Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, January 19, 1956, Image 4

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    FOUR MEDFORD (OREGON)
Medfo:
UNE
"Everybody In Southern 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
:
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ERIC ALLEN JR.. Managing Editor
EARL H. ADAMS. City Editor
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RICHARD JEWETT, Sports Editor
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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
Jan. 19, 1946
(It was Saturday)
Carlos Morris elected presi
dent of the Southern Oregon
Funeral directors.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Sgiudge Pot column: What the
people of the country seem to
need most right now, things be
ing the way they are, is a Moses
to lead them out of the mess, of
their own voting.
20 YEARS AGO
Jan. 19. 1936
(It was Sunday)
Rudyard Kipling, Great Brit
ain's poet and story teller, dies;
may be buried in Westminster
Abby.
Ray C. Ward elected presi
dent of board of directors of
Jackson county Fruitgrowers
league; cA. S. V. Carpenter,
first vice president; S. G. Nye,
second vice-president; A. H.
Banwell, secretary-treasurer.
30 YEARS AGO
Jan. 19. 1926
(It was Tuesday)
James H. Owen announces
$900,000 building program for
Owen-Oregon Lumber company
here.
Wildlife census at Crater Lake
National Park shows 3,170 black
tail deer, 640 coyotes,. 900 mar
tens, 48 bear and 35 lions.
40 YEARS AGO
Jan. 19, 1916
(It was Wednesday)
Dr. ,J?argrave elected presi
dent of Medford city council at
first meeting of new council.
From Local and Personal col
umn: The county court meets
Thursday to take up the peti
tion of Talent farmers for the
creation of an irrigation district.
What's the Answer?
Can You Get 4 of the 7?
Copr. 1955. Editorial Research Repart
1. A majority of the 10 mem
bers of the Eisenhower cabinet
are over 60; right or wrong?
2. The YMCA movement was
founded, a little over 100 years
ago, in Canada, England, Scot
land or the U. S.?
3. The Jews 300 years ago
were expelled from or read
mitted to England by Oliver
Cromwell?
4. About 5, 8, 12. 15
or 20 of all non-fatal auto ac
cidents cause some permanent
disability?
5. The so-called Baghdad pact
is for mutual defense in the Far
East, Middle East, North Africa,
or North Atlantic area?
6. Stevenson when defeated
for president in 1952 got many
fewer electoral votes than Dewey
when defeated in 1948, or about
the same number?
7. The Mexican jumping bean
"jumps" by action of an insect
inside it; right or wrong?
The answers: 1 Right (6 of
the 10). 2 England. 3 Readmit-
ied. 48. 5 Middle East 6
Many fewer. 7 Right
SNOW MESSAGE
Eau Claire, Wis. (U.PJ Police
charged a man with knocking
down a street sign and then driv
ing away. They said someone
had seen the accident arid writ
ten the license number of the
offending car in the snow be
side the fallen sign.
MAIL TRIBUNE
The Dulles Article
The brickbats heaved at Secretary Dulles and
his "Life" article don't leave us cold exactly, but do
fail to raise the editorial blood-pressure danger
ously. Why?
Because this is election year.
And this sort of complacent and boastful ap
praisal of the administration's foreign policy, is just
what one should expect. It all comes under the head
ing of "stating with pride" just as the brickbats come
under the twin-bill of "viewing with alarm."
OERE are two of America's most venerable and
cherished political traditions. Instead of this
criticism at home slowing down the loquacious and
self-satisfied Secretary of State, it will probably, tend
to stimulate his partisan fighting spirit, as well as
lead to more statements of like tenor as time goes on.
This is all a part of the "old army game" it has
been going on for decades.
THE effect abroad is another matter. This article
will contribute to the growing unpopularity of the
United States (both east and west). BuHt is doubt
ful if the dislike of Uncle Sam in foreign lands will
be materially increased by campaign statements on
either side of the domestic political fence. There are
indications indeed that foreign observers are more
aware of the approaching presidential campaign and
its political significance, than the "old folks at home,"
and are disposed to discount it.
