FOUH MEDFORD (OREGON)
UNE
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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
July 1. 1947 (Tuesday)
Valuation of Jackson county
property for the 1947-48 tax year
is $33,132,300, an increase of
$3,577,380 over the 1946-47 tax
year.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: The gov
ernment closed the fiscal year
more than a billion dollars "in
the black." This Is a deploAble
state of affairs, and indicates
both economy and efficiency
have started to take root.
20 YEARS AGO
July 1. 1937 (Thuridsy)
John A. Clark, superintendent
of Medford sewage disposal
plant, is appointed assistant civil
engineer with rang of lieutenant
junior grade in Navy Reserves.
Out-of-state automobile regis
trations for the first six months
of 1937 total 1,368, according to
Lee Garlock, manager of the
Medford branch of the AAA.
30 YEARS AGO
July 1. 1927 (Friday)
The work of moving the coun
ty offices from Jacksonville to
the Medford armory will be com
pleted tomorrow.
Medford residents use for first
time today new water pipe line
from Big Butte Swings, 38 miles
from here.
53 S r I
40 YEARS AGO
G July 1. 1917 (Syoday)
E. G. Brown plans to reopen
soon his confectionery. Brown s,
at Main and Front sts., when re
modeling there is completed.
H. C. Hazelrigg, longest em
ploye at the Medford post office,
resigns.
What's Your I.Q.?
Nln or tm correct Is operlor;
seven or eight is excellent; live or
six Is good
1. Was Raleigh originally es
tablished for the purpose of be
coming the capital of .North Car
olina? 2. Which receives the higher
base pay in the Army; a First
Sergeant or a Master Sergeant?
3. Bible: In which New Testa
ment Book is the expression "Of
the earth, earthy?"
4. Comestibles are eaten, burn
ed, or exploded?
5. A camera is fundamentally
constructed identically wJ t h
which organ of the human body?
6. An animal that chews a cud
is called a r ?
7. What common commodity is
measured by the ream?
8. What is a mitre?
9. "Hope" implies anticipation
with desire a wish it would
happen. Does a wfih necessarily
include anticipation?
10. "Spare the rod and spoil
trm rhild." Butler. "Huldibras."
Do8 the proverb refer specific
ally to love or to child training.'
Answers: 1. Yes (1791). 2. The
base pay is the same for both. 3.
I Corinthian. 4. Eaten. S. The
ye. 6. Ruminant. 7. Paper. 8.
The headress of a bishop or ab
bot. 9. No. 10. Love.
Highway Lifesavers Urge
Careful Holiday Driving
Portland W The Highway
(Lifesavers committee has urged
citizens of Oregon to drive care
fully on the fourth of July and
try to keep the state's record of
not having a recorded traffic
fatality on the 4th for two
straight years intact.
Because the 4ih c o m s on
Thursday this year, the commit
tee anticipates heavy traffic for
. four days starting Thursday to
Sunday.
MAIL TRIBUNE
Editorial Correspondence . . .
New York, N.Y., June 27th;
that while we can do little about
do a good deal to us.
This is the second day of
smog, and as a result, good will
man's town are conspicuous by
We could cite many examples, but will confine ourselves
to only two, namely, two of our
John Crosby, the television and
Smith, the breezy and colorful
luminaries on the readable NY
Taking the last first, "Red,"
4.o the chief owner of the Brooklyn Dodgers, Walter O'Mallev,
who, in Washington, D.C., yesterday renewed his familiar refrain
that he will move his team to Los Angeles unless he can get a
new stadium in Brooklyn which will seat at least 50,000 fans
and park-for-free some 40 000 cars.
Red is fed up with this sort of "hold-up" threat and con
cludes his remarks about his old time friend in part as follows:
"O'Malley has taken a lot of money out of Brooklyn and
now he- wants to take their ball club. A suggestion has
been put forward which may
O'Malley can't contain his restlessness he ought to go to Los
Angeles, leaving the Dodgers behind."
"Red" then goes on to state
been the past live years one
League history. Their net profits the past half decade have
totalled SI. 800, 000 and a capital
"Red" thinks O'Malley ought
his own business for baseball
form a club of his own, in neither case ask the baseball fans to
act as both patrons and Santa Claus but let him a multi
millionaire finance himself.
