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! J o
Flight o' Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the file cf The
Mail Tribune- 10, 20. 30 and
'0 years ago.
10 YEARS AGO .
July 30. 1946 !
lit was Tuesday i
Harry Holmes elected presi- j
dent of the Rogue River Valley
Knife a!Td Fork club.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: A machine
has been invented for the har
vesting of potatoes, that does
about everything but eat the po
tatoes, after cooking them.
20 YEARS AGO
July 30. 193S
(It was Thursday)
Tear packing plants will start
operations next week. !
Kiwani club announces no
farther effort will be made to
fine! amateur talent in the organ
ization after timidity shown in
show Monday.
30 YEARS AGO
July 30. 1926
(It was Fridiy)
H. L. Walther. of Medford,
selected to take charge of the
Oregon Public Utility Informa
tion bureau.
About 100 Medford members
of the American Legion plan to
attend state convention at
Marshficld, Aug. 5-7.
40 YEARS AGO
July 30. ISIS
Ut was Sunday)
A first aid demonstration will
be given at city hall by Dr. T.
H. Kruse, of the University ol
California, at 8 m. Tuesday.
From Local and Personal: Mr.
and Mrs. A. L. Loomis will leave
for Pelican Bay, via Crater Lake
Wednesday.
Wfesi's tha Answer?
Can You Gt 4 of iho 7?
Copr. 1954. Kditorxal Beaeart
Rroort
Mf the President pocket ve
toes a bill after Congress Has ad
journed, he docs or doesn't have
to iOv his reasonsT
2. T! e surplus shown by the
U.S. Treasury last fical year
was the first in two. five, ten or
15 years?
3. Whether a business merger
violates the anti-trust laws de
pends chiefly on how large it is;
right or wong?
4. About one-third, one-half or
two-thirds of all airplane trips to
Europe from the U.S. in 1955
w ere in "tourist "class?
5. Appendicitis is relatively
common or rare among older per
sors? 6. What important U.S. busi
ness has a high concentration in
Hartford Conn.?
7. The thistle is the symbolic
f'owcr cf Ireland. Scotland. Can
ada Mexico. N. Carolina or
Spa.u'
The answers: 1. Doojn't. but in
practice usually does. 2. First in
fiva years. 3. Wrong. 4. About
lvro-thirds. S. Rare. 6. Insurance.
7. Scotland.
A small moliufk known as the
icrcdo cr slvipworm causes mil
lions of dollars of marine dam
age each year. It mines through
wooden piles and ship timbers
witl the rasplike surface of its
siiells.
Itinerant coconut pickers in
J-ohore. Slalaya. use monkeys to
t-erp them harvest the fruit, the
National Geographic Society
y.s Controlled by leashes, the
pu-iers pets Camber up tall
calros and fc of the COCO"
nu's
ASSOCIATION
MAIL TRIBUKE
Textiles in Trouble
i The tourist, trade, one of New England's most sol
i id industries, is reported booming this summer, but
: new trouble faces the textile industry there. Two large
mills have closed down production in recent months,
; blaming Southern and Japanese competition.
1 More than a score of others are extending their
- traditional paid July "vacation"' closings by another
week, this one unpaid. Workers are calling the extra
i week their '"Japanese vacations."
And as a striking corollary, a high tariff wing
:it least in regard to cotton and cotton textiles is
; building up in the Democratic party. Sen. John 0.
; Pastore (D-R.I. ), specifically asked to be put on rec
ord as voting "no" when the Senate on July 18 ap-
proved the customs simplification bill.
; I'astore was one of the movers and shakers behind
i a resolution approved on the same day by voice vote
; that directs the Tariff Commission to investigate whe
j ther textile imports are seriously affecting the domes
' tic economy. And support came from Sen. Wavne
I -Morse (D-Ore.), Sen. Thomas A. Wofford (D-S.C.),
Sen. Albert Gore (D-Tenn.j, and Sen. Olin D. John
ston (D-S.C.) cutting right across normal "liberal
' conservative"' lines.
; OXGRESS in passing the farm bill signed by Pres
j idem Eisenhower on May 28 wrote into it pro
I visions the President specifically criticized. These in
cluded required export sale of cotton surpluses at be
low market price, import restrictions on long-staple
cotton, and authority to negotiate import restriction
to the foreign aid bill would have applied the princi
ple of import quotas.
