FOUR MEDFORD (OREGON)
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NEWSFAfER
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Flight o' Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10. 20, 30, 40
and 50 years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
Oct. 25. 1946 (Friday)
No immediate increases in
prices of foods from which the
controls were removed earlier
this week is anticipated.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: Consumer
resistance to the high price of
meat is reported. Further re
ports also indicate some of the
steaks are also resisting, stub
bornly. 20 YEARS AGO
Oct. 25, 1936 (Sunday)
National air defense will be
considered at .a meeting of
Northwest Aviation Planning
council in Portland, according
to A. H. Banwell, manager of
the Jackson County Chamber of
Commerce.
The Townsend club of Talent
will meet Tuesday in the city
hall.
30 YEARS AGO
Oct. 25, 1926 (Monday)
First meeting of the Parent
Teachers association of Lone
Pine school scheduled at school
Friday.
Ben Dorris, state legionnaire,
will be principal speaker at a
meeting of local American Leg
ion post tonight.
40 YEARS AGO
Oct. 25, 1916 (Wednesday)
Three hundred high school
students to participate in a pa
jama parade on Medford down
town streets today.
Pair of Missouri mules got
better of encounter with a Max
well car driven by Fred Collins
Monday.
50 YEARS AGO
Oct. 25. 1906 (Thursday)
Miss Edna Eifert entertains 30
young women last night at the
home of her parents on South
A St.
President Roosevelt Issues
proclamation naming Thursday,
Nov. 29, Thanksgiving.
What's the Answer?
Can Yon Get 4 of the 7?
Copr. 1935 Editorial Research
Report
1. A married couple with two
children and $5,000 income in
1939 would need today one
about $7,500. $10,000, $12,500
or $15,000 for the same buying
power as then?
2. The "Andrea Doria," sunk
by collision in July with the
"Stockholm," was much larger
or smaller than it, or about the
same size?
3. The Lusitania was sunk in
World War I by a submarine,
iceberg, floating mine, bomb
from a plane, or collision with
another ship?
4. Life insurance companies
as a whole have over half of
their assets in common stocks,
or about one-third, or 15, or
less than 5 per cent?
5. Coal oil was once a com
mon term for crude petroleum,
gasoline, kerosene, vaseline or
natural gas?
6. The game of chess has six,
seven, eight, nine or ten different
kinds of pieces?
7. A tutu is found in a French
grammar, jazz band, ice cream
parlor, dancer's dressing room
or So. Pacific island group?
The answers: 1. About $10.
000. 2. Much larger. 3. Submar
ine. 4. Less than 5 per cent. 5.
Kerosene. 6. Six. 7. Dancer
dressing room (belief costume).
MAIL TRIBUNE
The Al Sarena Mystery
It continues to be a mystery to this department
why the supporters of ex-Secretary Douglas McKay
insist upon publicizing the controversial Al Sarena
"give-away," in feature stories with pictures, week af
ter week.
Last summer the Oregonian sent a reporter and
photographer to the old and exhausted "Buzzard
Mine" now the Al Sarena and as a result of their
endeavors published a series of SEVEN articles sup
posed to establish the rectitude and sanctity of this
"mining-for-timber" deal.
""THE ARTICLES of course, did nothing of the sort.
They merely confirmed the original conten
tion that this was an action unprecedented in the his
tory of the Department of the Interior, and if accepted
as a precedent would result in an epidemic of grant
ing rights to federal timber under the guise of mining
claims, involving the sale of the f ormer valued at
around $500 an acre in the open market, for $5 an
acre. Those are the facts they have never been suc
cessfully refuted.
Now the Albany Democrat-Herald follows suit,
donating a page "ad," claiming gross "misrepresenta
tion" regarding this "give-away" and including a
story illustrated by a picture of one of the McDonald
Brothers conversing (tete a tete) with. one of his near
neighbors a Mrs. Perley Seller, whose blood, it is
stated, always "boils" when anyone suggests that the
owners (the McDonald Brothers), wanted the land for
the timber on it rather than the ore it might yield.
