Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, February 08, 1957, Image 4

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TOUR MEDFORD (OREGON)
"Everyone In Southern Oregon
Reads Tha; Mail Tribune"
Published Dally ExceDt Saturday by
MZDfORD PRINTING CO
TI-2Z North fir St. Phone 2-141
ROBERT W BUHL Editor
RERB GREY Advertising Manager
CERAt-D LATHAM Business Manarer
ERIC ALLEN JR. Managing Editor
EARL H ADAMS City Editor
HARRY CHIPMAN Telegraph Editor
RICHARD JEWETT Sports Editor
OLIVE STARCHER Society Editor
DALE ERICKSON. Circulation Mgr.
An Independent Newipaper
Entered aa aecond class matter at
Medford Oregon under Act of
March 3. 1337
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Flight o' Time
edford and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10. 20, 30, 40
and 50 years ago.
0
10 YEARS AGO
Feb. 8, 1947 (Saturday)
Bruce Lininger of the Lininger
sand and Gravel plant says he is
in sftnpathy with owners of
strike-bound Medford Concrete
Construction company.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: Ashland
will stage a Shakespearean festi
val next Auust. Shakespeare is
the Cornice pear of the poets.
20 YEARS AGO ' '
F&. 8. 1937 (Monday)
First National Bank jl Port
land today formally takes over
the First National Bank of Ash
land and the State Bank of Ash
land. Tdffic out of southern Oregon
resumes normal procedure as
snow-blocked highways to the
soutS)are reported clear or par
tially (jjjear.
30 YEARS Ago
Feb. 8. 1927 (Tuesday)
City planning commission re
jects petition of Harry Caton who
requested permission to construct
and operate a service station
here.
Representatives from Grants
Pi, Ashland and Medford at
tended Southern Oregon Bar as
sociation meeting at Medford
hotel.
40 "ftARS AGO
Feb. 8. 1917 (1uriday)
Effort is tSing made to secure
enough hogs from the farmers in
Central Point district to make
community shipment to Portland
Union stockyards.
An America Negro fireman,
(feeorge Washington, is killed,
Dwhen British steamship Turino
Is sunk by German submarine.
What's Your I.Q.?
Nine or ten correct to superior; sev
en or eight Is excellent: five or
six Is good.
1. Philadelphia, Pa.. 1782: Fus
tians and jeans manufactured in
the U.S. What are "fustians"?
02. To whom did Bacchus em
power to turn whatever he
touched into gold? o
3. Bible: Who was the "angel
come down from heaven, having
the key to the bottomless pit."?
4. At what age do children us
ually show the first curiosity of
birth and sex?
5. Canadian troops fought in
the World War II Pacific thea
ter; true or false?
6. What is the general term for
low-laced shoes?
7. Is the Jajaynese "hara-kiri"
a wrestling skill, ceremonial sui
cide, or a feast?
8. The Townsend Plan dealt
with which subject?
9. What is UNRRA?
10. "No man can feel himself
alone The while he bravely
stands Between best friends ev
er known His good, honest,
h s." John Hancock.
Answers: 1. Baggy-like pants
of twill, etc. 2. Midas. 3. Salan.
4. From 5 Jo 7 years of age. 5.
True. 6. Oxfords. 7. Ceremonial
suicide. 8. Old-age pensions, a.
United Nations Relief and Re
habilitation Administration. 10.
"Hands."
UNMARRIED TAXED
Seoul (U.RJ The Communist
authorities in North Korea are
' levying heavy taxes on unmar-
(ied women in an attempt to
orce them to marry Chinese
Communist soldiers, the news
paper Seoul Shinmun reported
today.
i 2
MAIL TRIBUNE
'Who's "Crummy?
To the Editor: If New York City is the retarded back
water of sloth and decadence that you suggest in your Edi
torial Feb. 1, what does that make Medford?
Why not get rid of all the automobile parking areas in
your town, plant trees, prohibit automobiles in the city
limits and place hitching posts along the curbs?
After all, Medford's nothing but a crummy horse and
buggy place at best.
James Halvorson
Portland, Oregon
Now, now, Mr. Halvorson. Let's not be abusive.
