4 Thursday, Juh 12, 1958
MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, ORE.
MEDFORDtsSKrTRIBUNE
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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
June 12, 1948 (Sunday)
Jackson county sheriff's
posse ends its seventh annual
Rogue River Roundup this af
ternoon. Organization of a Rogue
Valley Hoo-Hoo club com
pleted recently with Robert
Voegtly, Medford, named as
president.
20 YEARS AGO
June 12. 1938 (Sunday)
A dismal future for the
Rogue River valley fruit in
dustry was pairtjed by of
chardists at yesterday's hear
ing on a plea for a reduction
of a minimum wage.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: "Cher
ries and strawberries are rip
ening fast and the kids and
the bluejays are making daily
forays."
30 YEARS AGO
June 12, 1928 (Tuesday)
After looking over his pear
orchar here, L. A. Banks
said prospects are bright for
a bumper crop.
The new reinforced steel
and concrete Pacific highway
bridge spanning Foots creek
sixmiles from Gold Hill is
completed.
40 YEARS AGO
June 12, 1918 (Wednesday)
Medford and Ashland mer
chants will hold a joint picnic
in the pa&t at Ashland in
July.
From local and personal
eolumn: "The children who
Join in the play group in the
city park Friday are asked to
weagj sandals."
What's Your I.Q.?
Nine or ten correct is superior;
seven or eight is excellent; five or
six is good.
1. Who wrote the book
"Ten Years in Japan"?
2. Two presidents of the
U. S. have been chosen by
the House of Representatives
because no candidate had a
majority in the electoral col
lege; naihe them.
3. Where is the port of
Cheribon?
4. Which is greater, the
polar or equatorial circum
ference? 5. What rank in the Navy
corresponds to Major in the
Army?
6. Which Italian city has
been called "The Bride of the
Sea"?
7. Bees will not sting a per
son while he holds his breath;
trueor false?
8. Does the law require the
Secretary of Defense shall be
a civilian?
9. In Dickens' novel "David
Copperfield," what was the
name of David's child wife?
10. The chemical composi
tion of the blood of all races
of people is the same, true or
false?
Answers 1. Joseph C.
Grew. 2. Jefferson and John
Quincy Adams. 3. Island of
Java. 4. Equatorial. 5. Lieu
tenant Commander. 6. Venice.
7. False. -8. No. 9. Dora Spen
low. 10. True.
esses)
Editorial Correspondence .. .
New Canaan. Conn. We
9:15 a.m. train at Lake Clear. It was a beautiful trip of
course through the lakes and woods, and no traffic, so our
host stepped on it to be sure
morning and night would
have been saved for when we
also ticket agent, dispatcher,
red-cap, said the train would
casual inquiry as to the cause
crew conductor, engineer and baggage mail-clerk had
been delayed at Lake Placid and had not yet- come down
from breakfast. We trust they did not suffer from indigestion
for they must have hurried,
train was only 25 minutes late.
The conductor assured us
up and the three-car train, drawn by a big Diesel, would
surely make our connection with the-"Chicagoan" at Utica
for New York. He was only worried about catching the
"Empire State Limited" going to Buffalo with only a five
minute leeway and the Empire wouldn't wait. However
both connections were made although the passengers going
west had to make a run of it across the tracks. It was very
humid in Utica and not reassuring to learn by radio that
heavy thunderstorms were predicted that evening, with a
likelihood of a tornado in
New York.
This is the mornics after
papers no tornado developed
was a severe one in Wisconsin. In fact this is "a beautiful
morning" fresh from Oklahoma.
.
But there is no suggestion of Oklahoma in this New
England village where the average residence at least on
our street is an "estate" with huge pre-bellum "mansions,"
acres of green lawn, requiring the attention of two or three
gardeners, attractive gardens,,
ing elms in front and often
converted into a two or three
We are in what is often
there are many nearby with
tween. It is called Hampton
and the "guests" are practically all of an age we trust
this description will be sufficient as to the actuary tables
involved.
