MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, ORE.
TUESDAY. JULY t. IIHO
4 A
iion
iirdaj by
13 North nr St.. Ph 8Pa-ell
" nOBERfW RUHL. Editor
RCnB GIU5Y Advertlilni Msnese
-,. n r I 11-UAM Rub Mar
ERIC W ALLEN JR.. Mng Editor
EARL H ADAMS. City Editor
tilnnu UTOMAM Tataa FilltfIT
RICHARD JEWETT. Sporta Editor
OLIVE ST ARCHER. Women'! Editor
LI A Li C ,n.lk,ivam,, v-iivuh"""
ME
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U U
Flight o' Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mall Tribune 10. 20, 30, 40
and SO years age.
10 YEARS AGO
July S. 1950 (Wednesday)
City firemen said two
brush fires in Medford yester
day were caused by misused
fireworks.
Medford's Civil Air Patrol
unit yesterday placed second
in the western regional drill
contest at Ogden, Utah.
20 YEARS AGO
July 5, 1940 (Friday)
A crowd estimated at more
fhau 20,000 jammed every
corner of space in Ashland
yesterday to witness this city's
big Fourth of July celebra
tion. From Arthur Perry's "Ye
Smudge Pot" column: "The
nation's birthday passed here
without anybody getting In
jail or the hospital, due to
exuberance with gin or gaso
:' line."
90 YEARS AGO
July 5, 1930 (Saturday)
A number of fish were
found dead in the upper
Bogue yesterday, apparently
the victims of a dynamite
blast, and fishermen are
aroused.
Five local youths celebrat
ed the Fourth by climbing to
the top of Mt. Pitt.
40 YEARS AGO
July 5, 1920 (Monday)
Medford's Commercial club
Is taking steps to get a census
recount for the city.
Mrs. Rose Sehiefflin of
Medford has been elected
Democratic national commit-
teewoman for Oregon.
SO YEARS AGO
July 5. 1910 (Tuesday)
The federal government
. started advertising today for
a site on which to locate the
$110,000 federal building
which is planned for in Med
ford. A Mail Tribune reporter
writes from Reno, Nev., that
there is a possibility that Jim
Jeffries was doped before yes
terday's championship fight
which he lost to Jack John
son; Elsewhere, race riots re
sulting from the fight, have
killed upwards of SO persons
throughout the nation.
What's Your I.Q.?
Nine er ten correct fa superior;
seven or tight Is oicellentt five or
six is good.
1. In which New England
Stnte is Saddle Mountain?
2. Does the New Testament
specifically imply that salva
tion is open to both Jew and
Gentle alike? '
3. Name the only State In
the Union whose name ends
In "k"?
4. In military practice what
arc "combined operations"?
5. Is the "t" pronounced in
hostler, hasten, or listen?
6. "My house is a c which
the king cannot enter." Em
erson. 7. Was the discovery that
sulphuric ether when inhaled
produced insensibility to pain,
made in 1826, 1846, or 1866?
, 8. One President of the U.S.
Was born In Pennsylvania;
Home him,
9. Name the former Secre
tary of State who was award
ed the 104S Noble Peace
Prize.
10. Who was the Spanish
American War hero of Manila
Bay?
Answorsi 1, Massachusetts.
2. Yes. 3. New York. 4.
Those in which land, sea and
air forces participate. 6. No.
6. ". . . castle." 7. 1846. 8.
James Buchanan. 9. Cordell
Hull. 10. Commodore George
Dewey. :
"Everyone In Souuiern Ore
Heidi Tha Mall Tribune"
JJ--' A$ SO C I ATI O M
NATIONAl
Unwisdom vs. Vindictiveness
Last Saturday morning there arrived in the
mail a plain, pre-stamped envelope of the sort
obtainable at the post office. It was postmarked
Portland. There was no return address.
Inside was a green-mimeographed "news
letter" from the office of Mrs. Edith Green, Ore
gon congresswoman from Portland. We thought
little about it except to wonder why it wasn't in
the usual kind of envelope.
Then we started to read it. It was full of
satiric and exaggerated comment on politics and
individuals.
AT first we thought Mrs. Green had taken
" leave of her senses. Then another staff mem
ber pointed out the date June, 1959. Still it
didn t make sense, and we got suspicious.
