Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, February 22, 1955, Image 4

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    FOUR MEDFORD (OREGON)
MedfordUWribuni
"veryoody iu ooutnern Oregon
Reads The Mail Tribune"
Published Daily Except Saturday by
MUt UKU rtun iniu
27-29 North Fir St.
Phone 2-6141
ROBERT W. RUHL. Editor
HERB GREY. Advertising Manager
E. C. FERGUSON. Managing Editor
ERIC ALLEN JR.. City Editor
HARRY CHJPMAN. Telegraph Editor
RICHARD JEWETT. Sports Editor
OLIVE STARCHER. Society Editor
JACK JACKSON, Sunday Editor
GERALD LATHAM. Circulation Mgr.
An Independent Newspaper
Entered as second class matter at
Medford. Oregon, under Act of
March 3. 1897
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Official Paper of the City of Medford
.1 I . n M V.-ba.n n I ...
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NATIONAL E DITOtlAl
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'iliiUMI-1
NEWSPAPEt
PUBLISHERS
ASSOCIATION
Flight o' Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30 and
40 years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
Feb. 22, 1945
(It was Thursday)
Technical staff for Red Cross
benefit play to be given at Holly
theater includes Mrs. Richard
H. Alley, Mrs. Tom Emmens,
Mrs. Wilton White, Mrs. Fred
Greene, and Mrs. Deborah Tumy
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot Column: Owners
of cocktail shakers have sent
them to war. They double as
churns. The buttermilk there
from is used in pancake batter,
and the butter used to grease
finished product.
20 YEARS AGO
Feb. 22, 1935
(It was Friday)
Enrico Caruso Jr., son of famed
tenor, to present concert in Med'
ford at Craterian theater.
' Washington grade school wins
city grade school basketball
championship with team com
posed of Frank Dixon, Jack Still
well, .Billy Thorndike, Frank
Rogers, Glen Jewett, Dee Park
er, Vern Kellenbeck and Donald
Wood.
30 YEARS AGO
Feb. 22, 1925 ;
(It was Sunday)
Pair held in Mexico as De
Autremont brothers, sought for
Siskiyou tunnel holdup and mur
. ders.
"Bobbed hair" style adopted
by scores of girls and women
in Medford area. ..
40 YEARS AGO
Feb. 22, 1915
(It was Monday)
Excavation work starts for
new Federal building at Holly
and Sixth sts. .
Medford Jitney club presents
a social dance at St. Mark's hall.
What's Ihe Answer?
(Can You Get 4 of the 7?)
Copr. 1955, Editorial Research Report
1. More or less than three
fourths of all workers in large
city factories are union mem
bers? 2. Which had the longest run
on Broadway: Abie's Irish Rose,
Life with Father, Oklahoma,
South Pacific, Tobacco Road?
3. Minimum pay for an en
listed man in the Army is now
more or less than $75 a month?
4. Which has the highest dol
lar sales: Allied Stores, May
Stores, R. H. Macy, J. C. Penney
chain, Marshall Field?
5. The "Black Sox Scandal" of
a generation ago was in baseball,
national politics, basketball,
Wall Street, or college football?
6. Average unemployment
benefit' now being paid in the 48
states is around $15, $20, $25,
$30, or $35 a week?
7. A Cosmetologist works in a
physics laboratory, ' fireworks
factory, dressmaking shop, ob
servatory, or beauty parlor?
The Answers: 1. More than
three-fourth. 2. Life with Father.
3. Slightly more than $75. 4. J.
C. Penney chain. 5. Baseball.
6. Around $25 a week as na
tional average. 7. Beauty parlor.
A USEFUL SIGN v-
Huntingdon, Tenn. . (U.R)
Eldon Roark had no use for a
used yard sign which read "The
Eldon Roarks" and mailed it to a
stranger with the same name in
another city 100 miles away.
