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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 10, 1958)
4 Monday, Nombr 10, H3t MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, ORE. "Everyone in Southern Oregon Keadi The Mail Tribune" PublishedDaily except Saturday by MEDFOKQ PRINTING CO. 33 North Fir St- Ph SP 2-6141 " ROBERT W RCHL, Editor HTRB GP.EY. Advertising Manager GERALD LATHAM. Business Mgr ERIC W ALLEN JR, Managing Editor EARL H ADMS. City Editor HARRY CHIPMAN. Teleg. Editor RICHARD JEWETT Sports Editor OLIVE STARCHER. Women's Editor PALEERICKSON. Circulation Mgr An Independent Newspaper Entered at second class matter at MeCford Oregon under Act of March 3. 1897 SUBSCRIPTION PATES Bf MaU In Advance. Copy 10c. 'Daily and Sunday 1 year $15 00 mnA ;nnHnV mOS. 8.00 Daily and Sunday 3 mos. 4.25 Sunday only Jne yc By Carrier In Advance Medford. Ashland. Central Point E a g 1 e Point. Jacksonville, wiu mu. Phoenix. Shady Cove. Rogue Riv er Talent, and on motor routes: Dally and Sunday 1 year $18.00 Daily and Sunday 1 mo. 1-50 Carrier and Dealers copy 10c All Terms Cash in Advance OfflrlaJ Paper of City of Medford Official PaperofJackson County United Pess International Full Leasea wire " MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU Advertising Representative: nvcT.unl irAV CO INC Of- , fices in New York. Chicago. De troit 5an rrancisco. ixra rtngcic Seattle Portland. St. Louis. At ' lanta. Vancouver. B.C. NEWS PA Pit PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION NATIONAL fOITORIAl jf AS0 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 Nov. 10. 1948 (Wednesday) An Indianapolis Speedway, veteran, demonstrating for the ; Medford Safety council, .proves speed saves little time 'by tearing through town, vio lating 60 traffic rules en route .but running the courseonly 50 seconds faster than his sec ond trip in which he obeys !the laws. , City police plan to crack 'down on all-night parking. '20 YEARS AGO .Nov. 10. 1938 (Thursday) Snow mixed with rain falls - in Medford, and snow reaches "a depth of 30 inches at Crater .Lake National park. " From Arthur Perry's "Ye ; Smudge Pot" column: "There is only one thing wrong with the election, and its results. There will be another one : In two years. : 30 YEARS AGO Nov. 10, 1928 (Saturday) ' A ukulele club gains in pop ularity and polish at Gold Hill high school. The California Oregon Pow er company is installing new overhead street lights on East Ninth st. between Cottage and Portland and at three other locations. 40 YEARS AGO Nov. 10. 1918 (Sunday) Beef, pork, veal and goat meat are in plentiful supply 1 at the public market. Until such time as the streetcar can be put into com r mission the mail for Jackson- . villa is being handled by auto. ; Whal's Your I.Q.7 Nine or ten correct is superior; I seven or eight is excellent; five of i sh is good. ; 1. Is it in California, or Florida, where most of our lemon crop is grown? - 2. A gubernatorial election "would be for the purpose of filling what state office? . 3. If a supervisor described one of his apprentices as mal adroit, would that signify that , the apprentice was clumsy, or skillful? 4. Name the author of the novel, "Kidnapped." 5. In the human body, the patella is the anatomical 'name for what? 6. "A-h" is the supreme being of the Mohammedans? 7. Does it require more, or ' less, power to move a vehicle with large wheels than one with small wheels, other -things being equal? ' 8. In which city was Presi dent McKinley shot? 9. Was the first U. S, census taken in 1790, 1800, or 1810? 10. Did the British set fire to the White House in Wash' ington, D. C. in 1812, 1813, or .1814? Answers: 1. California. 2 Governor. 3. Clumsy. 4 Robert Louis Stevenson. 5. .Kneecap. 6. Allah. 7. Less 'power. 8. Buffalo, N. Y. 9. 1790. 10. 1814 (August 14), CUSTOMS MAN DIES I New York - (CPD - Harry M. .Burning, 71, former collector "of customs for the Port of New iYork. died Sunday after a !lon illness. Business Strikes Back A sort of bisr business "togetherness" may be the answer to problems - . tive bargaining imposed by poweriui unions. Hav ing failed to curb industry-wide strikes by obtain ing revision of the Taft-Hartley Act, business is showing what has been called "a quickening tem po in employer-initiated mutual defense." The pact announced by six of the nation's big gest airlines Nov. 2 is a case in point. This is a mutual aid arrangement to share extra revenues Kvhen one or mdre of them is shut down by a strike. The agreement was signed by American, Capital, Eastern, Pan American," TWA, and United. The plan was filed with the Civil Aeronautics Board on Nov. 3. The Civil Aeronautics Act of 1 938 reouires CAB to issue orders approving or disapproving agreements among airlines on the basis of "the public interest." These include "pooling or apportioning