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About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980 | View Entire Issue (May 3, 1957)
Capital AJournal AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER ESTABLISHED IN 181 Bernard Mainwaring (1897-1957) Editor and Publisher 1953-1957 E. A. Brown, Publisher Glenn Cushman, Managing Editor George Putnam, Editor Emeritus ubliihad avary avanlng aacapl Sunday by lha Capital Journal Co., Mil. Jannia L. Mainwarlng Full leaiad Wlra Servica of Tha A.ioclated Pr.ii and Tha United Ptan. Tht Anocialed Preii it axcluiivoly anllllad lo Ih. uit for publication of ill nam diipatchai credited lo It or olherwlle credited in thii paper end alio nawi publiihed therein. : SUBSCRIPTION RATES y Carrier: Monthly, $1.50; Six Month., $9.00, Ona Year, $18.00. By Mail In Oregon! Monthly, I.S0; Six Monthl, $040; Ona Yaar $11.00. By Mail Ouliide Oragon: Monthly, $M0 Sl Monthl, $.00 Ona Yaar, $11.00 Naming a Park ' Salem ofncialdom, the public at large, and the newspapers too, have fallen into the er roneous habit of speaking of the city's west side park as Wallace Marine Park, or of oth erwise identifying with it only the name of the late Paul B. Wallace, who bequeathed the first of the park property to the city. Before the park is further added to and developed a reminder is necessary that Mr. ' Wallace himself chose a name for the park, that his children passed it on to the city after his death, and that the name was officially adopted by ordinance. The official name is Joseph H. Albert-Paul B. Wallace Willamette , Memorial Park. This takes nothing from the appropriate ' ness or the sentiment attached to Mr. Wai ' lace's name. Rather it is further evidence of his selfless character, so often mani fested during his lifetime. Records indicate that at the time of his death he was sole owner of the property. But early in the century he and Mr. Albert, who died many years before him, wore joint owners. They ' had social, civic and business interests in - common. Their fathers had been active in 'the earlier upbuilding of Salem. The two were friends, and Mr. Wallace must have felt that the Albert name too should be me morialized. In a letter to the City Park Advisory Com mission, dated May 30, 1053, Mr. Wallace's ' daughters, Nancy Wallace Gormsen and i Pauline Wallace Schroedcr, said that "as a ' result of family conversations over the past years, and from information left in a codicil to Mr. Wallace's will, we would like to sub .,mit for your consideration the following .'name: 'Joseph H. Albert-Paul B. Wallace Willamette Memorial Park.' " Later Mrs. Gormsen submitted it personally at a park board meeting and it was approved. The following .June 23, 1953, the City Council adopted it by ordinance. This ordinance aid that in his last testament Mr. Wallace "expressed the desire that the park be con sidered the joint gift of Joseph H. Albert and Paul. B. Wallace." Found Inter among Mr. Wallace's papers were directions lor a memorial tablet, which the daughters propose lo set up in the park when the city is ready for It. A legend for the stone, written by Mr. Wallace, reads: "This park is dedicated to, the City of Sa lem by 'Joseph H. Albert and Paul B. Wal lace, with the hope that succeeding genera tions may enjoy the facilities for recreation and relaxation, and may grow in apprecia tion of the beauties of our Willamette River." These papers stipulated that the memorial tablet should be six feet high, three feet eight inches wide, and two feet thick, and that "two red oak trees, quercus rubra, no other, are ' to frame the . tablet," so trained and pruned that the lowest branches should be 25 feet above ground. People, of course, like names for public places that are short and easily spoken. But since Mr. Wallace so greatly desired that both names be memorialized, it is imperative that the name he chose be remembered and used officially or formally. For, common usage a shorter form, like Albert-Wallace Park, might be permissible. an uninterrupted exchange of ever more in formation, a running debate, plus a readiness to listen." Vet, in its introductory announce ment, while objective, it is bare-fisted In pointing up the strengths and the weak nesses of the American and the European nations and setting them up in comparison. Edgar Ansel Mowrer is American editor In chief, with offices in Washington, and Rene Dabernat is editor in chief for Europe. The magazine has international executive and advisory boards, and managing editors or other staff members in most of the Western countries. The magazine proposes to feature a Debate of the Month, and the first is between Adlai Stevenson of America and Paul Reynaud of France, on "Is American Anti-Colonialism Harmful or Helpful?" The Hungarian upris ing, the Suez incident, and the American