Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, January 14, 1957, Image 4

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FOUR MEDFORD (OREGON)
MedfordTribune
"Everyone In Southern Oregon
neaai lot aiau inpune
Published Daily Exceot Saturday by
MEDFORD PRINTING CO
27-29 North Fir St. Phone 2-6141
ROBERT W BUHL Editor
HERB GREY Advertising Manager
GERALD LATHAM Businesa Manage!
ERIC ALLEN JR. Managing Editor
EARL H ADAMS Citv Editor
HARRY CHIPMAN Telegraph Editor
RICHARD JEWETT Soorta Editor
OLIVE ST ARCHER Society Editor
DALE ERICKSON. Circulation Mgr.
An Independent Newspaper
Entered aa second class matter at
Mectford Oregon under Act ot
March 3. 1897
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Flight t)' 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. 14, 1947 (Tuesday)
Mrs. Dewey Vincent, route 4,
box 428, Medford, selected by
Medford Safety council as the
Careful Driver of the Day.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: The price
of orlon is enough to bring tears
to the eye of the purchaser, one
of the Older Girls observes.
20 YEARS AGO
Jan. 14, 1937 (Thursday)
Tax collections in Jackson
county for 1936 were the highest
and the percentage of delinquent
taxes the lowest since 1928.
Medford Crater club holds
testimonial farewell dinner in
honor of William S. Bolger, man
ager of the J. C. Penney store.
30 YEARS AGO
Jan. 14, 1937 (Friday)
A 15-day celebration will mark
the 16th anniversary of the
Golden Rule Marcantile com
pany of Medford.
Sheriff Ralph Jennings re
turns to Medford after attend
ing the annual meeting of the
sheriffs association in Portland.
40 YEARS AGO
Jan. 14, 1917 (Sunday)
Exhibitions from southern
Oregon and Willamette valley
counties at the poultry show will
be extended because of inclem
ent weather.
From Local and Personal col
umn: Henry Gregory of Central
roint is a business visitor in
Medford today.
What's Your I.Q.?
Ntne or ten correct Is superior; sev
en or elrnt is excellent; rive r
six Is good.
1. Was the first varnish ex
ported from the U.S. (1836)
shipped into South America,
Mexico, or France?
2. Sex can be distinguished by
fingerprints: true or false?
3. Did John the Baptist bap
tize Saul (later Paul)?
4. Wellington is the capital of
which country?
5. Name the U.S. president
who was blind in one eye later
in his life.
6. Does angora wool continue
to grow atfer it is shorn from
the rabbit?
7. Is "angora wool" made
from goat, cat, or rabbit hair?
8. Is a "borzoi" a dog, fish, or
a native of San Marino?
9. Does "aggravate" mean to
make a bad situation worse, or
to make angry?
Answers: 1. South America
and Mexico. 2. Fall. 3, No. 4.
New Zealand. 5. Theodore Roos
evelt. 6. No. 7. All three. 8. Dog.
A Russian wolfhound. 9. Make
a bad situation worse.
Canfor Improving
Following Collapse
Hollywood (U.R) Comed
' ian Eddie Cantor showed
marked improvement today fol
lowing his collapse at the end
of an hour-long television show
honoring his 65th birthday.
The banjo-eyed entertainer of
vaudeville, movies and televis
ion was reported sitting up and
"feeling fine" at Cedars of Leb
anon hospital where he was tak
en after his collapse on the Sat
urday night show.
MAIL TRIBUNE
Bubbles
Consider, for a moment, the bubble.
There are all soils of bubbles. There is the bubble
in the baby's esophagus, which needs a gentle pat to
be loosened and give him comfort again. There are
the evanescent and colorful bubbles blown from
pipes by children, and the same scooped from pre
pared "goop" in recent years.
There are bubbles which form foam on a glass
of beer, or at the bottom of a riffle, or along the
beach after a storm. And on the same beach, one can
sometimes find Japanese glass bubbles, used to hold
up fishing nets, which have floated across the Pacific.
THERE are also, we find to our mild surprise, in
dustrial bubbles.
