Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, May 28, 1957, Image 4

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    FOUR MEDFORD (OREGON)
UNE
"Everyone id Southern Oregon
Head The Mail Tribune"
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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 28. 1947 (Wednesday)
Carrol Miller, Medford fruit
man, discusses methods of mark
' eting Rogue river valley fruit in
the east at Rotary club meeting.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: Henry Wal
lace in Portland announced he
might have "to bolt the Demo
cratic party." Cooler headed
Democrats do not believe their
party will ever have that much
luck.
20 YEARS AGO
May 28, 1937 (Friday)
Dr. Bruce Baxter, president of
Willamette university, will ad
dress 176 graduates of Medford
High school at 44th annual com
mencement exercises. '
Officials of state operating
division of WPA meet with Har
old Grey, district director, to
discuss future plans of operation
through summer.
30 YEARS AGO
May 28. 1927 (Saturday)
Fruit Growers league discuss
plans for providing reserve sup
ply of smudge oil sufficient to in
sure orcharidists against a short
age of fuel.
George L. Howard, manager of
the Diamond lake resort, leaves
for Portland to buy car load of
pipe for new water system for
the resort.
40 YEARS AGO
May 28. 1917 (Monday)
City council makes inspection
trip to the water works intake
and the city ranch of 380 acres
nearby.
From Local and Personal col
umn: G. E. Walters of Medford
who was in the hospital last
week, will return to his home
in a few days.
What's Your I.Q.?
Nine or ten correct Is superior;
seven or eight Is excellent; five or
six is good.
1. Which peoples were the
first known to have worn long
trousers. Scythians, American
Indians, or Scandinavians?
2. Who wrote the tragedy
"Mourning Becomes Electra?"
3. Bible: Which version has
been authorized by the Roman
Catholic church?
4. Name the capital of Ar
gentina.
5. In what noted court pro
ceeding was John T. Scopes the
defendant, and William Jen
nings Bryan a witness?
6. Which U. S. Senator from
New York was mainly respon
sible for the enactment - of the
original Social Security Act?
7. A watt is a unit of steam,
man, horse, or electric power?
8. In which state is Kalama
zoo? 9. He raised cabbages, car
rots and other things "along
that line." In the sense applied,
is "line" good usage?
10. The monument on the bat
tlefield at Saratoga shows a leg
wounded there and the epitaph
"The leg wounded in his coun
try's service should be embalm
ed in memory, while the dis
honored body rots, forgotten, in
the dust," refers to whom?
Answers: 1. Scythians. 2. Eu
gene O'Neill. 3. "Vulgate" (with
some modifications). 4. Buenos
Aires. 5. The Evolution Trial at
Dayton, Tenn. 6. Sen. Robert F.
Wagner. 7. Electric power. 8.
Michigan. 9. No. 10. Benedict
Arnold.
I raa
MAIL TRIBUNE
Editorial Correspondence . . .
Rice Mountain Inn, Lake
get up here from New York
and hemlocks. We took the "Empire State" from Grand Central
and arrived at Utica, N.Y., -at one-thirty p.m., D.S.T., with 15
minutes to catch the NYC local for Lake Clear. Thanks to a
couple of "Red Caps" and a truck we made it with about five
seconds to spare. The local took
the Barnum railroad which used
Motors now stands to what was
house. It was called the "Barnum cannonball" and its average
speed was about 10 miles per hour. The Lake Clear local did
a bit better, than that but it consisted of only an engine, baggage
car and one day-coach. It was an uphill climb to around 2,000 feet,
and the engine often got winded and had to stop to catch its breath.
This country is known as the Adirondacks, not far from
Saranac and Lake Placid where
go every winter for skating and
doesn't ski any yet, the oldest
six months or so, but before this
to teach them to fish. We have seen lake country before, both in
Wisconsin and Minnesota, but from Utica up here the lakes are
too numerous to count not very far from here is the St. Lawrence
with its thousand islands, this is the land of a thousand lakes.
The Adirondack branch have a lake of their own and miles of
forest, but the story is the carp have eaten up all the trout.