TUI OREOVER just as Secretary of State Dulles can't
prove he is right, his critics can't prove he is
wrong.
It all comes under the heading of guess-work
speculation.
There is no doubt that peace was restored in the
Far East and still exists in Korea, Indo-China and
the Formosa straits. But there is considerable doubt
that the peace secured in any area was a victory for
the United States or will be permanent.
General MacArthur and other military experts,
for example, stoutly maintain, that if the USA had
smashed over the Yalu with all its power, including
the atomic Red China would have quickly come to
terms, and instead of a divided Korea today there
would be a united one, threatening not Japan, but
Manchuria. .
Similar action in Indo-China would, the same
claimants maintain, have not resulted in losing half
of that country to the Communists, and similar all-out
support to Chiang Kai-shek (when we had atomic
superiority) would have resulted in the downfall of
the Mao Red dictatorship in China and the restora
tion of Democracy and a stable anti-communist gov
ernment m that disorganized and uniortunate coun
try. OULD all THAT, have been accomplished by a
different policy and without another World War?
Who knows? Only those who have the gift of
prophecy, who can, (with or without a crystal ball),
KNOW what would have happened if what did hap
pen, had NOT happened.
DUT there is no such speculation about what is
going to happen from here on to November. It
will be a time to try men's souls and ear-drums.
There will be many more articles like the Dulles
offering. There will be many more reactions like
those following this "viewing with pride" effussion,
by the opposition who will view with alarm.
-Those who determine in advance not to take the
campaign noise and fury TOO seriously and when
they venture abroad, leave their hearing aids at
home, will have a, far more enjoyable year, than
those who don't! R.W.R.
They Can't See It
In the army General Eisenhower was never noted
for his self-control or his restraint and moderation.
He was the dynamic, explosive combative type.
But perhaps as a result of his three years in the
White House and his recent serious illness, he has
become, we believe, a very different person and
more thoroughly disciplined character.
Lf this were not true, we believe "Ike" would
some time ago have ordered the demotion of Con
gressman Joe Martin and Senator Knowland, his
party leaders in the two houses of congress.
For their attitude toward the President since his
illness has been shockingly devoid of sympathy and
understanding.
pONGRESSMAN Martin has persisted in stressing
the President's "DUTY" to his party to run again
regardless of all other considerations. In other words
if after considering the situation from all angles the
President should decide not to run, he would be a
shirker, according to the Martin judgment.
CENATOR Knowland has altered his original posi
r tion slightly he now says he will delay his own
candidacy until February and if the President decides
to run he, of course, will not.
But he does not modify the clear implication that
the President SHOULD in justice to HIM and other
GOP aspirants make his decision early enough to
allow entrance into the primaries in various and sun
dry states, and any "holding operation" on political
and personal grounds would be unworthy of him.
MEITHER of these GOP leaders seem to realize
A" the great difficulty of the President's position or
are they able to assume that whatever his decision
finally proves to be, it will be the result of many con
siderations, the fundamental one being what he con
siders best, from the standpoint of the welfare, not
of HIMSELF, but of his COUNTRY. R.W.R.
Thursday, January 19, 1956
Finns1 Presidential Election
Influenced by Reds1 Interest
By CHARLES M. McCANN
United Press Correspondent
Soviet Russia, in a burst of
bigheartedness, is about to give
up its Porkkala naval base on
the southern
coast of Fin
land. Formal
transfer of the
152 - square!
mile territory,!
which Rus s i a !
forced Fin
land to lease
to it for 50
years, has
Charles MeCann Deen set lor
next Thursday. But Russia will
keep the Petsamo area, with its
rich nickel mines, and the other
territory it has seized from Fin
land in two wars.
Also, Russia evidently In
tends to keep the defiant, freedom-loving
little country under
its thumb politically as long as
it can. j
Finns have just finished vot
ing for electors who will meet
on Feb. 15 to choose a president
for a six-year term.
