4 Wednesday, April 22, 1959
MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, ORE.
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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 22, 1949 (Friday)
Medf ord's new YMCA
building swimming pool will
be opened tomorrow for an
inaugural plunge by members
selected by lot.
The Rogue Valley Develop
ment association, formed to
supplement chamber of com
merce operations, adopts by
laws. 20 YEARS AGO
April 22, 1939 (Saturday)
Glenn L. Jackson elected
president of the Jackson
County Chamber of Com-J
merce.
From Arthur Perry's "Ye
Smudge Pot" column: "The
lack of frost so far, has pre
vented the peaches from being
killed six times, and the Old
er Girls cleaning house the
same number of times."
30 YEARS AGO
April 22, 1929 (Monday)
Carl Tengwald returns
from an insurance conclave at
Seattle.
Rogue river is roiled, and
fishing consequently poor,
with more snow melting up in
the hills.
40 YEARS AGO
April 22, 1919 (Tuesday)
Congressmen Hawley puts
in a local appearance, speak
ing at the opening of the vic
tory loan drive here.
Merchants decide to stage
a "victory week" May 3 to 10.
50 YEARS AGO
April 22. 1909 (Thursday)
A corporation is formed to
construct a highway up Mt.
Shasta.
Plans are laid for sinking
an oil well in the Gold Hill
area.
What's Your I.Q.?
Nine or ten correct it superior;
seven or eight is excellent; five or
six is good.
1. From what portion of
the carcasses of beef and
mutton is suet obtained?
2. "Great Mogul," "Kohi
noor," and "Cullinan," are
well known names in connec
tion with what precious item?
3. During World War II, the
U. S. armed forces used hom
ing pigeons for messenger
service; true or false?
4. Which American states
man from Nebraska was
known as the "Boy orator of
the Plattee"?
5. How many years com
prise the term "three score
and ten"?
6. "Satchmo," is a nickname
of which noted trumpet play
er? 7. Which northern city, be
cause of its many scholars and
educational institutions, fre
quently is called "Athens of
America"?
8. Name the capital of
Hungary. 4
9. How many major planets
are known to revolve around
the sun?
. 10. If an auto travels 30,000
miles, wearing six tires equal
ly, how many miles would
each tire travel?
Answers: 1. Kidneys and
loins. 2. Diamond. 3. True. 4.
William Jennings Bryan. 5.
70. 6. Louis Armstrong. 7.
Boston. Mass. 8. Budapest 9.
Nine. 10. 20.000 miles. J
Riding to Oregon
No one pretends that the covered wagon cav
alcade now plodding its way to Oregon from In
dependence, Mo., is anything but a stunt to pub
licize the Oregon Centennial.
But it is a stunt with a purpose. And, further
more, it is a stunt which involves considerable
physical fortitude. . '
The "Indians" which have "attacked" the
caravan were not out for blood, as was the case
when the pioneers first came west. And if anyone
gets sick, they can always be taken to a well
equipped hospital somewhere along the route.
MONETHELESS, riding 2,000 miles in a spring
less, iron -tired wagon behind a couple of
mules is not our idea of 20th century comfort,
somehow or other.
And riding outside, either on a wagon seat or
on horseback, is not the best way to avoid getting
wet and cold, or hot and dusty, as the case may be.
Probably those who went along look on it as
something of a three-months lark. But by the
time the wagon train arrives in Independence,
Oregon, we'll wager the Centennial pioneers will
be ready for a hot bath and a. soft bed. E.A.-
'Riding to Corvallis
We feel a bit differently about the planned
4-H wagon trek from Medford to Corvallis, somehow.
These youngsters will leam things thereby
that their elders on the longer wagon trip pre
sumably already know some of the lore of the
pioneers, the difficulties of travel of 100 years
ago, and so on.
Also there will be the
mutual experience.
This is something; more than a stunt it is a
chance to learn by doing, and to boost the Cen
tennial at the same time. Good luck, to them.
E.A.
