FOUR MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE
MEDFCGIVTRIBimE
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March 3. 1897
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Flight o' Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30 and
40 years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
Ocl. 1. 1947 (Wednesday)
Jackson county court reports
the district conference of county
courts at Coquille recommends
sales tax.
From A r t h lu r Perry's Ye
Smudge pot column: "A return
ed traveller from the Oregon
coast, in search of seafood, re
ports he nearly found some.
20 YEARS AGO
Oct. 1. 1937 (Friday)
First annual Jackson county
4-H club baby beef and fat stock
sale at the fairgrounds brings
more than 20 cents per pound.
A new all-time attendance rec
ord set at Crater lake with 202,
403 visitors for the 1937 season.
30 YEARS AGO
Oct. 1. 1927 (Saturday)
federal prohibition officer is
cleared of charges of killing
rancher during a moonshine raid
Sept. 28 on ranch in the Med
ford area.
Orchardists in Sams valley
are reported to have harvested
all fruit except apples.
40 YEARS AGO
Oct. 1. 1917 (Monday)
Carl A. Noren, entomologist
In the county agriculturist's de
partment for the past two years,
resigns to enlist in the aviation
corps of Army.
Surplus horses and mules
from the area's farms and
ranches stream into city to be of
fered for sale to the govern
ment for military use.
What's Your I.Q.?
Nine or ten correct Is superior;
seven or eight Is excellent; five or
six Is good.
1. Is trudgen the name for a
fish, an oysterman's tongs, a
swimmirg stroke, or a slow pace
In walking?
2. Manet and Monet were two
famous French ?
3. Bible: TVhich king exchang
ed lavish gifts with Solomon?
4. Is the normal temperature
of the human body above or be
low 100 degrees F.?
5. In the fall of 1944 an im
portant conference was held in
Quebec between the heads of
two Allied nations; who were
the conferees?
6. There are five climatic
rones on the earth; two are frig
id: name the other three.
7. w nat nation was once
nown as the Ottoman Empire.
8. In what book by Rudyard
Kipling is Mowgli a leading
character?
9. "He was an alternative to the
delegate elect." Was he?
10. "He has an oar in every boat
and fingers in every pie." Cer
vantes. Is this a reference to a
kibitzer, meddler, or busybody?
1. Swimming stroke. 2. Paint
ers. 3. Hiram of Tyre. 4. Below,
(98.6 degrees F.) 5. Franklin D
Roosevelt and Winston Chur
chill. 6. Two temperate zones
and one torrid zone. 7. Turkey.
8. "The Jungle Book." 9. No,
He was an "alternate," not an al
ternative. 10. All (but prefer
ably to a meddler).
NEGRO GIRL TRANSFERS
Charlotte, N. C. IP A 15-year-old
Negro girl who with
drew from a newly-integrated
school because of abuse by white
classmates is going to attend a
private, interracial school in su
burban Philadelphia. The Rev.
Herman L. Counts declined to
identify the school where his
daughter, Dorothy, has been enrolled.
"Play
Yes, Virginia, there is
a possibility that the Milwaukee Braves will win the
1957 baseball World Series opening tomorrow.
But, my dear, you don't know your baseball his
tory if you think the defeat of the New York Yankees
is probable rather than possible. Listen to this:
The American League pennant has gone to New
York in more than half the years since 1920 to be
exact, 23 out of 37 times. They won six times under
Miller Huggins, eight under Joe McCarthy (the non
Wisconsin one), once under Stanley Harris, eight
times under Casey Stengel.
AND in 22 World Series
the last 30 years. The Giants beat them twice, the St.
Louis Cardinals twice, and the Dodgers two years ago
for the first Dodger world championship.
As a further indication of the prowess of the Yan
kees, six times they won the World Series in four
straight games. Only thrice were they carried to the
full seven games in winning. So you see what the
Braves are up against.
However, maybe in this field "there is a Santa
Claus." E.R.R. ,
Even "Mrs. "Homer Nods
In speaking of the decision of President Eisen
hower to send U.S. troops to Little Rock, to maintain
law and order, Dorothy Thompson, after praising
the action concludes as follows:
"If the aim is to improve the condition of the Negroes it '
cannot be realized by guiding colored children in and out of
school by Federal troops. If a decision engenders hatred it
is a bad one and not all the parliaments and courts in the
world have been able to legislate righteousness and enforce
brotherly love."
This is somewhat along the line of President Eisen
hower's brief pronouncement after his private meet
ing with Governor Faubus that:
"You can't legislate morality into people when dealing
with the civil rights problem."
THE statements in both
n A T"T
But so what? Because
be changed by legislation is no excuse for not con
trolling by law, their actions.