Russia quietly let the Finnish
government know in advance
that it wanted the new president
to be a safe man safe, that is,
from the Kremlin's viewpoint.
Today and
By Walter
DULLES RIDES AGAIN
There is not as yet available
any plausible explanation of
why Mr. Dulles chose deliber
ately to have
the "L i f e"
magazine
article writ
ten about him.
For the extra
ordinary thing
about this ar
ticle is- that
while it pre
tends to re-
Walter Lippman veal the inner
truths of our recent policy in the
Far East, it provides a funda
mentally false account.
The falsity lies in this: That
Mr. Dulles describes what has
happened in Korea, Indo-China
and the Formosa Strait in terms
of "unilateral deterrents" by
the United States. What has
really happened is that both
sides and all concerned have
been, held within a condition of
"mutual deterrent." Thus, while
it is no doubt true that the Com
munists have been deterred by
fear of our retaliation, it is also
undoubtedly true that Dr. Sygn
man Rhee, General Chiang Kai
shek, Admiral Radford and
those who wanted to intervene
in Indo-China have been deter
red by our fear of Soviet retalia
tion. The existence of the mili
tary stalemate explains, as Mr.
Dulles's one-sided account does
not explain, the political situa
tion in the contested area on the
approaches to China.
THE actual condition of mu
tual deterrent, or military
stalemate, was first discerned by
Churchill when he learned the
results of the hydrogen bomb
tests .Shortly after that the con
clusion was drawn by the Presi
dent in his famous declaration
that there is "no alternative to
peace." It was that declaration,
which the Russians have since
then described to, that led to the
first Geneva conference, and
was the core of that conference.
Now if there is no alternative
to peace, then no one can go to
the brink of war in the sense
that he threatens to go to war.
If war is not an alternative, then
anyone who threatens war is
either mad or is bluffing. If war
is not an alternative, then issues
have to be compromised.
If, as Mr. DuUes's article im
plies though he himself must
know better we were the uni
lateral deterrers in the Far East,
we would have enjoyed a mili
tary superiority sufficient to
make the Communists give in
to us on the issues in dispute.
In fact, all we have been able
to get has been peace on the
basis of the military status quo.
Both sides have had to accept
peace without victory.
MR. DULLES must come very
near to being the first For
eign Minister who has ever
wanted to appear more warlike
than in fact he was. "Life" maga
zine has painted a picture of a
bold and threatening man who
has over-awed the adversary.
The fact is that everybody has
been over-awed. The Commu
nists have been deterred from
aggression beyond the line of the
status, quo; we have been de
terred from liberation beyond
that line.
In order to maintain and sta
bilize that line at which both
sides are deterred, we have not
only made known that we would
fight if that line were crossed
by armed forces, we have also
given assurances that we ' our
selves will not cross the line in
the other direction.
TN KOREA, we have guaran
teed South Korea against ag
gression from North Korea and
from China. In return we have
taken the necessary military
means to prevent Dr. Rhee from
drawing us into an attempt to
Wants To Retire
Juho Paasikivi has been pres
ident since 1946. The Russians
made it known that they would
like him to remain president.
But Paasikivi, now 85 years old,
wants to retire.
Premier Urho Kekkonen, 55,
has obtained a dominant plural
ity of the 300 presidential elec
tors Finnish voters chose. The
word from Helsinki, the capital,
is that he probably will be
elected president.
Like Paasaikivi, Kekkonen
favors a policy of friendship
with Russia. .
It is a forced friendliness.
Neither man is at all pro-Communist.
Both realize, however,
that Finland's only course is to
avoid antagonizing the Soviet
government.
It is indicated that the Krem
lin may accept Kekkonen. But
it is still possible that it will
insist on Paasikivi, and that the
electors will agree.
The Kremlin never has been
reconciled to the loss of Fin
land in the Russian revolution
of 1917.
Finland was an autonomous
grand dutchy under the Russian
czar. It declared its independ
ence on Dec. 6, 1917, and made
Tomorrow
Lippmann
liberate North Korea.