There is, we believe, a lot of
and we have no doubt thousands
the way with him on the Overboard with O'Malley" thesis.
But being familiar with "Red's" column for many years.
our conviction is he would never havu given the "heave-ho" to
the Dodger boss in such outspoken fashion had it not been for
the weather.
So to John Crosby, our favorite TV and radio commentator.
He saw Ed Sullivan's 9th birthday anniversary show last Sun
day night and did not think much
ing correspondent.
But he was more explicit
newspaper contemporary than is
Listen to this for example,
"It sometimes seems as if
Sullivan is celebrating another
day, seems more like his ninetieth." Why there are quite
grown up children in the country who first opened their eyes
to the sight of Ed Sullivan, hands clasped in supplication, eye
balls rolling wildly on the screen. There are children whose
first exposure to the English language was Ed Sullivan feeling
his tortuous, uncertain way through a sentence."
Now, we happen to know that Crosby and Sullivan are on
good terms and reasonably good friends, and while we could
never imagine Crosby praising any such boresome 60-minute
show as Sullivan put on to celebrate his ninth TV birthday, we
seriously doubt he would have been quite so devastating if the
mercury had not been in the nineties and the humidity as high
or higher when he was called upon to write it.
m m
But the "pay-off" line in this Crosby article (no relation to
"BINi") was his comparison with Steve Allen, who comes on
at the same hour and apparently is getting a better rating via
Nielson than Sullivan.
Here is Crosby's conclusion, quote:
"You and I know when the switch occurs. During the com
mercials of course. Sometimes I wonder whether anyone ever
hears a commercial on either show any more."
How often, here and at home, we have wondered the same
thing.
We know we turn off the "commercials" whether they are
for beer, lip stick or motor cars, and we can't believe that there
are not many entirely objective and non-partisan TV addicts
who do likewise.
In fact up at the Rice Mountain lodge where the days were
never humid and the nights were never hot, we listened to both
Sullivan and Steve Allen and chose the latter for solely one
reason his commercials were much shorter and less impregnated
with spurious and silly salesmanship.
Obviously that can's be blamed on this God Awful weather.
But as indicated above the comments of Messers Crosby and
"Red" Smith can! R.W.R.
90 Years of the Dominion
Canada celebrates Dominion ,Day today, 90 years
after the British North American Act established the
Dominion of Canada on July 1, 1867. Only four
Provinces comprised the original Dominion Upper
Canada (now Ontario), Lower Canada (now Que
bec), Nova Scotia, New Brunswick.
Manitoba, carved out of the Northwest Territories,
was admitted as a Province in 1870. British Columbia
came along in 1871, Prince Edward Island in 1873,
Alberta and Saskatchewan in 1905, Newfoundland
(formally) in 1949. In addition to these ten Provinces,
there are two Territories: the Northwest and the
Yukon.
CPURRING on the federation of the original four
Provinces in 1867 was resentment at the United
States. Yet 20 years previously much sentiment,
especially around Montreal, had shown itself for an
nexation to this country, after the British ended their
preferential treatment for Canadian products.
And in 1855 a treaty between the U.S. and Canada
(jad provided for a ten-year
the two countries in raw materials. But then the U.b.
went high-tariff, resented
sympathy for the South in
reciprocity more helpful to Canada than to this coun
try. We abrogated the treaty in 1865, bringing the
four Canadian Provinces closer together for economic
self-protection.
TODAY, also, mistrust of
jiuiu a puiiui.ai uc v ciujiiiciiL 111 Vjdiidua, xiic jj-
minion ambassador to Egypt, E. H. Norman, com
mitted suicide on April 4 after a subcommittee of the
U.S. Congress had labeled
Many Candadians believe their economy endan
gered by U.S. tariff rates, U.S. sales of wheat abroad,
mounting U.S. control of industry in Canada. In the
recent political campaign lost by the Liberal govern
ment this was constantly charged with being sub
servient to Uncle Sam. E.R.R.
