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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 23, 1959)
MAIL TRIIUNI, M4tf4, Or. Thursday, Jyly 23, 1tS9 Ivryone id Southern Orefoa Reads The Mall Tribune" Published Dolly except Saturday of PRINTING CO. 33 North fir St Ph SP 2-8141 ROBERT W RUHL, Editor HERB GREY Advertising Manager GERALD LATHAM. Business M(T XRIC W ALLEN JR, Managing Kditor EARL H ADAMS, City Editor HARRY CHIPMAN Teleg Editor RICHARD JEWETT Snort Editor OLIVE STARCHES Women's Editor DALE ER1CKSON Circulation MCT An Independent Newspaper Entered as aewmd elaas matter at Medlorn urecon under AC oz March 3. 1897 SUBSCRIPTION RATES st Mai U In Advance. Comr 10c Dail" and Sunday 1 year 115.00 Daily and Sunday mos. tJDL Daily an Sunday 3 moi. 4.29 Sunday Only One year $4.30 nv Carrier In Advance Medford, AMnd Central Point. Eagle Point. Jacksonville. Gold Hill. Phoenix Shady Cove. Rogue Riv er Talent and on motor routes Daily and Sunday 1 year $18 00 Daily and Surnlay 1 mo. 1.90 Carrier and Dealers copy 10c All Terms Cash In Advance 'official Paper of City of Medford Official Paper et jacmira lonniy United Press International" Full Leased wire MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCTJLAT1UJI til T i ntitiif WEST -HOLIDAY CC INC. Of m. xM kj Vn.w riinm an D. troit, San Francisco. Los Angeles. Seattle, Portland St Louis, At lanta. Vancouver B.C. NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS "ASSOCIATION NATIONAL EDITOIIA1 IasQdcCatiQn Flight 'o Time Medford and Jackson County History from the files of The Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30. 40 and 50 years ago. Doug McKay Douglas McKay, who died in Salem yester day at the age of 66, was an old shoe sort ol person. He was comfortable to be with. There was no pretense to the man, no puffed-up vanity, no pomposity. ;"' McKay was not skilled in the arts .of diplo macy, and had a wy of calling a spade a spade which sometimes made his associates blanche when it came in the middle of a political cam- Daicm. or durine delicate negotiations. Ha was comnletelv honest and sincere, and his loss, both to Oregon, which he served as may- i- 1 1 i V A.? ' or, state senator and governor, ana 10 uie nauon, which he served as secretary of the interior and - . m a.1 1 TT l1 as chairman of the U.S. section oi uie joint u.o. Canadian water commission, is a sad one. r-OUG McKay never expected everyone to rl this newsrjaDer freauent- ly found itself opposed to him politically. But as a human being, as a conscientious public servant,, as a tough-minded man of integ rity, McKay earned universal respect. Nimble of wit, quick in speech, rapid in deci sion, -he was also loyal to his principles and to his friends. , '. He will be remembered with affection and respect, both by the thousands who knew him as "Doug," and by those whose only acquaintance with him was through the second-hand means of television and newspapers. E.A. Dennis the Menace Bear Creek " i Dominican Republic, Cuba, Face Each Other With Hostility; Could Spark War Br PHIL NEWSOM j UPI Foreign Editor The Dominican Republic and Cuba lie some 200 miles apart in the Caribbean. Theo retically, both are republics enjoying free dom of speech and thought. Actually, al though for dif- f e r e n t rea sons, both are dictatorsh i p s where a care less word 3 1 Phil Newsom or deed may have fatal results. The enmity between the two could be the spark to alight the Caribbean and con front the United States with a crisis mucn closer to nome than Berlin, Formosa or the Middle East. In Cuba is the 32-year-old Fidel Castro, fired with the success of revolution. In the Dominican Republic is the man twice the age of which have cut down nearly 600 persons accused of crimes against the state. In a nation of only a little more than five million it seems an unusually high percentage of those whose opposition to a regime made it necessary for them to Castro. 67-year-old Generalis- pay tne tinai penalty. simo Rafael Leonidas TruiiUd In the Dominican Republic, Molina, self-styled "benefac- an automobile bearing Labor tor," a man old in the intrigue Minuter Ramon Marrero Aris- and violence of Caribbean ty piungea ue iasi weex irom politics. I a cliffside road, bearing Mar- Castro is the avowed enemy rero Aristy and his chauffeur of Truiillo. not from Dersonal to fiery deaths, acquaintance but from Cas- Marrero was one of those tro's own avowed hatred of who, while professing loyalty Latin America's established to Trujillo, still planned for a dictators. In Cuba there is the dreary echo of the firing squads close. Yet, Castro, its enemy, may help to perpetuate it for a time. Landowners and other conservative Dominican groups have watched events in Cuba and are not anxious to see them duplicated In their country. Meanwhile, relations be tween the two continue in a cloak-anc.