FOUR MEDFORD (OREGON)
Mi
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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
Oct. 14. 1947 (Tuesday)
Stock rustlers continue activi
ty in the Beagle district, reports
show.
. From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: "Long,
long ago, the board of aldermen
of Canton, Miss., adopted the
following resolutions: to build
a new jail; to build it out of the
materials of the old jail; to use
the old jail until the new one
is finished." (Prison World)
Civic thinking hits peak.
20 YEARS AGO
Oct. 14. 1937 (Thursday)
Maj. Ben Stafford, at present
commander of the Redding CCC
district, joins Medford district
staff.
Stockmen delegations from
Butte Falls and other Jackson
county sections urge employ
ment of a federal hunter.
B0 YEARS AGO
Oct. 14, 1927 (Friday)
General field day scheduled
to smooth out the Medford air
field.
Real estate men suggest more
playfields for Medford at meet
ing of the Realty Board .
40 YEARS AGO
Oct. 14. 1917 (Monday)
Liberty loan committee for
the Medford district organized
with appointment of subcommit
tees. Extension service plans organ
ization of study clubs in home
economics.
What's Your I.Q.7
Nine or ten correct Is superior;
seven or elstat Is excellent; five or
six is good
1. Did Leon Trotsky, woh was
banished from the U.S.S.R., die
a natural death in Mexico?
2. U.S. airmen well know the
four-letter abbreviation for the
German term "Flugzougabwehr
kanone" what is it?
3. Bible: Are quotations from
the Old Testament frequently
used in the New Testament?
4. In which British Common
wealth are there cities named
Sydney, Canberra and Mel
bourne? 5. "Pickett's Charge" occur
red in what decisive battle of the
Civil War?
6. Calvin Coolidge served as
vice-president under which Pres
ident? 7. Do common house flies
breed in Alaska?
8. In the famous "Dartmouth
College Case" who defended the
college?
9. Are "other" and "other
wise" synonyms or antonyms?
10. "Mistakes are often the
best t s"?
Answers: 1. No, he was as
sassinated on Aug. 20, 1940. 2.
"Flak." 3. Yes. 4. Australia. 5.
Gettysburg. 6. Warren G. Hard
ing. 7. No. 8. Daniel Webster. 9.
Neither... 10... "teachers."..
Froude.
CRURCH IN A PUB
London HP) "If the people
wont come to church, the church
must go to the people." the Rev.
Stanley Evans said Sunday. It
was very successful." he said to
day. "I am hoping to hold simi
lar services quite often in the
future."
MAIL TRIBUNE
WHAT'S Dying?
Our nomination for the silliest statement of last
week came from the man who referred to "this dying
Rogue valley."
We wonder how long he's been around, or how
carefully he's surveyed the valley. We suggest he
open his eyes to a few facts.
The population has more than doubled in the past
two decades, and while that rate of growth has slowed
down, it will resume its climb again before another
few years have gone by.
A realistic look at our economic situation shows
that there is a temporary slow-down, with some of the
smaller mills closed, and unemployment higher than
it was last year at this time.
But in the long-range health of the valley, this is
no more than a slight cold in the head certainly not
a serious illness.
T OOK around.
There are signs of growth and activity and over
all prosperity on every side. Compare business statis
tics, not to record-breaking 1956, but to prior years.
The lumber market, in the doldrums for more than
a year, is beginning to show signs of perking up again,
the forerunner of a slow and steady growth which
probably will be capped in the early 60s by another
lumber boom as the overwhelming generation of "war
babies" starts to build its homes.
The fruit industry is wrapping up a successful year
not a record-breaking one, but a year of a good crop
and acceptable prices.
T OOK around again.
Watch the $1V2 million shopping center in Med
ford take shape. Watch the construction of new build
ings in Medford doctors' offices, automobile dealer
ships, a new 2y2 million hospital, and soon a o12
million retirement home. Take a look at bustling
White City, where two new major installations are be
ing put in for production of plywood.
