FOUR MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE
MEDFORDgTRIBUNr
"Iveryone tn Southern Orejoa
Published Daily except Saturday by
MEDFORD PRINTING CO
33 North Fir St. Ph. SP.2-6141
ROBERT W. RUHL. Editor
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ERIC ALLEN. JR. Managing Editor
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An Independent Newspaper
Entered as second class matter at
Medford Oregon under Act ol
March 3. 1897
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Flight 'o Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10, 20. 30 and
40 years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
Jan. 21. 1948 (Wednesday)
Jackson county tax collec
tions up to the first of the
year on the current tax year
ntaW S1 583.3. highest of
record, according to Sheriff
Howard Gault.
Medford citizens cautioned
not to give aid to persons
without first checking
the Salvation Army.
with
20 YEARS AGO
Jan. 21. 1938 (Friday)
Hads of various commit
tees for the Northwest Jack
son county fair in Gold Hill
this fall have been completed
by Walter C. McLean, chair
man.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: "The
brevity of this column today
is due to your correspondent
going to Eugene to make a
speech. It will be the first
time we have ever stood be
fore a crowd and looked a
water pitcher in the eye."
30 YEARS AGO
Jan. 21. 1928 (Saturday)
Eleven enthusiastic students
met Thursday to discuss plans
for organizing a pep band for
Southern Oregon Normal
school.
A mass meeting of all ex
servicemen is planned under
the auspices of the American
Red Cross and the Salvation
Army.
40 YEARS AGO
Jan. 21. 1918 (Monday)
-J. P. Mead, income tax in
spector of the internal reve
nue office at Portland, arrives
here to open office in council
chamber.
Class in blight work will
be taugh by County Agricul
tural Agent Cate now num
bers 45 women and five men
Whafs Your I.Q.7
Nina or ten correct is superior;
seven or eight is excellent; five or
six is good.
1. Correct the following
'They are not going any
place."
2. Bible: Who was the fath
er of Judas Maccabaeus?
3. Was Belisarius a Roman
poet, a historian, a genera,
or emperer?
4. In which European city
is the famous Quai dOrsey?
5. The Fair Labor Standards
Act of 1938 fixed what mini
mum wage per hour?
6. Which planet revolves
around the sun. between the
orbits of Venus and Mars?
7. Did President Buchanan
marry once of twice?
8. Name the capital
Switzerland?
9. During World War
of
II,
what was tlie WMC?
10. The largest living spe
cies of bird is native to what
country?
1. "They are not going any
where." 2. Matthias. 3.
GeneraL 4. Paris. 5. Forty
cents per hour (40 -hour
week). 6. The earth. 7. Neith
er. (He was a bachelor). 8.
Bern. 9. War Manpower Com
mission. 10.. Africa (the ostrich).
4
Getting What They Deserve
It has been many a moon since this depart
ment has been so delighted, so amused and so re
assured by any news items as by the recent press
dispatches from Maxton, North Carolina.
Here is the scenario of the year, made to
order for Hollywood but we doubt if the top
brass down there will be shrewd enough to see
the "box-office" in it.
It might be called "Justice comes to Maxton"
or "Kleagle Klan does the hot-foot" or "the
Night-Riders given a ride" though we grant any
of the professional gag-men in the Movie Metrop
olis could cook up a far more appropriate and
snappy title.
17HY reassuring?
Well, we have always had a theory that ul
timately and generally speaking right prevails
and justice again generally speaking is done.
Through the years we admit we have had our
"dou'ts," but down there at this Carolina village
justice WAS done, the right DID prevail, the
"biter WAS bit" at long last, and in the most con
vincing and fittingly dramatic fashion.
JT seems that Maxton is in a county that contains
an Indian reservation or community. Reverend
Cole did not like this mixture, particularly when
there was any disposition shown on the part of the
red-skin gentry to enjoy the same constitutional
rights as the whites. True to the "KKK" (to
which he belonged) he worked up his followers
to a high pitch of moral indignation against those
local citizens who were given by the Almighty a
different skin pigmentation than his. Whereupon
he arranged ior a nolv
clave and a burning of the Cross (of Christian
Brotherhood, of course,) as a preliminary to
either driving the red skins out of the commu
nity, or forcing them by these "KKK" terrorist
methods, to renounce their constitutional rights,
and meekly accept a submissive subordinate and
second-rate citizenship.