" The atmosphere of Hampton House is informal and
friendly. This is contrary to
pression particularly in the west that American hospitality
is a question of longitude. Tiiat is the hearty hand shake
and cheery smile really starts somewhere in the vicinity
of Denver and steadily increases until the Pacific Coast is
reached.
Our view is based solely
therefore may be wrong, but outside of the city of New
York, we would maintain the attitude toward the out
lander on a visit here in the east, is extremely friendly.
There is no back-slapping or gushing, but the people ore
meets in the stores, the service stations or at a "Guest
House" like this, could not be friendlier or more accom
modating. We never saw them before they never saw us,
they know nothing about who we are or aren't except
perhaps that we are riding around in a rented "Chevy."
But they are universally courteous, go out of their way to
be helpful particularly when we lose our way on these
twisting rural roads and simply without exception, in
our experience at least, are kindly, - Interested, friendly
people. i
It is the same "here at Hampton House where most of
the . guests reside east of the Hudson there is one couple
from Honolulu. '
But Ihere is a very friendly, homey atmosphere prevail
ing there is no "put her there, pal," of course, but while
great dignity and a certain reserve prevailed (as would
befit the average , age quotient) everyone including the
"hostess" were just plain nioe, and at the post-prandial TV
performance, conversation became general.
The only point we wish to make is that the claim that
friendliness, kindliness and genuine hosnitalitv i a mo
nopoly of "Where the West begins" is a lot of nonsense. Out
side oi tne very large cities where the stranger is anonymous
and alone, while attitudes and manners differ in different
individuals and localities, of course, hospitality in its TRUE
sense in the U.S. A. is INDIVISIBLE, it isn't sectional, it
extends from coast to coast, from Canada to the Rio Grande.
-
The importance of TV and radio's educational value was
demonstrated here last night when the guests were given
the speech by Premier Macmillan in full as "he received
the doctor of laws degree at Depauw University in Indiana.
The British Premier is not a magnetic personality, nor
an eloquent speaker which on such an occasion is unfortun
ate but we heartily approved of everything he said and
it needed to be said.
We might as well face it, we must support the UN to
the hilt, for it is in a sense our only hope, but it must not
only be made all inclusive but be given a power that can
control unbridled nationalism and aggression, not be ruled
by either. In other words the UN must be backed by world
opinion and in a crisis by force. The answer to the popular
refrain, it can't be done, is somehow, someway, to DO it!
As Premier Macmillan put it, quote:
"The free world can't defend itself or win allies
to itself only by rockets and bombers and all the rest.
They are necessary but they are not enough. In the long
run the free world will defend itself and win adherents
to itself because our way of life gives a better way of
living, a fuller life for the individual, greater security
ana greater hope. .
He might have added, greater liberty, and a better
opportunity to not only "pursue happiness" but attain it?
R.W.R.
Try and
-By BENNETT CERF-
ASKED TO SINGLE OUT two of the kids who created the
biggest unscheduled laughs on his People Are Funny"
TV shows recently. Art Linkletter nominated:
1. The innocent (?) who
babbled, "My father worked
at a vegetable market when
he was young and single,
and my mother-to-be used
to come in and pinch the
vegetables. Every time she
pinched a vegetable, my
father pinched her, until she
couldn't stand it any longer,
so they got married."
2. The little girl who com
plained of a sore mouth. "I
ran into a hot marshmal-,
low," she explained, adding,
when she was pressed for
details, "You see, I was eat
ing one part and didn't notice the other part was on fire.'
Texas mother to her two young toddlers: "I want you to be spe
cially careful going to school this morning, children; J'm afraid we
had another oil strike last night and it's very, very slippery out"
O 1968. by Bennett Cerf. Distributed by Kin features Syndicate,
got up early to catch the
ihe one of two trains a day
not be missed. The gas could
arrived the station master
baggage room attendant and
be half an hour late. To our
we were miormed tne train
instead of 30 minutes the
the lost time would be made
the vicinity of Binghamton,
and judging by the morning
in New York state but there
and shrubs, under the tower-;
a huge stable in the back,
car garage.
called a "guest house" and
a few private estates in be
House, as large as small hotel,
.