One writer goes so far as to say "the continued
prosperity of the industrial era may well hang on so
tenuous an object as the bubble."
Why? With supplies of basic raw materials getting
no larger, and with demand increasing steadily, new
processes for extracting metals from low-grade ores
are being developed, and many of them depend on
bubbles.
The scientist, A. M. Gaudin, professor of mineral
engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technol
ogy, put. it this way in a recent issue of the Scientific
American :
"It was observed about 50 years ago that when air is in
jected into a vat containing a mixture of substances in the
form of fine particles that some substances attach them
selves to the bubbles and float to the top where they can
be skimmed off as froth. Consider two small particles of
different substances suspended in water. The affinity of one
substance for water is so great that it is promptly wetted.
The other, with a grease-like surface, resists wetting. It
tends to adhere to relatively dry objects. Consequently
when such a substance encounters a bubble of air, its un
wetted surface becomes attached to the bubble and is
dragged to the surface."
THE process, known as "flotation," is now widely
used in the recovery of copper from ores which
may run as little as 1 per cent copper. It is ground to
powder-fineness and water is added, together with
tiny amounts of a chemical known as a "collector,"
which imparts to the copper water repellent qualit
ies. The bubbles of air then lift the copper to the sur
face where it is skimmed off.
Flotation, Professor Gaudin says, "has become not
only a major tool for satisfying industry's appetite
for materials but also an unmatched arena for the
study of related scientific problems."
As William Shakespeare tells us: "The earth hath
bubbles, as the water has, and these are of them."
" E. A.
Printing
What you are looking
ing. - -
Printing is the art of reproducing the written word
in quantity. And since it was invented several hun
dred years ago, it has "set free the mind of man."
If, before that event,
thoughts, he was limited in his power of communica
ting them, to word-of -mouth distribution, or through
hand-written letters.
Today, the words of a great man can -be read,
studied, re-read and considered by millions.
DRINTING, like all other developments of man, is
subject to abuses. Utter tripe can be broadcast as
easily as can words of wisdom. But the point, here, is
that man is free to discriminate, to choose between
utter tripe and wisdom. And in this lies his hope for
progress. ...
Not only this equally as important, printing
makes readily available, and preserves permanently,
ihe accumulated experience and wisdom of 6,000
years of human history. v ' -
And aside from these high purposes, printing is an
eminently practical art, making it possible for one to
ponder the thoughts of Socrates and the irreverences
of Voltaire, through books; or to find out what the
city council is up to, or who had a baby, through the
newspaper.
A MERICA'S most famous printer was Benjamin
Franklin, a man whose breadth of interest and
understanding, and whose sharpness of curiosity' and
analysis, have seidom been equalled. His birthday on
Thursday is the reason this week has been named
"Printing Week."
Printing is casually, and properly, taken for
granted today.
But if some edict were to stop the presses, dry up
the ink, and halt the flow of books, magazines, pam
phlets and newspapers, civilization as it is today
would vanish. E.A.
Colored Bridges
A proppsal has been made to paint Portland's
Willamette river bridges in
'Silly?
Not to anyone who has
watched the Bay Bridge sweeping in silver majesty
over the water, or the Golden Gate bridge looming,
stark, graceful and bright
fog.
The girdere of the Broadway bridge in Portland
used to be (maybe they still
Almost anything would
depressing black of the
bridges. E.A.
Meaday, January 14. 1357
at, at the moment, is print
a exeat man had great
vivid colors.
been to San Francisco, and
orange, through the rolling
are) light green.
be better than the drab,
old Morrison and Steel
Reshaping of British Policies
Foreseen in Macmillan's Lead
By CHARLES M. McCANN
United Press Correspondent
Harold Macmillan, Britain's
new prime minister, is likely to
take the first steps soon in a his
toric reshaping
of policy.
There are in
dications that, &
when he set
tles down to
his job, he t
means to set a
new course in
British foreign,
commonwealth
and domestic Ciianes Mciann
affairs. Macmillan's succession
to Sir Anthony Eden as Queen
Elizabeth's first minister marked
a complete change in the British
situation.