Sen. Paul H. Douglas (D-Ill. ) requested to be re
corded as voting "no" on the textile investigation res
olution. Douglas declared :
Those of us 'Democrats' who grew up in high tariff
areas fought against the false ideas promulgated by the
Republican Party. Now I am pained to see. as the textile
industry moves South to the Piedmont range, it is infecting
many Southerners with these erroneous ideas. That is one
New England importation that I think the South could do
without.
r0UGLAS argued that "the textile industry has a
bad case of stage fright over imports which, quan
tatively, are not large in number." He pointed out
that the Tariff Commission in a report to the Senate
Finance Committee had noted:
(1) That the U. S. exports cotton manufactures
'"to a far greater extent than it imports them"; (2)
that an exceedingly small part of the domestic con
sumption of cotton manufactures is supplied by im
ports and that "Japan accounts for only a part of such
imports."'
Douglas argues that the industry has "greatly ex
aggerated" its losses as the result of Japanese imports.
He attributes the textile troubles to a technical revolu
tion in manufacture due in large part to "the new
synthetic fibers."
Nevertheless, the concern of the textile states is
real. Sen. Wofford pointed out that Japan buys cot
ton at 6c less a pound "than our own domestic man
ufacturers have to pay for it." Also that Japanese
"textile industry girls" work for from 14c to 15c an
hour whereas the U.S. "average wage"' in textiles
is $1.30 an hour.
Secretary of State Dulles on Apr. 17 expressed
"great concern" over Alabama and South Carolina
statutes that require stores handling Japanese textiles
to post signs reading, "Japanese Textiles Sold Here."
As another indicator, Prof. Seymour E. Harris of
Harvard, chairman of the New England Governors'
Textile Committee, estimates that imports of Japan
ese cotton cloth this year might reach 224 million
yards, as against 100 million yards in 1955. E.R.R.
Everything's Booming Including Prices
A rise in steel prices will have a "relatively insig
nificant effect" on consumer prices, according to
Ewan Clague, U. S. Commissioner of Labor Statistics.
He announced on July 24 that consumer prices had
reached an all-time record in June.
The June level will go up, too, says Clague, but
"not in a jump like this." And he says he does not see
inflation in the figures.
Still, on the eve of the steel strike settlement, in
dustry sources were predicting an $8 to $10 a ton
price rise for steel. And inasmuch as steel is a basic
material in most manufacturing processes, price in
creases tend to pyramid before reaching the eventual
consumer.
Even without a rise in steel prices, automobile
manufacturers had announced that their 1957 models
will cost more. Over 11 per cent of the price of the
average automobile represents the cost of the steel it
contains. And automobile prices make up 6 per cent
i of the Bureau of Labor Statistics retail price index.
CTEEL scrap prices didn't wait for a strike settle
; ment to go rocketing. They rose S6 a ton in Pitts
i burgh on July 25.
On the eve of the steel settlement, the stock mar
i ket was making daily advances to all-time high levels.
Most commodity future prices were rising. The BLS
! attributes the 6.7 per cent rise in consumer costs
between May and June primarily to higher food
prices. Pork' chops, for example, jumped 9 cents a
pound.
Well, hold vour hats, here we go again. Choice
grade beef cattle in Chicago the type of beef sold
in most chain stores on July 25 went up to S25.50
a hundredweight, the highest point since May 1955.
And prices were being squeezed still higher by a sup
ply shrinkage.
The Federal Reserve Board on July 24 reported
that installment sales in department stores rose again
in May for the 21st consecutive -month. May install-
Monday. -Julr S8. 1SS
Polish Government Convinced It
Faces Bad Internal Situation
By CHARLES MeCANX
United Press Correspondent
The Polish Communist gov
ernment evidently is convinced
it faces an explosive internal
situation.
It is evident
also that the
Soviet Russian
govern ment
shares this con
viction fully.