Consider the progress on the Talent project, with
some $5 million in construction already under way,
and another 4!2 million scheduled in the near future,
and some $11 million more in the succeeding few
years. Consider what this will do to expand agricul
ture here.
Think about the millions scheduled to improve
our transportation and communication and utility sys
tems roads, highways, electrical generation and
transmission, telephone services.
Get your head out of the sand, Pop. This valley's
just getting a good start E.A.
"Caveat
"Caveat emptor," is the ancient Roman saying,
meaning "Let the buyer beware."
It's a handy phrase to remember, these days of
telephoned solicitations for insurance, dancing les
sons barely-legal coupon books and the Good Lord
knows what all.
Not to mention the door-to-door fly-by-nights who
peddle everything from a new roof painting job,
which disappears in the first rain, to "bargain" shrubs
which cost more than those from a reputable local
nurseryman.
TT MIGHT be well to put a little sign, with that suc-
cinct Latin phrase, on the door (as a reminder when
an itinerant salesman drops by) or the telephone
(which is a grand and glorious way for boiler-room
salesmen to find new suckers) or the mail-box (which
as often as not contains sales pitches not all of them
from solid and reputable people).
Hardly a week goes by without those hard-working
people down at the chamber of commerce office
calling us to ask that our readers be warned about
some crews of questionable salesmen passing through
Medford, or about some other gimmick which might
be entirely legal, tout which is, to say the least, of ques
tionable value.
EOR instance:
1 - Last week hundreds, perhaps even thousands, of
Medford people received an impressive-looking piece
of mail offering Canadian stocks for sale. The cham
ber received an inquiry about it, and they telephoned
the Better Business Bureau in Portland to see if there
was any record of it. Indeed there was : It was mailed
out from a one-man office in Canada, which sent out
these stock advertisements by the thousands through
out the western states in the hope that they could in
terest some low-sales-resistance types.
Another example :
A man who once "worked" Medford for a New
Jersey nursery company, and who left after dissatis
fied customers began to make life miserable, is report
ed to be returning. The company for which he works
has been cited by the Federal Trade commission for
misrepresentation of its product which, incidental
ly, costs more and grows less than shrubs purchased
from local nurserymen, who stick around to make
good on their sales.
OUMAN nature being what it is, we've about given
up hope that warnings, from newspapers, cham
bers of commerce, Better Business Bureaus, or any
where else, will ever do much good.
Mankind is always on the lookout for a bargain, a
fast buck, an easy way to make a killing. And repeat
ed warnings will not change him into a smart buyer
or a smart investor.
But for whatever it's worth, we join the chamber
in echoing "caveat emptor" to local folk, hoping that
someone will be saved embarrassment or money by
being "taken in" on some sales scheme, legal or not,
which depends on the credulity and ignorance of the
buyer. E.A. ,
Monday, October 14, I9S7
Emptor
9
"SlMk&rL
'GUBSS
British Royalty Not
Strangers to White
House; Visits Told
Washington (Special)
Queen Elizabeth and Prince
Philip of Great Uritain arrive
in the United States on Wednes
day. On the following day they
go to Washington, where they
will be White House guests of
President and Mrs. Eisenhower.
You could almost call the
White House a "home away
from home" for the British royal
family. It goes back to 1860,
when Elizabeth's great grand
father, who was to become Ed
ward VII, made an informal tour
of Canada and this country. As
Prince of Wales, he traveled in
technical incognito as the Duke
of Rothestay or Baron Renfrew
to avoid formalities, but at that,
he stayed at the White House
as the guest of President Bu
chanan. Edward's grandson, who was
to become Edward VIII and is
now the Duke of Windsor, made
the first of several visits as
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
From Baker County
To the Editor: Since your fine
editorial support of Wayne
Morse in 1956, I have intended
to write. As 1958 and another
election isn't too far away, I feel
that we who are interested in
politics and what it can do for
the future of Oregon and our na
tion should get acquainted.
