Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, October 23, 1958, Image 4

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    4 Thursday, October 23, 1938
MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, ORE.
MEDFORDtKfTBIBUNE
"Everyone tn Southern Oregon
Read The Mail Tribune"
Published Daily except Saturday by
MEDFORD PRINTING CO.
33 North Fir St. Ph. SP 2-6141
ROBERT W. EUHL. Editor
HERB GREY. Advertisine Manarer
GERALD LATHAM. Business Mgr.
EKlt W. ALLEN JfU
Managing Editor
EARL H ADAMS. City Editor
HARRY CHIP MAN. Teleg. Editor
RICHARD JEWETT. SDorta Editor
OLIVE STARCHER, Women"! Editor
DALE ERICKSON. Circulation Mgr.
An Independent Newspaper
Entered as second class matter at
Med lord Oregon under Act oi
March 3. 1897
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Official paper or jacKson county
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5ul l"0C5,N
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
Oct. 23, 1948 (Saturday)
The Medford City Teacher
association meets this week
with new officers presiding.
Headquarters for the 1949
Community Chest drive have
been opened at the Jackson
County Chamber of Com
merce offices.
20 YEARS AGO
Oct. 23. 1938 (Sunday)
Compositions by Miss Lucie
Landen, faculty member of
Southern Oregon Normal
school, will be presented at a
"composer's evening" in Ash
land. From Arthur Perry's "Ye
Smudge Pot" column: "Last
week was 'Be Kind to People
week. Nobody was killed with
kindness."
30 YEARS AGO
Oct. 23, 1928 (Tuesday)
"The shuffle walk and
pump handle "movement in
ballroom dancing is rapidly
becoming a thing of the past,"
according to an item in "Local
and Personal."
A deputy state fire marshal
discusses the need for approv
ing a ballot measure for a
$30,000 bond issue to finance
better facilities for Medford's
fire department.
40 YEARS AGO
Oct. 23. 1918 (Wednesday)
The Red Cross has com
pleted its drive to provide
clothing for the Belgians.
Mayor Gates has ordered
quarantines and fumigation
for houses where anyone is
suffering from the flu.
What's Your I.Q.?
Nine or ten correct is superior;
seven er eight is excellent; five er
six is good.
1. When going through a
fence, a hunter should drag
his rifle after himself; true or
false?
2. To which island in the
West Indies was the name His-
paniola originally given?
3. Complete this proverb:
"Every dog has ."
4. When the Vice President
of the U.S. is absent, who pre
sides over the United States
Senate?
5. What body of water lies
between the peninsula of
Lower California and the
mainland of Mexico?
6. What weapon did David
use against Goliath?
' 7. Potsdam is a suburb of
which German city?
8. In which civil war in a
European ' country did the
term "fifth column" origi
nate? ! - -
9. Is the Republic of Libe
ria on the west coast, or the
east coast, of Africa?
10. In which European
country did the breed of dogs
known as spaniels originate?
' Answers: I. False. 2. Haiti.
3. "his day." 4. The President
Pro Tempore. (An elected Sen
ator). 5. Gulf of California.
6. Sling. 7. Berlin. 8. Spanish
Civil War. 9. West coast. 10.
; Spain.
1
Registration Figures
- Having no ciystal ball, we don't know wheth
er or not this is going to be a "Democratic year"
in Oregon politics.
But we do know that it is a "Democratic year"
in voter registration. We have already commented
on the fact that the Republican majority in Jack
son county is no longer a majority it is a plur
ality, and a small one at that.
Jackson county, long a Republican strong
hold in a Republican state, is joined only by Jo
sephine conuty in the fourth congressional dis
trict by having more Republicans that Democrats.
Each' of the other five counties in the district
have Democratic majorities, as does the district
as a whole.
IN the fourth district (Coos, Curry, Douglas,
Jackson, Josephine, Lane and Linn counties)
the Democrats have 111,527 registered voters, the
Republicans 95,267, a difference of 16,260.
The largest Democratic majority is in Coos
county, where the count is 14,622 to 9,051;
In Jackson and Josephine, the GOP margins
are 687 and 342, respectively.
Throughout Oregon, the registration figures
are 447,195 Democrats, 395,090 Republicans, a
Democratic lead of 52,105.
