4 MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford-, Or.
Mondsy, Aug. 10, 1959
MEDFORDtSWTRIBUNX
"Iveryone m Southern Oregon
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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
Aug. 10, 1949 (Wednesday)
Medford officials consider
sale of the city's old sewage
disposal plant on Biddle lane.
Cooks are needed for the
Camp White veterans' domi
ciliary, federal officials an
nounce. .
20 YEARS AGO
Aug. 10, 1939 (Thursday)
The Central Point boys in
volved in stealing watermel
ons from Arnold Bohnert's
patch get suspended ' sen
tences but must apologize and
make restitution with cash or
by picking tomatoes.
From Arthur Perry's "Ye
Smudge Pot" column: "A
number of the Older Girls see
no hope, or a silver lining,
and glumly predict:. It's hot
today, and going to be hotter
tomorrow."
30 YEARS AGO
Aug. 10, 1929 (Saturday)
The Coos Bay newspaper
praises the aviation spirit of
Medford area residents.
The Medford Legion drum
corps wins a cup at the state
meet.
40 YEARS AGO
Aug. 10. 1919 (Sunday)
The last codling moth
spray of the season is applied.
National Editorial associa
tion convention delegates and
other dignitaries are expected
for a special visit to Crater
Lake.
50 YEARS AGO
Aug. 10. 1909 (Tuesday)
The Rogue valley's casaba,
musk, water- and other mel-
lons are reported to be the
greatest. -
A "modern" business col
lege is to be established in
Medford.
What's Your I.Q.?
Nine or ten correct is superior;
seven or eight is excellent; five ot
six is good.
1. Name the Hungarian Car
dinal who was tried bv a
"People's Court" on a charge
of treason.
2. In what town near Pitts
burgh did Andrew Carnegie
found his first public library?
3. There are no mosquitoes
in Alaska: true or false?
4. Is it tiie equinox, or the
solstice, that occurs at the
beeinnine of spring?
5. In what war did British
troops burn the White House
in Washington?
6. -Is the hollyhock a native
plant of- Holland, China, In
dia or America?
7. Name the Secretary, of
Agriculture of the United
Rtates.
o Tn the nursery rhyme,
what color was Mary's little
lamb?
' 9. Of what mineral is coke
a derivative? .
10. In what country is the
TJanffnon?
pull v- c
Answers: 1. Josef Cardinal
Mindssenry. 2. Braddock. Pa.
- a. The spring equi
nox I! War of 1812. 6.
China 7. Ezra Tafi Benson.
.?J . Coal. 10. Burma.
LI7 Boothbay, Maine-JIPD-Harold
Cross, 69, widely
Sown libel lawyer and for
mer associate dean of the Co
lumbia University School of
0
journalise, mtu
Taxing Churches
"Tax the churches," a frequent slogan of
those eager for tax relief, but one carefully
avoided by candidates for office, got a boost, of
a sort, from an unexpected quarter recently.
In. an article in the publication "Christianity
Today," the Rev. Eugene Carson Blake, stated
clerk of the United Presbyterian church and for
mer president of the National Council of Churches
of Christ of America, called on churches to re
examine their policy with regard to taxation
not that hex recommends putting churches on the
taxrolls at once but he does point out some tax
advantages which might well be curtailed. One
of those is exemption from the corporate income
tax on business operations, which gives churches
(and other tax-exempt non-profit organizations)
a competitive advantage over private owners.
'TAKING note of a growing "anti-church feel-
A ing" in the United States Dr. Blake says that
a government with mounting tax problems can
not be expected to keep its hands off the wealth
of a rich church forever . . ." He ventures the
opinion that if the present exemption on gifts,
inheritance and real estate and income taxes is
continued in a hundred years the problems con
fronting the state may be of such magnitude "that
their only solution will be revolutionary expro
priation of church property."
Expropriation is an ugly word, reminiscent of
the action of Henry VHI in England when he
broke with the Roman Catholic church, of the
French Revolution in the 18th century and with
nationalization of church property by Communist
states in recent times.
