MAIL TRIBUNE, MtdforJ, Or.
Friday, July 10, ItSt
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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
July 10. 1949 (Sunday)
The summer boy scout pro
gram at Camp McLoughlin
on Lake of the Woods is laun
ched today.
"Judge" Jimmy Dunlevy
holds kangaroo court down
town to try those guilty of
not wearing cowpoke togs.
20 YEARS AGO
July 10, 1919 (Monday)
- From "Side Glances:" Su
perintendent Bob Duff getting
worried about air in the-city's
water and hoping the cus
tomers would be patient until
he could do something about
it"
From Arthur Perry's "Ye
Smudge Pot" column: "Many
editorials these days haye the
theme: The meek shall in
herit the earth.' The meek
may some day, but not until
the slick have put up a bat
tle for it."
30 YEARS AGO
July 10, 1929 (Wednesday)
A police patrol is asked for
the orchard districts because
of the danger of transients
setting fires.
The farm bureau head pre
dicts the largest turkey crop
in the history of the valley.
40 YEARS AGO
July 10. 1919 (Thursday)
The Medford fire whistle is
blown so residents would shut
off their lawn hoses to in
crease water pressure.
A local boy runs off to join
Pancho Villa's army in Mexi
co, but . is apprehended en
route.
50 YEARS AGO
July 10. 1909 (Saturday)
Future coal mining work in
the Medford area is to be done
by contract.
The city's' gravity water
system is to be connected with
Fish Lake Ditch company's
canal at Bradshaw drop with
in the next day or two.
What's Your I.Q.?
Nina or ten correct is superior;
seven or eight it excellent; five ee
six is good.
1. The maple leaf is the
popular emblem of what coun
try? 2. How many 'outs consti
tute an inning of a baseball
game?
3. Which of these States is
smallest in area - Delaware,
Rhode Island, Nevada, Con
necticut? 4. Is it illegal to send threats
through the mails?
5. Which of the Great Lakes
lies wholly within the terri
torial limits of the United
States?
6. The pollen from which
weed is the principal cause
of the majority of hay fever
cases?
7. Which Oregon city is
called the City of Roses?
8. In which State of the
TJ.. S. was petroleum first dis
covered? 9. The beverages known as
chocolate and cocoa are both
made from the seeds of what
plant?
10. The President of the
TJ. S. has the power to declare
war, with the advice and con
sent of the Senate; true or
fMlse?
Answers: 1. Canada: 2. Six;
3. Rhode Island; 4. Yat; 5.
Laka Michigan; 6. Ragweed;
7. Portland; 8. Pennsylvania;
9. Cacao; 10. False: (Only Con
gress can declara war).
1
Congress
Criticism of the 86th
particularly among the "liberals" who are disap
pointed in the record made so far, and particu
larly in view of the broad program of social and
economic betterment so freely promised before
last .Novembers election.
The National Committee for an Effective Con
gress, a nominally non-partisan group which is
identified with liberal causes, declares that
"Congress has not kept pace with the historical
requirements of the times. ' And it adds:
"It has not, supplied the new national direction,
the sense of movement, which optimists expected after
the 1958 election. Confronted with the erosion of
America's world position, Washington lies becalmed,
as one commentator says, 'in the collision of planned
drift and masterly inactivity.' Even the housekeeping
assignments are not on schedule."
t
THE respected Courier-Journal of Louisville,
comments:
"Washington's urge to stall nearly everying on
dead-center has been noted in these columns before,
with credit apportioned both to Congress . and the
Administration ..."
Walter Lippmann, one of the most perceptive,
if not always the most far-sighted, of commen
tators, finds the Democratic majority trapped
between its recession-born promises of last iall
and the stone-wall choice of deficit spending or
higher taxes. They are thus, he says, immobilized.
Few Democrats (Sen. Richard L. Neuberger is
among them) are willing to propose tax increases
to pay for the developments they think are
needed. v
JOSEPH ALSOP, with different perspective
and political orientation, comments similarly.
