FOUR MZDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE
Monday. July 15, 1957
UHE
"Kvcrrona to Southern Oregon
Reads Th Mall THKiin-'
Published Dally Exceot Saturday by
n-2i North nr St Phone 2-614.
GERALD LATHAM Business Manager
auwi. allla J K Managing Editor
KARL a ADAMS. City Editor
HARRY CHIPMAN Telegraph Editor
RICHARD JEWETT Sports Editor
OUVE ST ARCHER Society Editor
PALE ERICKSON Circulation Mgr.
lV
An Independent Newspaper
entered aa second class matter at
Medford Oregon under Act of
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 yean ago.
Editorial Correspondence . . .
10 YEARS AGO
July IS, 1947 (Tueiday)
Josephine and Jackson county
chambers of commerce establish
fact finding committee to deter
mine need for a flood control
program on the Rogue river.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: Now that
the first ripe tomato has been
picked upstate, there is a lack
of candidates to use as a target
for same. .
20 YEARS AGO
July IS, 1937 (Thursday)
Eighteen members of the
American Pomoligical society
touring U. S. farming sections,
arrive in Medford to inspect the
orchards.
Jackson county relief commit
tee and county court meet with
Elmer R. Goudy, state relief ad
ministrator, to establish uniform
titles and salaries for office
workers in Oregon counties.
30 YEARS AGO
July 15. 1927 (Friday)
About $2,100 is collected by
Salvation Army during its heart
fund campaign with headquar
ters in the Elks club.
Delbert M. Little will be the
meteorologist at Medford's new
weather bureau sub-station.
40 YEARS AGO
July 15. 1917 (Sunday)
Horace M. Albright, acting di
rector of the National Park Ser
vice, arrives in Medford en route
to Crater Lake to inspect facil
ities there.
From Local and Personal col
umn: Alexander Nibley, general
manager of the Utah-Idaho Su
gar company, with headquarters
in Medford, travels to Grants
Pass on business.
What's Your I.Q.?
Nine or ten correct Is superior;
seven or eight Is excellent; five or
six Is good.
1. Auletes (Ptolemy X of
Egypt. 65-51 B.C.) was so called
for his skill with the flute, harp,
or horn?
2. A drum major's dress hat
Is called a beaver, fez, shako,
or turban?
3. Bible: Did Chrysostom, Au
gustine, or Cardinal Hugo give
the name "Bible" to the Scrip
tures? 4. Which constitutional
amendment abolished slavery?
5. Can edible oysters produce
pearls of commercial value?
6. In December. 1939, a Ger
man pocket-battleship was scutt
led by it crew off Montevideo,
Uruguay. Name the ship.
7. Where is Tulane Univer
sity? 8. Which months of the year
have only thirty days?
9. What is the plural of "you"?
10. By P. J. Bailey: "I can
not love as I have loved, And
yet I know not why; It is the
one great woe of life, And yet
I know not" Is the next (final)
word "why"?
Answers: 1 Fluta. 2. Shako.
3. Chrysostom (4th century). 4.
Thirteenth. 5. No. 6. Graf Spee.
7. New Orleans. La. 8. April,
June, September and Novem
ber. 9. You. 10. Yes.
Denver, Colo., July 12 We hasten to add the Burlington-!
"Denver Zephyr to our list of favorite trains.
We never had a pleasanter train trip than coming here from
sweltering Chicago last night, in the excellent time of 15 hours
and 15 minutes.
The cars were bright silver, perfectly air cooled (that is not
too damp and too cold but exactly right) the diner (as is true of
practically all trains WEST cf Chicago) was excellent and the
service in all respects TOPS.
We should get a season's pass from the CB&Q for this free ad-
advertising but fear we won't even get a "vote of thanks." Modern
railroads don't do those things nowadays back in 1903 we got a
free pass on the Lehigh from New York to St. Louis just for the
asking. Ah them were the days in SOME ways.
Our hopes of finding a cool Denver with its mile high eleva
tion were not fulfilled however. The taxi driver as usual well
informed and courteous gave us the sad news that the mercury
had not been below 90 for 2 weeks the maximum we mean. The
humidity is much less however than in either New York or Chi
cago and it is not the heat but the humidity that gets "grand
pappy down.
