4 Friday, October 24. 195t I
MAIL TBIBUNC uibtaan mi l
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March 3. 1897
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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
Oct. 24, 1948 (Sunday)
Medforcl school officials
deny blame for painting the
city high school's colors on
the new Grants Pass High
school building on the eve of
the big game (Medford won,
7-6).
Robert B. Duncan has ar
rived in Medford to take up
the practice of law with a lo
cal firm.
20 YEARS AGO
Oct. 24, 1938 (Monday)
The SouthernvOregon Con
cert association's membership
campaign gets underway to
night. From Arthur Perry's "Ye
Smudge Pot" column: "The
Democratic candidates ' for
Governor and U.S. Senator re
port they see landslides for
themselves, come Nov. 8.
They are both as sure of this
as the deer hunter who blazes
away at the horns he sees on
a huckleberry bush."
30 YEARS AGO
Oct. 24. 1928 (Wednesday)
Police report someone has
been passing lead dollars this
week, and urge merchants to
make sure future coins re
ceived ring true.
"Underweight girls are like
flat tires," the state health
director informs a local gath
ering of ladies.
40 YEARS AGO
Oct.. 24. 1918 (Thursday)
The new reduced freight
rate on aDtle shipments is
now officially in effect, and i
lively traffic is expected.
Heralding winter's arrival,
the big stove in Gates auto
store is now operating, with
war arguments among those
who gather near it limited to
59 minutes per hour and po
litical arguments, to three
seconds per day.
What's Your I.Q.?
Nina er ten correct ft superior;
even er eight is excellent; five er
is it goad.
1. Dean Acheson occupied
what post in the Federal Gov
ernment? 2. In the historv of base
ball, who was known as the
"Georgia Peach."
3. Who composed the ever
popular tune "Star Dust"?
4. If an object is ovate,
what shape is it?
5. In the early days of the
New Deal administration,
what was the NRA?
6. Where is the Valley of
Ten Thousand Smokes? .
7. Quote the line in the
Star Spangled Banner which
follows this line: "Then con
quer we must."
8. What is another name
for the card game Twenty
One? 9. A famous bell, nick
named "Big Ben," is in what
European city?
10. Name the European ex
plorer who discovered the
Philippine Islands in 1521.
Answers: 1. Secretary of
state. 2. T t u s Raymond
fnhK. a. Hoaav CarmiehaeL
4. Egg-shaped. 5. National Re
covery Administration, e.
Alaska. 7. "When our cause it
is just.- 8. Black Jack. 9. Lon
don. 10. Magellan.
Happy in the Middle
There is a strong possibility rather, a prob
ability that International Paper company, one
of the three or four largest woods products firms
in the world, will build two plants in Oregon in
the near future.
Scuttlebutt has it that they will be located at
Roseburg and Klamath Falls.
And, apparently part of a "package deal,"
plans are well along for a pipeline to bring natur
al gas into southern Oregon, at least as far as
Roseburg, and presumably through Medford and
Ashland and across the hill to Klamath Falls.
IF THESE speculations turn into truth (and
we'll be surprised if they don't), people in
Medford may be tempted to cry, "Why not Med
ford?!" v Our reaction, after thinking about the pros
and cons of such a possibility for nearly 10 years,
is one of pleasure.
Medford, we say, will be in a position to have
its cake and eat it too.
It will not have any single large new payroll,
but in every respect save that single one, it will
benefit just as much as will Roseburg or Klam
ath Falls. And, thank Providence, it will not have
the odors, the fumes, the smoke and the conges
tion which go with big new industries.
AS a matter of fact, it may even have less
fumes than it. does-now.
Instead of burning up their wood waste, the
mills in the Rogue valley will, for the first time,
find it economically sound to chip their waste
wood (except for sawdust), dry the chips (per
haps using natural gas to do so), and then sell
them to the Roseburg or Klamath Falls plants.
Waste will be turned into profit, and smoke back
into clear air.