UP to this point everything worked according
iiujit, a 11 u ah 0wixu avvux uaxitc vvitii uuc
Ku Klux Klan ritual.
The loyal faithful in return for the regu
lar $10 contribution donned their $1.25 night
gowns, put on their hoods, mounted their pranc
ing steeds or motor cars and with torches and
shotguns aloft, while the rebel-yell rang out they
proceeded miles an hour to the meeting place
where the podium had been prepared and the gas
oline soaked cross made ready for the match, as
the Reverend Cole cleared his throat, took a nip
of "branch-water," ordered one of the "Exalted
Roosters" to turn on the Kleig lights, and
TABLEAUX!
COMETHING happened!
From the outer darkness emerged a small In
dian boy with a 22 rifle "at ready." He took a
quick aim, fired, and presto all the lights went
out. Then from the same darkness emerged a
band of howling Indians, they not only howled
but fired off volley after volley over the heads of
those who were dedicated to the denial of consti
tutional rights to all citizens, and into the ground.
(No one was hurt, of course.) But the Grand
Wizard of the Invisible Circle" decided the time
had come to become invisible in FACT, and dis
carding his shot-gun and his gold embossed
"nightie" he proceeded as far as his physical fit
ness and the underbrush permitted, to reduce the
100 yard record to 9 seconds flat. His shot gun,
his royal regalia and his motor car were recov
ered later. So were his loyal but panicky follow
ers, in similar agitation and disarray.
DUT "Old King Cole" inherited none of the con
vival qualities of his famous ancestor. Even
though the next day was the Sabbath he was not
"merry" but vowing revenge.
He would sue the county sheriff, he pro
claimed, for denying him the sacred right of free
assembly and free speech. As for those blood
thirsty aborgines who outnumbering his stalwart
band of Christian crusaders two to one, had with
out provocation attacked him and them from
ambush with shot and shell they should be put
in a concentration camp where they belonged
with other saboteurs, aliens and outlaws.
IN other words, the "Grand Wizard" thinks he
is a martyr and has a case. Well, for the sake
of right and justice and a better America we hope
his case is brought to trial.
It will then be brought out for all to see that
while the right of free speech and assembly is
constitutionally upheld, it does not include, as the
late Justice Holmes so clearly brought out the
right to yell "fire" in a crowded theatre.
Nor does it guarantee the right to incite mob
action and violence against citizens of the United
States including the First and only 100 gen
uine Americans whose only crime is, the skin
of their parents did not happen to be white.
AS for being "OUTNUMBERED" for the
"KKK" to put up that plea IS a joke.
What has that organization done, excluding
the post Civil War period when, due to the evils
of reconstruction, it had SOME excuse for its ex
istence. It has done nothing but gang up and pick on,
not small groups, nor even individuals armed to
defend themselves, but on defenseless people
alone, usually in the dead of night, as they did
Tuesday, January 21, I9S8
White bupremacy con
'SEE? n'9 JUST LIK
f JVflfll HIM
Matter of Fact
MORE THAN A GIMMICK
Washington Is it a mere
political-propaganda play? Or
is it a matter of serious and
secret negoti
ations? These are
the obvious
questions t o
ask about the
a d m i nistra
t i o n ' s an
nounced i n-
tention to
seek agree-
Stewart AIsod mem wun uie
A A 1
Russians on "control of outer
space for peaceful purposes"
which means control of the
ballistic missiles. As Secre
tary of State Dulles made
crystal clear in his appear
ance before the National
Press club, the space-control
proposal will form a cardinal
point of American policy in
the months to come.
The answer seems to be
that the proposal is both a
propaganda move and a mat
ter for serious negotiation.
Various ways of extracting
every possible ounce of prop
aganda value from the pro
posal are being considered.
