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Flight o' Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the file of The
Mail Tribune 10. 20. 30 and
to years ago.
JX0 YEARS AGO
June 11. 1946
(It was Tuesday)
About 200 head of stock are
In corrals at Fairgrounds for fifth
annual Rogue River Roundup
Thursday, Friday and Saturday.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: There is
now a shortage of the old fash
ioned wooden clothespin, used
by pioneers to hang up the Mon
day wash, and subdue the
mores.
20 YEARS AGO
June 11. 1936
(It was Thursday)
Jackson county expended $1,
698.12 during the month of May
for Old Age pensions, accord
ing to figures in county clerk's
office.
Will Hansen, Rogue River
alley orchardist, purchases
Medford Hardware company.
30 YEARS AGO
June 11, 1928
(It was Friday)
Several citizens sign as mem
bers during membership drive
bv Crater club for Medford
Chamber of Commerce.
Newlv elected members of
the Jackson county Republican
Central committee meet at Med
ford hotel.
40 YEARS AGO
June 11. 1918
fit was Sunday)
The Grizzlies will attempt to
climb Ashland and Wagner
mountains in one day, Sunday,
June 18.
From Local and Personal col
umn: H. L. Walthers has re
turned from a business trip to
Portland.
What's the Answer?
1. President Eisenhower fa
vors or opposes a White House
conference of southern gover
nors on school integration?
2. Ships of 1,000 or more
gross tons in the active U. S.
merchant fleet total under 1,000,
just over 1.000, around 2,500, or
nearly 3,000.
3. More student nurses die
from diseases caught from pa
tients than from any other
cause; right or wrong?
4. Henry Ford II told Ford
stockholders last month that new
car sales this year would dip
below 6 million, equal the old
1950 high of 6.5 million, or ex
ceed last year's record 7.4 mil
lion? 5. What is a megaton in A or
H-bomb terminology?
6. Of all children between 7
and 17 about (1), (b) 4. (c) 7. (d)
10 or (e) 13 per cent get into juv
enile court during a year?
7. A Russian samovar is heated
by a spirit lamp, a charcoal
burner, or solar rays?
The answers: 1. Opposes form
al conference. 2. 1.081 on May 1.
according to Maritime Adminis
tration. 3. Wrong (auto accidents
leading cause of death, accord
ing to U.S. Public Health Serr
ica). 4. Dip below 6 million.
5. Measure of explosive force;
10-megaton bomb has a bang
equivalent to 10 million tons
of TNT. 6. About 1 per cent. 7.
By burning charcoal in a tube
Inside the urn.
RECORD SUICIDE FIGURE
Tokyo U.R) Police reported
14 suicide attempts in Tokyo
Sunday, a one-day record figure.
Three died.
MAIL TRIBUNE
Weather Influence?
How effective have been man's attempts to change
the weather?
That's an iffy question and virtually impossible
to answer with any degree of accuracy.
Jackson county is one of the pioneer areas in the
nation in weather control experimentation, but those
engaged in the projects are exceedingly cagey
and understandably so about making any flat state
ments as to their success.
P"IRST of all we had cloud-seeding from airplanes in
attempts to prevent hail from forming during
thunderstoi-m activity, and raining the fruit crops in
the valley. The relative success of these experiments
was never completely agreed upon, although there
is evidence to show that they did have some value.
Later, wintertime cloud-seeding from ground gen
erators was started by California Oregon Power com
pany in attempts to increase snowfall in their water
shed area.
Still later, the anti-hail attempts shifted to a
ground-based attack, with silver iodide generators
stationed at strategic points around the valley during
the summer season.
THERE have been a few other rain-making and f og-
dispersing experiments hereabouts.
But the bulk of the attempts have been in the in-cfeased-snow
and anti-hail projects.
Have they been successful?
No one will stick his neck out far enough to say
"yes" or "no." But the fact that Copco, on one hand,
and the fruit men, on the other, are still underwriting
the programs at considerable cost is evidence to show
they feel there is sufficient promise in them, if not
downright tangible results, to justify the expense.
THE fact is that Copco has had good watershed
snowfalls in all but one of the recent winter sea
sons, and hail has done only limited amounts of dam
age to growing fruit in recent summers.
