FOUR MEDFORD (OREGON)
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Flight o' Time
Medford and Jackson County
Historv from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10, 20. 30 and
0 years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
July IB, 1946
(It was Tuesday)
Jack Frost gives five-minute
talk on "Why Men Fail" at meet
ing of Medford Toastmasters.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: It is now
predicted it will be hot enough
by the end of the week for the
fashionable members of the fair
sex to wear their summer furs.
20 YEARS AGO
July IS. 193S
(It was Thursday)
Planning commission's final
report on zoning filed with the
council.
The soil conservation bonus,
when effective, will bring to
Jackson county farmers between
$35,000 and $40,000, according
to County Agent Robert Fowler.
30 YEARS AGO
July 16, 1926
(It was Friday)
For the first six months of
1926 Medford ranks fifth in the
building programs of the state
with 192 permits, valued at
$513,002.
Deputy Sheriff Lewis Jennings
and Jailer Ike Dunford leave
for Marysville, Calif.
40 YEARS AGO
July 16, 1916
(It was Sunday)
Professor F. C. Reimer, sup
erintendent of experiment sta
tion, and C. C. Cate, county
pathologist, to give demonstra
tion on pear blight in Talent.
The Rogue Elk Resort, owned
by McDonald brothers, to be
formerly opened Saturday night.
What's the Answer?
Can You Get 4 of the 7?
Copr. 1955. Editorial Research
Report
1. The U.S. ended its fiscal
year 1955-56 with a big or small
deficit, big or small surplus, or
just about breaking even?
2. Dissension is widely report
ed in the royal family of Den
mark, Sweden, Norway, Great
Britian or The Netherlands?
3. Who was Vice President in
F. D. Roosevelt's second term?
4. Burnoses are used in the
Orient to protect from the sun,
kill weeds, spread information,
kill snakes, or lassos cattle?
5. About one-third, one-half or
two-thirds of all federal em
ployees are war veterans?
6. Mohair comes from rabbits,
lambs, goats, llamas or sheep?
7. Republican national chair
man is President Eisenhower,
Vice President Nixon, Senator
Knowland, former Speaker J. W.
Martin or former Rep. Leonard
W. Hall?
The answers: 1. With small
surplus. 2. The Netherlands. 3.
John N. Garner. 4 Protect the
head from the sun. 5. About half.
6. Goats. 7. Hall
Southern Pacific Names
New Pacific Coast Head
San Francisco (U.R) The
Southern Pacific Railroad today
named Robert A. Miller as head
of its Coast Division to replace
James J. Jordan, who retires on
July 31.
Virgil E. Anderson, superin
tendent of the Salt Lake division
will replace Miller in his pres
ent capacity as head of the High
Sierra line. Anderson will be re
placed by Milton A. Mclntyre,
sssistant superintendent of the
Los Angeles division.
MAIL TRIBUNE
Now
The state highway commission last Friday re
jected a proposal to take over Prescott park on Roxy
Ann butte as part of the system of state parks.
This action is disappointing and we think short
sighted.
Considerable development (estimated at more
than 100,000 if it were to be brought up to the stand
ards the state parks department has set itself) is nec
essary. It is not immediately adjacent to a state high
way, and the state parks are run by the highway com
mission. The more than 1,700 acres in the park are
more than the parks department wants or needs for
any except a few of its major units.
IN rejecting the proposal, however, the highway com-
mission turned down the opportunity to take over
a big, beautiful and unique mountaintcp area, suited
to little else but recreational purposes. (The property
originally was owned by the bureau of land manage
ment, and the deed specifies that it can be used only
for recreation.)
Lying, as it does, outside the city of Medford,
which now owns it, the area presents a problem, both
in financing and in upkeep, to the city. As a result it
has never been developed to its full potential or
even to a major fraction of its potential.
We are now back where we started from. What are
we going to do with Prescott park which was used
by 1,950 cars (probably 5,800 or more people) over
a three-week period?