for eign policy, treated by internationally known writers, are among other features. If its editors follow through consistently with the first number, and fulfill their prom ises about content of the periodical, Western. World will be able to back up its boast that it is the "only forum of its kind in existence." Senator McCarthy Passes The sudden unexpected death of Senator Joseph McCarthy of Wisconsin, 47, from acute hepatitis at a Washington hospital, re moved from the nation the most controversial figure of the present generation, whose im petuous career added a new word to the lex icon of our language, "McCarlhyism," Im plying guilt by suspicion. Vigorous, impetuous and intolerant, , per haps McCarthy overplayed his hand. He was rebuked by the Senate, yet played a vital role in awakening the nation from Us com placent lethargy to the destructive menace of Russian communism in its efforts to de stroy our democracy and replace it with the bloody tyranny of unscrupulous dictatorship. McCarthy's vicious tactics won him politi cal power, based on fear, but the condemna tion by the Senate in 1954 drastically cur tailed his influence and it has been shrinking steadily. At the height of his power lie helped destroy some prominent Democrats and left others scarred. Though McCarthy supported President Eisenhower in 1952, and had his blessing, he challenged Ike's administration and almost de stroyed himself and was benched in the cam paigns of 1954 and 1958. Recently the Pres ident had snubbed him, largely for attacks on General George Marshall. Of all the comments on McCarthy's death by his many enemies, the remark of former Secretary of Slate Dean Achcsnn is most per tinent. He said it in Latin: "De mortuis nil nisi bonum" "Of the dead say nothing but good. G. P. Magazine With a Mission If first impressions are lasting a good future and a purpose-serving career should lie ahead for Western World, a new periodic cal intended for reading hy thoughtful pcoplo on both sides of the Atlantic. Issue No. 1 is at hand, with announcement that it "is dedicated to preserving and strengthening the Atlantic Community of Nations." Citing recent threats to the Atlantic Community, both from Moscow and from within the Community itself in the Suez in cident, it says that "no Western people can now overlook the stark fact that the Com munity will live or die by Its own decision (or indecision)." "Its disappearance," says the magazine, "would be a catastrophe of the first magni tude for all the peoples concerned." To fore stall this Western World offers itself as n in'ercontinental forum with novel method "neither harsh recrimination nor syrupy ap peals for agreement where there is no agree ment, but continual two-way conversation) U4 RAY TUCKER Western Senators Cool Off on Ike ' WASHINGTON A new threat lo Presi dent Eisenhower's "modern Republicanism" and liberals' control of the Party has arisen on Capitol Hill. It has become especially forceful and noticeable since members re turned from Easter vacations among grumbling and wor ried constituents. - j Whereas dissatisfaction to ward the White House pro gram had previously center ed in only the McCarthy-Ma-lone-Jenner group, it has now spread to veteran GOP-ers, including many who consider i themselves to be advocates of j moderation. They are not bay tuckb extremists. Although no hard-and-fast geographical di vision can be fixed, there seems lo be a line up of the Middle and Far West faction against the Eastern bloc, where Ike commands his greatest support. Although Robert A. Taft is gone, and Thomas E. Dewey has quit ac ; tive politics, it Is a revival of the Ohio-New York clashes at pre-Elsenhower conventions. Knowland Silent on Ills Plana The key figure in the hinterland coalition is Senator William F. Knowland of California, who was a Taft lieutenant. The Senate Min ority Leader refuses to divulge his plans for when he retires from Congress next year. He will not reveal whether he will try for the California Governorship as a step toward a Presidential nomination in 1960. But he shows no concern or regret when he is listed as hostile to many major admin istration proposals. It is generally believed that he and like-minded colleagues will strive to wrest control of the Party and the 1960 national conventions from the Easterners. They feel that they can do so without incur ring White House wrath, because Ike cannot be a candidate to succeed himself. GOP's Current Uneasiness Nor do they expect the President to in tervene too actively to force his own choice upon the Party, not for even such a loyal follower as Vice-President Nixon. Most of the five other men whom Ike suggested for the No. 2 spot in 1952 have faded from the political picture. The current uneasiness involves other is sues than the controversial budget. It runs the