FOUR MEDFORD (OREGON)
"Everyone in Southern Oregon
Reads The Mail Tribune"
Published Daily except Saturday by
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ROBERT W. RUHL, Editor
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ERIC ALLEN. JR. Managing Editor
EARL H. ADAMS, City Editor
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RICHARD JEWETT. Sports Editor
OLIVE STARCHER, Society Editor
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An Independent Newspaper
Entered as second class matter at
Medford Oregon under Act of
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. 28. 1948 (Wednesday)
O. H. Benetson, Medford at
torney and legislator, leaves
for Washington to appear be
fore a .congressional commit
tee on labor and public wel
fare which will hear testi
mony on a bill for acquiring
Camp White hospital as a domiciliary-
Ben Day, Sams Valley
rancher, announced today he
would be a candidate for no
mination for representative
from Jackson county in pri
mary election.
20 YEARS AGO
Jan. 28. 1933 (Friday)
Letter received by Ashland
Police Chief Charley Talent
requesting the birthplace,
date of birth and location of
burial of C. O. Johnson and
Elvyn Dougherty, two victims
of the D'Autremont train rob
bery. From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: "Pussy
willows are reported to have
made their vernal debut along
Bear Creek."
30 YEARS AGO
Jan. 28. 1928 (Saturday)
Harry Lindgren, livestock
expert for Oregon State col
lege, urges sheepmen of this
area to raise the quality of
their herd to make their
product more easily salable.
Considered one of the most
successful of its kind, the
third annual Owen-Oregon
Lumber company employees'
dance held at Oriental Gar
dens. 40 YEARS AGO
Jan. 28. 1918 (Monday)
Farmers in this area are
urged to grow sugar beets.
From local and personal
column: "The Rogue River
valley milling company is
now ready to begin opera
tions." What's Your I.Q.?
Nina or ten correct is superior;
seven or eight is excellent; five or
six is good.
1. Jack Broughton intro
duced the first set of boxing
gloves and what else?
2. Bible: Who was the fa
ther of the brothers, Gad and
Asher?
3. The Jewish Day of Aton
ment is known as ?
4. Is the former King
George of Great Britain the
V, VI, or VII George?
5. What is the motto of the
U. S. Army?
6. For what purpose is the
Bertillion system used?
7. What State of the union
is known as "Mother of Pres
idents"? 8. Does the Zodiac contain
11, 12 or 13 constellations?
9. What college is located
at Hanover, N.H.
10. What national organiza
tion is known as "Patrons of
Husbandry?"
Answers; 1. Boxing rules.
2. Jacob. 3. Yom Kippur. 4.
VI. 5. "Duty, Honor. Coun
try." 6. Identification of male
criminals. 7. Virginia. 8. 12.
9. Dartmouth. 10. The Nation
al Grange.
E
MAIL TRIBUNE
"Blue Monday"
This is BLUE Monday.
Outside it can't decide whether to be foggy
or rainy, and as this is written is making a sickly
compromise by doing a little of both.
Inside the news is not cheering.
"llE have not yet recovered from the shot-gun
T T suicide by one of our railroad favorites,
Robert Young, former president of the Chesa
peake & Ohio and more recently chairman of the
Board of Directors of the New York Central.
He was the man who told the world a hog
could ride from New York to San Francisco with
out changing cars but
couldn t.
By persistent and
had all this changed and at least report many
railroads were running through Pullmans from
coast to. coast, without a transfer.
UE was a man of great imagination, energy and
nerve. He was perhaps, too much of a gam
bler and promoter to suit the ultra-conservative
financiers on Wall Street his inability to secure
financing for his elaborate program of New York
Central improvement and modernization, un
doubtedly was a terrific blow to his pride and self
confidence, and a contributing factor m the re
cent decline of New York Central common stock,
from 50 to 15.
A CCORDING to reports from Miami, Florida,
and New York this stock tumble in his rail
road was not the cause of Young's break down,
however, but the trouble was ill health which had
recently pursued him, and resulted in extreme
depression and melancholy.