THE city obviously can't do the job that needs to be
done, unless the people approve a tax levy for that
purpose,. and since the park is used by anyone who
wants to, this hardly seems like a feasible idea,
j The state has turned it down,
j There is no federal agency which logically could
take it over.
Private groups do not have the resources or facil
ities for maintaining and developing such a project.
Nobody wants the responsibility, yet virtually
everyone who has been there agrees that it should, as
a major asset, be preserved and cared for.
What's the answer?
IT MAY lie in a section of Oregon law (paragraph
1 11 of ORS 203.120) which says, in listing the author
ity and powers pertaining to county commissioners to
transact county business, quote :
To provide, establish, maintain and regulate the use of
public parks and recreational areas within the county out
side the boundary of any incorporated city . . .
This is a power which the Jackson county court
has not, to our knowledge, exercised.
DUT the court is receptive to the wishes of the
people.
If it were made known that the people wish it to
accept this responsibility, we believe it would do so.
It might be well to remember, in this case as in so
many others involving tasks of local government, that
Jackson county has nearly 65,000 people now, with
more coming every day; that its third-greatest source
of income is in the tourist trade; and that both resi
dents and tourists are more recreation-minded now
than they have ever been in the past.
Unless something is done, Prescott park, a beauti
ful sightly spot in a beautiful county, with unmatched
views in all directions, will continue to be a haven
for poison oak, an occasional cow illegally grazing
there, and the few thousands of visitors who go there,
development or no an eyesore and a disappoint
ment. E.A.
Humane Problems
Through the generosity of one individual, the
Southern Oregon Humane society has been given a
new lease on life.
The basic problem, however, has not been solved.
That problem is, what is to be done, on a permanent
basis, about the three functions of the society which
are not otherwise readily available?
These functions are (1) the disposal of animals,
which, for whatever reason, are unwanted and which
would be better off dead than dragging out a miser
able existance, (2) the enforcement of those humani
tarian laws which punish cruelty to animals, and (3)
the placement of homeless pets in homes where they
will be welcomed and appreciated.
THE other functions, such as the boarding of pets
and so on, can be and are provided by privately op
erated kennels and animal hospitals. It is possible to
have an animal painlessly put away through some of
the same sources. But, as businesses operated for a
profit, these cannot be expected to perform the same
service free for homeless or unwanted animals.
And the police agencies, while charged with the
enforcement of all laws, lack the time, the experience
and the background to become effective as humane
officers.
UE would like to suggest to the county court that
" it appoint a committee, including residents of
both towns and the country areas, to make a study of
the problem and to discuss it with officers and trustees
of the Humane society and with interested individ
uals, and ask that committee to come up with recom
mendations. Governmental contributions to the Humane soc
iety have dropped and dropped over the years until
now they amount to nothing at all. Yet this problem
is a real if relatively minor one, and certainly seems
to fall within the assessment of government which
declares government should do for the people that
which they cannot do, or do as well, for themselves.
E.A.
Monday, July 18, 1956
What?
Future Headlines Predicted;
Admission of Red China Eyed
United Press correspondents
around the world look ahead
at the news that will make the
headlines.
Package Deal
European diplomatic sources
say that a 'long-range package
deal is in the works to admit
Communist China to the United
Nations. The West's price would
be the coincident admission of
West Germany. Red China's ad
mission would be a bitter pill
for the United States to swallow.
But strange things happen in
diplomacy. Further, the admis
sion of West Germany would be
a bitter pill for the Kremlin. It
would mean practically scuttling
the East German Communist
regime. Red Chinese pressure
would force Russia to go along.
Whatever happens, it won't be
until after the American elec
tion in November.