There was no change when
Eden succeeded Sir - Winston
Churchill 21 months ago.
Eden had been Churchill's po
litical heir for years. To a great'
extent, Eden merely carried on
where Churchill left off.
But there has been a strong
feeling in Britain and in foreign
countries that a radical reassess
ment of policy was necessary.
War Brought New Era
.This reassessment would nec
essarily involve the realization
that the second world war
brought a new era.
In this new era, the United
States and Soviet Russia are the
two great world powers.
' The recent British-French In
vasion of the Suez Canal Zone,
which resulted in Eden's down
fall, showed clearly how Brit
ain's position has changed.
Eden was compelled to call off
In the Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
The English-speaking world is
concerned chiefly today with
the new British premier, Harold
Macmillan who he is, what he
is, what he stands for and what
he is going to do.
So far as Britain is concerned,
he is now Mr. IT. .
JUST for the heck of it, lef s
take a look at the former
British premier Sir Anthony
Eden, who today is perhaps the
loneliest man in the world. Yes
terday he was one of Earth's Mr.
Bigs. Today he is just a career
statesman and politicians who is
out of a job. '
As this is written, he is mov
ing out of No. 10 Downing street
in London, which is the official
residence of British prime minis
ters. Servants are removing his
furniture and personal effects to
make way for the furniture and
personal effects of the- NEW
prime minister.
For about a week, he will re
main at Chequers, which is the
official country home of British
premiers. That leaves the Edens
with just one place to go a
quaint little cottage in Wiltshire
which Lady Eden bought some
time back. It is too small for
any entertaining and itis too
far from London to commute,
even if Sir Anthony had a job
to commute -to. .
THIS morning, he took another
step to remove himself from
the political scene, which has
been his life so long. After 33
years in the house of commons,
he resigned from parliament.
Following tradition. Queen
Elizabeth promptly offered him
an earldom, carrying with it
membership in the house of
lords an honor that by long
custom is bestowed upon outgo
ing British prime ministers (it's
called prime minister because in
constitutional monarchies the
premier is the king's FIRST
minister).
He declined the offer.
PIQUE?
Apparently not. In resigning
as premier, he gave the state of
his health as his reason. He gave
the same reason for his resigna
tion from the house of commons.
In a letter to his constituents, he
said his health was too poor to
allow him to keep his parlia
mentary seat. He put it in these
words:
"The life at parliament is a
strenuous one for which I clear
ly have not the present health."
Let's give him credit for stick
ing to his guns all the way
through.
IN CLOSING, one more word
nn Enfflanrl.
England now has gasoline ra
tioning. After our whirl with It
in World War 2, 1 think we must
all agree that gasoline rationing
is about the worst disaster mod
ern.living can face. It was Eden's
boner at Suez "that closed the
canal and brought gasoline ra
tioning to England.
Yesterday, a London lady.
name of Klouda, took her son
and several of the neighborhood
children to the circus. They went
in the Klouda family car. On the
way home the car ran out of gas
and Mrs. Klouda was fresh out
of ration tickets.
Her son solved the problem.
"Why not try whiskey. She did
and according to her report of
the affair the car drank it up
thirstily and "went off down the
street like a bomb."
She added ruefully: "But at
two pounds (S5.60) per mile, it
left us with an awful financial
hangover."
1 :
the invasion and to get France
reluctantly to agree. He not only
roused the anger of President
Eisenhower and Secretary, of
State John Foster Dulles, but he
could not win the support of
Canada, to name onlytone com
monwealth unit.
Macmillan started to come to
the forefront in the British gov
ernment only after the end of
World War II. Eden had been
in the first rank for more than
20 years.
But Macmillan has a consider
able advantage over Eden.
First, Eden's experience as a
statesman had been confined to
foreign affairs, except for a brief
period in 1939 and 1940 when he
served as dominions minister
and war minister.
Macmillan has served as min
ister of housing, air minister, de
fense minister, foreign minister,
and'chancellor of the exchequer.