IXfHILE the purposes of the church are laud-
able, when a church becomes large and rich
it excites envy, says Dr. Blake. However much
the enterprises of the church may be appreciated,
they are "not sufficient of themselves to make a
poor man love a rich church." As a starter Dr.
Blake suggests that gradually local property taxes
could be levied against churches up to 10 per
cent of the normal tax against private property.
That would be a modest beginning, to be sure.
Church trustees and treasurers, hard pressed
now to meet budgets, may wonder where the
money would come from to pay taxes. It would
have to come from present sources of income
from the pockets of the faithful. Dr. Blake's
frankness should and" will stir discussion of this
important topic both within and without the
churches. Oregon Statesman, Salem.
There He Goes
In the closing hours of the 1959 Legislature,
Sen. Dan Dimick, Roseburg'Democrat, made an
impassioned speech about "the chiefs and the
Indians. The burden of
more highly paid officials ("chiefs") were get
ting too much money, the lower-paid employees
("Indians") too little. He succeeded in eliminat
ing pay increases for the career service. ;
Maybe this sounded fine to some voters and
maybe it seemed to put
side of the "little man.
of only .0007. per cent on the biennial budget.
And it did the career service, as a service, great
harm. His attack was
calculated to improve the morale of career em
ployees who know they could do better, finan
cially, elsewhere.
MOW we're losing Art Handly. Mr, Handly, a
relatively young man and a very able one,
was drawing $9,000 a year as the No. 2 man in
the board of control office. He stood to inherit
the top job when William Ryan, board secretary,
retires. Mr. Handly was, by Senator . Dimick's
definition,' a chief. Because he made $9,000 a
year he was, by Senator
rageously overpaid. .
In his new job as principal assistant in the
Wisconsin department of finance he will get
$13,500. And presumably he won't have to take
a rash of insulting oratory from a legislator.
Good men with training and experience, men
willing to spend their lives in the service of the
state, are hard to find, and they're getting harder
to find. A pay raise, and a few kind words last
spring would have been well invested if they had
kept for Oregon young men like Art Handly.
Eugene Register-Guard.
Purposes of Living
A sociologist, writing in the Saturday Review
asks " is not the fathering and mothering of chil
dren the point and purpose of living?"
Well now, that adds something to the discus
sion of what life is all about, and we think that
this comment might mere appropriately have
come from a stockman.
The Christian says we live to serve the Lord,
the hedonist that we live to enjoy ourselves, the
communist that we live to serve the state.
Nearly all the philosophers of our present
white, Christian civilization have said that man
must contribute something to society to live prop
erly and most of us go along with that rather
humanistic ideal. Sherman County Journal.
ULTIMATE WEAPONS
Manila - (UPD - City prose
cutor Hermogenes Concepcion
suggested today that the city
require licenses for possession
of bows and arrows, blow
pipes, darts and slingshots.
it was that the state's
Senator Dimick on the
But it resultei in a saving
an insulting one, hardly
Dimick's definition, out
HAY FEVER HANKIES
New York-flJPD-As the hay
fever season got into full
sneeze, a New York depart
ment store today advertised
a sale on "drip-dry handker
chiefs.'? -
Dennis the Menace
I II l .-l I Ml I'll.
I III -NSVL I I II II I I 1 KTrt-T
ii c, - sr- i a ii ii i a ill
'SURE LUCKS I WeWALCUSl
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 the cae.
Poeis & Monkeys
To the Editor:
Look, Mr. Acklin, your Hup-
mobile rush
Chased a couple of "poets"
out of the brush.
Welcome Mr. B.L.J, and Mr.
Weaver
Did you bring along your
monkey cleaver?
Or did you just come along
for the ride? -Those
monkeys may eat the
tan off your hide.
Monkeys have been fighting
on that M.T. page
For weeks now, it seems like
an endless age.
The monkeys multiply by
leaps and bounds.
Anyone v have a couple of
monkey hounds?
I might enjoy a trip to Nir
vana,
Even though I become a ba
nana. .
But back to the heat, and flies
by the score.
May I repeat - No more mon
... keys, no more! ...