Headaches
A headache, according to a writer in the New
York Times, is one of the most underrated of hu
man ailments.
Dictionaries slight it with but passing men
tion. Our own desk-model Webster defines a
headache as a "pain in the head," adding help
fully, "cephalalgia." And that's all it says. The
larger dictionary around the comer isn't much
more helpful. It only adds, "a cause of worry or
annoyance.
Thus is mankind's most widespread physical
bane disposed of without ceremony.
"THERE are of course, headaches, and then
again, headaches.
There is the migraine king of them all. It
not only virtually blinds one with pain, but brings
with it, more often than not, nausea, spots m
front of the eyes, and dizziness. Sufferers can
console themselves that it strikes, usually, only
highly intelligent and sensitive people.
But doctors don't know enough about ;it, as
yet, to be very helpful once it has struck.
Other headaches come with the common cold,
or with an overexposure to light, or with too
much reading or watching TV.
ZITHERS come with emotional tensions and
this is the kind which presumably is the origin
of the non-physical sense of the word.
And some come with no apparent reason at
all. Hangovers, we are informed, result in head
aches. Others arrive with indigestion, or from a
smoke-filled room, or riding too long in a car, or
from the midnight barking of the neighbor's dog.
You can take an aspirin, which might help. Or
it might not. It depends on the headache. There
aren't any good ones. E.A.
Education Needs Courage!
The great and crying need in Education to
day is courage to throw out the pat phrases put
forth by the educators and come forth with frank
and plain words that fit today's system of need
and challenge. ,
The whole educational framework seems pat
terned upon easy words put forth by generation
after generation of professional educators who
have ran the gamut of hurdles set up by schools
of education.
1iat education does not fit the need of the
time appears of less importance than the desire
to say things that fit the "pattern of conformity."
"THIS then is the danger that lies in American
A education. This is the weakening influence.
This is the insidious danger that makes jobless
children a bane upon society; that makes lack
of guidance a pain to the thoughful ; that makes
questioning citizens uneasy.
If an educator was to come forth and sudden
ly and frankly set up a philosophy of education
that wTould be designed to educate the whole
child he would be as revolutionary as a Horace
Mann was in his time.
There is too much today of bowing to the ac
cepted ; too much for conformity's sake; too much
to dodge argument and disagreement.
EDUCATION is fluid; it is of its very sake, de
batable and changeable. .
Courage is needed.
Educators must be in the advance ; not follow
ing in the wake.
It is time that school people set forth their
aims and dared the public to keep up with them !
Coquille .Valley Sentinal i
fellowship gained by a
Dennis the
'this em oista a3AXgms,$o i told m m could
lAKt a reirv KUrrt vn 7UUK
Johnson Surviving
Attacks From Left
In Senate Position
By LYLE C. WILSON
Washington- (UPD -Sen. Lyn
don B. Johnson is surviving
thunder on the left to remain
boss man of
the U.S. Sen
ate. Johnson
is a tall, smil
ing Texan with
a knack for
getting along
with people
aftd for get
ting things
done. When
Lyie c. wuson the 80th Con
gress adjourned last summer
there were cheers for Johnson
from just about all over ex
cept from the politicos on the
left.
The cheers were for the job
Johnson had done as leader
of the Democratic majority
in the U.S. Senate. It was not
much of a majority, 49 Demo
crats to 47 Republicans. John
son made it work, however.
He made it work so well that
national attention came to fo
cus on the senator as an able,
alert, middle-of-the-road Dem
ocrat. And that was a boost for
the Lyndon B. Johnson for
president boom. It has been a
quiet but consistent boom, no
table for Johnson's occasional
public statements that he is
not a candidate for the 1960
Democratic presidential nom
ination. The boom persists,
however, and that seems to
Communications
Letters to the Editor must
bear the name and address of
the writer although nder cer
tain circumstances tne use of a
pen name or initial for publica
tion is pemissible. The Mail
Tribune reserves the right to
edit all letters with an eye to
clarification and condensation.
Letters submitted for publica
tion must not exceed 400 words
Wouldn't It Help?
