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ASS
Flight 'o Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30 and
40 years ago.
It YEARS AGO
May 26, 1948 (Wednesday)
Fluhrer bakeries announces
the sale, effective June 1, of
their retail bakery and pie
manufacturing business to W
K. Godlove, Los Angeles.
Jackson County Sheriff's
fNsse will hold its next queen
contestant dance Friday.
YEARS AGO
Xay 26. 1938 (Thursday)
Jackson county voters used
pencils freely at the primary
election and created close to
TOO -write-ins."
From Arthur Perry's Ye
fcnudge Pot column: "The
farmers need rain, though
there is enough hay down for
a cloudburst."
It YEARS AGO
Kay 26, 1928 (Saturday)
Hiss Julia Eakins was
oueen of the May festival in
Ashland Friday during the
Lithia park event.
From local and personal:
"For the past week the city
nas been bathed in the odor
of locust blooms."
t YEARS AGO
May 26. 1918 (Monday)
Despite reports to the con
trary, the Sells-Floto circus
will not be permitted to show
in this city Saturday, Mayor
Gates announces.
From local and personal
column: "Because of a freight
wreck near Dunsmuir Sunday
afternoon, passenger trains
14 and 16 were late."
What's Your I.Q.1
Mine er ten eerrect it tueerief;
even er eic.hr is excellent; five er
x it goes).
1. Complete the quotation
"Millions for defense, but not
cent for
2. Bible: Did St. Paul ever
go to Rome?
8. Copenhagen is the capi
tal of Norway, Denmark, or
Sweden?
4. Harry S. Truman was
lAe first U. S. president . to
veto a tax-reduction bill; true
er false?
I. Graphology is the study
f what?
- 6. Coral is a plant or ani
mal? 7. Can salt water.be made
Iresh?
8. What does "Pan" stand
lor in Pan-American?
9. In baseball, which base
Is called the keystone sack?
10. In what year did the
late President Roosevelt de
clare the bank holiday?
Answers: 1. "Tribute." 2.
Tec. 3. Denmark. 4. True.
. Handwriting. 6. Animal.. 7.
Tec. (by distillation). 8. All.
ft. Second. 10. 1933.
INVENTS 'SMELLEVISION
Plymouth, England (UPD
Inventor William Rose an
nounced Sunday he had in
vented "smellevision." Rose
said his "smelly telly" device
releases different perfumes
from a television set ' by
means of an electrical im
pulse from the transmitter.
fUOOV KILLS 31
Istanbul. Turkey (UPD
jhirty-one persons were re
ported killed today . in the
rl tf nrhinh HtfiflctafoH the
liuvu " -
Cankiri district near Ankara
last week. The floods also de
stroyed .35P houses in the
"area.
Now Its The "URL"
The merger of the United Press Associations
and the International News Service, announced
over the week end, into what will now be called
"United Press International," makes the new
organization probably the largest news-gathering
company in the world.
' The other big press service in this country
is the Associated Press. U.P. and I.N.S, (now to
be known as "U.P.I." ) both have been stockholder-held
companies, .operated for a profit. The
A.P. is a cooperative, owned by the papers it
serves.
THERE are other new-sgathering agencies in
other countries, Reuters in England, Tass in
Russia, and a number of others in other nations
or parts of the world.
But none of them have quite as extensive
newsgathering facilities as do the A.P. and the
new U.P.L, both of w-hich are world-wide in
scope.
Both of them have hundreds of full-time cor
respondents, mostly located in the larger cities,
which naturally enough are centers for news col
lection and for news distribution. Both also have
what they call "string correspondents," who are
part-time employees, most of them working full
time for newspapers or radio stations, who fur
nish the press associations with news of their
communities in addition to their regular work.
"THEY are organized so that news can come to
the Mail Tribune, or other papers, in min
utes, where it used to take hours, or days.
