4
" rOTJR MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE
Thursday, January 9, 19SS
i Medfordtribune
"Everyone in Southern Oregon
Reads The Mail Tribune"
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ROBERT W. RtTHT. Editnr
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ERIC ALLEN. JR. Managing Editor
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ninAnu jtwiii, sporta Editor
OLIVE STARCHER. Societv Editor
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; Medford Oregon under Act of
- March 3. 1897
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NATIONAL EDITORIAL
IassocITat
rN
p.mm.wa.-imu
"The Gentleman from Mars 9
At the moment we are not as interested in
landing on Mars as having some Martian land on
the earth preferably near enough to Washing
ton, D. C, to take a taxi to the U.S. congress.
Then after a few days there we would like to
have his impressions of this particular planet and
what is transpiring thereon.
COR what would he find?
He would find a nation abhoring war, de
ciding to go-for-broke preparing for it. He would
find a nation desiring, above all else, peace, doing
practically nothing to secure it.
This would severely jar his preconceptions
for he had always heard Americans were a highly
civilized, rational and particularly practical
people.
But democracy he would suppose meant the
rule of the people, and yet here is a free govern
ment representing the people, rushing hell-bent
0 do precisely what the people do not wish to be
done, namely: preparing for a war instead of try
ing by every conceivable means to prevent it
HOWEVER, if the Martian decided to stick
ai uuiiu tx w 1111c jai cnuia.i ij i uaniing aiuuuu
he halls of the congress, he would find a ready
explanation for what seemed to him contradic
tory, inexplicable and suicidal.
In a word that answer would of course be So
viet Russia.
Flight '0 Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30 and
40 yean ago.
Of
10 YEARS AGO
Jan. 9, 1943 (Friday)
' More than 3,000 cans
food for people in Europe
had been brought to local
chools up to noon today for
the relief ship drive sponsored
by the local Elks lodge.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: "A Brit
ish cool votes Secretary of
State Marshall the greatest
Santa Claus the world has
even known."
20 YEARS AGO
Jan. 9, 1938 (Sunday)
: Purchase of the Klamath
Natural Gas company and
plans to merge the utility
with the Southern Oregon Gas
company of Medford are an
nounced. , Postage receipts at the Med
ford Dost office reached a
new all-time high figure in
1837, Postmaster Frank De
Souza announces.
30 YEARS AGO
Jan. 9, 1928 (Monday)
: The demand for Copco pre
ferred stock has nearly ex
ceeded the supply, according
to the company's investment
department.
: A 15-gallon tank of moon
shine hidden in the top of
Studebaker touring car was
eized last month.
IIE WOULD quickly be told that this commu
nist country is entirely responsible for Ameri
ca's wild stampede toward its own and world de
struction, that if Russia were not armed to the
teeth and did not arrogantly aim for world con
quest there would be no such mad rush to protect
our security and our liberties.
40 YEARS AGO
Jan. 9. 1918 (Tuesday)
: An auto collision at Fir and
West Main sts. knocked
mother and baby into the
street, but they escaped ser
ious injury.
; No more free porch lights
will be permitted Ashland
people, according to the Ash
land city council.
What's Your I.Q.?
Nine or ten correct is superior
even or eight is excellent; five or
six is good.
1. Did President Hoover de
clare the bank holiday in
.1932 or in 1933?
2. Bible: Is the Apocrypha
between the O. T. and N. T. in
all Bibles?
3. Name the common veg
etable that is supposedly noted
for its coolness.
4. At Cooperstown, N.Y., is
a "Hall of Fame" for great
men of which sport?
5. Is the word "dollar" of
American or British origin?
- 6. Radio waves travel at i
velocity of a p p roximately
1,860, 18,600, or 186,000 miles
per second?
: 7. Was the German surrend
er document of World War II
aigned May 6, 7, or 8, 1945?
. 8. A vixen is a female bear,
fox or rabbit?
: 9. Did President Truman
serve two or three terms?
- 10. According to mythology,
Jupiter turned Io into a ewe,
yixen, or heifer?