There has even been tenta
tive talk, for example, of con
vening a special session of the
United Nations General As
sembly to be-addressed on the
subject by the President. Oth
er possibilities are a major
speech or series of speeches
by the President on outer
space control, another letter
to Bulganin on this subject
alone, letters to all heads of
government, and so on.
,
WHICHEVER way of dram
atizing the issue may be
chosen, the point is that
Dulles and his advisers un
questionably see the proposal
as a means of seizing that
famous initiative, putting the
Soviets on the defensive, and
ducking out from under the
charge of "negativism." It is
not unfair to suggest that the
domestic political advantages
of such "waging of total
peace" certainly have also not
been overlooked.
But the proposal, certainly
in the President's mind, and
apparently in the mind of
Secretary Dulles as well, is
more than just another propa
ganda gimmick. The evidence
that suggests that the pro
posal is serious falls into two
parts.
Like the President's atoms-for-peace
plan, the outer
space proposal has been
something of a cart-before-the-horse
proposition. The
idea was first suggested by
the soon - to - depart Harold
Stassen about a year ago, and
it has been rather languidly
put forward from time to
time since. When he was
drafting the President's letter
to Bulganin, Secretary Dulles,
desperate for counter-proposals,
seized on the idea and
laid great emphasis on it,
and he put even greater em
phasis on it in his Press club
performance.
DUT until now the idea has
t been just that an idea,
rather than a plan. Now seri
ous studies are going forward
both in the Defense Depart
ment and in the State Depart
ment's policy planning staff,
and. the inevitable planning
papers are beginning to pile
up. As far as the liquid-fueled
here in Jackson County 35 or 40 years ago.
They took a Medford citizen up to the top of
the Siskiyous and hung him up to a tree. He was
given no hearing, no trial, no defense. They hung
him up with a jolly heave-ho and executed a
war dance, just for a lesson, of course ! Then they
cut him down before he choked to death, but the
poor guy never recovered from the shock and
died a short time 'later.
VLTE hope the "Grand Wizard of the Invisible
TT Circle" of Maxton, N.C., WILL bring his
grievances to court, but while we suspect he is
characteristically brutal, bigoted and dumb, we
never expect him to be QUITE as dumb as
that! R.W.R.
I TOLDYA.
SMILE."
By Stewart Alsop
ballistic missiles are concern
ed, these studies confirm
Dulles' statement that "at the
present stage of the art . . .
we have something which is
readily subject to be con
trolled." Given what Dulles called
"even the most superficial
form of inspection from the
air," the ballistic missiles in
their present stage of devel
opment can be easily detected
and thus controlled. But since
serious study of the problem
began, all sorts of hideously
difficult q u'e s t i o n s have
emerged.
How about the air-breathing
missiles, for example, or
the solid-fueled missiles,
which are much more diffi
cult to detect and control?
And how about the shorter-
range missiles? Short-range
air-breathing missiles fired
from submarines could de
stroy our coastal cities. And
how would the International
Space Agency, or whatever it
is to be called, actually op
erate? . a
TUT at least these perhaps
unanswerable questions
are at last being seriously ex
ammed. As for the second
part of the evidence that the
proposal is serious, it consists
of the simple fact that Dulles
intends to launch private dip
lomatic talks with the Sovi
ets, probably both in Moscow
and Washington, on the
American proposal.
Indeed, a kind of prelimin
ary feeling-out process at sec
ond hand has already oc
curred. The results are not
encouraging. The Russians
have asked the obvious ques
tions. Are the forward bases
of the Strategic Air Com
mand also to be inspected and
controlled? And why should
the Soviet Union abandon a
weapon in which it has a com
manding lead?
Just because these ques
tions are so obvious, the odds
are probably a hundred to
one that the space-control
proposal will come to noth
ing. But the attempt is worth
making all the same. For any
one who thinks seriously
about the nature of the weap
ons must ask himself whether
a free society can survive in
the era of the ballistic mis
siles. The missiles are ideal
weapons of surprise attack,
requiring an automatic, in
stantaneous and totally un
democratic response. By their
very nature, they thus pre
sent the unfree society with a
crushing advantage. Which is
another reason why the pro
posal, however seriously ad
vanced, will doubtless come
to nothing in the end.