If say, a French government falls, a U.P.I,
correspondent in Paris can call the news to
his bureau, it will be put on the news circuits, and
flashed and relayed across the ocean and contin
ent, arriving in the Mail Tribune news room in
less than five minutes. A more important stoiy
can come even faster than that.
The other way around, if there is a major
news story in -Medford, the local "stringer" will
call it to the Portland press association office,
where it will be put on the circuits, and sent im
mediately throughout the countiy.
Lesser news, naturally, comes more slowly,
awaiting its turn after the major news has been
cleared.
The added facilities of the U.P.L, including
some of the top talent employed by what was
I.N.S., will enable the Mail Tribune to serve its
readers with more comprehensive national and
world coverage than ever before. E.A.
Nature Still Packs Punch
The spectacular electric storms of last week
were gorgeous and exciting things to watch. And
they wrere reminders that nature still has the
"big punch" when it comes to doing things in a
big way. -
Men have learned to
of the time, but so far it
naa to ao tne adjusting,
Only in a few cases
for instance, have sometimes been more or less
successful have men "conquered" nature. Most
of the time, mankind simply has to accept wThat
nature brings, and live
1V4EN have learned to
well: they have made remarkable progress
in engineering and technology; in transporta
tion and communication; in explosives and power
generation.
But his greatest eltorts, tremendous as tney
are, still are very often
nature ma really big
eniDtion of a cood-sized
much he can do about such things.
So far experiments m
have just scratched the
in snowfall and rainfall have been influenced by
men, but it is still far from an exact science, and
the weather still does pretty much as it pleases.
CO IT is that men's achievements have been
mostly in the line of accommodating them
selves to the whims. of nature, rather than con
trolling them.
In this, they have done 'well.
But the storms wrere a reminder that these pro
tections are not yet perfect. California Oregon
Power company, despite a widespread and most
ly effective system of controls to prevent power
outages, still lost power in some areas Thursday
night..
And this, in turn, is another reminder of how
dependent men are on the conveniences of civil
ization. In many homes, when the power goes off,
heat; lights, the stove, television, radios, appli
ancesall go off and the home is nothing but
a shelter, deprived of the things we view so cas
ually most of the time, and miss so much when
they're gone.
""PHE same is true in many business enterprises.
On a newspaper, for instance, a power out
age brings things to a dead halt. Our teletypes,
which brine to Medford the news of the world.
fall silent; the lights go
tuoes between newsroom and pnnt-shop cease;
line-casting machines stop , and the molten metal
used to form type begins to cool and harden; the
big press cannot turn: the saws and routers are
useless; tne engraving equipment cannot be used.
And the clocks stop.
Perhaps no other commodity in modem life
is so taken-for-granted, yet so vital to activity,
as electricity-which itself is . still understood
only imperfectly. E.A.
. i !
live with nature, most
is mostly men who have
not nature.
flood control projects,
with it.
house themselves pretty
subject to the whims of
electric storm, or the
volcano. There's not
controlling the weather
surface. Some increases
out; the communication
, . , ,
Dennis the Menace
10CXS0N.WE HAVE A UVVKMOWEff.A CITY LOT. AND vMV
1 SAH)lrWS30tf3TOeijySQMeSJEPl
Washington Report
By William
TWINS' SURVIVOR
Washington ior years
much of the power struggle
within the Republican party
has concerned
the vaulting
ambitions of
two compara
tively young,
very able and
not widely
loved politi
cians.
Both have
wanted to be
wmam s. white President
perhaps too much and too
soon.
Harold E. Stassen and
Thomas E. Dewey have been
to the orthodox elders of the
party a terribly unwelcome
set of terrible twins. They
have not been Dead End Kids
Rather they have been some
what precious Uptown Kids,
hurling at the silk hats of the
Old Guardists not mere snow
balls but demands for more
"modern" Republicanism.
One of this durable pair,
Stassen, can hardly be called
durable anymore. His recent
burial ; under a landslide in
his attempt for the Governor's
nomination in Pennsylvania
seems to have finished him off
once and for all as a Presiden
tial possibility.
