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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 6, 1959)
MAIL TRIBUNE, MedforJ, Or. Tuesday, 0r. 6, 1959 MEDF0RDS&TBIBU1(S "Iveryune in Southern Oregon Heads Th Mail Trtbuna published Dtil) except Saturday'By MJJJFOflB PRINTING CO 83 North fii St Ph SP 8-S141 ROBERT W BUHL. Editor .. HEHB GREY Advertising Manager GERALD LATHAM Business Mgr ERIC W ALLEN JR.. Managing "Editor EARL H ADAMS. City Editor HARRY CHIPMAN Teleg Editor RICHARD JKWETT Sports Editor OUVE STARl!HEB Women Editoi DALE EBICKSON Circulation Mgr An Indeeendent Newspaper -Enterea as second class matteT at Medfor Oreeon under Act of March 3. 1887 SUBSCRIPTION RATES By M a i i In Advance Copy 10c. Dall- and Sunday I rear $15 00 Daily and Sunday tnoa. 8-00 Dall? and Sunday 3 mos 429 Sunday Only On year $420 By Carrier In Advance Medford. Ashland, Central Point Eagle Point Jacksonville. Gold Hill Phoenix Shady Cove Rogue Riv . er. Talent and on motor routes Dail7 and Sunday 1 year $18 00 Daily and Sunday 1 mo 1.90 Carrier and Dealerscopy 10c All Terms Cast- in Advance Official Paper of City f Medford Official Papej oi Jackson County United Press International - fun Leased Wire I MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION Advertising Representative: WtSr-HOUDAY tU, "I- flees in New York, Chicago. De ' troit San Francisco. Los Angeles. o Seattle. Portland St Louis, M . lan'n Vancouver B.C. - NEWSFAPft k PUBLISHERS ''ASSOCIATION MATIONAL EDITORIAL Flight 'o Time Medford and Jackson County History from the fites ot The Mall Tribune 10, 20. 30, 40 and 50 years ago. 10 YEARS AGO feel. fi. 1949 (Thursday) The Medlord Central Labor eouncil reiterates its - stand supporting new Housing unus to replace the veterans' hous ing project near - Jackson school. ' "Old Timers" in Medford's Elks lodge are honored in ceremonies here. 20 YEARS AGO Oct. 6, 1939 (Friday) l Thomas C. Parker, acting superintendent of Crater Lake National park, asks public as . sistance in the search for missing Albert C. tJoetze of Ashland. .From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudge Pot" column: "The rain has caused farmers to fome to town and mutter fall plowing threats.". 30 YEARS AGO Oct. 6. 1929 (Sunday) A thunderstorm ends the Rogue valley's long drought after 114 long, dry days. v Plans for marketing Rogue galley turkeys are laid. 40 YEARS AGO Oct. 6. 1919 (Monday) The Medford city council considers new auto parking Regulations. f - Orchardists hope the pre dicted rains will hold off until all the apple crop is plucked. 0 YEARS AGO Oct. 6. 1909 (Wednesday) - Auditors find a $619.95 shortage on the city of Med ford's books, but blame ar chaic, bookkeeping methods rather than the bookkeeper himself. ;'., ; ; Warren Construction com pany is expected to set up its paving plant in Medford soon after completing work on 'Ashland's streets. JVhsl's Yoisr I.Q.? Nina er fen correct is superior; seven or eight is excellent; five ot sis is good. " v 1. What was the first wom en's magazine in the United States? 2. What has been the na-q tionality of the Popes for moge than three centuries? 3. Are sheep classed as bo vines, equines or ovines? 4. What four-letter word meanstmolten rock erupted by a volcano? 5. Who was nicknamed jThe Sultan of Swat?" 1 6. Under the sovereignty of What country is the island of Malta? ; . - s 7. Do you associate the narre of the pioneer Daniel Boone with Kentucky , Ala bajna or Tennessee? 8. Was Benjamin Franklin, Janes Madison, or Thomas Jefferson the nation's fu?t (Secretary of State? 9. Was Plato, or Pluto, a o Greek mythological charac ter? - 10. The man known as the "financier of the War of Inde pendence" was Benjamin Franklin, Robert Morris, or John Adams? 1. Godey's Lady's Book. 2. Kalian. 3. Ovines. 4, Lava. 5. Babe Ruin. 8. Great Britain. 7. Kentucky. 8. Thomas Jf f&son. 9. Pluto. 10. Robert Morris. - One-third of the world sup ply of commercial arsenic comes' from, the V. S. Thank You, Gentlemen For about the past week, this space has been taken, on and off, by editorial writers on vari ous Oregon daily newspapers. This was the expedient used during the con valescence of "E. A." from a bad cold to bring timely, Oregon-written editorials to the ' Mail Tribune's readers.. ...,. -: :" ' From our standpoint, the experiment (and the. expedient) was a success. For, generally speaking, Oregon's daily newspaper editorials measure up to those written anywhere. (XNE of the most rewarding parts of the job of being an editor is the opportunity to read other Oregon newspapers, and particularly the comments of their editorial writers on topics of common interest. They represent just about every shade of po litical and economic thinking, ranging from ultra conservative to liberal. Their beliefs are often in conflict, and they make no bones about