Polish P r e
mier Josey Cy
rankiewicz has
announced that l
tmiies uttiM emergency
measures are to be taken to "re
move the most painful griev
ances of the working masses."
fAotter of Fact
LYNDON AGAIN
Washington Senate Majority
I.eader I. vndon Johnson of Texas i
Aclai Stevenson just
about the nic
est present
that Steven
son could hope
for. By re-
mar kably as
tute parlia
m e n tary tac
t i c s, Johnson
narrowly pre
vented a rag-
J..-.1PD Vibup iiijj ma ii(i"3
fight at the wind-up of Congress.
Thereby, Johnson greatly im
paired the strategy of Steven
son's rivals, who want to use
the civil rights issue to split
the Democratic convention, and
incidentally the ranks of Steven
son's supporters. For Stevenson,
therefore, Johnson's ounce of
prevention was worth several
tons of cure.
It is shocking, of course, that
the tragic issue of civil rights
should always be treated as no
better than a
political foot
ball. But that
is the melan
choly fact. Be
ginning at the
beginning, if
the Eisenhow
er administra
tion had had
the faintest se
rious desire to
pass a civil rights bill, the bill
would have been introduced at
the beginning of the Congres
sional session and pushed with
maximum power thereafter.
Instead the Administration
bill was only offered in May,
when it had no possible chance
of getting past the usual road
block of a Southern filibuster.
The sole intention, obviously,
was to encourage the Democrats
to stage an intra-party donny
brook fair. The trick savored
of that peculiar brand of slick
political smartness for which At
torney General Herbert Brown
ell is widely and justly cele
brated. Yet the delay in introducing
the bill also helped Lvndon
Johnson to frustrate Brownell's
scheme. The House was bound
to take many weeks to act on
the bill. That meant that the
bill could only reach the Senate
in the closing dayt'' of the ses
sion. And that meant, in turn,
that Johnson would have time
on his side.
THROUGHOUT the whole ses
sion, of course, Johnson had
been working overtime to avoid
trouble over civil rights. The
has made
btewxrt 'Visop
ment sales were up 20 per cent over those of May
1955.
Department store, speciality shop, variety and
food chain groups were predicting gains of 3 to 4 per
cent in dollar sales volume in the second six months
of 1956. A recent survey by the National Retail Dry
Goods Association indicated that consumers were
turning to better quality goods, with higher prices
expected for women s, children s, and lnlants wear-j three days: b five days.- (c) 10
ivio- annai-pl I days: (d) one month?
lng appaiei. rT, , , , A (a) Three days (Article
Incidentally, the NRDGA says more and more de- j T section s. The constitu
partment stores are passing on to customers the costs tion also provides (Article h.
of "traditional services." About 58 per cent of the
stores charge for parcel post delivery; an increasing n.
number are adding charges for clothing alterations, i
nitely. So Lehman. Hennings
gift wrapping, C.O.D. delivery.
WHERE'S the money going to come from? Well,
the June price rise triggered an automatic pay
rise for some 500,000 industrial workers. Then came
the steel wage hikes. And now John L. Lewis, who had
been awaiting the steel settlement, is reported ready
to ask for higher pay for his miners.
Also, emplovment hit an all-time peak of 66.5
million iobs in June, Up 3.3 million Irom tne lSOO
average. And the Department Commerce on July
24 announced that tne nations pa10U ioi uie i"M,ion delegates, the scheme to
rh.-pp m. nths of 1956 was
billion. That was $3 billion higher than the rate for
the last three months of 1955; 19 billion higher than
for the first three months of '55 1 E.R.R.
HITCH-HIKER
Waverly, Tenn. (U.RI Rex
Hall was having his automobile
lubricated when the service sta
tion man found a three-foot
snake wound around the exhaust
pipe.
The "jack rabbit" of America
is really a hare. This animal
more correctly called the prairie
hare is famed for its "spy
hops." when it leaps several feet
into the air to get a view of the
surrounding landscape.
Edward Ochab, the Polish I
Communist leader, has said that
the standard of living of work
ers must be raised by 30 per cent,
and that 1.2 million homes must
be built within the next five
years.
Bttr Timei Predicted
Soviet Premier Nikolai A. Bul
ganin spent all of last week in
Poland. He made speeches in
which he told of better times to
come.
