Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, August 25, 1959, Image 4

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    MAIL TRIBUNE. MeJferJ, Or.
Tuesday, Aug. 25, 1959
MedfordcTribune
"Everyone ic Southern Oregon
Reads fhe Mail Tribune"
Published Dh11 except Saturday by
33 North fii St Ph SP 2-gl41
ROBi-RT W RUHL. Editor
EZRB GR Advertising Manage
GErALXJ LA I HAM Business MgT
ERIC W UiN JR.
Managing x.ditor
EARL H ADAMS. City Editor
HARRV CHIPMAJ) Teleg Editor
RiCHAHD JHWETT Snorts Editor
OLIVE ST ARCHER Women Editor
DALE ERiCKSPN Circulation Mgr
An Indeoendent Newspaper
Entered a second class matter al
VedfoT'1 Orecon under Act ox
March 3 1897
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Flight 'o Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the files ot The
Mail Tribune 10, 20. 30, 40
and 50 years ago. .
10 YEARS AGO
Aug. 25. 1949 (ThuTday)
Central Point approves a
contract with Medford for
joint use of the Camp White
sewage treatment plant.
W. J. Harms "fogs" Med
ford's park to demonstrate the
effectiveness of an insecticide.
20 YEARS AGO
Aug. 25, 1939 (Friday)
Construction of the Pacific
Telephone and Telegraph
company's addition to house
new dial central office equip
ment for Medford is scheduled
to begin next week.
From Arthur Perry's "Ye
Smudge Pot" column-(by Dick
Applegate): -"On the first
week of a new hat Arthur
presents an incongruous picture-clothes
by courtesy of
the Western Jute and Hopsack
mills, and a natty hat to
crown the effect."
30 YEARS AGO
Aug. 25, 1929 (Sunday)
The horse racing program
for this year's county fair is
completed.
Scores of Medford residents
journey to the Applegate to
pick wild blackberries.
40 YEARS AGO
Aug. 25, 1919 (Monday)
A score of Eagle Point resi
dents make a trip to Union
Creek for huckleberries.
E. C. Faber of Central Point
returns from a trip to San
Francisco.
50 YEARS AGO
Aug. 25, 1909 (Wednesday)
Prof. C. H. Gilbert of Stan
ford university arrives to sort
out and classify Rogue river's
piscine populace.
Talent is hailed as the fu
ture peach center of the north
west. What's Your I.Q.?
Nine or ten correct it superior?
seven or eight is excellent; five of
sis is good.
li Which two South Ameri
can countries have no sea
coast? 2. Is pure water always soft
water?
3. In Spanish countries is a
midday nap called a siesta, or
a fiesta?
4. What have the following
in common: clove hitch, bow
line, sheepshank?
5. Is the Balkan peninsula
in Europe or in Asia? '
- 6. Of what country was
King Farouk the reigning
monarch?
7. What is the largest des
ert in the world?
8. Which of these is largest
in area-Australia, Green
land, New Guinea?
9. What Carthaginian mili
tary leader crossed the Alps
with elephants in his army?
10. Complete the saying:
"A word to the wise . . ."
1. Bolivia and Paraguay. 2.
Yes. 3. Siesta. 4. They art
knots. 5. Europe. 6. Egypt. 7.
The Sahara. 8. Australia. 9.
Hannibal. 10. ". . is suffi
cient." '
APPROVES PAYMENTS
Washington -DPD-President
Eisenhower Monday signed
into law a bill authorizing the
payment of $5,387.98 to the
government of Iceland in full
ottiement of claims arising
from accidental damages
while U.S. troops were sta
tioned there.
The Frightened Magazine
The American Mercury is the most frightened
magazine we know.
It is afraid of communists, mostly.
It is frightened of almost anything appertain
ing to communists in any form.
Its current sweat is raised by the program of
"cultural exchanges" under way between this
country and the U.S.S.R. In an "advance proof"
of a story prepared for the November issue of
the magazine, we are warned to beware of this
danger.
THE danger, it appears, is generated because
A easy-going Americans, in viewing the artists
sent here by Russia, are apt to be hornswoggled
into forgetting the threat that international com
munism poses to this country.
