FOUR MEDFORD (OREGON)
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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. 15. 1347, (Wednesday)
Elk Lumber company holds
banquet climaxing dedication of
Jackson county's first tree farm.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: So many
people are going south on win
ter vacations, one of the Older
Girls went north yesterday just
to be different.
20 YEARS AGO
Jan. 15, 1937 (Friday)
Stockmen of the Rogue river
valley are hoping for a "break"
in the weather to ease the hay
situation, according to County
Agent Bob Fowler.
Representatives from home
economics and extension service
divisions of Oregon State col
lege begin program here on rur
al Sanitation.
30 YEARS AGO
Jan. 15, 1927
First annual meeting of the
stockholders of the Community
hospital is held. '
Jackson County Pomona
grange will meet at Rogue Riv
er Saturday with Live Oak
grange host.
40 YEARS AGO
Jan, 15. 1917 (Monday)
Sunny weather during week
end increases attendance at the
poultry show.
From Local and Personal col
umn: H. L. Leach of Medford
leaves for Tillamook today to
spend several months.
What's Your I.Q.7
Nine or trn correct is superior; sev
en or eleht Is excellent; five or
si Is cod.
1. When North Carolina ceded
its western lands to the U. S.
was an act of Congress needed
to make the transfer valid?
2. What state was subsequent
ly created from the North Caro
lina cession?
3. Was Cornelius, chief of the
"Italian band." mentioned in the
New Testament as a centurion
or a bandit?
4. Is there a National League
of Horseshoe Pitchers still in ex
istence?
5. Was the Greek divinity Ar
temis half male and half female?
6. Diana was to the Romans
as who was to the Greeks?
7. What is the popular name
for the London headquarters of
the Metropolitan Police?
8. In the legend, if it rains on
St. Swithin's Day, how many
davs will it rain?
9. "He that fights and runs
away, may turn and fight an
other" what?
Answers: 1. Yes. 2. Tennes
see). 3. Centurion. 4. Yes. 5. No
All male. 6. Artemis. 7. New
Scotland Yard. 8. Forty. 9.
"Day." Ray (1752).
Pan-American Faces
Threatened Walkout
Cocoa, Fla. (U.R) Pan
American World Airways repre
sentatives worked today to av
oid a treatened strike by some
400 civilian maintenance work
ers at the guided missile base
in Cocoa.
The workers said Monday
they will walk off the job Wed
nesday midnight unless they are
given the 'Tight to vote by sec
ret ballot on whether we want
a union."
The non-union carpenters,
plumbers and mechanics, are un
der a Pan-Am division. Pan Am
erican supplies some 2.000 wor
kers to the missile base
MAIL TRIBUNE
The Abuse of Secrecy
Congressman Hays of Ohio, who walked out of a
meeting of the House Foreign Relations committee,
a few days ago, started something.
His complamt was Secretary of State Dulles was
telling the people of the country one thing, and mem
bers of Congress quite another.
Moreover the latter meetings were held in secret
with the press barred. The Secretary then, in a stage
whisper, perhaps maintained conditions in the Near
East were alarming, but nevertheless he and his gov
ernment continued their campaign line outside for
the public that everything was "peaches and cream"
along the Potomac, the Medditerranean and every
where else.
The congressman did not like this. He refused to
give implicit endorsement by his presence. He be
lieved the people were entitled to the facts. So, as
remarked, he walked out, and as far as we know has
not yet returned.
HPHE "walk-out" caused very little excitement at
the time, or as far as we have observed, little com
ment since. Many members of. the Republican press
apparently even failed to print the item.
But it should have been.
For the single-handed shot presumably hit a
tender spot somewhere in old Jumbo's wrinkled epi
dermis. At any rate about a week later, the State Depart
ment released the substance of its Secretary's re
marks, which add up to an admission that the situa
tion in the Near East, is far from cheering, and that
President Eisenhower was entirely justified in asking
permission of the congress to, in case of further de
terioration, call out the troops.
So Congressman Hays would seem to be justified
in putting a feather in his cap and singing "Yankee
Doodle."
IT IS now to be hoped the good work will continue,
and Secretary Dulles will be less inclined to don
his professorial robes, and treat the people, not as
adults worthy of confidence, but as students in his
history class, who are to be instructed, rather than
informed. ' .
