8
MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Or.
Friday, Jan. 22, 1960
Eden's Book Raps
Ike, Dulles in
Suez Solution
New York - (UPD - Former
British Prime Minister Sir
Anthony Eden charges that
President Eisenhower and the
late Secretary of State John
Foster Dulles thwarted a
peaceful solution of the 1956
Suez crisis by vacillation,
cynicism and an unrealistic
appraisal of its importance in
relation to the Middle East
power balance.
Problems Conceded
Eden, in excerpts from his
memoirs published in Mc
Call's magazine, conceded
that the U.S. had some prob
lems of its own - including a
national election - which af
fected its handling of the
three - month crisis between
Egypt's seizure of the Suez
Canal on July 26, 1956, and
the British and French armed
intervention at the end of Oc
tober. But that did not mitigate
his criticism of the U.S. gov
ernment for forcing Britain
and France down what he
described as a ' long and dis
1 mal trail of negotiations."
During this period, as he re
lated it. the U.S. failed to
exert any financial pressure
on Egypt and, through ill
timed public statements, pull
ed the teeth from every plan
which it was hoped would
force return of the canal to
international control.
"A preacher in ine worm
of politics, it sometimes seem
ed as if Mr. Dulles had little
regard for the consequences
of his words . . ." Eden wrote.
The first instalment of ex
cerpts from Edens book, to
be published this spring, cov
ers western negotiations and
actions over the Suez crisis
from the inception of the
Aswan Dam project, from
which western financial sup
port was withdraw publicly
by Dulles on July 16, 1956, to
the point at which Britain
and France decided to inter
vene in Egypt without con
sulting the United States.
Wall Street
Chatter
New York - (ITD - Chrysler
could prove to be the auto
mobile stock of the year, a
field study of the situation by
Good body & Co., notes.
"Although not for the faint
hearted . , . we recommend
purchase by those willing to
take to a full speculative risk,
the firm points out.
"Chrysler, trimmed down
to fighting size by two very
lean years, appears to be in a
good position to capitalize on
the sweeping changes taking
place in the auto industry."
The popularity of the Val
iant as well as favorable ac
ceptance of the new Dart, pro
vides the potential for 1960
being Chrysler's year of ' con
siderable sales revival," the
firm adds.
Drastic Steps Said Needed To Mailt
Deterioration off Merchant Marine
A particularly strong base
formation is currently being
built up by National Biscuit,
says Bache & Co. "Should
this issue close at or above
5614. accompanied by increas
ing trading volume, we would
suggest it for short term trad
ing accounts."
The 1960 model cars will
use an average of 56 pounds
of aluminum per car, up from
51 pounds last year, estimates
Aluminum Co. of America.
Aluminum bumpers are now
regarded as a virtual certainty
and may be produced in color
because of improved anodiz
ing techniques, the firm says.
Minor Accident
Reported to Police
A reported hit-and-run col
lision yesterday turned out to
be, instead, a minor accident.
Police said the supposed hit-and-run
driver was on his way
to an emergency medical call.
James Kay Henry, Eagle
Point, told city police that an
other car hit and damaged his
car while it was parked on
North Riverside ave., between
Fifth and Sixth sts. about 5:10
p.m. Wednesday, then left the
scene without leaving any in
formation. Henry obtained the license
number of the vehicle and
gave it to police.
Police found the owner to
be Dr. Lorenzo Dow Inskeep,
2401 Hillcrest rd., and con
tacted him at his residence.
Dr. Inskeep told them he was
on an emergency call at the
time of the accident and after
hitting the car, backed up and
saw that damage was slight
so proceeded to take his pa
tient to the hospital.
After his patient was taken
care of Dr. Inskeep returned
to the scene of the accident,
police said he told them. No
citations were issued.
More than 14 million hens
in New Jersey lay more than
two billion eggs a year.
Washington -(Science Serv
ice) - The deterioration of the
U. S. merchant marine, a mat
ter of vital concern to the Gov
ernment, industry and the
military services, can be
checked only by drastic im
provement of cargo-handling
and ship operating efficiency.
