4 Monday, April 28, 1958
MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD. ORE.
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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
April 28, 1948 (Wednesday)
Pacific northwest orchard
ist Wednesday were survey
ing their fruit trees for pos
sible damage by the unseason
able April cold front.
Jackson county residents
this morning were surprised
to awaken and find a white
blanketed valley.
20 YEARS AGO
April 28, 1938 (Thursday)
City, state and county au
thorities continue search for
lone gunman who held up the
Midway service station on the
Butte Falls highway.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: "Mid
west farmers are now in re
volt against the crop control
efforts of the New Deal.' The
movement will not get seri
ous until the tillers start
tearing up the checks."
30 YEARS AGO
April 28, 1928 (Saturday)
The public market- sold
large stocks of late vegeta
bles, dressed poultry and
homemade foodstuffs this
morning.
From local and personal
column: "Salmon fishing in
the Rogue is now approach
ing its prime, according to
Fred Merrill, game warden,
who has been checking the
catches of these big Chi
nooks. 40 YEARS AGO
April 28, 1918 (Monday)
From local and personal
column: "W. Beeson, a pio
neer resident of Talent, left
for his home this morning
after investigating require
ments for taking railroad
grant lands."
Monday was a quiet day in
the Liberty loan campaign,
but quota has ben exceeded
by over $10,000.
What's Your I.Q.?
Nine or ten correct is superior;
seven or eight is excellent; five or
six is good.
L.Name the late war cor
respondent whose writings as
a roving reporter are com
piled in a book, "Home Coun
try." 2. Bible: What was the first
creature to leave Noah's Ark?
3. Alligator pear is a com
mon named for which fruit.
4. William P. Rogers holds
which position in the Presi
dent's Cabinet?
5. "Charge of the Light
Brigade" was written by
which British nobleman? -
6. What is the name of the
instrument that measures
wind velocity?
7. What is the missing let
ter in this scrambled word
beginning with S; Sivece?
8. Is the marimba a bird,
tropical vegetable, or musical
instrument?
9. Gold is weighed by the
fluid ounce, troy ounce, or
avoirdupois ounce?
10. Which of the oceans is
the largest in area?
Answers: 1. Ernie Pyle. 2.
A raven. 3. Avocado. 4. At
torney General. . 5. . Alfred,
Lord Tennyson. 6. Anemom
eter. 7. R (Service). 8. Musical
instrument. 9 Troy. 10. Paci
fic. Every day the American
public buys more daily news
papers than all the paper
match books given away free.
TT
"PooJi Bah" Office
The following concludes a series of editorials brief
ly describing the offices and candidates at issue in tha
May primary election.
- The county clerk is
Lord High Everything
Apparently in the
function of government came along, and no one
knew quite who should do it, it was added to the
duties of the clerk. These jobs now range from
issuing dog (and marriage) licenses, to writing
checks for the county,
and "conducting elections.
A combination of tact, diplomacy, kindliness
and desire to be helpful is an asset to the office.
I70UR people are candidates for the Jackson
county clerkship two. Republicans and two
Democrats.
Neither Democratic
political experience. They
of Medford, and Ernest
nix. Both, however, have had business experi
ence, Mrs. Zumwalt both as an employee and as a
business operator, and Madden as head of his
own small business.
The Republican candidates are Mrs. Bereth
P. Hopkins, the incumbent, and Mrs. Anna Scott,
who has unsuccessfully
Mrs. Hopkins has run an efficient office. In
the course of doing so, she has made some ene
mies, for she has a sharp tongue on occasion
Her experience ranges
business experience, and
in the present job.
Mrs. Scott, too, has
business and in public administration, much of
it in Hood River. She and her husband now
operate a ranch in the Applegate, and Mrs. Scott
has been active in Grange circles. E.A.
For County "Judge "
The office of county judge, (in Jackson
county, anyway,) is almost a complete misnomer,
as, indeed, is the county court.
The judge has no judicial functions in this
county, and the court isn't a court at all it is
a three-man administrative body.
