Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, July 26, 1955, Image 4

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    FOUR MEDFORD (OREGON)
MedfordvTribuni
"Evrrvbody in SouUiern Oregon
Reaos The Mail Tribune '
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Flight o' Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10. 20. 30 and
10 years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
July 26, 194S
(It was Thursday)
Maj. Bill Bowerman, head
coach at Medford Senior High
school, notifies superintendent
of schools he may be home by
end of year.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: It is now so
hot all over ilie nation, ham
could be fried on the sidewalks,
if the little pigs Secy. Wallace
ordered killed were available to
the consumer.
20 YEARS AGO
July 26. 1945
(It was Friday)
Operation of Medford corpora
tion, replacing Owen- Oregon
Lumber company, to start Mon
day; employment to reach 200
men in two weeks.
Oregon Highway commission
allots $120,000 for work on Siski
you section and $125,000 on Ash
land Neil creek section of Pa
cific highway regrading and con
struction work.
30 YEARS AGO
July 26. 1925
(It was Sunday)
Medford residents mourn death
of William Jennings Bryan in
Daytcn, Tenn.
Ashland school board selects
Easlerling-Tavener site for new
grade school.
40 YEARS AGO
July 26. 1915
(It was Monday)
- California-Oregon Power com
pany proposes to city council
new contract for lighting: five
per cent of gross receipts for
I" years.
From Local and Personal col
umn: The backbone of the heat
.was broken Sunday with a mod-
cdation in temperature, and at
r.oon today the mercury rose to
but 82 degrees in the shade,
about fifteen degrees lower than
during the last week. The air is
somewhat hazy due to forest and
brush fires.
What's the Answer?
Can You Get 4 of lh 7?
Cepr. 1955, Editorial Research Rtpart
1. Steel price rises following
steel wage increases are estimat
ed to add about S5, $15. S25. $35
or S45 to the cost of making a
1956 car?
2. Which state calls '"parish's''
what all other states call coun
tics?
3. Which of these first ratified
the UN charter: China. France,
Great Britain, the Soviet Union,
the United States?
4. Which member of the Eis
enhower cabinet ran the Repub
lican election campaign of 1952?
5. Fingal's Cave is on the Irish
or Scottish mainland, an Irish
or Scottish island, or in Wales?
6. Maximum age for draft li
ability is or isn't higher for doc
tors and dentists than for other
men?
7. Durum is a town in North
Carolina, a kind of wheat, a
breed of cattle, or a layer of the
skin?
The answers: 1. About $15. 2.
Louisiana. 3. The United Stales.
4. Postmaster General Summer
field. 5. Scottish Island. 6. Is.
7. Kind of wheat.
Tree farms are now operated
in 36 states.
MAIL TRIBUNE
"The Morning After
In returning from Geneva the Soviet delegation
stopped for a conference in Berlin.
Once more Premier Bulganin maintained the con
ference had relieved international tensions, but he
proceeded to demonstrate the cause of one of the
chief "tensions" between Soviet Rusia and the United
States, had not been relieved.
This is the unification of Germany. Both countries
favor unification in theory but Russia insists that, if
and when, such unification is achieved Germany must
secede from Xato and become independent of the
West.
To date the United States has refused to favorably
consider such action, and Chancellor Adenauer is
reported to be equally firm against it.
SO WE fear that any international celebration of
"the dawn of a new era of sweetness and light"
between the USA and the Soviet Union would be
somewhat premature.
There is no doubt the threat of a world war has
been removed farther from reality, as a result of this
"good will meeting" in Switzerland but the ideo
logical and political conflict between the two coun
tries promises to continue for some time to come.
Premier Bulganin remarked before the Geneva
conference assembled, quote:
"It would be naive to think we shall solve all complex
international problems, but if all participants in the con
ference display good will, sincerely seek to reach agree
ments we undoubtedly will be able to find common ground,
to chart feasible ways to an effective settlement on which
the peace and well being of the peoples depend."
