ObttrvM-, La Grand, Ore., httebllihed 114 Li Grand, Oregon Dally Exetpt Sunday PuDllaaaf Br to Grand Ronde Valley Publlahln; Coauaar V. 10. Weybret, Prunlilenl RAY C. ANDERSON Editor & Publisher GEORGE S. CHALLIS Adv. Director ' Member Audit Bureau ol Circulation United Press Full Leased Wire WK8T-HOLIDAY CO., INC. National RepreeaiUatle Loa Ariattlfta Ban Kranciacu Portland Seattle Denver New York Cljlcatfo Detroit SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier 1.25 Month 18.00 Year By Motor Route 1.40 Month 16.00 Year BY MAIL 1 Month 1.25 S Montha . S.SO 8 Months 6.50 1 Year 12.00 ntered aa Second Claaa Matter at the Poat Office of I Grande. Oregon Under tbe Act of March 8, 1117 Another Red J The Russians have now reverted to type with a ven , pennce. Their boasted "ban" on nuclear weapons testing vj is exposed as the fraud it was feared to be, and they are exploding- new devices on a full scale. In the United Nations, while piously professing: their j willingness to put an immediate test ban into effect ! "for all time," their representative says they won't join ; in the one-year moratorium we and the British propose, i . We wish to take it stage by stage until it has been i demonstrated that adequate systems of inspection and i detection-absolutely necessary to the effective enforce : mont of a test ban can in fact 'oe established. Having shown nothing to justify trust in them, die a Russians in effect ask everybody to take them on faith. It's as if the world's most famous bank robber applied to the Bank of England for the job of carting gold to 1! the vaults. J Our. Atomic. Energy .Commission-says that in their newest series of nuclear blasts, now totaling six, the J Soviet Union has set off at least one with a relatively high radiation yield. ' I One1 of the most outrageous aspects of the Russian position as currently stated is their declaration that they '' I propose to conduct at least another 100 test blasts to J "catch up" numerically with the total they say the Unit a ed States and Britain have touched off. ' J This is an absurd proposition designed for propaganda effect only, It is a crudeattempt to justify before the a world their abandonment of a ban1 they obviously never J intended to observe in the first place. If it were anything but this, one would be tempted J-to class it as a kind of juvenile insanity. The "I can do anything you can do" theme when applied to the busi ness of contaminating the world's atmosphere with un clear fallout could only be madness if .seriously meant. Furthermore, any exact numerical matching would in tin's instance be meaningless. While the three nuclear testing nations must surely be following the same gen eral lines in their experiment, it is fantastic to imagine that their specific endeavors are- similar and would re quire testing procedures identical as to kind and number. That the Soviet Union dares to insult the world's in telligence with this proposition, even as transparent propaganda, indicates how little the Kremlin has really changed. What hope now can be held out for success in the test ban talks beginning Oct. 31 in Geneva? : Another Whirlyhird Record Gradually the helicopter inches in as an important part of life today. These ungainly looking vehicles are becoming important work horses of the skies. Usually they emerge in the news only in tynes of emergency. They seem always -there to help flood victims, relieve the dangers of the snowbound or rescue the injured. . Almost as a routine item, the news wires are giving the details of how helicopters came to the aid of a stricken ship in the South China Sea. 'Copters from the U.S. cruiser Helena rescued 116 passengers. It was the biggest helicopter rescue so far and an encouraging indication ot achievements coming in the future. Barbs Some phone conversations others are just too long. The path from the TV set to the cookie jar or re frigerator is worn ragged by commercials. For every woman who takes up the law there :ii'e thousands who lay it down. - ! Side Glances iTv decided to dedicate myself to higher learning this semester, so what do I get for my birthday? . Five bottle of perfumel" - Tues.; Oct. 21 1958 Page 4 Fraud are long 'distance and , 1M i MA Unti. to. VtfTTSl I'Well, Khrushchev By COLLETTE BLACKMOORE United Press International MOSCOW (UPH What