In Indo-China we were de
terred from intervening with an
air strike to save Dien Bien
Phu by the fear that China
would then intervene openly by
invading Northern Vietnam.
Such an invasion would have re
quired an air bombardment of
China to repel it. That was a
course from which we were de
terred by the fear that this
would cause the Soviet Union
to intervene. This is how mutual
deterrents work. It worked in
Indo-China to deter open inter
vention either by the Chinese
or by ourselves, and to produce
a cessation of hostilities on the
basis of the military status quo.
There is no point in talking
now as if it had all been some
kind of victory.
In the Formosa Strait we
gave Chiang a treaty of guaran
tee which was, as Mr. Dulles
says, a warning not to attack
Formosa. But Mr. Dulles has,
in his role of melodramatic
hero, omitted the other half of
the story. The other half is that
we then releashed Chiang firm
ly, and sent word to Peiping
through various diplomatic chan
nels that we would not permit,
much less would we assist, Chi
ang to attempt to return to the
mainland. In the Formosa affair
Chiang got a guarantee of his
island refuge and Chou En-lai
got the assurance that Chiang
was no longer to be regarded as
a serious contender on the main
land. TN SUM, the Eisenhower policy
-- in the Far East has operated
as it had to within the over
all condition of a military stale
mate. This has led to a series of
compromises probably tempor
ary based on the military sta
tus quo. It is not glorious what
we have done; it is merely mak
ing the best of things as they
are, and striking heroic and
melodramatic poses about it is
entirely uncalled for.
The article has done damage
to the country and to Mr.
Dulles's own usefulness as Sec
retary of State. He has provided
the Soviet propaganda with a
text which is sheer bonanza. The
exasperating thing about it is
that whereas ordinarily we
have to contend with untruths
that others tell about us, here
we have to contend with half
truths that are tantamount to
untruths put out by the Secre
tary of State himself.
For the truth, which will now
be obscured by this article, is
that United States foreign policy
has been more realistic and
more responsible than anyone
would suppose who had read
what Mr. Dulles has allowed to
be written about it.
Copyright, 1956,
New York Herald Tribune, Inc.
AEC Continues
Bomb Safety Test
Las Vegas J.R) The Atomic
Energy Commission has set off
another explosion in its cur
rent safety series to determine
whether atomic devices can be
detonated accidentally.
The AEC refused to give de
tails of the blast which was set
off yesterday on Atomic Prov
ing Grounds 75 miles north of
Las Vegas.
"Today's test resulted in a de
tonation of low explosive force
creating a low altitude cloud
carrying minute amounts of
radioactivity," the AEC said.
"No offsite radiological problem
is expected."
The safety test series began
in November. At that time the
AEC said scientists were seek
ing to learn if atomic devices
could be detonated by shock
rather than by triggering them.
ncau auu rc w .u . .
Xhe Community's Biggest Marketplace
it stick
Shameful War
Soviet Russia invaded Fin
land on Nov. 30, 1939, when the
Finns defied their demand for
territorial concessions. That was
one of the most shameful of
wars. Finland resisted bravely,
to the admiration of the world.
But of course it lost in the end,
and Russia grabbed 16,170
square miles of Finnish terri
tory. When Adolf Hitler attacked
Russia in 1941, Finland sided
with the Germans. As the re
sults of that war, Russia seized
northernmost Finland including
Petsamo, the little country's
only Arctic port, and the nickel
mines. Russia thus extended its
frontier to Norway.
Russia also forced Finland to
lease the Porkkala navy base.
Its "lease" would not have run
out for another 39 years. But
last September it was announc
ed that Porkkala would be re
stored. Russian - troops were
evacuated, and all that remained
was the formal ceremony of
handing it back. The Kremlin
probably had the presidential
election in mind when it decided
to surrender Porkkala.
In The Day's
By FRANK JENKINS
Election year news notes:
Senator Walter George of
Georgia says in Washington that
American foreign policy, should
be to "go as far away as we
can in justice and honor from
ANY danger of involvement in
war." ,
The correspondents comment
that he thus took indirect issue
with the "brink of war" remarks
attributed to GOP secretary of
state Dulles in a recent article
in a big Eastern magazine.