Search Fbrty Scans Mountain for Youth
Longmire ilfi A rescue
party picked its way up 5.955-
foot Eagle Peak in Mount Rain
ier National park today search
ing for a 13-year-old Seattle boy
missing overnight.
Daniel Rathke, member of a
Monday, July 1. 1957
We have always had a theory
the weather, the weather can
a sultry, torrid and depressing
and good nature around this
their absence.
favorite newspaper columnists
radio commentator, and "Red"
sports writer, both recognized
Herald Tribune.
this morning pays his respects
win many converts that is if
the Dodger's management has
of the most prosperous m Big
gain of about $400,000.
to stay in Brooklyn and finance
is a business or go to L.A. and
good sense to "Red's" proposal
of Dodger fans would go all
more of it than your wander
and far more scathing for his
his wont.
quote:
every time I turn on the TV, Ed
anniversary Ninth birth
tariff reciprocity between
Canadian (and British)
our Civil War, pronounced
this country has lain be-
him a former Communist.
Lutheran church group visiting
the park yesterday, disappeared
while on a hike up the peak
Ratke did not return with the
rest of the group at noon but
his disappearance was not re
ported until about 3:15 p.m.
J38 M
..SO RBMBMBBR. fClOS.Trlfi NEXT TIME YOUR
OADOy GOeS TO THE DRUGSTORE.....' - .
Matter of Fact
THE HEIRS APPARENT
Washington The role of heir
apparent is a difficult one, re
quiring much circumspection.
There are cur
rently a couple
of circumspect
heirs apparent
in Washington
Deputy Sec
retary of De
fense Donald
Quarles and
Under Secre
tary of State
stevait aisop Christian Hert
er. Whether they will eventual
ly succeed to the two most pow
erful Cabinet posts makes an
interesting personal and politi
cal equation. .
The key figure in the equa
tion is. of course, the President.
In 1952, President Eisenhower
took on Cabinet members sight
unseen, on the recommendation
of Gen. Lucius Clay. But nowa
days, after going on five years
as President, he will certainly
make his own final choice. He
has already turned down one
heir apparent Undersecretary
of the Treasury Randolph Bur
gess at least in part because
he ' was annoyed with Burgess
for testifying that his budget
ought to be cut.
Presidential annoyance is also
a factor in the case of Quarles.
Secretary of Defense Charles
Wilson is an enthusiastic admir
er of Quarles, and his enthus
iasm carried him too far, to
Quarles disadvantage. For Wil
son virtually promised Quarles
the Secretaryship of Defense,
and when this was reported to
the President, he was angry for
he felt that Wilson had poached
on Presidential prerogatives.
PRESIDENTIAL annoyance Is
not the only obstacle Quarles
faces. He has enemies in all
three services. The Navy was
furious when testimony by
Quarles before a House commit
tee was released, in which
Quarles implied that the big
Navy carriers would be useless
in case of major war. The Army
was equally furious with
Quarles for the part he played
in denying medium range mis
siles to the Army. And even in
the Air Force he recently head
ed, Quarles is by no means uni
versally admired, since there is
much feeling that he failed to
fight hard enough against cut
backs in air power.
The Army and Navy are also
unhappy about the possibility
that a former Secretary of the
Air Force wUl get the top civil
ian Pentagon post, the more so
since the former Air Force Chief
of Staff, Gen. Nathan Twining,
has been elevated to the chair
manship of the Joint Chiefs. Yet
despite all this, the betting on
Quarles is high, and getting high
er. Curiously enough, Quarles'
chances are improved by the
fact that his admirer, Secretary
Wilson, has been making noises
which suggest that he may stay
on longer than previously sup
posed. If Wilson stays on until
the autumn, it is believed in
the Pentagon, Quarles should be
almost a shoo-in. For by that
time. Army and Navy passions
should have cooled. Moreover,
Quarles will have had a chance
to prove himself, both with the
services and with the President.
TTE is an immensely hard work
er, a 14-hour-a-day man, and
by this time he knows more than
any other civilian (other than
the formidable money man, Wil
fred McNeil), about where the
Pentagon's numerous bodies are
buried. He alio has a way of
impressing his superiors, as Wil
son's admiration for him sug
gests. Thus or so it is though,
in the Pentagon if Wilson stays
on for some months more, the
President's annoyance will have
worn off, and he will recognize
Quarles as the logical man for
the job.