This inn which incidentally is very attractive is the only
comfortable place available near to the MacArthurs not the
General's branch but son - in - law No. 2. He is an engineer
on the St. Lawrence Water Ways, a US-Canadian venture to
promote the welfare of both countries but which former Secre
tary McKay would no doubt condemn as "creeping socialism."
It is a public venture and will provide public power as well as
connect Chicago and the Great Lakes with the Atlantic. (If Hells
Canyon is wicked then the St. Lawrence waterway is worse!)
The season here doesn't start until June. So the fishing is
good now and the deer are thick. There were 15 of the latter
browsing around the inn yesterday. The season for neither has
started but the report is that on your own land or your own lake
you can do as you like. (If correct real estate values should be
high around here.)
After Oregon the trees all the way up from Utica are
disappointing. The fact appears to be the land was pretty well
denuded shortly after the Civil War, and the trees that remain
pine, maple, hemlock, birch, tamarack and what have you are
largely of second and third growth. Anything half the size cf the
logs one sees on the road to Crater Lake are conspicuous by
their absence. Most of the trees remind one of toothpicks but
there are plenty of them. And we are told that there are a number
of pulp mills operating hereabouts but very little timbering.
We enjoyed the "Empire State" which has been the crack
train from New York to Buffalo (five hours) ever since "college
days." It doesn't seem as "super-super" as it did 40 or 50 years
ago but it is still a very good train, with excellent accommoda
tions, courteous service and nice speed. Everything but the speed
were in sharp contrast to the "Commodore Vanderbilt." We still
think Mr. Young should provide life-belts on the latter.
The last two days in New York hit the hight spots,' sports
ways, for this trip. We not only
the "Damned Yankees, but do it twice in succession and de
cisively. For once the REAL "champs" were from Chicago, not
Greater Manhattan. The "poor old Yankees" misjudged flies,
dropped hot grounders and couldn't hit anything above their
spiked shoes. Not only did the White Socks (their stockings are
black, incidently, and their uniforms grey) hit the ball and fielded
brilliantly, but what struck this
was their SUPERB base-running. We made no count of the number
of second-base steals but they were more numerous than we have
seen in many years.
In fact we would say base-running was the one chief factor
in the Sox double-victory. For getting a man on second is AWAY
ahead of getting a man on first. So many times that man on first
is a set-up for a "double play" while a man on second is not only
proof against it but in case of a hit he can make a run at least
the young and speedy and well coached White Sox can.
We grant it would be risky to wager anything against the
Yankees being in the World Series AS USUAL but after seeing
those two defeats, if E.T. will offer his USUALLY generous odds
we will take the White Sox.
Can't seem to write a letter these days without a weather
comment. So here goes we left NYC in a humid, stuffy atmos
phere, arrived here in a heavy rain, but this morning the sun is
shining in a cloudless sky. a nice breeze is blowing and the
mercury is around 65. R.W.R.
Radioactive Fallout
How dangerous are the tests of nuclear and ther
monuclear weapons of destruction? Unhappily, the
people best qualified to give the answer are the ones
who disagree most widely on it.
So a Joint Atomic Energy subcommittee, under
Rep. Chet Holifield (D-Calif.), is calling scores of the
experts to hearings to see if some consensus of scien
tific opinion can be reached on the dangers of atomic
fallout. The hearings, to last three weeks, opened in
Washington Monday.
TTHE PROBLEM has its political as well as its scien-
tific impacts. In April 1956 Adlai E. Stevenson
proposed that the United
tests, then call on other nations to follow suit. Presi
dent Eisenhower replied that "research without test is
perfectly useless," and several weeks before the 1956
election Mr. Stevenson agreed that a unilateral sus
pension might be dangerous to this country. The
most recent U.S. nuclear test explosions have been in
Nevada.
In Great Britain the Labor Party, at first divided
on banning H-bomb tests, has made the ban a party
measure. The Conservative Government rejected the
Labor demand and went ahead with tests at Christmas
Island, but felt impelled to propose, on May 6, a multi
lateral suspension of future tests under certain con
ditions. CUSPENSION has become an international football,
too.
