FOUR MEDFORD (OREGON)
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March 3. 1897
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Flight o' Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30 and
40 years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
May 21, 1947 (Wednesday)
A decision to keep open the
area dedicated for 12th street is
made by the city council after
hearing proposal to vacate north
40 feet of street from Front st.
to the railway.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: Nion Tuck
er's hand, T. Carleton of
Flounce Rock towned Tues.
20 YEARS AGO
May 21, 1937 (Friday)
Installation of lights starts at
Medford High school football
field will be completed within
two weeks.
Edith Whillock named vale
dictorian of 1937 class at Med
ford High school.
.30 YEARS AGO
May 21. 1927 (Saturday)
Charles Lindbergh, dubbed
the "Flying Fool," lands at Le
Bourget field, in Paris, making
first nonstop Atlantic crossing
by air.
Eight carrier pigeons releas
ed from lofts of local Sperry
Flour company will be used for
communication purposes among
company branch officers.
40 YEARS AGO
May 21, 1917 (Monday)
Annual valley school athletic
meet and Valley Pride Cream
ery picnic scheduled at Apple
gate next week.
The Choral club will present
a concert Friday at the Presby
terian church.
What's Your I.Q.?
Ntne or ten correct Is superior;
seven or eight Is excellent; five or
six Is good.
1. New Orleans: In 1836 when
water was first piped into
houses, was the reservoir filled
from water pumped from the
Mississippi or Lake Ponchar
train? 2. Was the Greek Aesop a
fictional or a real person?
3. Bible: Did St. Paul ' ever
visit the province of Bythnia?
. 4. Persons born between Jan
uary 20 and February 19 are
born under which zodiacal sign?
5. Does hair grow faster in
winter or in summer?,
6. "Pippin" is a name applied
to several varieties of which
fruit?
7. Was Hermann Goerkig
hanged with other chief Nazi
war criminals after the Nurn
berg trial?
8. Was "Jimmie" Walker may
or of Boston, New York City, or
Jersey City?
9. Are both expressions "taken
in" and "took in" held to be
colloquial in any grammatical
sense?
10. "An onion can make peo
ple cry. but there has never been
a vegetable to make them" do
what?
Answers: 1. The Mississippi.
2.Real. (He lived about B.C.
560). 3. No. 4. Aquarius. 5. Sum
mer. 6. Apples. 7. No. He com
mitted suicide. 8. New York
City. 9. Yes. When used in place
of deceived, misled, or attended.
10. "laugh."
DURLING ON VACATION
E. V. Durling is on vacation.
His "On the Side" column will
be resumed on May 27.
MAIL TRIBUNE
Postal Service Problems
It looks as if lack of money not snow nor rain
nor heat nor gloom of night is going to be delaying
those couriers from the swift completion of their ap
pointed rounds in the very near future.
Postmaster General Arthur E. Summerfield warns
that unless Congress changes its collective mind 'be
fore July 1, he's going to have to curtail postal service
drastically then, on a contingency not foreseen by
Herodotus the Post Office Department is strapped.
Congress in its first regular 1958 appropriations
bill, slated to go to the President for approval in a few
days, carved $58 million from the Post Office Depart
ment's budget for the 1958 fiscal year. Summerfield
on May 8 had warned that unless that cut were re
stored, he would have to reduce mail service at the
beginning of the new fiscal year. In fact, said Sum
merfield, he would be sending Congress within the
next week or ten days a request for $70 million
to $90 million more than whatever the eventual cut
amounted to.
Boom times are pushing up mail volume and hence
his costs, Summerfield avers. Already mailings are up
4 per cent, instead of the 1.5 per cent anticipated in
the 1958 budget.
TTHE most recent lasting reduction in postal service
came in April, 1950. In the face of sharply reduced
appropriations, Postmaster General Jesse M. Donald
son restricted home mail deliveries to one a day, re
duced hours of service at post offices, and otherwise
cut back postal service.
