I OtjC !ttCU)$-tteVleU I In The Days News Publitheel by Neweevie Ce. Intf Ml S.I. Main St., keaeburf. Ore. Charles V. Stanton Editor and Manager Gaorgf Castillo Addyt Wright Amateur idilor Butineae Manager Member of the Aiaociated Preia. Oregon Newipaper Publiahera Asaoctation, thi Audit Bureau of Circulation Entered ai aecond tlaia matter May T. 1920. at the pott offica a Roaeburg, Oregon, under act of March 2, 1873 Subirripuon Ratea on Clamfied Advertiainf Page . ly FRANK JENKINS. Peter Eiton Present Congress Upsets Gag About Sameness Of Parties What to do with Dullea nute: Republican! But, in general, hit Prendent Eisenhower went to rjoliriei. includint the doIic of con- Walter Reed Army hotpital thia tainment of communism, were Jamtt Marlow EDITORIAL PAGE 4 Tha Naws-Reviaw, Roteburg, Ora. Wtd., Ftb. 25, 1959 EXCELLENT STATEMENT By Chirks V. Stanton Sen. Richard Neuberger recently told the Oregon Demo- i:. r i fn;ta that h Viaan'r vet. rletermineH crane trnuii .i.iiiun.v: .v - - whether he will he) a candidate for re-election at the end of his current term. I presume a lot will depend upon his physical condition. j The interesting thing to me is that he made the state-! ment he would be a candidate, if at all, on "my record as a responsihle legislator, judging issues on their merits and not through personal bitterness or partisan hysteria." In my opinion, that is one of the best statements 1 have heard for a long time. I am fully convinced that Sen. Neu bcrger desires to live up to that statement. Unfortunately, in my opinion, he has a lot to overcome. However, it would seem that he is endeavoring to change from a politician to a statesman. He is eminently qualified for the latter role. His statement to the central committee that he proposes to be a responsible legislator, judging issues on their merits, is something we greatly need in this country today. He couldn't help but take a backhanded slap at Sen. Morse when he referred to "personal bitterness or partisan hys teria." Their feud at last has come to. light. But, in my opinion. Sen. Neuberger said something that needed to be said, lie proposes an action greatly needed. Tremendous Influence The editorial writer for The World, published at Coos Fay, ventures the prediction that Neuberger. not Morse, wiil suffer most from their current feud. His theory is that Morse has such a large personal following that "the day is probably over in which Morse can elect those he supports; but it is probably not over in which he can defeat those he opposes." Thus the position is taken that Morse is able to "turn the tide against Neuberger." My own opinion differs widely. It is my belief that Morse wouldn't have been elected last time had it not been for the fact that Neuberger did an outstanding hatchet job on the reputation of McKay. Whatever the plot may be called, it at least did the work for the Democratic party, in my opinion. McKay, with a long record and an established knowledge of con servation was held up as the thief of natural resources. Torter wouldn't have beaten Ellsworth had not Neuberger succeeded In selling his Al Sarena case to the public. Have you heard anything about Al Sarena since it served its purposes to get Democrats elected? Without Neuberger's help in killing McKay's political life, and without Neuberger's help in promoting the Demo cratic Tarty, I doubt that Oregon would be as completely in the Democratic fold as it is today. I doubt that Morse would be a United States senator at this time. Chang Indicated Neuberger's past record is one of trickery, half-truths, misrepresentation. He spent most of his time in the Ore gon Legislature and his early time in Congress needling those about him. Probably no one has introduced more "stinker" bills hills designed to create controversy but with little chance of passage or made more proposals purely for publicity purposes or to embarrass his fellow legislators. Rut recently he has shown a vast difference in his ap proach. He has taken a far more responsible position. He shows signs of becoming the great statesman of which he is capable, if he'll only quit conniving and resorting to nau-trums. But he can't do it if he does as in his recent report by telling how Oregon is lagging behind the nation in "per capita" average income. He places the blame on high in terest rates, affecting the lumber industry; inadequate low