Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 12, 1957)
o o o o o o FOUR MEDFORD (OREttOK) "Cveryone In Southern Orefoa Read The Mall Tribune" Published Daily Except Saturday ij MEDFORD PRINTING CO 37-29 North Fir St. Phone 2-9141 ROBERT W BUHU Editor HERB GREY Advertising Manager GERALD LATHAM Business Manager ERIC ALLEN JR Manene Editor KARL H ADAMS, City Editor HARRY rHIPMAN T'rann WMttm RICHARD JEWETT Snorts Editor OLIVE ST ARC HER Society Editor DALE ERICKSON. Circulation Mgr. An Independent Newspaper Entered as second class matter at Medlord Oregon under Act of March 3. 1897 SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mail In Advance: Per Cony lOe. Daily and Sunday Osa year tlVOO Daily and Sunday Six months 8.00 Daily and Sunday Three mom 4.25 ( Sunday Only One year 4-20. By Carrier In Advance Medford Ashland Central Point. Eagle Point Jacksonville. Gold Hill. Phoenix, Shady Cove Rogue River. Tatent and on motor routes' Daily and Sunday One year $18 00 Dally and Sunday One month 1.50 tamer and Dealers 10c per cony Ail Terms Cash In Advance Official Paper of the City of Medford mucm paper of Jackson County United Pri -Full Leased Wire MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION Advertising Representative WEST-HOLIDAY COMPANY INC Offices in New York Chicago, ae- troit. ban Francisco. Los Angeles Seattle Portland St Louis Atlanta Vancouver. B.C. NEWSPAPEK PUtllSHEIS ASSOCIATION NATIONAL fOITOHAi IasTocS'iUn Flight o' Time MedforJ and Jackson County Histofy from the files of The Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30 and 40 years ago. 10 YEARS AGO Dec. 12, 1947 (Sunday) Six Medford accordionists who went to Roseburg Thursday to play for the annual meeting of the Northwest Turkey Grow ers' association were photograph ed in a cold storage plant with a giant turkey. From Arthurr Perry's Ye Smudge Pot column: "Stafford Mrs. John Reynolds treated the school children recently to a taffy pull." 20 YEARS AGO Dec. 12, $37 (Sunday) Despite unfavorable weather, the Lions club auto show in the Medford armory described as a success. Final plans for the annual district conference of the Ameri can Legion nearing completion and the stage is set up for the event which will be held here tomorrow afternoon and eve ning. 30 YEARS AGO Dec 12, 1927 (Monday) Most Medford and valley peo ple are ignorant of the fact that the local express company has low special rates for sending Christinas parcels of fruit and the like to any part of the Unit ed States. Feature of the usual weekly forum in the Elks temple tomor row will be a lieing contest; prize is a large dressed turkey. G0 YEARS AGO Dec. 121917 (Wednesdiy) Investigations are now nearly completed showing the amount of water required for an ade quate irrigation of all lands in the district, spokesman says. Medfdrd grocers are still some what confused over the nation al food conservation commis O sion's ruling regarding sales of certain products, a local survey shows. What's Your I.Q.? Ntne or ten correct Is superior; seven or eight is excellent; five or six is good. 1. What i$ a five letter word for water-opossum? 2. Bible: If the Israelites had been contented, would they have left Egypt? 3. Which one, if any, of the Great Lakes lies wholly within Canada? 4. The city of Zhitomir is in which one of the Soviet repub lics? 5. Niagara Falls is the highest waterfall in the U.S.; true or false? . 6. Was the first European re puted to have seen tobacco, Columbus, Raleigh or John Smith? O 7. From which language does the word interim derive? 8. Into which sea does the Danube river empty? 9. Who painted "The Ange lus"? 10. Is the zebu, a Chinese or Japanese counting device? Answers: 1. Yapok. 2. No. 3. None. 4. The Ukraine. 5. False. (Ribbon falls, Yosemite, Calif., is highest). 6. Columbus. 7. Lat in. 8. Black sea. 9. Jean Millet. 10, No. An animal. A FIRST! Monrovia, Calif. (IP) The United States' first Sputnik be gan "beeping" here Wednesday. His name is Alexander Sputnik Ornelas and he weighs 6 pounds and 10 ounces. O MAIL TRIBUNE Tougher Than Normandy We are glad the President is going to the Paris conference. For reasons stated in previous offenngs, we feel sure he "will be able to do the job better than anyone else. That doesn't mean necessarily that he will win any outstanding victory. The cards may not be. stacked against him, but from this distance they don't seem to be shuffled in his favor. ORANCE is still in turmoil. The opposition to the establishment of U.S.