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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 14, 1958)
1 4 Tneijay. October 14." li MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, ORE. MEDFORDJtWTMBUNE "Everyone In Southern Oregon Read The Maii Tribune" Published Daily except SaturdayTjjr 33 North Fir St. Ph.P 2-6141 ROBERT W HiTTTT. Crfltnr HERB GREY. Advertising Manager utnrtLij laimam. Business Mgr. ERIC W. ALLEN JR, Managing Editor EARL H ADAMS City Editor HARRY CHIPMAN. Teleg. Editor RICHARD JEWETT !nnrti Frfitni- OLIVE STARCH ER, Women's Editor jJAL-t. ekxckbon. Circulation Mgr An Indenendent Ncrvrananar Entered as second class matter at Mec'tord Oregon under Act of March 3. 1897 SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mail In Advmn: C o n v lflc Daily and Sunday 1 year $13.00 uaiiy ana aunaay mos. boo Daily and Sunday 3 mos. 4.25 Sunday Only One year 14.20. By Carrier In Advance Medford, Ashland, Central Point. Eagle Point. Jacksonville, Gold Hill. Phoenix. Shady Cove, Rogua Riv er, Talent, and on motor routes: Daily and Sunday 1 year $18.00 uauy ana bunaay i mo. 1.00 Carrier and Dealers copy 10c fui xerms casn tn Advanca Official Paper of City of Medford crucial paper or Jackson county United Press International Full Leased Wire MEMBER OF 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. O NEWSFAPft rUBHSHEKS 'ASSOCIATION NATIONAL EDITORIAL As ! IasTocm c3T8N Flight ro Time Medford and Jackson County History from the files of The Mail Tribune 10. 20, 30 and 40 years ago. 10 YEARS AGO Oct. 14, 1948 (Thursday) Mediord's fire department plans a training program. From "Side Glance s;" "Friends congratulating a lady card-player on her newly ac quired ability to identify her own auto." 20 YEARS AGO Oct. 14, 1948 (Friday) A district Boy Scout rally is scheduled here tonight. From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudge Pot" column: "A Utah hunter killed a deer with ft baseball bat. Here is a sate hunting weapon, barring the imaginative possibility of mis taking one's companion for an in-shoot." 30 YEARS AGO Oct. 14, 1928 (Sunday) County Engineer Paul Ryn ning reports completion of construction and improvement of two miles of Dead Indian rd. Plans are underway to re vive a local branch of the National Rifle association. 40 YEARS AGO Oct. 14. 1918 (Monday) A special city election on charter amendments is sched uled tomorrow. The local draft board is holding physical exams this week at the rate of 100 a day. What's Your I.Q.? Nine or ten correct it superior; seven or eight is excellent; five of six is good. 1. Do houseflies bite? 2. Complete the following saying, "I would rather be right than " 3. When an individual eats more starch than is needed by the body, the excess is stored, in the body as what? 4. Chopped apple, celery, nuts, With mayonnaise, served on lettuce is called a salad? . 5. Which President of the U. S. owned an estate near Nashville, Tenn., named "The Hermitage"? 6. The Yangtze River is in Siberia; true or false? 7. Was John Cabot an Eng lish, or an Italian, navigator? 8. Washington, D.C., is lo cated north, or south, of the Mason-Dixon Line? 9. Aboard a yacht, would meals be prepared in the gal lery or the galley? 10. How many major league baseball clubs are there in the American and National Leagues? Answers: 1. No. 2. "Presi dent." 3. Fat. 4. Waldorf. 5. Andrew Jackson. 6. False. (China) 7.' Italian. (Sailing In British employ.) 8. South. 9. Galley. 10. Sixteen. Mountbatten Praised For Film Cooperation . Hollywood-IIIPD-Lord Louis Mountbatten, Britain's first sea lord, was praised Monday by 20th Century-Fox Studio chief Spyros Skouras for his cooperation with the Ameri can film industry in produc tion Of films with Royal Brit ish Navy settings. Mountbatten arrived here from a tour of San Diego mili tary installations to attend a luncheon in his honor given by the association of motion picture producer. Optimistic Signs Maybe it is a state of euphoria induced by the recent glorious weather, but it certainly seems to us there have news that could be classed as "good news" lately. Work has started on the big shopping center off Jackson street. Workmen were busy doing last-minute levelling there, yesterday, and com pleting a big construction shack. Actual construc tion will get under way soon. Start of Rogue Valley Manor, the $5J mil lion retirement home on top of Barneburg hill, is due shortly after the first of the year. Core ; drilling, to determine sub-foundation f ormations, j was being done yesterday. j I T'HE Civil Aeronautics A tentatively, it plans tions to the routes of both West Coast and Pacific Airways, which will make Medford iust that much more readily accessible from north, south and east. This will be a to the transportation facilities of the Rogue valley. The "Make Medford ports strong and favorable response to its cam paign to make Medford a sightlier, .pleasanter place in which to live. The Senior Activity to older people a place to and a more active role in over the week end. EMPLOYMENT is up. The lumber market i? go ing great guns, at the moment, with a few ups and downs, but generally is far above what it was a year, or even six months, ago. It was a nrettv ffood and while there was considerable hail damage it wasn't as serious as gested. And, while it was a long, hot, diy summer, the forest fire record in this part of the state was good. (Let s keep our need ram to ena tne lire aanger.; There are still a few fly-specks on the body politic and economic, but future looks better than it has for a long time, hereabouts. The optimistic signs outnumber the gloomy ones, 10 to 1. E. A. Leave Religion Out of It "All men shall be secured in the natural right to wor ship Almighty God according to the dictates of their own consciences. No law shall in any - case whatever control the free exercise and enjoyment of religious opinions, or interfere with the rights of conscience. NO religious test shall be required as a qualification for any office of trust or profit." These are the second, tions of Article I of the of Oregon; They are good, sound, and fully in the American of church and state. Not only do they set the course for the ship of state to sail in its official apacity: they also set what should be the tenor of office-seekers within I TNHAPPILY, people these Constitutional 1 1 i 1 wmcn is not always ionowea .during political campaigns. We have seen instances, right here in Jackson county and not a man s religion being We feel that such action is in the worst possi ble taste, that it is violative of the spirit of the constitution, and that it is a curt denial of a phil osophy which has been hundreds of years, abuild ing. . ' - People who brine: a man's religion into a cam paign should be ashamed. Some of them are . 1 . ,1 . . T ? .11 1 il at least to tne extent oi dissimulating sucn action. -" $ - - A LL of which is by way of deploring the fact "that, intentionally or inadvertently, a relig ious issue was shoved into the gubernatorial cam paign upstate last week. The details are neither edifying nor particu larly pertinent,- so we'll skip them here, and we have a suspicion that the religious note was struck sort of by accident, and by misapprehen sion on the part of workers in the campaign not by the principals themselves. But, as Editor Charles A. Sprague of the Ore gon Statesman points out: "Perhaps it is for lack of really significant issues in the governorship campaign that it has become more than usually personal.' Better get back to politics and leave religion out." Amen. We repeat, the Silly Season is upon' us. E.A. Report Those Events! Ernie Hood, the hard-working county chair man for the Jackson county Centennial observ ance, has issued a "last call" to people in the county who are interested in having community events and celebrations properly promoted for the Centennial year. ' Anything wrhich might be a tourist attraction from a rodeo to a Roster Crow to a hillbilly Jamboree to a Catfish Derby should take its place on the list of Oregon events to be publi cized nation-wide during the coming year. They should be. But unless they are reported, and included on the "master calendar" of events, the won't be. Ernie can be reached at SPring 3-2059. E. A. been a lot of items in the ! Board announced that, to grant long-sought addi manor break in adding Beautiful" committee re Center, which will offer go, a place to do things, the community, opened near ciod this vear. too some early estimates sug fingers crossed we still generally speaking, the third and fourth sec Constitution of the State sensible proscriptions, tradition of separation the state. v being what tney are, provisions set up an ideal 11 1 1 . 2 ' 1 i I too long ago, either, of dragged into politics. . '1 GOT A BIS RANCH INT0W6! WrW SDO&NMLUOtf COWS 'N HO?SSI Atf TW WHITE fWS." Washington Report By William S. Whit JOHNSON and KENNEDY Washington A communi ty of practical interest, though nothing nearly so firm as an actual alli ance, is being broadened be tween the for ces of two Democ ratic p r e s idential p o s s ibilities for 1950. The immediate op erating center William s white of this move ment is in the South and the border states. Unless the nomination is to go to an advanced liberal as well it might - the focus of convention power is likely to fall somewhere between Senators Lyndon B. Johnson of Texas and John F. Kennedy of Massachusetts. Johnson is prospectively the convention's dominant . figure in the area running from the center to the right of the par ty but not the far right. Kennedy is prospectively its most important