Once the judge did have a judicial function,
largely in probate work and juvenile matters,
but these duties were long ago transferred to
the circuit court. (In a few of the smaller coun
ties, the county judges still have some judicial
functions. In Multnomah and Lane counties, on
the' other hand, the county court is now called
the board of commisioners.)
HTHE judge, as one member of the court, then,
with powers equal to those of the two commis
sioners, has a one-third responsibility for the
administration of those county functions which
are. not assigned to one of the other offices.
This includes supervision of road 'construc
tion and maintenance with the county engineer;
preparation of the budget (probably their most
important function, performed in conjunction
with the budget committee), general supervision
of some of the taxing procedures, and a wide
variety of lesser duties.
Trip, court is neither fish nor fowl: It cannot
be a true administrative body, for it has no juris
diction in county functions conducted by other
elective officers, and no legislative powers.
Even though it is an anachronism, we have to
live with county government as it is, at least
until it can be changed. And to do this, we need
the best men available to serve on the court; me i
skilled in governmental techniques, men with
knowledge of how to get things done, and how
to get along with others; men of integrity and
stature.
yHERE are six candidates for county judge,
two Republicans and four Democrats.
The Republicans are the incumbent, Rodney
Keating, an orchardist and former Navy reserve
officer (commander) and oil industiy lobbyist,
and Earl Miller, automobile service garage
operator and f ormer councilman, budget commit
teeman and ex-mayor of Medford.
Keating is running on the record of the court
since he has been in office, and Miller is cam
paigning on the basis that a more businesslike
approach is needed in county government.
"THE four Democratic candidates are Franklin
Girard, Ashland ; Scott Hamilton, Central
Point; C. L. Hockersmith, 'Medford, and K. C.
Wernmark, Central Point.
Girard is the onlv one with prior political and
public office experience,
as secretaiy of state of Idaho. He also has oeen
a forester, both state and federal. His campaign
has emphasized the growing need for recrea
tional development, for conservation, and the
county s role m both.
Hamilton is a well known orchardist and
rancher, and at present is a school bus driver.
His campaign has emphasized the need for more
representation of the Democratic party in county
government.
Hockersmith, who ran unsuccessfully for
county commissioner ten years ago, is a fanner
and is active in Grange work.
Wernmark is a building contractor. It was his
action in filing for judge which brought on the
cmiA. nrtinn declarino- the iudffe's term of office
v 0
is four, rather than six,
sort of a Pooh Bah the
Else of the county.
early days, when a new
keeping all the records,
candidate has had prior
are Mrs. Nita Zumwalt,
Marvin Madden, Phoe
sought office before.
from school teaching to
the time she has spent
had experience both in
having served two terms
j o - j
years. E.A. , j
Dennis the Menace
&7,ra BET you iWULMt HAVE
Matter of Fact by
JOSEF-NIKITA?
Washington With extraor
dinary abruptness and consid
erable brutality, the Kremlin
has now re-
3 versed the pol-
ship toward
Y u g o s 1 a via
which was the
first fruit of
Nikita Khru
shchev's rise
to power.
The most
josph aisop curious aspect
of this important event is' the
timing. The pretext for the
new Soviet excommunication
of the Yugoslavs was the
"draft program'" of the Yugo
slav Communist Party. This
document, which was publish
ed at the beginning of March,
has just now been discovered
to be crammed with intoler
able heresies.
The question at once arises,
why these intolerable heresies
were not spotted much earlier.
All of March and early April
passed by in peace and amity,
with the heretical program al
ready staring the Kremlin in
the face. In this period, Nikita
Khrushchev even requested
Marshal Tito to accept a visit
from his Hungarian stooge,
Janos Kadar, and Kadar was
duly invited for a jolly week
end in Yugoslavia.
Then . something happened
in the Kremlin, presumably
about mid-April, for a denun
ciation of the Yugoslav pro
gram was passed for "publica
tion in the Soviet narer.
Kommunist," on April 15.