This warning was contain
ed in a feport issued here to
day by a panel of the National
Academy of Sciences-National
Research Council. The report
was prepared by a nine-man
advisory panel on the wartime
uses of the U. S. merchant
marine headed by Adm. Ar
thur W. Radford, USN (Ret.),
a . former . chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff.
Must Make Advances
To avoid complete depend
ence on f o r e i g n-controlled
shipping for the maintenance
of its military and commercial
lifelines, the report warned,
the U. S. must carry out these
improvements and make sig
nificant advances in ship de
sign and construction. The ad
vances, it said are technologi
cally practical and can be
commercially successful with
minimum subsidy.
The report recommends
construction of a "new class
of cargo vessels of advanced
design with speeds in excess
of 20 knots" (about 23 miles
per hour). Present cargo ships
average about 16.5 knots, or
18.6 mph. These ships would
incorporate a unitized system
of cargo handling, embody in
creased mechanization, and
permit automation, to reduce
stevedoring costs, and allow
quick turn-around of the ship.
Increasing the productivity
of labor and management is
a "more constructive alter
nate to subsidization," the re
port said, but in both subsi
dized and unsubsidized seg
ments of the U. S. maritime in
dustry there is a "general
lack of incentive to take ad
vantage of technological ad
vances." Symptoms of Decline
The report cited the follow
ing symptoms of decline in
the merchant marine.
1. Most of its ships are near
ly overage and long outmod
ed. As of July 1, 1959, the
privately owned U. S. mer
chant fleet numbered 1,013
ships, of which about 800
were constructed before the
end of World War II.
2. U. S. flag shipping is car
rying a steadily decreasing
portion of U. S. foreign trade
(18 per cent in 1957 and 12
per cent in 1958).
3. The country is in danger
of losing its "flag of conven
ience" fleet, which carries
about one-third of its foreign
trade. This fleet is comprised
of U.S.-owned vessels flying
the flags of Panama, Liberia
or Honduras. Attacks on this
arrangement by U. S. labor
unions and some foreign in
terests have brought threats
from the owners to transfer
to the flags of traditional
maritime nations.
The report recommended
that the Government take the
lead "in enlisting the coopera
tion of maritime labor and
management to produce a
technologically feasible fleet
which will be competitive
with minimum subsidy."
Federal Agency Urged
The panel urged the estab
lishment of a Federal agency
to determine ways in which
the transition to mechanized
and automated production can
be accomplished without un
due harm . to labor. It also
stressed that consideration
should be given to the design
and construction of an experi
mental aluminum cargo ship.
Four possible courses of ac
tion were outlined for accom
plishing an effective transi
tion to more mechanized and
automated crew and cargo
handling procedures. These
were taking maximum advan
tage of the natural attrition
from the available work force,
lowering retirement ages, re
training and relocating work
ers both within and without
the industry, and adjusting
salaries and increasing fringe
benefits for those workers
who remain in the industry.
Drivers' Licenses
In Area Suspended
Salem-The department of
motor vehicles has released
names of 284 drivers whose
licenses were ordered sus
pended during the period be
ginning Jan. 11 and ending
Jan. 15.
Length of suspension varies,
depending on charges involv
ed, recommendation of court,
discretionary action by the
department or requirements
of Oregon law. The depart
ment said some of the li
censes involving court recom
mendations may have been
re-instated after suspension
was ordered.
The department warned
drivers that the penalty for
driving while suspended is a
jail sentence of no less than
two days and up to six
months, and there may be im
posed a fine up to $500: Un
der licensing procedures, this
will also result in an addi
tional year of suspension.
Among those suspended in
Jackson county were:
Gas Utilities Merger Approved
PUPS GET NEW HOME-Mr. and Mrs. J. new pups. After the pups were placed in
Rimkus of Longview, Wash., went to the their new home Photographer Dave Fal
grocery store looking for a box for their coner shot them as they tried to get settled.