-dagger atmosphere of plots and counter-plots and nighttime departures of would-be invaders from lonely Cuban beaches. Matter of Fact Alsep 'HEY, MOM! YOU READY TO WSS AN'MAKE UP?' Today & Tomorrow By Walter Lippmann THE STATE OF NIXON Washington - At the height of Napoleon's power, when half the thrones of Europe were occupied by B o n a partes, the Emperors tough old mother was f 7 10 YEARS AGO Julr 23. 1949 (Saturday) Medford Water commission announces modified lawn and garden sprinkling hours with improved reservoir storage system going into effect. Phoenix Ramblers girls softbaU team, recognized as world and U.S. champions in female kittenball circles, plays Erv Lind's Florists team in Medford. 20 YEARS AGO July 23. 1939 (Sunday) U.S. forest service employee is arrested in Grants Pass for setting three forest fires. From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudge Pot" column: "Sev eral threats to run for some- thin In the primary next spring have been whispered 30 YEARS AGO Julr 23. 1929 (Tuesday) Medford's Community chest committee approves budget of $17,000. Petitions submitted to city nlanninff commission for pav- in rfouth Central ave. from Fifth St. to Riverside ave. 40 YEARS AGO Julr 23. 1919 (Wednesday) Mrs. Ed Brown is first worn an passenger to make flight in airplane at local airport Thunderstorm breaks two week heat wave in valley. 50 YEARS AGO Julv 23. 1909 (Friday) Fruit shippers complain of freight car shortage to snip near cron. "Stationary scenic looko- scope" is placed on top of Mt, Ashland as a service to moun tain climbers. From the published reports, the East Side Abattoir's manager, Leslie Lusk, was in some ways a victim of circumstances when he was ar rested on a charge of polluting Bear creek. Tt pan hp otompA that there is no excuse what soever for 'willful pollution of a public stream. I That aromment is correct, too. I That argument is correct, too. I -f .But on tne otner nana, lvir, juusk was guuiv i i nf Tiothino- more than what a whole lot of other . w , , o , - A J " uppmuui ing on a law people, have been doing for years. And, tne re- for the reguiation of labor ports indicate, he actually is far less at fault than unions, a law which calls for snmft other tvties of ODeration which USe Bear comprehensive and far-reach- . ,"r j t,j t,m. mg Federal intervention in creek as a cheap and handy sewer. , th internal affairs of the . , , . . . i x i-' unions, xet m tne steei sxriKe T WAS his misfortune, however, to be the one ar. man mciUdine Who "got Caught," and against Whom COnVinC- now the President himself, i . - who want no Federal inter- "FACT FINDING" AND STEEL Among tht many big ques tions posed by the steel strike perhaps the most important is what should be the role of the Federal governm e n t. For there is much confus ion about this. The strike is taking place just as Con gress is work- ins on a law I Vhal's Your I.Q.? Nina ar fen earner is supener; seven er eight is excellent; five or six is flood. J. What device on an auto : mobile has the function of : mixing gasoline with air? 2. What mineral is obtained from wolframite? 3. What profession was fol I lowed by both MUlais and MUlet? ; 4. Name the capital of the : Grand Duchy of Luxemburg. 5. Name the animals that can see in complete darkness. ' 6. Is Quebec, Vancouver, or Montreal, the largest city : in Canada? " 7. Henry M. Stanley went to Africa to find and rescue which missionary and explor- er? " 8. For what god of myth- : oloey is Saturday nameai : 9. Correct the following : ontence: "My employer and " myself went to visit the f ac- tory." 10. In the Navy, what kind 1 of craft is nicknamed pig-.-.boat"? Answers: 1. Carburetor. T 2. Tungsten. 3. They were t painters, 4. Luxembourg. 5. None. 6. Montreal. 7. David ; Livingston. 8. Saturn. 9. "My employer and I ' 1C. Submarine. . : n OTHERS 'CHUTISTS Fort Campbell, Ky. (UPD Malcolm, George uwreose, t0a nd Buddy JJalton are fiev brothers from Arizona i t.Tro served in three Will . W , . , aSrhorne divisions and. , among them, have made to- tal oi 498 parauiun I ; -J- o,rn;inV.lQ who want no mgeviucmjc , . n vention and wish to see the His attitude m agreeing to clean up his op- . settled b the test of eration, at no little cost to himself, is commend- economic poWer. ahlo Tt ia to he hOTJed mat Mr. L.USK S Pllgni Win The President's views on wall t.n others intervention in the steel con- who, either deliberately or simply through over- XSJK." SSSS SlgnL Or inertia, are COHUiuuting tu mc jiuuuwu at nis press conference oi nnnifinn June 17. he was asked this Public opinion has finally become sufficient- gjjjn Jp roused to reamre mat sometnine ue uunc, 3t . . .