IIELL there was plenty of "good will" shown at
" the meeting by the United States as far as the
public reports were concerned; but just what went
on behind the scenes is not so clear.
Apparently the Russians did not take any offi
cial notice of President Eisenhower's challenge to
exchange military information, and enlarge trade re
lations. This, if it proves to be Moscow's permanent atti
tude, hardly qualifies as a gesture of good will, or
manners, but let us hope there will be some ex
planation for and softening of the "snub" later on.
Secretary Dulles pretty well expressed the prob
able reaction when on his return and in the rain he,
remarked:
"Only history will show whether it was a great or
momentous conference and whether the good spirit en
gendered there will be maintained."
He might have well added that the verdict of
histoiy will be influenced more by what is to be ac
complished in the immediate future by both major
powers than what was accomplished at Geneva.
A peaceful and mutually satisfactory solution of
the German problem should, as far as a better situa
tion in Europe is concerned, be placed first on the
agenda. R.W.R.
Not Quiet on Eastern Front
The return of the US "turn coats" from China
emphasizes a fact often overlooked, to-wit :
There is no peace in
armed trace. In other words factually, a state of war
still exists between the United States and North Ko
rea (or if one prefers the UN and Red China.) This
item may be an important factor in the final deter
mination of these turn-coat cases, as well as the con
tinuation of peace in the Far East.
THERE are and have been for a long time, for ex-
ample, many disquieting reports from the far-off
Pacific area.
The terms of the trace in Korea, it is claimed, have
been broken repeatedly by the North Koreans and
the Red Chinese, the forces opposing the South Ko
reans being some experts claim, greatly strengthened
since the armistice was signed. There are some who
fear an all-out attack on South Korea may come at
any time, and without advance warning.
TOR many weeks all has been quiet in the Formosa
area. But now there are reports of the Red Chi
nese massing forces on the mainland near Matsu and
once more Chiang Kai-shek fears an attack there.
CO HERE is another reason for not being too san-
guine about the future as far as the conflict be
tween democracy and totalitarianism is concerned.
As Bulganin declared in that pre-Geneva speech,
quote :
"Some people think that capitalism is better than so
cialism. We are convinced the opposite is the case."
So long as that conviction endures, in its present
intense form, no complete harmony or deep seated
goodwill between the greatest capitalistic country
and the greatest communistic country in the world,
should be expected.
That doesn't mean there will have to be war. It
doesn't mean there can't be a "modus viviendi"
thatis peaceful coexistence without war.
It does mean, wTe believe, such a sharp conflict in
ideologies and political beliefs, renders any period
of genuine friendliness and cooperation difficult if
not impossible to obtain.
In fact so long as Russia not only cherishes this
firm conviction but insists that its political beliefs
be extended throughout the world by propaganda and
infiltration there can be slight sense of security in the
free democratic countries, and unfortunately no ma
terial reductions in preparations for war. R.W.R.
La Grande UR) Robert Lee
Denton, 15, Union, who was
struck in the head by a light
ning bolt Friday was rousing for
brief periods today and doctors
said he will recover.
Tuesday. Julr 21, 19SS
Korea. There is only an
San Juan, Puerto Rico (U.R)
Puerto Rico Monday observed
the third anniversary of the
signing of its constitution as a
free state, associated with the
United States.
Matter of Fact
THE MEANING OF GENEVA
Geneva The great men have
departed, and this comfortable
city has returned to its normal
well-fed calm.
Looking
back over the
past week, it
logically can
be argued that
the great men
might just as
well have
stood in bed,
saving them
selves consid
erable effort
and their re
spective taxpayers considerable
expense. For. after all, no for
mal agreement whatsoever on
any disputed issue of real im
portance has been achieved
here. Yet something has been
achieved here all the same, and
this Geneva conference will live
into history for it.
As far as Europe is concerned.
both sides have recognized the
realties of the current situation
and tacitly agreed to do nothing
violent to alter these realities.
Both sides have recognized the
status quo.
