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Flight o' Time
Medford and Jackson County
Historv from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30 and
40 years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
March 19. 1947 (Wednesday)
Charles Holbrook is elected
commander of the Crater Lake
post. Veterans of Foreign Wars.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge' Pot column: "They say
that in China a man doesn't
know his wife until they are
married. That happens right here
In Burlington." (Burlington
(Wis.) Democrat) Ditto here.
20 YEARS AGO
March 19. 1937 (Friday)
A special session for wives of
Boy Scout executives of Crater
Lake area council was a feature
of annual court of honor last
night.
The Rogue River national for
est staff, now in the annex next
Oto the postoffice, moves to new
quarters in the Liberty building
soVearb AGO
March 19. 1927 (Saturday)
At midnight tonight the new
long distance building of the
Pacific Telephone and Telegraph
company will be placed into ser
vice. Tkfrs. . Susanne H. Carter,
county superintendent, has re
turned from an National Educa
tion association meeting in Dal
las recently.
40 TEARS AGO
March 19. 1917 (Monday)
OThree American steamships
with 85 Americans aboard have
been torpedoed by German sub-
q marip vith two sunk. .
Banft statements show that the
business of the Farmers and
Fruitgrowers bank has more
than doubled during the present
management.
Wbal's Your I.Q.?
Nin or ten correct in tupertor,
en cr eight It excellent; live ?
tlx la cood.
1. Was President Tyler's first
name Zachary or John?
2. The magnetic compass util
izes what directive force?
3. Bible: How many pieces of
silver did Judas receive for be
traying Christ?
4. What does the name Dachau
mean to you?
5. Vhich state in the U.S. is
Oierst to the North Pole.
9. Is Locarno in Italy, Switzer
land, Prance, or Spain?
'What are sabots?
. Vho was the "melancholy
t 'When did the twentieth
O century? begin?
10. Is royal jelly the food of
the larvae of queen bees, a kind
Oof marmalade, or a lubricant?
Answers: 1. John. 2. The
earth's magnetism. 3. Thirty. 4.
The notorious Dachau concentra
tion camp in Germany. 5. Minne
sota. 6. Switzerland. 7. Wooden
shoes. 8. Hamlet. 9. Jan. 1. 1901.
10. Food of the larvae of queen
bees.Q
A 'HAPPY' HIGHWAY
West Palm Beach. Fla. (U.P.)
Florida's new Sunshine State
Parkway was christerd for a
second time Monday with
moonshine whiskey. The occa
sion was the first capture of a
bootlegger on the newly opened
toll road. State highway patrol
men arrested Dewey Lee Young
after a chase and confiscated his
bootleg load of 575 gallons. The
whiskey was dumped in park
way ditches excent for a quan
tity save for evidence. J.i
"F. S. " Will Be Missed
We will miss Frank B. Streeter as editor of the
Grants Pass Courier.
The "stormy petrel" of Josephine county has re
tired, not only from the "Courier" but from the news
paper business, which he has enlivened in various
capacities for half a century, all the way from Aber
deen, South Dakota, to the "Climate City," via Long
Beach, California where he worked and resided for
20 years.
Quite a newspaper career.
And judging his past by his decade in our neigh
boring city, both a .pestiferous and predictable one.
For "F.S." was not only completely dedicated to the
policies of the Grand Old Party, whatever they might
be, but was in a constant state of indignation, against
anything or anyone, who dared to deviate from the
straight and narrow line of party 100 per cent regu
larity. As a result he was never an enthusiast for Presi
dent Eisenhower or his "Modern Republicanism,"
though, of course, his hatred for everything Demo
cratic and liberal kept him in line. He was at heart
an ultra-conservative and isolationist of the Old Guard
type, pretty closely following the editorial ideology
of the Chicago Tribune under Colonel McCormick,
even to the extent at one time of extolling with the
Colonel the virtues of Senator McCarthy and "Mc
Carthyism." ....
MEEDLESS to say, the Mail Tribune often came di
rectly into the line of F.S.'s editorial ire and fire
and we don't believe it an exaggeration to say, that
during the past four or five years this "independent"
paper, became a Streeter obsession.
