o
FOUR MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE
UNE
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ntred u second clan nutter at
Medford Oregon under Act ot
March 3. 1897
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Flight or Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10. 20. 30, 40
and 50 years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
Fa. 28. 1947 (Friday)
Leaders George Nichols and
Fred Enele assisted Bellview
sheep club members in obtaining
lambs recently.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: All the
leading Spring flowers, and the
perennial "blooming idiot" are
now blooming.
20 YEARS AGO
Fab. 28. 1937 (Sunday)
A program by pupils of Eve
Benson studio will be presented
as a spring recital at Craterian
theater.
Apprentice fair s c h e d u led
soon under sponsorship of Med
ford aDDrentice commission is
announced by Leland A. Mentz
er, commission secretary.
80 YEARS AGO
Fab. 28, 1927 (Monday)
State Supreme court enjoins
moving of county seat from Jack
sonville on technical error,
which was failure to publish
pamphlet with pro and con argu
ments. Medford Realty board spon
sors broadcast of Crescent City
Harbor Improvement banquet at
Grants Pass over KMED.
40 YEARS AGO
Fab. 28. 1917 (Wednesday)
Medals and certificates of
award won at the Panama Pacif
ic exposition at San Francisco
are being received by local peo
ple who exhibited valley pro
ducts at the exposition.
From Local and Personal col
umn: Tyson Beall of the Central
Point district is in Medford visit
ing friends and attending to busi
ness matters.
What's Your I.Q.?
Ntne or ten eorree't la superior; sev
en or eight Is excellent; five er
six is rood.
1. 1791: Which body appoint
ed Gen. St. Clair Governor of
the Northwest Territory?
2. Should U. S. flag be
flown day and night over a State
capitol?
3. Bible: What has Sychar,
place of the Samaritan ministry,
in common with Schechem and
Ashar?
4. Did the Curies or Becquerel
discover the radioactive prop
erties of Uranium?
5. Do rose growers ever plant
rose bushes in the fall?
6. Which U. S. President kill
ed a man in a duel?
7. Who was the detective char
acter in the novel "Study in
Scarlet"?
8. Under the Nazi regime was
Nuremburg or Berlin known as
the pdgeant city?
9. Is a cretin a kind of calico,
idiot, or drape?
10. "Men's minds are too
ready to excuse guilt in"
whom?
Answers: 1. Congress. 2. No.
Day only. 3. All are held to be
the same community. 4. Bac-
querel. 1886. 5. Yes. 6. Andrew
Jacksori. 7. Sherlock Holmes. 8.
Nuremburg. 9. Kind of idiot. 10
"Themselves." Liry.
Kaiser Net Earnings
Amount To $42,349,131
Oakland. Calif. (U.PJ Un
audited net earnings of Kaiser
Aluminum and Chemical Corp
oration for 1956 amounted to
$42,349,131, equivalent to $2.71
a common share.
Net earnings for 155 were
$36,021,114, equivalent to $2.43
share.
0
"Lest We Forget"
Editor Stanton of the Roseburg Review and Con
gressman Harris Ellworth's
follows the Ellsworth line.
He suspects all Democrats and Democratic pro
posals. He sees a communist nigger in every Demo
cratic wood-pile, and no clear distinction between
communism and socialism
AT THE present time, he "smells a mice" in Gov
fitnnni T-Tnlmcjc' ropont cnopial mncca era nn cf a fiO
resources development. He
written by the Governor
Review's pet aversions Senator Dick Neuberger. If
this suspicion should prove to be unfounded, well
anyway, quote :
"If it was not written by Neuberger it at least follows
the crafty line of political conservation practiced by the vo
cal Oregon Senator. Inasmuch as Neuberger has made no
bones of his desire to run Oregon politics there is room for
suspicion that he at least collaborated in the Holmes' plan."
"ROOM for suspicion" is the understatement of
the year, as far as the News Review is concerned.
