4 WtJipJay, July 30, 1958
MAILIIBUWE, MEDFORD, ORE.
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pug.Httn.'.nii
Flighfo Time
Medford aijd Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10. 20. 30 and
40 years ago.
9
10 YEARS AGO
July 30. 1948 (Friday)
Pete and Priscilla, two
small robins, have deserted
their uman foster parents,
the W. L. Tuckers of 2233
Aloha st.
Ranjit Sirlgh, a young na
tive from India studying hor
ticulture, visited the valley
this week. '
28 YEARS AGO
July 30, 1938 (Saturday)
Ten Medford boys sched
ule to leave tomorrow to par
ticipate in annual "Beaver
Boys' State"?
From Arthur Perry's "Ye
Smudge Pot" column: "The
heat, and the cussing thereof,
has moderated."
30 YEARS AGO
July 30. 1928 (Monday)
& Plagued by busy photog
raphers, Herbert Hoover was
unable to catch a fish in the-
p.o Rogue river early today.
Medford is bracing for the
state American Legion con
vention later this week.
40 YEARS AGO
July 30. 1918 (Tuesday)
A trio of healthy girl hikers
en route from Seattle to Los
Angeles arrived here last
night, commenting that in
their travejs they had met no
tramps and "only one man
that swore."
Oregon girls are being
urfgd join the Student
q Nurses' Reserve.
Whal's Tur I.Q.?
Nine or ten correct is superior;
seven or eight is excellent; five or
six is good.
1. The Philippines were
1 named after which king?
u 2. Ermine, the fur of royal
! ty, comes from which animal?
) 3. Were tomatoes, turnips,
or truffles once called "love
apples"?
4. Which of these is a kind
of bread: cheddar, pumper
nickel, hbhenzollern, vodka?
5. During W.W; II which
army used "Tiger Tanks"?
6. The percentage of silver
In the U.S. silver dollar is
40, 50, 70, or 90?
7. Is the alcoholic content
of beverages greater when ex
pressed by weight or by vol
ume? 8. The Linioln Memorial
building in Washington, D.C.,
contains the tomb of Abraham
Lincoln; true or false?
9. In which city is the
Army's Walter Reed General
hospital?
10. Do diesel engines have
spark plugs?
Answers: 1. King Philip II,
of Spain. 2. Stoat. 3. Toma
toes. 4. Pumpernickel. 5. Ger
man 'Army. 6. 90 per cent.
7. Volume. 8. False (Buried
in Springfield. 111.) 9. Wash
ington, D.C. 10. No.
Assistant Engineer
Starts Work With City
Raymond F. Vaughan, 36,
began work at city hall this
week as an assistant city en
gineer. Vaughan worked 11 years
with the city of Portland, do
ing both design and construc
tion . work, before coming
hefle. He will be joined soon
by his wife, Virginia L.
Vaughan, and twin sons, Pat
rick and Michael.
"A Policeman's Lot...
"A policman's lot is not a happy one."
So said Gilbert and Sullivan in "The Pirates
of Penzance," and in some cases, the saying is
true.
We have a hunch, though, that Captain Paul
Parson, veteran state police officer who retires
soon as head of the Medford police district,would
not agree.
He must have a lot of solid satisfaction in
looking back over his 34 years in police work
14 of it in command here.
IT IS men of Paul Parson's caliber who have
made the Oregon State Police a respected
force. It takes men of high ideals, toughness of
body and spirit, an unlimited capacity for work
and abuse, to create a top-flight police agency.
These men work long hours, seldom get
more than a comfortable living wage, and not
infrequently are exposed to the danger of death
or injury.
So, in addition to other qualities, it takes a
sense of dedication to make a police officer
choose his career, and then stick to it as Paul
Parson has done.
"fXTTIAT are the rewards and satisfactions of
having been a top-flight police officer for
three decades? . . '
Well Captain Parson would be reticent
about it if you asked him. He's that sort of guy,
not giving to talking too much about himself.