(T,nt. th. .x... and, as is always the case when the public de- management and the steel mands it, officialdom is beginning to enforce the unions are using self - serving i :j;.1V,rin cirFfi. statistics which are m great law, asaisieu uy uiusciuuiviuu yy conlict. Is there anyway that cient courage in their convictions to sign com- g0vernment can bring out nlainfc some . imnartial figures on . Drofits and wages ana pro T WAR Wn said that Bear creek is "too far ductivity so that people can AA.-' wvy. I . , . j t 1 - I . x i -ti i i. iiirv unaersiana xne isues auu eone" ever TO De COinuieieiy cieaiicu up. yt c vc . .. , nwn d-cision. even heard this from a Sanitary engineer. . Th- President answered Mr We are inclined to disagree, provided theJ Brandt, saying, "Weil, i think w-,V.li. nnTtti'miM. its treasure toward a clean-UD. y?u have asked about the -T-TT- ;-'lun m.i lwo inteUigent question on SUreiy, It Will iae imic nuu iu win trtivc pet- that particular question, par Rnasiori as well as law enforcement. " ticular matter: and I haven't TIiq wnret offenHers. whiph include SlaUffn- thought about it in tms par- x i. j j c;mi1of r ticular way . . . i aoni jenow lernouses, saiiu auugid w vyto, tt .""""r whether this would be heip- erations. can be cleaned up Dy court acuon. cut or n6t, but ru take your . t 11 1 J? M-nl ' i - t 1 SI .4-., J winth nr rno nniniTinn rnmps Tniin suravs uiu. i supeesuon ana wave it aiuu- MIMVll w. j t " I f puiauua wtuv.tt xttxv vv.x , "";..' " Last week, at his press con and then intd the creeK. utner comes irom pn- T ,iv m th- vri. vatelV Owned Septic tanks. And much Of both Of dent had had the matter tV.c-o nnmnotn at a flistnnpe trom T.n P. C ItSeil. Studied, tie naa learneu uj-i U1MC . ..a8 far as a fact-finding board MORE attention is now being focused on Bear E5Je1SSS S creek than at any time we can recall, irnnwn . . . Tn all our reports, Its potential is great. Some day it can, and in the labor statistics and the ;t Tin'll hoonma nticd mnre n recreational commerce and the other fig wc iiuyo iv wttt, - - urges that are published, some asset oi no mean vdiuc. But it is eoine to take the combined efforts of officers of the law, of city and county admin istrations, of the state hierhwav commission (and its narks and landscape divisions), and of the fed- Prpsirtent Aid not understand v i ii . il. i i j u.. :. .. .. i j?j j. eral agencies mVOlVea ail OI uiem uaciieu up uy the question, or ne dia noi infnmKwl and determined mihhc ommoh to want the President to unuer- ai4 aliAV llivu w- f - i7 get the job done. . iUUC 0 ft"YOOlUl . lished, how is the public to know how is Congress to know,- how are newspaper editors to know, which of the facts are important and rele vant? The task of finding the facts that matter and of judg ing how they matter is a semi- judicial function. It cannot be done without a specialized inquiry by trained minds. If there is no impartial tri bunal to find the facts, then there can be no such thing as an enlightened public opinion And if there is no enlightened public opinion that can be brought to bear upon it, a strike of this magnitude must become a test of power in a. whirl of propaganda and of prejudice. 11THEN the President reject-1 " ed the idea of a "fact finding", which he had thought rather well of a month be fore, he affirmed a new doc trine: "I believe that we have got thoroughly to test out and to use the method of free bar- cainine." Where great and vital interests are involved how much free bargaining do we reaUy believe in? In the steel controversy to day, the companies happen to have the stronger bargaining position, their customers have quarterly, some monthly, they are all there . . IiraOEVER did the studying of the Question for the E.A. stand it. For while it may well be true that the "facts are "aU there" in some of the many reports that .are pub out the country. Furthermore, it is much more common for the delegate - owners to seek out Nixon, than to be sought out by him. In these circumstances, a less prudent man would have no doubts at all about , the future. Probably Nixon him- more democratic tune alter Trujillo's departure. Feared Leak Early last week, in the United States,' he talked of his plans and said then that if his words leaked back to Trujillo "I'm a dead man." So violent death is a stran ger to neither country. Nor is intrigue new against Trujillo. He has been an abso lute dictator for 29 years, dat ing back to a time when Cas tro was but a baby, three years old. But Castro is his chief vu- Jopb AJsop "Let's hope this just lasts!" are the best translations of self would have no doubts, at . . . . a 5 i- ;l " neard to mut- least aooui tne i nominuu, tt now and u wM TrujUlo's t e r: - rouivu nis own-pons ma iioi suggcau .. r,,h, hat n iiiii-AT I tmt Mptain Ti Am rtr rn T.lf ran- . . . , ... 