We have no inside information, so can't deny
this report has some basis in fact.
But we are convinced, nevertheless, that had
there been no such recession in the stock market,
and the New York Central had been able to se
cure its financing and declare its regular divi
dend as expected Robert Young would be alive
today.
We never knew the man personally.
But we did correspond with him when the
"Friendly S.P." first announced it would deprive
Southern Oregon of all passenger service. And
at the time we were greatly ipmressed by his clear
understanding of the situation, and his enlight
ened view of the place an up-to-date and progres
sive railroad has or should have in the na
tional economy.
We don't mean he did not champion the rail
roads' cause he did and strongly urged less gov
ernment and state controls and restrictions. But
at the same time, he maintained, with character
istic vigor, that the railroads that were living in
the past, refused to keep up with the times, and
secretly yearned for the "good old days" of "the
public be damned" had no place in the modern
transportation picture, and better get out of it
or if not make way for some younger, newer and
more enlightened blood.
TO those who lived through the stock panic of
the Hoover administration this suicide of
Chairman Young brought up some rather disturb
ing memories. Later in that era it became a sort
of vaudeville joke, the way the Wall Street brok
ers were almost daily jumping out of windows
like pieces of pop-corn out a lidless hopper.
But it was no joke at the time and while latest
reports from Wait Street indicate no collapse in
New York Central stock or any special unfavor
able reaction in the market as a whole, there
were, no doubt, many of the veterans of that
"1929 bust," who when they heard the shocking
news from Miami did not sleep so well Sunday
night wondering what the market would do on
Monday morning.
THIS was not the only news item contributing
1 to the traditional "Blue Monday."
Someone was kind enough to send us a recent
report by Economist expert, Professor Sumner
Slichter of Harvard who like most Harvard pro
fessors is a stalwart Republican in good standing.
The Professor did not mince matters regard
ing the present "state of the union." Far from
questioning the existence of a sharp and nation
wide recession, he blamed it all directly upon the
"Federal government and the . Federal Reserve
particularly."
From such a source that statement can hardly
be dismissed lightly. Comments accompanying
the clipping supported this view, called attention
to the fact "President Eisenhower had publicly
urged consumers to buy less" and added that the
recession wTas no surprise to the administration
"chiefs of staff" for it occurred "as planned" and
was endorsed by Big Business "to put labor in
its place."
IXELL, however that may be and probably
any exact picture of what is really happen
ing today economically, will have to wait for
some future ,time when a proper perspective can
be obtained the news picture as a whole this
27th day of January, certainly can't be called
reassuring. And as indicated the Weather Man
isn't helping any.
But tomorrow when this is read will be an
other day, and no dobt in all aspects a better one.
We hope so.
MEANWHILE we , would suggest that the
words of the late Franklin Delano Roosevelt
be recalled when at the time of his inauguration.
Tuesday, January 28, 1958
YOU a human being
expensive - advertising he
Orink vou awuc.Soey. Then Wli
GZOWUPQiGAH'&K)HQUKMl'
Editorial Comment
HOW TO POLICE
MAGAZINE RACKS
The district attorney of
Lane county recently wrote
distributors of magazines ur
ging that they clean up the
printed material they put out
on news-stands with intima
tion of prosecution if they
failed to comply. The Oregon-
ian calls this action "out of
bounds." Proper procedure, in
its opinion, is arrest and pros
ecution. The Portland editor
says he doesn't want some as
sistant district attorney act
ing as censor.
The "Eugene Register-Guard
commenting on the same prob
lem, refers to the fact that
some large grocery chain has
an approved list of publica-
Campaign Starts
On Bike Licenses
Medford police will start a
1958 bicycle license enforce
ment campaign on Feb. 1, ac
cording to Chief Charles P.
Champlin. r.
He said bicycle riders would
be cited into municipal court
for failure to display the 1958
license. He added riders will
also be cited into court for
failure to obey traffic laws,
riding double, riding at night
without lights and for failing
to use arm signals when turn
ing.
The police department be
gan a more rigid enforcement
of the bicycle ordinance in
mid-December, Chaplin said.
