Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 7, 1955)
FOUR MEDFORD (OREGON) MedpordJTrduhi cverKuu in oouinetu Oregon Reads The Mail Tribune" Published Daily Except Saturday by MEDFORD PRINTING CO. 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 Ednor HARRY CHIPMAN Telegraoh 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 SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mail In Advance: Per copy 10c. Daiy and Sunday One year $12 00 Daiiv and Sunday Six months 6.50 Dailv and Sunday Three mos 3.50 Dailv and Sunday One month lis Sundav Only One year $3-50. By Carrier In Advance Medford. Ashland. Central Point. Eagle Point. Jacksonville. Gold Hill. Phoenix. Shady Cove. Rogue River. Talent, and on motor routes: Daily and Sunday One year S15.00 Dailv and Sunday One month 1.25 Carrier and Dealers 5c per copy All Terms Cash in Advance Official Paper of the City of Medford Official Paper of Jackson Courty United Press Full Leased Wire MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION WEST-HOLLIDAY COMPANY INC. Offices in New York Chicago. De troit San Francisco. Los Angeles. Seattle. Portland. St. Louis Atlanta. Vancouver B.C. NATIONAL EDITOIIAl ASSOdl-ATIlGN w O" NEWSPAPEI 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 April 7. 1945 (It was Saturday) Members of cast of Medford High school senior class play in clude Bob Boyer, Bill Hedrich, Bill Patton, Chuck Jones, and John Bullock. From Arthur Perry's Ye Smudge Pot column: In the Coast league, the Portland Beav ers are out in front as far as Gen. Patton's tank army; to the amazement of everybody, in cluding themselves. 20 YEARS AGO April 7, 1935 (It was Sunday) R. B. Hammond Sr. and E. L. Childers to meet in finals of President's cup golf tournament at Rogue Valley Country club. Students at University of Ore gon, -Eugene and University High schools plan mass demon stration against "war as a method." 80 YEARS AGO , April 7. 1925 (It was Monday) Medford offers a free site for the county courthouse if and when it is moved from Jackson ville. Workers finally reach body of Floyd Collins, who died in a rock slide in a Kentucky cave in January. 40 YEARS AGO April 7, 1915 (It was Tuesday) Residents of North and South Riverside ave. area protest to city police that "the nights are made hideous by wild men rid ing motorcycles." Monthly meeting of Medford Commercial club "enlivened" by speech by S. S. Smith and a tenor solo by Fletcher Fish of Phoenix. What's the Answer? (Can You Get 4 of the 71) Cepr. 1955, Editorial Research Report 1. Name two of the three pres ent Supreme Court justises who're Republilans. 2. Asia would get much less or much more than half, or about half, of the new Eisenhow er program for' foreign aid? 3. Present Government farm price supports on basic crops are at 75-90, 75-100, 82V2-90 or flat 90 per cent of parity? 4. The boundary is still unof ficial between two states: Mary land and Virginia, Oklahoma and Texas, North and South Da kota, or Arizona and California? 5. Home Run Baker, picked this year for baseball's Hall of Fame, was Athletics third base man, Chicago Cub shortstop, N. Y. Giants catcher, or Brooklyn pitcher? 6. Sen. McCarthy served dur ing World War II in the Air Corps. Army, Coast Guard, Ma rine Corps or Navy? 7. The late Thomas G. Ma saryk set up after World War I the state of Czechoslovakia. Fin land, Lithuania, Poland or Yugo slavia? .-. .v- M The Answers: 1. They re Chief Justice Warren and Justices Bur ton and Harlan. 2. Much more than half. 3. 82V2-90 per cent of parity. 4. Arizona and Califor nia. 5. Athletics third baseman. 6. Marina Corps. 7. Czechoslova kia. The first plant for making collapsible metal tubes ; in the United States was established in 1870 in Philadelphia. MAIL TRIBUNB A Truly Great Man One of the best stories about Prime Minister Win ston Churchill (retired) we have heard was told re cently by the well-known newspaper correspondent, Dorothy Thompson, in the Oregonian. . It seems that Mrs. Thompson was invited to a White House dinner during the Roosevelt adminis tration (F.D.R.) and sat next to the affable and in gratiating host, whom she had known for several years. During the conversation which was shortly after the now famous Yalta meeting, President Roosevelt told a story he thought amusing about a contretemps which occurred at the final banquet at Yalta, between Stalin and Churchill. OTALIN, it seems, liked his vodka and after drink ing 30 or 40 toasts proposed one of his own name ly: that after the Germans had been defeated, which promised to be soon, 50,000 German officers be taken out and shot. The Russian leader found this very ap pealing and proper, as he thought the German people were not so