Published by Newt-Ryltw Co., Inc., 54S S t. Main St., Ronburg, Ore. Charles V. Stanton Editor George Castillo Addye Wright , Assistant Editor Businotg Manager Member of the Associated Press, Oregon Newspaper Publishers Association, the Audit Bureau of Circulation Entered as second class matter Ma; 7, 1920, at the post office at Roseburg, Oregon, under act of March 2, 1873 ' Subscription Rates on Classified Advertising Page EDITORIAL PAGE 4 The News-Review, Roseburg, Ore. Tues., June 14, 1960 FLAG DAY By Charles V. Stanton June 14, though not a legal national holiday, is the day UDon which, by Presidential proclamation, we annually hon. or the flag of our country. Each nation has its flag. We have a flag for each state in our Union. Branches, de. partments, agencies and services of our government have their respective nags. The flag, however, is only a symbol. It is a symbol of a people their ideas, their purposes, their sentiments, their deeds. The flag of our country Old Glory, The Stars and Stripes, The Colors no matter by what name it is called, still is but the composite of the men and women who make ud the United States of America. This thought was beautifully expressed in 1914 by Franklin K. Lane, then serving as Secretary of the Interior, who spoke to employes of that department. He said: This morning, as I patted Into the land office, the Flag dropped me a mott cordial salutation, and from Itt rippling foldt I heard it say: "Good morning, Mr. Flag-Maker." "I beg your pardon, Old Glory," I said, "aren't you mlt taken? I am not the President of the United States, nor mem. ber of Congress, nor even a general In the Army. I am only a government clerk." "I greet you again, Mr. Flag-Maker," replied the gay voice. "I know you well. You are the man who worked in the swelter of yesterday straightening out the tangle of that farmer's home, stead in Idaho, or perhaps you found the mistake In that In dian contract In Oklahoma, or helped ts clear that patent for the hopeful Inventor In New York, or pushed the opening of that new ditch In Colorado, or made that mine In Illinois more safe, or brought relief to the old soldier in Wyoming. No matter; whichever one of these beneficent individuals you may happen to be, I give you greetings, Mr. Flag-Maker." I was about to pass on, when the Flag stopped me with these words: "Yesterday the President spoke a word that made happier the future of 10,000,000 peons In Mexico; but that act looms no larger on the flag than the struggle, which the boy In Georgia Is making ts win the corn club prise this summer. "Yesterday the Congress spoke a word which will open the door of Alaska; but a mother in Michigan worked from sun rite until far Into the night to give her boy an education. She, too, Is making the flag. "Yesterday we made a new law to prevent financial panics, and yesterday, maybe, a tchoolteacher In Ohio taught his first letters to boy who will one day write a song that will give cheer to millions of our race. We are all making the flag." "But," I said impatiently, "these people were only working." Then came a great shout from the flag: -.. "The work that we do It the making of the flag. "I am not the flag; not at all. I am but Its shadow. "I am whatever you make me; nothing more. "I am your belief in yourself, your dream of what a people may become. "I live In changing life, a life of moods and passions, of heartbreaks and tired muscles. "Sometimes I am strong with pride, when men do an honest work, fitting the rails together truly. "Sometimet I droop, for then purpose has gone from me, and cynically I play the coward. "Sometimes I am loud, garish, and full of that ego that blasts iudgement. "But always I am all that you hope to be and have the courage to try for. "I am the day's work of the weakost man, and the largest dream of the most daring. "I am the Constitution and the courts, statutes and the statute-makers, soldier and dreadnaught, draymen and street sweeper, cook, counselor and clerk. "I am the battle of yesterday and the mistake of tomorrow. "I am the mystery of the men who do without knowing why. "I am the clutch of an idea and the reasoned purpose of resolution. "I am no more than what you believe me to be, and I am all that you believe I can be. "I am what you make me, nothing more. "I swing before your eyes as a bright gleam of color, a symbol of yourself the pictured suggestion of that big thing which makes this nation. My stars and stripes are your dream and your labors. They are bright with cheer, brilliant with courage, firm with faith, because you have made them so out of your hearts. For you are the makers of the flag and It is well that you glory in the making." James Marhw Spotlight Is Still Focused On