a long-held but erroneous im
upon personal experience and
Stop Me
Dennis the Menace
DlO VOU WASH AW CESSER PLATg VET ? I COULD
SUKfc Lfoc VJOTHfcK ntCfe
Today & Tomorrow
By Walter Lippmann
DELUSION OF GRANDEUR
Washington Last week in
dealing with the foreign aid
bill, the Senate touched brief
ly on the
fringes, of a
great question
tion which is
becoming in
creasingly im
portant and in
sistent. The
question is
whether the
general direc-
Walter Lippmann tion of OUT
policy should be to expand or
to restrict economic relations
with the Communist coun
tries. The question was raised on
a rather narrow technical is
sue, that of the Kennedy
amendment which would
have eliminated the rigid pro
hibitions of the existing law.
But Sen. Knowland, who just
managed to defeat the amend
ment, based his fight on the
broadest possible ground. As
he argued his case, it would
be fair to say that he regards
any economic intercourse
with any Communist country
as an unfortunate lapse from
the ideal policy, which would
be by embargo, boycott, and
if it were feasible, blockade,
to have no economic inter
course. His -thesis is that economic
intercourse brings in goods
which strengthen the Commu
nist states, and that non-intercourse,
as nearly perfect as
possible, will weaken the
Communist states, will reduce
their military power, and will
cause discontent among Jfheir
people. Mr. Knowland's doc
trine is that in the cold war
we should, as respects econ
omic matters, act as we
would towards an enemy in a
shooting war. Anything short
of that is a compromise with
evil and a threat to our se
curity. ALTHOUGH Mr. Knowland
brought about the defeat
of the Kennedy amendment
by a margin of only one vote,
it is fair to say that his fun
damental theory; has for long
and until recently been that
of the preponderant majority
of the Congress.
We can say that the cold
war, which has been latent
since the Russian Revolution,
broke out openly in July,
1957. The cold war began
when Molotov, taking the
Czechs and Poles with him,
withdrew from the Paris con
ference which was dealing
with what was to become the
Marshall Plan. A few months
later, in March, 1948, the Ad
ministration initiated a pro
gram for export controls de
signed to prevent the sale to
the Soviet orbit of commodi
ties which would strengthen
its war-making capacity. In
1950, as a result of the Ko
rean war, the united states,
established an embargo on
trade with Communist China.
In 1952 our allies joined us
in a system of controls which
were stiffen than those ap
plied to' the Soviet Union. -
The whole system falls
short of complete economic
non-intercourse. There is
some trade which is licensed,
and among the great powers
only this country has a com
plete embargo on trade with
China. Where the" existing
system falls short of Sen.
Knowland's ideal it is be
cause our allies and our cli
ents have been able to refuse
to participate in complete
non-intercourse.
THE theory has had a reas
onably reliable practical
test for a period of 10 years.
There has been a little but
there has not been much
trade with Communist coun
tries. If Mr. Knowland's con
ception of the whole thing is
correct, his policy ought by
this time to show that it has
Ur Kiel
really caused serious trouble
in the economic affairs of the
Soviet Union.
The fact of the matter is
that the growth of the Soviet
economy has been amazing.
It may have been slowed up
in some measure by the re
strictions, but, in spite of the
restrictions, according to a re
cent staff memorandum to the
Committee on Foreign Af
fairs, "the Soviet rate of in
dustrial growth for total pro
duction is considerably larg-.
ter than that of the United
States . . . although our total
production is presently
going faster in absolute terms,
the Soviet rate of -growth is
greater."
In spite of the restrictions,
the Soviet Union has become
a very great military power,
and in the field of trade and
economic aid to the under
developed countries, the So
viet Union is a formidable
challenger.
THE basic theory that Com
munist development can be
slowed up or strangled by our
controls and boycotts is not
working. What is wrong with
the theory? In the last analy
sis the theory is left over
from the past history of mili
tary warfare, from the days
when Britain ha& undisputed
command of the seas and
could enforce an effective
blockade on - an enemy. The
doctrine of blockade worked
effectively against the Ger
mans in the first World War.