In fact, the President
his own conciliatory observation when the people of
Little Rock or at least scores of them insisted
upon violating the law, and backing up their violation
with mob action.
With the Governor of Arkansas using force to
support them, and the local police incapable of pre
venting such lawlessness, the President only did what
he took a solemn oath to do and had to do he
called out federal troops to restore law and order.
HTHE surprising thing in Miss Thompson's "obiter
dictum" is that she praised the President's decisive
action and address, comparing them favorably with
that of President Lincoln's second inaugural, and
then ties everything up with such an implied re
traction and obvious untruth, as this:
"If a decision engenders hatred it is a bad one."
"LJEAVENS ABOVE!" as a member of our staff
often remarks has there ever been an import
ant decision in history, ancient or modern, that did
not offend SOME one, did not cause hatred and re
sentment among many?
In the field of law when feeling runs high, there
are few decisions in fact practically none; where
the result is not greeted by the loser with anger and
resentment.
But in a vast majority of cases, the defeated party,
accepts the decision under the law and unless an
appeal is indicated, makes the best of it. There may
have been instances where the losing litigant, heaved
a brick at the judge's head, and called on his pals to
stage a mob action, but wre can find at the moment,
no record of them. ANYway
"THE issue in this Little Rock case is NOT whether
the President's action engendered hatred in that
city, the state of Arkansas or any other state, but
whether it was right or wrong, whether it was m ac
cordance with the fundamental law of the land, or in
violation? Whether it was the President's unescapa
ble duty to do so or not.
If the President of the United States, the judges
of the federal courts or any courts for that matter
have to base their decisions not upon what the law is
and the right is but upon what the popular reaction
MAY be; then as President Eisenhower indicated
there would eventually be no law7, there would be
nothing but anarchy and
the law and the courts, would rule.
All this seems so elementary and obvious that it
is difficult to understand how such a veteran and usu
ally level-headed news commentator as Miss Thomp
son should in such an important issue as school segre
gation, directly or by implication, QUESTION it !
R.W.R.
County Women Are Flown fo 5F Hospital
Two Jackson county women
were flown to San Francisco this
morning for emergency medical
treatment at Stanford Lane hos
pital. They were the 719th and
720th patients carried by the air
ambulance planes of non-profit
Mercy Flights, Inc., of Medford.
The patients were Mrs. Dor
othy Patter, 1408 Crown ave.,
Medford, and ITrs. Mary Hop
kins, Shady Cove.
Tuesday, October 1. 19S7
Ball"
a Santa Claus, so there's
after 1920 and up to 1957
cases are correct you
the natures of people can't
gave the perfect answer to
confusion. The mob, not
The ambulance flights have
made eight flights within the last
six days, according to officers of
the organization. Half of them
have been automobile accident
victims.
Both Mrs. Potter and Mrs.
Hopkins were subscribers to the
non-profit group's pre-paid sub
scription plan, and were not
charged for the flight.
lfeyf MOM! fflOU CE COMW
WHEN SHE COM5
Republican Support
For Ike at New Low
By Congressional Quarterly
Washington Republican sup
port of President iEsenhower's
legislative program- this year
dropped to its lowest level since
Mr. Eisenhower took office.
The average GOP legislator
voted with the President on 56
per cent of the 117 test roll calls
during the past session, and
against him on 33 per cent. Ab
sences accounted for the other
11 per cent of the votes.
That 56 per cent support
contrasts with a 72 per cent
score in election year 1956.
Margin Smaller
The GOP managed to keep in
tact its record of always giving
the President more backing than
the Democratic opposition. But
the margin of difference be
tween the parties was smaller in
1957 than it ever before has
been.
The average Democrat voted
with the President 50 per cent
of the time in 1957 6 per cent
less often than the average Re
publican and opposed him 40
per cent of the time.
That 50 per cent support fig
ure is the se'cond highest Demo
crats have turned in since Mr.
Eisenhower first was elected to
office.
One Bight Spot
One bright spot for the Presi
dent was an increase in Repub
lican support for his program as
the 1957 session went along. On
May 12, when the Battle of the
Budget was at its height and
Congressional Quarterly first
measured the support scores, the
average Republican had voted
for the President only 44 per
cent of the time. -
On July 10, the Republican
support score had risen to 54
per cent and another 2 per cent
was added to that in the last
seven weeks of the session.
Most of the decline in Repub
lican support of the President in
1957 was caused by disputes
over his domestic program and
its effect on the Federal budget.
From 1956 to 1957, GOP support
of the President on domestic pol
icy roll calls dropped 20 per
cent, while onVoreign policy roll
calls the decline was only 3 per
cent.