Stevenson, Rockefeller WASHINGTON (AP) It's the greatest play on words sinco somebody invented abracadabra Adlai E. Stevenson and New York's Gov. Nelson A. Rockefello deny they're looking for a job but they don't deny they'd run for the phone if tho employment agency called. For a pair being shy. they man age amazingly well to keep their names in tho headlines. Rockefeller withdrew from tho race for tho Republican presiden tial nomination without ever hav- ing admitted he was In it. Now ho is back In it by saying he would accept a draft while firmly denying he's a candidate. Stevenson won't even agree he'd accept a draft by the Democrats to bo their presidential choieo. But he doesn't say he wouldn't. Tho past few days his hat seemed to be in the ring. Then ho grabbed it back. Both men continue to stride across the national political scene, making political speeches and noises like candidates. Neilher has denied he would just lovo to be picked. Stevenson makes speeches ex plaining his own five-point "grand strategy for pcaco" and Issues statements criticizing the Repub licans and President Eisenhower. He termed the administration's handling of the spy plane a blun der, at the tame time speaking out against partisan fault-finding at this time. Rockefeller ciitleize!i the Elsen hower administration in a number of fields, but says "I think the administration has done a wonder ful job." Ho shocked tho Republicans last week by railing Vice Presi dent Richard M. Nixon to come out of tho political bushes and say where he stands. Rockefeller says it is "urgently necessary" for Nixon to state his position on tho issues but that, even if Nixon doesn't, he will sup port the vice president if tho lat ter gets the nomination. Tho governor says one of the vital signs of national political health is debato within the party. Hut when Nixon challenged him to a public discussion, Rockefeller utnn i accept. Playing hard to get worked well for Stevenson in 1952. That was tho year the Democrats picked him the first time. In 1956 he got their nomination again but that time he campaigned for it. Last week Eleanor Roosevelt got a telegram from Stevenson which mado her finally believe ha was a candidate because of Ste venson's wording. He told her: "I will servo my country and my party whenever called upon." She said that made it "clear Mr. Stevenson is a candidate." This was too positive for Steven son who then issued a statement: "f Will not seek tho nnminnfinn for president by the Democratic In The Days News ;By FRANK JENKINS ; Political interest today centers on Mr. Nelson Rockefeller's rath er startling statement of yesterday in which, after asserting that he is NOT a canidate but would AC CEPT the Republican nomination for President if it were tendered to him on a silver platter, be 1. Criticizes the Eisenhower ad ministration's defense program and advocates a three billion dollar in crease in defense spending, and. . . 2. Says the nation must achieve a faster rate of economic growth, urges federal aid for school con struction and endorses medical aid for the aged under the social se curity system in contrast with what he calls the "basically un sound" plan of the Eisenhower ad ministration. Let's take these criticisms up in order, starting with No. 1: Does Mr. Rockefeller (in the full text of his statement) say IN DE TAIL just how the additional three billions he wants should be spent and justify his contention by EX PERT knowledge that three bil lion dollars more are NEEDED in order to make us safe? That prompts another question: Who is better qualified to judge our military defense needs Pres ident Eisenhower, a dedicated mili tary professional who has devoted his life to military affairs and who has had more military experience than any American how living. . . or Mr. Rockefeller? That, it seems to me, is a fair question. We Americans want to know. If our military program is inadequate, it is OUR lives and fortunes that are at stake. In his now celebrated statement, Mr. Rockefeller urges faster rate of economic growth. . .meaning, presumably, an accelerated rate of growth FORCED by government. He wants federal aid for school construction. He wants increased medical aid for the aged under so cial security. All of these SOUND like endorse ment of the philosophy of t h e spenders. They seem to suggest that in Mr. Rockefeller's opinion the Republican party should pledge itself, if returned to power this fall, to SPEND MORE THAN THE DEMOCRATS HAVE BEEN SPENDING. Or- At least To spend more than has been spent under the Eisenhower admin istration. We must remember, of course, that we do not have before us the full text of the Rockefeller state ment. We have as yet only the di gest of its principal