gamut of many important domestic and foreign probems, based on complaints flood ing a top-heavy Congressional mail and talks with tho home folks during the Easter recess. Many feel that Ike and Dulles have taken on too many overseas commitments, with our two main fleets the Sixth and Seventh patrolling far-off and dangerous waters. There is great sympathy for Israel, and a belief that the United States has been outwitted by Colonel Gamal Abdel Nasser. There is sus-1 picion of the United Nations. More Positive Leadership There is insistence on enactment of a tax cut of two or three billions, to become ef fective next January. Otherwise, the Dem ocrats may press their own program, and reap benefit in the 195R Congressional con tests. Many Republicans discovered that the President's coattails were not sufficiently am ple for them in last year's elections. Finally, Secretary Ezra Taft Benson's pop ularity has sagged again, due to his support of a new system of lower payments to farm ers. This resentment is especially sharp and vocal among normally good organization men from the Mississippi River to the Pa cific Coast. President Eisenhower has been told that he must bestir himself and show more posi tive leadership, if he is to regain his political hold and popularity at the other end of Pennsylvania Avenue. His seeming lack of interest in party affairs and personalities dis concerts even his friends in the organization and in the legislative body. JAMES MARLOW din Death Writes Ending to McCarthyism WASHINGTON WV-A liver dis ease killed Sen. McCarthy but what no medical report will say or show is whether his spirit was broken before he died He showed every sign of It. He died 29 months to the day after his fellow senators condemned him Dn Dec. 2, 1H54, for his conduct. - And in that time McCarthy, who nad made him- Kit a blazing JAMES MARLOW figure, retreated more and more into silence and obscurity. By the time of his death he had become almost a nobody in the news and in the Senate, both of which he had dominated for four years. On the day of his condem nation this writer wrote: 'The censure charges aeainst him, summed up, come to this: the Senate has standards but he didn't live up to them; and there is no excuse for being as rough as he was toward the Senate itself and toward individuals." , Tragedy of Man'i Life There Is an old Greek theorv to explain the tragedy of a man's life: that it is due to a defect in character he can never over come and which inevitably leads him to his doom. In McCarthy's case his enemies might say it was arrogance, or ruthlcssncss, or a desperate thirst for power, or even "cruelty," which was the word used against mm dv Joseph N. Welch, his law yer antagonist in the Army-Mc- uariny neanngs. But one thing was indisputable: in the four years of what he called his search for Communists he showed an amazing disregard for omer people. Result Wai His Undoing He seemed incapable of chang ing that even when he was in his own greatest peril as he was when the Senate was considering censure charges against him and the result was his undoing. He had become like a man ob sessed with the word he had hurled at so many people "Com munist." He' finally used it obliquely as he so often did gainst others Just Don't Fall Asleep, Bud 8 I 1 ImmatiSSllrSme' staff fcfePfS. . . . . '.'vf- DAVID LAWRENCE Republican Party Had Better Close Ranks Soon or They Will Lose Election rn 1960 HAL BOYLE Florida Orange Juice King Was Once Poor Immigrant NEW YORK. 11 - Anthony T.i chauffeur, farmed for a while, f. Rossi who came here from Sicily rally bought the second sclf-serv-in 1923 with nothing but a pocket lie grocery store opened here. HAL BOYLE inescapable against the Sen-'and they apply ale itself. It was bis greatest mis- to the Rcpublt- WASHINGTON President Eis enhower has a big job to do right away as the leader of the Republi can Party in the nation. There are some fundamen- tal truths in politics that are take. He was condemned because he had "abuse d" the Senate and. among other things, had said the committee which was investigat ing the censure charges had "im itated Communist methods" and its members were "attorneys in fact" for the Communist party. Kept Up Briefly McCarthy kept his spirit up and his name in the papers brief ly after the condemnation. He said the benate had "disgraced it' self." He said he would go on in vestigating communists. When he lost the chairmanship of the committee which had been his main instrument for investi gating communism and making headlines because the Demo crats got control of the Senate in 1955 McCarthy began attacking communism abroad. He continued making state ments, but ever fewer of them, in 1955 and 1956. But thev disap peared further and further into the back pages of the paper, when his name was used at all. There