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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 17, 1960)
o o Everyone In Southern Orecoa Reads The Mail Tribune" Published Daily except Saturday by MEDFORD PRINTING CO 33 North Fir St.. Ph SP 24141. " ROBERT W RUHL, Editor HERB GREY Advertising Manager GERALD T LATHAM Bub Mgr ERIC W ALLEN JR Mng Editor EARL H ADAMS, City Editor BARRY CHIPMAN Teleg Editor RICHARD JEW FIT. Sport Editor OLIVE STARCHER. Women'i Ed. to? PALE ERICKSONlrcuIatlon Mp An Independent Newipaper Entered aa second claii matter at Med ford. Oregon, under Act of March 3, 1807 SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mall In Advance. Copy 10c uaiiy ana aunaay i year iaw flatlv and Sunday -6 tnos 8.00 Daily and Sunday 3 mot 4.25 Sunday Only One year f4 20 Hv rrritr In Advance Med ford Aihland. Centra) Point Eagle Point. Jacksonville. Gold Hill Phoenix. Shady Cove. Rogue RJv ex. Talent and on vnotor rnutea. Dailv and Sunday 1 year $18 00 Da'.lv and Sunday 1 mo 1.50 Carrier and Dealars copy 10c AlITermi Cash in Advance Official Paper of City of MedfofJ Official Paptrf Jackson County United Preaa International FuU Leased Wire D P I Tejephoto Newipleturea "TiEMBEH OF AUDIT BUREAU" OF ClRUULAl lUnS Irti'strtlcincr HpntPirit fttlvfl WEST HOLIDAY CO.. INC Of fice! in New York. Chicago De troit. San Franciuco. Los Angeles. Seattle, Portland St. Louis. At lanta. Vancouver. BC. NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION NATIONAL EDITORIAI c6T,h nnnnr; Flight or Time Medford nd Jackson County History from th files of The Mail Tribune 10. 20. 30, 40 and 50 years ago. 10 YEARS AGO June 17. 1950 (Saturday) Medford's population in creased 52 per cent during the past 10 years from a 1940 population of 11,281 to this year's population of 17,176, according to figures released today by the bureau of cen sus. Restrictions on week end log hauling on county roads were announced today by Paul Rynning, county en gineer. 1 20 YEARS AGO June 17. 1940 (Monday) Gold Hill's Beavers defeat ed the Crescent City Merch ants 3 to 2 here yesterday In what is the biggest upset in the Southern Oregon league In the past two years. From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudge Pot" column: "Yes terday was Father's Day. As the esteemed Oregonian sc pertly noted on P. 1 today 'It ended with the usual sun down'." 30 YEARS AGO June 17. 1930 (Tuesday) The Medford city council yesterday voted to spend $100 for the purchase of earwig poison. A bumper apricot crop is now being picked in the Fern Valley district. 40 YEARS AGO June 17. 1920 (Thursday) Eighteen special trains will pass through Medford in the next two days on their way to the Portland Rose show. Chemical tests show Med ford's water to be pure and undefiled. 50 YEARS AGO June 17. 1910 (Friday) John R. Allen, president of the Pacific and Eastern rail road, has given $1,000 to the Crater Lake Highway fund, the largest single donation yet. P. J. O'Gara, Rogue River valley pathologist, has laid down a plan for combatting fruit pests and diseases. What's Your I.Q.7 Nine or ten correct Is superior; seven or eight is excellent five or sii Is good. 1. Was it during the Hoover, Roosevelt, or Coulidge admin istratlon that the size of U. S. paper currency was reduced? 2. What does "quo vadis? mean? 3. Is Bacon or Shakespeare author of the expression "knowledge is power"? 4. The White House was at one time the residence of which newspaper columnist? 5. Was Jefferson or Madison nicknamed "Father ' of the Constitution"? 6. Is Venice on the Mediter ranean Sea? 7. Which race on earth Is descendent from Cain? 8. An excess of sugar and starch in the body is stored as ? 9. What is the name of the patron Saint of Scotland? 10. Correct the following: "He only had one hat." Answers; 1. Hoover. 2. "Whliher goes! Ihout" 3. Ba con. 4. Mrs. F. D. Roosevelt. 5. Madison. 8. No. Adriatic. 7. No racs. 8. Fat. 9. 81. Andrew. 