(UPI Telephoto)
Back Stairs: Case of 'Hot' Buttermilk
Driving While Suspended (In
cludes any conviction for viola
tion of traffic laws, involving
operation of motor vehicle,
while driving privileges were
suspended)
Avery, Harley Roy. 31. of 518
Putman st., Medford, driving while
susDended. 1 year.
Dowty, Verne Charles. 24. of 29
Newtown St.. Medford, driving
while susDended. 1 year.
Discretionary Action of Depart
ment: Stevens. Chester Edward, 18. of
718 Welch st., Medford, driving
record, 60 days.
Salem - lUPD - Public Utility
Commissioner Jonel C. Hill
Thursday approved merger of
two Oregon gas utilities into
Cascade Natural Gas corpora
tion. Involved in the transaction
are Consumers Gas corpora
tion and Eastern Oregon Na
tural Gas company.
Consumers Gas provides
service in and adjacent to
Bend and Eastern Oregon Na
tural Gas serves Malheur and
Umatilla counties.
Cascade is the surviving
corporation and will succeed
to all properties, rights and
liabilities of Eastern and Con
sumers, Hill said.
The face fly, an annoying
livestock pest, first found on
Long Island, N.Y., in 1953,
has since been discovered in
15 states.
Poison Oak?
Try a Bottle of ZEMACOL
You must be satisfied or voul
money cheerfully refunded. Get a
bottle today at WESTERN THRIFT
By MERRIMAN SMITH
UPI While House Reporter
Washington - (UPD - Back
stairs at the White House:
This, inspector, is the case
of the "hot" buttermilk, or as
we say downtown, the classy
clabber.
It reached all the way in
side the White House before
the neighborhood pusher ran
out of supplies.
We've had these cases be
fore, inspector. You know
how it is - a man gets to be
60 or so and begins to think
of his youth and someone
comes alon0 with a gimmick
to make him feel young again
monkey glands, vitamin
pills, all that jazz.
Simple Buttermilk
In this case, the magic stuff
was buttermilk, pure and sim
ple buttermilk. With hor
mones. Male hormones.
As near as our agents can
determine, this business start
ed at a cabinet meeting with
President Eisenhower sitting
up their just as big as you
please.
One of the cabinet mem
bers got to whispering with
another fellow at one end of
the room. The other fellow
was one of the President's
chiefs assistants. ' The assist
ant, it seems, said how well
the cabinet member looked.
"Buttermilk," said the cabi
net member. "That's what
did it."
Something was said about
hormones; that this particular
milk was simply loaded with
the stuff to make a man feel
like himself again.
Over-Priced Groceries
Our case switches now to
the supplier, a pleasant little
man who was minding his
own business selling over
priced groceries to bigshots
in a little rare foods empor
ium not far from the White
House. Among his choice
items was buttermilk from a
small dairy.
The next thing the store
keeper knew, there was a
long line of black limousines
purring up to the curb, uni
formed men sliding inside, to
ask for a couple quarts of
"that" buttermilk. Without a
limousine to serve as creden
tials, it was possible to get
the magic elixir simply by
mentioning the name of the
cabinet member in a properly
hushed, speakeasy type voice.
Inspector, the thing turned
into a boom. This supplier got
to where he was selling more
buttermilk than cheese tid
bits. One high government
official raced into his store
and demanded, as it were, to
be saved.
There was even a system of
deliveries started at some of
the highest government of
fices in town. The word of
buttermilk with hormones
spread like fire in dry leaves.
Nothing in Bullermilk
Then the case came to the
attention of this department.
Let the neighborhood clabber
pusher tell his own story:
"I don't know what go into
those men. Hormones? Nuts.
That would be against the
law, putting anything in milk
that wasn't put there natural
ly. "There's absolutely nothing
in this buttermilk. Absolute
ly nothing. It was just plain
old churned buttermilk and
somebody got to talk about it.
Gold Hill Couple
Are Recognized
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Straus,
Gold Hill, local representa
tives for United Farm Agen
cy, have been named the com
pany's "Men of the Year for
1959" recognition.