Qualitative Creep-Up
Some experts are saying that
Western air force officials who
Matter of
IKE AND THE
PRESIDENTIAL GLOW
Gettysburg When Presi
dent Eisenhower stepped out of
his car here the other day, the
small crowd
""w1 19 of reporters
j A..---.. 4 and other on
S'Jyr!. 1 lookers cran
CS& 1 l eo" forward
iW m with eager,
, , rfEt f somewhat
what morbid
curiosity. For
it was the
first time the
President
had been
i.---1 ... h ftni ir
Stewart Alstip
seen, except by intimates, since
he left the hospital, and every
one was anxious to see how he
looked.
As one might have expected
he looked like what he is a
vigorous man in his sixties, who
has had two serious illnesses in
nine months, and who has not
yet recovered from the second,
The President, in other words,
looks very well, considering.
But a heart attack and a major
abdominal operation are some
thing to consider, and the Pres
ident certainly does not look
quite as spry and youthful as
his more enthusiastic support
ers like to imagine.
AND YET there is a sort of
glow about him, an indefin
able effulgence. It is not simply
the Eisenhower glow, which he
has always had. It is the Presi
dential glow, which he has on
ly rather recently acquired a
physical, communicable sense of
immense power concentrated in
one man, so that he seems,
somehow, larger than life.
All Presidents get the presi
dential glow sooner or later.
Franklin D. Roosevelt emitted a
positively startling effulgence.
and even that humble man, Har
ry fa. Truman, acquired a glow
of authority in his second term
At any rate, President Eisen
hower's presidential glow has a
certain significance.
The Democrats' favorite ver
sion of the President's twice re
peated decision to run despite
serious illness is simple and sin
ister. The President, so the line
goes, has been the victim of a
'snow job." He is an amiable
but aging and ailing man, trap
ped into running against his will
by ruthless politicians and big
businessmen, determined to use
him for their own purposes. Is
there any truth in this version
of events?
THERE ARE always shades of
truth anrl i,ntn,tl, u
matters. But the shrewdest ob
servers are coming to believe
that the President, himself, far
from being the victim of a
snow job, wants very much in
deed to be President for four
more years.
A couple of years ago, such a
prospect would have seemed to
him like a prison sentence. The
fact that the President thor
oughly disliked his job, at least
during the first two years of his
Presidency, is amply document
ed, for example in Robert Don
ovan's sympathetic but reveal
ing book. '
But in the last year, and es
pecially, oddly enough, since
his heart attack, there has been
plenty of evidence that the Pres
ident has come to enjoy his job
thoroughly. The outpouring of
affection which reached him
from all over the country after
his heart attack unquestionably
moved him deeply. But there is
certainly another reason for the
President's new found pleasure
in the Presidency.
The main reason for his for
mer distate for the Presidency
was a sense .of unsureness in
matters of domestic politics. In
the 1952 campaign and for a
long time thereafter, the Presi
dent tended to defer humbly to
the judgment of professional
politicians and as a result, for
example when he omitted Gen.
George Marshall's name from
his Wisconsin speech, he made
some of his worst mistakes.
WITHIN the last year especial-
ly, the President has dis
covered that he is a better poli
tician than a whole passel of
visited the recent Russian air
show were much more impressed
than they have admitted public
ly. Type for type, one expert
said. Russian planes "now stand
in the same general class as
those in service in the United
States and British air forces."
That implies that the Russians
aren't merely creeping up quali
tatively on the West they al
ready have crept up.
Atomic Clam-Up
Don't be surprised if a ruckus
breaks out over the Atomic En
ergy Commission's policy of sec
recy. The AEC let a handful of
newsmen witness this season's
first two nuclear weapons tests
in the Pacific. Then it clammed
up, leaving it to the-Japanese
to announce all subsequent shots.
This gravels a number of con
gressmen. They say it's silly.