Medford's really a mighty "purty" little town. We
haven't seen a horse and buggy for some time. But,
doggone it, it'd be a sight for sore eyes if we did.
And isn't it Portland's own Ernest Holbrook who
advocates a state law prohibiting any more people
from moving into Oregon? He thinks there are too
many now. And some people agree with him. We do
too, sometimes, usually when we get all snarled up
in a traffic jam on the way home.
"UR Portland correspondent, whether he knows it
or not, in his second paragraph makes, faci
tiously we are sure, the same suggestion that forward-
looking city planners are
all except the hitching posts, anyway.
Their point is that downtown areas everywhere
are getting more and more congested; that downtown
parking facilities simply tend to attract more and
more cars, thus adding to the traffic congestion; and
that the solution is not to attract more CARS but
more PEOPLE.
They put great emphasis on the development of
adequate mass transportation facilities to do this.
They also suggest downtown parking prohibition, and
efforts to make the downtown shopping areas more
attractive to people by the addition of trees shrubs,
park areas and so on.
ASA matter of fact, the more we think over Mr.
Halvorson's note, the more we agree with his
suggestions although we rather resent his somewhat
unappetizing reference to Medford as "crummy."
That it is not not yet, anyway.
After the last park has succumbed to asphalt, after
the last tree is gone, after the f ouf-lane aerial free
way lifts the gaseous and noisy traffic high overhead
then, maybe, Medford will fit that description.
But as long as the parks remain, and as long as
people can be sad to see a tree vanish in favor of a
billboard ; as long as people can be honest and friend
ly in their disagreements; as long as they love their
children and support their schools and vote in elec
tions, and give to the United Crusade, and build
hospitals as long as Medford remains THAT sort
of town, we'll continue to believe it's as pleasant a
spot as any in the world. How about it, Mr. Halvor
son? E. A.
Sour Note
Engineering journals, scientific periodicals, and
newspapers in larger cities and on university cam
puses, are filled with ads these days, pleading for
engineers.
A great hue and cry has been raised about the
shortage of engineers, and great companies view the
situation with alarm, manpower authorities make dis
paraging comparisons between the situation here rnd
in Russia, and so on.
Probably this all is very true, and serious to boot.
But one publication, Aviation Week, strikes a sour
note in a recent issue.
IT REPORTED the results of a recent survey con
ducted by a group of men who answered 30 maga
zine and 75 newspaper advertisements of that kind.
The results were "confusing .and discouraging,"
the magazine reported.
Form letters, some unsigned and some not even
bearing a name and address, were received from 12
companies. Only 23 answered specific questions asked
in the application ; the other 53 ignored the question.
Out of the 105 letters sent out, 50 resulted in ac
tual applications being made. Thirteen of these were
not acknowledged. Three asked engineers with five
years of experience to take aptitude tests. Of 31 job
offers, three cast aspersions at the schools listed. One
company, which has five different projects, received
five applications. It sent back five different salary
figures, for five different jobs. The applicant was
turned down by four and found eligible by the fifth.
"THE conclusion reported by the magazine was that
1 there is no real shortage of engineers, at least
judging by the way companies reply to applications
for engineering employment.
This may not be a wholly valid conclusion, for
statistics do indicate that the supply does not meet
the demand. But it can be concluded that the situa
tion isn't as desperate as those flossy-looking ads
would indicate the ads which draw the applications
which are then kicked around or ignored. E.A.
"Till Death Do
A picture yesterday shows Liz Taylor and her
new (and third) husband. The marital exploits of
others (Rita Hayworth," Marilyn Monroe, Mane Mc
Donald, Barbara Hutton, Doris Duke to name' only
a few) are well known.
This leads us to wonder: When they get wrinkles
and gray hairs, and lose their figures, and shed the
last of their husbands, aren't they going to be bitter
and lonely and frustrated? Sex and excitement and
change may be stimulating in youth. But it's a darned
poor preparation for getting old. E.A.
Friday. February 8. 1957
tf
making in all seriousness
Us Part .
if
Pending Union Investigation
Reminds of Wall Street Probe
By LYLE C. WILSON
United Press Correspondent
Washington (U.R) The stop-look-and-listen
sign is up for or
ganized labor in the United
States.
