)
MAIL TRIBUNE, MSDFCRD, ORI.
4A Monday. Jun 30, 1958
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Flight '6. Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the , files of The
Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30 and
45) years ago.
.
10 YEARS AGO
June 30, 1948 (Wednesday)
Medford's 70-man National
Guard contingent returns by
train from summer training
at Camp Clatsop and marched
through town from the SP
depot to the armory.
, Yesterday's thunder showers
brought hailstones as big as
"pullet eggs," puncturing the
tops of convertibles and
knocking off branches and
limbs of trees.
20 YEAR AGO
June 30, 1938 (Thursday)
To something new Med
ford's new electric traffic con
trol system was added some
thing old, the familiar whistle
which sounded with the yel
low caution light in the old
system.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: "A num
ber of citizen are batching,
while their better Ms are va:
cationing, and between mow
ing the lawn and keeping the
kitchen sink clear $f dirty
dishes, they have no time for
golf." e
30 YEARS AGO
June 30, 1928 (Saturday)
John Moffet thought his
garter was slipping while on
an outing this week, but when
he hiked his trousers to in
vestigate he discovered not
only his garter, but a garter
snake to boot.
Arthur Perry says in his
column: "The local drift is
eow toward setter dogs, that
fe5vill not remain seated."
40 YEARS AGO
June 30. 1918 (Sundiy)
This has been the hottest
day of the year so far, with
the mercury retching 102V2
degrees abfeut 5 p.m.
Cowboys in silk shirts,
bright collars and spurred
boots are arriving for the big
roundup this week in Ash
What's Yw I.Q.1
Nine or ten correct is seeerier;
even or eight is excellent; five er
six is good.
1. Is the term "Plimsoll
line" a osurveying, mining,
nautical, or medical term?
2. Is Percheron the name of
a breed of swine, horses, or
cattle?
30 Which is the earth's most
abundant metallic element?
4. Does a biennial plant last
one, two, or three years?
5. Samuel L. Clemens used
what pen name? ,
6. Was butter, sugar, or
meat the first to be rationed
during W.W. II?
7. Name the singer who was
called the "Swedish Nightin
gale." 8. Who was the first Presi
dent to occupy the executive
mansion? e
9. The male, female or both
sexes of crickets, produce ethe
chirping sound?
10. An absolute vacuum has
never been produced; true or
fake?
Answers: 1 Nautical term.
2 Horses. 3 Aluminum. 4
Two years. 5 Mark Twain.
6 Sugar. 7 Jenny Lind. 8
John Adams. 9 Only ihe
malt. 10 True.
ft 5 Up to Nasser
What happens next in Lebanon rests in
large part with Gamal Abdel Nassar. The head
of the United Arab -Remiblic Eervpt and Syria,
with Yemen affiliated will naturally do what
ever he thinks will bring closer the union of all
Arab states under his Hegemony.
No matter how often he denies instigating the
Lebanese disorders, the whole world from Wash
ington to Moscow to Peking suspects that they'd
begin to subside once he gave the world to "lay
off." Whether his price for a lay-off order is one
that the West can't or
actually know just now except UN becretary
General Dag Hammarskjold.
I
F NASSER absorbs Lebanon, it will be hard to
keep Iraq, Jordan
from slipping down the voracious Nasser gullet.
The pro-West Chamoun regime in Beirut could
of course be bolstered for. the time being by a
UN armed intervention. At the same time, the
foreign troops on Arab soil could rally almost all
Arabs around the Egyptian colonel as when
Israeli, British and French troops moved to over
throw him in the autumn of 1956.
Yet the Nasser dream could degenerate' into
a nightmare if Russian troops ("volunteers"?)
landed in force under the pretext of. counter
balancing a UN intervention. What Nasser likes
is to play Russia and the West off against each
other without real risk of being dominated by
either.
He did make an arms deal with Czechoslo
vakia and later an aid agreement with the Krem
lin, but then complained
quality of Russian aid actually received. When
he took over-Syria in February 1958 he removed
or downgraded Communist or pro-Russian offic
ials and Army officers
the fable of what happens when a camel gets his
nose under the tent is
what s true of a camel
. ..