it. The writing varies from sparkling to dull. But all are honest, and all are based on what the writers feel to be the public interest. MOT infrequently, other Oregon editorials have ' appeared on this page in the 'Editorial Com ment" column, and have been reprinted here on Mondays in recent months, supplementing "E. R. R.", a syndicated editorial service (Editorial Research Reports) , which, while excellent in its own field, cannot have the same local punch as pieces written on the scene. , It might be of interest to mention the Ore gonian editors whose pieces have appeared here from time to time, Here are some : Charles A Sprague, editor and publisher of the Oregon Statesman in Salem, former governor of: Oregon, a man universally respected for his fairness, his sage perspective,; and his usually unemotional but comprehensive assessment of Oregon's (and the nation's) problems. J. Wesley Sullivan, alsoyof the Statesman, a graduate of the University of Oregon, and a former Nieman Fellow who studied at Harvard for a year on a fellowship granted only to out standing young newspapermen.5 - - ':' ''C I. W. (Bud) Forrester Jr.,editor and publisher of the East Oregonian inPendleton, a gradu ate of Oregon State college, now a member of the state board of higher education, a man whose opinions are respectfully sought in a dozen dif ferent fields. -.. ; ;': Robert Frazier, associate editor of the Eugene Register-Guard, another U of O graduate, and another former Nieman Fellow. He is a mem ber of the Oregon state parks advisory commit tee, and writes frequently on recreational and educational affairs. Charles V. Stanton, the Roseburg News-Review, whose chief inter ests lie in conservation, politics and local ad ministration.: He is one of the few who writes under a by-line, and uses the pronoun 'T in hisj column, rather than the "editorial we." Robert W. Chandler, of the Bend Bulletin, a graduate of Stanford, and an outspoken controversialist, who says what he j means bluntly and cogently, and without . any cnance oi Deing misunaersiooa. PHIL F. Brogan, associate editor of- the Bulle- acknowledged experts meteorology, meteors, have-you in the field of the natural sciences. Forrest W. Amsden, executive editor and as sociate publisher of the Coos Bay World, one of the few really liberal editorial writers in the state, who leaves this month for a Congressional Fellowship in Washington, where he will serve on the staffs of several different Congressmen. His pieces are trenchant, outspoken, and read with respect, even by those who differ. Jim Welch, editorial page editor of the Salem Capital Journal, another U of O graduate, whose forte is in sprightly, sometimes flippant, com mentary, seasoned by hard work and study. George Putnam, editor emeritus of the C-J, and formerly editor (many years ago) of the Mail Tribune, whose crusty, outspoken criticisms of what he believes to be sham and deceit are often coupled with descriptive bits of background in formation on news of the day. - .' , "THERE are others whose names and styles are "Ness frequently in evidence, or who are not so readily identifiable, but who contribute much to make Oregon's editorial pages often provoca tive and nearly always readable. In addition, some of the best editorials are written by editors of weekly papers, and some of these have also appeared on this page. We mention specifically William Tugman, of the Port Umpqua Courier in Reedsport, Ralph Stuller of the Coquille Valley Sentinel, and Giles French of the Sherman County Journal in Moro. For your inadvertent but much-appreciated help, gentlemen, much thanks. E. A. Inconsistency Sure, we're against air pollution. Sure, we love clear, sparkling fall days, when one can see the surrounding hills. Sure, we like the yellow sunshine of autumn, warming the crisp morning hours. 'But (and our only justification is in the quo tation that "a foolish consistency is the hobgob lin of little minds") we also are mighty fond of the smoke generated by a hundred pyres of burn ing oak leaves. E. A. r -- . - : . .... . editor and publisher of editor and publisher on geology, astronomy, paleontology and what- Dennis the Menace cms ita 'cathaP. ritMcm Matter of Fact "THE PEACE ISSUE" Washington - The first re turns are now in on the Demo cratic party's reaction to what the politicians call, with cheerful cal- lousness, 'the ""i 'gmmJ peace issue. i-L mm i x- cians do Pres- jr'isj"! ident Eisen- IX U W C X 1C33 than justice, when they suggest that Joseph Alsop he i.has started , negotiating with- Nikita S. Khrushchev with one eye on the next elec tion.. They are equally unjust to the American people (or so one hopes), when they fore cast that the voters will be ab solutely delighted : by any peaceful result of the new ne gotiations with the Soviets, even including a Munich-like result. .