Nikita Khrushchev calls a holiday would seem, tu the ordinary Russian hardly distinguishable from the everyday working routine. For two months, the Soviet leader has been resting ,at gov ernment dachas (villas) on the Black Sea near Yalta and Sochi. Some people may think that for the Communist Party chief and premier of a new power such as Russia, this is an unusually long vacation. Actually, ever since he depart ed for the south in mid-August, Khrushchev has combined relaxa tion and business. Between dips in the-sea,' sunbathing and strolls in the countryside, he has contin ued In attend countless party af fairs which are . the legitimate fairs which are ,the legitimate concern of the country's highest Communist.; Geographically, he is about 720 miles from Moscow. Yet, by tele phone and teletype,, he is only a few minutes away and in con slant touch with the latest devel opments in domestic and foreign affairs.'. At the same time,' Khrushchev has received numerous foreign of Backstairs At By MERRIMAN SMITH A United Press International LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Back stairs at the White House: As President Eisenhower tours the country, he runs into new signs along, the highways over which his motorcades proceed. One now addition to Ins vast col lection of roadside greetings was outside Salina, Kan., where a group of young .military school cadets were drawn up in as stiff attention as their excitement of the moment would permit. Their ign said: Hi, sir. When tho President stopped al Cedar Rapids, Iowa, he just woman t let well enough alone and now he realizes that some myster ious fate will keep him on his diet whether he likes it or not. The President was leaving a tent ot the national corn picking contest and spied a big cake which proclaimed "Welcome Ike" in white and yellow icing. i just can t leave, be said. "without a piece of that wonder ful looking cake." Whereupon one of the hostesses cut n big slab and handed it to him. He took It gingerly with om hand and attempted to sign c lady's autograph book with tin other hand. Several other ladles showed up with papers to be autographed and the President was hemmed in. A; he tried to do everything at once, the cake seemed to explode and lit started to drop It, then grabbed for it. A cascade of icing fell over his gray suit. He grabbed for out stray bit of cake and got ieinp up his sleeve. Finally, he had It step away from the ladies and dust himself off.' But not without leaving a few telltale spots. When the President visited last week in Ills oia Hometown m not lone, he stayed at the Sunflower Hotel where he Inst was a guest in l!)54. Each time, the hotel man agement claims, that the Presi dent comes to town the secret ser vice makes the Sunllower install new elevator cable. As one of the hotel clerks said We now have the largest supply of slightly used elevator cables in all Kansas. in tho Eisenhower museum m Abilene, there is a display of auto license plates used by the Presi dent over the years. One is a l'.MB This Is It ---Start Combines ficials and private visitors, in cluding East German leaders and Americans singer Paul Robeson, industrialist Cyrus Ealon and movie czar Eric Johnston. Early in September, Khrush chev interrupted his vacation and returned to Moscow to preside over a session of the central committee on economic affairs. Several days , ago, he left his dacha in the picturesque moun tain resort of Sochi to journey to Stavropol where lie awarded the region the Order of Lenin for agricultural . achievements. Dis playing his customary energy and colorful language, the premier addressed a large assembly of collective farmers, praising them for their contribution to the 1053 record grain harvest. .Khrushchev urged the farmers to redouble their efforts, and pre dicted the Soviet economy will undergo . "an unbelievable" ex pansion during the forthcoming seVQii-year plan. He said that when figures for the plan are published "the whole world will be amazed at the pro spective development of the so cialist economy.0 From Stavropol, " Khrushchev continued his tour of the southern agricultural country to the Kras- White House New York license number "DE 111." The President had this num ber when he was president of Col umbia University. Could this be prophetic? The District of Columbia license