MAIL TRIBUNE
Russian Communism Fails
Once upon a time, long long ago, it was stated in
this department that the totalitarian government of
Russia had within itself the seeds of its own destruc
tion. Well it has taken a long time to materialize but
it really looks now as though there might have been
some truth in that declaration. -
pOR IF the current reports are true or a majority
of them, the motive force of the Russian world
revolution is steadily declining. :
For that force was based upon the claim that the
so-called "dictatorship of the proletariat" would
bring a new and better day for the human race; not
for the privileged few, but for the masses, and as the
masses in every country comprise a large majority,
communism would therefore sweep over the world,
and what is known as private capitalism, would dis
appear. THHAT BELIEF, the corner stone of communist
propaganda and doctrine, has now been tested
for over 35 years, and instead of being confirmed has
been discredited, instead of improving the conditions
of the Russian people as a whole, the reverse has been
true. ,
That at least is what one cleans from the state
ments made, not by enemies of Russia, but by the
Russian leaders themselves, explaining the recent de
motion of former Premier Malenkov.
AGRICULTURE particularly has declined. Yields
per acre and total yields have gone down. There
are fewer cattle in Russia today than there were be
fore the revolution. In some districts there have been
famines, and meanwhile the millions of. Russians m
exile or slaverv camps, have steadily increased, add
ing to popular misery and discontent.
NOW THE proof of the pudding is in the eating.
f.vpti if these renorts have been exasperated
some of them probably have
doubt of one' thing, to wit:
That dm-ine- the nast
living and social conditions in. the free democratic
world have improved amazingly, while the same con
ditions in Soviet Russia have remained relatively
stationary or have declined.
And where the individual has enioyed well being
and personal liberty under democracy there has been
a complete absence of both under the Russian dicta
torship.'
IT WOULD be foolish to claim and we are not
nloi'TYn'nrT Viat tVio "Russian rnmnrmnist regime is
VICI-L-LIXIXCL wwv v
now on its last legs, or promises to be overtnrown to
morrow or next day or so long, as it controls the
1 11 - J ' iT-J. J.J....
ponce ana me army ior-
But we are claiming
lieve is convincing" that
or successful government,
failed to redeem its claims
some unlikely miracle is
eventually doomed.
DUSSIAN propaganda is devilishly clever, and the
truth about Russia is hard for the outside world
to obtain, but the "Big Lie" in the long run can no
more be successful over there than it has been over
here.
So when the TRUTH
is now being admitted by
the us: will be up as
conquest by Soviet Russia
i a ii j ji
simple iact mat notning
nothing fails like failure
ernment.
Totalitarian communism as practised in Russia
has been tried out in the crucible of. experience for
nearly -four decades now,
free democracy has FAILED. R.W.R.;
Disgraceful
The people of Oregon can well be proud of their
Board of Higher Education and the liberal and truly
American policies of the institutions it governs.
The people of the state of Washington should be
ashamed of both !
POR THE President of the University of Washing
V ton was recently upheld by the Board of Regents
in his denial of free speech, by refusing to allow the
famous nuclear scientist, J. Robert Oppenheimer, to
deliver a lecture before the students of that institution
of learning. The students rebelled as did many mem
bers of the faculty, but the apostle of bigotry and
prejudice as well as guilt by association now at
iL 1 i if " : i. Lj j 7
tne neaa oi mis great institution oi learning stood
firm, and he has apparently won out.
IT IS BAD enough when emotions prevail over rea
son, passions and prejudices over truth and jus
tice, in the POLITICAL field, but when they invade
the field of higher education and there gain control,
the situation is really appaling.
FOR UNLESS education in this country is dedicated
completely to the pursuit of truth, regardless of
all. other considerations, but especially political ones,
then we might as well call in some modern Hitler, to
burn the college books .and close the gates to our
institutions of higher learning.
IT IS, as stated, a source
uicn, uiuse in control ot higher education in
this state, refused to follow the state of Washington's
deplorable example. R.W.R. .
Tuesday, February 22, 1955
there is no reasonable
.
