FOUH MEDFORD (OREGON)
MedfordUTribune
1veryon In Southern Oregon
RtatU Tho Mail Tribune"
Fubluhed Daily Except Saturday by
MEDFORD PRINTING CO
37-2 North Fir St. Phone a-6141
ROBERT W BUHL, Editor
TTETRB GREY AdvertLnnff Manager
GERALD LATHAM. Buatneaa Manager
ER:C ALLEN JR.. Maiiafiine Editor
EARL H ADAMS. Cltv Editor
HARRY CHIPMAN Telegraph Editor
RICHARD JEWFTT Snort Editor
OLIVE STARCHER Society Editor
DALE ERICKSON. CircuiaUon Mgr.
An Independe nt Newspaper
Entered as second cJaaa matter at
Med lord Oregon, under Act of
March 3. 1837
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Mail In Advance: Per Copy 10c.
Daily and Sunday One year f 15 00
Daily and Sunday Six months 8 00
Dally and Sunday Three moi 4.25
Sunday OnJy One year $4 20.
By Carrier In Advance Medford.
Ashland. Central Point Eagle Point.
Jacksonville. Gold Hill. Phoer.ix.
Shady Cove. Rogue River. Talent,
and on motor routes:
Daily and Sunday One year S18 00
Dally and Sunday One month 1JS0
Carrier and Dealers 10c per copy
All Terms Cash In Advance
Ofrir-tat Paper of the City of Medford
Official Paper of Jackson C'ou nty
United Press Full Leased Wire
MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU
OF CIRCULATION
Advertising Representative:
WEST-HOLIDAY COMPANY. INC
Offices In New York Chicago, de
trolt. San Francisco. Los Angeles.
Seattle. Portland St. Louis Atlanta
Vancouver. B C
-CD
NATIONAL EDITORIAL
I ASSOCIATION
U W
NiWS fk tl
PUBLISHERS
ASSOCIATION
Flight o' Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30, 40
and BO years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
Oct. 24, 1948 (Thursday)
Bud Turbough of Thompson
creek probably will not enjoy
eating the deer he killed last
Friday; he had to kill it the
hard way with an axe and
hammer.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: Due to the
rains, farmers are behind with
their fall plowing, and ahead
with their coming to town.
20 YEARS AGO
Oct. 24, 1936 (Saturday)
Harvesting the pear crop of
the Rogue valley completed this
week with the exception of the
winter Nelis pears and New
town apples.
Annual coat and dress mak
ing school for homemakers en
rolled in extension projects in
Jackson county will commence
Monday.
30 YEARS AGO
Oct. 24. 1926 (Sunday)
A meeting will be held to
night to discuss the removal of
the county seat.
The "Toggery's sweeping sale
of men's suits, overcoats and
furnishings will continue
through this week.
40 YEARS AGO
Oct 24, 1916 (Tuesday)
The Philadelphia Auc.ion
company has been bringing
home the bacon to the specula
tors who have been buying box
apples at prevailing flo.b. prices
and selling at auction in Phila
delphia. W. C. Lamed returns from a
week's business trip to Portland.
50 YEARS AGO
Oct. 24. 1906 (Wednesday)
The high school department
now numbers 88 as three mem
bers were added Monday.
The building boom in Med
ford still continues; on the west
side of the railroad tracks sev
eral new buildings started in the
past week.
What's the Answer?
Can Too Get 4 of the 7?
Copr. 1953 Editorial Research
Report
1. Washington, D. C. public
schools were integrated or seg
regated before the Supreme
Court gave its anti-segregation
ruling in 1954?
2. Who was the last previous
vice president to be re-elected?
3. About 3, 8, 15 or 25 per cent
of all American adult males are
members of the Masons?
4. The elections in Alaska Oct.
16 were carried by the Demo
crats or Republicans, or was it
about 50-50?
5. Which state has the legend
"Wheat State" on its auto tags?
6. Adam C. Powell. Negro
Representative from N. Y., a
Democrat, is for Eisenhower or
Stevenson or has taken no sides?
7. Whiffletrees are found in
forests, on sail boats, behind
lunch counters, in stables, or at
reunions of Yale alumni?
The answers: 1. Segregated.
2. John N. Garner. 3. About 8
per cent. 4. Carried by Demo
crats. 5. Kansas. 6. For Eisenhow
er. 7. In stables (attachments on
carriages for harness).
