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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 20, 1959)
4 Monday, April 20, 193? MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, ORE. Medfo: TOE "Everyone in Southern Oregon . Reads The Mail Tribune" -Published Dai except Saturday by MJJJFORD PRINTING CO 33 North Fir St Ph. SP 2-6141 ROBEP.T W RTTFTT. V.rlUnr KERB GRETf Advertising Manager GEPALD LATHAM, Business Met ERIC W ALLEN JH 8 Managing F.ditor EARL H ADAMS. City Editor HARRY CHIPMAN Teleg Editor RICHARD JEWETT Sports Editor OLIVE STARCHER Women Editor DALE ERICKSON, Circulation Mgr An Independent Newspaper" Entered a second class matter al Medforri Oregon under At of March 3. 1897 SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mat In Advance. Copv 10c. Dail- and Sunday 1 year $15.00 Daily and Sunday 6 mos. 8.0C Daily and Sunday 3 mos " 4.25 Sunday Only One year $4.20 By Carrier In Advance Medford Ashland Central Point Eagle Point. Jacksonville. Gold Hill. Phoenix. Shady Cove Rogue Riv er. Talent and on motor routts Daily and Sunday 1 year $18 00 Daily and Surnlcy 1 mo. 1.50 Carrier and Dealers c o p y 10c All Terms Cash in Advance Official Paper of City of Medford Official Paper of Jackson County United Press International Full Leased Wire MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION Advertising Representative: " WEST -HOLIDAY CO.. INC. Of fices in New York. Chicago, De troit. San Francisco. Los Angeles. Seattle, Portland. St. Louis, At lanta. Vancouver B.C. NATIONAL EDITORIAI AS(sbcfATlota 32 Flight 'o Time Medford and Jackson County History from the files of The Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50 years ago. 10 YEARS AGO April 20, 1949 (Wednesday) The Medford city council proposes a $75,000 bond issue to finance completion of the municipal swimming pool and other park projects. Ashland firemen wash a Medford fire truck, but Fire Chief Roy Elliott protests the use of Lithia water which he says might corrode the ve- hide. 20 YEARS AGO April 20. 1939 (Thursday) The annual public school music festival gets under way at Southern Oregon college. From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudge Pot" column: "J. Cochran Robin is passing around the fishworms. The stork left four sons in his nest alow the first of the week." 30 YEARS AGO April 20, 1929 (Saturday) Grain buyers are in the area seeking Table Rock wheat. Local amateur thespians headed by Mary Greiner Kelly and Jo Murray Rostel score a hit in "The Dover Road." 40 YEARS AGO April 20, 1919 (Sunday) The Klamath orchard starts thmning, with 18 women and girls employed because of the scarcity of male labor. The frost season officially ends in the valley today. 50 YEARS AGO April 20, 1909 (Tuesday) Medford city council plans to discus? possible extension of the city limits. A booster rally for promo tion of local attractions is held at Gold HilL What's Your I.Q.? Nina or ten correct is superior; seven or eight is excellent; five or six is good. 1. Complete the following Mother Goose line: "Johnny Shafto's gone to sea ..." 2. Name the famous Roman who was assassinated on the Ides of March. 3. "Cape Cod Turkey" de notes what piscatorial food? 4. The maximum adult life of some May flies is approxi mately six hours; true or false? 5. What does "Indian file" denote? 6. Paas Day is another des ignation for which Christian religious festival? 7. In the human body, which organ secretes bile? 8. Is a chantey a type of dwelling, a sailor's song, or a deep-baked apple dish? 9. .Name the lower branch of the English parliament. 10. Two vowel sounds, which follow one another so closely as to form but one syllable, are called a d-h-g? Answers: 1. ". . . sliver buckles on his knee." 2. Ju lius Ceasar. 3. Salted codfish. 4. True. 5. Walking in single file. 6. Easier. 7. Liver. 8. Sailor's song. 9. House of Commons. 10. Dipihong. BERLIN COMPLACENCY New York - (UPD - Sen. A. S. Mike Monroney (D-Okla.), just back from a visit to Europe, said he met "total complac ency" over the Berlin issue wherever he went. He said he had heard 100 times more talk on the Berlin question in Washington than he heard during bis trip. tgT NEWSPAPER v PUBUSHE l3-ASSOCIATION Men in We live in an,age of heroic adventure. The past few years have seen such feats of courage and skill as the climbing: land, treks across the cruises of the Nautilus waters of the Arctic Ocean. But even these bold accomplishments pale before the adventure now on humanity s agenda: space. Whoever first accomplishes this feat assures himself immortal fame alongside Columbus and Magellan. We Amencans should not too readily assume that it will be Astronauts who