Scarcely a day passed that the editor now retiring
did not turn one of his verbal "six-guns" in our direc
; tion, and blast away with a vindictive and vicious
gleam in his editorial eye, mixing his political "bi-
w. r. " -fi. ,..."n. , . 1 1 i : i :
uuva un.cn vvilii uiipiea&aia personalities.
We did not like the personalities.
But we are quite sincere in saying that we liked
and will miss the Streeter editorials. For they were
always readable, always vigorous, and always, at least
from our viewpoint, WRONG.
TT BECAME with us, in fact, a sort of a game. We
A kept looking for a lucid and enlightened interval,
but never found one. Certainly if as Emerson main
tained "consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds,"
then one must conclude that "F.S." had no more use
for the Seer of Concord than he had for F.D.R. and
the New Deal.
For Editor Streeter was completely and invariably
consistent.
When the "Friendly Southern Pacific" became an
issue in Southern Oregon, for example, there were
some observers of the journalistic scene in this part of
the state who thought the "Big Business" lure would
fail. It did with every other Republican daily south of
Eugene. But not with the stalwart and sturdy defender
of the "vested interests" in Grants Pass.
According to the Courier indeed the opponents of
this billion dollar utility
or cheap, self-seeking politicians emulating the late
Hiram Johnson. Those who failed to see the justice
and righteousness of the S.P. cause in abandoning all
passenger service should
to. that effect.
(
QOOD old F.S.," true
A ND from the standpoint of editorial effectiveness
that sort of fixation has obvious virtues. For
there were never any doubts in the mind of the editor,
there were no shades or shadows, every thing was
clear cut and simple, all black or all white, all good or
all bad, and that was that. In the search for truth
such a line ends in frustration. But such a search
seldom concerns the average newspaper reader. Mr.
"A.R." prefers to take his editorials if he takes them
at all, straight, without
chaser.
"IXf HICH brings us to the one point where we un
TT doubtedly agreed with the "retiring" editor of
the "Courier" and where he might even agree with
us, namely: the saying accredited to Voltaire that,
quote :
"I disapprove of what you say but will defend to the
death your right to say it."
That "defending to
strong and melodramatic
no reasonable doubt that
any agreement between
was rare enough to deserve classification under the
familiar heading of man
ine oniy auierence
enraged, apoplectic and preoccupied by these differ
ences, than "R.W.R." and so gave them more space
In fact the undersigned, as indicated above, failed
to take the "slings and arrows" from the somewhat
choleric scribe to the north too seriously, missed few
of them, and genuinely enjoyed many of them.
We fear it is going to
out them and if "F.S. should return to editorial writ
ing elsewhere, we feel quite sure that for somewhat
different reasons, he will miss the Medford Mail
Tribune. R.W.R.
Student Pilot Dies In
Bend (U.PJ A 46-year-old
Douglas county student pilot was
killed yesterday evening when
his plane crashed near Burns
just short of the Hampton fly
ing strip, state police reported.
The victim was identified as
James E. Carrell of Riddle, who
Tuesday. March 19. 1957
were either "blatheiskites"
jump in the lake or words
to form as always!
either self-analysis or a
the death" might be a bit
in this case, but there can be
during the Streeter decade,
the two papers editorially
bites dog."
was mat "x.a." was more
be a bit flat and stale with
Crash Near Burns
operated a sand and gravel plant
in the southern Douglas county
town. He left Roseburg for
ranch late yesterday and refuel
ed here in the evening, leaving
for Burns at 5:45 p.m.
Carrell was taking his last
cross-country flight before tak
ing his finale xamination.
Renewed Hope for Negotiations
Seen in Peace for Cyprus Issue
By CHARLES M. McCANN
United Press Correipondent
There seems good reason for
hope that new negotiations may
be started soon for a solution
y. L-l J1 iai of the Cvnrus
problem. The
Greek Cypriot
Islanders who
are fig h t i n g
B r i t ish rule
have offered to
declare a
truce. British
g o v e rnment
r e a c tion has
been favor-
Charles McCann
able. The No. 1 British condition
for a resumption of negotiations
is that the rebels stop their cam
paign of terrorism.