A Gallup poll in May, 1950, indicated that the
public was about evenly divided on the cut in home
deliveries. The tally was: in favor, 46 per cent;
against, 47 pe" cent: no opinion. 7 Der cent. However.
persons whose own deliveries had been reduced were
against, two to one, and they were vocal. A bill to re
scind the order received House approval, 264 to 108,
but the Senate took no action.
More recentlv. Postmaster General Summerfield
halted Saturday deliveries,
closed post offices on that day to the public. Two days
later, deliveries in business districts were cut back to
two a day and post office windows were opened for
fewer business hours. Summerfield had warned a
House Appropriations subcommittee, April 3, that the
cut was coming unless he was assured that the Post
Office was get a $47 million deficiency appropriation
for the rest of fiscal 1957.
Congress approved a $41 million bill on April 16,
and Summerfield on the same day ordered a restora
tion of "normal" service except for the reduction in
business deliveries and post office hours. President
Eisenhower said, April 17, that he had approved the
cut-backs in advance.
CUMMERFIELD, it was disclosed on April 14, had
delayed in asking for additional funds because
Director of the Budget Percival F. Brundage had held
up permission for the request until mid-March. Sen.
Richard N. Neuberger (D.-Ore.) charged that Brun
dage had admitted that he did not know postal reve
nues were paid directly into the Treasury and not into
operating funds of the Post Office department. U.S.
Controller General . Joseph C. Campbell had said,
April 13, that the Budget Bureau violated the law by
allowing the post office to spend its funds too rapidly.
So Summerfield, once burned, is about to ask for
his deficiency funds in advance. Ironically, for 17
straight years prior to 1953, Congress had automatic
ally granted all request for supplemental funds. Sum
merfield had turned surpluses back to the Treasury
in 1953-1955. E.R.R.
That "Billy" Mitchell Court Martial
Pending before the Air Force Board for Correc
tion of Military Records is an application of the son
and namesake of the late Col. William L. Mitchell.
The son wants the record of his father's court-martial
in 1925 declared null and void.
After Worid War I Brig. Gen. "Billy" Mitchell,
assistant chief of the Army Air Service, vociferated
up hill and down dale that planes could sink any bat
tleship "in existence or that can be built." He demand
ed that a separate air force be created. For his pains
he was demoted to a colonelcy and banished to a re
mote post. .
He did manage to get in 1921 a test of planes vs.
warships, in which his airmen sank off Hampton
Roads, Va., a former German cruiser and dread
naught. Nevertheless a joint Army-Navy board found
that "the battleship is still the backbone of the fleet."
TN 1925 THE wreck of the Navy dirigible "Shenan
A doah" evoked a new intemperate outburst from
Mitchell, and he was court-martialed for insubordina
tion. Found guilty of conduct "to the prejudice of
good order and military discipline," he was suspended
from command, pay and allowances for five years.
President Coolidge upheld the verdict because of
Mitchell's "defiance toward his military superiors,"
but restored the allowance and half the pay.
Mitchell resigned from the Army in 1926, died ten
years later. In support of expunging the record of his
court-martial could be cited the fact that in 1946 Con
gress voted to award him a posthumous medal "in
recognition of his foresight in the field of American
military aviation." E.R.R.
Tuesday, May 21. 1937
effective last April 13, and
l'.jltE! rloWsjHHTroR A
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
view to clarification and condensation. Letters submitted for publication must
not exceed 400 words.
On Spiritual Reawakening
To the Editor: You probably
are already aware of our series
of meetings in the M a d i son
Square Garden in New York
City. This will probably be the
largest evangelistic effort in the
history of the Christian church.
The meetings will last for at
least six weeks, though we have
an option on the Garden for four
months if necessary. Over 1,600
churches have united and are
participating in this spiritual
crusade.
I am sure that you agree with
me that America needs a spiri
tual and moral awakening. Our
divorce rate continues to climb.
Crime statistics are alarming.