Democrats, on the other hand,
increased their support of the
President's domestic policy
stands slightly in 1957 but sharp
ly lowered their backing of his
foreign policy proposals. Their
domestic policy support was up
4 per cent from 1956, their for
eign policy support down 14 per
cent.
As a result of these shifts in
party positions, the President's
won-loss record in the 1957 ses
sion of Congress was the worst
he has known since he entered
the White House.
Based on Roll Calls
Congressional Quarterly Iden
tified 117 roll calls 57 in the
Senate and 60 in the House
where the President, by message
or public statement before the
vote, made clear his stand on the
issue.
Congress endorsed the Presi
dent's position on 80 of those 117
roll cails. for an overall winning
score of 68 per cent. By contrast,
he won 72 per cent of such tests
in the Democratic 84th Congress
and 83 per cent in the Republi
can 83rd Congress.
He won 79 per cent of the test
votes in the Senate, where Dem
ocrats held a two-seat advantage
most of the session. In the House
where Democrats had a 32-seat
advantage most of the time, he
won only 58 per cent of his tests.
Both Republican and Demo
cratic senators had higher aver
age support scores than their
party counterparts in the House.
Foreign Policy
The President's position was
sustained on 88 per cent of the
foreign policy issues and on 58
per cent of the domestic policy
questions in 1957.
There were 50 tests roll calls
that produced party-line votes,
and on 31 of them a majority of
Republicans backed the Presi
'POUND TVS MOUNTAIN
dent's stand. These included the
votes against major amend
ments to the President's foreign
aid and civil rights legislation
and an unsuccesful try to in
crease the military budget to the
level he recommended.
Few Demo Majorities
The President had only Demo
cratic majorities behind him on
19 roll calls, almost all of them
involving attempted cuts in do
mestic welfare spending.
His most consistent supporters
were his two Senate leaders,
William F. Knowland (R.-Calif.)
and Everett McKinley Dirksen
(R.-Ill.) with 93 per cent scores.
Rep. John W. Heselton (R.Mass.).
led House Republicans in back
ing Mr. Eisenhower, with 87 per
cent support. Minority Leader
Joseph W. Martin (R.-Mass.) had
a 73 per cent support score.
Six Democratic Senators Jo
seph S. Clark of Pennsylvania,
Carl Hayden of Arizona, Rich
ard L. Neuberger of Oreon, Spes
sard Holland of Florida, Paul H.
Douglas of Illinois and Stuart
Symington of Missouri tied for
the lead in their party at 70 per
cent. Rep. Melvin Price (D.-Ill.)
with 80 per cent, topped House
Democrats in support of the
President.
Opposition leaders were Sens.
George W. Malone (R.-Nev.) 40
per cent, and Russel B. Long
(D.-La.) 54 per cent; Reps. Rus
sell W. Keeney (R.-Ill.) 67 per
cent, and Robert T. Ashmore
(D.-S.C), W. J. Bryan Dorn (D.
S.C.), J. T. Rutherford, (D.Tex.)
and Arthur Winstead (D.-Miss.),
all with 77 per cent opposition.
(Copyright 1957,
Congressional Quarterly, In.c)
Communications
Letters to the Editor must bear
the name and address of 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
Wants Action on Atom Bomb
To the Editor: On July 31,
1957 Senator Wayne Morse of
Oregon introduced the following
resolution in the U. S. Senate. I
reproduce it here with the sena
tor's full consent and approval.
"Whereas Great Britain, the
United States, and Russia have
been engaging in extensive
tests of nuclear weapons and
presumably plan to continue
such tests in the future; and
"Whereas it is not alone the
death and destruction which
the bombs themselves can
wreak, but also, and perhaps
more important, the devastat
ing effects upon our own and
future generations of the ra
dioactive fallout which is the
aftermath of such explosions;
and
"Whereas our eyes have
been opened to the dangers
from strontium 90, and from
the presence to a lesser or
greater degree of radioactive
particles in the water and air
around us, by scientists
throughout the world and by
such prominent individuals as
Dr. Albert Schweitzer, Pope
Pius XII, Adlai Stevenson,
and many others; and
"Whereas millions of peo
ple in Japan alone have sign
ed petitions against further H
bomb tests and thousands in
our own and other countries
are showing increased concern
as to the fate of humanity it
self in a world made unfit to
sustain life of any kind; and
"Whereas it is recognized
that excessive radioactivity
not only creates a hazard for
all, especially for our children
who stand to suffer more di
rectly and acutely from stran
tium 90 than do we who are
responsible, but may even,
through genetic mutations
and other cumulative effects,
gradually and inevitably wipe
out the human race: Now,
M
any Visiting Delegations Mark
'Growing Pains' for Red China
By CHARLES M. MC CANN
United Press Correspondent
Communist China is playing
host to an unprecedented num
ber of official and semi-official
visitors from
both sides of
the Iron Cur.
tain.