The Kremlin of course blames U.S. "war-monger-ing'
for the continuing Soviet tests, but told Japan,
which had demanded an end to the tests at least for
a time, that the Soviet Union wouldn't suspend them
unilaterally. :
Among the world leaders demanding that the
tests be suspended are Nehru of India, Adenauer of
Germany and Pope Pius XII. E.R.R.
Tuesday. May 28. 1957
Clear, N.Y. -A long train ride to
and among the murmuring pines
us back to the good old days of
to run from where Crater Lake
then the Jackson County court
the other branch of the family
skiing. The family branch here
is three-plus and the youngest
visit is over grandmother expects
saw the Chicago White Sox beat
sports - editor - emeritus particularly
States suspend its H-bombJ
' Pl6AS,GEpfiS! 5H0W
Matter of Fact
THE PASHA
Baghdad Nearly four dec
ades have passed since the last
Sultan of the r Ottoman Empire
officially cre
ated the last
"bey" or "Pa
sha". But the
peoples of the
Arab lands,
boldly" step
ping into their
vanished rul
ers shoes, now
award these
titles rather
Joseph Alsop
liberally to those of their fellow
citizens who seem worthy
enough or powerful enough to
deserve them.
Here in Iraq, however,-in this
strange, rapidly evolving land of
the two great Mesopotamian riv
ers, there is only one real Pasha.
When Iraqis speak of "The
Pasha" and most Iraqis are
constantly speaking of the Pasha
in admiration ' or annoyance or
hatred or a mixture of these
emotions they mean his ex
cellency Nuri Pasha As-Said, 15
times Prime Minister and still
undefeated.
It is a curious experience for
an observer habituated to our
modern men of power to pay
call on the Pasha. In the first
place, he does not look like a
man of power, and he does not
surround himself with the trap
pings one expects in a virtual
dictator.
You are shown into a small,
altogether unpretentious office
where sits the Pasha behind a
large desk covered with papers.
He is rather slow. He is pretty
deaf. He is extremely affable
but decidedly hard to talk to.
rpHESE are the first lmpres
sions. But first impressions
are, suddenly corrected when you
notice the hawk's curve of the
nose cutting down, as it were,
into the outward amiability of
the smile; when you catch the
half-mocking note that creeps
into the voice as it utters safe
political platitudes: and above
all, when you briefly catch a
direct glance from the hooded
old hawk's eyes.
The platitudes are hastily dis
pensed, with a kind of cagey
boredom. The meeting between
King Saud and King Faisal has
been a great success. Arab unity
is most important and much to
be desired.
Yes, there has been a real im
provement in the condition of
Jordan. No, the Pasha , does not
want to say whether the events
in Jordan and the Saud-Faisal
meeting will anger Egypt he
does not believe in commenting
on or interfering in the affairs
of brother Arab states, no mat
ter what others may do. Yes,
the general position in the Mid
dle East has grown better in re
cent months. But no, there will
never be security and stability
until the Palestine problem is
solved.
Except for the reference to
Palestine, it all comes out with
no inflection of passion or deep
feeling. There is no doubt that
the Pasha believes all that he
says. He simply does not see
much point in having to say it.
And as one listens, one suddenly
realizes why this is.
THE Pasha is brave, long-head-
ed and. infinitely experi
enced. He knows, almost in the
dark as it were, the exact loca
tion of all the levers of power
in his . country. If the peaceful
levers' of power fail him - for a
while, as they have sometimes
done, he is perfectly ready to
use his highly efficient Army
and police force :to restore tran
quility. So why on earth' make
speeches or give interviews or
offer explanations or appeal to
popular emotions or waste time
in other such fruitless ways?
Such,' very surely, is the
Pasha's basic opinion; and this
being his opinion, it is not easy
to make him come to life for
publication. He will come to life
off the record,- cannily and
frankly discussing the greatly
increased American role in .the
Middle East, or bitterly, wearily
reciting his own feelings and dif
ficulties when the British, with
whom he. has always been close,
delivered their attack on Egypt
HOW SOU USED TO PLAY
By Joseph Alsop
in concealed partnership with
the Israelis.