35 vears; the standards of
o
mat mawer.
and the evidence we be
communism as a. desirable
in this modern world, has
and promises, and unless
performed, is therefore
is known and some of it
Russian leaders themselves
far as this dream ol world
is concerned, for the very
i ' 1
succeeds iiKe success anu
including, torms ot gov
and m competition with
of real pride and satisfac-
Matter of Fact
FOR KNOWLAND
AND ATTLEE
Taipeh, Formosa The
amount of drivel being talked
at home about a Formosa cease
fire reaUy - exceeds the reason
able public drivel allowance by
many decibels. Judging by the
echoes here, both sides of the
debate have achieved an almost
total disregard of the on-the-spot
facts.
Presumably what they are
arguing about is a guaranteed
cease fire down the middle of
the ' Formosa
Strait. The
Chinese
N a t i o nalists
would give up
their remain
ing offshore
islands. The
Chinese
C o m m unists
would give up
their ambition
to conquer
Joseph Alaop
Formosa a nd
the Pescadores. And this ar
rangement would be guaranteed
by other powers, with America
and the Soviet Union in the
lead. -
Those like Sen. Knowland,
who turn purple and bellow "ap
peasement" at the mere men
tion of such an arrangement,
have forgotten the real facts of
the Chinese Nationalist situa
tion. The offshore islands are only
important to the Chiang Kai
shek government if one of two
things is going to happen: if
there is going to be an immedi
ate battle for Formosa itself; or
if the re-invasion of the main
land is going to be attempted.
But the object of the cease fire
proposal is to avert a battle for
Formosa. And the talk about re
invading the mainland is dis
honest, or moonstruck, or both
at once.
In the first place, as Sen.
Knowland must know, Chiang
Kai-shek has now been care
fully re-leashed. The secret pro
tocol of the Formosa treaty ab
solutely forbids any Chinese
Nationalist attack on the main
land without American consent.
American consent will certainly
not be granted unless there is a
general war.
In the second place, the Na
tionalists would not be able-to
attack the mainland without the
most massive outside help, even
if Chiang Kai-shek were un
leashed aU over again. Despite
the inflow of American arms in
fact, the Chinese Nationalists
are steadily growing weaker in
relation to the Communists.
THE PEKING government to
day has something like 2,50
divisions of all kinds, and it is
strong and growing stronger in
the air. The Generalissimo's gov
ernment hds not more than 24
divisions, with a very small air
force. Even Chiang's navy is
now inferior to the Communist
navy. What honest man can talk
seriously of re-invasion when
this is the balance of strength?
In addition, the General
In The Day's
By FRANK JENKINS
In this space yesterday, I dis
cussed the growing use of jack-
pine (lodgepole) in the Spokane
area, where it is proving to be
a perfectly satisfactory material
for the manufacture of pulp and
paper.
1IHEN one starts talking about
jackpine, he runs into an
appalling void in the ' way ' of
information about this species
It has always been regarded as
worthless. Indeed, it can be said
that it has always been regarded
as worse than worthless because
it has cluttered land that might
otherwise have been devoted to
more useful purposes. ' - "
As a result, none of it has
ever been cruised. Such, infor
mation as we have about, it ; is
based at best upon Informed
guesswork.
All we re sure of is that we
have a LOT of it. .
TTERE is a good informed
guess:
Within economic transporta
tion range of Southern Oregon
there are approximately a mil
lion acres 3 of jackpine. Fairly
weU informed guessers estimate
that average annual growth
might amount to about a cord a
year (pulp timber is estimated in
terms of cords rather than board
feet.)
If that guess is anywhere near
accurate, it would mean an AN
NUAL supply of cord of wood
should produce a half ton of
pulp. : '
A fair-sized pulp mill, large
enough to be economical in its
operation, produces some 300
tons of pulp per day.
I17HAT is jackpine's reproduc-
" tion fvr1?
There is a wide range of opin
ion on that subject, and a great
lack of exact knowledge. Guess
ers who want to stay on the safe
side say 100 years. At Spokane
I put that question to an experi
enced paper mill forester. He
answered unhesitatingly: "From
30 to 35 years." - ;
AT SPOKANE, I was told that
railhead in the Spokane area at
about $11 per cord and is being
shipped some 250 miles to Puget
By Joseph Atsop
issimo's soldiers from the main
land are aging fast. Replacement
with Formosan recruits has
already started.
