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ASSOCIATION
Flight of Time
Medford affd Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10, 20. 30 and
iQ years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
Dec. 27, 1945
(It was Thursday)
Local Democratic group asks
Floy K. Dover to run for gov
ernor. From Arthur Perry's Ye
Bmudge Pot column: Horticul
turists of the valley will start
off the Sfew Year with an old
and favorite fret missing. They
won't have spent the first three
monthSj. worrying about lack of
snow m the hills next April
for irrigation water next Au
gust. 20 YEARS AGO
Dec. 27. 1935
(It was Friday)
A telephone system will be
completed this winter between
Hutton and Jacksonville by
members of the CCC.
Attendance at Jackson courfty
rural schools below registered
student figures because of epi
demics of contagious diseases.
30 YEARS AGO
Mc. 27, 1945
(It was Sunday)
From Rogue River news: Ju
lian's confectionery has been
another to come up with the
times and have installed a radio,
and is giving a great deal of
pleasure to the people who visit
the store.
H. M. Chadwick, former Med
ford resident, resigns as assist
ant state engineer. t
40 YEARS AGO
Dec. 27, 1915
(It was Monday)
Possibilities of securing the
Arthur Putnam mermaid statue
from the San Francisco exposi
tion will be considered at a
meeting of civic department of
Greater Medford club.
From Local and Personal col
umn: There was a hot time in
the old town of Jacksonville
Christmas, with many celebrat
ing at the same time. A night
in the county jail cooled the
enthusiasm of the more jubilant.
What's the Answer?
Can You Get 4 of the 7?
Copr. 1955. Editorial Research epft
1. Dr. Paul D. White, medical
consultant to the President, says
mid-January, mid-February, mid-
March or mid-June will show
whether his recovery is com
plete?
2. Woodrow Wilson was born
100 years ago, in New Jersey,
Ohio, New York, Virginia or
or Illinois?
3. Maximum weight for trucks
is set by the Interstate Com
merce Commission, Congress, the
Secretary of Commerce or each
state for its own roads?
4. Most oranges consumed in
the U. come from Florida; right
or wrong?
oPWhich of these was under
strike in December: General
Electric, Westinghouse Electric,
General Motors, U.S. Steel,
Montgomery Ward?
6. President Eisenhower's
farm at Gettysburg is aboit (a)
25, (b) 70, (c) 150 or (d) 250
miles by air from Washington?
7. Wilber M. Brucker is Secre
tary of the Army, the Navy or
the Air Force?
The Answers: 1. Mid-February.
2. Virginia. 3. Each state for its
own roads. 4. Right. 5. Westing
house Electric. 6. About 70. 7.
The Army.
MAIL TRIBUNE
How About the UN?
The 10th annual U.N.
will go down m history as
membership dam. It was General Assembly action
on an 18-nation "package deal" on Dec. 8 which
paved the way first for vetoes in the Security Council
of any new memberships and then, on Dec. 14, tor
Security Council agreement on a 16-nation deal, leav
ing out Outer Mongolia and Japan.
Nationalist China's veto of membership of Outer
Mongolia, which brought on the record 15 vetoes by
Soviet Russia on Dec. 13,
a kind of made-to-order grudge fight for its next ses
sion. As the tenth session
United States succeeded in
third successive year its
cision on whether Communist China should hold
China's place in the U.N. The vote was 42 to 12, with
six abstentions.
Votino; with the five
aerainst postponement were
Indonesia, Norway, Sweden, Yugoslavia. Abstaining
were Afghanistan, Egypt,
and Yemen. On the same
abstained; Israel had voted
Wi
HEN the question inevitably comes up at the next
Assemblv session, Nationalist China can expect
to reap the ill will of more Atro-Asian and otner
"neutralist" nations. In jeopardizing the original
package membership deal which the General As
sembly had recommended by a vote of 52 to 2, Chiang
Kai-shek's representatives were swimming against
the tide. Moreover, if the Chinese had killed the deal
entirely, they would have kept out of the U.N. six
Afro-Asian nations Jordan, Libya, Ceylon, Nepal,
Cambodia, Laos plus three other nations generally
considered "neutralist" Austria, Finland, Eire (Ire
land).