But there have been
fore.
The results of the attempts are so intangible, and
so readilv confused with other f actors, that only a long
period of experimentation, coupled with exacting and
accurate statistical information, will give any sort
of conclusive answer to the question.
"JRIGINALLY, objections to the cloud-seeding pro-
gram came from "dry-land" farmers, who sus
pected that seeding dried up the clouds and prevent
ed rain, so necessary for their operations. Perhaps
this year, which has already had record-breaking
amounts of precipitation, will ease their fears, for
seeding operations have been going on almost con
tinuously since last fall.
The time is not yet when we can have push-button
control of what the weather will be, and that day may
never arrive. Meanwhile, we await with interest more
conclusive evaluations of the programs than have so
far been made available. E.A.
FightingMan Nomenclature
Ever since the "unification" of the armed forces
under a single secretaiy of defense, there has been
increasing discussion of the advantages of true uni
fication that is, the elimination of the Army, Navy,
Air Force and Marines, as such, and the substitution
of the Armed Forces of the United States, all in one
uniform, with similar ranks and titles.
Time magazine recently devoted its cover story
to the proposal. Inter-service bickering has added im
petus to the movement, particularly in regard to jur
isdiction and use of nuclear and missile weapons.
,
THERE will be a lot of foot-dragging before true
unification is accomplished, if it ever is.
If for no other reason, tradition-minded soldiers
sailors and Marines will resist the plan because it
would put an end to cherished service mores and cus
toms which, while they add nothing to efficiency, do
have a role to play in morale and esprit de corps.
UNIFICATION, of course, would ppse a multitude
of serious, top-level policy problems. But there
would be minor problems, too.
For instance, we remember our first day in olive
drab uniform, and the patronizing way in which a
veteran of two months of service looked over our
group of "feather merchants," and snapped orders . . .
"That means you, soldier!!"
The appellation, "Sailor," is equally time-honored,
and comes easily to the tongue.
The newer title of "Airman" is less handy for use
in addressing an enlisted member of the Air Force.
e
W'HAT, then, would an enlisted man in the AFUS"
' be called? Based on the initials, we suppose he
could be called a "fusser," but that seems to lack a
military ring.
"Solor," or "saildier" are unwieldy and confus
ing. Possibly the Army phrase, "GI," (derived from
Government Issue) could be adapted for the occasion,
although the proud Marines would'probably die at the
thought, and swabies would turn crimson.
So it can be seen that there are serious practical
problems below the policy level.
r
THE fighting man of tomorrow (and, sadly, it looks
as though he will be necessary for some time yet)
will be called upon for a variety of tasks and skills.
If there is another world war (which God forbid) it
will be electronic and nuclear.
In the face of the unimaginable mighkof the new
weapons, what to call the men who wield them may
be academic and picayunish to everyone except the
poor guy who has to jump when the sergeant (or his
nuclear successor) says "jump !" E.A.
Monday, June 11, 1958
such weather cycles be
Repercussions of Debunking of
Stalin May
By CHARLES M. McCANN
United Press Correspondent
Some Soviet Russian leaders
may be wondering whether they
blundered in debunking Joseph
LlW(iJ,Jlui Stalin so very
abruptly and
so completely.
Of course,
they must have
foreseen that
their action
would have
terrific impact
in both the 16
r e p u b lies of
cbanei Mccmnn the Soviet Un
ion and in the seven Communist
satellite states of Eastern Eu
rope. But it is highly unlikely that
the 11-man collective leadership
in the Kremlin foresaw some of
the things that have happened
since Nikita S. Khrushchev took
Stalin apart bit by bit at the
Communist party Congress.
It is unlikely, for instance,
that they expected posters pro
claiming "Long live the inde
pendent Georgia Republic"
would appear in the streets of
Tiflis.
Nor is it likely they expected
a resurgence of anti-Communist
underground activities in the
Ukraine, second only to the Rus
sian Republic in the federated
system of the Soviet Union.
Train Wrecked
The posting of the Georgian
Republican posters in Tiflis was
disclosed last Thursday. The in
cident occurred on May 26, an
niversary of the proclamation of
a brief-lived anti-Communist re
public in Georgia in 1919.