CT COURSE there is a limit in such matters as
there is in everything else. ' That is one of the
penalties of democracy, as it is today, in fact, one of
the advantages of such a dictatorship as exists in
Russia. . .. .
The old boys in the Kremlin don't have to con
sider anyone but themselves. They can make a de
cision in five minutes and act on it in another five,
if they so wish.
No such dispatch and irresponsibility is possible
in a democratic government except, of course, in
case of armed invasion or hostile attack. '
DUT that does not mean that in a democracy, the
people should be misled, or as Congressman Hays
maintained, not given the salient facts.
And above all it does not mean, giving the people
a false picture of the international situation for po
litical advantage only, as was the case in the recent
campaign.
THERE is, in short, a
When the release of information would alarm the
people UNNECESSARILY, or give directly or indi
rectly "aid and comfort" to the enemy, secrecy in the
interest of the public welfare, of course, should at
all costs be maintained.
But in this particular case, where the information
withheld was released in a matter of a week or 10
days, obviously no such situation did exist.
CONGRESSMAN Hays will not get a gold medal,
and we don't expect him to have his picture on
the cover of "Time."
But he should receive the thanks of all citizens,
who believe, with certain reservations, in the prin
ciple of "open covenants openly arrived at," not only
in foreign but domestic politics, particularly where
secrecy is applied not because national security really
demands it, but only because it means taking the "line
of least resistance" and is the politically expedient
way out. R.W.R.
The First Thing To Do
. Before there can be any peaceful settlement in
the Near East there must be, as we see it, such a set
tlement between Israel and the Arab League.- ,
So long as the "cold war" or more accurately
a "hot-war" on a small scale-continues, (and it has
been continuing, off and
there will be continued tension m this section of the
Mediterranean area and Soviet Russia will continue
to extend its controls and influence as a result o'f
capitalizing on it
JVOREOVER the so-called Eisenhower doctrine,
JVA taken literally at least, can't do much about it.
For as previously stated, it is hard to imagine the
Kremlin being so dumb as
tary action m tins area, particularly so lone as it con
tinues to make progress toward its ultimate goal with
out war.
Why should it? And even if war should accidently
break out the United States is committed by this
Eisenhower declaration to use force ONLY upon the
invitation oi some Mid-hast country attacked.
What country in this part of the world would ex
Tuesday, January 13, 1S37
proper mean between both
on, for nearly a decade)
to start any aggressive mili
Matter of Fcrcf
THE ALLIED ATMOSPHERE
Paris Even a few short, tran
sitional days in this lovely city
have provided the answer to at
least one ma
jor question.
The question
was: "What is
the present at
mosphere o f
the Western
Alliance?"
The answer
can best be
tsiok tClatttsJ summarized in
Stewart Aliop two short ugly
words: "It stinks."
It would hardly be necessary
to state this unpleasing truth, if
Secretary of State John Foster
Dulles' s recent trip to the NATO
conference here had not been
followed by so much happy,
soothing burbling in Washing
ton. Official sources thereafter
gave the country the impression
that all the damage done by Suez
had now been undone. The rent
fabric of the West, we were au
thoritatively told, had been pa
tiently but successfully knitted
up again.
BUT the real state of affairs at
the end of the NATO confer
ence is better suggested by a
well-authenticated anecdote con
cerning one of the last meetings.
In the Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
Bad news' for car owners:
Automobile insurance rates
are going up in Oregon. Two
large insurance underwriters
groups have already put rate
boosts into effect, and others are
expected to follow.
WHY?
The answer is quite simple.
Automobile accidents are in
creasing in Oregon. State Insur
ance Commissioner Robert Tay
lor says one out of EVERY SIX
motor vehicles in the state was
involved in' an accident during
the past fiscal year.
As the RISK that your car
will be involved in an accident
increases, the price you pay for
insurance has to increase. Other
wise, the insurance companies
would all go broke and in that
event no insurance would be
available. .
HOW can we keep insurance
rates from going higher and
higher?
Again the answer is simple.
If everybody would drive
more carefully more SAFELY
there would be fewer acci
dents involving damage claims,
and in that event automobile in
surance rates would tend to de
crease instead of tending to in
crease. THERE is an interesting exam
ple of that fact in Oregon.
