MATT. TWBUNf, MEDFORD, 01.
4 Monday, October 27, 1958
MedfordTribuse
"Everyone In Southern Oregon
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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. 27. 1948 (Wednesday)
Medford Jaycees are spon
soring a Get-Out-t he-Vote
campaign, and painting re
minders on downtown side
walks. Displays of paintings by
local artists will appear in
store windows here during
National Art week.
20 YEARS AGO
Oct. 27. 1938 (Thursday)
The Southern Oregon Con
cert association reports great
enthusiasm in its current mem
bership campaign.
From Arthur Perry's "Ye
Smudge Pot" column: "Many
valley Democrats have vowed
publicly and privately that
they will vote the top of the
Republican ticket on election
day and pray all Republicans
do the same."
30 YEARS AGO
Oct. 27. 1928 (Saturday)
The first walnuts of the sea
son are in stock today at the
public market.
A Hallowe'en frolic is plan
ned at the Jacksonville High
school gymnasium.
40 YEARS AGO
Oct. 27. 1918 (Sunday)
The state lime plant at Gold
Hill is now producing,, and
fanners are asked to send in
orders to keep it in business.
Drilling by officers train
ing school and state guard
members is interrupted by the
unexpected arrival of a spent
.45 bullet just a few feet from
Major Crowson.
What's Your I.Q.?
Nine or ten correct is superior;
even or eight if excellent; five ot
sis is good.
1. Which is the only bird
that can drink water without
throwing its head back?
2. According to the Bible,
which was the elder son of
Adam and Eve Cain or
Abel?
3. Which of these is the
capital of Canada Mon
treal, Ottawa, or Quebec?
4. Who wrote the poem,
"The Shooting of Dan Mc
Grew?" 5. Rattlesnake meat is edi
ble; true or false?
6. Name the red-haired foot
ball player who was nick
named "Galloping Ghost."
7. Is the city of Cleveland,
Ohio, situated on Lake Mich
igan, Lake Erie, or Lake Su
perior? 8. Harriet Beecher are the
first two names of the auth
or who wrote her noted "Un
cle Tom's Cabin" nearly a
century ago; what is her sur
name? 9. Name the patriotic hymn
that begins "O beautiful for
spacious skies, for amber
waves of grain."
10. Would you most likely
play barnyard golf with cro
quet mallets, horseshoes, or
pitchforks?
Answers: 1. Pigeon. 2. Cain.
3. Ottawa 4.. Robert W. Ser
vice. 5. True. 6. Harold (Red)
Grange. 7. Lake Erie. 8.
Stowe. 9. America. The Beau
tiful." 10. Horseshoes.
Pittsfield, 111. -(UP&- U. S.
Rep. Sid Simpson, (R-Ill.), 64,
collapsed and died Sunday
while taking part in a cornerstone-laying
ceremony at a
hosnital.
Nobody Like T.R'.
The United States has never yet had, may
never again have, another President with inter
ests so diverse as those of Theodore Roosevelt,
the centenary of whose birth is today.
Perhaps nearest to T.R. in making the whole
world his province was Thomas Jefferson. But
the interests of the Sage of Monticello were al
most entirely intellectual in science, philosophy,
education, art and, especially, architecture.
HTHE first President Roosevelt had of course his
intellectual side, too. A Phi' Beta Kappa at
Harvard, he produced some top-flight historical
books. Even in the thick of politics he did much
writing (more than Jefferson or FDR), and on
leaving the Presidency in 1909 turned out a reg
ular column for the Outlook magazine. He was
reading the Annals of Tacitus one week, the
Paradise Lost of Milton the next.
However, he was as much at home in non
intellectual as in intellectual pursuits. As a young
man he bought and operated a ranch in South
Dakota. In the war against Spain he led a cav
alry regiment, The Rough Riders, in person, and
he tried hard to get an active, not a mere arm
chair, command in World War I. He argued about
the behavior of wild animals, identified birds of
England by their songs.
