Page 4 Section 1
Capital AJournal
An Independent Newspaper Established 1888
BERNARD MAINWARING, Editor and Publisher
GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor Emeritus
Published every afternoon except lundoy at 280 North
Church St. Phone EM-46811
TuU Laid Wire Service of Tht Associated Prrw and Th United
Prtil. Tlia Alienated Press II exclusively entitled to the use for pub
JJeatlon of all newt dlspalchet credited to it or otherwise credited la
thu paper and also newt published therein.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By CtrHer: Monthly, 11-2: Alt Monlhi, 17.50; On V'ar, SIVflO. By mall
In nrtgnn: Monthly, $1.00: Six Month, IS 00; on Voir, IB in. By mall
OuUldc Oregon: .Monthly SI .23; Six Months, S7.M; Ont Vfir, lll.of
Bernard Mainwarin"
Salem and Oregon lost a great friend Saturday.
Bernard Mainwaring's enthusiasm for the ultimate effort in
everything he did caused his untimely death following a
heart attack. We're sure he meant to have it that way. He was
a man who drove himself with seemingly unbounded energies.
No task was too large, none too small.
He died at the relatively young age of 50. Had he lived for
20 more years, he wouldn't have considered slowing down. It
was his way of life. He had to be busy. Work was his greatest
thrill, his recreation, his whole existence.
It isn't easy for one who has known a man like Bernard
Mainwaring closely for several years to write the final 30
to his career. He died at the pinnacle of his self-created suc
cess, at a time when the hopes and dreams he had worked for
most of his adult life were being realized.
What kind of man was he who rose from a modest begin
ning to become one of the most influential newspaper publish
ers in the west? It would take a book-length article to relate
those facts. He was widely-known and liked. And yet there is
much that many of his friends and associates didn't know
about him. We'll try to relate some of the highlights of the
man whose untimely death has cast a pall of gloom over his
associates in Salem and in many areas of the nation.
Mr. Mainwaring was a newspaperman first, last and always.
He was an extremely capable businessman, as attested by his
continued rise in the publishing business. But his main in
terest was the news and editorial side of the newspaper. With
him it was an absorbing passion. He firmly guided the hand
ling and play of news stories in the Capital Journal. Every
newspaper he owned has reflected his vibrant personality and
enthusiasm.
Perhaps his greatest love was the editorial page where he
distinguished himself for many years as a firm and positive
writer. He was not a crusader, but had a high conception of
editorial responsibility and the responsibility of a newspaper
in helping to form public opinion.
Ho loved politics. He thrived on the rough and tumble of a
political campaign and made his views clear on all important
issues. He was never a fence slraddlcr. He bore malice to no
one. He felt personal friendship for many men in high places
with whose views he differed. He often said he didn't have
time to hato anyone. Ho was widely quoted by oilier news
papers of the Northwest,
NATIONAL WHIRLIGIG
American Political Set-up
snows llemarKaDle SMrenstli
By RAY TUCKER
has its elements of chivalry and
integrity.
Instead of remaining on Capitol
Hill to undermine and con spirt
against Vice Presidnet Nixc.i. as
suming that the Oakland publisher
seeks the 1960 Presidential nomin
ation, he will fight for it openly
on the battleground of California
politics.
WASHINGTON, Jan. 21 - While
Kuropean governments shake and
shift under the pressure ot world
events, the American no,;lieal svs-
tern has shown an amazing
strength, solidarity and maturity
on and off Capitol Hill. And that
observation applies to bo.'h Demo
crats and Republicans.
The normally partisan and wasp
ish Harry S. Truman, for instance,
praises the Ariminist ration'.! far-
reaching Middle hast Doctrine,
evrn though it places hi.n in op
position to the man he called "one
of our greatest Secretaries of
State" Dean Acheson. It also pits
Iruman anninst Adlai K. Steven
sun and National Chairman Paul
M. liutler.
A majority of Senale-House
Democrats favor Ike's program
lor military defense of-the Middle
Kast. although dubious over pro
posals for economic aid. Their
attitude is regarded as especially
magnanimous, in view of Hepub
lican campaign boasts tha' the
Suez Canal and allied problems
were approaching a settlement be
cause of Eisenhower-Dulles states
manship. Isolationists' Finally .Surrendering
to Ike
Kven stubborn John Foster
Dulles eschews partisanship. He
conceded rather ruefully that the
I niled States might have adopted
a firmer Middle East polity se
eral years ago. thereby staving ofi
today's difficulties. But he sug
gested with some humility (hat "It
it is never too late to mend."
