O
O
O
FOUR MEDFORD (OREGON)
MEDFORIwle
Tribune
Ever oody in Soutnern Oregon
Reads The Mail Tribune"
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RICHARD JEWETT Sports Editor
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March 3. 1897
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Flight o' Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10, 20. 30 and
10 years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
March 7, 1946
(It was Thursday)
John E. Gribble, retired fores
ter and Medford resident, files
for Democratic nomination for
Jackson county judge.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: A number
of local citizens are striving for
a roof over them and a 1946 auto
wheels under them. Both are
distant, but it looks like the
spare tire will leak before the
roof does.
20 YEARS AGO
March 7, 1936
(It was Saturday)
Local residents urge federal
aid in preserving forests along
Crater Lake highway in Pros
pect area.
Some 15 scout leaders attend
school for leaders in Ashland.
30 YEARS AGO
March 7. 1926 3
(It was Sunday)
Medford merchants make ar
rangements for style show at
Craterian theater tomorrow.
From Local and Personal col
umn: The fee for automobiles
entering Crater Lake national
park will be reduced the coming
season from $2.50 to $1, and the
same reduction will be made
in Mount Rainier rtational park.
40 YEARS AGO
March 7, 1916
(It was Tuesday)
County Judge Frank L. Tou
Velle, returning from trip East,
reports that some sugar beet area
farmers net as much as $70 per
acre.
From Local and Personal col
umn: The city council wili hold
its regular monthly meeting to
night. In addition to routine
work, it will probably fix a
date for clean-up day.
What's the Answer?
Can You Get 4 of the 7?
' Copr. 1955, Editorial Research Report
1. The 1955-56 strike at West-
inghouse(jplants was the longest
major U.S. strike m the last five
years; right or wrong?
2. President Eisenhower's
brother Earl is an engineer, col
lege president, lawyer or news
paper official?
3 Which two of these states
had no city over 100,000 in the
1950 census: Alabama, Arizona,
Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi,
New Hampshire?
4. The big prehistoric dino
saurs were larger than any ani
malQtoday; right or wrong?
5. Temperature during March
is normally highest in Albuquer-
- que, Dallas, Mobile, New Or
leans or San Diego?
6. The Negro proportion of
the population is higher in Flor
ida than in Texas, or abjDut the
same in eacn.
7. Thomas Jefferson did or
didn't help frame the federal
Constitution in 1787?
The answers: 1. Right. 2.
Newspaper official. 3. Mississippi
and New Hampshire. 4. Wrong;
some whales today are larger,
5. New Orleans. 6. Much higher
in Florida. 7. Didn't (he was serv
ing in a foreign post).
The 688,000 civilians em
ployed by the Army work at
more than 400 plants, offices and
camrjs throughout the United
SSates and at almost 100 stations
ia more than 40 foreign counts.
MAIL TRIBUNE
Watching The Wheels
Student Government Day, which has become an
annual affair in Medford, and which was in operation
Monday and Tuesday, is a sound and well-thought-out
program.
There are many people to credit for its success
the Elks lodge, which helped originate it; school
staffs, who have encouraged it and fleshed it put and
given it meaning during class sessions ; the officials of
city and county, who have cooperated whole-heartedly
in making the project go off well.
TF THIS were, say, Russia, it wouldn't make too
much difference whether young people knew how
government works, for there's nothing much they
could do about it anyway.
But this is America, and the individual citizen is
still a force to be reckoned with in the political man
agement of public affairs. One man's influence can
be felt, particularly if he knows how the wheels go
around.
In watching the wheels go around, these students
are obtaining an infinitely valuable lesson, which
will stand each one of them in good stead no matter
what field they enter later on.
t
T"HUS, the program has personal benefits. But
there are larger benefits for the entire commun
ity. If a young citizen knows about government, he
is apt to be interested in it, and will want it to work
as well as it can.
Only when a substantial portion of the citizenry
has this feeling of personal interest, and the ability
and desire to participate, will our form of govern
ment operate the way the Founding Fathers intended
it to operate as an extension of the desires and
needs and abilities of all the people. E. A.
