Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, December 16, 1954, Image 4

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    FOUR MEDFORD (OREGON)
MedfordOITribuot
"Everybody id Southern Oregon
Red The Mail Tribune"
Published Daily Except Saturday bj
MEDFORD PRINTING CO.
27-29 North Fir St Phone 2-9141
p7mrnTw num. VMtnr
KERB GREY. Advertising Manager
X. C. FERGUSON. Managing Editor
ERIC ALLEN JR., City Editor
HARRY CHIP MAN. Telegraph Editor
RICHARD JEWETT. Sports Editor
OLIVE STARCHER- Society Editor
JACK JACKSON. Sunday Editor
GERALD LATHAM. Circulation Mgr.
An Independent Newapaper
Entered as second das matter at
Medlord. Oregon, under Act
March 3. 1897
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troit San Francisco. Los Angeles
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ASSOCIATION
NATION aCeDIT
,ieditokial
Flight o' Time
Medlord and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30 and
40 years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
Dee. IB, 1944
(It was Saturday)
War Shipping administration
reveals that tanker ship SS
Jacksonville, named for Jack
sonville, Ore., was sunk in the
Atlantic by a German subma
rine. From Arthur Perry's " Ye
Smudge Pot column: Ice froze
on mud puddles every morning
last week, but all the janitors
forgot to wet down the side
walks with a garden hose.
20 YEARS AGO
Dec 16, 1934
(It was Sunday)
Junior high school PTA spon
sors farewell party for Princi
pal and Mrs. B. R. Finch who
are leaving for Eugene and ad
vanced study at University of
Oregon. ,
Local furniture store adver
tises bedroom suites for $26.95,
occasional chairs for $6.75 and
9 by 12 Axminister rugs for $16.
30 YEARS AGO
Dee. 16, 1924
(It was Tuesday)
Medford covered by snow; po
lice announce that boys who
throw snowballs at pedestrians
will face arrest.
Oregon supreme court studies
Jacksonville bank failure case.
40 YEARS AGO
Dec. 16, 1914
(It was Wednesday) .
Medford ?Egg and Poultry
warehouse destroyed by fire
started by "cigarette thrown
away by careless tramp."
Medford inventor declares he
has discovered a way to make
dynamite out of sawdust.
What's the Answer?
(Can You Get 4 of the 7?)
Copr. 19S4. Editorial Research Report
1. The Salvation Army has
operated in the U. S. for 25, 50,
75, 100 or more than 100 years?
2. Which of these states has
the shortest coast line: Alabama,
Delaware, New Hampshire,
Rhode Island, South Carolina?
3. The great pyramids of
Egypt were built for defense,
as tombs for kings, to study the
stars, as altars f or . sacrifice, or
as palaces?
4. President Eisenhower has
averaged one press conference
every five days, week, XVi
weeks, two weeks, or one month?
5. What is a member of the
Society of Friends usually call
ed? "
6. The British Chancellor of
the Exchequer corresponds to
the U. S. Secretary of: State, the
Interior, Defense, the Treasury,
or Commerce? -
7. A morganatic marriage is
a union outside of wedlock;
right or wrong? :.
The answers:. 1. 75 years. 2.
New Hampshire. 3. As lombs for
kings. 4. One every" iiye days.
5. A Quaker. 6. Secretary of the
Treasury. 7. Wrong; ' if s one
with the ' wife of lower . social
status than the husband. .
FOUL EXCHANGE
St Petersburg, Fla. J.R)
Mrs. A. L. Tucker complained to
police that a thief took a clean
pair of her husband's trousers
from her clothesline and left a
dirty pair of dungarees in their
place.
MAIL TRIBUNE
Why Not Balance the Budget?
Senator Byrd of Virginia has a one-track mind.
It runs to just one station "balance the budget, pay
off the national debt"
The. Virginia Senator is consistent. He attacked
the financial practices of the Democrats under Roose
velt and Truman, and now he is attacking the Repub
licans under Eisenhower. We quote :
"The foremost plank in President Eisenhower's cam
paign was the promise of a balanced budget. A reduction
' of 7 this year would place our financial affairs on
a pay-as-you-go basis without increasing taxes. In the
third year of his administration it is time he fulfilled his
campaign pledge. We have given away 40 billion to for- .
eign nations all of which has been added to the public
debt. The first thing we should do is to eliminate aid to
other countries. If we continue to play Santa Claus to
people at home and half of the world abroad we can ex- ,
pect nothing but collapse of our currency with all of its
terrible consequences."
