Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, May 14, 1958, Image 4

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fti&t. TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, ORE.
4 Wednesday, May 14, 1958
toFORDTRIBDNE
Jveryone la Southern 'regon
Reads The Mail Tribune"
Ffblished Daily except Saturday by
MEDFORD PRINTING CO
3 North Fir St Ph. SP.2-6141
ROBERT W RUHL. Editor
VERB GREY Advertising Manage!
CMi ALB LATHAM. Business Mgr.
JRIC ALLEN. JR. Managing Editor
TRL H ADAMS. City Editor
HARRY CHIPMAN Teleg Editor
RICHARD JEWETT. Sports Editor
OLIVE ST ARCHER. Society Editor
4) ALE ERICKSON. Circulation Mgr
An Independent Newspaper
Entered as second class matter at
Medford Oregon under Act of
March 3. 1395
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Official Paper of Ctty of Medford
Official Paper of Jackson County
United Press Full Leased Wire
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Flight fo Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10. 20, 30 and
40 years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
May 14, 1948 (Friday)
Plans and specifications
have been received and bids
requested for construction of a
64 by 75 foot reinforced con
crete addition to the Medford
Public library.
Jackson county furnished
over 3,000 of the signatures
on petitions filed yesterday in
Salem for a vote Nov. 2 by
the people of Oregon on ac
quisition of Camp White
hospital.
20 YEARS AGO
May 14, 1938 (Sunday)
A wild brawl in the hobo
camp on the southern out
skirts of Medford late yester
day afternoon landed the
"mayor of the jungle" in Sa
cred Heart hospital.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: "Haying
has started. Showers, and a
shortage of hay-hands are
predicted."
30 YEARS AGO '
May 14, 1928 (Monday)
,A local sporting goods deal
er told recently how he
caught a 26 pound salmon in
the Rogue rivr with his bare
hands.
From local and personal
column: "It took over an hour
for Orbin Cooksey, local
young fisherman to land a
20-pound salmon which he
hooked Saturday afternoon at
Gold Ray dam."
40 YEARS AGO
May 14, 1918 (Tuesday)
Adjutant General Williams
will be here Wednesday or
Thursday night to muster the
home guard company into
state militia service.
.An agricultural camp for
-sie -.,,511 v. organized on the
Ollaway orchard beginning
the first of June.
Vhal's Your I.Q.?
Nina or ten correct is superior;
seven or eight is excellent; fivo of
six is good.
1. Carson City is capital of
which western state?
2. Bible: How long was Noah
jhut up in the Ark?
8. The initials WCTU ident
35y what women's organiza
tion? 4. Who succeeded Will Hays
;i''Czar" of the film industry?
f. Geographically, Mexico
a part of North or South,
merica?
. The young of moose are
ryalled cubs or calves?
7. Catacomb is the name of
special brush for grooming
sBts; true or false?
V There are 28, 32, or 36
aills in one gallon?
9. Name the author of Rob
inson Crusoe?
10. What is the meaning of
the name Philip?
Answers: 1. Nevada. 2. 350
days. 3. Woman's Christian
Temperance ..Union... 4. -Eric
Johnston. 5. North. 6. Calves
7. False. (Subterranean burial
ground). 8. Thirty-two. 9. Dan
iel Defoe. 10. Lover of horses.
The "Tax Base " Measure
At the bottom of the non-partisan ballot
which all voters in the county will receive Friday,
appears a county measure.
It is entitled "County measure establishing
permanent tax base." And the descriptive mater
ial reads as follows :
"Referred to the Voters of Jackson County, Ore
gon by the County Court of Jackson County, Oregon.
. Purpose: To establish the present county tax base of
$652,386.68 as a permanent county tax base of $652,
386.68 under Article XI, Section 11, Oregon State
Constitution, as amended. Under the above constitu
tional provision it is necessary to levy taxes at least
once every three years for the sole purpose of pre
serving the tax base, unless a permanent tax base has
been established. If a permanent tax base is estab
lished, taxes will only have to be levied when funds
are needed to meet County obligations."
TTHE constitutional provision, stripped of its
"legalese," provides that no taxing unit (in
cluding counties) can levy more taxes than the
amount of its tax base.