LJE WAS an indefatigable horseman. He took
ju-jitsu lessons, had one eye-ball destroyed in
White House boxing with a professional pugilist,
at some personal danger shot wild animals in Af
rican jungles, explored river headwaters in South
American jungles, argued military strategy with
the Kaiser. But as to music, he said he recogniz
ed only two tunes : "one was Yankee Doodle, the
other wasn't.
Jefferson and the second Roosevelt (whose
great hobbies were sailing and stamps) were as
popular as T.R. with the hoi polloi. But the Great
Unwashed were apt to look up to Jefferson and
F.D.R. as high-minded men sincerely interested
in their welfare, horizontally across the same
personality plane at "Teddy" as one of them.
E.R.R.
Chiang
Nationalist China's man of steel, President
Chiano- Kai-shek, nearincr his 71st birthdav next
Friday, still exercises a
dictatorial voice over
evacuees and .the nearlv
wan, the term both the Communists and Nation
alists use for .Formosa.
Reported in excellent
by a London Times special correspondent as
"stern, bleak, unshaken, uncompnsmg Metho
dist" and always the soldier. On Taiwan as on
the mainland, he keeps
armed forces under his complete 'personal con
trol. Chiang meets his present adversity with the
cold calm of a man who has made a life-long
companion of hardship. Born Chiang. Jui-yuan
(he changed his name after joining the 'Chinese
revolutionary movement) in the town of Chikou,
in the coastal province of Chekiang, he early
came to know the poverty of Chinese farm life,
made more grinding after his father died when
Chiang was only nine.
THE young Chiang chose a military career, at
A tending preparatory service schools in China
and Japan. He went AWOL from the latter to
join the Chinese revolutionary movement of Dr.
Sun Yat-sen, whose favor and confidence he
early gained. By 1923 he had become Dr. Sun's
chief of staff, in which capacity he made a four
month visit to Moscow.
Except for a brief period of retirement Chiang
has been virtual ruler of the Chinese Nationalists
since 1927, when he split with the Communists.
A dramatic reconciliation of Communist and
Kuomintang party (Nationalist) leaders was ef
fected by the kidnaping of Chiang at Sian in De
cember 1936, but full-fledged war with Japan in
1937 and the subsequent internecine conflicts of
World War II precluded any genuine under
standing. Chiang became titular head of the Chinese
state in 1943. He was elected President for a six
year term in April 1948 under a new constitution
adopted the previous year; re-elected in 1954. He
had volunarily retired, Jan. 21, 1949 in the face
of Communist victories on the mainland. On
March 1, 1950, with the backing of the Kuomin
tang and the Legislative Yuan, he reclaimed the
Presidency on the island of Formosa.
A FTER his wedding to Mei-ling Soong, daugh
"terof well-to-do Shanghai Christians, in
1927, the Generalissimo became a devout Metho
dist. Mme. Chiang frequently has visited the
United States to ask Nationalist support total
ing some $2.5 billion.
. Despite his excellent health, Chiang's age is a
cause for some concern among Nationalist well
wishers. The Vice President of the Republic of
China is Chen Cheng, but Chiang's likely succes
sor is his Russian-trained elder son, Gen. Chiang
Ching-kuo,who directs the Nationalist cloak-and-dagger
activities and strictly controls the police
on Formosa. E.R.R.
at 71
controlling some say
the 2 million mainland
8 million natives on Tai
health, he is described
the Chinese Nationalist
Dennis the Menace
'Mom, would you mind
Communications
Letters to the Editor must bear the name and address of the writer,
although under certain circumstances the use of a pen name or initial
for publication is permissible. The Mail Tribune reserves the right to
edit all letters with a view to clarification and condensation. Letters
submitted for publication must not exceed 400 words. The letters
printed in this column do not necessarily represent the views of the
aaper; in fact the contrary is often the case.
Protests Tactics
To the Editor: The follow
ing "open letter" has also
been sent to Gov. Robert
Holmes and Rep. Charles
Porter;
Due to the dissatisfaction a
number of land owners have
experienced in their dealings
With the state highway depart
ment, we are writing you this
letter to inform you of some
facts.
We refer to the extension
of Highway , 99 south from
Grants Pass which at this time
is under acquisition.