QENATOR George is an able
and patriotic Democrat. He
is chairman of the senate for
eign relations committee one
of the most important commit
tees of the congress. In foreign
affairs matters, he has never
hesitated to go along with the
Republican administration when
"he felt that going along was the
wise and statesmanlike thing to
do.
The moderate and temperate
character of his statement this
morning indicates rather clear
ly that he doesn't disagree very
sharply with what Secretary
Dulles had to say in his Life
magazine interview.
TF THAT is the case, why does
he "take issue" at all with
Secretary Dulles? .
. Well, it's like this:
Senator George is coming up
again this year for reelection.
He is nearing his 80th year. He
has served in the U. S. Senate
since 1922. He wants very much
to be reelected.
BuU-
This time he is facing hot com
petition for the Democratic nom-
Welfare Order
Cashings Probed
Portland (U.R) Police today
investigated reports that some
grocery stores here have ille
gally given cash for unused parts
of Multnomah county welfare
food requisitions.
Police said Joseph J. Peavy,
52 who was accused of stealing
26 blank requisitions last week,
told officers he was able to get
cash for unused parts of requisi
tions by accepting discounts of
from 20 to 25 per cent.
A welfare agency spokesman
said it was against the rules for
grocers to give holders of requi
sitions money for the portion not
used in the initial food pur
chases. The requisitions are
used by the county as a means
of giving aid to needy persons
before actual money payment is
started.
Detectives said one blank was
given to Louis Blanton, 36, who
they said was able to get $20.06
from a $32.50 order.
Peavy was held on a burglary
charge and Blanton was charged
with obtaining property by false
pretenses. Blanton was not link
ed with the welfare office burg
lary. .
EYEGLASS SWIPER JAILED
Chester, England (U.PJ A 21-
year-old insurance agent ad
mitted Wednesday that he has
had since he was 15 an urge to
take glasses off women's faces.
The judge sentenced the youth
to three weeks in a mental hos
pital for swiping eyeglasses off
the noses of three ladies.
ok l
1 MARKET 1
1202 North Riverside 8
k OPEN EVERY S
NIGHT TIL M
MIDNIGHT
Economic Competition
Between East, West,
Basis of Aid Request
By WILLIAM T. STONE
Washington The administra
tion's plan to seek a substantial
increase in foreign aid appro
priations, in order to keep out
lays for economic and military
assistance at about the present
level, was speUed out in the bud
get message sent to Congress
Jan. 16.
The present rate of foreign aid
spending is around $4.2 billion
a year. The administration wants
to raise the total for next year
only to $4.4 billion. However, in
order to maintain expenditures
at that level for a more or less
indefinite period, it will be ne
cessary to replenish a now de
pleted pipeline. Congress there
fore is asked to increase the ap
propriation for foreign aid from
the $2.7 bUlion voted for fiscal
1956 to about $4.9 billion for
fiscal 1957.
Economic Competition
The immediate object of the
request for bigger appropria
tions is to enable the United
States to deal with the growing
emphasis on economic competi
tion in the cold war. President
Eisenhower said in his State of
News
ination which in Georgia am
ounts to election. His opponent
is the son of the famous (or in
famous, depending on how you
look at it) Governor Talmadge
of Georgia.
SENATOR George has the fight
of his life on his hands. As
a Democrat in the Democratic
state of Georgia, he can't seem
to go along with a REPUBLI
CAN secretary of state in the
cabinet of a Republican Presi
dent. Young Talmadge would
make too much political capital
out of that.
So Senator George, able and
patriotic as he is, has to cut
bait in this political campaign
year.
T ET'S turn now to a Republi
can Senator Homer Cape
hart of Indiana. He calls in
Washington this morning for the
creation of an agency to GET
RID of more than eight billion
dollars worth of government-
held farm surpluses by gift, if
necessary.