Radiation Peril in Peace
It isn't only fallout from bomb testing that
can expose us to dangerous radiation. There's a
radioactive danger in all
omic developments, those
preparation.
The U.S. Public Health Service initiates on
Tuesday, July 1, a new
cans to the perils in peaceful radiation use. For
one thing, doctors and dentists as well as then
patients are to be warned against indiscriminate
resort to X-rays m diagnoses.
THE danger today, say
so much from a single
X-rays, or bombing tests,
emanations, or radioisotopes in medical treat
ment. Each of these is
mal effect by itself. The
an accumulation; many
gether can produce more than a modicum.
And even while the present generation may
not be harmed, the next one may be getting en
dangered. That's because radiation can mutate
the human genes, and genetic mutation can pol
lute the characteristics passed on by parents to
children. This consideration lies behind the argu
ments on whether there really ,can be any such
animal as a "clean" atomic bomb. E.R.R.
De Gaulle, 1958 and 1945
-When Gen. de Gaulle lands again in Algeria
on Wednesday, July 2, he wTill have been head
of the French government for a month plus two
days. During that time he has played his. cards
differently from the way he played them after
becoming civilian head of France in 1945.
Well, he lias different cards to play. On
Nov. 13, 1945 he was chosen interim president
of the Provisional government by unanimous
vote of the Constituent Assembly elected in Octo
ber (also with provisional tenure). On June 1,
1958, he was chosen premier, with special pow
ers, by a 329-224 vote of the National Assembly
of the Fourth Republic.
Only three days after de Gaulle was in office
in 1945, he .threatened to resign. The issue was
Communist insistence on getting the war, inter
ior (police power) or foreign af faii-s post in the
new government.
OOWEVER, on Nov. 21 he put together a Cab-
inet in which each of the three leading parties
in the Assembly Communist (152 members),
Socialist (142), his own Popular. Republican, or
MRP (138) had five seats. The Boss himself
headed the new Defense ministry, which replaced
the former ministries of War,. Marine and Air.
On Dec. 12, the government granted government
employees a wage increase, after they had pulled
a brief nation-wide strike for one.
The Assembly, in "framing, a new constitu
tion, was showing itself hostile to de Gaulle's de
mand1 for a more powerful executive. When the
delegates seemed receptive to a Communist-Socialist
move for a 20 per cent cut in military ex
penditures, de Gaulle on Jan. 1, 1946, threaten
ed to resign on that issue. On Jan. 20, he carried
out the threat.
These days he has shown himself, publicly
at least, far less recalcitrant. E.R.R. j
won't .pay, nobody may
and Saudi Arabia also
about the quantity and
in Damascus. After all,
from the Arabian, and
would be true of a bear.
-E.R.R.
manner of peaceful at
divorced from military
program to alert Ameri
the experts, comes not
source or radiation like
or atomic power plant
apt to have an infinitesi
danger is, rather, from
infinitesimals added to
Dennis the Menace
W dO 1 W TO DRESS UPTDCCm HERE?
WW AM I TRYIN'T&AZP?
Government Racks
Up 25th Deficit
Year in Past 29
By LYLE C. WILSON
United Press International
Washington (UPI) The
U.S. Government this mid
night will rack up its 25th
Treasury defi
cit in 29 years,
which means
the purchas
ing power of
the dollar in
your pocket
may shrink
some more.
The process is
known as
Lyie c. wusoa creeping infla
tion. Twenty-nine years ago on
this very day the people of
the United States were about
to learn that their Federal
government had been frugally
administered througtt another
year. The people were neither
impressed nor much interest
ed in those upcoming statistics
of the fiscal year 1929.
Low taxes, treasury sur
pluses and substantial reduc
tions of the national debt were
what the voters long had de
manded and received from
their public servants. The
thought that the government
could and would thereafter
over the years spend itself to
ward economic trouble in a
scarcely interrupted series of
treasury deficits this thought
would have been incredible in
1929.,
Danger to America?
The 25 deficit years of the
past 29 would have been as
unthinkable back there in the
'20s as is incredible now the
thought that enough more of
the same may be in the works
to do serious harm to the
American way of life.
Maybe it can't happen here.
But, it might! More precisely,
it is beginning to happen now.