Being a close neighbor and an intimate friend, no
doubt Mrs. Seller knows what the McDonald Broth
ers had on their minds when they bought the Old Buz
zard mine we don't, we only know what they did
AFTER buying it.
Perhaps, as stated the owners of the mine have
in two decades put in as much as $200,000 in develop
ment work; perhaps also they have taken out more
than they put in, but what has all that got to dd with
the case, or all the other details showing stands of
small trees and the slinking rear end of the family
hound dog. "Irrelevant, incompetent and immaterial."
.
THE POINT is that even after the mining patents
were granted contrary to the recommendations
of both the mineral experts of the US Forest Service
and the Bureau of Land Management, the Al Sarena
mine was not operated and has not been for the past
ten years. If the assays by another friendly neighbor
of the McDonalds in far off Mobile, Alabama, showed
such riches, why this inaction? It doesn't make sense !
The best answer we have seen to this question
comes from R. T. Moore, of the Oregon Voter an
other strong supporter of the Al Sarena owners, whose
blood also boils even more violently than Mrs. Seller's
when the case is mentioned, for he calls criticisms of
the deal, quote:
"Nothing more than a particularly vicious gimmick to
bamboozle the public and wreck the legitimate mining op
erations of the owners who dared to insist on their rights
against bureaucratic confiscation What are the morals
of any public servant who would stoop to such disgusting
obscenity?"
Strong words. Whether church-going Mr. Moore
refers to Charles Porter, candidate of the Democratic
party for congress, who has taken the lead in fighting
this timber-mining in Southern Oregon, or to Senator
Morse, who has only mentioned it occasionally is not
made clear. But such language surely does indicate
not only boiling blood but dangerously high blood
pressure.
OOWEVER, strange to say, in the same rhetorical
outburst the regular political contributor to the
"Voter" admits he sent an experienced executive of
his lumber firm to "case" this mine deal at close range
and here is a portion of that anonymous gentleman's
report, quote:
"The terrain is rocky and steeply ridged. The auto boiled
during the latter part of the ascent. Before commer
cial use is practical the road would need some rather ex
pensive improvement. But the total distance is not great
and the combined timber and ore resources could PROB
ABLY pay the freight."
Timber AND ore!
Does anyone need more evidence than that, cpm
ing from a timber expert and lumber company execu
tive, to remove all doubt that when the US Forest
Service and the Bureau of Land Management de
clared the mineral content of the Al Sarena claims
did not justify the granting of mineral patents, they
were RIGHT? . . . and when the Solicitor of the In
terior Department, without even consulting the head of
his department, granted them, he was NOT?
For if that is not the case, then what do we have?
We have the Department of the Interior with the au
thority to grant patents to mining claims throughout
the US National Forest, even if the mineral values do
not justify mining operations alone, but only with the
timber on the land added so the combination might
"pay the freight." Note the "might."
And the Al Sarena supporters are raising the cry
of "bamboozling the public" and presenting vicious
and obscene "gimmicks".
They entirely overlook the fact this land involved
belongs to the public, that it is a part of the US Forest
Reserve, not private property, and that for close to
40 years, it has been established practice in the De
paiment of the Interior, not to grant mineral and min
ing patents LN THE FOREST RESERVE, unless the
Forest Reserve s own assays showed the MINERAL
content would justify commercial operation.
Who, under the circumstances, can blame former
Secretary McKay for explaining when Al Sarena is
mentioned that he knew nothing about the granting
of patents until the papers had been signed?
Nor is it surprising that Secretary of the Interior
Thursday, October 25. I9SS
Communications
Letters to the Editor must bear the name and address ot the writer, although
under certain circumstances the use of a pen name or initial tor publication
is permissible. The Mail Tribune reserves the right to edit ail letters with a
view to clarification and condensation.
not exceed 400 words.
If The Shoe Fits . . .
To the Editor: It begins to
look as though the "grand
finale" of our political campaign
has caused many politicians to
resort to the Communist line in
an effort to crystallize public
opinion.