I am especially interested in
Jackson county. Both my parents
were members of pioneer fam
ilies there. My mother's parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph N. Wood
ruff homesteaded at Union creek
in 1887, and my father's father,
George W. Beale, reached Jack
son county in 1876. His old
homestead and early-day sawmill
were in the Butte creek area.
My father, Christopher C.
Beale, and mother, Pearl Wood
ruff, were married at the U. S.
Hotel in Jacksonville in 1888.
Mother and her sister, Orie, and
brother, Bird Woodruff, had a
dance orchestra, the Woodruff
Sisters Orchestra, which many
of the old timers will, I am sure,
remember. Aunt Orie died at
Colusa, Calif., in 1951. Bird lives
near Myrtle Creek in Douglas
county, and mother lives here
with my husband and me. Until
1952 she was an undefeated old
time fiddler. She won many con
tests until she had a stroke which
ended her playing. She will be
84 Oct. 12.
Mrs. Bea Thomas,
New Bridge,
Baker County, Oregon.
Buzzard Roost
To the Editor: Anyone ever
hear of, or know of, a Buzzard
Roost mountain? Well, neither
have we, but some 50 years ago
a man from a middle west state
stopped off the train at Wood
ville, Oregon, to make inquiry
and also offered a generous re
ward to anyone who did know.
Could it be the stranger had
been confused as to the actual
name of the mountain he was
searching for? We hardly think
so, although no one at that time
was able to give any help to
such a question. That was a time
when the maps did not show all
"buttes" like better maps do to
day. There is a Buzzard Butte
about 14 miles southwest of
Myrtle Point, in Coos county
and two miles from the Curry
county line.
We do know it is not unusual
to hear of gold being found in
that area of Oregon. Could it
be possible that "roost" was sub
situted instead of butte? Per
haps it was, and that may be
the clue to another forgotten
gold strike, yet to be rediscover
ed. That remains a mystery.
Bert Kissinger,
520 Boardman St.,
Medford, Ore.
7 J X. Ml L-f i I I
WHO "2
Prince of Wales in 1919. He did
not stay at the White House,
but called on the ailing Presi
dent Wilson there.
First Reigning Monarch
Then in May and June, 1939,
King George VI and Queen
Elizabeth II, paid a formal state
visit to Canada and the United
States. They were the first
reigning monarchs to sleep in
the White House, staying there
on June 8 and 9, before spend
ing a weekend with President
and Mrs. Roosevelt at Hyde
Park. There they were enter
tained at a picnic at which the
King with seeming relish drank
beer and ate hot dogs.
For all her preference for
simple food, it's not likely that
Elizabeth will be served hot
dogs by President and Mrs. Eis
enhower. They would be noth
ing new to her, however, for
the Queen herself served frank
furters to visiting American at
torneys at a party in London
this summer.
When Elizabeth and Philip
were over here last, in the au
tumn of 1951, their visit was
entirely social. Even so, the
heiress presumptive and consort
stayed at Blair House, temporary
residence of President Truman
during White House repairs.
And they were entertained at
formal dinners and were shown
Mt. Vernon (of course) and Ar
lington National Cemetery.
"Fairy Princess"
Princess Liz made a brief ar
rival speech after being met by
President Truman at the Na
tional Airport. "Thank you, my
dear," replied the President of
the United States, who later in
troduced her to dinner guests
as a "fairy princess" of the sort
he had read about as a little
boy.
Most recent member of the
family to put up at the White
House was the Queen Mother,
who stayed with the Eisenhow
ers on Nov. 4 and 5, 1954. She
had come over to speak and
receive an honorary degree at
Columbia University's Bicen
tennial Convocation.