To the Editor: It is rather
disturbing to see how one per
son can misinterpret another
person's words. I am sure that
none of the writers of recent
letters on smudge would have
smudging abolished and the
pear crop ruined. The fruit in
this valley is a big portion of
the economy of each one of
us. The only suggestion was
that a cleaner method of heat
ing be used.
Surely the orchardist them
selves and their families have
some of the cleaning, painting
and doctor bills with which
the rest of us are burdened,
and if so, wouldn't it be ad
vantageous to everyone, to
considerably reduce the am
ount of heavy smoke' that
stains our fair valley and its
occupants each spring?
Mrs. Kathy Preston,
1417 South Ivy st.,
Medford.
Try and
l-f'rt?.
By BENNETT CERF-
rI"S HARD TO BELIEVE but director Josh Logan swears
Mary Martin was a bundle of nerves before her London open
ing in "South Pacific" despite the fact she had won cheers
from audiences for over
three years in the same role
in New York. To reassure
her, Logan recited these
lines by William Blake:
"He who doubts , from
what he sees
Will ne'er believe, do
what you please.
If the sun and moon
should doubt,
They'd immediately S
out
Miss Martin's fears, of
course, proved groundless.
The very rafters rang with
applause from the ecstatic London audience.
That Christmas, Mary Martin sent Logan a pillow with the
Blake poem emblazoned thereon. She had spent hours in her
dressing room embroidering it for him.
0 1959, by Bennett Cert Distributed by King Jeataffea SyadicaU.
Menace
nrtz.
be what all the thunder on
the left is about.
Series of Complaints
The thunder on the left has
been a series of complaints by
left wing Democratic senators
against Johnson and his lead
ership. The complaints are di
rected at Johnson's leadership
of the Senate but actually
seem to be more intended to
derail the Johnson for presi
dent movement. If that is not
the purpose then they do not
make much more sense, col
lectively. Sen. William Proxmire (D
Wis.) sounded off first early
in the new congress. He raked
Johnson on charges ot one
man rule of the Democratic
Senate majority which had
zoomed to 62 after the 1958
election. Too much leadership
and not enough democracy
was Proxmire's complaint.
Next up was Sen. Pat Mc
Namara (D-Mich.). He com
plained against Johnson on
charges of too little leader
ship instead of Proxmire's too
much. McNamara's specific
complaint was that Johnson
had not led the Senate to pas
sage of a certain unemploy
ment compensation bill.
Sen. Joseph S. Clark (D
Pa.) is reported to have joined
McNamara in this criticism
of Johnson, but by private
letter instead of a speech on
the Senate floor. Proxmire re
turned to the wars last week
with a challenge to Johnson
to make good on a long list of
1956 Democratic platform
promises. This one was Prox
mire's third speech attacking
Johnson's leadership of Sen
ate Democrats.
Pattern Being Established
All of these Democratic
senators are of the left, inher
itors of the New Deal philoso
phy of FDR. Their maneuvers
are beginning to establish a
pattern. It is a pattern of re
pudiation of Johnson not only
as Senate Democratic leader
but as a Democratic statesman
who properly should be con
sidered in connection with the
1960 presidential nomination.
All of this is taking shape
of a stop-Johnson movement
a series of coordinated maneu
vers by party left wingers to
kill off early the only middle-of-the-road
Democrat about
whom there is much serious
presidential speculation.
The noncongressional left
wingers of Americans for
Democratic Action may be ex
pected to get into the act be
fore long. Back, in 1957, ADA
was complaining that Con
gress lacked leadership. The
stop-Johnson movement had
begun.
The first section of the Mos
cow subway was completed in
1935.
Stop Me
Humphrey Proposes
To Aid Needy Nations, Aid Farm Surplus
By ERIC WENTWORTH
Mail Tribune Staff Writer
(Story on Page 1 Also)
Eugene-Sen. Hubert Hum
phrey (D-Minn.) yesterday
outlined his recent proposal
for a "food for peace" pro
gram to better utilize U.S.
farm surpluses and assist un
derdeveloped nations.
