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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 30, 1958)
Tuesday, September 30, 13 MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, ORE. MEDFORDeWTRIBnre "Everyone to Southern Oregon Reads The MaU Tribune- Published Daily except Saturday by MEDFORD PRINTING CO. u 83 North Fir St. Ph. SP 2-6UI ROBERT W. ROHL, Editor HERB GREY. Advertising Manager GERALD LATHAM. Business Mgr. IRIC W. ALLEN JR.. Managing Editor ZARL H ADAMS. City Editor HARRY CHIPMAN. Teleg. Editor RICHARD JEWETT. Sports Editor LIVE STARCHER, Women's Editor PALE ERICKSON. Circulation Mgr. An Independent Newspaper Entered as second class matter at Med ford Oregon under Act of March 3. 1897 SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mail In Advance: Copy 10c. Daily and Sunday 1 year $13.00 Daily and Sunday 6 mos. 8.00 Daily and Sunday 3 mos. 4.35 Sunday Only One year $4 20. By Carrier In Advance Medford. Ashland, Central Point. Eagle Point. Jacksonville. Gold Hill, Phoenix. Shady Cove, Rogue Riv er, Talent, and on motor routes: Daily and Sunday 1 year (18.00 Daily and Sunday 1 mo. 1.50 Carrier and Dealers e o p y 10c All Terms Cash in Advance bfficial Paper of City of Medford Official Paper of Jackson County United Press International Full Leased Wire MEMBER OK AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION Advertising Representative: WEST-HOLIDAY CO.. INC, Of fices in New York, Chicago. De troit. San Francisco. Los Angeles, Seattle. Portland, St. Louis. At lanta. Vancouver, B.C. HEWSPAPEt k rUBHSHEIt "ASSOCIATION NATIONAL EDITORIAL I w K I M l :5T8N ASSOCM Flight 'o Time Medford and Jackson County History from the files of The Mail Tribune 10. 20, 30 and 40 years ago. 10 YEARS AGO Sept. 30, 1S4S (Thursday) A second tryout for parts in the Civic theater's production of "Male Animal" is scheduled tonieht. Skilled craftsmen and la borers are reportedly needed at the new Camp White domi ciliary. 20 YEARS AGO Sept. 30, 1938 (Friday) The 62nd annual reunion of the Society' of Pioneers of Southern Oregon will be held next week at Jacksonville. From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudge Pot" column: "The predominating ill df the com munity seems to be colds, a number having same about their person." 30 YEARS AGO Sept. 30, 1928 (Sunday) Klamath Indians are ex pected to gather this week for the U. S. court session here. C. C. Althouse, local rabbit raiser, has an order for a ship ment of cottontails to Japan. 40 YEARS AGO Sept. 30, 1918 (Monday) The Medford Irrigation dis trict's bond issue passed by a 141-120 vote. The annual three-day coun ty teachers' institute was con vened today at Medford High school. What's Your I.Q.? Nine or fen correct is superior; seven or eight is excellent; five or sis is good. u 1. An encephalograph is an x-ray photograph of what in the human body? 2. Beavers use their tails as trowels in dam building, true or false? 3. Which New England State is the only one that has no seacoast? 4. In which indoor sport do "keglers" participate? 5. How many tentacles does a starfish have? 6. Which king of England was unable to speak English? 7. The standard U.S. 5-cent piece contains a greater, or lesser, percentage of copper than does a standard U.S. copper cent? . . 8. A funambulist is a rope walker, cigar maker, or a ma gician? 9. In which State is Nor folk Navy Yard? & 10. Name the American humorist and philosopher who said, "I never met a man I didn't like." Answers: 1-Brain. 2-False. 3-Vermont. . 4-Bowling. 5 Five. 6-King George I. 7 More. 8-Rope walker. 9 Vir ginia. 10-Will Rogers. WILL SWEEP STREETS Singapore -flJPD- Mayor Ong Eng Guan said today he will lead city councillors and 1,500 white collar workers in "Ope ration Big Sweep" Wednes day. They will kick off the mayor's anti-litter week by sweeping the streets from 8 ajn. to noon. , Would Ease The Job The sum of $22,500, sounds like pretty good average citizen. This is the sum earned bv members of Con gress. But it must be said that most of them earn the money what they have left of it after all the demands made upon them. Sen. Richard L. Neubersrer of Oreeron. in recent interview with mond of the New York interesting outline oi some oi inose aemanas. FIRST of all, he says generous. And he continues: "Yet much of it is drained away by essential but unreimbursed expenses of Congressional service. Some months I pay as much as $350 out of my own pocket for extra stationery and office supplies. I am forever buying airmail stamps for my office because I, from distant Ore gon, receive the same airmail Allowance as a Senator from Maryland, a mere mashie shot away. My wife and I have a weekly radio program on 26 Oregon stations. They commendably donate the time, but cutting the tapes costs us $30 a week. A visit to the national capital is a rare treat for many families from Oregon, 3,000 miles away. Taking constituents to luncheon in the Sen ate dining room costs us