The old Taft faction is finally
surrendering to Ike. save for Joe
McCarthy of Wisconsin. Senators
Jenner and Capehart of Indiana
have indicated (hat they wtl! sup
port the White House program, al
though not completely happy in
their new role.
Senator Everett McKinley Dirk
sen. a raft lieutenant and a Chi
cago Tribune i'tol and isolationist,
aches In succeed Senator Willi? m
F. Knowland as spokesman for Ei
senhower in the Upper Chamber
Senator's Chivalry
Even Senator Knowland's plan
to retire from his important post
N Democrats' Factional Fight
The fierce factional fight fore
cast among Democratic Conserve
tives and Liberals has been a dud.
Relations between the two wings,
despite basic dilferences, were
never more harmonious.
Senate Majority Leader Lyndon
B. Johnson killed the nmt.cii to
bar filibusters when it was offered
by the Humphrey-Douglas-Neuber-ger
bloc. But the Texan and Sen
ator Knowland immediately joined
in an agreement to liberalize Rule
XXII along the lines proposed by
the Northern faction.
As a result, a moderate Civil
Rights program will probably he
enacted at this session, thereby
preventing a serious division
among the Democrats that might
be fatal again in I960.
Instances of American
.Sportsmanship
The opposing Democrats are on
excellent terms, personally. At
the close of each Senate day, John
son usually meets in his office with
a small policy-making group. Sen
ator Humphrey is always included
along with such veteran Conserva
tives as Russell of dcorgin, Hay-
den of Arizona, Stennis of Missis
sippi and other Soulherners. Ar.'l
Humphrey is not afraid to beard
these sages.
Humphrey helps to hnd the
gap between Congressional Demo
crats and Party bigwigs in dis
agreement with the Johnson-Ray-burn
philosophy and leadership.
Whereas the two Texans "piusec!
to join Butler's Advisory Commit
tee. Humphrey serves on it v.iili
Iruman. Stevenson and Eleanor
Roosevelt.
In the face of a divided and
hostile and shattered world, lliese
instances of American sanily and
sportsmanship set an exam pi 2 lor
friends and foes alike.
Calm Inspiration Remains
Ikes Main Characteristic
By JAMKS MAHl.OW
Associated Press Newi Analyst
WASHINGTON Wl The Prosi
dent Kisenhower who moves into
his second term today is in some
wnys not the same ninn who took
olfice four years ago. He has
Mr. Mainwaring was a completely honest man. He was hon
est with himself and with everyone and everything he touched.
He detested, and In earlier days was shocked, by dishonest
acts. In later years, lie often said nothing shocked or surprised
him. But to the end he maintained the belief that everyone
was basically honest. Over the years, he overlooked many acts
by employes that bordered on sham. Many times, he simply
didn't want to know about them.
Which leads to his relations with associates and employes.
He was a successful businessman. Ho shared his rewards with
all cmplovos. Ho always met them at the same level and his grown, he has learned, and he
fairness gained him their loyal support. And he backed his understands his country better.
employes without question, especially on the editorial side
of the newspaper. Youthful and energelic himself, he liked to
surround himself with people who had the same character
istics. Mr. Mainwaring was born in Golham, Wise, but he moved
in Newborn as a boy. From that time on he was an Oregonian.
Ho lived in Idaho as publisher of the Idaho Free Press in
Nampa for IB' years. While he always boosted that area, his
great love was Oregon and the Willamette valley.
Just a Suggestion, O King
j0 -V f oNyouRMAiESrys limpA.
Mf I be best mot rmm
AmM To TAK AL0MG CAR! I fl
Rf M iff 1 AMERICANS WOULb j
I fluCTJ - I PERHAPS THINK YOU'RE I
'56 GROUP VOTR ANALYSIS-TSo. 3
Women Equal Men for First
A
Time in November Election
inireetor. i
(EDITOR'S NOTE: Following is
one in the scries of special reports
by the Gallup Poll on how major
groups in the population voted in
the November election.)