There are two types of tax base, temporary
and permanent. The first is the amount of money
levied during one of the three preceding years
(except that for the payment of indebtedness or
interest thereon), plus six per cent. The other is
an amount approved by the voters.
The first is the type under which Jackson
county is operating at present. The second is the
kind proposed for adoption.
Unlike other counties which do not have sub
stantial sources of income other than taxes, Jack
son county receives considerable sums from the
federal government, from the sale of National
Forest and Bureau of Land Management timber.
These sources of income are so large, in fact,
that for the past several years they have been
enough to pay all the costs of county government.
IN THAT case, one may say, why worry about
a tax base at all? Why not just go on using
the federal timber receipts?
The answer to that is, the timber receipts may
not continue, indefinitely, to provide all the
money the county needs. If these receipts were
to fall off to any great extent, the county would
have to levy taxes to raise funds to continue oper
ating. And if that happened, it would need a
tax base so it could levy those funds.
As a result, it has had three choices either
levy a tax each third year, to protect the old base
(which is what it has done so far) ; or call upon
the voters to establish a permanent tax; base; or
lose the right to levy a tax without a vote.
This year, for the first time, it is asking the
voters to approve the second alternative.
IF THE tax base request is rejected, the county
will continue to operate as it has in the past,
receiving large sums from the federal govern
ment for the payment of operating expenses, and
presumably levying an unneeded tax of more
than $600,000 eveiy third year to protect the
tax base. (It could, of course, abandon the tax
base altogether, but we have yet to see any public
body give up its right to tax once it is estab
At best, this levying
each third year is a polite,
could be said to be a hindrance to good, economi
cal government.
IF A permanent tax base is approved Friday, in
the same amount as
the old system, the county would not have to
levy an unneeded tax each third year (including
this year) just to protect the tax base. It could
continue with tax-free budgets as long as the
federal timber and other receipts were sufficient
to pay for the costs of county operation, and
levy taxes only as they became necessary, either
because of a decrease in income or an increase in
necessary expenditures.
On the other hand, the measure would give
the county a sort of "blank check" to levy up to
$652,386 m taxes in any year it feels it necessary.
In doing so, it would remove the final say in the
county government another step from the people,
and would make it easier for county courts and
budget committees in the future to succumb to
those demands for more and more county funds
which many people feel should be spent.
THE constitutional amendment which author
ized the approval of a permanent tax base
was not designed for counties with ample sources
of income.
To the contrary, it was designed for cities and
school districts which long ago outgrew their old
tax bases, because of increased population and
rising costs, to permit them to get on a sound
financial basis without seeking a vote of the
people every year at budget time.
This is a valid use of the tax base provision.
Whether or not it should be used by a wealthy
county to avoid the levying of unneeded taxes
each third year is a question which can, and
should, be answered only by the voters and tax
payers of the county concerned.
We are inclined to doubt it. E.A.
Polls - And Rides
A correspondent points out correctly and
thoughtfully that, since many of the precincts
this year will use consolidate polling places in
Friday's election, this offers a better-than-ever
opportunity for the neighborly offer of a ride.
Particularly in the rural districts, where one
polling place serves several precincts covering a
large area, this suggestion is a good one. Vote as
you please Friday, but vote. And if you can offer
a ride to someone lacking transportation, so much
the better. E.A.
of unnecessary taxes
but practical, fiction. It
this year's tax base under
Dennis the
'WWT XJUR BACK SCRUBBED?'
Difficult Questions
Face U.S. Attorney
In Grand Jury Case
By LYLE C. WILSON
United Press Correspondent
Washington (IF) It is news
when a man bites a dog or
when a mouse nips a cat. So
it must be
news when a
potential crim
inal heckles
and harasses a
U. S. district
attorney to hv
diet him.
The heckler
and potential
criminal is
i.i. n Tun.nn William F.
Buckley Jr., editor of a smart
ly conservative weekly news
magazine called National Re
view. Potential criminal he
may be, but Buckley's con
science in this matter is as
sweet and clelan as a babe's.