Delegations
from eight for
eign countries
are in China
now. Delega
tions from 3
others have
just left.
Charles McCano
The reason for the visits is:
(1.) Red Chinese leaders Mao
Tse-tung and Chou En-lai are as
suming steadily increasing im
portance in the Communist
World. (2.) Non-Communist coun
tries are becoming increasingly
interested in trade possibilities.
Hungarian puppet Premier
Janos Kadar is the most import
ant foreign visitor at the mo
ment. Next in importance is former
Indonesian Vice-President Mo
hammed Hatta, who has again
become the No. 2 leader in his
"neutralist" country.
There are two visiting delega
tions from Syria, where pro-Russian
leaders are now in control
of the government. One delega
tion consists of journalists, tlie
other of students.
West Delegations Leave
There is a big parliamentary
delegation from Soviet Russia
and there are delegations from
Russian satellites Czechoslovakia
and East Germany, semi-independent
Communist Yugoslavia.
The delegations which have
left were from West Germany,
France and "neutralist" India.
The West German delegation,
which enjoyed semi-official sta
tus, signed an agreement for an
exchange of $54,700,000 worth
of goods each way.
This represents only a tiny
fraction of West Germany's to
tal annual exports of 5 billion
dollars. But it is an indication
of a trend.
A similarly semi-official dele
gation of French economists also
has left after long discussions
in the possibility of trade.
It was announced on Satur
day that the Red Chinese gov
ernment will send an official
delegation to Great Britain in
mid-October to talk trade.
Relaxes Trade Restrictions
Britain has led the Western
world in seeking increased trade
with Communist China, and has
drastically relaxed its restric
tions on types of goods which
may be sent there.
Britain also led the way
among Allied countries in recog
nizing Red China. .The recogni
tion was accorded by a Labor
therefore, be it - . .
"Resolved, That it is the
sense of the Senate that the
President should undertake
by all available means to ob
tain the prompt and concur
rent cessation of further test
ing of nuclear bombs by the
United States, the Soviet
Union, and Great Britain, un
til an international committee
of recognized scientists can at
least determine the extent of
the danger from radioactive
fallout."
I feel sure that many people
share Senator Morse's concern,
and would like to register their
opinions in some tangible man
ner. Then cut out this letter,
sign your name across it, or at
the bottom, and mail it to me.
If you would rather remain
anonymous mail the clipping
without the signature and it will
register as a vote of approval
for the resolution just the same.
If enough people make their
feelings known some action will
be taken.
E. Whealdon
804 Cedar st.
Medford, Ore
Mistake Clarified
To the Editor: I have written
the following letter to Mr. Art
Pullen, U. S. National Bank,
Grants Pass, Ore.:
Dear Art:
Senator Neuberger has called
to my attention the fact that
Baker Ferguson is associated
with the First National Bank of
Portland, and has absolutely no
affiliation with the United
States National Bank.
This man's statement that
Senators Neuberger and Morse
were keeping industry out of
Oregon occasioned my protest
ing letter to you 6f Sept. 23
which appeared in the Medford
Mail Tribune's editorial page.
I am requesting the Mail Tri
bune to publish this letter also,
as I sincerely regret stating that
Mr. Ferguson worked for your
bank. Both the Oregor.ian and
the Medford Mail Tribune pub
lished a resume of the speech,
stating Mr. Ferguson worked for
your bank rather than the First
National.
I do regret this mistake and
am sure the Medford Mail Tri
bune joins me in stating we both
should have checked his em
ployer prior to publishing the
letter. Also, Senator Neuberger
joins me in expressing this senti
ment, although in no way is my
criticism of Mr. Ferguson's state
ment concerning our Senators
activities modified.
Dana McBarron
Rogue River, Ore. "
S3
government, which was then in
office. On Jan. 6, 1950. That was
immediately after the Commun
ists swept the Nationalists off
the mainland.
The Chinese did not respond.
They snubbed the diplomatic en
voy whom the Laborites sent to
Peiping. The respective embas
sies are still headed by charges
d'affairies, not ambassadors. But
this situation is likely to end
soon.
Matter of Fact by
In the Wake of Little Rock
Washington (IP) In terms of
internal unity and the political
health of the United States, the
domestic cri
sis which now
confronts the
country is as
dangerous as
any in this
century. For
what it is
worth, this is
the basic con
clusion which
this reporter
Stewait Alsop
has brought back from witness
ing the ugly events in Little
Rock.