If you want to make some easy money sell corn short.
We have seen midwest corn in July many, many times. But
never have we seen such a stand as just seen from a car window
all the way from the Great Lakes to the Rocky mountains.
We grant a great many things may happen between now and
when there is "frost on the pumpkin" but there is the element
of chance in everything and if there isn't a bumper corn crop this
year then something unexpected and unlikely climate-wise will
have to happen.
Incidentally these terrible humid and hot nights, so hard on
the "older boys and girls," are just what the doctor ordered when
it comes to maturing corn.
We were surprised this morning to see so many fine corn stands
in eastern Colorado there were many more sugar beet fields and
pasture lands and they were as green as emeralds but corn ap
peared a close second.
Also on this trip the only farms we have observed that looked
in need of a federal subsidy were in New York state and New
England. However, looks in the realm of agriculture, as that of
feminine pulchritude, are only skin deep or top-soil deep if any
one wishes to quibble.
Fifty miles west of Denver the majestic peaks of the Rocky
mountains were clearly visible, but on arrival they were covered
with rather threatening looking clouds, and showers were the pre
diction.
We HOPE they don't materialize for with the mercury now
nearing 90 as this is being written, there we would be back in the
smothering embrace of our climatic nemesis, Signor Humidity
Man. (How we hate that Man!)
Between-trains in Chicago was spent, after some discussion, at
one of the country's most famous department stores, Marshall
Fields. The undersigned who signed off as far as family shopping
is concerned many years ago, was only persuaded after he was as
sured the place would be air-conditioned and had real GENUINE
ice water for-free on every floor. That proved to be true and with
the aid of a cushioned seat in the "infants' department" (which
was also free) "Ye Editor" did we are glad to say survive.
But it was a close thing at times, particlarly when a very mus
cular matron who could have won the hammer throw at the Olym
pic games had she entered, parked herself in the next seat, and in
spite of her energetic wielding of a palm leaf fan or perhaps
BECAUSE of it raised the surrounding temperature by at least
10 degrees!
It is curious about shopping women shopping we of course
mean, for men don't shop, they just buy things, and not very
often. The women don't buy so often, but no matter how weary,
heavy laden and disgusted any normal member of the mistermed
'gentler sex may be, let them once get loose in a store, and get
the scent of a bargain counter and hoicks away they go,
over hedges, stone walls and across the creeks, with physical en
ergy unlimited and maintaining the pace that kills or would kill
any male over 19 years of age who tried to keep up with it .
Pardon, we must run, there is a knock on the door! k.w.k.
Our Disarmament Offer
The United Nations Disarmament Commission
consisting of the 11 member nations of the Security
Council tlus Canada in Ann! 1954 established a
five-nation subcommittee to seek "in private" an "ac
ceptable solution" to the post-World War II disarma
ment lmoasse. This is the group composed ot repre
sentatives of Great Britain. Canada. France, the
Soviet Union, the United States which began the
current series of talks m London on March 18.
The U. S. position has been coming out of the
talks in piecemeal fashion. Sometime before Easter,
Harold E. Stassen, President Eisenhower's disarma
ment specialist, is supposed to have countered a Rus
sian aerial-photography inspection proposal. He sug
gested a cone-shaped inspection zone extending irom
the North Pole down to the south of France in the
West and to the U.S.S.R. shores of the Black Sea
in the East. Stassen, in completing the overall U.S.
presentation, is expected now to make a formal "open
skies proposal.
THE United States on June 20 proposed a three-
stage reduction of U.S., Soviet, British, and French
military strength. U.S. and Soviet military manpower
would be cut back successively to 2,500,000 men,
2,100,000, and 1,700,000. Meanwhile, Britain and
France would cut back to 750,000 men, then 700,000,
then 650,000.
On June 26, the United States proposed that non
nuclear weapons be cut. Lists of weapons including
"substantial amounts of specific quantities of iden
tified types" would be exchanged. Then the weapons
would be disposed of under international supervision.
