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FOtni VEDFOBD (OREGON)
MedfordTribune
"Ivrryone in Soutnern Oregon
Reada The Mail Tribune"
Publuried Daily Except Saturday by
MEDFORD PRINTING CO
27-28 Hiorth Fir St. Phone 2-8141
ROBERT W RUHL. Editor
HERB GREY Adverttiing Manager
Q GERALD LATHAM Buaineia Manager
CERIC AO-EN JR. Managing Editor
EARL H ADAMS City Editor
HAR5V CHIPMAN Telegraph Editor
RICHARD JEWETT S porta Editor
Q OLIVE ST ARCHER Society Editor
DALE ERICKSON. Circulation Mgr.
An Independent Newspaper
m icon4 eUa matter at
Mr Cwnom wider Act of
inarcn 4. 1837
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m A T I O W A I. EDITOIIAi.
ASSOCllA'ieN
'H.'.IHl
Flight o' Time
lord Und Jackson County
g.pry from th files of The
Mil tribune 10, 20, 30. 40
nd 0 years ago.
o 6Hr- I
far, association l
It
10 YHR9 AGO
CFet. 21. 1M7 (Friday)
Jackson county chapter, Na
tional Foundation for Infantile
J Paralysis, collects $14,443, ac
cording to Ralph Sweeney,
countj treasurer.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Sr-jje Pot column: Upstate
editors are nov fjatfootedly,
long-windedly, and fervently
endorsing the current prevue
of spring.
20 YEARS AGO
Feb. 21. 1937 (Sunday)
O The Jackson county chapter
O of the American Red Cross for
flood relief collects $3,721 dur
O O g recent campaign. ,
O RusseIlAcheson, junior high
schoo? athletic coach, and Rob
ert Emmens, Medford, will at
tend a training course in Army
c3 flying at Randolph Field, Tex.
O
J3 YEARS AGO
O Feb. 21. 1927 (Monday)
n Kiwanis clubs to back cham-
berOof commerce plan for val
ley improvements.
3 o ?wo hundred copies of the
j o ,Mafl Tribune are ordered by A.
db. Rosenbaum, for the Southern
pacific railroad, to be taken to
o AshlaiW and Gold Hill for pass
engers on the "marooned" trains
0jin those citiqj.
O o '
W YBARS AGO
Q Peb. 21. J917 (Wednesday)
0 0 Iffledford city, touncil retains
E.oM. Wilson to audit city re-
corders books,
o
Prof. F.
r Paimar nf thp
Sxperiment station, lectures on
O soils of tha Rogue valley at the
O library.
u What's Your I.Q.?
or ten correct Is superior; se
e$ or eight U excellent: five r
O I1X (OOd.
1. fSBO: The first penny news
paper published in Philadelphia
I .rp f-t Atti
-r, -was iiaiiieu x v ;
o o 2. Who is the husband of Cer-
O vagfes' Thera Panza?
0 3. BIBLE: Name the conquer-
(Uig son of Nun.
f What race was named in
o O (Jommemoration of a famous an-
O cient battle on the Plain of
o Greece?
u n 5. Did Homer or Vergil write
u the epic poem "The Aeneid"?
2 Stockholm is the capital of
JJorway; true or false?
w An alloy of copper
and
zinc is called what?
O - Qt which country was Kan-
taro Suzuki the last Premier?
O 9. Is it proper to use "consist
Q Oently" as a synonym for con
O stantly?
O 10. "Here's your hat, what's
q your hurry?" B. C. Constello.
mia UIC tlllC 3UU5 Ul a
n Play
Oq Jk,nsrs: 1- The Cant. 2. San-
crse) Pani. 3. Joshua. 4. Mara-
w au x tr :i e f 1 c
411 u 11. v Bigu, o. x aim. k7wv
O den. 9P Brass. 8. Japan. 9. No.
10. Tills (and refrain; 1904).
Wc&hingion Graduate
O iQtmLana urnce jod
O o Portland Irving W. Ander-
-r . j i r r i
O son. graduate of the University
of Washington, has been 'named
manager of the Oregon state
- land office of the bureau of land
manag(lient. State Supervisor
Virgil T. Heath has announced.