So we asked Mrs. Green about it.
When she learned what had happened she
was upset understandably so.
It will be recalled that in June, 1959, our
two senators were engaged in a rather acrimon
ious quarrel. There were other political activi
ties which gave those close to them cause for
unhappiness.
AT that time Mrs. Green wrote the '"newslet
ter," tongue in cheek, and mailed out a few
copies 10 or 12 to members of her family and
close friends.
It was intended as a purely private, personal,
tongue-in-cheek commentary on events of the day
in which she was caught up, and, since distribu
tion was limited to close personal contacts, Mrs.
Green sort of let her hair down in a way nobody
would in a public letter.
It may have been unwise but who among
us has not done the same sort of thing?
MOW, however, the political situation has
changed; Mrs. Green is up for reelection;
Dick Neuberger is dead; the feuds of last year
have quieted or ended.
Thus it is easy to understand why Mi's. Green
is upset that someone someone who took con
siderable pains to remain anonymous and convey
the impression that Mi's. Green's heavy-humored
and privately sarcastic letter was genuine had
mailed it out.
How widespread the mailing is we have no
idea, but it did not go to her regular mailing list.
We presume it was mostly to newspapers.
1MRS. GREEN may be subject to some criticism
for having authored such a letter in the first
place although it was never intended for public
consumption. Hyperbole and sarcasm are not her
usual vehicles of expression.
But how much worse, how really nasty and
vindictive, must be the person who ran across
a copy of the private letter, and attempted to
pass it off as an example of Mrs. Green's public
views. . ,
One can expect some pretty shoddy actions
during an election year. But how low can you
get? E. A.
Glorious 4th!
While we're on the subject of low-down char
acters, how about the unknown individuals who
set fire to the home in Portland being built by
a Negro couple?
Mr. and Mrs. Rowan Wiley have been sub
ject to harrassment and discrimination ever since
they began planning to move into what had been
an all-white neighborhood.
First of all, they were rebuffed by a build
ing contractor. It finally took action by the Ore
gon bureau of labor to obtain for them the equal
ity of treatment to which they are entitled under
Oregon law.
MEXT, the municipal water district in which
A" their prospective new home is located at
tempted to condemn their property. This was
stopped by a federal court order when it became
evident there was no justification for such con
demnation, and that it actually was designed to
scare them away, solely because of their race.
And, finally, several thousand dollars of dam
age was done to their unfinished, split-level home
last week end by the unknown, skulking arsonist.
And this on the 4th of July week end, when
we celebrate the origin of the Declaration of In
dependence which declares it is "self-evident"
that all men are created equal ! E. A.
Added Evidence
It's getting so that the best way to find a
peaceful, quiet spot on a long week end is to
stay at home.
The Forest Service estimated that 17,000 peo
ple were at Lake of the Woods Sunday.
And, last year, it was estimated that some
50,000 people in all sought solace outdoors in
one or another of the camping, boating, swim
ming or picnicking placesin the county.
IT may be, actually, that the law of diminishing
returns is beginning to set in.
Only a few boats and water skiers were in
evidence on the lake above Savage Rapids dam
Sunday, according to sheriff's deputies. And this
may be because a lot of people expected over
whelming crowds, and enough of them stayed
away so that the crowds were relative small.
But the situation over the week end is just
one more added bit of evidence that the Amer
ican people are taking to the outdoors in ever
greater numbers. Ana if accommodations aren't
provided for them, they'll provide their own
to everyone's loss. -E. A.
Dennis the
rAOIUN' THE
Matter of Fact By jo.Ph auoP
A JULY FOURTH
HURRAH
Wcstport, N. Y.-This was
the year when Ingemar Jo
hansson and Dwight D. Eis
enhower both
made over
seas journeys
which were
t r i u mphant
successes, a s
the President
h i m self e x
plained, e x
cept for the
tiresome b e-
i t
.r.npu iisnp UUVIUI ui
from disinterested minorities.
The comparison is James
Reston's; but borrowing from
a colleague is excusable in
this instance, because the
comparison tells so much
about the stage we have
reached. There are other In
dications, too. There is the
general opinion of respectable
Republicans, for instance, that
Gov. Nelson Rockefeller must
be either a fool or a rogue,
because he has dared to tell
the plain conservative truth
about the state of our de
fenses and our economy.
