Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, August 01, 1960, Image 4

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    "Everyone In Southern Oregon
Readm The Mnfl Trlhim."
Published Dally except Saturday by
. 93 North Fir St., Ph. SP 2-6141
HERB GREY Advntlilng Manager
GERALD T LATHAM. Bus. Mgr?
ERIC W. ALLEN JR., Mng. Editor
HADPM SurraVAM rril njii
RICHARD JEWETT. Sport Editor
oinnn&n, women aaiior
An Independent Newnnsner
Xntered as second class matter at
. xaeaioro, Oregon, under Act ox
March 3. 1897
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Flight o' Tim
Medford and Jackson County
History from the files ,ot The
Mail Tribune 10. 20, 30, 40
and 50 years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
Aug. 1, 1950 (Tuesday)
The Shakespearean festi
val In Ashland opens tomor
row night with "Henry IV"
"As You Like it," "Antony
and Cleopatra," and "Com
edy of Errors' being this
year's productions.
More than 23,000 fans
have attended the 35 home
games played by the Med
ford Rogues tins season, an
increase over last year's at
tendance at this stage of the
season.
20 YEARS AGO
Aug. 1, 1940 (Thursday)
The first sale of this sea
son's Bartlett pears was re
corded yesterday when 2,000
tons of the fruit was sold at
S30 Der ton.
From Arthur Perry's "Ye
Smudge Pot" column: "A
California slayer has been
senienced to five life terms
in prison. This is to insure
him serving one of them, if
he is not pardoned five times
faster than usual."
30 YEARS AGO
Aug. 1. 1930 (Thursday)
Southern Pacific has start
ed assembling its rolling
stock here preparatory to
moving the 1930 pear crop.
Two Sams Valley youths
killed a rattle snake 48 Inch
es long yesterday.
40 YEARS AGO
Aug. 1, 1920 (Sunday)
One man was shot and se
riously injured yesterday dur
ing a quarrel over "home
brew" in a South Front st.
residence.
Charles W. Rcamcs, Port
land, a former resident of
this city, leaves for a fishing
trip near Crater lake.
50 YEARS AGO
Aug. 1. 1910 (Monday)
The new gravity water sys
tem from Little Butte creek
will result in lower insurance
rates in Meclford, according
to state board of underwrit
ers. What's Your I.Q.7
Nine or ten correct is tuperior:
leven or eighr is eicellcnr; five or
lis is good
1. Did the Franco-German
War terminate with the
"Reign of Tears," or "Reign
of Terror"?
2. Name the capital ot Bra
zil. 3. "Thou shall not be
afraid of the bugges at night."
Should "bugges" be replaced
by terror, dark, or insects?
4. Which State is nick
named "Granite Stale"?
5. Does the value of an old
coin depend upon it age?
6. Is Hydrophobia a medi
cal term for rabbit fever, ra
bies, or dropsy?
7. Are earwigs ornaments,
insects, or a type of wig?
8. "Friends, I am with you
all and love you all. Said An
thony in "Julius Caesar" by
whom was it written?
9. Does the "Creed of Pope
Pius IV" (1584) contain 10, 12,
or 14 obligations?
10. Which great U.S. ocean
liner bore the name U.S.S
WEST POINT as the Navy's
'largest transport in World
War 11?
Answers: I. Reign of Tears.
2. Rio de Janeiro. 3. "terror."
4. New Hampshire. 5. No, it
depends on rarity. I. Rabies.
7. Insects
f a William Shalt. I
I! Twelve. io. s.s.
speare.
America
UN Peace Force
TVia TTnifo1 Mafi'ona
psran laninrr n a Tanr.n wtimi. n. tint icvci ucui u-
to create by agreement a permanent interna
tional police force. The nucleus of the police corps
now assigned to the new Republic of Congo came
from the noncombat Doay 01 troops which luua
in the Suez area in 1956 upon withdrawal of
British, .t rench, ana Israeli xorces.
The Congo force was
in less than a fortnight.
f.nw, ii nofinnc m'no in
and two in Latin America. They wear O.N.U.
insignia; m French-speaking oongo me ui ims
stand for "Organisation des Nations Unies.
The reasonable expectation is that a United
Nations "presence" will be needed in the Congo
for a long time. Meantime the U.N. Emergency
Force (UNEF) in Egypt will probably be main
tained at its normal 600-man strength. And in
Korea the U.N. Command consists of 50,000
troops, overwhelmingly United States in composition.