Our mental institutions are
jammed. With all our economic
prosperity, most Americans feel
that there is something yet lack
ing. New York is the center of art.
entertainment, c o mmunication,
and in many ways sets the stage
for the rest of America. The city
influences the American people
and the American way of life
more than any of our great
American cities, yet the religious
renaissance that has been felt in
other parts of the country has
left New York virtually untouch
ed. Many of New York's prob
lems are getting out - of hand.
Catholic, Protestant and Jewish
leaders have spoken out in, fa
vor of this coming spiritual cru
sade. New York's most distin
guished civic leaders are work
ing together in an effort to reach
the city's millions with a spirit
ual message. As Mr. Ogden Reid,
publisher of the New York Her
ald Tribune; said to a group re
cently: "This crusade offers an
opportunity to the masses of this
city."
It is our hope that the spiritual
and moral awakening will not
be confined to the New York
area but will spread throughout
the nation. Exactly 100 years
ago this month an awakening
began on Fulton Street in New
York City. It spread to the en
tire nation until hundreds of
thousands had united with the
churches in the space of a few
months, and America had one
of its greatest religious revivals.
It is our prayer that history will
repeat iteslf.
I believe the New York Cru
sade can become a stage upon
which we may see a great
religious awakening in this
country that could alter the
course of our history. I do not
think I havener been so heavi
ly burdened for our country as
I am at this time. Its place of
leadership in the world demands
that we have the moral and
spiritual courage that it will take
in the years ahead. A spiritual
awakening' throughout the na
tion could make a great con
tribution. Billy Graham
New York City
Missed Reunion
To the Editor; I was very
happy to receive a flipping of
the paper regarding the reunion
of the class of 1937 Medford
High school.
I regret that I was not in
formed of the reunion as I would
like to have had an opportunity
to compete for the prize for
travelling from the farthest dis
tance. Also I could have tied
for having the most children (5).
Of course, with all of my mov
ing around with the Air Force,
it isn't surprising that I wasn't
contacted.
I am hoping that our class
Poland Ousts Stalinist Chiefs
Warsaw IP) Poland's Com
munist leadership ousted three
"Stalinist" former chiefs of the
Security Police in a party shake
up designed to strengthen Wla
Hvsiaw Gomulka's independent
Communist policy, it was learn
ed today.
The ousted police were for
mer Politburo member Jakob
Berman, former Minister of Pub
lic Security Stanislaw Radkie
wicz and former Deputy Minis
. aieCT.-siettiu.awiaeya.me.
FISHIH'POLEV
will have another reunion in
5 or 10 years rather than waiting
another 20. I will be planning to
be at the next one.
Dean Ford,
(Class of '37, MHS)
Major, TJSAF,
Eielson Air Force Base,
Alaska.
Roadside Cleanliness
To the Editor: We have, in
Oregon, a law which should be
put to use to control the dump
ing of refuse on the public roads
and highways. Following are ex
cerpts from this law:
"Dumping rubbish on private
land or public way. Any person
who throws, dumps, places, de
posits or drains, or causes or
permits to be drained upon the
land of another, without per
mission of the owner, or upon
any public road, highway, street,
alley or any easement used by
the public for public travel, re
ferred to later in this section as
a public way, any cans, glass,
nails, tacks, broken dishes or
crockery, carcass of any dead
animal, old clothing, old auto
mobile tires, automobile parts,
boards, metal, or any sort of rub
bish, trash, debris, or refuse, or
any sewage or the drainage from
any cesspool or septic tank, or
any substance which would mar
the appearance, create a stench
or detract from the cleanliness
or safety of such public way, or
would be likely to injure any
animal, vehicle or person travel
ing upon such public way, shall
be punished upon conviction by
a fine not to exceed $100 or by
imprisonment in the county jail
not to exceed 30 days.
"Throwing debris or discharg
ing firearms on highway. Any
person who throws, deposits or
leaves any glass bottles, glass,
nails, tacks, hoops, wire, cans
ar any other substance likely to
injure any person, animal or ve
hicle upon any road, street or
highway in this , state, or who
discharges any air rifle, rifle,
gun, revolver or other firearm
upon or across any highway in
this state, shall be punished the
same as provided in subsection
(1) of ORS 483.990. This section
does not prevent the discharge
of firearms by peace officers in
the performance of their duty.
