
From Side Glances: Johnny
Niedermeyer and Earl Sims try
ing to converse over the loud
hum of voices as about 20 kids
lined up to take turns on Earl's
lop-wheeled kangaroo bicycle.
, Evans creek area residents
submit petition to county court
seeking irrigation district.
30 YEARS AGO
Jan. 20. 1S26
(It was Wednesday)
Special train arrives with John
Philip Sousa and his band; to
play at armory here.
Medford city council to sell
$500,000 worth of bonds for con
struction of new water system
40 YEARS AGO
Jan. 20, 1916
(It was Thursday)
F. L. Tou Velle, county judge,
and W. C. Leever, county com
missioner order county officers
to purchase locally made goods
whenever possible.
From Local and Personal col
umn: The game wardens of this
county have been officially noti
fied to feed pheasants and other
game birds when the snowfall
makes it difficult for them to
forage a breakfast.
What's the Answer?
Can You Get 4 of tha 7?
Copr.1955, Editorial Research Report
1. President Eisenhower took
office in 1953 on Jan. 3, Jan. 20,
or March 4?
2. Farm families have more
or fewer children, on the aver
age, than city families, or about
the same number?
3. U. S. labor unions altogeth
er collect in dues from their
members about $100 million,
$500 million, $1 billion or $5
billion a year?
4. Antoine's is a famous res
taurt in New York, Paris,
Buenos Aires, New Orleans,
Mexico City, San Francisco or
Chicago?
5. On shipboard eight bells
signifies which of these: 4 a.m.,
8 a.m., noon, 4 p.m., 8 p.m. or
midnight?
6. More men than women die
of cancer, or more women than
men, or about the same number
of each?
7. With what sport is the
name of Hannes Schneider assc,
elated?
The answers: 1 Jan. 20. 2
More children for farm families.
3 About S500 million. 4 New
Orleans. 5 All of them. 6
More men than women. 7 Ski
ing. The second largest telescope in
the world, second only to that at
Mt. Palomar in Calif., has been
uhveiled at Hampburg, Germany.
I
EKES
MAIL TRIBUNE
Should Be Interesting -
The Legislative Interim Committee on Local Gov
ernment will hold a hearing in Medford on March 1 in
its efforts to find out just what are the problems of
rapidly-growing areas, and to work out some possible
solutions for them.
It should be an interesting session.
For Jackson county, in common with many other
areas of Western Oregon which are growing rapidly
in population, is faced with many situations which
probably will call for a new approach.
TO MAKE the hearing a fruitful one, represehta
" tives of the area's many small units of government
should attend, for they are intimately concerned with
what the committee is trying to do. Many of them
overlap, both in area and in taxing authority.
- The cities, the county, school districts, fire dis
tricts, sewer districts, water districts, irrigation dis
tricts, soil conservation districts all these can look
forward to telling the legislature, through this com
mittee, what their problems are.
And the chance to hear about the problems of
other groups might well make for greater understand
ing among the sometimes conflicting units of gov
ernment. IT, CANNOT be assumed that some magic panacea
will come out of the study, for people, after all,
are still people, and as some problems are solved,
others will arise.
. But the committee is sincerely interested in hear
ing both what the problems are, and suggestions as
to how they can be solved. And they may well come
up with some suggestions for the legislature which
will make life easier for everyone in bur fast-growing
part of the state. E.A.
Good Appointment
One of the reasons why the committee mentioned
above has gone about its job in an effective and in
telligent way is the fact that
capable executive secretary, Kobert K. Johnson.
Bob Johnson is largely responsible for the way
in which the Oregon civil
and knows his way around
other men of his age (37)
OIS ability was recognized this week by Gov. Paul
Patterson, who appointed him to the watchdog
position of director of the
and administration, succeeding Harry Dorman.
Dorman made himself
employees for his determined and effective work in
cutting out waste and lnemciency in state, govern
ment. But he has saved the taxpayers money amount
ing to millions of dollars, and is entitled to apprecia
tion and good wishes in his retirement.
