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FOOT MEDFORD (OREGON)
MEDFORDvyTRIBUNE
"Everyone In Southern Oregon
Readi The Mat) Tribune"
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Flight o'Time
Medford and Jackson' Coiauy
History from the files 'of The
MaU Tribune 10, 20, 80, 40
and 50 years ago.
L
10 YEARS AGO
Mot. 8, 1946 (Fiday)
- The regional War Assets of
fice plans to sell $50,000 worth
of government surplus good
left over from a recent site sale
at Camp White.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
C Smudge Pot column: .The met
ropolitan iootball field that was
O to be planted to turf last spring,
for this fall's contest, is, still a
O quagmire second to none, all re
ports rtate.
20 YEARS AGO . .
Mot. 8, 1936 (Sunday)
Krs. Dorothy Hamtn, new
(manager cf Mann's Art Needle
work department, .discuses pop
ularity of knitting with women.
Strong winds blow through
Rogue valley, swirling dust,
Jmves and paper around the
rtty-
30 YEARS AGO
Not. 8, 1926 (Monday)
J. B. Coleman, Jackson coun
ty assessor, presides at annual
meeting of County Assessors, of
Oregon at Armory today.
Medford delegation to the
O jpray- residue conference at
Portland 3 returned Sunday.
40 .YEARS AGO
O Mot. 8. 1916 Wednesday)
No important 'happenings oc
O cur Hong the French front last
nightj the war office reports.
"From Local and Personal
column: E. J. Kaiser., .Ashland,
gpandf day in Medford.
50 YEARS AGO
a Not. 8. 1916 (Thursday)'
P. J.McMahon, managei of
Hush hotel, engages orchestra to
play there this evening between
5:30 and 7:30 p.m.
From Local and Personal col
umn: M. and Mr. R. H. Halley
have gone to southen California
for the winter.
What's lbs Answer?
Can You Get 4 of the 7?
Copr. 1955 Editorial Research
Report
1. The Constitution sets a
higher or lower minimum age
limit for Senators than for Rep
resentatives, or no minimum for
either? ;
2. More 0 Hardtops or station
wagons are sold in the U.S., or
about the same number of each?
3. Louisiana which forbids
Whites to play ag'ainst Negroes
in t ports contests there, does or
doesn't also forbid mixed seat
ing at them.
4. U.S. cruistrs are named
far States, cities, naval heroes,
qualities of character or fish.
5. Ships entering the Am
brose Channel" from open water
are headed for Boston, New
York, Miami, New Orleans, San
Francisco or Seattle?
6. Harlowe H- Curtice is pres
ident of U.S. Steel, General
Electric, General. Motors, Sears
Roebuck or Dupont.
3 7. A merganser is a plumber's
tooi, flower, duck, man who or
ganizes business mergers, or de
votee of rock 'n' roll?
The answers: 1. Higher for
Senators (30) tlran for Represen
tatives (25). 2. More' Hardtops.
3. Does. 4. For cities. 5. Nw
York. 6. General Motors. 7.
Fish-eating duck.
O SNOW IN SANTIAM
Salem (U. Santiam-pass
reported one inch of new snow
but pavement' is bare, the State
O Highway Department said 'today.
MAIL TRIBUNE
A Great
Anyone who has followed this department at all
regularly some have throughout this now defunct
campaign need hardly be tola tnat the victory ot
Wayne Morse for his third 6-year term in the U.S.
Senate compensates for disappointment in other po
litical fields.
We never thought that such a fabulously popular
President as General Eisenhower could, even with the
aid of Richard Nixon, be defeated for a second term.
In the history of this country the number of Presidents
denied a second term, except by the hand of death or
refusal to run, can be counted on the fingers of one
hand. Ike would be the last for whom one would
foresee an exception. (Nevertheless, for reasons
often stated, we did what we could to make him one.)
DUT as the record will show we concentrated on re
turning Wayne Morse to the Upper House in
Washington, and while as expected, he did not cany
Jackson County the Republican majority was tre
mendously reduced, and he carried the state by a ma
jority far in excess of what practically all the experts
predicted. .