Answers:!. No. (President
Roosevelt did, in 1933) 2. No.
3. Cucumber. 4. Baseball.
5. No. (Bohemian). 6. 186,000
per second. 7. May 7 (in a little
zed brick schoolhouse in Re
ims. France). 8. Fox. 9. No.
just short of two terms),
10. Heifer.
- Nampa, Idaho 0P Fire
which destroyed several build
ings housing a 35-bed hotel, a
medical clinic and two busi
ness firms in Nampa's down
t o w n district Wednesday
damage estimated at $410,000.
TTO THE surprise of everyone in the congress,
however, the "Gentleman from Mars" was not
impressed.
It seems that on a previous flight he had visit
ed Russia, and the bosses there told the same story.
THEY were the ones engaged in a wild stam
pede toward national and world destruction be
cause of the terrible menace of rich and imperial
istic America. A capitalistic land which would
never halt its unholy determination to wipe Com
munistic Russia and all communism from the face
of the globe, if it took their last red-penny to do it.
.
"CO" THE visiting Martian continued, "you
two would-be cosmic champs are in the same
boat neither of you say you want war, but both
of you are engaged in a wild armament race, on
and, sea and in the air, which eventually accord
ing to the history of your planet, can only bring
it."
If you can't arouse any national common
sense why can't you yield to what is supposed to
be the strongest instinct of your earthly, race,
namely: the instinct of survival and self preser
vation? Taking your bearings why don't you stop
this crazy rat-race to mutual destruction and talk
things over with a view to mutual survival.
AT THIS point of course Secretary Dulles
would enter the picture, looking more like
John Calvin in one of his more pious, platidinous
and sanctimonious moods than ever.
"That can't be done !" he would declare, "Rus
sia simply can't be trusted. We have tried it re
peatedly and repeatedly failed. That is out !"
The "Gentleman from Mars" showed for
the first time, some slight annoyance. He said
"Haven't you an old adage that goes something
like this: 'If at first you don t succeed, tiy, try
again'!
Well that is what we did. When Jupiter threat
ened to wipe us off the celestial map, it took pa
tience, time and a lot of hard forensic work bui
eventually we found this out:
Jupiter, after all, was only what you people
call human.
He had no love for us, he had no love for God,
peace, cosmic or otherwise. He couldn't be trusted
as far as you could throw Taurus by the tail. But
he DID have a great love a high regard tor his
country and himself.
And after much talk and persistent argument
we Martians finally persuaded the "old boy" that
while to him honesty is NOT the best policy, keep
ing the peace, in view of the pulverizing and in
escapable power of modem armaments, lb.
IT TOOK some doing but we did it.
1 . To a man up a tree or up on another
planet I see no reason why YOU can t do it.
Don t worry about Khrushcnev ne doesn t
want to commit suicide any more than you do.
Even on my brief visit to your interesting
globe, I find I am not alone in this view of what
should be done. There is Lord Kussell, tor ex
ample, your English cousin, who recently stated
and I entirely agree with him quote :
I suggest, Sirs, that you should meet in a frank
discussion of the conditions of coexistence, endeavor
ing no longer to secure this or that more or less sur
reptitious advantage for your own side, but seeking
rather such agreements and such adjustments in the
world as will diminish future occasions of strife. I be
lieve that if you were to do this, the world would ac
claim your action, and the forces of sanity, released
from their long bondage, would ensure for the years
to come a life of vigor and achievement and joy sur
passing anything known in even the happiest eras of
the past.
J-R.W.R.
I WW
j a p n Inl II 11
NOW WE'LL ADO SOME HOT WATEf? AN'
wUf got a tfAtt smm pool ;
Today & Tomorrow
By Walter Lippmann
ARMS AND THE MIND
The returning Congress will
be more than willing to vote.
indeed it will be insistent up
on a substan
tial
increase
in military ex
p e n d i t ures
The President
can have the
money he asks
for, and as
matter of fact,
he is likely
to be criticiz-
waiter Lippmann ed because he
has asked for
too little rather than because
he has asked for too much
The relization has struck
home that in the race of arm
aments the Soviet Union is
moving at a faster rate than
we are, and that the time is
in sight when the balance of
power will be decisively
against this country.