We have a feeling Bob Johnson will be a worthy
successor. E.A.
Lapse in
Circuit Judge Ralph M. Holman of Clackamas
county, in a letter to the Oregonian yesterday, caught
that august newspaper in a logical lapse.
The Oregonian had editorialized in petulant fash
ion on a supreme court decision which ruled that
some money, found by a couple of Portland young
sters, actually belonged to an estate (not a living in
dividual), and since there were no heirs, would have
to revert to the state of Oregon.
The Oregonian was disturbed. The boys, it said,
who had honestly turned the money over to the au
thorities, would not be "rewarded" for their honesty.
It assailed the supreme court decision as unjust. The
money had not been lost by some individual who
needed it, the paper declared, and the state would
never miss the money. .
JUDGE Holman, however, pointed out that if the
Oregonian's premise were . followed, "lawsuits
should be decided on the basis of need and not on
who is correct."
As to the paper's other contention, that the boys'
honesty was not rewarded, Judge Holman says :
Might I point out-that if pecuniary benefit is the prin
cipal reward for honesty, which I doubt, no person who
returns property of another will ever be rewarded as much
as if he had been dishonest and kept it, unless he received .'.
the entire "amount as a reward. Apparently you are of the
opinion that honesty is the best policy only if it has mone
tary rewards. 1
The Qregonian, it seems, was carried away by
sentimental concern, and didn't bother to think the
matter through before taking the supreme court to
task. E.A.
Fire Station
' How long has it been since a permanent east side
fire station was approved by a vote of the people?
To long much, much too long.
It is for this reason we are glad to see that a site
has been approved, that, the city already owns the
land, . that the .funds are available for the work to
begin, and that there is hope that the east side crew
can move out of its present temporary quarters and
into a new building within about three months.
THHE site selected is sufficiently far away from ex
isting residences that objections should be few,
if any. And if there are, it might be well to reiterate
the experience of those who live near the west side
station to the effect that the firemen make good
neighbors, and a fire station is a handy thing to have
nearby.
The city councilmen, who have been in the middle
of tills touchy situation for so long, are glad, we don't
doubt, to get it out of their hair. E.A.
Friday, January 20, 1958
it has had an exceedingly
service system is set up,
state government as few
do.
state department of finance
unpopular with some state
Logic
Matter of Fact
THE PRICE OF HONESTY
Washington The case of Rob
ert Bowie, chief of the State De
partment's Dolicy planning staff,
suggests that
honesty is not
always the
best policy
these days in
Washington.
Bowie has
been nominat
ed as an As
sistant Secre-
Joseph Alsop ""y or oidLe.
But his nomination looks like
its running into very bad
trouble.- Indeed, Senators Wil
liam Rnowland and Styles
Bridges have already served no
tice on the State Department
that they mean to put Bowie
through the hoops when his nom
ination comes -up for Senate
approval. As Republican leader
and ranking Republican on the
a 1 1 - powerful Appropriations
Committeei Knowland and
Bridges are certainly in a posi
tion to carry out this threat.
What, sin, then, has Bowie
been guilty of?
At first it was charged that
he had been guilty of "associ
ating" with Owen Lattimore. In
'5IP1 fact. Bowie
had seen Lat
timore once,
when Latti
more long ago
addressed an
impec c a b 1 y
conserva t i v e
discussion
group of which
Bowie was
Stewart Aisop then a mem
ber. When Thruston Morton,
Assistant Secretary of State for
Congressional relations, explain
ed this to Knowland and
Bridges, the charge of guilt by
association was dropped. But it
was never more than icing on
the cake anyway.
THE real reason for the resent
ment against Bowie among
the conservative Republicans is
quite different. Bowie is held to
have favored recognizing Red
China, or at least admitting
Communist China into the
United Nations. More generally,
he is held guilty of New Dealish,
or Acheson-like, foreign policy
views.