about $150 monthly, with anoth er $100 for dinners in downtown Washington-an ex pensive realm in which to eat. "Other personal expenses sky-rocket with public life. My office is constanly besieged for autographed pictures, and we have invested some $330 this year in photographs alone. The demands upon us for charity, for gifts of my books to hospitals, to auctions and bazaars for worthy causes are legion-and we try our best to meet them. "Not intending to become Washington expatriates, Maurine and I maintain our roomy old house in Oregon as well as an apartment in the capital. With 3,000 miles between them, this means a car at each end of the line. Even our modest 1953 Buick and 1954 six-cylinder Ford cost a good deal to insure and operate. Only this year has Congress provided more than one annual round-trip between home town and capital, and no travel allow ance is made for a member's family." IN THESE terms, a Senator's salary doesn't sound so impressive. And it is the expenses and more important than the personal ones, which Senator Neubersrer A political campaign traveling, advertising, appearances, costs thousands upon thousands of dollars, even m a small The temptation to campaigning members of Congress more, the necessity to accept cam paign donations, simply to put on effective cam paigns, is irresistible. He a campaign out of his vanishes just taking care erating expenses. A NUMBER of differing attempts to solve this dilemma have been those by Senator Neuberger himself, who has given considerable thought to the problem. He has suggested that allowances tor legitimate one thing. And for another, he has suggested that memoers oi uongress snould be subjected to the same conf licts-of -interest pointees m the executive . And as to campaign repeatedly suggested that funds be made avail able for this purpose from public sources, to free office seekers from depending on large, privately- given funds, which always tend to place the pub lic otlicial m a position of debt actual or psych ological to an individual or group. JHE senator concluded: "The cost of democratic, representative self-government, in a modern industrial nation of 175,000,000 peo ple, makes reforms such as these essential if the public is to retain confidence in the integrity of those who as sume the public trust of which Jefferson spoke." The pressures on public officials are fierce. these days, and it is difficult for them to satisfy all the demands, and still do the vastly imDortant jobs to which they are elected. We doubt that Senator Neubererer's proposals would completely solve appear that thev would holder's human worries ces, ease the burden of his job but not now chargeable to "official" ex pense, and ease the burden of conducting; a cam paign without becoming ed to an individual or group, who may, some day, attempt to "cash in" on that obligation. E.A. Ahhh-Choo!! The first cold of fall Is worst of them all, x I swear it, I swear it, I swear it. Your nose is all runny, Your stomach feels funny, Can't bear it, can't bear it, can't bear it. Your chest is on fire, More Kleenex acquire,' Don't tear it, don't tear it, don't tear it. The cough or the sneeze Just add to the breeze; Ensnare it! ensnare it! ensnare it! Nothing is tasty, Your skin is all pasty. Beware it, beware it, beware it. Oh autumn's first cold Is a thing to behold. Forswear it, f orswear it, f orswear it. E.A. as an annual salary, take-home pay, to the Columnist Roscoe Drum- Herald Tribune, gave an he believes the salary is But his expenses do. . the political ones to refers. these days, what with brochures and television state like Oregon. can't begin to finance salary, which pretty well of his personal and op proposed, amoner them congressmen's expense costs be increased, for rules which apply to ap department. expenses, the senator has this problem. But it does tend to ease the office about his personal finan expenses connected with overwhelmingly obligat Dennis the Menace AN YOU SJT THERE 'TIL I Cause mBIGGEffff M?tf. Matter of Fact by QUEMOY Quemoy The cliffs of Quemoy seem to be formed of alternating layers of palest pearl and deepest coral. Under the bright early sun, the em battled beach would be the pride of any sea resort. In truth, the jr. ed building on the island, the hospital, was built on the beach with the idea of peace-time conversion to a resort hotel.' ine rule is that you run across the beach from the old C-46 transport to the shelter ing caves in the cliffs. But this time, there is no shelling (The methodical Communists seem to be accustomed to no more than one arriving plane daily; and they had done their shelling, very thorough ly ineed, for the plane that arrived a little earlier). So the runners slow to a fast walk before the cliffs are reached Behind the cliffs, there is a moon landscape of bare and eroded gullies and draws; and here the battalions have dug themselves and their guns and all their weapons dumps and living facilities