SUBMITS RESIGNATION
Portland U.PJ Clay Brown,
president of M and M Wood
Working company for the past
two years, said today he has sub
mitted his resignation to the
new Simpson ownership, effec
tive Nov. 1.
MAIL TRIBUNE
UN Forum, Not Arena
Throughout the year there is. such a surfeit of
special "days," "weeks" and "months" designed
to do everything from selling more potato chips to
achieving greater sympathy for underprivileged cats
that we seldom get excited about any of them any
more.
We're not "excited" about United Nations Week,
Oct. 22 to 28, either, but we are glad to have it as an
excuse to pat the UN on the back.
Whether or not the UN has ever prevented a major
war is difficult to tell because you can't count wars
that haven't happened. But the record certainly indi
cates that several wars would have started had it not
have been for the UN.
"THIS, of course, is the chief and most important
value of the United Nations the prevention of
war before it starts, because we start talking rather
than shooting.
The UN, as organized at present, can't very well
stop a war once it gets started, but it is a great moral
force against war, simply because it is there, because
it offers a spotlighted platform where the world can
see and judge the positions of the disputing nations.
The moral force which this exerts cannot be over
estimated. We believe it has done more toward pre
venting war than almost any other factor.
And the annual budget of the UN equals the price
of only a day or two of war.
COME OF of the secondary functions of the UN
the permanent and specialized agencies like
wise serve to good purpose.
A number of them, little known in the United
States, are best-known in some of the underdeveloped
nations where their services can and do make the dif
ference between existence and living.
They deal with such things as labor conditions;
food supplies and agriculture; international civil av
iation; banking and reconstruction funds; postal
regulation ; interna tional telecommunications ;
health ; refugees, and weather studies.
They make the wheels of international trade and
cooperation turn more smoothly.
e
SEVENTY-SIX nations now belong to the UN, thirty
YY11A ftlOTI vrnmknv itIii iaimaJ ntlAn 1. a
Lliau WIG UUJJ1UC1 VV 111111 JU11CU W11C11 LUG
charter was ratified in San Francisco eleven years ago
today.
The UN is not a world government. (Some people
think it should be.) It is, instead, a voluntary organi
zation of sovereign states which have agreed to meet
and talk things over, and to see that some things of
benefit to all are accomplished.
Its record over eleven years is a remarkable one
even though it has not been universally successful
in its objective of cultivating world friendship and co
operation. That, perhaps, is too much to expect of any
organization under present circumstances.
But it has served as a balance wheel, a court of
world opinion a forum rather than an arena. And
that is important. E.A.
Bucket
The day may come when the old DC-3 will vanish
from the nation's skies but it will be a long time off.
One of our pilot friends, calls the dependable old
planes the workhorse of the air. It's true, too. They
could hardly be called the "Model T" of the planes,
for they are fairly big and comfortable, but they've
probably logged more miles carrying more passengers
than any other aircraft in histoiy.
I JNITED Air Lines this
DC-3s, and will shift
vairs which have become familiar to Medford resi
dents through their regular use on most of the sched
ules in recent years.
We'll still be seeing the
for West Coast will continue to use them for another
year or so, before they switch over to a new turbo
prop plane called a "Friendship," of German Fokker
design made in this country by Fairchild ; and South
west Airways will continue
in addition to the Martin 2 -
fJNITED is selling its DC-3s, most of them to busi-
nesses for executive planes, and it is one measure
of their durability and dependability that thev are
getting about as much for
or so rumor has it.
About 11,000 of the "tireless" DC-3s were built
between their advent in 1936 and about 1945, and it
is estimated that at least half of them are still flying.
Wherever pilots gather to
of the DC-3 is pointed out
and did do under all
Its designer, Donald Douglas, recently received an
award, which, as one writer
tine to a flying machine that has been whining its
way into man's affection since 1936 the stocky,
sturdy, utterly dependable bucket of bolts known as
the DC-3. E.A.
Pilot Rock Youth Top
PortlandU.R) Darrell Horn,
17, of Pilot Rock, took top hon
ors in the 4-H beef showmanship
competition at the Pacific Inter
national Livestock exposition
here yesterday.
Horn exhibited a 136-pound
hereford that he won at the
show last year for his all-around
skill in raising and showing beef
animals.
