o
G o '
O
o
A Sgttffa?,4, 1958 f
e-
T'jarye im Southern 'rcra
aadi The Maa Tribune'
gxccpt Saturday hy
MDFORD
.TING CO
North Fir St.
Ph. SP.2-S141
tOBEtT fllUHL. Editor
B CIKV ArivertUinff Uanivl
GEAALD LATHAM. Business Mct.
XRfC AI:C JR. Managing Editor
lARL H ADAMS. Cicy Editor
HARRf CHIPMA! Tele Editor
RirA!i JEETT. Sports Editor
OLIVE STARCHES, Society Editor
DAE atlCKSON, Circulation Mgr.
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ASSOCIATION
NATIONAL tDITORIAl
iSSOCfATlQN
Z -J J
Hjgltf fo Time
Afiem&rd and Jackson County
History from tte files at The
Mail Trfiune 10, 20, 30 and
40 yftrf)ago. 0
10 YBARS XGP
July 24. 1948 (Saturday)
Thirty-five Guernsey breed
ers of Jackson county tour
local herds.
The eight touring travel edi
tors from eastern papers say
they are impressed with the
greenness of the valley and
the clean, well-kept appear
ance of homes and farms here.
20 YEARS AGO
July 24, 1938 (Sunday)
Southern Pacific company
adds latest-model air-conditioned
sleeper to the train
from Portland to Ashland.
From Arthur Perry's "Ye
Smudee Pot" column: "The
valley was as full of smoke
Fri. as a room with 16 worn
en playing bridge"
nS0 YEARS AGO
uJuly 24. 1928 (Tuesday)
The mercurv climbed to
113V4 degrees in Grants Pass
yesterday.
Notes containing malicious
gossip have Been showing up
on local front lawns, causing
residents to pick up "with
great expedition" any pieces
of Daper which might appear
thoueh most ar "innocent"
scraps.
40 YEARS AGO
July 1 1310 V TT cuucauaj
From Reese Creek Riplets
"The farmers in this vicinity
whn Picnect to, thresh are
waitine on the machine."
O Miss Dorothy Conner writes
of a thrilling escape from the
Hun's clutches when the can
ten she was operating on the
French front was captured.
o Uhri't Tur I.Q.?
ki: 1 Maeriar:
aigQ av r" -
seveg sr eitfnt if axaellent; fi ar
it ood.
1. What Is meant by the
expression, "the quick and
the dead"?
& Approximately 81 years
aap, Thomas Edison announc
ed the invention of the tele
graph key, the phonograph, or
the, raqjo?
i. Nam the man. who came
to the U.S. from Scotland and
carter funded the vast system
tchich is nov the U.S. Steel
(CorgoVation.
1. Che tlfree wise monkeys
of Nikko are sid to represent
Vhat sang-
5. The human race is often
divided into five colors; name
them. ' 0
6. A ehiie globfl map on a
lighPblue field is the flag of
which international organiza
tion?
7. Which two sas are join-
ed by the Dardanelles and the
Bosphorus?
8. Lemons pnd bananas are
picked when green, or when
ripe?
9. What is the significance
of "VIP" as it refers to a per
n? 10. What "VIP" from the
White House is currently in
the limelight because of a
connection &vth Mr. Goldfine?
Answers: I. Tfce living and
the dead. 2. Phonograph. 3.
Andre- Carnegie. 4. "Hear
bo evil, speak no evil, see no
vil." 5. White, . black, red,
brown and yellow. 8. United
Nat$ns. 7. Black Sea and the
Mediterranian. 8. when green.
9. Very Important Person. 10.
Presidential Assistant Sher
man Sdams
Kuwait
Middle East tensions could explode next in the
waterless desert sheikdom of Kuwait, the British
protectorate on the northwest shore of the Persian
Gulf.
Sheik Abdullah as-Salim as-Sabah, the benev
olent but virtually absolute ruler of Kuwait, met
President Gamal Abdel Nasser of the United
Arab Republic twice in Damascus, Syria, on July
20, conferring at the same time with high Syrian
officials.
