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4 Monday, July 28, IMS
MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, ORE.
MEDFO
UNE
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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
July 28, 1948 (Wednesday)
City water department em
ployees held their annual pic
nic last weekend at Big Butte
spring, source of the city's
water supply.
From (Side Glances): Post
master Frank DeSouza head
ed homeward with $20 worth
of groceries in a paper bag."
20 YEARS AGO
July 28. 1938 (Thursday)
o
Four blueblood bulls have
been chasing blackberry pick
Gers near Pleasant creek.
From Arthur Perry's "Ye
Smudge Pot" column: "A
number of politically-minded
around here declare they are
'liberals' without knowing
what it means, either."
30 YEARS AGO
July 28, 1928 (Saturday)
Herbert Hoover, presiden
tial nominee, is heading this
way to try his luck with
Rogue river steelheads.
More decorated private
cars are need for the Amer
ican Legion convention's pa
triotic parade.
40 YEARS AGO
July 28, 1918 (Sunday)
Sixty-five women hold po
sitions on Jackson county
school boards.
Treichler-Peirson, Inc.. auto
mobile dealers, have moved
to 1 a" r g e r quarters in the
Garnett-Corey building at the
corner of Main and Grape
sts.
What's Your I.Q.?
Nine or ten correct is superior:
seven or eight is excellent; five or
sn is good.
1. Does Easter always fall
on a date before the first day
of spring?
2. With what sports do you
associate these names: Babe
Ruth, Bill Tilden, Bobby
Jones?
3. What government agency
is indicated by the initials
T. V. A.
4. What building is repre
sented on the back of the $5
Bill? o
o
5. Did the birth rate in the
U. S. increase or decrease dur
ing World War II?
6. Name the seven colors
of the rainbow.
7. Is the esophagus the
passage for food to the stom
ach, or air to the lungs?
8. What is a caisson?
9. Name the President who
subsequently became Chief
Justice of the Supreme Court
10. Which is the larger at
birth, a bear or a porcupine?
Answers: 1. No. (II cannot
precede the spring equinox).
2. Baseball, Tennis, Golf. 3.
Tennessee Valley Authority.
4. The Lincoln Memorial. 5.
increased. 6. Red, orange, yel
low, green, blue, indigo, vio
let. 7. Food ! stomach. 8.
Artillery ammunition wagon.
9. William Howard Taft. 10.
Porcupine.
. Idiosyncratic Lebanon
Mountainous Lebanon, like mountain coun
tries in general, is a stew of contradictions. Add
to the mixture the fact that Lebanon was under
French mandate from 1920 to 1941 and now has
a government based on the French parliamentary
system. Stir in the fact that the population is
about half Moslem and half Christian. Season
with an herb rare among Arab states orienta
tion towards the West and you begin to get the
savor of this idiosyncratic nation.
The London "Times" has called Lebanon
"pre-eminently ... a country of gifted money
makers." Like France, it has a prosperous and
influential middle class. Like the French, the Leb
anese have a taste for violence and a talent for
nonchalance. Taxis take U.. S. correspondents to
the headquarters of Salaam and other warring
chieftains; their telephone lines have not been
cut.
The Lebanese army maintains an Indonesian
aloofness towards the rebels. In the midst of this
odd civil war oil flows through the Lebanese
pipelines at pre-Suez levels. Calm is the constant
companion of chaos.
THE Lebanese parliament which elects a Presi
dent to succeed Camille Chamoun is typically
idiosyncratic. The seats are alloted on a party
basis but also by religious confession. Under a re
distribution put through a year ago, the alloca
tion of the 66 members is: Maronites (of the Ro
man Catholic Uniate faith), 20 seats; Sunni Mos
lems, 14; Shia Moslems, 12; Greek Orthodox, 7;
Druses, 4; Greek Catholic, 4; Armenian Ortho
dox, 3; Minorities (Armenian Catholic, Roman
Catholic, Protestant, Jewish), 2.
Lebanon is a mosiac of at least 15 different
religious communities, and equity as among the
sects is required by the constitution. Moreover,
by agreement, the President of the republic is a
nnstian usually a Maromte the Prime Min
ister a Sunni Moslem.