num ber on the car of Vice President Richard M. Nixon is "Ul," As far as anyone can remember, i he first lime Eisenhower was ever phdtogrnphcd as President worshipping in a purely religious church service was in St. Mathews' Cathedral in Washing ton. This was last week when he attended the Pontifical Requiem Mass for the late Pope Pius XII. The usual policy of press sec retary James C. llagerty is to refuse flatly to let photographers inside a church where the Presi dent is attend 'a service. I w r j t YOUNG RAILROADER, OLD ENGINE Young Bryan Pnvicic of Brentwood. Pa., uses a bit of spit and shine on the headlight of this model of an 1865 steam locomotive. Model was exhibited in Pittsburgh. Push-button railroading equip ment abounded but Bryan passed it all up for the old-timer. Kxhibit was sponsored by .1 loin) unit of the Eastern Railroad Presidents Conferciu-o. Digging" Work, Fun nodar and Rostov regions where he awarded more Orders of Lenin. . The Soviet leader was expected to continue touring and gradually make his way back to Moscow toward the end of the month. It has been announced that Polish leaders will visit the Soviet' Un ion during the second half of Oc tober, and it was likely that Khrushchev would make the visit the first major item on his agen da when he arrives back in the capital. Chuckles In The , V News United Press International SEOUL, Korea (UPII Ministry of Education movie censors have advised film producers and im porters that screen kisses must be cut from the previously-per mitted 30 seconds to a maximum of 10 seconds, to make them "less lascivious." WASHINGTON (UPI) The Washington Post and Times Her ald said today the government's Small Business Administration had received a letter which read, in part: ' "I'm just five feet tall in my stocking feet, and I'd like to know if that qualifies me to be a small businessman?" TOKYO 'UPII An array of Indies' panties and brassieres was floated over downtown Tokyo Sun day night on clusters of balloons. It advertised a new motion pic ture, entitled: "Women Are Made ot Underwear." LONDON (UPII Lord Mayor Sir Denis Truscott quoted a schoolgirl's essay about his job: 'The Lord Mayor is covered in fur and goes around in a coach. Ho is a newcomer to the city, but lie has a lot of affairs there." GOPs Say 'Sabotage tJ By RAYMOND LAHR United Press International WASHINGTON (UPI) Re publicans charged today that an increased Democratic majority in Congress would "sabotage" Pres ident Eisenhowers conduct ot foreign policy. Democrats denied it. and said an increased margin would strengthen bipartisanship. The clash came as President Eisenhower moved into California for his first major campaign Demos' Smouldering Civil Rights Fight Out In Open WASHINGTON (UPI) ThelFla.i, in charge of the campaign Domocrats' smoldering civil! to elect Democratic senators Nov. rights fight broke into the open Monday with a blunt invitation by Democratic National Chairman Paul M. Butler to anti-civil rights Democrats to quit the party. Butler, interviewed Sunday on ABC-TV's "College News Confer ence," said the racial issue re quires "moral leadership" and predicted there will be "no com promise" on a strong civil rights stand in the Democratic platform in 1960. "Those in the South who are not deeply dedicated to the phi losophies of the Democratic Par ty will have to go their own way," he declared. . ."If they don't want to go along on the ra cial problem and the whole area of human rights, then I think they are going to have to take political asylum wherever they can find it, either in the Republi can Party or a third party.,. . "I would say anyone who is unwilling to accept the platform of the Democratic Party in 1060, and anyone who is going to stand up in America today and say,, we are going to resist the decisions of the Supreme Court, and we shall not recognize the principles of law and order upon which this nation exists, then I certainly would hope they would take leave of the Democratic Party. Sen. George A. Smathers ID- SHE'S FIRST Lt. (jg) Lu cille Kuhn of Richmond, Va., handles a micrometer as part of her physics course at George Washington University in the nation's capital. She's the first WAVE officer' ever sent to col lege under the Navy's Five Term program which enables officers who haven't completed their college : work to do so while on active duty. Firms Deny FTC Charges Of Price Fix, Monopoly WASHINGTON (UPI) Six manufacturers of antibiotic "won der drugs" have denied Federal Trade Commission (FTC) charges of trying to monopolize the indus try and fix prices. The denials came Friday from Charles Pfizer & Co. of Brooklyn, N.Y., American Cyanamid Co. of New York, Bristol-Myers Co. of New York, Bristol Laboratories, Inc., of Syracuse, N.Y., Olin Mathieson Chemical Corp. of New York and the Upjohn Co. of Kalamazoo, Mich - ' All denied in similar replies they carried , on illegal licensing arrangements in restraint of trade, as charged by the . FTC last July . 