Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, October 01, 1958, Image 5

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    J
Communism Appears Roofed in Minds of
Chinese People, UP! President Declares
San
is no strong evidence that
Communism in China has
rooted itself permanently in
the minds of its 600-million
people, Frank H. Bartholo
mew told a group of civil and
industrial leaders here today.
Bartholomew, president and
general manager of United
Press International, said evi
dence seems to support the
contrary view that the masses
consider themselves under the
rule of "still another war
lord."
"They go about their busi
ness as they have for thou
sands of years regardless of
whose flag is flying.
"P rivate armies have
marched and counter-marched
across the land through all
recorded history, and to the
Chinese peasants the present
armies of Mao and Chiang
Kai-Shek may be more of the
same.
Future Will Tell
'There has been speculation
as to what will happen to free
China when Chiang Kai-shek
dies. Perhaps curiously, there
has been little speculation as
to the future of Communism
on mainland China if Mao
and Chou-en-lai were re
moved by death. These events
themselves will reveal wheth-
Francisco UPI) There I er for the first time a foreign
ideology has really rooted it
self into China, or whether
Mao and Chou-en-lai are
merely praising war lord who
held the reins of government
in their time because no
stronger war lord successfully
challenged them."
Meantime, he said, UPI is
preparing to cover stories of
Communist agitation through
out Asia.
"As far back as July 3," he
said, "our correspondents
were reporting impending
trouble in the Quemoy-For-mosa
area.
Trouble Widespread
"There is trouble along the
border of Red China and Bur
ma. The atmosphere invRan
goon is tense. In Indonesia,
the situation is far from set
tled. India is in desperate
economic straits. With her
400-million people, India is a
logical target of Communism.
"Even in Japan, the big in
dustrial nation of Asia, Prime
Brando's Vife
Plans Divorce
Hollywood -l'PD- Actress
Anna Kashfi, complaining of
Marlon Brando's "indiffer
ence and neglect," Tuesday
night disclosed her intentions
of divorcing the moody actor.
The dark-haired beauty told
her close friend, Actress Pier
Angeli, that her decision was
"final and conclusive." She
had rented an apartment and
moved out of Brando's hill
top home because he was
"never there."
Miss Kashfi's decision to di
vorce Brando carne 11 days
less than a year since they
were married in a surprise
ceremony.
The announcement of di
vorce also came on the act
ress' 24th birthday. She took
her and Brando's 4-month-old
son. Christian Devi, with her
to her new home.
Asked about reports of
trouble between Brando and
the actress, Miss Angeli, who
is having marital problems
with singer Vic Damone, said:
"Yes, it is true,, Anna wants
a divorce. She called me to
night and told me about it."
Minister Kishi is very wor
ried about the growing
strength of the extreme
leftists.
"On the other side of the
world, our correspondents re
port an increase in Arab na
tionalism. "We may not have seen the
last country fall under Nas
ser's sway. Western diplo
mats are agreed the Arab na
tionalism Nasser represents
cannot be stopped. Howeyer,
they also agree he is his own
man, although in practice he
gives the appearance of being
hostile to the West. This may
improve in the next few
months.
East Europe Tense
"The Jordanian position is
most delicate. Jordan could
not survive without outside
help.
"Our European correspond
ents tell me Eastern Europe
is now in the greatest ferment
since the autumn of 1956, be
fore 'Polish October' when
Gomulka came to power, and
Bloody November' when
Hungary rose.
"But perhaps the biggest
story there will be the run
ning feud between Yugoslavia I
and the Communist bloc.
"We all are looking forward
with interest to the congress
of the Soviet Communist
Party, now moved up to Janu
ary, 1959, from 1960.
"At the previous congress,
in February, 1956, Khru
shchev made his surprise in
dictment of Stalin."
Bartholomew spoke before
a group of San Francisco in
dustry presidents at a lunch
at the Clift Hotel co-hosted
by Earle Le Masters, presi
dent of the Pacific National
Bank, and Herbert Cerwin of
Herbert Cerwin & Staff, pub
lic relations consultants.
