MAIL TRIBUNE, McJfsrf, Of.
. Tharsdsy, Msf 28, 1 95t
uxx
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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
May 28, 1949 (Saturday)
Medford Red Cross swim-
mers appear in Roseburg at
the dedication of that .city'i
new municipal swimming
pool.
. Mrs. Sam B. McNair of Ash
land exhibits her collection of
early American antiques. t
20 YEARS AGO
May 28, 1939 (Sunday)
: Samuel Finley, . California
golon from Siskiyou county,
says his constituents want to
secede to Oregon since high
way crews of the Beaver state
do a better job of roadway
maintenance.
From Arthur Perry's "Ye
Smudge Potf column: : "Pick
ing of strawberries not con
fiscated by the jaybirds and
the robins, will be in- full
swing this week. They are
quite plentiful in the stores
and shortcakes."
30 YEARS AGO
May 28, 1929 (Tuesday)
Dorothy Gore . recites an
original poem before the Ro
tary club.
Roses are blooming in great
profusion, promising an ample
supply for Memorial day.
40 YEARS AGO
May 28. 1919 (Wednesday)
C. C. Hoover, announces
that after June 1 Snider's
dairy-will take over his milk
route.
- The school board refuses to
terminate classes three weeks
early despite complaints of a
' labor shortage. "
SO YEARS AGO
May 28, 1909 (Friday)
Lionel L. Webster, Mult
nomah county judge, offers
to defend the Crater Lake
road appropriation.
Rain falls in the valley to
the delight of farmers and
gardeners alike.
What's Your I.Q.?
Nine.ar ten 'correct is superior;
seven or eight is excellent; five of
six is flood.
1. What was the winged
horse of Minerva called?
2. In this sentence a state is
i spelled in proper order; find
it: "Sam is sour indeed."
3. By what method was Sir
Walter Raleigh executed?
4. The first shot' fired in
the War Between the States
was fired against what Fed
eral fort?
5. Is a baby kangaroo at
birth larger, or smaller than
a mouse?
6. A yellowhammer is a
carpenter's tool; true or false?
9
7. Correct the following:
"He associated with a bunch
of gamblers."
8. What is the chemical dif
ference between beet "and
cane sugar?;
9. A briquette is an adobe
brick; true or false?
10. Name the 1959 winner
of the Kentucky Derby.
Answers: 1. Pegasus. 2. Mis
souri. 3. 'Beheading. 4.. Fx.
Sumter. 5. Smaller. 6. False
(bird). 7. "... a crowd of
gamblers." 8.. None. 9. False.
(Compressed fuel). 10. Toxny
Lee.
. 'Antarctic
"Antarctic Crossing"
love-interest, or formal
or studio effects.
Much of it consists merely of scenes of deso
late stretches of snow and ice.
Yet it is one of the most fascinating, and in
its own way, thrilling motion pictures we have
ever seen. It is simply the documentary record
of the British Commonwealth expedition which
crossed Antarctica during the International Geo
physical Year exploration of the southern
continent.
IT IS a story of high drama, the drama of. men
and machines fighting the elements and the
rigors of the largely-unknown Antarctic.
To a resident of Medford, the story takes on
added drama when one sees the big and lumber
ing -but efficient Sno-Cats which were made in
the factory on Highway 99 just south of town.
. Seeing the color films of the vehicles rolling
through the expanses of ice and snow toward
the south pole, clambering over obstacles, being
pulled from near-disaster in huge cravasses, arid
finally rolling in triumph to Scott base, 2,100
miles from the start, is an exciting experience,
even vicariously.
THE TUCKER Sno-Cat Corp. is to be compli
K mented for obtaining the film, and for hav
ing made it available, gratis, for public viewing.
It is to be hoped they also will allow others,
unable to attend the public showing last Thursday
night, to see it as occasion arises.
The firm is proud of its accomplishments, and
with every good reason. The Sno-Cats proved to
be the most dependable of the several types of
vehicles used in the Antarctic during the IGY,
and have earned a world-wide reputation for
themselves and, by association, for Medford.