The 24 "protocols" upon which
Communist ideology is based,
are carved from untruth, decep
tion, confusion, and prejudice.
It might be well to quote a
couple of spasms from these
"protocols" that the reader may
judge whether or not that many
of our politicians are going
about deceiving the voter, while
at the same time are being de
ceived themselves.
Quote:
"In order to control public
opinion, it is necessary to per
plex it with many conflicting
opinions. The people will get
lost in the labyrinth, and decide
that perhaps that it was not
meant for them to understand
technical political questions."
Quote: .
. "In the absence of facts to
prove your case, never argue
from the negative side of the
issue. Take the facts of the op
position, and with a volume of
verbage, twist and bend the facts
around until they prove your
own case. The people will be
lost in ignorance, confusion, and
prejudice, and start arguing
amongst themselves. The flames
of anger will cause them to be
willing to shed their blood or
even lay down their lives in de
fense of your cause."
Earl Allen
176 South Stage rd.
. Medford, Ore.
Fluorides, Again
To the Editor: I wish to thank
Dr. W. W. Howard for his recent
letter published in the Mail Tri
bune on fluoridation.
The following paragraphs have
been copied from the Bulletin
of the National Health Federa
tion published March, 1956.
The Supreme Court of the
United States has defined lib
erty in extremely broad terms,
and that forcing fluoridated wa
ter upon those of the public who
do not want fluoridated drink
ing water would be a direct vio
lation of liberty within the
meaning of the Supreme Court
decision.
There are many alternatives
outside of a mandate by law for
the individual's prerogative such
as fluoridation on an individual
basis for the persons wanting
them, the same as all other
drugs are dispensed, thus elim
inating all controversy, law
suits and possibility of harm to
adults and chronic sick.
Fluorine and its compounds,
in quantity, are a deadly poison
for human consumption.
Mrs. Charles Boussum
720 Welch st.
Medford, Ore.
Her Conclusions
To the Editor: Having four
children, I am interested in the
fluoridation issue and would like
to be sure of the main facts re
garding it. From what has been
published on both sides, I believe
these points are true. Fluorine
in drinking water does check de
cay in teeth of children in the
six to twelve year age group.
Doctors and dentists do not agree
on the advisability of its use. The
teeth of some children become
mottled with fluoridation. Ac
cording to chemical analysis flu
orine is a poison used in rodent
extermination and as an insecti
cide. Fluorine is accumulative in
our bodies to the detriment of vi
tal organs. Fluoridation of city
water systems is costly, consider
ing the small per cent of children
it may help. It will be added to
our taxes and cause higher water
rates. The approximate cost as
estimated in any public project
is always lower than the actual
cost.
Fluoridation of public water is
form of socialized medicine.
We are asking our neighbors to
pay our dentist bills. Fluorine is
available in other forms besides
city water systems and person
ally I prefer to administer it to
my children in one of tnese ways,
since the quantity varies in wa
ter systems. I have found mat
the teeth of my children decay
before they are six but with
proper diet, adequate calcium
and curtailment of sweets and
also strict adherence to daily
brushings the cavities have been
substantially reduced.
Mrs. Elmer Haseltine
1634 Spring st.,
Medford, Ore.
Seaton should, after doing his bit to help his predec
essor, broadcast the fact that so long as he holds his
present office nothing like the Al Sarena give-away
will happen again.
As before remarked, under the circumstances we
should think the supporters of Douglas McKay would
want to forgetthe Al Sarena case, not keep it alive
and devote pages of free space to publicizing it from
week to week.
For there is nothing involved in this unprecedent
ed transaction which could by the greatest stretch of
the imagination reflect any credit upon the man who
was responsible and who now aspires to replace
Wayne Morse for six long years in the Senate of the
United States quite to the contrary, in fact R.W.R.
Letters submitted for publication must
Journal Noi Democratic
To the Editor: Your newspaper
of Sunday, Oct. 21, carried a po
litical advertisement paid for by
Stanley C. Jones Jr. and Dick
House, which was a reprint of a
recent editorial in the Oregon
Journal, of Portland.