He is more concerned with the'immediate politi
cal implications of the impasse, whereas Lipp
mann 'is more inclined to deal with the long-range
aspects of a government which is balking at the
cost of preparing the way for continued growth
and development.
Paul Butler, chairman of the Democratic
National committee, and the Americans for Dem
ocratic 'Action, likewise assail the Democratic
leadership in both houses. For the ADA to slap
at Democrats is unusual; for the Democratic
chairman to do so is startling. '
Leftward-leaning Democrats in the Senate
itself, notably Proxmire of Wisconsin and Morse
of Oregon, also have criticized the leadership for
taking its cue from the White House.
1X7HAT are some of the things the "liberals'
" the "spenders" want?
Well, adequate defense comesfirst with
everyone.
But beyond this requirement, which is the
major money-eating federal program, those who
believe the federal government has a role to play
in the development of the country,' economically
and socially, have in mind such things as these:
A revived highway program (the present one
is in danger of coming to a screaming halt for
lack of funds) ; an accelerated job of getting the
national" forests ready for the demands of the
next 100 years; recreational development, includ
ing the protection from despoilage many areas
which the American people need in which to
spend their increasing leisure hours.
..
THESE are not things which, except to a limited
onI TMfirtnTVifinl rvforf Iayis? 4"V amcinlvmci 4-r 'r-lt
tion on a local or even state level. They need
attention nationally, and the federal government
is the only agency with the size and the resources
to perform them.
That isn't the end of the list, either.
Thoughtful educators, eyeing the tremendous
increase in population, actual and to come, and
existing deficiencies in the nation's educational
establishment,-see a need for a revolutionary in
crease in educational spending and organization.
Police authorities, judges and juvenile work
ers, to say nothing of parents and teachers, see
the need for a nationwide attack on the causes
of crime, in general, and juvenile delinquency
in particular.'
AMERICA'S health
list notably mental illness, cancer, and cardio
vascular ailments. Too many Americans now die
who could, with expanded research, still live.
A far-seeing program of foreign economic
aid, while not a very popular project in some
domestic quarters, would furnish the best hope
for the growth and peaceful development of
many areas of the world where now near-starva
tion and unrest reign.
The world is now too
placent about the "backward" nations. It is to
our own self-interest to see that they are given
a hand in their march forward. The alternatives
are unpleasant communism, or chaos. .
HHESE then are some
ica needs or should
many people think it needs and should have.
It is, at any rate, an idealistic list of projects.
Can the United States afford it, or any part
of it? Some people would phrase the question
differently: Can the United States afford NOT
to do these things?
- Whether or not it can, the prospects, at the
present writing, appear dim for any such sweep
ing program or even any major part of it. The
Congress seems determined to avoid any new
extensive deficit spending, and appears in 'no
mood to consider a higher level of taxation.
Somehow, if seems too
nation on earth (that's
that spends more for liquor and cigarettes than
it does on education) can't Dav the bill for a
happier, more secure future. E.A. '
Under Fire
Congress is mounting:,
standards are high, but
small for us to be com
of the things that Amer-
have or at least what
bad that the wealthiest
what we call the nation
I
Dennis the
I LEFT 'm OVER AT Toms
'EM CAUSE IM GOM RIGHT ffACJCf
Washington Report
By WILLIAM
BUTLER AT ODDS
Washington National
Democratic Chairman Paul
Butler is moving with un
exampled self-
assurance to
control the
I960 Demo
cratic conven
tion for pur
poses that are
quite clear
but in behalf
of men whose
identies
are not
clear at all.
His central motives are
plain enough. He wants to dis
credit the party's "moderate"
elected Congressional' leader
ship and inevitably the rec
ord of the Democratic Con
gress itself both 'within the
party and in the eyes of the
country.