Quemoy-Matsu Policy Finds
Way Onto Politial (Debates
Nixon Kicks Off
California Bid for
Republican Votes
With Nixon in California-(UFD-
Vice President Richard
M. Nixon, the Republican par
ty's top campaigner, launch
ed a crusade in California to
day for support for the em
battled GOP ticket in the No
vember election.
Nixon admitted upon his
arrival in Los Angeles Tues
day night that his party is
running behind right now in
its contest with Democrats
for control of the nation's sec
ond largest state.
"We have the fight of our
lives on our hands," he told
a news conference. "We must
wage an all-out fight. If we
don't, we can't win but I
believe we are going on the
offensive with a kind of cam
paign that can win in the na
tion and in California."
Nixon planned to concen
trate on vote-heavy San Diego
county today, one of three
population centers he will hit
before he leaves California
for Oregon on Friday.
In a speech in Los Angeles
Tuesday night, the Vice 'Pres
ident urged Californians
Democrats and Republicans
alike to get behind Sen.
William F. Knowland for gov
ernor and tiov. lioodwin J.
Knight for U. S. senator "be
cause they are the best men
for the jobs."-
They would, he said, carry
on the progressive policies of
President Eisenhower and
such former California Repub
lican governors' as Earl War
ren, now Chief Justice of the
Supreme Court.
The Issues
Nixon tackled three of the
most controversial issues in
the California election cam
paign by declaring:
He is against a proposal to
repeal the property tax ex
emption now granted paroch
ial schools because "we
shouldn't take any action to
discourage private schools."
He believes it would be a
''catastrophe" if the voters
approve a ballot initiative
sponsored by the American
Federation of Labor which
would reduce the state sales
tax but increase middle and
higher bracket state income
taxes.
He takes a neutral position
on Proposition 18, the so-called
"right-to-work" initiative
which would outlaw the un
ion shop.
Knowland favors such a
state law; Knight and most
other GOP candidates for the
statewide offices oppose it.
BRUCE BURNS
New Physical Director
Physical Director
Named at YMCA
Bruce Burns, a graduate of
Whitworth college, Spokane,
Wash., has been 'appointed
physical director at the Med
f ord Young Men's Christian
association, Alex McDonald,
personnel committee chair
man, has announced.
Burns, who will assume
duties Oct. 1, will be respon
sible for organization, promo
tion and handling physical ac
tivities, with swimming, gym
and weight lifting programs
his major fields.
He recently was discharged
from the Army, with which
he served in Germany, where
he was married. During his
undergraduate years at Whit
worth, he was part time phy
sical instructor in the Spo
kane YMCA.
Burns will direct trampo
line, weight lifting, boxing,
judo, basketball, swimming,
life saving, skin diving, wrest
ling, paddleball, handball, vol
leyball and other activities.
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Navy Plane Lands .
With Engines Gone
Christchurch, New Zealand
-OJPIl- A U.S. Navy R4D en
route to Christchurch to join
an Antarctic squadron landed
here safely today after an epic
flight from Canton Island.
The transport plane lost its
port engine over the Pacific
and flew 500 miles on one
engine, losing height and
speed all the way. It ran out of
gasoline shortly before land
ing. The remaining engine was
found to be burned out when
the pilot, Cmdr. Frank E.
Kimberling, ' Buena Park,
Calif,, set it down on the run
way here.
En route Kimberling or
dered the six-man crew to jet
tison everything removable as
the plane dropped to 1,700
feet. Tool boxes, personal gear
and seats torn from their
mountings were thrown out.