Mr. Jones and Mr. House cap
tioned the editorial thus:
"The Democratic Oregon Jour
nal of PorUand is Signing Doug
McKay."
One wonders if it were inten
tional for them to term the Ore
gon Journal "Democratic," or if
they simply didn't know any bet
ter. The Oregon Journal is not a
Democratic newspaper, and for
proof Mr. House End Mr. Jones
need only to read an editorial in
the Oregon Journal of Oct. 16. In
the third paragraph of that edi
torial, the Oregon Journal says:
"First, let us repeat what we
have said before: The Journal in
its 54-year history has never been
a Democratic newspaper as such.
Its masthead has always carried
the words 'An Independent
Newspaper . . . ."
Time was when the Oregon
Journal did rather consistently
support Democratic candidates.
That was under the regime of the
earlier Jacksons and of B. F. Irv
ine. But of recent years the
Journal, for reasons known best
to the publishers, has been as
Republican, or more so, than the
traditionally Republican Oregon
ian. The Journal has a right to sup
port McKay if it wishes, but
Jackson county Republicans have
no right to mislead voters by
making claim that a "Democra
tic" newspaper is supporting a
Republican candidate when the
newspaper, by its own declara
tion, is not a Democratic news
paper. Lula G. Watson
1638 Stewart ave.,
Medford, Ore.
in The Day's
What's new in Poland?
It's hard to say. We must re
member that in communist coun
tries news is regarded as the
PROPERTY OF THE STATE
not the property of the people.
The people in communist
states are told only what their
rulers think it is good for them
to know.
WE must keep this clear:
These revolters are com
munists. But they are home town
communists. As such, they are
CLOSER TO THE PEOPLE.
They want to run their own af
fairs, instead of having EVERY-'
THING run from Moscow.
And
Poland, where the trouble
seems to be hottest, cherishes
ancient and deep and bitter hat
reds of Russia. Four times, in
the past couple of centuries, Po
land has been "partitioned"
that is, torn limb from limb. In
every one of these partitionings,
Russia has had a hand.
The Poles don't forget that.
NOR do they forget the Katyn
Forest. In the Katyn Forest
in 1955, ten thousand Polish of
ficers (prisoners of war) were
massacred by Russian order.
They don't forget Warsaw. In
the dying days of World War 2,
the Germans were closing in on
Poland's capital. The Russians
had powerful forces just east of
the city. They could have pro
tected it. Instead, they sat tight
while Hitler's army took the
city, practically destroyed it and
killed counUess thousands of its
people.
Both deeds were done in cold
blood. Russia wanted to DE
STROY Poland destroy it for
ever. The Poles know that. They
haven't forgotten. So let's not
write off this trouble that seems
to be brewing in Poland as just
a flash in the pan.
Something could come of it.
ri Chicago, Candidate Adlai
Stevenson says President Ei
senhower's reply to the Bulgan
in letter proposing to put an end
to H-bomb tests is "unfortun
ate." He says he agrees with the
President that the Russian pre
mier's letter is an interference
in American political affairs,
but, he says:
"The REAL issue is not Mr.
Bulganin's manners or Russian
views about American politics
what can be done to save the
Hungarian Revolt Shows Troops
Of Satellites Are Not Reliable
By CHARLES M. McCANN
United Press Correspondent
The Hungarian revolt has in
dicated clearly that the govern
ments of Soviet Russia's satel-
lite countries
cannot rely
upon their
armies.
It has indi
cated clearly
also that Rus
sia could not
depend on
those armies
to fight for it
Charlet Mrl ano II a intra
world war broke out.
The call of the Hungarian
Communist government for the
help of Soviet troops in sup
pressing riots in Budapest was
a big development.
It meant that the Red leaders
were afraid to trust their own
troops.
What made the admission
more significant is the call for
Russian help came not from a
"Stalinist" regime but from
Imre Nagy, the new "Titoist"
premier of Hungary.
Hungary's armed forces total
about 300,000 men: of these,
about 200,000 are in the army
and 100,000 are so-called secur
ity troops. In addition, there are
the ordinary police.
