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Friday. Joey 0. 1V
'Everyone In loutharn Oregon
Reads The Mail Tribune"
FubiiVhed Dally except Saturday by
S3 North Fir St.. PhSP 2-141
ROBERT W RUHL. Editor
ItKRB CREV Aiivertisinir Manage
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NEWSPAPER
VASSO:iATION
NATIONAL EDITORIAl
ASSOCrHTION
Flighf o' Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30, 40
and SO wi ago.
10 YEARS AGO
May 6, 1950 (Saturday)
The Southern Oregon Plan
ing mill and the J a c k a o n
Creek Lumber company wu
be closed all day Tuesday In
memory of Austin A. Cleek,
47, who died Thursday in San
Francisco; he had been gen
eral manager of the two
plants.
The Phoenix community
center, built with $18,000
worth of donated materials,
labor and funds, should be
Completed in a week.
20 YEARS AGO
May B, 1940 (Monday)
A mad coyote was shot and
killed yesterday after terri
fying residents of "Old Camp
No. 1," a small settlement
near Butte Falls.
From Arthur Perry's "Ye
Smudge Pot'' column: "Many
piscatorial enthusiasts were
chilled at the Saturday night
baseball game, and got warm
wading In the Rogue river all
day Sunday." ,
30 YEARS AGO
May 6, 1930 (Tuesday)
Harry L. Corbett, Portland,
candidate for governor will
meet local voters here Friday.
A shortage of eggs in the
valley has been reported.
40 YEARS AGO
May 6, 1920 (Thursday)
Rawlcs Moore will head a
ennd roads bond issue cam
paign in the county.
The mercury rose to 84 de
grees here yesterday for the
hottest day of the year so far.
SO YEARS AGO
May 6, 1910 (Friday)
John 11. Hartley, well
known Journalist and adver
tiser, has moved from Eugene
to Medford where he will set
up business says "Medford
has brighter future and is fu
ture big city of Oregon."
A committee of the Med
ford Commercial club has
been appointed to ask Pacific
and Eastern railroad to build
a line between Medford and
Crescent City.
What's Your I.Q.?
Nine or tin correct It luperlon
savin or eight li ecellent five oi
lix U good.
1. In what game Is a period
of play called a "chukker"?
2. The diminutive for duck
is duckling. What Is It for
goose?
3. Is the "Blue Hen State'
Delaware or Ohio?
4, Does the Washington
Monument contain any win
dows? 5. Has a sphere or a cube
the greater volume for the
least area?
8. Which game Is the older
tennis or handball?
7. Who was the Vice-President
under President Hard
ing? 8. Are Indians born In the
United States citizens?
9. Is the Panama CSnal
Zone leased to the United
States?
10. Is the electrical equlva-
lent of a unit of horsepowif
7,460 watts or 746 atU?
Answersi I. Polo. 2. Goslinf.
t. Delaware. 4. Yes (eiffet).
8. Sphere. 6. Handball. 7. Cat
Tin Coolrtg. 8. Yei. 9. Ys.
C3K) I Z) KJ KJ
O
There's quite an assemblage of "do-gooders
and bleeding hearts" (to use thi phrass so bt-
loved by stand-pat era and status quo ers) wno
believe that society can and should make efforts
to alleviate the problems of juvenile delinquency.
(If being a "do-gooder and btebdlrij; lisr"
is to bslieve that intelligence and cooperative
pffort can lead to beneficial results lor society
then we stand with DGs
nfiither here nor there.)
The New York Herald
carried an editorial wh ch
claims that organized social efforts can, and do,
help society. , , , , .
pjERE is what it said, in part:
". . . New York City, for the first time since
1952, shows a decline (5.9 per cent) of children's,
cases In the courts. For the whole state, the drop ia
even greater (8 2 per cent), the first reversal of the
upward trend since 1050.
". , . This is evidence of 'increasingly effective
work with youth by police, schools, youth boards
and other public and voluntary agencies.'
"The further point is made that such results
come from improved understanding of children'!
problems and needs that something can indeed be
done, and li being done, to prevent Juvenile delin
quency. "Having demonstrated this, the obvious thing Is
to keep pressing."