But it occurs to us that the greatest of these
must be the knowledge
community, his state, a
place to live for his generation and for those to
come. That, truly, is a great reward.
Some day, maybe, in the far and unforesee
able future, we will achieve a society in which po
lice officers are not needed. It will be a long time
coming, unfortunately, if it ever arrives.
In the meantime, we are going to need high
minded men to carry on the sometimes-unpleasant
tasks of policing our fellow beings, and serv
ing as the guardians of our peace and well being.
We will do well if we can always attract men
like Paul Parson to do these jobs. E. A.
Cultural Fame
With the Oregon Shakespearean Festival
starting its 18th season this week in Ashland, the
1958 opening marks the completion of the
Shakespearean canon 37 of the comedies, trag
edies and fantasies penned by the great British
board.
This is an accomplishment of note for a little
Oregon community in the foothills of the Siski
yous, one of Oregon's major gateways to Calif
ornia. Few if any modem theaters in the world
today have completed such a cultural project.
THAT Ashland has become the oldest perma-
no accident. It is a tribute to the foresight and
scholarly endeavor of Angus L. Bowmer, now
professor of drama at Southern Oregon college.
More than 23 years ago Bowmer envisioned mak
ing this pear and pine city, entrance to Southern
Oregon s scenic Rogue River valley, as lamous a
cultural area as Stratford-on-Avon, Salzburg or
Oberammergau.
The Shakespearean
the events in a three-day community celebration
back in 1935. Since then, with the exception of
the war years, Shakespeare in Ashland has be
come a major annual event.
THROUGH Sept. 4, four productions ("Much
An AVrmr Mntrn'no-" "Tfirirr T.oar" "Trio
11UU ilkyUUU iWUUUlgj JL.AAJ. J-IVUil. t J-"
Merchant of Venice" and "Troilus and Cres-
sida") will be rotated
Before the 39 consecutive performances are
completed this year, it is estimated that more than
25,000 visitors will have viewed Shakespeare as
it .wag written and staged in the authentic repro
duction of an Elizabethan theater under the stars
in picturesque Lithia Park. .
In addition, more than 100 roles will be por
trayed in detailed, Ashland-produced costumes,
by student and semi-professional actors from
leading universities and colleges throughout the
country.
VES, most patrons of the arts would consider
founding such a theater in Boston, New York,
or perhaps even California or Florida, but it is
a unique and remarkable accomplishment for a
town that should be more noted fora Western
rodeo to become known internationally as a per
manent home of summer Shakespeare in Ameri
ca. Oregon Journal, Portland.
Practical Post-Script
As a post-script to the Journal's comments
above, it could be noted that the festival probab
ly generates somewhere around $100,000 in local
income each year as a bare minimum.
Attendance this year is expected to total
about 25,000 persons. Last year, 73 per cent of
all those attending came from a distance far
enough so they had to stay over night. A survey
by the state highway commission indicates the
average tourist spends $5.20 per day, and the
average expenditure. per car is $16.13.
So, at the smallest possible figure, there is
nearly $100,000, and at a more realistic estimate,
probably several times that amount, attributable
directly to the festival, this year and in years to
come. E.A.
99
that he has made his
cleaner, better and safer
Festival was but one of
nightly. ,
Dennis the Menace
OH I-OUNNO.-lVrlEN WAS THE LAST TIME
ue mu A niBATC cuio cmco
mi nti r riorum anir.
DeGaulle
Proposed
By CHARLES M. McCANN
UPI Foreign News Analyst
Premier Charles de Gaulle
has completed the draft of a
new constitution under which
he plans to re
v o 1 u t i onize
France's gov
ernmental system.
The consti
tution is to be
submitted t o
the people in
a national ref
erendum o n
Sept. 28 or
Oct. 5.
Political experts predict it
will be approved by a com
fortable majority and pos
sibly by a landslide.
If so, France will get, on a
permanent basis, an "authori
tarian" government like that
which de Gaulle is adminis
tering under "his temporary
powers.