cost power, and not enough pulp production. But why doesn't Neuberger tell the truth that Oregon has a great superiority in number of young people people producing families that we have a high percentage of children who don't work and young mothers who can't work, and that his "per capita" figures, while true In themselves, don't tell the whole story? They tell only part of the story. Whv not say we are one of the highest in individual income? The fact remains that he shows promise of being a great man. He has made an impressive statement con cerning his planned politics of the future. WASHINGTON NEA That rrans which the administration old fag about it being impossible proposes. niurning mr anuiner visii wr.n ail- souna enougn inn iney nave oeen " "i"""" 1 HOUSE and senate nuis nave c,,.,,.... c,,. . . -m i i t.t n . ..t,i. ...... nm,u.rta nn . j . .-n. secretary oi state wt si.it uuuea. . . itmiiww in oruau uuiunv uy rreai- kuu,m.pu . ..... . 10 Be compromised, Willi no leniug Meanwhile a suggestion by Sen. dent Eisenhower and Mr. Dullea. good any more. what the outcome. President Ei- Stuart Symington of Missouri that : i In the first month of this new trnhower will give no hint on Dulles resign brought a retort from I After all. it ia no simple problem session of Congress, programs of whether he will sign or veto a bill While House Secretary James Hag- that we face. the Eisenhower administration and that goes so far bevond his rec- erty. who said in reply to questioni The over-all objective of com mil- the Democratic majorities on Cap- ommendations. But this will bring nisra n to conquer tnt world. Our.itol Hill nave oeen speuen oui so over-all objective ia to CHECK-1 clearly that the differences are un MATE that purpose to checkmate mmtakable. it, if possible, without going to The principal difference is in nancing war. In these days, all-out war is ideas about the amount of money Tike aid untninkaoie. 11 couia mean tne end the federal government snouia of the world. .spend, and whether the budget So far. Mr. Dulles, as our minis-! thill be keDt in balance or operat- that many other members of the ter of foreign affairs and the chief d it a deficit senate are saying that we should architect of our foreign policy, hasj in THREE AREAS alone fed- w.i ..iir, ui jiii. isuur. aery- nanuirtj . iivKiisn anu uaugeiuu. eral aio lO etillvaliotl, eirpun cull- ; years. ires as long ai he ia able and situation adroitlv enough to avoid tmennn and housme Democrats I t.l. ...I..-.) . .j, Foreign Affairs Problems Worry State Department WASHINGTON (AP) While ards. to improve John Foster , conditions. its economic by reporters : "President Eisenhower is aware of Sen. Symington's suggestion i that he doesn't think Dulles can run the State Department from a hospital bed) but so far hat made no comment on it. i 'The President ia also to a head the question of whether . the government will unbalance its budget and embark on deficit fi- Dulles fights cancer and the world awaits the outcome Amer can problems in foreign policy ring the earth. Dulles is able to read news papers and magazines and, while Nasser Another Problem Moving west a bit. there is the still unsolved problem of trying lo get along with President Nasser of Egypt and keep him out of the clasp of communism. , ,h 1 ,,ll- wiiiih iiai itii , iu,rij . i t ,ed m Wltn ,he Lmtjo stiles un it lmuu.uiv aiu aillfcra mill to ironic that after all the criticism - , -4. TV. mA n aa haa Hnu . in hie civ l aara in alls for 2U0 ',."" ',--"." unite, uc ia iiuw ucuiK iatuui ministration program , million dullars spread over four vein The hill intrrwtnreH hv Sen I A. S. Monrone t D-Okla ) calls! The praise ranges from mild to for 575 million spread over five I excessive, including the sugges i praised. til a revolution destroyed both King Faisal and his regime, the Communists, ' and through them the Soviet Union have steadily gained influence. At this moment there seemi a genuine puzzlement over Iraq tion that he is indispensable, i whether or not it may go Com willing to give them." Well- Vvhit SHALL we do? Shall we throw Mr. Dulles out? Or shall we continue to avail our selves ot his services as long all-out shooting war which ia quite now propose spending lli billion an achievement, I dollars more than the Republican administration proposes for the IM'i put it this way: nt fiscal year. Over the