We have been ill-advised
and facts have been diregard
ed in many instances. The
tactics of their agents have
been so deceptive that many
of us now fear to deal with
them, which indicates many
are ready to no longer enter
tain them. This would mean
that court action would be
necessary to bring out all the
facts in each respective case.
We do not like to be forced to
gain our fair and just equity
in this manner.-'
Some of our complaints
more specificaUy listed are as
follows:
1. Contradictory and mis
leading statements regarding
information a land owner
needs to understand how
values are arrived at.
2. Coercive methods ap
parently intended to frighten
client into signing an option
without any further dickering
or "horsetrading."
3. Refusal to discuss com
parative values of respective
parcels of land even though
they are side by side or as
identical as two pieces of prop
erty can be.
4. Will not submit apprais
ed figures of the M.A.I. ap
praiser to the land owners
that he may know the un
biased figures from which
they pretend ' to arrive at
values, whereas the M. A. I.
appraisers' fees are paid by
the taxpayer and is a public
record. It should be available
to those concerned.
May we impress on you that
we only ask for a fair and
just deal.
Henry Corbin,
5664 Foothill blvd.
Grants Pass, Ore.
and six others.
Claims Misrepresentation
To the Editor: It has been
called to my attention that
Congressman Charles O. Por
ter is attempting what ap
pears to me to be a deliberate
attempt to deceive the people
of this Congressional District
Try and
-By BENNETT CERF-
HPEDDY ROOSEVELT, President, big-game hunter and writer
J- of first-rate biographies and histories, coined many Ameri
canisms that have become part of our language. Examples:
pussyfooter, weasel words,
lunatic fringe, muckraker,
square deal, and malefactors
of great wealth.
Another TR quote sup
plied by Herman Hagedorn,
director of the Theodore
Roosevelt Centennial com-
mission: "A typical vice of
American politics is the
avoidance of saying any
thing real on real issues,
and the announcement of
radical policies with much
sound and fury, and at the
same time with a cautious
accomplishment of weasel phrases each of which sucks the meat
out of the preceding statement"
An exam paper at Michigan State included this question: "If hav
ing the tonsils removed is a tonsillectomy and the appendix removed
is an appendectomy, what la the term for having a growth from the
head removed?"
One ingenious student answered, "A haircut"
O 195s, by Seaaett Cert. Siitributed by King Feature! Syndicate
turnin'the tv oh?'
concerning his position and
his votes on important farm
legislation.
I have carefully checked
Mr. Porter's record. Certain
statements credited to him
concerning his voting record
and his position on farm mat
ters are false.
On Oct. 8, the Eugene Register-Guard
quoted him as say
ing, in regard to the so-called
"omnibus farm bill," that "I
voted only for consideration
of the farm bill and when it
came up for a vote, I voted
against it." This is untrue.
Wiser Democrats and Republi
cans killed this bill in June,
1958, when it came up for a
vote to debate it, so Mr. Por
ter would have had no other
opportunity to vote for or
against it. .
In a letter to the Medford
Mail Tribune on Oct. 19, he
did "conec t" the same
erroneous statement which
had been made almost three
weeks earlier in Medford. He
made this "correction" only
after he was confronted with
his own record. In the same
letter, however, he stated
"My position has always been
against price supports for so
called basic crops." This, also,
is untrue. He voted for the
continuation of high parity
payments in March, 1958. He
vote$ for the Agriculture Act
of 1958 in August, 1958. 17fail
to find in his record even one
vote against high price sup
ports. I also fail to find that
he ever corrected the false
statement made in Eugene.
It seems to me to be a ser
ious matter when a Congress
man from the Fourth District
of Oregon supports costly,
wasteful legislation which
would help no farmers or
ranchers in this District, but
which would help increase our
cost of living and which would
affect our already high' tax
burden. It seems even more
serious, however, when he
deliberately attempts to mis
represent this record to voters
of his District, by claiming
positions and votes which, on
the record, are the opposite
of the truth.
I think the attention of the
public should be called to this
matter.
Glen W. Johnson
Azalea River Ranch
Azalea, Ore.
