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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 21, 1959)
Try and y BENNETT CRF- rFHE NEW GIRL in the typists' pool at a big magazine office was cute as a button, but painfully thin. One of the re search editors finally decided to take her out to a ball game, ana then for a big Italian dinner. "The kid looks half starved," he explained. He never got her past the Yan kee Stadium, however. She was wearing a new beige dress, and every time the editor turned his head, the bat boy handed her to Mickey Mantle! At a matlctans convention, en magic maker aaked an other, "Say, what crer hap. pened to that blond wife of jours you used to saw in half very performance" "Oh, we split up some time ago," was the aaswer. Now she's liv ing in Boston and San Diego." " , Win Rogers defined a bargain as "anything you can buy for only twice what it's worth." He described an unforgiving person as "just a row of hooks on which to hang grudges." O US, by Bennett Cerf. Distributed by Kin Featurei Syndicate. Nixon Will Discuss Variety, of S u b j ects With Russian Boss Washington-fCPD-Vice Presi dent Richard M. Nixon will confer with Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev in Mos cow Sunday on the Berlin cri sis, atomic tests, disarmament, trade and other East-West is sues. The vice - president who leaves Wednesday on an 11- day tour of Russia, also is expected to talk with Khru shchev about prospects for a summit meeting between the Soviet leader, President . Ei senhower, British Prime Min ister Harold Macmillan and French President Charles de Gaulle. No Special Message Nixon will confer with Ei senhower Wednesday. While there was no indication Nixon would carry any special presi dential message to Khru shchev the White House meet ing largely" will determine the substance of his conversation with the Soviet premier. The Nixon- Khrushchev meeting will be held at the premier's residence. It will mark the first time since the 1955 Geneva summit confer ence that Khrushchev hasliad a chance to talk with anyone who can speak with full au thority on U.S. policy. During his tour, Nixon will be in daily contact with Secre tary of State Christian A. Herter at Geneva. He also will report to Eisenhower when ever the occasion justifies. The vice president will pay official visits on Soviet Dep uty Premiers Anastas I. Mi- Khrushchev Gives No Explanation of Trip Cancellation Warsaw -(UPD- Soviet Pre mier Nikita S. Khrushchev still has offered no public ex planation for the surprise can cellation of his Scandinavian visit. But he may do so today The visiting Russian leader addresses a group of Com munist Party notables this afternoon and there was a chance he might use the occa sion to reveal the reasons for his sudden change of plans to visit Finland, Norway, Swe den and Denmark. - ' If poor health dictated hi? decision, it was not in evi dence here either in his appearance- or kthe k rigorous schedule Khrushchev has fol lowed since his arrival in Poland. : -: To Moscow Thursday Khrushchev returned to Warsaw Monday night from a flying trip to Rzeszow in southeastern Poland. He had gone to Rzeszow from a week end at an unidentified beliday camp in western Poland. Diplomatic sources said he would return to Moscow Thursday after taking part in the 15th anniversary of Po land's Communist govern ment Wednesday. , .. No details were released on his schedule today other, than a meeting with party officials and civic leaders this morn ing. ' Khrushchev used a round of political speeches Monday to boast superiority in the field of missiles and space tech nology. .. - , PARADE REST Ft. Campbell, Ky.-flJPD-Un- til a replacement can be brought up, there won't be as many parades as usual for the 506th Airborne Battle Group here. ' Somebody stole the reviewing stand. Buffalo. N. Y. (CPU - An Air Force C-47 showered sev eral townships in western New York with boxes of photographic equipment i t was forced to jettison when one engine failed. Stop Me koyan and Frol R. Kozlov, both of whom toured the United States this year, and on Soviet President Klimenti Voroshilov. Opportunity Seen Nixon is known to feel that his conversations with top So viet leaders should provide a good opportunity for give-and take discussions on the Ber lin and German issues, dis armament, atomic tests, trade and other issues. He is said to feel that Rus sian leaders need to knov where the United States stands on these issues and why. The conversations also will give the vice president a chance to - determine Khru shchev's rock-bottom position, " The only other American present at Nixon's Sunday meeting with Khrushchev will be U. S. Ambassador Llewel lyn Thompson. ' Khrushchev and Nixon will determine what if anything will be made public about their meet ing. LIAISON OFFICER - Serving as Air Force Academy liaison officer for Southern Oregon is Lt. Col. Martin J. Elle, of the 9417th Air Force reserve squadron, Medford. Colonel Elle, an assistant professor of psychology at Southern Ore gon college, may be contacted at the college or his residence, 1381 Iowa st., Ashland, by young men interested in at tending the academy. Colonel Elle announced that he would : i t i . i it dc avauaoie ior wuks concern ing the academy either to in dividuals or to groups. Edith Green To Introduce Kennedy Portland -UPD- Rep. Edith Green (D-Ore.) will fly here to introduce