Hut he still retains a quality
which historians may consider
liis greatest contribution to Amer
ican life a quality he originally
brought to the presidency. It's his
ability to stay calm and convey
a sense ot confidence.
Four years ago he inherited a
nation which was at war in Korea,
desperately worried about com
munism abroad, and so divided
over McCnrthyism it was almost
neurotically suspicious of com
munism at home.
He got the war ended. It was a
far from perfect armistice. Bui
it did get Ibe killini; slopped and
forestalled Ibe chance of a bigger
war.
He remained aloof from nerson-
Fnnm the lime he was graduated in 1020 from Oregon Stale
College until 1953, his fondest desire had been to own the
Capital Journal in Salem. The day he purchased the news
paper from George Putnam in January of 195.1 was probably
the high point of his life. He gave up a growing and profitable
newspaper in Nampa to lake over the Capital Journal where
he knew he would have a more demandinc job. But that was
Mainwaring's way of doing things. He loved the challenge involvement with Sen. McCar
Salem presented. And since he had always wanted to own the
Capital Journal, he was finally home.
Mr. Mainwaring was a self-made man. He fought his way
from a small beginning on the llcrmiston Herald through the
small daily and metiium-size newspaper lielcl to tne semi-, isconsin
metropolitan Capital Journal. His first newspaper venture at
Hcrmiston was the product of several years of personal sacri
fice; and saving. From there be went up the ladder.
One of his outstanding attributes was a belief that every
businessman should devote as much time as possible to civic
and community affairs. His list of such activities in cities
where he had lived is long and productive
view.
Eisenhower can hardly claim
credit for the Hed reverses. Cer
tainly not directly. The Kremlin's
iron grip had begun to slip before
Eisenhower took office as in
Yugoslavia and accelerated
afler Malm s death in 1953.
In foreign affairs Eisenhower
con be credited with no basically
new ideas. He is folloWinir the
policy of President Truman in
conlnining communism by aid,
alliances and military bases over
seas. But in these past four years he
has shown himself a master pol
itician in a way unique among
politicians: by avoiding nersonal
conflicts, whether as a deliberate
By GEORGE GALLUP
.iiiprli-an loshlut of Public ClDtnloal
a representative sample of voters
was asked to express a preference
between the two possible tickets.
In the April survey, women gave
the GOP ticket el per cent pre
cisely the vote recorded in today's
KINCETON', N. J. Women post-election analysis. From that
voters made t. S. political nisiory point on, me voic 01 women vonea
last November on two counts: J only three percentage points from
I. For the first time since they w per cent to .vj per cent
were liven the rl.ht of suffrage ! . y nc mner "ami. me April
36 years ago, women went to the
polls In about the same number as
OPEN FORUM
Salem, Oregon, Monday, January 21, 1957
POOR MAX'S PHILOSOPHER
One of Every Six Women
Down South Hunts Husband
NEW YORK W- Things a
columnist might never know if lie
didn't open his mail:
That ladies seeking a husband
By HAL BOYLE
ment. The stamp win sup on eas
ily, and retain enough glue to ba
used asain.
That an Iowa larmer named
may una me pesi mu....6 stalk 31 feet 3 inches. . . or
Unitet. States in the south. . . . . h hci ht o( the
there, census figures show fnc " "yT
of six women of marriageable age Tj;at fo, Jjm BowiCi who n
already have landed a man. but g mv ou(door carying knj(
one of every four men is still sin-1 . iM jn (hc Aam0 was (he
gie- dandv of the frontier. . . in his
That only halt the nations Pro-war(i'r0De wcre 40 shirts, 22 nw
fessional men such as doctors, njng coa(Si 6 evening jackets, 4
lawyers and architects make capeSi a si (0p hat, and 3 buck
a will before they die. . . do they I skjn snirls , , hunting trips
hope to figure out a way to take nc had an 3 buckskin shirts
it with them? ... washed daily.