bad but their officer class was, and should be liquidated. President Roosevelt, who was feeling in good spirits also, and favored taking drastic measures against Germany at that time but not later arose to suggest that instead of shooting 50,000 German of ficers, it might be better to shoot only 49,000! That comment relieved the tension somewhat with every one around the table, but Premier Churchill. The Premier of England did not think the suggest ion funny. He kept his seat, offered no toast, but did remark gruffly, and so all could hear': "Her majesty's government does NOT shoot prisoners of war!" , . "THAT was a slap in Stalin's face, so taken and in " tended. (It has been hinted since he and Churchill were never on good terms thereafter) . When the dinner had ended Sir Winston, who had not neglected his brandy preferring it to. vodka, did not yield to any alcoholic exuberance or the social am enities however, and took President Roosevelt severe ly to task for siding with the Russian leader regarding such an inhuman and barbarous proposal. It was only a joke on rejoinder. "I thought it better to turn it off that way than to take it seriously," At this point Mrs. Thompson said she turned to the President and quietly but pointedly observed, that she agreed in this case with Premier Churchill completely. But Dorothy" was FDR s rejoinder, "you must realize I did not mean what I said, I merely thought it best for all concerned, to take such a proposal with a smile instead of otherwise, and cause a scene. HAT was the end of the story. But we think it one of the best to date, as reveal ing the true inner characters of these three leading statesmen of World War British war leader, whose of 80 has brought tears of tears of sorrow and regret world. Winston Churchill liked his brandy and his 50- cent cigars, neglecting neither, he even took things in his stride and whenever appropriate with a smile ; but when matters of principle became involved, when questions between what he regarded as right and wrong were concerned, that jaw of his became firm, those smiling eyes became cold, and regardless of the nature of the company, social or otherwise, or the temptations to go the "easy way" he took his place on the firing line, to defend the British traditions and especially the one he cherished most, that of good sportsmanship, decency and fair-play. IT WAS this fundamental moral sense and courage imbedded in the hard core of his fighting nature, that made him stand alone on this occasion and out so far ahead of his contemporaries in time of nation al and world crisis. He was in short a truly GREAT Man, one of the few in public life of the present generation. He was a man not only of fortitude few men in high posi tion lack it but of wisdom, vision and the type of initiative so rare and yet so essential. to successful leadership. As has been stated previously, the world, particu larly the English-speaking world, will not seem the same without him. gUT fortunately this is not an obituary. Sir Winston although living on borrowed time, ap pears to be in excellent health and vigor, his mental powers not noticeably impaired, and so while on his vacation, his old seat in Parliament will be waiting for his return. It is not only the hope of his countrymen, but of all men of good will, we believe, that he may resume his place in the government soon, and for many years the benefit of his unerring foresight, wisdom and de votion to principle will be available to the struggling and sometimes frustrated, nations of the Free World. R.W.R. Billy Graham Lauds Winston Churchill Glasgow, Scotland (U.R) American Evangelist Billy Gra ham last night lauded former British Prime Minister Winston Churchill "as the greatest man of our times." Graham recalled he visited Churchill at 10 Downing Street last year. "I got the impression he was a man of deep religious convic tion," the evangelist said. " Graham drew a capacity Thursday, April 7, 1955 my part, was the smiling II, and particularly of the resignation now at the age regret to his own eyes, and to the eyes of the civilized crowd of 18,750 to his nightly sermon and won "Decisions For Christ" from 411. The new con verts raised the total for Gra ham's "Tell Scotland" crusade to 6,496. FoUowing the meeting, Gra ham attended a birthday party for his choir leader, Cliff Bar rows, at the Royal Scottish Au tomobile club. Graham's present to Barrows was a set of bagpipes. In the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS Headed south from Tucson to ward the twin towns of Nogales one of them in the American state of Arizona, the other in the Mexican state of Sonora. The distance from Tucson is about 65 miles, over a truly