The General Assembly at its next session could
vote by a simple majority to seat Red China's repre
sentatives as representing China, or, if some nation in
sisted that this was an "important" question, by a two
thirds majority. Nations backing Red China might
corral a two-thirds majority. In the Security Council
Nationalist China holds the veto right. Whether the
matter of Red China's credentials there would be
simply procedural remains in some doubt, as does the
question of Nationalist China's veto right on a pro
cedural matter involving credentials.
.
A SIDE from the membership gains, the 10th Gen
" eral Assembly session can hardly be said to have
accomplished much. One highlight was an overwhelm
ing victory for a resolution to give first priority in
future disarmament efforts to a Western-sponsored
plan featuring President Eisenhower's air inspection
proposal.
As the session closed, the Union of South Africa
was boycotting the Assembly. The walk-out occurred
on Nov. 9, after the Special Political Committee had
adopted a resolution expressing "concern" that South
Africa maintained its apartheid (racial separation)
policy after the Assembly had requested that the pol
icy be reconsidered. The Assembly on Dec. 15 urged
the governments of India, Pakistan, and South Africa
to .continue negotiations on the treatment of Indian
minorities in South Africa.
Another boycott had ended on Nov. 29, after two
months, when France returned. France, which had
walked out when the Assembly voted, 28 to 27, on
Sept. 30 to place the question of Algerian unrest on
the agenda, came back when the Assembly' voted
unanimously to drop the Algerian question for this
session. E.R.R.
In The Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
Question:
Did somebody mention a
threatened water shortage in
Southern Oregon and Far North
ern California a while back?
SPEAKING of weather, the tel
etype contributes this one:
Weather men will try dusting
the clouds with dry ice next
year in an effort to steer hurri
canes away from populated
areas or out to sea. The idea is
the latest worked out by a spe
cial study group set up to cope
with weather problems of this
sort.
AT first thought, it sounds
wonderful.
But
That's a lot of POWER for
human hands to hold. On second
thought, it half gives one the
shivers.
T ET'S turn to something sim
pier and more comforting
than the power HELD IN HU
MAN HANDS to control a hurri
cane and steer it away from a
big city possibly into villages
whose people value their lives
as much as big city people do
as one steers an automobile
away from an obstacle in the
road.
TJOWN in the great Central
U Valleys of California a while
back, they were building a levee
to control the flow of water. In
the way of the leve'e, as the en
gineers had located it, stood a
huge old oak tree.
So they cut it down.
The tree was owned by a
farmer named George Johnson.
He put in a bill for S500. When
the bill came up before the Cal
ifornia state finance department
it was held up. Five hundred
dollars, the department ex
perts said, is a LOT OF MONEY
for a tree. They called Farmer
Johnson to explain his bill.
He said the tree was worth
$500 because throughout the
Tuesday, December 27. 1955
General Assembly session
the one which broke the
gives the General Assembly
opened on Sept. 20, the
getting accepted for the
resolution postponing a de
- nation Communist bloc
Burma, Denmark, India,
Israel, baudi Arabia, byna,
question in 1954, Indonesia
for postponement.
year, in summer and in winter,
it gave shelter from sun and
storm for his sheep and his cat
tle. 1JE might have added al
though the record doesn't
indicate that he did that in
the priceless golden years of
their childhood his children
played under the branches of
that spreading old, oak, and per
haps climbed up into it, as chil
dren will, and built playhouses
up there in the leafy greenery.
I don't know Mr. Johnson.
But if he is in his sere and yel
lowing years and his children
have grown up and moved
away, he must have his memo
ries. These memories must in
clude golden curls blowing in
the wind and happy, laughing
voices ringing in the air as the
children romped and played in
the friendly shelter of that an
cient tree.
Who can put a price on such
memories?
Only the angels, I think, are
competent to do so.