Whether it will be possible,
under the best conditions, to
find a permanent settlement of
the complicated Cyprus situation
is another thing.
Greek islanders started a cam
paign of assassination, ambushes,
bombings and sabotage two years
ago.
They demanded that Britain
grant Cypriots the right of "self
determination," which meant
that they wanted Britain to hand
the island over to Greece.
Turkey Backs Britons
Britain refused and was sup
ported by Turkey, which ruled
Cyprus for centuries before the
British took it over in 1878.
The campaign of violence in
tensified. Archbishop Makarios,
head of the Greek Orthodox
Church in Cyprus, became the
political leader of the self- de
termination" campaign.
Matter of Fact
LAST CHANCE
London The Bermuda meet
ing between President Eisenhow
er and Prime Minister Harold
M a c m illian
looks like just
about the last
c h a nee to re
build the
ciumbl ing
foundations of
the West era
Alliance.
"What will
they do about
Gaza?" every-
Joseph Alsop
one will no doubt be asking. But
that will not be the real ques
tion. For this Bermuda meeting is
not an international gathering
of the common sort, at which
statement gather in the 'sun,
wrestle briefly with the crisis of
of the moment, effusively assure
one another of their mutual af
fection and part again after is
suing a smooth and empty com
munique. Or rather, if Bermuda
turns out to be this sort of rally,
it will be remembered as ' the
last chance that was missed.
What has to be done to miss
the chance? The answer is sim
ple. Detailed and practical agre
ements must be reached concern
ing the long-term policies of
America and Britain in certain
critical areas. Of these areas,
the Middle East is now im
measurably the most important.
But NATO is another policy area
made urgent by Britain's plan
ned reduc tion of her troop
strength in Germany. And there
are one or two more.
...
A ND why will the last chance
probably be lost, if detailed,
long-term approaches to these
knotty and complex problems
are not agreed upon at Bermuda?
Again the answer is relatively
simple. The ancient Anglo-Amer
ican partnership has already fal
len upon such evil days, that
another failure to reach real
agreement will simply impose
too heavy a strain.
Of course there will be no
open, rapid rupture, if Bermuda
merely ends in another meaning
less and amiable statement by
the two chief conferees. But if
this is the only result of Ber
muda, the festering feelings of
the British will grow still more
poisonous. The ugly stories that
are everywhere repeated here
will be repeated and believed
still more widely. And thus the
already marked drift away from
the old partnership will be ac
celerated to the point where it
can hardly be halted and re
versed. That is the danger one finds
beneath London's smiling and
outwardly prosperous surface. In
part, feelings fester here be
cause the terrible failure at Suez
marked an equally terrible turn
ing point in the thinking of many
intelligent and courageous Eng
lish people. Against heavy odds,
for nearly 12 years after the sec
ond world war's end, they car
ried on the struggle to maintain
Britain's role as a great world
power. But after the Suez fail
ure, they have just about aband
oned hope.
"We've been a great power for
a very long time, one of them
told me. "But now we know we
aren't a great power any longer,
and we must find a new course.
...
TY NO means all of those who
- have reached this bitter con
clusion have also turned against
the Anglo-American partnership.
But there are some, even of the
best, who have turned against it
some whose names, if they
could be publicly used, would
send a thrill of cold horror down
the spines of those in Washing
ton who still care about the fu
ture of the Western Alliance.
Britain charged that Makarios
also was implicated directly in
the terrorism. On March 9,
1956, Makarios was arrested and
deported to the , Seychelles Is
lands in the Indian Ocean.
British forces under Field
Marshal Sir John Harding, com
mander in chief and governor of
Cyprus, have pressed a deter
mined drive against the small
but well-organized and bold
group of extremists who are
responsible for the terrorism.
In recent months, the extrem
ists have suffered some punish
ing blows. A number of their
leaders have been captured or
killed. On March 3, Gregoris
Afxention, second in command
of the rebels, was killed in his
mountain hideout.
