Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, January 03, 1957, Image 4

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    FOUR MEDFOHD (OREGON)
MEDFORDvTRIBUNE
"Everyone In Southern Oregon
tiena ine Mail in Dune
Published Daily Except Saturday by
MEDFORD PRINTING CO
27-2& North Fir St Phone 2-gl4i
ROBERT W RUHL. Editor
HERB GREY Advertising Manager
GERALD LATHAJd Business Manager
ERIC ALLEN JR. Managing Editor
EARL H ADAMS Cit? Editor
HARRY CHIP MAN, Telegraph Editor
RICHARD JEWETT Sports Editor
OUVE ST ARC HER Society Editor
DALE ERICKSON. Circulation Mgr.
An Independent Newspaper
Entered as second clan matter at
Medford Oregon under Act of
March 3, 1897
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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
Jan. 3, 1947 (Friday)
City Fire Chief Roy Elliott ad
vises residents who use oil heat
ing stoves to clean the inside of
the stove along with the chim
ney, in order to avoid possible
explosions.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: One of the
Older Girls modestly boasts she
swatted the first house-fly of
1947 before noon Wed.
20 YEAR'S AGO
Jan. 3, 1936 (Sunday)
Deposits of Farmers and Fruit
growers bank of Medford show
increase of 49 per cent during
1936 over 1935, according to F.
E. Wahl, cashier.
J. C. Crouch, of the Crater
Lake National park staff, will
discuss "Work of the national
park service" at the Kiwanis
club Monday.
30 YEARS AGO
Jan. 3. 1927 (Monday)
The state and county tax levy
for Jackson county, in districts
not maintaining high schools, or
libraries, will be 22.5 mills.
Postmaster William J. Warn
er reports that rate on air post
age from Medford to any place
in the United States will be ten
cents for each ounce or fraction
of an ounce.
40 YEARS AGO
Jan. 3. 1916 (Wednesday)
Business in the Medford post
office during 1916 showed a gain
in every department over the
previous year, the receipts about
$1,600 more than 1915.
Medford has enjoyed unusual
good health the past year, ac
cording to City Health Officer
Thayer.
What's Your I.Q.7
Nine or ten correct tl apertor; sev
en or elsbt Is excellent; tiv or
six Is food.
1. Was the first dwelling-
house erected in Kentucky dur
ing the Revolutionary War?
2. Is a vintner a winemaker,
or a vinegarmaker?
3. Did the ministry of John
the Baptist begin in 16 or 26
A.D.?
4. The name "Land of Bond-
age" is sometimes given to
which country?
5. Was the unconditional sur
render of Germany at Rheims
signed in a schoolroom, tavern,
or railway coach?
6. What was the first name of
Caruso, the famous Italian ten
or? 7. The discovery of gold re
sulted in the K e R - - h?
8. Exasperate is a synonym of
aggravate. Is it also synonymous
with both irritate and provoke?
9. Did the Spanish queen who
sponsored the voyages of Colum
bus have red, blond, or black
hair?
10. "Hear, Land o' Cakes and
brither Scots." Burns. Scot
land is called "Land of Cakes"
because of what cereal in com
mon use there?
Answers: 1. No. (1774). 2.
Winemaker. 3. 26 A.D. 4. An
cient Egypt. 5. Schoolroom. 6.
m v
jfcjtt Enrico. 7. Klondike Rush. 8. Yes.
Oatmeal.
A company-size Army Reserve
unit (about 100 men) which
meets one night a week will
have an annual payroll of at
least $25,000.
MAIL TRIBUNE
Nixon "Build-Up" Starts
We fear our misguided (and misnamed) Democrat-Herald
of Albany is jumping the gun a bit. Either
that or it has not yet awakened to the fact that not
only 1956, but the campaign of that year is over. x
For here it is nearly four years before another
presidential election, and we find the Democrat
Herald busily buttering-up Richard Nixon to take
President Eisenhower's place in the White House,
when the latter, because of constitutional amendment
and undoubtedly his own inclination, gets out.