The Formosans appear to be
increasingly reconciled to the
Taipeh government. The Ameri
can military advisory group
thinks they will make good
soldiers. But they have no per
sonal attachments to the main
land. And Formosan troops will
surely balk at any such hair
brained adventure as a re-invasion
of the mainland that is
not part of some much larger
effort. ;": ; .
These facts' bluntly indicate
what should be the real -role of
Formosa. On the one hand, there
should be a strong military force
here, not for dream invasions,
but - to constitute a permanent
threat on the Communist flank
just in case the Peking govern
ment decides to start a general
Asian war.
On the other hand, Formosa's
primary aim should be that
"political re-invasion" of; the
mainland which Prime Minister
O. K.,' Yui himself admits must
precede the military re-invasion.
Conditions on the mainland are
bad. and growing worse. The
Chinese people are like camels,
bearing heavy burdens for long
periods but finally rebelling at
last straws. When and if the
Communist last straw comes,
Formosa should be able to offer
the people of the mainland a
hope and an alternative.
Such are the only practical
aims for Formosa today. To
these aims, continuing, crisis
producing occupation of the off
shore islands will actually be a
hindrance. And after the first
severe psychological shock, a
cease fir will be a help if a real
cease fire can be obtained.
OUT THE error of
Attlee, Sen. Morse and even
President Eisenhower is to be
lieve that a cease fire can be ob
tained by wishing for it. It
should not be necessary to ans
wer the Attlee-Morse theory,
that the way to do business with
Communists is to be nice to
them to show goodwill by
giving them the offshore islands
as a gracious present.
Unfortunately the theory of
the President and his policy
makers does not seem to be
much more workable than the
Attlee-Morse theory. Judging by
the Communists demeanor,
there is almost no hope of get
ting a cease fire on the present
system, by mumbling that we
just "may fight for the offshore
islands if we happen to feel like
it that day.
There will be more hope of a
cease fire if we say. that unless
we get one, we are ready and
willing to fight for the offshore
islands, period But even then,
alas, the odds will only be even.
The ugly truth is that a cease
fire may well be unattainable
until the conventional moment,
which is after there has been
some firing. .
(Copyright, 1955, New York
Herald Tribune Inc.)
News
Sound for use in pulp mills
there.
It is a matter, of record that
considerable jackpine is being
shipped from eastern Montana
and Wyoming to Wisconsin for
use by pulp and paper mills.
ERE there is a market for
how is jackpine being
harvested?
; The gyppo cnotracting system
seems to be the prevailing meth
od. . That is to say, independent
operators take contracts to cut
it. These contracts provide em
ployment for a lot of labor.
Much of this employment comes
in the winter season. "
A dependable source of win
ter employment is a useful asset
anywhere in the West.
TACKPINE, you see. v- after
lying out in the rain and the
snows of winter and the hot sun
shine of the summer and being
looked upon as a pest tree to be
got rid of if possible, is begin
ning to shape up as a VERY
CONSIDERABLE asset.
FEP Administrator
Will Be Church Rector
Selam U.R) W. E. Van Me
ter, Oregon Labor bureau admin
istrator of fair employment prac
tices, has resigned to become
rector of St. Pauls church and
special consultant to the Na
tional Council of the Episcopal
church in New York City."
Van Meter was appointed in
1949 to administer the newly
enacted FEP law to guarantee
equal job opportunities in Ore
gon. He is an ordained Episcopal
minister.
Betty Hutton To Wed
Record Firm Executive
Las Vegas, Nev. XU.PJ Betty
Hutton, Hollywood's exuberant
musical comedy star, says she
win marry record company ex
ecutive Alan Livingstone within
a week or as soon as he gets a
Mexican divorce.
Miss Hutton was granted an
uncontested divorce on grounds
of mental cruelty yesterday
from her second husband, dance
director , Charles O'Curran, to
clear the way for her marriage
to Livingstone.
President of France
Waits End of Crisis
To Return To Routine
By CHARLES M. McCANN
United Press Foreign Analyst
President Rene Coty is mak
ing one of his rare appearances
in the political limelight during
the French
Cabinet crisis.