Thereafter the Soviet Party
theorist, Pospelov, delivered a
stinging attack on the Yugo
slavs as his contribution to the
celebration of Lenin's 88th
birthday. Finally the Soviets
organized a general boycott of
the Yugslav Party Congress at
Ljubljana by all the states of
the "Socialist camp."
rpHE Yugoslavs were 'frank
ly taken by surprise by the
boycott, which again under
lines the last-minute, wholly
unexpected character of the
squabble. And just to round
out the mystery, "Pravda"
published a renewed and very
venomous attack on old Molo
tov and his allies, who had op
posed Khrushchev's pro-Yugoslav
policy, at almost the same
time when Pospelov was at
tacking the Yugoslavs.
Concerning this intensely
significant and intensely be
wildering sequence of events,
there is only one point of gen
eral agreement among the experts-
All agree that the sud
den Soviet-Yugslav break is a
by-product of another inner
struggle in the Kremlin. But
as usual in these cases, no one
can tell who is kicking whom.
One thesis is that the neo-
Stalinists, Pospelov and the
high and dry doctrinaire, Mik
hail Suslov, have at last or
ganized a successive opposi-.
Try and
-By BENNETT CERF-
A WEALTHY GAMBLER knew he was sinking fast. He also
had a pretty good idea where he "was going. "No use put
ting any clothes on me when I cash in my checks," he told his
wile, nury me in my birth
day suit, so I'll be as com
fortable as possible in the
climate down below."
The wife, faithfully ob
served his wishes, but one
week to the day after his
burial, his ghost seeped
through the window, and
his hollow voice pleaded,
"Darling, give me every
suit and heavy overcoat I've
left. There's been a big
change in Hades. There are
so many big shots down
there now that the devilJias
put in air conditioning." ,
.
A foreign correspondent, admitted to a satellite country in East
ern Europe, wanted to know why there were so many breadlines.
'We Conimunists have so much bread these days," explained a gov
eminent official glibly, "we have to give it away to the people!"
1958, by Bennett Cert Distributed by Kips Ftww Syndicate,.. w .
ANY MICE WITH HM AROVSD1.'
Joseph Alsop
tion to Nikita Khrushchev. It
is a tempting thesis. Condem
nation of the Yugslavs after
all implies condemnation of
the very first major Soviet
policy decision that has a clear
Khrushchev label.
rFHE opposite thesis sees the
J- master-hand of Khrushchev
behind the new development,
When Marshal Zhukov was de
stroyed, the Yugoslavs them
selves, at . first argued that
Khrushchev had been "push
ed by the Stalinists," such as
Suslov. But in the end, the
Yugoslavs concluded that the
real prime mover in the de
struction of Zhukov was the
very man whom Zhukov had
just saved from destruction,
Nikita Khrushchev himself
In the present instance.
Khrushchev again has to deal
with one of the forces that
sustained him in his long and
devious rise to the supreme
position. Zhukov and the Com
munist Party apparatus were
his twin supports throughout
the whole elimination contest
in the Kremlin. Zhukov asked
too much reward, as saviors
will, and Zhukov was taken
care of with the help of the
party apparatus. More recent
ly, the party apparatus has
shown signs of getting above
itself, .particularly by ob
structing Khrushchev's im
mensely radical' agricultural
reforms. So may not Khrush
chev be preparing to teach
their proper place to the party
bureaucrats, as he taught his
place to Zhukov?
rpHE trouble with this thesis
-" is obvious enough. The con
demnation of the Yugoslavs
must surely be pleasing to the
party extremists like Suslov
and Pospelov, as Pospelov's
role indicates. At best, there
fore, it would be an astonish
inelv devious maneuver in a
Khrushchev game to defeat
the party bureaucrats.
But Khrushchev is just the
kind of wrestler who gets his
strangle-hold by seeming to
give way. Furthermore, the
Yugoslavs themselves plainly
blame Khrushchev personally
for their condemnation. At
Ljubljana, they have attack
ed Khrushchev personally in
stead of denouncing "Stalinist
survivors who still cause trag
ic distortions," as they would
otherwise have done. In fact
the Yugoslavs see what has
happened as another stage in
the transformation of Khrush
chev into a somewhat jollier
image of Josef Stalin.
