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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 29, 1955)
90V9 PDFOD (OREGON) "Xverybody In Southern Oregon Reada The Mail Tribune CPubliahedP Dally Except Saturday by MEDFORD PRINTING CO. North Fir St. Phone 2-S141 ROBERT W9 BUHL. Editor HERB GREY AdvertiainB Manager Z C FERGUSON Hni!in Editor ERIC AXAEN JR. City Editor HARRV CHIPMAN. Telegraph Editor RICHARD JEWETT Sport Editor OLIVE ST ARCHER. Society Editor JACK JACKSON. Sunday Editor GERALD ilATHAM. Circulation Mgr. O An Independent Newspaper Entered as aeeond daaa matter at Medford. Oregon, under Act of March 3. 1897 . " ' SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mail In Advance: Per copy 10c. Daily and Sunday One year $13.00 Daily and Sunday Six month! 650 Daily and Sunday Three mos. J0 Sunday Only One year 3.50. By Carrier In Advance Mediord. Aahland. Central Point Eagle Point. Jacksonville. Gold Hill. Phoenix. Shady Cove. Rogue River. Talent and on motor route: ... nn Daily and Sunday One year 15 00 Daily and Sunday One month 1M Carrier and Dealer 5c per copy. All Terma Cash in Advance Official Paper of the City of Medford official Paper of Jackson County iru Pr.n Full Leased Wire BUREAU Advertising Kepresenuiuvc. WEST-HOLUDAY COMPANY. INC. Office. In New York, picaea De troit San Francisco. Loa Angelei. SWportland. St Louia Atlanta. Vaneoover B.C. NATIONAL EDITORIAL aotfl-ATIQN BtauMUltUa NIWIPAPlt pUBllSHItS ASSOCIATION Flight or Time Medford and Jackson County History from the files of The Mail Tribune 10. 20. 30 and 10 years ago. I la 10 YEARS AGO Sept. 29, 1945 (It was Saturday) Naval hospital at Camp White receives 168 patients Wednes day. From Arthur Perry's Ye Smudge Pot column: The mighty hunters have started hieing to the hills to slay the bounding deer. All signs indicate there will be more hunters than deer, and the alleged shortage of am munition will be conspicuous . by Its absence. -' 20 YEARS AGO Sept. 29. 1935 j (It was Sunday) Applegate cabin and Talent barn burn in rash of fires. City Physician Dr. L. D. Ins keep urges cooperation of peo ple in reporting diseases, es peciallyetneasles. e SO YEARS AGO Sept. 29. 1925 (It was Tuesday) Leonard Carpenter ranch house and Southern Oregon Gas company "plant' near Phoenix catch fire, quickly put out by use of "chemicals." From the Local and Personal column: Concrete is now being gpured into the footing trenches of the new high school building, which operation commenced yes terday. Excavating for the base ment has commenced. It will only be large enough, it is under stood, to accommodate the heat ing furnaces. 40 YEARS AGO Sept. 29, 1915 (It was Wednesday) Governor to be in Medford for the formal opening of the new armory of the Seventh company. Band park concert to include "The Templar March, "Amer ican Patrol," "Kiss of Spring," "Silver Fox," "The Mill in the Forest," grand selection of Ren Ick's hits. "Isle d' Amour," and "Days of Old." What's the Answer? Can You Get 4 of the 7? Copr. 1955. Editorial Research Reaert 1. More autos were made in the U. S. in the first eight months of 1955 than in all 1954; right or wrong? 2. The Eastern Star order is affiliated with the Knights of ilumbus, B'nai B'rith, Ameri can Legion, American Federa tion of Labor, or the Masons? 3. Colombo is the capital of Colombia, Pakistan, Indonesia, Venezuela or Ceylon? . 4. Fganklin D. Roosevelt had or hadn't feeen elected to federal oillce before being elected Pres ident in 1932? 5. The Autronic Eye on a car is to depress headlights, reflect traffic signals, shine through fog, or show whenthe battery is dis charging? 6. JkIore bills were introduced in the Senate this year per Sena tor, or in the House per Repre sentative, or was it about 50-50? 7. A "horse mackerel" is a sailfish, marlin, tarpon, cod. or tuna? The Answers: 1. Right. 2. Ma sons. 3. Ceylon. 4. Hadn't. 5. Depress headlights. 6.. More in Senate per Senator. 