There are some other
things, to be sure, that any
American can honestly cele
brate this Fourth of July. For
example, the existence of hid
den, currently untapped
springs of national energy is
plainly proven by the quality
of the conceivable next presi
dents. Whether the White
House's new occupant is to
be Nixon or Kennedy or Lyn
don Johnson, one cannot tell.
But one can certainly tell that
this new man, whichever he
may be, will be a -considerable,
worthy leader of the
United States.
BUT all the same,' the first
half of the year 1960 has
been darkened by disaster and
humiliation;, and these have
been made worse by the tor
rents of synthetic twaddle
poured out to obscure the
harsh outlines of the hard,
harsh fact. Merely as a counter-demonstration
then, it may
be pardonable to celebrate the
least synthetic thing that the
United States has produced in
1960, which happens to be a
book.
"Felix Frankfurther Rem
inisces" is a book without any
close parallel, as far as this
reporter can recall. The vol
umes nearest to it are the
books of "table talk" that
were fashionable a hundred
years ago - "The Table Talk
of Samuel Rogers," for in
stance, and the imitation of
the Rogers book was based on
the conversations of Justice
Story. But these were pruned,
dressed up, and dead as mut
ton, compared to this new
book of verbatim recordings
of Justice Frankfurter's spok
en recollections of his life.
This book - one may as
well say it boldly and plain
ly - Is nothing more or less
than a new American classic.
It is a minor classic, because
it is artless. Even the best
talk is bound to be artless, un
less retouched. It is classic,
all the same, because It is hu
man, funny, brave, noble,
Myrtlewood Plant
Burns at Delake
Delnke, Ore.- IUP0 -Firemen
battled for more than an hour
Monday a fire which blazed
through a myrtlewood factory
during gusty winds at this
beach community.
Fire Chief Bob Ballard of
the Taft-Nelscott-Dclake fire
department said the blaze
broke out about 2:30 p..n.
Firemen managed to keep
flames from spreading to a
nearby service station.
Gusty -23 mile per hour
winds plus stored varnishes
and thinners in the building
made it difficult to put out
the fire, Ballard said,
The blaze, which attracted
many holiday sightseers,
caused an estimated $30,000
damage. The plant, Wolf's
Myrtlewood, is located at the
south end of Delake.
Menace
MZS
tainlng, all In one splendcd
jumble.
rpHE stories are Incompar-
able. There is the anec
dote, too long for this space,
about how the august Henry
L. Stinson descended to call
ing another man an s.o.b
There is a later Secretary of
War, Lindley M. Garrison,
"a very nice man, very ill-
equipped for his Job," who
warned one of his assistants
proudly:
"I can assure you, once my
mind is closed, It s closed!
There is the wonderful de
scription, by the wife of the
senior Henry Morgcnthnu, of
how her vain, pretentious but
originally timid husband be
came first accustomed to and
then enchanted by the sound
of the human voice when pub
licly uttered by himself.
There is Justice Frankfurter's
own description of a famous
American proconsul, descend
ed from Ralph Waldo Emer
son, through whom the blood
of the Concord Sago "must
have passed without stop
ping." "He proved," remarks the
Justice, "that being disinter
ested and having a high sense
of public duty doesn't always
mean that you promote the
public good."
But the jokes and the por
traits which are unkind are
far less important In this
book, than the opinions on
public topics, so oddly pre
sented with mingled sharpness
and grandeur, and the admir
ing, even loving portraits of
towering figures like Bran-
deis and Holmes, the two
Roosevelts, Stimson and many
others.
AND these brilliantly life
like portraits of great men
from the crowded galleries of
a rich and crowded lite are
less important, in their turn,
than the unconscious and un
posed self-portrait of Justice
Frankfurter, which is the
whole book.
Somebody from Columbia
University poked a recording
machine at him. With some
reluctance, he talked his
memories into the machine,
not initially for publication
but for the histr... cal record,
The memories -wonderfully
enrich and enliven the record
Yet the best prize captured by
the recording machine is the
man himself who spoke Into
It - a man brisk and courag
eous and full of life, shrewd
as a peddler but oddly inno
cent too, sometimes uncon
sciously comic .but never ig
noble, and all his life pos
sessed and guided by the
highest, most truly glorious
idea of Americas meaning
and promise.