The sign
blazes bright
est right now
for the most
powerful union
of them all
Dave Beck's
T e a m s t e rs.
Beck and other
labor leaders,
within whose
Lyla C. Wilson
anions are fat locals with pe
culiar methods of keeping books,
would do well to take a tip from
Wall Street's experience.
A special Senate committee is
squaring away now for an in
vestigation of suspect union fi
nancial practices. As good a
friend of organized labor as Sen.
Paul Douglas (D-JU.) chaired a
lesser investigation two years
ago.
The house cleaners from the
outside already are moving.
Douglas Thursday introduced in
the Senate a bill directed against
embezzlement, kickbacks and
other abuses in the union ad
ministration of employee welfare
funds. Cosponsors were Sen.
James E. Murray (D-Mont.), a
notable New Dealer, and Sen.
Irving M. Ives (R-N.Y.) a left
of center Republican, neither
ever accused of labor baiting.
Douglas reported that his 1955
OK By Arab Leaders
For Mid-East Plan
Tops News
By CHARLES M. McCANN
United Press Correspondent
The week's good and bad
news on the international
balance sheet: '
Leaders of three Arab nations
expressed approval of the new
Eisenhower Doctrine for the
Middle East as
the result of
talks with the
P r e s i dent in
Washington.
Partly be
cause of eco
nomic s t r a in
caused by the
surge of revolt
in Communist
rhariei McCann Europe, the So
viet Russian government an
nounced a big cutback in the
rate of its industrial expansion.
In another move related to its
political difficulties, the Soviet
government accused the United
States of carrying out a big spy
campaign in Russia.
Officials in Washington and
London intimated strongly that
President Eisenhower is likely to
meet British Prime Minister Har
old Macmillan in March.
It is likely that Eisenhower
also will meet French Premier
Guy Mollet after he sees Mac
millan. Doctrine
President Eisenhower's pro
posal to use American forces, if
necessary, to combat armed
Dead Girls' Mother
Gets 'Confession'
Chicago (U.R) Authorities
sought today the identity of a
letter writer who "confessed"
the slaying of two teen-aged
sisters and asked the victim's
mother for forgiveness.
Police also awaited a complete
medical report on the cause of
the girls' deaths in the hope it
might shed light on the murder.
The report is expected to be
ready today or Saturday.
The latest possible clue came
in a letter signed "Trudy" and
sent to the victims' mother, Mrs.
Loretta Grimes, 48.
The letter, similar to one re
ceived by Mrs. Grimes last Sat
urday, said in part:
"My name is Trudy. Please
forgive me for killing your
daughters."
The letter listed the names of
two men, one nicknamed
"Trudy," and urged Mrs. Grimes
to "tell police to check on them."
Authorities sought the two
men listed in the letter and the
mystery writer.
Jel Plane Missing.
From Paine Air Base
Everett, Wash. (U.R) An
F-89H jet stationed at nearby
Faine Air Force Base was report
ed missing and presumed down
early today.
The jet, with a pilot and radar
observer aboard, left the base
about 11 p.m. (PST) Thursday
on a routine training mission
with two other planes.
The other two jets returned
safely but the last radar contact
with the missing plane was made
shortly after midnight.
Coast Guard headquarters
here said five cutters had been
altered for search efforts. The
plane was believed down in the
Port Gamble area across Puget
Sound and about 20 miles south
east of here.
inquiry turned up "shocking
abuses such as embezzlement,
collusion, kickbacks, exorbitant
insurance charges . . . misman
agement, waste, extravagance,
indifference, nepotism."
Old timers around town can
remember when good friends of
WaU Street were making equal
ly serious charges against the
big - time financial practices
which flowered in what became
known as the Coolidge boom.
Wall Street big shots scorned the
device of taking a Fifth Amend
ment defense against testifying
to their own misdeeds.
There was perjury aplenty,
however, in the record of the
Senate's stock market investi
gation conducted by a banking
and currency subcommittee with
Judge Ferdinand Pecora of New
York as chief counsel.
