Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, March 29, 1956, Image 4

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    FOUR MEDFORD (OREGON)
MedfordjTribune
"Everybody in Soutnern Oregon
Head The Mail Tribune"
Published Daily Except Saturday by
MEDFORD PRINTING CO.
27-29 North Fir St. Phone 2-6141
ROBEPT W. RUHL, Editor
HERB GREY. Advertising Manager
GERALD LATH Ail. Business Manager
ERIC ALLEN JR Managing Editor
EARL H. ADAMS. City Editor
HARRY CHIPMAN. Telegraph Editor
RICHARD JEWETT Sports Editor
OLIVE STARCHER Society Editor
DALE ERICKSON. Circulation Mgr.
An Independent Newspaper
Entered as second class matter at
Medford. Oregon, under Act of
- March 3, 1397
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Flight o' Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10. 20. 30 and
iQ years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
March 29. 1946
(It was Friday)
Several county residents vac-
cinated for smallpox after out
break in San Francisco and Se
attle.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: The North-'
west area may get a huge wind
tunnel. It will be used to test
flights at i-pesds faster than the
speed of :Jund, and will offer no
competition to the old style wind
tunnel, generally known as the
legislafure.
20 TEARS AGO
Marcij 29. 1936
(It was Sunday)
Maurice Tedrow, district
ranger of Rogue River National
forest, promoted and
transfer-
red to Colville National
forest
in Washington.
Clarence E. Pankey, orchard
ist and member of pioneer
Rogue valley family, enters race
for county clerk on Democratic
ticket.
30 YEARS AGO
March 29, 1926
(Itwas Monday)
Medford Mayor O. O. Alexan
der and city recorder, M. L. Al
ford, travel to Portland with
$500,000 in bonds sold recently
for water improvements.
Seventh Day Adventists con
vention committees appointed at
business session here.
40 YEARS AGO
March 29, 1916
(It was Wednesday)
eaHenry O'Malley, for nine
years in charge of the U. S.
Bureau of Hatcheries in Rogue
valley, appointed chief of the
division of fish culture at Wash
ington, D.C.
Grizzlies scheduled first out
ing of season; hike to Table Rock
from Col. Washburn's ranch.
Whafs the Answer?
Can You Gei 4 of the 7?
Copr. 1955, Editorial Research Report
1. Margaret Truman plans to
be married in April, May, June,
mid-summer or early fall?
2. Many states require an
employer to pay women employ
ees the same wage as to men
employees for similar work;
right or wrong?
3. The Girl Scouts of America
was founded in an Eastern, Mid
dle Western, Southeron or West
ern city?
4. Cities of about equal popu
lation have much the same num
ber of traffic deaths each year;
right or wrong? o
5. Stalin, late Russian dictator,
was a native of Moscow or of the
Ukraine, foriKer Polish, Sibe
rian, or Caucasus area of the
Soviet Union?
6. About one-third, one-half
or two-thirds of the wheat grown
in the U.S. is used for domestic
food consumption by humans?
7. U.S. Chief Justice Warren
is a Republican. Can you name
anther Republican on the Su
preme Court?
The Answers: 1. April. 2.
Right. 3. Southern (Savannah,
Oa.). 4. Wrong. 5. Caucasus area.
6. About one-half. 7. The other
two are Justices Burton and
Harlan.
MAIL TRIBUNE
Still for
A reader asks why we have dropped Adlai Stev
enson overboard so summarily.
That is one of the major occupational hazards in
the newspaper business editorially speaking being
misunderstood, either accidentally or intentionally.
"THE MAIL TRIBUNE has never thrown Mr. Stev
enson overboard either summarily or otherwise.
His defeat by Kefauver in Minnesota was to us
both surprising and disappointing. But that did not
mean it changed this paper's admiration for the man,
or our judgment that he is the best qualified candi
date in the Democratic party for the presidency.
TT DID MEAN, as stated at the time, that this "up-
set" would greatly strengthen the anti-Stevenson
forces at the Chicago convention and unless Adlai
could stage a sensational comeback wotald reduce his
chances of securing the nomination to the vanishing
point.