-missile-bases in western Eu rope, appears to be growing. There seems little doubt that while the prestige of Communist Russia has been steadily increasing, par ticularly in its satellite states and the Mid-East; the prestige of the U.S.A. and especially Secretary Dulles, has been steadily declining. In other words, not only is there the ever present threat from Russian pressures but there is real danger of weakness and even disunity in the ranks of NATO. CO THE prospect is far from encouraging. But it might be well to remember conditions were far from encouraging when that channel storm broke on the eve of the Normandy invasion. Yet Gen eral Eisenhower gave the order to shove-off , and everyone knows the result of that enterprise which seemed, at the time, to be launched against terrific odds. "IITE DON'T expect any similar triumph this time. The world was practically a unit then against Germany. The same world is far from a unit against Communist Russia today. In fact if we had to predict the result of this NATO meeting we would rule out any chance of a clear-cut American victory, and be glad to settle for no Ameri can defeat. That may seem overly modest and pessimistic. But frankly we can see little cause for optimism. IF PRESIDENT Eisenhower, as the head of the U.S. delegation can avoid any further deterioration of American power and prestige in western Europe and the Mid East as a result of this conference, he will de serve, as we see it, the hearty congratulations and gratitude, of the American to these shores. R.W.R. "Ike" Wouldn't Like It Some very sincere and dent Eisenhower's decision personal grounds. They believe he has country in war and peace, his age to retire now with quiet of their Gettysburg maining years in that pastoral Paradise free from heavy responsibilities and undue strain. THAT is a very humane yjiiiy uuuuic vviiu 11 jo, uiic tuiivi uoivjii, ao vv o ott in, is based upon a misunderstanding of the President's character and desires. Like General MacArthur General Eisenhower is a West Pointer and first and foremost a regular army man, true to the tradition "that old army men don't die they just fade away. That is another way course, but they never surrender. They die as the saying goes "with their boots on." "1I7ELL our belief is that is the way "Ike" wishes to "call it a day" when HIS time comes. He was elected to one term as President, reelected overwhelmingly to another, and unless compelled by circumstances over which he could have no control to do otherwise, he wants to be in there pitching until the "bell tolls." He would, we believe, never be satisfied or really happy if in lieu of any such physical compulsion he should decide to take the "easy way" and retire. R.W.R. "To a Yes politics is funny. As so often noted it makes such a difference whose ox is gored. Several of the same Republican papers that, a few days ago, were urging Secretary-of -State Mark Hat field not to enter the gubernatorial primary against State Treasurer Sig Unander, are now welcoming with open arms the announcement by that hardy per ennial Lew Wallace, that he WILL enter the .Demo cratic primary against Governor Holmes. .To render the inconsistency, and therefore the humor, even more striking, the same reason for such divergent views is given namely don't rock the boat, maintain party solidarity, etc., etc. S FAR as this paper is concerned, so long as the provisions of the Primary are observed, the more the primary contestants, and the more active they are in threshing out the issues, the better. And the more there are, the greater the range of selection and the more differences in qualifications are revealed. So the greater the chances of the voters selecting wisely. IN SHORT we believe fundamentally in the party Primary. Most of the orthodox regulars in the G.O.P. don't. And many of the super-dedicated party Democrats, don't either for that matter. But none of them at least very few admit it. They claim absolute devotion to tlie principle of popu- Thursday, December 12, 1857 people when he returns kindly people regret Presi to go to Paris solely on given quite enough to his and deserves in view of "Mamie" to the peace and farm, and enjoy their re and natural viewpoint. The of saying they do die of Louse 99 'BOY, DID m Today and By Walter MISTAKES IN JUDGMENT It is true, as Mr. Nixon said on Sunday about Vanguard, that there is nothing conclusive about a test which fails. It is true also that the operation could not have - been secret owing to the fact that it is impossible to conceal every thing that goes Walter Lippmann On at tne launching site on the Florida beach. This, however, raises the question of why the country and the world were not properly pre pared for the possibility of a failure, why such large public expectations were allowed to build themselves up. The first Sputnik was launch ed on Oct. 4. The news was re ceived here .the next day. On Oct. 9, as his reply to the Soviet achievement, the President