It is not necessarily a reflec
tion on Dave Beck that he pres
ently is out of the country and
out of the subpena jurisdiction
of Senate labor investigators,
nor that he is the lone big-time
labor holdout against firing
union officials who hide behind
the Fifth Amendment to the
Constitution.
Beck might consider, however,
the ancient dictum which goes
like this: The bigger they are,
the harder they fall. Wall Street
learned the truth of that the
hard way. In the process of
learning, a president of the New
York Stock Exchange went to
jail, the presidents of New
of Week
Communist aggression in the
Middle East was given a big
boost by spokesmen for three of
the countries which would be
affected.
King Saud of Saudi Arabia,
Crown Prince Abdul' Illah of
Iraq and Foreign Minister Char
les Malik of Lebanon all en
dorsed the aims of the doctrine as
the result of talks with the Presi
dent. .
Cutback
The Russian government an
nounced at a meeting of the Su
preme Soviet Parliament in Mos
cow that its rate of industrial ex
pansion for 1957 would be 7.1
per cent. This compares with an
average of 11 to 12 per cent for
previous years since the end of
World War II.
One reason for the cutback is
that the rebellious spirit of peo
ple in the Soviet satellite coun
tries has compelled the Soviet
government to deliver more
eoods to them. Another is that
unrest in Russia itself has com-1
pelled the government to make
concessions to its own people.
Spies
At a theatrically-staged press
conference in Moscow, the Soviet
Foreign Ministry produced four
Russians who, it said, had con
fessed to spying for the United
States after having been para
chuted to Russian territory from
American planes. The United
States, an official statement said,
is waging a "secret war" of sub
version against Communist coun
tries. Meeting
The prospective meeting of
President Eisenhower and Prime
Minister Macmillan is a follow
up to negotiations conducted in
Washington by British Defense
Minister Duncan Sandys. Sandys
said in London that he had reach
ed full agreement on defense co
operation, especiaUy in the field
of guided missiles.
Blocked Off Reno
Area Reopened
Reno, Nev. (U.R) The down
town Reno area, ordered evacu
ated following Tuesday's blasts
and fire ,was reopened last night
after a 32-hour check for pos
sible gas concentrations.
The six-block area, containing
much of Reno's main business
district, was ordered evacuated
Wednesday morning when jittery
workers noticed gas odors and
feared another explosion.
Tuesday's blasts and fire was
believed caused by leaking gas.
Two persons were killed, 42
were injured, five buildings were
destroyed and many others were
damaged.
Year's Farm Outlook
Sees Price Increases
St. Louis (U.R) Secretary of
Agriculture Ezra T. Benson said
yesterday the farm outlook for
the year ahead is for modest
increase in prices and income.
Benson told the convention of
the National Association of Soil
Conservation Districts here that
prices received by farmers have
been running about 7 per cent
above those of last year.
FIGURE THIS ONE
St. Joseph, Mich. (U.R) A
motorist's request for license
piste numbers 36-24-36 has been
rejected by state officials. The
motorist said he wanted the
numbers to match his girl
friend's measurements.
York's two largest banks were
forced to resign, one of them in
the utmost disgrace, the other
pinned as a reckless promoter
who had no business running a
bank in the first place.
Challenge Grounds Similar
It may be significant that
Beck's underlings have chal
lenged the Senate's right to in
vestigate union finances on the
very grounds on which the late
John W. Davis and other
notable lawyers sought to pro
tect their banking clients in the
early 1930's from Pecora's ques
tions. Davis on occasion told the Pe
cora subcommittee that it lacked
authority to pry into the matters
under review. The subcommit
tee's response in all cases sim
ply was to return to the Senate
and obtain specific authority to
proceed.
History could and doubtless
will repeat itself if labor wit
nesses persist in that strategy.
The new special Senate commit
tee will have broader specific
authority than the standing com
mittee which began the inquiry
with some of Beck's men as wit
nesses. The investigation wiU
range for months, nationwide.
The chairman will be the
same, however: Sen. John L. Mc
Clellan (D-Ark.). Balky labor
leaders wUl learn that McClel
lan is a tough man. He has put
offenders on notice to clean
house if they don't want him
to do it for them.