For as we remarked,
want will be a VOTE-GETTER, and only candidates
who have demonstrated their ability in that direction,
or not clearly demonstrated their inability will have
a fighting chance.
That is still our opinion.
It had or has nothing to do with our view of
Mr. Stevenson's qualifications for high office, merely
his lack of success as a campaigner in the primaries,
so necessary this year in the business of reaching high
office.
TN OTHER WORDS, so long as the former Illinois
governor is in the race for the Democratic nomina
tion, we are for him, and for the very simple reason
he is, as we see it, the best man for the job.
But unless he can go into that convention with a
substantial showing of primary popularity and grass
root support, then he might as well bang up his gloves,
and call it a day. He can't,
base without either one or both.
TI7E DON'T MEAN the candidate who leads in the
primaries will automatically win the nomina
tion. Senator Kefauver in 1952 demonstrated the fals
ity of that assumption. We only mean that a one-time
loser in the game of politics has two strikes against
him anyway, and as a one-time-loser, Adlai Steven
son must show he has more on the ball than his Demo
cratic enemies claim, or he is "out" so far as the 1956
campaign is concerned.
And to run a poor second or third in the primaries
would, as we see it, mean just that.
That doesn't mean that those who believe in Adlai
Stevenson should throw in the sponge, or this is any
time to quit quite the reverse, in fact. It merely
means facing the situation realistically, not resting
under the delusion that at this stage of the game re
fusing to do so and indulging in "wishful thinking"
is going to help. R. W. R.
Why?
Speaking of Adlai Stevenson we have to admit,
that many of the reasons given for not suporting him,
are reasons why we do and did.
Complaint No. 1 is he doesn't "give 'em hell," a la
H. S.'T. Well, in this department we believe Mr.
Shakespeare gave better advice than the expert poli
ticians. William S. advised being true to oneself, and one
could then be false to no one.
That is what we liked about the Illinois governor
four years ago and think he made a mistake to be per
suaded otherwise by the politicians.
Mr. Stevenson then refused to accept the time
honored practice of trying to picture everything in
blacks and whites, supporting the fiction that one par
ty was all wrong, the other all right, and to choose
between them was as simple as to choose between
Old Man "debbil" and the Heavenly Angels.
TNSTEAD of that Adlai talked SENSE.
He pointed out where he believed the Repub
licans had made mistakes and the Democrats could
do better, he analyzed the issues between the parties
with clarity, intelligence and conviction, but he did
not throw any brickbats or tear his hair, or tear up
the platform carpet.
He took then, what he took at the outset of the
present primary race, the "moderate, sane course."
Not because he was a chicken or even an "egg head,"
but because it was his belief, that approximately in
the middle of the road was the TRUTH. He believed
also, the American people wanted the truth, had
reached a stage of development where they wanted
facts rather than a barrage of epithets and politi
cal slogans that were perhaps stimulating to the emo
tions but an insult to reality and intelligence.
WE LIKED that'
We. also liked Stevenson's subtle irony and hu
mor. We wanted a president of that type in the White
House. But as is pretty generally known now, we
failed to get him.
Well, that is okay. "Vox Populi, Vox Dei."
However, we still believe Governor Stevenson's
defeat was due to other
noted above, or the criticisms most fi-emient.lv firerl in
his direction, particularly by the political "pros" of
both parties.
The remaining primaries may prove we were
and are mistaken. We rather hope they do, but our
guess is they won't. R. W. R.
Tax Legislation Seen Wedge for Sales Tax '
Portland -(U.R) State Sen.
Robert D. Holmes, candidate for
Democratic nomination for gov
ernor, says the last Legislature's
tax legislation was "a prepara
tory wedge for a sales tax."
A 45 per cent surtax was added
Thuriday, March 29, 195S
Adlai
what the convention will
in our opinion, get to first
causes than the finalities
and dependency deductions were
lowered.
Holmes also called for a lieu
tenant governor for Oregon.
He spoke at the March meet
ing of the North Portland Demo
cratic Women's club.
Coming H-Bomb Test Unpopular
In Japan, Among 'Neutralists7
By CHARLES M. McCANN
United Press Correspondent
The United States is not going
to be very popular in Japan for
some time to come.