wonderful highway. It is wide, and for the most part straight, and the sur face is as smooth as a table. THE terrain slopes gently to ward the south. There is a strong tail wind. It would be easy to let the speed drift into the upper brackets on the speed ometer. But there is the ever present psychological bugbear of these unmarked Arizona patrol cars, equipped with radar, of which the signs warn you about every mile and a quarter. In the back of your mind there is a chilling picture. The picture is that of a cop seated in a car bear ing NO insignia of ' the great state of Arizona. Maybe a Ford. Maybe a Chevvie. Heck! Maybe a Cadillac. This is a fabulous country down here. In your mind's eye, you "see the cop watching a radar screen. On the screen there is a blip. You have the fearsome feeling that the blip is YOU and that the radar jigger is saying to the cop: "This guy is from Oregon and his foot is getting heavy on the throttle and in about two shakes of a lamb's tail he's going to be over the limit. Then you can NAB HIM." MIND YOU, I don't take too much stock in this radar business. I have a sneaking no tion that at the worst about all it amounts to is a couple of cops sitting in their cars a measured mile apart and talking to each other by two-way radio. In that event, it would be just an old fashioned speed trap, and if you kep an eye peeled for lurking cops you will be OK. But How can you be sure? This radar is mysterious stuff. Maybe it DOES see all. Maybe it DOES know all. So I ease up on the accelerator. The UNKNOWN is always terrifying. THE road ffbm Tucson to Nogales follows an ancient watercourse. The stream has long since dried up. But in the underground reservoirs beneath the gently sloping valley, na ture has STORED WATER as a squirrel stores nuts in seasons of plenty for use in seasons of scarcity. Man, probing with his drills, has FOUND these under ground stores and with his elec trically driven pumps he is lift ing the water up and putting it on the thirsty soil. The result is the. miracle of irrigation, which maketh the desert to blossom as the rose. The hotter the desert, it seems, the better, for when heat and moisture and good rich soil are mixed in the proper proportions the consequences thereof are something wonderful to gaze upon. 1HOPE man down here doesn't get greedy and pump the water out of the underground reservoirs faster than nature is willing, to fill them up. That would be tragic. AT the border there is another miracle. It is the miracle of what hap pens when government, by apd large and lumping everything together, has been GOOD FOR THE PEOPLE instead of being BAD FOR THE PEOPLE. Between the American state of Arizona and the Mexican state of Sonora there is only an imaginary line. On both sides of this line the soil is the same. There is as much water on one side of it as on the other. The same beneficent sun looks down on it all. But OH, shucks! Let's skip that. To describe in meticulous de tail the differences between the American state of Arizona and the Mexican state of Sonora would be to cast aspersions upon our neighbor Mexico, and cast ing aspersions upon our neigh bors is mean and churlish and altogether unforgivable. But the ' contrast in ways of life is a startling thing and if you find yourself getting soured on your country and its institutions you'd better come down here and take a good look. What you'll see, I think, will teach you a lesson that will be good for your soul. Churchill Planning To Westerham, England U.R) Sir Winston Churchill today kept a long promised date with the builders who will remodel his country house while he vaca tions in Sicily. The newly retired Prime Min ister is full of plans and proj ects, despite his 80 years. The first is to convert Chartwell, the red-brick Georgian house he bought'in 1922, from a week end retreat to a full time residence. Later, Chartwell will be al tered into the Churchill Museum that Churchill will leave to pos terity, much as the late Presi dent Roosevelt left his Hyde Park estate. The museum will be financed from Churchill's 80th birthday fund. Donations are still coming in from- all- over the world, adding to the $280,000 "first in ON HIS WAY OUT As a large crowd sets up a thunder ous cheer, Sir Winston Churchill leaves his London resi dence, No. 10 Downing Street, for last official mile ride ta Buckingham Palace. There he handed Queen Elizabeth his resignation as the prime minister of Great Britain. Kremlin Shows Great Anxiety Over Who Fled To Freedom By CHARLES M. McCANN United Press Foreign Analyst The Kremlin is showing great anxiety over the flight of Valery Alexandrovich Lysikov to the freedom, of West Berlin. So far there have been