In other words,- cut off the rest of the world, raise
our own iron curtain, cut out the theory of promoting
the "public welfare" at home and we will all be
saved. On the other hand, go on the way the present
administration is going, (and the two preceding it)
and we will go the way of Greece and Rome, to
bankruptcy, ruin and destruction.
In the same public statement, however, the Sen
ator from Virginia safys he regards . Secretary Hum
phrey "as one of the ablest men who ever guided the
U.S. Treasury."
Yet in the same statement he maintains that this
"most able" Secretary is. advocating a course that
he (Byrd) claims means national destruction.
TPHERE would seem to" be a certain inconsistency
here!
' Jt is hard to believe that one of the most able
Treasury Secretaries in our history would deliberate
ly advocate a program that would end in complete
financial collapse.
This most able Secretary can't regard this pro
gram as catastrophic as
does, or he wouldn t propose it. .
On the other hand, if he is wrong on this mosl
vital matter, how can. he
Secretaries, of the Treasury "since Alexander Hamil
ton? ' - ; ..- v
"UR advice to Senator
"heart-to-heart" talk
men wjio has ever guided the U.S. Treasury" and get
the Secretary's reasons for not balancing the budget
at the present time.
We are fairly sure one
that this country faces a serious crisis. -We are not at
war, not a hot one at least but we are in a cold
war, and we must be strong enough to resist or
better, prevent-a hot one.
To do that takes billions.
As for sending money
Claus "rive-away" it is a
part of increasing world
nist aggression and so preventing war. It is not given
to help other nations so much as to help and protect
ourselves.- That adds up, as stated, to more billions
to prevent another world
peace. "Hooey" declares
BUT consider the alternative, Senator.
year of World War II cost us 800 billion! What is
3 or 4 billion a year to aid resistance to Communism'
compared to 800 billion :
As to-promoting the
would Senator Byrd if
. - . -
Treasury advocate the complete elimination oi tnat
program, call it New' Deal, Fair Deal or whatever
epithet you prefer. We doubt it very much. The Eisen
hower administration never has. -.J. v..-
7VERYONE would of course LIKE to balance the
-national budsret and tav off the national debt
tomorrow if possible. That
And it is very easy tor any benator on eitner side
of the. aisle to demand it.
But how many of them if they were in the Presi
dent's shoes, or the shoes of his Secretary of the
Treasury at this time and who had their responsibil
ities, insist upon doing this, and taking the national
consequences of such action?
Perhaps Senator Byrd who suffers from an obses
sion in the direction of economy would.
But if so he would soon be verv lonesome indeed
and he would be out of a job
Western Railroads Sue
Kansas City Truck Firm
.' Washington (U.R) Twenty-three
western railroads filed counter
claims for 100,000,000 in dam
ages in U.S. District Court to
day against Riss and Co., Kan
sas City, trucking firm.
The railroads charged "illegal
and unauthorized operations by
Riss in hauling of explosives and
other commodities between cer
tain points in the West over a
period of 12 years."
Silent Propulsion of
Whales Kept Secret
Washington (U.PJ The Navy
has decided to keep secret a re
port prepared by the Woods
Hole Oceanographic Institution
entitled "Silent .Propulsion of
Whales."
The report is concerned with
the reasons whales make no
noise while swimming.
WEATHER By United Press
Northern California: Fair ex
cept fog from Sacramento to
Bakersfield this, morning,, de
creasing in extent.
Thursday, December 16, 1954
the Senator from Virginia
be one of the most , able
Byrd would be to have a
"with one. of the most able
reason would be. the laci
abroad, that is not a Santa
part and . an important
wide resistance to tommu
war and preserve world
tne senator irom Virginia.
.
public welfare at home,
he were Secretary of the
. All 1
would be just dandy.
in a very short time !
K.W.K.