full six Vie have been given to under- or tevta years of the conflicting stind that Mr. Dullea' mind is as programs, the Democrats would ciear aa n n i m-uiai m sprnd 13 Dinion dollars more ' Looked at coldly the word "indis-: he ia able and willing to give them? I affliction is wholly physical. If that n campaign speeches at Pitts- It ia his MIND that counts and 1 is true, there ia no reason to be- there have been no suggestions i lieve that his grasp of the foreign that hia mind ia not as clear and affairs situation has been impaired, kern as it has ever been. I If he. is willing to risk his lite by What would you do? continuing at work until it can be determined how severe his afflic- Mr. Dullea ia a great man as tion will turn out to be. there nearly all our secretaries of state have been. Most of them have been unpopular in the sense that their policies have drawn a great deal of criticism. This includei Dean Acheson. Mr. Dulles' predecessor under Presi dent Truman. He made some mis- bureh and Charleston last Oct. 27 President Eisenhower identified the Democrats as league" and accused them of "urg ing a raid on the taxpayers' dollars." 1 ne rmrne was rrsriiuuiijr uc" rifice should not be accented in the .i.. ,u. L'.i.-:dent Eisenhower vetoed . . . i . . ., . ;. , iruni uie waj tilings ic nuai'iiis : u.11 iau. The administration called for noth- pensable is a little less than ing beyond last year's National' realistic when applied to any man. Defense Education Act. But Sen. If tomorrow Dulles decided he ; James E. Murray (D-Mont.) has no longer could do his job and ' introduced a bill fur school con- resigned, some one would have to ctr,iti,n anil nlhap hnfitc u-hiz-h tL- hia nlao Vn matter hnul ! would cost 11.3 billion dollars in valuable a secretary has been. ' convulsion I the next four years. this country has long been accus- mild. in the field nf pmernment ' tomed to acquiring a new secre- Rijjht next Hmmuiri- lary every lime a new auininis- Aiiiem-an munist. If it does, the USS R, will have gained its first indispu table foothold in the Middle East. Such an event would call for a complete rearrangement in the thinking of the Arabs and the West. To say it would cause a in the area seems door is another friend, still friendly: seems no good reason why his slo wer Hiriiiiuru ,.nrf,n. rnorm. ,h. the spendthrift , , proposed 55 million dollars tralion takes office. ! Iran. The task here is how t for depressed areas suffering from i True. Dulles has so completely , T " '"rllulJ ""F " chronic high unemployment. Sen. dominated and handled American ; !o threats and pressure. Paul Flnnola. ,11.1111 tnnnoH thi lr..,un nnllev that hit nna pnulrf Behind the Upcoming CflSlS OR a 375-million program. Fresi- now just step in and take over .: I d. . j . a similar spirit in which it ia offered. p in ,ne .w ,e5Mon of Congress, year. Besides If we haven't In our State De partment enough good men COM ING LP who will be able to carry out temporarily the implementing takes, including Korea. He was i ot the policies of their chief, we sharply criticised especially by 1 are in a bad way. the President's charge aeems just-' "J nf congress is aireaay jfjpl bogged down with legislative pro- Take housing. The administra-' P05al. not . recommended by the tion called for a tl .660,000.000 pro- administration. In the firs month snre.rt nver sit vears Sen 1 oi me session. o.-u new dims were Reader Opinions Senator Explains Reason For Criticizing Budget gram. John Snarkman (D-Ala.) introduc ed a bill which would cost nearly three billion, spread over seven years. For the fiscal year 1960. this bill introduced in the Senate and 3.833 in the House for a total of 4 653. This is a record for any first month. Manv nt thttcA hilti eatl fnr in- innmvil hw tha Senata wnnlH rrpaseH oovernment evnenHitures. resume his job pn1 ISA mill inn rinllara more than The ehallense which thev throw! time, or not at the President requested. A bill up to Democratic leaders is how passed by the House would cost they will curb inflation if they al 300 million more. The differences ; low government appropriations to would be for direct loans to vet-; keep on going up. delava until he could master what ! ' . now, in a way sausinc a secretary of state needs to know. : "ry " them. West and East Ger- . ,u . n . .k. . I many can be unified. Most of the talk so far about' ' whether