will be the first. No doubt Mos cow is already training its own astronauts, and it may oe a Kussian ratner than an American wno iirst pits his frail body cosmos. - Jut whether, that Columbus of space is a Russian or an American is relatively inconse quential as compared with the fact that this dra matic feat is virtually, certain within the foresee able future. THE extreme demands impose up the first pioneers is clearly indicat ed by the rigorous testing to which the Mercury Astronauts were subjected. In the seven who sur vived the elimination great courage, outstanding physical development, first-class intelligence, A word should be said too for the courage of their wives and children these husbands and fathers risk the supreme haz ard of our time. It is good that we have such out standing human beings young people can properly look to these Lotro nauts as examples to emulate. No doubt the day will come when a flight to the moon will be considered as routine a matter as a flight from this city before then the new crop of astronauts and their successors will certainly write many a shining page of courage, endurance and faith in humani ty s annals. New York Castro And High hopes for fundamental reforms in Fidel Castro s Cuban revolution I dashed, iiven those whose establishment of a democratic government in the 1 1 l: " 1 l t l niV isiana nation wnicn is snuggiea against, our nor ida coast have had those hopes dampened. We not that columnist Drew Pearson, who was high on the Castro-government possibilities just before and immediately after Batista s fall, has since discovered things in the Cuban pre mier's background and recent actions to give him pause. This also has occurred with many leading newspapers, such as the New Orleans Times Pica yune. And Congressman Ore), who felt a surge of optimism for democracy in Cuba after Castro's revolt, is quoted this week by lime Magazine, as saying, "I don t think CaS' tro is a dictator yet, but I do see an ominous trend." What Porter feared early this year that Castro was "young and eminent and might therebv come a cropper is the basis for the "ominous jWIOST worrying to U. S. officials is the appar ently left-orientated trend to Castro's dic tatorship, if it is a dictatorship. The United States tends to see every action by anybody, anywhere, as favoritism of either the U.S. or the Soviet Un ion. We have a habit of contending that every body is either for us or against us. We are joined m that attitude by Russia. Thus it's difficult for Castro's government is Either kind of dictatorship is undesirable. If Castro is leaning between the U.S. and Russia, or even leaning to ward Soviet sympathies, there is a partial logical explanation in historic Cuban fears of the Big Brother to her north, and also in that Big Bro ther's attitude toward the THE U. S. government r-F V o -lri vi nr "Dofiofo'e order to protect American investments and the U.S. foreign sugar supply right up until the State Department embargoed shipments of arms to Cuba a scant few weeks before Batista fled. Even after the embargo, actions of the U. S. envoy in Havana could hardly be construed as anything but American support for the repres sive, brutal, bloody Bastista dictatorship. a All that is past history. What matters today is Castro, whose policies are still being swept along on the popular enthusiasm of a majority of Cubans. . His policies, young and naive perhaps, are not pro-United States. The U.S. has a difficult job ahead of it in changing Castro's attitude. The job may be impossible. If it is, the blame is not all Castro's. Coos Bay World. Interesting Election m It should be a mighty interesting election in 1960. Besides the Presidential race and one sen ator in Oregon, it looks as if we might get to vote on daylight savings, a sales tax and a power bill. All these things sure make life tough for an edi tor. ficryallis Gazette-Times. Space of Mount Everest, over Antarctic wastes and the and the Skate under the man s first flight' into ' one of the seven Mercury against the terrors of the that this adventure wil process we have men of and emotional stability. who have agreed that in our society, and our to Chicago is today. But Times. ... 