' The theory, it seems,
the Bolshoi ballet, for instance, one becomes en
tranced by the performers, decides that they may
be human beings after all, instead of genuine
communists with horns and tails, and thus auto
matically thinks that all communists must be
hunky-dory.
We rejoice that the frightened men of the
American Mercury are not the policy-makers for
the United States.
THEY display the most appalling lack of con-
fidence in this country, in its people, and in
their ability to do a little constructive thinkng
for themselves.
Because we might like the music of a Russian
composer, does it follow that we are to be taken
in by the propaganda of a Khrushchev? The Mer
cury appears to think so.
It's the same sort of head-in-the-sand non
sense that led us, in. World War I, to label
sauerkraut "liberty cabbage" and to look upon
a performance of the works of Beethoven or
Wagner as somehow un-American.
It is not only asinine, but it is craven, uncer
tain and unimaginative thinking.
I ET us grant the obvious to the Mercury, that
" communism is dangerous. It is dangerous to us
in the form of manpower, submarines, new land
based weapons, and, most dangerous of all, in
H-bombs and the missiles to deliver them.
It is dangerous in its sometimes-successful at
tempts to infiltrate and
And it is dangerous
that we run to the nearest hidy-hole whenever
it is mentioned.
Aren't Americans made of a little sterner
stuff than the Mercury
Aren t they able to distinguish between the naked
threat of force or subversion, and the alternative
of peaceful (or non-hot-war) competition?
A ND are Americans so wishy-washy, so un-
skilled, so inept and fearful, so subject to
propaganda, that by taking one look at a ballet
performance from Moscow, they'll swoon into
the arms of Khrushchev?
Buck up and get ahold of yourself, American
Mercury.
We refuse to believe
stupid and impressionable
And we do believe
pride in its own contributions to the "cultural
exchange contributions which might tend to
dispel the Hollywoodish, impression of America
far too prevalent abroad.
We can despise communism without being
afraid of it. Stop being so scared. E.A.
Mercury and McCarthy
Speaking of the American Mercury, that pub
lication is today a far cry from the day when it
was the vehicle used by
at the boobs and stuffed
scene.
It now appears to be
ultra, ultra far right the
the others who would tie
for progress and political
promise m rea tape, security oaths, security clear
ances, and all the rest of the spooky folderol of
the police state.
Its heyday, we hope, is past. It no longer is
a much considered organ of opinion, and prob
ably wields less influence, in its own field, than
The Nation and The New Republic do at the
other end of the political spectrum.
McCARTHY, of course, is dead. In his case
1T1 we find it difficult to heed the admonish
ment, "De Mortuis Nil Nisi Bonum" of the dead
speak nothing but good.
He capitalized on the fears and insecurities
of Americans, and came close to turning us into
a nation of cowards the kind the American
Mercury would apparently have us become.
Much will be written of McCarthy in the years
to come. Much of it will be unbiased and non
partisan. But it is probably too soon for such ob
jectivity today, for his memory lingers.
f)NE recent book, "Senator Joe McCarthy," by
Richard Rovere, makes no pretense of objec
tivity. Nor, indeed, does Charles A. Sprague,
whose column reviewing the book appears else
where on this page.
Readers of this review should know that Mr.
Sprague is editor and publisher of the respected
Oregon Statesman in Salem, is a Republican, and
is a former governor of the state. E.A.
is that if one watches
take over other countries.
if we get so afraid of it
gives them credit for?
that Americans are so
as you fear.
that America can take
H. L. Mencken to slash
shirts of the American
the spokesman of the
neo-McCarthyites and
up the American genius
moderation and com-
Dennis the Menace
7 j
I OONT LIK0 6UTTERE0 CAKRORS, AN RUFF DONT" UKB 'EM,
SO I tfAOtO PUT "EM NMy POCKET i
Matter of Fact
FLOWERS FOR THE HOST
Washington-Nikita S. Khru
shchev has now followed his
acceptance of the President's
invitation t o
the White
House with
an open dis
play of con
tempt for his
future host.