Elizabeth II will be the fifth
reigning queen to stay overnight
in the Executive Mansion. The
first royal visitors, according to
the Library of Congress, were
the Queen's parents. Then, dur
ing World War II, Queen Wil
helmina of the Netherlands stay
ed there, to be followed, some
time later, by her daughter,
Queen Julian and consort Bern
hard. Other Guests
President and Mrs. Eisenhow
er were hosts to King Paul and
Queen Frederika of Greece in
October, 1953. Other royal visi
tors not overnight guests, how
ever have included King Al
bert I and Queen Elizabeth of
Belgium in 1919; Queen Marie
of Rumania in 1926; King Praj
adhipok and Queen Rambai of
Siam (Thailand) in 1931; Shah
Mohammed Riza Pahlevi and
Queen Soraya, 1954.
His "Imperial Majesty Haile
Selassie I of Ethiopia was enter
tained at the White House by
President Eisenhower in 1954
but stayed at the Ethiopian Em
bassy in Washington. This year
King Saud of Saudi Arabia stay
ed at Blair House but was enter
tained at the Executive Mansion.
Pearson of Canada
Awarded Nobel Prize
Oslo, Norway IP) Form
er Canadian Foreign Minister
Lester B. Pearson today was
awarded the Nobel Peace Prize
for 1957. As usual, the Norwe
gian Nobel Committee, gave no
reason for its choice.
The committee also decided
not to give any peace prize for
1956, and the amount of money
normally awarded will be re
turned to the Nobel Peace Prize
fund.
Pearson's prize for this year
is worth 208,628 Swedish Crowns
the equivalent of 340,330.33.
United Press Writers Forecast
Stories Which Will Make News
United Press correspon
dents around the world look
ahead at the news that will
make the headlines.
Headlines And News
Queen Elizabeth will be tak
ing the headlines in the United
States this week. But London in
siders say Foreigne Secretary
Selwyn Lloyd will be making
the real news. This will be a
secret, urgent proposal that the
United States and Britain answer
Russia's Sputnik triumph by re
suming cooperation in the nu
clear energy field. Lloyd will
argue that the two allies are
hurting themselves by, working
independently on the same pro
jects and that a single clue,
given by one side to the other,
might save months in a vital
cold war race. Lloyd will serve
as the Queen's minister-in-at-tendance
in the United States
But before she arrives in the
United States Wednesday, Lloyd
will be in Washington seeing
Secretary of State John Foster
Dulles and probably President
Eisenhower.
Girard
The word from Tokyo is that
the defense of S-3 William S.
Girard, on trial for killing a Jap
anese woman scrap metal scav
enger on a firing range, is go
ing strong. A lot of evidence is
still to be heard. But the betting
is that the Ottawa, 111., GI will
get a very light sentence and
that it probably will be suspend-
In the Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
Sputnik, the man-made moon,
is still circling the earth and mut
tering messages in a code that
presumably only its makers un
derstand. Because it was made
by RUSSIAN MEN, it still dom
inates the news. It even over
shadows the fabulous victory of
the under-dog Braves over the
big shot Yankees.
So I suppose we might as well
go on talking about it.
"QJPUTNIK." Where did that
weird name come from?
It's simpler than you'd think.
It's Russian for "satellite." The
Russian language experts tell
us a more precise translation
would be "fellow traveler" of
the earth.
That, in itself, is rather inter
esting. In Kremlin double-talk,
a communist is a "fellow travel
er" who goes along with Krem
lin ideas of world domination.
Among the Russian Big
Wheels, a "satellite" country is
a country that does what Russia
tells it to do and thus helps to
advance Russian objectives.
So, you see, "Sputnik" is a
perfectly good name for Russia's
artificial moon.
M
ORE incidental information:
The Russians launched "Sput
nik," thus gaining for themselves
much kudos and leaving us with
very, very red faces.
But
We were the first to deter
mine the precise orbit of the
third-staee rocket that launched
ithe Russian satellite into outer
space.
That gives us something to
brag about.
H
OW did we do it?
That is interesting too.