Year-Old Marriage of
'Corliss Archer Told
Hollywood U.R) Ann Baker,
22-year-old actress who plays 15-year-old
Corliss Archer on tele-
j vision, nas been married zor a
year xo ousmessman n.an J-iong,
her production company re
vealed. A spokesman for ZIV televi
sion programs admitted the
marriage yesterday, saying ef
forts had been made to keep the
marriage a secret because it was
felt that it might not be in char
acter with the teen-age role she
played. .
SUGGESTED BIBLE ;
READING
The American Bible So
ciety, the Medford Ministerial
Association and the Medford
Council of Church Women
are cooperating in sponsoring
daily Bible reading in the
period between Thanksgiving
and Christmas. -
The suggested scripture
reading for today is:-
John 17.
The End of McCarthy?
There was a very appropriate slogan in our Christ
mas street parade a week or so ago.
It went something like this:
"Have good will toward men and you will have peace
on earth."
Yes it is just as simple as that But you must get
the good will FIRST, v.
Today there is so much ill will spread all over the
poor old planet we inhabit, and so little will that
is good, it looks at times pretty hopeless.
'..
Which brings up another appropriate Christmas
thought that deserves more prominence than it re
ceived, one reason being it was not designed as
such. 1 . t
It was a statement of David E. Lilienthal former
chairman of the A.E.C. talking to the Chicago Sunday
Evening club recently on the general subject of "the
state of the nation" with particular application to
McCarthy and McCarthyism.
Here it is in brief, quote :
"America's greatness depends upon the degree to which
Individuals demonstrate sensitivity to "what is right and . '
good, and what is wrong and evil."
'The building of individual character is a greater shield
against national adversity than any armament, including .
the hydrogen bomb." .
"A nation of men and women who live each day with a
concern for wnat is right and fair and decent, who have a
deep faith in man and in God such nation has generated
within itself a moral force, an energy, so great that not aU
the power marshalled by science, not even the energies
released by the atomic bomb and the hydrogen bomb can
compare with it in might and power."
"The coarse, cynical, bullying type of public figure is
swept into obscurity, when the "quiet responsible people
show they have ha.d enough."
We hope the wish is not the father of the thought,
but we have a pious idea the 'time has about, come
when the "quiet, responsible people," are about ready
to demonstrate they HAVE had enough. Enough of
McCarthy and McCarthyism. R.W.R. .
Matter of Fact
RECURRING NIGHTMARE
Saigon, Viet Nam Here in
Saigon, although the surface of
life is immensely pleasing, the
memory of the
end of free
China comes
back like a re
curring night
mare. ;
Once again an
American gen
eral this time
Lawton Collins
. has a big
oart to play
Joseph Alsop Gen. Collins' di-
rective no doubt
shows considerably more politic
al realism than the directive
James F. Byrnes gave Gen,
fieoree C. Marshall: but that
may not help greatly in the end
For once again the effort to
find a solution is complicated
to put it very mildly by the
personal ambitious and intrigues
of the politicians on tne scene
It is never easy, apparently, for
people to remember that their
private enmities do not matter
very much when the enemy is at
the gates.
Because of this all too common
failure of memory, and also be
cause of a certain naivete in
past American policy making,
there has been a serious crisis
here in the last week. Our nai
vete consisted in giving all-out
support to President Ngo Dinh
Diem without any very clear
idea of what he would do with
his power when he achieved it.
More than once, the Ameri
can embassy intervened to pre
vent President Diem from be
ing physically ejected from the
leadership of South Viet Nam
during his quarrel .with Gen,
Nguyen Van Hinh and the Viet
namese army. The idea seems to
have been that if only Gen. Hinh
could be got out of the way, all
would automatically be well.
Similar illusions used to be cher
ished in somewhat similar cir
cumstances in Chungking.
The reasons for the American
commitment to Diem were good
reasons. He is scrupulously hon
est. He is extremely courageous.