Creeping! There will not,
however, be much public in
terest in the splatter of 1958
fiscal year-end figures from
the Treasury. Fiscal '58 ends
at midnight tonight. The citi
zens will be playing a cruel
practical joke on themselves,
however, if they continue to
refuse to be interested in what
takes place as this fiscal year
ends and in the fiscal years to
come.
There has been, of course,
another round of inflationary
deficit spending, the Treasury
going about 3 billion dollars
in the red. The national debt
has swollen about 260 billion
dollars in 29 years. Perhaps
another little 3 billion won't
do us any harm. A deficit of
8 to 10 billion dollars is like
ly in the fiscal year which be
gins tomorrow. That will be
fiscal '59.
The Government has had to
borrow despite collection of
taxes in the multi-billions of
dollars. For the total sum of
those taxes there is no numer
ical comparison in this world,
only in the astronomical sta
tistics of outer space.
The 50-Cent Dollar
This is dull stuff. Not so
dull is the explosive fact that
such deficit spending could
and may rattle the U. S. econ
omy unless it is checked.
Health of the U.S. economy is
judged considerably in terms
of the dollar which, as of now,
is worth about 50 cents com
pared to 1939 .purchasing
power.
The US. Government is a
going coaeern right enough,
but going where? On the rec
ord of the past 29 years it is
going toward trouble if it con
tinues to live beyond its in
come. The citizen's trouble
will be with his pocket money
and his cash in the bank.
Consider a citizen who put
dollar in the bank back
there in 1939 and withdrew it
today. This citizen lives, for
example, in Washington, D.
C., and needs the dollar for
trolley fare. The 1939 buck he
banked would buy then 10
rides to and from work. It
would buy him only five rides
today. The same goes for baby
shoes, rent or whatever. Per
haps the citizen now is earn
ing twice his 1939 salary,
Lucky guy!
Maybe it can't happen here,
It has been happening, how
ever for nearly 30 years. In
flation is a slow though dead
ly poison.
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'for publica
tion is permissible. The Mail
Tribune reserves the right to
edit all letters with an eye to
clarification and condensation.
Letters submitted for publica
tion must not exceed 400 words.
The - letters printed in this
;olumn do not necessarily repre
sent the views of the paper, in
fact the contrary Is often the
case.
Weather Cycles
To the Editor: That the
weather in southern Oregon
does undergo various cycles
and changes was related to
this writer around 1912 by
the older residents of Wood
ville and Gold Hill.
The old-timers did remem
ber when the surrounding
hills were placer mined by
meriting winter snows, also
how thunder showers fell in
the summer time. Then too,
there was the Rogue river
Canal company that started
construction of a high line
irrigation system and in an un
usual wet year in June the
general superintendent was
admitted as saying that "if the
weather rains like this in
southern Oregon the people
need no irrigation."
For other reasons (unknown
to us) the canal system was
never completed. As a general
rule we have noticed that a
winter season of deep snow
fall there is much ' less fog,
although there are no two sea
sons that are exactly alike.
Bert Kissinger,
520 Boardman, .
. Medford
Idleness Problem
To the Editor: As a person
who is vitally interested in
the welfare of young people,
I too am concerned about the
"juvenile" problem. Like the
weather, we are so inclined,
to "talk" about it and do
nothing.
It's my personal observa
tion that idleness is 40 per
cent, the real reason. Until
we give employment to these
young fellows,. we can expect
no improvement. ' . , ,
I happen to have "person
ally" a group of 16-year-olds,
who would willingly ' work
and earn their way, if given
a chance. Their parents have
"put them on their own," be
cause they are "big enough"
to be self-sustaining. r
After pleading attempts to
obtain employment, these
kids are about ready to give
up and join the ranks of the
"least resistance" to earn a
little cash for necessities.
It's a very tragic and sad
state to see otherwise fine
and wholesome young boys
deteriorate in morals and
courage because of the indif
ference of us adults.
I would suggest that more
of you people give these boys
encouragement and back it
up with something more con
crete than talk. 1 know for a
fact some of these kids will
work, and work hard, if giv
en a chance. And if you are
really concerned in helping, I
can furnish you with the
names of boys asJio will justi
fy your confidence, by drop
ping a card tormy address.
