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(-, "Everyone In Southern Oregaa
2 Read The Mail Tribune"
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Flight o' Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail Triburua 10, 20. 30 and
40 years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
Nov. 28. 1947 (Sunday)
Prospects for next summer's
Irrigation water are in the usual
uncertain state, according to a
survey by the Fruit Growers
league irrigation committee.
From Arthur Perry's -Ye
Smudge Pot column: "Quite a
number of the intelligentsia from
the camps of the state were down
to eat turkey and pull a wish
bone with the home team Paw
and Maw.'
20 YEARS AGO
Nov. 28, 1937 (Sunday)
A drive for the proposed new
Phoenix firehall will begin Dec.
1. Lower insurance rates for the
community are expected to re
suit. Skiin conditions in Crater
Lake national park were de
scribed yesterday as excellent
for experts, fair for novices.
30 YEARS AGO
Nov. 28, 1927 (Monday)
A more compact organization
of all fruit promotional organi
zations in this area will be con
sidered during the annual meet
ing of the Fruitgrowers' league
to be held within the next few
days. "
Thf third rum-running car
captured by Federal Officer
Terry Talent during the past
week was seized at 4 a.m. xoaay
south of Ashland.
40 YEARS AGO
Nov. 28. 1917 (Wednesday)
a ort-ir nf Mprlfnrd men were
entertained at the Grants Pass
sugar factory by Manager Alex
Nibley of the Utah-Idaho, Sugar
company Tuesday ana wuuccu
the manufacture of sugar.
W. C. Hammatt, engineer of
the Medford irrigation district,
has recently compiled a map of
the district showing the char
acter of the crops planted.
Whifs Your I.Q.?
Nine ot ten correct Is superior;
seven or eight Is excellent: five or
six is good
1. A full moon rises in the east
at noon, midnight, sunset or sun
rise? .
2. Bible: Is there a reference
relating specifically to the "heav
enly city?"
3. Is air in sunlight of a higher
temperature than air in sunset?
4. By what title are warrant
officers and flight officers ad
dressed? 5. Louisiana is named after
what French king?
6. Was James Oliver Curwood
an American painter, writer or
author?
7. Are teeing-eye dogs given
free to blinded war veterans?
8. Une? which President was
the Tnnise River Muscle
Shoal yroject begun?
9. What causes electrical dis
plays in he earth's northern lati
tudes? 10. Did Scott, Tennyson, or
Hawthorne write "Ivanhoe"?
Answers: 1. 6unsl. 3. Yes.
3. No? . Mister. I. Louis XIV.
6. Author. .7. Ys. Woodrow
Wilson. 9. Sunspots. 10. Scolt.
AMERICAN FLIER KILLED
Huckneall, England HP! A
RAF twin-jet vertical takeoff
"Flying Bedstead" crashed
Thursday on a trial flight, killing
- 4ts American-born pilot. Wing
Cmdr. Gordon Larsen. Larsen,
41, has lived in England for
years. He won the Distinguished
Flying Cross during World War
II with the RAF.
kail tribune
How to Ruin Your Town
What makes a "good city"? And what makes a
"good citizen"?
Opinions vary, of course, as do people. One person
can be a good citizen in his own way, and act entirely
differently from another person who is also a good
citizen, but in another way.
Be that as it may, we recently received an interest
ing check-list of "how to ruin your home town." It first
appeared in the Sedalia (Mo.) Democrat, has been
widely reprinted, and was sent to us by a friend.
Here it is :
1. Don't pay taxes. Let the other fellow pay his. Then
fuss because the streets are not kept up.
2. Never attend any of the meetings called for the good
of the town. If you do, don't have anything to say. Wait,
until you get outside and then cuss those .who made the
suggestions.
3. Get all the city will give you and don't give any
thing in return. Write unsigned letters to the editor de
manding more for your tax money.
4. Talk cooperation, but don't do any work for your
city unless you get paid for it. And by all means refuse to
serve unless they make you chairman.
5. Never accept an office. It's easier to criticise than to
do things.
6. Don't do any more than you have to. When others
willingly and unselfishly give their time to make a town
better, howl because the town is run by a clique.