He added bicycle's are being
impounded by the court up to
seven days when an offender
is found guilty.
Licenses for 1958 may be
purchased at the police sta
tion for 25 cents.
Advanced Math Set
For Adult Classes
Advanced math will be
taught as part of the adult
education program in room
236 in the Medford senior
high school tonight, high
school officials announced.
This is the first year for
this course, it was explained.
Approximately 12 persons
have signed up for this course.
School officials said they had
tried to start the course .for
two years but had received
no response. From six to eight
men working on the Talent
irrigation project have signed
up to learn use of the slide
rule, officials said.
A course in rocks and min
erals will also start Tuesday
night in room 226, Medford
high school.
A course for nurses aides
will start Wednesday night in
room 11 at the high school.
Starting time for all of the
courses is 7 p.m.
Other classes starting this
week are millinery, clothing,
shorthand, typing and book
keeping, lampshade craft,
Spanish, public speaking and
welding.
and the Hoover depression was still fairly strong
he told the country and the world "the only
thing to fear is fear itself."
WE believe it would
There is certainly no
ostrich-act and denying
ecession.
Of course there is.
But it is nothing to
pared with 1929 it is no
ebb and flow of the sea
is economically speaking
economic process. In snort a necessary period 01
eadjustment.
So don't rock the boat
Remember
and if Tuesday and Wednesday aren't, certainly
Thursday and Friday will be MUCH better!
R.W.R.
fions which it permits to be
offered on its racks. The R-G
wonders if some citizens' com
mittee coujdn't be set up that
would prepare a list of ap
proved books and magazines.
Dealers would be free to fol
low it or not, but those who
did not wouldn't get to dis
play the "seal" of committee
approval.
We don't think the Oregon
ian is correct in scolding the
Lane County DA. Experience
here shows how hard it is
to prosecute successfully.
What the DA was doing was
to encourage policing by the
distributors, in the hope that
would be more effective than
yanking them into court, try
ing them on particular issues
of particular publications. All
the case could do would be to
punish the distributor for the
single offense. The expecta
tion would be that he would
purge his products thereafter.
Why not urge him to do it
before staging a prosecution?
From reports the DA's re
quest has brought results.
As for committee approval,
that at least is an affirmative
approach rather than Watch
and Ward policing. The prob
lem there would be to keep
such an organization going,
retaining persons of reason
able tolerance rather than
zealots. Who would have time
to go through the monthly
output of reading matter from
the nation's presses? In the
end "social security" must de
pend pretty much on self-po-iicing
within the industry,
scrutiny by the vendor, and
selection by the customer.
Oregon Statesman (Salem)
Tree Farm Group to
Meet Friday Night
Rogue River National for
est officials will discuss the
method of government stump
age at a meeting of the South
ern Oregon Conservation and
Tree Farm association at 8
p.m. Friday, Jan. 31, at the
Rogue Valley Country club.
A social hour will start at
7:30 p.m.
Other business will include
a report from the traffic com
mittee, preliminary plans for
a fire school, naming a nomi
nating committee to select
names for three directors, and
awarding at least two new
tree farm certificates.
Hot A Candidate,
Lilfrell States
E. A. Littrell, Republican
representative from Jackson
county announced today he
would not be a candidate for
reelection to the Oregon state
legislature.
Littrell has served for the
past two terms as a repre-"
sentative from the Jackson
county or district number 19.
He will devote full-time to the
operation of his business in
Medford, Littrell Parts, a
spokesman said.
be a pious idea to recall
point in performing the
there is a nation-wide
be alarmed about, com
more alarming than the
in fact that is what it
a part of the organic
boys and girls, or jump
this is "Blue Monday
Summit Meeting This Year
Now Said To Be Inevitable
By K. C. THALER
United Press Correspondent
London (IF) Highly-placed
diplomats said today mounts
ing public pressure in Europe
has made a summit confer
ence this year "inevitable."