What is not so certain is
whether the country has been
made to realize that the in
security in which we are be
ginning to live cannot be
overcome by weapons alone
that, to put it concretely, our
insecurity cannot be cured in
the Pentagon alone, no mat
ter how it is reorganized,
streamlined, unified, and fin
anced. The fact that we have
fallen behind in the race is
the result of a decline in our
intellectual activities and of
our public energies.
rjiHlS ominous default can-
-"- not be corrected by a
crash program in which it be
comes our supreme, national
purpose to acquire a supply
of missiles. For if we whip
ourselves into an hysterial
fixation on missiles, we shall
jusi. as surely as fate itself
alienate the allied coun
tries in which the bases
for the missiles would
have to be placed. We can
achieve security, which we
now believe to be threatened,
only if our military effort
though firtn and decisive is
part of a much larger revival
one which includes our dip
lomacy and our education and
the intellectual, life of the
nation.
We shall have missed the
point of the challenge to
which we are are put if this
Congress, having voted an in
crease in the military budget,
turns its back on education
and research, and settles for
some trifling and timid con
tribution. The American crisis
today is the result of a long
accumulation of errors and
neglect in the field of educa
tion. And while it cannot be
cured by money alone, it can
not be cured without money,
without much more money.
It cannot be cured without
a change in the popular at
titude toward the support of
education. - By existing stan
dards this would constitute a
break-through to a new and
higher level.
demonstration that we have
read the meaning of the Sput
niks, not as frightened men
rushing excitedly for weap
ons, but as lucid and honest
men, unafraid and unashamed
to admit their failings. Noth
ing, morever, would do so
much to restore the confi
dence of mankind in the Unit
ed States, and to dissipate
their fear that we have lost
our nerve.
But that will not be enough
We shal? have to reappraise
some of the principal aims of
our foreign policy in view of
the fact that our military pre
ponderance has ended. For let
us have no illusions. If we do
everytnmg recommended m
the Gaither and the Rockefel
ler reports, we shall at best
maintain the balance of pow
er. We shall still be only one
great power competing with
an equally great power. The
days of our military suprem
acy were brief and they have
ended.
rpHE decay of our foreign
policy is due to the ina
bility of those who make it
to recognize or to accept the
fundamental fact that the
United States is not the para
mount but is only an equal
power. Yet in the Far East,
in the Middle East, and in
Germany, the official aims of
our policy are those of a para
mount power. These aims can
be achived only by . the un
conditional surrender of China
and of Russia.
This underlying contradic
tion is the basic cause of the
decay of our foreign policy,
and incidentally, it is the
basic cause of the fabulous
unpopularity of Secretary
Dulles. We are struggling
stubborly for results that we
cannot hope to achieve, and
this impetus, especially when
is covered with moral
preachments, is alienating the
people we are trying to lead.
(Copyright 1958 New York
Herald Tribune Inc.)
Communications
Letters to the Editor must
bear the name and address of
the writer although under cer
tain circumstances the use of a
pen name or initial for publica
tion is permissible. The Mail
Tribune reserves the right to
edit all letters with an eye to
clarification and condensation.
Letters submitted for publica
tion must not exceed 400 words.
Matter of Fact By
Telephone Project
To the Editor: In behalf of
the Medford Kiwanis Club
wish to thank you for the
very substantial contribution
of the Mail Tribune and staff
in making possible our "Santa
Telephone" project during the
Christmas season just passed
We know that many young
hearts were warmed by the
calls and you many be sure
that those of us who partici
pated experienced some heart
warmings, too. We trust that
the same satisfying reward is
yours for your fine help in
the project.
Again we thank you for
your ready and generous co
operation.
Kiwanis Club of Medford
By Paul Hornbeck
Lighting Contest
To the Editor: Ai chairman
of the Medford Junior Cham
ber of Commerce's 1957 res
idential Christmas lighting
contest, I wish to express
our gratitude for the help and
cooperation you extended to
us. Your assistance played a
large part in making this pro
gram the success it was this
year.