1. . brougnt aoout tne can xor next month's meeting of the foreign ministers of the Or ganization of American States (OAS) in Santiago, Chile Trujillo first preferred que ca dure! ""Pro vided this just lasts!" or that certain Democratic can didates will be disturbingly hard to defeat. Among these'! Democrats, Sen. John F. Ken nedy of Massachusetts is the most conspicuous, with more the Corsican matriarch's than 60 per cent of the? total charges of interference in in bleak, prophetic remark. The story is worth telling, because it nicely conveys the state of mind of Vice President Rich ard Nixon at the moment of his much - publicized depar ture for Moscow About , his Moscow trip, Nixon seems to have no doubts at all. He has been telling people . here that he genuinely hopes to accomplish something by face - to - face straight talk with Nikita S. Khrushchev. He has said that Khrushchev reaUy. may vote in at least one of the big states that have been tested. NIXON believes that he can overcome even such a lead as this, after the campaign has started in earnest. But he also foresees that the Repub licans will be extremely res tive if next spring's public opinion tests still show Ken nedy or any other Democrat with such an enormous lead. The length of the lead will make the situation a set-up for the use of the "can't win" Communications Letters to the Editor must bear the name and address of the writer although nder ear tain circumstances tne use of a pen name oi initial for publica tion is pe-roissible. The Mail Tribune, reserves the rirht to edit all letters with an eye to clarification and condensation Letters submitted for publics, tion must not exceed 400 words be persuaded to see American slogan that beat Sen. Robert policy in a new light by a man like himself, who has joined in all the American govern ment's highest level policy reasons, and can explain the reasons for him. To say the least, this is distinctly opti mistic. ' A. Taft of Ohio. ternal Dominican 'affairs against Cuba and Venezuela, a nation also recenUy freed of dictatorship. The charge was withdrawn after it became ap parent that the rising tide of feeling agamst dictatorships could result only in his defeat. The OAS now will consider the general question of Carib bean unrest There are many conflicts in the Trujillo story. Enmity be tween the Dominican Repub lic and Cuba dates far before Castro. Yet, today TrujUlo finds himself perhaps the un willing host of Fulgencio Ba- So far. Nixon has been pro- tista, Cuba's ousted ex-dicta tnfl oiinif thm "pa n't win" tor. doer,., Viv a infl simDle nis is an uuuuuutcu u.- c; uf troy. a rv torship. yet the Dominican the other conceivable Repub- Republic's record of hospitals IMplcnn SCnOOlS, sewage aysiciiia lican contender. Gov. Rockefeller of New YorK, nas mad a rather Doorer show- . . I , xi .11.- tt: n..o;nf TfcTTT Vio etao nf nis rimnfS- ins lima me vi riwiuiu- D an nolitical fortunes is the But suppose Rockefeller hject that really absorbs emerges from his self-imposed c Portent And this isolation in the Albany Gov ernor's mansion, as he is showing signs of doing. Sup-' pose he embarks on a cross country baby kissing trip, mingled with statesmanlike large stockpiles, public opin- Bonaparte. ion is stoutly opposed to nn the surfac. to be sure. su the Vice President. And this is where he reportedly dis plays the carefully condition al optimism of old Letizia and general prosperity is far bet ter than that of Haiti, the Ne gro republic with which divides the island, and which now is sunk in poverty, There is a growing feeling that the Dominican dictator ship may be drawing to what we "status." are coming to call another round ol. wage and price increases. The union appears to be far from solid within itself. ' But this favorable balance there is no reason why the Vice President should not look forward to receiving the Republican Presidential nom ination with almost absolute oratory, as some of the . men around Rockefeller are .urg ing him to do. Then everything can per- 0 iUR