They said there no longer
is a question of whether there
will be a heads-of-government
meeting. The question now is
how soon and on what con
ditions. The western governments
Matter of Fact
NIKITA'S LATEST
Bonn Nikita Khruschev's
brisk announcement of the
suppression of the "machine
tractor sta
tions" that
control the
whole vast
Russian coun
try - side is
even more ex
citing news
than the dra
matic fall of
Marshal Zhu
i Jnsenh AIsod KOV.
Machine tractor stations
may . not sound like institu
tions highly charged with hu
man emotions. Many months
have also passed to cool this
correspondent's recollections
of the Soviet Union. But the
news is still so stirring that
a comment is irresistible.
It is stirring because the
machine tractor stations were
the rural command posts of
the omnipotent Soviet party
government. It is stirring be
cause the abolition of the ma
chine tractor stations and the
sale of their machinery to the
collective farms will almost
unavoidably give Soviet peas
ant life a wholly new kind of
internal autonomy and local
freedom.
OF COURSE, there may be
the biggest kind of hooker
in this news. It may conceal
a decision to adopt the much-
discussed policy of transform'
ing the collective farms them
selves into "state farms." The
collectives, as their name im
plies, are at least collectively
owned and collectively man
aged by their members, of
course with much state-guid
ance. But the state farms are
like ' huge Roman slave
estates, state owned, state
managed and worked by lab
orers having no personal stake
in the land.
Khrushchev has lately been
expanding the state farms at
the expense of the collectives
Yet both the terms and cir
cumstances of his announce
ment appear to indicate a
bold change of course. He
specifically mentioned the col
lective farms as the prospec
tive beneficiaries of the disap
pearance of the machine trac
tor stations.
At the same time, "Pravda"
published a grim warning to
party "conservatives" who
were erroneously clinging to
"antiquated institutions"
just the sort of people, in
short, who would prefer state
farm expansion of any other
expedient whatever to the
desperate expedient of giv
ing more freedom to the
wretched peasantry.
THESE indications do not
deceive, Soviet agriculture
has started on another extra
ordinary whirl on fate's
strange merry-go-round. The
oddness of fate is indeed il
lustrated by the history of the
very institutions now being
abolished.
The machine tractor sta
tions were economic necessi
ties in the early, terrible per
iod of Soviet agricultural col
lectivization and mechaniza
tion. At that time machines
and machinists were desper
ately short. So the tractor
stations were set up as pools
of mechanical equipment and
mechanically competent per
sonnel, each station serving
severai surrounding collective
farms.
Long since, the machine
tractor stations lost this pure
ly economic function, because
of the Soviet success in pro
ducing farm machinery and
training many hundreds of
thousands of poung people to
use farm machinery. Long
since, Soviety agriculture en
tered a stage of contradictions
described in the same way to
this reporter by all the very
able foreign agricultural ex
perts in Moscow last winter.
On the one hand, these ex
perts agreed that abolition of
the machine tractor stations
and transfer of the machines
to . the collectives would be
the quickest, cheapest, surest
Any Mail
from Barker's?
have, step by step, whittled
down their terms for such
a gathering, the diplomats
said, and noiw are merely
seeking an advance agree
ment on the agenda for a
"summit" meeting.
Public Pressure
The diplomats termed it a
clear case of public pressure
forcing a course of action on
the Western governments de
spite skepticism by some lead
ers of the usefulness of a
rushed top-level get-together.
By Joseph AIsop
way to obtain a large, immedi
ate increase of Soviet farm
production. Plenty " of ma
chines and , plenty of men to
run and care for them were
now available. If the collec
tives were allowed to own
and run their own machines,
the results would surely be
greater pride of work, greater
incentives to get the best from
the land, and consequently
much greater farming effici
ency. On the other hand, the
foreign experts also agreed
that abolition of the machine
tractor stations, while eco
nomically so desirable, was
politically absolutely impos
sible. rpHE tractor stations were
the government's eyes in
the countryside. They were the
government's hands holding
the collectives in a tight grip,
through their control of the
machines the collectives need
ed to till their fields. Abolish
these command posts, said the
experts, and the Kremlin
would suddenly be confronted
with collective farms almost
like true agricultural coopera
tives of the Western type.