We feel that this contest
helps to beautify Medford
during the Christmas season
and fosters the feeling of good
will in the community. With
this in mind, we plan to con
tinue this as an annual event,
which we feel will surely
grow in stature through the
years.
John C. Amcker, Jr.
Medford Jaycees
n the Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
Grist from the rumor mill:
Whether or not Russia had
launched a MAN-CARRYING
MISSILE remains a $64 ques
tion as this is written. First
reports, unconfirmed from any
official source, said the Sov
iet Union had sent a man 186
miles into space and brought
him back alive.
V", jl
Stewart Alsop
IKE ON THE DEFENSIVE
Washington Has the Pres
ident's brilliant political in
stmct. which has been es
sentially a n
instinct for re-
f 1 e c ting the
u n d erlying
mood of the
country, sud
denly deserted
him? The
quest ion is
suggested by
the Presi
dents r e p c-
tions to the new situation in
which he finds himself. The
answer may be provided by
the tone and content of the
Presiden't forth-coming State
of the Union message.
tor uie Presidents reac
tions in the last few months
have been surprisingly out
of tune with the mood of
the country 'as that mood is
sensed by virtually all the re
turning members of Congress
His reactions have been con
sistently defensive.
A symptom has been the
President's anger at the wide
spread publicity given to the
Gaither report, calling for a
major national effort to avoid
future catastrophe. It was ab
solutely inevitable from the
start that a report with such
sensational implications, in
which so many people of
known views from outside the
Administration participated,
would become known in substance.
YET the President, accord
ing to reliable report, is
furious about what he con
siders "leaks" from the Gai
ther Committee. "Ike's so
angry about the leaks," one
of his subordinates has re
marked, "that he's hardly got
around to considering the sub
stance of the report."
This Presidential reaction
certainly inspired Press Sec
retary James Hagerty's state
ment that the Gaither report
raised no question about the
American defense posture "at
this time." The statement was
so obviously specious that,
again entirely predictably, it
had precisely the opposite
effect than that intended.
All the President's own
public statements in recent
months have been similarly
defensive in tone. There were,
for example, his press con
ference remarks brushing off
the Soviet ICBM tests and the
Soviet satellites as of little
consequence. And there were
his two "chins up" speeches,
Stewart Alsop
rockefeller Fund has done
If one supposes General of
the Army Dwight D. Eisen-
sower doing these things, it is
obvious on the face of it that
the defense issue would be of
remarkably little use to the
Democrats.
Why, then, has he not done
such things? There are sev
eral possible reasons. To take
such a stand would involve
at least an implicit admission
of past error. Although ad
mission of error is rarely poli
tically harmful, and can even
be a popular move, there is
a natural human disinclination
to admit mistakes, perhaps
especially In a man unused to
criticism.
TT IS also entirely possible
-- that the President does gen
uinely and whole-heartedly
accept the George Humphrey
theory that any markedly
greater national defense ef
forts will "destroy the free
enterprise system." Former
Secretary of Defense Louis
Johnson, after all, liked to
call his budgets "Ike I" and
"Ike II," and to claim the Gen
eral's support for his policy of
cutting the gizzard out of the
national defense in the name
of economy.
Perhaps, finally it is just
not in the nature of the Presi
dent to take such a stand
Perhaps the President so faith
fully mirrored the mood of
the country when that mood
was easy-going and unworried
because it was natural for him
to do so; and now that the
mood has changed, it is no
longer natural for him to re
flect it.
One thing, at any rate,
seems sure. If the President s
State of the Union message
is filled, like his "chins-up"
speeches, with complacent re
assurances, he will be hand
ing the Democrats a winning
issue for 1958 and 1960. And
that is precisely what the
Democrats (who are them
selves by no means invulner
able on the defense issue) hap
pily expect him to do.
(c) 1958 New York
Herald Tribune Inc.