7. Don't back your fire department or your police de
partment. If the firemen work to bring insurance rates
down, tell everybody that is what they are supposed, to do.
Don't thank them or the policemen for endangering their
lives that you might have a safer town in which to live. De
mand special treatment.
8. Look at every proposition in a selfish way. If you
don't get the most good out of it vote against it. Never con
sider what it will do for the town as a whole.
9. Don't do anything for the youth of the town. Criti
cize them as potential delinquents.
10. If you have good town leaders, don't follow them.
Take a jealous attitude and talk down everything.
11. Don't work on any committee. Tell them, "I'm too
busy."
12. Don't say anything good about your town. Be the
first to point up its shortcomings.
13. And don't support your local retail stores and in
dustries. Claim the prices and service in stores of other
towns are better. Claim industry and its payroll hurts the
town. But if you need a donation, ask your local stores and
industries for it. Expect them to back you, but don't back
them.
The editorial concluded, "If these 13 steps don't
ruin your town, it isn't your fault." E. A.
$70,000 Experiment
Up at Albany, the Western Kraft Corp. his started
a $70,000 project designed to eliminate offensive
smells from its big pulp and paper plant to the north
of town.
It is, frankly, a gamble, for company officials are
not just sure that the new equipment will do the job
although obviously they are hopeful that it will.
And so are the residents of Albany and a large
area around the city." The noxious odors from the mill
can be smelled vividly even in Salem, 25 miles away,
when the wind is wrong.
TTHE problem of air pollution (including smells) is
of increasing importance in Oregon, where new
industries are badly needed to bolster a depressed
economy.
For instance, in the Rogue valley, when we have
a "cold air inversion," and the fog is held close to the
ground, imagine what a horror it would be for a pulp
plant to be sending out its horrid smell.
Also, the Rogue river could ill-afford to have any
casual dumping of pollution-causing effluent in the
river although modern methods of water treatment
are said to have solved, or nearly solved, this problem.
IN ANY event, we shall watch with interest the results
1 of the Kraft $70,000 experiment. K it works, it
could be of importance to this area.
For, in the nature of our economy, a pulp plant
would fit in well with the efforts being made to div
ersify the economy, and to broaden the utilization of
forest products.
But as it stands, we simply could not afford to
"take a chance" on destroying the values which make
the Rogue valley the lovely place it is. E.A.
t
It Means Everyone
If anyone gets killed during December in an auto
mobile accident, he can't say he hasn't been warned.
Because of a disastrous death-toll in Oregon dur
ing October and November, which promises to shatter
long-standing death records, responsible public and
safety officials have pleaded, warned, cajoled and re
peated the warnings "Be careful!".
Still, accidents happen ; people get killed ; and few
outside the immediate families of the victims seem to
get veiy upset.
C" ACH person, we suppose, believes deep in his heart
two things:
1. "I'm a safe driver."
2. "It couldn't happen to me."
These are perfectly natural beliefs. The only catch
to it is that they very probably were also the beliefs
of those who were killed.
Most drivers know the rules of safety on the road.
It's wljen they momentarily forget, or ignore them,
that trouble happens.
And this, as the old saying goes, "means YOU."
E.A.
Friday, November 29, 1957
SUK. I'LL TELL YOU WHY HIS
MS FULL OF JUMPS.
Matter of Fact
BASTIONS. DULLES-STYLE
Amman, Jordan Among the
world's few palaces still in
habited by reigning monarchs,
the B a s m a n
palace is cer
tainly the
least palatial.
The modest
stone structure
stands on a
dusty hill
above this
little city,
with a view
Joseph aisoo across a n a r
row valley to another dusty hill
where goats browse on the scant
desert growth.
But this palace of young Hus
sein, King of Jordan, hardly
larger than a big Western coun
try house, is now perhaps the
most sensitive single spot in all
the troubled Middle East.
The Egyptians, the Syrians
and the Soviets have vowed to
destroy Hussein and his govern
ment by any means within their
power. Organized bomb out
rages, organized subversion, or
ganized lies of unprecedented
shamelessness all these and
other weapons have been used.