N the state as a whole, there are 14 counties
with Republican leads and 22 Democratic coun
ties. Marion is the largest Republican county,
Washington is second,' and Jackson is third. J
The largest Democratic majority in the state,
of course, is in Multnomah county (Portland),
where there are 156,201 registered Democrats to
121,206 Republicans.
But elections aren't won by counting up the
total number of registered voters. It still depends
on the individual voter (no matter what his reg
istration), and whether or not he's sufficently in
terested to get out and vote election day. - '
And perhaps even more important, no politi
cal party can count on all its registered voters
voting only for candidates of that political per
suasion. Intelligent voters cast their ballots for
the man, not the party label. (And shhh!
we've even heard some devout party leaders, in
both parties, admit, off
that s what they do, too.) &.A.
U.S. Cardinals
Trip trirpp United States urinces of the Roman
Catholic Church Cardinals James F. Mclntyre
nf T,ns An p-ples.vEdward A. Moonev of. Detroit,
and Francis J. Spellman
ticipate m the election ot a rope tnat oegins on
Saturday, Oct. 25. Only two nations have more
members of the College of. Cardinals, Italy, of
course, with 18, and France with 6. There are nine
from all of Latin America, two from Canada.
Whpn the late Pius XII in 1946 brouerht the
College of Cardinals up to its full strength of 70,
five members were from the United States. Of
these five three have died: John Cardinal Glen
nnn nf St. Louis. Dennis Cardinal Douehterv of
Philadelphia, Samuel Cardinal Stritch of Chi
cago. The present total is 55.
'
THE first U.S. Cardinal was Brooklyn - born
TrViv lYTf1! rolrmr vi o m a A i 1 C7P tttVi Ck-r A irT
tt Willi lUvVyivoiiVjr iiamu in iuiu vv 1111 in 11-
bishop of New York. A year after his death in
1885, the second U.S. Cardinal, James Gibbons
of Baltimore, also American-bora, was named.
For some years thereafter the United States
had only one Prince of the Church, but in 1924
there were four, Cardinal Dougherty of Phila
delphia, Hayes of New York,.Mundelein of Chi
cago, 0 Connell of Boston. The number of Car
dinals was raised to the present 70 by Pope Sixtus
V in 1587 After the 1946 consistory the non-Italians
(42) exceeded the number of Italians for the
f L'st time in four centuries. E. R. R.
Brown For President?
The betting odds favor the election of Ed
mund Gerald ( "Pat" J Brown, 53, over his Repub
lican opponent for. governor of California, Sen.
William F. Knowland. If Brown wins, he may
well jump into the lead for the Democratic 1960
presidential nomination. ' . I
One obstacle would be his commitment to
serve out his four-y ear gubernatorial term if
elected.
Perhaps another, obstacle would be his repu
tation, at least so far, for being all things to men.
One news magazine has called him a "genial
teddybear." But as governor he would have 112
years to build a record. ' " .
His Catholicism (his wife is a Protestant)
could be little or no barrier these days. Indeed,
it could keep co-religionists from feeling resent
ful if the convention passed over Sen. John F.
Kennedy of Massachusetts.
..., ,
THE GOLDEN STATE, along with Pennsyl
vania, has 32 electorial votes, second only to
New York. If another Californian, Vice Presi
dent Nixon," gets the Republican presidential
nomination in 1960, as now seems indicated, he'd
have no advantage over Brown in Calif oria in be
ing a native son.
And California ' could ' be no pushover for
either party in 1960. It is true that in 1952 it gave
Eisenhower a 700,000 majority and in 1956 one of
600,00, but in 1948 it plumped for Tinman by
the hair-thin margin of 17,865..
Brown as governor of California would be in
the forefront of Democratic presidential possibili
ties in large part because none of the others, at
least as they stack up in 1958, seems exactly for
midable.: E. R. R.
- the - record, of course,
of New York will par-
'CbVOU REALIZE THAT IF YOU MARKY M ITAL1W GIRL
tlKB 3INA, XPUU HAVE TO EAT SPAGHETTI fOR BREAKFAST?
Roscoe Drummond
Reports ...
(Drummond is substituting for Walter Lippmann,
during the latter's trip to Russia.)