The highway from here to Roseburg is ex
cellent now, and is due to be improved even more
so soon. And the new route across the Cascades,
by way of Lake of the Woods, will bring Klam
ath Falls closer to Medford than ever before.
Chip shipping will be no problem.
IT IS EASY to pretend that paper mill fumes
don't really matter. The newspaper in Bend,
which at one time was under consideration as a
paper mill site, came to the conclusion that the
smell really was the smell
But those who have
bany on a day when the
the highway, or who have lived in Salem when
the wind is from the paper plant, know that the
odor can make life mighty miserable.
And one only needs
know what it would be like to have a paper mill
sending out it fumes during one of the "cold-air
inversions" which visit the Rogue valley regu
larly each winter, and which hold fog and smog
close to the ground.
e
ACTUALLY, of course, all of southwestern
vicguu io on ctuuumit uiul, ucapitc iimiui
differences, and what benefits one section ulti
mately. benefits all. Jackson and Josephine coun
ties will be richer and more prosperous because
of the growth and prosperity of Douglas and
Klamath counties.
And Jackson county,
center for the whole area, will benefit with the
continued growth of service, wholesale and dis
tribution industries, and all the things that go
with them.
We are just reactionary enough to like things
in the Rogue valley pretty much the way they
are. Things will change and grow, but we re just
as glad International has picked sites on either
side of us, and left us undisturbed in the middle,
where we will get most of the advantages and
almost none of the disadvantages of the big new
mills. E.A.
Cranes Going South
Twice a year, in the spring and in the fall,
the whooping cranes come back into the news.
This wTeek we read about them again, as they
started their annual southward pilgrimage from
their summer home in the wilds of Canada to
their winter home on the Aransas National Wild
life refuge in southern Texas.
Last January, the U.S. fish and wildlife serv
ice counted the big cranes, and the. total came
to 32 of which six were in captivity, and 26
at large.
THERE is something
extinction of the big
rather breathless manner in which bird-lovers
keep watch on them, and excitedly report each
new addition to the little clan.
The flock may have gained in numbers
slightly this year. Observers in Canada and the
United States have reported seeing a few young
birds,' which survived their flight north last spring
and the summer in Canada,' arid which are now
en route southward again.
i Only if the few young survive, and new ones
are hatched safely, will the wrhooping cranes be
saved from extinction, and join .the dodo and the
passenger pigeon and some other species whose
last members have vanished. E.A.
of fresh, new money.
driven by the plant at Al
fumes are drifting over
a slight imagination to
the natural distribution
poignant about the ne'ar-
white birds, and the
'AfCHf.' Margaret at gha had a 3tT ot& mc,
Ak.1' .lAitf evelrr&J sSfAa-ll f4eW UK la
Washington Report
By William S. Whit,
WHY IKE IS 'TOUGH'
Washington One of the
most spirited of all the con
tests going on in the climax of
the Congres
sional cam
paign is a Se
ries of brisk
battles be
tween Dwight
D. Eisenhow
er and Dwight
D. Eisen
hower. The
"tougher" Ei-
WUiiams White sennower is
progressively winning over
the amiable Eisenhower
with all encouragement from
the Republican professionals.
The President has first de
plored and then welcomed
foreign policy fighting in the
campaign. He first assented
to the use in a Republican
manifesto of the cry off "so
cialism" against the Demo
crats. And though he back
slid momentarily to repudiate
that cry, he has now gone
much farther to charge the
Democratic party with being
dominated by "political rad
icals." This accusation, made re
cently by the President in a
belated effort to help the Re
publicans in California, was
incomparably the harshest
partisan blow he has deliver
ed. It was wholly and dem
onstrably out of character, not
only on this correspondent's
experience but on the word
of some of the top people in
the Republican party organ
ization itself.
THE PROS at the GOP na
tional committee did not
prepare, though they happily
welcomed, this Presidential
epithet against a party that
on some critical issues has
helped him in Congress more
than his own. It was written
by White House ghosts who
are supposed to be "modern"
Reoublicans Innocent of the
combative partisanship of the
regular" Republicans which
the President himself usually
deplores.