figure in the area running left of center to the left but not to the far left. e r T NOW looks not impossible that form these situations their followers might merge to dominate the convention. Indeed, it is not inconceivable that these situations will go so far as to produce nominees Johnson for President and Kennedy for Vice-President though it is most unlikely. Johnson is a liberal South erner but still a Southerner by geography and being any kind of Southerner has been bad news at any Demo cratic convention for many years. It will no doubt be even worse news in 1960, barring the small though real possi bility that the Democrats might decide they could not usefully compete all the way with Richard M. Nixon, the probable Republican Presi dential nominee, for the mas sive Negro voting bloc on the civil rights issue. Johnson had a heart attack in 1955, and though there has been no recurrence, this is a political liability. Perhaps worst of all, as a Texan he is identified by many with fat oil and gas "barons", and all that. FinaUy, there is a genu ine continuing doubt that he would "go" for the noirtina tiOh anyhow.' All the same, he is the most powerful single man in the Democratic party today as well as its ablest politician, measured on actual perform ance. Such facts do not neces sarily enchant political con ventions: but they never do a man any harm and -some times they do him some good. KENNEDY, too, has certain inherent liabilities. There is his religion both parties have been "afraid to nominate a Roman Catholic since the defeat of Alfred. E. Smith in 1928. And there is his youth- he will be only 43 in 1960. Nevertheless, these two pol iticians both victims of cir cumstances for which they are not responsible but with which they must reckon -are being progressively drawn closer together. More exactly, their supporters are being so drawn. Powerful Southern politi cians, . including a potent handful of Governors, are speaking in increasingly high tones of Kennedy, privately as well as in public. Their at titude could easily be over evaluated. Kennedy is not their first choice; rather, he is their choice if finally they must face some alternative nominee as Governor G. Meg- nen Williams of Michigan or Governor AvereU Harriman of New York. Their true first choice un doubtedly would be Johnson. The pro-Kennedy movement , If ri in the South thus is basically a hidden pro-Johnson move ment. That is, the Southern hope it will be Johnson at the end but are maneuvering not to the left without any altern ative position to a Mennen Williams, say, if it turns out that Johnson will not seek the nomination or cannot get it. SOME of the most realistic of non - Southern Demo cratic politicians, too, are now privately talking up a Johnson-Kennedy ticket. In part, their motive is completely s&r ious; in part, they are sending up small trial balloons to test public reaction. . . " . The net of it is that John son and Kennedy are increas ingly being presented as lead ers of party groups between which there need be no irre coiiciliable conflict. One rea son is that Kennedy has al ways .. h a d much Southern goodwill as was spectacu larly shown in 1956 when. under Southern leadership, he very nearly took the Vice Presidential nomination away from Senator Estes Kefauver of Tennessee. But the rock-bottom reason for It all is this: Kennedy, though a Northern liberal, is no extremist on the race ques tion, though he has a good voting record from the Ne groes' viewpoint. And John son is very far from a extrem ist Southerner. He is, in fact, the principal reason why the first civil rights bill ineight decades got through the Sen ate in 1957, unsatisfactory though it was to the all-out civil rights advocates. (Copyright, 1958. by Fea ture Syndicate, Inc.) Editorial Comment POLITICS -AND RELIGION lhe gubernatorial race seems to have involved not only the candidates but their press agents. When Marguer ite Wright, press representa tive for the Holmes campaign, prepared a press release on the Governor's speech - at W e s t m i n ster Presbyterian Church, Portland,, she put in by way of preface the clause: "Evidently, in answer to re ports that Secretary of State Mark Hatfield had used his identification with church ac tivities to get votes ..." This touched off Travis Cross, press representative for Hat field, who promptly cried "character assassination" and labeled the attack "vicious and vindictive." In his own speech in his comments on political moral ity, Holmes had made no mention of his Republican op ponent. But his denunciation of such campaign techniques as "identifying Almighty God with my political party," and his self-exculpation of any such indulgence himself were so strong as to seem, to point directly at his opposition. If his press agent drew that in ference