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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 23, 1959)
MAIL TR1IIWI, Mof, . Tuesday. Juna 23, 1159 MEDF0RDt4 ..Tribune Everyone is Southern Oregon Reada The Mai Tribune" published D-iily except Saturday by MJJ)FOU PRINTING CO 83 North 1i St Ph SP 2-6 Ml ROBEHT W RUHETEditor ' HERB GRV Advertising Manager CEP-ALD LATHAM. Business Mgr ERIC W AXLEN JR. Managing Mitor EARL H ADAMS. City Editor HARRY CHIPMAM. Teleg Editor BICHAHD JKWETT Sports Editor LIVE ST ARCHER Women's Editor DALE ERICKSON Circulation Mgr An Independent Newspaper Entered as seennd class matter at Medlorrt Oregon under Act of March 3. 1897 SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mel I In Advance. Copy 10c. Dail- and Sunday 1 year $13.00 Daily and Sunday mos. 8 .00 - Daily and Sunday 3 mos. 4.25 Sunday Only One year $450 By Carrier In Advance Medford, Ashland Central Point, Eagle - Point Jacksonville. Gold Hill. . Phoenix Shady Cove, Rogue Riv er. Talent and en motor routes. Daily and Sunday 1 year S1S.O0 Daily and Sunday 1 mo. 1.50 Carrier and Dealers copy 10c All Terms Cash In Advance Official Paper of City of Medford Official Paper ot Jackson County ' United Press International - ' Full Leased Wire " MEMBEH OF AUDIT BTJEEAU OF CIRCULATION Advertising Representative: " " WEST -HOLIDA Y CK INC. Of fices in Ne York, Chicago. De troit. San Francisco. Los Angeles. . Seattle, Portland St. Louis, At lanta. Vaiwmjv.r B C. rr NEWSPAPER Si . PUBLISHERS "ASSOCIATION NATIONAL EDITORIAL Flight 'o Time . Medford and Jackson County History from the files of The Mail Tribune 10. 20. 30. 40 and 50 years ago. - 10 YEARS AGO - Juna 23, 1949 (Thursday) " Queen Irene Walker of the Rogue River Roundup will be crowned tonight. Medford Water Superin tendent Robert A. Duff reports that the alternate-day lawn ir rigating schedule has been a success in relieving low water pressures. , , . , 20 YEARS AGO " . " June 23. 1939 (Friday) Fletcher Fish, federal fruit inspector, ' distributes New town apples to the Mail Trib une staff. . From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudge Pot" column: "The song of the threshing machine will be heard in the valley next week. Some have already started vocalizing." 30 YEARS AGO June 23. 1929 (Sunday) The Medford fire depart ment moves into its Third st. station. - ; , The airport is expected to be ready for use within-70 days; ' : " 40 YEARS AGO June 23. 1919 (Monday) Early risers report seeing a "sun dog" on the eastern horizon this morning. The high school band gives a concert in the city park. : . , , 50 YEARS AG6T X June 23. 1909 (Wednesday) A shipment of rainbow and brook trout is expected this week for local dissemination. Medford Commercial club members agree to finance an appeal of the Crater Lake road appropriation case. What's Your I.Q.? Nine or ten correct is superierj seven or eight is excellent; five er six is good. 1. Is a horned toad a toad, lizard, or snake? 2. Did George Washington have any descendants in the direct line? , 3. It tis asserted that the wonder drug, cortisone, can now be made from Mexican yams; true or false? 4. From what Massachu setts town did Paul Revere start his famous .ride? " - 5. The names of which two state capitals include the en tire names of their states? 6. From what mountain did Moses see the Promised Land? 7. What famous orator in the U. S. Senate was nicknam ed "MiU Boy of the Slashes"? 8. What was the name of the Barber of Seville? 9. What is the name of the large island northwest of the state of Washington? 10. In what game is a puck used? Answers: I. Lixard. . 2. No. 3. True. 4. Charlestown. 5. Indianapolis 'and Oklahoma City. 6. ML Pisgah. 7. Henry Clay. 8. Figaro. 9. Vancouver. 10. Hockey. CZECHS SENTENCE PRIEST Vienna-ffiPB-A Roman Cath olic priest was sentenced by a Czech court to five years im prisonment for anti-state ae tivities, it was disclosed today. The priest, Jaroslav Tyrner, was accused of doing "every thing to incite the population against tneConununist re gime," the Czech newspaper Pochoden said. Tyrner "hearts ily hated socialism and the working class," the newspaper said. , Hoffa And The Hill The timing of the resumed Senate Labor Rackets Committee hearings on Jimmy Hoffa and his Teamsters is probably not to be fair- deliberate, lney were interrupted in part because of a medical check-up for Chairman John L. McClellan (D-Ark.), But the new Hoffa head lines could not come at a more appropriate mo ment for McClellan, advocate and sponsor of a stronger labor reform bill than that which cleared the Senate by a 90 to 1 vote back in April. A House Education and Labor subcommittee on June 10 concluded hearings on a reform meas ure, and now the full committee is working on the