Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, January 23, 1957, Page 4, Image 4

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    Pajje 3 Section 1
THE CAPITAL' JOURNAL'
Salem, Oregon, Wednesday, January 23, 1957
Capital AJournal
An Independent Newspaper Established 1888
BERNARD MAINWARING (1897-1957)
Editor and Publisher, 1953-1957 '
E. A. BROWN, Publisher
GLENN CUSHMAN, Managing Editor
GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor Emeritus
Published every afternoon except Sunday at 280 North
Church St. Phone EM-46811
Full Lcastd Wire Service of The Associated Pre! and The Unlled
Presi. The Associated Press la exclusively entitled to the use lor pub
lication of all news dispatches credited to It or otherwise credited in
thia paper and also newa published therein.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Br Carrier: Monthly. SI .25: SI Months 7.M; One Teir, 113 00. By mall
Ir Orecon: Monthly. 11.00; Six Month!, $5 00; One Year, $9.oo. By mall
OuUldt Orecon; Monthly 11.24; Six Monthi, I7.M; On Year, 115.00.
NATIONAL WHIRLIGIG
Ike in Earnest. About Linking
South With Republican Party
By RAY TUCKER
Inside U. S. Bureaucracy
Since the United States has become one of the two great
nations of the world, the State Department which nego
tiates Its foreign relations, has become the most important
branch of our government and is more in the limelight of
publicity than any of them, except perhaps, the executive. Its
growth in power and bureaucracy in the past century is shown
by the fact that under Abraham Lincoln its staff consisted of
24 operators, now has an army of 30,000 men and women
spread all over the globe, of which the 7000 at Washington
will soon occupy a $56 million building, the largest in the
nation I capital. Only the military branch costs taxpayers more,
A recently published book, "Inside the State Department",
by Bryton Barron, a former State Department official, re
tired after 26 years of service, published by the Comet Press
and available from the Communication Service, Room 505 W.
42nd St., New York 36, sheds light on its activities. He says:
"The State Department Is no longer a mere Government bureau.
It has become a free wheeling, almost independent branch of Govern
ment, a petty sovereign stale, far closer in spirit to the chancelleries
a&rota men uie grass roots oi America.
Mr. Barron was chief of the Publishing Section, Assistant
Chief of the Division of Research and Publication, head of the
Treaty Staff, Foreign Policy Analyst and Historian, and ought
to know the facts. He states the main, interest of the workers
in the Department is to maintain or better their jobs, to make
work for themselves, to cater to highes-ups and to get salary
hikes. He quotes from official papers and names. He admits
that many employes are devoted to their work and loyal to
their government, but many are not. He summarizes some
characteristics:
"Eager nne-worldcrs and international socialists:
"Bureaucrats who have developed a contempt for the man on the
street and a disdain for the men on Capitol Hill;
"Left-wingers and former Communists;
"Officials who are indebted to former administrations;
"Officers who. while abroad, lost touch with the homeland;
'Men of foreign birth, raised and educated abroad;
''Political hacks who know little of foreign affairs;
"Personal favorites of top officials;
"And the Alger Hiss type."
There is more than a sprinkling of such characters in the
department, says the author and they wield influence in
shaping foreign policies, and he adds, no President could pos
sibly clean-up either the state or anysother department, the
. "hoards of loafers, incompetents, and unnecessary employes
protected by congressional influence, and the 'liberal' press."
Ike tried to, but he failed. Congressmen protected their fav
orites and threatened appropriations "for patronage rules
political life, regardless of party, and the only way to oust in
competents is to purge the payrolls by cutting appropriations
In half."
Intrenched bureaucracy as in foreign lands, rules all gov
rnment departments which congress will not purge
WASHINGTON. Jan. 23-Prcsi-dent
Eisenhower's distribution of
Federal patronage in Southern
States shows that he means busi
ness in aiming to attach this his
torically Democratic section to the
once detested Republican Party.