IN THIS complicated, tension-filled world, many
people are in need of help help which only
public social agencies, backed by the citizenry at
large, are equipped to render, f nvate agencies no
longer are capable of doing the job.
The problem of juvenile delinquency is one
area where help is needed help more enlight
ened than Mr. J. Edgar Hoover's unbelievably
callous and short-sighted advice to the effect that
Sunday school is the remedy for all such ills.
So it is trood to learn, through the cold sta
tistics of the New York State Youth Commission,
that efforts along these lines are, indeed, bearing
fruit. If properly pursued and supported, they
will pay off in many ways more responsible,
educated adults; lowered taxes; better commu
nities; a stronger nation. E. A.
H.R. H. and Mr. Jones
A small boy once used
ful it would be to be a king or a prince a person
of great importance and
No more.
Eyeing the to-do being made over today's
weddintr of Princess Margaret of Great Britain
and Mr. Anthony Armstrong-Jones, one wonders
how these pleasant-appearing young people man
age to keep heir senses of perspective and humor
it, indeed, tney cio so manage.
Thev not onlv are deDrivedof privacy: they
are in fact public property, to be subjected to
advice, criticism, adulation, or recriminations for
their every action, their every appearance,
MEWSPAPERS feel free to pry into the most
intimate details of their lives. Commentators
discuss their clothes, their habits, their histories
and temperaments and virtues.
European royalty, or
marriacre of a British princess to a commoner, and
ritain s press gets peeved. I he Queen, ignoring
riticism, seats the bridegroom's parents (di
vorced) in a choice position in Westminster
Abbey.
And so it goes. The bachelor-girl Princess
finally has found a husband ; the bohemian pho
tographer becomes "Cinderfella."
There's hardly been so much excitement since
the abdication of King
7IEWED from our own
" in the midst of petty
sometimes wonders if H.R.H. and Mr. Jones
would be happier as handsome, but otherwise
nondescript, simple people.
It is a vain thought. One cannot cast off the
trappings of royal tradition. Even the Duke of
Windsor is a prisoner.
In the case ot rnncess Margaret, it is a role
which she did not choose, but which she accepts
as part of her duty and heritage.
Mr. Jones, we fear, will find it a difficult,
demanding, and often frustrating life.
It will have glamor, pomp, notoriety But,
from way out here in the provinces, one is in
clined to feel a bit sorry for these two nice
appearing young people, every once in a while.
We wish them every happiness they can find.
E.A.
Music Is for the Ears
This is National Music Week, an observance
of which we approve.
But what does one say about music in plain,
pedestrian words, black and white on the printud
page?
Several jillion words have ben so written,
and well, too. But they signif0nothirij; unless one
lends an ear to music itself.
And, happily, it has never before ben easier
to do, for wht with radio, TV, ohonographs,
coffterts, recitals, musical comedies, operettasel
and J3Hi. But that's
Tribune the other day
lends substance to th
to dream how wonder
power. .
much of it, shuns the
Edward VIII.
position of advantage,
bourgeois comfort, one
'I'D RATHEf? NOT.DeNrJIS. I DON'T TBUSTMSU1,
Washington Report
By WILIIAM
HAND-IN.Ql.OVE
Washington - The hand Is
Elsenhower's. The glove is
Nixon's. And this hand-In-
glove arrange
ment is firm
ly grasp 1 n g
the Initiative
on what his
torically has
been a Demo
cratic - and
not a Repub
lican - Issue,
that nf n r ft.
White international
ism. President Elsenhower and
William R
Vice - President Nixon are
putting the squeeze most pain
fully on the Democrats In this
whole area. Not the least im
portant consequence is to give
Nixon a massive buildup as
the Republican presidential
nominee for the approaching
campaign-
Most notably Messrs. Eisen
hower and Nixon are publicly
challenging this Democratic
Congress to bring off a posi
tive miracle, a foreign aid ap
propriation of the full $4.1
billions asked by the Presi
dent. It is a long-established
and well-understood rule of
the game that no president
ever gets every dollar he asks.
