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Flight o' Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the filet of The
Mail Tribune 10. 20. 30. 40
and 50 years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
Jan. 21, 1947 (Tuesday)
Jackson County Chamber of
Commerce will be headquarters
for the March of Dimes this
month, Mrs. O. A. Eden, Med
ford chairman, announces.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: The old
fashioned oyster supper is quite
the vogue in the rural regions
hereabouts. Three guests report
they found oysters in the stew.
20 YEARS AGO
Jan. 21. 1937 (Thursday)
Farmer - stockholders of the
Medford National Farm Loan as
sociation elect C. W. Isaacs,
president of board of directors.
John C. Mann and W. J. Warn
er reelected directors of Medford
Federal Savings and Loan asso
ciation. 30 YEARS AGO
Jan. 21. 1927 (Friday)
Work is progressing on the
city's new water pipe line from
Big Butte Springs to Medford,
according to City Water En
gineer F. C. Billard.
Three D'Autremont brothers,
wanted for the holdup in 1923
of an SP train in southern Ore
gon and the murder of four men,
are still at large, according to
city police.
40 YEARS AGO
Jan. 21. 1917 (Sunday)
Southern Pacific Station Agent
Vanwarning will have for his
guests Sunday five ticket agents
of the SP system.
A. C. Allen shows films at
Page theatre pointing out bene
fits to fish of screening irriga
tion ditches.
What's Your I.Q.?
Nina or ten correct la inperlor; in.
cn or eight U axcaUent; fiva or
aix Is rood.
1. In 1845 Congress reduced
the rate of postage to 5 cents on
a single letter not exceeding
300 miles; 10 cents over that
distance; true or false?
2. Were France and England,
or France and Australia, the
principal nations engaged in
"The Hundred Years' War"?
3. Does the Book of Jeremiah
mention the overthrow of Sodom
and Gomorrah?
4. Did President Truman de
bark at a Belgian, English, or
German port on reaching Eu
rope for the Potsdam Confer
ence? 5. Is an apiary a place where
birds are kept?
6. In Dickens' "Oliver Twist"
was the Artful Dodger an adept
ft) villainy, a young thief or an
old swindler?
7. Was Joseph M. W. Turner a
landscape painter or composer?
8. What is the English equiva
lent of the Roman numeral
MDCCCXXX?
9. Is it proper to use "claim"
as a synonym of allege, assert,
or maintain?
10. "Mad as a March hare,"
"I say, thou madde March
hare." Did Heywood or Skelton
use the spelling "mad"?
Answers: 1. True; 2. France
and England; 3. Yes: 4. Belgian.
Antwerp; 5. No. Bees; 6. Young
thief; 7. Landscape painter; 8.
1830; 9. No; 10. Heywood.
EXPLOSION KILLS
Taipeh. Formosa (U.R)
Twenty seven persons were kill
ed and 30 seriously wounded
Sunday in the accidental ex
plosion of an artillery shell, 'it
was reported today.
MAIL TRIBUNE
Who Is Parcel Post For?
About a week before Christmas, when the "mail
ing rush" was still under way, we toted a hefty pack
age down to the Post Office to be mailed to a Cali
fornia city in time for Christmas.
We waited patiently in line for the 10 or 15 min
utes it took (it seemed more like half an hour) to get
to the window. By the time we got there, the strings
on the package had cut into our fingers, we were late
back to work, and our humor was not of the best.
The clerk at the window was nice enough. He ac
cepted the package, weighed it, then said, "Sorry, it
weighs 22 pounds. Twenty is the limit."
We trudged back to the office, still toting the
darned package, seething. We also recalled distinct
ly having mailed larger and heavier packages in the
past.
IT DIDN'T take long to find out the reason for what
had happened. Postmaster Moore Hamilton re
ported the ruling is the result of Public Law 199,
which we later found out was passed in 1951 at the
behest of the Railway Express agency; a monopoly
owned by the nation's larger railroads.
Further data was forthcoming from Dave Holmes
of Harry and David, one of the largest users of parcel
post and Railway Express services in the nation.