AT any rate, the bill for the
tree was referred by ihe
state' finance department to the
state reclamation board and the
reclamation board has just vot
ed to go out on a limb and see
to it that Mr. Johnson gets S500
for his tree.
George Lodi, of Arbuckle, a
member of the reclamation
board, put it this way: "I dor.'t
think there is any doubt we
all feel that Johnson is entitled
to the $500."
I think. Mr. Lodi must have
children of his own and may
be grandchildren.
Subscribers
To report Improper or rlon-dellv-ery
ot the Mail Tribune phone
2-6141 before 6:45 pjn daily and
10:30 a.m Sunday
It regular delivery arrives short
ly after vou call please notify of
fice thus eliminating special mes
senger service.
ssia's
By CHARLES M. McCANN
United Press Correspondent
It may prove that Soviet Rus
sia's action in blocking the ad
mission of Japan to the United
Nations was
not so smart.
Russia ve
toed Japan's
application for
member ship
because N a
tionalist China
vetoed the ap
p 1 i cation of
Outer Mon
golia. Japan was
manes .we ia nn nummated ana
angered by the slap it received.
The first tendency in Tokyo,
naturally, was to blame the Na
tionalists. It is true that if Nationalist
China had not cast its veto, de
spite the personal pleas of Presi
dent Eisenhower to Generalis
simo Chiang-Kai-shek, Japan
would now be in the United
Nations.
But advices indicate now that
the Japanese are increasingly in
clined to put the blame where it
really lies. ' That is, with the
Kremlin.
After all, Japan is a nation of
nearly 90 million people. It has
been one of the world's greatest
powers and it will be again.
Political Fake
Outer Mongolia is a political
fake. It is an artificially created
satellite of the Soviet Union. It
has no set boundaries. Authori
ties differ widely on its popula
tion. Nearly every member of the
United Nations wanted to admit
Japan. Nobody, outside of the
Ru
Jap
an may Backfire i
U -
Matte? Of FGt By Joe and Stewart Alsop
CASUALTY ROCKEFELLER
Washington Nelson A. Rock
efeller was the most important
casualty to date of the peculiar
policy - making
process of the
Eisenhower ad
ministration. Of course
they played
"Hearts and
Flowers" quite
beautifully a t
the funeral.
One of the
g r e at conven
iences of gov
ernmental ob
Joseph Also
sequies is that the casualties are
not quite in the dear departed
category, but are only the dear
departing. They can join in their
own last rites, which Rockefel
ler loyally did.
He wrote the President that
family business imperatively re
quired him to leave the govern
ment. The President replied af
fectionately, with many an ex
pression oi
deep regret. Ev
ery convention
was observed.
But the fact re-
mains thai
Roc kefeller
would never
have left his
key post as a
Presidential ad
viser, if the ad
vice he gave in
Stewart Alsop
the recent
struggle over next year's budget
had not proved unpalatably in
sistent and forthright.
Just how the end came is still
cloaked in considerable mystery.
Certainly Rockefeller gave sharp
offense to Secretary of the
Treasury George M. Humphrey
and the Administration's other
budget-firsters. Certainly Rock
efeller's intervention was also
far from well received by Secre
tary of State John Foster Dulles,
who guards his prerogatives with
some care. Certainly Rockefel
ler's position as a Presidential
adviser or in plainer language,
an official fifth wheel was al
ways an inherently difficult po
sition. "DUT it does not matter very
greatly whether or no it was
Rockefeller himself who decided
that he had worn out his useful
ness as seems most likely. In any
case, he is really leaving the
executive offices because his use
fulness there was finally worn
out although no doubt there is
no shortage of Rockefeller fam
ily business for him to take care
of now. that he is free to do so.
Furthermore, what wore out
Rockefeller's usefulness was his
powerful insistence on a wholly
new order of national policy pri
orities. Balancing the budget
and even cutting taxes must now
yield pride of place, he declared.
