DUR MEDFORD (OREGON)
MedfordJTribune
'Everybody In Southern Oregon
neacu 111c iuiiiiuuuc
Published Daily Except Saturday by
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O cpOBERT w- RUHL. Editor
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GERALD LATHAM, Business Manager
ERIC ALLEN JR- Managing Editor
EARL H. ADAMS. City Editor
HARRY CHIP MAN. Telegraph Editor
RICHARD JEWETT Sports Editor
OLIVE STARCHER. Society Editor
DALE ERICKSON. Circulation Mgr.
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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
March 14, 1946
(It was Thursday)
Medford Lions club endorses
city school bond issue to finance
improvements.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: Spring is
officially due to arrive a week
from today. So far the vernal
season has been so backward,
nobody is forward enough to
call the current sample, Vern.
20 YEARS AGO
MarchC14, 1936
(It was Saturday)
Spraying for peach
starts in valley.
aphis
Wild horse roundup to start
at dawn tomorrow in Little Ap
plegate area.
30 YEARS AGO
March 14, 1926
(It was Sunday)
Medford takes third place in
state basketball tournament
with 22-17 victory over Baker.
Construction and installation
of new water system in Med
ford to start in about three
weeks.
40 YEARS AGO
March 14, 1916
(It was Tuesday)
Clint Gallatin, deputy county
assessor, filed for nomination on
Democratic ticket for assessor.
J. Cecil Alter establishes of
fices in Medford as official frost
observer.
Whai's the Answer?
Can You Gei 4 of the 7?
Copr. 1955, Editorial Research Report
1. President Eisenhower's
brother Edgar is a newspaper
publicity man, college president,
engineer or lawyer?
2. Largest state is Texas. Sec
ond largest is California, Flor
ida, Georgia, Minnesota or New
York? . V. . .
3. Chancellor Adenauer of
West Germany is a member of
the Social Democratic, Christian
Democrat, or Free Democratic
party? .
4. The horse that "places" in
a race has come in first, second,
third, fourth, or worse?
5. Medium-priced cars depre
ciate in value in three years by
about, on the average, 40,
55, 70, or 85?
6. The natural gas bill vetoed
by President Eisenhower had
more support in Senate from
Republicans or Democrats or
about equal support from each?
7. A man named St. Laurent
heads the government in France,
Quebec, Portugal, Italy, Canada,
or Australia?
The answers: I. Lawyer. 2.
California. 3. Christian Demo
crat. 4. Second. 5. About 70,
on the average. 6. More from Re
publicans. 7. Canada.
Lonergan Withdraws
From State Primary
Salem (U.P.) James F. Loner
gan, Portland candidate for the
GOP nomination of representa
tive from the east central city
subdistrict of Multnomah coun
ty, was the only person to with
draw from the Oregon primary.
Deadline for withdrawing
from the race was 5 p.m. Monday.
MAIL TRIBUNE
Jack Pine Uses
We read about the plans of the Johns Manville
company, which is starting a big plant near Klamath
Falls for the manufacture of insulating board, with
considerable interest.
The interest was motivated by the fact that for a
long time we have been waiting for someone to be
gin making use of the jack pine, or lodge pole pine,
so abundant in that area.
THE ONLY previous large-scale use of the little
trees has been for chipping, with the chips being
used in hardboard manufacture, a process similar to
that Johns Manville plans to use, with the ground fi
bre of the wood being dry-pressed into the insulating
material.
The $15 million or so the big company will invest
in this venture is an indication of its confidence that
it will pay off, and that jack pine is finally coming in
to its own.
With a growing cycle of only 20 to 50 years
much shorter than that of larger species the little
trees can renew themselves on a regular basis and
form the backbone of a continuing industry. E. A.
Two
Steven Kelly, a 9-year-old whose home was in Sa
lem, died in Rochester, Minn., last week following a
heart operation.
His death is in tragic contrast to the successful
operation performed on a young Medford man, Leon
McDougall, whose story was told in last Sunday's Mail
Tribune.