NOTHING would so stimu
late this country as the
Atlas Launching
loped for Friday
Cape Canaveral, Fla. (IP)
--Weary scientists, prevented
from launching the intercon
tinental Atlas missile Wed
nesday because of high winds,
hoped today a break in the
weather would let them fly
the nation's biggest "bird" on
Friday.
Chill, gusty winds appar
ently made a fourth test
flight of the giant missile too
risky Wednesday.
Today, activity at the cape
seemed not directed toward
any launching.
There was no official word
at this security conscious mis
sile test site of when the next
attempt to launch the 5,500-
mile range Atlas was sched
uled. But observers guessed
scientists would relax today
from the tensions of Wednes
day and try again Friday,
WnrlH cnionTictfl ui'pwpH the
... . . i j in nrllfnh lirVlllA FlfrtW ICITI ff trt
rumors witn reserve ana saia ww, .....
It's remarkable if true." give tne;TOUgn wun xne
smootn, ne gave a greai aeai
of smooth and precious little
rough.
If only as a practical poli
tical matter, taking this de
fensive stand was . precisely
calculated (as Vice President
Nixon immediately sensed) to
do the prestige of the Eisen-
IT'EEP your fingers crossed.
it could be true.
In these modern days, al
most anything can be true.
B
in-
Let' s not ge scared.
Americans have met every
challenge yet-and there have jStto
been some erim ones. Per
sonally, I refuse to believe
that our people have lost their
courage or their resourceful
ness.
Try and Stop Me
By BENNETT CERF
A"YOU-ALL" MISS enjoyed her first visit to the Hayden
planetarium. She was particularly fascinated by the tele
scopesomething she never had seen before. "WelL now I
understand how you won
derful astronomer boys dis
cover new stars," she cooed
to the guide, "but I still
don't see how you find out
their names!"
A kind-hearted judge was
commiserating with a much
put-upon wife. "Tour husband
really is a problem," allowed
His Honor. "Has he ever tried
Alcoholics .Anonymous ?"
"I reckon he has, judge,"
she nodded sadly. "That man '11
drink anything!"
"Some government officials," admitted Will Rogers, "are honest
as they come. It's when they're leaving that you have to watch 'em."
a 1358. br Bennett Cert. Distributed by Kins Features Sradieata-i.-
the President himself, the
maximum of harm,
rr GAVE the Democrats, and
indeed all the President's
MORE from the day's news critics and opponents, an op
as reDorted bv the portunity to take the offen
clicking teletype: sive to belabor not only the
Every day about 800 East Administration s past errors
Germans (East Germany is a ana inadequacies, dui aiso its
T?nian sntPim cross into present iacK oi a sense oi
West Germanv. fleeing from urgency." Thus the Admini-
communism. They trick armed stration's defense policies have
guards, minefields and barb- become, for the first time, a
ed wire to get away from the major national issue, and the
"people's paradise." uemocrats count neaviiy on
Death stares them in the it lor ootn tne 1958 ana lSoo
. , in I i
eve at every step, out stm elections,
thev seek to GET AWAY. Suppose that the President,
instead of. reacting so deien-
jiurt a long ume, tne com- gively, had marched to the
A munists adopted a SO head of the parade and seized
WHAT attitude toward the the banner of national de
refugees, declaring that their fense. Suppose he had really
departure was good riddance given "the rough with the
that most of them were smooth," suppose that, instead
elderly, sick and generally oi 0f complaining about "leaks,
no value to communism. he had used the Gaither re
But the picture is changing, port to support his case for a
First the farmers, driven out great national effort, suppose
by collectivization schemes, he had told the country of Its
and now the young men, on danger as publicly and frank-
whom the communists have iy as the recent report of the
pinned "their hopes, are flee
ing westward.
After 12 years of communist
indoctrination, designed t o
turn school children into flag
waving, slogan-chanting auto
matons. East German youth
is still unconvinced. They
show it by taking to their
heels, crossing the heavily
guarded border where armed
"people's police" patrol with
dogs and guns.
- .
TT IS an ancient saying that
"the proof of the pudding
is the eating thereof.