He said it would involve
spending about $2 billion a
year over a five-year period.
Its need, he said, arises from
the fact that underdeveloped
Foreign Ministers
To Start Preparing
For Summit Meet
By PHIL NEWSOM
UPI Foreign Editor
On May 11, in Geneva,
Switzerland, the foreign min
isters of the United States,
Britain. .France and Russia
are scneduiea
to begin their
confere nee
paving the
way to a ses
sion at the
summit.
It would be
a sad day for
the West if
the conference
were to start
Phil Newsom
tomorrow. For the West
scarcely ever has been more
divided on basic issues than
now.
Should the situation con
tinue, it would fulfill a pre
diction made by the late So
viet Premier Josef Stalin.
Shortly after World War
II, Stalin wrote that a' war
between the Soviet Union and
the West was much less likely
than a split among the West
ern powers, brought about by
their own conflicting interests.
The present division among
the Western powers arises
from questions dealing with
the future of Germany and is
less a question of conflicting
interests than one of conflict
ing ideas about how the Ger
man issue should be settled
with the least risk of war.
Meanwhile, the Soviets are
grimly pursuing their usual
divide-and-conquer tactics
against the Western Allies
and filling the air with ac
cusations which later will be
come part of their arguments
at the conference table.
In the space of two weeks,
the Soviets have:
-Accused the United States
of deliberately trying to tor
pedo the foreign minister con
ference by insisting on main
taining high altitude flights
along the air corridors to Ber
lin. .
-Warned Norway that
NATO bases on Norwegian
soil endanger the peace.
-Continued their stalling
tactics at the Geneva nuclear
conference where agreement
is being sought to ban tests of
nuclear weapons and set up
1ft J
D.A.R. Ladies Put
U.N. on 'Probation'
By FRANK ELEAZER
Washington (UPD It turns
out that the Daughters of the
American Revolution haven't
forgiven the
united jn a-
tions after all.
It's more that
the DAR
ladies have
put the U.N.
on probation
for a year.
Accord
ing to Mrs.
t i x t n
Frank Eleazer Jonn n. rdue
of Columbus, Ohio, chairman
of the resolution committee,
we reporters had it all wrong.
When her committee came in
without a resolution like last
year's, which called for with
drawal of this country -from
the U.N., we figured the DAR
had decided to let up on the
international statesmen.
"Not at all," says Mrs.
Pace. "A resolution once en
acted remains in full force
and effect until repealed. We
haven't proposed to repeal
it."
Some of the other ladies
hinted discreetly that maybe
there was a little more to it
than this. After all, some
resolutions, like the one com
mending J. Edgar Hoover and
the FBI, get re-enacted yearly.
Gels Off Light
Any way you figure it, the
U.N. this year is getting off
NOTICE!
Due to illness Don Byers
Will not appear in Medford this evening
Watch for Announcement of His Appearance at a Later Data.
Prayer Meeting Tonight as Usual.
CENTRAL CHURCH OF CHRIST
Central & Jackson, Medford
nations in Africa and Asia
that must spend their reserve
funds on food for their people
lose capital they require for
economic development.
He said tne food could be
given away, if the situation
demanded it, or could be sold
to the nations in exchange for
their own currency, on a basis
of 40 or 50-year credits at an
interest rate of 2Vi or 3 per
cent. The currency and cred
its, he continued, could then
be loaned back to that same
an international inspection
system which would guaranty
its being carried out.
West At Odds
It may be predicted w,ith
some confidence that other
similar tactics are in the cards
which the Russians will play
before the foreign ministers
sit down to their Geneva con
ference. Meanwhile, even without
Russia's disruptive tactics, the
Western powers continue at
odds.
West Germany's vacation
ing Chanceller Konrad Aden
auer recently used words
against Britain which one
commentator described as
words usually reserved for an
enemy.
The British accuse the Ger
mans of rejecting ramification,
while the British, in the words
of Prime Minister Harold Mac
millan, seek:
"Pacification by negotiation
and reasonable agreement."