That soap is believed to have Tha( Sir winston Churchill likes
first cime into limited use about ,his cognhQ vdh a spiash 0 s0(ja
the time of Christ. . . infant mor- lhe Du,c o Windsor prefers
tality today is lowest in countries . hjj Q1 ,hc rocl(s a big sniffer,
having the largest per capita use That tne onc question most olten
of soap. ' asked me by strange women at
That the $20 bill is the only one cocku,ii pa,ties is, "Why doesn't
tha' has a picture of the white he baseball umpire hold up his
house on it. . . it also bears the',t,(t hand to indicate a ball, just
portrait of Andy Jackson, a Demo- Ls h(, docs his ri(,nt band to call
cratic President, but Democrats a strike.", , . thc only reason I
comp' -in only Republicans can j can tnjnk o( (hat umpires pr0,.
afford to see it. , I ably need to keep the fingers o
inai anions "mci nunuii onP hand tree to count wun.
her f-bulous career hate Smith
has a S100.000 collection of antiques.
That the mountain goat is per-
That it was Sir William Osier,
the grci.t physician, who said,
"the desire to take medicine is
thc greatest feature
That tne mountain goai is "--, Deri.ns thc grt
haps the only horned mammal 1 whioh distinguishes man from the
that regularly sits on us naunencs. 1 arnmais."
On the other band
trial heat results showed men
voting 57 per cent for the Eiscn-
men to vole In a presidential clec-: vur; " n ana
,lon I July, the figure held steady at 59
2. It was the women's vole that "w. in uie iumiiuic s
accounted lor the mo)or part I irst check after the conventions,
the Elsenhower margin over Slev.
enson in 19.r6, as was true in 19.V2.
In a special post-election anal
ysis based on survey data. Insti
tute statisticians find that vir
tually half of lhe more than 62,-
000.000 votes cast in the November
election were those of women.
Actually, in terms of percentage
of turnout, men have a slight edge
Willi survey results indicating
that 61 per cent of men voted, com
pared lo 58 per cent of women.
But when these percentages are
projected against the total number
of men and women of voting age
as of last November, when women
policy or a natural' altitude And outnumbered men in the population
L 1. ... ' II... n n( 7.W iWlrt In 1
he has benefited.
New York:
"My life is yours.'
my ik-hisi. Itut his aides cer
tainly with his knowledge and
approval look a stand against
McCarthy and set in motion the
Sonnle scrutiny which drove the
Rcdhunter into the
shadows.
Alter that the haired anil vili-
, . , ,... . . ji-ni-uni Mn, a , wno Mimlav
i r took office, m 19..3 bogan to enlercd his 3lh v;nr of u
Sr'' ous sloop ns a M.f
It U-JW if .m,l,r th Vi.n. . . . ' ' ' J 1 1 1 IS
howor onliniH'ss the mass of
by a margin of 53,700.000 to 51,
000.000, the turnout race between
men and women ends in a virtual
draw.
Official election figures, which
have just become available, show
the' Kisenhower-iNixnn ticket re
ceiving 35.5fi9.270 votes to 26.03-1.-
(tiscussinc press coverace with a... t n .i .j
newsmen during her weekend in !annrftvimatrlv urn nm votes.
Based on the nationwide major
party vote only. I ho Kisenhowor-
t Nixon ticket polled 57.8 per cent
They Say Today
Quotta Kroin The New,
By I'NITKI) PRESS
NKW YORK: Ingrid Rergman
the figure dropped to 53 per cent
and by late September it had
fallen to 52 per cent.
The impact of the revolts in
Hungary and the Middle East cris
is during thc last 10 days of thc
campaign is clearly seen in the
following table, which shows the
Republican percentage by men and
women in lhe Institute's semi
final report, published on Oct. 31,
and today's figures:
Semi- Today's j
Final Figures
Survey
Men 52-, 5.11
Women 59 61
Copyright, 1957. American j
Institute of Public Opinion
Asks First Choice
To People at Home
To The Editor:
Why all the help for the refu
gees? 1 am a World War I veteran, a
skilled mechanic, out of work,
though not through any fault of
mine; just that there isn't any
work in my profession.
There are many unskilled work
ers receiving unemployment
checks also. Were these jobs
g ven to our own people first,
and the refugee not shown first
choice, it would certainly relieve
the state of some expense. I be
lieve in help for all. I also believe
our people should be thc first to
receive employment. I have talked
with many people who are of thc
same opinion. In this day and age
there are so many worthy things
to give to your contribution, big or
small, is most vital. So let us
(This item, I know, will bring me
816 letters for secretaries saying,
"how about the old goat I work
for? He does nothing but sit on
his haunches, and il he doesn't
have horns, he ought to!")