We wish it continued success in its work"oi
making specialized over - snow transportation
equipment, the best in the world. E.A.
Time foVaTeash Law
. It is with reluctance that we finally have come
to the conclusion that Medford needs a dog leash
law. . .
The tragic incident in St. Louis last week, in
which a small child was' killed by a pack of dogs,
and the resulting recommendation and explan
ation by Chris Hagler. county dog control officer,
seem to be conclusive evidence of the need.
True, such an incident
Hagler, who travels about the county and knows
a lot aoout trie dog situation, gives the rather
shocking verdict that he is "surprised" there
haven't been any such incidents locally.
WHEN MEDFORD was small, and everyone
"1 VV Jf sXJr WOt, CVIAVJ. IvllXC V C jjldilvjr'
ofj Vacant lots, and houses weren't too close to
each other, there was little need for such a restric
tion. All of the dogs in any neigborhood were
known, as were their owners.
Today, with Medf ord's population somewhere
between 25,000 and 26,000, and another several
thousand in the-immediate vicinity, the situation
is different.
Not only is there the danger of which Hagler
speaks, but there is the increasing nuisance to
traffic, gardeners, and home-owners generally
to say nothing of the welfare of the dogs them
selves. THE LAST reason mentioned, as a matter of
fact, should weigh heavily,,at least with any
one who cares about dogs.
We once felt that leashing or confining a dog
was a kind of cruelty. (And it would be to an
older dog used to running at large.)'
But if a dog is confined from puppyhood
onward, he is content. And he is protected from
the hazards of traffic, or irate homeowners or
unwholesome food taken during raids on garbage
cans. The problem of indiscriminate breeding is
thus limited, if not eliminated.
Dog ownership brings with it responsibilities.
If they are not assumed voluntarily, for the sake
of the dog itself, to say nothing of neighbors
and children, it is time for society (in the form
of a city ordinance) to insist they be assumed.
E.A.
'Moderates' Win
The victory of the "moderate" forces in the un
happy Little Rock, Ark., situation, is a step for
ward in the south's slow but inevitable march
toward equality of opportunity.
Perhaps the "moderate" forces there do not
view it as such. To them it was simply a question
of slow integration, on one hand, or no school
at all plus the vindictive firing of teachers, on
the other.
Faced with this choice, they picked the path
of moderation and sanity. -.
IT JIVILL be many years before the white and
black races will have equality which the Dec
laration of Independence declares is the heritage
of all men.
It will come with education, for both races,
more than any other single thing.
- Denying youngsters .of both races education,
as Little Rock has done this past year, largely
the result of the demagogueiy of Governor Fau
bus, does harm to white and black alike, and
delays the eventual and inevitable outcome.
But it has been a delay only; not a halt. E.A.
Crossing9
is a film without anv
plot, or Hollywood cast,
is one-in-a-million. But
Dennis the
lOTSA GOOD TRAOIN STUFF
Matter of Fact By Joseph Alsop
BERLIN FROM BUDAPEST
Budapest -A visit to Hun
gary casts invaluable light on
the present situation in
Europe. Seen
from Buda
pest, in fact,
the Berlin
crisis has a
brand new
look.
I n particu
lar, there are
indie a t i o n s
here that Ni-
1 S X TJ1 T
iosDb Alsop k 1 1 a xvnrusn
chev is thinking about an am
bitious reorganization of the
entire Soviet empire. If this
is correct (and the Budapest
indications interestingly jibe
with high Western specula
tions in Geneva and Moscow),
Khrushchev wants to improve
the position of his East Ger
man puppets as a necessary
first stage in his scheme of
imperial reorganization.
Khrushchev himself has
given certain hints that he
had something big in mind.