10. "He had only ont hat." EX-PRESIDENT DIES Lafayette, lnd. - IUPI1 - Dr. Edward Charles Elliott, 85, president emeritus of Purdue University, died Thursday, Double Standard in Politics There are two atwoaches in an election vear, A party and its candidates can follow the dictate of fheodore Koosevelt, water's edge." Or they up one side and down debate on foreign policy. On few occasions in the nation's history has the latter course been pursued so fervently as it was in 1952 when the Republicans and their can didate, Gen. Eisenhower, attempted to make the Korean War, Iranian s possible tried to make war appear a tragic mistake. MOW, some Democrats 1 1 tions about the conduct of foreign policy by a Republican administration. The Republicans aic jrcuuig xuui auu peasers." It's an old, old story whose ox is gored. But. for the Democrats there's more to the story than that. What events of today point up something else. Its the double standard in politics in this country a double standard created and maintained in most part by the editorial pages of Republican newspapers, of which Democratic newspapers. A CCORDING to the GOP press, it is unpatriotic " to Question the foreign policy of a Republican President, Dwight Eisenhower. This same press did not, however, raise a Democratic President, Harry Truman, was catching unshirted hell for his foreign policy de cisions. There not only was no protest; mucn of the GOP press participated gleefully in the game. . Although there was Truman administration munists, as Sen. Joe McCarthy alleged, the GOP press went right along with McCarthy. When McCarthy and others accused Secretary of State Dean Acheson of being soft on communism the GOP press did not protest. Mr. Truman made the point recently. He noted that when he was in the White House, George Allen was the President's "poker playing, whisky drinking crony." Now the same George Allen is a close friend of President Eisenhower and he is described as "a statesman." COME observers have speculated on the reaction of the Republican press had Harry Truman invited Nikita Khrushchev to this country and had had private talks with him in his home at Independence, Mo. Oh, what they'd have done to him! Contem plating it gives us the whips and jingles. We do not like to see a debate on foreign pol icy in the heat of a presidential election. But we like less that Republican theory that they can have it both ways that foreign policy of a Democratic President but un patriotic to raise any questions about the foreign policy decisions of a Republican President. Few things the Republicans do irritate the Democrats more. And with complete justifica tion. Pendleton East Oregonian. Atrophy Unnecessary I had a caller the other morning, a college graduate, Class of 1960. his degree. College was big and wide lay before he had doubts, too. One thing that worried him was this: In his four years of college his lated along many lines: philosophy, ethics, sociol ogy how could he keep those interests alive when he got out into the "world"? His concern was understandable. For four years he has had contact with keen and aggres sive minds, with professors prodding him to in tellectual achievement, reading books that digest the wisdom of the ages, fumbling in laboratories to grasp something of the methods of scientific inquiry, indulging in bull sessions where ques tions of all sorts were kicked about. Soon he would be slipping into some groove in the world, with its ordered pattern of work and play, with attention and energy absorbed in routine busi ness, cut off from contacts with stimulating minds, shared in all probability with the joys and problems of setting HOW may the college graduate keep himself u ltnm ? An1 frit' tVio wntn o n nia A no to ir ttrtaa major duties soon may bearing and rearing children is her store of in tellectual interest and while she cooks and sews ot social and community These questions are 1!)()0. 1 hey have come ates, even from grade levels of ordinary occupation are always under the levels of the school, tal growth and performance, lhe answers are written in the actions of the individual. The col lege man or college woman may "adjust" fully into the current of his or her level of activity, so that college becomes only a memory, the campus an excuse lor return on Wg Game Day. Only as the individual exerts himself can he keep his mind awake. If he tries, he can succeed, and he will find others with like purpose and will The materials to support such interest are abun dant; libraries, magazines, newspapers, lectures, Great Books courses, concerts, discussion groups. No need to let one's mind atrophy just because college days are over. Charles A. Sprague in iii-guii o linesman, oiuem. rolitics must stop at the can rip the opposition the other in an all-out War, and in every way