A Cease Fire Offer
Last Thursday the rebel or
ganization, called "EOKA," an
nounced that it would cease
fire immediately if Makarios
were freed.
The British government show
ed great interest in the offer,
as did Field Marshal Harding.
The cease fire offer is now
under consideration by Prime
Minister Harold Macmillan and
his cabinet.
There are indications that
Britain might take Makarios to
London not to Cyprus to see
if there is a possibility of fruit
ful negotiations.
Britain is willing to grant
Cyprus home rule. But it is not
prepared to give up the island.
especially because it has become
an important Middle Eastern de
fense base
By Joseph Alsop
I One such, a much respected sen
ior English leader with close
American connections, a man
who bitterly criticized Sir Anth
ony Eden's venture, told this re
porter in plain terms:
"I thought we were fools to do
what we did at Suez. But now
that it's all over, I've been wond
ering about our relations with
America. For instance, I've been
asking myself whether your air
bases here are of any use to us,
whether in fact they serve any
purpose except to make us H
bomb targets if a war comes.
Perhaps we should now con
sider a Nehru-like policy of be
ing nice to everybody."
The man who spoke those
words will, I think, finally re
consider them. But that will
not matter if the present drift
continues, if there are more and
more causes of Anglo-American
disagreement, and if feelings are
more 'and more inflamed there
by. If this happens, here in Brit
ain, the wise and the prudent
will eventually be overborne by
the hot-headed and the self-deluding.
Then the partnership
will end.
LEST anyone think that these
warnings are overdrawn, it
can be rather positively stated
that the American Embassy in
London has been sending very
grave warnings to the State
Department. Indeed, it is an open
secret that the new Ambassador,
John Hay Whitney, was deeply
shocked by the. state of feelings
he found here.
It may well be said, of course,
that the United States is better
able than Britain to do without
the Anglo-American partnership
and the Western Alliance. But
if that is what the Eisenhower
administration has in mind, then
it is the Administration's duty to
come up with a new American
world strategy, not based on the
Western Alliance, and including
such unpalatable items as a 100
per cent self containted defense
system for our continent.
(c) 1957. New York
Herald Tribune Inc.
ATTENTION FLORENCE C.
Marine City, Mich. (U.R
Conservation officials said today
they think a deer which swam
across the St. Clair river four
times Monday set some sort of
endurance record for swimming
deer. The officers said the deer
swam over from the Canadian
shore but was frightened away by
spectators and swam back. Later
the same deer swam over a sec
ond time and was frightened
back again.
Free Lecture on CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
Under the auspices of First Church of Christ, Scientist, Medford,
Entitled
"Christian Science: Practical Christianity
Revealed and Demonstrated"
by Clifford R. Nysewander, of Indianapolis, Indiana
Member of the Board of Lectureship of The Mother Church,
The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Massachusetts f
Tonight, March 19, 1957 8 p.m.
Medford Senior High School Auditorium
It is open to the public. No charge is made, no money is solicited at a Christian Science Lecture
Turkey says firmly that if
Britain ever gives up Cyprus,
the island must revert to Turk
ish rule. It is only a little more
than 40 miles from the Turkish
mainland, and it is about 660
miles from Greece. Greece, in
cidentally, never has ruled Cy
prus,, though about 400,000 of
the 500,000 islanders are of
Greek racial stock. The remain
ing 100,000 are Turks.
In the Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
Interesting little item: '
West Germany's share of
world trade both imports and
exports increased from 4.1 per
cent in 1950 to 7.3 per cent in
1956.
During the same period. West
Germany's share of world ex
ports increased from 3.6 per cent
to 7.9 per cent.
THAT is to say:
In six vaars aftpr ffettinff
back on her feet following the
war West Germany nearly doub
led her share of total world
trade (both imports and exports.)
She MORE THAN DOUBLED
her share of world exports
(meaning what she sold to the
world) in this same period of
time.
HOW come?
Well, when she lost the
war she shrugged off her debts.
Having lost the war, she no long
er needed huge armaments. So-
even allowing for the fact that
she has had to help support al
lied troops on her soil her taxes
have been relatively low.