Mrs. Nye on Taxes
To the Editor: In answer to
Mr. M. J. Olson, in the Oct.
22, Mail Tribune, I have come
to believe that control is our
biggest problem in taxation.
As a housewife I have always
Stop Me
solved my budget problems
by estimating the amount of
money I could expect to have
available to run my home and
apportioning that money to
meet our household needs. I
think the state should operate
in the same manner. The legis
lature should, . I believe, de
termine the rate of taxation
which is reasonable and fair
to expect of our citizens, keep
ing in mind our per capita
wealth and the fact that we
must maintain a competitive
position with our neighboring
states. The amount which such
a tax program would raise
should then be apportioned
among the various govern
mental agencies. Instead of
this, they have allowed pres
sure groups to build a budget
of astronomical proportions,
which must then be met by
whatever tax rate is required.
As far as a sales tax is con
cerned, I do not now or have
I ever favored it as an addi
tional tax. If a sales tax can
be drawn so that it will op
erate as a property tax off-set,
I think it should be consider
ed, but I am a little concern
ed because some of the big
spenders in the legislature
who were formerly opposed to
a sales tax are now showing
an interest in it, and I suspect
that they want it as an addi
tional source of revenue.. I
would want nothing to lo
with that type of sales tax.
Dr. Sly, of the Princeton Re
search Department, who has
been making a survey of the
Oregon tax structure, states
that it can stand no substan
tial increase of expenditures,
meaning that our income tax
rates are at a maximum now.
Further state spending, there
fore, can only come from a
new source of revenue. In the
final analysis, the people of
Oregon will decide whether
or not they want a sales tax.
Eve Nye
Route 3, Box 203
Medford
How About Olwell Way?
To the Editor: For several
days photographs of unsightly
residential and commercial
scenes have appeared on the
front page of the Tribune in
your worthy campaign to
"Make Medford Beautiful."
Since the cause is of primary
value to the community, why
not suggest the city take the
initiative?
Across East Jackson st.
from Hedrick Junior high is
"Olwell Way." You wUl find
this unmarked street on your
map of the city one block
long joining Jackson and
Crown streets. Residences
have been built on both street
approaches, but the remain
ing portion of the street is
bogged down with a frog
pond, tule, and blackberry
vine- It wouldn't need to be a
major project with asphalt
surface, curbing, etc. Just
punch the street through,
drain the water, surface with
gravel and rid the community
of a top -grade unsightly
mess. Too, this would provide
additional car parking space
for the public turning out for
civic affairs at Hedrick Jun
ior high.
Just one more thought, and
I'm sure it hasn't escaped you.
Why not take a shot-of the
picturesque barn across from
Hedrick for your campaign?
Jack H. Nichols
232 Olwell Way
Medford
'Paraphrase' in Versa
To the Editor:
The further story of Geddes
the gent,
Who now boasts a new accom
plishment: "I offer to my constituency
My shiny new foreign policy!
I just found out the voter
cares
About these here foreign af
fairs. The voter's choice is my selec-tion-
At least from now until elec
tion. So now I stay up nights and
look
At the pictures in my history
book,
And learn about the foreign
places
Inhabited by (ugh!) other
races.
So friends, if elected, I will
stand
Against dictatorship in every
land,
But do so diplomatically,
And offend no man who might
hurt me,
And when in doubt I'll simply
do
The opposite from my oppo
nents who
Don't understand how Rose
burg can be
The entire universe to me."
George W. Rode
Fluhrer Building
Medford
Doesn't Like Herblock
To the Editor: I would like
to ask if you people at the
Mail Tribune honestly feel
that Herblock's cartoons are
contributing anything to the
common good.
In my opinion he is just a
clever fellow who has a
unique way of signing his
name to political cartoons that
contribute nothing to freedom
and democracy.
Roy F. Thompson
660 Clover lane .
' r Ashland
Nasser's Sway Seen Long-Term
Thing; Greater Influence Due
By WILBUR G. LANDREY
UPI Correspondent
Cairo-flJPD-Things are likely
to keep going the way of Ga-
mal Nasser in the Middle East
during the coming months
and years.