As you read this book, you
keep saying to yourscll;
"This Is what this man thinks
of our country, who came to
these shores as a skinny, pen
niless Jewish immigrant kid."
Try and Stop Me
By BENNETT CERF
THE TELEVISION PLUG or "payola" under fire in
Washington, was once dramatically exemplified on a
Jack Benny show. "Rochester," commanded Jack, "pass mc
my electrically heated
Best Better Electric Blan
ket" "Bossl Boss!" pro
tested Rochester, "you
ain't got no Rest Better
Electric Blanket." Benny
registered one of his
meaningful pauses, then
said, "I've got one NOW,
Rochester!"
e
Howard Van Smith tclta
of a farm family saddled
with a backward son. One
day they sent him out to
mako a count of the chicken
population. He returned
sadly perplexed. "1 couldn't do It, Paw," he confessed. "1 count
ed all of them up to 22 but there was one that kept running'
around and I couldn't count him."- . ,
-
Overheard In Los Angeles; "1 can't wait for them to finish
shooting that baseball plcturo, Sum-toe or OnmpaneUa.
O UM, by Burnett Cert. Distributed by King features flyndlctte
Foreign Notebook: Polaris for
Red Army
By PHIL NEWSOM
UPI Foreign Editor
From the foreign editor's
notebook:
Summit Aftermath
Tho iiilddlo-rimgo U.S. Po
laris missile, requiring u mini
mum of launching site, nuuie
a deep impies-
sinn on West
G e r mini De
fense Minister
Franz - Josef
Strauss w h o
believes It Is
just the thing
to relnto rc e
NATO's shield
In dentil. How-
iMiitNKWsii.M over, Strauss
is unwilling to give Moscow
further fuel for Us anti-German
campaign and believes
that NATO or some other
member of the alliance should
make the proposal adding Po
laris to the list of NATO
weapons.
Meanwhile, in London, U.S.
navel authorities predict that
two American nuclear sub
marines equipped with the
Polaris missile may be attach
ed to the U.S. 2nd Fleet In
the Atlantic by lute this year.
Later, another two probably
will be attached to the 6th
Fleet In the Mediterranean,
they add.
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 lor publication Is permissible. The Mall
Tribune reserves the right to edit all letters wllh a view to
clarification and condensation. Letters submitted for pub
lication must not exceed 400 words. The letters printed In
this column do not necossarily represent the views of the
paper; in fact the contrary is often the case.
Can Anyone?
To the Editor: If personally
conducted tours of diplomacy,
like those we have been re
galed with recently, are such
a howling success, why
doesn't Mr. Nixon, tlu Repub
lican, an experienced "tour
ist," come out and state: "We
Republicans will carry on;
will evangelize the world for
freedoms as never before?"
Surely the Vice President has
his election to the top job
cinched (so we are told) and
consequently will have eight
full years to put the commies
to rout on the diplomatic and
ideological levels. Isn't he
supposed to fit the shoes of
Ike; be like the Rock of Gi
braltar In fibre?
Of course Boss Mao Tse and
his office boy Nikita (address
Moscow) did vex and ruffle
our diplomatic protocol a bit,
but those slithery snakes
could not be expected to be
table broke. In fact, like their
ilk, they Just love to "spill the
beans" (as It were). Japan Is
an ally, though. And Nikita
was a virtual Prince Charm
ing to our President while he
was here.
We can always tell a Demo
crat . . . but we can't tell them
much! They pretend to be set
to do that which is necessary
to retrieve our once greater
nation's fortunes . . . but after
each election, with decisive
majorities in Congress. . . they
seem to stiffen up , . . like a
batter in a slump . . . and
lose their tongues and their
courage to act for the people
who elected them.
We are faced with an ac
complished fact . . . that in
four places we have been in
sulted; assaulted (Nixon in
Bolivia); dared (Cuba); and
accused. Is there a man among
It fills you with such pride
that you want to stand at at
tention, and it makes you
wish that more men were as
good Americans as Felix
Frankfurter, who has so often
been denounced as un-American.