Runnerup was Steve Burnet,
Wednesday, October 24, 1959
of Bolts
week will end its use of
over instead to the Con-
"3s" for a while though.
to use the Douglas planes
0 - 2s now in use.
them as they originally paid
talk about planes, the worth
in tales of what they could
conditions.
put it, was a "tardy valen
Winner at PI
15, of Moro. He and Horn had
earlier been named as intermedi
ate and senior age division
champions. Junior 4-H showman
was Bob Monahan, 12, of Con
don. Top showman honors in the
FFA division went to Gordon
Wanner of Molalla. Reserve
champion was Roger Rothrock
of Pendleton.
Communications
Letters to th Editor must bear the
unaer certain circumstances the use or a pen name or initial tot- publication
it permissible. The Mail Tribune reserves the riqht to edit all letters with a
view to clarification ind condensation,
not exceed 400 words.
Answers Mrs. Padgham
To the Editor: In your issue
of Oct. 14. .was a letter from
Jane Gillaspie calling attention
to the fact that funds contri
Cuted for the tuberculosis cam
paign were being used to pro
mote a campaign for fluorida
tion. To say that such a revela
tion was amazing is putting it
mildly. '
However, the statement of
Mrs. Henry Padgham of the
Jackson County Health associa
tion in attempting to justify
this expediture by the fact th.it
their char'er permits it, is still
more amazing. It apparenUy
tries to convey the impression
that regardless of the purpose
for which funds are solicited
lier association can spend them
as they see fit
Letters received by me in the
past in behalf of the Christmas
Seal Sales (and I presume the
same letters went to others) have
i-tated specifically that the funds
were to promote the crusade
against tuberculosis. If the funds
are being used for other pur
poses than the fight against
tuberculosis, then it should be
so stated in the solicitation let
ters.
There are many contrioutors
to this fund who do not favor
fluoridation. Is it fair and above-
board to use their contributions
given for a specific purpose to
further a cause to which they
tre opposed? Fluoridation must
be decider at the polls, but if
its passage depends upon such
questionable methods as are be
ing used in this case, then it
deserves defeat.
Howeve , the sad part of the
whole story is the fact that an
old and worthy cause, the cru
sade against tuberculosis, has
been tarnished by the actions
of a few overzealous persons
It remaini to be seen whether
contributions to the Christmas
Seal Sales will be given as free
ly in the ruture as they have in
the past.
A. J. Curry
906 West Main st.
Medford, Ore.
Wants Him to Try Farming
To the Editor: The prosperity
banner wiiich Ellsworth is wav
ing in Southwest Oregon looks
mighty moth-eaten when you
consider the family farmer's in
come is down more than 25 per
cent from 3V4 years ago and
that his mortgage debt went up
$2.4 billion in the same period.
If Ellsworth had the farmers'
interest at heart he should have
done something during his 14
years in office, not try to tell us
how rich we are two months
before he hopes to go back to
Washington.
It was Roreburg's Ellsworth
who continually voted against
making funds available for the
Rural Electrification Adminis-
tiation so mere farmers could
get the benefits of low-cost elec
tricity. And on this point I like the
stand taken by Charles Porter
of Eugene who should be sent
to Washington so Ellsworth can
try a little farming out here
under the 'estrictions he helped
set up.
Porter has gone on record for
Eld to the family farmer and
no one but Ellsworth and a few
rabid GOP selfish interests
would say. we don't need it.
And don't let Editor Ellsworth
tell you the Soil Bank will lift
Western Oregon into a bright
spot of his prosperity. . . we just
don't do '.hat kind of farming
out here, Harris.
Our stake in a healthy agri
culture requires that we lift the
ltstraints put on the REA pro
gram, farmers' home adminis
tration, soil conservation; farm
ctedit programs, agricultural re
search and other important farm
programs which have lagged un
der the GOP rule.
We need policies which pro
mote wider distribution of in
come, full employment, full pro
duction and full consumption . .
but we won't get these things
with stumt ling-blocks like Ells
worth screaming "socialism '
every timi. ihe farmer needs a
Lelping hand.
Thanks to Ellsworth, Western
Oregon is one of the dark spots
of the "spotty prosperty' 1 he
does so much io promote. It's
long past the time we need a
man who understands our prob
lems and will work for us. That
representative will be Charles
O. Porter.
Wanda Kare,
Talent, Ore.
Ouoles the Bible
To the Editor: I would like
to get in my two bits worth be
fore election on this water quest-on.