In official American circles.
it is not fashionable or popular
to spell out this fact. Secretary
of State John Foster Dulles long
and bitterly opposed the
Churchillian notion of a "meet
ing at the summit'' just because
he knew that it would amount
to a recognition of the status
quo.
When asked why he opposed
the Churchill proposal, Mr.
Dulles in those days always
pointed out that photographs of
the American and Russian lead
ers smiling together were sure
to be taken. Then these pictures
would be distributed throughout
the Soviet satellite countries.
The satellite people would inter
pret them to mean that all hope
of liberation was lost and that
resistance to Communist rule
was henceforth hopeless.
Now there are plenty of pic
tures of the President, and Sec
retary Dulles himself for that
matter, in animated and friendly
conversation with Bulganin,
Khruschev and Co. If Secretary
Dulles' initial reasoning was
correct, this means that we have
abandoned the satellites.
TN FACT, the satellites were
abandoned long ago, when, de
spite campaign talk of "libera
tion," nothing was done at the
time of the Czech and German
uprisings in June, 1953. Since
then, the satellite people have
needed no photographs to tell
them that we were not going to
war to liberate them.. And they
are perfectly aware that they
cannot be liberated by-' radio
propaganda or campaign
speeches.
The President's reference to
the satellites in his opening
speech was thus a purely formal
exercise, and it was recognized
as such by all concerned. His
very presence here has been a
signal to the Russians that we
intend to do nothing violent to
overturn their satellite empire.
But the recognition of the
status quo has not been a
wholly one-sided affair. Until
very recently, the Russians were
saying, or almost saying, that
they would fight rather than per
mit German rearmament. Thes,e
threats could not be entirely
discounted.
This reporter recalls, for ex-
ample, a conversation with the
great British soldier, Earl Wa
vell, before Wavell died. Wavell
was a most undemonstrative
man, but suddenly he smashed
his fist in his palm and said
with almost passionate earnest
ness: "If you Americans rearm the
Germans, the Russians will
fight. If I were the Russian
Chief of Staff. I should advise
my government to fight."
In short, the Russian threats
had to be taken seriously,
simply because the rearmament
of a hostile Germany is a deadly
serious thing for the Russians.
Yet the Russians have now made
it entirely clear, here in Geneva,
that they will not fight to pre
vent the creation of a West Ger
man army.
Behind the polite exchanges
here, in other words, both sides
have been saying: "We think
what you have done and are
doing is intolerable, but we in
tend to tolerate it anyway
rather than go to war about it."
IT MAY BE, of course, that the
status quo in Europe will be
suddenly and radically altered
by political rather than military
means. There are knowledge
able persons who believe, for ex
ample, that the Russians are get
ting ready to offer the West
Germans reunification on their
own terms, given a simple pro
mise not to join NATO. But
when one considers what sacri
fices such an offer would in
volve for the Russians, it seems
wore likely that Prime Minister
Bulganin meant what he said
when he remarked that it would
take "time" to solve trie German
problem presumably a great
deal of time. "
If so, the freezing-in-position
which has been tacitly acknowl
edged here in Geneva reduces
the chance of war breaking out
in Europe, in the immediate fu
ture, almost to the vanishing
point. Surely this is a gain, even
though, for the long run, it set
tles nothing.
And there may have been one
ml
Stewart Alsop
By Stewart Atsop
other gain too. President Eiscn
hower's dramatic offer of mu
tual aerial inspection seems
likely to come to nothing. But
both sides have at least recog
nized a mutual advantage in
some sort of warning system
against surprise nuclear attack.
Yet despite such gains, it is.
alas, not yet time to relax hap
pily in the glow of an assured
peace. For there has been a
death's head at the feast here in
Geneva. For a long time, it has
been obvious that far the great
est danger of war lies in Asia
rather than in Europe. And
nothing meaningful whatsoever
has been done here to deal with
this far greater danger.
(Copyright, 1955
New York Herald Tribune Inc.)