On July 2, the United States proposed a 10-month
suspension of nuclear tests. On the following day,
Stassen added the proposal for a universal ban on
the production of fissionable material for military
use, effective one month after an international in
spection system was set up. The United States on
July 5 went on to suggest that this countiy and the
Soviet Union junk an agreed proportion of their nu
clear weapons. Fissionable material from the bombs
would go to peaceful use.
THIS, in the briefest possible form, is the United
States plan., Stassen is expected to offer, in addi
tion, proposals on guided missiles and space weapons.
To most or all of the U.S. specifications the Soviet
delegate, Zorin, had been making similarly piecemeal
counter-proposals.
Now Stassen has put the ball in Zorin's court. On
July 10 he challenged the Soviet Union to come up
with a disarmament formula that the Russians really
think the Western nations can accept. E.R.R.
'Gosh'. Who'd ever think there was a wots clock of
TOOTHPASTE IN A UTTLB TUBE UK THIS?
Matter of Fact By stew,, ai,p
fc. f . :
LYNDON JOHNSON AND
CIVIL RIGHTS
Washington Senate Major
ity Leader Lyndon Johnson,
probably the most effective Con
gressional leader of this genera-
ation, now fac
es his supreme
challenge. For
he has set him
self the task of
preventing the
Northern and
Southern wing
of the Demo
cratic party
from tearing
the party to
stewait aisod shreds over
the civil rights issue. And his
own political future is also deep
ly involved in his success or
failure in this task.
It is a remarkably difficult
task. In the past, it was easy
for both Northerners and South
erners to attitudinize righteous
ly, taking extreme positions to
please the folks back home with
out inflicting deep or lasting
wounds on the other side. For
in the past, no-one thought that
civil rights legislation had a
ghost's chance of - passing. Now,
for the first time in this cen
tury, some kind of civil rights
legislation seems certain to pass
the Senate. So the fight, for the
first time is in deadly earnest.
The Eisenhower administra
tions decision to make civil
rights a major party issue has
not only frightened the South
erners with the specter of Ne
groes becoming a decisive voting
bloc even in the deep South
states. It has also scared the
living daylights out of the North
ern big city Democrats, whose
political lives depend on an ov
erwhelmingly Democratic Ne
gro vote.
THUS both Northerners and
Southerners are in a near-
desperate mood, and in such an
atmosphere an irreparable inter
nal explosion in the Democratic
party could take place. It is such
an explosion that Johnson is la
boring desperately to avert.
snatching the bloody shirt from
the hands of Southerners eager
to wave it, using his peculiar,
almost hypnotic powers of per
suasion to calm the political pas
sions seething in northern
breasts. So far, he has been re
markably successful, partly be
cause his counsels of moderation
fit well into the Southern stra
tegy fishioned by Sen. Richard
Russell of Georgia. Russell rec
ognized from the start that it
would be fatal for the South to
be placed in the position of op
posing the right to vote.
He therefore concentrated on
those aspects of the Administra
tion bill which have raised hon
est doubts in the minds of the
thoughtful men like the denial
of jury trial, and the force bill
aspects of the legislation. Thus
the tone of the Southern argu
ment has been so far an ap
peal to reason, rather than to
passion. Russell has also astute
ly cast Attorney General Her
bert Brownell in the role of vil
lain of the piece, a role to which
he is well suited in the eyes of
the Northern liberals.
Russell's strategy has worked
brilliantly so far. It is ex
tremely doubtful that Senate mi
nority leader William Knowland
could muster a simple majority
for the bill as it now stands,
much less the sixty-four votes
needed to silence a filibuster.
Thus compromise of some sort
is inevitable. The key battles
will be fought on amendments
to require trial by jury, and to
enforce school desegregation.
When these batUes are joined,
Johnson will have to perform
miracles to prevent an internal
explosion in his party.
civil rights-minded than any Re
publican. In this situation, moreover,
Johnson's task is complicated by
the fact that almost everybody,
with the possible exception of
Johnson, considers him a poten
tial Presidential candidate in
1960. Any compromise position
he favors will be labelled by
the Southerners a sell-out to the
North, and by the Northerners a
sell-out to the South.