(Copyright 1958, New York
Herald Tribune, Inc.)
Portlander Elected
Boilermakers Official
Philadelphia (IP) Homer
Patton, of Portland, Ore., was
elected secretary-treasurer of
the International Brother
hood of Boilermakers, Iron
Shipbuilders, Black
smiths, Forgers and Helpers
at the union's executive meet
ing here Monday.
Patton succeeds William J.
Buckley, who died last Thurs
day. He will serve Buckley's
unexpired term, approximate
ly three years.
In the Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
Teletype chatter:
A woman in Cantanzaro,
Italy, is talking again after
being mute for six years. It
all came about because she
got mad. Back in 1951 she
and her sister were having an
argument and something the
sister said so infuriated her
that she became speechless.
She remained mute until
yesterday, when the same sis
ter got her so mad that she
burst out with a shout of rage
and now she can talk again
TJmmmm. There's a thought
11 there.
If we could find a way to
get our talk-spouting politi
cians so mad that for six
years tney a go witnout
speaking just sawing wood
and saying nothing think of
all the wonderful things we
might accomplish!
Think of the worldwide re
spect and admiration we
could gain!
TJERE'S another thought.
"Mnt alnnp in Amprira. hilt.
throughout the modern world
the techniques of disagree
ment have reached a high
stage of perfection. If we
would learn how to bring to
the stage of perfection the
technique of REACHING
AGREEMENT AND THEN
GOING AHEAD AND DO
ING THINGS, how wonder
ful it would be.
We have to disagree, of
course. Human beings aren't
all cast in the same mould.
When differences of opinion
arise, we have to argue things
out. But we could be much
more reasonable and effective
about it.
A SUGGESTION:
i- Snm dvpnintf or snnw
Sundav when you have noth
ing better to do, reach up on
your five-foot shell ana taKe
down your Ancient History
and read un on the golden
age of Ancient Greece.
The city states of Greece,
led by Athens, built up a civ
ilization that was more won
derful than anything that had
ever existed before on earth.
But these city states could
never learn how to reach and
retain a reasonable state of
agreement' and cooperation
over any considerable peri
od of time. They disagreed
and argued and fought and
scratched and bit each other
in the leg from time to time.
Eventually the barbarians
swept in from the surround
ing outer darkness and put an
end for good to the golden age
of Greece. You'll find the
story an interesting one, well
worth the time it will take to
read up on it. You may be
able to draw from it some
morals that will be useful.
rjNE further, thought while
" we're in this philosophical
mood:
If you'll carry your histori
cal resources far enough,
you'll learn that the bulk of
these barbarians who swept
in from the outer darkness
and put an end to the glory
that was Greece were known
broadly and generically as
Scythians.
These Scythians lived on
the treeless plains of AN
CIENT RUSSIA, from the
Danube river to the Volga,
and they spoke a language
that was distantly related to
modern Russia.
History, you see, tends to
repeat itself.
ONE more thought in clos
ing.' If you'll go on with your
reading, you'll learn that the
Scythians invaded the King
dom of Media and occupied it
for ten years. The king of
Media, a wise . and crafty
character who succeeded in
escaping liquidation by the
invaders, eventually got rid
of the Scythians by GETTING
ALL THEIR CHIEFS AT A
BANQUET and killing them.
Kruschev, BEWARE!
History might repeat itself
again. -
Try and
-By BENNETT CERF-
BEN HECHT, reminiscing about his old friend and collabor
ator, the late Charlie MacArthur, writes, "In the grin
that slightly turned the edge of his lips, and in the foggy look
in his eyes, there lurked
always the promise of 'live
ly doings." This was a pet
phrase of his. He treasured
a postal card sent him by
Hilda, the cook for the
MacArthur household, who
had returned in 1938 to her
home in Berlin. 'Dear Mr.