I have been in Medford
a-most three years. I like it here
and own my own home. God
has given us pure water, why
tamper with it? Do people think
God made a mistake when He
made the water pure? The Bible
says (St. Mark 7:37) He hath
done aU things well. But the
way some people want to change
things you would think God
needed a dictator. The people
who want fluoride in the water
1ft them have it handy and
a ink as much as they want,
and not force it on others As
for me I do not want it. If
name and address, of the writer, although
Letters submitted for publication must
fluoride is put in the water, my
home will be for sale.
Etta Graham
319 South Peach st
Medford, Ore.
More on Fluorides
To the Editor: Anyone inter
ested in this movement to put
fluoride in this city's water sys
tem may write to Washington
D.C., to get tioth sides of the
question. So you don't have to
depend on local discussion if you
don't wish to.
But the most important adver
sity of this project is this: that
each and every one has the per
sonal right to choose his own
medication or preventive.
I have always heard that, even
your own doctor cannot lawfully
force any medicine or treatment
on you if you strongly object to
it.
I was at this fluoride meeting
at the court house last Friday,
And to be sure I had not been
misinformed, I asked the doctor
and the lawyer that was there, if
this was really true, and they
both- said it was true.
So why then, is it thought
proper for the majority of lay
men to prescribe for the rest of
us laymen, when your own doc
tor cannot infringe on your per
sonal rights?
They wouldn't think of getting
mass vaccinations of any or all
kinds in this crude manner.
It just don t make common
horse sense.
The parents are largely to
blame if their children have
more than the average cavities
in their teeth.
So let them get the treatment
for this, in the way it has been
Dointed out many times.
"Maybe they can t all aiiora
to." you say? They afforded
sweets in excess, did they not?
Mary E. Atkins
1634 Orchard Home dr.
Medford, Ore.
Whv Ike and Wayne?
To the Editor: The public
ODinion noils seem to be indi
cating that Oregon will reelect
both Morse and Eisennower. i
wonder how many voters real
ize what the effect of this ticket
splitting will undoubtedly be.
Those Morse supporters casting
a vote for Eisenhower are voting
for a veto of the High Hells Can
non muiti-Dumose dam bill
Morse will sponsor next year,
and the President's disinterest m
the many other aspects of con
servation of our natural re
sources that Morse will be work
ins for.
In addition, Eisenhower wouia
be the first President constitu
tionally barred from seeking re
election, as a result of me iaia
Amendment enacted several
years ago. His greatest strength,
H the ranks of his own party,
l as been his enormous personal
popularity and the coattaili that
popularity provided for tne tie-
publican candidates who reject
his views on basic issues, ine
lact that his running-for-Presi-
e'ent days would be over the
moment he were reelected un
derscores the fact that the Old
Guard of the GOP would no
longer have any political use
for him and would withdraw
even the token, faltering sup
port it has given him so be-
"rudeinsly during tne first term.
Morse supporters who vote for
Jke are then giving their ap
proval of the Nixon-Dirksen-
McCarthy-Jenner faction whose
international and political phi
losophy is 30 years out of date.
To those people wno sun ukc
ke, I say you cannot vote for
the man without voting tor me
ReDublicari party, so let's let
Ike retire gracefully to his Get
tysburg Farm instead of allow
ing him to be a snowpiece
ignored by his own party.
Mrs. Maxine E. Johnson
174R S.E. Poplar ave.
Por'land, Ore.
Against Dictation
To the Editor: Who outside oi
Oregon has the right to tell the
Oreeonians who should repre
sent them in congress? We are
the people and we can vote for
who we please. We need a presi
dent, not a dictator. Our great
president Franklin D. Roosevelt
called us fellow Americans.
We Oreeonians have a reputa
tion for independence. When the
Chinese Exclusion law went into
effect, some people expected riot
ing. President Cleveland tele
graphed to Governor Pennoyer
to raise the militia ready to keep
peace. Governor Pennoyer tele
graphed back and told Cleve
land strongly to attend to his
own business.
The dictator foisted Nixon on
to the Republicans. Let it end
there. Charles W. Sherman
Kerby, Ore.
Titoist Revolt in Poland Puts
Molotov in l-Told-You-So Soot
By CHARLES M. McCANN
United Press Correspondent
The Polish revolt against So
viet Russian domination has put
"old Bolshevik" Vyacheslav M.
1 Molotov in a
very nice
spot.
Every time
anybody in
the Soviet in
ner leadership
mentions Po
land, Molotov
is in position
Cbarles Mccano to say:
"I told you so."