manufacturers, course, are coming , to SMALL cars this fall. But their small cars are ex- On Stopping Nightmares To the Editor: Like the abominable snowman of the Himalayas, the abominable chairlift of Crater Lake is probably less horrible in fact than , in imagination. lYour editorial July 16. "The Abom inable Chairlift.") If it would be an abomin ation I'd not press for its in stallation. No one wants to desecrate Crater Lake. We want to use it, appreciate it, even more than at present. I can't share your objection to fishing and sight-seeing boats even though I do ad- . mire vonr rpfprpnrps in 'th mirror-like surface of the lake on a clear, windless day . the indescribable blueness and serenity of the water." As for the practical con siderations, I . must respect fully dissent. It can be built, not only almost wholly out of sight, but so that the snows will not hurt the towers. I m doing my best'-to have a model built now so that you and others can observe direct ly just how "abominable" this aerial tramway would be. A Grants Pass friend of mine took a poll at Crater Lake recently and found the visitors overwhelmingly in. favor of such an installation. If a tramway is to be built, first it must be desired by al m o s t everybody concerned. We'll need the support of people like Eric Allen. Infor m'ation comes first, then opinion. This means we must ar range for him and others to moot thp aHnminnhlp chairlift in the daylight. Nothing else will stop their nightmares about it! Charles O. Porter, Member of Congress. to the companies will not al- confidence. In most of the I . a m 4 AM A r A n3n rhanffe. and Nixon can pected to sell tor aoout .uuu have a real fight on his hands, The price range on the cheap- ways be the case, and I won der whether it is wise and prudent for them to set it up as a principle that in these great controversies involving the national interest the issue shaU be decided by a contest of power? ' I do not believe it is. true, as has been said recently, that this is "one of the ways in which freedom functions." If freedom is to function it must insist that the struggle of powerful interests be regula- state organizations, Nixon s nomination is already being taken for granted. In conse quence, he is actually having much difficulty avoiding the uncomfortable role of arbiter in states where the Republi can party is divided. Being sure that Nixon will inherit the mantle of party leadership, leaders of the con tending factions in these states are pressing their own delegate slates to him. They want him to recognize their ted by rational and just pro- faction by approving the fac- even at the Republican con vention which today seems sewed up. (c) 1959 New York Herald Tribune Inc. cedure. Freedom does noti mean that the powerful inter ests shall fight it out as best they can. tion's slate. Nixon has run into this encouraging kind of trouble with special acuteness in Wisconsin and Pennsylvan ia. But even in other states In the Day's Hews By FRANK JENKINS Interesting figures: - Personal incomes of Amer icans rose to a RECORD an nual rate of 382.9 BILLION dollars in June. It was the tenth time in 12 months that American incomes jumped to a new high. The department of com merce says its figures indicate that our national output (value LIVE in a time when the where the Old Guard-modern vital industries and serv- Republican split is much less nf eVervthine we produce) ices of the nation are m the deep, the same sort of thing mav dimb to a staggering 500 hands of giant companies and has been happening. BILLION dollar rate by the giant unions. We cannot en- . end of this year, tnicf interests of the na- TVi M Vie no stronger tion to a combination of the sign 0f the prosperity of the rpHOSE are rosy figures est models of the foreign cars which account for the vast bulk of sales here runs from $1098 at the New York port of entry up to ?ib4a. That leaves a rather wide gap in the purchase price. From all we can read in the way of advance forecasts, the American small car will be more costly to operate and maintain. THIS situation that exists in the automobile market rep resents a cloud on our eco nomic horizon that is present ly only the size of a man's hand. But it suggests this ques tion: Are we pricing ourselves out of market? If we are, it will be reflect ed in loss of jobs in the Unit ed States. How About Sprays To the Editor: I read in the paper that the manager of one of the slaughterhouses was ar rested for. dumping an offens ive substance in Bear creek. When are they going to start arresting the orchardists for dumping all kinds of spray in