points that has been provided for us by the news services. Before we can draw accurate conclusions, we must have the FULL TEXT. We must study it carefully. We must balance one statement against another. Before we can arrive at an accurate judg ment of what Mr. Rockefeller pro poses, in the event that the Repub lican party takes him at his word and DRAFTS him as its nominee for the high office of President, we must have the full text of his statement so that we may study carefully, even prayerfully, what he is proposing in his dramatic entrance into the political arena. But- On the face of what we are able to see so far A lot of Ais will feel a sense of disappointment in Mr. Rockefeller. Hal Boyle Philosophic Male Ponders Why Women WantTo Wed NEW YORK (AP) Why do women want to marry? This is something the philosophic male often ponders. For to his unprejudiced eye, it often seems that most of the woes that befall women can be traced, directly or indirectly, to marriage. Marriage appears to cause many of them to go to rack and ruin. Or if it doesn't, then what does? What else is there to blame? A single girl of 22, in many ways, represents femininity at its peak. She is neat, strong, healthy, and attractive. She has a job and is financially independent. She likes sports and is well-informed on world affairs. She reads the latest books. She keeps up with everything. She doesn't know it, but she is in the prime of life. What happens? Well, she listens to some wedge-headed youth who tells her, "What's a pretty dame like you doing wasting yourself behind a typewriter? Why don't you let me take you away from all this empty nonsense?" She does. She marries the goof. And then what happens? Why she goes straight downhill. She falls apart like a wet paper bag in a Coos Bay Clerks Union Ends 21 -Store Strike COOS BAY (AP) Members of the Retail Clerks Union who had been on strike for the past three weeks in 21 retail stores here returned to work today. The clerks voted 92 to 19 Satur day to accept a new two-year con tract offered by the Associated Employers of Coos Bay. Under tho new contract, the clerks received a 40-hour week and an across-the-board 17-cent hourly pay increase. convention. Therefore I am not a candidate." But he didn't say he would ob. jeet if the nomination were of fered to him. hurricane. The years peel her like she was an artichoke. Before marriage she could play 36 holes of golf and then demand, "Anybody for tennis?" After mar riage she can't walk half a block without looking around for a taxi. Before marriage she could car ry a 25-pound pack on an all-day hike without help. After marriage she can't struggle into a girdle without help. Before marriage she liked noth ing better than inviting a boy friend to her apartment and dish ing him up a nice meal. After marriage she suddenly can't stand her own cooking anymore. She wants to eat out at least three nights a week. Before marriage a nice cloth coat suited her fine. After mar riage something happens to her metabolism. "I just can't take these cold winters the way I used to," she says. "I have to have a fur coat or I'll freeze to death." Before marriage she could talk on any subject. After marriage the only topic she is really in terested in is, "why don't you either ask your boss for more money, or look for a better job?" Before marriage she loved act ing as a baby sitter. After mar riage she spends most of her time trying to find a baby sitter. Before marriage half a dozen guys stood in line to help her paint her apartment. After mar riage she wails, "If this house is ever going to get any new wall paper, I guess I'll have to put it up myself." Before marriage, when she got a new dress, everyone said, "Gee, you look pretty." After marriage, her husband merely growls, "What'd it cost?" Before marriage she didn't have a gray hair in her head, and she had a shape like a willow tree. After marriage? But why go on with it? What matrimony does to the average woman is obvous to everyone even herself. The puzzle remains: Why do women eagerly seek marriage, when they know its terrible price? Readers Opinion Reader Has Economy Idea For Legislators To The Editor: Several times items have ap peared in the papers that seem to wonder why the voters of the state refused to O.K a pay raise for our legislators, but I have never yet seen a statement defending the decision of the voters, so I think it is time one is made. I have heard the remark several times that it was their opinion that if for the past thirty years the legislators had received their pay just the same but had not been called to Salem as a legisla tive body in all that time the state would be better off today. And evi dently a lot of the voters seem to have