"(a) Upon conviction, by a fine
of not more than $100 ar by im
prisonment in the county or mu
nicipal jail for not more than
10 days.
"(b) Upon a second such con
viction within one year after
the first conviction, by a fine
of not more than $100 or by im
prisonment in the county or mu
nicipal jail for not more than
20 days, or both.
"(c) Upon a third or subse
quent conviction within one year
after the first conviction, by a
fine of not more than $500 or by
imprisonment in the county or
municipal jail for not more than
six months, or both."
We, as a garden group dedi
cated to the beautification of
our State, are willing, individu
ally or as a group, to help prose
cute any and all offenders of
roadside misuse.
Our Highway Department has
placed trash barrels at intervals
along our highways. Use these
for your litter not the road
side! Remember this If we
would have a beautiful state for
others as well as for ourselves
"Keep Oregon Green and Clean"
Mrs. Clarence Mathes
Siskiyou District Chairman
2404 Siskiyou blvd.
Ashland, Oregon
ter of Public Security Niecyslaw
Mieckowski. They were ousted
by unanimous vote of the xninth
plenum convention of the Polish
United Workers Communist
Party which met here last week.
The resolution said the three
were dropped because of their
part in the "distortions" of the
former Interior Ministry. The
ministry was organized immedi
ately after Gomulka returned to
power last October. -..
Gomulka Successful in Downing
Opposition Wings Within Party
By CHARLES M. McCANN
United Press Correspondent
Polish Communist leader Wla
dyslaw Gomulka has won an im
portant victory in his fight to
maintain a n
i n d ependent
policy.
' Stalinist "
Reds who had
hoped to force
Pol and's re
turn to the sa
tellite status
11 occupied De- Charles M McCann
fore the revolt of last October
have suffered a corresponding
defeat.
Gomulka won his victory at a
four-day meeting of the central
committee of the Polish Commu
nist Party, or the United Work
ers Party as it is called official
ly. The "Stalinists" entered the
meeting prepared to make a
strong bid to increase their
strength in the central commit
tee and thus head Poland back
toward complete subservience to
Soviet Russia.
The "Stalinists" failed.. In
stead, two strong supporters of
In the Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
A question this morning:
Reading the newspapers and
listening to the radio, do you
sometimes find yourself toying
with the cynical idea that hu
man beings are a pretty rotten
lot?
IF SO, here's a suggestion:
Take a few minutes off and
think back over the story of
little Benny Hooper who fell
into an open well in the back
yard of his New York home. As
an aid to your thinking, I'd like
to offer this heart-throb story
of the climax of Benney's rescue
as told by the UP teletype:
ONE of the. men who helped
rescue little Benny is 29-
year-old contractor Sam Wood
son, who worked through the
night with 38-year-old John Ar
ambo, another contractor. The
two men were among more than
100 persons who were involved
in the night-and-day-long batUe
to save a child's life.
Woodson was the first to reach
the trapped boy, and was start
ing to brush sand from Benny's
face when he heard a whimper.
Woodsons says:
"Just then, we started to have
a cavern. I grabbed him a little
bit hard and heard him cry. I
held on. , . and he looked at me
and started to groan. I didn't
have a chance to talk to ,. him.
I TALKED TO GOD."
Woodson says he thought of
his own child his little girl as
he fought to get Benny out of
the shaft, and it kept him going
beyond the point of exhaustion.
MR. WOODSON and Mr. Ar
ambo just happened, to be
at the psychological spot at the
psychological moment when the
rescuers broke through from the
excavation that had been made
beside the well in which little
Benny was trapped so that he
could be reached without push
ing more dirt down on him and
suffocating him.