7. Tuna. Low in cost Quick in Results! Use Tribune Want Ads MAIL TRIBUNE Editorial Correspondence San Francisco, Sept. 27 The entire world Is hoping and praying for President Eisenhower's prompt and complete recovery including all the leading Democrats and Communist Russians. The latter, Incidently, sent some of the best phrased messages, from the standpoint of good taste, in the vast collection. So one touch of danger,' like one touch of nature, makes the whole world kin. It will be a different story when politics, domestic and In ternational, enter the picture, which as Mr. Eisenhower continues to improve, will become more and more apparent. e With the World Series starting, however, even politics is adjourned for the week. In view of the records of the two teams in the closing days, it is hard to see how the Yanks can lose, but this may be the one time when the dope-bucket will be turned upside down, and not in their favor. As usual here's HOPING! Speaking of sports, why doesn't some sport magazine feature Chick Evans of. Chicago. He won the national amateur only a few years after Chan Egan, but he is still playing golf. We don't mean "older boys" golf either Evans is playing TOURNAMENT golf, and usually in the 70's. Not the low 70's and sometimes in the low 80's, but he is in there pitching all the time. We don't know his exact age, but he certainly won't see 60 again. He surely deserves some space. (That's one great asset golf has as a sport, as long as you can walk you can play!) Stanford may not have the best football coach In the country but it has the most unusual one. His name is "Chuck" Taylor. If he has EVER predicted his team would lose we failed to listen in. After being beaten by Oregon State in one of the major up sets of the season's opening, Stanford tangles with the 1954 Rose Bowl champions, "Ohio State," this coming Saturday. But is "Chuck" down-hearted? Not for a minute. Although beaten 10-0 by OSC he' thinks his boys played a good game in the north, have a better team than the Beavers, and will dem onstrate this to the world against Ohio State. If there is such a thing as a football coach being TOO cheerful and optimistic, then Stanford certainly has him. Speaking of football the "pro" teams have a corner on the game as it SHOULD he played. And now that "old college try" spirit is not entirely absent either. The local "49'ers" were beaten Sunday by the LA Rams to join in with other football teams in one of the prize upset week ends of football history. Quite a crowd of rooters came up from Los Angeles, cheered them selves hoarse up at Kezar and a crowd of them paraded around the lobby of this hotel (the Clift) afterward with Ram banners flying, which took the writer back many years for those banners were dark blue, the only difference being there was a "ram" spelled in white instead of a big "Y." The "pro" game will never crowd out the amateur game In footbaJJ as has been the case in baseball, we believe, but no one can deny the popular appeal of the former is increasing at a faster rate at the present time. There was an accident on the Powell Street cable car line the other day several people injured but none seriously. As usual the Incident has revived the demand In some quarters that ALL cable cars here be abolished as dangerous and hopelessly out-of-date. However, whenever the people of San Francisco have had a chance to vote on TOTAL abolishment they have voted "No." The undersigned hopes they will continue to do so. We hope the street cars (without cables) will be retained also. In short we don't like bus transportation here or anywhere else, but particularly here. Without those cable cars jerking up and down Nob Hill with bells clanging and passengers hanging on to the side-rails, San Francisco wouldn't be San Francisco. We have received a paid ad clipping dated September 21st in which the "Friendly Southern Pacific" boasts, quote: "Since World War II, the Southern Pacific has spent many thousands of dollars to locate or expand 141 in dustries in the area between Eugene-and Ashland. These have been the backbone of the .area's growth and pros perity." , , How generous and public-spirited! Now will the Friendly Southern Pacific please advertise or make public, at no cost, how many thousand dollars it spent and also how many thousand dollars it has taken in? According to the latest report, present rate will total in round numbers $60,000,000. Would it be too much to ask that the SP inform the customers in this area how many millions in profit were taken out of the area from Eugene to Ashland, where it claims the revenue is so scanty that passenger service of any kind That doesn't seem to be an unreasonable request to make. How about it? R.W.R. In The Day's By FRANK JENKINS As this is written a world famous heart specialist has just said that barring unforeseen complications President Eisen hower's prospects for recovery from his heart attack are "rea sonably" good. The bulletin adds: "Dr. White (the specialist) was so satisfied