was less and less news in any thing he had to say. Era Melted Awny There was less and less inter est in anything he had to say be cause, as the era called McCar thyism" hegan lo melt away and an almost hysterically divided na tion returned to normality, he meant less and less to more and more people. lie was a discredited senator whose following melted away. When he did enter the Senate chamber these last two years he was never, a man for spending much time there he seemed more and more like a ghost out of American history, a man whose story had been finished in his own lifetime. Si can Party as a whole as well as they do to the President. l'hey may be . Lawrence outlined as follows: 1. The Republican presidential nomination in 1960 will not be worth much to any Republican if the record of the Eisenhower ad ministration cannot be supported by Republicans generally. If the administration proves to be a suc cess, all Republican candidates wilt want to ride on Its coattails. 2. Differences of opinion bet'.vccn a President and members of his party in Congress should be threshed out at the White House in a series of conferences with plenty of copies of the 1956 plat form handy for reference. It was unanimously adopted only ten months ago. There are ways that Republicans can. express their dif ferences on particular issues with out deserting their party leader ship. Deserters Won't Win 3. No political party which pro duces a division during its incum bency wins the subsequent elec tion. The Republican party today, for example, hasn't enough votes to spare in the pivotal states, so it cannot afford the luxury of feud ing within Its own ranks. 4. The Republican party needs to mobilize all its energies lo meet the challenge of the radical Demo crats who would stifle the system of free enterprise. Most of the southern states will vote Demo cratic anyhow in 1958, but the election of more radicals from the north will lessen the strength and influence of the conservative Dem ocrats in Congress. The crucial battle Is in the north and west. No Defense, Offense 5. The Republicans, inside and publicly. 8. Dissent by a few members of Congress on policies isn't just a quarrel between the White House and those members. It means that millions of voters take sides, be come fixed in their positions on public questions, and this in turn stimulates permanent disaffection. Ultimately it results in apathy at outside Congress, have not organ-: the polls, if not a drift of many ized their offense or their defense party members to the opposite to date. They have allowed six months to go by since the Novem ber election without unifying their- forces and without meeting the day-in-and-day-out sniping by the radical Democrats and their allies In the press. In fact, too many Republicans, instead of being spokesmen for the defendant, have joined the prosecution. 6. Every incumbent administra tion is on the defensive because it has the responsibility of taking ac tion each dav. whereas its oppon ents need not say what Ihey would do they merely attack what is be ing done. The late FDR was one of the few presidents who recognized that as party leader he should never let down on the attack. His "fireside chats" on the radio kept going throughout his tenure in of fice the fight against his political opponents and sustained the mor ale of his own party workers. Mr. Eisenhower has both television and radio available. He doesn't use them enough between campaigns Can't Neglect 'Homework 7. Every administration has troubles with its own members in Congress. There are always pa tronage difficulties and failures to consult senators and representa tives about matters vitat to them, especially appointments. A presi dential staff that neglects its homework on politics can wreck a party's chances just as fast as can those members of Congress who attack a President of their own party and stir up dissension DR. WILLIAM BRADY Old, New Dr. Brady Still Likes Wheat, Somersaults Pagoda Builders Albany Democrat Herald We don't think that everything is going to the dogs. We think that the good old days never were, and we believe that juvenile delin quents are the children and grand children of delinquents. But take lights. A car used to have two headlights and a tail light. We counted the lights on a new model the other day. There were 1 j 'Wor,d ii oi incm tour ncanngnis, two Wlr Wf think parking lights, two laillights, two , u , havc nncsiip ngnis, two stopugnts ana-b on vour (nth. or nnAT two turn lights. Wo appraised the! pr Grandfather said that Dr. remaining expanse of metal on the: ,e , two ends of the car. .Uteres still .