To understand why Bowie's
nomination looks like making
so much trouble, it is necessary
to understand the 'nature of his
position. He is one of those men
there are always a few such
in Washington who are hardly
known at all in the country, but
who nevertheless have real
power in the government.
Bowie wears two hats. As
chief of the policy planning
staff, he is the chief adviser of
American foreign policy. But
Bowie is also a member of the
Planning Board of the National
Security Council. In this capa
city he has direct access to the
President, and President Eisen
hower has often consulted him.
A MAN in this position makes
enemies automatically. But
Bowie, a rather sharp-tongued
realist, has made more than his
share. Both in the State Depart
ment and in the N. S. C, he has
made it his business to ask in
convenient questions, and to
question the realism of comfort
able assumptions.
He has never, for example,
favored recognition of Red Chi
o;ui sunio jo uoissiuipe ; jo 'bu
the United Nations. But he has
held, instead, that it is not
enough simply to hold up heads
in honor, and that recognition
and admission must be discussed
rationally, in terms of the real
American interest.
He has made enemies particu
larly by his stand on the ques
tion of the. off shore islands of
Quemoy and Matsu. He has ex
pressed certain doubts about the
theory of an "immaculate war"
against China. He has irritated
certain persons in the Pentagon
notably including ie power
ful Admiral Arthur Radford,
chairman of The Joint Chiefs of
Staff by asking for official es
timates of existing military capa
bilities in the area, in case war
starts over the islands.
He has even expressed the
view that, if we do not mean to
defend the islands anyway, we
should at least consider making
a serious effort to persuade Chi
any to exacuate the flower of
his armies from them.
m w
FJ SHORT, on the matter for
Far Eastern policy, Bowie has
acted as a sort of general hair
shirt. He has been a hair shirt in
other ways too. He has ques
tioned the eternal Tightness of
our German policy, a most un
fashionable things to do. He has
questioned whether the much
touted ' Baghdad and SEATO
pacts are quite all they are
cracked up to be. He has even
asked whether the air-atomic
balance of power is turning
against the West, and if so, whe
ther the process should be al
lowed to continue.
All this is not to suggest that
Bowie has always been right. He
has often lacked the insight of
his brilliant predecessors, Paul
Nitze and George .Kennan. But
he has served most usefully in
his roles of hair shirt, especially
at a time when the way to get
along in the government is to
maintain solemnly that every
thing is just Jim Dandy.
Hair shirts are rarely popular,
however. The going-over which
awaits him on Capitol Hill is the
penalty he will pay for honesty.
111 tfT-gSPX
By Joe and Stewart Alsop
No doubt it will serve as a useful
warning to others with an incon
venient tendency to speak their
minds plainly.
Copyright 1956, New York "
Tribune Inc.
In the Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
Poor old Dulles is in more hot
water. Now it's the British that
are in his hair over his "brink of
war" statemnt in a recent mag
azine interview. The venerable
London Times says of his ex
planation of what he said in the
interview that his "footwork was
good," but it doesn't think much
of what he had to say. The equal
ly ponderous Manchester Guard
ian says: "DuUes has again put
both left feet forward."
In the olden golden days when
Britannia ruled the waves she
sent her fleet boldly to any spot
in the world where trouble
threatened and told the trouble
makers bluntly to call it off or
she'd blow 'em out of the water.
But in .these more degenerate
days anything that sounds like a
firm policy upsets her no end.
I THINK myself that if Dulles
talked less he'd be better off.
But in a situation like 'this
cold war you just HAVE to let
troublemakers know you have
guns and if compelled to pull
em you're GOING TO SHOOT.
That's the only; language com
munists understand. '
PUBLIC officials, of course,
face a tougher situation..
-If they don't talk enough, we
accuse them of bottling up the
news. If they talk too much, we
jump down their throats be
cause of what they said.
Theirs is a rugged life.
LET'S jump from politics to
economics.