Fiddlesticks, Dr. Hurlock
Dr. Elizabeth Hurlock, who writes a column of
advice in the Mail Tribune, sometimes has wise and
sound things to say. Last Sunday, however, she gave
some advice on a subject about which we think she
might just have well kept quiet.
We refer to her answer to this question:
My daughter wants to marry a boy who is studying
medicine. She says she will get a job and support them
while he finishes his course. Can a man really respect him
self and his wife under such conditions?
10 THIS query, Dr. Hurlock replied:
Many young people today marry under conditions simi
lar to those your daughter proposes. While the young men
accept the aid and support of their wives, they often feel
guilty because they know older people think they are shirk
ing their masculine responsibilities. It is certainly not an
ideal arrangement for your daughter and you would do
well to try to persuade her to wait until this man-is ready
to support himself. '
To which we reply, "Fiddlesticks, Dr. Hurlock.
Likewise, bah. Also, fooey."
QF COURSE it's not an "ideal arrangement." The
ideal arrangement, obviously, would be for all
of us to have just oodles of money, so that we could
all do just as we wanted whether it be studying
medicine, or writing letters to the editor.
But "ideal arrangements" are few and far be
tween. This young man she tells about has a long road
ahead of him somewhere. between eight and fifteen
years of training and education, depending on his
field and degree of specialization. This is a long
time. It's a long time to take training and it's a
long time to wait to get married if the young people
are sincere about it.
There are some boys and girls we know who we
would advise to wait just to make sure it was what
they wanted. But many young people, particularly if
they go into it with their eyes open and with a realiz
ation that they are facing a tough time, will come
out of it, no only all right, but the better for the ex
perience. Mf ARRIAGE is, or should be, a working partner
ship. The young wife is entitled to be a full par
ticipant. And if this calls for her to work-for the sup
port of a student-husband, where's the harm?
We have been privileged to know a number of
young couples in circumstances like this. Sure, it's
tough. But show us the early years of any marriage
which are free from troubles and cares and worries.
FR. HURLOCK's advice is too general and too re
strictive. By it she might have deprived a young
couple from an intensely satisfying experience in
which the wife, for the rest of her life, cairfeel she
is a full partner in her husband's later success.
The pattern is shifting, these days, with marriages
occurring at earlier ages. Provided this does not pre
vent serious-minded young people from completing
their education and achieving their aims, we see noth
ing wrong with it, and much that it good. E.A.
Filipino Girls Urged To
Manila, P.I. U.R) City Coun
cilman Apolonio Gener said to
day he would introduce a reso
lution to make Filipino women
offer their lips to local males
before foreigners.
He was outraged that a Fili
pino girl asked American actor
Marlon Brando at a press con
ference here to "kiss me" and
Brando refused. '
"Gentlemen, look," Gener told
newsmen. "Our foreign policy
is run by Americans, and our
economy is controlled by Chi
nese. Let us not allow foreign
ers to control our love life."
Gener said that if the woman
who asked Brando for a kiss,
had come to hirri first, "I would
have given her full satisfaction."
The Filipino race, Gener said,
Wednesday. March 7, 1936
Kiss Native Males
is "more virile, more romantic
than any other race in . the
world."
Margaret To Become
University President
- Newcastle-Under- Lyme, Eng
land (U.R) Princess Margaret
will soon take over the presi
dency of a university from a 91-year-old
man.
The Court of Governors of
North Staffordshire University
College announced that the 91-year-old
Earl of Harrowby had
had accepted the office of uni
resigned and that the princess
had accepted the office of uni
versity president.
She will be informally install
ed June 28.
ommunications
in the Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
All kinds of tales are in circu
lation about the cost of living in
Mexico meaning, that is, the
cost of food and lodging. You'll
hear one day that prices are
fabulously low in terms of Amer
ican dollars. As like as not,
you'll be told the next day that
they're as high as in the United
States.