For .example, in his speech at
Leipzig during his visit to
East Germany, he listed all
the altered and disputed fron-,
tiers of Eastern Europe - the
Polish-German frontier on the
Oder - Neisse; the Soviet
Union's own frontiers with
Poland and Romania; the
Romanian - Hungarian fron
tier, and so on. Having listed
these potential sources of
trouble, he then pooh-poohed
the idea of any trouble aris
ing from them. Frontier dis
putes between Socialist states
were unimaginable, he declar
ed; and, anyway, he continued
mysteriously, a time would
come when frontiers within
the Socialist bloc would cease
to have any meaning at aU.
THIS forecast by Khrush
chev seems to point in just
the same direction as the signs
observed in Budapest. It
seems to point, in fact, to
wards a merger of all the
existing states of the Krem
lin's empire in a larger union
of some sort.
No doubt there is no inten
tion to reduce Poland, Hun
gary, and the other nations of
Eastern Europe to the status
of the Ukraine and Byelo
Russia. That would be too
radical. But it would not be
radical to organize the Soviet
Union, the European satellites,
perhaps even China, North
Korea, and North Vietnam, in
a single giant federation.
Such a federation would not
need to make deep, organic
changes in existing relation
ships. The governing body or
bodies - perhaps composed of
all the Communist party First
Secretaries with Khrushchev
as chairman - would certainly
coordinate economic and for
eign policy for the blocs as a
whole. But the Kremlin al
ready does just this. At least
at the outset, the federation
Try and
-By BENNETT CERF-
A BUSINESS MAN who liked to spend many evenings and
weekends with male companions suddenly realized he
hadn't been giving his wife a fair shake, so he impulsively
bought her a dozen Ameri
can Beauty roses and a 5
pound box of candy. When
he presented them to her,
she burst into tears. "This
is the last straw," she sob
bed. "First the cook quit,
then Johnny broke his arm,
and now you come home
drunkf
Red Skelton picked up a
pair of friss-crossed field
glasses when he stopped off in
Tokyo. "Very useful at races,"
the sauve Japanese clerk as
sured him. "Not only see
horse that win but horse you bet on at same time."
, Romantics were distressed when a Hollywood couple split up
after 40 long years. She finally became convinced he wouldn't
marry her.
' C UsS, by Seaaett Cerf. Xfcotubuud by iuag f mums SyadicsU.
Menace
VSSB1.
might be nothing much more
than the Kremlin under
Another name.
piVEN IF purely formal in
character, such a federa
tion would have two very
great advantages. First of all,
it would afford a legal pre
text, usable even at the United
Nations, for re-invasion of any
province that might rebel af
ter the 'withdrawal of the
Soviet garrisons there. This
is important because Khrush
chev is anxious to get his
troops out of all of Eastern
Europe except East Germany.
Just the other day, he glee
fully predicted the early with
drawal of the Soviet garrison
in Hungary itself, where Red
Army troops are the govern
ment's main prop.
Obviously, any widespread
withdrawal of troops from
Eastern Europe would be an
appallingly risky business, as
long as the sequel might be
a repetition of the terrible
Hungarian drama on an even
vaster scale. But if all the
European satellites are form
ally incorporated in a larger
federal whole, then the new
super - government can claim
that any local insurrection is
a "purely internal affair." The
peculiar conventions of U. N.
debate will thus be satisfied,
and the necessary massacres
can be committed with due
attention to form.
TN ADDITION, Khrushchev
Amay well hope that a scheme
of federation will eventually
solve the gigantic political
problem that is basic here in
Hungary and throughout East
ern Europe. In brief, aU Hun
garians, including great num
b e r s of Hungarian Com
munists, regard their govern
ment as a mere colonial ad
ministration. As long as this
sentiment exists, no amount of
material progress will recon
cile the masses to their gov
ernments. As in all colonial
situations, the opposition to
colonialism will overcome all
other factors.
Federation would go a long
way, however, towards kill
ing any lingering hope of lib
eration The utter loss of hope
is, the surest weapon against
moral resistance. And when
hope has been utterly lost, the
existence v and symbol of a
federation may finally per
suade the peoples of the satel
lites to forget their colonial
status.