All the same, Eisenhower and
Nixon are demanding an ab
solutely Intact loaf of bread
THEY really do want it,
true enough. But In all
candor they know perfectly
well they never could expect
to get all this. The technique
Is simply the best possible
assurance of avoiding really
deep congressional cuts.
And in political terms
strong medicine, indeed, is
being made for Nixon by Mr.
Eisenhower. This is not mero
ly on foreign aid; it is all
across the board of the "peace
issue."
First, there was the Presi
dent's suggestion that he
might find it desirable to have
Nixon sit In for him for a
time at the Paris summit' con
ference. The President's rea
sons for this were not parti
san. His real purpose was to
let the Soviet Union know
that the President would not
sit out any meeting deliber
ately lengthened by the Rus
sians for mare propaganda ad
vantage.
Still, the thing had an un
deniably helpful effect on
Nixon's presidential ambi
tions. Some Democrats rose
to protest. But their com
plaint, while entirely under
standable, only helped furth
er to promote Nixon. For it
was repudiated by the head
Democrat of them all, for
mer President Truman. After
all, as Mr. Truman himself
said In effect, you can't tell
any president what use he is
Try and Stop Me
By BENNETT CERF
DEXTER FELLOWS, probably the greatest circus press
agent of them all, liked to tell of the night a lion escaped
from his cage. A posse was formed to recapture the beast,
but before the hunt be
gan, the brave volunteers
repaired to a nearby tav
ern for a couple of stiff
ones.
Only Fellows declined
to partake. "Not for me,
boys," he insisted. "Hard
liquor makes me too darn
courageous."
e e
. An Indignant customer
returned for credit to his
tookstor a copy of "The
Romance of Cattle Rais
ing." "Th! book," he cc-
)! nit nhrAf. rattle
- . T . a
raiiiltt Tro nor. a, wora romance in u.
Unhapplest man In Chicago la musician who worked hl head
ce) on a new arrangement for a wk (d then hit wife can
celled her date to visit her family In Alberqucrque!
C)J, by Kejritt Cwt. retributed by King nature jadlcM
S. WHITE
to make or not make of his
vice-president.
NEXT, the administration
let it be known that the
Vice-President had been Im
portantly Involved . in ar
ranging the recent big wheat
deal with India.
And now, Mr. Eisenhower
has publicly added glamour
to Nixon's role by assigning
to him much of the adminis
tration's fight for a full for
eign aid appropriation.
The Vice-President, though
not even listed on the pro
gram, turned up the other
night at a big foreign aid rally-
dinner here which had been
arranged by Erie Johnston
and Dr. Vannevar Bush, the
scientist. This, again, was
President Eisenhower's doing.
Mr. Nixon's dramatic Intro
duction from the rostrum as
an added starter among the
guests of honor was not exact
ly harmful to him.
THE Republicans have no
ultimate responsibility for
what Congress does, because
they are in a minority. They
are, therefore, free to belabor
the sweating Democrats on
foreign aid, demanding that
they do this and that. The
Democrats, In the shorthand
of politics, cannot escape
blame for what will surely
come, and would quite as
surely have come had this
been a Republican and not a
Democratic Congress - a re
duction in foreign aid.
So everywhere the public
looks in the months ahead It
will see one spotlighted
figure in world affairs, aside
from Mr. Elsenhower himself.
This will be Richard M.
Nixon.
It all proves that no presi
dential aspirant can possibly
have so strong an ally as a
man who is already in the
White House, sitting at the
center of American political
power.
(Copyright, 1960, by United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.)
OSC StudentsWin
Oratorical Contest
Portland - 01PD - Two. Ore
gon State students, Kooert
Russell and Sue Palmer, won
the men's and the' women's
divisions of the annual Oregon
intercollegiate oratorical con
test here Thursday night.
Both are from Portland.
The contest was held at the
University of Portland.
Runner-up in the men's di
vision was John Lake of Port
land State and second in wom
en's competition was Erma
Johnson of Northwest Christ
ian college.