British and United States naval and air forces
in the Persian Gulf area are being bolstered.
Kuwait's importance to Britain and to the
United States is told in one word : Oil. Half of
the 207 million barrels of crude oil that Britain
imported in 1957 came from Kuwait. The Kuwait
Oil Company, the principal shipper, exported 405
million barrels during the year. -
Kuwait Oil is half British, half American.
Under an agreement of December 1951, Abdullah
receives 50 per cent of oil profits before U.S. and
British taxes. His take last year is reported at
$305 million. The British and American (Gulf)
companies split a similar melon.
pREAT Britain since'1899 has had a treaty re
lationship with the Kuwait dynasty, guaran
teeing control of foreign relations and defense. A
British political agent is stationed in the country
for these purposes, though Britain since 1914 has
recognized Kuwait as an "independent" govern
ment. The special relationship binds the Sheik
not to "cede or lease any portion of his territory
to any foreign government or national except
with the express authorization of the British gov
erment." Another American company in 1953 discover
ed oil in the Neutral Zone between Kuwait and
Saudi Arabia. And both states have granted
Japan offshore oil concessions on a 57 per cent
43 per cent profit basis favoring the Arabs.
In part because of a dispute over territory and
oil rights, Saudi Arabia has on occasion menaced
Kuwait, as it has other Arab sheikdoms protected
by Britain. The London "Economist" noted more
than two years ago : "The Ruler of Kuwait is no
toriously nervous of pressure from his big neigh
bors Saudi Arabia and Iraq."
Moreover, about half of Kuwait's '250,000
population is not native. Much of it comes from
Iraq. Abdullah paid a state visit to Iraq in May,
as the federation of Iraq
ratified.
"THERE is supposed to be a strong pro-Nasser
feeling within Kuwait made manifest during
the Suez crisis of 1956 by demonstrators seeking
the removal of all British subjects. According to
"U.S. News & World Report," Abdullah was "so
short of teachers that he allowed Egyptians and
pro-Nasser Palestinians virtually to take over the
school system.
Despite outside influences, the U.S. Com
merce Department reports: "Relations between
the state of Kuwait and
pany were maintained throughout (1957) ... on
a generally cordial basis, and the company began
systematic construction of large new facilities to
enable it to expand production." Abdullan is re
Dorted to turn over two-thirds of his vast oil reve
nues to welfare and the
which" is about the size of
A recently completed five-year plan cost $267
million. It encompassed new schools, public hous
ing, hospitals and a 2-million-gallon-a-day plant
i i i-n T7 T3 T5
to aisuii sea water lur umirung. u.i.iv.
Lebanese Election Violence
m
To choose a president to succeed President
Camille Chamoun will be
Lebanon Parliament on
July 31. Its 66 seats are
. Aia.a
the religious atimations oi me people, witn 6o
of the 66 held by Christians.
When elected in 1957, more than three-
fourths of the deputies were classified as Cham
oun supporters. However, some of these are now
listed as strongly opposed to the U.S. armed in
tervention. '
Although Chamoun
step down when his
23, his opponents demand that he quit as soon as
his successor is named. It was primarily to enforce
that demand, they say, that they continued the
armed revolt against him.
ND it is noteworthy
shop-closings forced
Beshara el-Khoury, to
from office in September
ernment was then the
that led to the election of Chamoun, considered
anti-Government. Chamoun in turn charged cor
ruption bribes taken bv deputies of the new Op
position to vote against
parliament and ordering
in July 1953.
These 1953 elections
violence. Four years later, the Opposition again
called strikes and otherwise demonstrated against
alleged Government interference in the election
process. Thus violence before elections has been
the usual Lebanon story,
those who ascribed the
Syrian-Egyptian machinations than to internal
combustion E.R.R.