All these tales are true by
which I mean that what you pay
will be determined largely by
where you go and what you
want. There are places on Mexi
co's west coast that are modeled
closely after luxury resorts in
the states. At these places the
price will be roughly equal to
prices as similar places on our
side of the line.
But if you go to the Mexican
places including the best ho
tels in the larger towns you
will pay much less than in the
U.S.A.
LET'S deal first with the lux
ury resorts.
Of these, the best known and
the most heavily ' patronized by
Americans is at Guaymas, some
250 miles down from the border.
Guaymas has a glamorous his
torical background. The Spanish
conquistadores found it early
some 300 . years agofor there
were important pearl fisheries
in the Gulf of California, and
these early Spaniards had a sen
sitive nose for gold and silver
and jewels.
Then came the missionary, or
ders Jesuits, Dominicans and
Franciscans founding missions
for the education and the civili
zation of the native Indians and
the saving of their souls. There
were pirates in Guaymas' past
English' and French whose idea
was to take away the gold and
the silver and the pearls from
the Spanish after the Spanish
had taken them away from the
Indians.
Gold and silver and jewels
and-pirates are prolific produc
ers of glamor, and Guaymas has
all of them in its past.
GUAYMAS as a Mexican re
sort for Americans had its
origin in a gleam in the eye of
the Sante Fe railroad, away back
in 1884. The Santa Fe by then
had reached the Pacific Coast
with its rails, and some of its
brass had got as far down the
Gulf of California as Bocochi
bampo bay, where Graymas sits.
They were charmed with it and
acquired the site where the pres
ent more or less fabulous resort
hotel known as La Playa de la
Cortes now stands. :
. But, for one reason or another,
the Santa Fe never went ahead
with the resort project and short
ly after the turn of the century
the Southern Pacific acquired it.
The S.P. is said to have had in
mind a gambling resort some
thing like what later became
Agua Caliente, just outside Tia
Juana in Baja California. People
then did all their long distance
traveling by rail and the S.P. is
said to have had the idea that
it could earn quite a few shekels
by hauling Atlantic coast moguls
out to Guaymas, where in beau
tiful semi-tropical surroundings
and in the midst of fantastic fish
ing they could angle' by day and
try their hands at outwitting
Lady Luck by night. ,
But the S.P. fan into the long
series of Mexican revolutions
and among other things the revo
lutionists cracked down on gam
bling in the state of 'Sonora.
Along about that same time
Henry Ford invented the cheap
automobile, which more or less
put the skids under passenger
traffic as a big revenue producer
for the railroads. So the South
ern Pacific project went the way
of the Sante Fe projpet.
"EWENTUALLY wealthy people
acquired- the site and built
the present Playa de la Cortes
Not only did they have money,
They had the good taste to em
ploy architects of outstanding
ability, who made a truly lovely
place of it. It is charming, and
you can get your money's worth
just by strolling along its colon
naded halls and loafing in its
sunlit patios and swimming in
its pool or sitting along its edge
and watching, somebody else do
the' swimming.
It is run on the American plan,
which means that meals are in
cluded in the price. The cost for
two people is around $25 per
day, depending on the kind of
room furnished. The cost for one
person is somewhat more than
half the amount charged for two
because of the difference in
room occupancy. At these prices
it is so popular that you have to
have reservations well in ad
vance in order to get in.
GUAYMAS has another distinc
tion. No two people pro
nounce it the same way. There
are three general schools of
thought on the subject.
- One is just plain Gway-mas,
like it is spelled. Another is
Gwy-mas. Still another is WHY-
mas, -with variations such as WY-
mas.
A fourth way is the right way
-r-or at least the Spanish way
but that can't be diagrammed
here for the way the- Spanish
pronounce the letter G just can't
be done in print. You kind of
clear your throat when you
make the Spanish sound for G.