When Premier
Pierre Mendes
Fra nee was
overthrown, it
became Coty's
duty under the
Constitution to
nominate a
successor.
But as soon
as he has nom-
charies Mccann . inated a man
who can get confirmed by a
majority of the National Assem
bly, Coty will settle back in
his normal presidential routine,
a routine of peace and quiet.
For the President of France
is not, like President Eisenhow
er, a chief executive. He leaves
it to the government to run the
country, and thus his job ap
proximates that of Queen Eliza
beth II.
French presidents are not
even elected by popular vote,
they are elected by the two
Houses of Parliament in joint
session.
Coty was elected President,
for a seven year term, on Dec.
23, 1953, with the right to seek
reelection for one term.
He had been in politics, first
local and then national, for 46
years.
But as soon as he entered the
Lysee Palace, after his inaugura
tion on Jan. 16, 1954, he became
a figure above politics.
Like a constitutional monarch,
he became a symbol of national
unity. His duties as president
are largely ceremonial. He gives
state dinners, pays officials visits
to French Cities in his six car
special train, and conducts cor
respondence with other chiefs
Of state on occasion.
But when a top-level diplo
matic conference is held, the
President of France remains at
home. The Premier represents
the country as its real chief
executive.
As President Coty gets a sal
ary of only $11,500 a year. But
he also gets an allowance of
$128,500 a year to maintain the
beautiful Elysee Palace, his offi
Nixon Relays Peace
Note To Cosia Rica
San Jose, Costa Rica -(U.R)
Vice-President Richard M. Nix
on has relayed to Costa Rican
President Jose Figueres, Nica
ragua's offer to bury the hatchet,
informed sources said today;
: Nixon flew here yesterday
from Managua with what he
said were "solemn assurances
from Nicaraguan President An-
astasio Somoza that Nicaragua
will do nothing to create "fur
ther tension and disturbances
along its common border with
Costa Rica."
Nixon said he was authorized
by Somoza to convey the assur
ances to Figueres. The touring
U. S. vice-president and Fig
ueres conferred last night.
Editorial Comment
Hell Be Hard To Beat
Gov. Paul Patterson in Salem
this month commented that
"Next year's elections will be
won this year." By "elections
Republican politicians mean the
1956 race agamst Wayne Morse.
Then came a report that Presi
dent Eisenhower wants Gov.
Patterson and Washington's Gov.
Arthur Langlie to run against
Sen. Morse and Sen. Warren G.
Magnuson.
j.nis puts tne governor up
front in the growing list of pos
sibles, au of whom have been
gossiped about, compared, evalu
ated, and dismissed at one time
or another' as "impossible pos
sibles." The truth is that, ex
cept for the governor, Oregon
Republicans are mighty hard up
for a candidate. The "possibles,"
even the eager ones, are wary,
as weU they should be.
It won't be easy. It's cus
tomary at Republican rallies to
say funny things about the sena
tor and to dismiss him as a per
son of little consequence. How
ever, no Republican who has aU
his marbles will indulge in such
a luxury when it comes . time
to find a candidate. We've trav
eled about with Morse on his
campaigns, and we testify that
nobody absolutely nobody -
can match him for energy, en
durance, stamina, talkativeness,
"rising to the occasion," and
sheer drive. Finding a man to
keep up with Wayne" must be
the first step in finding a man
to beat him. Ask Dave Hoover
cr Edgar Smith. Eugene Regis
ter Guard.
THESE ARE THE JOKES
Bangor, Me. U.R) An
11-year-old girl walked into the
public library here and asked for
Victor Hugo's "The Hunchback
of Notre Dame." The librarian
asked for whom the book was
intended. The girl replied: "My
younger brother. He just loves
football stories."
cial residence, which was built
in 1718 and has been the home
of Madame . Pompadour and of
Napoleon Bonaparte.
When the President wants to
make an official trip anywhere,
he gets special funds from Par
liament. Coty was a dark horse presi
dential candidate to succeed
Vincent Auriol, first president of
the post-war Fourth Republic,
who refused to be a candidate
for a second term.