Mrs.-i Delbert Casey
Route 1, Box 358
Central Point
Support Firemen --
To the " Editor, and the
people of Shady Cove:
I heard a criticism today
that made me very unhappy
and I would like the people
of Shady Cove to hear about
it.
There was a fire which
threatened two buildings on
the former Martin ranch. The
Shady Cove fire department
was called and they arrived
in record time. The buildings
were saved but some brush
was still burning when the
Shady Cove five department
loaded up their hose and de
parted. I overheard some one
make the remark to the ef
fect that the fire department
was certainly in a hurry to
leave and they thought they
could at least stay until the
fire was completely out.
Perhaps I should state that
the men who answered that
fire are all Shady Cove busi
ness men and that they closed
their places of business to
answer the fire call, and I
might also add, they are the
same few men who answer
all the fire calls, day or night.
They receive absolutely no
pay and seldom any thanks
for their effort.
I for one appreciate what
these men are doing and I
think it is a shame for people
to expect these few men to
leave their places of business
and then criticize them for
not staying until the last
spark is out.
It seems to me the people
of Shady Cove should appre
ciate having a fire depart
ment enough to at least come
to the fire meetings and learn
how to use the equipment and
not to expect the same few
business -men to do all the
fire fighting. Many men have
been asked to just serve on
the fire board and they have
refused and again that leaves
the same few men to carry
on.
If everyone would make it
his business to do his share
instead of criticizing these
few men we would all have
a better community to live
in. -;
I would like to give a vote
of thanks to the business men
of Shady Cove for offering
their time and effort so that
our community can have
some protection from fire.
We are very fortunate in hav
ing two good fire trucks but
we are unfortunate in not
having more people who are
schooled in the use of this
equipment.
How about it folks - Don't
you' think it is high time you
8-f0
DAD 30T TUB 0O&ST
got behind our fire depart
ment and helped do your
share? Next time it might be
your home that is on fire.
Thelma Reinning
Clerk of Shady Cove-Trail
Rural Fire Protective
District.
P.S.: No member other than
myself knows this letter is
being written.
Prospectors Gone
To the Editor: How true is
the statement voiced in the
United Press a while ago at
tributed to one Oregon U. S
congressman, that the old
time prospector had vanished
along with the legendary do
do bird. In fact there should
be a kingly monument erect
ed in each of the early west
ern mining states in memory
of the prospector and jack
ass miners who blazed the
trail for future civilization to
live and develop into a mo
dern economy.
Yes, the old time prospec
tor has come and gone "the
way of all flesh,"-and in his
stead, is a modern day man
in a jeep, helicopter or jet
plane, equipped with late
gadgets to test out, analyze
and segregate all indications
of active minerals in a jiffy.
Now the few remaining sym
bols left of the old time pros
pector are the packsack and
burro of today.
Bert Kissinger
520 Boardman st.,
Medford. -
Farewell, Jacksonville
"Jo the Editor: We arrest our
activities to pay tribute to
Jacksonville, well loved, once
crowned with the most envi
able honors that courage, cul
ture and progress could be
stow. Jacksonville, this mo
ment being snatched from us
on the eve of her rebirth into
a life of promise,' will then
not truly rise and shine in a
modern afterglow of historic
wealth with a radiance that
might outshine her meager
beginnings.
Her life was long. To go
back to her beginnings is to
go into another world, of pio
neers with courage, diligence
and foresight and faith in her
future. Gold brought some,
the land brought some, adven
ture brought some, and some
came only to serve those al
ready here. But the gold has
long since been gathered, the
land settled, and adventure
presently lies beyond newer
horizons. Those who remain
to serve find little call and
less appreciation for what
they do.
Although it is not altogether-
fitting to think now of
what might have been, few
will view this passing without
regret that the necessary mir
acle did not happen, and that
the prescritpion for her ills
was not utilized when pre
scribed by those qualified to
advise. But like a fever rid
den child, sleepy and weak,
she closed her ears to the call
of true friends, and she would
not open her eyes to see her
decaying parts.