four official Soviet demands for Lysikov's re- t u r n, each more excited than the one before. The fourth protest was Charles McCann maae Dy no less a personage than Soviet For eign Minister Vyacheslav M. Molotov. Molotov summoned American T 1 - Ike's Appointment Recalls Forgotten Pact With Russia Washington (U.R) The United States has a 40-year-old trouble-shooting treaty with Rus sia which has lain dust-covered and forgotten in the cold war. This came to light after Presi d e n t Eisenhower surprised everybody including the State Department's official spokesman by appointing a French his torian to a commission set up under a similar treaty with Swe den. His action sent reporters to their history books. 'Cooling Off Treaty There they learned that the United States at one time had such treaties--known as "Bry an Cooling Off Treaties" with about 40 nations, including Rus sia. The agreement with Russia never was annulled and still is carried on U.S. books as tech nically in force. The treaties were the pet proj ect of William Jennings Bryan, who served as Secretary of State during part of the administration of President Woodrow Wilson. He felt the best way to head off serious trouble was o prevent it before it got out of hand. Commissions, Set Up Under the agreements, five member commissions were set up to handle any dispute between the treaty signatories if it could not be handled through normal diplomatic channels. The treaties ran for five-year periods and were automatically renewed unless "denounced" by either party. Remodel House stallment" presented Churchill on his birthday last Nov. 30. Beekeepers Schedule Series of Meetings The Rogue River Valley Bee keepers association will hold s weekly meetings at which in-, struction and advice in beekeep- j ing will be available to anyone ; interested. Plans for the night ! meetings were adopted by the ; association last night and it was announced that the first one will be held Thursday, April 14, in Bigham hall at the fairgrounds. The second meeting, on April 21, at the same place, will be ad dressed by Dr. W. P. Stevens, entomologist and extension apiarist. He will be assisted by some of the beekeepers of the valley. Ambassador Charles E. Bohlen to his office to protest against Lysikov's "detention." "The just indignation of the Soviet people has been aroused," Molotov said solemnly. Just a Boy Is Lysikov then, another of the numerous high secret police espionage officers who have sought asylum in free countries all over the world? Is he a brilliant Soviet scien tist who has fled to the West with atomic secrets? No. Lysikov is a pink-oheek-ed, keen-eyed, jazz-loving Rus sian bey of 17 who escaped to the American sector of Berlin on March 18 and turned himself over to officers at Tempelhof Air Field. "I wanted to breathe some free air," he explained later to news men. "I want to be a pilot in the American Air Force." Lysikov's father is a lieuten ant colonel in the Soviet Air Force, stationed in East Ger many. The father and mother went to West Berlin to plead with the boy to return, and to threaten him. "You will be put in a concen tration camp," his father said. "They will put you to work in the mines. They spent 2Vt hours with the boy. He refused all the pleas and ignored all the threats. "It:s no use," the mother said finally. "We may as well go home." It may be asked why the Kremlin is so worked up over the flight of one Russian boy to the ;West. The answer is simple. Valery's flight is a slap in the face for the entire Communist concept. He is no mature Russian who, af ter being stationed in the West, decided not to go home. It may be taken for granted that Allied propaganda radios beamed behind the Iron Curtain will tell Valery's story to count less thousands of his fellow-Russian boys and girls. And the Kremlin knows it. HE'LL BE HARDENED Shreveport, La. (U.R) For mer Lt. Andrew W. Hilger is pedaling a bicycle to his home in St. Paul, Minn., 1050 miles away, so he can "harden up" after his desk job in the Air Force. CHAPEL MORTUARY Funeral PHONE 2-8030 Matter of Fact THE ARMY AND THE ISLANDS Washington The vast major ity of responsible army officers including Gen. Matthew Ridg- way, Chief of S t a f f be lieve that American ground troops will ultimately have, to fight, if the decision is taken to hold Quemoy and the Mat sus. This convic tion, of course, Stewart Abo flies in the face of the Air Force and Navy doctrine that the job of defending the off shore islands can be done with air and naval power alone. There is certainly a professional bias in the Army view. But there also seems to be a good deal of plain common sense. In the first place, army tac ticians believe that Chiang Kai