His technique differs completely
from the abortive efforts made by
Herbert Hoover and his national
chairman. Claudius Huston of Ten.
nessee, after Hoover carried sev
oral Southern Commonwealths in
his defeat of Alfred E. Smith, and
by a long list of pre-Hoovcr GOP-ers.
Whereas they looked upon Dixie
as a captive political province, to
be ruled by absentee and politics-
for-pay overlords, Eisenhower and
National Chairman Leonard W.
Hall, with active co-operation of
certain Democratic Senators, have
recognized the new forces and per
sonalities which seem to be recon
ciling that area toward Republi
canism on the national level.
Past Selfish GOP actions
Since the days of "Teddv"
Roosevelt and William Howard
Taft, who were almost the only
Republican post-Civil War Presi
dents who had not served on the
union side in that conflict, the
GOP has "used" or misused
the South for selfishly partisan
purposes.
Questionable members of the
white and colored races were
placed in positions of influence as
national, state and local leaders.
With only a few exceptions, ap
pointments to Federal offices
District Attorneys, Marshals, Cus
toms and Internal Revenue Col-1
lectors were made on the same
narrow and mercenary basis.
ihese Republicans most impor
tant job and it was about the only
work they did was to deliver dele
gates to their Party benefactors at
Republican national conventions.
Sometimes, as at Kansas City in
iiizb, tney sold out to rival candi
dates for the nomination, and had
to be bought back by the original
purchasers.
Disgraceful Politics
Of Other Times
Under such disgraceful circum
stances, no self-respecting South
erner dared to register or vote
as a Republican, even in Presi
dential contests. .More importantly,
no reputable newspaper could say
a good word for that Party's plat-
lorm or nominee, from 1928 until
1952, no state in the Deep South
deserted the Democrats.
Ike has reformed this 'situation
from top to bottom, although ad
ditional cleansing is still needed
and is in the works. He is appoint
ing able and distinguished "Eisen
hower Democrats" to key positions
in recognition of his 19.r2 and 19.S6
political successes below the
Mason and Dixon Line. Moreover.
he is consulting recognized Demo
cratic Senators before sending the
nominations to Lapitol Hill.
Ike's Meritorious Appointees
The new Commissioner of Edu
cation. Lawrence Gridley Derthick
of Tennessee, is recognized as one
of the nation's experts in this field.
In view of the controversy over
segregation, selection of a man
Virginia Plan Held Illegal
The Virginia plan for retaining racial segregation in public
schools, which was regarded as a pilot plan for other southern
states has been voided by Federal District Judge Walter E.
Hoffman in a 12.000 word opinion which rejected motions to
dismiss suits calling for desegregation at Norfolk and New
port News, Va. In his decision he said:
"The pupil placement program enacted by Virginia Is directly In
the teeth of the language of the Supreme Court which declared
the fundamental principle that racial discrimination in public educa
tion is unconstitutional.
The pupil placement law was enacted by the Virginia Gen
eral Assembly last September at the instigation of Gov. Thom
as B. Stanley. The placement act would keep all pupils in
their present schools unless transfer was approved by a spe
cial three-man board.
The board in theory would reassign pupils for reasons other
than rare or color, considering health, learning aptitude and
the "sociological, pyscholoqical and like intangible social scien
tific factors as will prevent as nearly as possible a cotvitnon of t
eocial-economic class consciousness among the pupils." II
The law also provides for a cut off of state school funds to
localities that practice any form of racial integration In public
schools.
Judge Hoffman asserted that "the pattern Is plain the Leg
islature has adopted procedures to defeat" the Supreme Court
decision. Manifestly, the Governor of Virginia has suggested
there shall he no integration of races in the public schools of1
Viroinin irrncnnM iva nf hnu- clint.t It n,n, I.a'i I
.',.,,'"' was inscribed in the President's
An appeal will be taken by the state. Governor Stanley has 'pronouncement. He articulated the
slated that he 'does not believe we can operate an efficient
(vstem of public schools in Virginia on an integrated basis."