Incidentally, Bulganin said
also that the German territory
east of the Oder-Neisse rivers j
line, which Poland now occu-
pies pending a peace treaty, will
remain Polish "forever." ;
The statements of Cyrankie-
y j nd stewo a!cP
, worst moment was when the
Senate had to pass on the nom-
ination of Solicitor
Genera
Simon E. Sobeloff to a Circuit
Court judgeship. Because Sobe
loff had displeased them by his !
Supreme Court arguments on
school de-segregation, the more
fiery Southerners wanted to
make the debate on Sobeloff
into a sort of white supremacy
field day.
Johnson foresaw that a white
supremacy field-day would in
vite Senators like Lehman of
New York, Hennings of Missouri
and Douglas of Illinois to stage
a civil rights field day. So he
triumphantly held the debale
to a minimum, reportedly getting
Sen. Olin Johnston of South
Carolina,
an angrv
for instance, to cut
two hour oration to '
a little 20-minute talk.
Jonnson s next hurdle was the
Republican leadership. If Minor-1
ity Leader V ilham Knowland
of California had chosen to play
BrowneUs slick trick to the
limit, Johnson s bottling up oper -
auon couia never uae sucucra-
ed. But President Eisenhower
had personally telephoned John-
son to plead for passage of two
bills he particularly wanted, tiie
foreign aid bill and the bill tA
raise executive department sal
aries. That gave Johnson a lever.
EFFECT, Johnson told
Knowland that the President
could either have the bills he
had asked for and no civil rights
fight, or he could have a civil
rights fight and no bills. So
Knowland therefore asTeed to
coorierate with Johnson.
Thus the lines were neatlv mitted in the course of the 84th
laid when the civil rights bill Congress (two years) would ap
finallv came over from the ! proach: (a) 5.000; (b) 10.000; (c)
House and was referred to the
Senate Judiciary committee. As I
the chairman of the Judiciary i
committee is Sen. James East
land of Mississippi, the commit
tee could be counted on to hold
the bill until kingdom come un
less its hand was forced. But
there were only two ways to
force the committee's hand, and
Johnson had already closed off
both of them.
The normal expedient was to
offer the civil rights bill as an
amendment to another bill. But
legislative amendments are not
in order on appropriations bills.
Johnson had left nothing but ap
propriations bills for last min
ute action. The other expedient
was a motion to discharge the
Judiciary committee. But such
motions are not in order except
during the "morning hour" that
follows the end of a "legislative
day." And by merely recessing
instead of adjourning each ses-
at an annual rate of S233
PLANER
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Phone 2-2111 Court and McAndrews
Ochab and Bulganin all i
of course, from the big I
riots which broke out in the in
dustrial city of Poznan on June I
28. I
The riots were serious enough
in themselves. At least 53 per
sons were killed.
To make it more embarrassing,
the riots occurred during a big
international fair which had at
tracted hundreds of foreign vis
itors to the city.
A communique of the official
press aencv PAP said "imper-
la"st agents and members of
'"e anti-communist underground
organization fomented the riots
ana staged them during the fair.
This pretense has now been
almost abandoned, though un
doubtedly it will be hauled out
again for the trials of the 300
odd persons held as rioters.
Unrest Admitted
Now Cyrankiewicz all but ad
mits that the riots stemmed di
rectly from widespread unrest
among both workers and peas-
ants. He says he will end
that
period when workers, peasants
and intellectuals were distrusted,
restricted by countless regula
tions . . . when they were sub
jected to lawlessness and abuse
l by the authorities and when
their grievances and needs were
ignored."
Ochab blames conditions on
"the soullessncss of the authori
ties. The Communist organiza
tion, he says, has committed
grave errors.
It is reported that Russia is
considering a big loan to Poland
to enable Syrankiewicz and
Ochab to make cood some of
their promises.
An indication o tlle imme.
rfiat(? future in po,and wil, CQme
; duri tne ,rials of the Poznan
i rioters whieh mav start this j
week I thc sente'nces are se.
1 vere lhcv mav suppress unrest j
Jo. a time Rl,t thpv wiU onK.
j stir up thp hatrcd 'with whici,
nearv al poles regard lhejr Red
ma;crs
!
:
Congressional
Quiz
(Copyright. I95S
Congressional Quarterly)
Q Even with adjournment in
the offing, new bills are intro-
i duced daily. What final figure
would you guess the bills sub-
15.000?
