MAIL TRIBUNE, MlDFORt, OKI.
FrMay, June 27, 1931
Tvyryenef in Southern Vrecoa
' Keada The MaU Tribune'
Published Daily except Saturday by
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NATIONAt? EDITORIAL
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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 27, 1948 (Sunday)
The annual summer-school
picnic dinner for Southern
Oregon college held at Lithia
park with 200 students at
tending. ,
Miss "Greta Hansen intro
duced to the public at the
"Miss Medford" ball at Rogue
Valley ballroom.
20 YEARS AGO
June 27. 1938 (Monday)
Two hundred persons attend
picnic in the Rogue River Na
tional forest campground at
Union creek, sponsored by the
Southern Oregon units of the
National Letter Carriers asso
ciation. From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge' Pot column: "WPA
stories are plentiful, and
worse than the Ford yarns of
pre-depression days.
30 YEARS AGO
June 27. 1928 (Wednesday)
Frank .Crouch, superintend
end of the Pacific Shaleries
and Lumbering company of
Ashland, formerly the Hart
marm Syndicate Inc., asks the
county court to grant a right
of way for a railroad.
A delegation of Oregon edi
tors will meet here Friday for
a golf tournament as part of
the Oregon Editors' associa
tion convention.
40 YEARS AGO
June 27, 1918 (Thursday)
A contingent of 60 drafted
.men from Jackson county left
at 11:35 aon. today.
From local and personal
column: "No word has been
received from Federal Forest
Supervisor Rankin and As
sistant Supervisor Foster who
left Monday for the big forest
fire in Klamath Indian reservation."
What's Your I.Q.?
Nine er ten correct it superior;
seven or eight is excellent; five er
six is good.
1. Chimpanzees are mon
keys; true or false?
2. Name the chief Commu
nist party newspaper pub
lished in the United States.
3. The body of British Field
Marshal Sir John Dill is in
terred in the U.S.; in which
cemetery?
4. Which two bodies of wa
ter are connected by the Erie
canal?
5. Name the . largest of
these planets: Mercury, Ve
nus, Mars, Earth.
6. Seattle is the capital of
the state of Washington; true
or false?
7. Is the Suezcanal a sea
level or a lock canal?
8. Is the Tropic of Capri
corn north or south of the
Equator?
9. Apple trees do, or do
not, grow in Normandy,
France?
10. During World War I,
who was king of Italy?
Answers: I. Falsa (anthra
poid apes). 2. The Worker
(weekly). 3. Arlington Nation
al cemetery. 4. Lake Erie and
Ihe Hudson river. 5. Earth.
6. False (Olympia). 7. Sea
ItreL 8. South. 9. Do. 10. Vic
tor Emmanuel III.
Polar bears do not hiber
nate, but in the' winter the
'female lies up in a snug den
under the snow to produce her
cubs. ,
Always
"About the only thing
the fact that things change.
The world is never
yesterday, or will be tomorrow.
One year is even less
And, as one decade
changes are even more
more pronounced.
1E CAN remember,
T T newspapers were
sighted world, where a
forever, things seemed static, resolved, perma'
nent
But it didn't take long to realize that this im-
Eression was one of childhood. As the years go
y, they fly faster and faster, and while there is
a continuity and a certain sameness m experi
ences and thoughts, there is that constant subtle
difference which we take in stride until we sud
denly realize that, quite without our noticing it,
the world is different than it was.
This effect is best-known to parents of grow
ing children, who, close
the same. And yet when an acquaintance sees
them for the first time in months, the ciy is
always, My, how they have grown.
.
THIS has not always been so.
During the Middle Ages, one day, or
month, or year or even decade or centuiy -
was much'like the one before, or the one after.
Society was static, predictable; what was, was,
and always would be.
But with the Renaissance and the Reforma
tion, the static world started to fall apart. Minds
were given freer rein, and the -impact of fresh
thinking and new ideas began to be felt and
to circulate and widen, as the ripples in a pool of
water widen after the impact of a stone.