The UAR president is the
symbol of Arab nationalism-
he may even be its prisoner.
In practice, his non-alignment
has meant hostility to
ward the West while accept
ing the helping hand of Rus
sia. But Nasser is his own and
not the Communists' man.
Any one of several coun
tries could come under Nas
ser's sway in the coming year,
whether he encourages them
or not. Nothing succeeds like
success.
When Western diplomats
talk of the Arab nationalism
which Nasser represents, they
agree: "You can't stop it."
The holdouts against his
policy since the revolution
chased Western influence
from Iraq are isolated and
shaky.
Jordan Most Explosive
Jordan is potentially the
most explosive. In spite of
British troops now on their
way home or a United Na
tions "presence," one bullet
could end King Hussein and
his regime. Hussein is the
poorest insurance risk in the
Arab world.
The Middle East has fooled
its prophets before, but diplo
mats believe Hussein may go
sooner than later, one way or
another.
Nasser probably would pre
fer to see the West go on foot
ing the bill for impoverished
Jordan for the present, taking
the political blame and wor
rying about the long border
with Israel. But if a revolu
tionary government in Jordan
asks to join his UAR, he can't
New Drug To
Reduce Blood
Pressure Praised
Washington - (UPD - The Na
tional Heart Institute today
announced "impressive" re
sults with a new drug for
lowering blood pressure.
It said research physicians
of the institute have found
that the drug, known as JB
516, "produces marked and
sustained lowermg of blood
pressure in patients with hy
pertension." Hypertension is
the medical name for the dis
ease commonly known as high
blood pressure, one of the na
tion's leading causes of death.
Formal Paper
The research physicians are
Drs. Louis Gillespie Jr., Lu
ther L. Terry and Albert
Sjoerdsma. They presented a
formal paner on their research
today before a scientific ses
sion of the American Heart
association at San Francisco.
The findings were simultan
eously made public here by
the institute, a branch of the
National Institutes of Health
at.Bethesda, Md.
The physicians reported that
JB 516 does not seem to pro
duce some of the undesirable
side effects of other blood
pressure-lowering drugs now
in use. These side effects in
clude sexual impotence, dry
mouth and constipation.
Color Blindness
In some patients JB 516 has
produced a unique side effect
of its own temporary color
blindness. . This condition has
disappeared upon withdrawal
of the drug. ,
It has been'-administered to
date to 21 patients, of whom
19 responded with "significant
and sustained lowering" of
blood pressure.
The physicians said how
ever that further clinical tests
must " be made before the
drug's lasting value in treat
ment of hypertension can be
known.
tyree Appointed
Antarctic Commander
Christchurch, New Zealand
-(UPD-Rear Adm. George J. Du
fek announced today that
Rear1 Adm. David Merrill Ty
ree had been named to suc
ceed him as U.S. antarctic
commander.
Tyree is now commander
of the U.S. Navy task force
in nuclear bomb tests at Eni
wetok. DIRECTOR DIES
Montreal -UPD- George H.
Richards, 57, senior vice pres
ident and director of the Cel
anese Corp. of America, died
Sunday of a heart attack.
Worry of
FALSE TEETH
Slipping or Irritating?
Don't be embarrassed by loose false
teeth slipping, dropping or wobbling
when you eat, talk or laugh. Just
sprinkle a little FASTEETH on your
plates. This pleasant powder gives a
remarkable sense of added comfort
and security by holding plates more
firmly. No gummy, gooey, pasty taste
or feeling. It's alkaline (non-acid).
Oct FASTEETH at any drug counter.
His radio and press con
tinue their attacks against
Hussein.
Victory for Nasser
In Lebanon, the appoint
ment of rebel leader Rashid
Karami as premier represents
a victory for the rebels and
at least a moral victory for
Nasser.
Lebanon will have enough
to do licking its political
wounds in the coming months
and trying to prevent out
breaks of new trouble.
Roscoe Drummond
Reports . ...
(Drummond Is substituting for Walter Lippmann,
during the latter's trip to Russia.)