Mary . Williams,
913 North Central ave.
Medford,
Matter of Fact
By Joseph Alsop
THE GOVERNMENT'S
DISARRAY
Washington In close to a
quarter - century of government-watching,
this reporter
has never seen
the govern
ment of the
United States
in such disar
ray as it is to
day. There is
the thought
that crowds
out every
other, after
Joseph Alsop
the first
alarming look at what may be
called post-Goldfine Wash
ington.
The worst moments of
Franklin Roosevelt's and Har
ry Truman's administrations
were not like this, possibly be
cause neither Roosevelt nor
Truman ever enjoyed the pro
longed, almost universal adu
lation that President Eisen
hower enjoyed, in his first
term.
Very soon after the famous
hundred days, the opposition
to Roosevelt became vocal and
sometimes even vicious. Tru
man too, had only a short hon
eymoon period, after which he
had to fight strong and deter
mined enemies on every side.
Maybe a determined opposi
tion is a good thing for an ad
ministration, as exercise is
good for the body.
In any case, the Roosevelt
and Truman administrations
got over their rough patches
without any of the symptoms
of near-demoralization that
meet the eye in Washington
today. There was never any
sense of the whole show being
out of control. There was
never any feeling that the
man in the White House
would not or could not rally
his troops and fight back, giv
ing his enemies as good as he
got.
IN WASHINGTON today,
however, you get just that
sense and just that feeling.
They have grown up by
stages, and now they have be
gun to be pretty over-powering.
First there were the
Sputniks, which destroyed
confidence in the President's
defense program. Then there
was the recession, and the
long uncertainty of the Ad
ministration's post - recession
economic policy.
Now there is the" curious
case . of Sherman Adams,
which has somehow been
much the worst of all. This
case is the sort of thing that
is bound to happen from time
to time in modern govern
ment, . which has such enor
mous favors to dispense to
private interests. The mistake
that was made is a mistake
that officials can easily and
often innocently wander into,
if they are excessively easy
going, like Harry Truman's
Harry Vaughan, or passionate
ly parsimonious, like Dwight
Eisenhower's Sherman Adams.
Yet Adams' vicuna coat has
been a much more deadly
blow than Harry Vaughan's
deep freezes. The reason was
summed up in this poignant
sentence of the President's, "I
need him." No President has
ever depended upon a subor
dinate as the President de
pends upon, Adams. Some of
those who should know even
argue that the President's
health will not stand the add
ed strain, if the still-developing
story of Bernard Goldfine
and his friends finally forces
Adams out of the White
House. .
RIGHT there, of course, is
the central human tragedy
of this whole sorry business.
President Eisenhower did not
wish to seek a second term
after the sharp warning of his
heart attack. He was per
suaded to seek a second term,
by those around him with
Sherman Adams in the lead,
by those in his party who had
not rallied to his side, and by
his. adulators in the press who
are now bitterly attacking
him.
If the President had fol
lowed his own inclinations,
laying down his heavy burden
in 1956 he might have gone
off to his farm in Gettysburg
in a golden blaze of glory. But
he yielded to the persuasions
that came from so many sides.
He carried the burden into an
other term. His luck ran out.
And for reasons that one can
easily deduce from those three
Doisnant words "I need him"
the President seems to be un
able to respond to 'the harsh
challenge of his new situa
tion. ' .
The old, Hagerty-planned
gestures are made. Some of
them are pretty appalling ges
tures, like the contrived visit
to George Washington's sword
of honor, which was also a
"gift." In any case, whether
good or bad, the Hagerty-ges-tures
no longer have the old
effect. And yet there is no
substitute for them.
Nor is this, alas, the end of
the story. Anyone who has
seen the Lebanese crisis at
first hand can predict with
certainty that the challenges
that confront the President l
3
Relations Between Russia, UAR
Entering Cooling-Off Period
By CHARLES M. McCANN
UPI Foreign News Analyst
Relations between Soviet
Russian leaders and President
Gamal Abdel Nasser of the
United Arab
Republic seem
to be entering
a cooling-off
period.
Nasser Sat
u r d a y sailed
for a visit to
President Tito
of Yugoslavia.
Russia has
made Nasser
Charles M.