The Japanese government, Jap-
ns i anese political
parties and ap
anese people
gen erally re
sent President
E i s e nhower's
decision to go
ahead with the
H-bomb tests in
the Mars hall
Islands next
Charles McCum month.
This resentment is likely to
grow in the coming weeks. And
Water Pollution Tide
Rising; Bill Foreseen
To Aid Meeting Costs
Washington (C Q) Congress
must decide in the next few
weeks how much money to give
states to fight the rising tide
of water pollution.
The 1948 Water Pollution Con
trol Act, the first comprehensive
anti-pollution program ever
passed by Congress, runs out
June 30. Two stronger versions
await action. One calls for a
$10 million program, spread over
five years, the other for more
than SI billion with no time
limit.
Pollution statistics alone ap
pear formidable enough to prod
Congress to pass one of them.
But if. statistics aren't enough,
public health officials, fisher
men and recreation enthusiasts
stand ready to help push the leg
islation through.
Poisoning Growing
Public Health Service statis
tics show water the nation's
lifeblood is being poisoned
faster than mechanical hearts
can purify it. The yearly growth
in the number of sewage treat
ment plants has not kept pace
with the amount of waste pour
ing into streams.
The biggest offender is in
dustry. Statistics show it dumped
almost twice as much waste in
waterways in 1955 as in 1930.
And the expected growth of syn
thetic and nuclear production,
with their poisonous byproducts,
magnifies the problem.
Other studies show the de
mand for clean, fresh water
nearly will double by 1957. The
percentage increases over 1955
demand predicted for 1975 are
105 per cent for industry, 70
per cent for municipalities and
42 per cent for irrigation.
Since the supply of fresh
water remains fairly constant,
the only solution to increased
demand is to keep using water
over and over during its flow
to the sea. This means money
and lots of it for more sewage
treatment plants.
Big Costs
PHS figures show that muni
cipal spending would have to
total $5.3 billion by 1965 to meet
sewage purification needs that
year. That is only $1.4 billion
less than total municipal spend
ing for sewage plants from 1920
through 1954. The PHS officials
say they have no estimates of
industrial need, except that it
would be at least as much as the
municipal total and probably
more.
How much Uncle Sam should
chip in to help states fight the
pollution is the big question be
fore Congress. A bill passed by
the Senate June 17, 1955, would
contribute $2 million a year over
a five-year period to state, inter
state and municipal sewage pro
jects approved by the Surgeon
General. The federal money
would pay one-third to two
thirds of the project's cost.
Rep. John A. Blatnik (D
Minn.), chairman of the House
Public Works Rivers and Har
bors Subcommittee, says the
Senate version does not go far
enough. He has introduced a bill
which would, besides the $2 mil
lion in the Senate bill, authorize
$1 biUion for sewage plants.. No
time limit for using up the bil
lion was set in the bill, but total
grants for any one year would
be limited to $100 million. The
federal money would have to be
matched 50-50 by the states.
Hard Sales Job
Blatnik admits he will have
a hard time selling Congress on
the $1 billion provision. The
Administration is against it on
grounds municipalities give sew
age treatment works a low prior
ity by choice, not necessity.
Blatnik predicts the rest of his
bill will go through unscathed.
It parallels the Senate version
but includes revisions sought by
state and municipal health of
ficials.
President Eisenhower is ex
pected to play a leading role in
getting anti-pollution legislation
passed. In this year's health mes
sage he said: 'Problems of water
pollution control grow more
pressing with population growth
and with industrial development
and expansion ... I again recom
mend that the authority in this
Act be strengthened and placed
on a permanent basis."
Give More Authority
Both Senate and House bills
give the r federal government
it will be fanned not only by the
Chinese Communists and Soviet
Russians but, undoubtedly, by
"neutralists" like Prime Minister
Jawaharlal Nehru of India.
There is no indication, fortu
nately, that in the long run the
friendly relations between the
United States and Japan will suf
fer. But Japanese ill-feeling seems
sure to continue.
Japanese opposition to H-bomb
experiments stems from the big
tests held in March, 1954.