- -: : All the same, although he has not yet borrowed Ueville Chamberlain's leftover um brella, President Eisenhower has effectively draped himself in the peacemakers' mantle. A large corner of the mantle also covers Vice-President Nixon. These facts quite cer tainly constitute a political prbblem-of the first order for the Democratic party. Above aU, this is a problem for the Democratic Presidential hope fuls.'7 " . : IT IS even harder to be against peace than' against motherhood. Hence all Demo crats must n-.tu- eJly be tempt ed to shout "me too," as the British Labor party did in the 1930s. But this process of negotiating with the Soviets needs to be watched and de bated with relentless realism. This much we ought to have learned from President Roose velt's experiences with Joseph Stalin. Hence the first Demo cratic reactions to the "pea:e issue" are healthy and encour aging, whether or not you agree with them in detail. The bluntest reaction came from Dean G. Acheson. In a speech delivered in Germany, Acheson sternly attacked the President's acceptance of the Soviet thesis that the Berlin situation is "abnormal." The former Secretary of State pointed out what is true -that the situation at Berlin had produced no threat to peace for ten years. He added, again accurately, that any threat to peace comes exclus ively from Khrushchev's sud den attack on Soviet-guaranteed Western rights in Berlin. He concluded that any sacri fice or dilution of Western rights in Berlin would amount to surrender to Soviet threats, whatever Khrushchev may have said about "no . time limit'' for the negotiations. FORMER Secretary Ache son can say unpalatable things in an unvarnished way, without worrying about los-1 Try and 'I ' 11 By BENNETT CERF- THE TEACHER'S first report on little Cbjistopher was distinctly encouraging. "Chrissy is a bright, alert lad," was the comment, "but I believe he spends too much time playing with the girls. However, I am working on a plan which I be lieve will break him of the habit." Chris' mother ac knowledged receipt of the report and added this note of her own: "Let me know if your plan works, and I'll try it on his father." -. The -passenger in Upper Berth Number 7 ps-s-s-ed the conductor and asked, "Win you please bring me a glass of water?" 'That's the tenth glass of water you've demanded in the past 20 minutes," protested the conductor. "I never heard of any body drinking so much water." Tm not drinking it," said the passenger. "My berth is on fire." -r c 1959, fey Bennett Cert Plstribnted by Bag feaiuru Syndicate. call's it 'eoowi OFF. Bv Joseph Alsop ing delegates at the Demo cratic convention in 1960. The two remarkable, closely similar, recent speeches by Sen. John F. Kennedy are particularly interesting. When he spoke, Kennedy was dele gate - hunting in a Rochester, N.Y. and Indianapolis, Ind. Yet there was no "me too" ring in what he had to say about the peace issue. Kennedy did not go so far as Acheson. He welcomed ne gotiation about Berlin, about disarmament, about the sus pension of nuclear , tests. But he boldly warned his huge audiences that there was no easy, way out by "keeping talking." There was hope, he said, in effect, if we our selves created the right cir cumstances for talks. These circumstances he defined rather clearly in Indianapolis. v"We must build our mili tary preparedness, to close the missile gap; to harden and protect out deterrent; to mo dernize and strengthen our conventional forces to resist brushfire aggression any where," he said. "We should not delude ourselves into mis taking Mr. Khrushchev's will ingness to talk for (indefinite and permanent) willingness to keep the peace." , "More effort" was the some what surprising Kennedy cry in both speeches - and by "ef fort" he explained, he mean$ not just effort to maintain a reasonable balance of military power, he also meant effort to sustain an adequate rate of economic growth, and ef fort to solve the multiplying social problems of an ex panding society. A S JUSTIFICATION for this call for effort and sacri fice, Kennedy recalled the great . speech b y Winston Churchill in the time of the Berlin blockade. In that speech, Churchill pointed to the still - existing American atomic monopoly as the sole defense of the West. He then pointed to the Berlin block ade, in order to suggest the Kremlin's boldness, even when the U.S. enjoyed an atomic monopoly. He warned, finally, that the atomic mo nopoly would eventually be broken. As the close Churchill asked, as Kennedy recalled: "If . this is what they do in the green wood, what will they do in the dry?" Such reminders of past his tory are surgically salutary and they are also unusual to hear from a candidate. " As Kennedy admitted, Khru shchev may mean all that he says about peaceful co-existence, if you understand the phrase as he does. But think how he has threatened us at the opening of the missile gap, what then will he do in 1960, and 1961, when the gap will be very wide indeed? (c) 1959, New York Herald Tribune Inc. Stop Me Communications Laetters to the ' Editor must bear the name and address ol the miter although under cer tain circumstances tne use of a pen name or initial for publica tion is pe-missible. -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 Porter Replies To the Editor: I'U argue with the Lane County Sheriff who wants my job when he wins the Republican nomina tion, if he dees, next May and when I , win the Democratic nomination,- if -1 tlo,-in the same primary plection.