THE CAPITAL JOURNAL of Salem, in a thought-
ful tribute to the boy and to those who did what
they could to save young Steven's life, commented on
his death this way:
It came just after "heart month" when this community
under the urge of a special local organization, the press,
television, clubs and soliciting groups, had done its part in
a national drive to create a fund for research into heart
ailments, their prevention and cure.
It came just after 69 persons in the community had do
nated blood in Steven's behalf, lifting the most recent Red
Cross blood drawing above its quota.
Are these movements futile just a whim of the times?
Emphatically no. They appeal for more effort and great
er giving, even to the point of sacrifice. Every death from
this and other ailments, suGh as cancer, is a challenge, an
accepted challenge, to, the science of medicine and sur-
gery. Steven died. And the community, which had watch-'
ed the case so closely and hoped so strongly for his recov
ery, extends its sympathy to his family. But his death may
mean that other children shall live.
Science some day will be able to control this affliction,
as it has others.
THE OTHER story, the story of "Punky" McDoug
" all of Medford, has a happier ending. His opera
lion was successful, and he is nearly back to normal
again. Better than normal, actually, for the increased
circulation of blood has "brought to life" nerves and
feelings he never had before.
We're sure Punky agrees whole - heartedly with
the Capital Journal's comments about Steven, and
about the need for further study and research in the
field of heart and other ailments.
THE TWO stories one happy, the other tragic
A stand in contrast as symbols of the fact that medi
cal research is making progress, and the time is ap
proaching when boys like 9-year-old Steven need not
die. ; ,
They also demonstrate dramatically that people
basically are good, that when called upon they will
do what they cari to aid their fellows, and that when
the chips are down one really finds out who are
friends and who are not. E. A. -
What Will We Be? '
Up in the Willamette valley, telephone exchang
es are being switched over to the use of word-prefixes,
such as have long been in use in large cities. Most
familiar, probably, are those in Portland, ATwater,
BEacon, and so on.
The inevitable has happened some of the cities
are less than totally pleased with the prefix '"designa
tions assigned to them.
CALEM, for instance., has been labeled EMpire. But
the Salem Statesman mildly complains that either
CApital (now in use in Portland) or CHerry would
be much more appropriate to the area.
And Eugene has been assigned the prefixes Dia
mond and Riverside.
The Register-Guard in that city says it "isn't com
plaining exactly," but it points out that the Guard
has named its own circulation area the Emerald Em
pire, "and we'd sure like to have that EMpire prefix
ourselves."
CO IT GOES in the unhappy Willamette Valley.
We checked with the local office of the
telephone company, and were informed that we're
due for prefixes in Medford (Central Point, Grants
Pass, Rogue River and a 'few other places already
have 'em) in just about a year.
Wonder what we'll be called? E. A.
Night Bus Service May
Salem (U.R) Salem citv
council is studying a Chamber
of CommmeFce recommendation
that night city bus service should
be continued in the city even if
the city government has to help
pay the way.
Meanwhile, no changes in
night bus schedules were expect
ed at least until the next city
council meeting March 26.
The city transit lines have
asked to eliminate service after
Wednesday, March 14, 1956
Stories
Slop in Salem
5:45 p. m. on Sunday and hol
idays, after 9:15 p. m. Mondays
and Fridays and after 6:45 p. m.
other days.
The 2,000 -word chamber
report presented to city coun
cilmen this week confirmed the
transit lines' poor financial
condition due .to declining pa
tronage, but said the night serv
ice should be continued as "nec
essary to the health, safety and
general welfare of the people."
Communications
- Letters to the Editor must bear
the name and address of the writer
although under certain circum
stances the use ol a Den nsn-? -js
initial for publication is Dermia
lible. The Mai Tribune reserves
the right to edit all letters with an
eye to clarification and condensa
tion Letters submitted for Dublica
tion must not exceed 400 words
On School Bill
To the Editor: Keaderslof your
newspaper who are familiar
with school problems must have
been startled to read Congress
man Ellsworth's recent by-line
story about the Federal aid-to-school
construction bills now
under consideration in the Con
gress. Mr. Ellsworth wrote: "So
far as Oregon is concerned, we
will gain nothing in dollar aid
from this bill." But in the imme
diately preceding paragraph, he
stated: "The Kelley bill formula
might be the best but I doubt
it. I feel inclined now to vote
for an amendment using the
President's idea."