There is no
other way to
read the new
Commu n i s t
4osph aisoo aggression in
Laos. The situation there can
become very serious indeed,
touching . off another Far
Communications
Letters to the Editor must
bear the name and address of
the write? although "nder cer
tain circumstances tne use ot a
pen name ni initial for publica
tion is pe-missible 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
Air Pollution Meeting
To the Editor: I would like
to thank everyone who came
to the meeting on air pollu
tion for attending.
It would have been nice if
the auditorium could have
been filled to capacity, but
considering the other activi
ties going on and people leav
ing for the week end, I think
we had a pretty good turnout.
Also, a very special "thank
you" to Mr. William Dorn
bach. Without his help and
the time he spent contacting
officials and interested per
sons, our meeting would not
have been possible.
I enjoyed Mr. McQueen's
talk very much. He expla'ned
what their mill is doing to
utilize their waste,, and in
vited everyone to see their
display at the Kiwanis Fair.
It was very interesting to see
the different types of residue
and how they can be used.
If all the mills were this
progressive there would be
very little problem. If other
mills are doing the same
thing, I think they should
take it upon themselves to
inform the public. Only
through good public relations
can the people understand
mill - management problems
and with understanding comes
tolerance and patience, until
the problem is solved.
They would also avoid be
ing unjustly accused of not
caring about the needs or
wants of the community. We
are all for the progressive
mill operators. But, for those
who aren't-there will be no
let up in our asking that they
bring their operations up to
date, and make an honest
effort to alleviate the smoke
and cinders coming from
their burners.
Mrs. Leonard Matheus,
1124 West 10th st.,
Medford.
f
Help Needed
To the Editor: We have in
our city of Medford a mother
with six little children and
expects the seventh one in
less than a month, whose hus
band is in the penitentiary,
sentenced by Jackson county.
Because she has not been here
a specified time, all help has
been refused her by the wel
fare, by the Red Cross, by the
Salvation Army. What kind
of laws do we have and what
kind of organizations do we
support that refuse to help
little innoncent children who
would actually have starved,
if a few God loving compan
ion people had not helped
them and are stiU doing it. It's
a heavy burden on these few.
But Jesus said what you do
unto the least of these little
ones you do it unto me.
They are in need of food,
clothing, bedding, a bed and
linens, money for rent and
utilities, and hospital ex
penses. Mrs. Beulah Dusenberry,
721 East Jackson st., "
Medford
Phone SP 2-2439.
Bv Joseph AIsop
Eastern crisis of Quemoy-like
intensity. If the Communist
aggression is not repelled,
moreover, all the neighboring
countries -South Vietnam,
Cambodia and Thailand-will
at once find themselves in
danger.
Nonetheless, the indication
of Khrushchev's contempt for
President Eisenhower and the
nation he leads is probably
the most disturbing feature
of the very disturbing Laotian
trouble. On this point, the
facts speak for themselves.
TN BRIEF, the President's
announcement of the com
ing Khrushchev visit was
made on Aug. 3. Very nearly
simultaneously, the attack on
Laos began. The attack took
the form of border-crossings
from Communist North Viet
nam into Laos by Communist
infiltration units trained and
armed for the purpose by the
North Vietnamese. Such ob
scure guerrilla movements in
those jungle-clad mountains
can hardly be precisely dated.
Yet the major border cross
ings quite certainly began aft
er Khrushchev's mil-July ac
ceptance of the President's in
vitation, even if some oc
curred before the public an
nouncement. , The timing of this opening
of the attack on Laos is ines
capably significant. Yet a
good many of the people
around the President who had
pinned their hopes on the
Khrushchev visit, are still
trying to escape the meaning
of this timing of the Laos at
tack. "It is Peking's enter
prise, not Moscow's," they ar
gue. ON THIS point, too, howev
er, the facts speaks for
themselves. The attack on
Laos was hardly under way,
when Khrushchev received
the organizer of the attack,
the North Vietnamese Com
munist boss, Ho Chih Minh,
for an extended state visit in
Moscow.
While Ho was in Moscow,
an obviously planned series of
statements was issued. First
Ho's government in Hanoi
blamed the trouble in Laos
on the presence of a 150-man
American mission to train the
small Laotian army. Then
Mao Tse-tung's government in
Peking virtually threatened
war unless the "U. S. military
bases" in Laos were instanta
neously abolished. Finally,
Khrushchev's own govern
ment in Moscow spoke out in
clear terms, refraining from
direct denunciation of the
United States, but strongly
supporting the North Viet
namese - Chinese Communist
position in Laos.