with the progress of the President that he left by plane immediately for his home in Boston." THAT, I'M sure, is at this par ticular moment the biggest news in the world. It is the biggest news in the world because President Eisen hower's condition is a matter of deep PERSONAL concern to every living human being. Ike (used as a term of affection, and not as a familiarity) has the re spect and the confidence of every person in the world in a measure possessed by no other leader. WHY THIS universal love and ' respect for him? Well, why do you love ana respect him? I think it is because you have FAITH in him. You believe that in every im portant situation he will do the thing he conceives to be RIGHT and therefore best for his coun try and mankind. TKE IS America's leader. America is the leader of the world at this moment in history. EVERYWHERE people recog nize that if the world is to be led out of war into peace, leader ship of Ike's particular kind is essential. If people are to be led, they must be willing to follow. People are willing to follow leaders like Ike. They are will ing to follow him because they TRUST him. IET'S INDULGE now in no J political speculations. Let's leave that to the professional politicians, whose chief concern is who gets what job, who will hold the reins of power in the days and the years to come. They will do plenty of speculating in any event. What those of us who are called THE PEOPLE are con- Thursday, September 29. 1953 the SP profits for 1955 at the can no longer be maintained.' News cerned with at this moment are Ike's health and his prospects of many more happy years. In the hoped-for event that his recovery is as complete as the heart spec ialist who has been quoted says is easily possible, Ike is entitled to be the judge as to how he will spend the years that may lie ahead for him. He is entitled to it because so far his life has been devoted to the welfare of his country and of mankind. ' rpHERE IS proper interest, of course, as to arrangements for "carrying on" while Ike is in disposed. That is routine. It will be handled. It has been handled before and will be handled now. If the head of the business be comes temporarily unable to perform his daily duties, his as sociates and his subordinates carry on. Vice-President Nixon says that as . to the technical de tails of handling state affairs while the President is temporar ily unable to do so a legal inter pretation will be needed from Attorney General BrownelL By "technical details," the signing of important paper is chiefly meant. One of the heavy and wearing physical duties a President of the United States must perform is the signing of HUGE STACKS of papers which under the constitution and the laws require the President's sig nature. OUT ALL that has been done before and can be done again. It of course WILL be done. On broad matters of national policy, the - National Security Council is our nation's chief pol icy-making agency. The National Security Council (which the President heads) includes the vice-president, the secretaries of state and defense, the foreign aid director, the mobilization direc tor and other officers. The Pres ident's cabinet is an all-important policy-making body. While President Eisenhower is (we all fervently hope) recover ing from his temporary ailment the routine affairs of our gov ernment will be carried on just as the affairs of private business organizations are carried on in similar circumstances. Today and By Walter THE PRESIDENT'S ILLNESS The President has been strick en at a moment when he is at the height of his popularity and his power. He has come to repre sent the hope of peace in the world and the unity of the nation at home. We are left, his doc tors tell us, with some Walter Lippmann days of anxi ious uncertainty, and beyond that with a task of carrying on through his convalescence for the rest of his term, and beyond that with the problem of his suc cession. We know that at the best he cannot for several months be expected to do the work of the President We are, therefore, face to face with what has be come almost certainly through a bad precedent based on mis understanding a grave defect of our constitutional system. This is the lack of a clear rule as to how the government is to be conducted when the President is ill. Almost certainly this de fect will need to be corrected now. There is no reason to doubt that it can be corrected. The root of the trouble is in a grammatical ambiguity