This effect, with some hold-ups and slow
downs, has continued to
celerating rate. It was given impetus by the dis
coverv of the new world, by the French and
American and industrial
117ARS speeded change. So did changes in
philosophy and in religious thinking. So did
a'dvancing technology. So did advances in gov
ernment and political philosophy. ......
Some of the changes have been for the good,
and some for the bad. But change is, and has been
and will be, the big overriding fact of human
existence. E.A.
Tomorrows World'
No one knows what tomorrow's world will
bring. But some of the better-informed guesses
have considerable fascination. -
. For instance, W. M. Kiplinger, the editor of
the well-known Washington "letter" and other
publications, recently had his staff do a job of re
search in many different fields among experts, to
construct some sort of picture of the future.
As a result, he told recent graduates of Ohio
State University that:
. There will be no world war; there will be limi
tation of armaments; there will be a continued
cold war on the economic front; there will be a
good long boom, with minor recessions; that
there will be new products, new methods, such as
never seen before, and that there will be gradual
ly rising prices. These, he said, will be the pattern
within the next 25 years.
AS TO the. new products, he said many of them
n rill V f T-i i n rre h of nr. nn V o a avan f h minrVif
of as yet.
- But, hie said, on the
ments, within the next decade or so :
Electric power will
atom as a regular thing,
will still be used.
Television screens will be oil the wall of the
room, most of them showing color TV.
Household dusting
tronic wands.
Telephone dialing throughout the nation will
be almost universal.
Almost every new home will be air condition
ed, and some new homes will be heated, lighted
and cooled by the rays from the sun.
Bed blankets will cool sleepers at night, as
well as warm them.
Luminous ceilings will light homes.
There will be "throw-away" paper clothing.
A whole new range of products will make
kitchen work faster and
SHOPPING, he said,
Thecommon cold will be licked.
Cancer and heart ailments will be controlled.
and people will be living;
present, and will do so in
lne iour-and-a-half day week will be stand
ard, and the f our-day week not uncommon.
A 1 -
And so on and so on.
DERHAPS these things seem fantastic to some.
But they don't to people who stop to re
iiect how much the things we take for granted
today were but dreams only a few years ago.
One decade ago television, was still pretty
much a dream. Rockets were still only 4th of July
toys, or, at most, new and effective anti - tank
weapons. People were talking of trips to the moon
in terms of hundreds of years, not decades. Jet
transport planes were just being designed not
flown. -
' -Things move fast these days. "And each" year
they seem to move, and change, just a feat faster
thai the year before. E.A. , - -
Change,
that doesn't change is
quite today what it was
like last year, or next.
follows the other, the
marked, more noticeable,
as a child, wondering why
needed. In a child's short
day is long and a year is
by from day to day, seem
the present, and at an ac
revolutions.
basis of current develop
be produced irom the
although coal, oil and gas
. "
will be ' done, with elec
easier than ever before.
will be done by closed-
five vears longer than at
comfort, y- - .
Dennis the Menace
AUygg we doctor
SPRAIH, BUT I CAY
Washington Report
By William S. White
THE SHAKEN G.O.P.
Washington The Republi-
can party is : reeling as it has
not done since the Democratic
1 peak . under
jFran klin D.
Roosevelt.
Fear and
defeatism, as
privately ex-
fi pressed in Re-
v1 publican Con
gressional and
other quarters
here, is thick.
wiuam s. white It is so extra
ordinary as to seem to a de
tached observer tp be almost
absurdly extreme.
The Republicans see for
themselves a future far gloom
ier than the most partisan
Democrat dares assume. More
over, no , impartial analysis
makes it look quite so . bad
for the Republicans as they
insist it is assuming . that
they are able soon to pull up
their socks. ...
The GOP is not simply put
ting a finger to the panic
button; it is leaning on that
button,- arm, shoulder and
torso.
The Republicans are now
even discussing whether to
prepare a solemn catalogue
of alleged Democratic influ
ence peddling going back two
decades to the Roosevelt Ad
ministration. That this sort of
answer" to the Sherman
Adams affairs should even be
thought of is the best illustra
tion of the Republican state
of mind.
QBVIOUSLY,- such a pro-
cedure would be the same
as a plea of guilty "Any
how, you're another; and you
were one first."
