lo oa 0
ft
editorial page
4 Th News-Review, Roseburg, Ore. Thur., June 21, 1962
Franks jfeiins
v-JSs
Interesting question:
Have you noticed that since the
big bust in the stock market we
tend to shiver less when we read
the FOREIGN news and even
skip some of the. headlines?
The home front news is dull to
day. So Old Kroosh gets back into
the picture. In a rather odd way,
He spent Tuesday talking to col'
lectivo (meaning communized)
farmers In Romania. His speech,
coming from the world's top com
munist, had a strange ring. He ad'
mitted that communism is having
difficulties in persuading peasants
(the communist name for farmers)
to accept collectivization. He said
to his peasant audience:
"Do not be too proud that you in
Romania have finished collectivi
zation of farms. There is always
(in communism) the psychological
problem of the soul of the peas
ants.
"No one is born a communist.
After collectivization, the peasant
goes out to LOOK FOR HIS OWN
HORSE, and feels that it is still
HIS OWN property."
He could have added but
DIDN'T that when the peasant re
alizes that what USED TO BE HIS
OWN HORSE isn't his. own horse
any longer he LOSES INTEREST
IN HIS JOB and no longer cares
whether he raises much of a crop
or not. ,
After all, he says to himself:
"What difference docs it make to
mo NOW whether I work hard and
produce a bin crop or goof off and
produce a little crop: In any event
I won't be allowed to keep FOR
MYSELF what I have worked
hard to produce."
That's the fly in the ointment of
communism.
Weird not in the news:
The suicide verdict still stands
in the case of the mystery shoot
ing in Texas last year of Henry
H. Marshall, the department of ag
riculture agent who had been
checking Into (ho cotton allotment
dealings of Billie Sol Estcs.
After a month-long probe of the
reopened case, the Texas grand
jury decided early this week that
"the evidence was too inconclusive
to substantiate any conclusion oth
er than suicide."
Let's see.
Marshall was found dead on June
3, at a lonely spot on his ranch in
Itobertson county, near the town of
Franklin. He had been shot five
times with a ,22 caliber bolt ac
tion rifle, which lay on tho ground
not too far away from his body.
The verdict at an inquest by a jus
tice of tho peace was SUICIDE.
If so, ho must have been DE
TERMINED to die. Imagine shoot
ing yourself FIVE TIMES with a
bolt action riflcl
The Almanac
By Unlttd Pratt International
June
21.
with
its
Today is Thursday,
(he 172nd day of the year
11)3 to follow.
The moon is approaching
last quarter.
Tho morning stars are Jupiter,
II a is and Saturn.
The evening star is Venus.
On this day in history:
In 1788, tho U.S. Constitution
became effective as the ninth
state ratified it.
In 1915, Japan surrendered to
the United States in the battle
for Okinawa Island in the Pa
cific. In 1948, a communications
worker demonstrated his "long
playing" record that revolution
ized the entire recording indus
try. A thought for the day: The
Spanish writer, Miguel Cervantes,
said: "That is tho natural way
of women to scorn the one
that loves them, and love the one
that hates them."
PASSING THE BUCK
By Charles V. Stanton
Sn. Wayne Mor&e of Orepron is doing an expert job
of buck passing in my opinion.
n,. nnnr, aonafnr wcAnt.lv loosed one of his verbal
n-wino on-,.;,,uf tho Konnedv administration because of
"red tape and delay" in taking action to help the de
Dressed lumber industry of the Pacific Northwest.
Morse, of course, isn't alone. Other of our senators
Northwest Alaska and California are
joining in the demand that the President "do something.
Rut whv ta the huek to Kennedy?
Our lumber industry is in need of immediate help.
TVmt'a wimt nnr BPnutnrH are Droclaimincr. They re insist
ing that help be given and at once by the Tariff
Commission and by the rreswoni.
But Congress has the power to give an immediate
tnrm nf rolipf. Tnstend of waitinsr for the President and
the Tariff Commission to get around to aiding the lumber
industry, these senators who have suddenly become so
vocal and demanding, could solve this problem, at least
temporarily, almost overnight.