There is ALWAYS room' for "suspicion" where
this paper, formerly edited by Oregon's ex-Congressman,
is concerned "always room for one more" as
the saying goes, if a Democrat is the target.
e e e e
FDITOR STANTON not only SUSPECTS Governor
Holmes as a "stooge" for Senator Neuberger who
he says aspires to be the political dictator of this
free-flying and free-wheeling state, but this term
"conservation" it seems in his judgment is only a
smoke-screen for such anti-Republican and pro-socialistic
ambitions. The real intent he believes behind the
term being simply to drive out free enterprise and
the American "Way of Life." Not only that but LIQUI
DATE the California-Oregon Power Company, and
transfer the waters of the Umpqua, Rogue and Klam
ath rivers to Southern California !
Quite a bundle, as the saying goes.
Just HOW this could be done the Roseburg editor
does not make clear. But he closes this warning of
a 5-alarm fire as far as the state, by telling his readers
not to forget, quote :
"Don't forget that a blueprint for a "Ladder of Rivers"
is still very much in existence, but that the water proposed
to be shipped to California isn't from the Columbia but,
rather from the Umpqua, Rogue and Klamath. And don't
forget, too, that these three rivers support the Copco hydro
electric system, a system which stands very much in the
way of public power taking over southwestern Oregon and
northern California. And don't forget that Neuberger, et al,
have public power as a primary political objective."
Well, the Mail Tribune is for public power, where
it promises to better serve
via a multiple federal operation, but aside Irom sup
porting the Talent federal
ect, we have never advocated and never expect to
advocate public power involving the liquidation of
"Copco" and sending the
qua and Klamath rivers down to irrigate Hollywood
and"L.A."
Again, just HOW could
The "Review" can't just be "seeing things under
the bed" again it must have some facts to sustain
such an alarming and catastrophic prediction. In the
interest of truth and the protection of the public wel
fare in this state we feel
it has, to sustain such a prophecy.
Until we get them however, we think we will
control and resist our original impulse which was to
put our cabin on the Rogue up for auction at this
coming week end Midway sale. R.W.R.
How About Conservation?
To oppose a policy simply because the opposing
party favors it, has always seemed to this department
unworthy of an adult mind,
might be involved.
But that is the only explanation we can find for
the Roseburg Review s strong opposition to the term
conservation.
Conservation of our natural resources has always
been accepted in Oregon as desirable, and particularly
since the timber frauds around the start of the present
century.
Who doesn't favor conservation of our forests, the
principle of "sustained timber yield", the preserva
tion and perpetuation, as far as advancing popula
tions allow, of our fish and game?
TAKE the motto of the National Wild Life Federa
tion for example, which reads as follows, quote:
To encourage the intelligent management of the life
sustaining resources of the earth its productive soil its
essential water resources its protective forests and plant
life and its dependent wildlife and to promote and en
courage the knowledge and appreciation of these resources,
their interrelationship and wise use, without which there
can be little hope for a continuing abundant life.
We should think all reasonable people regardless
of party affiliations could subscribe to such a doctrine,
and particularly in this state which still posseses such
a store of natural resources, in sharp contrast with
nearly all states in the East and Middle West.
DUT according to the Republican press, as repre
" sented by the Roseburg Review and some other
strongly G.O.P. adherents, all this talk of "conserva
tion" is just a cheap political "gimmick" to get into
office, and when in, to stay there.
IT WOULD clarify the situation greatly if the
"Review" or some of the other strongly anti-conservation
papers would cite a few facts state just
WHAT principles of conservation they oppose
"where, who, what and why". R.W.R.
Thursday, February 28, 1957
successor, quite naturally
"creeping" or otherwise.
thinks indeed, it was not
at all but by one of the
the public interest, usually
power and irrigation proj
waters of the Rogue, Ump
it be done?
the paper should give facts
regardless of which party
Soviets Open New Attacks on
Tito in Campaign for
By CHARLES M. McCANN
United Press Correspondent
Soviet Russia has opened a
new campaign against President
Tito of Yuogslavia as part of its
attempt to
tighten its grip
on its satel
lites. Criticism of
T i to 's "inde
pendent Com
munism" has
been intensify
ing for several
weeks in Rus
sia and other
Soviet bloc
countries.