Jacksonville could have
been great. She could have
annexed Medford and renam
ed the entire town as her own,
thus restoring to her fold the
county courthouse and seat,
retaining her state school dis
trict number one rating, re
gaining a railroad, and adding
the prestige of an airport and
position as fourth in popula
tion in Oregon. She would
have had a sewer, and a high
school, but her taxes would
have been lowered. Her name,
once called "Jacksonville
Hub of the West Coast and
Cultural Center," would have
become known across the na
tion as she stood upon her
past and builded great and
Rockefeller's Problem:
With Nixon For Wide
By RAYMOND LAHR
Washington - (UPD - It could
be that a Republican Gover
nor far from New York might
want Nelson A. Rockefeller
to visit and teU about the
New York's civil defense pro
gram. It could be, too, that
Rockefeller would decide that
it was his duty to respond to'
the invitation.
He needs to do something
like that to get on page one
occasionally in competition
with Vice President Richard
M. : Nion. He now has no
plans for trips outside New
York, but . his plans could
change.
The '. Rockefeller operation
does have Some ideas about
getting him attention this f all
but nothing so spectacular as
Nixon's Russian tour, -which
already has lifted the Vice
President in public opinion
polls. .
Decision This Fall
Rockefeller expects to de
cide this faU whether to con
test with Nixon for the GOP
presidential nomination if
the Gallup Poll should indi
cate he would be a stronger
greater tomorrows.
Farewell, Jacksonville. The
highest honor we can pay, and
the greatest tribute we can
give you is to say that you
lived aristocratically as did
your sons and daughters, and
though you walk over the
edge of doom, your head is
unbowed, and you smile, per
haps uncaring, certainly un
thinking, but were you undig
nified? ... Never..
Virginia D. Card, Prop.,
Terminal Book and Gift
Shop, "
Jacksonville.
On War Prevention
To the Editor: I write once
agaifi to express my convic
tion that our government
should be taking the lead in
trying to brine nuclear weap
ons, their further develop
ment, production, distribution
and use, under; international
control.. And I should like to
take this opportunity to point
out that such efforts as arms
control need not entail either
"unilateral disarmament" or
the "nuclear disarmaments
rice" of which F. J. Clifford
and others have been so crit
ical. .
I am not so politically naive
as to think that the American
people are likely to divest
themselves of the weapons
they consider so essential to
the deterrence of war and the
maintenance of peace. "How
ever, I am MORALLY naive
enough to believe that nuclear
war is wrong under any cir
cumstances and that bold, con
structive steps ought to be
undertaken to assure its pre
vention.
Still I realize there are
those who Would rake the
specter of man's past failures
at disarmament as reason for
abandoning all efforts at
atomic control today. These
people plainly ignore the fact
that times have changed and
brought with them changes in
war and its conduct which
now make arms control a ne
cessity. Children have long
since ceased to save pennies
for glorious old "battlewag-
ons" like the Oregon. Today
they are investing their dimes
and dollars in - America's
"peace power," alias the de
velopment and construction of
weapons of mass destruction.
And it should be clear to all
of us that these weapons can
not be used for defense of the
civilian population of this
country but only for the re-
talliatory destruction of the
civilian population of an en
emy nation.
Truly war is no longer
glorious, victory no longer
meaningful, and defense vir
tually impossible. And as we
Come to realize these facts of
life in the nuclear age, surely
it behooves us to make every
effort we can to assure that
we shall not have to relearn
them the hard way in the ca
tastrophe of a nuclear war.
I have not meant to suggest
that I know of any easy an
swers either for the solution
of the cold war or the preven
tion of a hot one. I have
sought merely to express my
opinion that our present
course is no answer at all and
that it is high time we Ameri
cans began considering alter
nate policies more courageous
and ' imaginative than that
which now stakes our hope
for peace and survival upon
the threat of annihilation.
Ross Flanagan,.
North Pacific Highway,
Box 606,
Medford.
candidate. That poll does not
rate him so high now but he
thinks there may be a shift.