The reappearance of the Uk-
In the Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
There is no doubt whatever
this morning (this was written
Friday) as to what is the biggest
news in the world.
It is the state of President
Eisenhower's health.
THIS is the story in chronolog
ical order!
Shortly after daybreak the
Word spread that after attending
a big dinner last night the Pres
ident wasn't feeling too well.
Unofficially and off the cuff
since ANY illness of the presi
dent, however minor, MUSTN'T
be concealed his trouble was
diagnosed as a stomach upset.
His appointments for the day
were cancelled.
THAT was the situation when
the stock market opened in
New York.
A selling wave swept the
floor. It lasted 31 minutes. At
the end of that time, prices had
dropped one to three points.
By then, word spread that noth
ing wasf wrong with the Presi
dent's heart.
That checked the selling, and
prices began to recover.
Vf EANWHILE, the President's
I'-l personal physicians had
held a conference and diagnosed
his trouble as an intestinal in
flamation and ordered him to
the hospital for a complete ex
amination. When that news hit the floor
of the exchanges, in London and
Paris as well as New York, it
touched off another selling wave
quite naturally, because to the
average person being rushed to
the hospital means that some
thing grave and menacing is sus
pected. Nobody stopped to think
that if the President of the
United States cut his finger
while sharpening a pencil he
might be sent to the hospital to
make sure that an infection
didn't set in.
As this is written, the second
selling wave is continuing and
prices have dropped as much as
$6 a share.
WHY this recital of. what the
stock markets did as a re
sult of the President's indispo
sition? Well, it reveals startlingly the
FAITH of people throughout the
world in President Eisenhower
and his policies. The feeling is
general that if he can be spared
to serve another term everything
will be ALL RIGHT. But if
something happened to him that
removed him from his post of
leadership nobody knows WHAT
might be the result.
Self-preservation, you know,
is the first law of nature and
that applies to FINANCIAL as
well as "physical self-preservation.
People's first thought, on
hearing the news of his upset,
was one of personal grief and
sorrow. Their second thought
was that they'd better sell their
securities while the seUing was
still good.
Hence the rush of selling or
ders on the financial exchanges.
WHAT of the future?
' I think we must let the
future take care of itself.
We all have faith that if at
any time between now and the
Republican convention President
Eisenhower feels that the state
of his health is such as to offer
a hazard to his country he win
withdraw as a candidate. -
He has said so, and we all
know he means it. Faith in his
word explains the trust and the
confidence the people place in
Ike.
Surprise Russians
ranian underground was dis
closed next day. Diplomatic
sources in Vienna said anti-Communist
guerrillas wrecked a
Russian army troop and ammu
nition train on a main railroad
line. They escaped with a large
quantity of weapons and ammu
nition after battling Soviet
troops, the report said.
Georgia and the Ukraine al
ways have been two weak spots
in the Soviet set-up.
Russia has ruled Georgia
since 1800. The Georgians al
ways have detested the Russians,
czarist and Communist. It hap
pens that Georgia was Stalin's
birthplace. He gave Georgians
many privileges that other So
viet peoples did not have. Pri
vate business and black market
speculation always were possi
ble in Georgia. During World
War II people wisecracked that
every able-bodied Georgian up
to 45 years of 'age was a stu
dent.. While Stalin was in power,
Georgians reconciled themselves
to Communist rule. "At least,"
Khrushchev was sent to the
Ukraine in 1938 to reorganize
Matter of Fact bv aisp
PARTRIDGE AND LEMAY
Washington The recently re
leased testimony of Generals
Curtis LeMay and Earle Part
ridge ought to
be r e q u ired
every policy
making o f f i-
cial of the Eis
enhower ad
m i nistration,
conspicuous 1 y
including Pres
i d e n t -Eisen
hower himself.
The Presi
ago remarked
dent not long
that people who compared Amer
ican and Soviet air strength
were just indulging in the "num
bers racket." It is simply not
possible that he could have dis
played such complacency if he
had read the sober, carefully un-der-stated
testimony of his Stra
tegic Air Commander and his
Air Defense Commander.