Before "pacification" be
tween even the British and
Germans is achieved, another
meeting may be necessary be
tween Macmillan and Aden
auer.
Criticize U. S. Flights
At the same time, criticism
in the British press of the
high altitude U. S. flights in
the German corridors has
been almost as strong as that
carried by Pravda, the Com
munist Party newspaper in
Moscow.
It became so strong that
last week the U. S. State De
partment took pains to make
clear that the flights had the
approval of the entire U. S.
government and were not just
the decisions of a few U. S.
generals
There are only two real
questions so far as Germany
is concerned. The Allies ai
ready have expressed their
determination not to be driven
from Berlin by Russian
threats. So the next move
seems up to Russia. The next
question deals with the terms
and conditions by which it
may be possible to reunify
Germany.
The present bickering only
contributes to Russian diplo
matic initiative.
light. Only its children's fund
(UNICEF) gets a rap on the
knuckles, on the ground it
spends a lot of its money on
kiddies in Communist coun
tries, promotes a world wel
fare state, and through the
greeting cards it sells tries to
take Christ out of Christmas.
So I guess they can rest a
little easier at the U.N. head
quarters now, as long as they
don't do anything rash like
letting Red China in as a mem
ber. The DAR ladies of course
are still against that.
' They are still dead against
world government too, but
the resolution on this doesn't
even mention the United Na
tions.
Mrs. Pace laid her resolu
tions before the DAR's 68th
Continental Congress at Con
stitution Hall with a warning
that propagandists and dis
ruptive influences threaten
our 'society and nation. But
she said the 62 members of
her resolutions committee'
were on to this danger.
She said they considered
457 proposed resolutions, as
submitted by members and
chapters, and case in with 20
"based on proved facts, not
opinions." The delegates
seemed to like them. They in
terrupted Mrs. Pace 11 times
with applause as she read
them.
There were some old stand-
'Food for Peace' Plan
country to provide the capi
tal it needed for development.
Expansion Advised
Humphrey stated at anoth
er point in the evening that
he considered the present de
velopment loan fund program
"inadequate" in terms of out
lay and long-term program
ming. He said he favored a
program of at least five years
duration to allow such na
tions as India to plan their
own development accordingly.
He said he believed Indian
should be offered both loans
and extended credits.
Humphrey said he was
"against recognition of Red
China per se" at present. He
said that prerequisites for dip
lomatic recognition of the
Peiping regime might include
a reunited Korea and Vietnam
to be guaranteed free elec
tions and territorial integrity.
Comparable guarantees for
Formosa and assurances that
the Communists would abide
by international law.
Should Make Efforts
He agreed that efforts
should be made toward mu
tual understanding and the so
liciting of such commitments
from Peiping and recommend
ed that the diplomatic chan
nel currently established at
Warsaw for seeking the re
lease of U. S. captives would
be appropriate for, overtures
in this direction.
Humphrey stated that U. S.
trade policies toward both the
Soviet Union and Red China
should be re-examined with an
eye to possible limited trade
in non-strategic materials.
Asked if the U. S. could trade
with Red China while not rec
ognizing it diplomatically, the
senator replied this was "not
an insurmountable problem."
He noted that the U. S. trad
ed with the Soviets for years
before recognizing their gov
ernment. 'Better Balance'
On the subject of defense,
Sen. Humphrey said this
country should develop "a
better balance of forces." He
said the Navy should be mod
ernized, particularly for ef
fective anti-submarine war
fare, and that mobility of
troops should be increased
He said he disagreed with any
cutback in the strength of the
Marine Corps.
"In the next three to five
years we must not just be
equal, to the Soviet," he said.
"It would be foolish of us to
be anything but ahead of
them."
Turning to the revolt in
Tibet, Humphrey said, "The
President first of all should
have filed a formal protest
with the United Nations." he
said the United States should
have made known "pointed
ly seriously and forcefully,"
its disgust at the tactics of
the Chinese Communists. Fur
thermore, he said, this coun
try should offer resistance to
the refugees fleeing Red rule.