it is not surprising. Whether Hatfield has been pnltivat ine the "church an gle" we cannot say-reporters haven't picked it up. Both candidates declare that one's religion should not be a factor in the political campaign, but their press agents accuse the other side of employing it. Religion is always an ugly subject to be injected into politics--and one often hard to keep out. In this instance it" adds noth ing by way of enlightening voters on the political issues between the candidates. Perhaps it is for lack of really significant Issues in the governorship campaign that it has become more than usu ally personal. Better get back to politics and leave religion out. Oregon Statesman, Salem. Bitter National Debate in Japan Over Stronger Police-Powers Bill By DAY INOSHITA UPI Corrtspondent Tokyo -(UPD- A bitter na tional debate is shaping up over charges that Prime Min ister Nobusuke Kishi is try ing to turn back the clock and revive the notorious war time "thought police" in Jap an. Proceedings in the Diet Ore gon Co ngressm e Above-Average Vote Washington-(CQ)-Only sev en of the Senate's 96 members said "yea" or "nay" to each one of the 200 roll calls of the 1958 session. ; House. Members did some what better 47 of the 428 Representatives (seven seats were vacant) posted perfect scores for the 93 roll calls re corded in their chamber in 1958. Most of their colleagues were not far behind, however. Congressional Quarterly's an nual study of voting partici pation shows that the average members of Congress voted on 87 per cent of the session's roll calls slightly less often than each of the three previous years, when the average score was 88 per cent. Voting participation scores are based on the percentage of all roll calls on which a mem Matter of Fact By Joseph Alsop THE BLINTZ ELECTION ' New York By any practical-test, the biggest moments in the New York Governor ship campaign have been g u s t a t ory. Fir st Nelson R o c k e feller publicly ate a -I cheese blintz. And then Av verell Harri man hastily topped Rocke feller, by joy 4ospb Alsop fully consuming both a cheese blintz and a plate of gefullte- fisch. Maybe it sounds cynical to take this competitive public ingestion of Jewish delicacies as the symbol of this cruicial fight for the Governorship of the most populous state in the union. Afterall, the incum bent, Harriman, is a seasoned public servant and a great figure among the Democrats, And the challenger, Rocke feller, is literally the only really promising new contend er that the Republican party has produced in this rather critical election year Both candidates have Cer tainly made the conventional speeches about the issues. But the issues have thus iar maae less impression than the candi dates', indefatigable blintz- ontin-r.' Dizza-munching and street-corner handshaking. IT IS really a fascinating 1 rthough mildly bewilder ing) public spectacle, to see these, two enormously rich, exceDtionally able, intensely Dublic-spirited and deeply serious men, both mainly seek- in a election by the same homely methods. As Rocke fpller . is the nfjvice blintz- eater, his performance is per haps more interesting. Imaeine, then, tne corner of 103rd Street and Lexing ton Avenue, on the verge of the dark slums of Harlem's Puerto Rican district. A crowd of perhaps a hundred people-:- half childrenT nas Deen at tracted by a car-mounted loud speaker. The organizer of the occasion, the sheepdog of the corner flock, is the chairman of Puerto Ricans' for Rocke feller, Anthony Toro. Toro is of Venezuelan descent, and he is on hand, one suspects, be cause he formerly did a good deal of work in South Amer ica for the RockefeUer-fin- anced International Bat lc Economy Corporation. But as an adoptive Puerto Rican, he seems to be most successful. fTVHE" candidate is a bit late, X hut the Rockefeller station wagon at length draws up to the kerb, chauffeured by the coordinator for Negro Affairs of Citizens for Rockefeller, James Hudson. (In Ordinary life, coordinator Hudson is superintendent of Winthrop Rockefeller's Winrock Farm, down in Arkansas; but he has retained his Harlem voting residence.) The candidate leaps from the station wagon, asking in apparent surprise, Why, who have we here?" Bedlam promptly ensues. The children scream. The adults shout. The bearers of banners, wave their printed proclamations: "Rockefeller Terminara la Brutalidad Po- liciaca" and "Fondacion Rockefeller acabo con la Bil- arzia en Peurto Kico." lhe candidate puts on a Mexican hat, and picks up a child, also In Mexican hat, to'the child's evident delight. 'A lady with Ofcceptional lung power shrieks into the microphone . 