The transcrips ought to be read
in full for their real impact. But
briefly, the main points made by
General Partridge, in testimony
released last Wednesday, were as
follows. First, the Soviet fight
ers are superior to anything we
have. Second, "We now have a
good system to fight the TU-4,"
which is the obsolete Soviet
bomber no longer: being pro
duced. But, the Soviets "intro
duced the jet bombers and the
Bear more rapidly than was fore
cast." As a result, "we find our
selves in the years 1957, 1958
and early 1959 in not too good
shape."
T"1HE Partridge testimony, wa s
-- heavily bowdlerized by the
Defense Department. But the
transcript makes it abundantly
obvious what "not good shape"
means. It means that under
present programs our fighters
will not even be able to reach
the altitude of the new Soviet
bombers until the new "hundred
series" of fighters begins to be
delivered in quantity some three
years from now. As General
Partriddge sadly remarked, "We
are, weak at high altitude. We
are weak at low altitude." If
there is any cause for complacen
cy in such testimony, it is hard
to detect it.
As for General LeMay, it is
even more important to read the
whole transcript of his testi
mony to gather the full meaning
of what he said. But his main
points were as follows.
First, by abut 1958 or 1959,
according to present programs,
the Soviet "long-range bombers
. . . will be a little over twice
what we have, so the advantage
will be with the Russians." Of
1960, LeMay said, "we may not
be able to carry out our mission
at that time."
The mission of the Strategic
Air Command is to provide a re
taliatory force sufficient to de
ter the Soviets from attacking.
Other testimony brought out
just what General LeMay had in
mind. Sen. Stuart Symington,
Chairman of the Armed Servi
ces Sub-Committee investigating
air power, asked the key ques
tion: "In what year, at what
time, if the present programs go
along ... do you think they'll
be in a position, if they hit us,
to destroy us? We will accept it
as a guess from the man who
has the most right to guess."
GENERAL LeMAY: "I don't
" like to guess on those things,
but if you insist, I will come up
with a guess . . . 1960, lie can do
it with a complete surprise at
tack." In short, by 1960 the Strate
gic Air Command "may not be
able to carry out our mission"
because all the SAE bases could
be knocked out by surprise at
tack. LeMay's "guess" it should
be emphasized, is based not on
his own estimate of Soviet air
power, but on the "national es
timates." These are intelligence
estimates prepared by the Cen
tral Intelligence Agency and ap
proved by the National Security
-am ff
ft VrV i
Stewart Alsop
the party on the basis of Stalin's
purges. He purged 3,000 out of
15,000 party secretaries. They
were shot or sent to slave labor
camps.
Welcomed Naiis
Then came World War II,
Ukrainians, highly nationalistic
like the Georgians, and many
of them of German stock, wel
comed the invading Nazi armies.
Khrushchev, . then in Moscow,
went back to the Ukraine to or
ganize partisan resistance to the
Germans. He did a good job.
After the war, Khrushchev
mercilessly purged Ukrainians
who had collaborated with the
Germans. It was reported that
he liquidated 50 per cent of the
republic's leading party work
ers, and more than 60 per cent
of its presidents of regional So
viets and directors of tractor
stations.
Khrushchev probably thought
he would be made a national
hero for taking the leadership
in debunking Stalin. But too
many Russians realize that
while Stalin is gone, the om
munist dictatorship remains
and that Khrushchev is linked
with Stalin's crimes.
Council, of which the President
is chairman.
The Partridge-LeMay testimo
ny suggests certain questions. If
Partridge and LeMay, in a fit of
hysterical parochialism, are sim
ply misinterpreting the meaning
of the national estimates, why
are they kept on in their im
mensely responsible positions?
If, on the other hand, their in
terpretations are correct, and
their testimony substantially ac
curate, what becomes of the twin
doctrines of massive retaliation
and mutual deterrence which
supposedly form the basis of
American defense policy?
f AYBE it doesn't matter. May-
1'i be the Soviet rulers have
not the slightest intention of
using the new weapons which
they have made such enormous
and Tjrilliantly successful efforts
to achieve.
