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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 9, 1947 (Wednesday)
Ceremonies inaugurating West
Coast Air lines passenger serv
ice into Medford will be held
next week, according to Charles
Willock, the firm's local man
ager. From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: A finan
cial expert reports, under pre
sent conditions, "The rich are
not getting any richer." The
poor report the same trouble.
20 YEARS AGO
July 9, 1937 (Friday)
Harvesting of the Burtlett
pear crop in the Rogue valley
will start between Aug. 15 and
20, according to County Horticul
turist C. B. Cordy.
Medford banks report general
Increases in business during past
year, greater commercial act-
tivity and continued economic
Improvement.
30 YEARS AGO
July 9, 1927 (Saturday)
United Artisans of Grants
Pass hold joint installation of
officers with Medford assemb
ly No. 561 at Medford.
trom Local and Personal col
umn: R. A. McKay will con
struct $6,000 dwelling and gar
e on Reddy ave.
4 YEARS AGO
July 9, 1917 (Monday)
Seventh Company of the coast
artillery. Medford, is mobilized
O by the war department, accord
ing to Capt. A. J. Vance.
New Chautauqua auditorium
at Ashland will be formally de
dicated at the beginning of the
25th assembly season, July 11.
What's Your I.Q.?
Nina or ten correct Is superior;
even or eight is excellent; five or
six la good
O 1. In 1733 the first Catholic
q Church was erected in Philadel
phia. Was a Masonic Lodge
opened there the year before or
after?
2. Perique tobacco Is grown
In only one State; name it.
3. Bible: Do all Biblical names
have particular meanings?
4. Are all conifers evergreen?
5. A fire of uncertain origin
destroyed the capitol at Harris
burg in 1887, 1897, 1907?
6. Who was President of the
U.S. when the Panama Canal
Zone was acquired by perpetual
lease?
7. The city of Asuncion is in
which south American country?
8. Which State of the U. S. is
known as the "Blue Grass
State?"
9. In 1897 the medical term
"psittacosis" (parrot fever) was
introduced. Is this contageous
disease communicable to hu
mans? 10. Shakespeare. "The Merry
Wives of Windsor:" It is a fa
miliar beast to man. and signifies
live." Is "It" a dog. dove, or
louse?
Answers: 1. After (1734): sec
4 nna established in the U.S.
2. Louisiana. 3. Yes. 4. No, (such
conifers as western larch, tam
arack, and southern cypress,
shed their leaves annually).
5. 1897. 6. Theodore Roosevelt.
7. Paraguay. 8. Kentucky 9. Yes.
And birds. 10. Lous.
MAIL TRIBUNE
Editorial Correspondence . . .
Stonington, Conn., July 4th Not like the "good old days." We
have yet to hear as much as a pop-gun and the great patriotic
celebration known as the "Fourth of July" will soon be over.
Like the stove pipe hat the "noisy, explosive Fourth of July" has
gone out of style, apparently.
Our change of base to Stonington corresponded with a sharp
change in the weather. The location of this quaint fishing village
on salt water may have something to do with it, but the NY
papers report much cooler weather down there also.
What a relief! A couple of blankets feel good at night instead
of that sweltering Madison Avenue hotel, where even pajamas
were a burden.
a
We have been here tefore, however, and know this part of
the country well enough to know this is what should be called
a breathing spell and a brief one it may be 90" in the shade
and in humidity tomorrow.
Stonington is, however, short of Maine, the best place we
know of along the Sound, to spend the summer. Like the road
from Rice Mountain Lodge to Dickinson Centre, things have
changed very little here since the War of 1812.
There are some nice summer homes here, but no one puts on
any dog. Everyone knows everyone else including the Portuguese.
And at noon you can buy lobsters that were caught only a few
hours before sweeter and more tender than anything we could
get in New York city. There is sailing, fishing and swimming
for those who can do any one or all as two of the boy grand
children are here the one sister is at camp in Maine and as
the three baby-blondes from the Adirondacks are expected in a
week or so, it is going to be hard to leave. But in spite of all
reports to the contrary we have our reservations.