-mmmM. if.io I "Surely, after all these years there must be a new Dr. Brady or do you follow your own ad vice? ' (Mrs. A.G.) "My grand father used to quole what a Dr. Wm. Bradv said in the Brooklyn Eagle away back a- hout the time of party. Outmoded, Obsolete 9. The "strategists" who In spired the President and members of his entourage to publicize me "modern Republican" concept played into the hands of the com mon foe the radical Democrats. For when the White House says, in effect, that the Republican party needs "modernizing" with out applying the same term to the Democrats, it gives the Democrats the chance to label the Republi cans n nntmnripH And nhsntpfo. Thnnoh liltlp emnhnck has hepn Dec. 5, 1941 placed on the point, the President J u s t two days is immutable on the essentials of before Pearl full of dreams will sell in 1957 the juice from ti o r e oranges than there are people on earth. How did he ouild a 25 mil lion Florida cit rus empire that will market the contents of some 3,600.000,000 or anges in a single year. Summarizing his fruitful career, the big, ham-fisted, 56-year-old businessman he once was a priv ate chauffeur, looks like Jack Dempsey said, smiling: "We started this business with S30.0OO and very little knowledge. But all my life t like to grow, to try to do something bigger than : by snjp God Given Help Then Rossi, a devoit Baptist who neither smokes or drinks and likes to open staff business meetings with a prayer, added in a voice curiously gentle for such a large man: "God has always guided me told me what to do and when to do it. He has used me for his purpose." Rossi, who stands 6 feet 2 and weighs 225, was one of 10 children of a physician in Messina, Sicily. As a boy he was imaginatve and adventuresome, and often ran away from home so often that his despairing father even took to ty ing him in bed. A Young Rascal "I was never a juvenile delin quent, just a young rascal." he recalled. But when he was 15 his mother, dying, said she hated to go because she felt Anthony need ed her. That changed her son over night. "From that moment on I was a good boy," he said. In 1923 he came here, self-con-tident but nearly broke, planning to stay only a short time. "But I found living in the United States the most exciting thing a man could do. I drove a taxi, in stalled refrigerating equipment, sold produce, worked as a private Operated Restaurant In 1941 he moved to Florida, for 6 while o p f r at e d the largest restaurant in Miami Beach, then in 1947 entered the venturesome citrus field. He pioneered in ship ping fresh fruit sections (orange, pineapple and grapefruit) to met ropolitan markets. In 1934 he decided the market was ripe for chilled cartoned .range juice, gambled by buying a million dollars worth of refrig erated trucks. Today his fleet of 150 trucks de livers citrus juice west to the Da kotas, north to Canada. He also markets the juice through 1,500 vending machines along the East ern seaboard. But his most daring idea was to cut costs by transporting bulk fruit juice to metropolitan areas Crazy Idea Worked "When I first tried to borrow three million dollars for this proj ect, I was told it was a crazy idea that would never work," he said. But it did work. Today his ves sel, the S.S. Tropicana can ferry 300,000 gallons of orange juice from Cocoa, Fla , to New York City in 56 hours. Soon its tank capacity will be quintupled to 1V4 million gallons to supply other cartoning plants in Baltimore and Boston. After the St. Lawrence Seaway is completed, Rossi Plans bulk shipments of citrus Juice to Great hake ports such as Cleveland. Ha also has plans to ship it by tank ers to Europe. Already a top fig ure in the industry, Rossi will be come America's citrus king if hose plans materialize. Humbly grateful for his success in bis adopted land, Rossi has this to say about the United States: "Our present prosperity is God's reward for using our power well. This country has been blessed, as other great countries in the past were blessed. They fell But this country responded to God's op portunities better than any prev. iuus country because it has used its strength to help the weaker nations rather than to exploit them. "We will endure as long as we refrain from abusing our power." BETS MAXWELL History in The Making May 3, 1940 Salem, a Capital Journal story had said, would within a few months become a port of call along united Airline s -sr route between f vancuuver, d.i.. ( and San Diego. (Keguiar united Airline service for Salem was inaugurat- f a dynamic conservatism. 10. The Republicans, both in Congress and in the executive branch have been clumsy in han dling the controversy over the budget. Instead of fixing the blame on rising costs the Infla tion which their opponents fostered in their 20 years of rule the Re publicans unwittingly give the im pression that the enlarged budget is due to frills desired by the ad ministration. Harmonlzer Big Nature 11. The President is a harmon izcr hy nature. What his admin istration needs is an "Eisenhower doctrine" for domestic problems. It needs Republican allies on Capitol Hill as against its politi cal foes. This means more confer ences on party strategy to help members of Congress to win elec- ,: U..t nP n hnllnp system of communicating the facts s1uawk 50 muc.h ?,bout the budSct lo the people about now me ad ministration is trying to meet the challenges of the times. 