There are indications de
Gaulle may dissolve the pres
ent Parliament before it can
start its next scheduled ses
sion on Oct. 7.
If he does, he will call for
an immediate election so there
will be a new Parliament as
well as a new constitution.
So far, only the Commu
nists have announced last
ditch opposition to de Gaulle's
nroposed new deal. '
Strongest Party
The Communists are the
strongest political party in
France, with 148 seats in the
596-member National Assem
bly, the controlling house of
Parliament.
Communist Leader Maurice
Thorez has ordered his party
workers to organize opposi
tion throughout the country.
The Socialist Party, which
ranks second to the Commu
nists, with 101 seats in the
assembly, is somewhat luke
warm on the constitution is
sue, though it is represented
in De Gaulle's cabinet. But
there is no sign it will come
out in firm opposition.
Under De Gaulle's constitu
tion the powers of the presi
dent would be increased at
the expense of the National
Assembly.
Instead of being largely a
figurehead as at present, the
president would get strong ex
ecutive powers like those ex
ercised by the president of
the United States.
The president would get the
power to dissolve the Nation
al Assembly and call for a
new election. He would ap
point a premier by his own
authority, instead of merely
proposing him to Parliament
for approval as at present.
In times of national emer
gency, the president would be
able to direct the government.
Powers Restricted
The cabinet would still be
Try and
Charles M.
MeCann
-By BENNETT CERF-
JEAN KERR, author of 'Please Don't Eat the "Daisies, isn't
fooled by the charms of her 17-month-old son Gilbert,
sincehis three older brothers have taught her what to expect.
"It's too early to tell yet
about Gilbert," she notes.
"As a matter of fact, we can
tell, all right, but we're not
ready to face it. Once upon
a time we might have been
taken in by smiles and
gurgles and round blue eyes,
but no more. We know he
is just biding his time. To
day he can't do much more
than eat his shoelaces and
suck off an occasional but
ton. Tomorrow the world.-"
Daniel George has written,
this "Epitaph of a Dead Author":
"I suffered so much from printers' errors '
That death for me can hold no terrors
No doubt this stone has been misdated
Oh, how I wish Td been cremated!"
C 1358, by Bennett Cert Distributed by King Features Syndicate.
Completes Draft of
French Constitution
responsible to Parliament.
But the powers of Parliament
to overthrow a premier would
be sharply restricted.
There are reports that if
the constitution is approved,
De Gaulle may resign as pre
mier and assume the presi
dency. This appears to be increas
ingly likely because of the
approval De Gaulle's policies
have won since he took office
June 2 after a 13-year succes
sion of cabinet overthrows.
De Gaulle wants to solve
the Algerian problem,
strengthen the country's fi
Wilson Sees Debt
Hike Request New
Bid for Inflation
By LYLE C. WILSON
UPI Correspondent
Washington (UPD Presi
dent Eisenhower's request for
a 10 billion dollar hike in the
permanent na
tional debt
limit means
the dollar bill
or sawbuck in
your bank or
in your pocket
is going to
shrink some
more.
The weight
and dimen
Lyle C. Wilson
sions of your dimes and fold
ing money will not shrink.
But their purchasing power
will in terms of beans or
biscuits or butter, or in terms
of anything you may buy.
Sad Story
In terms of what this
shrinkage does to the individ
ual and collective funds of
the people of the United
States, this is larceny on a
scale greater than grand. All
the footpads and burglars of
all time surely could not have
made away with as much of
the citizens' money as the
process of .currency inflation
has accomplished in a single
year the year 1942,- for ex
ample. That was a big year in the
cycle of currency inflation.
The Finance committee of the
U.S.- Senate calculates that
the dollar shrank in purchas
ing power in 1942 by 9.1
cents. The year 1947 showed
a nine-cent shrinkage.