In such circumstances, it is
hard to see how Johnson can
avoid the worst sort of bitter
rupture in the party he leads,
and fatal damage to his own po
litical prospects. Yet Johnson has
performed miracles before, and
the belief is growing on Capitol
Hill that somehow, in ways no
one can predict, he will emerge
from the civil rights crisis with
the Democratic party reasonably
intact despite its wounds and
with his own political position
damaged, perhaps, but by no
means beyond repair.
(C) New York Herald
Tribune Inc.)
Great Britain Preparing New
Attempt For CvDrus Solution
M
By CHARLES M. McCANN
United Press- Correspondent
Great Britain is preparing to
make a new and determined at
tempt to settle the long dispute
over the future
of Cyprus.
Details have
been under dis
cussion in Lon
don for a week
by the cabinet,
defense chiefs
and Field Mar
shal Sir John
Harding, gov
ernor and the
Charles Mecano commander in
chief of the island.
Several possible solutions
have been considered.
One would put Cyprus under
control of an international body,
possibly the North Atlantic
Treaty organization.
Another would give the 500,
000 people of the eastern Med
iterranean island independence,
preferably as a unit of the
British Commonwealth.
But it is certain that no so
lution Britain decides upon will
call for the union of Cyprus
with Greece, which demands it.
Considers Partitioning
Britain has considered parti
tioning the island between its
two ethnic elements, the 400,
000 islanders of Greek racial
stock and the 100,000 Turkish
inhabitants.
The interested parties in the
dispute, which has kept Cyprus
under emergency rule for more
than two years because of Greek
Cypriot terrorism, are Britain,
Turkey and Greece.
Britain is willing to give the
islanders self-rule. Turkey does
not want the island. It is will
ing to accept partition, but has
announced that in no circum
stances will it permit the Turk
ish Cypriote to come under the
domination of either the Greek
government or the Greek is
landers. Both Greece and Ortho
dox Archbishop Makarios of
Cyprus, who represented the
Greek islanders, have rejected
the partition proposal
Refuse to Negotiate
Makarios, who is now in Ath
ens, -has refused to enter any
negotions which involve Tur
key. He has said, with the ap- base. But the Suez Canal dispute
proval of the Greek government
that the future of Cyprus is a
matter for negotiation solely be
tween Britain and himself, as
the representative of Greek Cyp
riots. On the basis of the various
statements made, the Cyprus is
sue seems to be still in the dead
lock stage.
But Britain seems to believe
a solution may now be possible.
There is talk in London of
the possibility of a British-Turkish-Greek
conference. It is pos
sible that Paul Henri Spaak, new
secretary of the North Atlantic
Treaty organization, may be
called into help arrange such a
conference. Spaak, a former
Belgian premier and foreign
minister, is one of the most high
ly respected statemen In Eur
ope. Cyprus at present is Britain's
chief Mediterranean military
and Britain's new defense pol
icy have diminished its strategic
importance.
Defense Minister Duncan San
dys has recommended that Ken
ya, on the East Coast of Africa,
be made the new base for Brit
ish ground forces in the Middle
East. If that happened, Cyprui
would become a joint British
NATO air base, with facilitiei
for nuclear bomber planes.
One thing seems essential.
That is, that any solution will
have to be acceptable to Turkey
as well as Greece. Turkey,
which ruled Cyprus before Brit
ain took it over in 1878, says
Cyprus ought to be Turkish if it
is not to remain British. It points
out first that Greece never has
ruled Cyprus and secondly that
though the island is 43 miles
from the Turkish mainland it is
more than 500 miles from the
Greek mainland.
Closed Shop Provision
Again Under Question
In Georgia RR Case
U.P. Correspondents
Predict Future News
United Press correspondents
around the world look ahead
at the news that will make
the headlines.
Civil Rights
France ts fighting a civil
rights battle of its own. It
could cause the fall of the gov
ernment this week. Premier
Maurice Bourges-Maunoury is
trying to force through the Na
tional Assembly a bill to give the
police special powers to crack
down on Algerian rebels who
reside in France. Members don't
like it. They say a tough gov
ernment could use it against
Frenchmen as well as Algerians.