Wide Experience
He has thus had wide execu
tive experience in domestic as
well as in foreign affairs. That
was one of the strengths of Win
ston Churchill, who has occu
U.P. Correspondents
Forecast Headlines
United Press correspond- '
ents around the world look
ahead at ihe news that will
make the headlines.
State Visit
Prospects are increasing that
President Eisenhower may
make a state visit to some for
eign countries this year. There
is a strong feeling in some
Washington circles that he may
go to India, especially, to return
the recent visit of Prime Minis
ter Jawaharlal Nehru.
Danger Signs
Word comes from Warsaw that
independent Communist Pre
mier Wladyslaw Gomulka is
preparing for possible trouble
incident to the parliamentary
election next Sunday. Police
forces are being strengthened
and provided with special anti
riot equipment. Despite Gom
ulka's successful fight against
Russian domination, there have
been anti - Communist out
breaks in several cities. West
ern observers on the - spot see
the election as a test for Poland's
future. If it goes off peacefully,
and the Communists roll up a
substantial majority, all will be
well. But if the vote is not con
vincing, and if there are riots,
Moscow- may try to upset the
present relatively liberal re
gime. : That would mean blood
shed. Oath
Don't be surprised if the
White House changes its mind
and decides to give the public
a peek by television and photo
graphs at President Eisenhow
er's private oath-of-office tak
ing at the White House Sunday.
He must take the oath Jan. 20.
But because that's Sunday, the
White House decided to make
Today and
By Walter
EDEN AND THE
PARTNERSHIP
As Anthony Eden goes . into
retirement, he can take with
him the knowledge that his
friends are a
multitude on
both sides of
the ocean. For
them, the end
will not wipe
out what went
before, those
valiant years
of the world
war era. For
them, too, the
Walter Lippmann
last word has not been spoken
to explain the disaster at Suez,
and the time has not yet come
for a final judgment. His friends
will wish him a good recovery
and a quiet mind.
It was Eden's fate to have to
do what Churchill once vowed
he would never do, to preside
over the liquidation of the Brit
ish imperial position in the Mid
dle East. Had everyone concern
ed been much wiser and more
reasonable than he was, there
might have been a happy transi
tion from empire to a new order
of things between East and West.
It was not to be. There has not
been the wisdom in the West,
that is to say in London, Paris
and Washington, to use what re
mained of their declining power
to propose a new order to replace
the old. In the East there has
been violence and hatred, resent
ment and fanaticism, to discour
age and to frustrate statesman
ship. ,
The intervention at the Suez
Canal seems to have been a last
desperate gamble to recover a
power and an influence that had
in fact already been very nearly
lost. What little of power and
influence remained was wagered
and was lost in the disaster.
THERE is no denying the fact
thA the Anglo - American
partnership in world affairs has
been affected. This partnership
really began with Churchill .and
Roosevelt in the second World
I 4V.. -J
pied every big important Brit
ish cabinet post except that of
foreign secretary.
Macmillan made a name for
himself as a brilliant adminis
trator when he was minister of
housing. When the Labor party
was in office after the war, it
laid out an ambitious housing
program. But Macmillan, when
the conservatives got back into
power and he was made hous
ing minister, really built houses
300,000 in one year.
It is likely that Macmillan
will make restoration of close re
lations with the United States
one of his first concerns. But he
is also likely to review, and to
whittle down, British commit
ments all over the world. He is
expected to pay a lot of attention
to British economic relations
with the countries of Western
Europe. He is called "Europe
minded." Churchill and Eden
were world minded.
Macmillan is to make a report
to the British nation on Thurs
day, in his first formal television
appearance as prime minister.
His speech may be sensational.
the ceremony completely pri
vate, and to hold a public cere
mon next day. There has been
much criticism of the decision.
So the signals may be changed.
Was He Pushed? '
The official version still is
that Sir Anthony Eden resigned
as prime minister because of
bad health. But here's a report
that is being circulated at cock
tail parties in inner circles: The
Marquess of Salisbury, who is
becoming Britain's political king
maker, visited Queen Elizabeth
at Sandringham, her country es
tates, last Friday. He told her
that the concensus of the divid
ed Conservative Party leader
ship was that Eden had to go
The Queen called in Eden next
day and told him the bad news.