The Astoria, Eugene, Klamath
Falls and Salem areas are EX
CEPTIONS to the statewide
trend toward more and more
automobile accidents. As a re
sult, rate increases for young
drivers in these cities (drivers
under 25 are regarded by the
insurance people as the highest
risks) will not be as steep as
elsewhere and older drivers will
get a slight reduction in their
policy costs.
SO MUCH for insurance costs.
Let's now take a look at TAX
costs which are interesting in
view of the fact that the 1957
session of the Oregon legislature
opened in Salem this week. The
toughest job the legislature will
face will be finding enough
money to pay for the services
the people of uregon want irom
their state government. .
The legislature will have to
face this hard, cold fact: The
more it spends, the more it will
have to tax.
If it would like to tax less,
thus reducing the burden on the
people, it will have to SPEND
LESS.
r'S JUST like the problem of
car insurance.
Tf .1,0 incict rn rtrivino" care
lessly, thus inviting more costly
accidents, well nave to pay
more for insurance protection.
If we insist that the state must
provide more services for us,
we'll have to pay more taxes.
There lsn t any otner way oui.
There is no such thing as
something for nothing.
tend such an invitation except Israel and possibly
but not probably, Iraq?
'
AND if under such circumstances such an invitation
WERE extended, and the involvement of Russia,
or some COMMUNIST - CONTROLLED country,
could not be clearly established as the aggressor,
would the present administration take the risk of
starting World War III by accepting it?
It seems highly unlikely. i
WHAT then? Well we shall leave the answer to
the Delphian Oracle or some one in possession
of a crystal ball in better working order than ours.
In fact, we can do nothing but return to our orig
inal thesis that first things should come first, and the
first thine to DO, in this critical situation, is to SOME-
how, SOMEway, get a peaceful settlement of the con
troversy between Israel and the Arab states surround
ing it.
Until that is done,
powder keg with a short
will continue to exist and
world peace. R.W.R.
By Stewart Alsep
At one point in the usual row
about the communique, French
Foreign Minister Christian Pi
neau wished to support the
Dulles view. His way of doing so
was to announce sardonically:
" must confess that this is one
of the rare occasions when I find
myself in agreement with the
Secretary of State."
The mood that this anecdote
reveals is apparently not one
sided, either. Undoubtedly, the
French and British are being
foolishly self-indulgent, in giv
ing such free rein to their detes
tation for Secretary Dulles and
above all in blaming the enor
mous misfortunes they have
done so much to produce almost
wholly on the actions of the
United States.
But there are also excellent
reasons to believe that the Amer
ican policy-makers are not be
having in a very grown up way.
Or rather, they seem to be be
having like misunderstood fe
males in the most dolorous sort
of bad play. It was an open se
cret, even before this reporter
left Washington, that very high
policy-makers were charging
that skeptical analyses of the
Administration's course in the
Suez crisis had been inspired by
foreign intrigue in itself . a
strong sign of policy-makers'
neurosis.
THE nonsense, it now turns out,
hc hv no means stoDDed
there. According to another re
port which may well be ceniea
but is quite certainly authentic,
the State Department actually
took formal action in the basis
nf th npnrotic theorv outlined
above. The American Embassy
in London was posmveiy re
nnccipH in rnmnlain to the For
eign Office that the British Em
bassy in Washington was dissem
inating misleading repora aooui
American policy. "Call your
dogs off," was in effect the re
quest.
It can be imagined what the
a mai-iMti rpartmn .would be.
whether or not the complaint
was justified, it tne oiaie ur
Mrtmonf i-pf pi vpH such a mes-
FAa oVinnt an American Embas
sy abroad from a foreign em
bassy in Washington. On top of
this humiliating episode, there
n-nw .crimp nminous rumblings
from Washington about alleged
secret documents m tne posses--:
tha stato Tlenartment
3 1 W 1 1 V. tltk -
which, if revealed, might cause
the French and uruisn govern
ments to fall. Rightly or wrong-1-.,
rjai-ic anrl T.onrlon unanimous
ly'attribute these implied threats
t Canralarv fillllpS himSelf.
ul. -
It is a simple, practical fact
that this sort ot tning nas goi iu
ho ctnrmpH ahnmtlv. completely
and pretty sternly, if the West
ern Alliance is to oe resiorea 10
any sort of working order.