We don't read any of the Hearst papers at home or abroad as
a general rule, but coming up on the "New Haven" the other day
we were presented with a copy of the N.Y. Journal-American by
a waiter in the dining car. Glancing it over we ran into one of the
most violent and unwarranted attacks on the Supreme Court it has
ever been our displeasure to read. All the hulabaloo was over
the courts in the recent California Communist cases and the re
versal in the Watkins case. Presidents Truman and Eisenhower as
well as Attorney General Brownell were scored for packing the
court with left wingers who were engaged in a plot to besmirch
the name of the late Senator McCarthy of Wisconsin, and turn
the American government, lock stock and barrel, over to the
Kremlin. Many other papers wedded to "McCarthyism" have
joined in a smiliar hue and cry since these "liberating decisions
were handed down, but we have seen none as extreme and in
temperate as this.
But that, of course, is the Hearst philosophy and technique
and has been through the years. They never appeal to the intelli
gence or the sober judgment of their readers, but always to their
prejudices and passions.
There was nothing in these decisions that upheld Russia com
munism or any other political radicalism. They only upheld the
constitution of the United States and the Bill of Rights. The court
did not destroy the power of congressional investigation, as
claimed, but only defined its limits and when the rights of an
American citizen are at stake there SHOULD be a limit.
As far as the "American way of life" and subversion are con
cerned, the Hearst editorials attacking the American judiciary and
its personnel contributed far more to that end, than anything the
declining "Red Conspiracy" in this country can, from now on in,
be expected to do.
We were glad to see that in spite of the noise and fury of the
reactionary press, President Eisenhower held firm to his dislike
of any return to McCarthyism, and reaffirmed his confidence in
and high respect for the members of that tribunal, and its vital
importance in the American TRUE "way of life." R.W.R.
Size of the Major Leagues
Presidents of certain minor baseball leagues meet
with Ford C. Frick, commissioner of baseball, at St.
Louis on Wednesday, .July 10.. They are to discuss
"preliminary steps" toward expanding the major
ISclTlGSei
Expansion won't, admits Mr. Ford, be "easy."
Nevertheless, a major revision of the entire set-up of
baseball seems indicated as result of the decision of
the National League last May 28 to let the Brooklyn
Dodgers remove to Los Angeles.
If the Dodgers do go, then the New York Giants
are allowed to shift to San Francisco. But Abe
Stark, president of the New York City Council, on
June 26 told the Celler Judiciary subcommittee in
vestigating baseball that if the West Coast wanted
a major league, it ought to "build" one of its own
without disrupting the "names and addresses of ex
isting teams."
CONSIDERING how sharply some large cities have
changed in comparative size of population over
half a centuiy, it is remarkable that the two major
leagues should have remained unchanged in member
ship for 50 years from 1903. That was the year when
peace was signed between the National and the new
American League. In 1953 the Boston Braves (Na
tional) shifted to Milwaukee, then the St. Louis
Browns (American) to Baltimore, the Philadelphia
Athletics (American) to Kansas City.
Back in the 1890's, when the National was the
only major league, it consisted of 12 clubs. Most of
them lost money most of the time, and in 1900 the
League found it the part of wisdom to reduce to eight
teams. E.R.R.
Suhrawardy s Pakistan
The next prime minister to come to the United
States will be Hussein S. Suhrawardy of Pakistan,
who reaches Washington tomorrow. As a political
entity, his country is a bizarre one, inasmuch as 1000
miles of land separate its two units, West Pakistan
and East Pakistan. What holds the two together is
the Moslem religion prevailing in both.
Moslems for a time worked side by side with
Hindus for freeing India from British rule, but for
some years before independence came in 1947 the
two had become hostile to each other and had drifted
far apart. So in 1947 Pakistan and India were set up
as separate members of the British Commonwealth.
THE capital, Karachi, lies in West Pakistan which
lovnroltr orirl Viae civ ti'mpa the arpa nf East PnklS-
ACiljV-AJ' ...... w-v. .
tan but a smaller population. Semi-tropical East
Pakistan, with a highly developed jute industry, de
mands more autonomy for itself than the national
government is willing to concede.