or not Dulles will con-. Khrushchev Balking tinue in office, or have to retirej '""day Khrushchev brushed' seems to be a conversation piece. ',he Western Allies aside, saying kthe question of reunification could Decision Weeks Away ' not even be discussed by the It mav be some weeks before I'nited States, the Soviet Union, either liulles or his doctors can Britain and trance. He said it is knm uhethee h will he ahle tn i a question for the 'two German full-time, part-1 states tnemseives. all Meanwhile' All these enormous To The Editor: I have read with S billion dollars siphoned out of interest your editorial of reb. 2 on the Ireisury for farm price sup the issue of government spending, t agree with a good part of it. I am sure the editor of The News- Lenten Devotions there are problems that need con tinuing attention. First and foremost: What to do about the Soviet demand that the Allies get their troops out of West Berlin and leave it a free city. Unless handled right, the West's whole position in Germany could crumble. burdens. awaiting solution, are on I shoulders of Dulles who is I years old today and fighting his life against cancer. the 71 for Dentists To Convene PORTLAND (AP) annual meeting ot Review realizes that I have tried to be responsible on this issue. In an effort to restrain inflation and ports to big cotton, corn, wheat. Tt: Matt. 13:1-73 sower sowine seed in a field. tobacco and peanut growers in this . wh , h. ,e, hjm I Some falls by the wayside and is budget. If Oregon senators and j,,,,... ,verse 9) devoured by the birds; some falls congressmen do not fight for na- i Hnw marvelnui is the facultv in stony ground and because of of hearine' Rut the hearlne re- insuUieient soil, is choked out: fin ferred lo in these verses w more tional forests, rivers, harbor and schools in Oregon, our state will deficit spending. I took the politi-1 be denied any genuine participa-rally-difficult course last year of; tion in Mr. Eisenhower's budget; favoring higher postage rates and we will pay taxes for expendi- opposing federal tax reductions, on tures elsewhere, and that will be these occasions, l was following 1 aDout it me recommenuauuu oi riesiiinit uuna ausicruy is national dull of hearing and their eves Eisenhower, as the editor of The need. I agree with the editor of i have closed; lest at any time they News-Review is well aware. j The News-Review that sacrifice is should see with their eyes and However, let me explain why the required. But it must be national hear with their ears, and should un President'a proposed budget ia a sacrifice not sacrifice by Oregon derstand with their heart, and bad budget for Oregon. and one or two other lumber states, should be converted, and 1 should Approximately 60 per cent oi tne while the big defense budget scat whole budget ia for national de-! ters our tax dollars merrily through eastern industrial states and our tax dollars through the big grain producing farm states, as welL. Richard L. Neuberger United States Senator Washington, D C. (Editor's Note The above let ter from Sen. JVeuberger raises an The 66th the Oregon The West is bracing itself for a'u, uen'a' A"n, 'rnenuiea in showdown on Berlin, perhaps Portland March 2-4 L Nearly 1,500 around May 27. As late as Tues-1 persons are expected. day Soviet Premier Nikita 1 Khrushchev was beins tough and ii . .IZL .n.. Z f ..a unvielding, despite Allied propos- fense. Our state larks war indus tires and military posts. During the 1940 s, Oregon lost out when armaments factories nd defense bases were being established. This means that Oregon shares very lit tle in the items for which Presi dent Eisenhower has recommended than the hearing of "in one ear I and out the other." This never ! changed a life. Christ stated in our text "For the people's heart is . 