TN THIS effort the Albany editor pulls out all the
stops of the Nixon political propaganda barrel
organ, with everything included but an obligato in a
falsetto tremolo by the little girls and Checkers.
IT seems according to the "Herald" that but for
Mr. Nixon's 48-hour visit to nearby Austria, the
"self -exiled Hungarians" would have concluded they
had been forgotten by Uncle Sam. But as soon as
"Poor Richard" appeared among them with his hearty
hand-shake, firm jaw and his ready smile, the entire
nation "took heart," just like THAT!
TN FACT as the heading of this leading editorial
demonstrates, quote: "Dick Nixon is doing all
right." Indeed the position he now occupies has never
before been given such emphasis and responsibility.
The young man, moreover, is highly capable, has
grown in political stature steadily and if just if to
quote the "Herald" again, "there should be a pre
mature vacancy in the nation's top office or through
election he will be well equipped to give this country
the kind of administration it should have. (Period)
And what kind is that? Again the Democrat-Herald
has the answer, quote :
"That means a well-rounded administration that knows
where it is going."
MO REASONABLE doubt of that, but there may
be some doubt that a majority of the voters of
America four years hence will favor such a course
and such a destination.
TN FAIRNESS to the Albany paper, however, it must
be granted it has and expresses certain reservations
as far as "Dear Dick" is concerned.
It admits, for example, that the ingratiating and
plausible "V.P." has been accused of making "occa
sional bloopers." But it also
Albany paper at least that these aforesaid errors,
were only deliberate official
opinion on certain issues.
Unfortunately the Democrat - Herald does not
name these bloopers or "trial balloons" though Nix
on's recommendation to send U. S. troops to aid the
French in Indo China might have been one of them.
However that may be the "Democrat" does not
include among Nixon's faults the kind of smear cam
paigns Mr. Nixon conducted in California against
Mrs. Helen Gahagan Douglas or against the Demo
cratic party in 1952, nor surprisingly that deal with
an affluent group of "Big Business" men from the
Golden Gate state during his first term in the U.S.
Senate.
For these are grouped under the "few specific
charges" made against Mr. Nixon which again, quote :
"have been pretty well dissipated."
And if the Albany "Democrats" editorial build-up
is sound, no wonder.
For it is claimed that Mr. Nixon did not accuse
Mrs. Douglas of being a communist or "soft on com
munism" or ok such accusations, via anonymous
phone calls to voters in strategic areas of California.
Nor did he ever, according to the "Democrat," call
former President Tinman a "traitor."
Nixon only claimed Mrs. Douglas' voting record
in the House was practically identical with that of
the pro-Communist the late Congressman Vito
Marcantonio, and declared President Truman and his
administration had been "traitors" to the cause of our
basic DEMOCRACY, in their tolerance of the Com
munists who are dedicated to the overthrow of our
democratic government by force.
e
THAT is ALL!
And as far as that cash subsidy from the banking
and oil group of California , is concerned Nixon's
"ham-act" over the air, with "Checkers" as an assist,
denuded this transaction of ALL taint, according to
the Albany paper, and what the heck, it was only a
campaign contribution anyway.
THE only trouble with that final statement is, it
1 isn't TRUE.
That $18,000 cash contribution was not for Rich
ard Nixon's campaign expenses, he had already been
elected, and the best proof of that is the Vice Presi
dent's broadcast "for the defense" where no such
claim is made and it is or was admitted that the
money was used to reduce Nixon's office expenses
and save money for the poor down-trodden taxpayers.
Then as the Senator made clear, he was not like Adlai
Stevenson, a "rich man's son," but a poor boy who had
to make his own way unaided, except, of course by
such good-will donations as his well heeled consti
tuents, might feel disposed to give with again, of
COURSE, no strings attached !
DATHER silly isn't it?