earnings," and other cooperative working agreements." THE airlines' understanding was announced in the midst of a strike against Capital by the Intel-national Association of Machinists going into its fourth week. But behind it lie two years of industry study aiming at joint labor-management bargaining. Robert T. Quick, a district JAM president, on Nov. 3 called the plan "a union busting move." The Big Three automobile manufacturerers npnprnl Motors. Ford. Chrvsler made no secret nf their solid front in collective bargaining: this year, terminating in essentially - similar settle ments in September and October. The Big Three in steel U.S., Betnieftem, Kepuonc naa oar-p-ainer iointlv with United Steelworkers two years ago. And industry-wide been accepted m otner industries noiaDiy ciotn ing and coal. Just before a newspaper strike was averted in New York City, The New York Times had an nounced, Oct. 30, that even though it should not be struck it would suspend publication so long as any craft union refused to cross picket lines at any newspaper in the metropolis. Other papers immediately followed suit. (XF THE airlines agreement, the Wall Street Journal has commented editorially: "It is one more indication of the practices can force industry into doubtful prac tices of its own." , .... . ,. Certainly it will raise the U. S. department of comment. As for the agreement m New York, in asmuch as newspapers, are quasi-public utilities and the trustees of the people's right to a free press, the newspaper unions could argue that they have a moral responsibility to publish whether or not a competitor is struck. E. R. R. J- - ' .SSSSk. Anniversary Of A Pogrom The German people are observing a sad 20th anniversary for it Nov. 10, 1938, that Hitler ing campaign of terror -against the Jews of Ger many.. More than 170 synagogues were burned down all over the nation. tal Night." The reference smashed windows of Jewish shops shimmering m the German streets. Just a year ago guilt-ridden Germans began building a Jewish community center in West Ber lin with a prayer that it would help erase the shame of Ciystal Night. President Theodor Heuss sent a message saying the erection of the center was "a good sign that German Jews are taking root again in our country and gaining confidence in the future." Thousands of Jews and non-Jews gathered to see the laying of the community cen ter cornerstone on the burned-out site of wrhat had been Germany's biggest synagogue. - . . . . JEWISH refugee from Poland, seeking re venge for the sufferings his parents had had to endure from the Nazis, on Nov. 9, 1938 shot and killed the third secretaiy of the German em bassy in Paris. In this single lunatic act of young Herschel Grynszpan the government-controlled German press professed to see a plot by "world Jewry." The next day Jews were disarmed in Ger many, and Jewish establishments were looted through a week of disorder countenanced by the authorities. Thousands of Jews were attacked, the Germon government imposed a "fine" of 1 billion reichsmarks (about 400 million at 1938 exchange rates) on German Jews, and new mea sures of repression were adopted. TPHIS "hideous series of atrocities," former Un- der Secretary of State Sumner Welles has re ported, "raised public indignation in the United States to fever pitch." President Franklin D. Roosevelt rebuked Germany by recalling Am bassador" Hugh Wilson to Washington to "re port." Former Secretary of State Cordell Hull has recounted how Roosevelt greatly heightened a press statement prepared by the state depart ment on the pogrom : "I myself could scarcely be lieve that such things could occur in a twentieth century civilization." Hitler retailiated by recalling Ambassador Dieckhoff. For the remainder of their relations, Nazi Germany and the United States were to be without ambassadors to each other. E.R.R. in industry-wide collec- m i 1 X bargaining has long way union monopolistic legal questions, though justice so far has refused was just 20 years ago, on opened his most crush The Nazi called it Crys was to .the glass from Dennis the jM IL-r, - esa, the mi .ymiKrz.mc r.Hlt?