We learned that exasperation at the law has been
mounting, ever since it became offective in 1952, on
the part of the public, large users of parcel post, and
postal employees themselves.
JJERE are a few of the provisions of the law:
From a first class post office you may not mail a
package to another first class post office if it
weighs more than 20 pounds or if it measures
more than 72 inches in combined length and thick
ness. BUT you may mail a package weighing up to 70
and 100 inches the same as it was everywhere be
than first class.
If it is going not more than about 150 miles, how
ever, it can weigh up to 40 pounds, between first class
post offices.
On the other hand, if you mail from a post of
fice other than first class, the limitation is 70 pounds
and 100 inches the same as it was everywhere be
fore the law was passed. (We could have taken that
package to Phoenix and mailed it, no questions ask
ed). THE question is, why this silly business of different
weights and measures for different post offices
and different distances things which the average
postal patron can't possibly keep in mind, and should
n't be expected to?
We don't know for sure, but the Parcel Post As
sociation blames it directly on the Railway Express
and no one else. They claim it was designed to pro
tect this "monopoly" from the "competition" of the
Post Office. -
They say the result has been that the postal defi
cit has increased; that parcel post rates have gone
up as patronage has gone down ; that Post Office ad
ministration is more difficult, and that the ultimate
objective is to kill parcel post (it was only established
in 1912) altogether.
Question: Who is the Post Office supposed to
benefit, the taxpayers that support it, or the express
agency which fears its competition? E.A.
Scenery vs. Signs
We have been watching with interest the com
ments of Willamette valley newspapers on the new
Baldock freeway between Portland and Salem, and
how gradually, little by little, billboards are taking
over what was once a beautiful, pastoral section of
highway.
They don't like it.
Neither do we.
At the last session of the legislature a law was
passed limiting, but not banning, billboards on Ore
gon's freeways. Billboards are allowed not more fre
quently than every 1,000 feet. But at 60 miles per
hour, that's one billboard every 12 seconds .
THE Oregon Statesman
"We do not oppose outdoor advertising; but do object to
it where it mars the scenic view or creates traffic hazard."
That puts it in a nutshell. The fact is that with
the new federal highway bill, much of the wide new
highways will be through unspoiled, uncrowded areas,
which will be both a delight to the eye and a temp
tation to billboard advertisers.
Bills to protect the freeways from billboard en
croachment will be under consideration in both the
state legislature and the federal congress. It is to be
hoped that members of either or both can resist the
pressures of the billboard lobbies and offer protec
tion to areas which are more valuable for their scenic
beauties than they are for gargantuan pictures ex
tolling the virtues of beer, cigarets or mayonnaise.
Let us close with that Ogden Nash verse we have
quoted before:
"I think that I shall never see a billboard lovely as a
tree.
"Perhaps unless the billboards fall, 111 never see a tree
. at all."
May that verse not be prophetic!! E.A.
Snow Threatens Disaster
Valencia, Spain (U.R)
Falling temperatures and freak
snow, the first in 30 years along
this orange-producing coast,
have threatened economic disas
ter for the second time in 12
Monday. January 21, 1957
says:
Along Coasf of Spain
months.
Farmers watched anxiously
for a repetition of last Febru
ary's disastrous freeze which
cut orange exports by an esti
mated 83 per cent and cost Spain
S80 million. . - ...
Today and
By Walter
Big Budget Big Country
Looking at the big budget
which the President has just
submitted to Congress, the ob
vious question
is why with
Mr. Eisenhow
er in the White
House, with a
stalwart like
George Hump
hrey in the
Treasury, Fed
eral spending
has risen so
much. There
can be no doubt about what
Eisenhower meant to do when
he took office four years ago.