Whether Molotov will be able
to capitalize on his position at
In The Day's
JIHE fire in Poland is getting!
A hotter.
Gomulka. the leader of the
Polish communist party, has is
sued a virtual declaration of
independence from Moscow and
has denounced the misrule of
the past 12 years. The Yugo
slav (Tito) communist press says
Kefauver Drives
For Michigan's
Electoral Votes
Detroit, Mich. (U.R) Sen.
Estes Kefauver, (D-Tenn.), pick
ed Defense Secretary Charles
E. Wilson and the administra
tion's "big business" policies as
his chief targets here today in a
one-day drive to capture Michi
gan's 20 important electoral
votes.
The vice presidential candi
date, swinging into the nation's
auto-making center, charged
that the Eisenhower administra
tion has been . "fattening the
treasuries of the giant financial
empires while the American
people have been lagging be
hind."
Kefauver, in this industrial
ized area where unemployment
is a sore subject, pointed out
that General Motors' profits
soared 113 per cent between
1952 and last year, while the
auto workers wages have
creased only 14 per cent."
In remarks prepared for de
livery at a business and profes
sional men's luncheon, Kefauver
accused the Eisenhower admin
istration of trying to establish
'a stop-gap election eve prosper
ity."
He charged that Wilson, form
er General Motors president and
now defense secretary, "has
cooked up a deal with Curtiss
Wright to tide it over until aft
er election day."
Kefauver referred to defense
contracts for Curtiss Wright fol-
18wing Curtiss Wright's taking
over the stock of Studebaker
Packard. Snow Blankets
Northwest Area
By UNITED PRESS
A blanket of snow four inches
deep covered parts of the North
west early today and a cold out
break dropped temperatures
about 30 degrees.
The snow resulted from a
strong disturbance which moved
northeastward through the
Central Plateau and Central
Rockies. Rock Springs, Wyo., re
ported the largest snowfall
four inches.
Snow flurries continued at a
number of points in Idaho and
Western Montana early today
while scattered showers were
reported southward into Ari
zona.
The only other precipitation
rain in the nation occurred
in the Northeast, but amounts
were light.
Near freezing temperatures
were, common early today over
the Northern Plateau, Delta,
Utah reported a reading of 33
degrees, compared with a 67-de-
gree reading early Tuesday.
Strong southerly winds, now-
ever, kept temperatures in the
60s over the plains as far north
as Southern South Dakota. Con
siderable blowing dust was re
ported throughout the Central
plains were winds with gusts
exceeding 50 miles per hour
were "recorded.
Portland U.R) Mayor Fred
Peterson received a letter
from President Eisenhower yes- !
terday in which the chief execu- .
tive expressed his thanks for the
welcome given him on his visit
to Portland last week.
She's wearing the new, astonishing Sono
tone 79 hearing aid entirely ct the earl
No card down hr neck Nothing in her
hair-do Nothing on tho body No fussing
with eyeglasses
To discovor tho secret of how you too can hoar o
whisper and be inconspicuous with a -ounce
hearing aid, call, or send (or free information.
SONOTONE
C. R. ADAMSON, District Manager
839 EAST JACKSON Phone 2-590
the expense of Nikita S. Khru-
thchev and Premier Nikolai A
Bulganm and whether he
wants to remain to be seen
But certainly, from the Bol
shevik viewpoint, Molotov has
been right about the danger of
"Titoism" ever since President
Tito of Yugoslavia broke with
the late Josef Stalin in 1948.
Shared Stalin's Hatred
Molotov fully shared Stalin's
hatred of Tito for rebelling
against Soviet dictatorship over
the East European satellite coun
tries.
Molotov was thrown out of
his post of foreign minister to
make it easier for Khrushchev
and Bulganin to make friends
News
By Frank Jenkins
this morning that ALL Polish
workers are behind the new
independent-minded red leader
ship in Warsaw.
There are reports that men
have already been killed x and
wounded in clashes between the
two factions of communists. A
Western source in Berlin says
Russia has pulled some of her
crack motorized divisions out
of East Germany and has sent
them into Poland.
iS TO what to do about what
seems to be happening in
Poland, the Kremlin commu
nists have two choices:
1. They can MOW 'EM DOWN
with guns.
2. They can seem to give
little.