We did it with the help of a
MECHANICAL BRAIN an IBM
at Cambridge Massachusetts. In
to this robot we fed information
obtained from photographs and
visual observations and the ro
bot came up with the orbit
meaning the path followed by
the segment of the rocket in its
revolutions around the earth.
WE INVENTED THE ME
CHANICAL BRAIN.
That helps to save our face.
B
UT
Let's not get cocky.
Here are some disturbing fig
ures: TUSSIA is outdoing us in pro-
ducing scientific brainpower, j
By the latest calculations, she is i
educating two to three times as i
many scientists as we are. In j
1955, the Russians graduated j
63,000 students from scientific
and engineering courses. j
At the rate we are going, we ;
won't nave 63,000 NEW scien-
tists and engineers until 1964
almost a decade behind the reds, j
The U.S. on the average, is turn-1
ing out about 138 engineers per
million of population. The Rus- j
sians are graduating about 315
engineers per million of popula
tion. That's about double our rate.
SO let's not underestimate the
Russian brainpower.
Underestimating your enemy
is always a bad mistake.
TRUST TO DISTRUST
Paris (ID Japanese en
gineer Kitano Hiroo was quick
ly transformed Sunday from a
trusting soul to a doubting
Thomas. A stranger offered to
look after Hiroo's luggage in a
hotel elevator until the engineer
got to the lobby. When Hiroo
arrived, the obliging stranger
and the luggage, including
$1,200 in travelers' checks and
a round the world plane ticket,
were gone.
ed.
'Don't be surprised if Vice
President Richard M. Nixon en
dorses Sen. William F. Know
land (R-Caliif.) in his bid to re
place Goodwin J. Knight as gov
ernor of California. Knowland
insists he has no 1960 presiden
tial ambitions which might put
him against Nixon. Also, Knight
backed a move to run Harold
E. Stassen instead of Nixon for
vice president last fall.
Split
Washington reports that con
gressional Democrats are badly
split on a big issue. They've got
to decide whether to keep de
manding federal economies and
a tax cut, now that Sputnik is
circling the globe, or to demand
more defense funds. Arguments
are waxing hot on both sides.
Invitation
London says it's about certain
now that Queen Elizabeth will
invite President and Mrs. Eisen
hower to Visit her in London.
The Queen will make the invita
tion personally while she is in
Washington, palace sources say.
If the President doesn't want to
go, he may be on the spot. He
isn't ill, no election is impend
iWcrffer of Fact
CAN SPUTNIK SEE?
Washington There is a moun
ting body of evidence, taken
most seriously in the Washington
intelligence community, that the
Soviet satellite
is not blind,
that Sputnik
has eyes to
see. If this is
so, it means
that Sputnik,
which is cer
tainly a major
propagan
da and scienti-
stewait aisod c inumpn ior
the Soviets, is a great military
r: - j i m
triumph as well.
Last Wednesday, in Belgrade,
Yugoslavia, a Soviet scientist,
Dr. Aleksander S h e r b a n, let
what Iooks like a very big and
ugly cat out of his bag. Dr
Sherban, who is vice president
of the Ukranian Academy of
Scientists, said proudly that
Sputnik carried certain "ele
ments" which made it possible
in effect to record the terrain
of the earth below.
If what Dr. Sherban said is
true and there are strong rea
sons to believe that it is true
President Eisenhower's hope
ful statement that Sputnik has
no military significance "in it
self" is nonsense. On the con
trary, if Sputnik has eyes to
see, Sputnik represents a ma
jor triumph of Soviet intelli-
fence, with immense military
significance.
rpO understand the real impli
cations of Dr. Sherban's
boast, you have to understand
one of the strangest and in some
ways the most difficult of the
problems facing the missile-ma
kers. An intercontinental mis
sile, to do its grisly job, must
be fired several thousand miles,
and land within five miles of a
specified target. This is a tough
enough job in any case. But
what makes it very much tough
er is the curious fact that all
existing maps are unreliable.