Senior Republicans are
speaking, not simply of? a
heavy defeat in the Congres
sional elections this fall; they
are muttering of '"distaster."
The reason is .not solely the
Adams case, though it has, in
deed, hit the Republicans like
a paralytic stroke. Public re
action is only their obvious
worry. Equally important is
worry for the effect within
the GOP organization itself.
For, overly-dramatic though
it sounds, the Republican
party seems to be coming
apart at the seams. The mam
reasons are two:
1. Adams' acceptance of fa
vors from his rich business
man friend has dangerously
and overnight reduced the
power of the whole Eisenhow
er wing -of the -party. It has
thus set off party in-fighting.
THE orthodox Republicans
have worked in outward
harmony with the Eisenhower
Republicans only because of
the immense public appeal of
the President. Now, with the
Try and
'Am
-By BENNETT CERF-
AN ARMY DRAFTEE was observed by his lieutenant me
thodically depositing dimes in a PX soft drink machine. As
each bottle was delivered,, the recruit carefully lined it up on
the table and put in another
dime. When the lineup had
reached a total of 14 bottles,
the' lieutenant figured the
time had come to interfere.
"Don't you think that will
hold you for the time be
ing?" he inquired.
"What?" protested the
draftee. "You want I should
quit right in the middle of
a winning streak?"
All day long Mr. Shaugnessy
sat fishing from the end of
the recreation pier, and all day
long a stranger sat behind
him, watching intently. Finally Mr. Shaugnessy turned and asked
with sarcastic politeness, "Did it ever occur to. you to do some fish,
ing of your own?" -
"Never," admitted the kibitzer cheerfully. "I haven't the patience
for it' ; . .
'""O W58. by Bennett Cert Distributed by King Features Syndicate, "
says it just a
rt0XOK!'
fall of Adams and he .has,
in fact, fallen, no matter how
much longer he may stay in
office the orthodox no
longer pretend any fondness
for anybody in the White
House.
And the decline of Sher
man Adams is in a real but
lesser way the decline of Gen
eral Eisenhower ' the de
cline, that is, of his practical
influence within his party.
2. The Adams affair has had
a cumulative shock effect
upon the Republicans gen
erally. Their story already
had been like the perils of
Pauline. As the middle-aged
will remember, that unfortun
ate girl seemed to spend her
life tied to one railroad track
or another while the locomo
tive whistled in the distance,
In January the Republicans
were fearful of the political
effect of the Soviet sputniks.
After a while they largely
worked out . of this danger,
but the memory shook them
Next, , it began to appear
that massive farm resentment
was building up. This men
ace, too, then seemed to pass
with the rise of agricultural
income.
A ND then came Bernard
Goldfine's great generosity
to Sherman Adams.
This episode could . .have
been far better handled by
the party as a whole had
there been a party of the
whole. But there never was
such a party.
Adams never held any pow
er based upon general party
consent or acceptability. He
held only a second-hand pow-
er of discipline from the
President. He was only the
mouthpiece of the "modern"
Republicans; he had no weight
in his own right. ,
From the day Adams went
in he has been resented by
the "regular" Republicans
He has given them little job
patronage, little time and
less courtesy. They are repay
ing him now, and the more
so because they think that for
this .campaign year the Re
publican ship is sinking any
how.
But it is not only Sherman
Adams who is shaken. The
whole "modern" Republican
apparatus has been shaken
with him.
(Copyright, 1958, by United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.)
Millbrook, N.Y. (UPI)
Miss Elizabeth KW. Lame
75, a member .of the world
council of the Young Wom
en s (Jnristian Association,
died Thursday after an illness
of two months. She was a
daughter of the late Daniel
Scott Lamont, secretary of
war in - President urover
Cleveland's second cabinet.
Stop Me
Communications
Letter 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 (or 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
:olumn do not necessarily repre
sent the view of the paper, in
fact the contrary is often the
case. .
Fight Goes On
To the Editor: An effort
will be made by supporters of
humane slaughter legislation
to win on the Senate floor an
effective law to , prohibit
cruelties to animals in many
packing plants. The Humane
Society of the United States
is opposing a "study" bill the
Senate Agriculture commit
tee recently reported out.