Next?
and Jordan was being
the Kuwait Oil Com
running of the sheikdom,
Connecticut.
the ticklish task of the
reconvening Thursday,
allocated according to
Ail 1 "ilA
had to agree, finally, to
six-year term ends on Sept.
that riots, strikes and
Chamoun's predecessor,
speed up. his departure
1952. Corruption in gov
chief Opposition charge
him in dissolving the
elections lor a new one
also produced much
always pointed to by
present disorders less to
Dennis the Menace
'Dobs hbw wallpapsr cost
Britain, France Take
Roles in Summit Negotiations
By CHARLES M. McCANN
UPI Foreign News Analyst
Great Britain and France
seem to be taking the ball
away from the United States
in negotiations for a "sum
mit" confer
ence. If such a
conference is
held on the
the Middle
East crisis, it
is pretty sure
that British
Prime Minis
ter Harold
Charles M.
McCann
Ma c m il lan
and French Premier Charles
de Gaulle will have a full say
in preparations for it.
The Allied replies to Soviet
Premier Nikita S. Khrush
chev's demand for a confer
ence disclose a radical depart
ure from customary proced
ure. In the correspondence with
the Soviet government during
the last seven months on a
summit conference, British,
French and American notes to
Russia were practically iden
tical up to this week.
These notes also have fol
lowed pretty closely the view
point of President Eisenhower
and Secretary of State John
Foster Dulles.
This is not true of the re
plies to Khrushchev's belli
cose demand for an immediate
conference on the United
States and British troop land
ings in Lebanon and Jordan,
Macmillan Takes Lead
Acceptance of Khrushchev's
demand would have meant the
three Allies would have ap
peared before him and .Indian
Prime Minister Jawaharlal
Nehru to defend themselves
against his charges they were
aggressors.
iNaruraiiy xnere was no
chance the Allies would agree
to that.
But in their notes to Khrush
chev Tuesday, the Allied gov
ernments did agree to a sum
mit conference on their own
terms.
It is indicated strongly that
Macmillan took the lead in
insisting the replies meet
Khrushchev's demand at least
in part.
During the long negotia
tions for a summit conference
on general cold war issues,
Macmillan had been under
severe pressure not only by
the Labor Party but by the
British public to -work for a
summit conference on almost
any terms.
The French government, up
to the time De Gaulle took
over, had been favorable to
the conference idea.
Dulles had held back. He
had insisted there must be
proper preparation for a con
ference, to insure that Russia
could not make use of it as a
pure propaganda sounding
board.
Opposes Immediate Meeting
Macmillan, in, his note to
Khrushchev, said he agreed a
conference on the Middle East
would be "useful." He said it
should be held under the
United Nations Securi ty
Council.
De Gaulle did not favor an
immediate conference. H e
said the U.N. should continue
its meetings on the Middle
East. If the U.N. failed to
settle the crisis, he said, a
summit conference could be
held.
Eisenhower's note showed
clearly his reluctance to agree
to a special summit confer
ence on the Middle East.But
he said he was ready to hold
one under Security Council
procedure.
Washington dispatches say
Eisenhower agreed to an early
conference only under British
pressure.
Whatever happens with re
gard to the negotiations now
being conducted, it is indi
cated both Macmillan and
De Gaulle will have much
vert much ?
more to say than in the past
about Allied tactics.
It is also most likely that
German Chancellor Konrad
Adenauer will be getting into
the act. Through his ambassa
dors in Allied capitals, Ade
nauer has been following the
Middle Eastern negotiations
closely.
Washington Report
By William
BIPARTISAN
OPPORTUNITY
Washington The Eisenhow
er Administration has an op
portunity to broaden its do
mestic base of
support, to
share the
grievous bur-
den of the
Middle East
and possibly
even to obtain
some fresh
and useful
ideaa.
This would
seem the time
WUlam
to grasp the chance for genu
ine bipartisanship. The Demo
crats, it may be stated au
thoritatively, would welcome
it.
The two past Democratic
Presidents, Franklin D. Roose
velt and Harry S. Truman,
brought the Republican oppo
sition into the inner councils
at every foreign peril. Mr.
Roosevelt after 1940 created
a coalition war cabinet. The
post of Secretary of War went
to a Republican, Henry L.
Stimson. Another, Frank
Knox, became Secretary of
the Navy.