The case of Herter is differ
ent. He has no enemies. The
President likes and admires him.
and since he came to Washing
ton, he has also won the admir
ation of the State Department
hierarchy, for his ability and
knowledge of foreign affairs.
By Stewart Alsep
And he has the invaluable knack
of getting along well with Con
gress. The main obstacle in Herter's
case is Secretary of State John
Foster Dulles love for his job
After his cancer operation, it
was generally believed that
Dulles would bow out by mid
summer. He had, indeed, drop
ped some hints to that effect.
But no hints have been dropped
lately, and Dulles acts more and
more as though he regarded
himself as a permanent fixture
More -than most Secretaries of
State, he has become convinced
that the whole jerry-built struc
ture of American foreign policy
would collapse like the wonder
ful one-hoss shay if he ever left
his post.
TT was generally suspected
when he came to Washington
that Herter had a flat commit
ment that he would become Sec
retary of State, as a reward for
his backing of Vice President
Nixon at the time of Harold
Stassen's famous fiasco. Actual
ly he had no commitment of any
sort. But he certainly would not
have left the governorship of
Massachusetts for a subordinate
State Department post unless he
had excellent reason to believe
that he had a very good chance
to become Secretary of State.
Thus, if and when Dulles
leaves a L.: if and a big when
Herter is certainly frontrun-
ner to succeed him. It is still
possible, of course, that the
President will choose his closest
friend, Gen. Alfred Gruenther,
or another man, for either the
Defense or State Department
posts. But Herter and Quarles
are currently favored daily
double to inherit the second and
third most powerful jobs in the
American government.
Copyright 1957 New York
Herald Tribune Inc.
Communications
Careless Tricks
To the Editor: Here's a cheer
to the lame brains!!! men, wom
en and children who are so
thoughtful as to throw tin cans
and broken bottles in our lakes
and streams.
Sunday we went over to Ash
land's beautiful Lithia Park for
relaxation and enjoyment, which
it was, until our oldest youngster
decided to cool his feet in the
lovely waters of Ashland creek.
Now thanks to some thoughtful
goon he's sporting six stitches
across the arch of his foot, and
t. fine crop of poison ivy from
the park grounds.
It's only been about a month
since we went to TouVelle State
Park, near our home, for a wie
ner roast. There, were a large
group of Boy Scouts all fine
heathy lads strolling the river
banks. They found a pop bottle
which forthwith was thrown in
the stream and pelted with
rocks. Now, those ruthless pieces
of glass await some tender little
foot to gash. Well trained boys.
My nephew can attest further
to such carelessness. When
scrambling for a toy a broken
beer bottle slashed across his
wrists severing four tendons and
narrowly missing an artery.
Why, oh, why, must people do
such simple - minded, careless
tricks?? I do hope this might
serve as a reminder to others to
be careful and to be thoughtful
of someone else.
Mrs. J. W. Stevens
Route 2 Box 151A
Central Point, Ore. i
ON AND ON FOREVER
God gives you eternal life from the in
stant you receive Christ as your Lord and
Saviour. Rich or poor, rags or robes, receive
Christ as having died for your every last
sin from the cradle to the grave. And.
whether or not you are in God's family of
the saved, read the Bible. Learn why it is
the world's Best Seller. To the saved, the
Bible is the Book of Books. It says that
man shall not live by bread alone but by
every word that proceeds out of the mouth
of God.
Geo. N. Taylor, 2385 87th
Portland 1, Ore.
Mao's Speech Inviting
To Speak Out Said Backfiring
By CHARLES M. McCANN
United Press Correspondent
The big-hearted speech in
which Chinese Communist lead
er Mao Tse-tung invited criti
cism of his
regime, has
backfired.
Mao made
the speech at
a secret meet
ing in Peiping
last Feb. 27.
It started to
leak out only
weeks later
Thai-it Mccano and finally
was broadcast officially on June
18.
Seeking to show that the Com
munist dictatorship really was
liberal, Mao admitted there
were contradictions between
various elements in "China, in
cluding the government and the
people
"Let a hundred flowers bloom
let a hundred schools of
thought contend," Mao said in
inviting criticism.