bill. McClellan on the last day of hearings told the subcommittee he would like to see the Senate bill strengthened: (1) "to deal effectively with the no man's land" between state and fed eral jurisdiction in labor disputes, (2) to outlaw secondary boycotts, (3) to include stronger pick eting provisions. These last two items are viewed by the administration and Secretary of Labor James P. Mitchell as indispensable to an effective reform bill. JlflcCLELLAN termed "one of the most vital 1VA parts of the bill" the "labor bill of rights" which he had introduced on the Senate floor and which, in somewhat watered form, was tacked on to the Kennedy-Ervin measure. That's where Jimmy Hoffa comes in. Hoffa's basic position, like that of the United Mineworkers' John L. Lewis, is that no labor law at all should be passed this year. But if a bill is to be passed, his union has its own version of a "bill of rights." Teamsters attorneys on June 9 promised the House subcommittee draft legislation that would incorporate a "bill 6f rights" in all union consti tutions and bylaws; prescribe rules of order and methods of redress; assert the members' rights to vote on financial matters, to participate in union elections, and to express opinion on all matters relating to union affairs; provide for federal mediation of grievances between a union and its members, and provide federal court re- course for a member if mediation failed. The attorneys promised to submit a model bill by June 15. But the Labor Committee told Editorial Research Reports, June 18, no draft had yet been received. OOFFA'S views on bills of rights seem not to have been communicated to the federal courts, or, indeed, to have trickled down to the Teamsters themselves. The United States Court of Appeals on June 10 told the union that it would have to abide by sweeping clean-up orders issued by its court-appointed What makes Hoffa on Capitol Hill so welcome to advocates of a tough measure at a time whfjn the House is mark ing up or debating a reform bill is the kind of threat the Teamster chief made just a month ago. Speaking at Brownsville, Texas, on May 19, Hoffa warned that if Congress placed unions under antitrust laws, "we should have all our contracts end on a given date." The threat of a general strike of labor, U O i, 4J.ux.La a icjuicuns, was iuiiueuiaiciy icpuuiaicu uy AFL-CIO President George Meany, but it inevi tably strengthened the others seeking strong reform legislation so much so that Hoffa on the following day pleaded that he had been misquoted. had carried the remarks report. L.K.R. Conference in Moscow The 133-member Central Committee of the Soviet Communist Party Wednesday in what is for cedented glare of publicity. The usual practice has been to reveal the passed into history. This time Pravda not only announced the date, it also published an agenda oi sons. The committee is to questions related to the new Soviet seven-year plan. Such matters as automation, mechanization of farming, wider use of synthetics in short, application of the latest technical innovations to the U.S.S.Ks big pusji for economic supremacy. Why the advance notice? Some observers theorize that Khrushchev is trying to give rank-and-file party people a sense of participation in great events. Maybe so. But it's also possible the Reds are doing exactly what they seem to be doing, namely engaging in a little old-fashioned ballyhoo. " AS NUMEROUS economists have been at pains x .yv"if uul-, uie tuuu&uicu iace ueuweeu the U.S. and the U.S.S.R. is in one sense a trumped-up affair. The Russian economy is going through a stage ours has already completed. G, Warren Nutter of the National Bureau of Eco nomic Research noted just the other day that a large snare ot the Soviet spurt is attributable to 'the diversion of manpower to industry" from fanning and other work. But such subtleties don't make very effective propaganda for the West, and Khrushchev has managed to convince a large part of the world that the Soviet Union is about to run us into the ground at our own specialty production. What ever other purpose it may have, the Moscow meeting will furnish Khrushchev with an excel lent sounding-board for pressing his propaganda advantage. ; Meanwhile, in the U.S., the self-analysis con tinues. Recent reassurances haven't removed the sting from Defense Secretary McElroy's warning of April 23 that unless we "increase our own out put ... we may come out second best in a compe tition for which there is no second prize." E.R.R. Board of Monitors. " s presence as a witness clear in the context of i;ii v.. hand of McClellan and The wire service which stood by its Brownsville ..... convenes in Moscow on the Russians an unpre session only after it's consider key economic Dennis the i HOW C0UU I OCIVE YA