, ,,
Turkey's Premier Meniferes Holds Fast
In Face of
By PHIH MEWSOM
UPI Foreign Editor
Tka aan . of . tkw vaaki
Turkish Prettier A 4 i
Memdarae.
The flam Ankara,
The auoiet "On canaot
lay with swuruy mi
the gouBtry,"
The challenge to Turkey's
security came from groups of
restive students who felt that
Menderea had
given the
count r y eco
n o m I c prog
ress but rob-
I bed it of polit
ical freedom.
A week ago,
the students
stormed thru
the streets of
Istanbul and
Ankara, clashing with troops
and police and demanding
Menderea resign,
By this week, their overt
acts had died down to minor
demonstrations and cries,
against Menderes of "mur
derer." In the Days News
By FRANK JENKINS
There are two hot spots In
the news. They are:
1. Foreign aid, Don't cut It
now, Ike pleads.
2. Medical help for the aged
and the aging.
THE President says that
major cuts in his $4,175,
000,000 foreign aid program
would "deal a crushing defeat
to the free world and lead to
grave international tensions."
He adds:
"Slashing the program
would mean virtual abandon
ment of an effort that has
yielded greater benefits In se
curity, good neighbors and
profitable trade than any
other comparable outlay."
He said the amount he has
requested is the minimum re
quired to meet the basic neces
sities of sheer defense and "to
keep alight a glimmer of hope
in hundreds of millions of
people arrayed with u on
the side of freedom."
ON medical help for the aged
and the aging he speaks
briefly in his message.
He says the program pre
sented by Secretary of Wel
fare Flemming recognizes federal-state
relations and PRI
VATE relationships.
From the political stand
point (in election years
EVERYTHING is viewed from
the political standpoint) the
administration plan is regard
ed as a backfire to slow down
the much more expensive
Democratic plan for medical
help for the aged.
HMMMMM
It must be admitted that
deep slashes in the foreign aid
program right now might
shake the solidarity of the
Western alliance at a moment
when the free world must pre
sent a united front to commu
nism. It must also be admitted
that medical aid for the aged
is a program that must eventu
ally be undertaken, just as the
social security program was
undertaken some two decades
ago.
The problem is HOW TO
PAY FOR THEM in a nation
whose federal debt alone al
ready aggregates nearly $6,000
per household.
HOW to do it?
The answer, I think, is
that we must DO WITHOUT
SOMETHING ELSE. If you
want a fine, Ynodern, new au
tomobile to replace your out-of-date
old one, you have to
do without something -else in
order to be able to pay for it.
Utnerwise, you will be
SWAMPED in debt.
The only difference in the
case of governments Is that
they can PRINT MONEY with
which to pay their bills and
you can't. The penalties for
printing money with which to
pay government debts are rug
ged, but it takes a long time
for these penalties to show up
disastrously, and the spenders
feel it will be safe for them
to play against time. (They
may be gone when the note
comes due.)
OUR government is fabulous
ly extravagant. It WASTES
a fantastic amount of money.
By a p p 1 ic a 1 1 o n to the
PUBLIC'S business of the
sound principles that govern
private spending, IMMENSE
savings could be made.
The time will come, I think,
when we will HAVE to apply
these sound, time-tested prin
ciples to public spending.
Maybe the time is here now.
Vancouver Chamber
Assriant Nmirmd
Vancouver. Wash.-fflPD-Col.
James T. Dnrrah has been
named assistant manager of
the Vancouver Chamber of
Commerce. Col. Darrah, will
take over his new position
following his retirement'from
the army June" 30. He current
ly is head of all army rescrv
units in the Oregon mi)ary
aetiur.
mil Newttiin
Criticisms;
Menderes was still in full
control of things, but the
ciu.ut of the student pretest
remained. Whether he would
do anything about them was
uncertain.,
it Menderes follows form,
h will reject the demands
and continue his own hard
course, for he has run Turkey
to his own design for 10 years
and shows no sign of chang
ing despite storms of criti
cism, Born of Wealth
A dapper and dynamic lit
tle man of 61, Menderes con
siders himself the spiritual
heir of Kemal Ataturk, the
strong man who hammered a
modern Turkish state out of
the ruins of the Ottoman em
pire. Born in 189S in Aydin, he
grew up as the indulged son
Of a wealthy land-owner. He
was educated at the Ameri
can College In Smyrna (now
Izmir) and holds a law degree
from Ankara University.