Sen. John Kennedy (D-Mass.) at the Dave Epps Memorial dinner Aug. 1. Mrs. Beulah Hand, actins chairman of the Democratic party in Oregon, said sound pictures of Epps in action would be shown as a feature of the evening's program. Epps, 51, died suddenly June 29. Kennedy plans to ar rive in Portland Saturday morning, Aug. 1, and to visit the .Centennial Exposition in the afternoon. On Sunday he nas scheduled several meet ings plus television aDDear ances, and on Mondav he will speak at the annual AFL-CIO convention in Seaside. The Epps Memorial dinner will be, held at 7 pan. in the Neighbors of Woodcraft hall nere. V '"I j LA.dL DR. JOSEPH W, BURBA Wishes to Announce : . - The f Association of DR. EUGENE R. COSSETTE In the practice of GENERAL DENTISTRY 836 E. Main St. In the Day's Hews By FRANK JENKINS Big question: What of Castro?. What's he up to? LETS WAIT and see. He may be gunning for an overwhelming demand from the Cuban people to COME BACK AND RULE US. Let's go back into history and take a look at Julius Caesar - who, according to William Shakespeare, an able historian as well as the world's foremost playwright, "did thrice upon the Lupercal refuse a kingly crown." Caesar refused the crown, but he went on RUNNING ROME - on the whole, very wisely and very soundly. Dis honest practices in domestic and provincial government promptly CAME TO AN END under his rule. He used the power he had won to good ad vantage and made many im portant reforms. He appoint ed to public office the MOST CAPABLE of his opponents. He replaced dishonest offic ials with honest ones. He con tinued the distribution of free grain, but he gave it only to those who were IN NEED. BUT Caesar was murdered. He was stabbed to death by men who had accepted his favors and who. he had believed, were his friends. That could happen to Cas tro - who, for better or for worse, is playing a dangerous game. We'll see what we'll see. QUESTION No. 2: What of this man Bohlen, who is under consideration for a place on the state depart ment's policy planning staff, specializing - in . Russian af fairs? He is said to be favored by President Eisenhower and Sec retary of State Herter. Some right wing Republican sena tors, including Senator Bridges of New Hampshire and , Senator Dirksen of Illi nois, don't seem, to think much of him. What's it all about? FIRST, let's take a look at Rohlen's hanlrtrrminri When, back in the Roose velt administration, it became evident that he was likely to be sent to Moscow as our am bassador, he turned in and studied and MASTERED the difficult Russian language. He did it, incidentally, in an amazing short time. That is certainly in his fa vor. If you are going to be an ambassador, you'd better learn the language of the country you are going to be sent to. If you can't talk to the people or read the local newspapers, you will be hor ribly handicapped. TyHAT is there against him? " Wpll hp wae raitVi Presi dent Roosevelt at Tehran and Yalta. Plenty of mistakes were made at Yalta and Teh ran We now know that some of these mistakes were tragic. Among other things, they laid the foundation for the present mess in West Berlin. But it's highly doubtful if Mr. Bohlen influenced President Roose velt very much at these meet ings. Even Churchill wasn't able to influence FDR at Teh ran and Yalta. B'ohlen wasn't in the decision-making echelon at either place. He was just a consult ing expert. But the fact that he was on FDR's consulting staff on those occasions does n't sit well with Republican senators of the type of Bridges and Dirksen, who are suspic ious (perhaps with reason) of everybody who had anything to do with the Roosevelt ad ministration. T ETS PUT it this way: a- Mr. Bohlen is an accepted expert on Russians affairs. He got his knowledge the hard way. The knowledge of Rus sia and Russians that he has obtained can be very valuable to us. We shouldn't waste it. There should be no politics in foreign affairs. MORPHEUS ON DUTY Rideeway. Ont. (UPD Po lice who discovered a break- in at the Watt Electric store here found" the watchdog sleeping peacefully in the basement and the intruder, George W. Price, 48, asleep in a chair. JUST A FEW DEGREES Marlboro, Vt. (UPD Marl boro Junior College gradu ated just five "students this year. There are 47 in the en tire student body. Phone SP 2-9275 President Says America Has Ho Fear of Communism Havana-flJPB-Osvaldo .Dor- ticos Torrado, 45, who soared from obscurity to the presi dency, of Cuba in a few short hours last week end, appealed today for American "under standing" of the Cuban revo lution. The president said .there was no basis for American fears of a Communist take over here. "Americans must under stand the Cuban revolution and our objectives,"'Dorticos said. ."This is a Cuban revolu tion. It is nationalistic." He said that if the people of the United States under- Melted Crayons Stall Automobiles ' Los Angeles -(UPD- A thick mass of molten- wax oozed out onto the street Monday during a- $100,000 fire at a crayon company, seriously burning a fireman and a mo torist. . . Eighty tons of wax and par affin used., for making chil dren's crayons were melted in the blaze of undetermined or igin which spread through the Califqrnia Pacific Crayon Company's storage shed. Several cars were reported to have stalled in the molten material. Paul Stringham, 28, of nearby Norwalk, suffered burns when he stepped from his stalled auto and