Throughout the three year
Congressional campaign for
humane slaughter legislation,
humanitarians have opposed
"study" legislation on the
grounds that it would actual
ly delay the use of humane
slaughtering methods. The hu
mane organizations insist that
the painless killing - methods
have been sufficiently stud
ied. The few packers using
humane methods find them
economical and efficient.
The American Meat Insti
tute and -the Department of
Agriculture joined forces in
urging Congress to enact a
study measure. The bill writ
ten and reported by the Sen
ate Agriculture committee is
considered by the HSUS a
device to defeat effective leg
islation. It would direct the
Secretary of Agriculture to
study slaughtering methods
for two years.
The biU is expected to reach
the Senate floor in July.
Amendment on the floor, to
return the bill to the language
of Congressman Poage's ef
fective bill, which the House
passed in February, would
mark the beginning of the5
end of slaughterhouse cruel
ties to animals in our country.
Humane minded people can
help win the battle in the
Senate by writing or wiring
their Senators, urging the
amendment and a roll call
vote.
The Humane Society
of the United States
1111 E. st, N.W.
Washington 4, D.C.
Editorial Comment
WHITE HORSE
TRAILER PARK
Congratulations definit e I y
are in order for members of
the Josephine County Park
Commission the County Court,
and all others who partici
pated in establishment of
White Horse Trailer Park.
They have provided this area
with the first publicly-owned
camping facilities adequate in
nature for the accommodation
of tourists who may want to
stay several days or even sev
eral weeks in scenic Southern
Oregon. .
Th"e new trailer park re
portedly is only the second
publicly - owned development
of its kind between Shasta
Dam, in Northern California,
and the state of Washington
It will serve a growing need
as thousands of additional
trailer tourists take to the
road each year.
In many other parts of Ore
gon the state highway com
mission has developed state
parks for over-night camping.
The portion of Josephine
county around Grants Pass,
however, has not been includ
ed in these developments.
Hence the necessity for local
action,' if this community is
to offer something for trailer
tourists who may want to stay
over a few days.
White Horse Trailer Park
is located between Lower
River Road and the Rogue
river, about seven miles west
of Grants Pass. It is a beau
tiful shaded area of big oaks,
pme, fir and. madrone trees.
It affords cool, comfortable
camping spots for persons
who wish to park their trail
ers on the Rogue, or establish
headquarters for side trips to
other points of interest in
Southern Oregon. We predict
that many campers who plan
to spend only a day or two
in this park will end up by
remaining for a week or
longer.
That's exactly what this
community needs; something
to cause the tourists to stay
here longer. Otherwise they
pay for a night's lodging, buy
a meal and possibly a tank of
gasoline, and are on their
way. Grants Pass Courier.
East Mala Si.
DAIRY -
Try our Banana Smith, a split
with Dairy-Smith dignity.
.1
Russians' Display of Temper
Tops International News
By CHARLES M. McCANN
UPI Foreign News Analyst
The week's good and bad
news on the international
balance sheet:
Soviet Russia indulged in
an outburst of temper this
week over developments in
the field
of
foreign
af-
fairs.
Mobs, ob
viously o f f i
cially organ
ized, engaged
in hostile dem
o n s t r a tions
against the
United States,
West German
I is
Charles M.
McCann
and Danish embassies in Mos
cow. The demonstrations were
staged in retaliation for anti
Communist demonstrations in
New York and Bonn in protest
against the execution of Hun
garian revolt leaders Imre
Nagy and Pal Maleter.
A Soviet note to the United
States threatened to boycott a
meeting of experts, already
set for next Tuesday in Gen
era, Switzerland, on means of
assuring compliance with a
possible ban on tests of nu
clear weapons.
Official statements and the
officially - controlled Moscow
newspapers denounced the
United States, its' allies and
In the Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
At a news conference in
New York the other day Al
bert Cole, U.S. housing admin
istrator, told the reporters
there is highly encouraging
evidence that a MAJOR up
turn in home building is un
der way.