The conclusion may sound ex
treme, and perhaps it is For it
is an unsettling experience to
see American soldiers using
their bayonets to herd a sullen
crowd of American civilians
down a pleasant, shady, Ameri
can street. It is an unsettling
experience also to sense, as it
was impossible not to sense in
Little Rock, the reason-blinding,
glandular passions which sur
round the race issue, passions
which can so easily be exploited
by demagogues to their own
ends.
The central danger in the
present situation is clear. It is
that, in the wake of Little Rock,
the demagogues and the advo
cates of violence will succeed in
dominating the southern politi
cal scene.
TN the South, there are no
white integrationists with any
political power at all. There are,
instead, two kinds of segrega
tionist. The first kind, which
has been until now generally
dominant, says in effect: "We
oppose integration, and we fa
vor using all means within the
law to stop integration, or fail
ing that, to slow it down. But
we must remain within the law,
and we must abhor violence.'
The second kind says: "We
must use any means, including
violence, to prevent integration
of the schools, let come what
may." The Little Rock tragedy
has unquestionably strengthened
the hands of this second kind of
integrationist, and the result
may be, as "The Montgomery
Advertiser" has said, "to usher
m a new era of violence.
Consider, for example, the
speech by Gov. Orval Faubus of
Arkansas last Friday night. It
has been oddly described as
"conciliatory." - In fact, in the
context of the political atmos
phere in Little Rock and else
where- in the South, it was as
inflammatory as it could be,
short of an open call to insurrec
ection. fPHE Faubus rhetoric about fed--
eral troops "bludgeoning in
nocent bystanders, with bay
onets in the backs of school
girls, and the warm red blood
of patriotie American citizens
staining the cold, unsheathed
knives" was an invitation to vio
lence. And given the present
mood of Little Rock, the invita
tion is all too likely to be ac
cepted, when the opportunity
presents itself.
Faubus, as his bitterest critics
agree, is a shrewd politician. So
are men like James Eastland of
Mississippi and Olin Johnston of
South Carolina, who have also
extended an implied invitation
to violence. And the central
political fact which must now be
iv"
Counsel With . . .
Mr. Insurance Fred Brennan
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Fred Brennan
Or Call
Mr. Friendly
Bill Fish
Phone SP-2-4940
MEDFORD
INSURANCE
AGENCY
27 NORTH HOLLY ST.
Communist China is having
its growing pains. Even more
than in other Communist coun
tries, intellectuals and members
of the Communist party are be
ginning to question the acts of
their leaders and Communist
philosophy itself.
But Red China's prestige is
beginning to rival that of Rus
sia's in most of the Communist
world. In the Far East, Chinese
prestige is higher.
Stewart Alsop
reckoned with is that the ad
vocacy of violence, open or im
plied, may now be smart poli
tics in the South, as the un
doubted present popularity, of
Faubus in Arkansas suggests.
If the extremists triumph in
the South, the voices already
being raised in the North for
punitive action against the
South will become far louder.
And this interplay of extremism
could quite conceivably lead to
genuine national tragedy.
. There is only one man who
can act effectively to avert the
tragedy, and he is the, President
of the United States. What the
President must do is clear, al
though how he is to do it, in the
wake of Little Rock, is another
matter. He must find ways and
means, short of an ignominious
surrender on the integration
issue, to reassure and strengthen
the moderate and reasonable
men in the South. For these men
may otherwise soon have their
backs to the wall in Little
Rock today, for example, it
takes actual physical courage to
take a public stand for modera
tion on the race issue.
"CWEN after Little Rock, the
President is well equipped
for this task, not only because
he is President, but because he
is Dwight D. Eisenhower. He
still has an important reservoir
of trust and good will in the
South, despite Little Rock, and
no-one can accuse him of har
boring personal political ambi
tions. The genius of Eisenhow
er, moreover, has always lain in
calming passions and in finding
common ground between war
ring factions.
But the President cannot
do the job that must' be done
sporadically, or between 'golf
games. He cannot do it by issu
ing occasional statements
through press secretaries, or
staging an occasional meeting
with southerners. He can only
do it by devoting ''all his time,
all his energy, and all his heart
and soul to healing the wrench
ing, tearing disunity which
threatens the country. 1
For if matters are allowed to
drift, and the advocates of vio
lence become dominant in the
South, the end result may well
be to make a Little Rock in
many southern towns, and thus,
in a time of great danger, to
tear the country apart as it has
not been torn since reconstruc
tion days.
(c) 1957. New York Her-
aid Tribune, Inc.
fy
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