Charlei HcCans
Now the Soviet government
has put an economic squeeze on
Tito by withdrawing from com
mitment to grant him promised
OL
From Washington
By Roscoa Drummond
OUT OF THE IMPASSE
Washington A negotiated so
lution, which would bring about
the withdrawal of Israeli forces
from Egypt with assurances
against new Egyptian raids and
discriminations, seems within
reach.
If this end is achieved in the
next few days and the ingredi
ents of agreement appear defin
itely at hand then everybody,
with the possible exception of
the Soviet Union which prefers
turmoil, will be the winner.
It seems to me that the United
States has righUy committed it
self, both morally and, in all
reality, irrevocably, to estab
lishing for all nations, including
Israel, the right of innocent pas
sage through the Egyptian-held
Gulf of Aqaba to the Israeli Port
of Elath.
For its part, Israel now seems
disposed to accept "assurances,"
which are less binding than
"guarantees," as a basis for with
drawal. This would be a wise
and justifiable act of faith in
the firm intentions of the United
Nations, and the United States
not to permit a resumption of
the Egyptian actions which pro
voked the invasion.
AT has brought this ex-
osive and apparently irrec
oncilable impasse to the border
of peaceful solution?
The Israeli position was that
its very survival depended upon
being guaranteed against re
peated Arab raids from the Gaza
Strip and uninhibited access to
the Port of Elath.
The United Nations position
was that, despite the provoca
tions, the Israeli invasion of
Egypt in force was a massive vi
olation of the U. N. charter and
that the U. N. couldn't give any
guarantees to Israel as long as
it was violating the charter.
The statlemate: no Israeli with
drawal without guarantees; no
guarantees without Israeli with
drawal. This deadlock could only be
broken by two things:
Recognition by the United
States that the U. N. had become
so involved in the technicalities
of the dispute that in the end it
was dealing primarily with what
it would do that is, vote sanc
tions if the deadlock were not
broken, rather than dealing ef
fectively with the substance of
the deadlock.
Recognition by Israel that in
the end its best interest would
be served rather by relying on
the U. S. and the U. N. than by
provoking the aroused hostility
of the free world through try
ing to obtain its rights by force.
e e
IT SEEMS to me that there has
been a confused and over
elaborate concentration on the
need of making sure that Israel
is not "rewarded" as the result
of its invasion of Egypt.
This would be an important
concern were it not for two cir
cumstances: The responsibllty for the
series of conflicts between Egypt
Anteafer Exterminates
Termites From File
Washington (U.R) The
National Zoo had termites in its
files.
So it called in Tommy, a
hungry anteater who lives in a
nearby cage.
He spent a wild and happy
hour Wednesday eating from
drawer to drawer in an old
wooden file in the zoo office
building.
However, Insect authority
Thomas E. Snyder, who acted as
host, said using anteaters for
ridding homes of termites prob
ably never would catch on.
"Anteaters don't like humans
much," he said. "And they smell
bad."
500 English Miners
Strike Over Cup of Tea
Chesterfield, England -XU.R)
Five hundred miners struck over
a cup of tea Tuesday.
They struck in protest when
the mine's canteen 'manager
fired waitress Francess Hancock
because she complained the
weak tea he made was not good
enough for the miners.
credits of up to $250 million.
There is no doubt that the
Russian leaders have opened up
against Tito again because they
regard .him as a menace.
After the successful Polish
revolt against Moscow domina
tion, and the Hungarian revolt
that failed, Russia is doing
everything it can to- safeguard
itself against further trouble. '
Tough "Stalinist" leaders are
being strengthened in aU of the
East European Communist satel
lite countries.
It is reported that one reason
Russia reneged on its promise
of credits to Yugoslavia is that
Tito refused to help in the build
up by recognizing the East Ger
man Communist regime.