As between the two theses,
you can pay your money and
take your choice.
(C) 1958 New York
Herald Tribune Inc.
MAGAZINE EDITOR DIES
Riverside, Conn. (IP)
Philip W. Swain, 68, who re
tired in 1954 as chief editor
of Power magazine, died Sun
day of a stroke.
Stop Me
'.--1 'f-
i 20 M
'Wm
In the Day's News
' By FRANK JENKINS
In the news, there are two
related items:
(1) Senator George (Molly)
Malone of Nevada says in a
srJeech in the senate that the
reciprocal trade act divides
American DOMESTIC mar
kets with 36 foreign competi
tive 'nations and thus makes
the United States a colonv of
Europe. He thinks the act
should be done away with so
as to give American business
men the inside track in our
domestic market.
(2) The head-mistress of an
exclusive girls school at Hast
ings, in England, gets into
the British courts with a vio
lent protest against locating
industries near the school.
Her lawyer says: "Bringing
hordes of virile young bache
lors here is not viewed by
my client with any en
thusiasm." WORD to both of them:
What you have in mind
CAN'T BE DONE at least
in the modern world.
Nations must TRADE.
Young women must
MARRY.
TF nations can't trade legally.
they will trade illegally
by smuggling, if there is no
otner way. 11 young women
aren't allowed to pick their
Communications
Letten 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.
The letters printed in this
column do not necessarily repre
sent the views of the paper, in
fact the contrary is often the
case.
Faith and Reason
To the Editor: With your
indulgence I would like to say
a few words in answer to the
letter of E. L. Sackett, and all
those sent to me personally,
None of you have presented
me with anything new, any
thing that would in any way
induce me to change my
views on the Bible and relig
ion.
All your tenets and prem
ises are, as usual, based on
belief only. Some of the print
ed matter you sent me con
tains the following statement:
"A Christian faith is based
on the supernatural from be
ginning to end and makes no
attempt to satisfy man's in
tellect, rather it satisfies the
heart. There is no place for
rationalism."
Well, right there is the basis
of the age-long struggle be
tween truth and surmises
facts or delusions, the differ
ence between certified know
ledge and the faith of reli
gion, the question of progress
and the dark ages. As for my
part, I prefer to be guided by
the light of reason, as Thom
as Jefferson so aptly put it:
"Fit reason firmly on her
seat and call to her tribunal
every fact, every opinion.
Your own reason is the only
oracle given you by heaven
and . you are answerable not
for the Tightness but the up
rightness of the decision."
Personally, I would rather
study the writings of the great
thinkers and dissenters than
all the Bibles in the world,
although all of them contain
many good and elevating pre
cepts, as the advice Buddha
gives his students, I quote:
"Believe nothing, oh monks,
merely because you have been
told it ' . . . or because it is
traditional, or because you
yourself have imagined it. Do
not believe what your teacher
tells you merely out of re
spect for the teacher. But
whatsoever, after due exam
ination and analysis, you find
to be conducive to the good,
the benefit, the welfare of all
beings that doctrine be
lieve and cling to and take as
your guide!"
Now I think that is as good
as any advice you find in the
Christian Bible. A good max
im for all of us, young and
old, to live by.
In conclusion, let me quote
John Burroughs: "If we take
science as our sole guide, if
we accept and hold fast that
which is verifiable, the old
theology must go."
William Krauss,
Route 1, Box 373,
Gold Hill, Ore.
Wish To Apologize
To the Editor: The Unander-
for-Governor Committee
wishes to apologize to those
people who called in ques
tions for Mr. Unander's TV
panel last Tuesday. We were
utterly swamped with phone
calls and" questions and con-
:equently could not get, all
of them on the program. We
want to thank you for your
interest and hope you will
understand the limitations of
our TV time.