MacArthur,' wrote the ef
fervescent Teuton, 'I am
happy to be home. Adolf
Hitler is a fine boss and
there's lots of lively do
A 9-year-old acting prodigy turned up for a TV audition. "What
do you do when you're not acting?" asked the casting director. "I
watch TV," answered the kid. "And when you're not watching TV?"'
"I listen to the radio." "And when you're not listening to the
radio?" The kid answered blithely, "My ma sends me to the unem
ployment insurance office."
01938. by Bennett Cerf. Distributed by King Features Syndicate. .
Russia. China Seen
Pressure on Poles'
By CHARLES M. McCANN
United Press Correspondent
Soviet Russia and Red
China appear to be trying to
set Communist leader Wlady-
slaw G o mul
ka of Poland
back on the
party line.
It w a s an
n o unced last
Thursday that
Soviet Com
munist Party
Leader Niki
ta S. Khrush
chev had con
Gomulka for
Charles M.
McCann
f erred with .
three days at a hunting lodge
ECnowland Predicts
Stiff Fight Over
Aid, Trade PHans
Washington OF) Senate
Republican Leader William
F. Knowland said today that
foreign aid and reciprocal
trade, two of President's key
legislative proposals, are in
for stiff fights in Congress.
But the California senator
predicted both will pass in
some form although possibly
in weaker form than the Pres
ident wants.
Opposes Tito Aid
At the same time Knowland
told reporters he Is unswerv
ing in his opposition to con
tinued military or economic
aid to Marshal Tito's Yugo
slav Communist government.
Knowland left his GOP lead
er's chair last year to lead
an unsuccessful fight against
aid to Tito. Military aid to
Yugoslavia has, since been
scrapped but economic help
apparently will continue
The Republican Senate lead
er made the statements as
the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee, of which, he is a
member, prepared to question
George V. Allen, President
Eisenhower's nominee for di
rector of the U.S. Information
Agency, about his plans for
the agency.
USIA Funds Asked
The President has asked for
Consolidated Buys
Hunt Transfer Co.
Menlo Park, Calif. (IP)
Consolidated Freightways Inc.
Monday announced it had
completed the purchase of
Hunt Transfer' Company, of
Portland, Ore.
The joint announcement
said that storage and local
moving of household goods
within the Oakland. Portland
and Los Angeles areas will be
conducted under the name of
Hunt Transfer and Storage
Division of Consolidated
Freightways. Over - the - road
operations will be conducted
under the name of Consoli
dated Freightways Van Lines
Division.
Established in 1908, Hunt
operates in California, Ore
gon, Washington, Idaho, Utah
and Montana. It operates
warehouses in Los Angeles,
Oakland and Portland.
Ellsworth Has No .
Desire for Office
Portland (IP) Harris Ells
worth, chairman of the U.S.
Civil Service Commission,
said today he had no desire
to seek his old office again.
He served 14 years as a con
gressman from Oregon.
Ellsworth, making his first
Oregon visit since his appoint
ment to the federal job last
spring,' was here to speak to
the Chamber of Commerce
after which he will go to Se
attle for another speech Tues
day. He plans to visit his moth
er, Mrs. Eva Ellsworth, in Eu
gene Wednesday.
Stop Me
near the Russian-Polish bor
der. No details of this meeting
have been disclosed. But
there are indications that
Khrushchev may have offered
Gomulka some badly needed
economic help at a price.
The price would be in
creased Polish cooperation
with the Soviet bloc of coun
tries in Communist party af
fairs and possibly abandon
ment of Gomulka's attempts
to get substantial economic
help from the United States.
Aid Restriction Urged
In this connection, reports
from Warsaw say that Mao
increased funds for the USIA
which ran into considerable
congressional criticism last
year when it was headed by
Arthur Larson, so-called phi
losopher of "modern Republi
canism." Allen's nomination was not
expected to have serious trou
ble in the Senate.
Eisenhower has stressed the
need for foreign aid, expan
sion of the reciprocal trade
program and expansion of
the Information Agency as
key points in the U.S. counter-
offensive to Russia's economic
and psychological advances.