That an easy way to take an
unused stamp from an envelope
is to dip thc corner containing the
sta"ip in boiling water for a mo
give our own people a job when
and if there is one to give.
M. B. Finch,
Salem, Ore.
TRICKY
Shei'.nan County Journal
Speaker Pat Doolcy is reporter!
as saying that the bill to repeal
thc surtax and increase the rates
to obtain the same amount of
money is all in one section of the
law. Referendum against the rates
would also be against the surtax
repeal. It is a neat trick, even a
slcik trick, and an unworthy trick.
It would very likely be cheaper
for the taxpayer to repeal the new
rates and keep the surtax.
Arrange, for the cash you
need . . . now ... on signa
ture only, auto or furni
ture. Money for every plan
, . . every purchase. Just
phone for 1 trip service.
$25 to $2000
' Cal Stavenau, Mgr.
375 N. Liberty St. Phone EM 4-3396, Salem
Houri: Mon.-Fri. 9-5:30; Sat. J.-30-I2 Open ueninpj by appointment
loam madt lo raitdanli el n.arby towni
Salem l'.i Yrs. Ago
By RF.N MAXWELL
Jan. 21, 1944
Salem Y.MCA had celebrated its
freedom from debt with a mort
gage burning ceremony participat
ed in by members of the board,
presided over by Paul B. Wallace,
i Paul Wallace. Salem business
leader and philanthropist devoted
ClIICAtiO: Mrs. Bertha Sm'i i.'m . .'.. c, .. I nearly 50 years to advancing edu
avino for M ' ' , l' " '"' Mlinnnl .rH .nrl.t in.li U-
praying for recovery of her 18- Kofauvcr
His arrival in Salem proved to he of lienofit to many com
munity projects, which he helped both personally and through
the news columns of lhe Capital .loiirnal. He believed that he
should devote at least as much time to civic activities as he
did to operating his own newspaper. And in thc four years he
was in Salem, he did just that.
One might think thai a man who was exposed to extremes
of life that newspaper people view nearly every day would be
come something of a cynic. Many are. Mr. Mainwaring wasn't,
lie was a deeply religious man who gave of his time and tal
ents to church work. In all his years as a newspaper publisher,
he never published liquor advertising, not because he was
against imbibing as such, bill lie felt he didn't want to help it
along. Hccause of this belief, he refused thousands of dollars
in advertising revenues yearly. He didn't drink or smoke him
Americans regained confidence in
themselves lo handle domestic
communism without (ear or hys
teria. As a result of the public dis
enchantment with McCarthy and
his followers. Kisenhower finally
dominated the Kepuhlican parly.
I p to Him ho had seemed to lean
oer backwards to please the
parly's reactionary wing. There
afler he sleered n more liberal
course
The Kisenhower who nowadays
urges expansion of Social Secur
il. lhe ininiinimi wage and public
l lo educalion has traveled
self hul he knew humanity and didn't attemiit lo force his I . . . . t.isennower oi
cnrivictions on others.
Only the good Lord really
knows what's ahead for Paul. In
the meantime, we will pray for
him and do our best (o make him
comfortable."
WASHINGTON': Lewis I..
Strauss, chairman of the Atomic
Knergy Commission announcing
Russia has exploded another nu
clear bomb:
"The Soviets yesterday conduct
ed' another nuclear weapons lest
in their current series which has
been resumed since announce-
In its final estimate of the 195fi ' wos, do",n,r of Wallace waierfront
election outcome, the Institute ro-il';"Vn csi .-.aiem. nauace oiea
ported the Kisenhowcr Nixon vote n m.cago. .nine
at 59 5 per cent In error of onlv , wh,lc making a plane con-
17 per cent. This is the third , ncct""1'
election since 1948 1:, which the I Marion coimlv rourt had d
r"".r"S p? resolution leading up to".
... .(..., '. . I Plan lor erection ot a new court
Today's analysis shows the fol
lowing vole in llie .vivemner elec
tion by men and women:
MUX'S VOTK 19.-.6
Klsenllower-Nlxntl 55rp
Stevenson-Kefauver 45
WOMKN'S VOTK 1956
Klsenhower-Nixon Glr
Stevciison-Kediuver 39
President hisenhower in IS
ment of a Soviet test was made I bad a majority of popular votcsldivis
by the i nited Mates on Nov. IT,
1956."
