East Germans Assured
Russia Not Planning
To Sell Them Short
By CHARLES M. McCANN
United Presi Foreign Analyst
Russia's Nikita S. Khrushchev
and Nikolai A. Bulganin have
assured the East German Com
munists that
the Kremlin
would not
dream of sell
ing them out.
The German
Reds in turn,
say they are
not worried
over any deals
that their Mos
c o w friends
may make.
But it may
be taken for granted that the
East Germsns are not happy.
The same goes for the Polish
Reds.
They must look forward with
concern to the negotiations
which West German Chancellor
Konrad Adenauer is to hold in
Moscow in September, and to the
talks the Bis Four foreign min
isters are to have in Geneva in
October.
It has been suggested that
Adenauer has everything to win
and nothing to lose by going to
Moscow.
The East German and Polish
Bank Official
Talks for NOMA
Russell McNeill, vice-president
and personnel director of
the First National Bank of Port
land, spoke at a meeting of the
Medford chapter of the National
Office Managers' association
held this week at the Medford
hotel.
McNeill stressed the "human
touch" in personnel relations.
John Pletsch, Medford chap
ter's first president, presented
the past president's plaque to re
tiring president John Graff Jr.
Russell Brown, vice-president,
was in charge in president Har
per Hamilton's absence.
Elwood Hedberg, manager of
the Medford branch of the First
National bank, and Wesley Nis
sen, the bank's personnel direc
tor, attended the meeting. Also
present were James Taylor,
Medford, CPA. and Walter Tay
lor. Ashland. Dorothy Tubbs,
NOMA'S newest member, also
attended.
What every .
good cook knows:
Just a little difference in ingredients
makes a big difference in cooking results
Snowdrift is just a little lighter than any other shorten
ing and that can make the big difference in giving
your family lighter, more digestible fried foods.
Snowdrift gives just a little more
safety than ordinary shorten
ings, because it fries perfectly at
correct high temperatures. That
can make the big difference in
digestibility of fried foods.
No other shortening at any price is
so creamy, so digestible - and so light!
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Communists, on the other hand,
seem to have everything to lose
and nothing to win.
Khrushchev, the first secre
tary of the Russian Communist
Party, and Mulganin, the Soviet
Premier, flew right to Berlin
from Geneva Sunday after the
Big Four Summit Conference.
They stayed until yesterday,
assuring the East German lead
ers that everything would be all
right.
"The Soviet Union feels that
the German problem can not be
solved at the expense of the Ger
m a n Democratic Republic,"
Khrushchev said in a speech
Tuesday. The "German Demo
cratic Republic' 'is the East Ger
man puppet regime.
The Berlin newspaper ''Neues
Deutschland,"' organ of the Ger
man Communist Party, said yes
terday that everything would be
fine.
Visitors Hailed
"The visit of our friends
Khrusnchev and Bulsanin is
proof that we do not stand alone
and that the German Demo
cratic Republic, more than ever,
can count on the unconditional
support of the Soviet Union
the newspaper said.
Neues Deutschland said that
the "timing" of the Khrushchev-
Bulganin visit was "especially
notable."
Nobody will deny that. When
Khrushchev and Bulganin went
to Yugoslavia to see President
Tito, they made it a point to
visit Bulgaria, Romania and
Poland on the way home. They
assured the Red leaders of those
countries that no dirty work
was afoot.
The East Germans must real
ize by this time that there is no
chance they will be able to take
over the country when the time
for reunification comes.
Chances Dimming
The Poles must realize that
their chance of keeping that
German territory east of the
Oder-Neisse rivers which they
occupy is dimming.
One notable thing about the
Khrushchev-Bulganin visit to
Berlin was what happened at a
"farewell rally" for them. The
Reds managed to herd fewer
than 5,000 people into the vast
arena instead of an expected
200,000 or more. Before Khrush
chev was half way through the
main speech the crowd started
walking out on him.
Snowdrift's ingredients are just
a little costlier than any other
solid shortening's (yet you pay
no more). That can make the
big difference in better tasting
foods, whether fried or baked.
PULLING OUT Air Force
Secy. Harold Talbott reads a
letter to the Senate investi
gating subcommittee looking
into his business connections.
The letter was to Paul Mul
ligan, Talbott's partner, tell
ing him that he was pulling
out of the $S0,000-a-year
partnership.
Douglas Fir Chips
Experiments Made
For Paper Industry
Corvallis Ways of expand
ing the use of douglas fir chips
for pulp are under study at the
Oregon forest products labora
tory on the Oregon State college
campus.
Approximately 1,000 tons of
sawmill and veneer residues are
now chipped and sold daily to
the kraft industry, but no doug
las fir chips are being used to
produce newsprint. The kraft
industry makes such products
as paper bags and wrapping
paper.
The market for mill residues
would be expanded and raw ma
terial supplied for additional
pulp production if a process is
developed for producing a satis
factory newsprint pulp from the
douglas fir chips. More than
5,700 tons of douglas fir saw
mill residue go unused daily.