Anderson will replace Pierce
M. Rice, land office manager
C-Jsince January, 1956, who is be-
O ing transferred to the new posi
tion of adjudicator in the area
lands office at Portland.
O
MAIL TRIBUNE
Consistent In Inconsistency
Charles E. Bohlen, U.S. Ambassador to Russia is
due in Washington today or tomorrow. He will con
sult with President Eisenhower and Secretary Dulles,
and it is reported tender his resignation.
If so his term of office will be about par for the
course.
U.S. Ambassadors to Moscow have never par
ticularly enjoyed the job under normal conditions
but under existing conditions of tension, suspicion
and dislike, it is a back breaking, frustrating task.
Our guess is "Charley B." returning to Washington,
with perhaps a side trip to Palm Beach, will feel like
a life-termer, suddenly granted a parole.
"THE timing from the standpoint of .Soviet history is
excellent.
Just a year ago, Nikita S. Khrushchev, Communist
Party boss in Soviet Russia, was talking about Joseph
Stalin's "mania for greatness." At a secret session of
the Party's Twentieth Congress in Moscow on Feb.
24 and 25, Khrushchev was outdoing "imperialist"
complaints against the former Russian dictator. Lis
ten to this description of Stalin :
"He had completely lost consciousness of reality; he
demonstrated his suspicion and haughtiness not only to
individuals in the U.S.S.R. but in relation to whole parties
and nations."
Khrushchev named names and gave dates in his
attack on Stalin's "brutal force."-It appeared that a
rewriting of all Bolshevik history might be in the
making. But less than a year later, at a New Year's
Eve party in the Kremlin, Khrushchev was singing
a much different tune, to-wit:
"Stalin was a great fighter against imperialism. He was
a great Marxist. The imperialists call us Stalinists. Well,
when it comes to fighting imperialists, we are all Stalinists."
THE rehabilitation of Stalin by Khrushchev, his
principal defamer, has been continuing. In a toast
to visiting Chinese Communists on Jan. 17 he called
Stalin a "model Communist," true to Marxism-Leninism.
"In the essential and the essential is class
interests ' Khrushchev avowed, "God grant that
every Communist should be able to fight like Stalin
to defend them."
rN THE surface, Khrushchev's about-face on Stalin
is as difficult to understand as is his prayerful
language in the Chinese embassy in Moscow. But
events since Stalin's death show a consistency be
neath the inconsistency. When GeorgiM. Malenkov
became premier of Soviet Russia on March 6, 1953,
the day after Stalin died he declared that the stand
ard of living in the Soviet Union "can and must" be
raised.
On Feb. 8, 1955, Malenkov resigned, confessing
his guilt and responsibility for "the unsatisfactory
state of affairs which has arisen in agriculture." He
specifically endorsed a new Communist plan for
agricultural recovery "on the only correct foundation :
the further development by every means of heavy
industry."
J7VEN before Malenkov's resignation, a shift in
" Russia's post-Stalin emphasis on increased pro
duction of consumer goods had been announced. On
Jan. 24, 1955, Dmitri T. Shepilov, then editor of
Pravada, had called the turn.
Now that Shepilov has been replaced as Soviet
Foreign Minister by Andrei A. Gromyko, Shepilov,
known in the party as an expert on ideology and
propaganda, goes back to his old job as one of the
eight secretaries of the party's central committee
under Khrushchev.
CHEPILOV is generally considered a protege of
Khrushchev; Gromyko of Vyacheslav M. Molotov.
"Iron Backside," as Stalin called Molotov, was one
of the former dictator's sternest lieutenants. Until
Molotov's resignation as Foreign Minister last June 1;
he was the leader of the old-line Communists.
But the Moscow radio now is backing the foreign
policy outlined by Shepilov as recently as Feb. 12.
So his reassignment may reflect a need for his prop
aganda talents within Russia rather than a change in
the country's foreign policy.
CO WHAT?
Well, merely that Sir Winston Churchill was
right, when he said that Soviet Russia's diplomacy
was a riddle, shrouded in mystery, wrapped up in
an enigma, or words to that effect.