Backing the school bill are Senator Harry Byrd, Democratic
boss of Virginia and most of the Democratic leaders of the
late. Byrd says "Virgiina Is offering its peaceful leadership to
the South."
Two other suits brought by the two local school boards,
claiming that the program offered the Negro plaintiffs ad
ministration remedies they should seek before going to court,
will be heard In February.
from Dixie for this office caused
surprise and comment.
For the one appointment on the
Civil Aeronautics Board reserved
for the Democrats, Ike picked a
well-known Miami lawyer, Louis
J. Hector, after endorsement by
Senators Holland and Smalhers:
The President had to resist strong
pressure from the Northwest to re
name Joseph P. Adams of Wash
ington State, for the Far West has
a deep and growing concern with
commercial aviation.
Although he ran against Ike as
a Conservative Independent, T.
Coleman Andrews of Richmond
falls into this category. One of the
nation's ablest certified public ac
coui:tan s, he did an excellent job
in purifying and streamlining the
Internal Revenue Bureau before
he resigned as Federal Director.
Although not formally endorsed
by Senator Byrd of Virginia,- An
drews was eminently satisfactory
to this veteran Democrat.
In short, Ike has shown himself
to be a Christopher Columbus in
remaking the map o.' American
politics, at least temporarily.
(Released by McClure News
paper Syndicate)
Blizzard of 57
A Smile or Two
The little boy was toeing shown
his new baby brother and he
seemed especially intrigued by the
infant's hairless condition.
Utile boy: Where'd you say he
came from?
Mother: From heaven.
Little boy (marveling) : Well,
they sure give close haircuts in
heaven, don't they? Ottawa Journal.
IU i1 SjM!"5XWLli J-.SV affiavaMadisW . Srolii
0
POOR MAYS PHILOSOPHER
Team From Italy Clobbers
American Bridge Players
call.
"The American team? Shucks,
we may not even see each other
three times in a year."
Its almost truism that a com
petent husband-and-wile team can
give two experts, who haven't
By RELMAN MORIN
For HAL BOYLE
NEW ',YORK OB Experts es
timate ,the. bridge-playing popula
tion of the United States at around
40 million, give or take a few
;ii;nn
Every hour on the nour, some- piayea reguiariy luge-ner, a real
where Americans are playing, tussle at bridge. That is .assum
kibitzing, holding post-mortems, ing Momma and Poppa are en
taking lessons, and telling stories : rapport, generally.
( iho dam that cot away, we
ought to be good at the game.
Yet the Bermuda Bowl, symbol
of the world's bridge champion
ship, has just gone over to Italy.
Six Italian internationalists clob
bered a top-flight American team
by 10,001 points in 224 hands
a shocking margin.
Viewing with alarm, I called
my old pal, Peter Leventritt, a
member of the American team,
to ask how this could come to
pass. (Get it?)
"Perfectly simple." he said.
','They out bid us, out-played us,
and out-defended us." No man to
varnish facts, he.
The Italians used' three sepa
rate bidding systems, two of
which can be understood by any
nuclear physicist, or a good clair
voyant. Peter said they used some
other curleycucs in their offense
as well.
But apart from these refine
ments, the basic reason for their
success was simply Momma-and-Poppa
bridge, polished to perfec
tion. "Those six play everyday, and
always together. No stakes, just
for love of the game. They prac
tice constantly together. So each
one comes to know exactly what
the other means by any given
Ever wonder how it feels to
play in such a contest?
The two big hotel rooms were
packed with spectators, .watching
the hands on a mirror arrange
ment outside sound-proof booths.
Kind, of frightening.
Peter said be had less than
eight hours sleep during the six
days of the tournament. Ha
couldn't unwind at home.
"I kept re-playing the hands
while 1 was asleep," he said.
"Then I'd sit bolt upright, won
dering, 'Now why did I do that?' "
Even the experts made com.
mon, ladies-afternoon-tea boners,
four of them a revoke (tsk,
tsk i . a lead out of turn, and two
wrong cards pulled. Each team
erred twice.