In testimony prepared for a
senate agriculture committee,
Capehart says congress must DO
SOMETHING about what he
calls "the desperate plight of the
American farmer."
He's using the time-tried poli
tical trick, you see, of making
them feel sorry for themselves,
He disregards entirely the fairly
logical fact that the flexible sup
port policy, which is a Republi
can policy, is a SOUND cure for
what ails American- agriculture
because its effect will be to DIS
COURAGE OVER PRODUC
TION which is bulging the
warehouses with surpluses that
hang like a dark thundercloud
over the markets of the future,
T'HE flexible support policy,
however, REQUIRES TIME.
Senator Capehart needs votes
RIGHT NOW.
He, too, comes up for reelec
tion this year.
So he calls for another shot
in the arm.
T SUPPOSE it's too much to
expect, but I can't help going
along with these words of Josiah
Gilbert Holland's stirring poem,
The Day's Demand, written
about a century ago:
God, give us men! A time like
this demands
Strong minds, great hearts,
true faith, ready hands,
Men whom the lust of office
does not kill.
Men who can stand before a
demagogue
and damn his treacherous flat
teries without winking;
Tall men, sun-crowned, who
live above the fog
In public duty and in private
thinking.
w
w
J2LU
the , Union message that the
United States must "sustain and
fortify" the foreign aid program
and put itself in a position to
give aid recipients "assurance"
of continuity in economic assist
ance for development projects
and programs which . . . require
a period of years for planning
and completion." The need is to
combat "conditions of poverty
and unrest in less developed
areas" which have made their
people "a special target of in
ternational Communism." '-
Congress has been less" con
vinced of the need for foreign
economic aid than of the need
for military aid. Leaders of both
parties have made it clear that
the requests for economic assist
ance will be scrutinized care
fully before new funds are ap
propriated. Meanwhile, ques
tions are being asked about the
effectiveness of western aid pro
grams in the Middle East and
Asia, where Russian Commu
nism is making a strong bid for
the favor of underdeveloped
countries and Jheir peoples.
Cite U.S. Superiority
One body of opinion in the
administration and in Congress
holds that the Soviet economy,
despite recent gains, is still not
strong enough to compete with
the West in providing the kinds
of goods and services required
for foreign economic -develop
ment. Adherents of that point of
view observe that the total out
put of goods and services in the
United States is nearly three
times as great as in Russia.
Another body of opinion holds
that the Soviet government is
capable of maintaining a sub
stantial flow of trade and tech
nical aid to non-Communist
countries, provided that the
Kremlin deems such transactions
politically worth while. The So
viet rulers can follow more
flexible aid policies than the
western democracies, because
they have power to determine
arbitrarily how their human and
material resources shall be used.
Gives Little Aid
A rough balance sheet of econ
omic and technical aid in Asia,
and the Middle East shows that
the Soviet Union actually has
rendered very little assistance to
less developed countries. Foreign
aid received by India during its
first five-year plan (1951-1956)
has come entirely from the West.
The Soviet Union has offered
to buy surplus raw . materials
from India, Burma, Egypt and
other countries . in . return for
purchases of Russian industrial
equipment. It has offered also
to construct steel plants for In
dia and to provide technical as
sistance to Burma, Egypt, and
Afghanistan for economic de
velopment projects. So far, how
ever, Russia has been unable to
supply the investment capital
which most of these countries
need. The western powers con
tributed nearly 20 per cent of
the capital of $2 billion invested
last year by 12 Asian nations in
their national development
programs.
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103 No. Central
Across from Peney's
2)W
"CORONER CASES"
In those cases requiring the services of the
county coroner, most people seemingly do not
understand that they still have a free choice
of the' funeral director they want to handle the
funeral arrangements.
If you should be unfortunate enough to have
to call the coroner regarding the loss of a
loved one, remember to call the funeral direct
or of your choice AT THE SAME TIME!
He can be of immeasurable help in relieving
you of many of the troublesome difficulties in
volved in "coroner cases."
CHAPEL MORTUARY
Across from the Courthouse
Frank Morgan Harold Snodgras
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
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