Since the 23-year-old king has
stood annoyingly firm; Gamal
Abdel Nasser's Cairo radio has
lately taken to open incitement
to assassination.
There is method, too, in this
macabre and seemingly lunatic
violence. For if Jordan can only
be reduced to a Soviet-Egyptian
satellite on the Syrian model,
the days of independent Iraq
will be numbered. And if Iraq
falls, it will soon.be the turn of
the oil-rich sheikhdoms of the
Persian Gulf and of Saudi Ara
bia itself.
""OTHING but young Hussein's
naked courage saved Jordan
from the Soviet - Egyptian spon
sored coup d'etat last April.
Nothing but Hussein's stout de
termination is saving Jordan to
day. His coolness, his firmness
must impress anyone who talks
with him, as this reporter has
just done at some length.
Courage always tends to be
the winning quality, especially
when it is in rather short supply
among the opposition, as is the
case here in Jordan. Neverthe
less, it is necessary to face the
plain fact that the position here
in Jordan is at least very peri
lous. The king has great assets, to
be sure. Under pressure of ne
cessity, he has grown very rap
idly in self assurance and ma
turity. He has grown too in the
respect of his people and of po
litical leaders- Despite the most
active efforts to infiltrate the
army, finally, the king still
commands the loyalty of the
Arab Legion; and here in Jor
dan, as in every Arab countryi
the army is the decisive factor
in politics.
OUT against these items on the
credit side nf tho halanre
credit side of the
sheet, it is necessary to balance
a heavy list of items on the debit
side. There is the tragic plight
of the half - million Palestinian
refugees, who form a third of
Jordan's total population. There
is Jordan's basic poverty. There
is the continuing appeal of the
Syrian-Egyptian-Soviet brand of
"Arab nationalism." There is
the bandwagon effect of the re
cent leftwing success in Syria,
which has frightened Jordan's
moderates and made them reluc
tant to commit themselves to
Hussein.
The young king is sternly con
fident that he can maintain Jor
dan's independence, despite the
powerful forces massed against
him. But it sticks out like a sore
thunb here, that urgent mea
sures are needed to improve the
odds in the king's favor.
The United States alone can
take these measures. The repson
sibility to do so was publicly ac
cepted by President Eisenhower
himself at the time of the April
crisis here. But consider what
has followed! Even the $30,000,
000 of aid without strings that
the President then publicly
promised was very nearly lost
in the strange recesses of the
administrative and policy mak
ing machinery in Washington.
When this reporter was last
here, six months ago, the Ameri
can Embassy - was desperately
waiting for a messenger from
Washington who was bringing
HAIR IS FULL OF NICK'S.
by
Joe and Stewart Alsop
word whether the President's
promise would be kept or brok
en. As these words are written,
the Embassy is again desperate
ly waiting for another messeng
er from Washington. He is al
leged to have the answer to the
great question, whether we have
anything that deserves the name
of a policy for Jordan.
A REAL policy for Jordan has
two basic requirements. First
of all, enough money must be
provided, not just to pay the
army as in the past, but also to
start useful projects, like the ex
ploitation of Jordan's valuable
phosphate deposits and the irri
gation of the Yarmouk River
valley. Even if there were no
such useful projects, the extra
money would be needed for the
simple purpose of making work,
and thus creating a new atmo
sphere of hope.
For this purpose, an increase
of aid to Jordan from the pres
ent level of thirty million a year
to a new level of fifty million a
year will be ample. It is not
much. By the same token, only
a few more millions are needed
to satisfy the second essential
requirement. This is the require
ment of adequate financing for
the work of the United Nations
relief and welfare administra
tion among the Palestinian refu
gees. Yet at this mpment, the
admirable director i the criti
cal refugee relief program, Hen
ry Labouisse, is at the United
Nations publicly pleading bank
ruptcy. In a most literal sense, Jordan
is a bastion of the free world
position in the Middle East. It
has been officially classified as
such by Secretary of State Dulles
as well as by the President. It
seems we have a rather vague
way of defending bastions,
(c) 1957 New York
Herald Tribune Inc.