If anyone is in trouble it is
Paul W. Williams, U.S. dis
trict attorney in New York
City and, perhaps, the U.S.
Department of Justice.
What it's all about is this:
Beginning last Dec. 14, in
a special article full of em
barrassing questions and im
plications, Buckley's National
Review began suggesting that
something smelly had hap
pened to a Grand Jury which
was supposed to be investi
gating charges of income tax
evasion against Rep. Adam
Clayton Powell (D-N.Y.).
Powerful Politician
Powell is a clergyman, pas
tor of the largest congregation
in Harlem where is concen
trated most of the Negro pop
ulation of New York City. He
is one of three Negroes in Con
gress and powerful political
ly with his race.
On Oct. 11, 1956, Powell
bolted Adlai E. Stevenson, the
Democratic presidential nom
inee, to endorse President Ei
senhower for reelection. Re
publicans welcomed Powell's
support. Republicans know
they probably must remain a
minority party unless they
can win back from the Demo
crats the Northern Negro vote
which was absorbed into
Franklin D. Roosevelt's New
Deal.
The Powell Grand Jury was
impaneUed in December, 1956.
, ff
In the Day's News
By FRANK
Fantastic note in the news:
Vice-President Nixon has
been planning tentatively to
visit European capitals late
this summer on a friends
making mission. However
in the light of rowdy demon
strations that have greeted
some of his Latin American
appearances (notably the
stone-throwing ruckus in Peru
the other day) a question has
now arisen in Washington as
to whether the good wUl he
might engender overseas
would outweigh the AMERI
CAN resentment that would
ensue if he were greeted with
the kind of . Yankee-Go-Home
displays the communists are
said to be able to organize in
some Western European coun
tries. As a result of this situation,
Washington correspondents re
port, Vice-President Nixon's
European trip may be called
off.
THAT is to say:
It may not be a good
idea to send our vice-president
to European capitals on
a friendship tour because he
might be heckled and insulted
and this heckling and insult
ing of a high American of
ficial might MAKE US MAD.
That is a pretty pass to be
reached by a nation that has
given some 60 BILLION DOL
LARS of its treasure to help
out peoples who are less for
Menace
It sat for two months when,
according to Buckley's Na
tional Review, the proceed
ings were halted on orders
from Washington. The Grand
Jury remained in limbo and
almost forgotten until Dec.
14, 1957, when Buckley's mag
azine began asking questions.
Had' there been, for example,
a political deal to let Powell
down easy?
The magazine reported that
Assistant U.S. Attorney
Thomas A. Bolan, in charge of
the Grand Jury proceedings,
had been informed that the
Powell case was being turned
over to the Treasury Depart
ment on orders from Washing
ton which, obviously, would
have to come from the Justice
Department.
Indictment Issued
Treasury investigators i h
New York, however, showed
no interest in taking over the
case. Months elapsed and
nothing happened except that
National Review each week
continued to spotlight the
Grand Jury's inactivity. Jury
members began bombarding
U. S. Attorney Williams with
letters threatening to recon
vene on their own if they
were not called back
Williams called the jury
back April 17. Powell's in
dictment on three income tax
counts came down May 8.
Buckley evidently applied the
hot foot which caused jurors
to write to Williams. The
young editor sent to each jur
or a copy of National Review's
Dec. 14 article, "The Wheels
of Justice Stop For Adam
Clayton Powell." And that ac
tion was a federal offense,
punishable by fine and im
prisonment. Buckley admits all. In its
current edition, Buckley
writes:
"National Review pleads
guilty."
It, looks like Williams)
move. And if he movesito in
dict Buckley how can he pre
vent the trial from becoming
an investigation of: Who
called off the Powell Grand
Jury, and why? Tough ques
tions! JENKINS
tunate than we.
It calls for some rather ser
ious thinking on our part.
THIS thought is advanced
by those who support con
tinued American aid spending
in Europe and Asia and else
where in the older world:
If we don't do it, RUSSIA
will.
not let Russia do it?
CONSIDER this possibility:
It isn't wholly improb
able that if we retire from a
giveaway field and Russia
goes into it in a big way the
peoples who receive Russia's
bounty will TURN AGAINST
HER, as they have turned
against us. - ,
We have proved rather con
clusively in our foreign aid ex
periment that you can't BUY
friends.