- HEy,3irti This means Matter of Fact The Ideological Gymnasts Washington-The scene, last June, was a big conference room in Cincinnati. The actors 1 were Ohio's hardy peren nial Republi can Senator, John W. Bick er, Ohio's vet eran Republi can State Chairman, Ray Bliss, and a large group lostpb aisop oi leading Ohio industralists. The powerful Charles Hook, of the American Rolling Mills Co., had called the meeting to discuss the desirability of putting a so-called right-to-work law on the Ohio ballot this year. The Timken Roller Bearing Co. and other Ohio businesses of comparable standing were also represent ed. Bricker and Bliss are two of the most solidly conserva tive, most sincerely business minded Republican politicians in any state in the Union, so everyone ought to have loved everyone else. In fact, however, the two Republican professional poli ticians were "treated like dogs," as one of them has sub-! sequently recalled with con siderable bitterness. "PVEN after the meeting, the Republican Governor of Ohio, C. William O'Neill, had been pressured into staying. at home. ("If any damn chair man of any damn board calls Bill on the telephone, he just melts," was the explanation given by s a colleague.) Even after this desertion, "however, Sen. Bricker and State Chair man Bliss insisted on apear ing before the assembled in dustrialists, to tell them plain ly that putting the right-to-work law on the ballot was a suicidal act. The businessmen's reply was so angrily abusive that Sen. Bricker drew his dignity around him, and took his leave without further ado. Ray Bliss, who is made of sterner stuff, stood his ground long enough to warn the right-to-work enthusiasts that the Re publican Party could "lose everything" in Ohio if they persisted in their scheme. He was loftily assured that he was quite mistaken; that the Ohio Republicans would win their greatest victory under the right-to-w o r k banner. After that, Bliss also departed. BY NO means all the Ohio industrialists d i s a g r eed with Bliss in this manenr. The formidable George Magoffin Humphrey sympathized with his old friend, for instance; and many of the leaders of steel and rubber companies took the same position. But despite the split in the busi ness community, the Ohio Chamber of Commerce and the Ohio Manufacturers As sociation persisted, and at con siderable expense right-to-work went on the ballot by petition. Even so, all was not lost, until some of the board chair men who have the knack of melting Gov. O'Neill, got the wretched man on the tele phone, i As a weak and un popular Governor, poor O'Neill was the only Republi can candidate who was then in any danger of defeat. There fore he melted rather more easily than usual, obediently announcing that he was for the right-to- work , law, and that right-to-work was the campaigner's big issue. O'Neill's action in turn en tangled Sen. Bricker, who did not want a repeat of the Cali fornia situation. Along with Bricker, the whole Republican state ticket was involved. In the outcome, Bricker was roundly beaten by Ste phen Young, an amiable, old nonentity whom the Demo crats had nominated simply because he was in the habit of running for office whenever possible. O'Neill took a fear ful licking. Of the other candi . . I,1!1 Menace yoi' By Joseph Alsop dates' for state office, only a single Republican survived. Both Houses of the state legis lature were captured by the Democrats. Three Republican Congress seats were lost. And the righ-to-work law itself was defeated by the staggering margin of nearly a million votes. HPHIS fearful hecatomb, as Ray Bliss bitterly pointed out in a public statement, was a direct result of the interven tion of the right-to-work en thusiasts. Without right-to- work, the Ohio Republicans were flue to come through with flying colors, except that the brisk Mike DiSalle would probably have defeated the feeble O Neill anyway. But because of the right-to-work, the Ohio Republican party, the businessman's 'party, is just about back to where it was in the worst years of Franklin Roosevelt. The story does not end in Ohio, either. Right-to-work laws were on the ballot in five other states besides Ohio. They were beaten in four of these five states. . Their pre sence on the ballot in all cases gravely damaged the Republi can candidates. Even in Kan sas, where right-to-work was approved, the issue contribut ed labor votes to the vic torious Democrat, Gov George Docking. Even in In diana, where right-to-work had already been placed on the statute books, the bitter ness thereby engendered help ed to defeat Republican Gov. Harold Handley in his Senate race. Altogether, the warning is clear that meaningless ideo logical gymnastics should be carefully avoided by those who hope to win elections, (c) 1958 New York Herald Tribune Inc. 