He intends to destroy that
leadership's influence at the
convention and thus to open
the way to the nomination for
President of some person
deemed by him to be "liberal"
enough in his definition. He is
attempting not only to drive
from the convention all the
conservative Southerners, but
also to make powerless even
the party's moderates North
ern as well as Southern.
THE conservative Southern
ers have long been fair
game to nearly every Demo
cratic faction - outside the
South, and understandably so.
For these conservatives for
years have brandished the
threat of party bolts to try to
force their way, even as a mi
nority. But Mr. Butler has now
gone far beyond these favorite
Southern whipping boys. In at
tacking the Democratic Con
gressional leadership and rec
ord in terms as harsh as those
used even by the Republicans,
he is . serving this notice: no
degree of dissent from his
view of the proper liberalism
will be tolerated in 1960 if he
has his way.
He is hitting, in a word, not
merely at the top Congres
sional leaders from Texas,
Senator Lyndon B. Johnson
and Speaker of the House
Sam Rayburn. He is also strik
ing at many powerful non
Southerners, among them the
Democratic floor chief of the
House, Rep. John W. McCor
mack of Massachusetts, and
such Senate hierarchs as Sen
ator Mike Mansfield of Mon
tana. And he is alsocutting, if
more obliquely, at four of the
five present real Democratic
Presidential "possibilities":
Senators John F. Kennedy of
Massachusetts, Hubert H.
Humphrey of Minnesota, Stu
art Symington of Missouri and
Johnson. For if the Democra
tic Congressional performance
is as poor and timid as he says
it is, no man who is a part of
that record can escape some
measuer of blame for it.
A collateral effect of Mr.
Butler's clamors is, of
course, to put increasing pres
sure on the three liberals,
Senators Kennedy, Humphrey
and Symington, to open fire
on the moderate, Johnson.
This kind of Senate in-fighting
would hurt not merely John
son but them all.
Two large unanswered ques
tions, however, remain: In
whose convention interests,
precisely, is Butler operating
this curious campaign? And
how does he feel qualified to
take the whole conduct of the
party into his own hands?
As to the first question, the
suspicion is wide among na
tional Democratic politicians
that Butter is running an ope
ration in aid of a third nomi
nation for Adlai E. Stevenson.
This is assumed mainly be
cause Butler is much influ
enced by politician Paul Ziff
ren of Calif ornia, who is sup
posed to be a "Stevenson
WUllamS.
Waits
Menace
WACXM'fBOL! J DIDN'T fiRlNS
S. WHITE,
man." Even this explanation,
however, is not too plausible.
For Stevenson as titular party
head was ready to discharge
Butler as national chairman in
1956 until he wep to be kept
on and until one of his pres
ent chosen victims, Rayburn,
interceded for him.
' (One consequence of But
ler's present activity would be
to deny to Mr. Rayburn in
1960 his traditional honor as
permanent chairman of the
convention.)
rIE second question how
does Butler think he alone
is competent to dominate the
convention? is a good one
even if the Democratic Con
gressional leadership is worse
than he says it is. That leader
ship, after all, has presided
over three successive Demo
cratic victories in Congres
sional elections. Butler presid
ed over a catastrophic Demo
cratic Presidential defeat in
1956. And in 1958 he was re
pudiated in his home state of
Indiana in trying to block the
successful Democratic Sena
torial candidate, Vance
Hartke. v
No one can say absolutely
that Mr. Butler is not alone
right about party matters
now. But no one can gainsay
that never in memory has a
salaried, unelected employee
of a national party sought to
grasp so much personal pow
er in such enigmatic circum
stances. '
There is room for one
larger, and final question:
Who, on balance, are benefit
ing most of all from the But
ler strategy? Answer: The Re
publicans and weU they
know it.
(Copyright, 1959, by United
Features Syndicate, Inc.)
In the Day's News
By FRANK
, From Havana:
Premier Fidel Castro's rev
olutionary regime is armed
with the DEATH PENALTY
for a major onslaught against
opposition to his land reform
program.
