4 Friday, December 9, If 38
MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, ORE,
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Raaria TVia Mail TiriViiia7'
Published Daily except Saturday by
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Managing Editor
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March 3, 1897
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ASodj-JlgN
December 19, 1958
Hint to the weatherman : We could use just a
little less of that nasty, cold fog, please, particu
larly from now to Christmas.
Only four more shopping days. Is it really true
that Christmas comes faster each year? Or is it
only an effect of getting older?
Each year at about this time, we hear people
moaning about how Christmas isn't the way it
used to be, and that it's too commercialized, and
that they can't get excited about it any more, and
why doesn't it come in July and so on and so on.
We note, however, that these Scrooges, most
of 'em, are pretty well softened up by the time the
Big Day comes, and are just as sentimental as
ever when the youngsters get those stars in their
eyes at gift-unwrapping time.
It's odd to read of brush fires in southern
California the week before Christmas. And that
68-degree temperature in San Francisco yester
day well !
Dennis the Menace
Construction on the new Sears Roebuck and
Company store on Jackson street continues de
spite the fog. It s just a bit eerie to peer through
the white blanket and dimlv discern the figures
of construction men moving around, sort of like
ghosts.
Conflicting Stories Told of Dulles'
Illness; Need for Frankness Emphasized
By LYLE C. WILSON
Washington - (UPD - If there
be occasions when it is right
and decent to join in the cir-
culation of
rumors, per
haps this is
one of those
occasions.
The rumors
concern the
health of Sec
retary of State
John Foster
Dulles. A re-
yle C. Wilson sponsioie dip
lomat told a United Press In
ternational reporter this week
that Dulles' condition was
such as to require delayed
surgery on his return from
the Paris NATO talks.
Other equally responsible
and presumably well inform
ed news sources, much closer
to the secretary, instanUy
told UPI men that no surgery
was in prospect. None claims,
however, that Dulles is a well
man. He was accompanied to
Paris by a physician. Best
judgment here is that his ill-ness-inflamation
of the colon
-just before leaving for Paris
was quite serious, that his re
cuperation was not complete
Matter of Fact
Flight 'o Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30 and
40 years ago.
It amazes us that more than $221,000 has been
raised in just a little over a month for the Shake
spearean Festival theater building. It's amazing
and Heartening. Just a little more effort on the
part of the fund-raising volunteers, and the goal
will be achieved which would be a real New
Year's present from the Rogue valley to itself.
And how about a little extra boost for the United
Medford Crusade? It's SO close to its goal!
10 YEARS AGO
Dec. 19, 1948 (Sunday)
The local Red Cross con
tinues to dispatch Christmas
gifts to the Roseburg Veter
ans hospital.
Prospect students prepare
for the annual Christmas pro
gram, which features a play
about Mrs. Claus' entertain
ing the toys Santa leaves be
hind.
20 YEARS AGO
Dec. 19. 1938 (Monday)
A reactorrter to test au
tomobile drivers' reaction
apeeds is being used for stu
dents at Medford Senior High
school.
From Arthur Perry's "Ye
Smudge Pot" column: "The
sales tax has two mean fea
tures: it works, and nobody
can get out of paying it."
We wonder who is responsible for that tri
angle of black asphalt at the corner of Eighth
and King streets? Shouldn't that have been a
little, landscaped park? Couldn't it still be? Can't
the highway department do something about it?
Can't the city ask them to? -
Odd story, that one about prisoners in the
county jail having a rather considerable sum of
money. We've had a couple of telephone calls,
protesting that no one could smuggle that much
money in without its being found when the prison
ers were searched before being admitted. But we
got the story from those who did the searching,
and stick with it.
30 YEARS AGO
Dec. 19, 1928 (Wednesday)
Outdoor fog is more than
matched by smoke from cigars
doled out by Mayor O. O.
Alenderfer at the city coun
cil meeting.
The Medford traffic depart
ment starts a drive to relieve
downtown parking congestion
by tagging cars for parking
violations.