Apparently to his surprise, a
lot of people in China took him
at his word.
Much Criticism
Intellectuals, ' leaders of some
small fellow-travelling political
parties which are still tolerated,
even Communist Party mem
bers, started criticizing enthusi
astically. Prof. Ko Pei-chi, a lecturer in
literature at Peiping University,
for instance, accused the Com
munist Party of being too high
handed in its methods.
In the Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
Story with a happy ending:
A giant auger bored 240 feet
through a mine in Bloommgdale,
Ohio, to rescue five men who had
been trapped for 14 hours by a
cave-m.
The big machine tried twice
unsuccessfully to get through
the mass of rock and rubble. On
the third try, the trapped men
heard the big bit getting closer
and closer. They kept repeat
ing: "Come on, baby, do your
stuff." It did, coming clear
through to .the hole the men
were trapped in.
They crawled through the hole
to safety.
TJIGNESS, you see, isn't always
badness.
If the machine hadn't been
big, it couldn't have bored
through to rescue the men.
HERE'S a little tele about
prince and a queen:
The Duke of Edinburg attend
ed a luncheon meeting of the
British Automobile Association
the other day and made a speech
in which he told his hearers:
"WE'VE GOT TO HELP
DRIVERS TO BE BETTER AND
SAFER DRIVERS."
Later in the day, with Queen
Elizabeth beside him, he swish
ed out of London into the coun
try. Some 20 miles out, he had a
fender-denting rear-end collision
with a tiny pre-war clunk. No
one was injured. The dent was
in the Duke's fender. The little
car came out unmarred.
THE Duke shouted: "It's all
rieht. Nn riamnpp Don't
worry. It's all.my fault."
The other driver didn t seem
to realize at first who it was.
But when he saw the queen he
smiled, hesitated and then drove
on.
The Duke's face was a bit red.
jHE moral?
It's easy to preach about safe
driving.
But if the preacher doesn t
practice what he preaches, he
gets nowhere.
QOOD news:
The Institute of Life Insurance
says life insurance purchases in
the United States in the first half
of 1957 were 30 PER CENT
above last year.
If the trend continues, the re
port adds, total life insurance
sales may reach a record 70 bil
lion dollars.
GAIN the question:
Why is that good news?
rriHE answer is simple. Life in-
A surance represents SAV
INGS.
Before a dollar can be borrow
ed to build a house with, for
example SOMEBODY MUST i
SAVE A DOLLAR UP.
Investment . money doesn t
grow on trees.
Ave.
S-W,
if
The people can blow you
down," Ko said. "They can kill
Communists. The people can
overthrow you."
Gen. Lung Yun, vice chairman
of the National Defense Commit
tee, took advantage of the new
freedom to direct a hearty swipe
at Soviet Russia. He complained
of the way in which Russia loot
ed the industrial areas of Man
churia after World War II. He
said that Russia ought to pay a
share of Red China's costs in the
Korean War.
As the result of statements
like these, Mao and his fellow
leaders appear to have had some
sober second thoughts.
Mao issued a long directive
to the national police last Tues
day. He said that the police must
hunt down "counter-revolutionaries."
He said that they must
keep close contact with the peo
ple, "listen to their opinions"
and regard themselves as public
servants.
It looked somewhat as if
"counter-revolutionaries" would
prove to be those whose criti
cisms of the government and
the Communist Party were too
Editorial
Comment
THE TEST OF OBSCENITY
An examination of news re
ports of the U. S. Supreme
Court's rulings upholding legis
lation against obscene literature
indicates that the high court has
not significantly altered the
status of such laws as they have
been interpreted by the inferior
federal c o u rts and the state
courts. The court has confirmed
the power of society to protect
itself from the circulation of
obscenities, but it has not dis
turbed the following basic limita
tions on that power:
(1) Obscenity is to be deter
mined by the effect of a publica
tion read in its entirety, not from
selected excerpts.
(2) The effect is that to be ex
pected on a person of average
maturity and instincts, not on
children or on persons particular
ly susceptible to pornographic
suggestion.