But in the second, as against
the empire conquered by Hit
ler, it did not work. It did
work against the Japanese is
lands when our submarines
and air force succeeded in
blockading them.
But as against a continental
mass, which includes the So
viet Union and China, and ex
tends from the heart of Eu
rope to the Pacific, the notion
of blockade, or of some near
equivalent, is a delusion. It is
a form of the delusion of
grandeur to think that such
a great central land mass,
with big resources and an
enormous population and a
powerful government, can be
brought down by restraints
on oui; trade and on the trade
of our allies. Mr. Knowland's
theory has not worked out in
practice because it is mere
wishful thinking which
ignores the facts of life.
THE problems raised by the
economic challenge of the
Soviet Union and its allies
are novel and among the
most difficult in their com
plexity that we have ever had
to deal with. Henceforth the
Communist economic compe
tition is, bound to become a
crucial concern of the non
Communist 'world. There is
no easy and ready-made an
swer to.it.. . ,
But this at least is certain,
we shall only befuddle our
selves as long as we do not
clear our minds of the anti
quated notion that our rela
tions with the Communist
world are somehow analo
gous, in terms of economic
warfare, to the relations in
the eariler days between su
preme sea power and small
countries that could be
blockaded,
(c) 1958. New York Herald
Tribune, Inc.
Myrtle Point TV
Translator Sought
Washington (UPI) Broad
bent Television Translator,
Inc., asked the Federal Com
munications commission Wed
nesday to permit telecasts in
Myrtle Point, Ore., of pro
grams carried b y station
KPIC-TV, Roseburg. The FFC
was asked for a construction
permit for a translator station
at Myrtle Point to convert the
programs of the Roseburg
station to Channel 78 at Myr
tle Point.
De Gaulle's Start as
Of France
By CHARLES M. McCANN
UPI Foreign News Analyst
Gen. Charles de Gaulle has
made an encouraging start as
the "authoritatarian" premier
of France.
He has shown
both modera
t i o n and fi
nesse in the
first stage of
his task of
bringing
France back
JT 1 trnm rrtlitinl
1 fhan in eta-
McCann blllty.
He has shown both modera
Matter oi Fact bv wPh aip
IN DAVID'S DISTRICT
Tizi Ouzou, Algeria Da
vid's District is one of the
many grandiose mountain
' f : a masses of this
country oi tne
Kabyles the
"free people"
as the pre
Arab inhabit
ants of Alger
ia prefer to
call them
selves. The moun-
i : 4. i -
Joseph Alsop "" w- l"c
Djebel Aissa Mimoun, dun
colored at this season, surge
steeply upward from the val
ley floor. Olive groves, fig
orchards, and little patches of
barley and millet cling to the
mountain's flanks. And on the
upmost crests, built so that
each village almost defiantly
occupies its own lonely crag
or peak, are the tiny, white
washed, earth-built houses of
the District's 10,000 to 12,000
people.
This is a region of many
grim but interesting . prob
lems. For example, since the
French subdued the Kabyles,
the population has increased
at such a fearful rate that the
Kabyle land now only feeds
its people for three months
each year. The little villages
on the mountain tops chiefly
live, nowadays, by exporting
labor, to metropolitan France.
v
TUT from David's point of
view, the most immediate
problem presented by the
Djebel Aissa Mimoun was its
ideal character as. guerilla
country. He came here just
about two years ago, from an
assignment in Hongkong as
liaison officer of the French
intelligence. One of the few
who were really informed
about Communist China, Da
vid made a lot of newspaper
friends in Hong Kong. This
was why he was suddenly
burdened with a week end
guest, here in this remote
Kabyle country..
As the jeep carried us up
a kind of enlarged goat track
into the mountains, David
vividly described the condi
tion of his district back in
1956. As it was a natural for?
tress, the Djebel had. been oc
cupied by big bands of fel-
laghas from the beginning of
the Algerian rising. At first,
a whole French battalion had
been needed to fight them.
"The worst part of the job
was over," David said, "when
the battalion left and I moved
in with a company of troops.
But the rebels still had a field
force of 20 men on the Djebel.