- . However, in his letter to you earlier this month he ends up by saying ". . . but I still question the motives of a man who heralds revolution against Franco, Trujillo and Jimenez and who wants all manner of courtesies extend ed to Mao Tse-tung and Fidel Castrp, as well as Jimmy Hoffa." ; : , j'-., , ; . . . I can excuse him for not knowing that Perez Jimenez, the former dictator of Ven ezuela, has been deposed now for almost two years and by a revolution of which ' I fully approved, but I cannot sit stul in the face of his com pletely baseless assertion that I want "all manner of cour tesies extended to Mao Tse tung and Fidel Castro, as well as Jimmy Hoffa." I have never suggested that any courtesies be extended to Mao Tse-tung or Jimmy Hoffa. As for Fidel Castro, he has established an honest government which pro tects the individual liberties of its citizens. It is a dis organized government and it has not as yet set a date for elections but it is headed by a man who is a sincere ideal ist. I might also point out to the Sheriff that it is the of ficial policy of our govern ment to extend a helping hand, so far as possible, to Fidel Castro. I sincerely hope that such r e c kless misrepresentations wiU not continue to be the basis for the Sheriffs attempt to win the office I now hold. , v ; Charles O. Porter .' Member of Congress Thanks Veterans To the Editor: In your com munications column , of Sep tember 30, a letter appeared written concerning the vet erans in the Camp White Dom iciliary stating that. the vet terans there had been doing a great deal for the communi ty without getting any credit for it. ' AS the campaign chairman for the United Medford Cru-' sade this year, I wish to thank the .vriter of . the letter for expressing this opinion, and to publicly thank the veterans for their help. Each year for many years the veterans at Camp White have sorted campaign ma terial such as window stickers and lapel pins for the Crusade, I am sure that they have been thanked for this task, but no public announcement has been made of it. From year to year the em ployees at the Camp White Domiciliary have received recognition for generous giv ing when the activities of the Public Employees Division of the Crusade Campaign were reported. Gifts from veterans at Camp White have been in cluded in this total. It is true that every em ployee group and organization is not given publicity for com munity help, especially in news media. It is understood that charitable service and charitable giving are not for publicity purposes, but rather for the satisfaction of being able to help. I feel that the letter con cerning the Camp White Vet erans was well justified. I am happy to publically thank our veterans. They are indeed a part of our community. Del Landing Campaign Chairman United Medford Crusade Society Replies To the Editor: This is in answer to the letter from Mrs. O. B. Bates, 4010 Jacksonville Highway, which appeared in the Mail Tribune Oct. 5, in which critcism and false state ments concerning the South ern Oregon Humane society were made. The society wel comes constructive criticism but objects strenuously to false statements. After reading the letter a member of the board of directors of the society went to see Mrs. Bates at 4010 Jacksonville Highway to as certain just what her com plaint was, but found that 4010 Jacksonville Highway was non-existent, so this letter is being addressed to the non existent Mrs. Bates through. the Medford Mail Tribune. We invite Mrs. Bates or any one else interested to visit our society at 2902 Table Rock rd. and acquaint themselves with our policies and inspect our facilities. The Southern Oregon Humane society is a non-profit organization, sup ported by public contributions and memberships and has no salaried employees. Apparently Mrs. Bates is not aware of all the facts as we believe that the Southern Oregon Humane society was. U.N. Probers in Laos Tough Task Finding By PHIL NEWSOM - UPI Foreign Editor ; The United Nations. Inves tigating Commission in Laos is haying understandable diffi culty docu menting the La o t i a n charges of agg r e s s i o n against Com munist North Viet .'Nam..1.' Part