But there is only one moment
when he is simultaneously vivid,
interested and willing to be
quoted. It is occasioned by a
question about the comparative
mildness of the Iraqi reaction to
the Suez crisis. It was a very
tense time indeed, but the
demonstrations and police ac
tions were positive picnics com
pared to the bloody horrors
Iraq has gone through in the
past. And why was this?
"1IE ACTED promptly to keep
" order," the Pasha replies.
"But the fact that it was easier
to do so was the political first
fruit of our development pro
gram. Our people have jobs.
They live better now. A man
making a dinar a day on a steady
job does not take' a few cents
from an organizer who wants
him to join a riot. It is as simple
as that."
After hearing precisely the
same thing from a disappointed
opposition leader, one was in
clined to believe the Pasha's
briskly practical response, with
its tincture of real and deep
pride. One was also inclined to
wonder about the strange double
standard of our modern politi
cal judgments. Why reserve the
name of patriot for the Egyp
tian dictator, with his oratory
and his bomb plots and his
agents and his almost complete
carelessness of his people's wel
fare and meanwhile why con
demn the Pasha, with his much
milder government and his great
development program intended
to give the Iraqi people the
means to be truly free?
(C) 1957 New York
Herald Tribune Inc.
Field Geologist
Talks at Chamber
Roundiable Meet
"There is no 'geological rea
son why uranium should not be
discovered in southern Oregon,"
a government field geologist told
members of the Jackson County
Chamber of Commerce Round
table yesterday at the Jackson
hotel.
Len Ramp, field geologist, U.S.
department of geology and min
eral industry. Grants Pass, dis
cussed -uranium and several
other southern Oregon minerals
during a talk on the "Importance
of Minerals to Southern Ore
gon." Prospecting Slows
Ramp said, "What prospecting
there has been in this area for
uranium has slowed down be
cause the samples mined were
not of a high enough commercial
grade." .
It appears as though Lakeview
will be the only Oregon city
having an active uranium mill,
he said. The mineral expert ad
ded, however, that there should
be more exploration for uranium
in this area. The United States
currently is the world's biggest
producer of uranium, he noted.
Discussing other minerals,
Ramp pointed out there were
sufficient copper deposits in
southern Oregon to justify ex
ploration but that "interest in
the mineral has dwindled with
falling market values" on cop
per. '
Market Values
He added that market values
largely determine development
of a mineral. According to Ramp
the mineral industry is in "con
stant change" and since is find
ing uses for minerals that "yest
erday were just rocks."
The geologist said low grade
industrial minerals, among them
manganese, have a good future
in southern Oregon, but that
qualified mining engineers
would se required to develop
them. '
Noting, sulphur and iron,
Ramp said there are some sul
phur deposits near Diamond
lake but in most areas they -are
too small in quantity to be of
value. He added there is a de
mand for iron here, but its sup
plies were insufficient to encour
age prospecting.
Trouble in Africa Complicates
Governmental Crisis in France
By CHARLES M. McCANN '
United Press Correspondent
Serious new trouble in North
Africa is complicating French
cabinet crisis.
While President Rene Coty is
trying to find a premier to suc
ceed Guy Mollet, the relations
between France and its former
protectorate of Tunisia are at
the. breaking point.
Last Tuesday the day Mol
'Clean Elections1 Bill
Still in Committee;
Backers Keep Hoping
Washington
(CQ) The .
"clean elections" bill has been
trapped in the Congressional
starting gate for four months
now, but its. backers are not
quite ready to declare it out of
the race. ,
"I still hope we can pass a bill
this session," says . Sen. Albert
Gore (D-Tenn.), "but every day
that goes by hurts our chances."
Gore headed the Senate Sub
committee whose study of 1956
campaign financing reported ex
penditures of $33.2million and
admitted "the total campaign bill
. . . far surpasses that figure."
Congressional Quarterly's own
survey of House campaign spend
ing, not covered by the Sub
committee, added $2.9 million
to the total.
These huge expenditures, caus
ed in large part by the increased
cost of modern campaigning, led
the Subcommittee to conclude
that "the need for remedial leg
islation in the field of Federal
elections is imperative and im
mediate." High campaign costs have forc
ed candidates to depend a great
deal on a few large contributors.