PITTSHUHCU: Don C. Rariek
leader of a protest movement to
He was a confirmed exlroverl-a man of the hearty hand
shake whose love of people and their thoughts won him
the late 1940s.
It was in those days that Kisen
bower, as president of Columbia
In:
wanted security he could find it don of anneals for nrntesi
house as a post war project. .Mar.
6. 1944 was the date set for a pub
lic hearing on the proposal. (New
Marion coiinly courthouse costing
SI. 912. 000 was mostly huiP during
19,'.:i. It was dedicated debt free
Friday, June 18. 19541.
Salem's first junior citizen for
1944 was Ralph W. Johnson. 33.
manager of the Willamette Vallev
ion of the Portland General
curb I'nited Steelworkers of ority by which Kisenhower defeat
oi n, ww, ooo. linseil on survey tl.ita. Klectric Co
men voters accounica lor 2.1KK1.0OO; .
of this majority; women accounted j On this day in 1944 Sears. Roe
for 6.7IHUXH1, Or. putting it an-; buck Co. was advertising wool
other way. 70 per cent of the maj- blankets imported from the Arcen-
line, regular Ji;.9.i values for
lAllier Ca Ones Increases ntl.l.-Lln.. P.1 Sll-voncn n 10-.,: r.n l, ... 1
sily. said that if a person the t'SW Kvei-iuive Rn.ir.l'. r,.. i. k,. .i, . ... ..i 1, s c!.-. j . '
ny way ot cumpansion. here is
friends everywhere. He loved to lalk as most newspaper peo'n " u'a slafment which ers to be listed on election b.il- 'the' vote' by men and women in' Flans "ere shaping for a ground
pie do. hul he alwavs had somellung to sav of importance, lie ! mmnr.Tnlhc ,l'oZl . , H , v , (l , '"''"''' Kisoohower-Nixon breaking ceremony at Salem's
. ' i ,. : j. i ,, i ' , , , i , , , mi.intng, and public npprtnal. o(: It docsn t look to me ike he ticket po ed 55 4 per cent nation- alumina from clav plant and set
was always in demand as a public speaker. And lie looked for- , he New and Fair Deals under i Executive Board had anv inlen- wide to 44 6 per cent for Stc' en- for Jan. 22. 1944 at 2 30 p m.
ward to it. Many times in Idaho he drove I. it) miles over; which the government assumed tion of giving us a lair and son-Sparkman: I
gnnw-roverra mgnwa.is to address groups anil Pack tne same some responsiniuiy lor the peo- square hearing
right. I l"r s wruare.
Once in Idaho he was called upon to be lhe speaker at the!, '"'be Kisenhower who took office
annual foolball banquet at the College of Idaho, lie was an , , ti ' , ,Te !
dually knew little of football at that , ,,.i,.n..,.i .,,. ,h r.mill,.,.
enthusiastic fan. but
WASHINGTON: A woman guest
shrieking as Vice President Nixon
passed during a giant reception in
nonor oi the slate governors at-
"Oh. I touched him."
time. In spile of this, he spoke for an hour and a half on lhe; lions of government. This showed ; tending the inauguration
nigniy-tecnnicai sunject ot I oolb.il I and ditln l lose a listener up particularly in his answers at
He had simply taken the time to inform himself on football his early news conlerences when
hislnrv and modern meilinds m,l fr,.n. ilmi lime was slanuied i ""'re was no lime for his aides
as an "expert" on gridiron activities.
fair and son-Sparkman:
I MKVS VOTK 19.-.S
Flsrnhoner-Nixiin . SSe
Sieve nsnn-Sparkman 47
WOMKN'S VOTK 1952
Klsenhower-Nixon 5
Stevensnn-Sparkman 42
Institute election studies indi
cated that approximately 31.050.OiW
- men voted in the 19.V2 presiden-
V1KNNA: Austrian Chancellor lull election, compared to 30.4.1.-
' prepare his answers. 1 .Tubus liaab attacking tyrannical ivo women.
tjn..nntl.. .t.n.. i. . i i i .i i- i 1,1 '""' v.ui. mm uiiiiiuinan rule wnicn is lorcing - - -
. j i- j i V ii.iineii prcMiiciu oi ine 0.1I.-U1 i oi- i,elore that be preached against thousands of Hungarians to lice Still another sharp contrast in
ted F und, his editors published his picture on page one with- government spending. But (or thc ! to Austria: I' thc political battle between the
out his knowledge. He was extremely concerned lest readers past three years, when he had to "It is unbelicveable that in the sexes" throughout 1956 was the
think lie was trying to promote himself and ordered that lus;lo"k at the problems involved, the i last four days despite the fierce I (act that women were much more
picture never appear on page one again until his death. I.illle 1 h'",s" he h"' "ered have heeni winter weather. 1.261 fugitives consistent than men in their sup-
did any of us rcalue that it was to come so soon.