The villagers paid tribute to
them, ' and fed them, and
clothed them, and kept them
constantly informed about
our movements. They were
the real rulers. To us .the
villagers were a closed, ab
solutely closed people. The
people did not speak to us,
they would do no work for us.
We could not even go among
them, except in armed
groups."'
pWEN as the jeep wound
upwards on the mountain
track, it became clear that
those days were over. The
men working in the poor
fields often waved as we
passed, and the innumerable
and enchanting children al
ways stopped their roadside
play to wave and smile.
At the Company Head
quarters, old Assli, a veteran
of the French Army and now
the Mayor of the surrounding
village, had drawn up his
self-defense force of 15 men,
in order to show their newly
issued hunting rifles to David.
In the two big lower rooms of
the Company Headquarters
building, school was going on.
The school teachers were
soldiers in uniform, whose
rifles hung by the blackboard.
But the hundred or so little
boys and girls in the two
classrooms, who had never
had any other sort of school
teacher, seemed to be learn
ing their ABC's with cheerful
enthusiasm all the same.
A long day's climbing
around and over the Djebel
Aissa Mimoun gave much
Mosquitoes and Flies
Don't be chewed to bits by these blood
thirsty pests. Just burn a little BUHACH
wherever you want peace and comfort.
r'Jc:, BU II AC II
Safe Easy To Ui Iconomieal
Said 'Encouraging'
tion and firmness in the first
stage of his task of bringing
France back from political
chaos to stability.
The French people, as a
whole, have accepted him
with evident relief. -
Governments of the coun
tries allied with France in the
North Atlantic Treaty Organi
zation, while they had ome
doubts at first, are increasing
ly confident that he will not
weaken the Western side in
the cold war.
Want Dictator
The only elements which
seem to be unhappy over de-
more evidence of the samel
sort. In all the villages,
French soldiers were running
schools and French medics
had opened infirmaries. In
all villages, small self-defense
forces had been formed. There
were practical improvements
too. One village had a new
fountain which gave good
water, even in the most
parched weeks of summer.
Another had just built itself
one of the goat-track roads
a real miracle, this goat track
and had immediately in
vested in a communal truck.
NO DOUBT, the old officer
who has now succeeded
David as Company Command
er and District Officer did his
very best to put the District's
best foot forward. Sometimes,
indeed, his eagerness carried
him rather ludicrously far
But there was no doubt either
that the fellagha's absolute
grip on the Djebel Aissa Mi
moun had now been broken.
They ruled the Djebel no
longer.
With voluble enthusiasm,
David described how the job
had been done. Oddly enough
the fellaghas owe their defeat
on Djebel Aissa Mimoun to
the theory of Mao Tse-Tung's
that an army must live among
the people "like a fish in wat
er." The whole process start
ed when David moved his
Company from an isolated,
fortified farmhouse into the
very midst of one of the hos
tile villages. From there, the
process went by steps. The
next was strengthening their
confidence that the company
would protect them from the
fellagha's vengeance.
A GREAT turning point was
an old man's night-time
visit to give the names of the
fellagha cell-members" who
held his village in a ruthless
grip. Another turning point
was the destruction, in a ser
ies of sharp clashes, of the
Djebel Aissa Mimoun local
rebel field force. In this man
ner, gradually and village by
village, the whole Djebel was
in fact reconquered.
"It can be done every
where," said David, who was
given his promotion to Ma
jor for doing It here. One
could not help wondering
whether" doing it everywhere
in troubled Algeria might
not strain the supply of men
of David's character as well
as the French Army's supplyj
of ordinary manpower. But
David's district was a strik
ing exhibit all the same.
(C) 1958 New York
Herald Tribune, Inc.
Dredge To Replace
Sunken Army Boat
Portland (UPI) The Army
Engineers' dredge Harding,
from the New York . district,
was to arrive here at noon
today to replace the dredge
Rossell which was sunk last
year at Coos Bay.