He is too stout a nationalist to
be regarded as a French puppet,
which is a fatal label here now
adays. TTNFORTUNATELY, however,
President-Diem, although a
devout Christian, takes his po
litical ideas from the ancient
maxim of Confucius: "To put
the country in order, the Son of
Heaven needs only , to have a
pure heart and to sit facing
south." The rapid Communist
penetration of South Viet Nam
seems to trouble him very lit
tle. - .--
In addition, President Diem Ss
chiefly influenced, by - his own
family, who largely compose the
government; and he is particular
ly influenced by his brother Net
it a . .
vmn iau, ana ine Tigerish Ma
dame Ngo Dinh Nhu, who is in
turn the daughter of the Viet
namese ambassador in Washing
ton and the niece of the foreign
minister.
When the quarrel with Gen.
Hinh was finally ended by Gen.
Hum's removal from the army
leadership, the Americans here,
ana - even tne less optimistic
French, naturally supposed that
President Diem would immedi
ately establish a strong and ef
ficient government. " Above all,
that most intimate collaboration
was needed between the civil
authorities and the Vietnamese
army, which is the only serious
By Joseph Alsop
instrument of order in the coun
try. The obvious step was to re
place ' Gen. Hinh with Gen.
Nguyen Van Vy, a combat sol
dier who enjoys even greater
confidence in the army than Gen.
Hinh. But President Diem and
his brother and sister-in-law
wanted above all, personal pow
er over the army.
They therefore insisted on
naming a junior officer with no
real strength, Gen. Le Van Ty,
as Chief of Staff of an army al
ready wildly 'disorganized and
on the threshold of rebellion.
The ' dislike of Generalissimo
Chiang Kai-shek and Madame
Chiang for the , capable and
brave Gen. Chen Chang, and
thjeir clinging to their creature,
Gen. Ho 'Ying-chin, were Jn
short reproduced here on a small
scale!, but in even more urgent
circumstances.
The immediate result has
been the crisis above noted, in
the course of which Gen. Col
lins and the wise' French com
mander Gen. Ely have worked
together intimately. It is known
that Gen. Collins has used some
very nara words to President
Diem. The outcome, as there
words are written, seems, to be
a compromise.
PRESIDENT Diem's favorite,
Gen. Ty, will become Chief
of Staff; but the responsibility
of troop command will go to
Gen. Vy, and the brave and ef
ficient Phan Huy Quat will be
named Minister of Defense. The
theory is that this complex con
traption, so reminiscent of j. the
political contraptions put togeth
er in Chungking and Nankmg,
will somehow work to save the
day. .
Maybe the contraption really
win work, or a better substitute,
will be devised. Gen. Collins is
doing his quite remarkable best.
So is 1"Jen. Ely. And among the
Vietnamese leaders men of cour
age and foresight are by no
means lacking. .
But it is already time to pre
pare for the possible shocks of
the future. Gen. Marshall was
sent to China to arrange a coal
ition government because this
seemed, at that time, was the
best and cheapest; above all the
cheapest way out of a bad
business. Gen. Collins has been
sent to glue something together
here for precisely the same rea
sons. To be sure, coalition'gov
ernment would not have averted
the loss of China, whereas Gen.
Collins' success can avert the loss
of the rest of Indo-China. Yet
the motives of his mission still
limit, his effort. And just as the
loss of China prepared the dis
aster here, so loss of the remains j
of Indo-China will in turn pre
pare an even larger disaster in
Asia.
(Copyright, 1954, New York
Tribune Inc.)
Bridgeport, Conn. U.R) Miss
Anna Nurse is a nurse at a local
hospital. ;
YOU HAVE SEEN THEM ON TV
I SHEAFFER SNORKEL
PARKER "51" JOTTER
. PAPERMATE CAPRI .
You can buy them from
a complete selection at
Walt Young's MEDFORD STATI ONERY
210 East Main - Q ; . Phone 2-6780 . ; ;' '
omimiiiiifflee May (Saaose WfaoagDe
Washington U.R) The first
big wrangle of the mcommg
84th Congress may come over a
proposal to clip the wings of the
House Rules Committee.
Some Democrats with liberal
leanings fear a conservative
Democratic-Republican c o a 1 i
tion may dominate the . commit
tee. They are considering an at
tempt - to revive a previous
House rule under which legis
lative committees could bypass
it.
The Democrats tried this pro
posal in the 81st Congress of
1949-50, but scrapped it in the'
Congress that met in 1951. Sev
eral important bills went
through the House in 1949-50
under the procedure restricting
the power of the Rules Commit
tee. .