Eight native Oregonians were
holding rank of general in World
War II: I.. R. Boyd. J. G. Chris
tiansen. Arnold J. Fund. F. von
Harten Kimble. Fredrick McCabe.
It. M. Montague. Owen Sumners
and Leo. A. Walton.
A Siiiilt or Two
A particularly daring group of
I nited States Air r orce pilots wa:
sent to scatter propaganda leaflets
over Berlin one ni.nht during World
War II.
All planes returned safely to the
base except one. Dawn came, but
no plane. F inally engines were
heard and the pilots dashed out to
meet the missing member.
i. it,er. ..... muried where have you Been- tne
.I. Hr.,n.nff in cup operations officer demanded.
.nnnri "Doing mv dutv. sir." said the
UtiVITY IN THOVGHT ' Antieinaiins thai lhe candidates youth. "I delivered the pamphlets."
SMrai faawai would he Eisenhower and Nixon "Well, how long does it take lo
Oiif lltmua otuwaty tnws in lr tke Republicans and Stevenson dren a few bundles of leaflets'"'
loo. especially in Eastern Europe. 1 thnuiht. 1.(1 ur unAonmr. Am aUiaanw W ta rtevir.-g. i 'Hrop cm. gsspcfl the pilot
where the Inng-hidde'lt distal iifac-. In think welV, ikik t Oi fnfr ttW4la 41 Affi. i "' ' pushing 'em under doors:'
lion with the Kremlin burst into! of ethics. ie&Kl "tool tvai, i tiwhi Catholic Dicsu
: going up. not d 'wn. 1 nevertheless came to Austria. Is port ot the Republican candi
t- u.- r . . , , . . i "v r.isi-niHiw ei m Him. is wen iiu-ir any plainer evinenee inai min ociore ami oner uie noinin-
uu muse vi us wnu nave wnrKoo w in n m at foe i a la i.in...j ,k l . i , ,i. j; L.
. I Ul ii iiiiui iiivu, maims in I'm i to iiie iiii-.se n-opie were onven oy anx- anug vimxemions
uiiuion, uaasini; leaves a voin wnicn we win ue uiinuiu io:rxiremeiy elfieient team ot men icty and (ear.
fill. All our sympathies go out to members of his family, who he brought in to help h
have sustained the greatest loss.
Mr. Mainwaring's driving ambition van to develop the Capi
tal Journal into- onp of tits bei4 wrairvA Mwspapcrs of its sue
in the United, Saitx, Ktfym t:m hs Axxurad that those of us
u Mitmm Pto tatsoA im tmim vn ttt6iw to do .til it our
JOsVt'f h t itllt bill VfuUl COKflKH Uue. ji, Co o
In these aast four years the
Commw an ( apiac sana
ground lan- loM ' w ant M
Indochina bo !) r'ooj
jnjio)Sn'S
SPECIAL
PURCHASE
Gleaming new bathroom fixtures reduced for our January clearance. Plan now to re
model that bathroom. Buy your fixtures now on easy budget plans and savel
athroom Fixtures
3-Pc. Set Only
1
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BATHTUB
Gleaming porcelain enamel
ed 5-ft. bathtub (with recess
ed valves and pop-up waste).
39.95 Closet
China close-coupled
closet com hination
(with white seat, an
gle stop and supply,
seal ring, bolts,
screws).
3230
All fixtures "A" grade, acid re
sisting enamel.
29.95 Basin
China 17x19 modern
design basin (with
mixer faucet, metal
lift waste, trap,
stops and supplies,
drain bushing).
LIBERAL TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE - REPLACE NOW!
STEEL MEDICINE
CABINETS
Baked enamel cabinet with glass shelves.
Stainless steel framed mirror.
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