Probably Ambassador Bohlen after his service
there knows more about it than Americans who have
never lived in Russia, but our hunch is he would be
the last to claim he clearly understands it.
Neither do we. R.W.R.
Unknown Comfort
New York (U.PJ America's
new magic carpet a 41,000
mile steel and concrete highway
system that will link every state
of the nation will permit mo
torists to travel with speed,
safety and comfort unknown to
day. Steelways, official publication
of American Iron and Steel In
stitute, said motorists will be
able to drive from coast to coast
without spotting a red light.
They'll save a penny per mile in
lower fuel and auto operating
costs.
The publication said the ve
hicles will roll along on multi
lane, divided highways at auth
orized speeds up to 70 miles an
hour and could well reduce auto
mobile fatalities by 3,500 a year.
"In 13 years this could spell a
saving in lives of more than 45,
000, as compared with today's
annual toll of more than 35,000."
Thursday, February 21, 1957
Due on New Roads
The vast highway construction
program will roll into high gear
this spring. The program will
cost $33 billion and be spread
over a 13-year period.
Steelways said an estimated
49 million tons of steel wUl be
utilized in the project which will
be equivalent to 60 per cent of
all steel ronsumed in direct war
use between 1941-45.
The publication noted that the
advantages of the program wiU
fan out far beyond safer, swifter
travel for cars, trucks and buses.
It said:
"The interstate freeways will
speed the dispersal of key indus
trial plants. In the event of war
they provide a defense lifeline
for moving troops and supplies
and for evacuating cities.
"Moreover, they will create
sites for new factories, ware
houses and shopping centers in
our fast-expanding economy."
Legislative
By ERIC ALLEN JR.
Mail Tribune Managing Editor
Salem Robert Duncan, Jack
son county's freshman represen
tative and the first Democrat to
represent the county in the legis
lature in many years, has ac
quired the nickname of "The
Scotchman" among many of his
colleagues.
Duncan carries heavier re
sponsibilities than most fresh
man members of the house. He is
chairman of the judiciary com
mittee, which has before it some
100 bills dealing with mihy legal
technicalities, changes proposed
for many statutes dealing with
judicial administration, and a
wide variety of other bills which
logically fit into no other com
mittee's category.
In addition, he is a member
of the ways and means commit
tee, perhaps the most important
of the legislature, in which orig
inate, or to which are referred,
all bills which would call for
spending public money. The
ways and means committee is a
joint committee, having on it
members of both house and sen
ate ,and its members, because of
their authority over spending
proposals, have much influence
with other members.
Receives Nickname
It is in his committee work.
and his protests in the house
against spending proposals he
thinks unnecessary or unsound,
that Duncan received his nick
name, of which he is unashamed,
and perhaps a bit proud.
His committee jobs keep him
busy, but in addition he has all
the other duties of a legislator,
such a$ attending sessions of the
house, answering mail, and so
on.
Here is a typical day's sched
ule for Duncan:
8 a.m. Arrives at Capitol
from home, checks desk.
8:15 a.m. Attends meeting of
subcommittee of ways and means
committee. (Sometimes two sub
committees to which he belongs
both have meetngs scheduled, in
which case he attends the more
important, or sometimes attends
both briefly, in turn). .
These meetings usuaUy last
until 10 a.m., when the house
convenes, staying in session un
til about 11:30 "a.m.
Checks Mail
After the morning adjourn
ment, Duncan checks over his
mail, and dictates replies to his
secretary (his wife, Marijane
Duncan) until about 12:20 or
12:30 p.m. During this period he
usually remains at his desk on
the floor of the house, but some
times goes to a committee room.
Legislators have no offices of
their own. On the floor of the
house, there are a constant series
of interruptions visitors, lobby
ists, other legislators some of
them social, but most of them
for quick conferences on pending
legislation.
At about 12:30, he will "grab
a quick bite to eat" at the cap
itol or the nearby Elks club, and
at 1 p.m. on two or three days
each week will conduct a meet
ing of his judiciary committee,
which will last until about 3,
when the ways and means sub
committees meet again, until"
about 5 p.m.