The reason is simple. Map
makers use an instrument call
ed a transit to determine latitude
and longitude by celestial obser
vation. The transit contains the
equivalent of a carpenter's plum
bob, used to determine the verti
cal. In theory, the plumb bob
points to the center of the earth.
In fact, it is slightly diverted by
local geographical formations,
like high mountains. Moreover,
it is slightly inaccurate anyway,
since the earth, being flattened
at both ends, is not a true
sphere.
THAT is why all existing maps
arp lnarrnratp. And that in
turn is why Dr. Sherban's boast
was so immensely significant.
For one might have supposed the
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ing and the school integration
situation is cooling off. Any re
fusal would have to be made
very diplomatically, including a
convincing reason, to avoid a
snub.
Sign Of The Times?
Motor experts say there's no
mention whatever of horse
power in the elaborate press
package on the 1958 B u i c k
which has been mailed to auto
mobile editors throughout the
country. But there are plenty of
details on brakes, transmission,
suspension and styling. Detroit
recently has been playing down
horsepower and playing up
safety.
Nehru
Tokyo reports that Indian
Prime Minister Jawharlal Ne
hru is having a good time on his
visit to Japan. He is likely to
go home empty-handed econ
omically speaking, however.
Japan wouid like to build export
markets in India. Trade expan
sion is a chief aim of Premier
Nobusuke Kishi. But India is in
no position to pay for goods ex
cept through a deferred pay
ment scheme. This, Japan can
not afford to accept.
By Stewart Alsop
Soviets, wishing to zero in, for
example, on a strategic Air
Force base in Maine, would
simply locate the base on a
good map, and aim their inter
continental missile accordingly.
In fact, given the enormous dis
tances involved, the inaccuracy
of existing maps would mean an
error of several crucial miles.
As first reported in the New
York Herald Tribune, high in
telligence officials suspected,
even before Dr. Sherban's boast,
that "The satellite is mapping
the United States with infra-red
devices to locate targets in Am
erica." It is possible to use infra-red
devices to locate cities,
rivers, coastlines, and the like,
by ' measuring the intensity of
light. Telemetering instruments
can then be used to communi
cate this information by code.
When it became known that
Sputnik contained telemetering
devices which were sending
coded information to the Sov
iet scientists a fact confirm
ed by the Soviets themselves
the suspicion that Sputnik was
not blind was born. It was re
inforced by the guarded hints in
"Pravda" that "the satellite has
light-sensitive elements." The
weight of Sputnik, which am
azed American scientists, was
another element in the equa
tion it is logical to assume that
Sputnik is so heavy because it
contains numerous "miniatur
ized" instruments. And Dr.
Sherban's statement seenwd to
confirm the worst fears of the
intelligence community.
TF THESE fears are justified, it
A means that Sputnik can be
used to give the Soviets, for
the first time, an accurate "fix"
on targets in this" country. Suc
cessors to Sputnik, which the
Soviets have announced in ad
vance, can be used to double
check the accuracy of the Sput
nik fixes by cross-triangulation.
In short, the belief is grow
ing in the intelligence commun
ity that we have done it again
that we have once more un
derestimated the Russians. If
Sputnik is very much more than
a "neat scientific trick," to use
Charles Wilson's blandly com
placent phrase. Sputnik, is, in
stead, a vital element of the
Soviet intercontinental ballis
tic weapons system, which the
Soviets are clearly building
with 'frantic urgency. For if
Sputnik has eyes, Sputnik pro
vides the means to zero in the
Soviet instruments of total de
struction on every important
American target. In the cir
cumstances, a little less bland
complacency and a little more
frantic urgency, might seem to
be called for in this country.
(C) 1957 New York Herald
Tribune Inc.
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may make funeral ar
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keeping with its means. A
selection of services for
every price range Is of
fered to,, satisfy individual
preferences and to meet
all financial circumstances.
Convenient Terms?
Certainly!