40 YEARS AGO
Dec. 19, 1918 (Thursday)
Mayor Gates raises hopes
that the flu masks may be
dispensed with in a few days
if all goes well.
Prominent Christian Scient
ists here deny that they op
pose the flu mask ordinance,
What's Your I.Q.?
Mine or ten correct is superior;
even or eight it excellent; five of
ix u good.
the
1. Edmond Dantes is
hero of "The Count of ....
" by Dumas, the
elder?
2. Would an anthro pophag
inian be a prehistoric mons
ter, a cannibal, or a henpeck
ed husband?
3. "Little Necks" are young
clams, or oysters?
4. Lacrosse is a sport that
was originated by the French,
British, or the North Ameri
can Indians?
5. "Bojangles" was the
nickname of which vell
known Negro tap dancer?
6. In which Western state is
Mt. Rainier National park?
7. Is the flageolet a precus
sion, or a wood-wind musical
instrument?
8. Name the capital of
Greece.
9. Biceps are the muscles in
the upper leg, or upper arm?
10. What is the opposite of
flood tide?
1. Monte Cristo. 2. Cannibal-
3. Clams. 4. North
American Indians. 5. Bill
Robinson. 6. Washington.
7. Wood-wind. 8. Athens. 9.
Upper arm. 10. Ebb tide.
The 21st traffic death of the year was record
ed Wednesday. And it was another case where it
probably could have been avoided. If 21 persons
were killed all at once, the whole county would
be shocked right down to its toes. But apparently
when they're killed one by one, we just get used
to it.
Our conscientious chief of police has again
pointed out one of the principal traffic hazards
the guy who has had too much Christmas "cheer,"
but won't admit it and insists on driving. And
don't depend on coffee to sober you up either. It
doesn't work.
HAM FOR NERVES
Jackson, Miss. - (UPD - Nerv
ous? Try ham, not Miltowns,
says Roy Cavender, pork mar
keting specialist at Auburn
Polytechnic Institute. Accord
ing to Cavender, one serving
of ham will provide 68 per
cent of the daily thiamine
needs of the average person.
It's the thiamine content of
tranquilizers that calms jit
tery nerves, he said.
We like firemen. We particularly like Med
ford firemen. And we like them especially well
at this time of year when they're completing their
annual, selt-imposed job of collecting and repair
ing a whole raft of toys to be distributed at Christ
mas to youngsters who otherwise wouldn't have
any. The same goes for the Lady Lions, who do
the same thing with dolls. Bless 'em.
What do people expect to accomplish when
they write anonymous letters? It only reveals their
own cowardice in failing to stand up for what
they believe. Most of these letters, incidentally,
are vicious and stupid, like the one sent to a Med
ford woman this week in response to a perfectly
intelligent, decent letter she'd written to this
paper. When we get unsigned letters here at the
paper, we chuck 'em in the waste-basket which
is where they belong.
We are tired of reading stories about Liberace
and his family fuss in the paper, and we are also
tired of reading about Elvis Presley. They have
been fewer recently the stories, that is. One of
the things we can be thankful for at Christmas.
We received (and printed) a letter recently
from Bemal S. Quayle, a real nice guy who is
passenger traffic and public relations manager
for the Southern Pacific company in Portland, in
which he chided us for chiding the SP for its lack
of rail passenger service in this area. In the letter
he points out that competing airlines receive fed
eral subsidies, the implication being that railroads
(or at least the SP) don't. How about all those
thousands upon thousands of acres which the SP
and its predecessors received as land grants (sub
sidies) in the early days? The SP still receives a
considerable annual income from them at least
in California and other southwestern states. In
Oregon, the federal government took them back
again when the railroad violated its original
agreement as to how they could be sold.
Four more shopping days! Hope the family
secretary of health, education and welfare is
doing well on her list.
Best news of the day for those at the paper:
Mrs. Earl Adams became the mothsr of a 10
pound boy this morning. Earl is the Mail Trib
une's city editor. E.A.