This dependence, said the Sub
committee, poses a threat to the
integrity of the whole American
political system.
The Subcommittee's survey of
the 1956 election convinced it
that:
The limits on spending in the
existing Federal Corrupt Prac
tices Act of 1925 "fail miserably
. .". and can serve only to de-
Communications
Letters to the Editor must bear
the name and address ot 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
Billy's Message
To the Editor: I hope you will
allow me space for this special
message, written for the DAV
on the occasion of Memorial Day,
by the Rev. Billy Graham.
THE PRICE OF FREEDOM
"Most Americans are inclined
to take their blood-bought free
dom for granted. How lustily, in
times of war, we sing songs of
patriotism, respect the boys in
uniform, and pray for peace,
then forget it as soon as we can,
when it's . over. True gratitude
for . an earned peace should be
perpetual. The young men who
gave the best years of their lives
should always be remembered
by the' citizens of our nation.
And that memory should not
find expression in a shallow sen
timentality, but in making ade
quate provision for those who
have so willingly stood in war's
gap and subjected their youthful
bodies to the onslaughts of the
enemy. .
"Freedom of any sort, it
seems, never comes cheap. Our
spiritual freedom was purchased
at terrific cost by the most splen
did youth that ever walked the
shores of time, Jesus Christ the
Son of God. It hardly seemed
right that He of all men should
die in the very prime of life and
at the peak of His usefulness.
But, in God's wisdom, only those
who are ready, able and willing,
are called upon to bring life and
liberty to those who are unable
to secure it for themselves. In
the case of spiritual freedom,
there was only One in heaven
and earth who was equal to the
task, and that was Jesus' Christ.
"And when our national free
dom was jeopardized, only the
young, the strong, the very
cream of society, were equal to
the task. After World War I,
300,000 men returned disabled,
handicapped or ill. World War
II counted the disabled in hun
dreds of thousands, and Korea
added many more.
"As a group, they have been
self - sacrificing, counting the
price they paid as a debt they
rightly owed. But we, who prof
ited so greaUy by their sacrifices,
must not forget the debt we owe
these men who bear the wounds
and -scars that well might have
been ours. -
"On this Memorial Day, we
should rededicate ourselves to
the great principles of freedom
for - which thev exposed them
selves so willingly; that the war
dead shall not have died in vain
and that the Disabled war vet
erans shall not have been
wounded in vain.'
Pat Graham, Adjutant and
Service Officer, Jackson
County Chapter No. 8, DAV,
1515 North Riverside ave.,
Medford, Ore.
(P.S. Pat and Billy are un
related.)
let was forced to resign after
losing a confidence vote in Par
liament France suspended the
payments on its 35 million dol
lar a year aid program to Tun
isia. The reason was that the
French government believed that
the arms which it was sending
to Tunisia were being relayed
to the rebels in Algeria.
Premier Habib Bourguiba of
Tunisia responded by announc-
moralize the political climate
I he limits on contributions are
"for all practical purposes mean
ingless." The reporting and disclosure
requirements "are hopelessly in
adequate." On the basis of these findings,
Gore introduced a reform meas
ure that would:
Raise the limits on what can
didates can spend, but close the
loophole in existing law that en
ables them to evade all limits by
forming numerous local and tem
porary committees beyond the
reach of Federal legislation.
Put a holeproof ceiling of $1,-
000 a year on an individual's to
tal contributions to candidates
for Federal office and also re
strict interstate shipments of
campaign funds.
Make the candidate himself
responsible for authorizing and
reporting all spending on his be
half. Gore's bill was sent to the
Senate Rules Privileges and Elec
tions Subcommittee. Its chair
man, Sen. Mike Mansfield (D-
Mont.), has called no hearings on
the Gore bill or a similar meas
ure drafted in 1955 by Sen,
Thomas C. Hennings Jr. (D-Mo.),
and reintroduced by Hennings at
the start of this session,
Mansfield told Congressional
Quarterly, "I hope to have hear
ings at the first available oppor
tunity, but' it's hard to know
when we'll find time."