Wall Street Looking
To Congress to Put
New Zip in
By ELMER C. WALZER
United Press Financial Editor
New York (IP) Wall Street
is looking for Congress to inject
new zip into business and the
market early
in 1958.
But the mar
ket men admit
there still are
many things
the market
must contend
with. These in
clude: 1. Some fur-
Elmer Watzer ther tax selling
I that might leave a rally brought
; u-r roinwechnpnt of vfar-end
interest and dividend payments
2. A new' test of the 1957 lows.
One test was successfully met in
the Eisenhower break, it is held.
The experts think another one
is being postponed to early 1958
by a tendency toward easier
money.
3. Further pinch on profits is
foreseen regardless of any step
up in government spending. '
4. Inventory problems, over
capacity problems, and the like.
Ike's Health Factor
The market still is sensitive to
President Eisenhower's health.
Not a few in the financial dis
trict are convinced prices would
break again if he had a turn for
the worse.
Another line of thought with
regard to the President is de
veloping. Gerald M. Loeb, a senior part
ner of E. F. Hutton and company
holds that the nation is looking
to Congress rather than to the
Presidency for action that will
have a bearing on business and
inflation.
: "Thus," he adds, "the near
term outlook is for continuance
of the upward trend at least until
early next year when congres
sional action will make itself
felt in the stock market."
He feels that if Vice-President
Richard Nixon should be compelled-to
take the reins of gov
Ike's Illness
Foreign News During
By CHARLES M. McCANN
United Press Correspondent
The week's good and bad
news -on the international bal
ance sheet:
President Eisenhower's illness
was regarded in countries all
over the world as the biggest and
gravest news
d e v e lopment :
this week.
Official and
newspaper re
action empha
sized the fact
that - in these
times of inter
national ten
sion the Chief
cuanei m. Aiccann Executive of
the United States is the outstand
ing political figure in the free
world.
A spokesman for the neutral
government of Austria reflected
the feeling of many world lead
ers when he said:
"It is the worst news in
months, much worse than the
news of the launching of the
Soviet earth satellites."
The heads of government of
the 14 countries allied with the
United States in the North At
lantic Treaty Organization had
looked to Eisenhower to play
the leading part in a "summit"
conference to be held in Paris
Dec. 16.
This conference was decided
upon, in view of the threat of
Soviet Russian progress in mis
sile development, to tighten the
unity of NATO countries and to
strengthen Western European de
fenses. The news that Eisenhower
would not be able to attend
brought immediate speculation
that the meeting might be can
celled. When it was made known
that the United States was ready
to send Vice President Richard
M. Nixon in his place there was a
change of feeling.
But it was plain that no man
can take the place of an Ameri
can president in point of prestige
and authority.
In congressional hearings, in
Defense Department conferences
and at missile-testing grounds po
litical leaders, scientists and mili
tary men concentrated 6n the
urgent job pf meeting the Rus
sian threat.
In Paris, British Prime Mint
ister Harold Macmillan and
French ' Premier Felix Gaillard
met in an attempt to end the
coolness in their relations which
resulted from the dispatch by
the United States and Britain
of weapons to France's former
protectorate of Tunisia.
Official statements showed
clearly that France was still dis
satisfied. This "sue, incidentally, was
one of many which Eisenhower
would have been expected to
clear up at the NATO meeting.
Premier Gaillard put the life
of his new cabinet to the test in a
debate in the National Assembly,
the controlling house of the
Market
ernment, "business will be opti-
mistic about tne re-eiecuon oi
Republican administration i n
1960, since .the voters generally
favor a continuance of the in
cumbent candidate who maye
Nixon."
Recession Too Costly
Eldon A. Grimm, analyst for
Walston and company says the
U. S. economy must step up to
compete with Russia. He holds
that unlike the old days, we can
not afford a recession while the
Soviets are going ahead.
Prentice-Hall Tiolds that "our
nation will not long relinquish
economic and military' superior
ity." But here the service injects
a sour note in saying that "the
inevitable U. S. response to the
Soviet challenge will eventually
call for more planned economy,
more economic controls."
Controls could drive many to
sell stocks, say the experts. They
see nothing good in controls ex
cept for black marketeers.