Gov. Mark Hatfield of Ore
gon already has told Rocke
feller that he has to come Out
of hibernation if he has any j
thought about being a candi
date, t ;
Rockefeller has accepted
only one television invitation
since he became Governor
but is expected to be seen
more - frequently on - panel
shows this fall. Rockefeller
sketches in national maga
zines are said to be in the
works.
Otherwise the New York
Governor has a set of state
projects going and at least
some of them are expected to
get more than local attention.
The report of his civil defense
advisory board already has
done so, largely because of its
proposal for a . compulsory
program of fallout shelters in
every home. ' ;
Task Forces at Work
He has put more than 30
task forces to work. Half a
dozen of these deal with edu
cation and such subjects as
prospective needs for schools
and teachers ' and how new
techniques could be used to
allow more effective use of
the limited corps of teachers.
Another study is aimed at
developing a program of in
surance against catastrophic
illness under private health
insurance plans and still an
other seeks ways to enlist
private capital for investment
in middle mcome housing.
In the Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
A Soviet radio commenta
tor assails American politic
ians and "journalists" who,
he says, are trying to figure
out whether the United States
or Russia will gain THE
MOST from the Eisenhower
Khrushchev visits.
"This kind of bookkeep
ing," he said, "can piJy do
harm."-
TM HALF inclined to agree
with him. ,
The big question . that in
terests THE PEOPLE of the
two countries (as well as the
people of all the world) is
this: ,
WLU BOTH the United
States and Russia gain from
these visits?
THEY will - IF out of the
developments following
the new situation that has
arisen there comes the con
viction that SOMEHOW all
out nuclear warfare MUST
be avoided.
There is some room for
hope. -
Ever since : World War
poison gas has been in the
possession of all the great
nations of the world, includ
ing Russia. .
It HASN'T been used.
A WORD now as to Nixon.
"Let's quit thinking about
whether or not it helped his
candidacy. -
Let's concentrate our think
ing on whether or not it has
helped the UNITED STATES
OF AMERICA and its people.
AS THIS is written, catas
trophe has overtaken our
sister city of Roseburg. An
explosion, comparable to an
enemy bomb, has damaged a
considerable part of the city's
business district. The record
at the moment , is ten dead
and 52 injured. At the scene
of the explosion, there is a
crater like a bomb crater.
From all over the Pacific
Coast, offers of help are pour
ing in. The telephone system
is swamped with calls. The
burden of these calls is
WHAT CAN WE DO TO
HELP YOU?
. This is a pretty good country,-
after all. - ; -.
Centennial Serenade
Planned by Group Here
The Centennial serenade
planned by Bliss Heine's Jun
ior '58ers will be held Tues
day and Thursday afternoons
starting at the YMCA. The
group will meet at the Moose
hall at 1:30 p.m. each day.
The serenade will end Thurs
day at the welcome booth
stockade on top of Siskiyou
summit. About a seven-minute
program will be played at
each stop. All performances
will be off the street. There
will be about 30 stops, Heine
reported.
The Very Best!
Snider V
Quality DAIRY FOODS
H ow To Com pete
Public Attention
Others involve economic
expansion, a review or. tne
state tax system, long range
transportation needs, parks
and recreation, transferabili
ty of employee pension rights
from one company to another,
power resources nospitai
services and reorganization of
the state government.
Studying Trade Unions ;
Although he already has
succeeded in getting one
labor reform measure, for fi
nancial reporting, enacted
over mild labor opposition,
Rockefeller also has a group
studying "Democracy in
Was h i n g to
By WILLIAM
JACK AND HUBERT . .
Washington-" Jack and Hu
bert" are forcing so fast a
pace in the wide-open race
7 for the . 1950
&Z D e m o c ratic
o m i n a tion
that the very
! next month
matf Krincr'-n
.""j o
fateful show
down between
them.'
"J a c k" i s
Sen. John Fitz
gerald Kennedy of Massa
chusetts, and "Hubert" is Sen.