This conflict between the two halves of the nation
is one reason why it has held no national elections
since 1947, and its parliament is still the Constituent
Assembly set up to receive independence. E.R.R. I
Tuesday. July 9. 1957
CNmK$mSARLY! THE
Matter of Fact
NIKITA TRIUMPHANT
London The sharp HtUe eyes
positively sparkled with pleas
ure. A delighted smile creased
the broad face.
The stubby
peasant hands
sketched a
quick gesture
of a p p 1 a use.
What Nikita S.
K h r u shchev
was applaud
ing was the
simple enor
Joseph Alsop
mity nf tho
heaval involved in turning the
whole vast structure of Soviet
industry literally urisinV down
This moment in a long inter
view pnoiograpned itself on
this reporter's memorv hepanw
of its intensely personal charac
ter. Another man might have
.... i . . j i . i .
.uuiiuuea mat a radical reor
ganization of Soviet industry
was a regrettable necessity. But
Khrushchev positively gloated
over it, most strongly emphasiz
ing just those aspects of the new
departure which would be the
most risky and unsettling.
One suspects that just this
trait of Khrushchev's this
pleasure in bold and radical new
departures for their own sake
was at the root of the repeated
disagreements between him and
the cautious, longheaded Molot-
ov, the old wheelhorse Kagano
vich and the shrewd, cynical
Malenkov. It is clear, at any
rate, that their numerous differ
ences over foreign and domestic
policy were brought to a head
by Khrushchev's industrial re
organization plan.
AS Khrushchev himself pointed
nilt rt TTIA fVia nlun uni- on4
is a direct attack on the vested
interests of "tens of thousands"
of the most highly placed offi
cials, technicians and adminis
trators in the Soviet Union. An
actual majority of the official
population of Moscow was com
posed of the swollen staffs of the
huge, now abolished industrial
ministries. And as Khrushchev
said with sardonic cheerfulness,
"These gentlemen are now to be
sent out into the provinces to do
more productive work."
One can easily imagine the
opposition and obstruction
evoked by this mass exile. Ob
viously the opponents and ob
structory of industrial reorgani
zation flocked to the support of
the minority members of the all
powerful Presidium. In the
Presidium itself Pervukhin and
Saburov were the successively
displaced industrial coordinators
whose efforts had failed to satis
fy Khrushchev. They evidently
joined Khrushchev's three active
enemies, Molotov, Kaganovich
and Malenkov, when the issue
was finally joined.
It must have been a very near
run thing. Both Molotov and
Khrushchev himself at different
times told former American
Ambassador Bohlen that Presi
dium decisions were taken by
vote. In a Presidium of eleven
members the opposition had five
votes. Khrushchevs with six
votes, had a majority of one. But
Khrushchev's six included the
unpredictable doctrinnaire-fanat-ic.
Suslov. and the aged, be
mused figurehead. Marshal Vor
oshilov. JUDGING from the published
documents, the opposition
seemed to have won the day at
one moment during the visit to
Finland of Khrushchev and Bul-
ganin. This, no doubt, was when
the "anti party group" actually
'tried to change the composition
of the party's leading bodies
elected by the Central Commit
tee." But Khushchev, thus threat
ened with expulsion from the
Presidium, boldly turned for
support to his adherents in the
party apparatus and above all to
Marshall Zhukov and the army.
A special meeting of the party s
Central Committee was called,
""he struggle seems to have gone
on from June 15, when Khrush
chev and Bulganin returned
from Finland, until June 29
when the Central Committee
meeting ended.
The experts infer that the
struggle was both intense and
prolonged from the indications
t at the Soviet leadership had
no time for anything else during
,7-9
SEAGULLS ARE UP'.'
By Joseph Alsop
this period. The annual Moscow
Air Show was cancelled. The
great and costly anniversary cel
ebrations at Leningrad, which
should have brought out almost
the whole Presidium, were at
tended by none of them. In the
disarmament meetings here in
London, the Soviet delegate,
Valerian Zorin, could only lis
ten and ask questions from June
15 onwards because he could get
no orders from Moscow. There
were other such signs.