Even so, it is worth pondering
one further question: What will
happen to the Western Alliance,
and to our own firmness of pur
pose as leader of the West, when
the Soviets know, and we know,
and the world knows, that they
can destroy both our cities and
our ability to retaliate, at any
time, by surprise attack?
Copyright 1956 The New York
Herald Tribune.
Change in NATO
Seen as Objective
Of Anthony Eden
United Press correspondents
around the world look ahead'
at the news thai will make the
headlines.
Big Switch -
Look for British Prime Minis
ter Anthony Eden to propose a
revolutionary change in the
North Atlantic Treaty Organiz
ation set-up. He wants to cut
NATO ground forces sharply
and concentrate on air. Eden
and his defense chiefs believe
that the H-bomb, and the planes
to deliver it, wiU suffice as
the chief Allied weapon.
Please Loosen Up
Eden also hopes to use Brit
ain's forthcoming H-bomb tests
as a lever to persuade Congress
that the United States and Brit
ain ought to resume swapping
nuclear secrets. He feels that
present restrictions are causing
a great waste of British and
American money on duplicate
projects, especially missiles, t
Million Trouble-Shoot
' Unless President Eisenhower's
condition prevents it, Vice-President
Richard M. Nixon may go
on a trouble-shooting trip to the
Philippines next month. There is
increasing criticism of United j
State policies in the island re-
public, which is an important j
link in the Far Eastern defense i
line. Nixon might fix things up. ,
Rooftop Rumble !
Watoh for reports on new
trouble for the Chinese Commu
nists in Tibet. Travelers arriving
in India bring word that Chinese j
Nationalist underground agents
were behind the recent uprising
of 80,000 anti-Communist Tibet
ans. The agents may be just get
ting Btarted.
Huddle '
It will be some time yet But
diplomatic informants say the
next likely move to solve the
dispute over the future of Cy
prus .will be a conference of
the British, Turkish and Greek
foreign ministers. Turkey wants
a full voice in any more nego
tiations. It won't let Greece get
the island.
FAST
BELIEF
isr-inin
for
Headache
12 TABLETS IOC
KA5PIR1M1 j
PLOUGH PBOa j
Propose Payment 01
Klamath Falls (U.R) The
management of the Klamath In
dian reservation Saturday pro
posed government purchase of
the reservation for the apprais
ed value, to be paid through is
sue of government bonds.
T. B. Watters, chairman of the
management group, said "There
is a strong indication that as
many as threcrfourths of the
tribal members may want a cash
payment for their share of the
reservation.
"This will mean that three
fourths T)f the tribal property
would have to be sold at the
highest possible price as requir
ed under the present law. Such
action would amount to a forced
sale and would result in finan
cial loss to all tribal members."
The management group also
recommended, if Congress makes
possible purchase of the reserva
tion, that certain rights be re
Editorial Comment
GHOST SPIRES
NOT FORGOTTEN
The east entrance to Crater
Lake National Park, up pinna
cled Sand Creek, is to be per
manently closed to travel. Signs
will be placed at related road
junctions to notify 'motorists of
the closure.
Seemingly this action will iso
late the pumice and scoria-filled
canyons in the southern part of
the park, familiar to the thou
sands who entered the area over
the Sand Creek entrance in
earlier years.
But this is not true. A sec
tion of the Sand Creek road,
from the Rim Drive to the Pin
nacles, is to be kept open. Unique
features to be seen in this "pock
et" area will be called to the
attention of park visitors.
In the Sand Creek area are
some of the park's most spectac
ular features. A world-famous
geologist, Howel Williams, con
siders the Pinnacles along Sand
Creek the second most import
ant feature of the entire park
Visitors to Crater Lake who
have entered the park area
along the Valleys of Sand and
Annie Creeks have been at
tracted by the grotesque "hoo
doo columns known as the Pin
nacles. These spires rise from
the upper part of the canyon
walls.
The grotesque pillars of many
colors are in fact fossil fuma-
roles," and mark vents through
which gases from molten pumice
escaped, in the months and years
immediately following the Cra
ter Lake mountain explosion.
Brown, pink and white streaks
cut the gray scoria where the
gases rose to the surface. Some
of the spires are hollow inside.