right into the cliffside.. Any enemy who gained the grimly enfiladed beaches would find a worse hell awaiting him behind the cliffs. rpHE weapons carrier climbs the gully-side, along a sandy road that has been cut down eight feet into the earth; and at last it comes up onto the center of the island. Northwards is the tumble of dark purplish stony hills, where the Chinese high com mand occupies a central re doubt cut deep in living rock. Southwards is Quemoy Town, which must have been a pret ty little place, full of its own little local bustle and life, be fore the unending shelling marred the gracefully curved tiled roofs, closed most of the shops and all but emptied the streets. The Quemoy landscape is doubly strange to those who know China. On the one hand, U.S. aid counterpart funds have been used to plant in numerable trees on Quemoy. The graceful cedars, with their long, dark, frond-like needles, oddly transform this morsel of Chinese country side into an Italian country side. And while this new fea ture has been added, on the other hand, an invariable fea ture of every Chinese country side has been subtracted by the Communist artillery. There are no peasants tilling the little fields, behind the tall windbreaks of , silver plumed esparto grass. WHEREVER you go on the island, the shelling is a background noise. Even on a quiet day, it is always going on, with one of Quemoy's guns very occasionally bark ing its answer to the heavy crump of the enemy shells. It must be pretty bad on the little-islands, Erh Tan, Ta Tan, and little Quemoy, which have been the targets of half the huge total of rounds fired by the enemy. But big Quemoy is as large an island as Hong Kong. The Communist artillerymen are singularly inefficient. They have been using air burst and super - quick - fused shells, which do very little damage unless you happen to be in the immediate neighborhood or unless they hit a fairly fragile structure like a Chinese peas ant's house. So Quemoy looks a bit pocked here and there, but Quemoy does not look and has not been really badly hurt, even by more than 150,- 000 rounds of enemy fire. As it is a big place, and the chances of being in the imme diate neighborhood of any in coming round are trifling, the SAY YOU CAN SETUP' SBBV Rowland Evans Jr. slow crump-crump of enemy shells almost ceases to be no ticeable after a while (unless you hear the shell-whistle, which means that they are aiming fairly close). . , OESIDES this slow crump ing, the place has its other characteristic sounds and sights. There is the odd sight, for instance,, of a school of . small amphibious landing craft, looking like a stranded school of porpoises. They wait in a sheltered gully to lumber back across the beach to swim to their mother LST. It will come soon, and a new school of supply-laden small craft will repace these that one sees. There are the gun positions every visitor is shown a gun position with the 155s Housed in all but impregnable casemates. The seasoned, effi cient gun crews, mostly main- landers and getting older now, have made their casemates al most homelike in their long spare time'. Little Capt. Peng, commanding the battery, talks wistfully of "my prov ince," which he left some 17 years ago; and he talks proud ly of his battery's success with time on target fire against the enemy guns, which he cannot maintain as he ought to do, because an iron ration of am munition has to be conserved. Then there are the villages, like North and South Moun tain, near the beach where the invading. Communists lost 15,000 men in 1949. Poor oys ter fishermen who also grow millet and sweet potatoes live here; but South Mountain also has its big houses built by re turning immigrants who made money overseas. It cannot have been a bad place before the- shelling. Now however, it takes a full five minutes to find a single civilian inhabi tant. VOUNG Li Pien-chin, who has lived here all his life, explains that another member of the Li clan was killed that morning by a chance shell that got him when he was bringing in his horse. He shows the way about the place its great peculiarity is the innumerable massive pig pens, all granite, built before the Quemoy reforestation. Children seem to spring from the ground to look at the for eigners, but most of the vil lagers are huddled in the damp tunnel-shelters. "Many will come out tomor row, when they have forgot ten today s death," says young Li. "We have not lost, many, but it is bad that we dare not go out for oysters or work the fields properly any more." In this fashion, by conver sations more or less casual, and by visits more or less ar ranged, one's impressions ac cumulate. At length the visit draws to its close, the moment of the dawn takeoff for Taipei arrives. And this time there is shelling on the beach, but nothing much to worry about. And so one leaves with a sense of the human reality of this little, besieged, bravely defended place that so many people who are comfortably distant from the human re ality would like to treat as a pawn on a chess board. Copyright, 1958, New York Herald Tribune Inc. Sputnik Rocket Not Visible in Oregon Portland -IUPD- Mrs. Robert L. Boardwell, co-captain of the Oregon Moonwatch Team, said Monday that for this week the passages of Russia's Sputnik rocket would not be within the viewing period. The rocket is expected to pass over Oregon within the 90 minute period after sunset sunrise, and skies at this time are too light to permit view ing, she said. Mrs. Boardwell predicted the condition would hold for a week or 40 days.