It seems hard to reconcile
these two statements by Mr.
Ellsworth. Under the Democratic-sponsored
Kelley bill, rec
ommended by the House Com
mittee on Education and Labor,
Oregon would receive $15,452,
284 in Federal school aid over
four years. Under the Presi
dent's proposal, Oregon would
receive only $11,660,000 spread
over five years. Mr. Ellsworth
fears that Oregon will gain no
net financial help from Federal
aid to school construction, yet
he simultaneously announces
that he would vote for an
amendment to the bill to substi
tute the administration formula,
which is far less favorable to
Oregon.
Mr. Rex Putnam, Oregon's
Superintendent of Public In
struction, has written me that
"the Kelley bill will more near
ly meet the needs in this area,
so far as Oregon and most other
states are concerned." I hope
that every member of Congress
from Oregon will be recorded
in favor of passage of the Fed
eral school-aid bill which actu
ally comes to a final vote.
Richard L. Neuberger,
United States Senator,
Washington, D. C.
Label on a Can
To the Editor: Label on a can
of sodium fluoride designated
for use in pure municipal drink
ing water reads as follows:
Insecticide Caution
poison warning.
Sodium fluoride is highly pois
onous and therefore must be
used with extreme care. Do not
store it in the same locality With
any fcod product or any medi
cinal item for either external or
internal use.
Store out of reach of children.
Use every precaution to prevent
accidental spilling or accidental
contamination of articles about
the house. Doxnot permit hu
mans or animals to come in con
tact with sodium fluoride. It is
highly irritating and a small
amount on any skin abrasion,
minor cut or injury may have
serious effects.
Scrupulously avoid inhaling
the'dust.
Do you want that sort of stuff
in your drinking water? Of
course you don't. Do not con
fuse chlorine with fluorine.
Chlorine affects injurious bac
teria in water. Fulorine works
destructive injury to the human
body.
John Strebinger,
126 Kenwood ave.
Medford, Ore.
He's Surprised
To the Editor: Just read the
half-baked editorial copied from
the Oregon City Enterprise
Courier, and am surprised that
an editor would write such an
article, or that another editor
would copy it with apparent ap
proval. However, some good seems to
be coming out of this discussion
of the fluoridation question. It
seems to have developed a sure
fire technique for determining
the scholastic standing and integ
rity of an individual. Just ask
him "Do you favor fluoridation
of city water?" If he says "Yes,"
you know he is well educated,
well informed, unselfish, and
highly dependable. If he says
"No," then he has admitted that
he is ignorant, uninformed, un
educated, selfish, stingy, and gen
erally not worth considering
1 Many of us belong to this lat
ter class, and we do not feel too
badly, or too lonely. The great
nations of Sweden and France,
are against fluoridation, and be
long to our class. Also belonging
to this class are men like-Dr.
Chas. Dillon of the British Dental
Assn. who has spent 14 years
studying tooth decay; Dr. W. R.
Cameron, formerly of the Bant
ing & Best Research Labora
tories; Dr. Geo. A. Swendiman,
past president, American Dentai
Assn.; Dr. C. A. Briisch, director
Brusch Med. Center, Cambridge,
Mass.; and an increasing host of
others who, like the Delaney
committee of the 82d congress,
after hearing "both sides" of the
question, decided against the ad
visability of fluoridation.
Your selfish, uninformed ser
vant, John C. Stille,
Shady Cove, Ore.
At any one time the Naval
Air Test Center at Patuxent
River, Md., is testing nearly 30
different types of planes.
Embarrassing Questions Seen
For U.S. On Jurisdiction Limit
By CHARLES M. McCANN
United Press Correspondent
The United States may be ask
ed some embarrassing questions
at a conference which starts
Thursday
in
the
West In-
dies.
Delegates of
the 21 Ameri
can republics
wiU discuss at
Ciudad T r u
jillo, ' Domini
can Republic,
the issue of the
Charles McCann proper limit OI
territorial waters.
That means the limit to which
a country may claim jurisdiction
over the waters off its coast.