Considering the overwhelming opposition to him
in practically a unanimous anti-Morse press, the huge
sums spent on behalf of his opponent, in radio, news
paper advertising and TV, as well as the greatly de
sired and cherished blessing of both President Eisen
hower and Vice President Nixon, the "pet hate" of the
Grand Old Party, came through with colors flying,
head unbowed, and a clear course before him to carry
on for six more years as he has for the past 12, for
what he BELIEVES to be right regardless of the party
sanction. It was not only a great personal victory for
1 Wayne Morse but a great and much-needed victory
I for courage, independence and principle above party
i in the political field in America today.
! P. S. Later: it now appears Senator Morse even
; earned Republican Jackson county by a whisker. If
; official returns confirm this, the achievement of our
senior Senator suggests the
passed R.W.R.
Outstanding in Defeat
"It is easy enough to be happy
When life goes by like a song,
" But the man worth while.
Is the Man who can smile
When everything goes dead wrong."
. Adlai Stevenson did not put on a grin exactly, but
in his congratulatory talk to his victorious- opponent,
after Democratic defeat became certain, he did, not
only in what he said, but the way he said it, establish
a new high for good sportsmanship, and sincere and
selfless patriotism.
' He apparently took his text from Thomas Jef
ferson, to-.wit:
"Error of opinion may be tolerated where reason is
free to combat it."
I 'IKE the "Happy Warrior" he expressed no bitter
ness and no regrets but took a pride in the fight
that had been made, and expressed sincere and deep
felt gratitude to those who so loyally fought with him.
There was none of the ecstatic hand-pumping and
back-slapping jamboree that greeted President Eisen
hower in his presidential suite. No one in Chicago was
chanting "We like Adlai" as they chanted "We like
Ike" in Washington.
But it was quite apparent over the Ty air waves,
that the crowd assembled did like Adlai, they be
lieved he had fought the good fight, and there was
nothing phoney about their applause and cheers, nor
their devotion thus expressed to the cause he repre
sented. A GAIN following the lead of Thomas Jefferson
when the country was faced with a similar crisis
in foreign affaire, Governor Stevenson assured his
successful opponent that at such a time "we are no
longer Democrats and Republicans but we are ALL
Americans."
In that particular reference it was not only what
he said but the way he said it.
There was no tremolo stop pulled out in this por
tion of his brief talk or any other, no solemnity in
the group, no exaltation either; but just a calm and
unruffled facing of the facts and genuine devotion
a second major battle had been lost but not the war.
A CCORDING to the professional politicians' code
and former President Truman's as well this
second crashing defeat will end Stevenson's active
political career, in the presidential area at least, and
probably , any other.
Politically speaking, no one loves a loser, and par
ticularly a second time loser.
Well, mebbe so.
But we will say this for Adlai he never more
clearly revealed his true presidential stature or his
keen perception of the real dangers confronting this
nation, at home and abroad, than he did in the few
words that he addressed to his followers, President
Eisenhower, and the people of the country following
his second crushing defeat as leader of the Demo
cratic party. R.W.R. .
British Casualties In Egypt Said Few
London (U.R) Defense Min
ister Antony Head said today
that preliminary reports showed
British casualties in Egypt "do
not exceed 85. of whom not more
than 20 were killed."
Head told the House of Com
mons that before the invasion of
the Suez Canal Zone, photo
graphic reconnaissance had
shown the Egyptians had "dug
in tanks and established strong,
Thursday, November 8, 1S5S
Victory
age of miracles has NOT
points along the front of Port
Said facing the sea."
"It was decided that 24 hours
before the assault an air drop
should take place with a view
to clearing the strong point em
placements," Head said. " It was
carried out so effectively that
there was no need for prelimin
ary bombardment which would
have caused destruction and casualties."
Nixon, Kefauver, Seen
Heirs to Political Leadership
By LYLE C. WILSON
United Press Correspondent
Washington (U.R) The elec
tion made Vice President Rich
ard M. Nixon and Sen. Estes
Kefauver the
most likely
heirs in their
respective par
ties to the 1960
presid e n t i a 1
nomination.