TO THE &X6Y HATCH? YA clAaV- a. I pe la MMWM a M nun i tsvew uc ms ZiJJxK! Paraguay Is Nation Where U.S. Form of Government Goes Slow By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign Editor Naturally rich but perenni ally poor Paraguay is another Latin American nation where democracy has found heavy going. - Upris i n g s and revplts, some - success ful, others failures, almost have been the landr v rVV 1 locked counr rfNTS1 try's history since the end of its war with Argentina, Brazil and Uru guay in. 1870. And the seeds of revolt scatr tered throughoift Latin America by the winds of Fi del Castra's successful revo lution in Cuba, have found fertile ground in Paraguay, which has been under state of siege for nearly 30 years and. today is ruled by the military dictatorship of President -pen. Alfredo Stroessner. In the last six months, spurred by the Cuban revolur tion and a number of abortive invasion attempts by Nicarar guan exiles in neighboring states, Stroessner has made some gestures at restoring a democracy which most Parar guayans never knew. Press Freedom Returned On April 28, he raised the state of siege and announced restoration of freedom of the press. ' He also called for election of a constituent assembly to ret write the constitution, to be followed by national elections to name a truly representative congress. On paper, it made encou? raging reading. But Stroessner's opponents have called it lip service only and Stroessner's own gestures toward carrying out his pro gram have seemed but half hearted. His opponents gained am? munition for their charges when on May 30, Stroessner reimposed the state of siege and arrested 15 members of the House of Representatives and at least as many political leaders within his own Cole rado Party. The arrests grew out of ant i-government demonstrar tions protesting a rise in trans portation fares. A deeper cause of the denv onstrations was poverty pitted against the steadily rising cost of living in general. It's a Dictatorship Stroessner came to power five years ago after a "sen-r sible revolution which ousted President Federico Chaves. While Stroessner's is an un doubted dictatorship, there also are indications he is not entirely his own man. Stroessner does not have the Try and By BENNETT CERF- TiHE WALL STREET JOURNAL tracked down a not-too-1 bright office girl Who, when finally discovered, had thought for eight solid months that the waste-paper chute down to the furnace was a filing cabinet. That's where she had stuffed every letter given her to file. "That's not the worst of it," mourned the bank V.P. who exposed her. "We fig ure that we lost 3,000 letters as a result of this girl's stupidity and to this day we haven't needed one of them!" Reasonably distinguished author dropped in to visit his publisher, but was stopped by a too-honest receptionist. Xou can't see the boss now," she told him. "H's completely tied up. He's taking a nap." i e If you care to take the word of Oklahoman Cliff Wade, Texas marriage vows now conclude, "Do you promise to love, honor, and talk about Texas?" 1958. by Swastt Cat Distribute to aUuXatiumeVadkate. Menace strong man temperament and he seldom makes decisions without consulting the mili tary junta which surrounds him. On his own volition, he is inclined to deal lightly with his opponents, or even those who plot against him. A man behind the scenes is Lt. Col. Ramon Duarte Vera, powerful chief of police who is a law unto himself, ujir touchable even by Stroessner. Besides his own police force, Duarte Vera also has the backr ing of the army cavalry divi sion at Campo Grande which guards the capital of Asun cion. ' - ' Aligned with Duarte Vera is Tomas Romero Pereira, president of the Colorado Party, the only legal party in Paraguay. These two men, more than any others are blamed for Paraguay's backward march from democracy. Paraguay's constitution is Wagon Riders See Wedding Kemmerer, Wyp.-(UPD r-The seven covered wagons of the On-toOregon Cavalcade to day served as the rustic, ro mantic setting of the marriage, of. Thomas A. Holloman, 21, and Judith Ray Roudebaugh, 18, both of Drain, Ore. The Fif ty-Niners" pulled into Triangle park in the cen ter of this Western Wyoming town about noon and formed the traditional circle for en-: campment. The bride and groom were escorted to Evanston, Wyo., Monday by Wyoming state police to complete pre-mar-riage technicalities after Arriv ing from Drain. '. V Kemmerer businessmen ar ranged for-the wedding cake, flowers and the reception. The bride wore an old-fashioned white wedding dress made for her by Mrs. Edna Erickson, Drain, an old friend of the family. Don Work, cou sin of the groom, accompan ied the couple and served as best man. Maid of honor was Janelle Roudebaugh, sister of the bride. The parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. R. "Rudy" Rouder baugh, are riding the wagon train. RAIDERS KILL BRITISH Cairo -(DPD Arab Fedayeen raiders killed five British sol diers in the southern Arabian state of Muscat and Oman, the semi-official Middle East News Agency reported Mon day. The unconfirmed report said the raids took place be tween . Nazwa and Azki against a British military camp and another British out post. Stop Mo Congress Reported By FRANK ELEAZER United Press International Washington - (DPD - Rustlers are reported after the cattle again in the West, and it f looks like Con- iS 6 l c g . 