At that time radioactive fall
out contaminated 7,000 square
miles of the Pacific.
The waters involved are used
by Japanese fishing boats. There
more authority to conduct pollu
tion research, but do not
strengthen its enforcement hand
greatly. Under both bills, the
U. S. could bring suit against a
polluter if either the state where
the pollution originated or the
one downstream suffering from
it requested court action. Only
the state in which the pollution
occurred can initiate federal
court action under the current
Act.
The biggest protest against
putting more teeth in anti-pollution
legislation will come from
industry. Their battle cry is ex
pected to be, "Let the states
handle it."
But industry is so heavily
outnumbered by anti-pollution-ists,
the problem before Con
gress is not whether to extend
the Act, but how.
(Copyright 1956.
Congressional Quarterly)
Matter of Fact ey
DEFENSE AND
INDIFFERENCE
Washington Some very sen
sational statements have re
cently been made by the highest
thorities, but
anybody has
paid any at-
tention to
them at all
Consider the
following brief
samples:
Gen. Nathan'
Twining, Air
Stewart Aisop Force Chief of
Staff:
"They have been and are out
producing us in all categories
but medium bombers . . . Here
is the area of deep concern the
Soviets are presently beating us
at our own game production
. . . The Communists are mak
ing scientific , and technological
advances at a faster rate than
we are."
Lt. Gen. Thomas S. Power,
Chief of the Air Research and
Development Command:
"With both quantitative and
qualitative superiority on their
side, we would lose the protec
tion of the deterrent force and
be at their mercy. This danger
is very real and immediate."
WHAT all three generals are
saying, of course, is that
the Soviet Union is rapidly out
stripping the United States in
strategic air power, the one
field in which this country has
heretofore enjoyed superiority.
Surely it is no exaggeration to
describe such, warnings 'as sensa
tional. Surely an official warn
ing of "a very real and immedi
ate danger" that this country
will be at the mercy of the So
viets, for example, is nothing if
not sensational.
Yet such warnings are met
these days with a long, bored,
national yawn. Why?
The question is worth asking,
because the national indiffer
ence to such warnings is a vital
ly important phenomenon.
There appear to be a number of
inter-locking answers.
TN THE first place, there is a
-tendency to regard .all gen
erals as professional cryers of
"wolf, wolf."
Certainly the services have
sometimes been guilty of
budget-minded scare-mongering.
Yet, as General Twining pointed
out in his testimony, the Air
Force has consistently under
estimated Soviet progress in air
power, and by a very wide mar
gin, rather than the other way
round.
Then there is the theory that
"they don't really know
they're just guessing." ' The
theory is comfortable, but in
correct. When Twining testified
OPEN IN
NEW LOCATION
Wakefield Drapery
1100 Crater Lake Ave.
Same Phone 2-6010
was practically a national panic
in Japan for fear that fish sold
after the tests were poisoned.
To make it worse, the crew of
one fishing trawler far from the
test area were dusted by fall-out.
One of the 23 men died later.
It developed, long after the
tests, that the fish were not poi
sonous and that the crewman of
the trawler Fortunate Dragon
who died was the victim of a
liver complaint. Nevertheless
the United States paid $2,000,000
damages as a gesture , of good
will.
All this did not convince the
Japanese that the .H-bomb tests
were not a real threat.
As far back as October, 1954,
Japan started protesting offic
ially against any new H-bomb
tests.
Immediately after the an
nouncement by the Atomic
Energy Commission last Janu
ary of the new tests, Japan sent
a note of protest.
Japan also asked a guarantee
in advance that the United States
would pay for any damage or
inconvenience the tests might
cause to its shipping or its fish
ing industry.
Protest Rejected
The protest was rejected. But
the United States promised to
consider any solid claims of spe
cific damage. ;
It is now disclosed that Presi
dent Eisenhower himself decided
that the tests must go on. The
United Nationals Trusteeship
Council was informed that there
is no alternative.
"It is the conviction of the
United States that it has a re
sponsibility not only to its peo
ple but to all the peoples of the
free world to maintain at a
maximum its capacity to deter
aggression and preserve peace,
the U.N. was told.