The president of the National
Association of Home Builders
applauds the reinstatement of
30 - year, federal - insured mort
gages. But, he says., DOWN PAY
MENT requirements should also
be reduced. .:
. On the other side of the fence,
a New York mortgage banker
describes the return to 30-year
mortgages as "a temporary shot
in the arm which will have In
flationary effect." Our economy,
he thinks, is again approaching
the point where inflation is
something to be feared. -
T ET'S look at the housing busi
" ness from this angle:
When building is controlled
by the market-j-that is to' say, by
supply and demand private in
dividuals use - their own judg
ment as to whether to build more
houses for sale. If they think
there is a market'for them, they
go ahead and build them and
take their chances of selling
them.
If they can't sell them, they're
just out, and that's that. ' The
point is that in a housing mar
ket controlled by. supply and
demand no more houses will be
built if the people who are put
ting up the money think the
houses can't be sold at a profit.
DUT
When the government is
the controlling factor in the
housing business, POLITICS EN
TERS THE PICTURE.
In this particular instance the
National Association of Home
Builders wants more homes built
on smaller down payments and
with longer time to pay out so
that its members can build and
sell more homes and make more
money.
After aU, it's the GOVERN
MENT that is putting up the
money and if it turns out that
too many homes have been built
and they can't be sold at a price
that will yield a profit or break
even IT'S ONLY THE GOV
ERNMENT THAT LOSES.
AND-
If in the meanwhile every
body has made a lot of money
building and selling houses on
government credit, what differ
ence does it make if the govern
ment DOES lose in the transac
tion? It's only government money
anyway.
That's one of the troubles with
big-government-run-everything.
Fuel Deliverers End
Strike in New York
New York (U.R) A four
day fuel deliverers' strike ended
today. The fuel-short city was
shivering under a covering of
snow.
Mayor Robert Wagner an
nounced settlement of the strike
at city hall where representa
tives of 3000 fuel oil and coal
truck drivers and 350 fuel deal
ers had been negotiating since
Monday, assisted by a three-man
citizens committee and media
tors. A wage agreement which end
ed the walkout was reached.
Wagner had ordered the Board
of Health to stand by to declare
a state of emergency if the strike
was not settled this morning.
The end of the strike signalled
the resumption of coal and oil
deliveries to homes, office build
ings and institutions whose sup
plies had run low or, in some
cases, been exhausted despite
provisions for emergency delivery.
New Balance Sheet of
Lists Egypt,
By CHARLES M. McCANN
United Press Correspondent
"The week's good and bad news
on the international balance
sheet:
The Good
1. Egypt, land of the Phar
aohs, entered a new period in its
7,000-year history. Smiling, dy
namic President-Premier Gamal
Abdel Nasser proclaimed 'a new
constitution. Under it, the infant
Egyptian republic win get its
first representative parliament
ary government. After the over
throw of King Farouk, the rul
Babson Forecasts Eventual
Return to U.S. Prohibition
By ROGER W. BABSON
Babson Park-i-My father used
to sav to "me: "Roger, avoid
the words . NEVER and AL
WAYS; also
d.o not put
dates on your
Forecasts." In
discussing this
unpopular sub-
1 t- t ;
I yy I bitibn, I wiU
I I now observe
his advice."
Roger W. Babson - First, let me
say 1 am not forecasting the suc
cess of the Prohibition Party as
a political factor. Rather, I am
forecasting that one, or both, of
the' major parties will put some
form Prohibition in their plat
forms. The1 curse of the liquor
traffic may be no different now
than 25 years ago; but there is
one great difference.
In 1933 when Prohibition was
overwhelmingly defeated, there
were "no great , industries to put
up the funds to continue Prohi
bition, while the great brewers,
distillers, and other liquor inter
ests supplied the funds to kUl
it. Then, .however, there were
only 20 million automobiles:
Today with 50 million automo
biles the situation is .very dif
ferent. In the next , fight over
Prohibition, the automobile in
dustry (now the second largest)
which includes manufacturers,
sales agencies, the great gasoline
industry, as weU as the owners
of property rented by these in
terests, should heavily support
the Prohibition cause. And this
group is increasing every year
as more cars go on the roads.