is sued a statement in which he an nounced the official schedule of "those charged with the United States satellite program." Small test vehicles, he said, would be launched during 1957 to check the rocketry, instrumentation and ground stations, and the 'first fully instrumented satel lite vehicle would be launched in March of 1958. The first of these test vehicles is planned to be launched in December of this year." That announcement was the origin of the fiasco on Fri day. Who it was that wrote the President's statement for him, we do not know. He may have been a scientist who had no knowledge of public opinion, and did not realize that the public do not read the fine print. He would then have assumed that he was covering a possible failure by speaking of a "test" vehicle. Or he may have been some kind of a lay-ghost writer who had an interview with some of the scientists. Then it would have been a man who did not know that a "test" vehicle can just as well fail as succeed in the test. In any event, the whole world was allowed to think that the President had promised that a small satellite would be launch ed in December of this year and a fully instrumented one in March of the coming year. TNQUIRY in Washington will show, I think, that with all the public delations officers there are in Washington, from Mr. Hagerty down the line, there was nobody who, with Sputnik circl ing the globe, could take charge of the problem of how the Ameri can government was to respond. Any tyro could have told the President on Oct. 9 that since there was no certainty of success in the test he should not only avoid setting a deadline for the American scientists but that he should see to it that no one else subjected the scientists to a pub lic deadline. It would not have lar selection when an election nears, but between times many of them admit off the record they wish the people of the country and particularly of Oregon, would return to the "more efficient and business-like" convention system. One of our highly respected contemporaries did just that a few days ago. IT ISN'T a matter of any great moment of course, and it is quite understandable why most professional politicians have no great affection for the party pri mary. It would be a considerable relief, however, to this department at least, if more of them could see how inconsistent and amusing they are instead of taking themselves with such seriousness and persistently rest ing under the delusion they are fooling everyone. We suggest more of them read over that wise say ing of Robert Bums to a louse to wit: "O wad some power the giftie gie us To see oursel's as others see us! It wad frae mony a blunder free us, An' foolish notion." ' R.W.R. EVER SPENOyiy." Tomorrow Lippmann taken great, prophetic genius to do this, but ordinary prudence and common sense. TF this were an isolated in- A stance, it might be possible to accept it and dismiss it as a bumble, and just one of those things that are bound to happen now and then. But the basic er ror in the advice which the Presi dent got and took after Sputnik was not limited to the deadline on our satellite to match the Russian satellite. The same er ror appeared again in the Presi dent's decision, during the visit to Washington of Mr. Macmillan and Mr. Speak, to attend the NATO meeting in Paris this month. Like the statement about the satellite, this decision was taken in an atmosphere of dis may and chagrin and alarm under the impulse to do some thing spectacular to counteract the Soviet achievement. That this is a fair criticism is attested by the fact that the President was committed to a meeting at the "summit" before there was even an understanding of what was to be discussed, much less an agreement on what should be done. Surely, it is a cardinal rule in diplomacy that there should not be a meeting of heads of governments unless and until their Foreign Ministers have made certain before they meet that there will be a. useful and important agreement.' The mountain must not labor and bring forth only a mouse. Even less, must it labor and produce an earthquake. But here, as in the case of the deadline, the President has com mitted himself hastily and reck lessly to something which in volves not only his own pres tige but that of the country. WHEN the President was stricken recently, the first reaction of the State Depart ment, which must have been that of Mr. Dulles, was to "assume" that the President would not go to Paris. It was the right assump tion. For on the very best con ceivable medical diagnosis, his illness was a perfectly adequate diplomatic reason for undoing the mistake of having promised to go to Paris in the first place. It is said that it has been the President himself who over