'56 GROUP VOTE ANALYSIS NO. 4
Ike's Vote Among Catholics
Up Five Points 1952 to 1956
By GEORGE GALLOP '
(Director. American InalUuW of Publlo OdIqIobI
(One In a series of special re
ports by the Gallup Poll on how
ir.ajor groups In the population
voted in the November election.)
PRINCETON. N. J. The
Catholic vote, often regarded as
one of the most solid Democratic
voting blocs in U.S. presidential
elections, split almost evenly be
tween President Eisenhower and
Adlai Stevenson in 1956.
A special post-election analysis
just completed by the Institute
shows the vote ol Catholics divid
ing 49 per cent for the Eisenhower
Nixon ticket to 51 per cent for
Stevenson-Kef auver. .
This represents a shift upward
of 5 percentage points to the Ke
puhlican candidates in 1956 among
Catholic voters compared to 1952,
when 44 per cent cast their ballots
for the Eisenhower-Nixon ticket to
56 per cent for Stevenson-Spark-man.
The Jewish vote, which Steven
son won by a 3-to-l margin, also
shows a shift of 2 percentage
points to the GOP candidates be
tween 1952 and 1956. Survey data
Inaiiffural Address Called
Among Greatest in History
By DAVID LAWRENCE
WASHINGTON One of t h e I President Eisenhower in his in-
Salem 48 I rs. Ago
By BEN MAXWELL
Jan. 13, 1909
State authorities were seeking
authorization for a' contract with
Salem to supply pure mountain
water to be obtained from unpol
luted branches of the Santiam in
the forest reserve. (At this time
there was agitation for public
ownership of the city's water sys
tem with the Willamette river as
its source of supply. Not infre
quent cases of typhoid fever were
.attributed to the city's contami
nated water supply).
City council was beselged with
requests for paving downtown and
residential streets. An example
was the unpaved intersection at
Trade and Commercial streets, an
impassible quagmire 48 years ago.
Here tracks or s.r. had settled
enough to de-rail several cars dur
ing the past few days and there
was a strong demand for paving
Commercial street to the South
Mill creek bridge.
During Salem's building boom in
1908 not less that 324 structures
had been erected and remodeled
at an expenditure of $376,400.
indicate that 25 per cent of per
sons of the Jewish faith cast their
ballots for President Eisenhower
in 1956 compared to 23 per cent
in 1952.
Among Protestants, who voted
almost S-to-3 Republican, there
was no shift. In both 1952 and
1956, 63 per cent of Protestants
voted for the Republican candi
dates to 37 per cent for the Demo
cratic candidates.
Official election figures, which
have just become available, show
Eisenhower and Nixon receiving
57.8 per cent of the major-party
vole nationwide to 42.2 per cent
for Stevenson and Kcfauver.
In its final estimate of the 1956
election outcome, the Institute re
ported the Eisenhower-Nixon vote
at 59.5 per cent an error of only
i.i per cent.
This is the third election
'?.' :C,ii"'!'l".1" M,w ,"Prej! Salem Board of Trade was con
' I io!!, "'. ;r'U":," ll,r.u ii"ing a campaign for 500 new
7 . - i'"- bin dines in 1909.
great inaugural addresses o f
all limes has just been delivered
by President Ei
senhower. 1 t
probably was
the first mes
sage at an in
augurnl cere
mony directed
hi its entirety to
all the peoples
of the world as
well as to the
people of t h e
Vniled Slates.