in the text of the Constitution itself. It says (Article II, Section 1, Clause 6) that "in case of . . . inability to discharge the powers and duties of the said office, the same shall devolve on the Vice- President." The question is: to what do the words "the same" refer? Is it "the powers and duties" of the office of President which devolve on the vice-Pres- ident? Or is it the office itself? In other words, can the vice President discharge temporarily the powers and the duties of the President without himself be coming the President? Because of this uncertainty no President who was ill has ever allowed his powers and duties to "devolve even temporarily on the vice President. For it was not cer tain that he would still be Pres ident if and when he recovered. THIS ambiguity, which is due to faulty grammar, can be cured. There is very little doubt as to what the autors of the Con stitution meant, and what they meant was what common sense and practical convenience now require. They meant that when the President is incapacitated be cause he is 'ill, his powers and his duties, but not the office of President, are to be. taken over by the vice-President. The Vice President does not become the President But. he exercises the powers and duties of the Presi dent. For how long does he exer cise them? "Until," says the Constitution, "the disability be removed," that is to say until the President is well enough to do his necessary work again. There can be no serious doubt that this is the way the Consti tution ought to work. Yet, as we know, it did not work that way during the prolonged illnesses of Garfield and of Wilson. Anyone who remembers the obscurity, the intrigue, and the confusion during Wilson's incapacity will wish to take no chance on its being repeated today. fViJS practical question is how -a. "th nowers anrl rliitipc " Vint not the "office" can in a seemly way be made to devolve tempor arily and constitutionally on Vice-President Nixon. It is ob vious that he cannot assume those powers and duties on his own initiative. How then is the temporary delegation to be ef fected? The simplest procedure, it would seem, would be for the President to call Congress in special session and to send it a message saying that for the time being he is unable to discharge the powers and duties of his of fice, and to ask that Congress by concurrent resolution agree that the powers and duties shall de volve temporarily on the Vice- President. That message can, of course, be prepared for the President. There is no reason to suppose that he is so ill that he could not sign it. This proce dure would clear up once and for all the ambiguity of the Consti tution. Without some such for mal action Mr. Nixon will be in a most uncomfortable and con fusing position. The Vice-President, though he acts as President pro tern, would continue to be Vice-President. He would not take the Presiden tial oath of office, and there would be no question at all but that Mr. Eisenhower was the President of the United States. 4 LTHOUGH it is most desir- able, indeed necessary, that the line of authority should be made clear, the problem posed Dy the President s illness re mains a very serious one. There is bound to be a vacuum where he works so well as the repre sentative and the leader of the nation. This function of repre sentation and of leadership is inherent in the office of Presi dent and of the man who fills that office. It cannot be dele gated. The best that can be ex pected is that the Vice-President when he is the acting President, Tomorrow Lippmann will in the spirit as well as in the letter feel bound in his pol icies and program to act as his conscience tells him President Eisenhower would have acted. We may suppose that power of ultimate decision in the high est matters of state will for the time being be discharged by a group, in effect a council of state, consisting of the Vice President, the senior Cabinet of ficers, and the party leaders of Congress. The country will, I be lieve feel more secure if the composition and the operations of this group are not left to chance or shrouded in obscurity. The country will want to feel sure that it knows how, during the President's disability, it is in fact being governed. (Copyright, 1955. New York Herald Tribune, Inc.) Problem of Multiple Marriages Reaches United States By CHARLES M. McCANN United Press Correspondent - The problem of the Moslem wives, which started a battle of the sexes in Southeast Asia 15 