He promised then that in two
years he would reduce the last
Truman budget, which reflected
the Korean war and rearma
ment, down to $60 billions, a re
duction of some $14 billions, and
and he certainly hoped that the
reduction would "steadily con
tinue." In his first two years he did
reduce expenditures by some
$10 billions, mainly by savings
on national defense. But since
then he has felt he had to ask
for more and more money. The
new estimates are not much be
low the high Truman budget of
1953 and. if expenditures for
federal highways are included,
they are higher by nine billions
than the first Eisenhower bud
get. The bulk of the increase is
for defense. But there is a not
insignificant increase of three
billions in what are called "civil
benefits," a term which covers
the veterans, agriculture, hous
ing and natural resources.
in the Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
As this is written, three U.S.
B-52 bombers have just landed
at March Air Force base in Cali
fornia. Only 45 hours before
their wheels touched the ground
this morning they LEFT Cali
fornia.
Within this brief SDace of
time, they circled the world
without landing. They were re
fueled in the air four times,
the last time at Guam island.
THEY traveled 24,325 miles at
an average speed of about
525 miles per hour.
Half-way around the globe
off the Malay peninsula in South
east Asia they conducted a
make-believe NUCLEAR BOMB
DROP.
PAGE the ghost of Jules Verne,
whose fictional hero circled
the world a little less than a
century ago in 80 DAYS and set
a new record for imaginative
thinking about the future.
Then
Post this notice to Russia and
her commie buddies: "Take note,
gentlemen, before starting some
thing you might not be able to
finish."
THE federal power commission
says the nation's electric
utility capacity must be
TRIPLED to meet the demands
now estimated for 1980. This
estimate is seven per cent high
er than an estimate made by the
FPC only two years ago.
Interior Secretary Seaton says
the commission estimated at that
time it would cost 94 billion dol
lars to build the necessary new
generating plants to meet the
needs of the next two decades.
WHY all this growth?
Remember the four million-odd
babies that are expect
ed to be born in the next 12
months. Remember that by 1980
the population of the United
States is expected to be in ex
cess of 220 million people.
And most of them are going
to want electric gadgets.
ANOTHER thought:
If the hundred-odd billion
dollars that will be needed to
finance just the new electric
plants that will be needed by
1980 not to mention all the
other elements of our expanding
economy that will need invest
ment money a lot of people
will have to SAVE UP A LOT
OF MONEY between now and
then.
Money for investment comes
out of savings. If we try to pro
vide it by starting the printing
presses there win be first a boom
that will shake everybody loose
from his teeth and after that (to
borrow Treasury Secretary Hum
phrey's expansion) a depression
that will "curl our hair."
SPEAKING of money
An employee of the U.S. mint
in Denver has been arrested and
accused of pocketing a large
number of UNFINISHED two
bit pieces. He is alleged to have
used the silver discus in SLOT
MACHINES.
They caught him quick, and
if he is convicted he faces a fine
of $10,000 and ten years in
prison to think over the hazards
of trying to get rich too quick.
HE is a good example of what
might be called the "dishon
est mentality," and what it usual
ly leads to. What it will lead to
in his case will be a ruined life.
I know that sounds like
preaching, but it is the hard
trtith, distilled out of centuries
of human experience.
I
Sa. S'Ti.-'-J
aVi-itAiAcJjJ
Halter Lippmann
Tomorrow
Lippmann
ALL this has happened under
Eisenhower and Humphrey,
and in the face of an Eisenhower
landslide, which removes any
need to bid for votes. Mr. Hump
hrey makes no bones about his
personal unhappiness at the size
of the expenditure. What, if he
had had his way and not been
overruled by the President,
would he have done to reduce
the budget?
He has not said plainly what
he would have done. But read
ing between the lines, it appears
that he would have altered our
present military policy on the
one hand, and on the other, he
would have resisted sternly the
various demands for federal aid.
In the military establishment he
would, it appears, have concen
trated on the new big strategic
armaments, and he would then
have made substantial economies
in the conventional sea and
ground forces. This would mean
an establishment designed to
deal only with overt Russian ag
gression, but unprepared to do
much about local and limited
disorders.
In the field of "civil benefits,"
he would have fought off the ad
vance of the welfare state.