Night Meetings
For the next hour or more, he
will again tackle his mail, and
about 6:30 p.m. will arrive home.
On three nights a wek, he has
evening meetings of ways and
means subcommittees, lasting
from 7:30 to 10 p.m.
At 10, he will check in to the
judiciary committee room to or
ganize the work the committee
will take up the following day.
Sometimes he will write letters
to constituents or others through
out the state asking for their
views on legislation to come be
fore the groups on which he
serves.
Before going home, he will
check the "third reading calen
dar," which is a list of measures
scheduled for final house action
the following morning, and read
the bills on it. He usually gets
to bed about 12:30 a.m.
Handles Correspondence
On days when the committee
schedule is less demanding, he
can devote more time to study
ing bills and handling corres
pondence. On some occasions,
usually week ends, he wiU make
trips to inspect institutions whose
budgets will be coming before
his subcommittee.
With this schedule, he has
found little time for any social
life, and usually turns down the
many invitations which are ex
tended to most legislators.
He has not introduced a great
number of bills of his own, but
there are several whichhe has,
and others in which he has some
particular interest. Among these
are his measure to eliminate cap
ital punishment in the state,
which he thinks has a good
chance of passing in one form or
another; a bill to validate, for
bonding purposes ,the consolida
tion of the Medford, West Side
and Oak Grove school districts,
and another which would ex
tend, under most circumstances,
the protection of workmen's
compensation to men who are
nominally self-employed and are
not covered under present legis
lation. This would affect many
"gyppo" loggers in Jackson
county.
Work Most Demanding
The ways and means work
probably is the most demanding.
The two subcommittees to which
he belongs handle the budget re
quests of a wide variety of state
institutions and departments, in
cluding civil defense, the indus-
Letter
ft V ' i
ROBERT bUNCAN
Nicknamed The Scotchman'
trial accident and unemploy
ment compensation commissions,
the 'state board of health, the
board of control, the civil serv
ice commission, the state's courts,
the attorney general's office, the
public welfare department, and
others. They also are making
studies of requests for pay in
creases for virtually all state
employees.
These budgets are gone over
line by line, each item checked
against the amount in the pres
ent year's budget and against the
amount spent during the prior
fiscal year.
The subcommittee's findings
are reported to the full commit
tee, which can adopt, refer back
or amend them. When adopted,
they are reported out to the
house. The total amount in all
these bills represents the total
of the final budget for the state,
which this year will total prob
ably close to $300,000,000 or
more.
Communications
Letters to the Editor must bear the name and address of the writer, although
under certain circumstances the use of a pen name or initial for publication
is permissible. The Mail Tribune reserves the right to edit all letters with a
view to clarification and condensation. Letters submitted for publication must
not exceed 400 words. .
Feart Air Poison
To the Editor: Dear friends
and fellow citizens, may I step
into your circle, and voice my
opinion about the freeway?
Some of you are tired of free
way talks, but it needs to be
discussed, it's very vital. Yes,
I feel sorry, not for myself, but
for everyone that will be affect
ed by this unjust measure of men
in power. Some few weeks ago
when the Highway Commission
sent their very able spokesman,
Tom Edwards, to give a talk,
he painted everything so fine
and beautifully that some people
got rocked to sleep and now
think it's all right. But the peo
ple of Medford have a right to
demand a vote. We look to the
city elders for help the same
as the American people look to
the president to shield them
from the enemy.
The for and against of this
thing have all been discussed
but the most important factor
of it all has, by many, been for
gotten, but one writer told the
whole truth: Mr. F. J. Clifford
of 1211 West Main street in the
Sunday paper a few weeks ago
(Feb. 10). I will repeat part of
the article:
"A heavy toll will be required
of us who live here, if and when
it is built at the proposed loca
tion, for the lethal monoxide
and hydrocarbon gases pouring
from car and train-size trucks
off the elevated structure and,
being heavier than air, will
creep across the city, exacting
demands on health and life.
"This is no idle speculation,
for increasing numbers of cities
are prohibiting all but vitally
necessary gas burning vehicles
from city-center streets during
the windless days of late sum
mer and fall." Mr. Clifford.