On The Side
By E. V. DURLING
(Distributed by King Features
Syndicate, Inc.)
Any man who has a traffic
ticket "fixed" is a disgrace to his
community. He has participated
in a form of bribery and is there
fore a criminal. So is the man
who "fixed'" the ticket. All or
ganizations interested in safe
automobile driving should
strongly combat this type of "fix
ing." An investigation is in order.
The man who had the ticket "fix
ed" should be charged with bri
bery and jailed. The "fixer" like
wise. The latter should also be
fired. Turn the rascals out: It
is petty corruption that leads up
to a major graft. It is ticket "fix
ing", that leads to wild driving
and disrespect for the law in
general.
Those Matches
Folder matches appear much
shorter thar formerly. Has some
efficiency man convinced match
manufacturers profits can be in
creased by cutting a piece off
each match? The average folder
match is all right for lighting
a cigaret. It is adequate for
igniting a cigar if you puff vigor
ously. However, it certainly is
too short for the proper lighting
of a pipe.
Corny
A favorite word of the synthe
tic sophisticates is "cornv." I
note a reference by one of these
intellectual giants to the song
titled "Count Your Blessings" as
being "corny." Maybe it is
"corny." But I like to sing it
in the shower occasionally and
enjoy its philosophy. Incidental
ly, t once had a terrific run of
bad luck. Everything seemed to
go wrong. At that time I carried
around in my wallet a poem
including the line, "I kept hum
min' better times are comin' and
you bet they came." Very
"corny" line what? But I kept
repeating it and I believe it
helped pull me out of that
I slump.
Song Writer
Among the song writers
achieving recognition by publish
ing their own songs is Lawrence
Wright of London. Not only were
Wright's songs great commercial
successes but so is his business.
He publishes the songs of many
other composers. The slogan of
his firm is "You can't go wrong
with a Wright song." Wright
used a pseudonym for his own
songs so as the publisher he
could boost them as if the work
of another writer. Using the
pseudonym Horatio Michaels he
wrote and published that smash
hit titled "Among My Souve-
nirs."
Get It Right
Nineteen hundred was not a
leap year. Bob Fitzsimmons
weighed 156Vfc when he fought
and knocked out James J. Cor
bett at Carson City, Nev. Such
are statements made by me. In
numerable subscribers claim I
am wrong on both. I am right.
I warn you, . gentlemen, don't
risk your stogies. I know where
of I speak.
Asides
Did you hear about the kid
who, when out motoring with
his parents, said. "Papa, I wish
you would let Mama drive. It's
more exciting." . . . Replacing
of steam engines by diesels con
tinues. When down on the farm
I miss the sound of that engine
whistle in the distance. Was one
of my favorite sounds.
Changing Names
The father of the Duchess of
Windsor didn't care for the first
name his parents gave him. I
don't blame him. It was Teackle.
He changed his signature to read
T. Wallis Warfield. The Duchess
didn't like her first name either.
It is Bessie. She changed her
signature to read Wallis War
field. Horse Players
Practically every book of ad
holds up George E. "Pittsburgh
vice on "How to Beat the Races"
Phil" Smith as a shining exam
ple of what a smart horseplayer
can accomplish. There is no
doubt that "Pittsburgh Phil"
died a jnillionaire. However, in
addition to, playing the horses he
was part owner in several track
bookmaking establishments.
There is a possibility that he
accumulated most of his money
as a bookmaker.
Milk Producers Picnic
With Eugene Producers
Medo-Land Creamery, Eugene,
and the Southern Oregon Farm
Tank's Inc.. a group of , milk
producers of Jackson and Jose
phine counties, held their sec
ond annual picnic in the Grants
Pass city park Sunday. July 24,
according to Don Geren, Eagle
in the Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
Big question:
What's really happened at the
"summit" conference in Geneva?
I DON'T know, but I'll make a
The heads of state assembled
there were sizing each other up
and arriving at conclusions that
will be veryt. very valuable in
the future. These conclusions,
based on PERSONAL contacts
and PERSONAL observation.