From these facts, it may be
possible to argue that the
prime impulse for the attack
on Laos came from Mao Tse
tung. But whoever was the
prime mover, it is certainly
not possible to argue that
Khrushchev was anything but
a knowing, willing accomplice
in the Laos enterprise. The
Ho visit to Moscow and the
subsequent Moscow statement
are the clearest proofs of
Khrushchev's active complic
ity. Khrushchev's purposes can
be variously interpreted. The
Communist interpretation was
given by a high official who
told this reporter "It's the old
tactic of the carrot and the
stock." (When ' asked what
was the carrot, he replied,
"why the Khrushchev visit"
which seems an unattractive
sort of carrot!)
KHRUSHCHEV'S aim per
haps is to extract from
the President in the White
House new terms for Asia as
well as new terms for Berlin.
In this, it must be added,
Khrushchev is likely to have
the indirect help of the Brit
ish and Canadian govern
ments. Both are not merely
summit-drunken but fixed in
their idea as well that every
thing in Asia will be rapidly
Washington Report
By William S. Whit
HOPE IN LATIN AMERICA
Washington -The United
States now has sound hope
for working its way out of a
most a w k-
ward situation
in Latin
America. We
have been
caught be
tween the
devil of "Yan
kee imperial
ism" and the
rlgfn cpq n f
white Castroism.
Fidel Castro, the bearded
revolutionary demigod in
Cuba, has stirred up the
whole Caribbean. Plots and
counter-plots for and against
this or that regime in Pan
America has been hatched,
sometimes on U.S. soil. Seem
ingly comic-opera "invasions,"
involving only handsful of
men but in areas where
handsful are enough to over
turn a government, have been
popping up in Caribbean
waters.
Basically, our national in
terest in all this is simply the
maintenance of order and re
sponsibility in this hemis
phere. Ideally, too, we want
to promote democratic re
gimes - but not if these can
be obtained only through out
side aggressions by self-ap
pointed bnngers of the true
gospel, of the Castro kind.
TTIOST OF ALL, we seek to
-"A avoid any wide spreading
of the possibly well-intention-ed
irresponsibility of Castro
ism. If this unintentionally
assists in maintaining un
democratic regimes, such as
that of Trujillo in the Domini
can Republic, this obviously
is part of the price of non
intervention as a doctrine.
For the United States,
poised on the brink of fateful
cold war negotiations with
Nikita Khrushchev of the
Soviet Union, simply cannot
afford the risk of violent up
heaval in this hemisphere.
We cannot, now or later,
act baldly and alone to keep
the hemisphere peace, either
with our own troops or
through economic sanctions
against the disorderly ones.
That would be "Yankee im
perialism,", indeed. And aU
this sort of thing we dis-
fixed up if we are just a little
nice to Mao Tse-Tung.
In any case, the contrast
between this5 time and last
time is horrifyingly strong.
Last time Khrushchev talked
with the President of the
United States, in 1954, he paid
for his ticket of admission
with the liberation of Aus
tria, and the dramatic though
temporary restoration of nor
mal relations with Yugosla
via. This time, crude threats
to Berlin paid for the ticket;
and is soon as the ticket was
in Khrushchev's pocket, Laos
was attacked.
No one who is not absolute
ly flannel-headed can see in
this pattern anything but a
display of the most profound,
unalloyed and arrogant con
tempt. Whatever its sources,
Khrushchev's contempt is a
desperately serious political
phenomenon. The sources
need urgent investigation. But
no search for sources' is afoot,
no doubt because careful
search would reveal a distin
guished soap manufacturer
pouring out soft soap, while
still constricting the Ameri
can defense efforts two years
after the Sputnik, under strin
gent orders from budget-obsessed
higher authority.
(Copyright 1959, New York
Herald Tribune, Inc.)