Chile, Peru, Ecuador and El
U - 1
Consumer Credit At
AH-Time High; Some
Uneasiness Results
By MARTIN PACKMAN
Washington Uneasiness over
a rapid rise in the volume of
outstanding consumer credit was
reflected in President Eisenhow
er's proposal that Congress con
sider giving the government
standby authority to regulate in
stallment buying. The President
emphasized that present condi
tions do not call for use of such
authority; he thought, however,
that "This is a good time for
Congress and the Executive
Branch to study the problem."
Washington has not exercised
direct control over consumer
credit since May, 1952, when the
Federal Reserve Board suspend
ed Regulation W, which pre
scribed minimum down pay
ments and maximum maturities
on instalment purchases. The
Eisenhower administration came
into office dedicated to keeping
away from direct economic con
trols as much as possible. Damp
ening of boom tendencies has
been undertaken mainly through
the general monetary controls
administered by the Federal Re
serve Board.
A growing number of bankers
and economists have been sug
gesting, however, that re-imposi
tion of federal controls over con
sumer credit may now be
prudent. Congress usually has
considered such controls dis
tasteful, but Chairman Spence
(D-Ky.) of the House Banking
Committee has said that if the
President shows that controls
are needed, Congress will au
thorize them, though reluctant
ly. Consumer credit outstanding
at the end of 1955 totaled $36
billion, an increase during the
year of $6 billion. Automobile
loans accounted for more than
$14 biUion of the total and for
about $4 billion of the year's in
crease. The rate at which instalment
credit has been expanding and
the easy terms allowed for re
payment of many of the obliga
tions have paused -more concern
than the record volume of such
debt. Some economists fear that
when the total outstanding stops
growing and starts to shrink,
the economy will suffer. Changes
in the extent of instalment buy
ing accentuate general business
booms or recessions.
Lowering of required down
payments and lengthening of re
payment periods have reduced
buyers' equities and increased
lenders' risks. This tendency has
been especially marked in the
automobile tieia, wnere ex
tremely liberal terms have been
offered on new and used-car
purchases. Sales of new cars for
only one-fourth of the purchase
price down and 36 or 42 months
to pay have not been uncommon.
Consumer credit, once consid
ered only the resort of spend
thrifts, has for many years now
been recognized as a vital seg
ment of the national economy.
Almost two-thirds of all automo
biles and one-half of all major
household appliances now are
sold on time. Consumer credit
helps make possible mass pro
duction and mass- employment.
Moreover, by facilitating pur
chase of hew models before the
old are worn out, it contributes
to the dynamic nature of the
economy.
Longshoremen Open
Contract Discussion
San Francisco W.R) Repre
sentative of 17,000 West Coast
longshoremen opened a two
day meeting to prepare demands
for forthcoming contract nego
tiations. The master contract for all
West Coast longshoremen ex
pires June 15, unless extended
to achieve a common termina
tion date with the East Coast
contract. .
Most of the first day's session
was spent in the study of wel
fare programs, including a pilot
dental plan that provides care
of longshoremen's children up
to the age of 15.
Harry Bridges, president of
International Long shoremen's
and Warehousemen's Union, was
to address the final session of the
meeting today.
Salvador formally claim a 200
mile limit. Some other Latin
American countries are ready to
make the same claim.
The United States refuses to
recognize that. It points out that
the historic limit is three miles.
It admits that the three-mile
limit is really outdated in these
modern times. But it wants to
set a modest one instead.
Some Countries Bitter
The immediate point in dis
pute is fishing rights. Some
Latin American. -countries are
bitter over; the activities of big
United States fishing fleets off
their" coasts. - They say' the fish
population is being Wiped out.
But some bigger 'issues have
entered into question.
One is that of the "continental
In view of the fact that the
country is currently experienc
ing record prosperity many ex
perts maintain that the present
volume of consumer debt is not
unduly high. General Motors'
President Curtice has said that
the expansion of consumer credit
represents "a very normal situa
tion, which has accomplished
the growth in . . . population
. . . disposable income, and . . .
consumer purchasing."
Borrowed From Future
On the other hand, some of
those who think that consumer
credit has been rising top fast
and too far contend that so much
buying on time has probably cut
into future production and sales.