In other words, the substantial
reduction in the Eisenhower
budget, which Mr. Humphrey
regards as so necessary to our
economic health, could not be
made without fundamental
changes in policy. It would mean
a change in the Eisenhower for
eign policy, which is one of con
tainment on a global scale, and
requires the support of conven
tional forces. It would mean an
abandonment of the Eisenhower
domestic policy, at least that
part of it which is called the
new Republicanism.
For the new budget is big be
cause of the big policies to which
the President has committed
himself.
VET, apart from the various
items which of course need
to be scrutinized by Congress, is
it fair to measure the over-all
size of the 1958 budget by the
smaller ' size of previous bud
gets? Since the Eisenhower ad
ministration came to power in
1953 the population of the
United States has increased by
10,000,000 persons. This country
is, in fact, having an explosive
expansion of its population. The
labor force has increased by
about- 5,000,000. The total na
tional production is larger by
more than $50,000,000,000. Sure
ly, the President is right in say
ing in his message that "the
budget must also reflect the gen
eral responsibilities of a gov
ernment which will be serving
172.000,000 persons in the fiscal
year 1958."
Compared not with other bud
gets but with the growth of the
nation and of the economy, the
present expenditures have not
increased even proportionately
Short of a miracle, that is to say
a peace settlement of the cold
war, it is vain to expect ex
penditures to be drastically re
duced. These big expenditures
reflect the two basic facts
that the population is growing
prodigiously, and that there is a
race of armaments proceeding
at a rapid rate.
rpHE prospects are that the
growth of the American popu
lation will require increased
government spending. For when
the population grows and be
comes concentrated in the great
metropolitan centers, the need
for public expenditure is bound
tn rise. Masses of people living
in cities and in suburbs need all
manner of public works and fa
cilities which are not necessary
when they live in country vill
ages. We speak of the American
way of life which is new in our
generation. This great human
change is reflected in all the
government budgets, federal,
state and local throughout the
land.
(Copyrighted 1957, New York
Herald Tribune Inc.
Czech Miners Stage
Slowdown in Pits
Vienna U.R) Czechoslovak
miners are staging a slowdown
strike in sympathy with the min
ers of neighboring Hungary, reli
able sources said here today.
The sources said the Czech
miners passive resistance al
ready has caused a serious drop
in coal production.
They said the slowdown was
clearly connected with the situa
tion in Hungary where miners
are producing only half of their
pre-revolution output.
Walt Disney, ABC
Sign New Contract
Hollywood -4U.PJ Walt Dis
ney Productions and the Ameri
can Broadcasting Co. announced
today they had reached a new
contract involving more than $9
million and 130 hours of televi
sion programming in 1957-58.
Under the pact, Disney will
produce three TV program series
for ABC - TV "Disneyland,
"Mickey Mouse Club" and a new
series titled "Zorro." The latter
will be a live-action series of 39
weekly half-hour adventures.
India in Unaccustomed Role of
Opposing Self-Determination
By CHARLES M. McCANN
United Press Correspondent
India is about to play the
unaccustomed role of a country
that does not want to talk about
"-'--. '""Ml the . riaht of
self- determin
ation.
The United
Nations Secur
ity Council
meets Wednes
day to discuss
the future of
the state of
Kashmir which
Charles McCann has been in
dispute between Indian ' and
Pakistan since 1947.
Pakistan wants the United
Nations to conduct a plebiscite
so that Kashmir's people can
decide for themselves whether
to unite with India or Pakistan.
Prime Minister Jawaharlal
Nehru- of India is one of the
world's foremost supporters of
the right of peoples to self-de
terminations.
In this instance, however,
Nehru is on the other side. He
does not want a plebiscite.
The trouble is Nehru knows
that if a plebiscite were held.
Matter of Fact
By Stewart Alsop
HOW BIG A STICK?
Washington The President's
request for standby authority to
use force in the Middle East has
been described
as a policy ot
"speaking soft
1 y and car
rying a big
stick." It is
therefore
worth asking
just how big is
the stick we
are carrying.