And he pleaded for giving an
over-riding first priority to meet
ing the double challenge of the
enormous progress of the Krem
lin's arms program and the wide
extension of the Kremlin's po
litical offensive in the Middle
and far East. ,
The decision to neglect this
double challenge is a fateful de
cision. The new theme song
seems to be a revised version of
the old hymn "Look Only to
Lady Luck, SHE Will Carry Us
Through." Maybe Lady Luck
really wUl carry us through, as
every sensible person must pray.
But if Rockefeller's factually
justified forebodings prove cor
rect, as is also possible, his- de
parture fronij the government
Veto off UN S
six Communist members, really
wanted Outer Mongolia in.
Why should Russia have been
so insistent on the admission of
Outer Mongolia to the United
Nations as the price of Japan's
admission?
One reasbn seems to be that
the Kremlin used the Nationalist
veto to keep Japan out for the
present. It hoped to force Japan
to make concessions in the long-drawn-out
negotiations for a
Russian-Japanese peace treaty.
Another may have been that
it wanted to coerce Japan into
seeking closer relations with
Communist China.
A third reason probably was
a desire to "save face". That is
an Oriental device for covering
up an evident defeat with an ap
parent victory. Russian diplo
macy often has an Asiatic com
plexion. In other words, the Kremlin
apparently decided that if it
could not get Outer Mongolia
into the United Nations, it had
to keep some other country out.
Pressure Lessens
Recent advices from Tokyo
say that Japan's attitude toward
Russia is likely to be hardened
as the result of the U.N. action
and that it will not be coerced
into making concessions.
It is reported also that Japan
is increasingly cool toward the
question of seeking closer rela
tions with Communist China.
Pressure on Premier Ichiro
Hatoyama to recognize the
Communist regime has notably
lessened in recent weeks. Nor is
there the hope which existed a
few months ago of closer trade
relations.
This is partly due also to the
will later be remembered in the
way men now remember the de
partures of British officials in
the '30s, who got into hot water
by! insisting that it was danger
ous to neglect the challenge of
Adolf Hitler.
TO BE sure, Rockefeller and
his senior partner in .the
struggle, Vice-President Richard
Nixon, who showed quite excep
tional courage, have some re
sults to show after their fight
for different policy priorities
The budget-firsters ' did not get
all they wanted. A great increase
of Soviet power and an intensi
fication of Soviet effort were not
answered by a considerable re
duction of American power and
effort. The American policy de
cision was to carry on as before.
Yet the departure of Rocke
feller leaves almost no one but
the Vice-President, who is likely
to speak up for a change in pol
icy priorities, if and when just
carrying on as before begins to
prove acutely dangerous.
At the State Department, Sec
retary Dulles is heavily over
burdened with the endless in
tricacy and constant movement
of day-to-day diplomacy. Ques
tions of American power and
American effort, which have
mainly to do with the defense
and foreign aid program, Dulles
tends to leave to his two sub
ordinates, Under Secretary Her
bert Hoover Jr. and Foreign Aid
Administrator John Hollister
Both Hollister and Hoover
strongly incline. to the budget-
firster side.
AT THE Defense Department,
Secretary of Defense Charles
E. Wilson is no longer willing to
reduce our defense effort
which is a form of courage in
present circumstances. But Wil
son sees no reason to increase
the defense effort, either, in or
der to balance the increase of
Soviet strength. As for the views
of Treasury Secretary Humphrey
and Budget Director Rowland
Hughes, they might almost be
described as notorious.
Thus there is no one besides
Nixon to signal a change of
course, except the President
himself. If Eisenhower ever de
cides a change of course is
needed, he will have to over
rule most of those who hold the
key positions on his team.
All hope is now on him.
(C) 1955, New York Herald
Tribune Inc.
MR.
INSURANCE
Fred
Brennan
An electric skil-saw and other
tools, concrete blocks, roofing, and
even a small concrete mixer were
stolen from our construction jobs
last year. Can a contractor get
insurance against the loss or danv
age of his tools and equipment
from agy cause whatever?