4 -""lRI have been brought to a halt over the Kishi government's controversial police duties law revision bill. The Communist - led Zen gakuren National Students Federation has, ordered na tionwide demonstrations and protest rallies on Oct. 23 and 28. A group of leading schol ber casts "yea or nay" votes the only kind that affect the outcome of roll calls. Among the ' Senate's 100 percenters, vop honors unques tionably belong to Sen. Mar garet Chase Smith (R-Maine) as the -only member with a perfet score for three years running. The only other Sen ator to miss none of the 107 roll calls Of 1957 as well as the 200 of 1958 was Sen. Henry Dworshak (R-Idaho). Perhaps the most unusual score of 1958, however, was that of Sen. William Proxmire (D Wis.). His 100 per cent was achieved despite a rugged pri mary contest and reelection campaign. House Records In the House, Rep. Paul Brown (D-Ga.) maintained his record as the member with the longest unbroken record that "Tammany Hall and Har- riman done a big mistake by taking the Puerto Rican peo ple for granted." Then the candidate, showing that he takes no one for granted, makes a graceful little speech in Spanish, which touches off a perfect frenzy of cheering. THAT ends what has to be called the organized part called the organized part of of the morning, for want of a better word. Rockefeller leaves the loudspeaker and plunges into the crowd, shak ing hands right and left, and occasionally bestowing a Spanish style "abrazo" an embrace of greeting. The Mex ican hat, now rising above and now being engulfed by the heaving multitude, seems like a -frail barque in a high sea. One gasps when the hat seems to go under forever, But suddenly there is an open ing in the ranks, and there is Nelson Rockefeller, grinning with obviously unaffected pleasure, slightly rumpled and minus his hat, but crying out to Tony Toro s too protective subordinates, "Let me get at the people; they're the ones I want to see." So the candidate sets off down Lexington Avenue, sur rounded by a tis'iit knot of children, adult admirers, pro fessional organizers and pho tographers. There are enough children at the knot's center, struggling to hold Rockefel ler's hand, to make him seem a bit like the pied piper caught In a mob scene. But with extraordinary agility, he continously escapes from this perambulating encirclement to shake hands with street corner gossips, grocery-store patrons and owners, barbers and customers for haircuts, and anyone else who may hap pen to be on Lexington Ave nue on this, bright autumn morning.- - - " AT ONE point, he stops to patronize one of the count less shoeshine boys who swarm on " these Lexington Avenue sidewalks. Getting a shoeshine is probably the next best thing to eating a yam or some Puerto Rican delicacy, which is impossible because the Puerto Rican restaurants are not open yet. At any rate, the gesture is greeted with immense enthusiasm, and another period of bedlam re sults. There is bedlam again for a short set speech at the corner of 111th Street. There is super bedlam in the market under the railroad tracks on Park Avenue. And so it goes, for a full three exhausting hours, which altogether fail to exhaust Rockefeller, how ever. The last hand at Lexing ton Avenue and 125th street, is shaken with the same en thusiasm as the ifrst. It is all very unlike the Lincoln-Douglas debates or Gladstone's Midlothian cam paign. It is very, much like the same performance, when put on by Avefell Harriman. And odd as it may seem, the spectacle has considerable Warmth and charm. (c) 1958. New York Herald Tribune Inc. Husbands! Wives! Get Pep, Vim; Feel Younger Thousands of couples are weak, wom-out, exhausted because body sicks iron. For new younger feeling after 40, try Ostrex Tonic Tablets. Contain iron for new pep, vim; plus high-potency dose Vitamin Bi. In a singl day, Oitfet supplies at Much, iron Is 10 dta. raw oysters, 4 lbs. of liver, 16 lbs. Of beef. 3-day "get-acquainted" size only 69t. Or get Economy size, save $1 .67. All druggists ars and intellectuals in Tokyo and Kyoto have launched their own independent cam paign against the government reform. The Socialist Party, the Communist Party and Sohyo, Japan's powerful three-million member labor federation, bill. But a lot of ordinary peo- n Ma i h fa i n Records of 100 per cent voting partici pation, .begun in 1951. Even if a Member is unable to be present for a roll call, he can go on the record by pairing with another absent member, announcing his stand or answering the Congression al Quarterly poll, so that his costituents may know his posi tion. In 1958, the average mem ber was on the record 94 per cent of the time, either by vot ing "yea" or "nay" or by de claring his stand on the roll calls he missed. A total of 38 Senators (eight more than in 1957) scored 100 per cent on the record in 1958. In the House, 114 Representatives (almost twice as many as the 60 in 1957) made their stands known on every roll call. Local