The idiosyncrasy extends ever further. Leb
anon's pre-World War II Christian majority of
53 per cent has given way to a slight Moslem ma
jority. But because the whole structure ,of the
government is based on recognition of a Chris
tian majority, no new census has been taken. The
delicate religious balance is maintained by re
fusing citizenship to any sizeable number of the
more than 100,000 Palestinian refugees estimated
to be in Lebanon.
THE Palestinians are
cal Communists carrying on the open revolt
against the government of Chamoun. Under the
constitution the President, who cannot immed
iately succeed himself, is elected to a six-year
term by the parliament, as m France. The Presi
dent appoints the premier, who is responsible to
parliament. The president can dissolve parlia
ment and call for new elections.
Lebanon was the first Middle East state to en
dorse the Eisenhower Doctrine. The government
victory in parliamentary elections last year was
seen as really a vote for the West' as against
Lgypt and the Soviet Union. But over and above
the pro-West views of
Minister. Charles Malik, Lebanon, an Arab
league member, is first of all an Arab state. Dur
ing tKe Soviet-Western contention over Syria last
September, Malik told Parliament that Lebanon
would aid Syria against any attack, despite his
administration s open disagreement with the
pro-Soviet Syrian regime. E.R.R.
First Increase
When we pay four instead of three cents post
age on and after Friday, Aug. 1, as the basic
rate on a first-class letter, and seven instead of
six cents for an airmail one, we're paying the
first letter mail increase in 26 years. Know any
thing else, the Post Office Department had asked
in proposing a five-cent rate for out-of-town let
ters, that hasn't gone up in price for 26 years?
The one-cent increase amounts to 16 2-3 per
cent in airmail, 33 1-3 per cent in letter mail.
Know anything else, the Department asks again,
that has cost only one-third more over 26 years?
In that period the average retail city prices of
food have risen 185 per cent, of rent 45 per cent,
of wearing apparel, 125 per cent.
The new rates are supposed to boost postal
revenues by $550 million a year. Don't think,
however, that this means an end to the postal
deficit. This had been estimated in the Budget
as $676 million next fiscal year. Also, in raising
postal rates Congress raised postal wages by an
estimated $265 million.
IF YOU grumble at paying four cents to mail a
letter today, you might reflect that when the
nation was founded in
send one 200 miles (rates
m parcel post today). Even for only 50 miles it
was 7y2 cents. In the early days you had to pay
something for delivery to your home or office.
too.
Even when rates were
cost 25 cents to send a letter the maximum dis
tance. And when the basic letter rate did go as
low as three cents up to 3000 miles in 1851. this
was only for a half-ounce,
ior an ounce now. bo your great-great-grandfather
would have undoubtedly said vou have-little
cause to grumble in 1958.
prominent among the
Chamoun and Foreign
in 26 Years
1789 it cost 15 cents to
varied bv distance, as
reduced in 1810 it still
as against four cents
E.R.R.
Dennis the Menace
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jTOUGMTA Gm US ENOUGH FOOM IN THE POOU '
Mcrf fer of Fact by
BACK TO ADAMS
Washington Even the Mid
die Eastern Munich has not
made the Republicans forget
the problem
of S h e r m an
Adams. Loud
though rather
tentative sighs
of relief are
going up. be
cause the word
has again been
passed that
nothing has
T J J
Joseph Alsop cnangea, dna
Adams will go when the time
comes.
The sighs are rather on the
basis of "I'll believe it when
I see it." But the relief is real
enough all the same. At the
crucial moment, the catastro
phe in Iraq forcibly switched
the spotlight from Bernard
Goldfine to the more major
problems of the United States.
The impression has been
therefore growing that the
White House might regard
this rather costly dim-out of
Goldfine as an excuse for re
taining Gov. Adams in his
present post. The impression
was strengthened by the re
cent praise of Adams by mem
bers of the Cabinet; but this
is now seen as preparation for
Adams' departure with honor.
The decision that Adams
must go (if there is a decision
rather than a mere hope and?
and expectation among those
who have passed the word)
has quite certainly been made
by Sherman Adams himself.