VIEWS OF A 'MODERN'
REPUBLICAN
Washington QUESTION:
What is your philosophy of
Republicanism? V "
Clifford P. Case (R), U.S.
senator from. New Jersey
To anticipate and meet
squarely the problems of the
,day that is the task of the
Republican party.
This means an open mind.
It means alertness to recog
nize new and ever-changing
problems in both the interna
tional and the domestic fields.
It means willingness to con
sider and to search for new
ways and new solutions. We
believe these can and should
be found within a framework
of governmental and social
organization which guards
against vesting any group
with too much power. For
neither business, nor labor,
nor any other group should
dominate our country or our
party. We believe in checks
and balances in society, in
government and in the Re
publican party. This is es
sential if freedom is to sur
vive. ... - '': . .
We Republicans recognize
that initiative and a free
economy are among the basic
driving forces of America.
We recognize, equally, that
government ' has a vital role
to play in assuring that the
nation's economy and the
well being of its people, its
educational and scientific
progress and its military se
curity go forward on a sound
and adequate basis.
We believe America can be
an example for the world of
how a free people works and
prospers and at the same
time manages to help other
nations in .their efforts to
achieve economic progress.
We believe in working with
other nations, through the
United Nations, . toward the
goal of a peaceful world in
which all nations and all peo
ples may develop secure in
the knowledge that differ
ences will be resolved by rea
son rather than by force.
-.
QUESTION Is this differ
ent from what many Dem
ocrats believe?
""Sen. Case The crucial dif
ference is that the Republican
party can be a far more ef
fective instrument of prog
ress. Of course, there are dif
ferences of view within the
GOP, but nothing like the
basic split that divides the
Northern and Southern wings
of the Democratic party. That
split inhibits' constructive ac
tion in many areas of most
pressing concern to the coun
try as a whole. It affects not
only civil rights questions,
but such fields as education
and housing; even foreign
policy, since the way we han
dle civil rights problems at
home affects our standing
abroad.
The effective functioning of
the Congress is involved,
since Southern Democrats
dominate -committee chair
manships. There is always, in
the Senate, the threat of fili
buster, which has many
times operated , to , prevent
urgent legislative matters
from ' even being considered,
much less acted upon.
QUESTION How does the
record of the recent Congres
sional session measure up
against your philosophy?
Sen. Case It is a mixed
record. On the plus side are:
defense reorganization, exten
sion of the reciprocal trade
program, mutual security, im
provement of social security,
the college loan program, re
vision of the Atomic Energy
act and approval of Euratom,
establishment of the new
space agency, and, at long
last, acceptance of a some
what more realistic approach
to the farm program.
Sen. Case On this side of
the ledger I would put: failure
to act at all on aid for school
construction, elimination 'of
the scholarship program, fail
ure to enact any public hous
ing legislation or to provide
adequately for urban renewal,
complete . neglect of civil
rights, a totally inadequate,
piecemeal approach to immi
gration problems, and rejec
tion in the House of legisla
tion to provide a measure of
much-needed protection for
union members.
Another area neglected by
the recent Congress is that of
regulation of campaign ex
penditures and other measures
to promote integrity in the
conduct of government. A bill
to bring election laws up to
date to regulate primary
elections and to set realistic
ceilings on campaign expend!
tures was reported by the
Senate Rules Committee in
the first session only to lan
guish on the calendar until ad-
journament this year.
The basic idea behind this
bill is that of disclosure mak
ing the pertinent facts avail
able to the press and the pub
lic. It should be supplemented,
I believe, by requiring dis
closure of the financial inte
rests of top government of
ficials, in the Congress as wpII
as in the executive branch. In
clusion of the legislative
branch seems to be essential
if we are really serious about
increasing the respect and
confidence of the public gen
erally. "
QUESTION On what issues
do you think the election
will turn?
Sen. Case Generally, I ex
pect the issues will vary even
more than usual from state
to state.
There continue to be seri
ous pockets of unemployment,
and in these areas this may
be reflected at the ballot box.
Indeed, I think this was an
important factor in Sen.
Payne's defeat in Maine.
Much of the country, how
ever, is probably more con
cerned now with the threat of
inflation. We haven't yet
found a really effective me
chanism for controlling the
upward spiral of prices and
wages, partly because the
voice of the consumer and of
those on fixed incomes has not
been effectively expressed. .