12. All this reveals the impor- that Mr. Eisenhower will take thethc cos' ' c!r. television sets On Poker Playing The psychologist was answering questions at the close of his lecture when one meek member of the class raised his hand and asked: "Did you say a good poker player could hold down an executive job?" "Thai's right," asid the psychologist. "Does it raise a question in your mind?" "Yes," said the student. "What would a good poker player want with a job?" Mellen tWis.) Weekly-Record. room for two dozen more lights on the rear and about half that many on the front, if space still is to be left for a vestige of grill. But we oren t the first people to worship sheer quantity. A friend of ours notes that many cenluries hack the Chinese were even poorer than now. Tlicv didn't bury their dead. They laid them on lop of the ground and tossed a pile of dirt over them. when the family had the where withal, it bought a round ornament to top off the mound. Then along came a relatively wealthy man. He built a roof over his departed kin. A neighbor, not to be out done, built two roofs, one on top of the other. From such humble beginnings, the 12 and H tiered pagoda was born. Rut this is the auto age. roll sommersaults" . . . (E.J. G.I "Are you the Dr. Brady who used to write a health column in an Oregon newspaper? I enjoyed it so much and still have a scrap bonk bulging with those articles . . ." (Mrs. l.W.) Lois of Good Ideas pit, please be patient don't push me. While you are waiting, tell me this: Did you do any somer saults this morning? If not, why not? Too decrepit? Follow! Same Advice In reply to Mrs. A.G., yes, there is a new Dr. Brady conducting Personal Health Service, and 'he follows the advice given by 01' Doc Brady. In reply to E.J.G.. yes, l.'ni the nut who was privileged to conduct the health column in the late, great Brooklyn Daily Eagle I'd like to know whether your grampa adopted the morning rolls as a living habit or considered the idea silly and slipped away , pre maturely. In reply to Mrs. L.W., one of the notions of the Dr. Brady who used to write the health column in the Oregon newspaper is that whole wheat, freshly cracked or ground in your own mill, is a boon for everybody's nutrition. My pa wasn't a doctor but he Let's Do Somersaults had a lot of ideas one ot his favorites being: All disease begins in the stomach. It you have my pamphlete Yankee Stomach for a copy send stamped, self-addressed envelope you'll notice what I say: Every one who values health. vile and long life should keep ALL Before I go quietly, of course I d like to get millions of Ameri cans in the habit of doing six for ward rolls (in my fighting days I called 'em somersaults, but I stump for his party in both the 1958 and 1960 campaigns He is the elected leader of his party. and the fact that he isn't to be a candidate himself for re-election should strengthen his position in the country. What he says will be believed because he conies before the people as a man without political ambition and as a dis interested exponent of the maxi mum good for the maximum num ber. He is still the Republican party's biggest asset. (When Charley McCann entered S. P. service Dallas was served by the narrow gauge Oregonian railroad extending from Airlie lo Coburg via Rays and Fulquartz landings). Evans Products Co. of Detroit, Mich., had this day 17. years ago started construction on their larga and modern plywood manufactur ing plant at Lebanon. (This plant with 1,050 employes produces 150 million feet of plywood annually. Its payroll is about $1,500,000 an nually. Since 1944 the enterprise has been knowq as Cascades Ply wood Corp.). Funeral services on this day 17 years ago had been held in Port land for B. F. Irvine, 77, blind editor of the Oregon Journal. He had entered that newspaper's em ployment in 1908. i Editor Irvine was born in Jackson county's rough and tumble Logtown, a roar ing mining camp in the early 1860s. When this writer visited the site of Logtown a Harrison's Yellow rosebush alone marked the location of this vanished gljost town). Delbcrt V. Price's store at Rick reall had been destroyed by fire causing a loss of about $4500. The" some of the richest people in this 1 " ""u!. " " country and they havc never been L, H (h t 2 more prosperous, and for them to ! ff , 2? 