Only 4.4 cents were melted
away from the value of the
U.S. dollar in 1948 and only
half a cent in each of the fol
lowing years, according to the
committee's calculations. In
very recent years the infla
tion trend has been substan
tially checked but not
Stop Me
In the Day's News
By FRANK
Foreign affairs:
Secretary of State Dulles is
in London, where he is con
ferring with members of the
Baghdad Pact specifically
Britain, Turkey, Iran and
Pakistan. The purpose of the
Baghdad Pact " is to provide
a roadblock to keep Russia
from getting into the Middle
East. Consult your map for
details.
Dulles is reported to have
told" these nations the U.S.
would be willing to join Rus
sia in putting an embargo on
arms to the Middle East ex
cepting, of course, Turkey,
Iran and Pakistan whose job
is to provide the roadblock
to stop Russia.
TS DULLES wasting words?
I suppose so.
But at a conference, espe
cially a diplomatic confer
ence, one has to talk. One
purpose of diplomacy is to
keep everybody talking until
the immediate danger of
SHOOTING passes.
nances and increase its pres
tige as a world power.
He could best deal with Al
geria and finance if he kept
the leadership himself.
As for prestige, De Gaulle
already has made a pretty
good start toward giving
France a stronger internation
al standing.
He is having a full say in
Allied discussions on a pos
sible "summit" conference
with Russia, instead of per
mitting France to be over
shadowed by the United States
and Great Britain. And he is
being listened to by the Amer
ican and British governments.
stopped.
The Vanishing Buck
During the first four
months of this year the de
preciation of the dollar aver
aged only 0.2 cents per month.
The big, bad fact, however,
is that the Senate committee
figures show that from an ar
bitrary valuation of 100 cents
in the year 1939, the dollar
had shrunk in purchasing
power by the end of April,
1958, to 48.L cents.
In just under 20 years,
therefore, the value of the
proud product of the U. S.
Bureau of Engraving and
Printing has gone off by near
ly 52 cents, a bit more than
half. A $10 bill now in circu
lation is worth slightly less
than $5 in terms of 1939.
Where all of this will end,
none can say; especially none
of the politicians in Washing
ton who borrow and spend
the money which puts the
government in more debt and
requires raising the debt limit
in bites of 10 billion dollars a
whack.
Truman To Speak
At Portland Dinner
Portland (UPD Former
President Harry S. Truman
will speak at a Democratic
party dinner here Saturday
is was announced by C. Gir
ard Davidson Tuesday.
Democratic state Chairman
Dave Epps said the Truman
dinner will be "our biggest
event of the campaign."
A site for the $25-a-plate
fund-raising dinner has not
been selected.
Truman will appear in Se
attle. Friday at a Young Dem
ocrats convention.
Explorer IV Covers
390,000 Miles Daily
Huntsville, Ala. (UPD -
-Ex-
plored IV, the newest and
largest of U.S. earth satellites,
is speeding through outer
space at 16,250 miles per hour
and covering 390,000 miles
every .24 hours, the Army re
vealed Tuesday night.
Scientists at Redstone Ar
senal, the Army's missile cen
ter, said instruments in the
38.43 pound bullet-shaped
satellite launched Saturday
are working "perfectly."
East Main St.
DAIRY -
Sorry we carj't be with you today . . . This
is our day to rest, worship and get
acquainted with our families.
JENKINS
MORE foreign affairs stuff:
Diplomats in Washington
say this morning that the lat
est Soviet blasts against the
U.S. do not necessarily mean
a rejection of Preident Eisen
hower's newest conditions for
a summit talk. (Soviet news
papers, which say only what
they are TOLD to say, have
been shouting that the U.S.
is "procrastinating" in an f
fort to head off the summit
meeting.)
What the diplomats mean is
that Russia's job is to blast
us verbally at every turn of
the road. A long as she blasts
us with words, instead of with
bombs, there isn't too much
to worry about.
Her VERBAL blasts are apt
to mean that everything is
normal.
HERE'S something more in
interesting: These Washington diplo
mats also EXPRESS HOPES
THAT U.S. TROOPS MAY
BE WITHDRAWN BEFORE
OR DURING THE PRO
POSED MID-EAST TALKS.