MEETING UNDER THREAT
Paris -The Foreign Minis
ters of the West are meeting
under threat of a new Soviet
offensive on
all fronts con
siderably worse than the
o f f e n s i ves
launched by
Josef Stalin.
The menace to
Berlin, which
is the all-absorbing
topic
4osph Alsop nere,. la umjr
another, particularly ugly
chapter in a long, somber
ptory.
Very few people in Amer
ica have grasped these un
pleasant facts, partly because
Nikita Khrushchev bubbles
over with such jolly bon
homie between thrusts at our
vitals, and partly because Sec
retary Dulles has exiled our
best qualified analysts of So
viet behavior. The sharpest
American eyes are in Manila
or elsewhere, so we have been
half blind. But by now the
facts are too big and too black
to escape notice any longer.
The beginning of the new
Soviet offensive may be
roughly dated from the sum
mer of 1957, after the defeat
of Khrushchev's enemies of
the so-called "anti-party
group." The first incident was
the Syrian coup d'etat, organ
ized by the Kremlin with the
help of its unsavory Syrian
agent, former Defense Minis
ter Khalid al Azm.
THIS little - understood but
crucial coup in Syria had
two altogether novel aspects.
First, it revealed the adoption
of a new and more aggressive
Kremlin line in the Arab
lands. Second, it led on to
Nikita Khrushchev's use of
military menaces of a previ
ously unprecedented charac
ter. Khrushchev charged that
Turkey was thinking about
reacting to the coup d'etat by
invading Syria-and there was
more foundation for this
charge than appeared at the
time. He therefore massed his
armies on the Turkish fron
tier, and roared that if Turkey
invaded Syria, Turkey would
also be invaded. '
This reporter well remem
bers George F. Kennan, one
of the brilliant exiled ana
lysts, worriedly remarking
that he "wished for once he
again had access to all the
intelligence, because he was
puzzled by Khrushchev's
roars, which struck a really
new and very alarming note."
The coup d'etat in Iraq pro
vided the next climax. Once
again, Khrushchev freely and
violently talked of resorting
to military measures. His
menaces continued until he
was sure that the relatively
meaningless Western troop
landings in the Lebanon and
Jordan were not the first
phase of an attack on the
new Iraqi government. That
By Joseph Alsop
incident left the Western po
sition and the Western policy
in the Middle East in utter,
irremediable ruins. There fol
lowed the grab for Quemoy,
the first open aggression any
where since Korea.
...
rpHE firm line of Secretary
Dulles caused the grab for
Quemoy to be frustrated in
the end, after a good many
breathless weeks. But the fact
that the offshore islands are
now being shelled only every
other day should not distract
attention from the extraor
dinary signs of growing So
viet boldness in other areas,
In the few weeks since this
reporter was in Iraq, the Com
munists seem to have strength
ened their grip on that un
happy country to a point that
is likely to be fatal. This is
the new Kremlin line for the
Arab lands-to have the Com
munists take over themselves
wherever possible, if need be
in open opposition to Gamal
Abdel Nasser's Arab nation
alists. In Iraq, the Nasserites
have been jailed by the score,
There is no military risk, of
course, in this new Commu
nist line in the Middle East,
But it is none the less amaz
ingly daring to offer this kind
of political challenge to the
undisputed leader of Arab na
tionalism, the most powerful
figure among all the Arabs
Egypt's Nasser. The daring
is underlined by the fact that
the Kremlin plainly expects
Nasser to ignore the chal
lenge, and to go on helpfully
attacking the remaining West
ern positions in those parts
of the Arab world where the
Communists are not yet strong
enough to act alone.
In part, one suspects, the
Kremlin's Middle Eastern
gamble is based on the new
Berlin gamble; for Nasser will
never break with his Soviet
friends if the Western pow
ers finally surrender at Ber
lin. This kind of shattering
and terrible Western defeat,
if it is permitted, will surely
start a whole series of politi
cal avalanches. . The ava
lanches will occur not only
in the Middle East, but also
in the Far East, in Africa, and
no doubt in South America
too, not to mention Europe
itself.