Indeed, Mr. Eisenhower, as
recently as Oct. 15,. had tutt-
tutted this kind of language,
with the chiding observation:
"Politicians do love to make
things very positive."
The fact that within less
than a week he himself was
making things even more
"positive" is still a source of
happy relief to the pros. They
knew what was supposed to
be in the California speech.
But they had great fears
that the operative words "po
litical radicals" would never
get uttered by the President
when the time came. Many
times before they had seen
"hard- hitting" Presidential
speeches become much soft
Alcorn observed that he had
not become Republican chair
man to preside over the liq
uidation of the GOP in No
vember. These strong and continu
ous representations alternate
ly made and lost" headway,
But Alcorn successes began to
predominate over Alcorn fail
ures after Sherman Adams,
the former Presidential assist
ant, left the White House for
good. Mr. Adams, until his
forced resignation because of
acceptance of gifts, had held
Mr. Alcorn at arms' length
from the President.
'
BUT ONCE the GOP chair
man began to see "the
boss" himself, and after all
the lingering Adam influence
had departed from the White
House, the President did, in
deed, begin to "toughen up"
most of the time. Alcorn
then on his own account be
gan to take an exceptionally
"tough" line. This reached its
pitch in his charge of Ocl- 19
that the Democrats were "the
party of the left-wingers and
the appeasers."
This was almost exactly the
tone of the President's Cali
ened before delivery.
To determine .why they
were spoken has required a
good deal of exploration
among the labyrinths of the
Republican high command.
This is the story:
VTOT MERELY Vice Presi-
A1 dent Richard M. Nixon
but also Meade Alcorn, the
Republican national chair
man, had been axiously at
work since early September to
"toughen the President up."
Mr. Alcorn began going to
the White House long ago to
say that unless the President
went to work in urgent par
tisanship the rest of the Re
publicans would be able to
stir neither the voters nor
the "fat cats" the campaign
cash contributors.
As Winston Churchill once
declared he had not become
the King's first ( minister to
'preside over the liquidation
of the British empire," Mr.
fornia speech of two days
later, in which the dominant
wing of the Democrats became
"political radicals." Oddly,
by that time, Mr. Alcorn and
President Eisenhower himself
were very nearly outdoing
Vice President Nixon in their
attacks on the Democrats.
And there is, ironically,
sound information from Re
publican quarters that neither
the President no the party
chairman would have gone so
far had Mr. Adams, a special
Democratic target, remained
in the White House.
(Copyright, 1958. by United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.)
Communications
Don't Kick the Kids
To the Editor: It just makes
me sick to my stomach to
hear every one blaming the
poor teenagers for every
thing that's done. I have had
lots of arguments about that.
You can hear an adult say,
Oh, that's a stupid teenager,"
and I have seen grown men
and women do things on the
highways no teenager could
think of. But just let any
thing happen and you can al
ways bet your sox someone
will say, "Oh, teenagers did
it." -
I'm sure if just some of you
would just think back when
we were all teenagers you did
as bad as they do now, only
we didn't have a car to ride
in, just horses or walk, but
they aren't any worse today.
Oh, some try to be big shots,
but just think how many men
and women do the same thing,
but they get by with it. I
have driven back and fourth
to Medford for about 15 years
and I-have seen all sorts on
the highway and I have yet to
see a teenager in the bunch.
As for printing the names of
the kids every time they do a
little something I think that
would make more criminals
Try and Stop Me
-By BENNETT CERF
F5MPOUS LADY stamped into an elevator and declared,
Tm in a great hurry, young man. Take me right up to the
ninth floor.'
"Whom do you wish to
see on that floor?" asked
the operator.
"What business is that of
yours?" countered the lady.
"None, Madam.' admitted
the operator, "but there are
only eight floors in this
building."