That argument, when the stark
facts of life are considered, seems
unanswerable. But it will not
satisfy Japan. .
Stewart Alsop
recently that the7 Soviets were
producing more than twice as
many long range bombers as this
country, and that they were
already testing intermediate
range missiles, he was not guess
ing. He knew. How he knew
may be none of the public's
business. But the facts them
selves are very much the pub
lic's business.
fPHERE is the equally comfort-
-- able theory that "we can't do
anything about it anyway,
which is equally incorrect. As
sistant Secretary of the Air
Force Trevor Gardner resigned
essentially because of an offi
cial 'decision not to undertake
the "crash" missile program he
proposed. By the same token, to
increase our long range bomber
production at least to the Soviet
level, as Gen. Curtis LeMay has
strenuously advocated, would
require ; a simple order to the
Boeing plants. The order has not
been given, entirely for budget
ary reasons.
The plain fact is that the
American government has offi
cially decided to permit the So
viets to outstrip this country in
strategic air power. Many peo
ple refuse to worry about this
decision, because Dwight D.
Eisenhower is head of the Amer
ican government. But General
Eisenhower's military experienc
was in a different field, and he
himself has often disclaimed
personal infallibility.
THE President's military repu
tation is of course a major
reason why the Administration's
defense policies have been so
mildly criticized. Those ' who
undertake to do so, like Senators
Stuart Symington and Henry
Jackson, find themselves
charged with "breaking secur
ity," becoming '"prophets of
gloom and doom," or simply
playing politics. Critics of de
fense economies are also ac
cused of wasteful war-monger-ing
since "there won't be an
other big war anyway" which
could be true, but only if we do
not "lose the protection of the
deterrent force."
But all this is not enough to
explain the extraordinary public
apathy in the fact of such sensa
tional warnings as: those listed
above. Unless the country has
become so flabbily self-regarding
as to be indifferent to the
future, there must-e something
else as well a failure of com
munication between the nation
as a whole and those responsible
for the national security. As
another report in this space will
suggest, the failure seems to
center in the -ystem which has
grown up around the august,
highly secret National Security
Council.
Copyright 1956.
New York Herald Tribune Inc.
ommunications
Letters to the Editor must bear the name and address of the writer, although
under certain circumstances the use of a pen name or initial for publication
is permissible. The Mail Tribune reserves the right to edit all letters with a
view to clarification and condensation. Letters-submitted for publication must
not exceed 400 words.
From An "Aginer"
To the Editor: While sorting
and. reading press clippings last
Saturday (235 articles), we found
that your March 14 issue con
tained an ear pinning job by
John C. Stille of Shady Cove. A
beautiful job telling the Oregon
City man plenty. Enclosed is
the original editorial provoking
item (mine) which the Oregon
City writer did not publish. Also
a copy from the press clippings.
Also enclosed is my -answer to
him, which also was . not pub
lished. Furthermore in a second
hand manner I have been in
formed that I have written dirty
letters to the editors. The dog
that gets hit with the rock is
the one that howls.
The entire program is based
on false premises. The quota
tion of figures has been in error.
Read the logic and facts in Dr.
Exener's fifty page research re
view; done by an M.D. and is a
masterpiece and has document
ed facts. If this matter seems
usable to you, use your discre
tion. We can not get both sides
published in Portland.
Dr. Thos. S. Dulin Jr.,
Dentistry
Medical Dental Bldg.,
Portland 5, Ore.
Member and Director
Natural Food Associates.
To Oregon City Enterprise
Courier:
Your editorial on WATER
FLUORIDATION in your Sun
day, March 11th edition of your
paper at least showed that you
were thinking even if . it was
only on the level of moronic
high school chemistry. I would
refer you to James Rorty on
"The Truth About Fluoridation,"
from the FREEMAN, A GOOD
REPUBLICAN PAPER, and not
leftist. A portion of the f ounda-
i - f a i-i
lion iacts wnicn lormea me
basis of this article came from
that school unacceptable to this
Public Health Service Depart
ment, namely MASSACHU
SETTS INSTITUTE OF TECH
NOLOGY. (DR. HARRIS, PH.D.)