But that is politics, and we have no doubt this
fulsome tribute to the personable and plausible Vice
President is an example of what will continue off and
on through the ensuing years of the present adminis
tration. FOR it is realized, of course, that "We Like Ike"
can't be used four years hence. So if the GOP hopes
to stay in power and it surely DOES the Vice Pres
ident as of today is their best
Thursday, January 3, 1957
is "suspected" by the
"sorties to feel out public
bet. But there is, because
Today and
By Walter
THE MIDDLE EAST
DECLARATION '
The declaration which the
President will submit to Con
gress is, plain enough, only a
first install
ment in a re
ap p r a isal of
our course in
the Middle
East. As dis
closed to the
leading corre
s p o ndents in
Was hington,
Mr. Dulles is
proposing not
Walter lmrmaiui
to announce a new "doctrine"
but to restate and reaffirm and
emphasize the Truman doctrine
as applied to the Middle East.
Since 1947 it has been funda
mental American policy to op
pose with force, if necessary,
any military aggression by the
Soviet Union. Mr. Dulles himself
has frequently reaffirmed this
policy in very strong language,
notably in his famous statement
of March 20, 1954 when he de
clared that "there should be a
capability for massive retalia
tion without delay" against the
capability of the Soviet Union
"to strike by land at any one of
approximately 20 states of Eu.
rope, the Middle East and Asia."
' How, then, has it come about
that the policy needs once again
to be reaffirmed? It has come
about because of the tone of the
political campaign and the posi
tion taken by the government
in the Middle East and in the
Hungarian crises which broke
out in the closing weeks of the
campaign.
A NET impression has been
created, especially abroad,
that the President is a pacifist,
and that on many issues of the
Middle East, which are of vital
concern to Europe, he is a very
considerable neutralist. The im
pression is no doubt false, and
those who have the impression
would find it hard to cite chap
ter and verse to support it. But
there is no doubt that in greater
or lesser degree the impression
exists in every foreign office in
the world.
It has been fed by the Repub
lican campaign oratory about
Eisenhower as the guardian of
peace. But what has given the
impression its greatest impetus
is the way the administration
has during the autumn crises
followed along behind the ma
jority of the General Assembly
of the United Nations. When
that majority was willing to be
strong, as against Britain and
France and Israel, we have been
strong. When that majority was
acquiescent, as against the So
viet Union and Hungary, we
have been asquiescent.
The net result has been to
spread the view that in the Mid
dle East the President would do
nothing to oppose the Soviet Un
ion or to stabilize peace unless
he got a vote authorizing him to
do so from the United Nations.
As the Soviet Union has a veto
in the Security Council, and as
the Afro-Asian bloc has a veto
in the General Assembly, we
seemed to be saying that our in
terest in the Middle East was
not to be taken too seriously.
THE first object I won't say
- the only object of the new
resolution is to correct and re
pair these impressions to make
it known that President Eisen
hower has not repealed the Tru
man doctrine, and that this
country has not signed over to
a majority of the General As
sembly its role in the Middle
East.
Although I am not myself an
admirer of broad generalized re
sounding declarations as an in
strument of diplomacy, there is
no doubt that the impression
created this autumn is so mis
chievous and dangerous that a
Congressional declaration may
be necessary. Certainly, if the
President asks for such a decla
ration, it cannot be refused with
out compounding the confusion.
TUT let us have no illusions
that such a declaration will
somehow constitute a new Mid
dle Eastern policy and will re
place the one which has col-
First Columbia Smelt
Catch Arrives Today
Portland U.R) The first Co
lumbia river smelt catch of the
season arrived here today, seven
days earlier than last season.
The fish were offered at 75
cents a pound, same price as
last year. Some 20 pounds of
smelt were gillnetted by Ray
Suti near Clatskanie yesterday
afternoon. Gillnet smelt fishing
closed at Wednesday midnight
and will open again Saturday
noon.
I - K 1
of his record and devious ways, wide spread distrust.
Therefore this must be "dissipated" as the Albany
"Democrat" has tried to do, and a new and exalted
"image" must be built up, if a third four-year term
for the "Grand Old Pachyderm" is to be assured.
Well as indicated above, that is all a part of the
time honored political game ; our only SERIOUS ob
jection as of now is it is too early in the New Year to
start. And when they do start it is hoped they will not
falsify the record, but stick to the facts. R.W.R.
Tomorrow
Lippmann
lapsed in ruins. A warning to
the Soviet Union not to inter
vene overtly may conceivably
be needed. It probably can do
no harm.