As a young man, he fought
in what the Turks call the
"War of Liberation," when
Kemal Ataturk drove the last
foreign troops out of Turkey
after World War I.
He won a local reputation
as a progressive farmer on
his family estate, and then en
Dick West, Abashed,
He's No Teen Ager After All
By DICK WEST
WashingtonUPII-If the 1960
Olympic games had a contest
in jumping at the obvious, I
expect I could
bring home a
gold medal.
When I am
trying to
make a point,
I do not mere,
ly hit the nail
on the head; I
also leave no
stones unturn
ed and no
bridges uncrossed. Moreover,
I take earn not to burn any
bridges behind me.
Recently, however, in a
misguided moment, I. decided
to take what I regarded as a
subtle approach to a report I
was writing on the congres-
Portland Dope
Raids Net Five
Portland-IUPD-More than a
month of undercover work by
two unidentified Portland po
lice officers climaxed early
today with the arrest of four
men on charges of selling mar
ijuana. A fifth man was arrested
for possession and four homes
were searched. The four were
arrested on secret indict
ments.
Arrested were Elbert Polk
Jr., 21: John Otis White, 21;
Donald Clifton McLaurin, 26,
and George Dolby, 53.
Merle Johnson, 38, was
charged with possession of
narcotics after police found
a packet of marijuana in
foot locker in his home.
Police Chief William J.
Hilbruner said that at a later
date the two officers would
be identified, but now must
remain unknown.
The undercover men were
accepted in underworld hang
outs, jazz-joints and other
spots, Hilbruner said. He said
they made contacts which
gave them passports to the
people who dealt in narcotics.
Crater Speech
Festival Slated
Central Point - The first
speech festival for sixth,
seventh and eighth graders in
District 6C, which includes
schools in Gold Hill, Sams
Valley and Central jPoint,
will be held at Crater High
school tomorrow.
The event.-sponsorjd by the
Crater High school speech
squad, of which Don Lacy is
advisor, will start at 9 a.m.,
following registration in the
Crater High cafetorium.
Awards will be presented at
3 p.m. Saturday.
About 36 contestants will
compete in five events. They
are debate, poetry reading,
humorous reading, serious
reading and oratorical decla
mation. The topic for debate
is whether Oregon should
abolish capital punishment.
Awards will be presented
by Miss Patsy Charley, presi
dent of the Crater speech
squad, and Chafjes A. Meyer,
superintendent of District 6C
schools.
Judges will include resi
dents of Gold Hill, Sams Val
ley, (Central Point, Medford
and Southern Oregon college,
Problems
tered politics where h quick
ly won acclaim ai an able
parliamentarian.
In 1S45, he and a number
of other deputies, led by Celal
Bayar, now ?urh-sy's pmti
dent, broke away front the
ruling People's Republican
Party to form th new Demo
cratic party.
Wins Elections
Five years later, President
Ismet Inonu permitted Tur
key's first genuinely free elec
tions and the Democratic
Party swept into power
where it has remained ever
since, winning a renewed
mandate in 1957.
Bayar became president
and Menderes premier, and
Turkey entered enthusistlcal
ly on a new era of hope of
expansion.
Under Menderes' bold lead
ership, roads, dams, power
stations, factories and schools
were built. Transport, indus
try and trade were developed.
And, above all, agriculture
was mechanized and expand
ed, He gave the Turkish peas
ants a stake in the country's
development, and made polit
ical capital by cultivating
them assiduously.
Menderes gambled that he
could create an industrialized
slonal investigation of disc
jockey Dick Clark.