2 . . . , nave to neao 'em off at the interchange. Sen. Cordon Allott (R Colo.) said he is informed bad hombres under cover of Frank Blearer nlgOl nave been snatching slick newborn calves, loading them into panel trucks and floorboard ing it for unspecified markets in Kansas. The victims naturally are yelling for help. Meanwhile, back at the Capitol, our lawmakers also have promised a fight to save the West's few remaining wild horses. It seems that city slickers in airplanes and heli copters have been running the modelled after that of the United States. But it exists on paper only, and meanwhile the people of Paraguay seem to have little immediate chance o enjoying their na tural riches which range from fertile lands to timber and yast mineral resources. New Biography Pictures Nixon As Driving Man By RAYMOND LAHR United Press International Washington-flJPD-A new bi ography of Vice President Richard M. Nixon pictures him as a man who would bring drive and confidence to the presidency. This is the way the book answers its own question as to what kind of president Nixon would make: ". . . He would be perhaps the hardest-driving chief ex ecutive arid the most contro versial since Theodore Roose velt. There would be nothing haphazard, nothing bland about his administration, nor any doubt about its political identity. There would be hold overs from the Eisenhower regime, but under Nixon they would move more energeti cally." . Earl Mazo, - who covers Washington politics for the New York Herald Tribune, wrote the biography which is titled "Richard Nixon, A Po litical and Personal Portrait." Mazo took a six-month leave of absence in 1957 to produce the book, and ended up" de voting 15 months- to it. 20 Interviews He interviewed Nixon more than 20 times, talked with about 300 other persons about the vice president and com pressed the result in 300 pages. The book can be described as neither an unfriendly book nor a campaign document. Mazo gives a play-by-play account of events leading to the vice president's renomina tion in 1956 and cf Harold E. Stassen's campaign to knock him off the ticket. The book reports that Presi dent Eisenhower reminded his junior partner that no vice president had been elected to th White House for more than a century. Mazo also reports that Nix on actually decided in March, 1956, to get out of politics and accept a job in private business but was persuaded to defer his announcement. Mazo depicts Nixon, the po litician, as a sort of fatalist who believes he was elected to the House, the Senate and vice presidency because he "was in the right place at the right time." Nixon is described as ambi tious but less so than many people believe. Consideration of Kilkenny Delayed Washington (DPD Action was set over Monday by the Senate Judiciary committee on the nomination of Pendle ton lawyer John F. Kilkenny to be U.S. judge for Oregon. The Monday meeting was a closed session and nomina tions were not considered. The committee worked on its legislative schedule in the Monday meeting. . . Kilkenny was approved by a subcommittee last week. The full committee will meet again next Monday and must pass on Kilkenny before the Senate can confirm then nomination. t . M May Have on Increase mustangs to exhaustion, with a view to grinding them up into dogfood. Rustling on Increase Rep. E. Y. Berry (R-S.D.) is already in with a bill to make rustling cattle a little less promising as a life's work, although he does not say any thing about enforcing the new law with a rope, as in some earlier days. "Rustling is on the in crease," Berry said. "There's been an awful lot of it lately. One reason is that under fed eral law as now written this offense ordinarily is punished as only a misdemeanor." Under the Berry Bill tak ing a cow across state lines for an immoral purpose like stealing would be cause to threw a man in the stockade for up to five years and fine him as much as $5,000. The Justice Department is against this, and that's not so surprising. The federal bulls are so busy now chasing inter state car thieves they haven't got much time to spend run ning down cows. Under