Equipment Installed
Dr. Ervin F. Kurth is direct
ing this new phase of the labor
atory's research program. Sev
eral new pieces of process
equipment have been installed.
Pulps made from douglas fir
chips by several different pro
cesses will be compared with
newsprint pulp stock, and their
strength, color and bleach-ability
will be evaluated.
Pulps produced will be stud
ied to determine their useful
ness for paper products , now in
large demand, such as contain
er board, newsprint and paper
board. Douglas fir will be used
first because of the large vol
ume of readily available saw
mill residues from this species.
May Use Bark
For some products, such as a
corrugating medium, color is not
important and chips from un
barked slabs, could be used if
the bark had little detrimental
effect on other properties of the
product. Ability to use chips
with bark would mean that a
mill could sell chips without, in
stalling a barker, and would pro
vide a use for the bark, too.
The forest products laboratory
is a state research agency sup
ported by a timber harvest tax.
Standard To Drill
Well Near Prineville
Portland (U.R) Standard
Oil Company of California an
nounced yesterday that drilling
of a second exploratory oil well
in Oregon will begin within the
next two weeks. The company's
first Oregon well near Astoria
was abandoned a month ago as
a dry hole.
Location of the second well
will be about 40 miles southeast
of Prineville. in Cook county,
according to E. V. Burns, region
al manager for Standard.
The well will be drilled to
test geologic formations in that
portion of central Oregon where
the firm holds a number of
leases. The operation will be
carried out by Thomas Pike
drilling company. ,
PERSISTENT JEWELER
New York (U.P.) Police
arrested Martin Menge, 36, on
robbery charges Wednesday
when they saw him running
down the street followed by
William Ruckel, 48, the jeweler
Menge had just held up. Ruckel
was still gagged and his hands
bound.
NEW LOCATION
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& SHEET METAL CO.
613 East Jackson
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Neuberger Tells Details of
McNary Memorial Proposal
Washington, D.C. (Special)
A monument in tribute to the
late Sen. Charles L. McNary of
Oregon on the Capitol plaza in
Washington, D.C. has been pro
posed by Sen. Richard L. Neu
berger. Neuberger, (D-Ore.), said a me
morial honoring McNary, a Re
publican senator from Oregon
for 23 years, "transcends any
narrow partisan considerations."
During the discussion on the
Senate floor over a resolution
setting aside space on the plaza
for a tower commemorating the
career of the late Sen. Robert A.
Taft of Ohio, Neuberger told
his colleagues that he thought it
would be appropriate for an edi
fice saluting McNary also to oc
cupy space on the Plaza near
the national Capitol building.
Not Be Precedent
Sen. Theodore F. Green, (R
R.I.), chairman of the rules com
mittee, advised Neuberger that
the "precedent' 'established by
passage of the Taft Memorial
resolution might well be used to
justify locating the memorial to
McNary on Capitol grounds. At
present, the only statue on the
Capitol plaza honors John Mar
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shall, early chief justice of the
supreme court.
Sen. Dennis Chavez, (N.M.),
chairman of the public works
committee which his jurisdiction
over government buildings and
grounds, told Neuberger that he,
too, believed the career of Sen
ator McNary merited a monu
ment on the Capitol plaza.
Former President Herbert
Hoover is chairman of a com
mittee which plans to raise Sl,
000.000 by private subscription
to erect the 110-foot bell tower
honoring Senator Taft.
Hopes For Funds
Neuberger said it was his hope
that interested Oregon citizens
would begin soon to raise funds
for a McNary Memorial, "now
that there is every assurance we
can have land set aside on the
beautiful and historic Capitol
plaza for this purpose."
"The people of the northwest
have a constant reminder of the
courage and wisdom of Senator
McNary in the steel and concrete
of the Columbia river dam which
bears his name. However, an
other memorial is fitting in the
locale where Senator McNary
rendered his distinguished serv-
V
e mean more leisure Tim
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Thursday, July 28, 195S
Cigaret Referendum
Petitions Filed Here
Some 34 deferendum petitions j
to place a three-cent cigarette j
state sales tax on the ballot for j
a vote have been filed in the j
Jackson county clerk's office. I
The deadline for filing was to-;
day. j
The petitions, proposed and j
distributed by Oregon Tobacco ,
Distributors association of Port-':
land, contained about 700 signa
tures. Fred W. Conrad, 304 Med
ford plaza, circulated petitions
in Jackson county.
If enough petitions with the
necessary 20,047 signatures from
throughout the state are sub
mitted to Secretary of State
Earl Newbry, the proposed tax
will be placed on the ballot at.
the Nov. 6, 1956, general elec
tion. ice to the nation and mankind,"
Neuberger said. He suggested Dr.
Charles D. Byrne of Eugene, re
tired chancellor of the Oregon
board of higher education, as a
possible choice for chairman of
the McNary Memorial commit
tee. Use Mail Tribune Want Ads
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