If Nikita Khrushchev is in
deed considering this bold
scheme, his motives for desir
ing changes at Berlin and in
East Germany are very power
ful indeed. The indications in
Budapest are far from decis
ive. Yet it is clearly possible
that Khrushchev has such a
scheme in mind. And the mere
possibility is sufficiently im
portant to be worth reporting,
(c) 1959 New York Herald
Tribuno Inc.
Stop Me
Haiti Is Beautiful, But Government Is
Unstable;
By PHIL NEWSOM
UPI Foreign Editor
From the beautiful bay at
Port-au-Prince, Haiti, the trav
eller steps ashore to a park
like atmosphere of palms,
close - clipped
lawns and
low - slung,
gleaming sun
bathed build
ings built by
the govern
ment. This is
a tropic para
dise. A short
walking dis
tance away is the public mar
ket. Here the picture begins
to change.
Vegetables from the day
before and the day before
that rot on the ground, the
stench of one day overcoming
me iresnness of the next.
Inland, a road runs toward
Communications
Letters to the Editor must
bear the name and address of
the writer although under cer
tain circumstances the use of a
pen name or initial for publica
tion is permissible. 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
Tickets
To the Editor: Last week I
stopped in Medford for a cup
of coffee and a refill. It cost
me 65c. I forgot to put penny
in parking meter. When 'I
drove to police station for
putting 50 pennies in city
treasury, I forgot to put penny
in parking meter. When I
came out of police station, I
saw Paladin coming down the
street on his motorcycle. We
both drawed, but I shot penny
in parking meter before he
could shoot me with parking
ticket. I almost got refill on
parking ticket.
On my way home, I came
close to gettin' parking ticket
from state police. Making 20
miles in 50 mile zone. When
I learned to drive we didn't
have zones, we was lucky, we
didn t even have speed cops.
I've got to speed up or the
speed cops got to slow down.
Bet on speed cops. The officer
wanted to see my driver's lic
ense. Licenses I got lots of.
Driver's, fish, dog, squirrel,
jackrabbit, deer and Californ
ia license. Deer, steelhead and
salmon tags. I got more stamps
than you could put in Fibber
McGee's closet. Green, brown,
yellow, pink, purple and duck
stamps. I got something to
put on everything but ele
phants. It's a good thing we
don't have monkeys in Ore
gon, we'd have to go down
to the post office and buy
a book of monkey stamps to
paste on monkeys.
I only got two tickets, one
a 1949 Southern Pacific tick
et to Medford. I never got a
speedin'' ticket, only one tick
et for reckless driving. Driv
ing without license, brakes,
horn, lights, no hands on steer
ing wheel while learnin' to
drive down the sidewalk
backwards, blindfolded. I
didn't think that was reckless
driving. I was the only one
on the sidewalk, everybody
else was in the middle of the
street. I was accomplishing
two things, learnin' to ride a
bike down the wooden side
walk without the handlebars,
and teaching the pedestrians
to walk in the street.
Everett Acklin,
Box 233 '
Ashland.
It's Man's Fault
To the Editor: I have read
in the Tribune of the death of
a child from the jaws of a
pack of worthless dogs.
This I hope shall never hap
pen again, anywhere, because
we are these animals' keep
ers, and when this kind of in
human event happens it does
not speak well of man's part
in a civilized country as ours.
I wish to set the record
straight; it is not the animals'
fault but the neglect of man's
part as to his intelligence.
I wish to put every dog
lover's mind at ease and not
condemn, but to make amends
so each individual will per
form the duty he or she was
bred for. The old saying that
you can tell a man by his
dog is very true today.
I would like you to put this
in the paper for I am a lover
of animals and I know that
the layman may get the wrong
impression of the dog for his
many man-made talents.
Leo Rifenbark,
1131 Pinecroft ave.,
Medford.
An Appeal '
To the Editor: Please print
this.
To whom it may concern: I
am making a plea to the peo
ple of this valley for a young
couple who are very much in
need of furniture, cooking
utensils, dishes, curtains, etc.