Pre sumaoly
the President has in mind the
limited application of force, rath
er than a global hydrogen war
with the Strategic Air Force.
And we have, after all, some
rather recent experience of the
limited application of force, in
the Korean war.
Lesson one of the Korean war
was, simply, that you ned
army to win a war. President
Truman at first hoped to use
only the Air Force and the Navy,
but he was quickly disillusioned,
Even the Marines, with their
mall ready force, cannot do the
job alone, vital as was their con
tribution in Korea.
WHAT; then, is the state of the
U.S. Army? As a result of
the budget-dictated "new look,
its manpower has been reduced
by a third, to about a million
men, since 1952. At the same
time, the administration claims
to have maintained the 19 divi
sions it inherited.
If the same combat power had
in fact been maintained with
third less men and a sharply re
duced budget, this would have
been a remarkable achievement.
But when you inquire a little
more closely into the facts, the
remarkable achievement begins
to look more like a sort of shell
game.
For consider those 19 divi
sions. At least five of them are
not real combat divisions at all,
but hardly more than training
divisions, under strength and un
ready for combat. Two more are
the so-called "static divisions."
The static division were magical
ly created by picking up various
bits and pieces, a battalion here,
a regiment there, from Panama
to Alaska, and calling them divi
sions. Thus hey, presto the 19
divisions were ostensibly main
tained despite reduced manpow
er and a reduced budget.
Seven from 19 leaves 12. But
that is not the end of the story.
About three weeks ago a "reor
ganization of the Army for atom
ic warfare" was announced, cut
ting the manpower of our Army
Eisenhower, Nixon
Pick Bible Verses
Washington (U.R) Presi
dent Eisenhower selected verse
12 of the 33rd chapter of Psalms
as the Biblical passage on which
to rest his hand in taking his
oath for a second term.
It reads:
Blessed is the nation whose
god is the Lord; and the pec-pie
whom He has chosen from His
own inheritance."
Vice President Richard M.
Nixon selected the fourth verse
of the second chapter of Isaiah,
which reads:
"And He shall judge among
the nations: and shall rebuke
many people: and they shall beat
their swords into plowshares,
end their spears into pruning
hooks: nation shall not lift up
sword against nation, neither
shall they learn war any more."
The President used a Bible
given to him by his late mother
when he was graduated from
the U.S. Military Academy in
West Point in 1915.
Nixon used a Bible that be
longed originally to his great,
great grandparents. William and
Martha Milhous. The Bible was
a King James Version printed in
1829.
r -Ah
Stewart Alsop
the Kashmiris would vote to
join Pakistan.
Full Debate Opposed
He said at a meeting of his
governing Congress party in
New Delhi last Tuesday that the
United .Nations should confine
itself to the question whether
Pakistan has been the aggressor
in the dispute over Kashmir.
So on Wednesday, the pros
pect is that V. K. Krishna Men
on, India's chief delegate to the
United Nations will argue that
the plebiscite issue should not
even be debated.
When Indian and Pakistan
were given their freedom in
1947, what had been British In
dia was divided between them.
The divison was made on the
basis of religion Hindu areas
to India, Moslem areas to Pak
istan. Kashmir is a Moslem area
which had long been under the
rule of Hindu maharajas.
After the 1947 partition, both
Indian and Pakistan moved
troops into the area. There was
bitter fighting between Indian
and Pakistani troops, and tribes
men who supported one side or
divisions by some 60,000 men.
The reorganization was overdue.
Our cumbersome, World War II
styled divisions were not
equipped for the mobility and
dispersion imposed by the atom
ic revolution.
pWEN so, the combat cutting
edge of our ground strength
is measured in divisions, and it
is patently silly to suppose that
you increase your combat power
by reducing the manpower
in your combat units. If the "in
crease" in combat power had
been real, and not phony, the
60,000 men "saved" by reducing
the manpower per division
would have been organized into
new divisions. But that is not
to be done, because, fonone rea
son it would cost too much.