The largest of these tubular
spires is eight feet across, on
Castle Creek.
Walls of the fossil fumaroles
are cemented by iron oxide, kao
lin and opal. '
Geologist Williams has this to
say about the ghost-like pillars
along Sand Creek and in adja
cent areas:
"When one sees these exten
sive signs of fumarolic action
one is tempted to imagine how
the slopes of Mount Mazama may
have appeared at the close of the
great eruption.
"The glowing avalanches had
converted the glacial canyons
into wide, barren plains from
which for years, plumes of acid
gas rose into the air. Long after
the fumaroles had almost dwin
dled to extinction, the plains
must have been hidden by dense
clouds of steam.
"Nothing remained of the
scant forests that had formerly
clothed the lower slopes of the
volcano. The ridges between the
plains of 'ten thousand smokes'
were mantled by a gray-white
pall of granular pumice.
The summit of Mount Ma
zama had gone, leaving in its
place a vast caldera." -
Sand Creek and its Pinnacles
are part of the geologic story of
Crater Lake. They will no longer
be accessible via the historic
east entrance, but they will re
main a part of the park. Bend
Bulletin. . , -.-.
Since 1908
PERL
Mortuary
o
Phone 2-6675
. FINER
FUNERAL
SERVICES
In (very pries rang
Land in Bonds
tained by the tribal members.
Those rights included hunting
and fishing rights be retained
during the life of all enrolled
members of the tribe; that min
eral rights be reserved for tribal
members for 20 years; that mem
bers be allowed to purchase land
by competitive bid; and that the
federal government pay the cost
of termination.
STAMPEDE KILLS PATRON
Cuernevaca, Mexico U.R)
Twelve persons were trampled
to death Sunday when a movie
audience stampeded for an exit
The stampede was caused when
someone in the balcony shouted
a false alarm that the building
was collapsing.
The richest deposits of gold in
Colorado were first discovered
in the mountains 100 miles north
of Denver.
POOR STRATEGY
Look magazine reports that
some Democratic strategists are
considering the nomination of
a Catholic for the vice presi
dency. They've got it all figured
out, Look says, and they can
prove that a Catholic on the
ticket would do the Democrats
more good in the North than it
would do them harm in the
South.
Of this sort of "strategy" we
take the dimmest of views.
We should deplore the nom
ination of a Catholic to attract
the Catholic vote, just as we'd
deplore the nomination of a
Negro to get the Negro vote,
a redhead to get the Titian vote,
or a short fat man to get the
short and fat vote. Likewise
we'd deplore withholding the
nomination of a good man
simply because he was a Cath
olic, had red hair or black skin
or because he measured five-by-five.
Religion, like color of skin,
color of hair, and personal con
tour, are not matters that are
properly part of government.
Therefore they are not properly
part of politics. The only leg
itimate areas of politics are mat
ters of personal integrity and
opinion on public affairs. Re
ligion fits neither.
If the Democrats find a Cath
olic or a Jew, or an Adventist
or a Methodist who would be
a good vice president, we hope
they nominate him. But hold
ing out a man's relgion as bait
for voters of the same persua
sion shows a basic disrespect
for the voters, for the candidates ,
and for the high office. Eugene
Register-Guard.
It requires 40 materials' and
125 processes to make an aver
age lead pencil, yellow colors
still preferred.
Grown-Up Love
GEO. N. TAYLOR
As He went about, Christ
healed the sick and raised the
dead. And to this day, hospitals
go up wnerever
the name of
Christ is known.
Mi '-
Christ not only
gave hope to
dwellers in
this world but
He also bridges
over into eterni
ty. After He had
died for . your
sins, He was
buried but on the third da v. He
arose from the grave and soon
ascended back to God. Some
day. He is to return to raise His
of the living and His who sleep
in me grave.
BOOK OF LIFE Know that
whoever was not written in
God's Book of Life was cast into
the Lake of Fire: this is the sec
ond death. See Rev. 20:12-15. In
this world as He went about
Christ healed their bodies. Now
receive Him as Lord and Sav
iour and He saves your soul.
in is message sponsored by A.
Scappoose family adv.