- - -- Communications Letters to the Editor must bear the name and address of the writer although under cer tain circumstances the use of a pen name .or initial for publica tion is permissible. The Mail Tribune reserves the right to edit all letters with an eye to clarification and condensation. Letters submitted for publica tion must not exceed 400 words. Man vs. Bible To the Editor: I have read with great eagerness the let ters relative to the local juve n i 1 e delinquency problem, and also your editorial. The last letter printed, dealt somewhat with delin quency from a spiritual stand point. We are living in a time of corruption. The Bible says, "Evil seducers shall wax worse and worse." I have read in the Mail Tribune accounts of corruption in small local politics up to almost the high est position in the land. Law nessness is prevalent at all levels, not only amongst the teen-agers, but in all walks of life. Society has one standard of conduct, and the Bible anoth er. These two are at disagree ment one with the other. One act may be legal, but does not even maek it right. Let me il lustrate: The court dissolves a marriage and gives them permission to remarry, but Jesus said "What God hath joined together let not man put asunder." It also says "he that marrieth her that is put away committeth adultery, and that an adulterer cannot inherit the kingdom of God, While there may be pros and cons as to whom is to blame for. juvenile delin quency, there are a number of contributing factors. Some were printed recently in the Mail Tribune. I feel the great est factor is lack of Bible teaching and acceptance of God's way of life. As a text book, the Bible has been re moved from our schools. In it, and it alone, lies the cure for the sins of this life. The first text book in the American schools was the Bible. Our founding fathers gave Ameri ca the right beginning. We have laid aside the wisdom of God and have substituted for it the wisdom of man. Where as the Bible was the rule of conduct, now it is man-made philosophy. We agree with Russia on this one thing, if nothing else: They do not have the Bible as a text book in their schools; neither do we. We are reaping what we have sown. The Bible says, "Be not deceived, God is not mocked, whatsoever a man soweth that shall he also reap." Also, "There is a way that seemeth right unto a man but the end thereof is the way of death. Heaven and earth shall pass away but my words shall never pass away." Put Bible Christianty in government, in politics, in business, in the teachings in the churches, and in the home. The result: Therefore if any man be in Christ he is a new creature; old things are passed away; behold, all things are become new. Thomas White Route 1, Box 344 Central Point It's In The Book To the Editor: In answer to Mrs. Ragland's letter of Sunday, Sept. 28, let me point out that the registration "pub licity" referred to should not be attributed to that, but to the cooperation of our local news media in cpmplying with ORS 247.011 (4). In discussing mobile units, the material portion of the controlling leg islation is as follows: "... In so far as practic able, he (the registrar) shall acquaint the public with the location cf such place or mo bile facility, and facilities av ailable for registration and the ease and convenience with which registration may be ac complished ..." See you at the polls. Jim Redden, Chairman, Democratic Central Committee Buffalo and Elephants To the Editor: Everytime I go fishing I ; learn something new. If you are too busy to go buffalo hunting, you're too busy. If you are too busy to go fishing, you're lucky. I thought Buffalo were extinct, but they ain't. It's salmon and steelhead. Buffalo are coming back. I just saw seven of them below Gold Rey dam. Upon return home, I look ed up the game laws on buf falo. There ain't any, so I looked in the encyclopedia. In 1850 there were 20,000,000 buffalo in America, and you were allowed 1,000 in your possession at one time. With out a Jeep, that's a darn good day's hunting. In 1889 they didn't run out of buffalo, they ran out of ammunition. They still had 541 left. That ain't a half -day's hunting for one good buffalo hunter, so the government closed the barn door. In 1850 we had a buffalo for every dollar national debt. We ain't now. The Democrats and the Republicans took care of that. They