80 Korean Orphans
Arrive in Portland
Portland (IP) Another 80 Ko
rean orphans landed at Portland
International Airport Thursday,
to be greeted by their new
American parents who . had
adopted them before, they left
Korea.
The chartered Korean Na
tional Airlines plane brought
87 Korean youngsters to .this
country, but seven of them left
the plane at Seattle, their des
tination. Harry Holt, the Creswell farm
er who started the Korean baby
lift operation, met the Thanks
giving plane in Seattle and
accompanied the children to
Portland. Holt said he, was work
ing intensely to get, as many
more as possible of the already
adopted Korean children to this
country in time for Christmas.
Overshadows Other
French Parliament, on means to
end the rebellion in Algeria.
Gaillard announced that at the
end of the debate this week end
he would seek a vote of confi
dence. His defeat would mean
his resignation.
President Eisenhower caught
the chill which was the first de
velopment in his illness, while
Symington Sees Hot
Partisan Issue in
issiie Development
By LYLE C. WILSON
United Press Correspondent
Washington (IP) The word
today is that Sen. Stuart Syming
ton (D-Mo.) takes a dim view
of the Idea
that the Sen
ate investiga
tion of the de
fense - missile
program
should- be
sweetly non
partisan. v
Syming ton
was secretary
of air in 1947-
50. Then and thereafter in the
.Senate, personable Stu never
ducked a fight when he felt the
air defenses of the United States
needed a defender. He bucked
the Democratic White House and
all comers on such occasions.
These battles gave Symington
a favorable political identity,
sufficient to include his name
among those contending in 1956
for the Democratic presidential
nomination. Now comes the mis
sile controversy set off by the
Russian Sputniks. This contro
versy had the public's urgent at
tention from the moment it
began. When a matter of nation
al policy obtains the public's
sustained and anxious interest
there exists the substance of a
socko political issue.
Such Win Elections
Socko political issues win elec
tions for political parties and
make careers for political indi
viduals. Symington apparently
sees that clearly. The senator
is a member of the Senate Pre
paredness Subcommittee chair
ed by Sen. Lyndon W. Johnson
(D-Tex.).- Johnson opened the
hearings this week with empha
sis on the seriousness of the in
quiry into missile and satellite
development and his own disin
terest in assessing blame.
' What the committee would do,
the chairman said, would be to
lind out what should be done
to correct the missile situation.
"We will not," he added,
"reach that goal by wandering
up any blind alleys of partisan
ship." Symington need not interpret
that remark as any charge of
blind partisanship against him
self. Moreover, if Symington
briefly can be patient, there will
be enough partisanship in the
missiles inquiry to satisfy every
one, including the voters of this
republic who may by now feel
that they have a right to know
who was responsible for the lag
in the United States outer space
and missile performance which
causes scientists to say the set
back is comparable to what hap
pened back there at Pearl
Harbor.
Nixon vs. Truman
Pearl Harbor was an all-time
shocker until Sputnik I directed
attention to something which
sober men assert is even more
catastrophically shocking. Vice
President Richard M. Nixon and
former President Harry S. Tru
man each is maneuvering to per
suade the public that the other
political party was at fault. You
might almost say that these two
have begun a public debate on
the subject.
If that debate develops, the
word partisanship will be much
too weak for the scope of argu
ment. There is personal feeling
between those two fit to heat
a cold political issue white hot.
However that may turn ou,
the Republican National Commit
tee rejected the non-partisan an
proach to the missile issue as
the Senate hearings began. The
committee issued an eight-page
pamphlet full of facts and fig-
AND THE FIDDLER PLAYED
Chicago (IP) A former Chi
cagoan now living in Los "An
geles, Mrs. Joseph A. Golde, has
given Northwestern University's
School of Music something dif
ferent to fiddle with. She pre
sented a century-old English vio
lin and a Buthold Luthier Vio
loncello. '
I.yle C Wilson
Enjoy Good, Strong, Guaranteed Relief
From ARTHRITIC PAINS wife AR-PaII-EX
Do you suffer from the sharp,
crippling torture of arthritic or
rheumatic pains? Only the suf
ferer can really know how these
horrible, wracking pains can stop
you from fully enjoying life.