Neuberger Eyes
Claims That Korea
jWas Truman's War
By
Sen. RICHARD NEUBERGER
Washington, D.C. (Special)
Republican talk of Korea as
"Truman's War" has helped to
harm the Democrats in four
elections 1950, '52,. '54 and '56.
There is scant doubt of that,
This talk has been cruel and
ruthless, but it has been effeo
tive. As Republicans keynoter
last year, Governor Langlie of
Washington referred to Korea
as "a costly and fruitless" war.
Many Oregon Democrats ask
me about this. They, too, are
troubled troubled because the
war in Korea has damaged our
party politically, and also troub
led because of a feeling that
perhaps our action in Korea
may have been a mistake. I
always answer these disturbed
inquiries wih several quotes.
"No Recourse"
In June of 1950, soon after
American forces were ordered
to intervene against the invad
ers from North Korea, President
Dwight D. Eisenhower of Co
lumbia University told report
ers: "There was no recourse but
to do what President Truman
did.
On August 31, 1953, Vice
President Nixon said to the
American Legion convention:
"Let's recognize right now that
the decision to go into Korea
was right because the Commu
nists had to be stopped."
Undoubtedly, Harry Truman s
sending of our troops to Korea
had an adverse political impact
on the Democratic Party. Yet
history asks only what was right
and not what was politically
successful.
Employees Help
To Save Business
Detroit (U.R) The 376 em
ployees of the Hammond-Stand-ish
& Co. meat packing plant are
paying out part of their salaries
in an effort to keep their jobs
and the firm alive.
Joseph Strobl, president of
the 99 -year old firm, said
Wednesday he was counting on
the money to keep the company
in business.
Strobl said that if the plan
worked the employees would, be
able to keep their jobs and even
tually would get their money
back. If it doesn't, he said, they
lose both job and money.
Strobl said the program of co
operation between management
and the members of Packing
House Workers Union Local 190
allowed each employee to sign a
contract giving 10 per cent of
his pay to a special benefit fund
for the next five years.
He said he estimated the dona
tions would reach about $90,00C
by the end of the five-year per
iod and would be used as work
ing capital and to cover operat
ing losses.
"If we hadn't made this agree
ment," Strobl said, "there was a
good chance we would have
gone out of business but now
we hope the plan will let us get
out of the red and back into the
black again."
POLICE GIVE UP
Columbus, Ohio (U.R) The
Police Department yielded
Thursday under pressure of a
spelling lesson by Austin Besan
con, principal of Columbus' East
High School. Embarrassed of-fcials-
rushed to remove signs
from in front of the school when
Besancon told they had the word
"yield" in signs reading "yield
to pedestrains" spelled "yeild".
Teaching,
Discussed by Babson
By ROGER W. BABSON
Babson Park, Mass. Two
basic financial problems are
facing every city and town to
day. (1) Higher interest rates
must be paid
for all money
borrowed, in
cluding that
for new
schools, and
there is a
s h o r tage of
money at any
cost. (2) High
er salaries are
Roer w. Babiun being demand
ed by teachers, and there is a
shortage of teachers at any
wage.
Almost all other groups of
workers have increased produc
tion as their wages have risen;
me carpenters use electric tools;
the painters spray, instead of
using hand brushes; the doctors
make quicker "calls" by tele
phone; while stores are fast
adopting "self-service." Even
the blond typist uses an electric
typewriter; while her boss uses
Soundscriber. The housewife
herself has cut down her work
so as to make it unnecessary to
employ maids and laundries;
and, in fact, she can even earn
money by an outside part-time
job.
With the faithful school teach
er, the results are often the op
posite. It is true that she has
been given more "things" to
teach and to talk about. These
have been forced upon her
school superintendent by high
pressure textbook salesmen and
politicians. These outside
"things" take the teacher's time
and strength. I greatly sympa
thize with all school teachers
in their predicament.
Teaching Inefficient
But the fact is that her pro
duct does not increase in ef
ficiency and usefulness as her
salary is increased. The good
women now teaching my grand
children get more than double
the pay which the teachers re
ceived when I was in school. I,
however, am convinced that
these children do not get the
training that I had 50 years ago.