The Drowning Incident
To the Editor; I was very in
terested in F. S. Brandon's ac
count of the 1880 Umpqua flood
and the "disappearance" of six
stage horses and a heavy load
ed stage of driver Fred Tice (not
Tyce) as mentioned in the Mail
Tribune of March 4. I knew
Fred Tice years ago and he told
me of the incident many times.
I hope the following will clarify
and not contradict Mr. Bran
don's account.
Fred Tice's stage run in Feb
ruary 1880 was from Jackson
ville to Canyonville which was
made in a day and a night, and
the road at that time, down in
the canyons and straight up over
the mountains, rarely followed
a grade. It was a bad winter and
the mud in the. road was axle
deep to his coach. He said he
expecte.d trouble crossing .the
streams, but the main rrivers,
the Rogue, and the Umpqua,
were bridged but Graves creek,
Wolf creek and Cow creek were
open fords. He recalled that
though they were all raging-torrents
he made it across all till
he reached . Cow creek. Cow
creek was well over the banks
and he was certain he could not
ford it, but then he thought of
the mail and the contract with
the Express company, he felt he
had to ford it if at all possible,
so he urged his team of six
horses into the stream. The swift
water forced the lead team to
stop and the swing team became
tangled in the "stretchers,", bet
ter known as "single trees,"
causing them to1 be pulled down
in the raging waters, piling up
the whole team. The stage,
pushed by the current of the
stream, swung around against
the bank and Fred and his guard
abandoned the coach, saving the
express box and mail sack. They
then walked to a change station
and stayed a short time, and
when the high waters lowered
enough so they could get to
where the horses were, they
took their pocket knives and
cut the harness loose from the
horses and let them float down
the creek. This is the version of
the drowning as told to me by
Mr. Tice. Mr. Tice has a son
living here in Medford..
There is a' picture on display
in . the Jacksonville Museum of
the late Fred Tice on the seat of
his stage coach driving a six
horse team, but if this was the
team that drowned I "do not
know.
Harry W. Barneburg
1297 Sunset ave.
Medford, Ore.
Not Sound Business
To the Editor: The 10-year
Kingston - Newburgh fluorida
tion experiment, begun in 1945,
is the only one' I have read
about as being completed. Even
now, the facts from both sides
have not been told. Research
has not yet disclosed a safe
tolerance level for fluoride in
take in the variable communit
ies. It may take years before we
know what effects they may
have on the rest of the body.
If fluorides harden the teeth,
what is to prevent them from
hardening the arteries and the
bones? The mere application of
heat to fluoridated water will
increase the concentration of
the fluorine by evaporation of
the water. Leafy vegetables ab
sorb more than the impene
trable ones. Frozen absorb more
than the fresh. So the question
of how much fluorine one in
gests daily involves not . Only
how much fluoridated water he
drinks but also the amount of
vegetables he eats,- how - long
they were cooked, and how
much water they were cooked
in. '
There is also a direct -correlation
between blood coagula
tion time and the fluorine, con
tent of the blood. Rabbit's blood
and goose blood clot slowly and
have a high fluorine content,
while that of the dog and cat
which clot rapidly are free from
fluorine. Further observations
showed that in human subjects
using drinking water with vary
ing amounts of natural fluorine,
coagulation . was 6 - to- 20 . times
that of individuals, using flour
ine free water.
The magazine "Chemical
Week," July, 1951, states: "Only
17 per cent of the nation's water
is fluorine treated, thus the mar
ket potential has. fluoride mak
ers goggle-eyed. Standing to
benefit from the boom are
chemical companies ' and equip
ment makers. It adds up to ,a
nice piece of business on all
sides."
In Milwaukee it was estimat
ed it would cost $78,000 to fluor
idate the water. As only 1 per
cent of the water is. used for
drinking, so $77,220 - worth of
sodium fluoride is wasted.
There still remained $780 repre
senting the cost '"'of drinking
water for both child and adult.
Of this, only three-tenths of 1
per cent is drunk by "children,
so $546 more is deducted for the
sewers, leaving $234, which ac
tually served the intended pur
po'se. To say . the "least, this is
not sound business."'