Mary A. Ragland, ,
Treasurer of Unander
For Governor Committee
Sukarno Takes Definite Step ,
To Align Indonesia With Reds
By CHARLES M. McCANN
United Press Correspondent
President Sukarno of Indo
nesia has taken a definite and
disturbing step toward align
ing h i m s elf
with the Com
munist view
of things to
come.
In a speech
last Thursday
Sukarno pre
dicted the in
evitable fall
of "c a p i t al
ism and the
certain emergence of "social
ism" as the dominant politi
cal force in the world.
That by "socialism" Sukar
no meant communism there
seemed to be no doubt
"In this century the people
Jiving in 13 socialistic na
tions total one third of the
human race," he said.
Just why Sukarno picked
this particular time for his
speech is puzzling.
Resistance Near End
Indonesian g o v e r n m ent
troops are pressing the rebel
forces ( in Sumatra hard, and
organized resistance there
seems to be nearing its end.
Nothing Sukarno coulc
have said would be more cer
tain to insure that resistance
to his regime by all conserva
tion elements in Indonesia
will continue.
Socialism, Sukarno said in
his sDeech is a "historical cer
tainty" and capitalism and
imperialism are destined to
fall
"We live in a transitory
era," he said, "in a transitory
reriod from old to new. The
new era will be marked by
socialism, the brotherhood of
man and the fall of capitalism
which is a historical certain
tv."
Ever since Indonesia ob
tained its independence in
1949, Sukarno has cooperated
with and encouraged the In
donesian Communist party.
which claims more than one
million card-carrying mem
bers and ran fourth in the
1955 elections by polling six
million votes
In February, 1957, Sukarno
nroclaimed his conception of
'guided democracy" in which
the Communists would play a
full part in government. Con
servative elements saw the
making of a dictatorship in
mates and marry in the nor
mal way, they'll pick mates
and elope with them.
The pages of history prove
that thesis.
OENATOR Malone is propos-
ing that we take the easy
way out of what is becoming
a difficult situation.
Here in the United States
years of inflation are begin
ning to come home to roost,
Because of rising costs of
production our prices are
getting to be disturbingly
high. Production costs aren't
rising as rapidly abroad as
they are rising here at home.
As . a result, the American
market is increasingly at
tractive to foreign producers,
who are finding a profitable
market in America. Foreign
built automobiles are a good
example of what is happen
ing. There are signs that we
are beginning to price our
selves out of foreign markets.
As Senator Malone sug
gests, we can build a tariff
wall around our borders and
live on our own fat. But I
doubt if we would like that.
THE budget session of the
California legislature has
finally adjourned without
making any .provision for
MORE WATER FOR USE IN
CALIFORNIA either to
north or to the south of the
Tehachapi.
But
South of the Tehachapi
MUCH more water is want
ed. Much more water is un
doubtedly needed.
H
ERE is a basic fact:
1 The only way to get more
water for use in California,
both in the south and in the
north, is to SAVE UP more
of the winter precipitation
that now runs away to the
sea and is LOST in the sea
son in which it is needed.
It will take more STOR
AGE facilities to do that.
The bulk of the surplus pre
cipitation is in the north.
Therefore the storage facili
ties must be provided in the
north. Since the south wants
the water, it is up to the
south to provide the storage
facilities.
That's about the long and
the short of it.
Don't Neglect Slipping
FALSE TEETH
Do false teetn drop, slip or wobble
when you talk, eat, laugh or sneeze?
Don't be annoyed and embarrassed
2 such handicaps. PASTEETH, an
kallne (Don-acid) powder to sprin
kle on your c la tee. keeps false teeth
more firmly set. Gives confident feel
ing of security and added comfort.
Ho gummy, gooey, pasty taste or feel
ing. Get FASTKTTH today at any
drug cou&ter.
Charles M.
McCann
the guided democracy pro
gram. Vice President Moham
med Hatta, the leading con
servative, resigned from the
coalition government.
84 Million People
Indonesia is the sixth larg
est country in the world in
point of population 84 mil
lion. It stretches for 3,000
miles from the Indian ocean
to the Pacific.