Debate on the measure starts
Tuesday. A confidence vote on
it is due Friday. If Bourges-
Maunoury loses it, he probably
will resign.
Khrushy
It looks as if Soviet Commun
ist chieftain Nikita S. Khrush
chev is being censored. He's
making a lot of free-swinging
attacks on foreign personalities
during his whistle-top tour of
Czechoslovakia. For instance.
the one accusing President Eis
enhower of "stupidity" in talk
ing about a "clean" H-bomb.
That one was broadcast by the
Prague radio. It wasn't publish
ed in Czech newspapers. A
Czech official said the broadcast
was a "mistake." Now Khrush
chev's saltier off-the-cuff com
ments are being cleaned up be
fore they are broadcast or pub
lished in the papers in summary
form. It is reported that the rea
son Western correspondents
were barred from the tour was
that his cracks might cause trou
ble.
Draft
Don't be surprised if a retired
general, admiral or foreign ser
vice officer is "drafted" to suc
ceed John B. Hollister as foreign-aid
chief. Hollister resign
ed July 1 to re-enter private
business. His job never has been
popular one. State Depart
ment officials say an appalling
number of possible successors to
Hollister have turned it down
cold.
Underground
Insiders m Dublin expect the
Sinn Fein party, to go under
ground with the outlawed Irish
Republican Army as the result
of Prime Minister Eamon De
Valera's drive against terrorism
About 50 members of Sinn. Fein,
which is the political arm of
the IRA have been interned on
De Valera's orders. The party
can't announce who will take
their places, so an underground
headquarters is expected.
Speed-Up
Despite a security blackout,
it can be disclosed that plans to
construct 11 new North Atlan
tic Treaty organization bases in
Turkey have been speeded up as
the result of the passage of Sov
iet Russian warships into the
Mediterranean from the Black
Sea. Work has been started hast
ily on several bases. Sites are
secret. But it is reported that
they have been chosen with an
eye to Russia's Baku oil fields,
close to the Turkish border and
the naval base at Sebastapol
across me macs. sea.
Air Safety
Look for the air safety plan,
tested on Washington-New York
Chicago flights, to be exended
to other parts of the country
soon. Planes flying above 9,500
feet in the triangle the
world's most congested flight
territory must operate un
der instrument flight rules and
in federally-designated lanes to
avoid collisions. Crews report a
noticeable decline in the number
of "near misses" in the triangle.
Signs of the Times
The magazine "Aviaton Re
search and Development" is
changing its name to "Missile
Design and Development." The
reason: A survey showed that
83 per cent of its readers are
now devoting themselves to mis
sile research.
Movie Hawk Balks
At Trip by Plane
Hollywood OPt Grabber, a
trained movie hawk, caused a
transportation crisis at Colum
bia Studios when he refused to
fly by plane to New Mexico
for location shots for "Cowboy."
His trainer, Moe Dessesso, dis
closed that Grabber can't stand
hich altitudes and gets dizzy
spells and a bloody beak. Pro
duction schedules were juggled
and Grabber took a train to New
Mexico.
By LYLE C. WILSON
United Press Correspondent
Washington (in The state
of Georgia has invited the U.S.
Supreme Court to reconsider its
ruling that
closed shop
union agree
ments can be
e n f o r ced in
violation o f
state law.
The question
arose in Geor
gia in the case
of Looper and
i.yie c. wuson others against
the Georgia Southern & Florida
Railway Co. Looper and his as
sociate petitioners are railway
employees. They were notified
that under terms of the Federal
Railway Labor Act they must
within 60 days join a labor union
or forfeit their jobs.
This closed shop provision has
been made effective by the U.S.
Supreme Court in all states, in
cluding those which have enact
ed "right to work" laws outlaw
ing the closed shop.
The Supreme Court of Geor
gia expressed its deep distress
at being compelled to follow the
U.S. Supreme Court's lead. But
it found comfort in a new avenue
of attack against the closed shop.
Looper and his associates com
plained that compulsory union
membership compelled them
also, to contribute unwillingly
to political activities of which
they disapproved.