There are now over 225,000 fill
ing stations earning nearly a bil
lion dollars annually. '
Preventing Accidents
Safety belts, compulsory ; car
inspections, canceling of li
censes, and even jailing offend
ers should help prevent acci
dents or make them less serious.
However, none of these things
seem to be effective. The main
cause of accidents is with the
brain of the driver. Hence, the
great importance of insisting
upon drivers keeping in line and
not passing except where specifi
cally permitted.
The basic reason why drivers
Meeting Of Radio
Operators Sunday
Members of the Jackson coun
ty control center wiU meet at
8 a.m. Sunday, Jan; 22, in the
Wooden Shoe at the Holland
hotel to discuss county disaster
plans.
Dwight J. Albright, council
civil defense control center
chief, urged control center per
sonnel, both commercial and
amateur radio operators and
message handlers to attend.
Among items to be discussed
are radio operating and han
dling of messages and re-registration
of members of the con
trol center. Albright said mem
bers must be registered since
Jan. 15.
Damage Suit Filed
In Circuit Court
A suit seeking $20,000 from
Ralph Henry -Glass and L.' L.
Atkins, partners in a lumber and
log hauling busine.ss, has been
filed in circuit court by Mar
garet H. Conners, Ashland.
The suit resulted from the
death of Mrs. Connors' husband,
Edward C. Connors, 68, who
died of injuries last Nov. 21
when struck by a log truck
operated by Glass, according to
the complaint. '
2 31 EAST SIXTH ST. ' '. -
JOWL PORK , . BEEF VEAL
BACON SAUSAGE STEAK STEAK 9
Wlb. ,29. Lb. 3 Lb. 3 Lb. I
Cyprus, Finland
ing army chieftains announced
a three-year period of transition.
This period ended Monday, and
the army made good on its prom
ise to start the country on its
way to fun rule by the people.
2. Soviet Russia announced
that it would f ormaUy hand over
its, naval base of Porkkala to
Finland next Thursday. After
World War II, Russia compeUed
Finland to "lease" the south
coast base to it for 50 years.
The Kremlin announced last
September that it would give up
Porkkala, 39 years ahead of time.
disobey traffic rules, crossing
lines, driving fast, ignoring in
tersections and signs, is lack of
mental control. People are all
too wiUing to take chances. But
civilization has progressed by
a constant tempering of this in
stinct to risk, by education, reli
gion, and laws working toward
the development of self-control.
This is a very important fact
which parents and teachers
should recognize.
Liquor and Self-Control
There are three biological ef
fects of drinking. 1. Drinks
"pep" one up. Liquor, even -in
very' small amounts, gives peo
ple temporary courage to do and
suy things they otherwise would
not. 2. Drinks enable people to
forget but this means forget
ting driving rules a? well as
troubles. 3, Drinks are habit-
forming. No one ever expected
to become a slave to drink when
he started simple social drink
ing. -
. Not only, are ' automobiles in
creasing every year by several
million and the population by
about - 3 million, but the . age
when young people start - to
drink has lowered. The cocktail
party, along with the above-
mentioned factors, has made
liquor a national problem which
must be conquered. It may -get
worse before Prohibition, in
some form,- returns; but it is a
sure forecast that it wiU return.
Perhaps one plan would be to
prohibit sales to those holding
drivers' licenses. Even the new
four-lane turnpikes do not solve
the difficulty, as they develop
a "sleepitis. . '
Will Be Different
How the liquor curse wiU be
handled, I do not know. As my
friend, Delcevare King says, it
is a problem of the three E's-
Education,, Engineering, and En
forcement. The most common
suggestion is that we aU have
a license either to buy liquor
or to drive a car. This, however,
wUl not alone solve the cocktail
party danger and the fact, that
the self-control and judgment
of many individuals are . not af
fected by a little liquor while
others are affected almost by
the smell of it!