This young fellow, who was
my foster boy for nine months,
is doing his best to overcome
a big mistake he made. His
wife was in a very serious
car accident and is at home
Wealth, Poverty Contrasted
the blue mountains. The sea
breeze is a savior here. It is a
road not usually used by tour
ists because it runs through
a shanty city of open sewers,
of shacks leaning one upon
the" other, of naked children,
of massed humanity living in
unimagined poverty.
Poverty and Unrest
Up in the hills are the lux
ury hotels and the homes of
the wealthy where the squal
or below is hidden from view
and it is indeed a tropic para
dise. N
Haiti is a land of beauty
and poverty, of political un
rest and intrigue, of democ
racy whose strength is based
on a secret police force which
is the antithesis of democracy.
In the midst of all this is
President Francois Duvalier,
who was elected in . Septem
ber, 1957, and whose term
under the constitution should
run for six years. But it is
always open season on presi
dents in Haiti and in this
century only three have re
tired of their own accord.
In this Negro republic,
where it has been traditional
for the rich to get richer and
the poor to get poorer, Du-
Direct Distance Dialing For
Congressmen Bring
By FRANK ELEAZER
Washington (DPD Con
gress has a wonderful new
automatic telephone exhange,
with 3,444
phones. But
i an unnerving
discovery has
b e en made.
Each phone
has - been
quietly con
nected with
just about
every city and
Frank Eleazer most xowns in
the country.
This communications ad
vance took place without
ceremony on April 14 when
direct distance dialing began
locally.
The first phone bill since
then has not come in. House
and Senate officials, on the
basis of certain unfortunate
experiences in the past, are
eearinz themselves for a
shock.
Meanwhile, in a move born
more of desperation than
hope, they have withheld
Grants Pass Suit
Grants Pass-A suit seeking
more than $209,000 has been
filed in circuit court in Grants
Pass by attorneys for the
WS&L Log corporation of
Crescent City.
The suit names 19 persons
and three companies as de
fendants and alleges fraud and
misrepresentation in the sale
of certain timber lands in Del
Norte county, California.
Defendants include Jean R.,
Robert J. and Gail C. Watkins,
identified as .timber or lum
ber operators living in Trail;
Harold C. Lacy, Crescent City
surveyor; Donald H. Coulter,
Grants Pass attorney; Albert
G. Wheelon, Del Norte coun
ty engineer; David P. Scott,
Community Bans
Business Firms
Cincinnati, Ohio fUPD You
cant buy an aspirin or a loaf
of bread-or anything else-in
the exclusive Cincinnati sub
urb of Indian Hill.
The community of 2,100 oc
cupies an area one-fourth the
size 'of Cincinnati, which has
a population of more than
half a million.
Indian Hill has outlawed all
business establishments ' and
permits only single family
dwelling units.
When the village was first
incorporated, a filling station
was in operation, but the com
munity purchased and elimi
nated it.
with friends. They have two
little girls, 3 and 2 years old.
To encourage and keep on
top they need our help.
Many of us have these
things stored away and would
like to get rid of them. This
would be a good place to help.
These things may be brought
to 250 Bush st., Central Point,
or call NO 4-1666.
(Name on File)
Central Point
Breatheasy Complete Set
Regularly $12"
NOW $750
Limited-Time Offer
JJreatheasy
AT YOUR DRUG STORE
at
valier's government is setting
a record as one more honest
than usual and one whose in
terest in irrigation projects,
public housing and public
welfare in general prove a
desire to improve the poor lot
of the average man.
But if instability of govern
ment may be taken as an aver
age among Caribbean nations,
then Haiti-' is more average
than most. '
Still Some Opposition
Between December, 1956,
and September, 1957, Haiti
had five governments," each
installed and supported by
the army.
Between 1937 and 1957
there were no less than four
uprisings in Haiti, in each of
which the army took part. In
that period, no candidate j
could be elected and hold of
fice without the support of
the army.
By various means, mainly
consisting of disarming the
regular army and setting up
a secret force operating pri
marily from within the presi
dential palace grounds, Du
valier has managed at least
to drive his opposition under
ground.
from the lawmakers special I
supplements to the phone
book listing the out of town
codes.