A (c) 15,000 is closest. The
total will exceed that figure.
As of July 13 the tally of bills
submitted in the 84th Congress
was 16.467.
Q True or False: All legis
lation pending when the 84th
Congress adjourns will lapse un
less a special session is called
before Jan. 3.
A True. Election years sig
nal the end of a Congress.
Each Congress meets for two
years (the term of office of a
Representative) and legisla
tion carries over from the first
Jo the second year. But it dies
when the second session ad
journs, unless a special session
is called.
Q Under the Legislative Re
organization Act of 1946, a date
was set for Congress to adjourn
(with certain exceptions). Which
was it: (a) May 31; (b) July 31;
(c) September 31?
A The date set was July
31, not counting Sundays, and
excepting times of war or
tional emergency. However,
Congress may decide to over-
slay the deadline. The U. S.
currently is in a state of na
tional emergency dating from
the Korean crisis.
Q What is the constitutional
limit on the time one House of
Congress may adjourn without
the consent of the other: (a)
and the others had to admit de
feat.
If a long, bitter civil rights de
bate in the Senate had generated
all the usual bitterness just be
fore the Democratic convention,
a repeat performance in Chi
cago would have been quite
unavoidable. But with such civil
righters as Mrs. Franklin Roose
velt and Sens. Lehman and Hu
bert Humphrey of Minnesota in
I Stevenson's corner, and with no
;
knock off Stevenson on the civil
rights issue now looks a lot less
workable.
(Copyright, 1956,
New York Herald Tribune Inc.)
wicz,
stem
In The Day's
Today's hottest world news:
Nasser, Egypt's Man on Horse
back, SEIZES the Suez canal.
As a result, the chancelleries
of the world are buzzing like a
bumblebee nest when a brash
small boy pokes it with a stick.
TN LONDON, Britain sends
Egypt a sharp note in which
the British make it clear that
they do not recognize the grab
as legal.
In Paris, the French foreign
minister tells off the Egyptians
so strongly that the Egyptian
minister says Cairo will have to
reconsider existing relations
with France.
HPHE dispatches report this
morning that relations be
tween Nasser and the British
and French governments have
reached the crisis stage.
In Washington. President Ei
senhower discusses the Suez af
fair with his cabinet and with
Herbert Hoover Jr.. our under
secretary of state. (State Secre
tary Dulles is in South Amer
ica.)
Over in the state department
our striped-pants boys are con
ferring busily with their British
and French opposite numbers,
and a stale department spokes
man, Lincoln White, says the
Egyptian action carries "far
reaching implications."
llfORLD financial markets re
" act sharply. Suez Canal
company stock fell 21 per cent
on the Paris exchange this
morning. Since the Suez canal
is the major channel for Middle
East oil ship oed to world mar
kets, oil con.pany shares drop
ped as mucn as S6.50 in Paris
Headlines of Future
Reviewed by Newsmen
United Press correspondents
around the world look ahead at
the news that will make the
headlines.
Next Round To Israel?
Don't be surprised if Israel
comes out a winner in the Suez
Canal dispute, even though it
isn't in the fight. The United
States, Britain and France may
start sending Israel arms in
quantity as one of their moves
against Egyptian President
Gamal Abdel Nasser. It's regard
ed as unlikely that Russia would
retort by beefing up Nasser's
supply. London insiders say the
arms-to-Israel question is a top
item for consideration in the
United States-British-French con
sultations now in progress here.
Target
Expect Chairman Lewis L.
Strauss of the Atomic Energy
Commission to get a thorough
going-over by the Democrats in
the campaign. Strauss and con
gressional Democrats have long
been feuding. The Democrats ac
cuse him of dragging his heels
on developing atomic power for
peaceful uses. He's accused also
of "insulting" Congress by with
holding information from the
congressional Atomic Energy
Committee. Strauss is President
Eisenhower's special assistant
for atomic matters, as well as
AEC chairman, so he will make
a fine campaign target.
Indian authorities are alarm
ed at those anonymous letters
threatening to assassinate Prime
Miss Ann Rice Buys
j Interest in Store
Miss Ann Rice has purchased
thc N. II. Zachari;;en interest in
the City Appliance stores in
Medford and Ashland and is
now the sole owner of both
stores.