Chairman Fulbright (D-Ark.) of
the Senate Banking Committee
said on Jan. 25 that "It now ap
pears that a great part of the
boom . . . was borrowed from the
future."
Numerous defenders and
critics of the current credit sit
uation agree that dealers and
lenders should refrain from us
ing credit terms as a weapon of
competition. They hold that
greater self-restraint and more
careful selection of credit risks
are the best way to regulate con
sumer credit.
Campaign-Year
Biography
By LYLE C. WILSON
United Press Correspondent
Washington U.R A book
briefly titled "Nixon" hit the
sales counters today and headed
toward some angry controversy,
It's a 188-page account of the
life of Richard M. Nixon written
by Ralph De Toledano, a re
search expert on the Commu
nist conspiracy in the United
States. Henry Holt and Co. pub
lished the book at $3.
Toledano's book will delight
the vice president's friends de
spite its tilt toward over-praise
It will anger his enemies with
special emphasis on former Pres
ident Truman, top Democrats
and the political-left.
Chief Justice Earl Warren
may be jolted by the implica
tions of a paragraph discussing
Nixon's . 1950 senatorial cam
paign against California's Demo
cratic candidate, Helen Gahagan
Douglas.
All Out Support
Mrs. Douglas' record in the
House was notably left wing.
The Truman administration
went all out for her with Vice
President Alben W. Barkley and
several cabinet members on the
stump. Toledano relates: -
"Gov. Earl Warren, -who was
running for re-election against
James Roosevelt, said openly
that 'he would not raise a finger
for Nixon and he kept' his
word. Warren never explained
why he disassociated himself
from the rest of the Republican
ticket. But it was known that in
1948, when he was the vice
presidential candidate he had
dissuaded Thomas E. Dewey
from raising the Communists-in-g'overnment
issue."
Toledano details Nixon's poli
tical career from his first elec
tion to the House- in 1946
through the 1954 general elec
tion campaign. Nixon defeated
the unbeatable Jerry Voorhis
for a House seat in 1946 in a
campaign stressing the "Social
istic, aspects of Voorhis's pro
gram and its general left wing
character." He was in bad with
left wingers thereafter. -
Daily's U-Drive
Medford Airport
shelf," involving the sovereignty
over the under-water oil re
sources off a country's shores.
Another that especially
worries the United States is de
fense. If a country can claim a
200-mile limit, it asks, could the
claim be extended, to air rights?
Could a country set a sweeping
jurisdiction over the air lanes
over the waters?
The arguments of the United
States seem somewhat weakened
by a prohibition-era chicken
which has come home to roost.
Back in the late 1700's the
United States and Britain agreed
on a three-mile limit of terri
torial waters. That limit was de
termined by the distance from
shore to which a cannon fire
might extend.
On the principle, in these
days of guided missiles with
inter - continental ballistic
on the way a country might
claim jurisdiction which could
span the Atlantic.
But the United States itself
set some precedents, which now
may become embarrassing, back
in the 1920's. '
The Prohibition Act had come
into force, but not into effect.
Fleets of fast rum-runners start
ed operating off the American
coasts.
The United States succeeded
in negotiating treaties with Can
ada, Britain, Cuba, Panama and
Mexico setting at. 12 miles the
limits to which its coast guard
cutters might chase a rum-run
ner.
Then it got some countries to
agree that rum-runners flying
their flags might be pursued and
captured up to one hour's steam
ing distance, from the coast
That, in those days, might have
been 30 miles.
Then came the almost forgot
ten , incident of "I'm Alone." An
enthusiastic Coast Guard skip
per pursued the Canadian regis
tered rum runner of that name
for 2V2 days and sank it 215
miles off the Canadian coast.
It may be hoped that none of
the Latin American delegates at
Ciudad Truipillo will be mean
enough to hark back to those
days. But some of them may be
tempted to ask the American
delegation the difference be
tween . the 00-mile limit they
want and the 215-mile limit the
United States took.