months ago, has reached the United States. The problem is whether the Moslem hus band, who is legally entitled to four wives, should content himself in these modern Charles McCann nines w;ui uue. President Soekarno of Indo nesia started it in June, lao. when he took a second wife a beautiful divorcee with five chil dren. Premier Mohammed All of Pakistan was next. He married a second wife in Beirut, Leban on, last April. She had been his social secretary. King Idris of Libya followed suit. He took his second wife on June 5. ,. Women throughout the Mos lem world were outraged by the second marriages. There were in dignation meetings of women's organizations in cities all the It- -TT Boat Explodes, Burns Off Washington Shore Westport, Wash. (U.R) A 32, foot charter boat, the Serado, ex ploded and burned 200 yards off Westhaven dock yesterday but all seven persons aboard were saved by the Coast Guard, the Grays Harbor office reported. The boat, owned by West Sport Trollers and operated by Chet Pratt of Westport, and just fuel ed at Westhaven dock for a fish ing trip. The Serado traveled 200 yards offshore, then ex ploded and started burning. One of the passengers, Mrs. Dorothy Quick of Enumclaw, jumped overboard but was pick ed up by the Coast Guard. Other passengers removed from the boat by the Coast Guard were Stanley Koskivick, Tacoma; John Beard, Seattle; Al bert Uhler, Auburn; Warren Beerman, Enumclaw, and Harry Quick, husband of Dorothy Quick. GOP Urged To Slop Talking Candidates Los Angeles (U.R) A. J. Gock,' former board chairman of the Bank of America and a state Republican leader, today urged the GOP to stop discuss ing possible presidential candi dates during President Eisen hower's illness. "Any talk among Republicans of candidacies or succession to the presidency is presumptuous and in very poor taste," said Gock. "No one, and this perhaps in cludes the medical specialists, can do anything other than spec ulate as to the extent of the Pres ident's fufture activities," Gock said. Body Recovered From Klamath Canal Klamath Falls U.R) Police and sheriffs officers yesterday recovered the body of Patrick Thomas Callahan, 4, from the waters of a swift-flowing irriga tion canal near Klamath Union high school. . The boy, his dog, and a five- year-old companion, T i m m y Amuchastegui, had been play ing along the banks of Canal "A" which flows from Upper Klamath Lake to southern Klam ath county irrigation districts. The Callahan boy, son of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Callahan, fell about eight feet into the canal. There was no barricade along the bank. Timmy notified neigh bors and police were called. Matter of Fact By Joseph A bop ADLAI AND DICK Washington In Chicago at the moment Adlai E. Stevenson and his growing group of advis ers and man agers are still arguing about just when he will make his announcement, about whether to do it in a press confer ence or in his scheduled speech to the Demo- Joseph Also cratic National Committee dinner on Nov. 19, and about other such details. But these customary activities of an incipient candidate are now going on in a wholly new atmosphere. Long before Presi dent Eisenhower was so tragic ally stricken, Stevenson had made up his mind to go all-out for the Democratic nomination. His intentions have not been V Moslem way from Cairo, Egypt, to Ma nila in the Philippines. Palace Stoned The palace in which Soekarno maintained wife No. 2 was stoned. Shouting women demon strated outside Ali's home. It was all a just problem for the Moslem husbands and wives to fight out until Mohammed Ali brought wife No. 2 to the United States and wife No. 1 fol lowed him. That presents a problem for American and United Nations of ficials and hostesses. Should they recognize wife No. 1 or wife No. 2 or both? It happens that Mohammed All was ambassador here once before. Then he had only one wife. She was. one of the most popular women in the diplomatic, corps. Ali was premier when he re married. Now he is out of the prime ministry and back here as ambassador and chief U. N. lelegate. J. he plural wives problem seems to have arisen first be cause leaders in some newly- liberated Moslem countries de emed to go old fashioned as re gards marriage. Step Backward ' . But this problem assumed the proportions of a social crisis in the Moslem world because the women . are.: determined to win complete, sex equality. They want to go forward, not back ward. Soekarno must have been sur prised