Probably you have tried many old-
fashioned palliatives or pain killers
fashioned palliatives or pain killers
without effect. But now there is new
medical reason for hope. You may
not be able to cure your arthritis, but
you need not be reconciled to live a
half life in pain.
Here's Good News
AR-PAN-EX, a medically developed,
potent combination of seven medic-
WESTERN THRIFT - 30
Past Week
waiting at Washington Airport
to welcome King Mohammed V
pf Morocco, another of France's
former North African protector
ates, who arrived on a state visit.
Vice President Nixon took the
President's place at the state din
ner which Eisenhower arranged
for his guest. Secretary of State
John Foster Dulles took over the
job of chief negotiator.
ures. The purpose: 10 lay .tne
blame for Pearl Harbor No. 2
right in the lap of Harry S.
Truman. .
What happens next is likely
to be quite lively because Mr.
T. is not going to like that.
.
In Ihe Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
Within a period of approxi
mately two years President Eis
enhower, has suffered three phy
sical setbacks a heart attack
in 1955, a later case of ileitis
which necessitated an abdominal
operation and a period of recup
eration, and now a mild stroke,
from' which he seems as this is
written to be recovering quick
ly. All three have brought on
sinking spells in the " nation's
economy.
These incidents suggest two
interesting questions:
1. Is Mr. Eisenhower's health
so frail as to unfit him for the
job of President of the United
States?
.2. Is the job of President of
the United States, as its duties
are presently defined by law and
custom, so burdensome as to be
beyond the physical capacities
of ANY ONE MAN?
QUESTION No. 2 was dealt
with exhaustively in a re
cent issue of U.S. News and
World Report, one of the nation's
most influential business maga
zines. Its conclusions suggested
the possibility that the job IS
becoming so exhaustingly- de
manding as to be beyond the
physical stamina of any average
person who devotes to it the at-
tention it deserves and that law
and custom require.
W
HAT to do about it?
There are many alterna
tives. We might, for example,
lay down by law or custom a dic
tum that only a physical super
man could be eligible for the
office of President.
But I don't think we'd like
that. In the job of President of
the United States, brains are
more important than brawn and
purely' physical stamina.
WE MIGHT divide the respon
sibilities of the job by set
ting up a cabinet form of govern
ment, in which a number of
men would share the responsi
bilities n ow borne soley by the
President.
But I don't think we'd like
that, either. It would smack too
much of the Kremlin, where thet
dJties of top bracket govern
ment are shared by several in
dividuals. The lesson of history
is
that in such a government
there are continuing
for supreme power.
intrigues
THE burdens of the Presidency,
as evidenced by President
Eisenhower's disturbingly fre
quent physical breakdowns, are
leading us toward one obvious
change in our national political
customs the need for choosing
as vice-president a man capable
of succeeding to the office of
President and bringing to it the
qualities that are called for.
In earlier days, the idea .was
that any old political hack who
would DRAW VOTES TO THE
TICKET was good enough to be
vice-president.
We're rapidly outgrowing that
ancient shibboleth.
ANOTHER alterpate would be
to try to CHECK THE
DRIFT TOWARD CENTRALI
ZATION OF ALL GOVERN
MENT IN THE FEDERAL GOV
ERNMENT AT WASHINGTON.
Personally, I think it would
be a SPLENDID idea if the
STATES resumed a lot of .the
powers they have more or less
abdicated in the past couple of
decades.
That would bring government
closer home and at the same
time it would lessen the strain
on the President of the United
States.
menu deliver fast, toothing, broad
spectrum relief directly into the blood-f'ram-,
" Powerful, each small
tablet is double-coated for your pro
tection, yet o absolutely gemle and
safe, it may be sold without a doc
tors prescription.
BaI: ..
Keller IS guaranteed
TieHAR"PAEX for J one week
i-nd iow-coitTeilef. Many usersre!
port that it provides honest relief
from the miseries of achinit nnvii?
stiff painful joint a"d ig rat
nerves. Try AR-PAN-EX with oZ
jjottie must heyou-or'u7Imorn
North Central Avenue