THOSE who should know
say that has happened in
his administration. According
to the same sources, the Presi
dent's distress has been' so
great that it will be better for
Eisenhower himself if Adams
goes, despite the President's
unprecedented reliance on his
subordinate. But there is too
much between them. There is,
for instance, the recollection
of the time when Adams spent
nights on end on a cot outside
the fearfully ill President's
hospital door. Hence the Presi
dent has had to leave the de
cision to Adams.
Certainly there are only too
many practical reasons for be
lieving that the word-passers
really must be right about
Adams' prospective departure.
For one thing, the case was
really remarkably badly han
dled, no doubt because the
unfortunate Adams has al
ways lived in such chilly iso
lation. Even the President's
statement about it was a mis
fortune. And its three terrible
words. VI need him" were ap
parently inserted by Adams's
private advisers over the pro
tests of Press Secretary Hag
erty. THEN Adams's own disclo
sure of what he had re
ceived from Goldfine was in
complete. He said there were
no suits, and it turned out
there were two suits a petty
matter, but a matter that
sticks in the public mind. He
said that he thought the hotel
rooms in Boston were a per
manent apartment maintained
bv Goldfine. like a man's own
house. And then it turned out
that this permanent apart
ment wandered all over the
Sheraton-Plaza Hotel, and it
further turned out that it also
had the magic-carpet power to
transfer itself to New York
and even to Washington, to
the extent of more than $200
worth of eating, drinking and
lodging at the Mayflower.
More petty stuff, you may
say, and so it is in a way; but
it is the sort of petty stuff that
counts in campaigns. And
here, of course, is the second
reason why the Adams depar
ture has become almost un
avoidable.
No practical Republican
leader supposes that Iraq or
anything else will make the
Democrats forget about
Adams, especially if Adams is
still in the " White House.
Every practical Republican
Joseph Alsop
expects a setback this year.
(Some are predicting the kind
of setback that will leave the
President about as impotent
as James Buchanan in his last
four White House months.) If
there is a setback, and Adams
has not departed, Adams will
be. given part of the blame by
all and sundry. ' -
"So how, the hell," as one
Republican Senator profanely
inquired, "can the little guy
talk to any of us after that?"
AS for the third reason that
is pushing Adams out of
the White House, it is simply
the effect of any other course
on, the standards of conduct
in the government. . Here the
point that cannot be got over
is the acceptance of cash pres
ents -from Goldfine by two of
the most confidentially placed
employees in the White House
the secretaries to Adams
and Thomas Stephens. These
imprudent ladies could not be
fired, so long as Adams was
not fired. But if their conduct
is established as proper, it will
then be proper for any secre
tary in any part of the govern
ment in the A.E.C,, for in
stance to accept Christmas
checks from businessmen, or
politicians, or newspapermen
for that matter. '
In sum, the case . for
Adams's going is just too
strong, and he apparently
knows it and is ready to go,
even although he has tempo
rarily ceased to be the center
of attention. Probably he is
wise enough to realize that his
merciful obscurity is only
temporary, unless he chooses
the permanent obscurity of
private life.
(c) 1958 New York
. Herald Tribune Inc.
GOP Fund
Crying the
By LYLE C. WILSON
UPI Correspondent
Washington (UPD The po
litical grapevine:
Republican campaign fund
raisers' are crying the blues
in an angry key. Collections
i are way off al-
though the
party suffers
the political
handicap of
being substan
tially identi
fied as the al
ly of big bus
iness and big
Lyle C. Wilson money.
It would seem that ample
funds would flow from such
an alliance but thefurid raid
ers complain: Not so: An old
timer among this town's po
litical mechanics cited a com
bination of discouraging cir
cumstances which confronts
Republican money raisers:
Don't Follow Through
'' The business elements of
the electorate do not follow
through politically. They hit
hard to get the Democrats out
of the White House in 1952
and to keep them out in 1956
but seem to feel now that they
won their political battle, and
no longer need to vigorously
support anyone.
The industrial fat cats
who put their cash on the barrel-head
over the earlier years
of this century, when the Re
publicans were securely in
the majority, are dying off.;
Congressional investigations
have scared off some poten
tial contributdrs. Some bus
inessmen who contributed
substantially to the Republi
cans in recent years now tell
party collectors that the GOP
will be licked in this year's
congressional elections, and
that they do not want tp be
mixed up in it.