...
INCE again, the outstanding
feature of the Berlin crisis
has been Nikita Khrushchev's
flagrant, incessant use of the
naked menaces of military
force. In the last 18 months,
in short, the Soviet bloc has
openly resorted to force once,
at Quemoy, and Khrushchev
has used menaces of force
three times. Furthermore, his
language about Berlin has
been more shockingly unre
strained than ever before.
That is the record. It is
a pretty disturbing record,
and the spectacle of the wor
ried huddle of Foreign Minis-
Try and Stop Me
By BENNETT CERF-
THE MANSERVANT of a wealthy Eastern potentate tendered
his resignation at Monte Carlo, and asked for a letter of
recommendation. This is what he got: "To whom it may con
cern: The bearer of this note
has served me for three
years to his complete satis
faction. If you are contem
plating giving him a berth,
be sure it's a wide one,"
A steel worker on a new
project on Park avenue is
beginning to think Ms wife
is planning to give him the
air. All last month she
wrapped his lunch in a road
map.
Harvard upperclassmen are
exchanging notea about a
Cambridge siren who treats her gentlemen callers like dirt She
hides them under her bed.
Renwicke Cary has a name for the person who's afraid to become
embroiled in the Christmas shopping rush: a Noel coward.
O U5S. by Bennett Cert Distributed by Kinf Feature! Syndicate. - -
Communications
Letters to the Editor must bear the name and address of the writer,
altnough 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
saper; in tact the contrary oirsrt sn cu.
i
On Nursing Homes
To the Editor: First let me
School Defended
To the Editor: In answer
to W. O. Burns' letter in Com
munications Dec. 16:
"Outdated" school system?
Really, Mr. Burns, can't you
do better than that? Even the
students know that Medford
has one of the superior sys
tems in Oregon, if not the
country.
What sort of segregation to
keep slow students away from
those with high IQs? Haven't
vou heard of major work
group classes in the elemen
tary levels and academic
classes in the high school?
You mention the article
"High Schools Too Easy." Yes,
Mr. Burns, some schools, but
not Medford Senior High,
Those in the college prepara
tory division at Medford must
have earned, before they are
allowed to graduate, 3Vi units
in English. 2 in math, 2 in a
foreign language, 1 in
science (either chemistry or
physics), Vi unit in home
nursing for girls, first aid for
boys, 1 in American History,
1. in government problems,
and 2 in physical education,
a unit indicating a year's
work. The majors that stu
dents in this division have to
pick from are science, lan
guage, math or social studies
Many major in more than one
of these. Does this sound easy
to you, Mr. Burns?
Another interesting point:
most colleges accept Medford
college-prep students without
requiring an entrance exam,
they are that sure they are
qualified students!
But Medford isn t just a
school for students who are
interested in the sciences,
math, etc. Music students are
in excellent hands, shop stu
dents have a variety of classes
to choose from, business ma
jors have modern, efficient
classrooms, and so on. We
have our share of students
who won't work, but this is
their fault, not the school's.
Everyone has a chance to
study in the field he is most
interested in, at the level he
can cope with.
I have one more thing to
say, in defense of the Tribune.
I read it daily, from cover to
cover, front page news, fea
tures, comics, Dr. Alvarez,
editorials, c o m m u nications,
etc., and I certainly don't
feel any more inclined to
ward delinquency than if I
didn't read it. Nor do I find
any evidence, period, of con
doning juvenile delinquency
in the Tribune. Perhaps I'm
just an uninformed, unedu
cated high school sophomore
(due to our "outdated" school
system) but at least I've sup
port behind my statements.
Miss Dayle Ann Stratton,
804 Bennett ave.,
' Medford.
say I don't know the man
that wrote the article in Sun
day's paper.
Second let me say the ar
ticle was good. But the writer
was misinformed. There are
nursing homes in Medford
where the guests get a snack
at night before going to bed.
Because I believe that if
you're hungry you're hungry,
doesn't matter where you are.