Dangerous To Russians
But aside from that, Tito re-
and Israel is so interwoven that
a similarly interwoven solution is
not only realistic but justifiable.
Both countries are at fault and
I should think there is no moral
reason why the conditions which
would bring about a solution
should not come into being si
multaneously or as nearly si
multaneously as possible.
Secondly, the real test of
whether the U.N. has "reward
ed aggression" is surely not
whether Israel withdraws before
it has some solid assurance that
Egypt's offenses against Israel
will not be repeated but whether
Israel is being given anything
in the wake of the invasion that
it didn't deserve before the in
vasion. It isn't.
OECRETARY DULLES' initia-
tive to break out of this
hobble is apparenUy yielding
results. With increasing precision
he is assuring Premier Ben-Gur-
lon that if Israel withdraws its
forces, the U.S. will act to estab
lish the international right of
free passage through the Gulf of
Aqaba. This is not reward; this
would be righting a long-standing
injustice.
Reports from Cairo suggest
that Egypt may be ready to ac
cept u.w. troops In the Gaza
atrip to prevent border raids.
If not, the same protection could
be achieved by Israel inviting
the U. N. troops to stand guard
on the Israeli border.
(C) 1857 New York Herald
Tribune Inc.
In the Day's News
By FRANK
At .its first hearing yesterday
before the house judiciary
committee of the legislature at
Salem the resolution proposing
amendment of the Oregon con
stitution to abolish the death
penalty brought out some inter
esting opinions,
Warden Clarence Gladden of
the state penitentiary told the
committee he had once been bit
terly opposed to abolishing capi
tal punishment because of the
murder of his 20-year-old sister.
But
He added
He now believes the death
penalty is NO DETERRENT TO
HOMICIDE and should be abol
ished. He cited statistics to
prove that the incidence of mur
der is, if anything, smaller in
states where capital punishment
has been abolished than in states
where it remains in force.
WARDEN GLADDEN' S state
ment that -his earlier views
on capital punishment were in
fluenced by the murder of his
sister is quite understandable.
I think we have all been influ
enced in the case of most of
us, of course, in a less personal
way by the feeling that the
murder of an innocent, unof
fending persons CALLS FOR
VENGEANCE.
As I recall the circumstances,
the repeal of Oregon's former
prohibition of the death penalty
was influenced strongly by a
peculiarly brutal murder that
led to the conviction on the part
of the public that such a crime
could be atoned for only by the
death of the murderer.
That is to say:
When the people of Oregon
reversed their previous judg
ment and reinstated the death
penalty they did so because of
a wave of feeling that a brutal
murder should be AVENGED.
IN TIME, however, as anger
fades and is replaced by the
calmer judgment that the basic
purpose of punishment is NOT
vengeance but instead is pre
vention of .crime by deterrence,
we come around to the view set
forth by the Apostle Paul in his
Epistle to the Romans:
"Dearly beloved, avenge not
yourselves, but give ' place unto
wrath: for it is written: Venge
ance is mine; I will repay, saith
the Lord."
rpHE resolution abolishing the
-- death penalty in Oregon sets
the punishment for first degree
murder at life imprisonment,
but contains a curious exception
Satellites
mains an ever-present danger to
Russian domination of Eastern
Europe.
He constitutes living proof
that a Communist ruler can
completely throw off Russian
domination and get away with
it. The surge of revolt in Eastern
Europe has subsided, but it
-could start again at any time.
Tito, to Soviet leaders, is a hor
rible example of independence
who might give others ideas.
The new Russian campaign
comes at an embarrassing time
for Tito.
He has made no secret of his
keen disappointment that he was
compelled to cancel plans for
him to visit the United States.
The cancellation was due to
the substantial opposition in the
United States to the reception
by President Eisenhower of a
Communist leader.
But the cancellation was a
distinct help to the Soviet gov
ernment. Reason for Attacks
It is probable that one reason
for the sharpened attacks on
Tito is. that the Russians are
taking advantage of his embar
rassment.
Tito is having a hard time ec
onomically, and he badly need
ed the credits which Russia
withdrew from him.