COULD prevent somebody in the
future from making a wrong
move that might lead to a war
that nobodv wants.
TTERE'S an interesting little
"sidelight on the Geneva af
fair:
Mrs. Eisenhower was hostess
at a yachting party on Lake
Geneva. She took along the wives
of the British and the French
delegations and the wife of
Switzerland's president.
She would have invited the
wives of the Russian delegates
but the Russian delegates
DIDN'T BRING THEIR WIVES
ALONG!
That, it seems to me, is a sig
nificant comment on commu
nism. JOTTINGS from the notebook:
" Oregon has had many inter
esting characters. In any list of
them, the name of Sam Board
man must be included. He came
from Colorado and acquired land
holdings up along the Columbia
in Morrow county, where the
town of Boardman bears his
name. At Boardman, Highway
30 (the Old Oregon Trail) leaves
the great river and bears off
eastward and southward.
Life in Colorado had taught
Sam about irrigation. He soon
discovered that he NEEDED it.
So he started scratching around
to GET it. And agitating for it.
The upshot of his scratching and
his agitating was the Umatilla
irrigation district which has
been a big factor in the develop
ment and the prosperity of that
area of Oregon.
Intelligent scratchers and agi
tators are good for the commun
ities they live in.
"EWENTUALLY, Sam Board
man came into the service of
the state of Oregon.
He put together the bulk of
Oregon's present state park sys
tern. He loved the job as a
mother loves her child. He'd see
a piece of land, lovely in itself
and in a lovely location, and the
thought would come to him that
it would make an ideal state
park. So he'd start in hounding
the owner of it especially if the
owner happened to be a well-to
do individual. About three times
out of four in these cases, he'd
wind up by getting the land do
natcd.
If he didn't get it donated out
right, he'd badger the owner
sometimes using the tactic of
crying on his shoulder until he
got an exceedingly attractive
price out of the old skinflint.
IT WAS thus that the Oregon
state park system came into
existence. The Oregon state
parks were then and still are
a part of the state highway sys
tern. Sam visualized as an ad
junct of the state's highways, de
signed to make travel in Oregon
pleasanter and more soul-satisfying.
THE Old Oregon Trail was
deeply imbedded in Sam's af
fections, and the thought came
early to him that its beauty
would be tremendously en
hanced if it were bordered by
trees in its ruggeder 'arid sec
tions. Did he go to the highway com
mission for a bigger cut out of
the gasoline tax pie, so that he
could BUY trees and HIRE them
planted? Did he go to the legis
lature for a juicy supplementary
appropriation with which to ac
complish his purpose?
Nope! That wasn't Sam's wav.
He ORGANIZED THE SCHOOL
CHILDREN. Someway or other,
he wangled the trees and then
he fired the school children with
the ideal of SERVING THEIR
STATE by going out and plant
ing them.
For nothing! Just for love of
the commonwealth in which we
live and have our being. Imagine
that in these days when, if we
want something, our idea is to
get an appropriation from gov
ernment and then HIRE SOME
BODY to do it for us!
HE CHOSE his tree varieties
wisely ailanthus (the Tree
of Heaven), locust, Russian olive,
all of them well adapted to arid
soil.
They didn't all live, of course.
But a surprising number t DID
live (some of them because
school children carried water to
them in buckets until they got
their root systems established.)
These survivors add immensely
to the beauty of the arid stretches
of Highway 30.
Anyway, states with citizens
like Sam Boardman are lucky.
Point, president.
The Eugene group was headed
by Gordon Coleman, manager
of Medo-Land, and his wife and
family. Also in the group were
Clyde Johnson, plant superin
tendent, and Leo Reed, assist
ant superintendent, and their
families.
Dead line for Sunday ClauiXicd is
at noon Saturday.