Something far
r :fi
lect accuracv
Here are the results of today's
analysis of the vote by religious
groups in 1 !)."B. as measured in
Institute surveys, together with
comparable figures for the 1952
e'ection:
CATHOLIC VOTE 1956
Stevenson-Kefauver 51
Eisenhower-Nixon 49
CATHOLIC VOTE 1952
Stevenson-Sparkman 56T
Elsenhower-Nixon 4-ci,
The vote of persons of the Jew-
augural address said "Rarely has
this earth known such peril as ! jsn -ajtn
. h'.H'Y:'"LT "" ""U JKWMH VOTE-MS
Stevenson-Kefauver 75
! Eisenhower-Nixon . 25
"The divisive force is Interna
tional Communism and the power
hn nou.or"7 ' i, n,.3" Stevenson-Sparkman
clear in practice. It strives to eair.T.V,X0"
JEWISH VOTE 1952
pointed to the people of Soviet
missia as follows:
"We honor, no less In this divid
ed world than in a less tormented
time, the people of ltussia. We do
not dread, rather do we welcome,
l heir progress in education and in
dustry. We wish them success in
their demands lor more intellect
ual freedom, greater security be-
tiirn their man Uu f,.1l..e alniv-
Linn County, according to the Democrat Herald, has become ment of the rewards' of their own
Linn County Svvs Planum"
forever the fate of those it has
enslaved. It strives to break the
ties that unite the free. And it
strives to capture to exploit for
its own greater power all
forces of change in the world,
especially the needs of the hungry
more than an appeal for peace; and the hopes of the oppressed."
men came the expression of a
new hope Hungary and what
hopes and aspirations of the op-1 the recent crusade for freedom
pressed and the enslaved in the there had meant. The highest ap
world. It was a recognition of their jplause came as Mr. Eisenhower
plight and a veiled promise not to spoke these words:
forget them. "Vet the world of International
Most significant were the words ' Communism has itself been shaken
, 77
Here Is the vote of Protestants:
I Officials of Salem's United
States National bank had ex
pressed an intent to erect a five
story brick office building at the
northwesf corner of State and
Commercial street. "Now the Pio
neer Trust building. The site was
that of several old buildings, in
cluding the post office in the 1860s.
This old structure had been razed
to reveal that it rested upon sills
hewed from logs.
PROTESTANT VOTE 1956
Eisenhower-Nixon 63
Stevenson-Kefauver 37
PROTESTANT VOTE 1952
Eisenhower-Nixon 63
Stevenson-Sparkman 37
(Copyright, 1957, American In
stitute of Public Opinion
Eisenhower Expected to
Follow Persuasion Policy
By JAMES MARLOW
Associated Press News Analyst
WASHINGTON Wi-Anyone who
has expected President Eisenhow
er s leadership to be more fiery,
forceful and tough in dealing with
Congress these next four years is
likely to be disappointed.
In his first two years in office
Eisenhower sometimes acted like
a man who thought the President's
job was merely to, consult with
Congress. In the following two he
showed more signs of pushing for
the ideas he wanted approved.
But in his whole first term Ei
senhower can hardly be said to
have fought very vigorously for
much that he proposed, at least on
domestic problems. He did fight
harder on foreign affairs.
Nevertheless, he received a lot
of cooperation from the lawmak
ers and, judging from last Novem
ber's election, the broadest kind of
the lap of the lawmakers this past
four years.
He has talked to Congress in
person on the Middle East; de
livered in person his State of the
Union message; delivered his in
augural address in public: and
sent his budget message to Con
gress. All of them had their quota of
platitudes. There was no indica
tion he would really fight very
hard for any of the suggestions
he made, except perhaps for the
free hand he wants in the Middle
East.
There is another way of looking
at this: That the lack of force
fulness simply shows a lack of
leadership. It's a view which was
expressed by Adlai Stevenson dur
ing the presidential campaign and
yesterday by former 'President
Truman. Truman issued his state
ment in Kansas City. It could be
public approval" for what he did j interpreted as meaning Truman
and the way he acted. thinks Eisenhower is timid when
Apparently he has no intention t comes to action. But, strangely
of changing. He said as much at for Truman, his own state
ly iscnnower
his news conference Nov. 14 after
getting an overwhelming re-election
pat on the back. On th.it day
he indicated the course he'd fol
low, which was the course he had
followed.
He said he would try to get
things done through persuasion,
since he is not one of the desk
pounding type who likes to stick
out his jaw and try to look as if
he is bossing the works.