The Harding will begin
temporary dredging assign
ments in the Willamette next
Tuesday. - - -
Chapel Mortuary
Across from the Courthouse
Frank Morgan Harold Snodgrass
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
Premier
velopments since De Gaulle
took office on June 1 are the
right-wing extremists, who
want him to be a swashbuck
ling dictator, and the Commu
nists.
De Gaulle's first act in of
fice was to appoint a cabinet,
including three former pre
miers, in which the moderate
right, middle-of-the-road and
moderate left parties are rep
resented. .
The right-wing extremists
who, by means of a military
revolt against the government
of Premier Pflimlin, brought
De Gaulle into office, were
excluded completely.
The Communists, who
threatened riots and revolu
tionary strikes if De Gaulle
became premier, have been
strangely inactive.
Soviet Russia, too, sat on
th,e fence for a while. But
now, apparently, the Soviet
government has made up its
mind that from the Commu
nist viewpoint De Gaulle is
up to no good. "
Have Challenged General
The right-wing extremists
who staged the revolt in Al
geria and Corsica that led to
De Gaulle's emergence as pre
mier have openly challenged
his authority. -
The so-called "All-Algeria
Committee of Public Safety"
sent De Gaulle on Tuesday a
demand that French political
parties "disappear" suspend
activities until a national
referendum is held on the
premier's proposed constitu
tional reform plan.
The committee called also
for a similar committee in
France itself. This would
mean that De Gaulle would
subject himself to the direc
tion of the extremists, v
De Gaulle retorted with a
message calling the extrem
ist demands "unfortunate,"
"untimely" and "peremp
tory." V
The attitude of both the
right-wing extremists and the
Communists indicates that the
French political crisis is far
from over,
But De Gaulle is not the
man to let anybody tell him
what to do, and he seems to
have the support not only of
the French people but of the
overwhelming majority of
French Army officers.
BIG
July 4th
Medford High Stadium
YMCA CAMP BENEFIT
Advance Ticket Sale
Now Underway
Buy Your Tickets Early
' At The YMCA or From
Any Y Member
ADULTS $1.00
CHILDREN $ .50
i This Ad Sponsored by
GOLDY & IIEtlSELMAU INSURANCE
Today. . .
and Every Day
DIAL-SP 3-7331
You'll Be Glad You Did!!
o
Letters to tm Vita Surt
bear the same ami sslasesa of
the writer altaou easier cer
tain circumstance? tto wB of a
pen name or initial fct- publica
tion is permiatibje. Vh Mail
Tribune reserves ts right to
edit all letters SMta aa to
clarification antf condensation.
Letters submitted for publica
tion antut not exceed 400 words.
The letters printed in this
:olumn do sot necessarily repre
sent the views of the paper, in
fact the contrary is often the
case.
TV Set for Sale?
To the Editor: I thought to
answer Calvin Hamner's gpm
munication of May 25 at the
time I read it because it was
my understanding that this
cable TV would not interfere
with KBES-TV in the valley
as we know it today.
But I understand now why
KBES-TV did not answer this
accusation. I heard today that
KBES-TV will nt be able to
continue as, in the past due to
lack of advertisers sponsors
necessary for continued op
eration, if cable TV is al
lowed! And yet this KBES-TV has
been battling to keep pay TV
from getting a foothold for
this same reason that it would
end free TV, or locally
KBES-TV as we know it to
day.
I wrote my senator urging
against pay TV. sVnd now
KBES-TV (for whom I wrote)
plans to take TV away from
me, regardless. If that isn't
a pretty picture! Either way,
we lose; pay TV or cable TV,
take your choice. But I do
know this no matter how
good the programming under
cable TV, there will always
be those who will not be sat
isfied because you can't
please all the people all the
time.
But KBES-TV can, and evi
dently will, take0 TV away
from a good maiy who have
enjoyed watclftng, and who
have been rightly proutj of
their KBES-TV until now.
Thanks, it was nice while
it lasted! When our free TV
goes off the air, Til have on
used RCA table model 21-inch
TV for sale reasonable.
S. V. Dodge,
504 Austin St.,
Medford.
Trans - Australia Airlines
carried a record of 912,000
persons on scheduled flights
in 1957.