, In a sense, therefore, it is
one down and one to go for
the Old Guard. .
BUT Dewey, unlike Stassen,
is going up, not down.
His dreams have been as in
sistent, and they have carried
him farther. Dewey, after aU
twice has had the nomination
in 1944 and in 1948 to
ward which Stassen has never
even moved close.
But Dewey has learned
what Stassen never did how
to wait. And in learning this
he has attached himself firm
ly to or has been grasped
firmly by the present boss
of the Republican party, Vice
President Richard M. Nixon.
And perhaps the most damag
ing of all Stassen's errors was
his attempt to challenge Nix
on's renomination in 1956.
Thus Dewey is now riding
the wave of the future not a
"new" Dewey, maybe, but
certainly a new wave.
What follows is a report on
his recent, activities and
degree of influence within
the Eisenhower Administra
tion and an estimate ; of his
future based upon information
from persons close both to
President Eisenhower and to
Vice-President Nixon.
Dewey, as a man who more
than any other brought about
General Eisenhower's nomina
Try and
-wy BENNETT CERF-
ARLENE FRANCIS did her TV show from the Beverly Hiltoa
hotel poolside in California one morning. It was cold and
foggy and the pool itself chilly. On the stroke of six the director
signalled a young woman
who had a heavy blanket
wrapped around her, ,and
ordered, "Get up on the div
board and let's see you
dive."
She obediently did a dive
but it was a belly-whopper.
"That's terrible!"
groaned the director. "Dive
again and this one better
be right!" Again she dove.
Back on terra firma, Arlene
whispered, "I'm sorry you
had to dive in this weather.
Your teeth are chattering. I
hope they're paying you well for this."
The young girl said, "Oh, I'm n-n-not in the s-s-show, Miss
Francis. I'm a g-g-guest at the hotel. I j-j-just came d-d-down
to watch you do TV!"
There's & bookseller in Chicago, says Irv Kupcinet, who's a genuine
14-karat pessimist. He's always building dungeons in the air.
q 1958, by Bennett CerL Distributed by Xing Feature Syndic ta.
S. Whits
tion, has an enormous arid
largely untapped potential
power within the Administra
tion. It is perhaps rising rath
er than diminishing. When
ever he wants to come around
the White House he will .be
pushing a door that could not
be open more widely. -
TTE HAS little sought to use
this power. He has hung
back from offering advice.
and recently .he has declined
flattering invitations to speak
publicly on behalf of the Eis
enhower Administration.
He has preferred to remain
remote; when he drops into
the office of the President-, the
Vic-President or of presiden
tial assistant Sherman Adams,
it is usually "not by his re
quest. He has become perhaps
the youngest "elder states
man" in history.
His air of remoteness is ex
plainable primarily by his
basic feeling that he should
stay out of the limelight for a
while to let orthodox Republi
can hostility toward, himself
cool a little. And sometimes
he has not identified himself
with the Administration sim
ply because he did not agree
with what the President was
doing or the way he was
doing it.
As to Nixon, this is the sit
uation concerning Dewey: The
Vice-President is his own boss
and probably as toughly self-
sufficient a politician as is
Dewey himself. Nevertheless,
he keeps in line with Dewey
at every important step on
high party policy looking to
ward 1960.
IF DEWEY should strongly
objet to any course Nixon
was proposing to take, there
is reason to believe that his
objections would, be heard
with great respect. They
might sometimes actually pre
vail.
In helping : to build up
Nixon, Dewey may seem to be
limiting his own future. For
if Nixon should "be elected
President in 1960 and reelect
ed in 1964, Dewey's own
White House hopes would be
postponed eight more years.
Nevertheless Dewey knows
how to take the long view
and this view has its compen
sations. He prefers to stay out
of active politics now. in mak
ing a great deal of money for
his family in his law practice.