Not having to add a staggering
burden to taxes to her prices,
she has been able to keep her
costs of production down, which
has enabled her to outbid her
competitors in world markets
and GET THE BUSINESS.
WOULDN'T it be wonderful if
Russia would look the Ger
man situation over and come to
the conclusion that world con
quest DOESN'T PAY?
In that event, we could have
a peaceful world.
HO! HUM!
Here's morp tn think
about:
,A 24,000 CARAT emerald is
on its way from Johannesburg in
South Africa for evaluation by
a jeweler in New York. The
huge gem's owners say it has
been priced in Johannesburg at
anything from "almost worth
less" to "perhaps worth MIL
LIONS of pounds." (A British
pound is the approximate equ
ivalent of $2.80 in American
money.)
the doubt about the value
That, too, is an interesting
story.
In the modern world, it would
be hard to find anybody willing
(and able) to pungle up the as
tronomic price that would be
commanded by a jewel of that
staggering size.
THE number of that kind of
people in the world is be
coming small.
I recon King Saud could wang
le it if he tok a notion to. His
income is estimated at s o m e
where in the neighborhood of
300 million dollars a year and
since he is "the works" in his
country of Saudi Arabia he
doesn't have to pay any taxes.
But his inclination doesn't
seem to lean in that direction.
He'd probably rather have an
other hundred solid gold Cadil-
dacs. There may be a few ma-
harajas left in Iindia who could
dig up the dough, but even the
maharajas are beginning to look
at their hole cards.
llfHAT about some rich Amer
' ican?
Pooh! Pooh! Pooh!
What American in this day
and age could afford to put mil
lions of pounds of capital into a
huge emerald just to look at?
In modern America, capital has
to be put to work to earn the
money to PAY TAXES with.
So that's out.
I suppose they'll just have to
cut this huge stone up into little
bits of stones that common, or
dinary, everyday people who
are the salt of the earth in this
modern age can afford to buy.
From Washington
By Roscoe Drummond
POLITICS AND
FEDERAL SPENDING
Washington In Washington
today we are witnessing a monu
mental, buck-passing hassle over
the' size of the Eisenhower budg
et $71.8 million for the coming
year which must seem frustrat
ingly confusing.
Right now it is a kind of po
litical merry-go-round which the
politicians understand and
which can only fool the voters
if anybody.
President Eisenhower has
painted himself into a box of his
own making. In permitting, even
encouraging, Secretary of the
Treasury Humphrey to urge
Congress to make a substantial
cut in a budget which the ad
ministration described as the
"best" it could devise, Mr. Eisen
hower should have known that
Congress would leap to trim an
item the White House considers
vital to national defense the
economic aid program. Thus the
President has given momentum
to a budget cut he will greatly
deplore or have to fight to the
last trench to avert.
BOTH sides are playing poli
tics. House Democrats, normally
eager to preserve the fullest
Congressional authority over ap
propriations, are resisting the
Humphrey theory that Congress
ought to do what he said the
administration was unable to do.
They pass it to the President.
Mr. Eisenhower holds up his
Communications
Letters to the Editor must bear
the name and address of the writer
although under certain circum
stances the use ot a pen name or
initial for publication is permis
sible. The Mail Tribune reserves
the right to edit all letters with
an eye to clarification and conden
sation .Letters submitted for pub
lication must not exceed 400 words
Humane Slaughter
To the Editor: I am writing you
about humane slaughter. Two
major packers, the George A.
Hormel Co. who anesthetize hogs
by passing them through a car
bon dioxide tunnel, and Oscar
Mayer, who stun cattle with a
captive bolt pistol, and a few
other packers are the only ones
in this country that I know of
who give a humane death, with
out suffering, to meat animals.
Almost 7,000,000 animals are
killed every working day in our
slaughter houses and with the
exception of those slaughtered
by the above packers they all
have a terrifying and cruel
death.