For Information Call
MEDFORD INSURANCE
AGENCY
Phone 2-4940
wit?
eat for
s View
visits of Japanese members" of
Parliament, business men and
news men to Red China. Their
reports have been critical.
They were not impressed by
life in the Communist paradise.
Also, they saw signs that Red
China might become a trade ri
val instead of a customer.
RKO Film Library
Sold; $15,209,
Paid By TV Firm
New York U.R) C&C Su
per Corp. announced today pur
chase of the entire film library
of RKO-Radio Pictures, Inc., for
$15,200,000 in cash.
The library, comprising 740
feature motion picture films and
over 1,000 short subjects, will
be used for exhibition on TV
throughout the world and for
motion picture showing outside
the United States and Canada.
Between 80 and 85 per cent
of the films will be made avail
able immediately to stations
throughout the , country.
Three Years Old
All the pictures in this block
are at least three years old. RKO
reserved the right not to release
any of its pictures until after
they had been exhibited . for
three years in the United States
through standard motion picture
channels.
The remaining films will be
available in a matter of months
since RKO film production has
been relatively small within the
past three years, the announce
ment said.
The transaction called for the
immediate payment of $12,200,-
000, with the balance of $3,000.-
000 to be paid within the next
24 months as other films become
available from the RKO library.
From a financial viewpoint,
Matthew Fox, president of C&C
Television Corp., a subsidiary,
said that the original cost of the
films involved in the purchase
amounted to $750,000,000. He
noted that many of the films
were lavish productions prepar
ed in the years when RKO was
controlled by Howard Hughes,
Scientists Briefed
On IGY Readiness
Atlanta (U.R) Scientists to
day got a top-level briefing on
preparations for man's greatest
single probe of nature's secrets,
a world-wide investigation dur
ing the International Geophysi
cal Year.
Dr. Lloyd V. Berkner, vice-
president of the IGY commit
tee, opened a three-day sym
posium to bring his colleagues
up to date on the scope of the
giant scientific undertaking by
44 nations starting July 1, 1957.
The symposium is being held
in conjunction with the annual
meeting of the American Asso
ciation for the Advancement of
Science.
Among the most spectacular
events planned for the Geophy
sical Year are the launching of
the first man-made satellite and
the huge Antarctic expedition
being led by Rear Adm. Richard
E. Byrd.
But the vast undertaking will
embrace 11 branches of geophy
sics Berkner said.
The Sun will be under con
tinuous observation by 20 sta
tions around the earth watching
for changes in sunspots and oth
er conditions affecting the
earth's atmosphere.
117 S. Central
, - -
j cog -J
Quotes From the News
By UNITED PRESS
Reno, Nev. Civil Defense Administrator Val Peterson, prom-
1S1!fw 3id t0 flood victims western Nevada:
We re not here to take over but to help where we can. You're
going to have to do all you can to help yourselves."
Washington David Eisenhower, the President's seven-year-old
grandson, on the White House Christmas of the Eisenhowers:
Boy, did I have a time today."
Pafi1SFornler French Premier Pierre Mendes-France propos
ing settling of the Algerian crisis by conciliation-
"We will not be able to stay in North Africa or in the other
countries of the French Union as long as we count on force re
pression and violence."
Paris French Premier Edgar Faure, on the recent National
ist Chinese veto in the United Nations on admission of Communist
Outer Mongolia:
"Is it realistic to reconsider that China still is represented by
Formosa?" s
Chicago Ned H. Dearborn, president of the National Safety
Council, on the holiday highway slaughter:
"We may have dreamed of a White Christmas but we have
made it black with a record of death, destruction and disaster oa
the highway by which no American can help but be depressed,
ashamed and frightened."
Moscow "The Soviet Union appreciates the opportunity to
become acquainted with ihe operatic culture of the United States
and ihe great talents of the American people.",,
On The Side
(Distributed by King
Beautiful one, be not so coy.
Do not disdain me.
Sweet, entertain me! .
Do not, O do not, prize your beauty
At too high a rate;
Love to be loved
While you are lovely
Lest you love too late.
Bayley.