(c) 1960, New York Herald
Tribune Inc.
Strength;
Missiles vs. Men
Moscow wonl lo consider
able lengths Inst week to re
port government efforts to
find suitable places 111 Rus
sia's economy for her demobil
ized army men. But while
Moscow Is giving tho Impres
sion of a continued reduction
of armed forces, Khrushchev
hus Issued Instructions to
strengthen tho fighting power
of the Soviet Union, lie told
graduates of Soviet military
academies It Is a "sacred
duty" lo strengthen Russia's
nrmcd forces In tho absenco
of a disarmament accord with
the West. Chief attention Is
directed toward rockets. Do
fonso Minister Rodlon Mnlln
ovsky strongly hinted at the
same time that training is
being concentrated on new
weapons while conventional
forces are being reduced.
Algerian Turmoil
Contacts looking toward a
cense fire finally have been
established between the
French government and the
rebel Algerian "provisional
government" of Premier Fer
hat Abbas, but It Is a weak
thread easily broken, Tho rob
els a ro complaining bitterly
that the preliminary contact
Indicated the French want
Abbas to come to Paris merely
to surrender his guerillas and
weapons lo the French, Tho
rebels demand negotiations on
equal fooling with President
us that could cope with these
four almost fatalistic nose
dives In our American career?
Certainly Nixon and Ken
nedy, with a torn nation
brought about by a singular
election, will not be able to
counter-act, let alone over
come, our single purposed foe.
Walter Gabriel,
IIowclls, Neb.
Semantics
To the Editor: Recently, In
an editorial In this paper the
term "semantics" was used.
The definition given was the
meaning of words.
This writer first heard the
word about 30 years ngo, but
none of his dictionaries re
cords It. Possibly some later
editions do. As it Is a word
used in conjunction with
brainwashing, It is handy to
opinion molders in any cate
gory; say, writers, lecturers,
teachers, lawyers and what
not. The technique Is especial
ly handy to politicians. It is
not so much the meaning of
words as it is the connotation
of words and phrases, expres
sions that carry an emotional
implication or impact. For ex
ample: Home, mother and
poor little children, rough
neck, silk stockings, white col
lar, communist, egg head, Mc
Carthylsm, Santa Claus, capi
talism, freedom, free world,
democracy, -Iron Curtain, Hlt-
lcrlsm.
Our president Is very fond
of the word "freedom." He
uses it on all and each occa
sion whether it is fitting or
not. But to him It means
what he wants It to mean,
and as he is the president,
well, you take the ball from
there.
He used the slogan bor
rowed from the Russians:
Peace and Friendship. Yet
that did not suit him. He had
to add to It. What did ho add?
Did he say: Peace and Friend
ship and Plenty for All? No.
Nor did he mention "Dear
Old Dad and Mom." Nor
Health for the Aged. What
he said was "Pence and
Friendship In Freedom." As
he was on his way to visit
Democrats and Dictators, the
meaning of his slogan is
rather vague. But then he got
to use the word and whatever
It meant he got it said. No
doubt the whole nation thrill
ed. The term Is semantic.
Richard Nixon, when run
ning for the United States
Senate in California, had Mrs.
Douglas as his opponent, She
was U. S. Representative at
the time. There was nlso a
communist-line representative
from New York In the house
then. Mr. Nixon In his cam
paign against Helen Douglas
used semantics in a geometri
cal style. He argued that Mrs.
Douglas voted the same way
that Marcuntonlo the com-murilst-llno
congressman did;
therefore, as things equal to
the same thing are equal to
each other, Helen Douglas
must be a communist. There
we have semantics. By the
same token it might be Im
piled that as Richard Nixon
drank to Peace' and Friend
ship with the Russian hend
man ho too Is a communist,
Another case of semantics,
Walter Recce,
Gnllce rd.,
Merlin, Ore.
Algerian Discussion
De Gnullo and this ono Issue
could stalemate Iho Issue for
months.