I hope readers will not take
this column as propaganda for
Prohibition, as I believe the per
son who does not drive a car has
a right to drink. However, with
99 being killed each day and
one seriously injured ever 25
seconds, and these figures con
stantly increasing, something
radical must be done. Also, un
less the brewers and- distiUers
themselves "see the handwriting
on the wall" and help solve the
problem, the securities of such
companies face a 'terrific decline,
as happened when . Prohibition
went into effect in 1919.
Reed Student Dies
Of Gunshot Wound
Portland (U.R) Police said to
day they were continuing their
investigation into the circum
stances of the gunshot death yes
terday of an 18-year-old Reed
College student in one of the
men's dormitories on the Reed
campus here.
The body of Richard Town
send, son of Col. H. F. Town
send, Phoenix, Ariz., was found
in the. room, of another student.
The death went into police rec
ords as an accident.
Student friends of Townsend
told officers the youth had been
"dry firing" a .45 calibre auto
matic for the past two days.
Investigating officers said a bul
let may have lodged in the
chamber of the weapon while
Townsend was manipulating a
loaded clip.
Week
After next Thursday, the peo
ple whom the Russian evicted
from their homes in the area
will be free to return.
3. Hope rose for a friendly
settlement of the dangerous Cy
prus dispute. Greece demands
that Britain surrender the east
Mediterranean island, which has
become the most important Al- !
lied military base in the Middle
East. Advices from London indi
cate that Greece, and Cyprus
Greek nationalists, may agree
to wider home rule for the
island, with a promise of the
right of self-determination some
time in the future.
The Bad
1. The newly-elected French
parliament met in Paris in an
atmosphere of dissension which
foreboded months of recurrent
cabinet crises. Formation of a
strong majority government
seemed impossible. Whichever
bloc forms a cabinet will be at
the mercy of the Communists,
who hold 150 seats in the 626
seat national assembly, and the
followers of anti-tax leader Pier
re Poujade, who hold 53.
; 2. The Soviet Russian govern
ment 'indicated that it planned
a big campaign of Communist
penetration in Latin " America.
Premier Nikolai A. Bulganin
said in a question-and-answer
interview that the Kremlin is
ready to enter diplomatic and
economic relations with all of the
20 Latin American republics. At
present only three of them main
tain diplomatic relations with
Russia Argentina, Mexico and
Uruguay. Officials in, Washing
ton had expected the move. They
regard it as an- open challenge,
especially in the economic field,
to the United States.
3. Communist East Germany
announced the establishment of
a "National People's Army." Its
basis will be the present Mghly-
militarized "Barracks People's
Police." The new Red army will
be coordinated with the Russian "
and Russian-satellite armies un
der So -iet Marshal Ivan Koniev.
Its formation 'is Russia's retort
to the arming of West Germany,
on the side of the United States
and its allies of the North At
lantic Treaty Organization. It is
expected that more than 200,
000 East German youths will be
drafted to join the 120,000-man
"People's Police" in the new
anti-Allied army.
ITS STILL "OO" SOUP
Washington (U.R) The U.S.
Court of Appeals has ruled that
Washington's Peking Palace res
taurant should stop serving "oo
soup" because the Peking restau
rant just down the street has ex
clusive rights; to the Oriental
delicacy.-The court also told the
Pekin Palace it may not use the
"secret recipe" for "oo" and
serve it under some other name.
Most states have enacted laws
to regulate the legal rate of in
terest. PLANT
THESE
NOW!
FLOWERING
TREES
Cherries
(Pink-Double Pink
White) o Red Leaf Plum
Dark Red Double
Pink-White)
Red Leaf Peach
(Fruiting and flowering
Large White flowers)
GARDEN CITY
NURSERY
(formerly Newhall's)
Phone 2-7601
4631 Pacific Hwy. South
Medford