The old timer, said the
Democrats would be in as bad
a situation or worse but for
Future of
This Week; Iraq Not
By CHARLES M. MCCANN
UPI Foreign News Analyst
The future of the Middle
Eastern Treaty Organization
is likely to be decided in Lon
don this week.
Seer etary
of State John
Foster Dulles
is in London
to confer with
the four ac
tive members
of the alliance
Turkey,
Iran, Pakis
tan and Great
Britain.
Iraq, the fifth member, is
f or?
Charlei M.
McCann
Washington Report
By William
THE BRETHREN
Washington The home
of The Brethren is a great,
blazingly white temple across
rTW" which, etched
in stone, is
this mot t'o
Equal justice
under the
law.
The Breth
ren are the
nine justices
of the Su
preme Court,
Willam S. White -the world's
most influential tribunal and
the only one of its kind. This
independent branch of the
Government of the United
States is at once the most
majestic and the least aggres
sive oi all the six faces of
official Washington.
This court is guardian' of
the Constitution. It asserts
and sometimes actually uses
the right to veto the acts
of a Congress or a President
as unconstitutional. But it has
no military force at its com
mand, as does the President
no hold over the national
purse, as does Congress. In
fact, the court has really no
power whatever to enforce
i what it says no power ex
cept the greatest power of all.
This is a peculiar moral force
arising from the long Anglo
American 5tradition for play
ing the game as the rules pro
vide, or as they may be au
thoritatively interpreted.
..''.-"
rPHIS national sense of de
cencv has thus far, for
nearly two centuries, been
more persuasive than dive
bombers. .
. The present court is like a
slice of the country. The Chief
Justice, Earl Warren, is a big
hail-fellow as breezy as his
native California-and a little
inclined, in the view of some
critics, to be too cheerfully
quick and Western in settling
- Raisers,
Blues
the windfall of campaign
funds from organized labor.
The Republicans, he contin
ued, need a fund gimmick of
some kind, perhaps an income
tax reductions up to $500 for
political contributions. The
tax free riches of organized
labor are spent liberally in
behalf of Democratic candi
dates. The Senate Republican
Campaign Committee staff re
cently cited a survey which
reported that of $1,078,852
spent by labor groups in the
1956 campaign, all but $3,925
went to the Democrats.
The Republican Party in
Washington State selected
last winter a candidate to op
pose the reelection of Demo
cratic U. S. Sen. Henry M.
Jackson. John R. Lewis, the
Republican nominee, estab
lished campaign headquarters
in Seattle. After 2Vz months,
Lewis withdrew for lack of
campaign funds. Such inci
dents embitter Republican
fund raiders.
"The conservative cause,"
said the old timer, "is going
to wither away."
Conservatism's Decline
The old timer probably is
right about that. The wither
ing process has been under
way for some time. The pro
cess was on public display
six years ago when conserva
tive elements of the Repub
lican party were divided, un
certain and afraid to support
the presidential candidacy of
the late Sen. Robert A. Taft.
Twelve years before that
the conservatives were mouse-
trapped by the supporters of
the late Wendell L. Willkie.
By mail, telephone and tele
graph and with packed gal
leries, the Willkie-for-Presi-dent
forces put on a national
convention show which con
fused and defeated the party
regula'rs, enabling Willkie to
kidnap the 1940 Republican
presidential nomination.
President Eisenhower was
METO To
not expected to attend. The
revolution in that country, the
only Arab member, apparent
ly makes it certain that it
will withdraw from the pact.
The loss of Iraq is a se
vere blow to the members of
the alliance, and to the United
States which sponsored it.
But Turkey, Iran and Pak
istan have announced they in-i
tend not only to maintain the
alliance but to strengthen it.
To this end, Turkey and
Pakistan urgently want the
United States to become a
full member.
Nasser a Factor
This, dispatches from Wash-
S. White
some cases of old and infin
ite complication.