Trouble
Emergency legislation for
Hungarian refugees, once
thought certain of early passage
in Congress, may be in trouble.
Rep. Francis E. Walter (D-Pa.),
top hand on immigration legis
lation in the House, warns he
won't be rushed. Says full se
curity checks must be made be
fore any bill is passed to give
refugees permanent residence in
this country. There are other
signs that the tide of pro-refu
gee sentiment has passed its
peak. For instance: Rep. Omar
Burelson (D-Tex.), says he'll in
troduce a bill to send' refugees
home once it is determined that
the'r lives won't be in danger.
Clements
Look for former Sen. Earle
C. Clements of Kentucky to ac
cept the job of executive direc
tor of the Democratic senatorial
campaign committee. If he does,
he'll be in line for election as
possible future chairman of the
Democratic National Committee.
Tomorrow
Lippmann
War. Its essence has been con
sultation and agreement of the
highest levels of the two govern
ments in advance of any great
decision' in foreign affairs. There
has always been, certainly for
more than a century, the British
American connection. This has
meant that in case of war the
interests of the two countries
would cause them to be on the
same side. But the partnership
which Churchill and Roosevelt
established is a comparatively
new thing in British-American
relations.
This partnership has been, if
not dissolved, then at the very
least suspended in the Suez af
fair. The American complaint is
that we were not consulted be
fore the British government be
gan its momentous military ac
tion in Egypt. The British com
plaint is that since the Suez in
tervention, the American govern
ment has refused to consult it i
about any of its big policies. j
rpHE official American view ;
has been that it could never ,
again trust Eden after his fail- .
ure to consult In October. The
corresponding view in England ,
has been that after its experience j
in negotiating with him over j
Suez, it could never again trust i
Dulles. So Washington is re
lieved that Eden has retired, and
London will be relieved when
Dulles retires.
The old partnership in its full
sense is not, however, a matter
of personalities. The partnership
is at bottom dependent on com
mon interests and somethingjike
parito of power. Thus, even dur
ing the World War the Churchill
Roosevelt partnership did not
really control the war in "the
Pacific. Since the World War,
except perhaps at certain critical
points in the .Korean war, there
has been no partnership in East
Asia.
It now appears that the part
nership is dissolved in the Mid
dle EasfX what with the collapse
of British power and the so-
Matter of Fact
EDEN AND DULLES
Washington The resignation
of Sir Anthony Eden as Prime
Minister of Britain was a genu
ine personal
tragedy. It was
also an abso
lutely ' neces
sary first step
towards re
pairing the
shattered An
glo - American
partnership.
A partner-
Stewart aisod snip. er an,
is based on mutual trust it can
hardly operate successfully if
one partner is. forever suspect
ing the other of rifling the till
behind his back. Since the Suez
adventure, a relationship of mu
tual trust between the Eisenhow
er Administration and any Brit
ish government headed by Eden
could not possibly exist.
It may be very wrong and
very unfair. But, it is universal
ly believed throughout the top
level of the Administration, that
the 'Eden government on
Eden's orders consciously mis
led the American government
about British intentions, in the
two weeks before Suez.
This was the main reason for
the show of fury and pique in
the Administration immediately
after the Suez invasion. It was
also the main reason why Presi
dent Eisenhower, despite strong
hints, did not invite Eden to
visit him when Eden was recup
erating in Jamaica, and why he
did not express the customary
regret at Edens resignation.
TTNDER the circumstances, the
old close relationship could
not ia the nature of things have
been rebuilt between the Eisen
hower Administration and an
Eden government. But the Amer
ican attitude towards the Eden
government is only half the
story. The other half is the Brit
ish and French, attitude towards
the Eisenhower administration
and specifically towards Secre-1
tary of State John Foster Dulles.