But such a warning does not
come to grips with the real prob
lem of Soviet penetration, as it
is posed in Syria and more par
ticularly in Egypt. If Nasser
wants to make a working alli
ance with the Soviet Union,
how, unless you overthow Nas
ser, do you solve the problem?
Indeed, were it not for the need
to correct the impression of
weakness created during the au
tumn, the new declaration now
would have the air of being bold
and definite about what Is least
likely to happen an open So
viet aggression and of being
vague and indefinite about what
is happening Soviet penetra
tion. It is as if a man found him
self challenged to a bout with
a heavyweight boxer, and, being
asked how he expected to fight
the match, replied: If that so and
so brings a gun into the ring, I
promise you that I will get my
gun and shoot him.
There is not much doubt that
a resolution which is a commit
ment against overt aggression
will pass Congress. The serious
debate will be about what in the
way of military force is to be
authorized to deal with Soviet
penetration. On this, the crucial
point, we do not yet know what
the administration has in mind.
Copyright 1957,
New York Herald Tribune Inc.
In the Day's News
By FRANK
Glimpse of the future:
The EXPLOSIVE growth of
population and its drain on our
available material resources is a
problem which will soon have to
be dealt with in the United
States as well as in the crowded
lands of the Middle and the Far
East.
VyHO says so?
" The prediction just quoted
was made in New York the other
day by speakers at the annual
meeting of the august and au
thoritative American Association
for the Advancement of Science.
. They were not challenged
from the floor by any member.
pVYIRFIELD OSBORN, presi-
dent of the Conservation
Foundation, told his distin
guished hearers:
"Asuming that present rates
of increase continue, we shall
have 60 million more people in
our country within 20 years. Our
rate of population increase is
greater than that of India and
higher than the average of the
whole world."
We're growing, you see.
REALLY growing.
A THOUGHT:
Let's keep our agriculture
which is presently suffering
from overproduction on a free
enterprise basis. With 220 mil-
Newsprint Prices
Head for New High
New York (U.R) News
print prices, already at a record
high level, appeared headed to
day for a new peak
A price increase of $4 a ton
was announced Wednesday by
the Abitibi Power and Paper Co.
Ltd. in Toronto, Ont. Several
other paper producers indicated
they have been considering price
increases. The increase, if it be
comes general, would be at least
the 14th since 1933.
In 1933, newsprint cost $41 a
ton. Abitibi's increase would
bring its price to about $134 a
ton.
U. S. and Canadian newspaper
publishers were concerned over
the Abitibi announcement. A
member of the Senate Commerce
committee which has been in
vestigating the newsprint indust
ry called for joint action by the
United States and Canada or leg
islative action if necessary. The
Federal Trade commission said
it was looking into the possibil
ity of anti-trust action.
Abitibi said its increase was
due to higher costs, particularly
increased freight costs. The price
boost, the firm said,' came "only
after long and careful consider
ation" and would only partially
offset the higher costs.
During the past 20 years the
number of pupils transported to
and from school buildings at
public expense has increased by
350 per cent.
Russian Leadership Working to
Reshape Policies for Satellites
By CHARLES M. McCANN
United Press Correspondent
The Soviet Russian govern
ment seems to be working out
a thorough re-shaping of its pol-
"WI lcies after
months of em
barras s m e n t
and confusion.
Moscow dis
patches indi
cate the new
policy will cov
er the proper
dividing line
between "Stal-
Char Mclann ""on, "
toism," relations with the Soviet
satellite countries and the prose
cution of the cold war.
Nikita S. Khrushchev, the
Communist Party chieftain, gave
one important clue to the new
line in comments he made at a
New Year reception in Moscow.
After praising the late Joseph
Stalin as "a great Marxist" and
"a great fighter against imper
ialism," Khruschev admitted that
he . and other present Soviet
leaders shared some of Stalin's
mistakes because they were as
sociated with him. In fighting
imperialism, Khrushchev said,
"we are all Stalinists."
Repeats Earlier Praise
There was nothing sensational
in the praise of Stalin. Khrush
chev said about the same thing
in his sensational denunciation
of Stalin at the 20th Communist
Party Congress last February.