That probably accounts for the
lack of aggressiveness and steam
in his messages to date this year
outlining his program for the days
ahead. A possible exception was
his call for a new program for 1 Eisenhower and the Democratic
the Middle East. leaders in Congress.
So far in 1957 he has offered no The latter have been very mild
ideas again with the exception of in their comments on Eisenhow-
They Say Today
Quotes From The News
(Reg. U.S. Pat. Off.)
Bv UNITED PRESS
WASHINGTON: Rep. Clare E.
Hoffman (R-Mich) charging elec
tion of H. Meade Alcorn Jr. ai
chairman of the hepublican Na
tional Committee will bring about
liquidation of the "conservative,
isolationist" wing of the party:
"I assume that former Gov,
(Thomas E. Dewey of New York
will shortly become a candidate
for president again.
LONDON: Prime Minister Har
old Macmillan .telling critics in a
polite way that the cabinet will
continue to direct the nation's af
fairs: "Her Majesty the Queen, by vir
tue of her royal prerogative,
makes war and peace, acting on
the advice of her ministers who
are responsible to Parliament."
MIAMI: William C. Rose telling
why he will drink one jigger of
whiskey after another in a court
room test to disprove drunken
driving charges against him:
"The drunkometer doesn't apply
to everyone equally. I'm a big
man and I've been drinking a con
siderable amount regularly for a
number of years. A little man who
isn't used to drinking might be in
bad shape with a .246 reading,
but I am not."
WASHINGTON: Thomas K. Fin
letter, secretary of the Air Force
during the Truman administra
tis., calling for an end to U.S.
efforts to "play power politics" In
the Middle East:
"The result has been total failure."
NEW YORK. George Metesky,
the mad bomber of Manhattan.
ment criticizing
InnlrAsf nnM HiA
"T1" "'Niu. I MmnUinin that hie kaon eat.
Truman marched up the hi 1 bv ,,""' : " .. aa
condemning the lack of a plan ofj "I?! ,0nae,CheUdb"C;oy: live very
action in Eisenhower's "mes- L ,!.. .? lnea t0 "ve very
sage." The original text of his q ''
f'T"'. r?fT:cL' EiscnhtH . KANSAS CITY. Mo.: Former
pf T. t ",cs!, 'Be- President Truman attacking Pres-
?",Lla'" .Tran .c.crc,Hidcnt Eisenhower's inaugural ad-
asked that this identification be
deleted. Then what message did
Truman have ip mind?
the Middle East that could be
considered new or more contro
versial than anything he laid in
dress as lacking an "active and
militant approach":
"It wne vnrv jctrnnff for home
The secretary simply said Tru-Ian(j mother and world peace, just
man wished his statement to read j as we an are, but I see no plan
only "the President's message." 0t action outlined in the mcs
Truman may have been trying to sage ."
hit two birds with one stone:! -.
GLAMOR
Glna Lollobrlglda
Glamour is when a man knows
a woman is a woman.
er's message. Maybe Truman was
trying t start them fighting as the
opposition party. They haven't
shown much fight these past four
years, either.
conscious ot tne need lor county planning, as Marion tountv
did several years apo.
But in Linn County there is one notable difference in that
the farmers are pointing to the need of it. In Marion County
they have generally opposed it and contributed much to it's
defeat in three elections. The Democrat-Herald showed edi
torial Interest when "the Farmers I'nion began discussing the
need for a county planning commission "
It started,' that newspaper continues, "when this
toil. Kor as such things come to
pass, the more certain will be the
coming of that day when our peo
ples may freely meet in friend
ship." No such purposeful separation of
the rulers of an aggressor govern
ment from the peopli of a country
h.-s been made since the fateful
days nearly forty years aso when
group President Wilson said in his war
recame unhappy with plans for a road cnnnertinR Seven Mile 'message of April 2, 1917, to both
Lane ana .o. lu orange itoad. We don t know a tiling about houses or congress:
the merits of this plan, but we do believe that when such ques-l "We have no quarrel with the
Uons come up a planning commission is the agencv to handle 'German people. We have no feel
ijjgfll." i 'r! twards them but one of sym-
- ' , . , . , . pathy and friendship. It was not
Speaking of the city planning commissions in Albany and upon their impulse thai their gov
e!ewhere in Linn County, the Democrat Herald goes on to 'eminent acted in entering this
cay: ju.ir. It was not with their previous
knowledge or approal.