Miss Rice, who has lived in
Medford the majority of her life,
has been in the snles department
of several local firms and was
with Copco for many years.
City Appliance will continue
handling the Holpoir.t line of ap
pliances. According to Miss Rice
the sales staff at the Medford
store has been enlarged and
starting next month they will
handle the new line of Hotpoint
television sets.
Section 2) that the President
may adjourn Congress in case
the two Houses disagree, but
no President has used that
power.
JUST COME OF AGE
Published a a public serv
ice in cooperation with The
Adiertising Council and,
the Xeuspapcr Advertis
ing xcutiijes A ssociation .
News r
Frank Jenkins
and more than S3 on the New
Y'ork stock market.
AY'BE we'd better bring our
selves up to date on this lat
est case of international jitters.
You will remember that for
quite a period of time we dick
ered along with Nasser on a
Lady Bountiful proposal to help
him build a big dam on the Nile
if he'd promise to be good and
stay on our side. The British
were toying with the idea of
chipping in with us on the deal.
Whiie this was going on, Nasser
was dickering also with the Rus
sians. Eventually we got sen
sible and told him the deal was
off and the British gave him the
same word at about the same
time.
So
He seizes the Suez canal and
announces that he'll use the tolls
from it to build his Aswan dam.
Out here on the Pacific Coast,
we'll recognize his tactics as
identical with those employed
a century ago by Joaquin Mur
rieta, the famous California out
law. lirHAT'S the pitch?
" Well, in situations wher
we're pretty certain there"'
something that doesn't meet the
eye, we Americans say: "Look
for the "Ethiopian in the wood
pile." In similar situations, the
French shrug their shoulders and
mutter cynically: "Cherchez la
femme" (Look for the woman. i
In this case, we won't be far
off if we twist the French phrase
a little and say: "Cherchez le
RUSS."
It's a safe guess that the Rus
sians are mixed up in it some
where. Minister Jawaharlal Nehru.
They remember what happened
to Mohandas K. Gandhi, Nehru's
predecessor as Indian leader.
The threats addressed to Nehru
come from the fanatic Maharas
trians of Central India. They
are enraged over his determina
tion to take Bombay away from
the new state of Maharastra and
put it under central administra
tion. Gandhi received similar
threats before he was assassin
ated by a Maharastrian in 1848.
Hurricane Hunter
me Lnited States Weather
Bureau plans to announce this
week a contract of nearly $4.
000,000 for specially designed
radars to detect hurricanes and
tornadoes. They will improve
forecasting of dangerous storms.
It's a timely move Anna, first
1956 hurricane, was born last
week.
Hot Strait
Military observers in Formosa
predict a big fight soon between
Chinese Nationalist and Chinese
Communist jet planes over th2
Formosa Strait. Nationalists fir
ing American-built F86 and F84
jets, shot down four Russian
built Red MIGls and damaged
two on July 21. The Reds are
reported moving MIG reinforce
ments to the coast.
Mothers Tell It
Geo. N. Taylor
An Illinois mother, leaving
the hospital with her ninth babe
tells the nurse "111 see vou
again next
year." But the
nurse said
"No, make it
two year s."
And so this
mother did.
Next is the
California
mother of ten.
"That trip
to the hospital
year after year
is hard work." But her smile
said she wanted more of it.
In the millions who have been
born out of sin into eternal life.
God has His joy, for "There
is joy in heaven over one soul
that turns." Only sucli as be
lieve down . in their heart that
Christ died "for their every last
sin, have eternal life. These are
raised to glory Resurrection Day
and such of them as die to self
and promote Christ as Lord and
Saviour, win eternal reward.
This Message sponsored by
an Oregon family. Adv.
but her name is in
the book!
It's a wonderful feeling, isn't it?
After all these years, to be really
grown up at last mature and
responsible enough to act ua Uy say
how your government will be run
by your vote on election day?
Registering to vote is your first
official act as an American come-of-age.
It's one of the most im
portant steps you'll ever take an
a cittren. So don't put it off.
Kegwter now.
Is your name
in the book?
mm