smaller creeks where it eventually, goes into Bear creek? - Surely some of the spray used- for killing weeds along ditch and creek banks must get into the water, too. v Barbara Kantor, Route 1, Box 251, Talent, Ore. HELP US! We Need Clothing, Sheas. Dishes, Furniture. Wa Pick Up. HELP OTHERS! The Salvation Army SPrina 3-733S companies and tne unions, Nixon candidacy, wnat maices which is what we have naa the prosperity more striking for some years until recently in the steel industry. Nor can we entrust the interests of the nation to a power struggle be tween the unions and the com panies, however mucn wis Try and Stop Mo By BENNETT CERF Hot The most freauentlv asked question around town these days is the old saw, "Is it hot enough for you?" - The answer is "yes." Hi.A. A Thought We've never seen a saucer fly, For us they seem to shun. ' But seeing lights go swooshing by Sounds like a lot of fun. We've never seen a UFO; We'd kind of like to see one. But if the day comes that we do We most probably will run. -a. A. - PeoDle look to the future when they have no Ke wg bridge coming down . ' . l , il i 1 i-1 VnTT. m r ! film nut t let bi - Tinsr. smn iook to tne uasL wnen uiev nave -- . - - . , r " v T i tt " i bridge pass, spiasns tar gone: iwaa smotuci. future Sherman fVnmtv Journal. Moro.' ui f One of America's great real estate salesmen cimcnea u TTTHEN THEY BROUGHT an a gusher on his land, an ejderly -W Indian in Oklahoma became a millionaire overnight, and immediately bought the most expensive automobile lor sale in Tulsa. A few days later he limped pack into the deal er's showroom, his face and hands covered with bruises and bandages. He wanted to buy another of those cars, he explained. "What hap pened to the other, one? gasped the dealer, "Me drive him fine," ex plained the Indian. "Buy gallon white mule iiiuer. , . Take coupla drinks. Step on gas. Trees and fences go by heap fast. Pretty soon. A preacher marrying some of these fast step- pine movie folks must teel HKe a ousn league Ditcher throwing to Willie Mays. He doesnt ex pect his work to be very successful, Sherman bounty Journal, Moro. JO-acre estate to Springfield with this togeniow fj Mr, Eustis. there ere exactly tea different Bpnngfields itt the United States. They are stretched from Massachusetts to Oregon; from Slu to Florida. Relatives seeking to graft weekend. Will never even be aole to find you!" . CJm by Bennett Cert, Distribute jr Kias reetartl Syadiatfc is the further fact that Nixon has not yet put together eyen the shadow of a campaign or ganization. During the past year, to d sure, he has added two very able recruits to his personal Staff: Robert Finch, former Los Angeles County Chair man, who handles the Vice President's enormous political correspondence; and Herbert Klein, a southern California editor, who is serving as pub lic relations. But even today the staff is hardly larger than the staff of any well-heeled Senator from a major state. There is no one to take the road on Nixon's behalf. Everything depends on Nixon's long-nurtured and close links with the Republican leaders through- But there's a catch in them. They are quoted in DOL LARS. DoUars can shrink in value. T ET'S look at some other figures: Last year, foreign car mak ers sold 377,625 units in the United States. This year, they exoect their U.S. sales to run ud to 600,000 units. In all of 1949, West German firms sold only TWO cars to the U.S. This yearr they ex- nect to ship 160.000 cars to us. That's auite a record of growth. ONE more figure: Five years ago, the Unit ed States built 70 per cent nf nil the cars built in the world. ' Last vear. the U.S. built a little less than 50 per cent -aii the cars built in the world. FOREIGN manufacturers are generally agreed that there are four reasons for their suc cess in invading the American car market: 1. Low purchase cost. f. Low cost maintenance. 3. High gas mileage. 4. Foreign styling. TnTE that ox tnese xou reasons, three have to do :m " . . "'r. ct' PURCHASE ence. and to wnicn tne puoiws wim v can rallv. cost; and alter tnat ri late Naw York Herald UNO cosi. Tribune Inc. struggle be prettified by can ing it "free, bargaining." In these great conflicts the national interest must be rep resented and asserted by the Federal government. The place to begin thia.is by a clarification of the contend ing claims. This alone may be enough to provide the basis of an opinion on which the gov eminent can exert its mini. hafwl Mohtuaif Asm fram th Csurihauta RANK MOtSAN - NAIOtO SNOOSRASS, fUNEKAl DMCTOSS DAY Oft NIGHT PHONE SP 2-8039 jr v.uai. Only ONE has to do with'