28. The companies asked the charges be dismissed. Governor Faces Busy Schedule SALEM (UPI) The business of being governor and also cam paigning for governor will give Gov. Robert D. Holmes a busy week this week. A United Nations day reception in the governor's suite, regular meetings of the Board of Control, Traffic Safety Commission, gover nor's committee on children and youth and ceremonies marking the 75th anniversary of Oregon State hospital are among high lights of the week's activities. On Saturday he'll be on the Ore gon State College side of the field for its game with Washington al Multnomah stadium. The United Nations reception, last year attended by several hundred persons, is set for Friday afternoon here. Two visits to Corvallis, one Tuesday night for. a candidate's fair and the other on Wednesday afternoon to address the convoca tion of Oregon State College, arc scheduled. Demo Majority Would Ike's Foreign Policy . speeches of the 1958 congressional contest. His first speech, in Los Angeles tonight, was billed as a "hard - hitting, recital oi tne record" of his administration The President's speeches this week, to be carried over regional TV networks, will push the cam- Daian into its climactic stage in which both parties will be throwing jill they have into the most critical states. Former President Truman, the 4, promptly accused Butler- of di viding the Democratic Party at a time when its primary need is unity. . "I think the time has come when the chairman of the Demo cratic National Committee should start spending his time pointing up the unity of the Democratic Party rather than its division," Smathers told United Press Inter national in an interview. "A leader is supposed to gather his forces, not divide them. I think his (Butler's) time would be better spent assisting our can didates to get elected than this continued pontificating about what's, going to happen in 1960. "What we need is unity, not di viders. What we need are peace makers, not agitators." From other highly-placed Dem ocratic sources came the sugges tion that the time is near at hand when Butler should be replaced by a national chairman capable of healing the Democrats' civil rights split rather than inflaming it. Some influential Democratic quarters, notably the party's con gressional leadership, have made no secret of the fact that they bold Butler in something consid erably less than high esteem. However Butler's strong civil rights stand will find supporters also within the Democratic Par ty. Some powerful Northern Dem ocrats feel their party must take an unequivocal pro-civil rights stand if it is to prevent further loss of Negro votes and capture the presidency in 1960. AIRMAN KILLED AGANA, Guam (UPI) Air Force Sgt. Martin J. Dorscy, 35, of Palm Harbor, Fla., was killed Sunday during a fight in a tavern, according to police. Authorities took another airman, who was not identified, into cus today. The airman allegedly ad mitted striking Dorsey on the head with a lug wrench. For Sale: Theater, Pavilion At Brussels World Fair By WILLIAM ANDERSON BRUSSELS (UPI) Want to buy a theater at the Brussels World Fair? It's going cheap because so far U.S. Commissioner. General How ard Cullman cannot even give it away. Along with the huge, round U.S. pavilion, the theater is valued at six million dollars. They have both been offered to the Brussels City Council as an outright gift now that the fair, which closed Sunday, is over. But the council has not accepted so far. They reckon the pavilion would cost too much to trans form and keep up. Tfiey don't want the theater because the theaters in Brussels are half em; ty in normal times and this one situated in the world fair grounds five miles from town would prob ably be a costly white elephant. So the most modern theater in Europe will probably be snatched up by some scrap metal dealer for a song. This is typical of the giant rum mage sale which got under way Monday. I " , . ' '':H' ' .' ....'