Judging by the fragmentary
evidence that is as yet avail-
able, Nikita Khrushchev has
now accepted the economic
reasoning of the foreign ex
perts, while defying their po
litical reasoning. Reasons for
this bold gamble are not far
to seek. Continuing the policy
of extending the state farms
demanded great additional
outlays of capital.
. Then too, the weather in
the virgin lands last summer
failed to follow the party line
(borrowing the wonderful
phrase of a party official in
terviewed in the virgin lands
by this reporter.) There were
drought conditions and dust
bowl conditions in large areas
of Kazakhstan. Seemingly.
this partial failure of Khrush
chev's first great agricultural
gamble in turn demanded a
further, even bigger gamble
Maybe, as stated above, the
gamble conceals a hooker that
will make the Soviet peasant's
even worse than before. One
must wait and see. But if
there is no hooker" then this
is the biggest demonstration
to date of the degree of which
the supposedly all-powerful
masters of the Kremlin are
mere servants of the great industrial-economic
revolution
which they have achieved in
the Soviet Union.
(Copyright 1958 New York
Herald Tribune Inc.
Holt Orphans Due .
To Arrive Thursday
San Francisco (IF) A plane
load of 85 more Korean or
phans, brought to this coun
try by Harry Holt, Creswell,
Ore., farmer, is scheduled to
arrive here Thursday night.
Included will be 12 orphans
suffering from tuberculosis.
Immigration authorities is
sued visas for their entry
after the National Jewish hos
pital at Denver promised to
care for them.
ATTACKS CLAIM PAIR
Bronxville, N.Y. OP)
Heart attacks claimed the
lives of Frank X. Gilg, an ex
ecutive assistant in the boil
er division of Bobcock and
Wilcox Co., and his wife,
Mrs. Helen Tatnal Gilg, with
in an eight-hour period. Gilg,
57, died Sunday at his home.
Mrs. Gilg, 56, died early on
Monday morning, also at
home.
Brightens Woolens, Silks and
Similar Fabrics
We Retex All of Our Dry
Cleaning at No Extra Cost
Medford Gleaners
Hale & Kathryn Wheeler
34 No. Holly, SP 2-6500
Free Pickup and Delivery
UETBl
Pressure from public opin
ion on European governments
including Britain was in
turn considered to be forcing
the pace of a reluctant United
States in drawing closer to a
heads-of-government parley.
This authoritative appraisal
of the West's position follow
ed Communist Party Leader
Nikita Khrushchev's renewed
call for an urgent summit ses
sion over the weekend and
latest reaction from European
capitals.
It cited mounting signs of
a Western "climbdown" re
flected in a progressive whit
tling down of Western terms
for a summit parley.
Advance Gesture
The West at first firmly de
manded an advance gesture
from Russia of good will and
sincerity, of careful prepara
tions of a meeting through
diplomatic channels and a
foreign ministers conference.
Now, the West was held
to have dropped tacitly many
of these prerequisites. At
least, this was the impression
which was emerging from of
ficial Western pronounce
ments. Britain was reliably report
ed to be prepared to drop her
earlier insistence that a for
eign ministers conference,
prepared by advance diplo
matic consultations precede
any summit gathering.
Preparation Recommended
Instead, Britain now would
be satisfied with careful ad
vance preparation of a sum
mit by ambassadors, or mere
ly through diplomatic chan
nels.
Diplomatic sources said the
United States also appeared
reluctantly prepared to accept
such a course of action, and
so did France.
Moreover, the West's earlier
demand for an advance good
will gesture from Moscow also
appeared to be fading.
The West's terms at pres
ent centered, according to the
sources, largely on an ad
vance arrangement of the
agenda of the projected top
level talks.
The sources suggested that
at any rate the West would
not insist on "too many pre
conditions" for a meeting, to
avert the charge that it is
anxious to avoid East-West
talks.
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.
Kindness Is A Good Deed
To the Editor: Recently our
dog jumped out of a pick-up
in Jacksonville. At the time
he was not missed until later
in the afternoon.