The Kremlin communists have
the guns to mow 'em down with,
but mowing 'em down might so
inflame the other communist
satellites as to put into their
minds the thought so vividly ex
pressed by our Patrick Henry:
"Give us liberty or GIVE US
DEATH."
Not only the Poles but the
Czechs have not hesitated in the
past to DIE when death seemed
preferable to oppression.
fTHIS is the significance of this
Polish business:
If it is what it seems to be, it
can indicate that communism
is finally breaking up into
KINDS OF COMMUNISTS, just
as there are kinds" of other
people. Up to now, there has
been only one kind of commu
nist and that is the Kremlin
kind. The other kinds have been
shot before a wall.
The importance to us of
"kinds" of communists is that
various KINDS of communists
will tend to split up into DIF
FERENT KINDS of thinking.
That is what we hope will hap
pen. If the different kinds of
communists get to fighting with
each other they won't have time
left to FIGHT US.
VUHAT will happen?
' ' Nobody knows.
We'll have to wait and see.
"fEANWHILE
The stock market In New
York turned mixed and hesi
tant in early trading this morn
ing. Pivotal issues fluctuated
from fractions to a point. Turn
ever was light.
Brokers said Wall Street was
weighing the events in Poland
over the week end.
flN THE other hand .
The grain markets In Chi
cago opened on a BURST of
BUYING. After the opening
bulge, prices slipped back a
little and then bounded forward
again. Grains ranging to more
than a cent were scored in most
cereals and rye jumped as much
as two and three-quarters cents
at one time.
HOW come?
Well, in the modern world,
the stock markets tend to weak
en on news indicating that war
might break out somewhere in
the world. Modern war means
rigid regimentation of business.
War, on the other hand, his
torically means HIGHER PRIC
ES FOR FOOD PRODUCTS.
n u, SHOPPING
L DAYS
UNTIL CHRISTMAS
So. Oregon's Complete Toy Store
Open Tonight
The TOY HOUSE
317 EAST MAIN
with Tito again.
It can hardly be doubted that
the Polish rebellion and the
prospective rebellion in Hun
gary will strengthen Molotov
in the Soviet Communist Party
Presidium which rules Russia.
There is talk now that Khrush
chev might be ousted from hii
job as first secretary of the
Communist Party. If he went,
Bulganin might go with him.
In that event, Molotov might
or might not get either the prime
ministry or the Communist
Party leadership if he wanted
them.
It is quite possible that, at
66, he does not want either post
and would prefer to remain a
vice premier and top policy mak
er. Hit Durability Emphasised
Molotov's present position of
strength emphasizes his dura
bility in the tough game of Com
munist power politics.
He is a comeback trtistof
note. He was premier from 1930
to 1941, when Stalin took over
that job to direct war policy.
For a while, from 1939 to 1941,
he was foreign minister as well.
He continued in the foreign min
istry until 1949. Then he was
"demoted" but remained one of
Russia's several vice premiers.
It turned out that Molotov really
was detached from an active cab-,
inet post to take charge of So
viet Far Eastern Dolicy.
After Stalin's death in 1953,
Molotov was called back to the
foreign ministry. His loss of that
position last June certainly wai
a demotion a slap in the face
for Tito's benefit.
Molotov Was Right
Now, it is apparent even in
Moscow that Molotov was right
all along in his warnings against
Titoism. What is surprising is
that Khrushchev and Bulganin
thought they could relax the
Soviet grip on the satellite coun
tries without asking for trouble.
In Poland especially, hatred of
Russia not merely of Com
munism is inbred.
One of Molotov's strengths is
that he has been around, a lot
for years, attending internation
al conferences.. He has seen
something of the world. Khrush
chev and Bulganin have been
going around for the last couple
of years. But their background
is almost incredibly narrow. All
through their careers, they have
seen a distorted picture of the
world from inside the Kremlin
That is a basic weakness in
Soviet leadership, and a cor
responding strength in Western
leadership.
COURT SESSION SET
Pendleton U.R) The Oregon
State Supreme court will hold
its annual eastern Oregon ses
sion here next Monday and
Tuesday.
Didn't Cough
ALL NIGHT
CREOMULSION
BRINGS SPECTACULAR
RELIEF
Special Formula Creomul.
sion Cough Syrup for Chil
dren relieves coughs due
to coldi right now, with-
out narcotics or antihista
mines, stops tickle pro
motes sleep tastes good
too. Get
CREOMULSION
FOR CHILDREN
SHOPNOW..seour-