Gore and Hennings are press
ing for action this year in the
belief that a start on reform
must be made before the 1958
campaign begins,
Proponents of the legislation-
see three main obstacles to its
enactment:
1 Opposition from certain
leaders of both parties to any
change in the accustomed pat
tern of campaign financing. The
Gore report viewed "with deep
concern" the Republican habit
of drawing funds from "persons
affiliated with big business" and
the Democrats' dependence on
the generosity of "organized la
bor." The' chairmen of the two
parties are opposed to any new
limitations on their favorite
sources of supply.
2 Opposition from southern
Democrats to including primary
elections under Federal cam
paign spending laws, as recom
mended by Gore and Hennings.
In 1956, 69 of the 109 southern
Democratic Representatives
were able to report they spent
no money in the general election
campaign, because their real
challenge, if any, came in the
Democratic primary.
Rep. Robert T. Ashmore (D
S.C.), whose subcommittee has
jurisdiction over the clean elec
tions bills in the House, says he
spent just $100 in the 1956 gen
eral election. Ashmore, , too, is
opposed to Federal legislation on
primary election expenses, but
says he will hold hearings on the
bills if House sponsors wish.
3 Fear of labor unions and
their Congressional friends that
the climate of opinion produced
by the Senate labor racketeering
hearings would encourage re
strictions on union political ac
tivity if the election laws were
changed this year.
(Copyright 1957,
Congressional Quarterly)
Counsel With . . .
Mr. Insurance Fred Brennan
Fred Brennan
Or Call
Mr. Friendly
Bill Fish
Phone SP-2-4940
- -
MEDFORD
INSURANCE
AGENCY
27 NORTH HOLLY ST.
j ing that he regarded French-Tun-
lsian economic agreements as
havin'tf hpm nanrolloH
Other Aid Plans Sought
Bourguiba then started a ser
ies of conferences with the dip
lomatic envoys of the United
States and other countries on
the possibility they might give
the aid France refused.
The United States was brought
more directly into the North
African situation last Thursday,
when the diplomatic representa
tives in Washington of 11 Arab
countries made a formal request
to Secretary of State John Fost
er Dulles that American aid to
France be suspended.
This request was based on the
ty of terrorism in its campaign
against the nationalist rebels in
Algeria. ?
The Algerian rebellion lies be- .
hind most of France's present
troubles.
Reluctantly partly due to
United States encouragement of
"nationalist" movements all over
the world France granted in
dependence to its protectorates
of Tunisia and Morocco in 1955.
Algeria, which is the most im
portant of France's African pos
sessions, remained as it had been
a part of France itself politi
cally, with representation in the
French parliament.
Open Rebellion Continues
Open rebellion broke out in
Algeria on Nov. 1, 1954. This
rebellion continues. France is
using nearly 500,000 troops in
fighting the rebels. It is estimat
ed that the campaign will cost
France one bUlion dollars this
year.
Morocco borders Algeria on
the west. Tunisia borders Alger
ia on the east. Both Morocco
and Tunisia are openly on the
side of the Algerian rebels. Also,
Tunisia lies between Algeria and
Arab Libya There is no doubt
that the Algerian rebels are get
ting arms from Libya through
Tunisia.
Successive French premiers
have vainly sought a solution
of the Algerian problem which
would give the country a great
measure of self-rule but would
keep it as a part of France politi-
The French cabinet situation
is so tangled that Paris dispatch
es now suggest the only solution
will be to get Mollet back as
premier. .
Whoever does get the job will
inherit the Algerian-Tunisian-Moroccan
headache.
I
Medford Senior High
Auditorium
Wed.,
May 29th 7:30 p.m.
Admission Free
FIRST 3J0U,CHvk FILM
in WIDE SCREEN
Featuring the
BILLY GRAHAM
heeding o
ALL SCOTTISH CAST
Insurance has no sub
stitute
To guard all things to
.completely
No other plan
Devised by man
Protects so much to
cheaply.
Bill Fish
myM?- m imiLimT color
Scotland's heroic C'm I
freedom of f "rT
a
TEAM
AtJ
r