Maxine, Hill,
1300 Winchester
Medford, Ore.
SyngmanRheeSeen
As Sure Winner in
Korean Elections
By CHARLES M. McCANN
United Press Correspondent
It is pretty certain that wrin
kled old Syngman Rhee is going
to be elected President of South
Js.orea ior a
third four-year
term.
His Liberal
party unani
mously nomi
nate d' him
Monday as its
c a n d i date in
the election to
be held some
time this sum
mer. Charles AlcCann
There was quite a flurry a. few
hours later when he sent a mes
sage to the convention saying
he would like to retire.
It soon developed, however,
that he wanted "the whole peo
ple" rather than just the party,
to decide.
; That meant that Rhee wanted
to be drafted. "That he would be
was made clear immediately. -
. Paraders representing all ele
ments of the Korean people
started parading through Seoul,
the capital, behind brass bands
and organzing "We Want Rhee"
rallies.
There is no doubt that the
people want Rhee to run, and
that he really means to.
Indispensable Man
The fact is that he comes as
close as is possible, at this time,
to being Korea's indispensable
man.
Koreans' and American offi
cials in Korea share the convic
tion that if anythng happened
to Rhee, political chaos would re
sult. This conviction was pointed
up dramatically on Jan. 30 when
Maj. Gen. Kim Chang Yong,
chief of the army counter intelli
gence corps, was assassinated in
Seoul.
Suppose that should happen to
Rhee? people asked. The reason
was that Yong's murder ap
peared to be part of an under-
surface struggle for power.
In addition to half a dozen
politicians who would like to be
President, four army generals
and the chief of the militarized
national police force are wait
ing to make a bid for leadership,
violently if necessary.
" Nobody could blame Rhee for
wanting to retire. He will be 81
years old on March 26. He has
been in politics for 62 years, since
he was 19. He has undergone im
prisonment, torture, exile.
He lived in the United States
for about 35 years before his
country was made free in 1945
He holds degrees from George
Washington, Harvard and
Princeton universities.
, At 19, he was in politics. He
served seven years in prison.
Then he came to the United
States. He worked untiringly for
Korean independence in Wash
ington, London, Paris and other
capitals. At last his dream came
true. He was elected Korea's first
President in 1948 and reelected
in 1952. Approaching 81, he is
still tough. He speaks softly but
his eyes are hard and he is al
ways ready for a fight. He re
mains Korea's No. 1 man.
'If you're
Where you save does make
As more than 15,000,000 Americans already know, there are
important advantages to putting your savings in insured
Savings and Loan Associations . . .
Excellent returns from your money is one advantage.
Modern, efficient, forward-looking service is another.
And, of course, your money is safe because in insured Savings
and Loan Associations your savings are protected by sound
management and substantial reserves. They are insured up to
$10,000 by the FSLIC an agency of the U. S. Government
No wonder Americans are now putting more of their savings
account dollars into insured Savings and Loan Associations
than anywhere else! .
Investments Made
Matter of Fcrcf by
STORM WARNING
Washington The vast ma
jority of Americans must -be a
bit bewildered by the headlines
"srrrr? announcins a
crisis in Trans
jordan. A local
king, it seems,
has summarily
dismissed a pe
culiar British
character with
the pecu liar
appelation o f
Glubb Pasha
Stewart Aisop irom commana
of the local army.
"But why the devil should I
care?," one common-sensible cit
izen rather peevishly asked these
reporters. "I don't even know
where Transjordan is."
Yet American interests and
even the American future are
TJ both rather di
rectly involved
in this liplv
t little crisis in
a small and re
mote nation of
the Middle
j East. So it is
well to try to
be clear about
what has really
Joseph Aisop happened, and
then to examine what it really
may mean.
What has really happened, in
brief, is that three relatively
novel pressures have utterly up
set the established order in
Transjordan. The first of these
pressures, and probably the most
important, is generally familiar.
It is the increasing nationalism
that makes it increasingly intol
erable, for all the ex-colonial
peoples, to have Westerners in
key positions in their countries.