THE BIG STAKE
IN CALIFORNIA
Los Angeles - Evervthine-
literally evervthinz is at
stake here in the California
election this fall. No less than
this:
The fate of the Republican
party, perhaps for a long time
to come, in a state where in
dependent Republicanism has
ruled for many years.
The shape of the Presiden
tial tickets of both parties in
1960.
The coloration in foreign
and domestic policy 5like, of
both parties in Congess.
And to a large extent the
future of the right - to - work
(anti-closed shop) movement
throughout the country. .
In the whole budget of na
tional politics this year, here
in one package is the biggest
stake in what in a few years
will be the most populous and
politically the most powerful
state in the Union-the biggest
bloc of votes at both conven
tions, the biggest bloc of votes
in the Electorial College,' the
largest delegation in Con
gress.
No doubt about it, some
thing big is going to give here
on Nov. 4.
T OOK at the stake in terms
- of its leading personalities:
If Sen. William F. Know
land wins the governorship,
particularly with all the odds
against him as they are to
day, he will instantly become
a formidable contender for
the 1960 Presidential nomin
ation and will provide a focal
point "for Republican conser
vative" opposition to Vice
President Nixon.
If Sen. Knowland wins, Mr
Nixon's prospects for the
nomination will be somewhat
hurt and his prospects of elec
tion, if nominated, improved
If Mr. Knowland loses, Mr,
Nixon's nomination will be
nearly assured and his pros
pects of elections impaired be
cause he will have lost a se
cure Republican home base
from which to operate.
If Democratic nom
inee Edmund (Pat) Brown
wins the Governorship, he
will be a power in the Dem
ocratic party nationally, can
do much to help it win in
1960, will be a big factor at
the convention, and a pros
pect for the Vice President
ial nomination.
. -
AND there are these other
consequences:
If the Republicans lose
in California, Sen. Knowland
will be an extinguished politi
cal figure, the party will have
lost one of its most vigorous
and respected conservatives
and the cause of an Asia-first
Reasonable Funerals
(Priced for Everyone)
CSC-
a,
yv y
The monarchy of Saudi Ara
bia may not be immune to
revolution indefinitely. Crown
Prince and Premier Feisal,
the real power in the country,
came here last month and
patched things up between
the Saudis and Nasser, who
earlier this year charged King
Saud with trying to assassi
nate him.
But observers believe revo
lution in Saudi Arabia is one
of those things which could
come tomorrow -or in five
years.
foreign policy and all-out sup
port of Chiang Kai-shek will
have lost one of its most in
fluential advocates.
If the Democrats win, it
will probably be a full-scale
sweep, including decisive con
trol of the state legislature
which will enable the Demo
crats to re-gerrymander the
Congressional districts in a
way which will produce a
heavily titled Democratic del
egation in Congress for a long
time.
If the Democrats win, the
right-to-work referendum will
probably lose, and if the same
thing happens in Ohio where
the anti-right-to-work Demo
cratic nominee for Governor,
Mike DiSalle, is visibly run
ning ahead of Gov. O'Neil
then most observers believe
it will end for some time at
tempts to get a national right-to-work
law and will likely
start a repeal movement in
some of the 18 states which
have such laws.
THE radiant Mr. Eisenhower
anrl trip riarrl-Vuttini Mr.
Nixon have done their best to
kindle fire and force behind
the Republican campaign. But
they have now come "and
gone, the voting is near at
hand and the factors which
still point to Democratic vic
tory remain:
Pat Brown's massive pri
mary ' majority over Bill
Knowland.
New registrations running
3-to-l Democratic.
A newly united Democratic
pary an an openly divided
Republican party with Goodie
Knight unforgiving Mr.
Knowland's wresting the Gub
ernatorial re-nomination from-
his hands and letting . it "be
known that a .vote against
Knowland-including his own
- would be all right with
him.
Republican moderates, like
Earl Warren and Knight, have
been able easily to defeat
Democratic Left-Wingers. But
now a Democratic moderate
is running against an authen
tic Republican conservative
and the outcome on Nov. 4
will be something to watch.
(C) 1958 New York
' Herald Tribune Inc.
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