Knockers sometimes deliver a
dozen blows with their heavy
hammers before cattle are
stunned into unconsciousness,
often smashing their skulls and
noses to a pulp and knocking out
their eyes, causing absolutely
unnecessary suffering and ter
ror. They are all shackled with
heavy chains around a hind leg,
which sometimes breaks the leg
if it is a heavy animal like a
hog; they are then hoisted into
the air and their throats cut and
they are left hanging there, suf
fering untold agony, to bleed to
death. Sometimes hogs that
haven't been stuck properly and
are therefore slower to die are
thrown into steam vats while
still conscious, and sometimes
the feet of smaller animals are
cut off before they lose con
sciousness and death releases
them from their terrible suffer
ing. Humane slaughter legislation
would require that all livestock
and poultry be rendered insen
sible by mechanical, chemical or
other means, to be rapid, effec
tive and humane. Such legisla
tion, when enforced, would save
packers $50,000,000 annually,
a loss they sustain through bruis
ing and mutilating meat animals.
Limited space will not permit
full story here. Write to me for
further details and how you can
help with three short letters.
This letter is being mailed to all
important newspapers in all
states to reach millions of Loya!
Humane Christians to fight for
Humane Legislation; to bombard
Washington in powerful volume
protests. Kindly cooperate all to
gether now for positive results.
We can win. Thank you.
John Taylor,
co Post Office
Watervliet, N. Y.
hand and says, "Who, me?" and
gingerly tosses the ball back to
the Democratically - controlled
Congress.
The President himself has
never bid Congress to cut his
budget and for a very good rea
son, lie screened it and approv
ed it; he will have to expound it
and defend it. Should he fail to
do so, he will be abdicating ex
ecutive responsibility in the
most serious manner.
Mr. Eisenhower's position is
by no means free of politics. He
takes the popular public stance
in favor of less federal spending
in principle and then blandly
tells the country through his
press conference that if there is
to be any solid reduction of
spending Congress will have to
abandon some of its programs
veterans' benefits, farm relief,
school construction, etc.
lyHOSE programs are these?
' They are Mr. Eisenhower's
programs. If he believes that it
is more desirable for the coun
try to reduce federal spending
substantially than it is to carry
out these programs, then it is his
duty as President and as leader
of his party, to ask Congress to
cut back these programs.
My judgment is that Mr. Eis
enhower does not hold any such
view, that he does not see his
budget as over-taxing the econ
omy and that he believes it more
desirable to continue what he
considers needed civilian pro
grams than to cut the budget
significantly. He is certainly not
taking any step to develop a
public opinion to the contrary.
But it is obvious that the Pres
ident wants to appear that it is
Congress, not he, who is stand
ing in the way of doing what
would have to be done if there
were to be a real slash in spend
ing. THE objective fact, as pointed
out by the McGraw-Hill econ
omists, is that the proposed $71.8
billion budget places no greater
burden on the economy than any
budget in the last six years, be
cause the economy has been
growing. Per capita federal
spending under this budget
wouia oe aouui 940, ui
more than last year. But per cap
ita income rose nearly $80 last
year. On top of this is our in
creasing population in light of
which, next year's federal expen
ditures will be less per capita
than in 1954, when federal
spending was $4 billion lower.
This is why the McGraw-Hill
statement warns not against the
size of this Eisenhower budget
but against the prospect' of
"steadily increasing budgets"
which take 20 per cent or more
of our national income and, in
its judgment, deprive "private
industry of the savings and re
sources needed to expand and
modernize producing facilities."
Federal saving that will per
mit tax reduction will be hard
to come by. -It will require ei
ther (1) A great easing of the
cold war, or (2) Ingenious and
still undiscovered economies in .
defense or (3) A radical cutback
in civilian programs. None of
these is in sight.
Copyright New York Herald
Tribune Inc.
Mr. Insurance
FRED
BRENNAN
Phone 2-4940
CLVB NOTES
The Me club carried by,
"Mr. Insurance." the other
day was not used In col
lecting insurance prem
iums. (Our insured are
happy to pay). Sure and
it was Just Freddie
O'Brennan and his Old
Shillelagh headed for the
St. Pat's party at the Sons
of Erin Chowder and
Marching Society.
MEDFORD INSURANCE
AGENCY