America's entry into that are raising some queS' waning wlcii uuiva in politics. It all depends happened in 1952 and the there are far more than the slightest protest when never any proof that the was "loaded with com its fair to criticize the He had his diploma and behind him, the world, him. He had plans, but interests had been stimu up a family. e shift to homemaking and spirit of inquiry to rust and holds up her end aifairs not new with the crop of with each crop of eradiv or high school. For the with its emphasis on men MEDFORD MAIL Dennis tha THe Lime neighbor b? yOtlK BtOOD PRESSURE Matter of Fact bv THE CASE FOR STRENGTH Washington - Sen. John F. Kennedy has now revealed the central issue on which he plans to fight the Presiden 1 1 a 1 election, in the highly likely event that he wins the Democrat ic nomination. The issue he has chosen arises from u .un. JOSEPH ALSOP "' our position in me worm has been allowed to become "dramatically weaker." The quotations do not come from the important speech in which Sen. Kennedy present ed his personal campaign platform to the Senate on Tuesday. They are taken from the famous bombshell-statement by Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller. On the central issue facing the country, there is only one difference between the Republican Governor and the Democratic Senator. Rockefeller blames the Tru man administration as well as the Eisenhower administra tion for this "dramatic" de cline of our world position. Yet the business of parcelling out the blame is far less im portant than the validity of the issue Itself. President Eisenhower and and his subordinates soothing ly argue that the issue is phoney, on the ground that America's military power is greater than ever. In absolute terms this is perhaps correct. GOV, ROCKEFELLER and Sen. Kennedy in effect re ply that the President's argu ment is meaningless, because Soviet power has been grow ing much more rapidly than American power. Hence, they point out, we are really weaker than ever before in relation to the Soviets. This Is also quite undeniably cor rect. Therefore, the validity of the Kennedy-Rockefeller issue depends on whether the continuing change in the over all balance of power is a seri ous danger to this country and the free world. The test, surely, lies in the pattern of Soviet behavior in the decade and a half since the end of World War II. The post-war pattern shows, alas, that every major Communist action involving any risk of Western reaction, was taken after a marked favorable change in the over-all power balance. Excluding the great Communist advances that be gan during the war itself, which Involved no risk, there have been five of these major Communist Initiatives in the post-war period. THE first post-war Initiative was the Berlin blockade. The background of the black ade was til? hugger-mugger post-war demobilization of the Western armies, which denud ed Western Europe of any serious defensive force. The second Communist ini tiative was the aggression in Korea. The background was the 1949-'50 American dis armament program of Presi dent Truman and Secretary of Defense Louis Johnson plus the successful test of the first Soviet atomic bomb in Septynber, 1949. Naturally Stalin cannot have regarded his stock of atomic bombs as sufficient for operational purposes in June, 19S0. But he must cer tainly have believed that America's disarmament insur ed him against any American response to the Korean ag gression. No doubt, too, he calculated that even a small though unknown number of Soviet atomic bombs would hamper American action, by encouraging hysterical ten dencies in the other Western allies. If he made this second calculation, he was quite right. The third Communist initia tive was the active Soviet in w TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, ORE. Menace must be behavins better. Joseph Alsop tervention In the Middle East, which began with the Egyp tian arms deal. The back ground was the drastic cut back of our post-Korean re armament effort, ordered by President Eisenhower, and carried out by Secretary of Defense Charles Wilson. THE fourth and fifth Com munist initiatives, finally, were the Chinese Communist attack on Quemoy and Nikita S. Khrushchev's attempts to frighten the Western nations out of West Berlin. The Ber lin crisis was started as soon as the Quemoy crisis subsid