He said the home building
figures for May are a new all
time high for applications and
he reaffirmed his belief that
there will be close to 1,100,000
new housing starts this year.
rpHAT'S for the country as a
whole. .
According to the statistical
department of Equitable Sav
ing and Loan Association, the
Pacific Northwest is doing all
right in the . way of home
building. The report says that
in May the dollar, value of
all dwelling permits issued by
the area's 64 largest cities was
up 17 per cent from the total
for May of last year. ,'
It adds that May was the
fifth consecutive month dur
ing which the dwelling per
mit total climbed above the
1957 levels. In comparison
with last year, the residential
dollar volume was up 11 per
cent in January, 21 per cent
in February, 14 per cent in
March and 14 per cent in
April.
rpHAT brings up an interest-
The Pacific Northwest,
whose chief industry is the
manufacture of building mate
rials, HAS CONFIDENCE IN
THE FUTURE OF ITS OWN
LEADING INDUSTRY and is
investing heavily in new
homes.
THAT is to say:
teresting point.
Home building was one of
the first industries to begin
to slack off. As a result, the
Pacific Northwest (along with
Far Northern California) was
about - the first area in the
nation to feel the beginning of
the recession.
The present upswing in
home building gives us good
reason to believe that this
area, which because of shrink
ing markets for building ma
terials particularly the ma
terials, entering into home
building led the nation into
the recession, will lead the
nation OUT of the recession.
THAT brings up a rather in
int siihipr-t.
The belief is rather gen
eral that lumber (along with
all building materials made
from trees) rose more star
tlingly in price than other
materials entering into con
struction. According to the
National, Lumber. Manufac
turers Association, that isn't
true. -
During the last decade, a
report recently issued by the
lumber association says, steel
on the wholesale level jump
ed 5 Vi times as much as lum
ber, clay products nearly 3
times as much and cement
2Vfc times as much.- -V '
In the decade ending with
1957, wholesale lumber cost
increase was Z6.Z per cent.
For structural steel, it was
127.8 per cent. '
SMITH
al GenetMO
J)
I I
the United Nations for consid
ering Lebanon's request that
action be taken to stop the
flow of weapons and men
which are being sent to the
Lebanese rebels across the
frontier of Syria from the
United Arab Republic.
On Monday, while police
watched idly, a mob smashed
the windows of the West Ger
man Embassy in Moscow. In
cendiary rags, stones and bot
tles of purple ink -were
thrown through the broken
windows. Draperies and fur
niture were damaged serious
ly. It followed the same course
as last Friday's attack on the
Danish Embassy.
On Wednesday, a much
more temperate mob demon
strated in front of the United
States embassy. Without much
enthusiasm, the demonstrators
shouted "Fascists," "dogs",
and similar epithets. But no
missiles were thrown and no
damage was done.
Everything had seemed set
for the Geneva meeting of ex
perts on a possible agreement
to suspend nuclear weapons
tests as the Soviet government
demands.
The United States, Canada,
Great Britain and France
were ready to send their dele
gates, expecting to confer
with experts from Russia,
Czechoslovakia, Poland and
Romania.
GOP Political News
Looks Up on Farms
-Of All Places
By LYLE C. WILSON
UPI Correspondent
Washington (UPI) Things
political are looking a bit
brighter for Republicans on
of all places
the farms
Not on all
of the farms,
of course, but
on enough of
them to give
some farm
belt . Republi
can candi
dates some-
Lyle C. Wilson
thing cheer
ful to think about. Credit for
that will be ..disputed. :
Secretary of- Agriculture
Ezra Taft Benson substantial
ly credits his conservative
farm policies which tend
away from high and rigid
farm price subsidies.
A Democratic wheat farm
er in western Kansas would
be more inclined to credit the
almighty and weather condi
tions which are bringing to
ward harvest a ' big wheat
crop.
Credit for Ea
However much the weath
er may have helped, it is ob
vious that Benson's farm poli
cies did not as predicted
prevent the good things
which are happening to many
farmers in the Midwest. Good
things, -especially, for the
corn-hog, . corn-beef farmers
The grain growers who sell
for cash instead of feeding
stock are not doing so well.