But Tito is a fighter. Attacks
on him by Russian and satellite
Communist leaders certainly
will not soften him up. On the
contrary, they are likely to
make him more eager, when
ever he gets a chance to
strengthen his own influence in
the satellite countries.
Yugoslav Foreign Minister
Koca Popovich made a counter
attack on the Russian campaign
in a speech in the Belgrade Par
liament Tuesday.
He said that Russian and sat
ellite leaders were trying to
discredit. Tito's policies and iso
late Yugoslavia as it was isolat
ed after Tito s break with the
late Josef Stalin in 1948.
Popovich went out of his way
to speak of the "precious" aid
Yugoslavia has obtained from
the United States. He said that
differences between Yugoslavia
and Soviet bloc countries could
be eliminated only if Yugoslav
ia was accepted as it is, with an
independent foreign policy. He
said -also that Russia's "Stalin
ist" policy of domination of oth
er countries had. done Commun
ism more harm than all the anti
Communist activities of "imper
ialist" nations.
JENKINS
I that a person convicted of
I murder while under sentence of
life imprisonment may be pun
ished by DEATH. -
I can't quite understand the
reasoning in the case of that
exception. If the death penalty
is ineffective as a deterrent of
ONE murder, why should we
expect that it. will be effective
as a deterrent of TWO murders?
rpHE exception seems to smack
-a- of the idea that if a person
is so wholly bad "that , he will
commit murder even in prison
he'd better be put to death and
got rid of so that the state will
not longer have to house and
feed him.
Wouldn't it be more consistent
to let the tail go with the hide
and just abolish the death
penalty?
Crown Zellerbaeh Man
Heads Louisiana Firm
San Francisco (U.PJ Reed
O. Hunt, executive vice presi
dent of Crown Zellerbaeh Cor
poration, has beene lected pres
ident of the new St. Francisville
Paper company of Louisiana.
The firm was recently formed
by Zellerbaeh and Time, Inc. It
will manufacture high quality
coated printing papers.
When You Really Need Friends!
While offering you experienced efficiency and mod
ern facilities, we still believe that a friendly, neighborly
interest in -helping you is most-important.
DAY OR NIGHT PHONE 2-8030
Chapel Mortuary
Across from the Courthouse
Frank Morgan Harold Snodgrass
FUNERAL DIRECTOr"
Matter of Fact y stew
DULLES AND THE
DEMOCRATS
Washington The relations be
tween Secretary of State John
Foster Dulles and the Demo
cratic Congres
sional leader
ship are rather
like those of
a married cou
ple for whom
the blush lias
long been off
the rose, but
who rea 1 i z e
that they have
Stewaic AIsod
to live togeth-
er for the sake of the children,
The marriage came very close
to the divorce stage recently.
And though hasty and partially
successful efforts to patch things
up have been made in the last
few days, there is still bitter
resentment against Dulles sim
mering on Capitol Hill.
The sources of the Democratic
bitternesses are various. They
are in part, of course, political.
Just as the far more violent
Republican bitterness against
Dean Acheson was political
There is for instance an obvious
political element in the unani
mous Democratic opposition to
the Administration's policy on
sanctions against Israel. The
American Jewish community is
overwhelmingly pro-Israel, and
the Democrats are far more ae-
pendent than the Republicans on
Jewish votes and Jewish finan
cial support.
m w w
TUT . the anti-Dulles feeling
among the Democratic lead
ers is not exclusively of political
origin by any means. Many Sena
tors have genuine doubts about
the wisdom of a policy which
may see this country again lined
ud with President .Nasser ana
the Soviets against Israel and
our major allies. And memories
of Republican campaign boasts
about the "dynamic toreign
policy increase the Democrat's
resentment that things should
have come to such an unpretty
pass.
The resentment has also been
increased by the Dulles tech
nique for dealing with Congress.