Scores In Oregon, Sen. Wayne L. Morse (D) had a voting par ticipation score for "yea" and "nay" votes in 1958 of 93 per cent. - k These votes, together with his declared stands on the roll calls he missed, put him On the Record 100 per cent of the time. . Senv Richard L. Newberger (D) voted "yea" or "nay" on 100 per cent of the 200 roll calls in 1958. By way of comparison, the average Senator had a voting participation Score of 86 per cent, an on the record score of 96 per cent. In the House, Rep. Charles o. Porter (D) had a votine Dar- ticipation score of 94 per cent ior tne 83 roll calls' of 1958. He went on the record on 99 per cent of the issues. The av erage representative had a voting participation score of 87 per cent and went on the record 94 per cent of the time. (Copyright 1958 Congressional Quarterly Inc.) Dean of Army Pilots Dies Dayton, Ohio -(UPD-- Col. Stanley M. Umstead, 62, once known as the dean of all Army pilots, died Monday night at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base hospital after a five-month iUness. Umstead, who retired to a farm near here in 1951. lod ged more than 13,000 hours nymg time during his 32 years in the service. He flew 350 different mod els and types of experimental aircraft, including everything from Jennies, the first U. S. military trainer, to the B19, world's biggest military air craft in the late- 1930s. He was test pilot for the -first B19. Umstead began his military career in 1917 when he was graduated from the' first Air Corps officer training course. He was chief of the flying branch at Wright field from 1937 to 1942. He is survived by his wife, Edna; three daughters; a son,. Capt. Stanley M. Um stead Jr., a jet. fighter and interceptor pilot at McGuire Air Force Base, N. J.; three brothers and eight grandchildren. Counsel With Mr. Insurance Fred Bronnan Or Call Mr. Friendly Bill Fish Phone SP 3-7343 MEDFORD ' INSURANCE , AGENCY 27 NORTH HOLLY ST. pie who remember the "Tok yo" thought police and th- "K e m p e i" gendarmerie of World War II are just dis-' turbed enough over its pro visions to throw their weight against the government in the fight. Some political . observers predict the fight could grow serious enough to rnrlt the 10-year-old conservative nrio1 in Japan for the first time. lhe center of the contro versy is a bill presented to the Diet last month by the Kishi government. This mea-; sure greatly strengthens po lice authority as outlined in the police duties law enact-' ed in 1948 under the Allied occupation when emphasis Was unon remnvincr fn,,- the danger of another "do-' lice state." Among the controversial points are stipulations em powering police officers to take juveniles and drunks in their "protective custody," and take measures to prevsnt crimes or the development of "dangerous situations" in. eluding entering homes and crossing private property without warrants. Government spokes men say the revisions are neces sary to enable police to deal with a rising juvenile crime wave, the increase of gang sterism in postwar Japan, and extreme actions by Commun ists and Radical Unionists. Accusations Outlined Critics point to Kishi's rec ord as a minister in the war time Tojo cabinet and his longtime record as a bureau crat, and claim he is trying to centralize more power in the government so he can stifle the labor movement in Japan and strangle the op position. They claim that police can invoke these powers to break up opposition rallies, revive "thought police" check ups in the home and hotels, and bypass the constitution to take political enemies out of circulation. The general view 'is that many of the measures are needed, that this is a case where left-wing extremism has bred extremism in the opposite direction, that Kishi has no purpose in mind ex cept to clamp down on gang sterism and left-wing hood- lumism, but he may be go ing too far in his reform. : One of the arguments against the bill which is most frequently heard is that it leaves too much to the judg ment of the individual police officer. Newspapers, especial' ly, are not prepared to con cede policemen have that much judgement, in view of a series of recent attacks by police against reporters cOv ering news events. - MONEY At Crater Finance you may borrow . for any worth while purpose on your FURNITURE - AUTO SALARY , and repay in monthly In sfallments. You may choose the ferms most suit able to you up to 24 months. Loins may be paid in ad vance er in full al any time. Crater Finance CORPORATION 135 Pine Street Central Point , Phone NO 4-1273 Frank Wilkinson, Mgr. Convenient Parking Fred Brennan ARE YOU JUST ANOTHER NUMBER? Not with us! By patronizing your local Independent Insur ance Agent you'll learn that wt consider you a friend and in dividual personality, not just I policy number. Bill Fish Lsl