The United States Informa
tion agency disclosed last De
cember that it possessed docu
mentary proof of a commu
nist plan to take over Indo
Director of Budget
Warns of Dangers
In High Spending
By LYLE C. WILSON
United Press Correspondent
Washington (tP That fold
ing money in your pocket and
your balance at the bank are
going to take
a bad beating
if the politic
ians you elect
to run the
country con
tinu e th e i r
spending spree
with your dol
lars. That's the
Lyie c. Wilson sad word from
a man who should know bet
ter than most what he is talk
ing about. The man is Maurice
H. Stans, newly appointed di
rector of the Bureau of the
Budget.
Stans was in Houston, Tex.,
the other day speaking before
the American Society of Char
tered Life Underwriters. What
he had to say should curl the
hair of any U. S. taxpayer.
Stans' criticism of U. S. gov
ernment spending was direct
ed primarily at Congress and,
therefore substantially against
the Democrats who control the
Senate and House.
Big Spenders
Democrats have distinguish
ed themselves as spenders
over the years, but the spend
ing buck cannot be passed to
any single partyPresident Ei
senhower and the Republicans
have done some frfte wheeled
spending, too.
The net result of it all is
that the U. S. dollar is shrink
ing in value at an . alarming
rate. In a short span of years
the dollar has lost half its val
ue in purchasing power, the
FRANK PERL
..!v II ' l'lPHfflj?i
ill-; - '
MY REASONS ARE:
1. I am for keeping the dignity of the Funeral Profession.
2. I would cooperate 100 with the District Attorney,
all Law Enforcement Officers, our Pathologist and the
Medical Profession for any cases coming under juris
diction of the Coroner's Office. All inquests and
autopsies are authorized and ordered by the district
attorney.
3. I am Qualified, Open
filling this Responsible Office.
4. I will work for the combined interests of the Five
Mortuaries in Jackson County.
5. I feel that after Sixteen years of a One Firm
Monopoly locally, it is time for a change.
6. I thank you for being a
VOTE
29X
FOR
0 iron eir
Frank Perl For Coroner Committee
C. M. Litwiller, Frank Morgan, Harold Snodgrass
Co-Chairmen
Paid Political Adv. Frank Perl. Peri
nesia by a detailed program
of infiltration and subver
sion. Officials in the Pentagon
and State department in
Washington expressed alarm
in March at the extent of So
viet military aid to Indonesia.
Sukarno has long been call
ed East Asia's second-ranking
"neutralist" leader, with
Prime Minister Jawaharlal
Nehru of India as the No. 1
man.
Now, he seems to be pass
ing from neutralism to open
pro-communism.
grandest larceny of all time,
no doubt.
In the words of the late AI
Jolson, Stans says: You ain't
seen nothing yet! His most
shocking prediction was that
spending may go to 80 billion
dollars a year and for some
time to come. If so, the U. S.
buck will be busted beyond
repair. No balanced budgets
are in sight, Stans reported.
And unbalanced budgets are
what currently inflation feeds
on.
Out of Balance
"But turning on vast new
programs for spending," Stans
said, "it (Congress) has moved
away from any hopes of bal
anced budgets for t959 -end
possibly for several more
years.
"What happens now? We
must guard against the ten
dency to think that the way
to start the economy upward
again is for the government to
go on a spending spree. Just
last year we moved into a $70
billion budget and there was
great public outcry.
"Now, with the programs
Congress is considering, we
are threatened with $80 bil
lion budgets for the next few
years, which could well mean
extended deficit spending."
Stans said ' large public
works programs acted too
slowly to do the recovery job,
even if they were within the
nation's means. He would pre
fer a selective tax cut if a
large-scale shot in the arm be
came necessary.
If a tax cut failed to spark
the national economy, Stans
would try public works but
not until then.
Why I Am
Asking Your
Support
on
May 16
for
County
Coroner
Minded and Enthusiastic for
Fair Minded Voter.
FRANK PERL
Funeral Home, Medford, Ore.