And any time in the day if
you want a cup of coffee,
again it doesn't matter where
you are a nursing home or
hospital you should be able
to have that cup of coffee and
many places here in Medford,
both hospital and nursing
homes, get it.
Now for the rates at the
farm home, $130 per month.
They pay no taxes, everything
is furnished, and at the Coun
ty Farm home it costs them
just as much and according to
the budget, which is always
in your paper in July, it costs
more per patient than in a
private owned nursing home.
And who makes up the differ
ence? We the tax payers. Who
is paying for the building, the
upkeep . and all, the differ
ence is made up by us the tax
payers. At Eugene they finally
woke up to the fact tht pri
vate owned nursing homes
were cheaper than a county
farm, and they sold the coun
ty farm and the man that
bought it is the president of
the Nursing Home Associa
tion of Oregon.
So tell your reporter to
visit nursing homes here in
the vaUey and see for himself
which are the happiest guests,
those in private owned homes
or out at the County Farm
Talk to people who have had
loved ones in different homes
and come up with the right
answers. Find out who takes
care of the patients that the
County Farm won't take.
Good time to clear up this
$130 a month deal when some
of us get $124 a month for
patients. Why not give it a
try to come up with a just
balance?
Mrs. Erma Milledge
Milledge Convalescent
Home
12 South Orange st.
Medford
and that he made the Paris
trip with reluctant medical
consent.
Dulles' Statement
Dulles himself took note of
reports about his health and
authorized this statement
from Paris Thursday.
"There is no basis in fact
for speculative stories appear
ing in the press today that
Secretary of State Dulles is
expected to re-enter the hos
pital following his return to
Washington with a view to
surgery. In fact the secretary
has almost completely recov
ered from the inflammatory
condition of the colon which
required treatment in Walter
Reed hospital, Washington."
The health of Dulles' colon
is peculiarly his own person
al concern except for this
fact: Dulles is a public servant
engaged in diplomatic nego
tiations of the most urgent
importance to millions upon
millions of free people. A fair
question would be: Is that a
job for a man who is not phy
sically fit?
Author-doctor Hugh L'Etang
wrote a year ago in a British
medical journal that British
and American statesmen con
trolling the destinies of mil
lions over the past 50 years
were ill, even dying, men at
times of crisis. He cited:
President Wilson, Franklin
D. Roosevelt, Stanley Bald
win, Neville Chamberlain,
Ernest Bevin, Sir Stafford
Cripps, Harry L. Hopkins and
Lord Keynes. These men were
ill when the people and
events demanded their best,
vigorous judgment and ac
tion. L'Etang said illness signifi
cantly affected the efficiency
of these men and he urged
full publicity of the illnesses
of statesmen. Otherwise, he
said, the public could not
know that they were being
represented in critical times
by men more or less seriously
incapacitated.
Wilson, FDR Illnesses
Of Woodrow Wilson, he
wrote: "After the partial
paralysis which developed in
1919, his actions destroyed
any hope of the Senate ratify
ing the German peace treaty
and entering the League of
Nations
He said of FDR: "It has
been said that the concessions
made to the Russians at Yalta
were the mistakes of a dying
man."
L'Etang noted that FDR
nominated Harry L. Hopkins
to act for him - "A man so
debilitated by sickness that
Roosevelt, himself, referred
to Hopkins as 'half a man'."
It is a matter of record now
that some of FDR's friends
know him to be ill and per
haps nearing death before his
fourth term reelection in
1944. William D. Hassett's fas
cinating "Off the Record with
FDR," just published, relates
that shortly after the return
from Yalta the Presidential
party arrived on Marcv 30,
1945 in Warm Springs. Bill
said to Dr. Howard Bruenn:
"He is slipping away from us
and no earthly power can
keep him."
Dr. Bruenn was non-com
mittal. Bill adds: "I reminded
him that I gave the same
warning when we were here
last December."
That was some weeks be
fore Yalta..
In the Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
More about Mr. Dulles to
day. He's our boy, you know,
and he's a long way from,
home and he's in an awfully
Dig poker game. Our lives and
our fortunes are all tied up
in the way he plays his cards.