ed. The background was the Soviets' acquisition of a com plete panoply of medium range missiles, sufficient to cover all the Western allies having U. S. bases on their soil, plus some long range mis siles capable of reaching American soil. Long before his missiles were ready, Khrushchev him self freely predicted, to this reporter aiong others, that the mere possession of these weapons by the Kremlin would intimidate and para lyze the nations that would be under the gun. If Khru shchev's own words are to be believed, In truth, a So viet calculation of the psychological-political effects of the most recent and most drastic change in the power balance was the main root of both the Quemoy and the Ber lin crises. e TN THE case of each of the above-listed Communist ini tiatives, the Kremlin policy makers were of course moved by many other considerations. But a prior change in the pow er balance is still the single, unifying factor in all five of the great post-war initiatives. That is an impressive, grim, even terrifying fact. The fact is that weakness has invariably invited trou ble. We have thus far man aged to scramble out of the worst of the trouble when it came. Yet we have only done so at the greatest cost and risk. Furthermore, the power balance is still deteriorating, and if the past pattern of So viet behavior means anything at all, we can expect greater weakness to invite greater trouble. , In sum, the issue made by Sen. Kennedy and Gov. Rockefeller is going to need a lot of answering by Vice President Richard M. Nixon. Nixon's task will not be eased by the further fact that his loyalty to the Administration only rather thinly cloaks personal viewpoint not very different from Kennedy's and Rockefeller s. Copyright 1960. New York Herald Tribune Inc. Decision Protects Rights of Indians Portland - IUPD - A federal judge has ruled against the stale of Oregon's right to In terfere with the fishing rights of the Umatilla confederated Indian tribes in off-reserva tion streams tributary to the Columbia and Snake rivers. The ruling was handed down by Judge Gus J. Solo mon. ine decision was In re sponse to civil action taken by the confederated tribes against state agencies. Includ ing the State Police, State Game Commission and the at torney general's office. The Indians were seeking to get a declaratory judgment and an injunction against the enforcement of state regula tlons. Judge Solomon said the state agencies Involved failed to show a sufficient reason for interfering with the In dians' fishing rights. The state agencies had used conservation as their main reason for the interference. Washinffea Alport By William S. Whit Washington - Rarely has reality been so hidden by fan tasy as Is now the case aooui Adlal E. Ste venson in the pre - conven tion campaign for the Demo cratic presi dential nomin ation. Stevenson's highly emo- tlnnal harkprc Wllll.m I. ,j White Bc- - B' swell" for him, which Is sim ply not visible to the detached observer. They argue that the summit conference collapse has strengthened a "draft Stevenson" movement, which never existed in the first place. The plain truth is that a Stevenson "draft" is not more but less likely than before the summit. His attack on the Eisenhower administration's policies on the eve of a Unit ed National trial of the Unit ed States on Soviet charges of aggression has boomer anged. Even among many sympa thetic to the substance of what Stevenson said this is now admitted. What he said might have been all right. But when he said it was all wrong. FOR example, it can be stated confidently that one of those who associated him self with the Stevenson crit icism, Senator John F. Ken nedy, now regrets its timing. And yesterday's general as sumption that Stevenson would wind up as secretary of state should Kennedy be come President now has no automatic validity whatever. tor there is wide aware ness everywhere in the Dem ocratic party except in Ste venson s wing, that his re cent course has diminished rather than increased his use fulness in campaign terms. National polls taken after the summit and "spy plane" epi sode have shown Vice-President Nixon to be climbing in favor on the question as to who the public would prefer to deal with Khrushchev. And Kennedy has now fallen be hind Nixon - 49 against 51 per centage points - where beforehand he had led Nixon. Stevenson's basic trouble