The Rules Committee's power
comes from the unique position
it holds in the House. Legisla
tive committees, such as the
Agriculture or Ways and Means
committees, draft legislation.
But the Rules Committee deter
mines which bills are to be tak
en up on the floor and when.
It can, and sometimes does,
pigeonhole a bill which has the
approval of a legislative com
mittee. Under the procedure,
which some Democrats are talk
ing of trying to revive, the chair
man of a legislative committee
could on his own initiative call
up a bill bearing the approval
of his committee if the Rules
Committee has not acted within
Communications
Letters to the Editor must bear
the name and address of the writer
although under certain circum
stances the use of a pen name or
initial for publication is permis
sible. The Mail Tribune reserves
the right to edit all letters with an
eye to clarification and condensa
tion. Letters submitted for publica
tion must not exceed 400 words.
G.O.C. Appreciative
To the Editor: The coopera
tion your paper has displayed in
its many releases in conjunc
tion with the Ground Observer
Corps program conducted by the
U.S. Air Force has come to my
attention and it is in indeed
gratifying.
With all the attempts that we
of the Air Force make in indi
cating our appreciation to the
members of the Ground Observ
er Corps for their untiring ef
fort in fulf llling voluntarily
this important part of the pro
gram of defending our nation, it
could be no better supplement
ed than to have the editors of
fine newspapers such as yours
recognize the patriotic Ameri
cans who are constantly giving
up many hours of their time in
the performance of a self-impos
ed, duty. We are well aware ; Of
the impact that that newspaper
media has on the public. Support
of the type your newspaper has
given our project is' a tremen
dous boost to the morale of the
citizens in your community who
are members of the ground Ob
server Corps. Further, it is a
great aid in the recruiting
problem.
We feel that editors such as
yourself who continue to sup
port the Ground Observer Corps
program certainly are an integ
ral part of this vital project.
Please accept my personal
thanks and appreciation for
vour understanding and sincer
ity of purpose in this important
endeavor.
Owen F. Clarke :.
Colonel, USAF .
Project Officer ;
t Ground Observer Corps
'Washington, D-C.
Christmas Feast
Said To Cost Less
Portland (U.R) The Christ
mas feast will cost Oregonians
less this .year than last
whether it features turkey or
ham. ; -v
Ttirkey prices for. holiday
buying will be announced .by re
tailers in their big Friday ad
vertising splurge and they are
expected to be In line with
Thanksgiving prices of 43 to 53
cents a. pound for birds cleaned
and drawn. That is about 10 to
15 cents cheaper than a year ago.
At wholesale, ham prices are
some o to li cents less man
1953 holiday prices. The pre-;
vailing price in most markets is
expected to be around 59 cents
a pound. - ...
Air Patrol Turned Cops
Pass Out Tickets Freely
Edenburg, Tex. ftJ.R)--Mem-
bers of the Edinburg Civil Air
Patrol were deputized Wednes
day to help city; police enforce
traffic laws. ' - :,
- During the day they gave jay
walking tickets to City Judge
Clayton R. Baird, Sheriff E. E.
Vickers and a policeman. They
ticketed City Manager J. W.
Harrison's auto for iUegal parking-.-
. A'.;i'V. " ' :"
21 days to give the biU a green
light
Committee Lineup
The historic lineup on the
Rules Committee is eight mem
bers of the majority party, and
four members of the minority
party. In the next Congress this
will mean eight Democrats and
four Republicans. "
Two of the Democrats, includ
ing the next chairman, Rep.
Russia's East Europe
Army
Selects
As Headquarters Base
By CHARLES M. MC CANN
United Press Correspondent
Poland, it is reported, is to be
come the general headquarters
for staff operations in Russia's
new Eastern
European mil
itary set-up.
Military
planning for
Poland, Czech
oslovakia and
East Germany
are .lo be cen
tered m .War
saw," according
to advices from
West Berlin.
Chanen McCann It 15 reported
also that Marshal Konstantin
Rokossovsky, the Polish defense
minister, may be made the com
mander-in-chief of a combined
Soviet satellite fighting force. . .
These developments would not
be surprising. Poland is the larg
est of the Kremlin's satellites,
with a population of 25,01)0,000.