Selection for the recogni
tion is based on outstanding
sales accomplishment during
the year, according to R. L.
Chamberlain, chairman of the
board of directors.
Mr. and Mrs. Straus were
named representatives of the
organization in 1957. They
are members of the Century
club, inter-company group rec
ognizing sales excellence.
SICK SOURCE
Jackson. Miss. - (LTD - The
state board of health said to
day it is unable to report how
many cases of influenza there
are in Mississippi because Dr.
Durward Blakey, the man
who keeps the figures, is in
bed with influenza.
RUSSIAN RESHUFFLE Radio Moscow has announced
a major reshuffle in the breadbasket republic of Kazakhstan
and confirmed that Nikolai Belyaev, left, has been removed
as the republic's Communist party chief. The broadcast said
Kazakhstan Premier Dinmukhamed Kunsov, right, replaced
Belyaev as Communist party first secretary. A session of the
Kazakhstan Supreme Soviet in Alma Ata named Zhumabek
Tashenev, center, former chairman of the Presidium of the
Supreme Soviet, to replace Kunsov as premier.
(UPI Telephoto)
"Those fellows bought me
out high and dry. I haven't
been able to get hold of a
quart for days. Boy, while I
had it, I sure sold it. I have
a waiting list now if I ever
get a supply again. You want
me to telephone the White
House if any comes in?"
British See Few
Drinks As Too Many
London - (UPD - The British
Medical association says
drinking more than a glass
and a half of beer or three
shots of whiskey before motor
ing can make you an unsafe
driver.
In a report published to
day, the BMA said drinking is
a prime cause of danger and
death on the highays.
A NEW SERVICE FOR
POULTRY GROWERS!
Every Tuesday 9:00 a.m. till 5:00 p.m.
we will receive chickens at
SORAN and WHITE BLDG.
4th and Fir Streets
Coops available for growers convenience
PHONE SP 2-5687, OR CALL
YOUR OWN FEED SUPPLIER
Top Portland Prices F.O.B. Medford
SORAN'S Poultry Farm
Quotes From the News
By UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
Dallas, Tex.-Mrs. Robert Spears, whose husband is sus
pected of planting a bomb on the airliner that crashed in the
Gulf of Mexico Nov. 16, killing 42 persons:
"If my husband is innocent, I want him proved innocent.
If h's guilty, let the chips fall where they may."
Oxford, England-Orson Welles, contending at the Oxford
university debating union that the spread of vulgarity in the
West could not be blamed on the United States:
"If Europt lagged behind America in vulgarity, it was
not by virtue of niceties of feeling but largely because of two
world wars ... now you are catching up with us."
Hollywood - Maurice Gosfield, who played Pfc. Duane
Doberman for five years on the Phil Silvers TV show, stating
that Doberman is no more and he now will go back to being
Maurice Gosfield:
"When I look the Phil Silvers show job I was the first
actor in history to be named after a dog . . . While it was
good for the pocktibook it was terrible for the ego."
Washington-Defense Secretary Thomas S. Gates Jr., ex
pressing a judgment on-the guidance mechanism of Russia's
8,000-mile rocket, assuming Soviet figures are correct:
"It would be good. Our Atlas is good, too."
S!BI$IIN SIMS
CLEARANCE
INVENTORY
SALE ! ! !
DURING INVENTORY WE FOUND THESE DOGS, FREELOADERS, OLD
SETTLERS, ETC., THAT HAVE BEEN AROUND TOO LONG SO NOW
OUT THEY GO!! REGARDLESS OF COST!!"
ALL SALES FINAL!!
NO REFUNDS
NO EXCHANGES!!