Again, it may be very wrong
and very unfair. But it is univer
sally believed throughout the
top levels of both the British and
French governments that Secre
tary Dulles, in the weeks after
the nationalization of the Suez
Canal, consciously misled both
governments about American in
tentions. This view is unquestion
ably shared by Eden's successor
as Prime Minister, Harold Mac
millan. The distrust of Dulles, more
over, unlike the distrust of Eden
in this country, is not confined
only to the top government
levels. It is virtually universal.
However unfairly, Dulles has be
come a symbol, and a scapegoat,
Ike Will Present '
Budget Wednesday
Washington (U.R) President
Eisenhower is expected to send
Congress Wednesday a record
peacetime budget calling for
total spending of $72 billion m
the fiscal year beginning July 1.
The budget, however, will be
a balanced one because revenue
in the new fiscal year is expect
ed to exceed spending. '
Th budget will indicate a sur
plus of $700 million for the cur
rent year ending June 30 and of
$1.7 billion for the following 12
months.
called Eisenhower doctrine.
IN Europe, however, there is a
deep need of the partnership.
And, so I venture to think, it
is in . the working out of a Eu
ropean policy that the partner
ship, which is now suspended,
will be restored.
We must suppose that after
the disasters abroad, Britain wiU
draw closer to Western Europe.
We -can be sure that there will
be great peril to Europe and to
the world unless Western Eu
rope can come to some kind of
settlement with Eastern Europe.
In these great and difficult
things, London and Washington
cannot go their seperate ways.
Copyright 1947, New York
Herald Tribune Inc.
1
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in Britain even more than in
France.
This raises the obvious ques
tion, whether the old partner
ship can in fact be restored as
long as Dulles is Secretary of
State, even after Eden's resigna
tion. The partnership, it should
be understood, is now in com
plete dissolution, except in the
most formal sense. The relation
ship between this country and
its British and French allies is
authoritatively described in the
phrase "a total suspension of
communication."
WO be sure, the British and
and French AmhassaHnrs
here see Dulles occasionally he
had a brief formal talk with both
immediately before the an
nouncement of the "Eisenhower
Doctrine." The American Am
bassadors in London and Paris
also maintain .formal contacts
with .Dulles' opposite, numbers.
But the old, easy, informal, al
most, instinctive exchange of
views and information has been
entirely suspended.
Until the old relationship is
restored,' the Western Alliance
will remain empty and formal.
and may indeed cease to exist
altogether. And if it cannot be
restored while Dulles . is Secre
tary of State, this raises another
question when, and whether,
Dulles will resign. i
After Dulles' cancer operation,
the word was put about that he
Intended to stay on for another
six months, and then leave his
post. But since then, Dulles has
recovered amazingly . quickly,
and he has shown all his ac
customed vigor. He obviously
loves his job, and he may now
want to stay on. But it is . at
least true that President Eisen
hower has considered arid, dis
cussed the possibility of appoint
ing a new Secretary of State.
TWO names have figured in
these discussions. One is that
of able Under-Secretary-desig-
nate Christian A. Herter. The
other is that of the President's
old friend. Gen. Alfred Gruen
ther (who has also been consid
ered to succeed Charles Wil
son as Secretary of Def ense)..The
obvious objection to Gruenther
is the fact that his appointment
would put a General in both the
White House and the State De
partment. But Gruenther also
has an intimate personal rela
tionship with the President, a
very real asset which Herter
lacks.
At any rate, both men are
well qualified. Both men are also
trusted and respected' by our
allies, which unfair though
"if may be Dulles' unquestion
ably Is not'. And if it Is true that
the old partnership ' cannot be
restored while Dulles remains In
his post, then Dulles, like other
Secretaries of State before him,
must be regarded as expendable.
Copyright 19S7 New York -Herald
Tribune Inc.
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FURNITURE
SALARY
S25 to S1,500
PAYMENTS TO FIT YOUR
BUDGET! ,
Call or Write . . '
' American
Finance Corp.
Phone 2-8886
12S W. Main Medford
4t PERL'S every fomjly
"'. may m a k e funergl ar
- rongements which are In
keeping with its means. A
selection of .services In
every price range is of
fered to satisfy individual
preferences and to .'meet
all financial circumstances.
'Convenient Terms?
Certainly! .