THE conditions for a new start
have already been created by
the Eisenhower declaration on
Soviet aggression in the Middle
East. It is no substitute for a
serious, detailed Middle Eastern
policy, to say that you will not
permit the Soviets to commit the
kind of overt aggression which
they have no intention of com
mitting. It is at best a fair sub
stitute for American adherence
to the Baghdad Pact, which was
so urgently requested by the
Turks, Iraqis and British, and
was finally refused by the Wash
ington policy-makers. But the
Eisenhower declaration is a very
gcod beginning all the same.
The resignation of- Sir An
thony Eden, tragic though it was
in many ways, may also help to
clear the air. But there are two
requirements for a real new
start. On the one hand, the petty
back-biting and self-righteous
self-justification has got io stop
on both sides. On the other hand,
the old relations of mutual
frankness and freedom of com
munication on all Western pol
icy questions, which are now
totally broken off, must be rap
idly resumed at all levels. Since
America is the leader of the
West, it is up to the American
policy-makers to make the first
show of large-mindedness and
generosity. Otherwise the West
ern Alliance may well openly
founder in the rough year ahead.
(Copyright, 1957, New York
Herald Tribune; Inc.)
we fear, the international
fuse needing only a match,
remain a constant threat to
Red China
In Efforts to Hold Red
By CHARLES M. McCANN
United Prats Correspondent
Soviet Russia and Red China
evidently have decided that if
Communists do not hang togeth
er they are
likely to hang
separately.
That, in Brief,
is the new pol
icy line which
Chinese Com
munist Premier
Chou En-lai is
outlining as the
result of his
recent visit to
Moscow.
There is no
Charles McCann
longer any doubt that Nikita S.
Khrushchev, first secretary of
the Russian Communist Party,
appealed to Red China to help
avert what threatened to be a
break-up of the Soviet bloc in
Europe.
Chou responded by interrupt
ing his tour of East Asia and go
ing to Moscow to cooperate in
working out the new policy line.
Will Visit Hungary
From Moscow, Chou has gone
Lobbyists' Pay Low;
Biggest Goes to Boost
Upper Colorado Plan
Washington (CQ) The aver-
age Washington lobbyist report
ed a salary of $5,059 for 1955.
Five reports listed fees and sal
aries over $30,000, but almost
one-fourth of the lobbyists said
they received no pay for their
legislative work.
Congressional Quarterly sur
veyed official reports filed with
Congress by 579 lobbyists active
during 1955, the last full year
for which figures are available.
Their salaries and fees totaled
$2,929,102. They represented
trade associations, farm and la
bor ' groups and other national
organizations.
The largest single fee was re
ported by Leland Glenn Snarr
for David W. Evans and Associ
ates, a Salt Lake City, Utah,
public relations firm. The Evans
organization received $55,882
from Upper Colorado Grass
Roots fee, for its part in push
ing enactment of the Upper
Colorado reclamation and power
project.
A Washington, D.C., law firm
employed by two opponents of
the Upper Colorado plan The
Six Agency Committee and the
Colorado River Board of Calif
orniareported a $30,274 fee.
Robert L. McCarty of the firm
of Ely, McCarty and Duncan
said the $30,274 was "every
penney we received, including
fees for litigation and work
with executive agencies, as well
as lobbying with Congress.
Top Individual Salary
The highest individual salary
was reported by Harold E. Fel
lows, president and board chair
man of the National association
of Radio and Television Broad
casters (NARTB). ' Fellows re
ceived $52,916.
He stated on his report the
Federal Regulation of Lobbying
Act was "not applicable to me
or this organization but said he
filed "in order that I may be
free to consider and discuss leg
islation without question."
An NARTB spokesman told
CQ Fellows' legislative work
was confined largely to appear
ances before Congressional com
mittees. "He's paid to head a
trade association, not to lobby,"
the spokesman said.
NARTB also had the highest-
paid lobby staff, reporting $113,-
029 total salary for five persons
during the year.
A survey of the reports makes
clear that while some lobbyists
report their entire salary or fee,
many others report only the per
centage of their pay they esti
mate they earned by lobbying.