slipped and fell in the hot wax. Fire Capt. Frank G. Vogel also suf fered burns. ' ' Open invitation to excitement, the Impala Convertible . and America's only authentic sports ear, the Corvette. Visit the General Motors Exhibit at the Oregon Centennial Exposition in Portland, and see your local authorized 9th at BARTLETT of Cuba stood this they would have no fears about Communism in Cuba. Dorticos expressed his views in an interview twith the United Press Interna tional. He has written many of the laws and decrees of Cas tro's revolutionary regime and has pledged to carry them out. Castro charged that Man uel Urrutia, who resigned under pressure Friday night, blocked some decrees by not signing them. Dorjicos, an attorney, said the principal aims of the rev olution included revision of the basic Cuban economy through agrarian reform to raise the standard of living pf the people and the guar antee of civil rights. Dorticos said his appointment- as president of Cuba "came as a surprise to me. At first I did not feel up to it but I have accepted my revolutionary responsibility .V Complete Freedom Dorticos emphasized ' that Urrutia is not under arrest and has complete freedom to go where he wishes. "Dr. Urrutia is at the home of his brother-in-law because that is where he wants to be," said Dorticos. "He is as free as any other citizen. The sold iers are there at his service." Three guards at the front entrance of the estate in sub urban Bauta where Urrutia is staying refused to let news men in Monday. They said Urrutia did not want to see the press. '. JET LANDS SAFELY Sydney, Australia -(UPD- A Qantas jet airliner carrying 23 passengers safely completed a flight from Seattle Monday night after radioing just be fore landing that slight trou ble had developed in its tail stabilizer. The big Boeing 707 touched down here without in cident as police and emer gency equipment stood by. The trans-Pacific flight took 17 hours. 27 minutes. Increased Benefits under Social Security Law You can receive information on the 1959 changes in the Social . Security Law by sending in this coupon, or calling your Pru dential Agent With your Social Security benefits as a base, a well planned Prudential Insurance program will help provide adequate retirement funds, a family income for your wife and children, money if you are unable to work because of sickness or injury. Get to KNOW your Prudential Agent IB Y MEDFORD Trumpeter Swans To Portland (UPD- Americans this summer will get their first look at the largest waterfowl in North America, the trump eter swan, the Interior Depart ment announced Monday.. Under a program of the Bureau of Sports Fisheries and Wildlife of the U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the big birds will be seen in zoos in CHEVROLET Be Put in Zoos Portland, San Diego, San Antonio,- Philadelphia, Bronx zoo in New York and Tracy Aviary in Salt Lake City. Each zoo is being loaned a pair of the birds, the depart ment said. Trumpeter swan adults weigh 30 pounds or more, attain a length of over five feet and have a wing spread of from six to eight feet. Yes. plus sand ma Mew social aacurny DDKS '3 one of 7 Big Bests Clievy gives you over any car in its field You've got more to go on than our say-so: Every motor magazine has given Chevy's standard and Corvette V8's unstinted praise. SPORTS CARS ILLUSTRATED says it this way: ". . . surely the most wonderfully re sponsive engine available today at any price." And if you want the thrift of a six, you still get the best of it in a Chevy. BEST ECONOMY No doubt about this: a pair of Chevy sixes with Powerglide came in first and second in their class in the Mobilgas Economy Run for the best mileage of any full-size car. " BEST BRAKES Not only bigger, but built with bonded lin ings for up to 66 longer life. Just to prove what's what, Chevy out-stopped both of the "other two" in a NASCAR-conducted test of repeated stops from highway speeds. National Association for Stock Cor Advancement end Research ' BEST RIDE A few minutes behind the wheel will leave no doubt about this. MOTOR TREND magazine sums it up: . . the smoothest, most quiet, softest riding car in its price class.'' BEST TRADE-IN Check the figures in any N.A.DA. Guide Book. You'll find that Chevy used car prices last year averaged up to $128 higher than comparable models of the "other two." 'National Astomobils Deolan Anoeiatitm BEST ROOM Official dimensions reported to the Auto mobile Manufacturers Association make it clear. Chevy's front seat hip room, for ex ample, is up to 5.9 inches wider than com parable cars. BEST STYLE It's the only car of the leading low-priced 3 that's unmistakably modern. "In its price class," says POPULAR SCIENCE magazine, "a new high in daring styling." 5 NEGRO SEEKS OFFICE Memphis, Term. -(CPU- At least one Negro will be on the ballot in the Memphis city election next month. Eliehue Stanback has qualified as a candidate for tax assessor. In addition, five other "Negroes have announced they will qualify before the deadline at midnight tonight. MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Or. fuatday, July 21, 1959 The Prudential INSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA In 2314, Dtpt. A. Twminal Annas, Los 94. California tha baoklet. "Plain Talk on tha Law. no obligation, of i STATC. D NO WONDER MORE PEOPLE ARE BUYING CHEVROLETS IN '59 I TU1N INVnTUCDriDI Chevrolet dealer SP 2-6115 mi