the same feeling. So with the voters having the opinion that they do, is it any wonder that the pay hike was denied? Now it seems that if our legisla tors would do something other than to find new ways to squeeze more money out of the people, the out come of the pay hike might be different. We've just got to vote, and each time we hope for improvement, and each time we are disappointed. C. E. Young P.O. Box 21 Glendale, Ore. France Warns Russ On New Arms Plan GENEVA (AP) France warned the Soviet Union here it would be a serious error to believe the new Soviet disarmament plan, partly based on French ideas, could disrupt the solidarity of the Western Alliance. French disarmament expert Jules Moch told the 10-natlon dis armament conference the plan put forward by Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev June 2 "denotes a complete change in the Soviet position, even if certain principles seem to have remained un changed." Moch recalled that Khrushchev and Soviet Delegate Valerian Zor io repeatedly emphasized that the plan contained proposals original ly put forward by the French gov ernment. "If as I do not believe the au thors of the nlan conceived it with the ulterior motive of exploiting it in order to weaken or disrupt tne Western Alliance, they will have made a serious error, as nothing will shake our solidarity," Mocb said. In his first speech since the dis armament talks resumed June 7, Moch said the Soviet plan had obviously been drafted for pres entation at the ill-fated summit conference. Ormsby-Gore asked Zorin a se ries of questions, saying the an swers were essential to permit the Western powers to determine tneir attitude to the Soviet plan. Zorin replied that the questions should be settled by negotiation, and suggested that the Western delegations start the ball rolling by proposing their own answers. Naval War Hero Takes Command Of Carrier SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Capt. Ralph W. Cousins, Navy flier who won the Navy cross for heroism in the Coral Sea fighting of World War II, will take command of the 62,000-ton attack carrier Midway on June 15. He will relieve Capt. James H. Mini, who will become command ant of midshipmen at the Naval Academy. The Midway is being overhauled at Hunters Point Naval Shipyard here. The work is expected to be completed in September, after which the carrier will rejoin the West Coast fleet. The Cartoonist Says: Cool State Department Sees 'At Home' Victory For Khrushchev Theory WASHINGTON (AP) Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev seems to have won a victory, at least at home, in battling against "left ist" opponents of his theory of peaceful coexistence. That is the hasty interpretation of State Department Soviet schol ars here of the strong defense of Khrushchev's policy and a denun ciation of his critics made in Sun day's issue of Pravda, the Com munist parly paper. The scholars say it will take a lot of study to evaluate fully the Pravda article. But they said that even a first glance confirms the theory that Khrushchev intends to maintain his line of coexistence and of negotiation to settle inter national disputes. The Pravda article by N. Mat kovsky said some persons mis takenly considered such things as meetings between Communist and non-Communist chiefs of state a departure from Marxism and Leninism. "Comrade Khrushchev has said, on questions of ideology we have firmly stood and will stand U.e a rock on the foundations of Marx ism and Leninism," Matkovsky said. The article and discussion of it by the Soviet public took note that in the world Communist move ment there has been some differ ences of opinion. It identified Khrushchev's opponents only as left-wing Communists, which ap parently was aimed at Mao Tze iuna and other Chinese Commu nist opponents in the Communist camp of tne rremier s enorts to ease tension between the Western and Communist worlds. Whenever Pravda prints a sim ilar piece on ideological questions, it usually marks the end of ex- ton!i,A rlahnta huhinrl rinsed Hnors on the highest Communist level. Soviet experts at the State De partment said it would be highly cnar-iilntiva in cav whn were the opponents of the Khrushchev the sis in tne soviet union useu. There is, however, no doubt that such a group exists. Whila tho PravHa nippe has likely settled the dispute in the Kremun Dy endorsing me inruu chev line, what if any effect it will have on the Chinese thinking remains to be seen, the experts said. . . Mao is not only regarded by many as the No. 1 ideologist of u-witm ha alan rpnrpspnt"! a country which never was satisfied to be just a satellite. Soviet Worker Prefers Food, Not Sputniks. MOSCOW (AP) "To hell with id. mnnn a'wa mp snmpthinff bet ter on my table," complained a Soviet worker here in letter published on tne iront page oi Pravda. 