The story does not end there,
either." It has been announced
that the 137-wing Air Force pro
gram, so long considered sacred,
is to be abandoned. The great
bulk of the reduction in Air
Force wings is to be in the Tac
tical Air Command, which di
rectly supports the Army, and
which is an essential component
of our ability to fight limited
wars, as Korea demonstrated
The 12 real (as opposed to
phony) divisions, which are to
lose both air support and combat
manpower, are not, of course,
all available for use in the Mid
dle East. Five divisions are com
mitted to NATO, and another
three to the Far East, and these
could not be substantially re
duced without denuding our
European and Asian defenses.
Eight from twelve is four, and
of these one or two at least must
be kept in reserve in this coun
try. A DD, finally, that the Eisen-
hower administration's offi
cial estimate is that the Red
Army consists of 175 divisions,
the bulk of which are being re
organized and equipped with
nuclear weapons, and the con
trast becomes rather stark. The
American Army, to be sure, is
spread very thin from the
DEW Line to Formosa and in
view of our global commitments
it is admittedly difficult to main
tain real ground strength.
Even so, the United States,
which is a lot richer than the
Soviet Union, ought surely to be
able to afford 19 real divisions.
If we cannot, it is surely better
to face the fact squarely rather
than to deceive ourselves with
shell games. For the above facts,
which are a matter of public rec
ord, suggest that we are in dan
ger of adopting a policy of
speaking loudly and carrying a
small stick.
Copyright 1957
New York Herald Tribune Inc.
FUNERAL
SERVICES
In Every Price Range
SillCe 1908 T PERL'S every family
, may make funeral or-
KmJ Y.J I rangements which are In
A MmmAJL V. A., keeping with its means. A
- p " - selection of services In
Funeral
every price range is of
Home fered to satisfy individual
preferences and to meet
all financial circumstances.
Phone 2-6675 Convenient Terms?
0 Certainlyl
the other, from October, 1947,
to the end of 1948.
Then the United Nations drew
cease-fire line between the
contending forces. India re
mained in occupation of two
thirds of Kashmir. Pakistan
stayed In the remaining one
third. The United Nations called for
a plebiscite after both Indian
and Pakistani armies had with
drawn. Double Defiance
Nehru agreed to the plebiscite
at one time, but he started to
specify conditions that blocked
it. Chiefly, he demanded that
Pakistani troops get out first.
He also wants troops to be sta
tioned in Kashmir during the
vote in the proportion of sev
en Indian soldiers to one Pak
istani soldier.
More than three million of
Kashmir's 4.4 million people are
Moslems.
Indian officials have said pri
vately that if a plebiscite were
held, the vole would go 60 per
cent for Pakistan, 40 per cent
for India. They hardly can be
assumed to have over-estimated
the Pakistani majority.
Another angle of the situation
is that the United Nations spec
ified that there should be no
change in Kashmir's status un
til the plebiscite was held.
But the part of Kashmir that
Indian holds has adopted a con
stitution under which it is to
come under the Indian consti
tution on Thursday, the day aft
er the UN debate starts.
So Nehru, the self-determina-tionist,
seems to be in double
defiance of the United Nations
as regards Kashmir.
If You Need Money
For Any Purpose
Borrow The
American Way
S25 to S1,500
PAYMENTS TO FIT YOUR
BUDGET!
Call or Write
American
Finance Corp.
Phone 2-8886
123 W. Main Medford
Young Girl Dies
GEO. N. TAYLOR
Some time since, out in the hills
of N.W. Oregon, a young girl
lay dying of T.B. She never had
been in touch
with church or
Sunday School
or in fact with
Christian peo
ple. Yet a New
Testament had
come into her
hands and this
she read con
stantly in her
last days. To
ward the end.
came great weanness dui sne
kept to her Testament. Then
came a moment when she raised
up in bed and held out her arms
with a cry "Jesus, I'm com
ing." At that she fell back dead,
but safe in the arms of Jesus.
And when you die? Where to?
This Message sponsored by a
Scappoose family. adv.
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