4 The Cold War have been considerably hopes were highest for Charles O. Porter (D naive in politics and gov- trend." us to truly see where headed, left or right. toward "neutralism" as Castro revolution itself. ' gave every appearance tm rrlnf i of i f rf rvc Vt -k ivi Dennis the ybv s'poss m can set Mom ta Matter of Fact THE MERELY SMOKING VOLCANO Washington-There is some thing remarkably revealing in the President's private reason t o r delaying the announce ment of his choice of for: m e r Gov. Christian Herter as Sec- retary of State. In brief, the choice itself -losopb Alsop was made long since, on the warm rec ommendation of Secretary Dulles. But "President Eisen hower had the curious notion that, at the moment of John Foster Dulles's final resigna tion, all attention ought to be concentrated on the tragic figure of the retiring Secre tary. Eisenhower wanted Dulles alone to hold the cen ter of the , stage," instead, of sharing it with his successor. Hence the President made Ms remarks about the other men besides Herter whose qualifications deserved to be examined. The President's sentiment about Dulles thus led him to cast an inevitable cloud of doubt on the degree of confidence that would be accorded to Dulles's successor. Once again, in this strange manner, the uniqueness of the position that John Foster Dulles enjoyed was sharply underlined. IN THE realm of foreign af fairs, until his terrible ill ness began, John Foster Dulles was President of the United States in fact though not in name. In the most critical sit uations his recommendations were never questioned. Nor were questions ever put to him about any situation that he did not bring to the Presi dent's attention. This ' last feature of the Dulles regency produced some pretty strange results, in view of John Foster Dulles's highly personal way of doing busi ness.' Since no one but Dulles himself had the authority to deal with any major problem, no problem was ever attended to that Dulles had no time to attend to. Despite his incred ible 'industry and self -disci pline, Dulles could not make one day grow into two days; and thus only the most urgent problems were seriously tackled. Volcanos in active eruption absorbed all the Sec retary's attention, so to say, while volcanos that were merely smoking angrily had to be neglected. rpHE results of this system X. are most clearlv visible in the strategically crucial Mid dle East. In periods of acute tension - during the first Jor danian crisis, for example, and during the Lebanese crisis all Secretary Dulles's efforts were focussed on the Middle East. But American Middle Eastern policy has been, with rare exceptions, a crisis policy rather than a continuing policy. At present, it is fair to say that the United States has no Middle Eastern policy at aU. The clouds of smoke pour ing out of several Middle East ern volcanos meanwhile indi cate that a policy is badly needed. Above all, decisions are demanded by the rapid in crease of Communist power in Iraq. This has produced the increasingly bitter quarrel be tween the Iraqi leader, Brig. Abdel Karim Kassem, and Egypt's Gamal Abdel Nasser, who has begun denouncing Communism as another form of anti-Arab imperialism. British Middle Eastern policy is desperately concen trated on protecting their oil rich holdings in the Persian Gulf. Hence the British were at first delighted by the Nas-ser-Kassem row. They thought Kuwait and the other Gulf Coast sheikhdoms would be safe, as long as the leaders of the two principal Arab states were busy slanging one an other. For a long while, there-. Menace count this as a BkTH ? ' Alsop fore, the British Foreign Of fice smiled on Kassem, and refused to believe in his sur render to the Communists. - IN RECENT weeks, however, the evidence of total Com munist domination in Iraq has become too great to be ig nored. The British Ambassa dor in Baghdad, Sir Humphrey Trevelyan, has been called home "for consultation." Con sultations are certainly in order, for as s o o n as the Communists are solidly estab lished in Iraq, the Kremlin and its local agents can be ex pected to put the most severe pressure on neighboring Iran, The position in Iran is already pretty shaky. A Communist success in Iran, which seems entirely possible within the next 18 months, will in turn have the most explosive ef fect in the Persian Gulf, in the Arabian peninsula, and everywhere else in the Middle East. The very fact that Nasser and Kassem are so violently at odds meanwhile gives ; an opening for a bold Middle Eastern policy. But the British are too weakly situated, and too dependent on Middle East ern oil. They dare not even think about a bold Middle Eastern policy without an American lead. But Let her rip" is the rule being followed by the State Department; so rip she will, with a vengeance The face of the globe is dotted with other, quite com parable though less acute sit uations. Secretary Herter can not do some things that Secre tary Dulles did, if only be cause he cannot hope for a comparable grant of power from the President. But per haps he will do what Dulles did not do - organize the State Department to begin a