(3) The ruling on obscenity
must be that of a duly authorized
tribunal, acting on the merits of
a particular case; i.e., police of
ficers, prosecutors and volunteer
censors have no authority to em
bargo a publication- administra
tively. These principles Save been
drawn by the courts from such
leading cases as U.S. vs. One
Book, "Ulysses," (1933) and The
New World Library of World
Literature vs. Allen (1953).
Neither of these federal court
decisions a p p e ars to be con
tradicted by the Supreme Court's
ruling that laws prohibiting ob
scene publications are consitiu
tionel. Indeed, this was the con
clusion in both cases cited.
These and other federal court
decisions have combined to estab
lish the modern American rule
that indicatable obscenity must
be "dirt for dirt's sake" and that
it must be judged, not by zeal
ous administrative officials or
volunteer censors, but by due
process of law.
It is impossible, of course, for
any court or any legislature to
draw a precise line and say on
the one side is obscenity. Each j
case must be determined on its
merits, and the views of judges
and juries will vary. But the
board principles are clear: Our
society will not tolerate the pub
lication of pornography and
sheer obscenity. On the other
hand the protections against
these abominations will not be
permitted legally to restrict the
publication of literature of mer
it (even though daring) or to
limit the reading of the general
public to; the level thought suit
able for a child or a pervert.
It is a sane and sensible middle
ground. Portland Oregonian.
The name Venezuela means
little Venice.
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Critics
frank, and that the police would
be listening especially to people
who dared to talk too much.
"Repent and Accept"
Premier Chou En-lai followed
this up in a speech he made last
Wednesday at the opening of a
session of Parliament in Peiping.
Chou warned critics of the
government that they might be
branded as "enemies of the peo
ple." He called upon them to
"repent and accept opportuni
ties for remolding themselves."
This all adds up to the fact
that in a Communist country
even a little liberalization is a
dangerous thing.
It is true that President Tito
of Yugoslavia has materially
liberalized his regime. But it
still is a dictatorship. It is true
also that in Poland Communist
leader Wladyslaw Gomulka has
gone even father than Tito. But
Poland, too, is still a Commu
nist dictatorship.
Nikita S. Khrushchev found
out in repudiating the methods
of Josef Stalin that liberalization
might get out of hand. His lib
eralization policy led to the Pol
ish and Hungarian revolts.
Eisenhowers Have
41st Anniversay
Gettysburg, Pa. Wl Presi
dent and Mrs. Eisenhower today
celebrated their 41st wedding
anniversary.
And they celebrated it quiet
ly at home the home they al
ways wanted with only a few
old friends on hand.
The gifts they gave each oth
er to mark the event were not
announced. But they had one
gift for each other that they
cared not who knew about: Bub
bling good humor and laughter
Thev showed it nlainlv Sun
day evening when they helped
this town mark its own great
anniversary: The epic Civil war
battle of Gettysburg.
The President and First Lady,
each grinning gaily, posed brief
ly arm-in-arm for photographers
before taking front-row seats at
a ceremony marking the 94th
anniversary of Gen. Robert E.
Lee's heroic but unsuccessful at
tempt to crack the Union armies
on the fields bordering the Eis
enhower's farm.
Gettysburg Mayor William-G.
Weaver asked the 1,500 towns
people crammed m the high
school auditorium to "give the
bride and groom of 41 years a
rousing cheer." The Eisenhow
ers, blushing a little, stood and
waved happily to their neigh
bors and the roar of applause.
Salesmen drive their cars the
greatest number of average
miles each year in comparison
with the record of other occu
pational groups.
EXTRA
CASH
FOR
VACATION
EXPENSES
Buy WHAT YOU NEED
Clean-up YOUR BILLS
We will supply the cash
on your own signature
and security. No one need
sign with you. Convenient
repayments. Com in,
write or phone.
Oregon
Finance Co.
Home Owned Ic Managed
by Gene Thomas
45 So. Central -
At PERL'S every family
may make funeral ar
rangements which are In
keeping with its means. A
selection of services for
very price range Is of
fered to satisfy individual
preferences and to meet
all financial circumstances.
Convenient Terms?
Certainly!