Retired Railroad
Publicity Man Dies
Oceanside, Ore.-flJPD-James
L. Hays, 60, retired director
of public relations for the
Union Pacific railroad, died
Monday following a heart at
tack. Hays joined the railroad's
advertising department in
1923 and came to Portland
in 1927 as assistant advertis
ing agent. He started his ca
reer as a newspaperman and
worked for the United Press
in Lincoln and Omaha, Neb.
Hays also had served as
publicity director for the
American Legion National
convention, the Pendleton
Round-Up, the Pacific Inter
national Livestock exposition
and the Oregon Winter Sports
association.
ANY MAIL FROM
BARKER'S?
New Book Sets Out To Prove
McCarthy 'Bold Seditionisr'
The late Joseph R. Me
Carthy, a United States Sena
tor from Wisconsin, was in
many ways the most gifted
demagogue ever bred on
these shores. No bolder sedi
tionist ever moved among us
-nor any politician with a
surer, swifter access to the
dark places of the American
mind."
That is the first paragraph
in a book "Senator Joe Mc
Carthy" by Richard H. Ro
vere Washington journalist.
He then sets out to prove his
thesis.
Today McCarthyism seems
only a bad dream, but it was
real and intense while it last
ed. The Wisconsin senator
who terrorized the State de
partment, held two Presidents
captive, in Rovere's phrase,
"or as nearly captive as any
Presidents of the United
States have been held," and
who claimed and held the
national stage from 1950 to
1954 was a political meteor.
He flashed briefly, but nis
eclipse was complete. He is
fast becoming only a memory
-and a bad dream.
McCarthy was an opportu
nist politician who managed
to defeat Robert LaFollette,
Jr. in the Republican primary
in Wisconsin-LaFollette had
left his Progressiv party to
run again as a Republican and
the Wisconsin conservatives,
who had never ceased fighting
him or his deceased father,
compassed his defeat. In 1950,
in the wake of the conviction
of Alger Hiss, McCarthy
rather accidentally stumbled
avowed two decades ago in
the good - neighbor policy
of Franklin D. Roosevelt.
The only solution, there
fore, lies in the collective ac
tion' of the American repub
lics themselves in support of
states that will be at least
responsible and, we hope,
pro-democratic In tone.
THIS SOLUTION has been
precisely provided for in
the recent decisions of the In
ter-American Foreign Minis
ters Conference in Santiago,
Chile. The "Declaration of
Santiago" amounted to a
manifesto against revolution
by export, along with a gen
eral statement in favor of
democracy as a way of life.
What has been agreed upon
in a nutshell is this: The Inter-American
Peace Commis
sion is now to be a genuinely
strong agency able to act col
lectively against any aggress
ion by one country against
another. It will keep strictly
hands off in cases of truly
local revolution. It is not to
attempt to mix in anybody's
internal affairs, not even to
halt subversion so long as it
is not subversion by way of
outside attack.
This is not an anti-Communist
movement as such. It
is simply a pro-responsibility,
pro-public order movement. It
is not an anti-Castro move
ment except in the sense that
anybody who carries irrespon
sibility around Pan America
wUl necessarily be a Typhoid
Mary to the new collective
security. Castroism is not re
garded as communism; it is
only regarded as disorder.
rpHERE is sober belief in
X
very high quarters here
that this new arrangement
wUl really work. According
ly, there is no present pros
pect of Administration sup
port for the establishment of
a new Pan - American peace
army under control of the
Organization of American
States.
Some of long experience in
Latin - American affairs, no
tably Sen. George Smathers
of Florida, are urging such a
force. Vice-President Richard
Nixon, among others, is un
derstood to have encouraged
Smathers in this proposal.
The State Department is not
hostile to it in principle. But
the department is aware that
the Latin Americans in gen
eral are not ready to go quite
that far. There is a Latin
American fear that it might
be pretty much a U.S. show.
So the present intention is
to depend upon the inter
mediate way involved in the
newly strengthened Inter
American Peace Commission,
which is a triumph for Secre
tary of State Christian Her
ter. Indeed, his first sortie
into inter - American diplo
macy seems to have been a
considerable success.
(Copyright, 1959, by United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.)
- on the "pay dirt" of "Com-
mumsis in government." in a
speech in Wheeling, Va., in
February 1950, he asserted
that the State department was
"f uU of Communists." he used
the figure 205, which . later
underwent numerous changes
-81, 57, "a lot." Challenged
in the Senate on his charges
he merely repeated them and
amplified them when he
found he had caught the ear
of the public.