That was the report this
month of Bernard Brenner,
United Press International
farm writer, after a swing
through the Midwest and into
the Texas cotton fields. Bren
ner found farmers and their
small town merchant suppli
ers better off now than pre
viously in many Midwest
areas. '
There are other indicators
of opinion. In a recent con
gressional record was repro
duced an editorial from the
Boise (Ida.) Daily Statesman
which is1 listed by Editor and
Publisher as an independent
Republican newspaper. The
editorial remarked on evi
dence that beuson was emerg
ing from the farmers' dog
house by reason of improve
ment in the agricultural econ
omy. "It is coming to be rather
commonly remarked nowa
days," the editorial contin
ued, "that there's no reces
sion in agriculture. And it's
a matter of record that farm
prices as of last April 15
Bedding Plant Sale
GRATER GREENHOUSE
,1048 CRATER LAKE AVE.
But on Wednesday, Soviet
Foreign Secretary Andrei A.
Gromyko handed American
Ambassador Llewllyn Thomp
son, Jr., an "aide memoire" or
informal note demanding that
the problem of insuring com
pliance with a test ban be sub
ordinated to reaching an im
mediate agreement on the sus
pension. Gromyko threatened to boy
cott the meeting unless hit
views were accepted.
But the allied governments
went ahead with plans to send
their delegates to Geneva and
await developments.
United Nations Secretary
General Dag Hammarskjold
returned to his New York
headquarters after conferring
with Lebanese President Ca
mille Chamoun "and Premier
Sami Solh and United Arab
Republic President Gamal Ab
del Nasser
Hammarskjold sought first
to try to get Nasser to stop the)
flow of aid from Syria to the
Lebanese rebels and secondly
to police the Lebanese-Syrian
border to cut the supply line.
Russia denounced all this as
intervention in domestic Arab
affairs and as threatening to
cause war in the Middle East.
But Lebanon was deter
mined to go aneaa wiin its ap
peal for help. And the United
States is pledged, if necessary,
to use troops in Lebanon's
support.
were about 10 per cent abovt
those of April 1957, while
most significantly firm
.costs rose only 3 per cent in
that period. Thus, arithmetic
favors the secretary." v ,
Benson touched the same
theme in an interview with
Brenner. Benson replied that
rising costs had hurt farmers
more than declining , price..
He estimated the . cost hjst
frnm 1920 to 1952 at IOdV
cent compared to only sixfC?
Egg Prices Rise v-i '
Assistant Agriculture . Sec
retary Marvin L. McClain
told senators three weeks ago
that agriculture, long the
weakest spot in the U.S. econ
omy, "has been a source of
strength in the current reces
sion." Somewhat earlier, the
department predicted a hike
in egg prices at the farm dur
ing the next few months..
That is big political news
of itself because egg money
usually is a reward of tha
farm wife. When prices are
right she is likely to be hap
py, perhaps happy enough to
vote Republican.
Dairy farmers do not have
it as good as the corn-hog,
corn-cattle feeder men and ,
there are other, soft spots. It
all adds up, however, to some
good news for the Republi
cans, of which they haven't
had much lately. -
New Ports Seen
On Columbia River
Portland (UPI) The
creation of at least 18 new
upriver ports on the Columbia
river by the year 2000 was
seen as a possibility today by
a Portland engineer.
Ray- E. Holmes, head of the
rivers and harbors section of
nhe Portland district of Army
engineers, told the American
Society of Civil Engineers
that a big increase in river
commerce is expected In the
future.
He cited two factors. They
are increased population and
industry which will require
more gasoline and other pe
troleum products and the
completion of dams and locks
in the stream which will
make navigation easier.
He said an engineers navi
gation study estimated that
tonnage carried on the Colum
bia system above Vancouver, .
Wash., would increase Irom
about 1,460,000 tons in 1955
to 9,860,000 tons in the year
2000.
Starts Saturday Morning
Petunias Marigolds Snaps
Annual Phlox Zinnia
Alyssum Celosia Perennials
Tomatoes Hot Peppers
BUY BEDDING and VEGETABLE
PLANTS BY THE FLAT ,(100
Plants) AND SAVE! . . f ,