The senior member of the
court in service, Hugo Black
of Alabama, is as withdrawn
as Warren is outgoing thin
faced, ascetic, with something
of the worn, rubbed look of
an old and much-used law
book.
The urban, intellectual East
is typified by Justice Felix
Frankfurter of Massachusetts,
who is spry, witty, wiry and
full of the joy of life. For
years Frankfurter, a Frank
lin Roosevelt appointee, was
looked upon with great fear
by the ultra-conservatives.
He was pictured as the head
and master of a classroom
radicalism that was training
its junior officers in the Har
vard Law School for the sole
purpose of joining Field Mar
shal Frankfurter in an ulti
mate assault upon every
Union League Club and man
agement group in this nation.
i
fTHE COURT has long memo
ries of many ironies. A
present irony 'is that Frank
furter, no doubt with some
wry private thoughts, has be
come something of a hero to
the legal conservatives. For
the court of 1958 in a most
polite and fair-minded way-
is fundamentally divided
along what might roughly be
called conservative and lib
eral lines.
And Frankfurter sometimes
is actually the chief of the
conservative group. Generally
speaking, he takes a rather
traditional and reserved view
of the proper role of the
court. He does not gladly chal
lenge Congressional acts
though many in Congress have
very often challenged his
acts.
The jso-called liberal fac
tion is headed by Black and
Warren, with Justice William
O. Douglas in their company
and Justice William J. Bren
nan Jr. sometimes but not
always with them.
The hard-core conservatives
are Justice Harold H. Burton,
Tom C. Clark and Charles E.
Whittaker.
The two Justices who are
perhaps the court's outstand
ing Constitutional authorities,
Frankfurter and John Mar
shall Harlan, form a gener
ally uncommitted third force..
On the whole, however, they
are more likely to come down
on the side of restraint rather
than of innovation in ques
tions of the court's proper
powers.
THROUGH history the court
-- has been under intermit
tent attack. Franklin D.
Roosevelt tried to pack it for
being too conservative on
economic issues. And where
20 years ago the advanced lib
erals were after the court,
the ultra-conservatives are
after it today.
The court that was not lib
eral enough two-decades ago
is now, in the eyes of the
right wing, far too liberal
mainly because of its anti
segregation decision and its
various rulings restricting
government action against
Communists o r suspected
Communists.
The Brethren well know all
this history. They are not,
however, greatly disturbed.
Time is long upon the high
bench, and all things pass
effered to the GOP in 1952
with the recommendation that
he could win. He won easily
and repeated in 1956. Those
were personal triumphs, how
ever, which have not accomp
lished much, if anything, to
ward repair of the dislocated
party machinery.
Hew To Held
FALSE TEETH
More Firmly in Place
Do your falsa teetb annoy and em
barrass by slipping, dropping or wob
bling when you eat, laugh or talk?
Just sprinkle a little FAS TEETH on
your plates. This alkaline (non-acid)
powder holds false teeth more firmly
and more comfortably. No gummy,
gooey, pasty taste or feeling. Does not
sour. Checks "plate odor" (denture
breath). Get FASTEETH today at
my drug counter.
Be Decided
Expected
ington say, the United States
will not do.
The United States has
joined the military, anti-sub
version and economic commit
tees of the pact. It has refused
to take full membership large
ly because President Gamal
Abdel Nasser of the United
Arab Republic detests it.
Nasser takes the stand that
the alliance weakened Arab
unity, because Iraq joined it.
Actually, what he meant by
unity was that it impeded his
own ambition to seize the
mastery of the Arab world.
Dulles sponsored the alli
ance. He did so to complete a
chain of alliances against
Soviet' aggression which ex
tends from Arctic Norway
through Western Europe and
Western Asia to the Far East.
The METO alliance was
signed in Baghdad, Iraq, in
1955. It provides not only for
military cooperation but for
cooperation in fighting Com
munist subversion and in eco
nomic affairs.
Kept Jordan Out
'Iraq joined the alliance de
spite Nasser's bitter protests.
Though he failed to keep
Iraq out, he did succeed in
keeping Jordan from joining
it.
The METO alliance has
been known as the Baghdad
Pact because it was signed
there, and its headquarters
have been maintained in that
capital.