"DOTH the
Roosevelt and
Truman Administrat ions
made the present Secretary
of State, John Foster Dulles,
an intimate adviser with high
privileges. Except for a short
break while he was a member
of the Senate, Dulles kept, a
foot in the door on Demo
cratic foreign policy from
1940 to the last days of the
Truman era 12 years later.
The Eisenhower Adminis
tration has stayed coldly clear
of both Mr. Truman and his
Secretary of State, Dean
Acheson. This circumstance
has always been surprising.
In the present crisis it ap
pears" on any detached ob
servation to- be very poor
business. x
Every member of the na
tional Democratic leadership
Mr. Truman, Adlai Steven
son, Senator Lyndon Johnson
and Speaker Sam Rayburn
is backing the President loyal
ly in his movement of troops
into Lebanon.
This support will go on, in
any case, so long as the crisis
endures. There are few lead
ing Democrats who do not
wish "things had been done
quite differently in the long
past. All the same, the Demo
cratic hierarchy is determined
not to see the party making
mere irresponsible, harassing
attacks on the Eisenhower
Administration.
Careful intraparty liaison
accordingly is being main
tained. Mr. Truman, for illus
tration, has known in advance
what Senator Johnson, the
Senate Democratic leader,
would say in public.
THUS, there will be no Dem
ocratic "demand" on the
point. But very powerful
Democrats think all concern
ed including Mr. Eisenhower
would be better off if Mr.
Acheson were invited - in to
advise the Administration.
One Democrat so believing is
the one who must keep a
powerful and restive Senate
in line, Mr. Johnson.
Such an action to welcome
visiting Acheson back to
S. White
Ike's Message on
Changes in Veterans
Laws Long
Washington (CQ) Prest
dent Eisenhower evidently
has had some second thoughts
about asking Congress to over
haul veterans laws this elec
tion year.
Mr. Eisenhower has been
promising since 1956 to send
a message to Congress spell
ing out recommendations for
improving the patch-quilt of
laws covering such veterans
benefits as pensions and civil
service preference status. But
with adjournment less than
two months away, no such
message is in sight.
Associate Press Secretary
Anne W. Wheaton said there
has been discussion at the
White House about revising
veterans benefits but that it
has not crystallized into the
form of a message.
This is good news to Re
publicans in Congress who
Leading
He is sure to let the Amer
ican, British and French gov
ernments know that West
Germany has a vital interest
in the crisis. He realizes quite
clearly that if a big war broke
out over the Middle East or
any other issue, West Ger
many would be a battle
ground. S. White
the State Department would
Signal the world that the
really controlling people in
both parties are not going to
let the President down right
or wrong beyond our shore
line. And, indeed, they are
not.
Satisfy a strong private
Democratic Congressional de
mand for representation in
affairs at the planning stage.
As things stand, the Demo
crats are brought in only after
decision have been reached
and the balloon is already
going up.
Provide such representation
in the person of a man Ache
son who is already in a posi
tion of peculiar trust and con
fidence with both' Senator
Johnson and Speaker Ray-
burn not to mention Mr
Truman and Mr. Stevenson.
Make available to the Ad
ministration a man whose
credit with Europe and the
neutrals has remained very
high. Indeed, it is higher than
that of Mr. Dulles, a fact
known to every impartial per
son in Washington who main
tains some contact with for
eign officials here.
'
A CHESON himself is seeking
no appointment. As a pri
vate citizen, however, he has
some notions as to where we
might go from here in the
Middle East. He would like
tn see a fundamental Allied
to make Nasser of
Esrvot behave by marshalling
the vast latent economic pow
er of the Allies. Specifically,
he would:
1. Arrange with our friends
in Ethiopia for large water
conservation projects along
one of the two headwaters
of the Nile lying in that coun
try. This would make it pos
sible to interrupt Nasser's
water supply.
2. Be ready. If necessary,
to drive Nasser's cotton from
ho world's markets by loos
ing a flood of American cot
ton for dumping.
a RtockDile in Western Eu
rope including its abandoned
mmesguch massive quanti
ties of oil as largely to lift
from the Allies, the present
blackmail threat of a disrup
tion of their essential sup
plies from the Middle East.