Big business, big labor, and
big ariculture are articulate
in their own behalf. Each is
inclined to point the finger
at the others as 'the cause of
the rising cost of living. Mean
while, the indices continue to
climb, although at a slower
rate. The plain fact is that
there is still a lot we do not
know about the interplay of
economic forces and how to
adjust them without upsetting
a proper balance. Short of
direct controls, which nobody
wants, the government should
seek an effective conterweight
on the side of the consumer.
Civil rights will, of course,
loom large as an issue in many
areas.
Finally, depending on the
turn of events, international
development may be an over
riding factor.
(c) 1958 New York
Tribune Inc.
Coast Conference To .
Curb Inflation Held
San Francisco-(UPD-A Pacif
ic Coast regional conference
to curb inflation was held
here today, with- delegates
from a number of West Coast
cities.
The meeting was sponsored
by the Chambers of Commerce
of San Francisco, Seattle, Los
Angeles and Portland. Prin
cipal speaker was Neil H. Ja
coby of UCLA.
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.
Not "Piffle" at All
To the Editor: The Mail
Tribune has labeled my pro
test of Congressman Porter's
using his free mailing privil
ege to mail campaign mate
rial "piffle."
Wasting the taxpayer's mon
ey may be "piffle" to .the
editor of the Mail Tribune
and certain Democratic poli
ticians and their paid politi
cal labor-boss supporters, but
I'm sure it isn't to the tax
payers of either party. '
The attempt to pass off the
piece of political propaganda
mailed by Porter as some kind
of "official" document won't
work either. It appeared in
the Congressional Record, aU
right, but it was inserted by
Porter, about Porter, and is
no more than a hymn of praise
to Porter, written by Porter
or one of his press agents.
A child could see that it has
only one1 purpose, to influ
ence the voters of this district
into thinking that Porter has
accomplished something for
them in his term in Congress.
It is filled with the usual dis
tortions and false ' implica
tions. Any way you look at it, it
is pure "and simple political
propaganda and all taxpayers,
no matter what their beliefs,
are paying for it. As I said,
it may be legal, but it is still
dishonest and unethical in my
book. It simply bears out what
Porter's campaign manager in
Coos County in 1956 wrote
to the Republican candidate
for Congress: "Porter will do
anything for a vote."
Donald L. Stathos,
Chairman,
Jackson County
Republican Central
Committee
76. Not 756
To the i Editor: Of course
Mrs. Catherine Gribble Lynch
(Communications, Oct. 21,
1958) is entitled to her opin
ions about me as a Congress
man and as a user of the word
"ambiguous." However, she is
in error when she writes tha't
"The Congressional record
shows Porter introduced 756
bills. Only one passed."
The facts are these:
In the two sessions of the
85th Congress I introduced
76 bills, 24 of which passed
in whole or in part; 13 made
some headway in one House
or the other; and 39 had no
legislative action although
many of these resulted in ad
ministrative action and at
least one (Rogue River flood
control and reclamation) help
ed crystallize public opinion
in Jackson and Josephine
counties.
Average number of bills
filed per Congressman was
35; per Senator, 51. About
1800 bills became law out of
some 20,000 filed in both
Houses. Only one bill had
my name on it (Waldo Lake),
but the Rogue .River bank
protection bill was my bill in
that I originated it, drafted
it, and nursed it through com
mittees and the House.
My Republican colleague,
Mr. Norblad, in 14 years has
had two bills passed bearing
his name.
I believe in making clear
what I stand for. If Mrs.
Lynch disagrees with any or
all of these bills, perhaps a
more pertinent discussion
would be on the merits of
particular legislation.
Charles O. Porter,
Member of Congress.
Geddes on Foreign Policy
To the Editor: Many of the
misinterpretations of my po
sition and mis-statements of
fact contained in the Mail
Tribune of Oct. 2 I can over
look, since as "E.A." himself
pointed out, this is the season
of partisan politics and in the
heat of campaigns, editorial
writers, like some politicians,
can be careless and at times
overly enthusiastic. Several
of these misrepresentations I
cannot overlook, even though
I cannot cover them all in
this letter. One issue in the
editorial that I do not choose
to overlook, is the rather in
temperate charge that I have
no interest in foreign affairs,
merely because I have critic
ized my opponent's forays
into trie field.