Two choice ctrtyns from
England's droll "Punch: (1)
a. lady in a gift card "shoppe"
inquiring, "Have you a eon
dolence card suitable for some
one who has been superseded
by automation?'' and. (2) a
pair of mountain climbers on the peak of a jagged mountain in the
stratosphere. One is leaning on his pick consulting a book. "There
etoesnt seem to be a thing in here,' he says dubiously, "that deals
with the descent'' ,
George Jesse, was acqnatettd with a man who was so active that
four yean after his death his self-winding watch still was running.
C 135S, by Beaaatt Cert Distributed by King Features Syadicate,
Wilson Discusses Responsibility for
Debasing of U.S. Dollar by U.S. Debt
By LYLE C. WILSON
UPI Correspondent
Washington-fllPD-The ruckus
between President Eisenhow
er and former President Tru
man over re-
p 0 n sibility
for the dis
g r a c ef ul de
base ment of
the U.S. dol
lar and for
spending the
nation into al
most unman
ageable debt
is one of those
Lyle C. WUsoe
Who struck John?" disputes.
"Who struck John?" was
slangy World War II GI ridi-
ijr-
Klamath Falls Writer Tells
Of Trip Over Green Springs
(Editor's note: The follow
ing description ef the drive
across the Green Springs
road was written by Floyd
L. Winne, city editor of the
Klamath Falls Herald and
News, and is reprinted from
that newspaper.)
In the Day's News
By FRANK
Let's talk today about some
thing other than politics and
W3Fa
. What shall it be?
How about opals?
Here, at least, is an inter
esting opal story: ,
AN OPAL worth ogling at
arrived in New York by
freighter the other day. It is
valued at $175,000. It weighs
125 POUNDS. It is named
the Panther. Its owner, who
is president of Panther Inter
national, says the stone, found
in an abandoned mine in Aus
tria, is the biggest known to
exist in the world.
' He says he'll try to sell it
all in one piece, possibly to
a museum. He adds: "There
will be no security precau
tions when the big gem. is
unloaded. Who would be able
than anything could. The
poor kids don't have anything
to do, no nothing, and what
can you - expect of them?
Don't get me wrong, I don't
have any teenagers, mine are
all grown, but I have grand
children who wUl be pretty
soon. So why can't we all let
up on them? You wiU see, we
will have better men and
women later on.
Let's all praise them instead
of kicking them in the pants
and build them some kind of
place to play instead of so
many detention homes.
Mrs. E. C, ;
(Name on file)
Medford
Did Someone Say Thl
Isn't The Silly Season?
To the Editor: I write this
in answer to Alan B. Holmes'
letter which was published
nvpr the signature of Bill
Schulz of Eagle Point. Mr.
Holmes is the campaign man
ager for the Republican can
didate for Sheriff.
Upon receipt of a courtesy
rnnv of the Schulz letter. I
"T J .
compared it with prior cor
respondence from the law of
fir nf Bover & Holmes and
found that Mr. Holmes is, as
suspected, the "ghost writer"
for a desoerate cause. In the
future, this sort of nonsense
that the readers were warned
to expect, wiU probably come
from a different typewriter
and be over a dilierent signa
ture. All that can be said about
the "merits" of your letter,
Mr. Holmes, Is that we will
wait with eager anticipation
your letters after November;
4, when the people elect Lar
ry Sheehan their Sheriff.
Jim Redden,
County Chairman,
Democratic Party.
cule of any dispute in which
the disputants just went
'round and 'round without ar
riving anywhere.
This fiscal "Who struck
John?" dispute relating to the
shambles in which the fiscal
affairs of the nation have fall
en can be exposed however, to
certain mathematical checks
and measurements. So expos
ed, the dispute between the
President and the former
President just about adds up
to a draw bet. They are both
wrong or, more precisely,
each is about half right,
which is just as bad. Take
spending, for example.
' The brightly edited "Demo
By FLOYD L. WYNNE
Traveled the Green Springs
twice over the week end. Two
trips to Medford, and enjoyed
every moment of the drive.
Couldn't help thinking on
the way over each time what
a beautiful country we live in.
JENKINS
to run away with a 125-pound
stone, all crated?"