McCann
its chief instrument in its cam
paign of penetration into the
Middle East.
Russia's relations with Tito,
at the same time, are near the
breaking point.
Dispatches from Cairo say
Washington Report
By William
1600 PENNSYLVANIA
Washington Sixteen hun
dred Pennsylvania Avenue in
Washington has long since re
placed No. 10
D o w n i n g
Street in Lon
don as the
world's most
s i g n i f i cant
street address.
The White
House, at the
Wash ington
address, is ex-
wuiant s. white ecutive Head
quarters of the United States
of America and actually of
all the free world. Downing
Street, as the Prime Minister's
place, is the center of the
parliamentary and adminis
trative life of Great Britain
and, indirectly, of the sprawl
ing British Commonwealth.
But the White House is in
fact the center and the symbol
of the vast influence in this
world of the whole British
American race. It, too, is the
symbol of our national adapta
tion of that Tace in the large,
tough, melting-pot society that
has so enriched this erstwhile
outpost of the now dead Brit
ish Empire.
NOWHERE on earth is so
much power exercised in
so small a place as in the
White House. And nowhere
on earth not even in the
smoky-looking, Charles Dick
ens sort of place that is No.
10 Downing Street is so
much power held with so little
pomp.
For the White House,, apart
from the ugly, functional an
nexes that are felled the West
and the East Wings, is in ap
pearance just that. It is simply
a large house, white in color
and Colonial in design, with
big. still grounds.
This correspondent does
not mean to try to pass it off
sentimentally as just a vine
bowered cottage. The point
is that it; looks like some
body's house if a well
heeled somebody's and not
the least like the keystone of
a massive officialdom and the
place where - modern history
is largely made.
The buildings on either side
look far more likely suited for
such roles. One, the squat,
heavy Treasury Building
looks about like what it is, a
kind of super-national bank.
THE other is a fantastically
elegant, ginger-bready sort
of structure topped with
cornices and curlicues and
filled with great, ornate stair
ways, gilt and marble : and
festoons of every kind:
This is the old State De
partment building, and it is
very much in character. One
look at it and you can imagine
tall silk hats, diplomats, sec
ret treaties. But this build
ing is now used for the over
flow of the second-string of
fices attached to the White
House proper. In this estab
lishment, the bigger you are
the less impressive is your
office.
It is not physical descrip-
today are far milder than the
challenges that will confront
him tomorrow or the day
after. With our defense ex
posed as terrifyingly inade
quate, with our economy still
in mid-slump, with Sherman
Adams still in the .White
House, the whole long-established
system of American
foreign relations also looks
like coming apart at the
seams. So still worse disarray
must be expected in the
future.
1958 New York
Herald Tribune Inc. '
bm'i Ntgltcf Slipping
FALSE TEETH
Do falsa teeth drop, slip or wobble
when you talk, eat, laugh or sneeze?
.Don't be annoyed and embarrassed
3T such handicaps. FASTEETH, aa
'alkaline (non-arid) powder to sprin
kle on your plates, keeps false teeth
more firmly set. Gives confident feel
ing of security and added comfort.
Kn cntmmv vrwiv t tru ,.--. n- fL
u
that Nasser hopes to make his
visit to Tito without antagon
izing Russia. '
How that can happen, it is
difficult to see. It is more like
ly that the Russians will re
gard Nasser's visit as a diplo
matic slap which it seems
to be.
A brief Belgrade dispatch
June 13 quoted an official
spokesman is saying that Nas
ser would make the visit.
At that time, the Russian
ana ninese communist re
gimes were bitterly attacking
Tito as a renegade, and the an
nouncement caused some sur
prise.
Relations Become Worse
Russian-Yugoslav relations
became even worse when it
was announced xon June 17
that Hungarian revolt leaders
S. Whit
tions, however, that are pri
marily intended here. What is
sought more is to suggest the
human atmosphere and the
smell of the White House.
This atmosphere is dry and
under-played and even a bit
homey. This smell is rather
like that of a home where
the floors are always well
waxed.