But instead of doing the thing they know would be of
immediate help, they piously insist that the President and
Tariff Commission put quotas on Canadian mmrjer.
Shirking The Job
They know full well that if this country places quotas
on Canadian lumber, Canada will turn around and put
quotas on something we produce. The lumber industry
will be aided in such case at the cost of some other produc
tion activity. The senators, I am quite sure, even while
demanding with great vigor that something be done, are
quite aware mat ntxie can, or win, De aone ai least im-mediatelv.
At the same time these "angry" senators, who would
have us believe they are trying to do something for the
industry, are shirking their own jobs and responsibilities.
They have the power to provide the immediate relief our
industry needs. Instead, they're attempting to place the
blame elsewhere. Only Sen. Maurme Neuberger has pro
posed what seems to me to be the obvious way to obtain
prompt action. But apparently she's not , getting much
help.
The Senate could, if it would, repeal that section of
the Jones Act which makes our coastal mills use U.S.
ships when transporting lumber to another. American port.
And amendment to the Jones Act could be pushed through
Congress in a hurry, if the members of 'Congress were
willing to face reality. Our mills then would be in a com
petitive position and could regain markets lost to Canadian
mills. Now they must' pay a subsidy to the maritime in
dustry.
But amendment of the Jones Act would involve tamper
ing with transportation practices. We have very few U.S.
boats remaining in the coastal lumber trade. Our coastal
mills are being forced ' to use rails, because the U.S.
doesn't have enough lumber schooners to provide needed
cargo capacity. But any change in the law would compel
downward revision of rail and truck tariffs.
Do you think our senators would risk losinir the votes
of the teamsters unions and railroad brotherhoods? If so,
suggest you think again.
Whipping Forest Service
Instead, our senators are dnnrvrincr all the , red her-
rings they can find across their paths so they won't be
forced into an action that might cost them some votes.
One device is to make a "whimjinor bov" of the U.S.
Forest Service.
Unquestionably there could be a number of improve
ments in Forest Service practices and public relations.
nut it seems to me that a good many of the devices pro
posed by operators at recent hearings are designed to get
more and cheaper logs.
1 lie timber industry stripped this country of its forests
from one coast to the other. Tho inrliint.rv. no o uhnln
hasn't shown much voluntary reformation.' It wants logs'.
une way to get logs is to force the Forest Service to for
sake its sustained yield, allowable cut policies.
n appears to me our senators should be seeking to ore-
serve our resources, promote conservation, nnrl think of
the future and the protection of coming generations, rather
man yielding voices unci lntluence to continuation of the
practice of leaving barren hillsides and ghost towns.
In any event, it seems somewhat hyprocritical to me
to be passing the buck to the administration when Hips
same senators who are doing the complaining have the
power 10 no me tiling they insist should be done.
Raymond J. Crowley
House Of Representatives
Is Co-Squal With Senate
WASHINGTON (AP) You'd
better smile, pardner, if you call
the U.S. House of Representatives
the "lower house."
Otherwise you're In trouble with
House members.
For there is nothing in the Con
stitution which says the Senate is
higher than the House. They are
co-equal. As a matter of fact,
some authorities feel that if ei
ther branch is expendable it is
the Senate, not the House.
But thorjh House members get
the same pay $22,500 as sena
tors, it has long been surmised
that many of them have hidden
inferiority complexes. For one
thing, the size of the House (437
as against 100 senators) tends to
dilute an individual member's
prestige. And to get any work
done, the House has developed
rules which regiment its run-of-the-mill
members. No represen
tative can make a marathon
speech, for example,
At any rate, the House has long
suspected the Senate of haughti
ness. So now representatives have
their backs up. They are insisting
that the chairmanship of Senate
House Conference Committees ap
pointed to iron out differences in
appropriations bills shall rotate
instead of always being heid by
a senator. This dispute has tied
up several appropriations bills
and many Government employes
face payless paydays, including
the valiant Secret Service.