Angry stop
Nixon and stop
Kefauver cam
paigns are just
k. nusoo around the cor
ner. They are loaded with polit
ical trouble for both major par
ties. Kefauver has been stopped
before this. He came to the 1952
Democratic National Convention
with solid delegate backing won
in a spectacular blitz of import
ant presidential primaries.
Kefauver led the field on the
first two 1952 nominating bal
lots. He was stopped, finally, by
a combination of big city Demo
cratic machines, organized labor,
conservative Southerners. The
successful effort to cut Kefauver
down to size was sparked by
Today and
By Walter
HUNGARY AND THE
MIDDLE EAST
The drama in Hungary is
tragic not only in the sense that
it is a bitter sorrow to see so
brave a people
crushed; it is
tragic also in
the sense that
the outcome
has been fa
tally ordain
ed since the
Nagy govern
ment lost con
trol of the re
bellion. Uallcr I ninmann
There are, we have every re.v
son to believe, two stages in the
liberation of a satellite- The
first stage in Titoism or national
liberty, which is not anti-Communist
and which remains with
in the Soviet sphere of military
and political .influence. The
second stage is complete liberty
at home and abroad. No country
which has once been within the
Soviet orbit not even Yugosla
via has ever reached the sec
ond stage.
The Hungarian- tragedy is
that the rebellion tried to by
pass the first stage, Titoism, and
in doing that, it challenged the
whole Russian position in East
ern Europe. In the past ten days
it has been ail too evident that
if the Hungarian rebellion could
not be stabilized about where
Gomulka has stabilized the Pol
ish rebellion, it was running
into terrible danger.
SHORTLY before the Red
army struck, on Tuesday,
Oct. 30, the Soviet government
made the statement which so
impressed President E i s e n
hower. It outlined a new con
ception of Eastern Europe
that of a "commonwealth of
socialist states." It was in es
sence a declaration that the So
viet Union would settle for Tito
ism. By Sunday, Nov. 4, the
Red army had crushed the Hun
garian rebellion.
The question is whether or
not the Russian action on Sun
day cancelled the Tuesday dec
laration of Soviet policy. On the
answer to that question may
depend the fate of Poland, end
the prospect elsewhere in the
Soviet orbit. Teh answer will
show whether within the So
viet government there has now
A Glance
Newberg (U.R) Newberg
voters decided Tuesday to keep
their city "dry" by continuing
the ban on sale of alcoholic
liquors.
Portland (U.R)
Oregon cities down
Several
proposals
to add fluoride to their water
supplies.
Coos Bay voters, however,
passed a fluoridation proposal.
Voters in Astoria, Gearhart and
Warrenton decided to retain it.
But Portland, Medford, Red
mond, McMinnville, Eugene, La
Grande and Klamath Falls
voters rejected it.
Roseburg (U.R) Circuit
Judge Charles S. Woodrich won
reelection Tuesday over Warren
A. Woodruff, Roseburg district
judge, for the district compris
ing Coos, Curry, Douglas and
Lane counties.
Vale (U.R) Circuit Judge
M. A. Biggs of Vale won reelec
tion Tuesday over Charles W.
Swan, also Vale, former Malheur
county district attorney.
Portland (U.R) Circuit
Judge Alfred P. Dobson defeat
ed Thomas P. Mahoney of Port
land to retain his position.
Springfield !U.R) Mayor
Edward Harms won reelection
Tuesday.
St. Helens (U.R) S. S.
(Heine) Heamann was elected
mayor here Tuesday over incum
bent Irvin R. Rau.
Harry S. Truman, then president
of the United States. Mr. Tru
man was out front again this
year in preventing Kefauver's
nomination for president, an
office for which Mr. Truman
says the senator is unfit.
Stop Nixon Bid Folds
Nixon survived a 1956 "stop"
campaign which had the Repub
lican, Party spinning off its axis
before it folded under pressure
of grass roots Republican lead
ers who not only like Ike but
like Nixon, too. That campaign
was to prevent Nixon's renomi
nation for vice president.