After 12 years of eating it,
the people who are compelled
to live under communism
JUST DON'T LIKE THE
PUDDING.
That' s weakness the Krem
lin can't laugh off.
hains Necessary
On Timberline Road
Salem (IPI Four inches
of new snow made chains a
necessity for travel to Tim
berline, the State Highway
department reported today.
Chains were also required
at Warm Springs junction
with two inches of new snow.
Plows were operating in both
areas and roadside snow had
reached 154 inches at Timber
line. Icy spots were at Cascade
Locks, Detroit, Siskiyou, Wil
lamette pass, Chemult, Mea-
cham and Seneca.
There was ground fog at
Roseburg, Grants Pass, Med
ford and Ontario.
German Recovery
Shown in Supply,
Quality of Food
By JOSEPH FLEMING
United Press Correspondent
Berlin (in A visitor to
West Berlin ordered a break
fast of one egg with toast
at a sidewalk cafe on the
city's fashionable Kurfuer
stendamm. The waitress told him she
was not allowed to serve less
than two eggs.
That, more than soaring
production graphs and the
smoking chimneys of the
Ruhr, is a testimonial to West
Germany's post-war recovery.
Ten years ago in Berlin
you couldn't get an egg for
love or money in any restaur
ant that wasn't a black mar
ket hangout.
And anyone who had an
egg could sell It for love or
money, or both.
Cigarettes were even bet
ter. A pack of American cig
arettes sold for the equiva
lent of $10. Today on the
black market they cost one
mark 50 pfennig, or 37 cents
a pack, 50 pfennig less than
tobacco shops charge for a
pack of German cigarettes.
Yes, Germany has risen
from the ruins and Germans
are putting on weight again.
During the 1948-49 Soviet
land blockade of the city, a
Berliner for his Sunday din
ner ate peas, dehydrated po
tatoes, and canned meat.
Feature Whipped Cream
Cafes now serve huge por
tions of whipped cream with
or without cake or ice cream.
Many Germans just order the
whipped cream.
Doctors warn housewives
they are ruining their hus
bands' health with huge por
tions of sausage, sauerkraut,
noodle soups, fried potatoes,
and the famed German kartof
felkloessee, a sort of round
mushy potato dumpling the
size of a Softball.
The word "kueche" will
never replace "cuisine" to de
scribe the culinary art but
Germany is no place for any
one on a diet. The food is
very cheap, too, by standards
in New York, London, Paris
or Rome.
On Kurfuerstendamm, the
city's main street, you can
get a thick vegetable soup, a
fried pork chop, three large
boiled potatoes, string beans,
and a small piece of cake with
whipped cream as big as the
cake for 75 cents.
A filet steak in the best
restaurant in town costs be
tween five marks ($1.25) and .
six marks ($1.50).
And that includes french-
fried potatoes and a vege
table.
A glass of good strong beer
to go with it will cost no
more than 20 cents and in
some places it will only be
12 cents.
BBSSSSBBSsBsBHSsSsHSJSISE
Buster Brown Shoe Store
Will Be
CLOSED ALL DAY
Tomorrow, Fri., Jan. 10
PREPARING FOR
A Sale of All Shoe Sales
SALE STARTS SATURDAY at 9 a.m.
STOLEN MEDALS FOUND
Milan, Italy OP) A 70-
year-old noblewoman today
got back a valuable collection
of medals and coins stolen
from her mother 46 years ago.
A worker digging a founda
tion in nearby Bollate found
a coffer containing the med
als and coins. A check of po
lice records showed it was the
some collection stolen irom
the late Marquise Luiso Sor-
mani Busta in 1912 and never
recovered.
MAKE A WILL!
As Funeral Directors we know only too well
how much confusion, heartache, and even fi
nancial distress can be created by the lack of
a will.
Where only small amounts are involved, it
Is even MORE important that both husbands
and wives make a will.
If you haven't made yours, don't delayl
DAY OR NIGHT -PHONE SP 2-8030
Chapel Mortuary
Across from the Courthouse
Frank Morgan Harold Snodgrass
FUNERAL DIRECTORS