My husband immediately
phoned K-BOY for an an
nouncement, giving the need
ed information; wonderful
cooperation was quickly giv
en. In less than 24 hours our
dog was back home again.
-1 wish to extend our many
thanks to Mrs. Josephine May
for calling me for Mrs. James
Hicks (both of Jacksonville),
who had the dog in protection
and care.
It does one good to know
that there are such people
that not only take an interest
but who are so kind to ani
mals, instead of doing the
many things we see being
done daily to animals and
birds of all breeds.
Again we have a happy
family and two children that
wonder how they got him
back without having the same
feeling as they.
Elinor Johnson,
109 Elk st.,
.Medford.
Counsel With . .
Mr. Insurance Fred Brennan
Y 1
1
Fred Brennan
Or Call
Mr. Friendly
Bill Fish
Phone SP-2-4940
MEDFORD
INSURANCE
AGENCY
27 NORTH HOLLY ST.
In ihe Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
I suppose you have been
reading about British and
American experiments aimed
at harnessing the H-bomb re
action to produce Industrial
electric power.
Perhaps you wonder why
the H-bomb reaction is so im
portant. Why not just rely on
the good old A-bomb reactor,
which is ALREADY produc
ing power in usable quan
tities and is expected to pro
duce vastly more power in
the not too distant future?
YUELL, it's like this:
In the A-bomb reac-,,
tion, energy is released (that"
is, power is produced) by the
fission (splitting) of certain
atoms. In the H-bomb reac
tion, energy is released (and
power is produced) by the
FUSION (going together) of
certain atoms.
The big point is this:
The world doesn't have an
inexhaustible supply of the
atoms that will SPLIT, thus
releasing energy. Presently,
uranium is our chief source
of them. It is estimated that
all of our reserves of fission
able atoms would give us
energy equal only to from
10 to 100 times the amount of
all the world's remaining
coal.
The supply 'of FUSIBLE
atoms is practically inex
haustible. Sea water, for ex
ample, is a source of the atoms
that release energy in the pro
cess of fusion.
rpHERE is another important
point.
The splitting of atoms cre
ates highly dangerous radio
active ashes which are becom
ing more and more trouble
some to dispose of safely.
Presently, the idea is to put
them in special containers and
take them out and dump them
in the deepest known seas.
Presumably, if that went on
indefinitely, the time might
come when the waters of all
the oceans might become
radioactively con taminated.
"Indefinitely" is a long time,
but the risk still has to be
taken into consideration.
The process of FUSION pro
duces in itself no radioactive
ashes.
THE British are supposed to
be a little ahead of us in
the production' of power by
the fusion of atoms.
How far? This seems to be
the answer:
At their laboratory at Har
well, British scientists have
succeeded in fusing TWO
hydrogen atoms. In the pro
cess of fusing two , atoms, a
microscopic amount of energy
was released.
The big job that lies ahead
is to produce a CHAIN RE
ACTION that is to say, to
find a way to keep the process
of fusion going on and on and
on and thus producing de
pendable power. How to do
that isn't yet known, but it IS
known that it will require al
most unimaginably high tem
peratures exceeding, prob
ably, the heat in the interior
of the sun.
The encouraging part of it
all is that we and the British
appear to be CO-OPERATING
in the research that is re-
quired instead of keeping
everything we learn SECRET
from each other.
By that kind of co-opera
tion the process of finding a
way to create a chain reaction
of atomic fusion can be hast
ened immeasurably.
I
T WILL take time, of course.
But
A lot of time intervened
between the moment when
watching steam lift the lid of
his mother's teakettle James
Watt got the idea of the steam
engine and the time when the
steam engine was actually
turning factory wheels in Eng
land thus bringing on the
Mechanical Revolution.
BUDGETS MADE EASYI
Package your personal in
surance. Have your insur
ance budget invested in a
single policy covering
dwelling, furnishings, per
sonal theft, family liability
and property damage and
your car. WE CAN ALSO
BUDGET THE PREMIUM.
Bill Fish
f - M
I