The 1960 play will be for big
ger stakes and, correspondingly,
it is likely to be noisier, angrier
and more newsworthy than was
the effort to keep Nixon off the
ticket this year. Both the senator
and the vice president are fa
vored by new political circum
stances. President Eisenhower is barred
by constitutional amendment
from seeking or serving a third
term. Adlai E. Stevenson, who
headed the Democratic ticket
this year, has lost two successive
presidential contests and is not
Tomorrow
Lippmann
been a return to Stalinism, or
whether Titoism, but not more
than Titoism, is the Soviet
policy.
WHEN we turn to the Middle
East, we find ourselves in
the preliminary and exporatory
phases of a new policy. We have
not prevented the British,
French and Israeli intervention,
nor have we been able to stop
it, and we have not, as our ac
tion in the United Nations im
plied that we would, been able
to restore the status quo ante.
A new policy cannot now be
adopted until the Anglo-French
military operation is concluded
and its results known and
appraised.
In our planning at this mo
ment we have to assume that
the British and French will
reach their military objectives
and that organized Egyptian re
sistance will have ceased. It is
at this point, but only at this
point when there is in fact a
cse fire, that a United Nations
police force could take over.
The United Nations force could
not intervene in the battle
which is now being fought, and
there is no reason to think that
Britain and France will break
off the battle in the middle.
It is of vital importance to
the world that Britain and
France should not involve
themselves in an indefinite oc
cupation of the canal- It is in
avoiding such an occupation
that a U.N. force to police the
armistice may prove to be very
useful.
IT IS difficult to see into the
future as long as the out
come of the military operations
is not known. But it would ap
pear that if the operations suc
ceed, the grand strategical re
sult will be to contain Egyptian
military power west of the
canal, and thus to cut off the
Egyptian thrust for the domina
tion of the Arab states of the
Middle East.
If that is to happen, it will
take not only good manage
ment but good luck. But if it
were to happen, there would for
the first time be the prospect
of a negotiated peace in the
Middle East.
Copyright 1956, New York
Herald Tribune Inc.
at Voting
The Dalles (U.R) Demo
crats scored almost a clean
sweep in Wasco county. Only
two Republican candidates ran
ahead State Treasurer Sig Un
ander and Mildred Galloway,
Wasco county treasurer.
Hillsboro (U.R) Joseph A.
Jaross, Democratic candidate,
won out over incumbent County
Judge Harry M. Seabold, returns
from Tuesday's election indicat
ed today.
Beaverfon (U.R) Mayor A.
H. Rossi was reelected Tuesday
and voters also approved a $200,
000 bond issue for funds for a
municipal building. .
BLM Timber Sales
Bring $279,548
Salem (U.R) Some 11,775.000
board feet of timber on four
tracts sold for $279,548 Tuesday,
according to Otto C. F. Krueger,
district forester for the Bureau
of Land Management.
Highest bid for douglas fir was
S39.25 per 1000 board feet, made
by George W. Gilmore of Molal
la. Lowest bid was $26.50 per
1000 for 2,482,000 board feet in
Columbia county. A bid of
S32.95 per 1000 was made by
Willamette Valley Lumber Co.
for some Linn county timber.
The Query Logging Co., Salem,
bid $20.75 per 1,000 for noble
fir in Clackamas county.
Likely
likely to be chosen to lead a
third.
Prior to the anti-third term
amendment, a member of a pres
idential administration was for
bidden by the rules of polite poli
tics to go out after the top place
on his party's ticket until given
the nod by his chief. His friends
were equally handicapped.
No Challenge To Ike
It will be no challenge to Mr.
Eisenhower's political future,
however, for any member of his
administration to reach now for
the 1960 presidential nomina
tion. It is beyond Mr. Eisen
hower's grasp in any event. Pres
idents do, however, frequently
prefer to choose their successors.
They like to handpick men to
complete the program which no
president ever is able to com
plete, however many White
House terms he may serve.
The stop-Nixon campaign will
be a double barrelled affair, di
rected both at persuading Mr.