present law,1 Berry says, you have to ascertain how much the missing dogie is worth before you know whether you are hunting a felon or only an adult de linquent. Only where you can prove the stolen critter would have brought $100 or better can the deed be punished as a felony. What with the way beef prices vary and all, Berry pro poses to disregard the price tag. This seems only fair to the rustler, who otherwise can't be expected to know how regretful to feel at what he is doing. Even Sheriff Raided A Denver cattleman named Lawrence C. Phipps Jr., wrote Allot the other day that io to J5 of his newborn calves recently turned up missing. and that several of his neigh bors also have been raided by rustlers, including John i Hammond, a sheriff. , Rustlers who steal cows from the sheriff obviously have no sense of ethics at Kelly Considers G, Pass Woman Still Committed Grants Pass -(DPD- Circuit Court Judge Edward Kelly, in an opinion filed with the Josephine county clerk Mon day, said he considers Mrs. Frances Irene McCurdy still under commitment to the Ore gon State Hospital in Salem. The opinion, in effect, says she cannot be indicted for the 1948 slayings of her two chil dren. Judge Kelly said that furth er proceedings against her, either under the original in dictment, "or any purported subsequent indictment" can not be undertaken without a report from the "proper of ficer of the Oregon State Hos pital. He said the defendant is unable to understand the pro ceedings and assist in her own defense. Mrs. McCurdy was indicted by a grand jury Sept. 16, 1948, for the murder of her son, Paul Bernard, and com muted to the mental institu tion without a trial. Second Indictment A second indictment, for the slaying of her daughter, Pamela Rose, was filed May 27 of this year. Her lawyer filed a motion to set aside the first indict ment. Judge Kelly said that in view of the standing hos pital commitment he was con struing this request as a mo tion to quash the indictment and said he would comply with the request on that basis. That motion voids the second indictment. The 1948 indict ment still stands, however, if she is released from the in stitution's commitment. In the first case, 11 years ago, the court ordered that she was to be returned to the jurisdiction of the court when her mental condition permits her to assist in her own defense. The court, how ever has received no report from "the proper officer of the Oregon State Hospital." Both children were slain with a butcher knife. The only president of the United States to be buried in Arlington cemetery in Vir ginia is William Howard Taft. Men0ldat5Qor60! recharge body's batteries -Feel Younger Fast! Thousands who feel weak, woro-out at 40, 50, 60 blame fading vigofon untimely age ing, when real cause is just lack oi invigor ating iron and therapeutic dose Vitamin Bi, needed to recharge body's batteries. Thou sands are amazed at way potent, new and improved Ostrex Tonic Tablets peps blood, cells, organs, nerves. In just one day Ostrex supplies iron eiuivalrat to 16 dozen raw oysters, 4 lbs. of liver, 1 6 lbs. of beef, 3-day "get-cniainfd" ajje 69 1. All druggists. to Head Off Rustlers in Mid-West States all, but where they really blew it, according to Phipps, was when they picked as a victim a rancher named Sher man Burns. Phipps said Burns operates not only a ranch near Sheri dan, Wyo., but also a well known detective agency of the same name. "He put some of his opera tors on the case and brought the thieves to court," Allott's constituent reported. However, not all the ranch ers out thataway have access to quite the same facilities for tracking down rustlers as Burns. That s why Allott is Matter of Fact m-p EVEN THE KITCHEN SINK Washington-As a footnote to American political history, it is worth noting the kind of thing that was fruit lessly done to secure Admi ral Lewis Strauss's con firmation as Secretary of Commerce. In the Eisen hower years, real pressure 1 , x ins-ph Aisop fas aimosi never been applied to make Congress see things as the President saw them. Dwight D. Eisenhower's line has gen erally been, "I propose, Con gress disposes." In this in stance, however, the White House threw everything at the Senate, figurately including even, the kitchen sink, in a way that would have been con sidered just a mite shocking in other, less sacrosanct ad ministrations. It is impossible to discover whether President Eisenhower himself really knew about the things that were being done in his name. The chances are that in his simple military way, he merely gave the ord er, "Do everything you can to put over Lewis Strauss In fact the chances are that the President himself will be just a mite shocked, if he ever learns how far Strauss and the White House staff went to win