is that no man's supporters are nearly so devoted - but so in credibly unaware of the ele mentary facts of political life AMONG these realities of "where the power "actually lies are the following: (1) -Stevenson by the most generous estimate will hardly control 75 first-ballot votes at the Democratic convention, whereas 761 are required to nominate. (2) Stevenson could have the nomination only if either one of two of the presidential candidates, Kennedy and Sen ator Lyndon B. Johnson, chose to give it to him. (3) If Kennedy's blitz fails -and he himself is the first to concede that he must make the nomination on an early ballot or not at all - Steven son would be the least rather than the most likely alterna tive choice. Far the more likely alternative would be ei ther Johnson or Senator Stu art Symington. (4) The real rivals In all early balloting will be only two - Kennedy and Johnson. Kennedy will go into the con vention with 600 sure to fair ly sure votes; Johnson with 400 to 500. If Kennedy then falters the convention will have three choices: (A) to go to Johnson as the ablest of the field of nominees. (B) to go to Symington as the least controversial and as holder of the most second-choice sup port, (fj) to go to Stevenson, whatever his qualities, is be yond question the most unpop ular of all with the party pros. e A Kennedy failure means convention deadlork. convention deadlock means that control passes at that very noint from the manv tn the few - to the old party leaders and bosses like Harry S. Truman, Gov. David Law rence Of Pennsylvania. Tnm. many Chief Carmine DeSapio, ana so on. Most of them would pre fer Johnson but wnuiH finH him difficult because of his southern geography. Many of them would find Symington sarest from their own view points. Very few of them would really Drefer Stpven son - and even fewer believe hp r-rttiM urln In Mm,AmWK Impossible li not in the dic tionary of convent ion poli tics. But the rational odds against a Stevenson nomlna lion are on the order of 20 to 1. (Copyright. I960. Br United tenure Syndicate. Inc.) PROFESSOR DIES Princeton, N.J. -HUD - Dr. Harvey Hewett - Thaver. 87 professor emeritus of modern languages at Princeton Uni versity and an authority on German literature, died here Thursday. Cloak-and-Daggcr Story Thrust Before World in Eichmann Case Br PHIL NEWSOM UP! Foreign Editor The men - of the - week: Premier David Ben-Gurion of Israel. - . The placet Tel AtIt. ' The quote! "I am certain that only lew persons in the world will fail io under, stand the profound motiva tion and supreme moral Jus tification of this act." "This act" was the appre hension of ex-Nazi and ac cused Jewish mass killer Adolf Eichmann by Israeli agents In Argentina last month. Communications Letters to the Editor must bear the name and address of the writez, although under certain circumstances the use of a pen name or initial for publication is permissible. The Mail Tribune reserves the light to edit all letters with a view to clarification and condensation. Letters submitted for pub lication must not exceed 400 words. The Utters printed in this column do not necossarily represent the views of the paper; in fact the contrary is Hummingbirds To the Editor: King-sized cigarettes! Years before the first one was marketed, there were King hummingbirds. They . also are king-sized. They are almost as big as robins. This, in marked con trast with the Bee humming bird, smallest of all the feath ered folk. Writer recalls find ing one on a Jamaica jungle trail. It did not cover his thumb's first joint. Thinking it immature he asked: "Him p i c k a n i n n y?" "No, him Papa." The King hummingbirds sometimes are called "Fiery topaz." Their feathers flash topaz, ruby, emerald. They are Amazon natives. They re call writer's passport experi ence when air travel was new. For one South American trip, we needed visas for a dozen nations. At Brazil's consul: "O.K. First, however, my yarn about Amazon jungle from an airplane." Writer ob jected he was in a hurry. "But, you need my signature. I demand 15 minutes to tell about how jungle in bloom looks from a plane. Then I sign." We waited. California is rich in hum mingbirds, has half a dozen species. The East has only the rubythroat. Writer found hummers feeding at wild flowers between Alaskan to tem poles. He found them high in Peru's llama-land, also in Chile's