Committee Rule in
Soviet Russia Seen
Increasingly Probable
By CHARLES M. McCANN
United Press Foreign Analyst '
It seems increasingly prob
able, after the Geneva confer
ence, that Soviet Russia is now
committee
rule. It seems
probable also
that the three
men who led
the Soviet dele
gation to the
Big Four meet
ing are 'the
three top men
on the commit
tee. They are Ni-
cuaries Mciaun ma a- rwnrub-
chev, first secretary of the Com
munist Party, Nikolai A.
Bulganin, prime minister, and
Vyacheslav M. Molotov, foreign
minister.
These three men evidently
were able to make any neces
sary policy decisions without
referring back to Moscow.
As regards the frequent re
ports of a "power struggle" in
the Kremlin, if Khruschev, Bul
ganin and Molotov did not get
along well together in Geneva,
they put on a convincing act.
Khruschev Talkative
The diplomatic experts who
attended the Geneva conference
differed widely in their com
ments on the Soviet delegates.
Some saw deep significance in
the fact that Khruschev was
exceedingly talkative, as usual.
at dinners and parties. They
noted that he sometimes pushed
himself in front of Bulganin.
Others reported that in the
actual Big Four meetings
Khruschev kept silent. He let
Bulganin and Molotov do the
talking. One commentator saw
Chrysler, Union
Said Near Agreement
Detroit (U.R) Chrysler Corp
an dthe CIO United Auto Work
ers were believed near agree
ment today on a pact similar to
the precedent-setting contracts
obtained, by the union from Ford
and General Motors.
The UAW resumed negotia
tions with Chrysler Monday aft
er a week's recess which the
union requested to study the
company's first offer in the talks,
Neither side would reveal the
contents of the offer but it was
believed to resemble closely
pacts granted by Ford and GM
which guaranteed workers 26
weeks of pay during layoff per
iods. The union presented its reply
to the company offer at the meet
ing Monday but neither side
would say what the answer was.
The union indicated, however,
that the offer was basically ac
ceptable and only minor differ
ence still had to be ironed out
The brilliance of
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significance in the fact that most
of the whispered conversations
in the Soviet delegation, during
meetings, were between Bul
ganin and Molotov.
At any rate, Molotov's stock
seemed to go up somewhat in
Geneva. TTiere was no indication
that he is about to be shoved
into retirement.
The stock of Marshal Georgi
K. Zhukov, defense minister,
seemed to go down.
Apparently Zhukov was taken
along largely to meet President
Eisenhower and renew their
wartime friendship.
Zhukov, by the way, was not
promoted to membership of the
powerful 11-man Presidium of
the Communist Party when that
bodv was reshuffled earlier this
month.
Joking Comment
Molotov himself was responsi
ble for the "retirement" talk
which has cropped up intermit
tently during the last few weeks.
During the Austrian treaty nego
tiations in Vienna in May. Molo
tov commented to a WTestern
delegate:
"We are getting old, and it is
time to give way to younger
men." -
It was not long before reports
were published that Molotov's
retirement actually was immi
nent. Molotov was asked about the
Vienna remark at a reception
in Moscow on July 9.
"I was joking," he said. "I
was talking about all of us get
ting older, and of the need for
young blood."
The possibility that Molotov
will retire before very long can
not be ruled out. He is 65. He
has been under greatt tension
most of the time for many years
as foreign minister and, for a
time, as premier.
But Molotov is one of the star
diplomats of the world. It hard
ly seems that this is the moment
to dispense with his services.
Peron Urges Party
Heads To Carry On
Buenos Aires (U.R) Argen
tine President Juan D. Peron
urged Peronist party leaders to
day to carry on by themselves.
Peron ignored an appeal that
he continue directing the party
and the revolutionary move
ment he has headed .for more
than 10 years. But Peron indi
cated he intends to stick to. bis
resignation as party leader.
The President announced in a
nationwide broadcast 10 days
ago that he was stepping down
as party boss to become presi
dent of "all Argentine friends
and foes alike." He said he was
resigning to encourage the politi
cal truce he asked for earlier in
the month. -
onr engagement
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