the confirmation which the Senate finally refused. FOR example. President Ei senhower is heavily com mitted to a freer trade policy. Yet the promise that the fu ture Secretary of Commerce would impose profitable re strictions on this country's world trade was freely used in the drive to win votes, as was the boast that he had al ready done so. r Among the Democrats who voted for Strauss, at least two Senators were frankly tempt ed by the bait of restriction on imports of Japanese tex tiles. A determined effort was made to change the votes of two other Democratic Senators in the same way. But Senators Ervin and Jordan of North Carolina ignored the pleas of the large textile interests in their state, which had been stimulated by the pro-Strauss high command here in Wash ington. Again, the appeal was made to Senators from oil-producing states that Admiral Strauss, almost alone among the Presi dent's close advisors, had arg ued for restricting imports of foreign petroleum products. One vote in the pro-Strauss Democratic list can perhaps be attributed to this appeal. But most of the Demccratics appealed to in this way -stood firm against the oil lobby, conspicuously including the two Texans. YET AGAIN, an indirect at tempt was made to reach the two West Virginia Sena tors by a promised restriction on imports of petroleum resi Counsel With Mr. Insurance Fred Brennan Fred Brennan Or Call Mr. Friendly Bill Fish Phone SP 3-7343 MEDFORD INSURANCE AGENCY 27 NORTH HOLLY ST. considering whether Congress ought to send out a posse or something. As for the aerial bronco busters, Sen. Mike Mansfield (D-Mont.) told the Senate the other day only 20,000 of these cayuses are left and that some thing has got to be done to save them from early extinc tion. 0 Accordingly, a House Judi ciary subcommittee will start hearings July 15 on assorted bills to blow the whistle on mustang hunting by plane, jeep, or even automobile. Wild horses couldn't keep me away from that hearing. dues from the Caribbean, which the coal interests have long desired. On thisoground. representatives of the United Mineworkers, generally the most powerful single political entity in West Virginia, put strong pro-Strauss heat on Senators Byrd and Randolph. Randolph and the younger Byrd stoutly resisted, and they, like the North Carolina Senators, have earned much admiration from their col leagues. In addition, there are rath er well-attested reports of a vain attempt to gain more southern votes with a promise that the Republican members of the Senate Judiciary Com mittee would join Sen. East land of Mississippi and his co believers in refusing to report a civil rights bill at this ses sion. Finally, and perhaps most important of all, the Sen ate has never experienced a similarly organized personal pressure campaign from grass roots business leaders. One Senator's wife is known to have left Washington in pro test against her husband's de cision to vote for Strauss, as requested by a very rich man close to both Strauss and Ei senhower who makes a habit of contributing to senatorial campaign funds. In another case, a leading Wyoming busi ness man, in response to a request from Washington, tele phoned Senator Gale McGee to "lay off Strauss." He warn ed McGee that the Jewish peo ple in Wyoming were accusing him of anti-Semitism-which was a demonstrable life. In still another case, the pro Strauss forces were boasting, "We've got Herman Talmadge in the bag," because the Presi dent's golfing crony, Robert Woodruff, had called the jun ior Senator from Georgia to ask his support for the Admi ral. Since Georgians generally bow to the head of the Coca Cola Company, Xhe expecta tions of the Straussites were perhaps understandable; but in the end Talmadge voted against Strauss. I IT IS perfect twaddle that there is no recent precedent for the Senate fight oil Strauss. An exact parallel, in which the man's character was the predominant issue, was the Senate fight against Henry A. Wallace when he too was nominated for Secretary of Commerce. On that occasion, however, President Roosevelt read the signs, rightly. He accepted a deal stripping the Secretary ship of Commerce of all real power, in return for getting Wallace confirmed to the empty title. On that occasion, moreover, the Roosevelt ad ministration, so of ten. accused of dictatorship, refrained from using anything like the meth ods that were, used this time. As Senate Majority Leader Lyndon Johnson warned his Republican opposite number, Everett Dirksen, the heat was so great that it helped to burn Strauss in the end. (c) 1959. New York Herald Tribune Inc.-E.R.R. DON'T BE TRAPPED ON A TRIP! See us for adequate Insur ance coverage for the be longings you take with you as well as the valua bles you leave at home. Bill Fish 4