Too, a Nixon Presidency prob
ably would at least mean for
Dewey post of Secretary of
State. And alternately, . a
Nixon defeat in I960 would
leave Dewey in the position of
having been a good soldier so
Stop Me
Communications
letters to the Editor must
bear the name and address of
the writer although under cer
tain circumstance the use of a
pen name or initial for publica
tion it 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.
NunUy Appreciative
To The Editor: I would ap
preciate it if you would pub
lish this as an open letter to
the people . of Jackson and
Josephine counties.
I would like to thank all of
my friends who worked so
diligently in the support of my
campaign, and to the almost
12,000 people in southern Ore
gon who expressed their
agreement with the points of
view which I expressed in my
campaign by voting for me at
the primary election. I am
only sorry that I was not a
strong enough candidate to ac
complish the purposes and to
give effect to the points of
view shared by those of you
who voted for me.
Walter D. Nunley,
Route 1, Box 427A
' Medford
Matter of Fact v
By ROWLAND EVANS JR.
While Joseph Alsop re
port from France, Row
land Erant Jr. covers the
Washington base.
THE PRESIDENT AND
THE PARTY
Washington President Ei
senhower is angry and resent
ful at speculation that he may
abdicate to Vice President
Nixon before the 1960 elec
tion and he is going to unusu
al lengths to stamp it out.
On one recent occasion, the
President amazed some of his
Republican associates by his
bitter reproach of politicians
whom he apparently suspects
of encouraging the resigna
tion gossip.. He was indignant,
in the testimony of those who
heard him, and gave every
appearance of introducing the
subject with deliberate intent.
He named ho names.
The. President asserted in
the strongest terms that under
no conditions would he re
sign, unless compelled by an
absolute requirement of
health. .
?
r7 IS no surprise that Mr.
Eisenhower would resent
suggestions that he .is plan
ning to turn over the White
House to the Vice President,
even if they came only from
a hotly partisan Democrat
like Paul Butler, the Demo
cratic national chairman, who
has been regularly hinting at
a dark plot of resignation.
The President has On occasion
publicly repudiated the idea.
But one may presume that
something more than Mr. But
ler is involved when the Pres
ident takes pains to denounce
the rumor mongers . in inti
mate conversation with hia
Republican associates, as he
is now doing. In the opinion.
of some influential Republi
cans, what has happened is
that the President is just now
becoming fully aware of the?
extent of tne resignation talk:
among members of his own
party. What is now disturb--ing
him, in short, appears to
be not the , well-publicized
Butler forecasts but the quiet,
speculative conversations that
never get printed and that arc
based on a political situation
wholly unique in American
history. .:
It goes without saying, of
course, that to many Republi
cans it is nonsense and worse
to discuss the possibility of
the President . resigning for
any reason other than physi
cal necessity. The President's
retirement, they hold, would
be, an affront to- millions of
Americans who voted for him.
.
TD OTHERS, however, the
the Republican prospect
for keeping the White House
away from the Democrats in
I960- would be brighter if
Nixon were installed before
the election and made the
race as a powerful, incumbent
President. These Republicams,
entitled to another chance on
his own.
The odds are that one way
or another Dewey will be
back and back high up.
Downward, Harold Stas9en;
upward Thomas E. Dewey,
the truly indestructible one of
the terrible twins.
(Copyright; 1S38, By United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.)
SAUSAGE CHAMPION
London (UPI) The
Whitley Bay carnival in
Northumberland county is
priming to watch an unchal
lenged champion outdo him
self. : "Little Joe" Steele,
champ sausage eater who has
consumed i feet of the spicy
meat at a sitting, will try to
down 10 feet at the forthcom
ing fair. .
Technical Talks May Lead to
Negotiations for Summit Meet
By CHARLES M. McCANN
Negotiations -with Soviet
Russia which may lead to a
summit conference on cold
war problems
apparently are
going to start
soon.