Oh, people of Medford, do you
realize what this means? It is
called progress, but so also is
the atomic bomb called progress,
and it creates fear and destruc
tion. Now then this is the great
problem and the question: how
are we to avoid having to
breathe this poisonous air?
God formed Adam out of the
dust, but he had no life until
God breathed into his nostrils
the same breath we have today
if it's pure and free from man
made poisons. Pure, fresh air is
the very breath of God. It is the
life giving element -that gives
us life, health, happiness, de
prive the lungs of it and you
won't feel good. The first thing
a new born baby needs is air
or it will die. Air is life. It's
God's law, obey it!
We trust in God, but we must
do our part to prevent this evil.
Suppose that we all would have
poisoned air to breathe, the re
sult would be this: Colds would
increase at an alarming rate.
Colds, so called, do not come
from a draft, they come from
bad air. Now, if we would have
to breathe bad air, every known
disease could gain a foothold
on us. The doctor could not cure
you permanently. The doctors,
druggists and undertakers would
MRS. J. W. WILSOlf,
of Houston, Tex., mji:
"I triad til upirisi but
St. Joseph Aspirin For
Children is the one for
my children. They like
it; Tm sore of dossfe."
ST. JOSEPH ASPIRIN FOR CHIIMK
Matter of Fact sy jeMPh
THE COMPANY TOWNS
Kemerovo The plump, fussy
restaurant manager is .greatly
upset by the party of miners
demanding a
table. They
are too cheer
fully tight for
his 4aste. But
they grow an
gry and shout:
"The reason
you don't want
us in your
damned place
is that . we're
Joseph Aliop
members of the working class.
You only want those others in
business suits."
So, fearing a scene, he lets
them in. It is lucky for the
miners that he did not call in
stead on the militiaman always
stationed in the vestibule. For
this large, bleakly ornate room,
with its depressed and intermit
tent orchestra, is literally Ke
merovo's sole restaurant in the
Russian usage of the word. No
where else in this great and
growing mining"' center of a
quarter of a million people, can
you sit at a table and have
both a meal and a glass of
Vodka.
In these circumstances, the
restaurant atmosphere tends to
be a bit rowdy. But at the big,
pompously pseudo - classical
"House of Culture," which the
Kemrovo Coal Trust has just
built in the miners' district, the
atmosphere is prim enough to
please the strictest nursery gov
erness. In the wide lobby, during the
halfway interval of the new
movie (about the loves of a boy
and girl for their dear tractors
andVne another) the young peo
ple are dancing, mostly boys
with boys and girls with girls.
Boys, who have actually cap
tured members of the other sex
are proudly buying their girls
do more business than ever be-
fore, but they also would be af
fected in time,. I am sorry to
say.
Now then, have we faith in
God to guide us m wisdom? Our
faith must be a living faith that
hath works, for faith witfiou
works is dead and wiU accom
plish nothing. Let every one of
you write a short letter saying
that you do not approve of the
park. Sign your na.me and ad
dress and address your letter to:
The City Council of Medford.
Also get all your friends and
acquaintances interested to do
the same.
Mrs. Lydia Ehrke,
' ' 200 Tripp st.
Medford, Ore.
Did You Ever Try?
To the Editor: I saw an article
in the morning Examiner as fol
lows: Tighter Banking Bill
urged.
Now that should not be any
harder to do than shooting a
duck in your bath' tub, but did
you ever try to get a banker to
loosen up?
Everett Acklin
Ashland, Ore.
Reading improvement
Classes Under Way
Classes in reading improve
ment are being held for the first
time in the Medford High school
according to public school of
ficials. The class, tought three times
a week from 4 until 4:45 p.m., is
limited to 10 volunteer students
and is taught by Henry DeVoss,
speech teacher for the public
schools.
The class is designed to in
crease to maximum efficiency,
the reading rate and comprehen
sion, and augments regular class
work done by the students.
The class, formerly offered
only in the junior high school
and elementary school levels,
lasts for 10 weeks.
What, For How Much?
At no other time would you spend a like amount with
out knowing in advance exactly what you are getting.