..w . .. v. ,.. ,f WW fr.r'fi.'r- APpLE-Jet-powered, free-flying targets will be used ?d "me ln a" Alr Force weapons meet when the 10 nay p10jcct William Tell" begins Oct. 20 .at Tyndall AFB, Rvin p ? abouv.eJs a close-up view of the "enemv"-the and a 1 In ."j wn,ch.c;,n streak through space at 600 m.p.h. iho 1 a',ltudes as hlh as 50,000 feet. It will try to evade rnrknt','' Foree'1s P interceptors, hurling deadly missiles and maw . ?',"Sl " !" what Gen- Cllr,is LeMay describes as "a ,rla.3.?r l??' of ?ur ability to stop an air attack against this coun- ' rtov.vJ lng'tlp pods on ,ne Firebee carry electronic scoring hTill cameras and radJ"- reflectors. The drone -is capable of oeing recovered and used again, unless destroyed by direct hit. Democrats' most active cam- paigner, returns to the stump Tuesday for a series of East Coast appearances which will have him crossing paths with Vice President Richard M. Nixon, busiest campaigner for the GOP. The sharpened pitch of the final two weeks of vote - seeking was presaged Sunday by the rival party chairmen. GOP National Chairman Meade Alcorn, referring to the Demo crats as "the party of the left wingers and appeasers," said the President would be "consistently undercut, sniped at and sabo taged" in dealing with Commu nists and preserving peace if a "big Democrat Congress" ' s elected Nov. 4. Democratic Chairman Paul U. Butler asserted a larger Demo cratic majority in Congress would mean "return to bipartisanship in forming our foreign policy.'" lie said a Democratic majority "will not attempt. to create pressure" to change the administration's Far Eastern policy. The Democrats still confidently expect to increase their present slim majorities in both houses in 1 the Nov. 4 balloting. Butler has previously predicted an increase of 8 to 12 Democratic senate seats and 40 to 60 in the. House. Sunday night he said it would be "closer to 12. than 8, or even beyond 12" in the Senate and -"probably 50 . rather han close to 40" in the House. Other political developments:. Butler openly invited Southern Democrats who don't agree with the Supreme, Court's school in tegration ruling to quit the-Democratic Party and join the GOP or form a third party. Sen. George A. Smathers (D-Fla.), chairman of the Senate Democratic Cam paign committee, accused Butler of dividing the Democrats 'when they needed unity. There were (re ports that efforts will be- made before long to oust Butler from his party chairmanship. A group of liberal Democrats headed by A. A. Berle Jr. of New York is seeking contributions for liberal Democratic, Senate candi dates on grounds they are not getting it from party headquar ters. An official spokesman for the Senate Campaign Committee denied it had tunneled party funds to Southerners and conservative Democrats and withheld them from liberals. ' 1 . - Butler scored a weekend pro posal by Commerce Secretary Sinclair Weeks that a sales tax be imposed 'at the manufacturers' level. Butler said the Democratic Party "will not take the tax load off of business and shift it to the shoulders of the consumers." If you're not in the theater, buy ing mood, then perhaps you might be tempted by an imitation coal mine. '.-". There's even one of these .go ing. The European coal and steel community's exhibit doesn't con tain much coal but it sure is realistic. -.- : Then there's the 8,000 wire gar; den chairs, somewhat battered and weather-beaten, but still a bargain at 60 cents , a piece if you've got room for this number in the garden. . . , A 150-foot-high spiral with built in neon lights which the owners admit is not good for anything is also on the sales list as be "show of the Century", becomes the "Sale of the Century." . ;' ,, But more than 50 per cent of the exhibits at the fair WlIK'be returned to their country of -origin. Many have been lent V by museums, industrial concerns! and private owners. ' ' The frugal Russians'" are -'dismantling their giant payilion .and shipping it back to Moscow to' serve as an agricultural show hall. ..:."' ?MklMlM..- .......