President Ei
s e n h o w e r's
new letter to
Soviet Pre
mier Nikita S.
K h r u shchev
offers hope
that technical
Charles M.
McC.-um
negotiations on the possibility
of an agreement to suspend
tests of nuclear weapons may
be opened within a matter of
weeks. ,
These negotiations would
be strirctly limited to the one
question of the weapons tests;
which lives in the field of dis
armament. But they should show
whether the Soviet govern
ment ready to act in good
faith ifci summit negotiations
also.
Further, they presumably
will be accompanied by direct
negotiations on the summit
conference, to be conducted
in Moscow between the Unit-
Joseph Alsop
who include practical politi
cians; in both the conservative
and "modern" wings of the
party-, tick off the following
points to make their case.
Tl&e first point, of course,
is the 22nd amendment, limit
ing a President to two full
terras. From the moment he
was elected in 1956, this con
stitutional barricade removed
all mystery about President
Eisenhower's intentions in
19fJ0. He could not be a can
didate under any circum
stance. Such an early, forced
decision tended at once to
corrode the President's power
over his own party and to
start an immediate search for
trie successor.
The third-term ban by it-
sitlf, however, would be quite
meaningless in the talk about
resignation were it not for a
far more important second
point. This is that Nixon hap
pens to be not only the Vice
President, and hence first in
line of succession, but also
Wie apparent choice of the
major factions of his party for
Ihe 1960 nomination. The
lhird-term ban, in other
words,, is significant only in
relation to Nixon's unique po
sition. If he were an old Vice
President, for example, or if
he were entirely unacceptable
to a powerful faction in the
party, there would be little
talk about the President's res
ignation. Nixon, however, is
not only acceptable, he has
a commanding lead over all
potential rivals, a lead that
Harold Stassen's defeat in the
Pennsylvania primary has
made more secure,
ONE other point completes
the case of Republicans
who would like to see Nixon
campaign for the Presidency
from the White House and not
from the Vice President's
small office in the Senate.
The President's three major
illnesses, they hold, have im
posed limits on his activities
and prevented him from har
nessing, the full energies and
resources of the Republican
party in a period of crisis
abroad and economic disorder
at home. Unless Mr. Eisen
hower deals more realistically
with the problems that are
pressing in on his administra
tion, these Republicans con
clude, the Democrats will be
unbeatable in 1960.
This in essence is the case
being made by some members
of the Republican party who
are concerned about the
party's future. Fed by politi
cal realities,, this kind of talk
is surely going to cohtinue
but, judging from Mr. .Eisen
hower's indignant reaction, it
may do more than stiffen the
President's resolve to com
plete his second term.
(c) 1958. New York
Herald Tribune Inc.
ssSsBlsSs
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ed States and British ambas
sadors to Russia on one hand
and Soviet Foreign Minister
Andrei A. Gromyko on the
other.
Latest Step
Eisenhower's letter to Khru
shchev is the latest step in a
series of exchanges which
started last December when
former Soviet Premier Niko
lai A. Bulganin began clamor
ing for a summit conference.
These exchanges have con
cerned both the summit con
ference itself and the related
question of reopening the
deadlocked disarmament
talks.
Eisenhower suggested to
Khrushchev, Bulganin's suc
cessor, on April 28 that "des
ignated technical people"
study the possibility of estab
lishing safeguards which
would prevent violation of an
agreement to suspend the
weapons tests.
The President also remind
ed Khrushchev that he pre
viously had suggested broader
negotiations on limiting the
danger of a nuclear war.
Khrushchev replied on May
10. He said he had "serious
doubts' about the desirability
of expert negotiations on sus
pension of weapons tests be
cause they would merely de
lay an actual ban on the tests.
But he said that, as Eisen
hower attached great impor
Pretzel-Bender New
Political Factor
In Pennsylvania GOP
By LYLE C. WILSON
Washington (UPI) Bert
Williams, the old black face
comedian, had a song back
there at the
turn of the
centjur y of
which the re
frainwent like this:
"It's a won
derful oppor
tunity for
somebody."