MICRO
SCOPE 1000
POWER
Reg. $12.95
$4.88
MICRO
SCOPE 400
POWER
(Reg. $8.95)
$2.88
REVELL
PLASTIC
SPACE
SHIP
KIT
(Reg. $1.98)
88c
A-J
FIRE-BEE
PLANE &
ENGINE
(Reg. $12.50)
$4.88
ROYAL AWARD
NUMBERED OIL
PAINT SETS
2-18x24" Pictures
Regular $6.49 3.98
PLACQUE CRAFT
PAINT SETS
2-9x12" Pictures (reg. 2.49)....$ 1.88
2-9x12" Pictures (reg. 2.98K. 1.98
2-12x18" Pictures (reg. 3.98). 2.69
Testors Sets 12x14" (reg. 1.98) 1.39
WENMAC
TURBO-JET
PLANE &
MOTOR
(Reg. $12.95)
$8.88
WENMAC
CUTLASS
PLANE &
MOTOR
(Reg. $16.95)
$11.88
COMET
REGULUS
PLANE &
MOTOR
(Reg. $7.98)
$4.88
COMET
SNARK
PLANE &
MOTOR
(Reg. $14.95)
s9.88
USEE) WES.
"Some of These are REALLY Used
But They are All Rideable"
24" Boy's Hawthorne $ 4.88
26" Girl's 3 speed Hercules 14.88
26" Boy's 3 speed Hercules 17.88
24" Boy's Hawthorne 9.88
20" Boy's Schwinn 12.88
20" Girl's Fleetwing 14.88
20" Girl's Hercules 17.88
24" Boy's Hiawatha 14.88
20" Boy's Ace 11.88
ABOVE BIKES ARE SOLD
AS IS - BUT ARE RIDEABLE
WITHOUT FURTHER REPAIRS
MODEL BOAT
CONSTRUCTION KITS
(Suitable for Engines)
Regular $2.95 to $13.95
1.88 to 8.88
MASTER GLOBAL
Stamp Album
Regular Si 8.95 I2.88
SUPREME GLOBAL ALBUM
Regular $27.50 18.88
AMERICAN
FLYER
TRAIN SET
($46.95 Value)
$2488
IMPORTED
H-0
Battery
Operated
TRAIN SET
(Reg. $7.95)
$4.88
ATHEARN
H-0
DOUBLE TRAIN SET
Lets of Track
2 Trains
(Reg. $39.95)
$2888
BIKE MIRROR-Shatterproof-Reg. 1.49 98c
2 CELL CHROME HEADLITE Reg. 1.19 88c
CHROME CHAIN GUARD-Reg. 1.49 $1.19
FRONT LUGGAGE CARRIER Reg. 3.98 2.98
ONE CELL HEADLITE Reg. 1.19 88c
26x2.125 HEAVY DUTY TUBE-Reg. 2.98 1.98
SEALED BEAM HEADLITE Reg. 5.95 4.88
TRICYCLE SEAT-Reg. 2.49 1.19
METAL TRICYCLE SEAT-Reg. 1.39 88c
BIKE SADDLE BAGS-Reg. 3.95 pair 2.88
WE GIVE
SILVER
DOLLAR
STAMPS
H-0 TRAINS & SUPPLIES
REVELL CROSSING GATE Reg. 5.95 $3.88
LIONEL GANG CAR-Reg. 7.95 4.88
TYCO 4-6-2 PACIFIC LOCO.-Reg. 36.95 24.88
TYCO DIESEL LOCO-Reg. 18.95 12.88
ATHEARN DIESEL SET-Reg. 14.95 11.88
VARNEY DIESEL SET, with pack-Reg. 37.00.. 24.88
TYCO DIESEL SET-Reg. 14.95 .'. 11.88
FRONTIER BUILDING KITS-Reg. 2.98 , 1.98
CAR, KITS, Large Selection .$1.19 to 3.88
PEDAL CAR
WITH HORN
AND HEADLITES
(Reg. $29.95)
$1988 Caln
PEDAL JEEP
(Reg. 34.95)
TRICYCLES
AT SALE PRICES .,.
From
7.88
FREE BOOK OF
SILVER DOLLAR STAMPS
BRONCO
IMPORTED 3-SPEED
BICYCLE
$4288
ALL THIS PLUS SILVER DOLLAR STAMPS ! !
SUMS -CYCILE--&.': MOBBY -SMOP.
23 NORTH FIR
Next to Mail Tribune