TT would reveal a great deal
about the structure of political
power in the Soviet Union today,
n any or the Episodes of the cli
mactic period of struggle were
known. Above all. one would
like to know the relative con
tributions to the final outcome
made by the two elements that
gave Khrushchev his victory
the officer caste headed by Zhu
kov, and the party apparatus
neaaea by Krushchev himself.
In any case, in the final out
come JMiKita Khrushchev was
completely triumphant. In the
new Presidium, Mikoyan and
Bulganin may venture to argue
and urge caution. But there is
only one man, Marshal Zhukov,
who appears to have the power
to offer direct opposition. But
Zhukov is believed to confine
his interests to military 'and stra
tegic questions (including im
portantly the problems of retain
ing control of the satellite em
pire). There is not the slightest
reason to suspect that Khrush
chev sees these questions differ
ently from Zhukov. There are
even some reasons to think he
sees them largely through
Zhukov s eyes.
Thus Khrushchev's mastery of
the boviet Union and its policies
may now be regarded as an ac
complished fact. A final ques
tion, in which there is no avail
able answer, still remains. Did
Khrushchev plan it that way, or
did he sincerely intend to adhere
to the system of "collective" rule
until he was forced to choose be
tween crushing the opposition or
being crushed himself?
(Copyright 1957, New York
Herald Tribune Inc.
Littrell Blames
Lack o! Experience
For Long Session
"Lack of experience" among
legislators accounted for the ex
cessively long 128-day session of
this year's state legislature, E. A
(Al) Littrell, state representative.
told the Jackson County Cham
ber of Commerce Roundtable at
yesterday noon's luncheon meet
ing at the Jackson hotel.
Littrell noted that there were
32 new -legislators at the session
and of 23 chairmen of various
legislative committees, only five
had previous experience.
The representative, a mem
ber of the House committee on
highways, said construction of a
highway to Klamath Falls, by
way of Lake of the Woods would
be delayed until approved by the
U.S. forest service, Washington,
D C. The highway has already
gained state approval, he said.
Discussing the tax program
adopted by the recent legisla
ture, he said itwouId probably
have a "detrimental effect" on
current and potential private in
dustry due to increased corpora
tion taxes and personal income
taxes.
Increased at the session were
the corporate -excise tax, taxes
on utilities, miscellaneous license
fees and unemployment and
workman's compensation, Lit
trell said. He added that the in
creases in worker's benefits
would have to be borne com
pletely by employers.
JESSE JAMES NABBED
Los Angeles (Ut Lawmen
caught up with Jesse James to
day and put him behind bars
for mail robbery. The 44-year-old
truck driver for the Los
Angeles post office was accused
of stealing some 3,000 letters
Saturday night.
Malenkov Will Be Lucky If He
Lives; Decision Being Weighed
By CHARLES M. McCANN
' United Press Correspondent
Georgi M. Malenkov will be a
lucky man if he is not shot as
the result of the big Russian
Communist
Party purge.
It is evident
now that Mal
enkov is re
garded as the-
m o s t danger
ous of the big
three "anti
party" men in
volved in the
raarles McCano dispute among
Soviet leaders. Charges amount
ing to criminal conspiracy .have
been made against him by Nikita
S. Khrushchev and other victors
in the dispute.
If these charges, made in
speeches, are not followed by
a formal prosecution, it surely
will mean that there has been
a radical change in Communist
Party procedure.
Vyacheslav M. Molotov and
Lazar M. Kaganovich, the other
two members of the "Big
Three," have been linked with
some of the offenses attributed
to Malenkov.
Last of "Bolsheviks"
What seems to put Malenkov
on the spot is the fact that he
is the youngest of the three, one
of the new generation of Soviet
leaders.
Molotov and Kaganovich are
survivors of a past generation.
Molotov is 67. He is the last of
the "Old Bolsheviks" who had
already reached the top at the
time of the 1917 Revolution.