Bert's amus-
Lyle C. Wilson ing Oltty COUld
become the theme song of
Pennsylvania Republicans in
this election year in recogni
tion of the opportunity which
is thumping on the door of
Arthur Toy McGonigle.
McGonigle is the political
freshman who last week
licked Harold E. Stassen in
the primary contest for Penn
sylvania's Republican nomin
ation for governor. McGonigle
is not in yet far from it.
In the November election
he must meet David L. Law
rence, the Democratic nom
inee who is serving his fourth
term as mayor of Pittsburgh.
Lawrence probably will lick
him because Pennsylvania's
Republican moorings no lon
ger are sure and firm. The
chance remains, however, that
McGonigle may be elected
governor in November. If so,
this unknown Pennsylvania
pretzel bender will become a
national figure overnight.
McGonigle is a pretzel
manufacturer. He made po
litical capital of his lowly
product in the. primary cam
paign; made a pretzel the em
blem and symbol of himself
and his ambition. This was
done in response to warn
ings from political pros that
McGonigle's pretzel back
ground would be derided and
laughed at by the voters,
man of the people who struck
it rich in a pretzel factory.
So McGonigle already has
achieved the human touch as
a politician, and if he wins
in November he will become
a new face, a new and attract
ive personality in the Repub
lican high command. At age
51, McGonigle has another
10 or a dozen years of po
tential political career before
him.
As governor of Pennsyl
vania if he makes it he
could and probably would
rove an eye toward the White
tance to the expert negotia
tions, he was prepared to
agree to them.
Experts Appointed
The Soviet government is
agreed to have either side ap
point experts who should im
mediately start work on study
ing the means of detecting
possible violations of an
agreement to end nuclear
tests, with the proviso that
work should be completed in
the "shortest term agreed
upon beforehand," Krushchev
said.
It was noted that Khru
shchevs' acceptance was lim
ited to expert negotiations on
a test ban alone.
But the White House said
at once that it might serve as
the basis for progress toward
agreement on disarmament.
It is to this limited accep
tance that Eisenhower has
replied.
The President now sug
gests that negotiations be
started , within three weeks
after Khrushchev's confirma
tion that he is ready for them.
The experts, meeting in
Geneva, Switzerland, would
make a progress report with
in 30 days of the start of their
meeting, and then make a
final report within 60 days.
This certainly seems to meet
Khrushchev's desire to com
plete work within the short
est time.
House.
There was laughter, but it
was friendly. There was no
derision; only cheers for this
If that seems to be a stata
ment far-fetched into the un
predictable future, be it rt
membered that back there i
the" 1930s it was possible t
predict something similar. K
was that a very young mi,
freshly elected to his firs
public office as district fit
torney of a single county in
New York City was a bright
new face in the Republican
party. That new face be
longed to Thomas E. Dewey.
McGonigle is a self-made
man with a striking name
which never would be at ease
in the Social Register. He's a
pretzel bender, to boot. Put
the title "governor" in front
of the man with that name
and background and, friends,
you've got a political package
There' should be a footnot
to the political obituaries
which were written of Harold
E. Stassen last week after h
was rejected by Pennsyl
vania's Republicans. It is this:
Stassen could arise and
walk again. The word is that
the Republican party in Penn
sylvania is in bad shape. Sup
pose Democratic candidate
Lawrence defeats Republican
candidate McGonigle next No
vember. What then?
. -
Well, four years from now
there will be -another Repub
lican primary contest for gov
ernor. If the Republicans have
not found a winner by 1962
they well might give Stassen
another turn at bat.
Register NOW
for JUNE 2nd
and July 7th
CLASSES
KEYPUNCH
Act Today Don't Delay
SP 3-4264
ROBERTSON
School of Business
40-42 North Riverside
Medford, Ore.