when he started it all. He married secretly, and the news leaked out only weeks after- Ward. TT 1 "omens organizations pro tested to nun, to his cabinet and to Parliament There was a call for a world congress of Moslem wives to demand that plural marriages be legally banned. Before Mohammed Ali remar ried, it was disclosed that two of his cabinet ministers had taken second wives. Apparently tie determined to follow their example. King Idris is the only one who can give a real excuse. He is 66. His first wife has borne him no children. He holds that as a monarch he must beget an heir. Bible FlisTole Shown at Rogue River Rogue River A collection of Bible films will be shown at Rogue River Veterans of For eign Wars hall, Oct 3 through 6 at 8 p.m., daily. Each presen tation -will be different and the public is invited. The films are furnished through the Laymen's Home Missionary movement with head quarters in Philadelphia, Pa. The group is nonsectarian and interdenominational. .For the most part the pictures are in technicolor and the players are professional actors. The pictures are for educa tional purposes and the object in presenting them is to promote home Bible study. They will be exhibited by one of the mover ment's traveling pastors, Wil liam Eschrich of Milwaukee, Wis. US Troops in Austria Join Forces in Italy Brenner Pass, Italy U.R) American occupation troops withdrew from Austria over this historic invasion route today to join allied defense forces in Italy. The troops, removed under the Austrian independence agree ment, will plug the defense line gap in northern Italy just south of this Alpine pass. The first units of the 5,500 man U.S. force made the frontier crossing shortly after dawn.,Rid ing in jeeps and trucks, the 200 officers and men from the first battalion of the 350th Infantry were headed for Vwenza. They will be billeted in two camps outside the town in the northern plane of the Po river. 5l changed in any particular by the President s illness. His pros pects, however, have been trans formed overnight. The reason for this transfor mation can be found in the politi cal polls. Only a little more than three months ago, the in quiring Dr. Gallup tested public sentiment toward a long series of possible Presidential candidates. His results showed Stevenson being roundly beaten by Eisen hower, by a margin of 57 to 40. But the same results also showed Stevenson trouncing the man who is now the leading Republi can possibility, Vice President Richard Nixon, by a margin of 56 to 35. It is fashionable; of course, to mock the pollster. No doubt they deserve mockery. But rightly or wrongly, the practical fact remains that the pollsters have acquired very great politi cal influence. The late Senator Robert A. Taft surely would have received the Republican nomination in 1948 or 1952, if the polls had not run so consist ently against him. The politi cians wanted Taft, but the polls made him look like a loser. What has given the great fillip to Stevenson's candidacy is the simple fact that he no longer looks like a loser. Instead, with a second term for President Eisenhower beyond the bounds of practical discussion, Stevenson now looks like a winner. He will have hard competition, most probably from Senator Estes Kefauver of Tennessee. If he does not perform well as an avowed candidate, he may get even more serious competition from Gov. Averell Harriman of New York. Every other aspiring Democrat will also be longing to jump into the race. But Steven son Is still front-runner. And if the front-runner also looks like a winner, he generally gets the nod. In other words, while his competition will be tougher, Stevenson automatically has be come a stronger competitor. That is the simplest summary. 'Meanwhile, the depth and darkness of the Republican dilemma is also revealed by the same polls. They showed Chief Justice Earl Warren running exactly even with Stevenson, the politicians agree with the pollsters that Warren would be the strongest Republican nomi nee. But the Chief Justice has re moved himself from considera tion in the strongest statement he was able- to write. Those close to him say that his oppo sition to putting the . Supreme Court into politics would not be overcome by a personal appeal from President Eisenhower himself. If Warren is out there fore, the next place among Republican- possibilities certainly must be accorded to Richard Nixon. The Vice President has the affection of the President, which