Favors United Germany
On the Berlin crisis, Hum
phrey said he believed in a
united Germany, which he
said, "lends itself to a stable
Europe more than a divided
Germany." He said he sees
hope for such reunification
possibly in the long run, but
"surely not in the short run."
He said any danger of a re
united Germany becoming
bys among the resolutions and
some surprises too.
Efforts to promote metro
politan government in some
places they call it "metro" -were
deplored as a step to
ward world government. Per
sonality tests in the schools
were view with suspicion. The
ladies were asked to come out
against the farm program, for
right-to-work legislation,
against double jeopardy, for
internal security and immigra
tion and passport controls,
and against so much federal
spending.
I'll say this for the Daugh
ters. Of the more than 3,000
here this week, there were a
larger proportion on hand at
9:30 a.m., to hear reports like
Mrs. Pace's, than at any other
convention I ever saw.
Maybe the punch they
served at their parties the
night before had something
to do with this. Pure juice.
WE
NEVER
CLOSE
c.
M. Litwiller
For nearly 24 years our door (downtown) has never been
locked. A real personal service. Not always easy but cheerfully
v given to all, regardless of social position or financial condition.
To merit your confidence is our aim.
LITWILLER
Funeral
Home
Mountain View Chapel
Hwy. 66 at Normal
Office 88 N. Main
ASHLAND
We Never Close
once more an aggressive farce
in Europe would be tempers
by the presence of a far great
er force of Russia.
With respect to his recom
mendation that Sens. Alexan
der Wiley (R-Wis.), and J. Wil
liam Fulbright (D-Ark.), at
tend the foreign sesion at Ge
neva May 1 1 to personify U.S.
party unity on the Berlin
question, Humphrey said he
intended that they should
serve "as advisers and not ob
servers,' not as delegates or
voting members."
$3 Million Added
To Forest Budget
Washington-flJPD- Sen. Rich
ard Neuberger (D-Ore.), Tues
day announced Senate appro
priations adding $3 million to
the Forest Service budget, in
cluding $500,000 for access
roads and trails.
The action came in a sup
plemental fund bill for the
Interior department and the
forest service. The Appropri
ations committee said added
money was to be used in areas
that are especially burdened
with unemployment "where
such work will be of benefit
to our forests from the stand
point of conservation."
Neuberger said Oregon
areas which probably would
qualify for participation in the
added funds include Mt. Hood,
Siuslaw, Willamette, Umpqua,'
Siskiyou and Umatilla nation
al forests.
These forests are located in
areas designated as having la
bor surplus by the Depart
ment of Labor.
The committee also added
$1 million to the Bureau of
Land Management access
roads program and $100,000
to accelerate timber sales on
O and C lands.
U.S. To Use Afont
For Polar Power
Sydney, Australia -(Scinc
Service) - The U. S. plans to
install four small nuclear poor
er stations in Antarctic i
the next three years to ji
vide heat, light and povt
for U. S. bases. The U. S. vill
be the first country in t R a
world to use nuclear pow in
the Antarctic. Geologists ho
found 178 different minetl
in Antarctica, but geologictlly,
have surveyed less than on
per cent of the 6,000,000
square mile continent. To ex
ploit the minerals, including
iron, coal, gold, silver, tin and
lead, cheap electric power is
needed, said Rear Adm.
George Dufek, commander of
the U. S. Operation Deep
Freeze, in an interview here.
05C Professor
Pleads Innocent
Corvallis - (UPD - Dr. David
C. England, Oregon State Col
lege assistant professor, Tues
day pleaded innocent to a
charge of involuntary man
slaughter in connection with
the death of an adopted son
Feb. 8.
The trial is scheduled to
begin on June 17. England,
37, father of four other adopt
ed children, is alleged by a
Benton county grand jury to
have struck Charles Edwin
England, 12, about the head,
causing his death. -England is
free on $10,000 bond.
Record
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