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. Disputes Speech To the Editor: This is the first time in my life I have written a letter of this type, but after reading the article in your paper about Mr. Ken Pickens discussion of the un employment c o m p e n sation plan in Oregon, I feel com pelled to write. I can recall only a few oc casions of a laborer saying "down with the corporations" but I am constantly hearing management saying "down with labor." Almost all of the labor force know they must depend on business for a means of livelihood. If there were no corporations there would be very few jobs. By the same token, management should know that they must depend on labor for survival. I wonder how much lumber Medford Corporation could produce if it were not for the men who operate the ma chines and convert the stand ing timber to the finished pro duct. He states that a man who voluantarily quits a job should be ineligible for benefits. Granting there are abuses in this, the cure is not ineligi bility. It is the only defense labor has against management which forces a nan to quit. Also there are other circum stances, such as driving so far to work that it takes a high percentage of a man's wages for transportation. This is not uncommon in the log ging industry. As for seasonal work, what is there besides lumber, con struction and agriculture? Why have unemployment compensation at all if it only benefits those who are never unemployed? The high pay received by lumber and . construction Roscoe Drummond Reports ... (Drummond is substituting for Walter Lippmann, during the latter's trip to Russia.) Why Kennedy Smiles Washington At several important points the voting this past week bears directly upon those Democrats who see themselves as Presidential candidates in 1960. The biggest beneficiary is Sen. John Kennedy of Mas sachusetts who is now the leading, though not necessar ily the most likely nominee. His chances are improved for two reasons. First, he not only outran his opponent mercilessly but out ran political history as well. His plurality of 870,000 is un matched by any Massachu setts candidate in either party at any time. It went far above the most optimistic hopes of his supporters. The boon which Sen. Ken nedy most needed to boost his Presidential ambitions was proof that he was a massive vote-getter in his own state. workers is. paid because the work is considered highly haz ardous. At least our insurance premiums, show quite a dif ference between a logger and an office worker. The hourly wage is high in lumber and construction work but it has to be when you only work about six' months out of a year. The annual wage, not the quarterly wage, has to be considered because a man has to go on feeding his family whether he is working or not. I believe Mr; Pickens would find that the lumber industry would have to raise the men's wages more than the few cents they now pay into unemployment com pensation if it were discon tinued. Mr. Pickens has some good points in his statements but his speech as' a whole only feeds the cancer of commu nism which infects our coun try today. It tends to make the .working man say "Down with the capitalists and man agement." : Ralph W. Pittman, Rogue River, Ore. More About Road To the Editor: Several months ago I was driving home about 11 p.m. with my four small children. If I had not known the road and knew there was a "blind spot" ahead, by children and might not be here today. This "blind spot"' is a small hill top oh a curve, a . driveway coining down off the hill leaves a dirt pile in the road causing quite a bump. A car coming out of Dark Hollow road onto South Stage rd must hit the "bump" if the car stays in the proper side When a car hits the bump at any speed over 10 miles an hour, it will nearly always veer to the other side of the road. This night as we came home from a late show and was ap proaching the blind spot, slowed down as I always do. All of a sudden a car sped around the curve, hit the "bump" and missed my car by inches I was stopped still by then and was as far to the left as I dared to be. If the oncoming car had hit my car, we would have been over a 20 foot enbankment. I do be lieve the Good Lord had His hand on "us that time. This is not the only bad place on Dark Hollow rd., as the bus accident indicates. My own children could ust as well have, been on that bus. Howeyer, they get off before the spot that the accident oc curred. The roads on our side , of town are dangerous, very narrow and winding, while the roads on the other side of town -areVquite' good. I think it is very odd. Lets get our road fixed so our children will be safe. Next time it may be my children or yours and they may not get off quite so lucky. Mrs. James W. Overturf 3196 Dark Hollow rd. Medford. Tribule To A Neighbor To the Editor: It may not be customary in this column to thus write of a deceased man,. and it, goes without say ing that his now sorrowing wife r and other immediate relatives would in modesty be loathe to admit a public trib- ute, yet because my wife and I were recipients during a time of great need, namely a near-fatal car accident (and since), of his - I should say their excellent neighborly kindness and favors, we feel it an obligation to write these words, and we are sure his neighbors would share them. Every one will agree that the proof of a man's manli ness is his acting well the part of a man. At the funeral his pastor referred to him as "a man's man", and that qualification may share in at testing. It has been weU said: "It's better