Furthermore, get this out of
beginning chemistry especially
since so little is known about
the twenty-year accumulation
effects on humans. The field
of Bio-chemistry, toxicology and
Medical aspects have not been
completely studied, claims of
adequacy not withstanding. The
proponents may be partially
right when they say that no
harm has been proven, but such
statements do not make it safe
either. Safety is not an opinion,
it must have facts proving same.
One dose today will not be
rjoison but it is accumulative.
Furthermore, the Medical
group are not unanimous in sup
port of this activity and some
of them are "RABID AGINERS."
It is still a hang-over from the
Roosevelt administration and a
lot of the Republicans would
like to clean house on these pro
moters of a step in socialized
medicine. This fact was practic
ally admitted in one part of the
last congressional hearing on
this subject.
Thomas S. Dulin Jr.,
Member Citizens Council
Against Fluoridation.
Swallows On Schedule
To the Editor: This morning
I received a letter from one of
your readers bemoaning your
article about the arrival of the
Swallows to San Juan Capis
trano Mission.
When I heard about this un
usual happening I too questioned
and doubted the story. A few
months ago a representative of
a publishing house which had
published this story in one of
their books came into my office
in search of something to back
up their story. If they couldn't
find any proof for their state
ment they were going to be
forced to withdraw the book
from circulation. The man was
desperate!
I took my Bible out of my
desk and read him one verse
from Jeremiah 8:7 and here -it
is, "Yea, the stork in the heavens
knoweth her appointed times;
and the turtle and the crane and
the swallow observe the time
of their coming; but my people
know not the judgment of the
Lord." ' He said 'that's good
enough for me,' and thanked me
for the help.
Well, Mr. Editor, I can under
Frank Morgan -
FUNERAL
stand your attitude, but believe
it or "not, the Swallows did ar
rive this year on schedule, and
they are busy repairing '. their
homes or building new odes.
- R. P. Abel,
; Box 457
San Juan Capistrano,
Calif.
Laziness?
To the Editor: I have iust read
the letter of Mrs. Gordon of 220
Erie st., Medford. and . would
like to ask if she is too lazy to
aaa soaium fluoride to her
drinking water. She doesn't care
for the rights of others, evident
ly. I. concede the stuff
prevent tooth trouhlp hut urViv
force others to drink it if they
don't want it?
If they put the stuff in drink
ing water, why hot go a few
steps farther, let's, add coffee,
grapefruit and other juices, po
tatoes, , onions, carrots, bacon,
etc., etc. and then all Mrs. Gor
don and others too lazy-to do
their own mixing can just,, drink
a glass of MedfordV sparkling
"gunk" and .get a complete meal
Simple isn't- it?
Fortunately it isn't my mis
fortune to find it necessary , to
live in Medford where some
people want to govern what
others drink and eat.
All this doesn't affect me one
bit, but if they start putting a
lot more "gunk" in the water I
shall find it necessary to bring
my own coffee and lunch when
I find it necessary to visit Med
ford. Since I live about a mile
from the Big Butte Springs, I
know Medford's water is O.K.,
the way it is, and has been since
1926 or 1927.
Floyd R. McCabe,
Mt. Pitt Star Route,
Butte Falls, Ore.
The M.T. is Congratulated
To the Editor and Staff: Our
hearty congratulations for your
50 wonderful years of dis
tinguished service to this City
and State, and to its grateful
citizens.
May the ensuing years be
many, and ever more and more
prosperous and fruitful.
Sisters of Sacred Heart
Hospital
By Sister Reine, Superior
the way to say
HAPPY EASTER
-
We have Hallmark Cards
that will convey your Easter
wishes to all your friends
and relatives . . . and each
one reflects the color and
beauty of the season. Come
in soon and choose yours
from our wide selection of
Hallmark Cards.
r .l'HJ row i t ; wi : 'a
May the peace which comes of
faith, the courage that is born
of Hope, and the Joy which
dwells in Love, be with you
this Easter season.
CHAPEL
MORTUARY
Harold Snodgrass
DIRECTORS