WHY NOT?
' Let's put it this way:
Suppose some VERY rich
person from a distant state
sent a member of his staff
around to you and that this
person said to you, in effect:
"Why, you poor thing, you
are in a bad way indeed. My
boss is terribly sorry for you.
Here's $10,000. The- only
string attached tc the gift is
that you agree to be friends
with him."
. I suppose you'd take the
Short Step
Seen in New Russian
By CHARLES M. McCANN
United Press Correspondent
Soviet Russia seems to have
taken a short step toward
agreeing to start negotiations
on disarm
ament. Premier Ni
kita S. Khru
shchev, in a
letter to Presi
dent Eisen
hower, accept
ed in principle
a United
States propos
al that experts
start discussing means of su
pervising a possible agree
ment to suspend nuclear wea
pons tests.
Khrushchev's offer was
hedged about by qualifica-
L mi ffife t
Charles M.
McCann
Communications
Letters to the Editor must bear the name and address of the writer,
although under certain circumstances the use of a pen name or initial
for publication is permissible. The Mail Tribune reserves the right to
edit all letters with a view to clarification and condensation. Letters
submitted for publication must not exceed 400 words. The letters
printed in this column do not necessarily represent the views of the
saper; in fact the contrary is often the 'as'
Fir Trees and Atom Bombs
To the Editor: A recent con
tributor to your "Communi
cations" department, Mr. John
Hale Foster, 238 King st.,
Medford, commented May 5,
1958, on my efforts on behalf
of encouraging Oregon devel
opment and in our country's
adopting a sane nuclear pol
icy. Apparently he disagrees
with these aims or at least
with my methods of further
ing them.
For the record I want Mr.
Foster to know that I trav
elled by train to New York
City one night, arriving there
about midnight, and return
ing by train three hours later.
I went at the request of Gov.
Robert Holmes as Oregon's of
ficial representative at a cere
mony planned to foster inter
est in a Fourth Congressional
District prime natural re
source the Douglas fir.
My train fare will be paid
by the public relations firm
responsible for the advertis
ing. As I told onlookers that
night, "you probably think
this is a publicity stunt to ad
vertise Oregon. You're right.
It's interesting to note, I be
lieve, that more than 12,000
persons have requested Ore
gon Douglas firs and that
these requests have come from
all parts of the nation.
Finally, Mr. Foster implies
that I serve a- Communist
cause and waste taxpayer
money when I go to the Mar
shall Islands to learn about
safeguards in nuclear testing.
Rather than detail my find
ings here, I will say that they
were deemed valid enough to
receive considerable attention
from the Atomic Energy Com
mission, from the press, which
had not been told that the
tests had begun, and from citi
zens who believe the AEC, un
der present policy, is impair
ing U.S. domestic and foreign
policy.
I travelled to the test 'area
on regularly scheduled mili
tary flights which would have
been made whether I was
there or not. The AEC had
designated me an official ob
server and was providing rou
tine transportation, just as It
does for each official observ
er. I paid for my own meals
and lodgings.
In order to return to Wash
ington from Eniwetok with
out undue delay, I took a com
mercial flight from the t West
Coast paid out of taxpayer
Charles O. Porter's pocket.
The flight and incidental ex
penses cost me well over $200.
I'm sending Mr. Foster a
copy of this letter along with
the remarks I made on the
floor of the House of Repre
sentatives the day following
my return. I hope he will read
both.
Charles O. Porter,
Member of Congress.
$10,000. But of this I'm cer
tain: You'd be HIGHLY SUS
PICIOUS of the honor, and
you'd watch him like a hawk
from then on. You'd wonder
what he was up to, and you'd
be pretty sure he was up to
no good.
Human nature is human
nature.
ANYWAY
We haven't had much
luck with our foreign pro
gram. In spite of our sixty
billions, we seem to have got
everybody down on us.
Why not let the Russians
take a whirl at it?
FALSE TEETH
That Loosen
Need Not Embarrass
Many wearers of false teeth havr
suffered real embarrassment because
their plate dropped, slipped or wob
bled at just the wrong time. Do not
Uve In fear of this happening to you.