There would De no inten
tion to destroy passer
even his presumed dream oi
some sort of a poky little
burnoose empire so long
this did not become part oi
any Soviet power complex.
(Copyright, 1958, ny, unuw
Feature Syndicates, Inc.)
60,661 Signatures
Obtained in State
Portland A total of 60,661
certified signatures are on
initiative petitions placing on
November's state ballot a con
stitutional amendment cover
ing the eligibility of persons
to serve in the legislature,
according to the Oregon Edu
cation association.
Cecil W. Posey, executive
secretary, said the signatures
are 12,519 more than the 48,-
142 necessary to qualify the
measure for the ballot.
Of the total, 2,356 signa
tures were obtained from resi
dents in Jackson "county.
Delayed
would be obligated to support
the President's recommenda
tions. Said one Republican
Representative up for reelec
tion this fall, "I've got enough
troubles already without tak
ing on the veterans."
Bradley Report
The President's long-promised
message was expected to
follow recommendations of
his special commission, head
ed by Gen. Omar N. Bradley,
which studied veteran laws.
Its recommendations, submit
ted to the President April 23,
1956, drew fire from the big
veterans' organizations. They
called them a brush-off of the
veterans.
The Bradley Commission
said that veterans who came
home from the war un
scathed should not expect spe
cial treatment from the Fed
eral Government. It recom
mended repealing pensions
for non-disabled veterans and
letting them rely on social
security. It also recommend
ed restricting the preference
for civil service jobs now en
joyed by veterans. It said this
preference should be limited
to veterans disabled while in
service.
These and other recom
mendations in ihe Bradley
Commission's 415-page report
were opposed by the Ameri
can Legion, American Veter
ans of World War II and
Korea (AMVETS) and Veter
ans of Foreign Wars. Together
they claim a membership of
over four million veterans.
The relatively small (25,
000 members) American Vet
erans Committee was the only
national veterans' organiza
tion to support the Bradley
Commission r e c o m menda
tions. Irving Lechliter, AVC
executive director, charged
the veterans organizations
have exerted pressure to keep
the President's veterans mes
sage inside the White House,
Called Too Drastic
Another factor in keeping
the message from reaching
Capitol Hill is the attitude
of the man who would receive
it for the House of Represen
tatives Chairman Olin E
Teague (D-Texas) of the House
Veterans Affairs Committee.
He believes the Bradley Com
mission recommendations are
too drastic to get anywhere in
Congress, even if the Presi
dent went all out to push
them through. He said a step-
by-step approach by Congress
not a ' sweeping directive
from the White House was
the way to overhaul veterans
laws,
Teague compared trying to
get the Bradley Commission
recommendations through
Congress to "trying to knock
over a tree by driving your
car into it. You would kill
yourself trying. But if you
took an ax, and chopped
away a little at a time, you
might get some place.".
President Eisenhower May
30, 1956, first promised to
send "specific recommenda
tions" to the Congress about
veterans benefits. He made
the promise again on Aug. 27,
1957, and again in his 1957
and 1958 budget messages.
In his 1958 budget message,
Mr. Eisenhower said: "Funda
mental changes have taken
place in our society in the
last several decades which re
quire us to reconsider the
laws providing veterans bene
fits and services which now
overlap other growing pub
lic benefit and welfare pro
grams. As I indicated last
summer, a message on veter
ans affairs will be sent to
the Congress at an early date.
In that message there will be
set forth for the considera-
"No man can tell whether he is rich or poor by turning to
his ledger. It is the heart that makes a man rich. He is rich
according to what he is, not according to what he has'
Henry Ward Beecher
o
Chapel Mortuary
Across from the Courthouse
Frank Morgan - Harold Snodgrass, FUNERAL DIRECTORS
DAY OR NIGHT PHONE SP 2-8030.
In the Day's News
By FRANK
The latest on the Middle
East:
The West moves toward a
summit conference with Rus
sia WITHIN THE UNITED
NATIONS.
Britain accepts Soviet Pre-
Communications
Letters 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.