Eisenhower publicly to endorse
some other man for the 1960
presidential nomination and at
persuading the American people
that Nixon in unfit to be presi
dent. The vice president's fitness
for higher office was a major
Democratic campaign theme this
year. It seemed not to set the
prairies afire.
There were Republicans, too,
who warned that Nixon's re-nomination
would jeopardize Mr.
Eisenhower's re-election. Harold
E. Stassen took leave as White
House disarmament aid to ex
pound that view in a pre-con-vention
stop-Nixon campaign. He
ended by seconding Nixon's
nomination before the Republi
can National convention.
In The Day's
This is written on election day
of the year 1956. If you have
followed the radio bulletins dis
criminatingly, I think you will
agree there has probably not
been another election day so
grave and serious since the fate
ful one of 1860, when Abraham
Lincoln was chosen President.
T ET'S go over briefly
the
events of this morning.
The early bulletins indicated
the British and the French were
doing well in their lone wolf
campaign to seize the Suez canal
and humiliate and discredit
Nasser.
Then
Egypt appealed to the world
to help drive out the invaders..
The Moscow radio broadcast the
appeal. At the. same time, Mos
cow warned France and Britain
to LEAVE Egypt.
An . authoritative source in
London announced immediately
that Russia's notes to British
Premier Eden and French Pre
mier Mollet were beipg taken
seriously and were not regarded
as a propaganda stunt.
ABOUT an hour later, in a
d ra m a t i c announcement,
Britain informed United Nations
in New York that Anglo-French
troops will end hostilities in the
Middle East.
Why did they stop when all
seemed going well with their
military enterprise?
There can be only one answer.
The grim developments of the
morning must have convinced
them that the evil genie they
had released from the bottle
when they attacked Egypt was
too menacing to be .faced. '
MEANWHILE
The United States served
notice it will OPPOSE any Rus
sian military intervention in the
Middle East. A White House
statement cautioned Russia
against force and said it would
in Oregon
Oregon City (U.R) Demo
crat Joe Shobe was elected sher
iff of Clackamas county yester
day over Republican candidate
Ben Schuld.
Chapel Mortuaty
o
Across from the Courthouse, o
o o
Frank Morgan Harold Snodgrass
Poland Appears Near
P o o
Success in Titoism
o - o
Revolt Against Russ
By CHARLES M. McCANtf
United Press Correspondent
Poland appears at the mo
mentment to be the big winner
in the East European revulsion
against Soviet
Russiar
nation. .
The Soviet
govern ment
has become so.
alarmed' over
the open rebel
lion in Hun
gary -that it
may yet mov
Chirl Mct ann Its nuge army
against the Poles. But as of now,
Poland has established a -Tito-ist
government and is proceed
ing with a combination of cau
tion and boldness to get rid of
its Russian "advisers." -
If the Poles do get away with
it, the credit must .go to Polish
Communist leader Wladislaw
Gomulka.
Gomulka has tried energetic
ally to keep the Polish revolt
strictly on the 'Titoist level. "
Strives for Independence
That is, he has tried to keep
the Polish movement a political
one, to make Poland an inde
pendent Communist state with
emphasis on the Communist la
bel, and to give the Russians no
excuse to intervene.
They used to call Gomulka Po
land's Little Stalin. He is a hard
bitten, hard-core Communist,
stocky, close-mouthed and tough
He is very lucky to be alive.
He was- sent- to prison as a "at
versionist" when President Tito
News f
rank .Jenkins
be the duty of ALL United Na
tions members. INCLUDING
THE UNITED STATES, TO OP
POSE any such effort- '
TPHE big question:
- Will Russia Visk war now?
SPHERE are reasons to believe
sne mignt tear to oo so.
Her Eastern - Europe satellites
are aflame with hatred of brutal
Russian communism. The flames
of this hatred are fanned to
white heat by reports of what
is happening in Hungary
where Soviet troops are said to
be hanging and shooting Hun
garian rebels on sight includ'
ing women and children.
In the Hungarian revolution,
the Russians faced two' choice
conciliation or. brute : force
They chose brute force.