1 waxed gross, and their cars are heal them" (verse 15). Jesus Christ likens the giving forth of the Word His message as staled in the Bible to a the vast bulk of federal spending, j interesting question. Is the national To make matters worse, the budget to be a national pork bar President has scrimped in nearly Ttlt wiln ,qal Jppropriationi for all the areas vital to our state .,ch sta or j, lt to be designed national forest access roads, rec- for lhe protection and welfare of reation in the national forests such (he pp , whole? This news. as campgrounus, river Frujevi, . paper has long agreed with the harbor improvements, etc. Oregon ned for more monev for national provides an excellent example ot the President's decision to subordi nate actual national needs to an arbitrary financial framework. The President has tailored his admin istration's program to a rigid pat tern which disregards ability of tne forests strictly as a business mat ter, not for pork barrel appropria tions. In that respect this news paper hai endorsed and appreci ated Sen. Neuherger'a work. But the senator's letter, as quoted above, indicates his theory that nation to invest in development of for every dollar another state gets, natural resources so as to acnieve i Oregon should, nave a dollar. national irowth and expansion If I accept these proposals with out protest, what kind of senator from Oregon would I be? Our slate already has been denied any real share of the nearly 50 billion dol lars spent on defense because it lacks war plants and military CVS) Teen-ager Holds Autos Viral To Many Youths To The Editor In the past several days some people have posts. Should we also accept the . written in to you and made the denials marie in the hudaet for I statement that teen-agers should anequaie iiuius lor iwihi iits roads, for home-mortgage financ ing so essential to our lumber in- ( dustry, for urban renewal to en I courage further the use of Oregon I forest products. It us not forget that nearly every project important to Oregon tn recent years had to be started Hal Bovle Ordered Life Tasteless To Veteran Scribe Hecht NEW YORK (AP)-"I hate peo ple who wake up in the morning and know what they'll think and aay all day," aaid Ben Hecht. Hecht. who will he 65 thia Sat urday, has spent a prodigiously creative lifetime lighting fire crackers under the hypocrisies and foibles of his time. Ben looks like an aging Kewpie doll, or a raffish Buddha. His blue eyes twinkle aa he verhallT skew ers mankind's eternal follies. He still has the air of a small hnv plaving a secret prank on every body. "I never achieved a real goal in life." he said cheerfully, "not even a haircut. ".Mv chief goal was tn remain lg. never to grow uo or ffrow old I missed that goal " But this onetime Chicago news paper reporter has managed to turn nut 65 movies. 25 books, 20 pjavs, 2.V) short stories and at least 300 magazine articles. A one man fiction factory. Ben has two books on the presses now. Ren, using a pencil and a lap THE EASY WAV PONTA CITY, Okla. - Har old Kanady has solved his grass rutting problem. He has rigsed up hra power mower to a rope that is lied to an upright pipe. The mower ruta in circles and aa it revokes around the pipe the rope shortens, leaving him only four smail cor ner! to cut In the usual way. board, writes every day and turns out about 5.000 words a week, as he has nearly every week for more than 40 years. Here Is HacM in hia own words: "I hate idleness it gives me suicidal moods and I hate ideat I Ideas turn men into monsters and j causes turn them into scoundrels. : If you siphon ideas out of their i heads, people are more human. "I'd like to see politics ahol jlshed. Politics Is as had for the spirit as war ia for the body. I "I like spirited people who dis like bosses. I've always figured that whoever hired me was my immediate enemy. That made me a fortune in Hollywood The harri er you hated a boss out there the i more he paid you. I "Everybody's a kibitzer. There ; is too much conformity. People are afraid to he individuals. "The future of the human rare, if it has one, should he good Some tremendous leader will have to appear, but I don't see him any where. "He may have to he a religious leader. It takes religion to relate t human being to himself, to God. . and to life. I "But the onlr religion I'll join is one which ak me to love mv self and love mv neichbor That religion has gone sour, hut it is the only one that ran save the world "Who Is God God it a human being, at far at I ran see We have forgotten that man has di vinity tn Him." the President's objections, j 3"r,"'d not drive until they are 18. Not one reason has been given for the re mark. I say if a kid is not old enough to drive at 16. he never will be. It is a proven fact that the older you get the harder it is to learn. So a kid learning to drive at 16 hat a two-year advantage over an 18- This includes John Dav Dam the Columbia. Cougar and Hills Creek