ruled the State Department, and that that is why we face another one of those weird affairs when the President's doctors' have to make the final decision on a great political issue. It is a great pity. For granting the best, that he is physically able to make the journey, the political risk of his making it is enormous and un necessary. If there are any close friends of his who can tell him the truth, they should tell him to stay at home, that he should have Mr. Dulles negotiate with the Allies and refer back to him the mo mentous decisions. These he can then make deliberately, in peace and quiet, away from the hulla- Soviet Letters Believed Strength To NATO Conference By CHARLES M. McCANN United Press Correspondent Soviet Russia probably has strengthened the likelihood that the North Atlantic Treaty Or- g a n i z a t ion meeting will be a success. In an at tempt to sabo tage the con ference, Soviet Premier Niko lai A. Bulgan in has sent personal let- Cbarles McCann ters to the heads of government of the chief NATO allies and to "neutralist" Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru of India. But the attempt is so obvious that it is pretty sure to backfire. Only a few days ago, the out look for the big meeting which is to open in Paris Monday was grim. It looked as if President Ei senhower, the star member of the cast of Allied leaders, would be unable to attend. There was serious division be tween some NATO governments on a number of problems, both political and military. So many complicated and con troversial items seemed likely to arise that there was danger the entire conference might bog down. The outlook for the confer Editorial Comment NEWSPAPERS GAINING Newspaper publishers are tim id souls. They quaked in their boots when radio came into the picture as a competitor in the ad vertising field. They, became McKay Sees Early Libby Settlement Portland (IP) Douglas McKay, chairman of the U.S. section of the International Joint Commis sion, says he believes the dispute between this country and Canada over construction of Libby dam in Montana will be settled soon. . But McKay said he believed the issue will have to be settled on the diplomatic level. The former interior secretary and Oregon governor arrived here by plane and was driven by relatives to his home in Salem. McKay said that although he knew of no move at present to channel the Libby dam dispute to the State Department it prob ably would be done before long. "Nobody is against Libby dam, except the Canadian members of the International Joint Com mission," he said. The dam would impond five million acre feet of water and about 20 per cent of the reser voir would be on Canadian soil, McKay said. AUSSIES BID FOR REFUGEES Vienna (IP) The Australian government has offered to grant entry visas to 1,300 Hungarian refugees still in Austria, in formed sources said today. Ar gentinna, Venezuela and Brazil also have informed the Austrian government they are prepared to take more Hungarians, but few of the refugees have applied for visas. More than 20,000 Hungar ians who fled their country after the 1956 resolution still are in Austria. ' baloo of one of those tumultuous international conferences. A lot is' being said about how neces sary to the future of NATO is the use of the President's pres tige. The answer is that the Presi dent's prestige is at least as great here as it will be when he gets to Paris, and that if he stays here his prestige will last longer. (c) 1957 New York Herald Tribune Inc. How Much Should A Funeral Service Cost? A funeral service should cost no more, in proportion, than a person would spend for anything else in accordance with his usual standard of living. We discourage anyone from "going overboard" and creating an obligation that would mean an eventual hardship. In any event, it is something you should know before such an expenditure has to be made. It costs nothing to find out, and there is no obligation involved. - DAY OR NIGHT - PHONE SP 2-8030 Chapel Mortuary Across from the Courthouse Frank Morgan Harold Snodgrass FUNERAL DIRECTORS ence became much brighter when it was announced that President Eisenhower would at tend after all. Even though he might have to restrict his activities somewhat, Eisenhower is the outstanding figure in the NATO alliance. His mere presence will help. Another boost was given when leading delegates of the chief Allied countries decided to go to Paris well before the start of the meeting to hold private talks among themselves. These include Secretary of State John Foster Dulles, Brit ish Premier Harold Macmillan and Chancellor Konrad Aden auer of West Germany. Nothing New . With Premier Felix Gaillard of France, they will be able to take up a number of matters