"It is alleged,' the Georgia
court said in its unanimous opin
ion, "that the union dues and
other payments they will be re
quired to make to the union will
be used to 'support ideological
and political doctrines and can
didates" which they are unwill
ing to support and in which they
do not believe.
It said this would violate the
First, Fifth and Ninth amend
ments to the Constitution.
Ruling for the petitioning rail
way workers, the Georgia court
said:
'We do not believe one can
constitutionally be compelled to
contribute money to support
ideas, politics and candidates
which he opposes.' We believe
his right to Immunity from such
claim the union may make on
him."
Magazine Comments
Noting the opinion, given last
June 10, the right wing weekly
magazine "National Review"
commented:
'The Supreme Court of Geor
gia has, in effect, told a number
of local railway workers that
they need only to prove the po
litical use of union funds to sus
tain the right to non-unionized
employment
This poses a nice question for
Chief Justice Earl Warren s
court in Washington. We await
the fireworks that must inevit
ably result when Justices Hugo
L. Black and William O. Doue-
last and the others are faced
with the words of "the Georgia
court."
Movie producer Cecil B. De
Mille went to court on such an
issue in 1945. De Mille refused
to pay a $1 assessment levied
by the American Federation of
Radio Artists. The levy was to
provide a fund to oppose an ef
fort in California to outlaw the
closed shop.
De Mille was suspended by the
union. In January, 1945, Super
ior Court Judge Emmet H. Wil
son ruled against De Mille, hold
ing that the producer must pay
up to remain in the union. The
judge said the use to which, the
levied fund would be put was
not political.
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 of
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
Poor Sttategy " " 5
To the Editor: In a recent arti
cle in your paper, an officer of
a sportsmen's group advocated
"catching the larger fish, the
wary big salmon that are lying
in the deep holes awaiting the
spawning season." He further
states with fewer fish and great
er fishing pressure, "Let's get
the bigger fish out of the river."
Would it be ,jn order to ask
a question? If we catch all the
big wary salmon that are await
ing the spawning season, and
we know these are the fish that
lay the eggs that produce the
fish in a few years, just how
will there be any improvement
in our salmon population? I am
sure that the salmon produced
by this year's spawn are not suf
ficiently large to be caught this
season and the smaller salmon
tnat are in the river most of the
season are not females. Why not
get behind a movement to stop
all salmon fishing in the Rogue
above Mule Creek for a few
years? This would get the sal
mon back to at least sub-normal.
A large per cent of the salmon
that are caught in this vicinity
after the 1st of June are not
good quality and it seems that
some of our sportsmen- drag
them out of the river just for
the fun of it and then holler
because there are not more to
be had. So why take the old
srawners? Let them' do their
work that nature intended!
M. H. Williams,
Shady Cove, 'Ore.
FOR the hard core Southerners
will fight to the death
against any civil rights bill at
al' they must, to survive atj
home. And the big city North
erners men like Douglas of
Illinois, "Clark of Pennsylvania,
Humphrey of Minnesota, McNa
mara of Michingan will also
be under heavy pressure to take
an extreme position. In order to
beat off the Republican bid for
the huge Negro vote, the North
ern Democrats must appear more
As In Noah's Day
As in the day of Noah's flood, sudden
death is again to fall on all mankind. See
Luke 17:26-27 BIBLE. Now again hear
Christ "No man come to me except the
Father who sent Me draw him and I will
raise him up the last day.'. So says John
6:44. By that you are to pray; God is to
draw them to Christ and He is to raise
them., Miller, famous as a prayer man
England prayed for three old men and
died without seeing them saved. Yet all
came to Christ after Miller's death. "Most
saved souls are prayed-for souls." An old
saying. Geo. N. Taylor, 2385 87th Ave.,
S-W Portland 1, Ore.
FUNERAL
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Funeral
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Phone SP 2-6675
Al PERL'S every family
may make funeral ar
rangements which are In
keeping with its means. A
selection ef services for
every price range Is of
fered to satisfy individual
preferences and to meet
all financial circumstances.
Convenient Terms?
Certain lyl