So the news spotlight fell on
them. But I'm" SURE every per
son of the hundreds who were
helping to save a trapped child
worked just as hard as Woodson
and Arambo and felt the same
rush of reverent gratitude when
it was learned that Benny was
still alive.
In, the PINCHES, human be
ings are pretty wonderful.
TURNING to routine affairs:
Housing starts in which.
the lumber industry is acutely
interested were 11 per cent
higher in April than in March,-,
but some 17 per cent under a
year ago. All building outlays
including commercial and in
dustrial buildings amount to
2Vz billion dollars in the first
four months of 1957, which is
a NEW HIGH.
The report on building adds:
The gain was accounted for
chiefly BY RISING PRICES.
.That's what inflation does to
us.
ON THE home front:
The Klamath and Jackson
county courts rate a congratul-!
atory pat on the back for bring-!
ing to a successful conclusion j
the long negotiations with the ;
state highway commission for a
new and immensely better high
way connection between the
Klamath Basin and High , .'ay 97
and the Rogue River valley and
Highway 99.
The narrow, winding, twist
ing, scary Green Springs high- ;
way has long been a barrier be-;
tween these rapidly growing j
areas of Southern Oregon that
have so much in common. The
new McAllister Springs route (
will be of great benefit to both
regions.
MODERN DAY. RUSTLERS
South Bend, Ind. - OP) Two
young men were being held in
St Joseph county jail today on
charges of cattle rustling. The
men, Robert P.edman, 22, and
Gene Sanderson, 28, confessed
rustling three calves from the
herd of the county home, load
ing them in the back of their au
tomobile and driving away.
ill
Gomulka were elected to the
committee. One "Stalinists"
leader was ousted.
Three Party Factions
There are three factions in
the Polish Communist Party.
They are the "Stalinists," called
the right wing; the "revision
ists," called the left wing, and
Gomulka's supporters, called
"centrists."
The revisionists want Gomul
ka to go even farther in his de-'
fiance to Russia. In Poland's pre
sent situation,, complicated as
it is by serious economic trou
bles, they are as big a menace to
Gomulka as are the "Stalinists."
At the first day's session of
the central committee, it look
ed as if the Stalinists were go
ing to come out on top.
Gomulka sharply attacked the
revisionists. He said that party
unity was absolutely necessary,
and that the revisionists were
the chief danger to unity. He in
vited any members who refused
to follow the party line to turn
in their membership cards or
face the possibility of expulsion.
' He tempered this by saying
that the party line is to liberal
ize agricultural policy, maintain
Matter of Fact by jOMPh aup
BRINK, NASSER STYLE
Beirut In the last week, the
already badly seamed and faul
ted "unity of the Arab states"
has come peril
ously close to
a final, open
break.
The cause, as
might be ex-
p e c t e d, has
been the flag
rant, continu
ing and quite
ruthless inter-
Joseph Aisop xerence of
Egypt's President Nasser in the
internal affairs of aU his neigh
bors. The neighbor that was al
most driven to an open break
was this sane, sturdy little coun
try, Lebanon. And the rupture
of diplomatic relations between
Lebanon and Egypt may yet oc
cur, if Egyptian interference in
Lebanese affairs continues un
abated.
Through the "Voice of the
Arabs", radio station and the
rigidly controlled Egyptian press
Nasser began an extraordinary
campaign of personal vilification
against the Lebanese govern
ment some month ago. Leban
on's wise president, CamiHe
'Chamoun, was target number
one for the Egyptian mudsling
ers. But the popular Prime Min
ister, Sami es-Solh and the cour
ageous Foreign Minister, Charles
Malik also earned in for their
share.
The first cause of this mud-
slinging campaign .was Leban
on's refusal to break relations
with Western powers after the
Suez crisis (even though Presi
dent Chamoun was ready to send
home the British and French
ambassadors if the invasion of
Egypt had not been called off).