THE U.N. Charter contemplated a permanent
U.N. armed force. Art. 43 stipulates that all
member nations should "undertake to make avail-
oMn t-n tVio RonnvU.v ("".nniir-il. nn its call and ill
ufnmvltmpQ with a snprial jiPTfiement or aerree-
HVVUlUWIiuu v "J- - o - (J
ments, armed forces, assistance, and facilities.
The five permanent members of the Security
i7niinr.il pnnfrihntprl fhpir rliipfs nf staff to the
U.N. Military Staff Committee. These subsequent
ly recommended that the permanent members
the United States, the Soviet Union, Great Bri
tain TiYanno and l7hi'iui shnillrl Pnntrihlltp in
itially the majority of forces required. But the
chiefs disagreed on the requirements of an inter
national army, and the whole mechanism bogged
clown in the Cold War.
TTRYGVE LIE, Dag Hammarskjold's predeces
sor as U.N. Secretary General, tried unsuccess
fully to revive the idea of an international police
force. So did Canada, original sponsor of UNEF
in Egypt, three years ago.
contingent and its original
E.L.M. Burns, was a Canadian.
Hammarskiold, for
idea of a "U.N. presence" in troubled areas. This
does not necessarily mean a police force, but
could be furnished by a
or personnel oi the U.N. secretariat.
On creation of a permanent police force,
Hammarskjold told the U.N. Special Political
Committee in November, 1958, he saw "no need
for the General Assembly to take any action at
the present time." Political issues would have to
be resolved, he advised, if and when the members
wisher! , to decide on a iieid operation when
the U.N. faced a "concrete situation."
IN THE Congo, of course, the U.N. is facing a
quite concrete situation. What has become an
emergency force of considerable potency started
out in Hammarskjold's planning as a contingent
of "military experts" from African nations.
Whether any more permanent arrangement
is worked out by formal agreement remains to
be seen, What is apparent is that a prolonged
emergency in the Congo as in Korea or Egypt
would impose permanency of a sort on the inter
national body of troops patrolling an area about
a third the size ot the United States. E.R.R.
Unionizing
Organized labor's
nave come in errorts over the past quarter cen
tury to brine; unionism to the farm. A new cam
paign is under way, however, and its bitter-sweet
fruits will be displayed in a Labor Department
Hearing, Monday, Aug. X, in Washington, on pro
posed changes in farm labor employment regulations.
At issue are departmental orders preventing
cue leoerai employment
uumusuc or Mexican iarm woricers to jobs in
volved in a labor dispute. California farm em
ployers want the regulations modified in order to
combat a series of strikes and picketing of Cali
fornia ranches during the fruit harvest.
rTIIE strikes are the calculated weapons em
ployed by the AFL-CIO Agricultural Workers
Organizing committee in a campaign to sign up
(at $2.50-a-month dues) the estimated 450,000
American migratory farm workers who follow
the harvests. The effort is centered in 11 counties
east and north of San Francisco. Resistance of
growers has been fierce,
it is making gains alter 50 or more strikes in the
past year.
Glowers are in a position highly vulnerable
to labor union pressures because their produce
must be picked promptly when ripe. The union
faces hard problems in recruiting and controlling
the highly mobile work force. The AFL - CIO
says it has assigned a budget of $100,000 for the
"experimental" campaign and that it hopes to
find a formula for organizing farm workers that
can be broadly applied.
Migratory workers would Jinnmir tn ho u fer
tile source for union recruiters. Unnrotiu-tod hv
minimum wage legislation and sublet, to bar-
rowing living conditions,
hand-to-mouth existence
movillfr slum. Oro-anizpd
"WW uvm-u-n it
can move into the vacuum created by federal,
nnr.Pj.VS in T)lOCeSS of
expanded to 1 J.uuu men
The manpower comes
Africa, three in Europe,
UNEF has a Canadian
commander, Maj. Gen.
his part, is fond of the
commission ol observers
the Farm
most resounding defeats
service irom referring
but the union contends
most of them have a
as members nf a imnf
lnhm-
MEDFORD MAIL
Dennis the
'IT OIDNT SOUND like 'daddy' TO
PAKAKtbTS lAiH WWtK
Communications
Letters to the Editor must bear the name and address of the
writer, although under certain circumstance! the use of a pen
name or initial for publication is permissible. The Mail
Tribune reserves the right to edit all letters with a view to
clarification and condensation. Letters submitted for pub
lication must not exceed 400 words. The letters printed in
this column do not necessarily represent the views of the
paper; in fact the contrary is often the case. -
Answers Letter
To the Editor: I am writing
this letter in reply to one
written by Henry Johnson Jr.
in the July 22 issue. In this
letter Mr. Johnson states, "as
I see It, Catholic, Protestant,
or whatever the profession,
the individual owes it to him
self to clearly study the issue
in a non-prejudiced way."