As in other satellite countries,
it is the security troops and not
the ordinary soldiers who can be
depended upon to fight then
own people.
The same is true of the satel
lite armies in relation to Rus
sia. Russia and its seven satellites
formed last Jan. 28 the so-called
Warsaw Alliance in answer to
the North Atlantic Treaty Or
ganization. On paper, this alliance gave
Russia the backing of about 2
million soldiers of the satellite
countries.
Actually, if a war broke out,
these men might end up fight
ing the Russians, and not Rus
sia's enemies.
There are reports that in the
Polish revolt last week Polish
troops fired on and turned
back Russian troops who tried
News
k Jenkins
world from hydrogen disaster."
StevensGn adds that Bulgan
in's proposal, even though it
might have been made in com
plete bad faith, should have been
fully investigated.
IKE, you will remember, said
he thought Bulganin's letter
was a breach of international eti
quette. Let's take a look at the
circumstances.
Bulganin gave the letter to
the . Moscow radio before Ike
had time to receive it. How
would you feel if somebody
wrote you a letter that was in
tended to put you in a hole and
then GAVE IT TO THE RE
PORTERS before you had time
to receive it?
I think you'd be just as in
dignant as Ike was. You'd have
a perfectly good reason to be in
dignant. I think that in such cir
cumstances anybody OUGHT to
be indignant. Bulganin's letter
was just plain dirty pool.
I can't agree at all with Adlai
that Ike's answer was "unfortun
ate." I think it was exactly the
right thing to do.
JE must remember of course
that Adlai must have been
horribly shocked when Bulganin
came out with his letter endors
ing the Stevenson candidacy
That was one supporter Adlai
didn't want.
But he should remember that
in this put-a-stop-to-the-H-bomb-tests
business he was playing
with fire in an effort to get
votes. He shouldn't object be
cause he got his fingers burned.
STILL IN ARCTIC
Virginia Beach, Va. flJ.R)
Pfc. Burton Boyer returned from
three months duty with the
Army near the Arctic Circle and
found his family a new apart
ment on Arctic ave.
Take The Offices of Coroner and Surveyor
Out of Politics!
VOTE YES on No. 4
4
Chapel Mortuary
Across from the Courthouse
Frank Morgan Harold Snodgrass
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
to cross the frontier from East
Germany.
The Hungarian Red govern
ment found it advisable Wednes
day to broadcast an apologetic
statement, explaining the call
for Russian troops.
"We have been asked repeat
edly how it was possible that
Russian troops have marched
into Budapest," the announced
said.
He explained that the govern
ment, "conscious of its respon
sibilities," asked Russian troops
to aid in "re-establishing order
and discipline against counter
revolutionary elements." He
asked the people to welcome the
Russians as "friends and allies."
It may well be asked why
with 300,000 army men and se
curity troops at its disposal, the
THE ELECTION
... And You
(The following space is made available on Tuesdays,
Thursdays and Sundays during the election campaign to
the two major political parties so that they may publish,
without charge, material concerning the presidential elec
tion race. Offerings are limited to 400 words, must have the
approval of the county chairman of the party, and must be
submitted not later than 2 p.m. the day before publication
on week days, at 11 a.m. Saturdays for Sunday publication.)
DEMOCRATIC STATEMENT
The Republicans can well be
accused of having given us a
banker's administration remini
scent of the Harding-Hoover-Coolidge
days when Andrew
Mellon one of the richest men
in the United States sat in the
office of Secretary of the Treas
ury and called every turn in the
nation's fiscal economy.
From the very first the Eisen-.
hower administration showed its
obsession with the welfare of
the bankers. One ot the first
moves of Secretary of the
Treasury Humphrey was to raise
the interest rate on federal
bonds to 3V4 per cent. This
"bundle for bankers" immedi
ately drove the price of the
bonds up.
With this auspicious start, in
terest rates generally kept
creeping up, thereby increasing
the value of the dollar for the
lender, as Senator Gore said, and
decreasing it for the borrower.