new, preventive approach to all these potential or probable trouble spots. (Copyright 1959 New York Herald Tribune Inc.) Editorial Comment THE COMMUNITY WISHES HIM THE BEST Principal J. R. (Russ) Ache- son of Bend's senior high high school, who is leaving at the end of the term to take over work in Medford's grow ing school system, has been more than a teacher and prin cipal in his dozen years here. He found time to serve the community in which he work ed and lived. Ruch Acheson's extra-curri-c u 1 a r activities covered a wide field. In 1958 his civic work was climaxed by his leadership of the Pageantarians in present ing the Mirror Pond Pageant. He also served as a director of the Bend Chamber of Commerce, and found time to work with the Lions in their varied projects. In his many years here, Russ Acheson has always been available for leadership in connection with athletic activities. Known to few is the fact that in his college days, Russ Acheson played varsity football at Oregon State college in a backfield berth. Despite his school and civic activities, Russ Acheson found time in his stay in Bend to continue his education, and in 1950 received his master's degree from the University of Oregon. This past year he was named vice-president of the Oregon Secondary School Principals' association, and will head the state group in the coming year. Russ Acheson will leave Bend with the best wishes of the entire community for full success in the larger field into which he is moving. The bid to Medford comes as a well-earned recognition of the Bend principal's ability as an executive, and his rec ord as a man who served his community well. Bend Bulletin 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 tc 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 paper; in fact the contrary is often th case Why Complain? To the Editor: I agree with the poor distraught house wives that smudge is terrible. But what are they complain ing about? Do they have to wash the clothes saturated in oil? Do they have to stay up nights getting extra meals? What are a few scrubbed walls and soiled drapes to the thousands of dollars rep resented in payrolls? I figure things in the house need to be well scrubbed at least once a year and why not wait to do it till after smudge season? Who likes to go to town and be covered with cin ders and filth from the mills in about a half-hour's time? It penetrates clothes, cars and house as well as lungs, but we figure it as a necessary living hazard and if we didn't like it we are free, white and over 21 to seek employment elsewhere. If there were no orchards with smudge and no mills with smoke there would be no jobs in the Rogue val ley, so you would have to move then. So why not'mQve now and quit complaining? Move to California? -No, they have smudge pots too, in spite of word to the contrary. guess only Hawaii would be ideal, but watch out for fire in your grass skirt or a coco nut on the head. Maybe some day a Utopia will be found but I am certain it will not be in this world. . If taxes were lowered to the point of enticing industry into the valley, the orchardist could then pull out his trees and sell his land for build ing sites and pavements. I don't hear the orchard la borer, his wife or kids com plaining, only the city dwell ers who are afraid of a little work. Put your brain to work on a solution and I am sure it would be appreciated by all. Mrs. Rae Williams, Central Point, Ore. R. R. Working Conditions To the Editor: Railroad workers in train and engine service are still laboring un der some conditions that are unheard of in most other in dustries today. President W. P. Kennedy of the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen points that out in calling attention to the fact that these railroad employees are not paid a differential for night work, receive no pay ments for away-from-home terminal expenses, nor do they get premium pay for work performed on Saturdays and Sundays. "It is difficult to believe that railroad workers, per forming highly - important service in one of the nation s principal industries, are still denied those modern-day con ditions benefits which near ly all other workers enjoy to day." he said. Representatives of railroad management, who are busily engaged nowadays conducting vicious campaign to turn public opinion against rail employees by unfairly charg ing them with "feather-bed ding" on the job, never men tion those outdated condi tions under which "rails" must toil. "The railroads see fit now to snipe at their faithful and dutiful employees, and their labor unions, on various work ing conditions to which they agreed in collective bargain ing sessions over