Labor Party Sees
SpOit in Tories
London (IP) The British
Labor Party began putting
heavy pressure on the Con
servatives today in hopes of
a party split that will bring
down the government of
Prime Minister Harold Mac
millan and set up a Labor
victory at the polls.
Both parties were paying
unusual interest to the new
session of Parliament which
begins today after a long
Christmas recess. A vote of
confidence is expected by
Thursday and the Laborites
believe they have their best
chance in months of winning,
The government rated the
new session so important it
sent hurried calls to Con
servatives who are out of Brit
ain to hurry back. They were
ordered to turn up without
fail in case they are needed
to help out the party.
Macmillan was the major
exception. He is in New Zea
land on an official Common
wealth tour and his Conserva
tives hope they can stall off
anv major showdown until
he returns.
Multnomah County
Workers Get Raise
Portland (IP) Two thou
sans employees of Multnomah
county have received pay
boosts with an average in
crease of $14 per month,
County Commissioner Jack
Bain said today.
He said the increase was in
line with an established pol
icy of maintaining salaries of
county employees at an ap
proximate level with that of
others in Portland and in the
Northwest.
The boosts will cost Mult
nomah county about $175,000
for the rest of this fiscal year
and about $350,000 during
the budget year starting
July 1
Counsel With . . .
Mr. Insurance Fred Brennan
Fred Brennan
Or Call
Mr. Friendly
Bill Fish
Phone SP-2-4940
e
MEDFORD
INSURANCE
AGENCY
27 NORTH HOLLY ST.
Putting
Premier
Tse-tung, the No. 1 Chinese
Communist, has strongly
urged Gomulka not to seek
aid from the United States
but to depend entirely on
Communist sources.
A Polish delegation is in
Moscow now, negotiating a
Russian - Polish trade agree
ment for 1958. It seem highly
probable that these negotia
tions entered into the Khrush-chev-Gomulka
talks.
It happens that a Polish
delegation is in Washington,
seeking new credits, and
probably will get about $95
million soon.
It is most unlikely that Go
mulka will agree in any cir
cumstances to forego Ameri
can aid.
First, he needs desperately
any credits he can get to
strengthen Poland's shaky
economy and in doing so to
strengthen himself in his
leadership. Second, Gomulka
is too smart to depend entire
ly on Russia for aid.
Never Forgiven
Soviet leaders never have
forgiven Gomulka for win
ning at least partial independ
ence from Russia domination
in the Polish revolt of 1956.
Gomulka got himself deep
er in the bad graces of the
Kremlin leaders in Moscow
in November by refusing to
take part in a new Commu
nist propaganda agency.
Since then Moscow news
papers and magazines have
criticized sharply on several
occasions the "lack of discip
line" in Poland. This, of
course, refers to Gomulka's
tolerance of criticism of his
regime.
One lawmaker was called
back several thousand miles.
Sir Ian Fraser, blind Con
servative member for More
cambe and Lonsdale, cut
short a visit to Southern Rho
desia on party orders. Others
hurried back from vacations
in the sun on continental
Europe.
Resignation Crisis
The crisis in the Conserva
tive Party revolved around
the resignation of Chancellor
of the Exchequer Peter Thor-
neycroft and two of bis treas
ury aides the night, before
Macmillan left Jan. 7 on his
Commonwealth tour.
Thorneycroft resigned in
protest against government
refusal to trim spending, espe
cially for Britain's welfare
program, despite threatened
economic troubles.
AFL-CIO Merger in
Multnomah Adopted
Portland (IP) Merger of
the AFL and CIO unions in
Multnomah county became a
fact Monday night with unan
imous adoption of the mer
ger agreement and a new
constitution.
The merger on the local
level marked the end of a 20-
year history of labor rivalry
that began when John L.
Lewis of the United Mine
Workers first split the ranks
of organized labor with for
mation of his Committee of
Industrial Organizations.
Glenn Blake, former head
of the AFL council and now
president of the merged Mult
nomah County Labor Council,
proclaimed an era of expanded
political activity for organized
labor here and said "the labor
movement is non-partisan
from now on. This is the only
way we can make progress."
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