Nixon
On Stands
Toledano presents Nixon as
the key figure in compelling a
reluctant President Truman and
his Department of Justice to
prosecute Alger Hiss. The de
partment's inclination, Toledano
states, was to prosecute, instead,
Whittaker Chambers, who was
Hiss' accuser. The author finds
Nixon the victim of smear cam
paigns from the early days of
his House career, one of the first
being related to Nixon's activity
in obtaining successful prosecu
tion of William Remington, a
Fifth Amendment employee of
the Commerce Department.
Remington was murdered by
fellow-inmates while serving his
sentence.
"Junior G-Man"
"The significance of the Rem
ington case in this account,"
writes Toledano, "derives from
the fact that Americans for
Democratic Action set itself up
as prime advocate of his 'inno
cence' and attempted to prove
it by mounting one of the first
smear campaigns against Nixon.
Arthur Schlesinger Jr. let fly a
rouser by calling Nixon a 'junior
G-man' but "never bothered to
inform his growing public thatj
since 1946 he himself had known
the key facts in the Hiss-Chambers
case."
The book organizes in story
form Nixon's accusations over
a period of nearly 10 years. It
boils down to the charge: That
President Truman and key fig
ures of his administration tried
to look the other way when evi
dence was produced of high
level Communist infiltration of
government.
It is a campaign book in a
campaign year with a hard core
of attack on the Roosevelt-Truman
administrations on charges
of being soft or muddle-headed
on the issue of Communist spies
in government.
SONOTONE
All-Transistor
HEARING AID
WHAT IS IT?
In simple terms the Sonotone
transistor Hearing Aid Is a Very
small perfectly engineered in
strument. It is most economical
to operate and easy to wear.
The only thing that your friends
could possibly notice about it is
the marvelous change in your
hearing and your entire per
sonality. j
C.
18
..Years
with
Sonotone
839 East
In the Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
Foreign aid project:
The U S. government has
just proposed buying 10,000
tons of Burmese rice to help
meet an emergency food short
age in East Pakistan.
Proceeds from the sale of the
rice would be used by the Bur
mese to hire American techni
cians to direct various Burmese
government projects.
TT'S a fine gesture, of course.
If there are hungry people
in East Pakistan, they ought to
be fed and since we are the best
nation on earth it's up to us, ac
cording to all the rules, to do
the feeding.
But I can't help feeling it
would be better for all concern
ed if instead of going clear
around the barn and buying rice
in Burma to feed East Paki
stan's hungry people we just
gave the food to hungry Paki
stani out of our own surplus
supplies, which are becoming so
huge that they threaten to de
stroy our agricultural economy.
UR biggest agriculture prob
lem is to get rid of these
surpluses which arose be
cause our politicians lacked the
necessary courage to change our
agricultural support policy
when the basic conditions that
were responsible for the policy
changed. As long as they hang
over the markets like a dark
thundercloud, our agricultural
economy will remain unsound
regardless of what we may do
in the way of soil banks and
such.
We can't burn these surplus
ses. We can't throw 'em in the
rivers and the lakes and the
oceans. People, jut won't stand
for DESTP.OYING food. If we
start dumping them on the mar
ket at whatever price they will
bring, we will make their people
plenty mad and thus gain us
even more unpopularity
throughout the world than we
already disenjoy.
BUT we can give our burden
some surpluses of food away
to starving people. Ever since
the world began, feeding the
hungry has been the right thing
to do. We'd be better off to give
it away than to let it lie and
rot in expensive storage ware
houses. IN New York, scores of Chase
Manhattan Bank clerks are
continuing their search through
the vaults for a MILLION DOL
LAR U.S. treasury note that has
been lost or mislaid since last
Wednesday.
I know just how they feel. I
lost my keys a while back, and
until I found 'em the world was
an upset place.
r
rM ON MY WAY TO
WAINSC0TT
PHARMACY
WE ALWAYS GET
OUR PRESCRIPTIONS
FILLED THERE. MOTHER
SAYS SHE LIKES THE
DEPENDABLE SERVICE.
Flavahist
.$1.79
$5.40
Paladae, 16-oz.
Homicebrin, 16-oz. $3.96
Medford's Oldest
Hearing Aid
Institution
R. ADAMSON
DISTRICT MANAGER
Jackson . Phone 2-5904
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