be fore the conference itself gets started. There seems to be every rea son to hope that they may reach agreements which will simplify the situation. ' There seems to have been nothing in any of Bulganin's letters that adds a thing to Russia's known position on East West issues. Another bid for a "Big Four" meeting of the United States, Great Britain, France and Rus sia . . . disarmament "proposals" that would give no guarantee against Communist cheating un frightened still more as televi sion was added to advertising media. With the advent of television there was evidence that people were spending less time with their newspapers. More recent studies, however, show that this is no longer true. Those who have increased newspaper read ing said they had become "more interested in what's going on," find "newspapers are more inter esting" and "today's events more important." Among reasons for spending less time with TV were: "the novelty has worn off;" "re sent TV commercials;" "the kid dies monopolize the set." A survey by the Bureau of Ad vertising of the American News paper Publishers Association shows that in 1956 expenditures by the American people for all types of .reading matter set a new record. More than $3 billion went into the purchase of news papers, books and magazines. Of this amount 42,3 per cent was spent for newspapers, 36.3 per cent for books, and 21.4 per cent for magazines. Publishers everywhere are finding much satisfaction in these and other surveys, coupled with pleasing experiences such as we have had here on The News-Review with our grand family of readers. Other surveys indicate that advertisers every where are realizing that newspa pers, welcomed into every home and retained even in difficult times, provide the perfect ve hicle for their messages to con sumers. Roseburg News-Review. WE SHED NO TEAR It isn't our fight, and we don't want to get into a discussion of the policy of Portland's Radio Station KEX which announced it fired a disc jockey for playing Elvis Presley's distortion of "White Christmas." Maybe it's sound policy, maybe it isn't. Maybe the man's punishment j was too severe, maybe it wasn't. We speak here not of an em- ploye's rights, but of a grave social problem. The more times I across the land that deejays are i fired, strung up by the thumbs j or drawn and quartered for playing Elvis Presley records, the fewer Elvis Presley records will be played. And, socially speaking, that is just dandy. Except that a little voice some where keeps telling us all this may be a publicity stunt. Eu gene Register-Guard. To Add der any agreement ... an offer to suspend nuclear weapons tests on Jan. 1, again without any safeguard against Russian cheating ... a warning to Ad enauer against the establishment of NATO missile bases on Ger man territory. Bulganin and his colleague Nikita S. Khrushchev must think that the move is a smart O one. But it seems to have fallen flat . and to have increased in stead of diminishing the pros pect for success in Paris. 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 Answer to Malmute Slim To the Editor To Malmute Slim of Camp White: . If you could turn back time and tears, And live aagain the past 40 years, Would you accept what you called destiny? Or say to it, I think 111 change you a little bit? You say that you think what happened from then till now Was predestined to happen anyhow. As we read God's word in our Bible old, He allowed Job to be tested, we are told. God loved you just as much, is my belief, To trust you with so great a grief. He was certain of you, Yes I believe God knew Though tried by fire, Malmute, you'd come through. I believe He is standing by, waiting, watching there, To shield you if the burden x gets too great to bear. He who went through the fur nace knew The one He could trust that's why. He chose you. I believe that sorrow brings an understanding . Of others' sorrows only as we learn The slow and torturous way the harshi demanding, .That grieving makes upon us can we turn And speak the freeing words to some hurt brother How well we know that blue skies bring no rain.Q : Yes, I believe that through these long hours of pain That when a seeking, search ing world reached out its hand to you i He knew the silver in your spirit would come shining through. Like Job of old, God knew He could trust this grief to you. (Name on file) Box 32 Prospect, Ore. "Ok Shoot!" To the Editor: All Americans have a hbby. Today we've all got the same hobby, blow hell out of the stock market. Let's change it. Let's just shoot one another with a sputnick. Everett Ackhn Box 233 Ashland, Ore. EMERGENCY NUMBERS FIRE . SP 2-2333 POLICE SP 3-3636 MONEY SP3-53C8 DAriEir mnncTni ji wus ZJ IliVWeVllilMli 16 S. CENTRAL O