of the difficulty is geographic a 1, Ftui Newsom part is the na ture of the people involved,' and part must lie in the defi nition of aggression.' - The dctionary definition of aggression is: "A first, or un- Cong ii ress Gain By .Congressional Quarterly Washington-(CQ)-The run ning ; budget, battle between: President Eisenhower and the Demoncratic-controlled - Con gress increases chances for the "Congressional Record"' actually becoming a record. The Record supposedly is a word-for-word account of the proceedings ,on the floors . of the House and Senate. The Record also has an appendix in case members of Congress want ito amplify their viewsl But members of Congress can' "revise" their remarks before they are printed in the Record. : These revisions are far more drastic than correct ing ' syntax or grammar. In fact, ; the revisions tradition aVy have been so extensive that, there . is a1 saying that Congressmen are the only people on earth who can sigh, "I wish I had said that," and then' say it. v; ''r ' ' Besides changing what was actually said on the floor, members of Congress can get permission to "extend" their remarks. This amounts to giv ing the printer of the Record a long speech which was nev er spoken on the. floor. But the folks back home have no way. of knowing from read ing the Record that their Con gressman, was miles away while the ' debate was going oh. - " Post-Adjournment Speeches Adjournment does not cut off the printed speeches. Be tween the adjournment of Sept. ' 15 " and Oct. 5, mem bers . of Congress can have their second thoughts printed in the Record. The Record dated Sept; 18, for example, is an appendix of remarks on everything from what Sen ate Minority Leader Everett McKinley Dirksen , (R - HI.) thought of the 1959 Sessions of Congress . to whs' Rep. Cleveland M. Bailey (D-W.Va.) thought of a West Virginia mule named Bert. - . The battle of the budget, however, has narrowed ' this tolerance for political twist- instrumental in obtaining the recent improvements at the county pound. Mrs. Bates' statement "and the animals taken there (to the Humane Society) are im mediately put in the gas cham ber is completely false. As a matter of fact and record, de serving animals are held by us for a much longer period than at the county pound, as unbiased investigation will substantiate. The Southern Oregon Hu mane society has no objection to the; humane acts of any kind person long as it does not add to the community - prob lem! It is our policy to public ly recognize all deserving acts of animal-human relationship, as witness our award to "Tim- my," the guide dog, on tele vision last Tuesday night. Board of Directors, Southern Oregon Humane Society. Hunters' Beware To the Editor: If you are going hunting, You would have better luck If you would wear a pair of antler horns, .; ' . So you wouldn't be ..taken for a buck. And instead of your red hat and coat, You should wear a coat of fur, So you won't be taken for a mountain goat, Or perhaps a grizzly bear. With so many hunters get ting shot, I think it would be wise, ;v : To make a law not to shoot, a man, Till they see the whites of y his eyes. Mrs. Naomi R. BoyL 1125 Atkins, Medford. Husbands! Wives! Get Pep,Vim; Feel Younger Thousands of oouplef are weak, worn-out, exhausted because body lacks, iron and Vitamin Bi. For a younger feeling after 40, try new, improved Ostrex Tonic Tablets. Contain iron and high-potency dose Vita min Bi for quick, new younger pep, vim. 3day gt-aoquainted" ciznlv 694. Of get Acowjmy ize,HV J 1.67. All druggjxti. May provoked attack, or act of hostility." : Within that framework, the charge of aggression against the land-locked Loatin king dom by the . Communists should not be hard, to prove. The Laotin government has been under steady attack by the North Viet Nam Radio, which, among other things, has accused it of permitting Laotian soil to become a United States base. Have Communist Support The Pathet Lao forces which form the backbone of armed opposition to the Lao tian - government have the outspoken support of the Communist Vietnamese and generally are agreed to have Accuracy ing of the Record. On 'Aug. 21, Senate Majority Leader Lyndon B. Johnson (D-Texas) obtained unanimous consent of the Senate to run a table in the Record every day to show what Congress did with President : Eisenhower's; re quests for. money; for the so called back-door spending pro grams like urban renewal and airport construction. j Dirksen and Rep. 