Thomas E. Murray, lone Demo
cratic member of the commis
sion, shares this view. So far
Japan has announced a total of
eight test explosions. Washing-
Fact by stewan aiSoP
professionals. This year's Ad
ministration program has been
a political masterpiece. The
current session of Congress has
taken the real sting out of ev
ery major Democratic issue. The
farm and gas bill vetoes were,
moreover, politically brilliant:
And although the details of the
recent political conduct of the
Administration may have been
authored by subordinates, the
general strategy was certainly
dictated by the President him
self. Mastery of politics is essen
tial to mastery of the Presiden
cy. Only since he acquired this
mastery has the President emit
ted the true Presidential glow,
which derives from an inner
sense of great personal author
ity. At any rate, the Presiden
tial glow may in part explain
the obvious paradox why the
President, who frankly consid
ered the White House an ele
gant jail when he was perfectly
well, is now, .after two serious
illnesses, eager and determined
to spend four more years there.
Copyright 1956 Nsw York
Herald Tribune Inc.
Communications
Letters to the Editor must bear
the name and address of the writer
although under certain circum
stances the use of a pen name or
initial for publication is permis
sible. The Mail Tribune reserves
the riRht to edit all letters with an
eye to clarification and condensa
tion. Letters submitted for publica
tion must not exceed 400 words.
What's 12 a.m.?
To the Editor: Just a note in
regard to E.A. and his confusion
of time, then the editorial from
the "'Eugene Register-Guard." I
also am a bit puzzled. The sign
on the front door of the "green
front grocery," the OLCC in
Medford, states the openipg
time as 12 a.m. Maybe E. A.
could tell me when is 12 a.m.?
J. A. Wilcoxen
P.O. Box 292
Applegate, Ore.
Editor's note: E.A. is baffled,
too.
About Teak
To the Editor: The tree-fuchsia
furniture item stimulated
considerable correspond
ence. (Even Auckland and
Christchurch are not too distant
in these airmail days). Hence
writer ventures a word about
teak. This not only is a hard
wood, but as a reminder that it
also takes two to make a dis
armament as it does a quarrel.
There is just no substitute for
teak. Kipling knew it when he
wrote "Mandalay". And there is
no substitute (Caterpillar or
tractor), for the elephant in
swampy teak jungle. Our Sac
ramento home is lined in golden
teak. We had come to adore it in
Burma, Java, Ceylon.
We were at Geneva for the
disarmament conference after
World War I. U.S.A. then set
the noble example of stopping
battleship-building. This point
today's Soviets might consider.
It really does take two to hon-
testly disarm. When our gov
ernment stopped an en route
teak shipment, (the only wood
for battleship turrets that does
not splinter), we bought the logs.
Hence our teak home.
The real point of above story
is the Child's Museum. Our
worldwide studies of hardwoods,
English oak, Manchurian black
walnut, Spice Islands' sandal
wood, Caribbean mahogany,
Brazilian rosewood began in
writer's boyhood's Home Mu
seum. A German-born cabinet
maker, over the months, donat
ed "specimens" of furniture
wood from all over the world.
These he cannily spaced as to
time. And each new block came
after a yarn about hardwood
timbering in Venezuela, or the
Congo, or Siam. No one has to
drive a kiddie to THAT kind of
education.
The "Museum" mflv hp inex
pensively of shelves nailed cross-!
wise in a couple of orange boxes. ;
What is learned thus at 8 re-1
mains vivid at 80.
C. M. Goethe j
Seventh and J sts., j
Sacramento 14, Calif.
say that's about
Enlistment Lag
West German Chancellor Kon
rad Adenauer may have to ap
ply his new conscription law
sooner than he expected. It is
due for final passage this week.
Things looked rosy until recent
ly the Defense Ministry had
160,000 volunteer applications
on file. Now, it develops, many
men had applied more than
once. Many more have been re
jected on physical or other
grounds. The Defense Ministry
has started a quiet recruiting
campaign among university stu
dents. Pull-Out
In this connection, London re
ports that Britain is quietly plan
ning a pull-out of many of its
troops from West Germany. Brit
ain is committeed to keep four
divisions and a tactical air force
there. But it's expensive. And
the government is bitter over
West Germany's refusal to pay
more than half the cost of main
taining the troops.