Just sprinkle a little FASTEETH. the
alkaline (non-acid) powder, on your
plates. Hold false teeth more firmly,
so they feel more comfortable. Does
not sour. Checks "plate odor" (den
ture breath). Get FASTEETH at any
Srug counter.
Toward Negotiations
tions which left a lot of room
for doubt whether he is act
ing in good faith or is mere
ly launching another propa
ganda balloon.
But it was received in
Washington as appearing to
justify some hope that the
long deadlock on disarma
ment talks might be broken.
A White House statement
said that Khrushchev's offer
might "serve as the basis for
progress toward agreement
on disarmament."
Secretary of State John
Foster Dulles was consider
ably more cautious. He called
Khrushchev's offer gratify
ing. It appeared to recognize
"to some degree at least" the
insistence by the United
States that the problem of
Resents Attack on Bar Poll
To the Editor: The poll by
the Oregon State Bar associ
ation is intended as an aid to
the voting public and if it
does not serve that purpose,
it should be abolished. There
is no better way of finding an
answer to this question, than
to go back over the years
since the poll was instituted
My first experience with
the Bar Poll was about 1928
At that time, the late Harry
D. Norton was a candidate
for Circuit Judge. He had the
endorsements of about 90 per
cent of the Bar. At that time.
the same propaganda was
used, such as: "It is only a
popularity c o n t e s t", "The
lawyers want him because
they can control him", and
many others of like kind. In
spite of that propaganda, Har
ry D. Norton was elected and
he soon became known as one
of the best judges in the state
of Oregon. The people's con
fidence was demonstrated by
the fact of his re-election to
another term and if age and
health had permitted, . he
would still be our Circuit
Judge. '
About 1940, Judge H. K.
Hanna became a candidate
for Circuit Judge. Judge Han
na had the endorsement of
about 95 per cent of the Bar
The same propaganda was
used in that campaign as was
used against Judge Norton
and is being used today,
Judge Hanna was elected and
soon became known as one of
the finest Judges in the state
of Oregon, not only so con
sidered by the people of this
county, but also so considered
by the members of the Su
preme Court of the state of
Oregon. To demonstrate the
confidence that the people
had in him, he was twice re
elected to another term and
only age and health prevent
him from serving permanent
ly. I could give you the same
illustration with references to
the candidates for the Su
preme Court of Oregon.
A good conscientious voter
should gather all of the infor
mation possible concerning a
candidate, in addition to the
information of the Bar Poll,
and then decide who to vote
for. The evil, if there is any
evil, is if the voter relies en
tirely on the Bar Poll with
out making further efforts, to
ascertain the qualifications of
the candidate. The Bar cer
tainly does not intend to tell
the " voters how to vote. It
does not intend for nor want
the voters to rely entirely up
on its recommendation. The
voters are not doing their full
duty if they do not inform
themselves as to the qualifi
The Verdict is Yours -
r
Friday YW Decide . . .
Shall we continue a coroner in BUSINESS another 4 years? (making 20
out of the last 22 years)
OR-
Shall we bring Jackson Co. up to date and nominate Frank Perl with
the "Rotation Plan"?
Mr. Perl is qualified by experience to administer efficiency and econ
omy, co-operate with funeral and law enforcement men. Extend free
dom of choice to families first, use the Rotation Plan second. Will keep
records safely and supervise deputies carefully. A vote for Perl is a
vote for fairness, and justice to All. Favoritism to none.
We need a change in Jackson County. Vote 29 X Frank Perl.
C M. Litwiller, G. W. "Bill" Drew and Chapel Mortuary
Pd. Pol. Adv. Litwiller Funeral Home, 83 North Main, Ashland, Ore.
Talk Offer
controls is the prime essential
in any disarmament agree
ment. Dulles added that he did
not mean to say that he
thought the prospects for any
disarmament agreement were
good.
He said it would take a lot
of study to determine whe
ther there was any ground
for optimism. "But at least,"
he said, "there is some prog
ress.