Costs Thousands Monthly
They don't really believe
this will help much, at least
not for long. The code books
are available generaly to all
telephone subscribers. Mem
bers can bring 'em from home.
But it is figured that the
longer it takes members, and
their thousands of helpers, to
learn of the new do-it-yourself
long distance system the few
er marathon coast-to-coast
conversations will show up,
unexplained, on Congress'
telephone bill.
House Clerk Ralph Roberts
has warned a House Ap
propriations subcom mittee
these unrecorded calls could
run to thousands of dollars a
month.
Congressional calls, local
and long distance, used to go
through operators. But the
load got too big and about
18 months ago a new auto-
Seeks $209,000
engineer, Crescent City; Wal
ter B. Robinson and Jerome
Blackwell, both of Engineer
ing associates; the Del Norte
county firm of Engineering as
sociates: "Black and White
company," "Red Company,"
and 10 persons named as Doe
One through Ten. True names
of the Black and White com
pany, tie Red company and
the 10 Doe persons were not
known by the complainants,
it was explained.
The complaint alleges that
on April 8, 1957, at Crescent
City "the defendants did con
spire, intending to deceive the
plaintiff and to purchase cer
tain timber lands in Del Norte
county," on which two of the
defendants had obtained an
option to purchase said timber
lands from the then owners,
Clear Fir Sales company.
The , defendants "herein
made to plaintiff certain false
representations," the com-:
plaint charges. i
wmm
LIKE THE
Si
Aaoa (root th
FRANK MORGAN - HAROID
DAY OR NIGHT
Nevertheless, within his
own time in office, there hava
been these instances of op
position: sabotage of a Port-au-Prince
power station, sec
ret radio broadcasts urging
revolution, a suspected bomb
plot set for last May Day, the
hi-jacking of a government
transport plane, and an eight
man invasion from Miami
which seized the main army
barracks in Port-au-Prince
and held them for a night be
fore being wiped out.
Most Illiterate
Of Haiti's approximate four
million population, about 90
per cent is illiterate. Nation
al politics is decided in Port-au-Prince
where the popula
tion is about 200,000. Most of
the other people are too poor
to care.
Haiti is dependent for much
of its income on tourism. Shop
keepers say this was the worst
season yet.
As of now, the bets are on
Duvalier to stay in office in
definitely, aided by public
lethargy and his secret police.
But the outlook for Haiti is
bleak a continuing struggle
between poverty and political
bankruptcy.
Problems
matic switchboard
was in-
stalled.
Until the advent of direct
distance dialing a member
or an employe or a reporter
in the press gallery wanting
to call out of town dialed 8
for the long distance operator.
She made the call and, in the
process, made a note on who
put it in.
Most members still ara
making their long distance
calls this way.
Others inevitably are learn
ing that all they heed do is
dial 9, then the proper code,
then the phone to be called.
This kind of call winds up
charged tp Capital 4-3121,
which is the Capitol. From
what extension was the call
made? Nobody can say.
Always Free-Loading
Roberts, who gets $19,250
a year to worry about such
problems, was careful of
course not to say any con
gressman would cheat on his
long distance tolls. The tax
payers pay each House mem
ber's long distance bills any
way - up to 6,000 minutes per
two-year term, with compar
able allowances also for sena
tors. But even before direct dis
tance dialing, Roberts said,
somebody was always free
loading on the congressional
phones. For the last year or
so direct dialing was possible
to points in the nearby area,
like Balitmore.
The monthly toll for unac
counted calls under this sys
tem sometimes has run into
several hundreds of dollars.
'Lately Roberts has balked
at paying the bill. He didn't
say specifically why. Other
sources said one possible rea
son was the frequency with
which racetracks at Laurel
and Bowie showed up on the
list of points called. Another
recipient of much congres
sional telephone patronage, it
developed, was a nearby book
maker.
"This would be a variation
of the same thing," Roberts
moaned, "except it would in
volve thousands of dollars in
stead of a hundred or so."
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