'What An .Qniitnika pivp. to & person like me?" asked the un identified writer, protesting uie lack of consumer goods in the So iaf TTnlnn "Sn muph mnnev is spent on Sputniks it makes peo ple gasp." ..... rne protest was tne iirst iu ap pear in a Soviet newspaper in cnmA tima It hl-ftlioht HnWIl R storm of criticism from the paper and from another Russian work er picked out to answer the com plaint. "I have had moments when my heart filled with pride at the ac complishments of our scientists," replied engineer P. L. Podovoisky. Ben-Gurion Talks Set With DeGaulle PARIS (AP) Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion of Israel ar rived today for talks with Presi dent Charles de Gaulle which could include an appeal for French support in the Eichman affair. The Israeli Prime Minister also may try to set up a meeting here with President Arturo Frondizi of Argentina on the same matter. Frondizi is due later. Ben - Gurion will see De Gaulle Tuesday. His official stay ends Tuesday evening but he will stay on privately until June 20. Israeli sources confirmed that several anonymous letters threat ening Ben-Gurion have been re ceived and that security precau tions have been made unusually severe. Whether these letters were prompted by the Eichmann case was not made clear. Officially, France has taken no stand on the seizure in Argentina of Adolf Eichmann, director of the Nazi "final solution" which re sulted in extermination of millions of Jews. But the French are known to be sympathetic to the Israelis and De Gaulle might be prepared to do his best to soothe feelings at least. Ben-Gurion departed after a Cabinet meeting which reportedly reaffirmed that Eichmann would remain in Israel to stand trial for his part in the Nazi extermination of Jews. Argentina had demanded that he be returned to Buenos Aires and that the Jewish under cover agents who spirited him out of Argentina late in May be pun ished. Argentina threatened to take the case to the United Na tions unless Eichmann were returned. MR. PRESIDENT by Patrick and Vinmont f", k ill t v&-t0w!fll MILLARD FILLMORE Bora in Cayuga County, New York, January 7, 1800; He attended the country schools until he was 15 when he was bound out as an apprentice to learn the trade ' of a woolcarder. Four years later he began the study of law and taught school to earn his way. He was admitted to the bar in . 1823. At 29 he was a member of the New York Assembly and for eight years a mem ber of Congress. In 1844 he was defeated for the governorship of New York. His . election to State Controller of New York in 1847 prompted die Whigs to nominate him for Vice-President with Taylor. The second Vice-President to be promoted by death, be became the thirteenth President of the United States on July 9, 1850 and served two years and eight months. . Slavery was tie cbief issue during bis administration. He signed the Fugitive Slave Law. With a political minority in both houses of Congress, many wise measures he recommended failed to be adopted. After an unsuccessful effort to succeed himself he was nominated by both the Know-Nothing and Whig parties in the election of 1856 but was again defeated. He died in Buffalo on March 8, 1874, aged 74. EDWARD EVERETT Born in Dorchester, Massachusetts, 1794. Before entering poliu'cs as a Congress man, 1825-35, he had graduated from Harvard, studied for the pulpit and served as a minister before he was 20. He studied in Europe five years and became the first American to receive a Ph.D. degree from Gottingen. He then taught Greek-literature at Harvard. . . . He served as Governor of Massacbusetts, 1836-40, Minister to Great Britain, 1841-46, President of Harvard, 1846-49, Secretary of State under Fillmore and as a United States Senator, 1853-54. He was outstanding in his support of the national government during the Civil War and was in constant demand to speak at public meet ings. He delivered the last of his great orations at Gettysburg at the consecration of the National Cemetery. He died in 1865. ' MRS. MILLARD FILLMORE Born in New York, in 1798, Abigail Powers, a teacher, was married at twenty eight to Millard Fillmore. She continued her work until his career was established. In fragile health, as First Lady she was ably assisted by her lovely daughter, Abigail, well educated and musically talented. Dismayed at finding not a book in the mansion, they founded the first White House library with volumes of their own choosing. At informal literary or musical gatherings or at State funcu'ons, the Fillmore ladies presided with simple dignity and a warm, natural friendliness. Mrs. Fillmore died in 1853.