The second cause was Lebanon's
acceptance . in principle of the
Eisenhower Dictrine.
rkUITE recently, the mudsling
ers mg reached such extremes
that President Chamoun and the
Lebanese government were driv
en to forbid importation -of the
Egyptian newspapers. Simultan
eously,, the Lebanese ambassador
to Cairo was ostentatiously call
ed home "for cbnsultation." At
present, the problem of jamming
the Cairo radio is also being
studied. But these strong meas
ures by no means tell the whole
story.
The heart of the story is in
the continuous, political activity
in Lebanon of the Egyptian am
bassador, Abdel Hamid Ghaleb.
As President Chamoun him
self is known ti have remarked
with great bitterness, the Egyp
tian Embassy in Beirut is noth
ing more nor less than the chief
opposition parties that hope to I
turn out the present Lebanese I
government in the general elec-1
tion here next month. '
Counsel With ...
Mr. Insurance Fred Brennan
t ' W-.
Fred Brennan
Or Call
Mr. Friendly
Bill Fish
Phone SP-2-4940
MEDFORD
INSURANCE
AGENCY
27 NORTH HOLLY ST.
the present working agreement
with the Roman Catholic Church
and renounce any return to ter
roristic secret police rule.
Sialir.ists Make Bid
The "Stalinists" took heart at
Gomulka's speech. They attack
ed his policies. They tried to
force through a resolution say
ing that Russia must be supreme
in the Communist world and
condemning the Hungarian ' re
volt which Russian troops sup
pressed. Gomulka responded by a di
rect attack on the "Stalinists."
He said that Poland, under hit
leadership, would not go back
to subservience to Russia.
The result of the central com
mittee meeting was to put Go
mulka in probably the strongest
position he has enjoyed since he
returned to his post of first sec
retary of the Communist Party
last October.
There are still right and left
wings in the party. But they
have both been weakened by
Gomulka's firm stand, and any
hope that Soviet Russian ruler
may have that Poland will re
vert to statellite status has been
substantially diminished.
The opposition coalition, head
ed by the pro-Egyptian Abdullah
Yaffi, also as might be expected
included the local crypto-Com-munist,
Antoine Tabet. It is, in
short, the standard grouping that
Egyptian influence and agents,
helped out by Soviet money, are
now supporting in every Arab
country.
T AST week, the reports of Am
" bassador Ghaleb's activities
were so shocking by any normal
standard of international deal
ing, that President Chamoun
took the big decision in princi
ple. Ghaleb must be declared
persona non grata, he decided,
even if this meant that Egypt
would then break off diplomatic
relations as Egypt would cer
tainly have done.
Subsequently, when Ghaleb
had the incredible effrontery to
protest to Foreign Minister Ma
lik against the "anti-Egyptian"
tone of some of the Lebanese,
the possibility that the ambassa
dor might be President Cha
moun, Prime Minister Solh and
Foreign Minister Malik have de
ceded that their evidence of
Ghaleb's activities, authough ab
solutely authenic, is not suffic
iently documented to justify an
open break in the Arab "front."
As Ghaleb is going further
and further, a break is almost
certainly to be expected after
the election if all the local bet
tors are correct in plugging heav
ily on a Solh victory. The fore
going facts are enough to sug
gest how close Egypt's Nasser
now is to a brink of his own
considerable more decisive than
any of the famous brinks of
Secretary Dulles.
QUITE recently, in addition to
the campaign against Leban
on, the "Voice of the Arabs" has
begun a bitter personal attack
on King Hussein of Jordan.
Extremely will informed sour
ces predict that in a short time,
particularly if the Baghdad con
ference seems to have been suc
cessful, Nasser will also open
attack upon his former close
friend, and generous financial
supporter, King Saud of Saudi
Arabia.
In sum, Nasser now looks like
going over- the brink of open
hostility," of frank, ruthless, un
relenting cold war against any
Arab government that is not ab
solutely obedient to his wishes
and commands.
(c) 1957 New York Herald
Tribune Inc.
KIRBY CO.
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With the boating season now
starting it might be wise to
trap in and inquire about our
ALL RISKS OUTBOARD POL
ICY. Bill Fish
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