The Washington reaction
showed plainly the feeling of
officials in allied countries
toward any development,
however slight, in the at
tempt to negotiate a "sum
mit" conference on world is
sues and get started on dis
cussion of disarmament by
experts.
First, there was eagerness
to grasp at any apparent con
cession by the Soviet govern
ments Secondly, there was the
natural suspicion of every
Russian move, and the doubt
whether the Russians will
agree to conditions that
would justify a summit con
ference or would permit the
first step to be taken toward
cations of a candidate in addi
tion to the recommendation
of the Bar.
I had no intentions of tak
ing any part in the campaign
for the judicial offices and I
do not now intend to help
any candidate nor to harm
any candidate, however, I do
resent the attacks being made
upon the lawyers generally
for trying to do their duty in
assisting the voting public.
The foregoing facts are his
tory. -
J. F. Fliegel
34 North Central ave.
Medford.
From "Coming Out"
To Coroner
To the Editor: I am a grand
mother and ' heartily agree
with Mrs. Farfan's answer to
"coming out gowns," in May
7 edition. I sincerely hope and
pray that my four grandsons
will grow up to be reverent
Christian men. . I think they
will be helped by their mod
ern parents who respect other
people's rights and opinions.
I would also like to men
tion our appreciation to Mr.
Carlos Morris for . the many
fine pictures we have seen,
free of charge, shown by him
at Grange and PTA meetings
during the 14 years we have
lived, in Jackson county. We
also appreciate the fine
weather reports on TV.
When we get through with
our sun tanned bodies, cer
tainly we expect Conger
Morris to be in charge of .the
things necessary at such times,
whether or not Mr. Morris is
county coroner.
We hope he will be.
Fayetta Gribble,
Box 461,
Gold Hill, Ore.
Oppose Tax Base
To the Editor: The board of
governors of the Jackson
County Taxpayers league by
resolution state that:
"After careful study and
consideration we find that the
establishment of a perman
ent tax base is not needed in
Jackson county at the present
time or in the foreseeable fu
ture. "We know that a tax levy
is unnecessary. The county
will have an expected income
from all sources this year of
at least $4,080,000. We be
lieve that the people of Jack
son county should decide by
their vote at regular election
if and when an emergency
should arise making a tax
base necessary to the finan
cial security of our county
government."
Tom R; Williams, '
North Stage rd.,
Central Point
(More Communications
On Page 5)
broad disarmament negotia
tions.
Eisenhower, in a letter to
Khrushchev on April 28, sug
gested among other things
that East and West start tech
nical talks on means of de
tecting any violation of a pos
sible agreement to suspend
nuclear weapons tests.
The President also pro
posed the establishment of an
Arctic zone air watch to les
sen the danger of a nuclear
weapons attack by planes fly
ing over the North Pole route
between Russia and the Unit
ed States.
Khrushchev reiected this
proposal. He said it seemed
aimed at gaining advantages
ior the United States over
Russia because of the pres
ence of American air bases in
countries within attacking
distance of the Soviet Union.
The acceptance of the pro
posal for technical talks on
an agreement to suspend nu
clear weapons tests was high
ly qualified.
"The Soviet government is
agreed to have either side ap
point experts who should im
mediately start work on
studying the means of detect
ing possiDie violations of an
agreement to end nuclear
tests, with the Droviso that
work should be completed in
the shortest term agreed upon
before hand," Khrushchev
said.
This reference to "the
shortest term agreed upon be
forehand roused suspicion
that Khrushchev's apparent
acceptance might contain
what Eisenhower has called a
"gimmick."
c
Let's Keep an
Experienced
Fair and
Competent
Judge on
the Bench!
VOTE FOR
Judge Edward C.
KELLY
(Incumbent)
CIRCUIT COURT
POSITIOII No. 3
(Non-Partsan Judicial Ballet)
PRIMARY ELECTION, MAY 16
Remember! Vetel
43-X - Edward
C. Kelly
"Incumbent. Judge Kelly experi
enced by thirty years varied active
practice." '
PA AHv. Kellv for Circuit Judoa
Committee, Otto J. Frohnmayer,
Chairman, 1656 Spring St. Med
ford.
L
J $
J '(A fS -