But McCarthy never proved
his case against a single Com
munist in government employ.
One of the cases he seized on
was Owen Lattimore, a pro
fessor in Johns Hopkins Uni
versity who had been consid
ered something of an expert
on the Far East and Mongolia.
McCarthy carted around with
him bulging briefcases and
shuffled many documents-"I
hold in my hand .... ." but he
never laid out the papers to
prove his charges.
The singular phenomenon
was not just Joe McCarthy
himself but the delusion he
created in the public mind.
The times were, ripe for his
performance. Alger Hiss had
been convicted of Commu
nism. The Reds had overrun
continental China-and Repub
licans were eager for cam
paign ammunition to use
against the Democrats. They
found it in the ultra-liberalism
of the Roosevelt New
Deal era and McCarthy ex
ploited it with special refer
ence to China - we "lost"
China because of "Reds in the
State department."
Charging Truman appoint
ees with being "soft on Com
munism" McCarthy soon had
Democrats cringing and many
Republicans applauding, and
political Neanderthals like
Texas millionaires supporting
him financially. Opposing
him became costly business
as Senator Tydings, Benton
Lucas and MacFarland found
out when they ran for re
election. He had President
Truman boxed in through his
assaults on Secretary of State
Dean Acheson, President Eis
enhower avoided any clash
with McCarthy, and in the
pre-election campaign delet
ed a passage praising General
Marshall from a speech at the
behest of advisers fearful of
offending McCarthy. Secre
tary of State Dulles virtually
capitulated to McCarthy by
letting Scott McLeod handle
State department personnel
matters. The Army nearly
"surrendered'" to the impor
tunities of McCarthy, but the
latter's crackup came when he
pressed the Army too far.
There folowed the famous
Army hearing in 1954 which
provided more drama than
fact, yielding no credit either
to the Army or to McCarthy,
McCarthy survived four in
vestigations by four commit
tees but the fifth inquiry was
his undoing. In December,
1954 the Senate, under the
lead of Sen. Arthur Watkins
of Utah voted to condemn
McCarthy for conduct con
trary to senatorial ethics
which tended- to bring the
Senate into dishonor and dis
repute. That virtuaUy ended
McCarthy.
The McCarthy phenomenon
invites an analysis to find out
how he gained such quick
fame with so little to support
it. A demagogue is not un
usual even in America. Huey
Long was one, but Long left
a subst antial record of
achievement in Louisiana in
improved roads and 'better
schools. McCarthy had no
program other than exciting
fear of Communism a dread
enough spectre, but a danger
already under control before
he burst on the scene. Rovere
offers this conclusion on Mc
Carthy: "His talent as a demagogue
were great, but he lacked the I
Counsel With c
Mr. Insurance Fred Brennan
Fred Brennan
or call
Mr. Friendly
Bill Fish
Phona SP 3-7343
MEDFORD
INSURANCE
AGENCY
27 NORTH HOLLY ST.
most necessary and awesomt
of demogogic gifts-a belief in
the sacredness of his own
mission."
McCarthy, in Rovere's opin
ion, lacked conviction in the
cause he exploited so shame
lessly. But this rates him an
unmitigated demagogue, a.
pure political opportunist.- As
such he surely has entered the
gallery of political immortals
in American history and I
hope we may not soon see
his like again. - Charles A.
Sprague, in the Oregon States
man, Salem.
iff;
Get a taste of excitement
in your glass, too...
smooth as silk in flavor...
no bite no burn in taste.
How can the price be so low?
JULIUS KESSLER CO.. UWROTCEBURG, DO.- HUGO
MUSOT-8G PR00F-72Yk GRAIN NEUTRAL SPRITS.
THE NAME'S THE
SAME
MEDFORD INSURANCE AGEN
CY, just as easy to remember
as MEDFORD, OREGON. Con
fusion caused by an accident
away from home sometimes
makest difficult to remember
the name of your agent. In our
case the Name's the Same.
Sill Fish
M SMOOTH AS SILK
Kessler
J20 - $070
45 QT. &PINT