to buy a small bouquet,- To give to your friend this very day, Than a bushel of roses white and red, He got it. Just winning wouldn't have helped him, and he more than won. He didn't just ride 'the Demo cratic tide. He was the high est wave in that tide. IT'ENNEDY had no real op position in Vincente Cel este. But neither did Leverett Saltonstall when he won the Senatorship by 561,000 in 1944, the highest previous plurality. Kennedy topped this by more than 300.000. Saltonstall was also running against a push-over. The second development which encourages the support ers of Mr. Kennedy's Presi dential ambitions is that oth er Roman Catholics fared ex ceedingly, well at the hands of the voters, like California's Governor-elect Brown and Pennsylvania's Governor elect Lawrence who won handsomely although there were many factors contribut ing to the result. But the event to which the Kennedy people attach the most value is the victory of Senator-elect Eugene McCarthy over Ed ward Thye in Minnesota a Catholic defeating a Luther an in a Protestant state. Sen. Kennedy, is of course, quue aware mat tne religious iciuiur aixecis ms prospects and realizes that resistance to electing a Catholic to the Pres idency is greater than electing a Senator or a Governor. But he is convinced that the re sistance has appreciably les sened and that with the man' ifold signs of Democratic strength, his chances look brighter than ever. SEN. Stuart Symington's eligibility for the Demo cratic Presidential nomina tion was fortified and Gov. Mennen Williams' was hurt by the election returns. . If the Northern and South ern wings, of the Democratic party can possibly reach - a compromise on the integration issue and I am inclined to think that they can't then Mr. Symington would be the log ical - compromise candidate, least unacceptable to the South. Missouri returned him to the Senate by a big vote. Though "Soapy" Williams achieved his sixth consecutive election as Governor of Mich igan, his vote-getting magnet showed that it was losing some of its" power. While this was a big year for' the Demo crats, it wasn't a big year for Mr. Williams. His plurality dropped from previous highs and Democrat Philip A. Hart won the Senatorship by a hig her plurality- than Mr.- Wil liams won the Governorship. Gov. Averill Harriman, To lay on his casket when he's dead." ---' Many of us who had this opportunity while he was liv ing embraced it, and also on and about the - casket were those "in memory of" bou quets and wreaths of colorful and fragrant flowers to be speak the color and fragrance of a life so suddenly and tragically ended. ,r Robert (familiarly and af fectionately called Bob) Meilicke's mortal remains are laid in the grave, "what he has written he has written," but his kindliness while he lived,- lives on in our memo ries, a challenge, an incentive, and an invitation to those who are still in life to live as he did, and a good neighbor should, as ?a man's man." Mrs. and H. R. Bulman Route 4, Box 316A, Medford Cargo Plane Hits Passenger Craft New York -flJPD A four-engine Seaboard ' and Western cargo plane crashed and ex ploded shortly after takeoff today and plowed into an empty parked passenger plane at Idlewild Airport. Both planes went up in flames. ' Two stewardesses-the only persons aboard the parked Trans-Canada Airlines Vickers Viscount-escaped safely, al though one was reported to have been burned slightly. Flames from the two planes quickly spread to the old do mestic, terminal building at the airport. A spokesman at the airport said the Trans-Canada passen ger plane was to have begun taking on passengers in a few minutes after the crash. Now Many Wear FALSE TEETH With Little Worry Eat. talk, laugh or sneeze without fear of insecure false teeth dropping. slipping or wobbling. FASTEETB holds plates firmer and more com fortably. This pleasant powder has no gummy gooey, pasty taste or feeling. Doesn't cause nausea. It's alkaline (non -acid). Checks "plate odor (denture breath). Get FASTEETH at any drug counter. Washington Report By Wiiliam S. White No More Parades Washington - The political future belongs so far as the eye can see to the middle- "5 roaders - the i quiet, . reason- 1 ni.iA : duic men j in stead of the 4 angry ana t shouting men. can voters are plainly tired of "give 'em hell" in poli tics, of black and spoUess. William S Wtute dyed villains heroes. Call them conformist and complacent. Or call them simply more grown-up now. Whatever the reason, the people no longer look at po litical candidates and parties as two frantically hostile rah rah alumni groups look at a college football game. Rather, the people put a cool eye upon candidates and parties and then make their" decisions on this basis; Which fellow, and which party, will be better for us on the whole and most of the time and tak ing