Coty was elected on the 13th
ballot after a bitter, record mak
ing week long battle among poli
tical parties. When he was driv
en into Paris from Versailles,
where Parliament met to elect
him, many people who lined the
route and cheered him hardly
knew his name. He had served
in Parliament, as a member of
the Chamber of Deputies and a
Senator since 1923 but never
had been really prominent.
Coty will be 73 on Marcn zu.
He resembles a French farmer.
with his rugged body and square
face. His chief non-official inter
ests are classical music and
literature.
Eisenhower's Rosy
Economic Picture
Declared 'Hoax'
Rome, Ga. (U.R) Sen. John
Snarkman (D-Ala)., said last
night the "rosy atomic picture"
painted by President Eisenhow
er is a "hoax."
Sparkman, 1952 Democratic
vice-presidential nominee, told
a Democratic rally that "in re
ality, we haven't been making
sufficient progress to match our
increased population and better
productivity."
Unemployment Predicted
Speaking to a $10-per-plate
Jefferson-Jackson - day dinner
sponsored by the Floyd County
Democratic association, Spark-
man rapped the "widening gap"
between high income groups on
one hand farmers and small bus
inessmen on the other.
"The result of this widening
gap," he said, "is bound to be
unemployment and distressed in
dustry." He predicted "'unem
ployment pockets" rather than
widespread unemployment. .
He said the administration ad
mits its farm program will mean
less income for the farmer "and
it comes when the farmer is in
the worst squeeze since before
World War II."
Safest I
Yoa cen plunge a flaming torch In
a pail of heating oil and it will go
! Heating oil for home beating
purposes burns only when atom
ized and fluxed with air. Compare
oil with other fuels.
With safe oil heat, you can relax,
enjoy complete comfort and peace
of mind. No wonder oil heat leads
7 to 1 in Oregon and Washington
over aU other fuels combined.
YOUR FAMILY IS WARM AND SAFE WITO
CLEAN, DEPENDABLE OIL HEAT!
fakoniz the dealer who displays this seal
Utka sptiaUtt mOiL HEAJl
Communications
Letters to the Editor must bear
the name and address ot 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.
Park Viaduct Opposed
.To the Editor: It appears that
an elevated freeway to be built
on a viaduct, is being considered
for Highway 99 along the east
side of Bear creek in Medford,
over and through Hawthorne
park. Two traffic lanes would be
built at first with four lanes the
ultimate aim. Access would be
limited to two places, near the
north and south city limits one
at each end of the elevated.
Parking under the freeway is
proposed. The whole purpose of
the plan would be to pass traffic
through Medford rapidly.
This proposal should be cause
for alarm to all residents of
Medford who love Hawthorne
park, its pool, picnic area and.
overall beauty. It would occupy
a substantial portion of the park
area and take Up a great deal
more land if parking of cars is
permitted under the freeway. A
group of public-minded citizens
bought the park land, gave it to
the city, which since then has
expended large sums of money
on the pool and park at large to
bring it to its present condition.
No other park of its kind exists
in Medford and a comparable
park site is not now available. .
This elevated freeway would
have a generally adverse effect
on that part of Medford. It
would be noisy, unsightly, make
that area undesirable and un
attractive and would reduce
property values there. The Boy
and Girl Scout headquarters will
be seriously affected by the
noise and elevated structure.
Some people feel it would
help business but it is difficult
to see how. Access to and from
the freeway would be limited to
the two mentioned places, one
at each end of town. It seems
that this would make it more
difficult for tourists to stop and
shop. A freeway is designed to
pass traffic rapidly through an
area.
This freeway, if built, should
by-pass Medford completely as
was done at Salem. A freeway
on the proposed route is un
thinkable. Why destroy a good
ly portion of Hawthorne : park
and adversely affect the area
around the freeway when it can
be avoided by locating same out
side of Medftrd?
Everyone who loves our park
ana wno oojects to xnis eievaiea
freeway should write letters to
the Medford city council and
State" Highway commission for
Oregon at Salem, voicing a
strong protest against the same.
Do it now! .
Kenneth G. Denman
Mrs. Kenneth G. Denman
104 Geneva st.