For the millions of borrowers,
whether it be for a new house,
a washing machine, or the latest
automobile, the administration's
hard money policy has been dis
astrous. It has added substan
tially to the ultimate or real
cost of whatever article we may
buy on credit.
For example, the price of an
average two-bedroom house in
1952 was $9,280. Bought on a
21-year contract, the average
payment was $59 per month.
Thanks to inflation and the
hard money policy of Secretary
Humphrey, the average two
bedroom house now costs $10,
600, and payments are $69 per
month for 25 years. The added
interest costs alone over the 25
year period amounts to about
$3000.
This is the price borrowers
have paid for voting in the Re
publican administration in 1952.
But all that can be rectified on
Nov. 6 when voters will have
the opportunity of voting out
the hard money men and install
ing a Democratic administration
that is pledged to lower interest
rates.
REPUBLICAN STATEMENT
We, in America, believe in the
infinite worth of the individual
human being, and under this be
lief we act through our system
of government to foster oppor
tunities for a rich and full life
for all Americans.
In the daily lives of people,
no factors are more important
than health, education, and econ
omic security. As each individ
ual advances in these fields, his
own life is enlarged and the na
tion is enriched. In these fac
tors, the Republican party of
fers more than promises. It
points to unmistakable, un
deniable accomplishments over
these past 3V4 years.
The fact is that the health,
QUALIFICATIONS FOR COUNTY CORONER AND
SURVEYOR. Purpose: To amend Oregon
Constitution by authorizing legislature to
prescribe qualification for office of
county coroner and county surveyor.
government had to call out the
Russians.
Every Communist government
is a dictatorship. Every dictator
ship depends on its armed forces
for secure existence. When the
army goes, there goes the dicta
torship. The Russian Revolution of
1917 the Kerensky revolution,
not the later Bolshevik coup
against Kerensky was made
possible because the army
would not fight the people.
That revolution, by the way,
was largely an accident. It
started with a series of strikes
in Petrograd. Troops of the Pet
rograd garrison joined the strik
ers in surging parades through
the streets. It was only then that
the revolutionary elements start
ed to organize.
education and economic secur
ity of the American people
have now advanced to levels
never before achieved in the
history of this country. While
this is due primarily to efforts
of individuals themselves, Fed
eral programs play an import
ant part.
Republican action created the
Department of Health, Educa
tion and Welfare, the first new
Federal department in 40 years.
The everyday, human problems
of people in these fields were
elevated to the highest council
of government for the first time.
The Eisenhower administra
tion has furthered the well
being of every citizen by ex
panding and improving every
major federal program in these
fields of human welfare, and has
launched important new pro
grams. At the same time that
the budget has been balanced.
Federal expenditures for these
programs have been raised to
an all-time high.
Under the Administration's
leadership, social security pro
tection has been extended to
over 10 million additional per
sons, including farm owners,
farm workers, and many profes
sional people. Now almost all
workers are covered, and, on the ';
recommendation of the Presi
dent, benefits were greaUy in
creased for everyone under the
system. The halting of inflation
has preserved the value of this
increased protection.
The Eisenhower administra
tion created the Federal Council
on Aging to deal with the spe
cial problems of older persons.
A new program has been
launched to build more and bet
ter facilities for medical re
search. Republican leadership has
helped encourage a notable ex
pansion and improvement in
voluntary health Insurance.
We must continue the progress
already made by this Adminis-.
tration to advance the health,
education and economic security
of the American people by re
electing Dwight D. Eisenhower
on Nov. 6.
OFFER TOO LOW
Stanton, Calif.OJ.R) George
Karcher offered to be the city's -public
relations man for $1 a
year but the city council dis
agreed. Karcher took the job
after the council raised his pay .
to $1 a month to cover his post
age stamp bill.
Comforts More
Childhood His...
than any other
children's aspirin.
Mothers trust it.
doctors approve it,
children Uke its
orange flavor.
ST.JOStPH
aSDIBIN
FOR cwuwnij
YES
NO.
Paid Political Adv.
iron
Prit
Poii
Ion