To return to the marriage anal
ogy, a wife can influence a hus
band successfully only if he does
not know she is doing so. Dulles
has used blatantly obvious meth-
Legion Officials
Attend Meeting Here
Representatives of five Amer
ican Legion posts in district 13
attended a conference here this
week regarding the responsibili
ties of Legion posts in the serv
ice program at the Camp White
Domiciliary.
Dr. Penn Crumb, director of
rehabilitation for the Legion de
partment of Oregon, pointed
out that the Legion was founded
on the principal that the dis
abled veteran should receive at
tention and care. Dr. Crumb,
Joe McDonald, department adju
tant for the Legion, and J. Rich
ard Smurthwaite, state veterans
employment service officer,
were in Medford this week, and
attended the Rotary luncheon
and visited Camp White.
The visit at Camp White was
to determine the future policy
of the Legion at the Domiciliary,
Legion officials said.
Comb Florence Area
For Missing Farmer
Florence (U.PJ Searchers
combed heavily wooded moun
tains south of here today for a
70-year-old farmer who was re
ported missing from hit isolat
ed cabin.
About 50 police officers and
loggers were taking part in the
hunt for W. G. Holesapple. The
elderly man was reported miss
ing Tuesday by Miles Steuven,
a friend who had gone to visit
him and found the cabin desert
ed. Bloodhounds were flown here
from Corvallis to aid In the
search. .
ods of influencing Congr.
For example, the "Eisnhoe
Doctrine" was given in substance
to the press before the Congres
sional leaders had heard any
thing about it, and it was then
presented as a matter of life-and-death
urgency. Yet when
Dulles testified on the proposal,0
it soon became obvious that he
could produce no hard evidence
of; urgency, and neither he nor .
anyone else had any specific
ideas at all about how, when, or
where the money or the Presi
dential authority were to be
used.
"I feel," remarked the respect
ed Sen. Richard Russell of
Georgia, after hearing Dulles
testify, "like a man in a dark
ened room wresUing with a
moonbeam."
e e
DULLES has also shown a
tendency to disDlav a certain
condescension in his dealings
with Congress. Until very re
cenUy, his meetings with (he
Congressional leaders have been
in the nature of briefings
"Dulles travelogues" rather
than real consultations. It is as
tactless in executive - legislative
relations as it is in marriage for
one side to do all the talking.
Dulles has been tactless in oth
er ways, ror example, in nis
failure to answer an important
letter from Senate Majority
Leader Johnson for almost two
weeks. ("I have plenty of scratch
paper already, Johnson is said
to have remarked coldly when
a meaningless reply was at
length forthcoming). And it was
certainly tactless to propose that
the entire Congressional leader
ship 26 busy men should jour
ney to Georgia to see the vaca
tioning President. The Congres
sional leaders tartly pointed out
that Washington, after all, re
mained the seat of government.
Since the President saw the
point, and returned to Washing
ton, there has been a marked
improvement in the atmosphere.
The meetings of the Congression
al leaders with the President and
Dulles on Feb. 20 and with
Dulles alone on the 24th, were
free-wheeling and fruitful.
Though the bitterness on Capitol
Hill is still there, it is distinctly
more muted than it was only
a few weeks ago, when at least
two Democrats actually de
nounced Dulles as a liar on the
Senate floor.
e e e
THE future course of the un
happy executive legislative
marriage of necessity will de
pend on events. As this is writ
ten, it begins to seem possible
that some sort of formula will
be found to resolve the immedi
ate crisis. In that case, the bitter
ness against Dulles on Capitol
Hill will no doubt largely die
away at least until the next
crisis. Otherwise, and especially
if the United States actually
votes sanctions against Israel,
Dulles will again be the main
Democratic target.
Yet even in that case, a final
break, a total collapse of bi
partisanship, remains unlikely.
Responsible Democratic leaders
like Johnson and Russell know
that they have to go on living
somehow with the Secretary of
State, for the good of thte coun
try. And Dulles himself, as his
belated but determined efforts
to patch things up suggests,
knows that he must go on liv
ing with them, for the same
reason.
Copyright 1957,
New York Herald Tribune Inc.
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