Castro has proclaimed the
land reform program as the
fundamental law of his revo
lution and has defied every
effort to slow it doWn or mod
ify it.
ITfHAT is his program?
Basically, he proposes
to expropriate the holdings of
big landowners, paying them
for it with Cuban bonds. whose
value 'would be doubtful in
view of the fact that his ex
propriation program would
upset Cuba's economy, thus
limiting her ability to levy
and collect the taxes to pay
off the bonds.
The expropriated lands
would ' be distributed among
the Cuban people in smaU
tracts.
QN
V so
ITS face, of curse it
sounds alluring, It conjures
up visions of a happy and con
tented people, with each fam
ily living in its own palm
thatched cottage, under its
own bougainvillea vine, with
its own banana tree in its own
back yard and its own pine
apples growing in its own gar
den. There was a time - in the
day of the hoe and the hand
shovel and the homespun gar
ment woven on the home
loom and tailored by , the
hands of members of the fam
ily when iC might have
worked. But times have
changed. Industry has chang
ed. Especially Cuban industry,
which is based on sugar and
tropical fruits. These require
huge expenditures of capital
and the supervision of trained
minds.
If Cuba's great sugar indus
try is wrecked, Cuba's econ
Koslov Trip to U.S.
Talks Peace, Trade
By PHIL NEWSOM
UPI Foreign Editor
The man-of-the-week: Soviet
1st Deputy Premier Frol
Koslov.
The place: Detroit.
The quote: "If our two
countries live in peace, then
peace will be
secure m the
Svll ttrfcnla -trm-lst
It was the
farthest away
from home
the graying,
broad - shoul
dered Koslov
U J i.
I iA Wa I ever veil-
&lVt Mured and
what he really
thought of the results of his
two-week "goodwill" trip to
the United States remained
locked behind his quick smile
and his easy.' recovery from
embarrassing moments.
But for the 50-year-old Kos
lov, the man with the rather
arbitrary designation as suc
cessor to Premier Nikita
Khrushchev, there had been
moments of strain.
One had come early in the
trip when he repeated once
too often the myth that Ameri
can famine relief sent to the
Soviet Union in the early
1930's had to be paid for in
gold. Vice President Richard
Nixon knocked that one down
with proof that the charge
was false and Koslov retired
from the field.
Meets Two Rebuffs
To this lesson in history
was added a rebuff by the
citizens of California who
showed an almost total lack
of interest in his presence
and the Mayor of Detroit who
had suggested it might be bet
ter if Koslov did not come to
Detroit at all.
It was at about this point
that Koslov requested a "pri
vate day," especially to be
free of newsmen. ,
In Detroit, he met Gov. G.
Mennen Williams and let his
irritation come to the surface
after the governor disclosed
the contents of their remarks
in a press conference.
The governor's press con
ference, Koslov said, "violat
ed a rule."
What gains, if any, either
the United States or the So
viet Union made as result of
Koslov's "goodwill" visit re
mained debatable.
What was not debatable
was Koslov's carbon - copy
echo of Khrushchev's unyield
ing stand on international is
sues dividing the two nations.
Newsmen lost count of the
number of times the word
"peace" appeared in Koslov
sentences.
To industrialists he held
out the promise of billions of
dollars to be gained in trade
with Soviet Russia.
Missile Might Boasted
But whether he spoke of
peace or dollars, it was
against the background of
Russia's boasted missile might.
Koslov was born too late to
be a member of the elite Bol
sheviks who plotted against
aild overthrew the czars. He
JENKINS
omy, wUl suffer seriously.
There will be tourists and
gambling to fall back on, but
they are not very solid foun
dations on which 'to base a
nation's economy.
T et'S take a look at our own
area, whose economy is
based on timber almost as ex
tensively as Cuba's is based
on sugar.
If its full economic benefits
are to be realized, timber re
quires huge investments of
capital in sawmills, pulp and
paper plants, woodworking
factories, and so on. Sugar
production requires immense
investments in sugar mills.