And - after all - he's 70 yean
old. He s no sprmg chicken.
How s he doing?
THE dispatches from Paris
w v va.v.. inui mug were
a little upsetting. They" con
tained this statement:
"The 70-year-old secretary.
only three days out of the
hospital where he was treated
tor inflammation of the colon,
looked gray and a BIT PEAK
ED when he flew in from
Washington."
TTNLESS you come from the
right . environment, that
word "peaked" may throw
you off. If you pronounced it
m one syllable - as one
speaks of a peaked roof - it
will be a sure sign you're
missing the point and may be
misled as to the secretary's
condition.
It should be pronounced
PEAK-ED - in two syllables.
When thus properly identi
fied, it describes a physical
condition that is not alarming.
Perhaps I can best illustrate
by repeating a conversation
with Aunt Sally Cozad, who
lived down in the creek bot
tom when I was considerably
younger than now. It occurred
reasonably often and went
something like this:
HOW'RE y'aU this morn
ing, Aunt Sally?"
"Oh, Ah'm feelin' mighty
po'ly this mawnin. Ah ain't
up to mahself."
"Ummmmm. That's too bad.
How's Uncle Tom?"
"Well, when he got up he
was lookin' pretty peak-ed,
but after he et his breakfast
he perked up and now he's
feelin' right peart."
THIS is the point:
"Peak-ed" and po'ly"
aren't synonyms. . ..; j
One LOOKS peak-ed. ' :
One FEELS po'ly.
rpHAT brings us back to the
Paris dispatch that started
off this piece. After relating
that Mr. Dulles looked "a bit
peaked" when he got off the
plane, it went on to say:
"But this morning his aides
reported he 'was feeling pret
ty good,' and that 'he seemed
to be getting into his old form
again' " maybe after he had
had his breakfast.
Anyway, let's hope Mr.
Dulles doesn't reach the point
where he is "feeling po'ly."
That would be disconcerting
news.
Editorial Commenf
ters here does not tend to be
calming, either. What is a
little calming is the memory
of the final outcome at Que
moy. Yet the record says, very
loudly and clearly, that the
Soviets are now acting in the
belief that the military bal
ance of power has sharply
shifted in their favor. And the
record further says that a pe
riod of acute danger will be
the smallest price to be paid
for the budget-first American
defense planning of the last
six years.
Copyright 1958, New York
Herald Tribune Ine.
ASHLAND'S SUCCESS
Ashland's belief in its own
future has been' demonstrated
in the magnificent results
achieved here in raising mon
ey for the building of the new
Shakespearean theater.
With an original goal of
$50,000, our community has
pledged more than $69,500 for
the project and before the
campaign is finally closed at
the end of this month, the to
tal will undoubtedly be com
fortably over the $70,000
mark.
There should be satisfaction
for everyone in Ashland over
what has been occomplished
here in the last month for eve
ry community takes deep and
quiet pride in achieving a
goal.
The success demonstrates
many things an appreciation
of the economic value of the
festival, but equally as im
portant, a recognition of the
festival's cultural advantages.
Scores of men and women
gave a great many hours of
their time in the solicitation
of funds and to them we all
owe a debt of gratitude. Ash
land Daily Tidings.
LAST CALL!
Before Christmas get a "Present for the future"
WORLD BOOK Encyclopedia - Used for every grade
in school.
Phone SP 3-5726 NOW
For the Lady in Your Life .
Glamorous
9kl
by PRIXCESS GARDNER
star brite matched accessories
1
y-.y.
Golden motif enhanced with brilliants ...on Gahna
Lustre Cowhide.
A. The "Continental" FRENCH PURSE $5.00
B. The CIGARETTE LIGHTER $2.50
C. The CIGARETTE CASE $3.95
0. The NEW Snap Closing KEY GARD ..... $2.95
1. The EYE GLASS CASE $2.95
Alt pint tax
Made to 60 together. .. GIVE together... USE together
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''Your Christmas Gift Store'