'Thomas B. Curtis (R-Mo.),. member of the GOP economy bloc in the House, said the table was po litically motivated and unf air. Curtis said claims and count er-claims, about .spending should be argued on the floor instead of "destroying the rep utation oi fairness and im partiality the Daily Dieest (printed in back -of the Rec ord) and Congressional Rec ord have established over a period of years." Johnson countered the figures used were from the Brueau of the Budget, which is under the President Attempts to Reform Curtis introduced a resolu tion to make it harder for members of Congress to use the Record as a political or gan. The Curtis resolution would require anything. not stated on the floor to be set in italic type to distinguish. it from actual remarks. ; A proposal sponsored by Senators Richard L. Neuberg er (D-Ore.) and Gordon Al lott (R-Colo.) would forbid Senators to make "changes of a substantive-nature", in theu remarks. Other pending bills would limit how much ma terial members of . Congress could put in. the appendix of the record and restrict the printing of irrelevant ma terial. With the Democratic lead ership showing a sensitivity to xiepublican budget-busting cnarges, there probably will be an attempt to continue running the spending tables. This will bring up the larger question which Congress has ducked ; all these years of just what should be allowed to run in the Record. There fore, the pending proposals stand a chance of getting con sideration in 1960. Senator Neuberger contends "the very masthead 'Congres sional Record' ought to as sure rigid fidelity to truth and circumstances. Why lse should the Government spend approximately $1.7 million a year to publish , some 43,000 copies of the Record?" (Copyright 1959..- " Congressional ; Quariely lac.) EXECUTIVE'S WIFE DIES Los Angeles, Calif. - (UPD -Mrs. Frances Dodge : Blees, 67, wife of a prominent busi ness executive and mother of the late actor, William Blees, died Monday. Her husband is a director of Hiller Helicopter Corp., Palo Alto, Calif. i 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. Facing Facts received both their training and their arms from the Com mrnists. The rub, however, is that the i Laotians, charged .the North. Vietnamese with send ing Vietnamese forces into Laos. Yet so far they have been unable to produce a single prisoner who could be traced directly to Viet Nam. What evidence they have produced has' been weapons and statements which they say back up their trharges. , To decide ; whether there has been physical aggression, the U.N. commission must de cide between a purely inter nal strife and the. question of actual invasion. It is the Com munist, claim that it is an in ternal .. Laotian matter and that the U.N. Commission is acting illegally." ' Factors Complicate. Geography and the people further complicate the com mission's work. - Much of Laos is trackless jungle, . without airstrips or roads, frequently, requiring days of painful travel from one outpost to the. next. O It is a tribal area, many of whose people have not even heard of Vientiane, the Lao tian capital. There can be no doubt that the Vietnamese Communists o under the leadership of the wily Ho Chi Minh seek to top ple the Western-inclined Lao tian government. It well njpy be that Vietnamese forces did aid the Laotian rebels, but pulled back in the face . of quick action by the United Nations and the. active threat of aid to the Laotians by the forces of the Southeast Ak Treaty Organization (SEATO). . But whether the U.N. Com- mission wjjl find the evidence is doubtful. ...... ... ' ; Panama City -(DPD Nationajl guardsmen fired a tear-gas barrage- into the National As sembly Monday night to ari&e out hundreds of "hunger mar chers" who sat down for 2V4 hours in the legislative cham ber and announced they were forming a "people's parlia ment." . .. ., .; ;. Gas shells crashed into flu- orescent lights and- cardmed off. paneled walls in the mod ernistic assembly-hall. Some shooting was heard in. the streets outside, but tnere was no report of casualties. Police arrested Andrez Gal van, a "beatnik" type who led the demonstrators, and his chief aide, Eugenio Ban-era. The. two men. were- taken from the assembly president's rostrum, which they occupied during the brief life of their "people's parliament" Galvan and about 2.000 fol lowers marched 60 miles from Colon, Panama's second city, to demand action to ease wide spread unemployment and hunger there. ' Although Barrera vowed in a speech that "we are going to make a government of the people," there were no reports of any serious attempt to or ganize a revolt against Presi dent Ernesto de la Guardia. Grants Pass Man Dies While on Hunting Trip . Prineville-flirD-William Leo nard German, 41, of Grants Pass, died Monday of a heart attack while hunting in the Prineville area. His death was the third by heart seizure in the Oregon deer hunting sea son which opened Saturday. Three others have died from gunshot wounds. - Only a Quarterback Can direct the team from the field. But when you TEAM upe with us on a dividend paying A insurance contract you'll get much more than a QUARTER BACK. .1 . . " Bill Fish Hunger &yV