the years," Kennedy says. Charles A. Fisher, Legis lative Representative Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen, No. 314, 1310 West 15th st, Eugene, Ore. Jobs Are Important To the Editor: Now, ladies of Melrose ave., let's not be vindictive. Every man has to earn a living to the best of his ability, and they can't all be good clean jobs. There can not be fruit without heat of some kind and I am sure if you can just be patient a bit longer all will be taken care of by the mighty atom-one way or another. Right in the same paper with your letter was an article pertaining to working out a solution. I am sure the orch ard owner, and I know the orchard laborer, is as anxious as you to find a better meth od. The only one who won't be happy will be the . oil men, but we can't keep everyone happy all of the time-can we? Think of it this way, ladies, when you are scrubbing and cleaning you don't have time to talk about your neighbors or get into any "idle hands" mischief. I'll take a little dirt in order to keep work for the thousands of men, women and children who make their liv ing from our fruit harvests, both directly and indirectly. Mrs. Ellen Doran, Table Rock Orchards, Central Point. Ore. , Veterans Job Clinic To the Editor: I wish to re peat an announcement that I feel is of importance to the veterans of this community, in these times of job scarcity. George Reid, regional vet erans federal employment representative of the 11th U. S. civil service district, will conduct a veterans employ ment clinic in the Jackson county courthouse Tuesday, April 21, starting at 8 p.m. This will begin the fifth year of these clinics, and they have always been of benefit to veterans familiarizing them with opportunities in federal employment as well as in pri vate industry, with specific in terest being applied to veter ans' preference in employ ment. . Job opportunities and ex amination qualifications will be discussed. . - - ' - Also present at the clinic will be Richard Smurthwaite, the veterans' representative of the U. S. department of la bor, representatives from the state employment service, the state department of Veterans' affairs, the bureau of veter ans' employment rights, the veterans' administration, and from all the veterans' organ izations, both from state de partment and local level. All veterans and their fam ilies are urged to attend, es pecially, service officers, em ployment chairmen, and lead ers of the veterans organiza tions. They will be sure to find this interesting and help ful. Pat Graham, Commander Department of Oregon, D. A. V., 175 Jeanette st., Medford. v 7 ' Mills Smoke, Too To the Editor: After read ing all the letters sent in to you about the smudge smoke I couldn't keep quite any longer. Why don't some of you men who work in the orchard write in your opinions, in stead of the ones who don't know very much about it? They have been heating with oil for years and this is the first time anyone has been talking so strongly about it, They talk about the beau tiful blossoms and pears which the valley is so fam ous for. How long would they be able to say that if they didn't smudge to keep them from freezing? The growers don't enjoy these nights of fir ing. He has the continuous worry of the temperature con trol, not counting the money it costs him for the oil and the extra help he has to hire, even though he doesn't have to light up. The pears don't grow on trees overnight, it takes a year's hard work, worry and expense to have a decent crop and one night's freeze could destroy it all. All you people in the valley enjoy making the money dur ing the harvest time. So why yell about the growers when they have to smudge to save the crops? If it wasn't for the fruit and the lumber industry there wouldn't be very many people who could afford to live in the valley in the first place. So why not let the orchards rest for a while and do some writing in about the mills around the valley? There is smoke, noise and sparks that are a danger that is year around. '. Mrs. H. D. Garrison, Route 2, Box 255, Central Point, Ore. Oiympia Bishop Receives High Post London-OJPD-The Right Rev. Stephen F. Bayne Jr., Protest ant Episcopal bishop of Oiym pia, Wash., has been named Anglican executive officer, the second highest post in the Anglican Communion. The unprecedented move will make the New York-born clergyman second only in the church to the Most Rev. Geof frey Francis Fisher, Arch bishop of Canterbury. Bishop Bayne's appoint ment, made at the request of the Lambeth Conference in London last summer, was con firmed by the Metropolitans of the Anglican Communion. He takes over the post as of Jan. 1, 1960. 