Though the Constitution makes
no mention of it, some people con
tend Congress has a "third house"
namely its system of conference
committees. When Senate and
House pass a bill in different form
a conference committee usually
is appointed to reconcile the dif
ferences.
Working in secret, conferees
wield great power. Sometimes in
the past they have altered legis
lation almost oeyond recognition,
And sometimes, especially in ses
sion-end logjams, Congress has
passed the conferees' "compro
mise" without knowing exactly
what was in it.
Suggestions sometimes have
been made that America could
get along with a one-chamber
Congress. Many foreign countries
and one American state, jseDras-
ka. manage to do it. But it is
inconceivable that either Senate
or House would vote for a con
stitutional amendment to put it
self out of business.
The present clash between Sen
ate and House, though tense, is
conducted quietly in gentlemanly
fashion. Both chambers have
rules against using the floor to
speak ill of .colleagues in either
house.
Gone are the good old days
when Congressman "Sockless
Jerry" Simpson (1842-1905) of
Kansas could arise or. the House
floor and call a colleague "a po
litical cannibal autocrat."
Nowadays the steam seems to
have gone out of presidential lan
guage too. It is hard to imagine
President Kennedy saying of any
senator what President Andrew
Jackson wrote of John C. Calhoun
in 1832:
"His best former friends say he
ought to be hanged."
Hal Boyle
Ruark Caught And Eh joyed
Everything That He Chased
NEW YORK (AP)-"My big
ambition as a child was not to be
ooor." said Robert Ruark, who
likes to be known as the world's
fastest two-finger typist.
"Money doesn't by itself mean
happiness, but it's a hell of a ne
cessity. A guy who can buy a bot
tle of whisky is better off than a
guy who can't buy a bottle.
"There's nothing you can do
poor that you can't do better rich
except beg."
At 46. Ruark, columnist turned
novelist, is in no imminent danger
of having to hold out a tin cup to
passers-by.
In 16 years, this latter-day Rich
ard Harding Davis estimates he
has turned out more than 1,000
magazine articles and 10 books.
His latest, a novel of African in
dependence, is a Book-of-the-Month
selection.
If it does as well as an earlier
African novel, which sold to the
movies for $300,000, Ruark should
reap a harvest of $750,000 or more
for it.
Not bad for a country boy whose
only desire was to get out of town
and see the world.
Bob left Southnort. N.C.. at the
age of 15 he was still in knicker
bockers to enter the University
of North Carolina. Ho was gradu
ated at 19. Soon after he was
working for a federal agency as
an accountant.
It took them three months to
find out I'd never even had a
course in bookkeeping," he re
called. Fired from that job, KuarK
became an ordinary seaman, then
worked as a newspaperman until
World War ' II, during which he
commanded a Navy gun crew on
a freighter. , .
Bob returned to his newspaper
typewriter then, and in six months
worked up from $125 a week to
$50,000 a year as a columnist.
Brash and self-confident, Ruark,
despite an intermittently ailing
liver, lives with a tremendous gus
to, thrives on controversy and ad
venture. His left arm is still laced
with the scars left by a wounded
leopard he shot recently in India.
He works hard, plays hard and
spends freely. Not long ago he
pick up a $2,500 for a party
he threw merely to. let some old
friends know he was passing
through town, -
"But I think it's about lime I
quit Uiat sort of thing," he re
He smokes 80 cigarettes a day
"but only about an inch of each"
and still restlessly travels from
100,000 to 150,000 miles a year.
But the boy is growing older and
feels now he'd like tn settle down
for while.
Ruark owns a Rolls - R o y c e,
homes in London and Spain, and
keeps busy a staff of 15 servants,
secretaries and agents.
Bob's credo:
"Everything I saw that I wanted
I chased; everything I chased I
caught; everything I caught I en
joyed. "But life is a matter of giving,
too. Everything I got I gave some
thing of myself first to get."