At one, point the plane
dropped to 1,000 feet and was
making a bare 90 knots when
the tired engine suddenly
pumped out another 10 knots
to keep it airborne.
jgy rout swmts yg
FIRST FEDERAL
Savings & Loan Assn. of Medford
29 North Ivy Street Robert F. Kyle, Manager
Convenient Street Parking
You have a hand in so many
people's happiness
Give a Fair Share -Others Do -to the
UNITED MEDFORD CRUSADE
20
Small Thunderbird
Said Due in 1959
Detroit -flJPD- The Detroit
Free Press says Ford Motor
Co. late next year will offer a
stripped down six-cylinder
Thunderbird as Ford's answer
to a growing demand for
American-built economy small
cars.
The 1960 model low-priced
Thunderbird will sell for less
than S2.000 and should travel
about 20 miles on a gallon of
gasoline, according to the
Free Press.
It will have a" 102-inch
wheelbase two inches longer
than American Motors' small
Rambler American. It will be
several inches lower, with a
roof line less than ir2 feet
high. It will be a two-passenger
model, looking much like
the Thunderbird of 1955-57.
The 1958 T-bird is a four-pas- j
senger car. ' J
Washington- (UPD - President
Eisenhower's Quemoy - Matsu
defense policy was propelled
smack into the 1958 politicai
arena today.
Democratic and Republican
partisans, some of whom had
been carefully skirting the
touchy issue, now have lined
up in what appeared to be
developing into a "great de
bate." The President's "no ap
peasement" stand toward Red
Chinese aggression was up
held warmly by Senate GOP
Policy Chairman Styles
Bridges (R.-N.H.) who often
is critical of administration
foreign policy.
But two . top Democrats
sharply criticized the admin
istration's position, a position
which Secretary of State John
Foster Dulles said was open
to change.
In California the Presi
dent's stand was attacked vig
orously Tuesday night by Ad
lai E. Stevenson, Democratic
presidential nominee twice
defeated by Eisenhower. Ste
venson accused the adminis
tration of blundering on For
mosa policy and said that the
United States should seek a
cease fire and Chinese Na
tionalist evacuation of Que
moy and Matsu.
The Democratic leader
voiced his protest in a cam
paign speech for Rep. Clair
Engle, Democratic candidate.
It was Stevenson's first
speech of the 1958 congres
sional campaign.
In Providence, R.I., Senate
Foreign Relations Chairman
Theodore F. Green said the
threat of a Far East war was
so great the issue should be
presented "directly to the
Congress," now in recess.
Green, a Democrat, said the
1955 Formosa resolution,
adopted by Congress at the
President's request, "does not
provide backing for the pol
icy which the President is
following" in the present cri
sis. Defended by Nixon
Also in California, Vice
President Richard M. Nixon
Stevenson Urges
Concentration on
Defense of Formosa
Los Angeles (UPD Adlai
Stevenson tossed a brickbat
at the Republican party today
declaring-in effect-Let's give
up the islands of Quemoy and
Matsu and concentrate on the
defense of Formosa.
'I think that we, the Unit
ed States, should not be de
fending these islands right on
China's doorstep," said the
former Democratic party pres
idential candidate as he open
ed a counter-offensive against
the personal appearance in
California of Republican Vice
President Richard M. Nixon.
Feelings Respected
"If Marshal Chiang (Na
tionalist leader Chiang Kai
shek) wants to-that's his bus
iness," Stevenson told a $100-a-plate
rally of Democrats on
Tuesday night in nearby Bev
erly Hills. "I respect his
(Chiang's) feelings about
them, but I also know how
I would feel if the enemy had
its foot in my front door dur
ing a civil war. I would try
to pinch it off or kick it out."
Railroads Rebut
In Lumber Hearing
San Francisco -(UPD- Three
railroads produced rebuttal
witnesses today to back their
pleas for lower lumber freight
rates between points in North
ern California and Oregon and
Southern California and Ari
zona. The railroads, Southern Pa
cific, Santa" Fe and Western
Pacific, were expected to take
several days for their rebuttal
testimony.
The hearings are scheduled
to end this week.
The railroads published the
lower rates last spring, but the
Interstate Commerce Commis
sion suspended them until
Dec. 20 after lumbermen,
truckers and water shippers
protested.