Nowhere are there obtru
sive guards. There is none
of that marching and stamp
ing importantly about, none
of the feeling of concealed
Tommy guns and so on, that
might be expected in such a
place at such a time in his
tory. INDEED, there are Mayors'
offices in this country, and
any number of Governors' of
fices, where everybody takes
it bigger, so to speak, and
where there is a far greater
aura of brass and braid.
Out on the street is a some
what shabby business district
that could be lifted up and
put down in nearly any city in
the United States - without
seeming out of place. This
street, but for literal geog
raphy, is as far away from
the White House as Oklahoma
City or Omaha.
For the White House is
the only one of the six faces
of official Washington that,
in a benign sense, is a false
face. It looks absolutely noth
ing at all like what it really
is this gardened, quiet house
where Lincoln emancipated
the slaves, where Wilson pro
claimed a world parliament,
where Franklin Roosevelt pre
pared the destruction of Hit
ler and Tojo, where Harry S.
Truman ushered in the atomic
age.
(Copyrighi, 1958. by United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.)
-
Prudential Invests
$2 Million in Qregon
Portland Investment of
$2,404,271 . in Oregon real
estate loans . by the western
home office of the Prudential
Insurance company of Amer
ica during the first five
months of. 1958, has been an
nounced by Ed Day, vice pres
ident in charge of western
operations.
Of the total $1,811,819
was for' residential purposes,
$412,652 for commercial and
industrial properties, and
$179,800 for farm loans.
Reasonable Funeral
(PRICED FOR EVERYONE)
' i r g
v LADY ATTENDANT -
FRIENDLY,
Imre Nagy and Pal Maleter
had been executed. Nagy had
been arrested after the Rus
sians induced him to leave the
Yugoslav Embassy in Buda
pest, promising him safe con
duct. Later Tito had been
promised that Nagy would not
be tried. The Russian treach
ery naturally outraged him.'
Because of the increased
bitterness between Tito and
the Kremlin, it seemed pos
sible that Nasser's visit might
be called off.
But it was officially dis
closed in Cairo on June 23
that Nasser would go through!
with his plan. . .
Cairo dispatches say that
Nasser will try to draw Tito
toward the "neutralist" bloc
This, Cairo argues, would tr
preferable froni the Sovit
viewpoint than a move
Tito toward closer relttioi
with the allies.
Any such hope seems ov
optimistic. Since Tito brok
with the late Josef Stalin i
1948, he has shown a dete
mination to follow his oti
course and not to tie hime.li
to any bloc.
If any "selling" is done a
the result of Nasser's visit,
Tito is likely to do it.
Is Getting Anxious
It is pretty certain that Nas
ser is, as reported, getting
somewhat anxious over the
extent to which he has tied
Egypt's economy to Russia.
It is pretty certain also that
his visit to Russia in May was
a most limited success. Nasser
did not seem to be much im
pressed by what he saw and
heard.
Tito is sure to point out to
Nasser emphatically, that Sov
iet Russia is a dangerous and
treacherous friend. He is sure
to remind Nasser that Russia
cancelled a 275 million dollars
credit to Yugoslavia when his
current dispute with the
Kremlin started. o
One angle of the situation
is that Prime Minister Jawa
harlal Nehru of India, Nas
ser's fellow "neutralist," has
condemned the Russian attack
on Tito as an interference in
Yugoslavia's internal affairs.
He also has criticized the exe
cution of Nagy.
In all, it is likely that Sov
iet leaders will be watching
developments anxiously for
the 10 days to two weeks,
starting Wednesday, . during
which Nasser will be Tito'i
guest.
Veteran Pendleton
Councilman Dies
Pendleton (UPI)
Longtime Pendleton City
Councilman Jack Kennedy,
70, died in a hospital Sunday
after a heart attack.
Kennedy had worked for 1
the State Highway Depart
ment in past years and was
active in civic affairs here.
Kennedy had recently filed
for re-election to the city
council.
During the past few years
he had conducted . wrestling
matches in Eastern Oregon
with his son who survives
him.
A RARE PROFIT
Miami Beach (UPI)
A Roman com about 1,500
years old was found in a
Miami Beach parking meter
and it netted the city 20
cents profit. A rare ,coin
dealer declared the indent
two-cent piece vir ully
worthless but he fvf titf)
officials a quarter fa- ife gift
to be generous."
perl;
Funeral
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