DEAR ABBY
Abigail Van Buren
Beat The Odds, Sweety!
REQUESTS TAX CUT
WASHINGTON (UPI) AFL
CIO President George Mciiny has
urged President Kennedy to ask
Congress for an immediate I a x
cut, which would be concentrated
in the low income bracket.
Mcany said a reduction in in
come taxes was "vitally essential
lo avoid sioOing the rate of econ
omic growth." His proposal came
In the form of a memorandum to
Kennedy that was made public on
Wednesday.
DEAR ABBY: Two years ago I
visited some friends out 'of town.
They were invited to a friend's
home for dinner and I went along.
llie "friend turned out lo be a
very handsomo young man who
had been in a wheel chair most of
his life. He lives in a five-room
home, built especially for him. It
was nicely furnished and spotless.
The meal (which he prepared him
self) was out of this world. He
keeps house, does his own laundry
and drives a car with hand con
trols. I liked him immediately. I
saw him many times and it de
veloped into love. He's asked me to
marry him and I want to. As you
can guess. I have parent trouble.
They say it is not "love" but "pity"
I feel for this handicapped man,
and if 1 marry him I'll be sorry
later.
Abby. how can you "pity" a man
who can take care of himself and
a home? He has a steady Income.
a 27-y tar-old woman should know
what thy want. W art all hand!
capped in stmt way nly h I
shows. If you lovt him, mtrry
him.
Dr.AR ABBY: When my hair
was long 1 had to have it set at
least twice a week. (1 work in an
office and must look well-groomed
all the time.) One day 1 had It cut
snori and 1 never had so many
compliments In my life.
My husband loves long hair so
he had a fit. He told me to let it
srow long and not to ci it again.
short hair is so much easier to
care for and everyone else likes
it. Should 1 let it grow to please
my husband?
TO CUT OR NOT
DEAR TO: It's mora important
to pltast ytor husband than tv.
tryont tltt ctmblntd. If ytu'rt
wilt, you'll lit It grow.
We wouldn't bp rich, but we'd get ,,,, mm- i . . . .
along. He Is 29 ami I am 27. What' , AnB:. Lalei'. have n-
do you think'' inai my mrsDana nas siart-
6 in L0yE ! cd to smile sweetly and make eyes
two-y a r , ey.P, (trance vumen he tinner, nn
the boulevard. They don't even
DEAR IN: Afttr a
courtship, a 29-ytar-old man and
The News' - Review
Publithtd bf Ntwi-Rtrltw PublliSinj Co.
S4S S. I. Main St., Reiebure Oregon
CHARLES V. STANTON ADDYE WRIGHT
... o ,ditor e Busoic Mieoge&
GEORGE CASTILLO DON HAGEDORN
- Monoaina Editor Disrlav Adv Mar.
Temvrrffiie6?5So'ri3icjrY??ss, orcgo'lTTvcHspapef Puollsners
. Association the Audit Bureau of Circulation
. Entered as second class matter May 7, 1920, at the post office at
Roscburg, Oregon, undft act of March 2, 1873
Subscription Rates on CmL4&iri!ai<t-. JstWafcaftAesftd SSfeftpe'
nave to ot gooiiiooklng Just so
they're women. My sister says he
should have his head exjyined. He
is 74 and 1 am 67, Should I ignore
it or what?
"67"
DSAR "7": If ytur 74-ytar.old
husband's "flirting" It net console-
cuoui to othtri, Igntrt It. Thi rnayj
ow nil Tnira cmiarwoa ana
ouitt htrmltis.
Reader Opinions
Bangkok Embassy
Man Leaves Milo
By MRS. DURNIN SWINGLE Y
Phil Hendrix has departed for
Thailand where he is stationed at
the U. S. Embassy at Bangkok.
He spent some time with his
mother, Mrs. Romie Hendrix, near
Milo, and other relatives. He had
been called home by the death of
his youngest sister, Agnes, in an
automobile accident. His brother
Melvin, took him to Mcdford to
catch the plane.