- The ideal mother, from a eu
genic standpoint, is of high intel
ligence, has broad hips, sturdy
limbs and big feet. So says an
expert on the subject. Therefore,
young woman, if you are some
what "hippy" and have big feet,
don't be depressed. To you na
ture has apparently been kind.
You will be the mother of some
wonderful children.
Asking
Queries from clients. Q. What
was the first film in which Gil
bert Roland appeared? I claim
it was as leading man for Norml
Talmadge in "The Dove." A.
Roland's first film was "The
Plastic Age," in which he was
featured with Clara Bow. That
was 1925. In 1927 he appeared
with Norma Talmadge in "The
Dove." . . . Q. Are you familiar
with an old Scotch toast that
includes the line, "May the
wings of love never lose a feath
er"? A. Yes, sir. It is as follows:
"May the hinges of friendship
never rust or the wings of love
lose a feather."
Asides
Chew on a sprig of parsley
after eating onions and odor of
the onions will be eliminated
from your breath, making you
again fit to be associated with or
to kiss your girl good-night. . . .
Since 1840 every President of
the United States elected in a
year ending in zero has died in
office. That includes Harrison,
Lincoln, Garfield, McKinley,
Harding and F. D. Roosevelt. So
I suppose the man elected in
1960 may have cause to do a
little worrying.
Guide io Guys
Men born under Pisces (Feb.
21-March 20) are not happy un
less they can completely domi
nate their households. They pre
fer the clinging vine type of
wife. They are opposed to wives
having careers. They expect per
fect home managing. They want
all the comforts of a home plus
service like a hotel. Pisces men
usually do well financially. They
know how to make money and
how to keep it. Or so say the
star-gazers.
Longevity
While vegetarians attributed
George Bernard Shaw's long life
to his adherence to a vegetarian
diet, the author himself credited
it to heredity. Especially to bis.
Electric Water Heaters
PLENTY OF HOT
. eiD
VATtK r"
ONLY PENNIES
A DAT
ey e. v. Durimg
Feature Syndicate. Inc.)
grandmother, who was the moth
er of 15 children and lived to
be 88.
Asides
It is the female mosquito that
does the stinging. The male mos
quito is a vegetarian . . . Ice
land has been a nation for over
1,000 years and has never had a
war . . . Players named Dooin.
Doolan and Dolan were all on
the Philadelphia National
League Ball club at the same
time. Once the summary describ
ing a double play read: "From
Doolan to Dooin to Dolan or
Doolan to Dolan to Dooin."
Insults
In Paris the supreme insult
one autoist can shout to another
is "Ecole! Ecole!" This means,
"Why don't you go to automobile
school and learn how to drivel
We could use a good one word
hisult for careless, stupid and
inept automobile drivers in this
country. Any suggestions?
Looking
Ahead
with
rUADlEC
E. JONES
Most of us are reluctant to
face unpalatable truths. That
sensitive spot on our molar is
probably just a temporary irri
tation; that twinge of pain in
the region of the heart will no
doubt go away if we give it
time. Too many of us put off
seeing our dentist or consulting
our physician for a periodic
check-up. Similarly, possibility
of early death is an unpleasant
fact that we try hard not to
think about. Yet only two cate
gories of people can afford to
disregard such a contingency
those who have no dependents
and those who have made,
through life assurance, sufficient
provision for their loved ones
against the chance of untimely
death. If you cannot conscien
tiously claim to be in either of
these categories drop me a line
telephone.
CHARLES E. JONES,
Local Agent
SUN LIFE ASSURANCE
COMPANY OF CANADA
Phone 2-9772
Phone 2-6241
REG. 89.95 UPRIGHT MODlt
8388
40-Gallon Electric Model. Cov
ered by 5-Yr. Protection Plan.
Adjustable thermostcr, double
element. Reg. 102.95 Of) 88
50-Gal. size 7W
109.95 Table Top Electric - 40
Gal. Covered by Wards 5-Yr.
Protection Plan. Por- AOiSS
99
celain enameled top