shek's heavy commitment of troops to the off-shore islands more than 50,000 on Quemoy alone is tactically as danger ous as the French commitment at Dien Bien Phu. As at Dien Bien Phu, an extremely val uable force is being risked in a geographical situation in which all the tactical advantages be long to the enemy. The islands are so close to the mainland that Communist troops can land in strength on Matsu or Quemoy or both, any dark night. A land battle will then ensue, in the army view, and this battle will be decided on the ground, like any other infantry battle, however success fully the American Air Force and Navy may bomb mainland installations. If this country in tervenes, the island battle must be won otherwise the United States will indeed look like a paper tiger. To make sure of winning,, we must be ready to stiffen the Nationalist forces with crack American troops, the army men maintain. Therefore, if the in tention to hold the islands is serious, this country ought ideal ly to have at least a full Army corps in the Formosa area, with at least one crack division in readiness at all times to rein force the Nationalist troops on the islands. BUT this is only the beginning of the story, in Army eyes. Suppose, for purposes of argu ment, the Army men say, that Nationalist ground troops, plus American air-tomic strength, do succeed in holding, the off-shore islands without American ground forces. If we bomb the Chinese mainland with atomic weapons, surely the Chinese Communists are not going simply to sit and take it, The minimum response to be expected is a Chinese Com munist and North Korean at tack on the Korean front. The Chinese are of course aware that we have only a cou ple of skinny divisions left in Korea, and that . our available reinforcements are even skin nier. The Republic of Korea forces are not negligible, but the real deterrent to renewed Communist aggression in Korea hasbeen the threat of nuclear attack on the Chinese mainland. If we use atomic bombs against China in the defense of Quemoy and the Matsus, this deterrent will be spent. For months, the Communists have been prepar ing for a resumption of the Ko rean war, in open defiance of the truce terms. Thus we should also be prepared for a second Korean war. There are other possible Com munist moves which must be taken into account. They range from the bombing of Formosa, and of American bases in Oki nawa and Japan, to the maxi mum response invocation of the Sino-Soviet treaty and nu clear war with Russia. Army men agree that Russian intervention is on balance un likely, but nevertheless they say May This 1A Easter Season Bless You with Hope and Peace Directors 1 KING STREET MEDFORD By Stewart Alsop that cannot be ruled out. And they claim that we cannot be come heavily committed in Asia and play our promised part in NATO also, unless the current cut-back in troop strength is immediately and sharply re versed. Finally, the Army men say, suppose the optismistic Air Force and Navy views are right. Sup pose the Chinese Communist air force is knocked out of the war, the islands are held, and the war does not spread beyond China. What then? How do you finish what you have started, except by going on to win the war? And after all, the Army men point out, winning major wars has in the past required the services of armies. , CONTRARY to report, neither Gen. Ridgway nor any of his subordinates opposes defend ing Matsu and Quemoy, if the President and his advisers con clude that they must be defend ed in the national interest. But most responsible Army officers do believe that the much pub licized notion of a rather pain less little war, in which hardly any one on our side gets hurt, is a dangerous illusion. They believe that a war starting over the off-shore islands will be no picnic no picnic at all. Certainly the Army, like the other services, has "parochial" tendencies, to use President Ei senhower's word. But sure ly there is also a certain unhappy logic in the Army's position, all the same." And by the same to ken, if the Administration is serious about defending off-shore islands, there is surely precious little logic in the announced in tention to continue the heavy cut-backs in Army ground strength. (Copyright, 1955 New York Herald Tribune, Inc.) rAdrienneV PRE-EASTER Values to $19.98 Miss Mayme Wade ' Will Be At Adrienne's Mon. & Tues., April 11th & 12th for SPECIAL FITTINGS of Love Bras Adri lenne s 214 E. Main - Phono 2-7169 4 Lovely r ;o Faille Coals jJM For A 11 Spring Iff TWO V Styles aii r Full ff Lined j 1 ' .ft?1 or . j t Push-up I -Sleeve I & J: AN ARRAY I ) OFCOLORS1, VI Jj Pink I Red I , Blue J Navy J Black ' W. Beige 10 I TRIBUNE All FOR RESULTS Phone MUi