T)ECAUSE of this new nation
alism, which one sees all over
Asia, General Glubb's position at
the head of the Transiordanian
Army was already an anachron
ism.. Yet the anachronism might
have lasted a lot longer if it had
not been for the two other pres
sures. The second pressure was not
really a pressure, in our sense
of the word, as much as it was a
temptation. The : Saudi Arabian
government is rich beyond the
dreams of avarice, by Middle
Eastern standards, with Ameri
can oil royalties. The Saudi
Arabians have used a substantial
share of their oil royalties to sub
sidize the politicians and the
press in neighboring countries
These subsidies have had a great
effect in Transjordan, which is
both small and poor.
In Transjordan, moreover, the
government itself has long been
subsidized by the British. The
whole bill for the Arab Legion,
the force that Glubb Pasha head
ed until last Thursday, was for
merly paid by the British tax
payers. Saudi Arabia and Egypt
really meaning Saudi Arabia,
which has the cash to spare-
have recently been offering to
pay the bill that Britain has al
ways paid. King Hussein of
Transjordan's abrupt dismissal
of Glubb Pasha means that .his
government has transferred from
the British to the Saudi Arabian
payroll. .. .'
AS FOR the third pressure in
volved in the Transjordan
crisis, it is simply the new Soviet
political offensive in the Middle
East. On the one hand, the Com
WW.
Ik &
saving for a comfortable future...
by the 1 0th of March Earn
FIRST FEDERAL j
Savings & Loan Assn. of Bedford
27 North Holly R. F. Kyle, President
WU m
Joe and Stewart AIsop
munist infiltration of the masses
in Transjordan Is much further
aavancea man mosi people sup
pose. When the British tried to
bring Transjordan into the Bagh
dad Pact the Communists led
the riots that defeated the Brit:
ish attempt. This Communist in
fluence has no doubt softened
up King Hussein, so that he is
willing to do business with, his
family's Saudi Arabian enemies.
On the other hand, Communist
agents disguised as Arab . Na
tionalists also' have far-reaching
influence at the court of King
Saud of Saudi Arabia. But after
reviewing all these pressures on
Transjordan, you may still ask
where we come into this mess.
The answer is fairly simple. In
the first place the money that
King Saud is dispensing is Amer
ican money. The Arabian-American
Oil Company pays him his
oil royalties; and Aramco has
allowed the Saudi Arabian ruler
to anticipate his royalties for
an enormous sum.
Furthermore, the British in
fluence in Transjordan, symbol
ized by Oeneral Glubb. was the
last, essential, 'ghostly survival
oi tne .British imperial position
in the Middle East. It was, if you
uKe, a Kina ol visible guarantee
of British control of the little
Arab sheikhdoms to the south
of Transjordan, such as Bahrein
and Kuweit. It also reinforced
the western links of the much
larger neighboring state of Iraq,
ine Key member ol the Baghdad
Pact.
TF ANYTHING unlucky hap-
c Li , till anu.
Iraq, it will not only break the
Baghdad Pact. Aboveall it will
affect the golden flow of oil from
these areas to Britain and West
ern Europe. Without the oil, Bri
tain will go bankrupt there and
then. The Western European
economies, even if they do not
go totally bankrupt, will come
to a dead halt for want o, Mid
dle Eastern nptrnlpiim Tho incm. .
.
lar vein of Western Europe and
Britain, in truth, is the oil
source of the Middle East.
In short, the future of Amer
ica's principal NATO partners
is in play in the Middle Eastern
power game, in which the Trans
jordan crisis is a major incident.
The power game is all the more
important to America, because
we are also in pawn to our Brit
ish and European partners. For
they control the overseas air
bases on which the; striking pow
er of the American strategic air
command wholly depends.
What has happened in Trans
jordan can even eventually af
fect the sacred concept of mas-
sive retaliation, iu una caicui
we are involved.
Copyright 1956,
New York Herald Tribune Inc.
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