INTERESTING, is it not? -And
don't forget that we
have opals in Oregon's high
desert country. Not that big,
so far as anyone knows. And
so far as is presently known
not too precious. But they
have their own hint, of the
flashing rainbow of colors
that has charmed gem lovers
for centuries.
Who knows what may hap
pen? One of these days some
lucky opal hound may stick
a pick into a cavity in the
desert rock and uncover an
opal that HAS EVERYTHING.
That's a part of the charm of
the high desert Nobody
knows what it may contain.
THERE'S uranium, for' ex
ample. Who would have supposed
a few years ago that there
is uranium out in our high
desert? But if you'll take a
trip over to Lakeview some
pleasant day you'll find there
a multi-million dollar uranium
mill that is adding greatly
to the prosperity of the area
rpHEN
A There's the NICKEL in
Douglas county. For centuries
it lay out in the rain and
nobody paid any attention to
it. Finally it came to the at
tention of modern capitalists
and with the aid of modern
science they developed it and
made it into a modern pay
roll industry that is adding
to the wealth of the entire
Umpqua Basin.
AND-
Don't foriret the chrome
and other rare minerals of
Douglas and Josephine and
Jackson and Siskiyou coun
ties. So far, the recovery and
the processing of these miner
als have been too costly to
make them a profitable asset
But who knows when mod
ern scientific researcn win
come up with a process that
will make them EXTREMELY
valuable?
WEIILE you're at it, let your
mind dwell for a moment
on the lowly jackpine that
for a century was regarded
as worse than useless because
it cluttered, land that might
have been useful for some
thing else. Now it's a prime
pulp wood and paper is made
of pulp and the good Lord
only knows what they'll be
making next out of paper.
They're already planning to
make disposable shirts and
dresses of it.
ITEEP your eye on our
mythical State of Jeffer
son. Its boundaries are mythi
cal No one knows just where
they begin or where they end.
The State of Jefferson if a
mythical concept that has liv
ed in men's minds for more
than a' century. It rests upon
a COMMUNITY OF INTER
EST. " But there's nothing mythi
cal about the RESOURCES of
our State of Jefferson. They
are real and tangible. And
they are IMMENSE. Nobody
knows yet how vast they may
turn out to be.
HERTZ
TRUCK RENTAL
Available
HOPKINS RICHFIELD
SERVICE
McAneWt at Ceurt IP J-9041
cratic Digest" for October
compares the spending record
of IDE, and DDE doesn't look
so good. The Digest offers
HST's surplus and deficit fig
ures for the fiscal years 1946
51, inclusive and - discovers
three surplus years and three
deficit years. The aggregate
of the three surplus years ex
ceeded the aggregate of the
three deficit years by $3,773,
000,000 which is designated
the real surplus for the period
covered.
DDE's record for fiscal
years 1954 to 1059, inclusive,
shows two surplus years and
four deficit years for what
is described as a real deficit
For some reason the leaves
seemed a deeper hue and the
rich riot of fall colors wove a
magic spell.
Maybe it was the fact that
at the beginning of my Sun
day trip over "the hump" I
ran into some snow here and
there. Maybe I just appreciat
ed the swan song of fall more
than usual.
Admittedly, when - you're
rolling along with only a few
feet separating you from a
mileMrop into the canyon',
you can't be day-dreaming,
but the beauty of the trip
wasn t lost on me, either.
Saw a flock of hunters at
every turn, many of them
camping out, some of them
right alongside the highway.
Also spotted three does and
several fawns, and somehow
they had my deep sympathy.
I know it's heresy in deer
country to say it, but some
how I'm too soft to go deer
hunting, and must admit it
Also noticed ' just above
Keno a furry brown bear
chained to a post at a service
station. Quite a character
with plenty of "bounce to the
ounce."
I don't know whether
you've .taken the Green
Springs route lately, but
there's plenty to see. The road
is now open and you can de
tour down to look at the new
Copco Big Bend dam and on
down into the canyon to the
Big Bend powerhouse.