I shall continue to criticize.
Early in his brief career,' my
opponent attempted to have
some of his ideas on foreign
policy accepted by amend
ments to a Mutual Security
THE
DANMOORE
HOTEL
1217 SW Morrison St.
PORTLAND, OREGON
All transient guests. All those who
come, return. Rates not high, not
low. Free garage, TV's and radios.
Reputation for cleanliness.
Reservations by long distance,
phone refunded on request
upon arrival
Matter of Fact bv josePh uoP
FROM PORCH TO
PICTURE WINDOW
'Indianapolis In politics,
in. population and in way of
life, there are great differ-
ences between
Takoma ave.
and College
ave. here . in
Indianapolis.
College ave..
or at least its
3400 and 3500
blocks, clearly
came into be
ing in the
building
- 4osepta Alsop
boom after the first World
War. Its houses are . solid,
roomy, style-less, rather dark,
and all, of them have front
porches. The hooks, with no
hammock hanging from them,
commemorate the almost van
ished American habit of
front-porch sitting. Older peo
ple, some retired, some with
small businesses, most of
them rather well off, are in a
majority along College ave.
Takoma ave., in contrast,
was one of the early post
World War II, G. I. loan-supported
building develop
ments. Its houses are flimsy,
cramped, vaguely pseudo
Georgian boxes, each with
its picture window, none
with storage space for so
much as winter underwear.
Younger people, mostly in
dustrial workers and - union
members, are in a heavy ma-
bill. One amendment was de
feated by 171 to 4 and the
other almost as decisively. At
this point, my opponent de
cided, like the - proverbial
small boy, to take his bat and
go, not home, but to South
America. ..' Since his ideas
were not accepted, he decid
ed that everybody was out of
step except Charlie and went
out to peddle his ideas in the
wide, wide world. Since then,
he has continued this lrre
sponsible and dangerous
course, to the utter confusion
of those citizens 4n certain
South American countries
who do not know whether
his policies or the State De
partment's (by virtue of con
gressional majority decisions)
are the policies of the United
States.
There are 435 congressmen
in the House of Representa
tives. What would happen if
each decided to try to pro
mote his own ideas on for
eign policy on foreign shores?
What is now a shaky world
situation would become abso
lutely chaotic. ,
If I am elected to congress
as I expect to be, I shall take
a great, interest in foreign
affairs and work for a sound
foreign policy. I shall work,
however, in the halls of Con
gress, not in foreign lands,
and I shall work through the
accepted, orderly channels of
study, discussion, and debate,
not through the dangerous
channels of groups of exiles
and revolutionaries outside
this country. .
Paul Geddes,
Roseburg, Ore.
BerleGoes On With
Show Despite Injury
Hollywood -(UPD- Comedian
Milton Berle went on with his
hour - long television show
despite an injured knee which
left him limping.
The veteran performer suf
fered a badly bruised and cut
knee during rehearsals ear
lier in the day when a break
away piano was prematurely
released and struck him.
FIRES ON NAVY TUG
Stockton, Calif - (UPD - Sher
iff's deputies Wednesday con
fiscated a rifle belonging to
Pashal Fraser, 68, after he adr
mitted firing it across the bow
of a Navy tug as it passed his
houseboat on the ' Stockton
channel. "It was going too
fast," Fraser explained. "I
just shot once to warn them
to slow down.
i
There is only one thing that will really train the human
mind and that is the voluntary use of the mind by the
man himself. You may aid him, you may guide him,
you may suggest to him and, above all else you may ,
inspire him. But the only thing worth having is that
which he gets by his own exertions, and what he gets is
in direct proportion to what he puts into it.
A. L. Lowell
Chapel Mortuary
Across from the Courthouse
Frank Morgan Harold Snodgrass, , FUNERAL DIRECTORS
DAY OR NIGHT ' PHONE SP 2-8030
jority in the 3000 and 3100
blocks of Takoma ave,
TTVAKOMA ave , as might be
expected, is . decidedly
more sympathetic to the
Democrats than College ave.
But despite this political di
vergence, the two neighbor
hoods also have two things in
common. Both gave Presi
dent Eisenhower substantial
majorities in 1956, and in
both, the Republicans appear
to have lost heavily since then.