Earlier in the week Merrill Hen
drix, son of Mrs. Romie Hendrix,
underwent major surgery at Sa
cred Heart hospital in Eugene for
a back injury suffered in a woods
accident some two years ago.
Mile Visited
Visitors at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Meyers of Milo last
week were the former's niece, Mrs.
Floyd Butler, and family of Ano
ka, Minn. They had been to the
Seattle Fair.
Attending the recent wedding of
Sandra Crumpton and Jerry Bon
ney, both of the Tiller-Drew area,
at the Medford Friends Church,
Medford, were his uncle and aunt,
Mr. and Mrs. Erwin Whetzel, and
children, Miss Terri Kostic arid
Miss Susan Wheaton all of Days
Creek. Sherryl Whetzel was an at
tendant and Miss Kostic sang two
solos.
. Relatives Visited
Dennis and Nancy Wheaton, son
and daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Rob
ert Wheaton, spent last week at
Tillamook visiting Mrs. Wheaton's
brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and
Airs. Jess Ingram. The two young
folks accompanied their uncle and
aunt to the Rose Festival at Port
land Saturday.
Mrs. Ervin Mather and Mrs.
Florence Brady were recent visit
ors to Medford and Central Point,
where they called at the home of
Mrs. Mather's son-in-law and
daughter. Mr. and Mrs. Ira Brock,
and small son.
I Editorial Comment
KENNEDY SHOULD CHALLENGE LABOR
San Oitge Union
There seems to be a feeling that since President Kennedy averted
an increase in the price of steel, the wage-cost spiral has been
brought under control and a great service has been given to the
American economy. But the striking down of a single company is
a far different matter than resisting the pressure of hundreds of
labor unions led by men whose strength necessarily lies in what
they can wring out of the system each year.
While Mr. Kennedy was appealing to labor leaders to hold the
line, and while their cheers and applause were still ringing in his
ears, a hundred efforts were under way, from one end of the coun
try to the other, to break through the line with higher wages and
more fringe benefits. No pledges were heard at labor conventions
that the annual round of mark-ups would be foregone.
The construction field in particular went its own way. One plas-
terers' group has won a $33-a-week increase or 23 per cent, and
by 1964 it will be earning $174 a week for 30 hours, plus hourly ad
ditions for welfare and pension benefits. Plumbers announce that they
want a five-hour day. A steel workers' local is asking a Sl-an-hour
increase. And so' it goes.
The construction industry is as vital to the nation's economy as
the steel industry. But it is a fragmented industry and on the man
agement side there is no single company or individual or small
group to lash or punish. On the union side, leadershin is diveers
and divisive. In the end, the power of labor leaders lies not with
the White House- but with their members. They are not subject
to random economic punishments, such as that held over the
steel industry, but only to imposition of dictatorial wage and price
controls that nobody wants. Their response to a national appeal to
hold the line must be on the basis of national interest and there
fore a patriotic one.
But the appeal goes unheeded. One raise must be matched by
another; one leader s position and prestige equated with that of a
rival. And the spiral continues upward and upward.
Surely the President must step up to the line' here in the not
too distant future. He must reach the source of labor union strength,
the members who have the best interests of the country at heart.
To do this he must challenge the leadership of the powerful men
who were among his chief supporters in his election as President.
This will be mighty interesting to watch.
RADIUM NEEDLES' LOST
CATANZARO, Italy (UPI)
Technicians with geiger counters
searched through refuse in the i
city dump today looking for two !
costly and dangerous radium nee- j
dies. Authorities said the needles ,
were thrown away absent-mind-1
edly by a hospital nurse Wednes
day. I
STATE OF OREGON VEHICLE SALE
"SPOT BID" AUCTION ot UNIVERSITY OF OREGON
Hayword Field, Agate & 15th Sts.
EUGENE, 12:30 P.M. P.S.T., SATURDAY, JUNE 23
Rambler, Lark, Ford, Cti.v., Pontine, Inr'l, Dodge. 39 Units (1950-.