At that time, Khrushchev spec
ified that in his early years of
leadership, Stalin actively fought
JENKINS
lion to 230 million people in the
U.S. by 1975, there should be
markets for everything we .can
grow.
It would be a pity if in these
problem years when the politi
cians are moving in on the farm
ers in the hope of harvesting a
bumper crop of votes we should
permit our agriculture to deteri
orate into a sort of government
supported pensioners home.
AND-
Here in the West
Let's go on battling determin
edly and unremittingly for recla
mation and irrigation, which are
essential to our type of agricul
ture. If our population is going to
pass the 220 million mark by
1975 as these learned gentle
men tell us our country is go
ing to need ALL the Western
land that can be reclaimed and
put under irrigation in these
next two decades.
CONSERVATION Foundation
President Osborne went on
to say:
"Such benefits as may come to
our country through a much
larger population will be bal
anced by disadvantages and
problems that will arise . . . Ev
ery city will be almost twice its
present size. Countrysides will
become suburbianas. The traffic
trickles of 1956 will become ever-flowing
rivers.
"And the sky above us will be
full of jets, coming and going."
TIE IS talking about the coun--
try's already swollen metro
politan cities and the suburban
districts that are growing up all
around them. It won't be that
way in Southern Oregon and Far
Northern California.
We will grow. We will grow
greatly. But we will retain our
own present primary economy i
with OUR OWN supporting pri
mary industry. We won't be just
the BEDROOM of some huge
metropolitan city.
We have great resources in
the way of power, water and
raw materials, and ,we're remote
enough from the present big cen
ters of population to have OUR
OWN INDEPENDENT ECONOMY.
- Donations Instead of Flowers?
According to the Florist Information Council, of Chicago, the following
national, state, and regional organizations have gone on record as being
OPPOSED to the idea of donations instead of funeral flowers:
National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis
American Cancer Society
American Medical Association
American Medical Association Auxiliary
American Red Cross
National Safety Council
National Congress of Parents and Teachers
National Education Association
Federated Women's Clubs (lp,0CI0,000 members)
Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks
National Garden Clubs
Kiwanis International
National Assistance League
National Association of Power Engineers
Living Memorials (Memorials by wire)
DAY OR NIGHT - PHONE 2-8030
Chapel Mortuary
Across from the Courthouse
to defend "Leninism" that is,
Marxism against those who de
viated from the party line. "In
the past," Khrushchev said then,
"Stalin doubtless performed
great services to the party, to the
working class and to the interna
tional workers movement."
But in his February speech,
Khrushchev tried his hardest to
absolve himself and his col
leagues in the new collective
leadership of complicity in Stal
in's crimes. Khrushchev's new
statement seems to be a conces
sion to them.
Accept "Titoist" Government
The problem of drawing the
line between old-style Stalinist
domination of the satellite coun
tries and Titoism is being met in
several ways.
First, the Soviet government
seems to have accepted fully the
"Titoist" government of Polish
Matter of Fact By Joseph Alsop
By Joseph Alsop
WAYFARER'S GOODBYE
Washington.
Dear Stewart:
The origins of this letter of
farewell, in case you are inter
ested, go back to an unbearably
hot afternoon
in early 1941,
when I arriv
ed in Chung
king just be
fore a rather
nasty little
Japanese
bombing raid.
Like a great
many other
people in those
days, I had been self-confidently
writing about China's problems
from Washington. But it was
only necessary to sniff the dust
laden air in those filthy, ruined
Chungking streets, to begin to
suspect that everything I had
written was pure drivel. The
suspicion was confirmed, with
sad finality, within less than 48
hours.
I then and there resolved that
if I ever returned to the news
paper business, I would try to go
where the news was before writ
ing about it. It seems an impos
sibly long time ago since you
and I adopted this resolve of
mine as the first rule of our re
porting partnership. In fact, a
whole decade has passed since
we came back from the war and
founded this joint enterprise.