As usual,, the figures tell the
story.
On College ave., 29 rather
articulate voters suffered the
intrusion' of this reporter and
the professional - poller, Lou
Harris. . In . : line with the
neighborhood voting record,
they had chosen Eisenhower
over Stevenson in 1956 by a
whooping 22 to 7. That year,
in the Indiana eovernorship
race, they had also given Gov.
Harold . Handley 21 votes,
against 6 votes for the Demo
crats and 2 not voting.
Yet this year, only 13 of
these same .people are ready
to vote for Handley for the
senate. No less than 11 have
already made up their minds
to 'vote for the Democratic
senate . candidate, Mayor
Vance Hartke of Evansville
Five are still examining the
alternative with as much dis
taste for the Republicans as
for file Democrats. If this
switch is representative, the
Republican ' bedrock in this
obstinately Republican big
city has been sadly chipped
away.
NONETHELESS, What we
found on Takoma ave.,
was even more interesting.
Of 23 intending voters polled
by us, 12 had chosen Eisen
hower and only 5 had chosen
Stevenson in 1956. Among
th ese more natural Demo
crats, the Eisenhower coat
tails had also helped the local
ticket rather more than in
most parts of the county.
Eleven of them had voted for
Handley for governor, and
only 6 had voted for the
Democrat.
This time, the Tabor unions
have been hard, at work, per
suading the faithful to regisr
ter in order to vote against
the right-to-work proposal on
the Indiana ballot. Thus the
Democrats had acquired no
less than 5 new votes. One
new voter, not a union man,
was backing Handley. In
addition, seven more Handley
voters had left him in the in
terval. .Hence the grim final
score was Hartke 15 votes,
Handley only , 5 votes, and
3 "don't know."
The falling off In the Re
publican vote was not only
much more terrible, on Ta
koma ave.,- than on College
ave.; the political tone was
also more ominous. In both
neighborhoods, those who
intended to vote Republican
were decidedly defensive, if
not downright defiant, just as
intending Democratic voters
used to be in the two great Ei
senhower years. But in Col
5S
VOTE
(X) Robert
DUNCAN
(X) Marijane
; DUNCAN
DEMOCRATS
RE-ELECT BOB
Your Present State
Representative
for
STATE REPRESENTATIVES
Independent thinking and Cooperative
Action Means Good Government!
'GOOD GOVERNMENT IS YOUR BUSINESS''
Pd. Adv. Duncans for Legislature Committee.
' Mark Norton, Chairman, Phoenix, Oregon
FA?
lege ave., the new Democrat
recruits wre seldom violent
about it; xhey talked rather
like the much-wronged lady
who so nobly said that she
was not angry, only a little
sick at heart." ,
ON TAKOMA ave., in con
trast a crrMt mnnv npn.
pie were very angry indeed.
One peppery lady an older
woman this, married to a high
ly - skilled, well - paid auto
worker with long seniority,
who had never been laid off
treated us to a positive- ti
rade about her husband's
wrong-headedness. First, she
said, her had persuaded her
to vote "for that Eisenhower"
last time. Now she added,
just to make matters worse,
he still maintained the Presi
dent had a right to play a lot
of golf. But, she concluded
triumphantly, "he's at least
got the sense to see that peo
ple like us can never vote Re
publican again"
.. Two small neighborhoods in
a great city do not necessar
ily foretell the final outcome,
any more than a single rural
route in a big farm state. But
more comprehensive polls
than ours, and the observa
tions of the local experts, and
the very shrillness of the Re
publican campaign, all com
bine to point in the same di
rection. As of now, the out
look is dark for the Republi
cans in Indiana, unless Nixon
style medicine can revive the
patient,
(c) 1958 New York Herald
- Tribune Inc.
ELECT
GORDON
HUDSON
DEMOCRAT
for ; l
State Senator
A young businessman deter
mined to further economic
development in
Jackson County
Vote for Your Future
VOTE FOR HUDSON ;
Pd. Pol. Adv. Hudson for Sena
tor Committee. Joan I. Redden.
2246 Aloha St., Secretary. ,
ELECT MARIJANE
Worked with Bob in
both '57 Sessions
T
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