Kaganovich is 63. Both have
been on the down grade since
the death of Josef Stalin.
But MaTenkov is only 55. He
is one pf the new generation of
In the Day's News
By FRANK
A little better than a century
ago 109 years, to be axact about
it an Oregonian by the name
of Marshall started the Cali
fornia boom when he leaned
down and picked up an odd-looking
rock in a ditch he was dig
ging near what is now Sacra
mento but then was Sutter's
Fort.
It gleamed faintly in the sun
and attracted his attention.
It turned out to be GOLD.
His discovery started a chain
reaction that has been going
ever since.
IT IS historically i n t eresting
that the boom he touched off
was confined to Northern Cali
fornia. For more than half a cen
tury California south of the Te-
hachapi slept on in the sun.
Then
When the riffles and the bars
of the creeks and the rivers of
the North had given up the bulk
of their easily-got-at gold
Somebody down in the South
stuck a drill into a pool of oil.
That reversed the current of the
boom. It quit flowing north and
started flowing south. In the
course of time, somebody dis
covered that if you would take a
string of pictures on a narrow
strip of film and then run the
film strip through a projector
you would get a picture that
MOVED!
THAT started Hollywood. And
Hollywood roared on and on
and on and still roars gently,
like an aging lion. After that
came the climate boom, which
perhaps has been the biggest
boom of all.
It still roars on. It will probab
ly continue to roar on as long as
there is standing room (and, of
course, water) in the Southland
llfHAT I've been going around
' Robin Hood's barn to say
here is that the California boom
started in the north, then swung
to the south.
Now
As standing room and water
are getting scarcer in the South
(and smog gets steadily more
abundant) the boom is swinging
back to the north. The San Joa
quin valley is filling up, with
cities of 50,000 cr more jogging
each other's elbows as they
cover up farm land with new
residential areas to house the
workers in the new factories.
ALREADY this creeping tide
of new population is show
ing up in the Sacramento valley.
It is practically solid city as far
up as Vallejo. Sacramento long
since became a metroplitan city.
On the east side Chico is spread
ing out, and as the building of
the Feather river dam nears
Oroville is feeling its oats.
On the west side, Woodburn is
growing. Williams and Willows
are building up. Industrial devel
oping is beginning to change the
Don't Say
"Hello"
Say
"FILTER-FLO"
Communists who are able admin
istrators and technicians as well
as politicians. Some people re
gard him as the brainiest oi .Rus
sia's big men.
If Khrushchev and tne rest
of the victorious leaders in the
Kremlin dispute decide to fol
low up their present charges by
formal legal action, they may
or may not spare Molotov and
Kaganovich.
But Malenkov will remain a
potential danger as long as lie
remains alive.
May Be No Change
' Khrushchev and his colleagues
may be doing some serious
thinking about their proper
course.
If they shoot Malenkov or put
him in prison possibly with the
other two it will be a confes
sion that the Communist system
in Russia is no different than
Senatorial Filibusters
Not Allowed in States
By Congressional Quarterly
Washington Most of the
Southern Senators threatening a
filibuster over the civil rights
bill could not get away with the
maneuver in their home legis
latures. U. S. Senate rules permit a
member to speak only twice on
a subject in any one legislative
day, but place no limit on the
length of time he may speak.
This can lead to a filibuster.
Under the Senate rules, the
vote of 64 senators is required
to shut off debate, known as in
voking cloture. This rule has
not been successfully applied
JENKINS
BDDearancp nf trip nlaacant nIH
cattle town of Red Bluff, which
got its start as head of naviga
tion on me way to tne gold mines
of the far north.
Redding is already a busUing
industrial center.
lyHAT of Far Northern Cali
' fornia and Southern Ore
gon?
The signs of what is to come
are already in the sky. The tide
of population is moving north
ward. Far Northern California
and Southern Oregon are in its
path. The advance ripples of this
creeping tide are already being
felt. New industries are spring
ing up. New population is com
ing in.
Southern Oregon and Far
Northern California are in for
big changes.