Cruel and Wicked
To the Editor: Why do we
hate the negroes and other
colored people? We can find
lots of excuses but what
are the reasons?
Suppose a nice young negro
boy, delivering papers, rode
past your house on his bicycle
and all of a sudden five white
boys jumped on him beat
him with clubs, left him on
the sidewalk, bleeding and
half conscious. What would
you do? Would you go out to
the boy, pick him up in your
arms, even take him into your
house and nurse his wounds?
Call his parents and medical
aid? Suppose his parents
should come over for the boy
would you even allow them
into your house?
Yes, what would you do?
Maybe you'd just leave him
lying there, hoping someone
else would see and care or
maybe you'd just call the po
lice and feel you'd done your
duty? What would you do?
and what would you want
done if it were your boy?
Who teaches a child to hate
anyone? We all know that a
very young child will play
with a negro boy and love him
like a brother he will see
no offense in him but his
parents will. They will say
"You can't play with him
anymore, he's a negro." The
boy doesn't understand he
says "Why can't I play with
him I love him he's never
hurt me!" Yes who teaches
a child to hate?
The Bible says that "Un
less we become like a little
child (humble and full of
love) we cannot enter the
Kingdom of Heaven." It also
'says "Love thy neighbor as
thyself." This commandment,
and the Love of God being
first, are the most important
commandments.
The Bible says "Whosoever
is angry with his brother
without cause shall be in
danger of judgement." Who
is our brother and who Is our
neighbor? Jesus was without
sin, yet he was crucified
you say wnai a cruei ana
wicked people. Yet, what a
cruel and wicked people are
we.
(Name on File)
Medford
CONTRACT TALKS START
Detroit (UPD The United
Auto Workers and Bendix
Corp. started negotiations
here today for a contract cov
ering about 12,000 workers in
seven Bendix plants in Michi
gan, New Jersey, New York,
Indiana and California.
tion of the Congress recom
mendations for specific ad
justments and improvements
in the compensation, pension
and related programs which
will enable us to discharge
our national responsibilities
to veterans with the greatest
possible equity to all con
cerned."
(Copyright 1958.
Congressional Quarterly Inc.)
JENKINS
mier Krushchev's proposal for
a summit conference on the
Middle East crisis, provided
the conference is held within
the U.N. Security Council.
The White House calls this"
"an orderly procedure," and
(-says the U.S. will go along
if it is generally desired.
WHY is this interesting?
"Well, what we want ii
a solution that will allow
British and American troops
to withdraw from the Middle
East without loss of face.
That would calm the ten
sion. It would get the fuse
farther away from the powder
keg.
rpHAT prompts this question:
- Why did we send troops
into Lebanon in the first
place?
rpHAT question makes thia
A dispatch, which came over
the wires several days ago,
rather interesting:
"West German intelligence
officials say the landing of
Americans in Beirut (Leban
on's capital) MAY HAVE DIS
RUPTED SOVIET PLANS TO
SEND VOLUNTEERS to bol
ster rebel forces in Lebanon.
"Officials said Russia be
gan organizing the volunteers
late last month. The Czech
army (Czechoslovakia is a
Russian satellite) reportedly
was told by Russia that satel
lite army volunteers were
wanted to accompany Soviet
volunteers possibly to Leb
anon." THAT is to say:
We BEAT RUSSIA TO
THE PUNCH.
And
No shooting followed.
MONEY
At Crater Finance you may
borrow for any worth
while purpose on your
FURNITURE - AUTO
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and repay in monthly In
stallments. You may
choose the terms most suit
able to you up to 24
months.
Loins may be paid in ad
vance or in full at any time.
Crater Finance
CORPORATION t
135 Pine Street
Central Point
Phone NO 4-1273 c
Frank Wilkinson, Mgr.
Convenient Parking
Do you know what
Frankenstein said to
his teenage son,
"Frankie" (he always
calls him Frankie)?
No you can't go to
The Craterian to see
"THE FLY"! Ifs too
scarey even for you
it might scare the
bolt out of your
headl
1