Its armed forces number about
450,000 men, and its army is
modeled closely after that of the
Soviet Union. Poland, in fact,
might be called a bulwark of
satellite military strength.
But what a bulwark! Poland is
a bulwark sustained not by the
Polish people but by : ruthless
Communist overlords, secret po
lice, spies and courts which mete
out sentences v to slave -labor,
prison or the gallows. And Po
land is in the same situation as
the other satellites and of Rus
sia itself, for that matter.'
Loyalty Would Be Doubtful
What it adds up to is that the
Polish ., army : would .; be -com
pletely untrustworthy, in a war
between East and West,, and so
would be the armies of East Ger
many and the other satellite
countries. .- ". '
Take .Rokossovsky.' He Is Polish-born..
But he had a pro-Rus
sian Background in Czarist days
and he went to Russia in 1914
when he was 18. He became a
Communist and rose to marshal
in the Russian, not the Polish
army. In 1949 he went back to
Poland as defense minister. He
Persons Hurt
In Train Derailment
Miles City, Mont. U.R)
Seven cars of the crack North
ern Pacific North Coast Limited
passenger tram were derailed
near here today, injuring an
estimated 16 to 17 persons. -
An attending physician ' said
that "three or four", of the in
jured were in serious condition.
A railroad spokesman said the
train, a diesel limited, was de
railed at about 5:15 a.m. about
one mile east of Ft. Koegh, a
suburb qf Miles' City. Two cars
stayed on the track. - '
Officials said the. derailment
apparently was caused by a
broken rail, which entered the
dormitory car, where the train
porters were asleep.
DAV Announces Plans
For Christmas Party
Chapter 8. Disabled American
Veterans, will hold its annual
Christmas party Monday, Dec.
20, at 7:30 p.m. in the DAV
building at 1515 North River
side ave., it was announced to
day. v
At the last business meeting
James R. Lillie, past commander
of the chapter, was elected chap
lain to succeed Alvin O. Young,
who was unable to continue in
the office for reasons of health.
Lillie previously served in the
office for several terms. . -
It is OUR responsibility to relieve yob v
fromjhe many details involved in ar-
ranging for a funeral service.
CHAPEL
Frank Morgan . . Harold Snodgrass
. ' Funtral Directors 4-
-ty
Office of Deputy Coroner ... Phone 2-8030
Howard W. Smith (D-Va.), are
conservatives who often vote
with the Republicans. The sec
ond Democratic, conservative is
Rep. William M. Colmer CD
Miss.), .; .',
Hence, there could be a con
servative coalition of two Demo
crats ; and : four Republicans.
This prospect has many -Democrats,
including some from the
South, concerned. t
Warsaw
went- not as a Pole but as a
Russian Communist, to help whip
the country ' in 'line with Com
munism. Take the Army. The authori
tative and objective "States
man's Year Book" saysr .
"Officers are required to learn
Russian. A considerable propor
tion of the higher commanding
posts is occupied by Russians cfr
former Soviet officers (partly of
Polish origin)." . .
Get Out the Vote
- The official Polish news agen
cy PAP reported on Dec. 8 that
the people of 11 small towns had
been forced to go back to the
polls and vote for candidates for
Communist "people's councils."
The reason was, PAP said, that
people did not bother to vote. in
the real election on Dec. 4.
A refugee Polish doctor told
Radio Free Europe in Munich,
iermany, that the number of in
sane patients in Polish mental
hospitals had jumped 500 per
cent under the blessings of Com
munism. '
These are just a couple of
straws in the wind. But West
German Chancellor Konrad Ad
enauer, asking ratification of .the
treaties, for West German arma
ment, predicted that Russia de
spite all its threats will be will
ing to sit down and negotiate
with the West after the treaties
have been approved finally by
all signatory countries. ' "
Considering the situation in
Poland, it would be a bold bet.
tor '-who would offer o,dds; that
he is wrong. ; . , ;
MIRRO
THf flMfSf AltlMlNtMC
STANDARD S!ZC
BAKE XI m
look far w yiim4 m to henoa. J
Fre Parking Free Delivery
SPECIALISTS IN HOMEWARES
CENTRAL POINT MEDFORD
MORTUARY