It is seldom wise for a despot
to go to. war when he, fears he
may not be able ' to trust the
people at home and there are
reports that Russians .ere fed up
with communism.
BUT
Histnrv' tells. u Dlsinlv that
when despots fear their own ;
people they sometimes, start fox-.
eign wars as a desperate ex
pedient to 4ake the minds . of
the people off their grievances
with the despots.
That might be the case now. t
We'll have to wait and see. j
Intercontinental
Missile Said Near i
Washington' (U.R) Builders !
of the Air Force's first intercom ,
tinental .ballistic; missiles ftint !
today the time is nearing when
the ocean-spannixig niissile wilf
be fired on its first test run.
Convair Division of General
Dynamics Corp. is preparing four
new test facilities for firing and :
launching the Atla's ICBM. It
gave no indication when the iirst '
test, firing will be made.
The fact that test facilities are
being prepared indicates that
development of the futuristic '
weapon is proceeding rapidly.
Convair disclosed that it is j
combining development of the in-1
tercpntinental missile with te-1
search "leading toward space
travel." .
7Zk I
Go to ChurcH!
In time of sorrow, as well as other troubles, thsre are fione
so lost and alone as those who have no faith t harg on to, or
a minister to turn to for consolation. o
o
Go to church if only for the selfish reasoji of building a
foundation against troubled times, an) to become friendly ith
a minister.
There will come a timt when you will naecf bothl
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
O
O O
O
O
siirressfunv0r e b fell ed aeainst
Josef Stalin's domination of (JTu-u
goslavia. He was freS in De
cember, 1954.. After ahe KrfWi- O
lin's denunciation of Stalin-type
liMntnrshin last Febrwarv. Go
mulka was "rehabilitated Whi
the Polish revolt brake, he was
brought back) as the Xommuflist q
party-leader.. o
Apparently .Realizes Danjijr u
Apparently Gomulka (ealizecP
from the Start the danger that U
the Polish revolt might turn like
that n Hungary inio an operand (
bloody rebellion "agaigsto
raunism useiij.
The Poles are historically hot-O r
headed? Theychate Russia ug)
sia itself, cnot just Communist
Russia perhaps more bitterly
than do any other people. co
It is reported that Poland is
still seething with unrest, pa''
in sympathy with tlt Hungarian
rebels in their heroic figh)s)
Gomulka has appealed again
and again to Pole, to rSfcintain
discipline. He ws warned that
he will suppress any riots "for
the good of our fathgrland and
the ssfety of our homes."
Avoiding Hungary's Fate
He has said that it depends
on the Poles thexnselves whether
their country shall share the fate
of Hungary. Thio iy to avoid
that, he has said, is for the peo
ple to restrain themselves and
obey all orders of the govern
ment and the Coiwmunist Party.
That leaves Poland stilLjunder
Communist rule. Bui) Gomulka
has the support of Cardinal T-s-zynski,
Roman Catholic primate
of Poland in his, appalnor law
and order.
So Gomulka, onft Poland's
Little Stalin, has mage himself C
Poland's Little Tito. Like T,ito,o
Gomulka has beea a gommjjiist
since his youthPBut as Tito turn
ed out to be a Yugoslav as well
as Communist, Gomulka &s
.turned out to be a Polish nation
alist as well as a Communig.
As things stand-now, Ultfe
seems,to be a gomfl cMrfce that
Poland may remain fige of RSN-0
cian rfnminatiniv
" oo
EDITH GREEN WIrtS c
Portland - (U.R) Cofiiftete,
unofficial returns from thel6
precincts ifi the third congres
sional district snowed thatRep.
Edith Green D-Ore. defeated O
RfipuWicanPhil oth, 145j97 to
91,465. O
ii?-mitmBiiiiiMli
ONL? 38
Shppin ys
'fil Christmas!
IT'S A
ONCW.
O
I've? left 41
Holiday Worries
Behind! I get my
Of ristfnas G
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PACIFIC
INDUSTRIAL
Dick Hans, Manager
16 S. Central Ph. 3-5308
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