3 " ..,-...,!. .. i, u.,i i...Ai 1 Goodell store for nearly 50 years. tin the 1880s Rickrcall was more commonly known as Dixie though it never officially had that name. Many Southerners lived in the com munity and feeling for the South ran high there during the Civil War). Harbor). Charley Mc- ben maxwri.l Cann, roadmastcr in the Dallas district for Southern Pacific, had retired after 49 years and 11 months of service. He had entered S. P. employment as a track labor er at Milwaukic, Ore., June 2, 1890. News Quotes By UNITED PRESS WASHINGTON Secretary of Defense Charles E. Wilson on U.S. Chamber of Commerce criti cism of defense spending: "My friends in the U.S. Cham ber of Commerce, they represent gives me a pain. NASHVILLE. Tenn. - Robert Sarnoff, president of the National Broadcasting Co., predicting that Revival of MVA? Omaha World Herald The Missouri Vapey Authority issue has been all but dead for several years, but efforts are. being made to give it new life. 'Charges that Missouri River water is being misused will be aired this week before the com bined Interior and Insular Affairs and Public Works Committees of the Senate. Presiding will be Sen ator Murray of Montana, a veteran advocate of valley authorities. Electric co - operatives in the Dakotas complain that river flows are regulated to the advantage of navigation and the disadvantage of power generation. They are ask ing Congress to do something. Early in the Pick-Sloan Plan, proponents of an MVA tried to soon will be within the reach of everyone: As the quantity goes up, the cost goes down." NEW YORK - Gambler Frank Costello to theatrical agent Wil liam Kennedy after an assailant's bullet creased Costello's scalp: "Somebody tried to get me. Get a doctor." WASHINGTON - FBI Director .1. Edgar Hoover charging that1 peddlers of obscene literature' are contributing to the rising rate of sex crimes: I "It would be naive to assume ; that there's no relation between I the mounting dchge or such filth, and the increase in sex crimes." CROWN POINT, Ind. - George Robert Brown, confessed sex mnr-i dcrer of two women, in denying! that he killed two Chicago sisters in a similar crime: "I've already confessed to two! inaiana murders and I know I'm! going to burn for them. Why' should I confess lo more?" DOG ACT PONCA CITY, Okla. Wl-Down-town traffic stopped here when a dog carrying a paper sack in its mouth dropped the sack in the middle of a street. Soma sand wiches fell out. The dog stopped, ate the sandwiches, picked up the empty sack and went on. "We Were All So Astounded ... ! know thai riilsrilivi art wai mh an impertant part l tha fg. naral ntvita. Wa all lhaught Howell-Edwards Funeral Home wai parfact. Wa u couldn't ba ll"! that it could ba dona." can t get mad at anybody any keep a feud fired up between the Budget Courage Albany Democrat-Herald Cutting that whopoing federal budget has its difficulties, but every last congressman is devoted to me cause of thrift. more) before breakfast every" upper and lower regions of the Monday the senate housing sub- mnrninff. In mtrsuit of this amhi- hacin u-hila thi.v Drniimt that th TEETH in good working order all ! tion. I invite every Tom. Dick, and I nnlv wav In achieve ruai- wa tn ;thc time. ! Harriet who happens to read this establish an authoritv with rawer After all. I'm not exactly what piece to send me stamped, self-i any old gecier can call doddering addressed envelope and ask for or decrepit. I turn out as much -the Somersaultauqua pamphlet, copy seven days a week as I did j w hich describe and illustrates for awav bark In the halvcon days ! ward rolls and tells what they are when a doctor could tell the truth 'good for. Try m for a year or zens of the Missouri Basin didn't i million in print without getting a lot of so. If at the end of the trial period want any part of a TV A super-' years. to make irrevocable decisions on committee locked out reporters while handling the slum clearance and urban renewal bill. The Presi dent requested a one-year aporo- water use. jpriation of $175 million. The present controversy has The committee adjourned, and many of the old one's earmarks. ! without announcing its vote, re- An overwhelming majority of eiti-! ported that it had approved $250 each year lor four DEFEAT FOR SPENDERS We read that it is impossible to cut federal or state budgets. Next election we will read of the I organizations on bis neck. If you you are not glad you did, I'll re- state 10 years ago. There is no j There's nothing 'o this budget nru'Hi oi inu.Mj wnu sfliu u. arc jum waning uuiil i ta.v wi iu iuiiu inr iuii puiiuaac pi ivo w ivn- iMMin 10 oeurve iney wouia cutting wnen you can work Sherman County Journal J the green pastures or the burning, out argument, ' Island for it today. 1 secrecy. Schaefer Corn Remedy The corn or callous should come off in t to 10 days. 25c SCHAEFER'S DRUG STORE Open Dally 7:30 a. m. to i p.m Sundays 9 m. to 3 p. m. 13S N. Commercial 0