Veteran Premier
French political experts be
lieve Premier Guy Mollet will
be able to continue his tight
rope act as head of a minority
coalition government at least
until mid-October. Mollet is ex
pected to get his emergency tax
bill through Parliament next
week, then adjourn the session.
When Parliament meets again
in October, Mollet will have
been in office nearly nine
months. That will make him a
veteran. The post-war average
for French premiers is about
seven months.
Turkish Protests
Bring New Element
To Cyprus Situiaion
By CHARLES M. McCANN
United Press Correspondent
The tangled Cyprus situation
has entered a new phase.
Britain has been unable to
find a basis for renewed negoti
13 ations with the
Greek Cypri
o t s who de
mand that the
island be given
to Greece.
Turkey has
rejected a Brit
ish proposal to
give the island
ers the even-
Chanes Mctann luai rignl OI
self-determination. Turkey ob
jected because 100,000 of the
island's people are of Turkish
origin. It does not want the
Turks to come under the rule of
the 400,000 Greek Cypriots, or
of Greece.
New Constitution
Now Prime Minister Anthony
Eden has decided to get things
started by drafting a constitu
tion which would give the island
ers internal self - government.
The rights of Turkish islanders
would be safeguarded.
The new constitution would
go into effect only when vio
lence by Greek Cypriots ended
The larger question of self-
determination would be left
open.
Eden evidently decided that
he had to come up with some
thing to get things going.
His Cyprus policy is under at
tack by Greece, by the opposi
tion Labor party in Parliament
and now by Turkey.
Violence in Cyprus continues,
though Field Marshal Sir John
Harding, governor and com
mander in chief believes he has
the extremists on the run.
School District Gets
Tentative Entitlement
Jackson county school district
4, Phoenix High school, has been
awarded a tentative entitlement
of S2.280.35 by the office of
education of the Department of
Health, Education and Welfare
under public law 874, according
to Sen. Richard L. Neuberger.
The district was certified for
immediate payment of $2,052.
A treasury check for that amount
has been sent to the district.
The funds are distributed to
school districts under the pro
gram to provide financial assist
ance for schools in federally af
fected areas.
Billy Rose and Wife
Will Visit in Moscow
Berlin (U.R) Showman
Billy Rose and his wife left Ber
lin today by air for Moscow on
invitation of the Soviet Culture
ministry.
Rose said he would stay about i
one week in Moscow, go on to
Leningrad and then visit East
bloc nations.
Wool production in North
Dakota in 1955 was estimated at
4,508,000 pounds.
FOR RENT or SALE
Adding Machines
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ton insiders
right.
Congressmen's Voting
On School Bill Said
Minor Election Factor
Washington (CQ) Will Re
publicans reap a crop of Negro
votes as a reward for voting 3
to-1 in favor of the Powell anti
segregation rider to the school
aid bill?
The answer will be forthcom
ing Nov. 6. Meanwhile, however,
a Congressional Quarterly study
suggests that few Representa
tives of either party may expect
to win or lose their own elec
tions because of their votes on
the Powell amendment. But in
these few instances, the issue
may be decisive.
The subsequent defeat of the
school aid bill may, of course,
overshadow in political signifi
cance the vote on the Powell
amendment. Democrats, a major
ity of whom voted against the
Powell amendment but for the
amended bill, point out that the
Republican majority, after help
ing to write the amendment into
the bill, then voted to kill the
bill.
For their part, Republicans
blame Democrats for voting al
most unanimously against a
move to substitute the adminis
tration's version of the school
bill for the ill-fated Democratic
sponsored measure.