wild-fuchsia jungle. He observed scores of species from Ecuador dug outs. Once, he saw the listings of hummingbird skins for Paris' market. It then was fashion's fad. The exports ran high into six figures. Brazil is highly organized by Ger man traders for tropical prod u c t s: blue-silk butterflies, snake leather, golden-monkey pelts. It was easy to expand redskin collecting when there came milady's demand at Paris. C. M. Goethe " 3731 Tea st. Sacramento 16, Calif. Litter Bugs To the Editor: Litter bugs and plain dumpers. In the .years that the litter bug campaign has been in existence we've noticed a con siderable improvement in the amount of litter along our main traveled highways. We know this is appreciated by the public in general, and we wish to thank all of those who have cooperated with us in making this possible. We can still use more co operation from that small per centage of people living in the town areas, who use the country areas, roads and pri vate property, for the dis posal of their unwanted trash. This includes everything from garbage to tin cans, bottles and even dead animals. Some of this trash creates fire hazards and health haz ards, along with being un sightly, and, in plain words, should never be disposed of in this manner. These same people can use the facilities furnished by the cities and county at a very nominal fee, and at much less risk of being caught and fined for dumping on public roads There seems to be an idea that they are beyond this law if they throw their trash over some farmer'i fence, or into someone's yard, a thing which has been done many times lately. This practice should be stopped, because they are still in violation of the law Hoping this will reach some of our offenders and make them see the wrong that they are doing. We will still con tinue to work for the day when our road areas will all be clean and not defaced with other people's trash. . Mrs. June Stevenson Litter Bug Chairman Siskiyou District Federated Garden Clubs of America. Route 1, Box 519 Central Point, Or. of the world's great cloak-and-dagger stories was thrust be before the CI world then I ... : . u p I h. W 1 L I . . . mann run to ground in Buenos Aires after 15 years of flight. Its details still are vague PHIL NEWSON and may never be known. But its after-effects will be aired before the United Nations next week. often the case. Swltcheroo To the Editor: This Is the age of the "switcheroo"-one can like it, or like it not. The truth can be, and frequently is, very nasty in one Instance, and then, presto chango, can be groomed in such a fashion that it serves for a wonderful 'dish" for the Bill of Fare. In another. Especially in poli-tics-or any affray where the participants can change races, even while crossing the stream, or at midway. It's the way the publicity is handled, guess. Now, this political (presi dential) year, we hear a lot about the "liberal religious spirit". Who is it, in America, that cannot be President, be cause of his church affiliation, we are asked. I, indeed, think there is nothing to It, myself. Of course, I do not believe it should be an issue. But the last election, and the previous one, four and eight years back, who made an issue of this matter? Well, if you do not know, I will not give you the answer. But, here is a hint -the same, I am told, who are now using the issue, or sug gest it is being used against their favorite son! It shouldn't be so-but it is, indeed, the age of the "swltch eroo", and I've heard the voice of the chief executive of this nation pull the same "switcheroo" again and again -not the same chief, always, of course. It's the age of the "swltch eroo" and just what -is the part we play? Fee Clifford Esteb, P.O. Box 1022, Medford Temperance and Churches To the Editor: In reply to Mr. H. Johnson Jr., on Tem perance. It is all true and sad. How to stop this evil that destroy human souls is one of the $64,000 questions. I have seen bootlegging at its top. This turned out to be more destructive than the old saloon. When evil goes under ground it is almost intoler able. Our government, state and cities, who get fat off of the licenses and revenue, should join forces and raise every thing pertaining to this evil so high that only a fool or a millionaire could afford it. No one gets the habit by an occasional drink now and then. It is the one who has it at his or her