everything into consider ation? fPHESE are the real lessons of the recent Congression al campaign, which has pro- ; duced the largest Democratic majorities in the Senate and House since the Roosevelt New Deal. But these are not New Deal majorities; at most, their total complexion is mod erately liberal. How did the Democrats win so largely? By having run a solid, unspectacular, unbitter and sensible show through two preceding Democratic Congresses. By having got the job done without howling and baying at partisan moons. By having made a record of true professionalism under highly professional leaders -Senator Lyndon B. Johfoson in the Senate and Speaker Sam Rayburn in the House. What has happened in 1958 simply is an extension of what happened in 1954 and again in 1956. In 1954 the Democrats took Congress only two years after the land slide' Republican victory for President Eisenhower. In 1956 they again won Con- though his years might have ruled him out of the nomin ation, would certainly . have had a lot to say" about what Democrat would get it if the voters had not extinguish ed Mr. Harriman as they ex tinguished William Knowland in California. Now Mr. Know land will not stand in Mr. j.ixon s ay and Mr. Harri man won't stand in anybody's way. . THERE are, of course, oth er Democratic hopefuls whose prestige was not at stake this fall. Robert Meyner had already decisively won a second term as Governor of New Jersey. Sen, Hubert Humphrey of Minnesota and Sen. Lyndon Johnson of Texas have always been big vote-getters. They are bound to be on the 1960 list. So will Adlai Stevenson. Unless, of course, the Demo crats become so divided that they can't agree on anybody. What will probably happen is that there will be two Demo cratic Presidential nominees in 1960. (C) New York Herald Tribune Inc. ii-var 111 mm Reasonable Funerals (Priced for Everyone) Frank a Perl talCt FRIENDLY, gress while the people were giving Mr. Eisenhower an even bigger re-election vic tory - while he, too, was still moderate. The way for all this was prepared in Jan. 3, 1953, to be precise. On that day Senator- Johnson became the Senate Democratic Leader. Two minutes later he told his . party caucus that he was go ing to drop most of the old partisanship. The way to win in the future, he declared in this private meeting, simply was to do things for most of the people-not to call the oth er party bad names. THE Republicans, he ob served, had spent 16 years trying to come back by shout ing slogans against Franklin D. Roosevelt, who was mani festly more popular than any body they could offer. They should have cut their losses early, he went on; they should have forgotten about Roose velt and prepared an affirm ative program of their pwn. The Democrats, he said, were going to forget about Eisenhower. They were not going to throw nasty words against him. They were going to put their energies instead into trying to create in the public mind a picture of a "responsible" Demo c r a t i c party. By this he simply meant a quiet, orderly, effi cient party. Johnson, along with mil lions of fellow Americans, had fought in World War II. He learned there, as did many others, that- the days of wild, dramatic charges up ' San Juan Hill were over; that modern wars are won by massive organization, by im personal competence, and not by blinkin' heroes. All this he applied to politics. To this correspondent h e forecast long in advance almost exact ly what would happen, and where, in the Congressional elections.- s What did happen was an immense rejection from coast to coast of extremists and ex tremism. Generally, left wingers and r i g h t-wingers alike were emphatically de feated. QJ O M E of Johnson's more & liberal party associates, already angry with him for "being too cozy," wanted to adopt the technique of fight, fight, fight. Johnson replied: "Leave that to the Republi cans." And so it was left to them. And the Republicans, including President Eisen hower, went out to the coun try crying epithets - "radical ism" and so on - that simply would not stick. The public knew that the Democratic party that had so moderately run two successive Congress es had not now suddenly emerged, bearded and with bombs in hand, from "Some revolutionary cellar. The one great Republican victor in a national Demo cratic triumph, Gov.-elect Nelson E. Rockefeller of New York, knew the people's mood. Not for him was :Sght, fight, fight. Indeed, it wts his opponent, Gov. Averell Har riman, who rejected the John son lines and went down. . Put the torchlights away in the attic; sadly if you wish, for many of us will find dull the new politics of middle aje. There will be no more parades - not soon, anyway. (Copyright, 1958, by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) PERL Funeral Home Phone SP 2-6675 LADY ATTENDANT HOMELIKE ATMOSPHERE.