Of the 579 persons and firms
reporting, 128 said they had no
income at all from lobbying dur
ing the year.
Largest Staffs
The group employing the larg
est number of lobbyists 13 or
ganizations and individuals
was the National association of
Electric Companies. Their total
pay was $71,849. The Transpor
tation association of America's
lobby staff included 12 persons.
but many of them said they had
no salary from lobbying during
the year.
In terms of pay NARTB's five-
Morse Proposes
Federal Hells Dam
Washington U.ft) Sen.
Wayne L. Morse (D-Ore.) intro
duced a bill yesterday to author
ize federal construction of a
single high dam on the Snake
river in the Hells Canyon area.
Morse said he had the backing
of 27 senator in 22 states for
the measure.
"In addition," he told the Sen
ate, "we have the assurance thai
several former sponsors of pre
vious bills who have adopted a
policy of not sponsoring any bill,
will vote for the Hells Canyon
project."
Morse quoted Senata Ma jority
Leader Lyndon B. Johnson (D
Tex.) as saying he considers the
bill important and would. throw
his weight behind it.
Supporting
on to "independent" Communist
Poland. From there, he is going
to Hungary where puppet Pre
mier Janos Kadar is trying to
prevent another outbreak of
open rebellion by reverting to
the ruthless methods of Josef
Stalin.
In a long policy speech in War
saw Chou said:
"We must march shoulder to
shoulder to the same goal. We
consider that the constant
strengthening of the friendship
of the socialist countries headed
by the Soviet Union is our great
est duty ..."
Thus Chou both appealed for
unity in the Communist-ruled
countries and reaffirmed Russia's
position as the center of world
Communism.
Recalls Franklin's Appeal
His appeal for unity was the
same as that which Benjamin
Franklin speaking in a better
cause made at the signing of
the Declaration of Independence
in Philadelphia on July 4, 1776:
"We must all hang together,
or assuredly we shall all hang
separately."
man staff was high with $113,-
092. The National Assn. of Real
Estate Boards and the Washing
ton Realtors Committee paid
four men $73,221 and the Na
tional Assn. of Manufacturers
gave six lobbyists a total of
$65,000.
Highest pay reported by a for
mer Congressman-turned-lobby
ist was $26,000 for ex-Rep. Ches
ter C. Thompson (D-Ill. 1933-39),
president of the American Wat
erways Operators Inc. Ex-Sen.
James P. Kern (R-Mo. 1947-53)
said he received $20,000 from
the Tariff Committee of the Wo
ven Felt Industry and the U.S,
Cuban Sugar Council. Former
Rep. Clyde T. Ellis (D-Ark. 1933
43) said his salary as general
manager of the NaUonal Rural
Electric Cooperative Assn. was
$16,673.
(Copyright 1957. Conf ressionil
- Quarterly)
Patient Threatened
To Disinherit
Doctor, Nurse Says
Eastbourne, England U.R)
The bedside nurse of a wealthy
widow who died while under
the care of Dr. J. Bodkin Adams
testified today the patient once
threatened to cut the doctor out
of her will.
Nurse Caroline Randall was
called as the first prosecution
witness as the preliminary
hearing on the patients death
went into its second day. The
hearing will determine whether
the crown has enough evidence
to order the chubby, 57-year-old
doctor to stand trial for murder.
Murder Charged
In its opening statement Mon
day the prosecution charged
that Dr. Adams murdered Mrs.
Edith Alice Morrell five years
ago with overdoses of heroin
and morphine. It also brought
up the names of two other pa
tients who died under question
able circumstances "while under
Adams' care.
The attorneys said the defend
ant profited from all three
deaths.
Miss Randall said she served
as Mrs. Morell's nurse for 22
months and was at her bedside
when she died. She said she
gave the patient nightly injec
tions of morphia on orders from
the doctor, and later he ordered
injection of heroin, which
caused the patient to become
"very collapsed."
Illness Associated
Asked if she associated Mrs.
Morrell's illness in any way to
the injections, the nurse said:
"I did to the heroin."
She said when A'dams went
away on vacation in 1950 with
out telling Mrs. Morrell, the pa
tient was annoyed.