Outlook Said Good
For Low Polio Toll
Washington HPI Public
Health service figures indicate
that the outlook for a low polio
toll this year Is good.
A spokesman said there were
only 1,403 polio cases reported
in the first 26 weeks of this
year, compared to 2,645 in the
same period last year. Further
more, the "median" figure for
tap years 1952-56 was 3,706
cases, considerably higher than
the current trend. .
The spokesman said the ser
vice nas not made a survey to
determine how many persons af
flicted this year have had vac
cinations. So far, there is one trouble
spot worrying the public ser
vice Johnson City, Tenn. An
expert has been sent to keep
an aye on the outbreak there of
some 50 cases. However, a
spokesman pointed out that
most of the cases were of the
mild non-paralytic" type and
the outbreak is not considered
great for a population of 29,000.
Counsel With ...
Mr. Insurance Fred Brennan
LZ-Li UMt I
Fred Brennan
Or Call
Mr. Friendly
Bill Fish
Phone SP-2-4940
MEDFORD
INSURANCE
AGENCY
27 NORTH HOLLY ST.
it was in Stalin's day.
The so-called "collective lead
ership" which was supposed to
usher in a new day in Russian
Communist policy will have
been exposed as a fiction.
It will be clear evidence that
a dictatorship is essential in
Russia, even if there are several
"collective" dictators instead of
one.
But from reports now leaking
out of Moscow, there are strong
indications that Malenkov, Molo
tov, Kaganovich and Dmitri
Shepilov, who was purged from
the Communist Party Presidi
um with them, really did make
a bid to oust Khrushchev as the
No. 1 collective leader by re
placing him as first secretary of
the Russian Communist Party.
There are indications also that
for a time they had hope of suc
ceeding. since its adoption in 1949.
36 States Limit Talk
In contrast. 36 states includ
ing eight of the 11 Deep South
senates permit use of a motion
for the previous question In
their senates.
This motion, the mere men
tion of which is enough to
arouse U.S. senatorial ire, per
mits a majority of a legislative
body to cut off debate in a mat
ter of minutes. In the British
House of Commons the motion
is known as the "guillotine."
This is how it works in the
U.S. House of Representatives,
where since 1811 it has been
used to shut off debate: A mem
ber moves the previous question
and that motion is put to an im
mediate vote. If the motion car
ries, the House proceeds to vote
on the matter before it bill,
amendment, etc. without fur
ther ado.
A motion for the previous
question is authorized in the sen
ates of Arkansas, Georgia, Loui
siana, Mississippi, North Caro
lina, Tennessee, Texas and Vir
ginia. All but Louisiana, Texas
and Virginia also limit the
length of speeches.
Others Limited
State senators in Alabama,
Florida and South Carolina,
where the previous question is
not written into the senate rules,
are limited both in the length
and number of their speeches.
Alabama and South Carolina!
also have some form of cloture
rule, according to a study of
state legislatures prepared by
the American Political Science
association.
Of the 12 state senates whose
rulebooks either prohibit or do
not mention the previous ques
tion, four have some other form
of cloture rule. They are Ala
bama, Massachusetts, New York
and South Carolina. '
The other eight senates have
no written limitation on general
debate, but Maine, New Jersey,
Connecticut, Delaware, Florida,
Utah and Vermont iimit the
number of times a member may
speak on a subject without
leave. Florida and South Caro
lina limit the length of speeches.
Maryland alone has no written
curbs.
Debate is even more severely
restricted in the lower houses of
state legislatures. Every state
but Vermont authorizes the use
of the previous question. Most
also place time limits on individ
ual speeches.
(Copyright 1957.
Congressional Quarterly Inc.)
SOMETHING OLD
Chicago IH Chris Iacullo -
believes in the savine "Some
thing old, something new ..."
about weddings. He will drive
to his wedding today in a 1936
car, leading a parade of vintage
autos driven by fellow members
of an old car club.
If you can afford to own
your own pool,
Chances are you're nor
considered a fool.
So why take chancel en
your guest's aquatic
ability.
When it's so cheap to
carry the proper
liability.
Bill Fish
lit
Tf