Moreover, every employer will
say that the product of our
schools is not as good as it form
erly was. Furthermore, we em
ployers are not allowed to "re
turn the goods and get our
money back" when the work of
a graduate is inefficient and
careless.
Basically, the job of a school
teacher is to help her pupils de
velop their brains. If this has
been properly accomplished, the
other needs character, health,
'posture and personality will
naturaUy follow. Yet, our public
school students are not taught
anything today about their
brain. They utterly fail to real
ize its marvelous powers, how
it works, and its tremendous un
used possibilities. In fact, only
in the past year did I get in
terested in my own brain
through Dr. George Russell Har
rison, the wonderful M.I.T. Dean
of Science. Write him for a copy
of his article in a recent Atlan
tic Monthly. (Please enclose
needed return postage!)
How to Remedy O r Difficulty
Now here is a suggestion
which those responsible for the
cost of the teaching of your chil
dren should seriously consider.
Begin in the lower grades to
interest the children in their
brains. Instead of giving' them
"CAT" as the first word to spell,
give them "BRAINS" to speU!
Have at the top of every Report
Card these words: "Report On
How Your Brain Is Working."
a
fa
'a a: i - r. i ts
r t) r-i fc
Investments made by the 10th of the month
earn dividends as of the First
Current Divi
idenoj
FIRST FEDERAL
Savings & Loan Association of Medford
29 North Ivy Street R. F. Kyle, President
Brainpower
ConstanUy keep the children
conscious of their brains and Its
marvelous possibilities.
RecenUy, I asked some boys
what kind of reading interested
them most? One replied, "Air
plane Engines"; another said,
"Space Flying"; while a third
said, "To understand how a TV
works." Then when I began to
tell them of the marvelous ma
chinery inside their own heads,
they were fascinated. I gave
them only one illustration of
what happens when they see an
object( and how the light waves
reflected therefrom are changed
to electrical impulses which in
turn are registered and stored
in a minute memory compart
ment of their brain to be taken
out and used years later.
Terrific Results Possible
My point is this: Physiologists
tell us that we are using our
brains at only three per cent of
capacity. If so, think what it
would mean to our future and
the future of the nation to in
crease this 3 per cent to only
6 per cent. It could not only
double the efficiency of every
public school graduate, but it
could double our standard of
living and it could make every
one of us better, healthier, and
happier. Then every teacher
would gladly be given double
her present salary, and more!
Communications
Letters to the Editor must bear
the name and address of the writer
although under certain circum
stances the use of a pen name or
initial for publication is permis
sible. The Mall Tribune reserves
the right to edit all letters with
an eye to clarification and conden
sation. Letters submitted for pub
licaUon must not exceed 400 words
Law Separated
To the Editor: Many citizens
have been sending Biblical ques
tions for some time to the Min
isters Roundtable of Protestant
association of ministers of Med
ford. I have listened to their sec
tarian ideas on many subjects,
and can say they have never giv
en a true New Testament answer
to any question so far.
So, for the benefit of all hon
est Christians in all churches, I
ask all ministers, why don't they
divorce the Law of Moses (John
1-17) from the Law of Christ. The
law ended with John the Baptist
(Luke 16-16, Romans 10-4). Law
given by Moses (Exodus 34-37.
38). Law abolished by Christ
(Second Corinthians 3-6 to 13)
abolished 1957 years ago.
I am an evangelist and teacher,
and separate the Law of Moses
from the Law of Christ. I teach
the commandment of Christ and
have had 37 years in evangelist
work. Am an independent dis
ciple of Christ. Am open for
calls to any group who want the
pure doctrine of Christ.
Evangelist William E. Brown
21 Genessee st.
Medford, Ore.
People Act The 9km
To the Editor: Mrs. J. N. Tay
lor's description of the actions
of the stray dog as described in
her letter of February 3, Sun
day Tribune, was very touching.
People act the same way when
anyone attempts to feed them
the Word of God.
Gloria Dey
333 Cross st.
Medford, Ore.
KILLED BY AUTO
Portland U.R) Anna Cul
ver, 71, was killed last night
when struck by a car. It was
Portland's fourth 1957 traffic
fatality.
Give yourself
raise
2
Per Annum