"Did Mrs. Morrell tell you
when Dr. Adams was away that
she intended to alter her will
and cut him out of it or words
to that effect?" defense attorney
Geoffrey Lawrence asked In
cross-examination.
"Yes, she was annoyed," the
nurse replied. However, she said
she did not know if Mrs. Mor
rell actually cut Adams out of
her will at that time.
PRAISE ROCK'N'ROLL
Songapore (U.P.) A newsp
per reviewer said today he found
that listening to rock'n'roll bands
has its compensation because
"you are never bothered by the
crackling of candy wrappers in
the next seat. You could not hear
a machine gun over those
bands," he added.
I A MIUOT 9f Mcne I
I PACIFIC
INDUSTRIAL'
14 S. Central Phaa 3-5308
Moscow
Line
The fact that Chou has speci
fied that Russia is still the center
of world Communism does not
mean that Red China with its
600 million people intends to
take a second-rank position.
Chou's support of Khrushchev,
and of Russian leadership, stems
from self interest. Red China
still needs, and will need for
some time, economic and tech- :
nical help from the Communist I
countries of Europe. (
Increased Taxes
Seen as Result of
Holmes' Program
Salem U.R) A Republican
state senator said today the pro
gram outlined by Democratic
Gov. Robert Holmes in his in
augural speech yesterday would
call for vastly increased taxes.
Sen. Rudie Wilhelm of Port
land, a GOP tax leader, said his
main concern was that the pro
gram called for additional ex
pense of about $40 million for
basic school fund increase and
at least another $5 million over
the budget of former Gov. Elmo
Smith, which he said was bal
anced and used up the $32 mil
lion surplus.
90 Per cent Surtax
That means the equivalent of
a 90 per cent surtax rather
than the present 45 per cent sur
tax if we are to get the major
part of it from income tax as
the governor recommends," Wil
helm said.
Reaction to Holmes' speech
generally followed party lines.
Rep. Keith Skelton, Eugene ,
Democrat, said he was sure that
under the governor's program
the tax problem can be solved.
But Rep. Joe Rogers, Independ
ence Democrat, said "Raising the
basic school fund from $80 to
$120 a census child would more
than wipe out the $32 million
surplus. We'll have to look for
more money. I agree with the
desirability of Governor Holmes' .
program, but I like to see where
we're going to get the money."
Lowry Sees No Specific Change
Sen. Philip B. Lowry, Medford
Republican, said the address of
fered no specific plan for tax
money. Another GOP lawmaker.
Sen. Howard Bel ton of Canby,
said the address was "an opti
mistic message based more on
public appeal than upon the real
ities of state administration.
Dr. John Richards, chancellor
of the state system of higher
education, praised the address.
"Higher education has every
right to feel encouraged that our
problems will be solved by this
administration," he said.
Anthony Eden, Wife
Sail for New Zealand
London (U.R) Former
Prime Minister Sir Anthony
Eden and his wife will sail for
New Zealand Friday for a visit
which was postponed because of
the Suez crisis.
Sir Anthony, and Lady Eden
will make the trip at the invita
tion of New Zealand's prime
minister, Sydney Holland.
An estimated 62 mllion acres
of the land now planted to crops
in the United States is said to be
completely safe from erosion.
Mr. Insurant
FRED
BRENNAN
Phone 2-4940
HOUSEHOLD
INVENTORY
It's good business to fol
low the example of busi
nessmen by taking an IN
VENTORY OF YOUR
HOUSEHOLD POSSES
SIONS. It helps determine the
amount of insurance cov
erage you need.
It is a detailed record
In case of loss or damage.
We welcome the chance
to assist you In outlining
an Inventory form.
MEDFORD INSURANCE .
AGENCY
Sold Wife for Opium
GEO. N. TAYLOR
A Chinese scholar sold his
wife and daughters to get money
for more opium. Then from a
gift-Bible ne read
of Christ's mira
cles. These mira
cles, all dressed
up, he gave th
crowd and then
passed the hat for
more opium coin.
Next, he himself
came to believe
on Christ and he
prayed the Lord
to take away the
opium urge. So Christ did and
also he sent the man out over
China to tell crowded houses
what Christ had done for him.
And may you also believe and
tell what Christ has done for
you.
This message sponsored by a
Scappoose family. Adv.