Hubert Horatio Humphrey- of
Minnesota. They are turning
westward for a confrontation
at the end of September. This
will find them crossing trails
in Wisconsin. In Western hoss
opera terms, it may be a kind
of High Noon where the two
leading characters meet in the
dusty street and gun it out,
The risks, however, will be
far from even. "Hubert" has
everything to lose and "Jack"
only some things. Humphrey's
whole strategy is one of shoot
ing the works. He -has long
been aware that his candidacy
cannot even get off the ground
unless he can first show great
strength in his home region
of the. upper Middlewest.,
SPECIFICALLY, this means
-Wisconsin, for Wisconsin
next April will have an early
and a critical Presidential pri
mary. This Humphrey simply
must carry impressively or,
in the cruel phrase of . the
pros, "he is dead." A Kennedy
loss of . that . primary . would
leave him .only wounded. r
Kennedy may; or. may not
enter that primary, for it is
not clearly .so vital to him as
it is to Humphrey. And this
coming month may determine
whether he really needs to
enter anyhow. For even apart
from the fact that Kennedy
now appears to be the front-
runner among the Democrats,
Humphrey has just been hit
a hard blow in his own Mid
west bailiwick. 1
A neighboring Senator from
Wisconsin itself,: William
Proxmire, has done a most
unneighborly act. He has re
leased a Wisconsin poll which,
he says, gave Kennedy 42.5
per cent of the Democratic
vote against a mere 17.3 for
Humphrey. Close examination
of the Proxmire figures makes
things look far less bad for
Humphrey. For Adiai E. Stev
enson who has rio intention
of getting into the Wisconsin
action and probably no inten
tion to contest for nomination
openly anywhere got 29.5
per cent in the Proxmire poll.
THOUGH Humphrey, is vast
ly more liberal than Stev
enson, it is generally accepted i
m m m St
William S.
White
Reasonable Funerals
(Priced for Everyone)
FRIENDLY.
-CV I :
tr"' Li1
v
Trade Unions." This smacks
of regulating the internal
conduct of unions and is al
most sure to put him cross
wise with the labor move
ment if carried through in
the form of new legislation.
Passage of the federal labor
law might shelve the project
Rockefeller is in no posi
tion now to match Nixon for
National publicity. But poli
ticians who remember Yalta,
Potsdam and the - spirit of
Geneva wonder if the Vice
President will continue to col
lect political dividends from
his Russian trip.
n Report
S. WHITE
that many of the poll votes
that went to Stevenson would
have gone to Humphrey had
those who voted known for
sure that Stevenson would
never be in the Wisconsin pic
ture. Thus, as a practical mat
ter, Humphrey can be said to
have done considerably better
than the figure of 17 J3 per
cent would suppest.
All the same, the Proxmire
data has badly shaken the.
Humphrey candidacy. "Hu
bert" is more popular with
the Democratic professionals
in Wisconsin than is "Jack."
But "Jack," on the Proxmire
showing at any rate, is more
popular with the people. And
this is a poll-happy country.
No one doubts that the Demo
cratic National Convention
next year will be strongly
influenced by "what the polls
say."
So, the Humphrey people
are moving quickly to repair
the prestige damage while
in private they make com
ments about Proxmire which
his loved ones would not like.
They have set for September
19 in Milwaukee a "statewide
organization convention . for
Humphrey." . They have ar
ranged for Humphrey himself
to arrive in the state on Sep
tember 25 for one of those
tireless dawn-to-dusk, whirl
wind speaking and handshak
ing tours at which he is a
master.
'
THE Humphrey people hope
that with all this they will
be able to demonstrate that
their man has much more
strength Jn Wisconsin than
Proxmire's poll would vindi
cate. They hope, too, that by
that time Stevenson will have
made some sign say, in a
September 23 "non-political"
speech he is to make in Madi
son, Wis. - that will help clear
the air a bit. ,
But they know that "Hu
bert" has got to "look good"
in; Wisconsin this time. And
they know, too, -6s they wryly
comment, that "Jack is com
ing in there, too." Kennedy
will be in Wisconsin on Sep
tember 24 and 25. Humphrey's
policy will be to try to force
Kennedy to mix it with him
among the grain elevators, the
breweries, the farms and in
dustrial plants to meet him
at High Noon. "
(Copyright, 1959, by United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.)
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