desire that forms a habit. If beer was $1 a stubby and whiskey was $25 a fifth and wine $2.50 a quart, how many teenagers would be able to buy it and still have money to go anywhere? The old drunks may be doom ed, but we who can control our habits may lose the desire of a drink. The Bible speaks of wine and its uses 134 times in the Hebrew Scriptures. Jesus and his disciples drank wine, and It was not grape juice. I feel that we do not have to make excuses for the uses of any drink if it be used moderate ly. I feel we like to add on, or take off, the word of God to suit our desire, but for the love of God for our weaker One New Hope for the "TIRED OUT" Don't Feel and Look "Old Before Your Time" Any Longer If you are wearing that look of "false old age", feel tired out, depressed, or suffer from sleep lessness, constipation, lack of ap petite, digestive disturbance, lack-lustre hair, your trouble may be caused by iron-poor blood or a system starved for nature's eeeential vitamins and minerals. If so, you need suffer no more, STOP SUFFERING In Just one day Drag-NOT Tab let's high-potency iron, multiple vitamins and blood-building ele ments are in your blood-stream, carrying new strength and energy to all part of your body. Then VAIIISCOTT'S 322 EAST MAIN STREET FRIDAY. JUNE 17, I960 In brief, Eichmann wai trapped in Argentina and re turned to Israel, where the plan is to try him for com plicity in the mass murder of six million Jews during World War II. There are few who would quarrel with that. But the manner of his capture has be come an International issue between Israel and Argentina. Israel maintains Eichmann was tracked down by Jewish "volunteers" and returned to Israel "voluntarily." Argen tina maintains Israel infrin ged on its sovereignty and Kianaped Eichmann. Argen tina wants him back, and then will let Israel negotiate for his extradition. Israel has re fused and Argentina hat taken its case to the U.N. Se curity Council. But Ben-Gurion has been seeking a friendly settlement. He made his plea for under standing of "this act" in a per sonal letter to Argentine President Arturo Frondizi in which he asked that Frondizi and- the Argentine people "join all the friends of jus tice in the world," and let Israel try Eichmann. Replied To Letter Then, by coincidence, both men went off on separate trips to Europe. Frondizi has replied to Ben-Gurion'a friendly letter and there have been reports the two might meet while abroad and at tempt to settle the case on a man-to-man basis. There also had been reports that French President Charles de Gaulle might try to me diate between them. Nothing solid has develoDed from any of these reports, though many still hope the is sue can be settled before it reaches the U.N. For the 73-year-old Ben- Gurion the whole Eichmann case is a symbol of the past he feels must be redressed. He believes trial of the man who is charged with organizing mass Jewish extermination is the moral right of the Israeli state. neighbors we show little con cern. I feel that the preachers of this valley are contented with their flocks and do not want any stampeded towards the righteousness for human souls. I felt that Medford could stand a revival, and wrote 20 pastors about 250 or more words in letter, and I received one reply, although I was not of his flock. They are not gathering, they are standing still, while men and women and children are cry ing in the dark for under standing and healing. If it had been possible for me to have written to Jesus when he was on earth, I know he would have come or writ ten back and granted the wish. Each man is his own disciple and if he so desires can ignore the pleas of many who would have faith if only they had that chanc .. Leo A. Rifenbark, 1131 Pinecroft ave., Medford. FATHER'S DAY CARDS Sunday, June 19 Swem's 217 East Main Medford watch your elimination. A few davs after you start taking Draff NOT Tablet the lasy organs will go back to work and you will notice the black, poisonous wast beginning to leave your body. NEW LIFE Then you will feel a wondrous) change: the years will seem to slip away and you will enjoy wonderful new pep and vitality, look and feel younger. Get non habit-forming Draa-NOT Tab. leta (rich in Iron, Vitamin Bh Bi. B,, C, plus other vitamin and minerals) and eea result ia 7 days or your money back. Price only $S.OO. PHARMACY MEDFORD O O O O 0 n