What I Intehded to do was
josh a bit about the current
teen - age infatuation with
Clark and his cast of pompa
doured boy sopranos. So I de
scribed the hearings as they
might have been seen through
the eyes of a "teen-age disk
jockey reporter."
Gets Fan Mail
You can imagine my cha
grin when I started getting
letters from Clark fans, ex
tolling me as a champion of
the true, the good and the
beautiful end adopting me as
one of their own.
In particular was I unset
tled by a note fom two young
Pittsburgh ladies, portions of
which are reproduced below:
'We ve never heard of you
before but what you said real
ly makes sense and we'd like
you to know that we're with
you all the way.
"We "first heard of you
when we read an article writ
ten by you in our dally paper
about Dick Clark. As far as
Dick's concerned, with the
teen-agers we know he's tops.
Dick Understands Them
"If they think that by hav
ing an over-publicized hear
ing that is going to change
our opinion of him, they're
out of it. Like we mean way
out.
"Dick's one of the few old
er men who has the under
standing and confidence teen
agers need. Like, dad, they're
all hung ...
"Keep those editorials
going. They're great."
Jeepers, girls, I hate to dis
illusion anyone, but you've
got me pegged all wrong. I
ain't really a teen-ager. I just
act that way sometimes when
I've been addled by too much
exposure to congressional
hearings.
To tell you the truth, girls,
I'm even older than Dick
Clark. I'm old enough to re
member the days when disc
jockeys played sensible songs,
such as "Flat - Foot Floogle
With a Floy Floy." They don't
write songs like that any
more.
And, girls, did you have to
WITH BIFOCAL SHADOW!
Youthful NOLES BLEND-VUE tentei eliminate the objectionable
tattle-tale age line earned by old-faahionad bifocal lenaeit No at
line no unpleaiant eye ume with BLEND-VUE leniei and
they can be fitted Into any toiMoi frame you dntret
MR)
casual shopping
O
ran. Omm J. Nolo!
o
Told
Turkey in ma tier of years
without quite slipping over
the brink into economic chaos.
But in his enthusiasm, he
overstrained the country'! re
sources, landing It heavily in
ivbt md ituting tnumi In
ternal inflation.
Asks Far Aid
By 1958, he had to go to
the United States and the Or
ganization of European Koo
nomic Cooperation for help.
He got some assistance, but
with it he was forced to ac
cept an economic stabilitatlon
program,
He devalued the lira, cut
spending and raised prices. It
was a program of austerity
necessary for the country to
survive, but It was one that
brought further criticism.
Prosperity grew, and so did
opposition.
Some members of his own
party joined this criticism,
while the opposition People's
Party took full advantage of
Menderes' troubles.
Menderes retaliated with
repression of the press and
maneuvers his opponents con
sidered anti-democratic. The
opposition feels that Turkey's
troubles were brought on by
Menderes' policies and believe
that the country Is still living
on aid from abroad, Menderes
counters with more controls.
Admits
say twice that you had never
heard of me before? We "old
er men" may be "all hung"
and ."out of it," but we still
have our pride.
Actually, girls, I never saw
the Clark show but once when
I was passing by a television
set, All ! could see then was
a screen full of flying saddle
shoes and bobby sox.
This may be good clean fun
but I'm more the Lawrenct
Welk type. I dig bubbles,
labor Secretary May
Speak at Oregon City
Oregon Clty-IUPD-Labor Sec
retary James P. Mitchell is
tentatively scheduled to ad
dress a $5-per-plate Republi
can fund raising dinner here
May 22, local GOP County
Chairman Wesley Phillips said
today.
Sunday, May 8
Send your best to
"mother" . . . send
Mother's Day Cards
Swem's
217 E. Main - Medford
MAR YOUR
APDEADAMt-e
otn 55tA. tvtt
OPTICA CO.
FORD SHOPPING CENTMD
fhortt $P 2-9990
with convenient parking
and WW lea T. Hedie
there is music eveiywhere, f everyone.
Enjoy it. E.A. O 0 c::
0
10. 746. w
- o iw. ir.
Orn
,n r-rr;;-:2C:2-2 OC3 GC-o
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