1961 Models): 5 compact sedans; 19 standard ledans; station wgn;
S pickupi; 5 dump trucks, two arc 4 x 4's; 2 Chev. suburban carry- .
alls, 1957'i; flatbed truck and Scoopmobile loader. Several cars from
Oregon State University.
Inspect at: Eugene, Hayward Field, Univ. of Oregon
10 a.m. te S p.m. P.S.T., June 21-22 and
from 9 a.m. Sat. June 23.
Complete payment must be mode by 4 p.m. P.S.T. Tuai. June 26,
1962
Isolated Area Urged
For County Boys Camp
To The Editor:
Concerning the controversy over
the proposed home for delinquent
boys at Myrtle Creek, I'm sure no
one is opposed to the idea of such
a home or homes. The controversy
pertains to the location.
We feel that putting a correction
home in an area of small rural
homes would create numerous
problems. Though this site is the
largest acreage in this area, most
farms having been divided several
times, very little of it is level
enough to cultivate. Water will be
a problem. If this property were to
be sold and the money spent to im
provo property in a more isolated
area (cut-over land for sale for
taxes, for instance) I'm sure there
would be no controversy.
People opposing the suggested
location have been treated as if
they were cold-hearted monsters.
It is easy to be tolerant and broad
minded when the problem isn't
dumped on your doorstep.
I'm sure a percentage ot the
boys to be housed in the home
would readjust and become good
citizens. But many would not. How
many local boys are going to be
influenced by these?
I'm sure just as many of these
boys would be rehabilitated if their
camp were to be put in a more iso
iSed area. In fact, perhaps more
would be rehabilitated In such a
lei;ion because temptation would
be farther away.
Mrs. Clinton Jones
N. Mvrtle Creek Rt.,
Box 221,
Myrtle Creek, Ore.
and thoughtfulncss by public em
ployes, while actually at work and
in a dangerous situation, is truly
appreciated.
Harry L. Johnson
233 Mosher Ave.
Roseburg, Ore.
Peninsula City Offers
World Fair Lodging
Firemen Draw Praise
To The Editor:
In view of the fact that there
have been controversial and much
publicized reports as to tho inad
equate housing and the resultant
"gouging" of visitors to the North
west and the Seattle World's Fair,
we felt that it would b a service
to your subscribers to inform them
that at Bremerton, just one hour's
boat ride to Seattle, and in the
surrounding areas we have many
hotels, motel, trailer park and
campsite accommodations that'
range in price as follows: Hotels
$5 single room to $8 double with j
bath. Motels Si singlrroom to $10 !
double with bath. Also with accom-
modations for up to 10 people $18.-;
00 larger unit. Trailer parks $2.- j
50 per hook-up. Campsites $1.00
(some have swimming pools). j
Many ot the motels arc recently
built and some of them offer trans-;
t portation to and from tfte ferry ter
minal. The scenic one hour ferry j
ride to Seattle, site of the World's
Fair, is one of the many tourist at- -tractions
of Puget Sound.
We should like to stress the fact
that our accommodations prices
are comparable or perhaps even
lower than in your locality, we
have taken care of thousands of ;
satisfied visitors in the past few 1
y'.e. CnsvOed parking and driv
ing inconveniences may be avoided
by leaving cars in Bremerton. We
are a verv hospitaole city and
Is For rfT"ofjfW's" nJtk fiwleavor to make any tour-
i ton and Century 21 a comfortable
Everybody has a problem.
What's yours? For a personal re
ply, write to Abby, Box 3365, Bev-
iO uTe .uiiui :
I wish to express my sincere
thanks to the Roseburg firemen
who participated in saving and oth-
erly Hills. Calif. Enclose a .sUflJU-rnjie protecting my belongings
.wl .iji.,t. -,.. tk.J 8 -R . rr . I j,;na .... ,. - c..-k
during our recent fire. Such cart
and enjoyable experience.
Wil Cooke. Chairman
Expo-Lodging Service
254 2nd Street
Bremerton, Washington
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