I'M SURE we private citizens
can all join in that hope.
Maybe we had to send the
troops in the first place. May
be the situation was so menac
ing that we had to send the
troops to keep shooting from
starting RIGHT THEN.
Things like that fall into the
category of restricted infor
mation. Intelligence services
can't always tell everything
they know. But private, unof
ficial, everyday Americans
are pretty certain in their
own minds that the quicker
we can get our troops out of
the Middle East the better it
will be.
IlfHY?
Let's put it this way:
Suppose Egypt or Turkey,
or Iran, or Britain, or France,
ANY foreign country had
sent troops to LITTLE ROCK
We'd have been MAD. We'd
have been mad all the way
through. We'd have had rea
son to be mad. Sending troops
into a foreign country is
ticklish business.
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.
Thanks for Help
To the Editor: In the past
when our home burned and
more recently when our ga-
rage was struck by lightning,
both times while we '' were
away, we have had reason to
be thankful for the vigilance
and help of the people in our
neighborhood. Since we do
not know from whom this
help came, we would appre-
ciate you publishing this brief
note in your Communications
section as a means of thank
ing our neighbors for their
kindness and consideration.
Mr. and Mrs L. B. Nelson
1750 Prune st.
Medford.
Not Anti-American
To the Editor: I am writing
you in my capacity as a citi
zen of Iraq with an American
educational background.
It is unfortunate that many
in the west have interpreted
the recent coup in Iraq as anti-
west. The university educated
Iraqis are unanimous that the
movement was the necessary
outcome of internal conditions
in Iraq.
The late dictator of Iraq,
Nuri Es Said, and his king,
had no regard for freedom
of speech, press, assembly,
habeas corpus, nor any re-
spect for the human indi
vidual and his civil and poli
tical rights.
If they were pro-American,
in my opinion as an American
educated Arab , with high
hopes for the gradual devel
opment of democratic insti
tutions in the Arab World,
they should have provided
for some of the freedom en
joyed in the free societies of
the West.
Their downfall was inevita
ble because they had put un
limited pressure on the people
of Iraq, resulting in the ex
plosive July 14.
It is unfortunate, of course,
that the king, his uncle and
Nuri were killed, but I am
JL
SMITH
at Genessee
Cloak - dnd
CIA Earns
Among Congress
Washington Impatieno
understandable, almost in
evitable impatience explains
the almost continuous at
tempts by congressional
bodies to examine the activi
ties of the Central Intelligence
Agency. The C.I.A. was ac
cused of being asleep at the
switch on the Korean invasion
of 1950; there are both
charges and denials that it left
the administration flat-footed
on the Iraq coup.
"We are maturing," ex
plains C.I.A. Director Allen
Welsh Dulles, brother of the
Secretary of State. "We're not
as good as we want to be, but
we're a great deal better than
many people realize."
Right lo Investigate
Nobody denies that Con
gress has a perfect right to in
vestigate the daylights out of
C.I.A. It was Congress which
established the Agency in 1947
and it is Congress obviously
which votes its funds, though
most members of Congres are
unaware of exactly when and
where these funds are hidden
in money bills.
The C.I.A. Act of 1949
greatly extended the authority
of the so-called "cloak-and
dagger' outfit. The Director is
empowered to hire and fire
personnel without regard to
other laws regarding govern
ment employment. The Act
specifically exempts CIA.
from the provisions . of any
law requiring publication or
disclosure of the "organiza
tion, functions, names, official
titles, salaries, or numbers of
personnel employed."
C.I.A.'s secret budget is
"currently estimated at any
thing from $100 million to $1
billion annually"; its . man
power at "anywhere irom
3000 to 30,000." The Budg
et Director Is instructed to
"make no report to the Con
gress" touching these matters.