TN THAT decade our country
has boldly met and inspiring-
ly accepted the challenge of
world leadership of the cause of
freedom. And in that decade,
too, freedom's cause has failed
to prosper with a saddening fre
quency, despite America's great
efforts. I do not think it is pros
pering at the moment; and I am
very sure that the tempo of
world events is now accelerating
in a rather dizzying way.
You remember what the Red
Queen sternly said in "Alice
through the looking glass" "It
takes all the running you can do
to keep in the same place. If you
want to get somewhere else, you
must run at least twice as fast
as that." I have the same feel
ing now about keeping abreast
of the vast developments and
shattering crises . that are now
going on within the Soviet Em
pire, in the troubled Middle
East, and in Western Europe it
self. THAT is why this is a letter of
farewell, quite probably for
a whole year. We have to run
"twice as fast," I feel very sure,
in order to remain faithful to
that resolve I made in Chung
king many months before Pearl
Harbor, which you and I reaf
firmed just after the war. So
now, instead of leaving for a
few months abroad as I have so
often done before, I am leaving
with a year's wayfaring as the
prospect before me.
It is not pleasant to transfer
my base. (For have not you no
ticed, too, that what one misses
most after a few months of trav
E Jpf
Junior League (Wisconsin)
Soroptomist Club (Missouri)
Eoy Scouts of America (Texas and New York)
Masons (New York State)
Rotary Club (Norfolk, Virginia)
Shrine (St. Louis, Salt Lake, Providence)
Community Chest (62 cities)
Hospital Council of Greater New York
Children's Home Society of Virginia
Order of Eastern Star (Texas)
Odd Fellows (Pennsylvania)
Davies County Health Center (Owensboro, Ky.)
Methodist Children's Home (Alabama)
Ouachita Parish Public Library (Louisiana)
American Heart Association ( 1 4 cities)
Frank
Communist Leader Wladyslaw
Gomulka.
This was a matter of necessity.
The Poles won their revolt
against both the "Stalinists" who
StiU ruled their country and
against dictation from Moscow.
Khruschev and his fellow-leaders
apparently have decided to
make the best of it.
In Hungary, now that the ac
tive rebellion has been crushed,
the Russian leaders appear to be
trying to insure that the trend
toward a really Titoist govern
ment is stopped. As one part of
that job, they have started to
give economic aid to the Kadar
government.
The policy toward other satel
lites seems to be to try as long
as possible to keep Stalinst lead
ers in control, at the risk of pro
voking outbreaks in some of
them. v.
eling is simply one's own bed?)
It is not pleasant, either, to aban
don all the roots I have spent so
many years putting down in
Washington (although of course
I hope they will still be there
when I get back at last.) But
there is the need to go, and there
is no escaping from it.
What makes that need, surely.
is the simple fact that both the
great world systems which now
divide the globe between them
are at present experiencing
sharp and hardly foreseen inter
nal strains. To the conflict with
one another, are now added
their own inner conflicts. And
the Middle Eastern ferment and
the weakening of Western Eu-,
rope on the one hand, and the
stirring ferment in the Soviet
Empire on the other hand, will
in turn react most sharply on
the course of the world struggle
between the free and the en
slaved. A LL this is what I hope to see
at first hand, which always
makes events look so very dif
ferent from the way events look
from our comfortable vantage
point of Washington. Moscow
will be my first port of call, and
as I interrupt the packing of
long, inevitably itchy woolen
underwear to write this letter,
I find that poem of Clarence
Day's running through my mind:
Farewell, my friends fare
well and hail.
I'm off to seek the Holy Grail,
I cannot tell you why.
Remember, please, when I am
gone,
'Twas aspiration led me on.
Tiddlely, widdlely, tootle-oo. '
All I want is to stay with you.
But here I go. Good-bye. '
Only I am not seeking any
Holy Grail, but simply the news
of the events that will shape all
our futures. And I can tell you
why. Seeking news is our busi
ness. So "here I go. Good-bye."
(Copyright 1956, New York
v Herald Tribune, Inc.)
WANT TO
SAVE
MONEY
On Your January
FOOD BILL?
SEETHE
Groceteria
S DAYS
AD ON
PAGET
Morgan Harold Snodgrass
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
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