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 spnnKle a uttie rAsmEiii on jiour 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). Get FASTEETH at any drug counter. Washington Report By WILLIAM NIXON'S ANTENNAE Washington Vice Presi dent Richard M. Nixon has put away one weapon his 1 old mastery of producing use-, ful headlines built upon in tense contro versy within the nation. He is now brilli antly employ ing a n o t h er a n rl n nfter William S. . . . . white tactic, in new circumstances. He is progressivelly draw ing favorable attention by persuasion and calm reason ableness, where he used to de mand it by loud threshing about in the national scene. He is a world away from the Nixon who, only short months ago, led a hotly partisan GOP Congressional campaign be cause this seemed the only possible way to stir the Re publican sluggards. There will be here, how ever, no nonsense about "new Nixons" and "old Nixons." A golfer is not a "new" golfer if on the 14th hole the lie of the land and of his ball requires him to put the iron back in his bag and begin a series of spoon shots. rpo watch Nixon these days approve him or disapprove him, is to watch a truly vir tuoso political performance. The fact that his antennae to public moods and changing public attitudes are extra-or-dinarily sensitive . has, of course, long been obvious. What is now striking is the way in which Nixon who underneath is a curiously lone ly and a one-man operator is using those fabulous anten nae to master his great prob lem for 1960. On all form, on such "gut" facts as his present control of much of the regular GOP organization, he is the dis tinct favorite for the 1960 Presidential nomination. No one, however, is more acutely aware than is Nixon that Gov. Nelson Rockefeller of New York already poses a real threat and might offer a mas sive threat before convention time. The Vice-President's vul nerability lies in this: He came up strictly via the route of controversy, and the sound est single objection to him is the fear that he might be a divisive force in the White House. To be thought of at that kind of symbol is, to some degree, always harmful to a Presidential contender. To be seen in that light in 1960, in a perilous world, probably would be fatal to him. THUS, given this as his basic potential weakness, what is he doing to strengthen his position? He. i s presenting himself as an ever-mellowing public figure, and he is do ing a good job of it. He is staying out of the partisan fighting that used to occupy him almost endlessly. He is equally staying out of such infighting as there is among the Republicans who, un like the Democrats, never for get that their true antagonists are not each other but rather the opposition party. He is accepting only a very few speaking engagements, and of these , all are in mark edly high-level, and prefera bly even academic, surround-1 Reasonable Funerals . 0 (Priced for Everyone) FRIENDLY, - r S. WHITE ings. He is speaking of big matters like the World Court; his tone is much the tone of a man who is already Presi dent and more interested in a country than in a party. He is saying generous things, even about the Democrats. These things are meant; for Nixon whatever his faults, has no phoniness in him. But they are the kind of remarks he never would have uttered until Rockefeller began to breathe genially down his neck. For the Vice-President, until lately, has been in the rock-'em, sock-'em school of politics. One of his old models in the school was a man not overfond of him, Harry S. Truman. TUT Nixon now follows the basic techniques not of Truman but of Franklin D. Roosevelt. Roosevelt main tained power largely by tying himself close to great all-national issues. This, and not merely his famous personal ity, enabled him to sustain a quite illogical coalition be tween conservative Southern planters and Detroit auto workers. Nixon, in sum, is now be coming what he always would have preferred to be, an issue politician a s distinguished from a personality politician. This probably explains h i s improving place in the polls. He has decided that the pub lic is already a bit tired of the "old faces" including Nixon'-s. And he knows that in any personality contest with Nelson Rockefeller he would be1 fighting in the wrong field. He is, therefore, moving to force Rockefeller to engage him in quite anoth er fie'd the field of largely impersonal issues. The odds are at least even that before it is over Rocke feller will find himself play ing in Nixon's ballpark. (Copyright, 1959, by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) TIRED OF BEING TIRED? 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