If a decision is not reached
before Dec. 20, the new rates
automatically go into effect.
The Andes mountains chain
is more than 4,000 milcr long.
Stevenson, titular chieftain
of the nation's Democrats,
threw his weight into an ef
fort to unseat Republican
nominees in the November
election, by appearing across
town while Nixon spoke in
Hollywood in behalf of GOP
candidates Sen. William F.
Knowland, running for gov
ernor, and Gov. Goodwin J.
Knight, aspirant to succeed
Knowland in Congress
Plan Said Unrealistic
Although their campaign
paths did not cross on arriv
als at International Airport,
Nixon was told of Steven
son's foreign policy remarks.
Nixon said, "I think his plan
is one he has given much
thought. But it is unrealistic
and unworkable."
Stevenson plugged for Rep.
Clair Engle, the Democrat
who opposes Knight. Engle
noted that Stevenson wore a
brand new pair of shoes, re
ferring to the 1952 campaign
picture in which the one-time
Illinois governor was shown
with a hole in his shoe.
Engle raised his right foot,
displaying a worn shoe and
quipped: "This time I've got
the hole." Both enjoyed a
hearty laugh because, as they
assured some 2,000 supporters
"we've got the Republicans
on the run."
Inner Tube Patch
Fixes Cow's Tummy
Prineville -(UPD A Prine
ville cow which suffered a
punctured stomach is now do
ing nicely, thank you, with a
large inner tube patch.
The hole in the stomach of
Earl Doney's cow had been
no problem all summer but
the approach of winter promp
ted Doney to enlist the aid of
a tire repair shop. A plug
consisting of two rubber
discs seven inches across, con
nected by a short length of
hose, was devised. It's work
ing fine and there's a bonus
virtue. In case of bloating,
the plug will function like
the safety gasket on a pres
sure cooker.
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TRANSFER AND
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Crating & Packing
Medford-139 South Fir Phone SP 2-6273
Ashland-240 4th St. - Phone MU 2-8552
BAtflS
BEKINS AGENT FOR MEDFORD AND ASHLAND
reiterated his own defense of
the administration's Formosa
policy. He said the Eisenhow
er policy had kept "peace
with honor."
Like Senate GOP leader
William E. Knowland, who is
running for the California
governorship, Bridges has
long felt the administration
too frequently was close to
negotiating a withdrawal
from the Formosa Straits. His
latest statement came as
Dulles was conceding the
United States might urge the
Nationalists to w i t h d r a w
much of their manpower from
the offshore islands if a de
pendable cease fire agree
ment could be reached with
the Reds.
"This may be the last
chance for the free world to
draw the line in Asia,"
Bridges said. Communist war
lords are testing us to see
whether we will resist the
threat of armed expansion or
capitulate to their demands."
MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Oregon, WedWy, October 7, 195g
Portlander Killed
In Aulo Accident
Troutdale, Ore.-dTD-George
M. Malone, 37, Portland, was
killed about midnight when
his car went out of control on
the Columbia River express
highway just west of Trout
dale junction.
Sheriffs officers said he
was thrown 75 feet after the
car struck a bank and rolled
over.
. The accident occurred at
the same spot where six per
sons died recently in a two
car collision.
ABOVE AND BEYOND
Cincinnati -flflD- One of the
first offenders to come before
Mayor George Geisen of sub
urban Gremhills, after he or
dered a crackdown on traffic
violators ws his wife. He
fined his wflt$5 and costs for
improper patting and admit
ted later "Gags are pretty
sticky aroundte house."
BOMBS EXPUDED
Havana, Cubi-fflPB- Seven
small bombs exuded Tues
day night in thelsana area,
the first such viole in three
months. Police saifttre were
no reported casual
DR. T. M. HOBART
Osteopathic Physician and Surgeon
303 Medical Center Building;
By Appointment:
9:00 a.m. to ,1:00 p.m. 2:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m.
MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY
Phone SP 3-3331
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