Aside from a kind of Pan
dora's box capacity for arous
ing curiosity, C.I.A. would ap
pear to have only itself to
blame for the many attempts
of Congress to lift its cloak of
secrecy. Only a Hoover Com
mission task force in 1954
headed by Gen. Mark Clark
warded off a second attempt
to probe the C.I.A. by tlje Sen
ate Investigations Subcommit
tee of the late Joseph R. Mc
Carthy (R-Wis.).
On occasion special arrange
ments have been made to
avert political exploitation of
the CIA:, a lineal descend
ant of the World War II Office
of Strategic Services, as in the
presidential campaign of 1952.
Aside from the alleged CIA.
goofs on Korea and Iraq, over-
zealous agents have been un
willing to limit their activities
to foreign . intellgence, al
though the enablng act speci
fically forbids clandestine
operations within this coun
try
CIA. agents were widely
sure that in 1776, many a
colonist would have been very
pleased to see the assassina
tion of King George III.
The coup in Iraq must not
be considered as pro-Soviet
or anti-America. It was but
the result of the desire of
the Arab people to be free
from foreign and domestic ex
ploiters and be united.
As a member of the Arab
intelligentsia, I admit that oth
er Arab governments in other
parts of the Arab land are
not democratic by Western
standards. But there is no
doubt in my mind that Arab
rulers everywhere will have
to submit to the will of the
Arab people if they desire to
remain in power.
These popular revolutions
against corrupt and tyranni
cal governments are not anti
America. On the contrary,
they are in the best tradition
of the American Revolution.
America must support these
liberal and popular move
ments; otherwise the Soviets
would once more and by de
fault, become the spokesmen
of Arab Nationalism: Arab
desire to be free and united.
Mohammad T. Mehdi,
Arab Information Center,
Ferry Bldg.,
San Francisco
The
Better
Service
Beautiful
Mt. View Chapel
C. M. Litwiller
Off street parking No
Quiet Location
At Cemetery Entrance
LITWILLER
Funeral
Home
r
Mountain View Chapel
Hwy, 66 at Normal
Office 88 N. Main
ASHLAND
We Never Close
- Dagger
Critics
reported to have had a rol in
an international incident in
1951 involving the movement
of Nationalist Chinese troops
in Burma. And one CIA.
alumnus is petitioning Con
gress for a "letter of marnno
and reprisal" to facilitate his
desire to liberate U.S. citizens
kidnaped by foreign powers.
It or all the criticism CIA.
and its agents have engen
dered, it should perhaps be
pointed out that the organiza
tion is only 11 years old.
Building a mature foreign in
telligence organization prob
ably takes more time than
CIA. has been given. And,
like its British and 1 French
counterparts, CIA. has oper
ated necessarily under re
traints not suffered by the So
viet Union's spy network. A
British expert puts the num
ber of foreign aeents emnlnv.
ed by the USSR at at "least ten
times the number used bv all
the Western Powers
bined.
Elizabeth Receives New
Czech Ambassador
London (UPD Queen Eliza
beth II has received her first
foreign visitor since she be
came ill three weeks ago.
The queen has been under
treatment for catarrhal sinusi
tis.
New Czech Ambassador
Miroslav Galuska drove to
Buckingham Palace in a
horse-drawn carriage Tuesday
to present his credentials to
the Queen. ,
Good Reading
for the
Whole Family
News Facts i
Family Features!
The Christian Science Monitor
One Norway St., Boston 15, Mast. -Send
your newspaper for the time
checked. Enclosed find my check or
money order. I year $18 Q
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PB-16-A O
DOC QU1GG
He has ranged a lot of terri
tory covering his United Press
International news beat:
from New Guinea to New
York, and reported every
kind of story, from a South
Pole expedition to a kissing
contest, from wars to murder
trials to nudist conventions.
Always with distinction, too,
as youll see in this versatile
United Press International
veteran's dispatches in .
MEDFORD
MAIL
TRIBUNE
processions through streets
Better service lower costs
1 00 Locally Owned
Is
mm
?X ANNIVERSARY 0 I
Mrs. Litwiller
'It is better to know us and not need us,
than to need us and not know us."