Visitors Welcome
Visitors are welcome but
there are some stretches that
have to be negotiated care
fully.' Notice, also that after you
leave Lincoln the old Green
Springs is getting a face lift
ing. The Green Springs tun
nel project is in full swing
and they're grading up can
yons, drilling a tunnel for the
Talent project on ,the other
side.-
As you come, down the
other side, there is evidence
of construction activity every
where. New roads are being
built, power lines, phone lines
constructed and the beauty of
the landscape has suffered
PAUL GEDDES SAYS:
"Pay Ho Communist
Blachmair
Paul Geddes opposes recognition of Red China
and U. N. membership for Red China. He be
lieves that a policy of firmness when dealing
with the Communists is a peace policy. Ap
peasement would lead only to more Communist
demands.
In marked contrast, Paul Geddes' opponent, the
present congressman, advocates recognition of
Red China, trade with Red China, and U. N.
membership for Red China. The Grants Pass
Courier reports that he told an audience there
on September 30, 1958, that a "world government"-was
our major peace hope.
PAUL GEDDES DOES NOT BELIEVE IN
SUPER -STATES" NOR TN APPEASE
MENT.' HE BELIEVES THAT THE BEST
GUARANTEE FOB PEACE IS A STRONG
AND SOVEREIGN AMERICA.
Is This Your Belief, Too? Then Elect A Man
To Congress To Represent You, For A Change!
PAH
(Pd. Pet. Adv, fiedds for Congress Committee, V. E. Jotmerv
iueen Owl)
of $19,111,000,000. Their re
spective spending records for
those six years were: HST,
$257,700,000,000; DDE, $419,-
400,000,000. Eisenhower is the
champ spender. No doubt
about that
The Digest figures leave out
of account, however, fiscal
years 1952 and 1953. Fiscal
year 1952 ended June 30,
1952, when Truman still had
six months and 20 days of
White House service ahead
of him. The Truman deficit
that year was $14,017,000,000.
The 1953 fiscal year began
on July 1, 1952. The 1953
budget was prepared by Tru
man and submitted to Con
gress in January, 1952. Tru
man directed government
spending from July 1, 1952
until Eisenhower's inaugura
tion on Jan. 20, 1953 by which
time the 1953 fiscal year was .
half gone, half spent Spend
ing for that fiscal year was
a whopping $74,274,000,000
and the deficit was nearly $10
billion.
Shrinking Dollar
Those deficit and spending
figures would considerably
change the Digest's compari
son of HST and DDE, al
though they would not alter
the fact that Eisenhower has
out-spent 'em all.
To the question of who most
debased the lovely U.S. buck,
the record compiled by the
Senate Finance Committee
from Bureau of Labor Statis
tics and Library of Congress
material answers up like this:
Assuming that the dollar
was worth 100 cents in 1939,
when Franklin D. Roosevelt
was president, it was worth
only 51.9 cents in 1953 when
Truman left office. The dollar
lost nearly half of its pur
chasing " power in 14 . Demo
cratic years.
From 1953, when Eisen
hower took over, until April
of this year, the dollar fell
from 51.9 cents to 48.1 cents,
a shrinkage of 3.8 cents in
about 5 years-less than a
penny each . 12 months. The
shrinkage during the 14 pre
ceding Democratic years was
at a rate of about 3.4 cents
annually.
So, Who struck John?
some deep scars.
But it takes far more than
that to efface the majesty and
beauty of the area. Old
Mother Nature rests supreme
in her unruffled majesty,
looking with some humor on
the puny efforts of man to
undo the work she has done.
Noticed, also, that Ashland
has taken another big step
into the modern era. They
have widened the street on
both sides of the long lane
entering Ashland from the
south, and have installed
complete line of modern street
lamps all along the route. ;
It's a wonderful improve
ment for Ashland.
A Green Springs trip at
this time of the year will cer
tainly give you a new glimpse
of the beauty and the promise
that is Southern Oregon.
EM
3d