Much of our timber is
blocked into large holdings -the
big timber and lumber
companies, the Forest Service,
the Bureau of Land Manage
ment, etc. Suppose our gov
ernment expropriated the pri
vate timber holdings, threw
its own Forest Service and
BLM and National Park serv
ice holdings of timber into
the pot and divided it all up
among all the people in small
tracts.
WHAT would happen?
" We all know what
would happen. The economy
of our timbered area would
be wrecked. You cant EAT
timber. It has to be manufac
tured into useful articles.
Our timber payrolls would
vanish - and with them would
vanish the prosperity of our
area. That is about what will
happen to Cuba if Castro's
land redistribution plan goes
through.
NO REASONABLY well in
formed person can fail to
look upon Castro's land pro
gram with a jaundiced eye.
The probable result of it
would be to wreck Cuba's
economy and throw the island
into the bands of the communists.
was born in 1908 near Ryazan
in central Russia and, as many
of his contemporaries, was
the son of a "poor peasant."
But he joined the Commu
nist Youth Organization at the
age of 15.
He had just passed the age
of 35 when his industry and
ambition came to the atten
tion of the Central Party lead
Ike Uses 'Lame Duck' Limit
To Enhance Political Image
Washington -(UPD- President
Eisenhowers political image
should be alight with an es
pecially favor
able glow this
week.
The old sol
dier did quite
a job of poli
ticking at his
Wednesday
news confer
ence. "What he
did was to
Lyle C. WUsoo contrive t suu-
stantial asset out of a condi
tion which generally is re
garded as a liability for him
and for the Republican party.
That condition is the consti
tutional prohibition against
Communicafions
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 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
Are We Ready?
To the Editor: "Drop Shown
in Juvenile Delinquency" our
paper ' reports. That's good
news. The stated fact that so
many youths are repeaters is
not. It shows a weak spot in
our penal system and our so
ciety. An offender is someone
who needs help and he isn't
being given that help. Likely,
he only needs a little love and
to know somebody cares.
Few youths reach maturity
without having a few misde
meanors. Luckily, they aren't
caught by the police. Loving
parents or friends have shown
that they cared. Not in the of
fense but in the integrity of
the offender. Thus they were
helped to get on the right
track before there was a po
lice court. They were indeed
lucky.
- Now with all the churches,
lodges, and various 6rganiza-
tions who work to be helpful
to mankind and spend money
to help youth, why can't
someone take in these erring
ones and be a big brother to
them? Give these first of
fenders a reason to believe
somebody cares. A unit
formed for that purpose with
in each fraternal group could
probably eliminate our crime
in 20 years.
Isn't delinquency really
started by a natural spirit of
adventure that is not evil but
lacks proper direction? It con
tinues because of a feeling of
being outside. Outside of cir
cles of attention, love, and ap
preciation. To prevent it we
need only to offer that friend
ship that would make them
feel they belong. They need
the warmth and security of
love. '
Much money is being spent
on young people, but we re
not reaching the ones who
need it most, as our police
records prove. Here is a won
derful chance to show some of
the love of our Heavenly Fath
er. We have everything to gain
-security, happiness, savings
from destruction, and large
police systems. WeU, are we
ready for action?
Or we will wait until our
own loved one is lost?
, Frances Ray,
Ralston, Wash.
For Calendar Reform
To the Editor: At the risk
of appearing a poor sport, one
who loses hard and never for
gets, I write to take issue with
an answer to a Dag Hammar
skjold, Secretary General of
the UN; a request directed to
the state department in the
spring of 1955. The issue is
still pending in spite of the re
ply received from the state de
partment and therefore appro
pos of discussion.
The request from the secre
tary general was for an opin
ion upon the advisability of
calendar reform, at that time
upon the agenda of the Eco
nomic and Social Council
(ECOSOC). The state depart
ment replied that this govern
ment "did not favor calendar
reform."