Why not investigate . .. now . . . what you get and
what is involved in a funeral service, before the actual
need arises? ;
DAY OR NIGHT PHONE 2-8030
Ghapel Mortuary
Across from the Courthouse
Frank Morgan Harold Snodgrass
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
greyish cakes and soda pop in
the buffet. Upstairs, a children's
song group is letting go with
"Thank you Party, thank you
great Party."
TN the big lecture hall, a rather
small crowd is glumly watch
ing a propaganda film on war.
And in the House of Culture's
vestibule, two irreverent miners
are making a joke about the
Comsomol's display of villains
of the month a set of photo
graphs of drunks, idlers and
other uncultured persons. The
director of the House of Cul
ture, a demobilized political of
ficer from the army, explains
proudly:
"Our main task is to organize
the recreation of the people."
At the miners' club (each
mine and every factory has a
club) the menu of activities is
much the same as at the House
of Culture. But the building is
smaller, shabbier and looks
more lived in. Here there" is an
almost bar-like buffet, where
bread and sausages and wine
and weak beer are sold. And
here an obvious candidate for
the Comsomol villain display is
having a loud argument with
one of the omnipresent militia
men. These sketches on trifles seen
in Kemerovo may- help .to sug
gest why places like this affect
the Western traveler as though
they were cities on the other
side of the moon. For the trav
eler himself, the sensation is
not exactly " disagreeable. In
truth, I have enjoyed almost
every moment of this Siberian
journey, mosUy because the in
numerable people I ' have met
have generally been very pleas
ant and often very impressive
human beings.
FURTHERMORE, although the
Soviet Union is certainly no
Lotusland, the average man's
lot has certainly been greatly
improved in recent years. The
people still have the greyish
look that comes from eating a
great deal of starch and too
little protein and fat. Although
warm and serviceable, the
clothes! they, wear are inexpres
sibly dreary. Their housing is
shockingly overcrowded. But
there is no doubt about it. The
time of real, misery and real
fear has altogether receded into
the past.
The strangeness that one feels
really lies, I think, in the fact
that these Soviet cities rather
resemble carefully organized
company towns of the earlier
period of American industry.
There is much literal truth in
the comparison. The mine or
factory not only provides the
elllllMBeiVeiSe
i
Can you save by shopping for
automobile insurance?
You may have read the recent ad in Life, The
Saturday Evening Post, Time and Newsweek. It's
about a family that compared costs and services and
then decided on the policy offered by their local '
Travelers agent.
For certain protection you can rely on The
Travelers. And for the service that means so much
you can count on us. ti
DON STATHOS, INSUROR you Jff
Professional Insurance Protection , ""7 m'K1
220 South Central, Medford '""7
PHONE 2-2677 BKT
representing THE TRAVELERS Hartford, Connecticut
club, the clinic, the dining hall
and the vacation camp for its
workers. It also builds and owns
most of their housing a strong
link that one.
BUT this is, by no means tha
whole story. As the forego
ing short sketches may perhaps
suggest, very great efforts are
also made to keep the working
masses on the path of virtue.
Governess - management, gov
erness - municipality and gov
erness - state aU join hands to
diminish the temptations to be
"uncultured" and to encourage
right thinking, general good be
havior and, above aU, unremit
ting hard work.
Thus far the system has pro
duced the flesired result. With
carrot and with stick, this coun
try has not only trained up a
remarkable new executive class.
It has also trained a wholly new
industrial working class with a
constantly increasing level of
technical skill.
Two things have struck me
about these Russian industrial
workers. One is their sturdy
pride in "moya professy my
specialty." The other is their
unvarying habit of pointing out
that "We are members of the
working clas." Judging by my
own experiences, at 1et, those
miners in the restaurant were
wholly characteristic in their
interesting consciousness of the
wide difference between "us of
the working class" and "those
others in business suits."
Copyright ft57 New Jork
Herald Tribune Inc.
Marie McDonald Treated
For Old Head nury
Hollywoed (U.R) Actress
Marie (The Body) McEftnald to
day was under observation at St.
Joseph's Hospital for a head in
jury which her physician said
she received several months ago
in a traffic accident. She was
reported in good condition.
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