shot three hundred billion buffalo through the ceiling. When the Democrats ain't shootin' at the Burmese Army Takeover Said Surprise to Most Observers United Press International Southeast Asia Manager Robert L'dick recenUy spent a week in Rangoon, Burma, just prior to the surprise army takeover there. Udick, who is now in Ja karta, reviews the Burmese situ ation in the following dispatch. By ROBERT UDICK UPI Correspondent Jakarta -(UPD-The Burmese army takeover with Premier U Nu's announced support surprised many Burmese pol iticians and foreign observ ers. These sources earlier this month were convinced the army would not move unless a post - election government put Communists in cabinet po sitions. The army earlier had an nounced a position of strict political neutrality-a position which it still maintains, ac cording to reports from Ran goon. However, Burmese sources made it clear that should U Nu be forced to seek signifi cant Communist coalition sup port and as a result possibly have to take Communists into the cabinet, the army would stage a coup.' In Driver's Seat If the army determined to do that, there was no doubt in any quarters the army could take over whenever it desired. The army was virtually the only organization in Burma not severely weakened by spontaneous splintering off of factional groups. This splin tering was daily taking its toll in weakening both major fac tions of the once all-powerful Anti-Fascist Peoples Freedom League party (AFPFL). The present pre-election po litical strife was kicked off when the AFPFL split into a faction headed by U Nu and a faction headed by former Prime Minister U Ba-Swe and U Kyan Myein. It was clear to observers Editorial Comment A TRIBUTE TO INSULIN Thirty-six years ago Rus sell Kohl, a New York fruit farmer, looked forward to only three more months of life. His . body had wasted away to only 95 pounds. He was on a starvation diet of 690 calories a day. He had diabetes. And then in that summer of 1922 he received a letter from the Presbyterian hos pital of New York City urg ing him to come to the hos pital to try a new treatment. The letter ended, "Please do not delay. You are one of the privileged few." The new treatment was in sulin. By the end of the year Mr. Kohl was released from the hospital. In the interven ing 36 years, he has received over 40,000 injections. Last week, at a healthy 66 years of age, Mr. Kohl and his wife revisited the hospital where he was honored at a luncheon. He was welcomed by Dr. Rob ert Loueb, the only living member of the team that in troduced insulin to the hos pital. Now, of course, further medical research has made it possible for insulin victims to take medicine by mouth. The "privileged few" have grown to the multitudinous many who owe their lives to insulin and the group of Ca nadian scients that developed it. The case of Russell Kohl is not only a tribute to insulin, but it offers a dim but real ray of hope to those who suf fer from diseases which, like insulin in 1921, are consid ered to be incurable.-Oregon Statesman, Salem. HE JOINED THEM Los Angeles -01PD- If you can't beat 'em, join 'em. Last month Ross Puckett lost a well-publicized campaign to save one of his mother's rent al m-oDerties from becoming part of the Golden State Free way. Now, Puckett has a new job-in the Highway Depart ment's eviction section. ceiling, the Republicans are. We should have kept the buf falo and shot the Democrats and the Republicans. Just the other day the Republicans shot the ceiling through the roof. While they were doing that, the Democrats were tak ing their coffee break in the Maine woods. Hunting ele phants. They had darn good hunting too. For the first time in history, they got more Democrats in Maine than they got elephants. When the ele phant hunters return, watch your ceilings. Everett Acklin, Ashland (Sassy? 3 Times Faster Relief Certified laboratory tuts prow BEll-ARS tablets Mutralizs 1 tints as mock ttomaca acidity in one mints at mass leading digestin tiblats. Sot tELL-ANS todtj tor the fastest known rslief. IS at druggists. Send postal to BEU-ANS, Orangtburg, N. T. for liberal fro sample. that the situation was deterio rating into a multi-party wrangle which could possibly lead to the same instability and coalition difficulties that plagued the French National assembly. Delay in Elections The army was believed chiefly concerned in that such a lack of stability would be beneficial to Communist ma neuvers and lead to a com plete deterioration of Bur ma's economy. Another factor thought like ly to have affected the move Washington Report By William S. Whit POLICY CHALLENGE Washington The na"sty dilemma of the United States in the Formosa Strait has pre sented a high opportunity to the Democrats to provide c're a t i v e assist- ance to tne President, The most powerful o f them are aware of this. wuiiam s. white And, it may be predicted, when Congress returns in January our China policy will come under a con