by a fierce and mighty force: the
readiness of men who love free
dom to pledge their lives to that
love. Through the night of their
bondage, the unconquerable will of
heroes has struck with the swift,
sharp thrust of lightning. Budapest
is no longer merely the -name of
a city; henceforth it is a new and
shinin' symbol of man's .yearning
to be free."
The I'resioYnt proclaimed, more
over, a pledge "to honor and
fortify the authority of the t'nited
Nations," Rut he also declared that
"Beyond this general resolve, we
are called upon to act a responsi
ble role in the world s great con
cerns or conflicts whether they
touch upon the affairs of a vast
region, the fate of an island in the
Pacific, or the use of a canal in
the Middle East."
Here was a reiteration of the
foreign policy of the United Stales
as expressed in the Formosa Reso
lution passed by congress and in
the Middle East Resolution now
pending. Here was a hint that,
since the Sues Canal issue has not
yet been settled. America may
play a vital part therein.
The inaugural address didn't
touch at all on domestic issues or
.... i ui-.-r k-imuii.,.,.1.1,.1, Mum, airtir lay, nac auiluorilv ; I,..., , ...i,.. I..... t I i ,-. j
to plan for a six-mile radius which includes much county tor-! had overthrown the Cm and Mr. malic occasion for an utterance of
ritory. But that leaves pie-shaped, unplanned wedges in be-; tt ilsim expressed the hone that " worldwide imnoriance. nd Mr Ei-
tween. and. because of this, reduces the effectiveness of plan-''" partner for a League of Honor" I senhower rose to the occasion. For
nine Inside the circles. Roads, unfortunately, have to go some
where. And planning commissions plan more than roads. They
tudy land uses and set up use zones so that, unlike Topsy.
areas grow as they should, without wrecking yards and hos
pitals side by side."
The editorial points to the success of county planning In
Lant County. And it would be well for Marion County people
to watch progress that probably will follow Lhe itir ttaxted by
lea uxmtn in una county,
hod emerged as the "great. gener-all the world will read and
Hussian people have been especially Moscow that there
.uliird ... to the forces that are
fighting for freedom in the world,
for justice, and for peace."
Rut it didn't turn out that way.
For International Communism took
over with a despotism that his
proved as oppressive as that of
lhe Ciars and has become a men-
1 ac to Iht whole world. That whjr
can be peaceful coexistence but
only on the basis ol free govern
ments in which the people are
free to express themselves and
elect their own rulers. It was a
speech that seeks by moral force
to Influence the attitudes and be
havior of people everywhere
moral force at its best.
iv?
B.AS1T
January
4 EAVS
Clearance
All merchandise from our regular stock
to never buy sale or distress goods.
in line with our policy
MEN'S SUITS
Kuppenheimer . . Griffin . . . Variety Town
88
$68
Regularly $125 00
Regularly $85.00 to $90.00
Regularly $65.00 to $69.95
ReguKirly $49.50
48
38
MEN'S TOPCOATS
Kuppenheimer . . . Alpagora
Regularly 79.50 to 85.00 .
Griffin
$59
Regularly 50.00 to 65.00 ,
$
39
MEN'S SHOES
NUNN-BUSH
Regular 17.95 to 19.95
Regular 20.95 to 22.95 .
14.95
16.95
EDGERTON
Regular 10.95 to 1195 .
Regular 1J.95 to 18.95 .
SPORT SHIRTS
Famous Mak Long Slwves
Cottons . . . Rayons . . . Part Wools
and All Wools
Reg. 5.00 to 12.95
)50 C47
A loU
8.95
10.95
1
I
OPEN MONDAY & FRIDAY EVENINGS 'Tit 9 P.M.