Powell Amendment Issue
However the voters choose to
assess the blame in November,
the roll call on the Powell
amendment is certain to furnish
effective campaign ammunition
in some of the close Congression
al races. This may be especially
true in those districts where the
percentage of Negroes in the
population exceeds the Repre
sentative's margin of victory in
the 1954 election, giving to the
Negroes in those districts at
least a theoretical balance of
power. 1
All told, there are 61 such
Congressional districts outside
the South. In 1954, 32 of these
elected Democrats to the House
and 19 chose Republicans. Of
the 32 Democrats, 19 voted for
the Powell amendment to bar
federal school aid to states with
segregated schools, while 12 vot
ed against it. All 31, however,
voted for the final bill. The 32nd
Democrat. Rep. William T. Gran
ahan, of Philadelphia, died May
25.
Of these dozen Democrats who
voted against the Powell amend
ment, eight who received less
than 55 per cent of the vote in
'No Slush Fund,'
McKay Declares
Portland (U.R) Douglas
iuc.is.ay, Kepublican nominee for
U. S. Senator, says "The Demo
crats have been making a lot of
noise lately about a 'slush fund
we don't have."
He told the Republican state
central committee here Saturday
that the Democrats were wrong
in contending that his campaign
to unseat Sen. Wayne Morse (D-
Ore.) in the November election
had an unlimited fund.
The committee treasurer, E
Stanley Goodall, said "As of
Monday, the exchequer will be
without funds."
McKay said:
"Apparently the Democrats
think a campaign can be won
with money. "They want it to
appear that we have vast re
sources and they are operating
on a shoestring. The fact is that
we cannot match the money they
are throwing into this campaign
nor would we want to if we
could."
McKay and other leaders
called for a stronger party or
ganization, particularly on the
precinct level, and predicted that
the outcome of the campaign
would rest upon how well the
GOP is organized and united in
the state.
Wendell Wyatt, of Astoria,
was reelected as committee
chairman.
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1954 will be open to serious
challenge by Republican oppon
ents who choose to capitalize on
the segregation issue. All of
these Democrats probably re
ceived a large majority of the
Negro votes cast in their dis
tricts, and could be defeated if
these voters shifted to the Re
publican column ir. November.
Could Improve Chances
Of the 29 ReDublieans frnm
Negro "balance -of-power" dis
tricts 23 voted for the Powell
amendment, although nine sub
sequently voted against the
school aid bill. Only two of the
23 received more than 55 per
cent of the 1954 vote. Since a
majority of Negroes presumably
voted against these Representa
tives in 1954, any switches in
duced by the Powell roll call '
would improve the incumbents'
chances of being re-elected in
November.
But the nine GOP members
who voted later to kill the entire
bill may be challenged by thei
Democratic opponents on the
sincerity of their anti-segregation
stand.
Only five of the 29 Republi
cans voted against the Powell
amendment.
On balance, then, the possibil
ity that a vote against the Pow
ell amendment could lead to de
feat in November affect only a
dozen Democrats. But gains reg
istered by Republicans among
Negro voters might be just
enough to assure the reelection
of several GOP members whose
.seats are shaky.
(Copyright 1956.
Congressional Quarterly)
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DEAH and BILL COX
She Wrote Dad
Geo. N.-Taylor
Sue, a college girl, was wait
ing on table at an Eastern resort.
And she wrote her dad that she
looked for
jibes from the
other girls
girls when she
told them that
she had Christ
as her Lord
and Saviour.
But they were
listless.
And are you
listless? The
Bible says that
you will never come to Christ to
be saved until God draws you
"No man can come to me except
God the Father draws him and
I will raise him up the last day."
John 6:44. Christ said it. God
must draw you to Christ and
then on Resurrection Day, hav
ing received Christ as Lord and
Savior, He will raise you up
to eternal glory. a
And may you saved folks
know how great a work you do
for God when you plead with
him to bear down until the lost
receive Christ as God the Sav
ior who died for them. Adv.
4t PERL'S every family
may make funeral ar
rangements which are In
keeping with its means. A
selection of services in
every price range is of
fered to satisfy Individual
preferences a n d to meet
all financial circumstances.
Convenient Terms?
Certainlyl
'"IlltMMII