structive review intended to find a way forward rather than to catch scapegoats. The central problem is to develop a policy, in our re lations with the Nationalist regime of Chiang Kai-shek and with the Chinese Commu nists, that will: Unite the people of the United States, who seem deep ly divided and deeply con fused. Draw our Western allies Britain in particular far closer to us in Asia. Reduce that part of our commitment to Chiang that is merely sentimental. Strengthen both our de termination and our ability, however, not ever to see For mosa fall to the Communists. fFHE real need, in short, is to prepare what we have never yet had a strictly rational approach based upon practical American and West ern interests. But, as though all this were not quite enough, many complex and passionate barriers must be broken down before we can even make a start. First of all, it must be rec ognized that never on a for eign issue have we had the emotionally empurpled public and private partisanship that so long has cursed us over China. The right-wing Repub licans years ago made bitter attempts to prove that the Regulus Tested on Sea To Shore Shot Brunswick, Maine-UPD-The Navy has fired a Regulus I guided missile in a bull's eye accurate sea to shore shot. The 30-foot missile was launched Monday from the cruiser Macon, about 50 miles off Boston. The missile made a perfect landing in a 100 foot circular target at the Brunswick Naval Air Station here. Five jet airplanes guided the Regulus on its 150-mile journey. The missile landed on its retractable landing gear. Regulus I has a top speed of 738 miles an hour and a range of about 500 miles. Counsel With . . . Mr. Insurance Fred Brennan Fred Brennan Or Call Mr. Friendly Bill Fish Phone SP 3-7343 MEDFORD INSURANCE AGENCY 27 NORTH HOLIY ST. which put army commander in chief Gen. Ne Win at the control of government was the apparent desire of most politicians to delay the elec tions well past the supposed November deadline. Postponement of the elec tions by several months would presumably allow some sort of knitting together of the AFPFL factions into a bloc which might have a chance of forming a fairly stable gov ernment not dependent upon any Communist parliamen tary support. Democratic administrations of Messrs. Roosevelt and Tru man deliberately turned mainland Ohina over to the Communists. This was the silliest of par tisan melodrama. Nationalist China was lost by Nationalist China, and by nobody else and all that is water over the dam, anyhow. But incalculable harm was done. For the irrational vio lence of those who love Chiang far too much has been matched by the almost hys terical vehemence of those who hate and scorn him be yond all reason. The all-out Chiang people are really arguing that he ought to be permitted to in volve us in major war, if only for his own purposes. The all-out Chiang antagonists in substance are really contend ing that because Chiang him self is an ally of doubtful value we should just give up the whole show to the Com munists. TT SEEMS not unreasonable to suggest that the truth lies somewhere in between and maybe even about as fol lows. 1. Chiang himself is certain ly not so useful an ally 'as, say, the British in any case, and we must not do anything in his aid that will leave us naked and alone in the West ern alliance. 2. Formosa, all the same, is truly vital to Western se curity, just as the President and Secretary of State Dulles have been saying over, and over. , ' 3. Just as it was irresponsi ble to destroy public confi dence in the old Democratic civil and military leadership, so it is irresponsible now to do the same thing to the ctn rent Republican leadership! 4. Because we simply can not let Formosa go, we can not afford publicly to throw Chiang to the wolves. What ever he is otherwise, he does at present represent Formosa; Formosa is power and pres tige; this power and prestige is indispensable to our Asian allies from Manila to Seoul in Korea to Tokyo. 5. Thus, in summary, we must keep the position of power Formosa without mortally alienating our West ern allies and in such a way as not to destroy the position of prestige with our Eastern allies. All this defines the emerg ing challenge to the Demo crats. No doubt it is a very hard thing. But it will not be -impossible, granted adult magnanimity on both sides in wiping the partisan slate clean and in calm, sensible planning for the future. What is needed is to look at the thing for what it is, a great security problem, and not merely as an opportunity either to canonize or to smash John Foster Dulles. (Copyright 1958. by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) YOU ARE OUR BREAD AND BUTTER! As a local indeepndent insur ance agency our livelihood de pends on the satisfaction we give our clients. So if you're looking for the most for your insurance investment consult us regarding proper coverage on your family, your home, your; car and your business. Bill Fish