certainly will count for much, and may win the day for him. He has a great position, in which his duties now will be come more important than ever. Among the Republican politi cians with truly national stand ing, there can be very little doubt that Nixon bulks largest after Eisenhower in the public eye. Yet as of this writing, Nixon has got to perform two feats that will be all the more difficult be cause the performance must be simultaneous. First of all, he must secure the Republican nom ination against angry and em bittered rivals, not the least of whom are the two men, Sen. William Knowland and . Gov. Goodwin Knight, who control the Republican organization in Nixon's home state of California. It will not be hard for Nixon to get the nomination, to be sure, if President Eisenhower publicly sponsors him, as Theodore Roos evelt sponsored William Howard Taft But if the President does not sponsor, the Vice President cannot go all-out for the nomina tion. As Eisenhower's highest subordinate, Nixon needs Eisen hower's approval before he can open campaign headquarters or launch into the other usual activ- We Specialize in Funeral CHAPEL MORTUARY Across from Frank Morgan FUNERAL Communications o Letter to the Editor must bear the nam and address of the writer although under certain - circum ttancea the use ot a pen name or initial for publication i permia tible. The Mail Tribune reserves the right to edit all letters with an eye to clarification and condensa tion Letters submitted for publica tion must not exceed 400 words OLD CARS To the Editor: As a young old timer, how many names of old make autos could be recalled? We can think of a few at ran dom. Many more have gone with the ' vanishing enterprise. Here are some alphabetically, but not necessarily in rotation. Auburn, Brush and Bush, Car ter-Car, Capps, Crow - Elkhart, Cole 30, Dort, Doble Steamer, Durant, DeFoe, Essex, Flanders, (EMF) Franklin, Dixie Flyer, Flint Hupmobile, Jeffery, Jack son, Kissel-Car, Lozier, Mason, Matag, Marmon, Maxwell, Mon itor, Moon, Moreland (J) Mitch ell, Overland, Pan-American, Pierce - Arrow, Regal - Racer, Rambler, Stoddard-Dayton, Sax on, Stutz, Temple or Templer, Thomas Flyer, Stanley Steamer, Star, Sellers Car, Vellie, Winton- Six, White Steamer. The letter "M" seems to lead the list of names with eight.. Peerless was a mail-order assem bly make. Bert Kissinger, 520 Boardman, " Medford, Ore. Russian Ballerina To Perform in U.S. Moscow (U.R) Galina Ul- anova, Russia's most famous pri- - ma ballerina, and Soviet compos-. er Arm Khachaturian will per form in the United States, it was disclosed today. Carleton Smith, director of the National Arts Foundation of New York, announced the two Soviet artists had accepted his invitation to go to America. Final arrangements -for ap pearances have not been com pleted, Smith said, but he hopes Khachaturian will be able to direct the Boston Symphony Orchestra in his own compositi ons next spring. ities of overt candidates.' While delicately, maneuvering for the nomination, . moreover, Nixon must also try to win over those middle-of-the-road, and in dependent voters whose prefer ence for Stevenson is indicated by the polls. This effort of win ning over the middle-of-the-roaders and the independents is in some measure inconsistent with the effort to win over the Republican bosses. So. - Nixon will need all his determination, astuteness and courage to realize the hopes that his friends already quite visibly cherish. Copyright. 1955. New York Herald Tribune. Inc. Was It A Ghost? GEO. N. TAYLOR It was a wild night on the sea of Galilee. The hard - muscled fishermen who followed Jesus, strained at the Dars as they Ducked the bl as t, their little craft ris- ing and falling with the heav ing sea. Then a something, all in white comes Award them. Hear their cry a ghost a zhost. N o w it is hid in the trough of the sea. Again it is lifted and turns to ward the boat. But it is no ghost It is Christ. Hear His greeting It is I; be of good cheer." He entered into the boat and at His word, the wind and the waves obeyed His will and quiet reigned. And just as Jesus quieted the wind and the waves, so He stands to quiet your troubled heart. But down within, you must believe in Him as your Lord and Saviour. At that God gives you eternal life. "For with the heart, man believeth unto righteousness" Romans 10:10. This message sponsored by an Oregon dairyman and family. Adv. Service the Courthouse Harold Snodgrass DIRECTORS 0 .