Ike Visit Sidelight
In Tokyo, It Is roportod the
Jispunvsu aucrut service learn
ed shortly before President
Elsenhower's scheduled visit
to Tokyo Unit 40,000 ultra
rightists were merging on
Washington Report
By WILLIAM
CUBAN INFECTION
Washington - While public
attention Is fixed upon our
domestic political drama, the
1 Info ctlon In
Cuba Is reach
ing tho point
of Intolerable
danger tu the
free world In
this hemis
phere. This la not
the Judgment
nt m.r- K-
Wlllum S. , . ,' "
While ii'iuni M lavs-
slonal "nntl-communlsls" who
see Moscow agents every
where. It Is the coolly consid
ered conviction of elevated
and truly liberal political
leaders of South America with
whom this correspondent hus
talked.
These leaders havo told our
statu department plainly Hint
Hdol Castro has permitted
Cuba to become nothing less
than a bridgehead for Soviet
Communism within 100 miles
of the United Stales. They
have told the state depart
ment plainly that Castro Is
spending vast sums whether
his own or Russian money
they do not say -all through
Latin America to destroy
Washington's leadership In
this hemisphere.
And they havo suggested to
the state department, polite
ly, that the United States gov
ernment has so far fulled lo
explain the realities to the
American people, of whom
only a tiny minority hus any
notion whatever of the facts
of life in Cuba.
THESE urgent representa
tions explain. In part, why
the state department has now
at last publicly admitted that
its soft line toward Castro is
being abandoned. A more
compelling reason for the
chnngo, however, has been
Congress itself.
Congress has been many
months ahead of the diplo
mats in recognizing the true
nature of the Castro menace.
This has been due almost
wholly to a single determined
senator, George Smathcrs of
Florida. The administration,
for illustration, has now ac
cepted what ll so long resist
ed - the principle of reducing
the large sugar subsidy we
grant to Cuba.
This small step, however -If
and when actually taken -will
be only the barest begin
ning toward the development
of a policy adequate to quar
antine the Castro virus,
e e
IT remains clear that the
United States can never af
ford to take the slightest mil
itary measure against Castro.
World opinion would auto
matically bellow "Imperial
ism," even though Castro's
open alliance with tho Soviet
Union plainly indicates thai
If anybody Is preparing ag
gression, it Is surely not the
"Yankee colossus," the United
States.
It is becoming equally clear,
however, that the whole field
of Latin-Amcrioun relations
will be rc-examlncd by the
new administration and new
Congress arriving In January.
Our ablest Latin - American
Counsel With . . .
Mr. Insurance Fred Brennan
Fred R. Brennan, C.I.A.
PHONE
SP 3-7343
MEDFORD
INSURANCE
. AGENCY
27 NORTH HOLLY ST.
NATO;
Tokyo lo be on hand for tha
arrival, ready lo fight n pitch
ed battle wllh the leftist
Zengiikuron student organiza
tion which opposed Hie visit.
In Hie violence which might
have followed, It wan feared
the President's mid thn em
peror's safely could nut bo
giini'iuilccd. Thus, tho Inst
minute cancellation.
S. WHITE
friends believe that In our
own Interests (and admitted
ly In their Interest, too) we
must consider something Ilka
a small Marshall plan for this
hemisphere.
Tho problem Is now reckon
ed to bo similar In principle!
lo the one wo faced In ICuropa
Immediately after the war.
Want mid chaos must be end
ed lest communism uses want
and chaos to entrench Itself.
AS to the military side of
tho problem, Senator
Similiters' tireless recommen
dations for a hemisphere se
curity force under Iho organ.
Izntlon of American stales are
now making somo headway.
They were once wholly Ignor
ed. Now It ran be said Hint
some men, both in the admin
istration and In Congress, are
showing a willingness at least
to examine the proposnl,
This Is a real gain. And so
Is the fact that professional
"liberals," who In the begin
ning howled Castro up as a
kind of secular snlnl, have
ceased their syrupy eulogies
of this bearded, this sensltlvo,
this poetic lyncher.
It Is even possible that for
Iho first time In modern his
tory the great complex of dlf.
(lenity that Is Latin America
may become Involved In the
presidential cnmpulgn Itself
ns nn Issue of consequence. It
Is no longer possible lo look
at this hemisphere ns a tow.
priority foreign policy nren.
It Is becoming absolutely nec
essary to look homeward ns
well ns across the seas.
(Copyright. 1960. by United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.)
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