dams in the Willamette Riv er watershed. Yaquina Bay Har bor authorization, etc. We in Con gress have added these despite their omission in the President's budget. That budget contains bil lions and billions for states like Michigan, New York. New Jersey. Ohio and Indiana where armament All raising the age would do would be to cut down on the num ber of drivers for two years. Then it would be the same as before, during the summer and after school. A car ia vital to them in being able to work. Many of them save money to go to college. To deprive them of the right to drive cars until they are ready to enter college would, aeem rather incon- nlinlt ' l.at,l I. ,t ,.., .. SIStent. an Oregon senator to seek relative- N. do ' 'hl"'t raising the age Iv small sums for the development ' tha driver to 18 is the answer of national forest timber sales, for 1 10 our teenage driving problem. power production and for outdoor ! I'mamly we have a minority of i recreation in Oregon' After the "ad drivers. But they are in everv President hat proposed billions for!' group. Let's not hlame it all j states with big Army, Navy and on kld 'ron1 " ,0 ' years. Air Corps installations, is it wrong I ' Parr, age 1 1 for an Oregon senator to emphas- Box 1835 ire that adequate guarantee of Roseburg, Ore. home mortgages will help to re-1 I store Oregon s sagging lumber Older Drivers Safer, market? r - wi v7 vajrvrajn met name I am sympathetic with the desire: of the editor of The News-Review to restrain inflation. He voices a national need when he does to But sacrifice in the budget should be spread over all states and not To The Editor I would like to give a pat on the bark to two people. Alvin Long of Myrtle Creek and Mrs. Parker of Yoncalla. Thev most certainly are correct. Older confined to a few states like Ore- driven are tha tafesi Hnv.r. gon. Our state does not even share , tm ,,0 , dnv,r . no tf. tojiny great degree in the nearly j cidents in more than 40 years. As I many know. I have been a garage Fortune Teller Should I mechanic in Douglas County for rorTUne I eiier iriOUlfll , t,n 40 years I have driven Have Checked Closer 1 and worked on the old two cylinder automobiles, such as the late Dr. INDUN APOI IS ( APi -Fortune Houck s old Reo, as well as the teller Rosa Ziko should have con- cars of todav. hall l.efore of William suited her crystal reading the paint iiyneman. Rosa ceref.illv ttudied Hvne- man t hind and then told him he of a wish to add that I don't ap prove of excessive speed, nor of drunk driving Neither is site. ( rystillired spindles and broken vie shafts, together with Moon. kind tut tires, proe that fast drmne can't be made safe. let's Bile Our law enforcement nen 1 airoiman llvnemin n the on. cert all our cooperation vice squad charged her with keep- Alva H Wilson- ing a dive fortune telling and Rt 3 Bog :j obscene conduct. Roseburg, lire. brings forth fruit. So God desires His Word to take hold of the hearts of men. We must do more than just hear the Word: we must believe it, apply it. ack nowledge it, rest upon it, and live it. Do we take time to let God speak to our hearts through His have hardly been tested yet. Word? Is the soil of our hearts America's relations with Its soft, fallow and prepared to re- fnend. the Philippines, have de ceive with joy His precious Word? terioratrd and need fixing. Then Calvin Harrah. pastor there's the task of trying to help Melrose Community India, with its bursting population Church I and extremely low living atand- ence to talk about it. In the background, always, is the continuing problem of how to 1 cope with Red China's growing strength and iti inevitable influ ence on all Asia where the United States has built up alliances which $$-Save-$$ 1959 Demonstrators Dodges Plymouths! Now for sale. See tbARCUS Your Dodge-Plymouth Dcoltr N. Stephen! at Gorden Valley ftd. Phone OR 3-5566 ...about TSorderis Cheese for meatless meals! Sprinkle, Spread or Slice I You'll get extra nourishment and flavor with Borden's I Try All TEN Delicious Flavors! VERA-SHARP BLUe CMCCSe N' BACON OLIVI-PIMENTO PIMENTO PINEAPPLE RELISH E-2 CHEEZ LIMBURQER SMOKEY najE'W'.'UMa- . .' in 'legiawaaaajeBaBaaaaaaaaaaaaawsaWWl.. ' 'fygjwaaaaaBaaaBBaaiaaaaBaaaaaaaaaaaaaesataaeaMaaaaawffa ,7. ) h L-W' "Boreem J-PASTfURIZEO PRCOSf; I - CHEESE SPRtAtt j I y.., MAPS IK USA. 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