Point one in retaliation is,
that Congress had not express
ed itself either in favor of or
disapproving action for calen
dar reform. Neither had the
people been given an oppor
tunity to express their atti
tude. The state department
Seen Indecisive;
and Red Missiles
ership in Moscow. There are
indications that at this time
the mentor was Georgi Malen
kov, who inherited briefly
Stalin's mantle as 1st Secre
tary of the Communist Party
and Premier.
It is a tribute to Koslov's
adroitness that he escaped the
anti-party purge, of which
Malenkov was a victim, and
Eisenhower being re-nomi
nated and reelected to suc
ceed himself. He frequently is
called a lame-duck President,
meaning that his political fu
ture is behind him.
This is a political liability
in the sense that aU hands are
aware that the great powers
of the presidential office must
in a matter of months pass to
another. These are the great
powers of reward and punish
ment. Gobbla-de-Gook Word
At his news conference, Ei
senhower capitalized on his
inability to succeed himself.
He was being asked about his
vetoes of congressional legis
lation. Specifically, a ques
tioner wanted to know wheth
er these vetoes which simply
kill legislation might not cre
ate in the public mind a nega
tive image of the Eisenhower
Presidency. "Image," as used
this way, is a gobble-de-gook
word meaning the added-up,
collective opinion of the citi
zens on the basis of the ob-
was without information, or
authority . of Congress, to
make such a declaration.
Point two is, contrary to
the statement made by the
state department, that the
United States could not pos
sibly act for a reform of the
calendar for the reason that
important religious faiths op
posed it. I know of one or pos
sibly two minor religious
groups who oppose such action
for calendar reform. I know
of one of three branches of a
non-Christian group who op
pose this action. Taken to
gether they represent, prob
ably, about one-tenth of one
per cent of the nation's popu
lation. Under the Constitution
the majority are allowed to
pass laws which they deem
beneficial for the public good,
howbeit, protection is afford
ed minority or dissenting
groups who cannot accord
full faith or credit to that ac
tion. '
The state department paper
was too broad, also at fault in
"principle." It should be al
tered and corrected.
Fee Clifford Esteb,
, P. O. Box 1413,
Medford.
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33 South Riverside
now in turn has become a
favorite of Khrushchev.
On his American visit ha
has been described as urbane,
pleasant, shrewd and tough.
Said Governor Williams of
him:
"I think it will take a
Yankee trader to beat him. I
think we have some such
Yankee traders."
servable performance of their
public servants. Pretty good
word.
Eisenhower did not think
his veto performance caused
the citizens to judge him to b
a merely negative or destruc
tive force in public affairs. In
fact, he was not much con-
cerned with images, but with
the public good.
"I call your attention,
again," Eisenhower said, "that
I cannot be running for any
thing; I am finished with po
litical life when my next, I
guess it is 18 months, art
over.
"It seems to me' that if any
man has almost the compul
sion to think only of the Unit
ed States of America and its
citizens, rather than any po
litical image or political am
bition, weU, then, I should be,
or any President who is in his
second term today, should be
such an individual. What I am
trying to do is to get legisla
tion passed that wiU benefit
the United States. . . "
'Good For The Country'
Some questions later, Eisen
hower had another go at the
same idea:
"I am having a reaUy very,
busy, hard time because I
think there are too many peo
ple who are not looking at
many of these problems in th
broadest possible way. I stick
by that, I am trying to do
what will," I believe, ba good
for the country."
That seems to leave the con
gressional Democrats among
the "too many" who are not
looking at these problems in
the broadest possible way: El
senhower's contrast was de
liberate and plain he, tha
man with no f urther( political
ambitions; ' they, the party
with a White House to win
next year.
If congressional Democrats
have their political futures be
fore them, so do the congres
sional Republicans. E i s e n
hower easily can set himself
apart from the world of po
litical schemes and strategy.
In so doing, he can enhance
his presidential image, and
the public will applaud. Oth
er Republicans, however,
must play politics - or else.
SIMCA
Phone SP 3-6247