It can hardly be called the
Baghdad Pact any longer,
however, and its headquarters
most probably will be shifted
to Ankara, Turkey.
But the secret documents
of the pact on military strat
egy and tactics and on Com
munist subversion will not
be shifted. The Iraqi rebels
seized them. The best that can
be hoped is that they will not
go eventually to Russia.
The Iraqi revolt was a great
victory not only for Nasser
but for Russia.
Reds Invite Shah
The revolt itself effectively
removed one member from
the pact.
The Soviet government at
once started to work on weak
ening it further. Shah Mo
hammed Reza Pahlevi of Iran
was invited to visit Russia, in
obvious hope that Iran's part
in the alliance might be weak
ened.. The Kremlin knew it could
not seduce Turkey. So it put a
big army adjacent to the
Turkish frontier and started
alleging that Turkey intended
to attack Iraq.
No specific plans have been
disclosed for offsetting Iraq's
loss to the pact. It seems pos
sible Dulles may make some
dramatic proposal. In any
event, Allied METO policy
must be radically altered.
LOTS OF NERVE
St. Croix Beach, Wis. (UPD
Service station attendant
Ronald Anderson told author
ities that a bandit who held
him up two weeks ago either
has a short memory or a colos
sal nerve. Anderson said the
bandit returned during the
week end to buy gasoline.
away. Come next October,
upon reconvening from the
summer recess, the nine black-
robed men will file in at noon.
The crier will call out, "God
save the United States and
this honorable court!" and the
long march of justice will go
serenely on.
(Copyright. 1958. by United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.)
Reasonable Funerals
(Priced for Everyone)
m. m
: 't f J
fere?; I
FRIENDLY,
In the Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
What's the big news today?
As this is written, there is
none for which let us b
duly thankful.
The BIG news is apt to bt
BAD news.
MEEDLE - IN - HAYSTACK
' note:
Search planes and ship
made a final sweep of that
South Atlantic the other da
for a tiny mouse and th
rocket nose cone that carriet
the mouse through space and
(presumably) carried it baoji
again.
Try this:
Imagine, if you can, tbji
VAST expanse of the SouA
Atlantic ocean. Then imagin
an object about the size ant
shape of the cylinders i
which liquid gas is delivers
to the customer.
Then TRY to imagine th
task of finding an object ceT
that size in an area of thai
almost unimaginable magni
tude. By comparison, finding
the needle in the hayslc
would be Basy.
IfHY is finding this obj
" so important?
It's like this:
It is relatively easy to skeot
an object (say a missile) ttf
yond the earth's atmosphere.
It is quite difficult to bring
it back to earth again because,
at the high speeds at which ft
will return (because of th
pull of gravity) the friction o
the air will burn it up unleoi
an unburnable materiaj
be found.
CONCLUSION:
V' We're seeking an u
burnable material. In such 9
search, experiments are neces
sary. We're doing the experi
menting. If we don't find sflcl
a material, maybe the Rue
sians will. That would giv
them a big advantage i
missile warfare.
What of the mouse? 99
mouse was put in to give mi
an idea as to whether it trill
be possible someday to sent
a human being out into spaca
and bring him back ftgaim
safe and sound.
1UHY do we want to do thmt?
" Well, why did Colum
bus sail off into the then
dreaded and AWFUL spaee
beyond the horizon of thft
Western ocean?
The answer:
He wanted to find out
whether human beings could
do it and COME BACK. The
only way to find out was to
TRY. Human being a
strange animals, aren't thef
MORE about human beings:
The teletype report pn
tains this terse itemr
"Russia's greatest . soedfer
star Eduard Streltsov
will no longer lead his team
to victory. The paths of glory
led him today to a 12-ye
prison sentence for AS
SAULT AND HOOLIGAN
ISM." '
WHAT happened?
Some people can taje
success in stride. Some can't.
It goes to their heads ani
ruins them. They think they're
so big they can do anythinf
and get away with it. Strelt
sov was one of this tribe.
It's at least interesting to
know that Russians act tha
way too. They AREN'T super
men. They're just human br
ings. '
The first export shipment
from what is now the United
States included lumber sob
to England in 1608.
3
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