This I agree with him one
hundred per cent. But who or
what religious belief is guilty
of prejudice?
If a Protestant, following
the dictates of his conscience,
says he will vote for a Protest
ant candidate, then he is prej
udiced, but, if Catholics turn
from their own political party
and vote for a Catholic, which
I am convinced they will do
100 per cent, then what do
you call that, Mr.' Johnson?
You also state in your let
ter, "Protestants claim to take
the Bible only while Catho
lics take both the Bible and
tradition."
"I too have seen this in
Calholic advertisements. But
surely you must know, Mr.
Johnson, that the Protestant
and Catholic Bibles are not
the same. Parts of it, yes. A
Catholic is not permitted to
read the Protestant Bible un
less the priest interprets it for
him.
As for tradition, what is
tradition but customs or rit
uals that have been handed
down for centuries. On the
basis of this argument sun
worship and Judaism should
be even more divine than Ro
manism because they have
survived longer.
Trena Howe,
416 Center st.
Santa Cruz, Calif.
Something Big
To the Editor: It is the opin
ion of this writer that some
thing big has happened in
Chicago.
The Republican convention
was not just another conven
tion. It was a momentous
event. It was an introduction
to history. It is the beginning
of another epoch. It was an
acknowledgment that our way
of life as we know it is mori
bund.
Now the nation is faced
with the fundamental three
R's. Namely: Rome, Rockefel
ler and Revolution. As Rome
is the symbol of the Vatican
and its ideals and ambitions
so does Rockefeller symbolize
our psychology and our way
of life. Quibble if you will,
but we have no other wav of
life. Vast wealth is the ideal
of America. So it will be as
long as our way of life stands.
1 speak as a social scientist
and not as a moralist or a pol
itician. Our heroes are the
men that can get ahead. Our
ideal is the man that can slay
ahead. That is the psychology
of America and we can feel
no other way. Religion has its
partisans and supporters; re
form has its adherents, but
wealth has its worshippers be
cause to deny wealth is to
deny success, to desert that
which makes life worth liv
ing. Mr. Nixon, in a choked
voice, admits that he has been
favored by the great Ameri
can Dream. How he arrived
is beside the point. In Amer
ica it is not a question of in
terest wliat storms were en
countered on the voyage, but
did your ship come in? Every
man that has an urge to suc
ceed identifies himself with
success. Therefore he favors
successful men. You may ask:
"Are all Americans snobs?"
Well-just about. The major
ity are. We have been condi
tioned to be what we are. It
is no fault of our own. It is
our tnvironient. Our reflexes
TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. ORE.
Menace
ae. Heck, jVe HEARD
N THAT!"
are conditioned. We are gre
garious and crave the appro
val of our fellow men. Hence
conformity to style.
The big picture at Chicago
was the boast to take econom
ic and social prestige from the
Communists. The U.S.A. was
to dominate the world. The
entire world was to get their
feet into our economic trough,
or so It was suggested. We
were to go places and do
things. To do what was sug
gested in Chicago would be
equal to a social revolution.
As Russia is a proponent of
social revolution it would
seem we are to follow up and
keep step or bypass the So
viet union on the double. To
follow through on the Chica
go declaration would imply
that we don t know where we
are going, but we are on our
way.
Mr. Kennedy and the Dem
ocrats were rather slighted a
the convention in Chicago. It
appeared to this writer that
Mr. Nixon and the Republi
cans were contesting with Mr.
K and the Communists. Their
strategy could imply that they
expect to walk over the Dem
ocrats in a surge to pass the
communists. They toyed with
the idea to bring "freedom"
to Moscow and challenge the
Red Chinese. It is quite evi
dent that Mr. Rockefeller and
Nixon think big.
Walter Reece,
Galice rd.,
Merlin, Ore.
Two Moons
To the Editor: New moon.
Two men. One used a new
moon, and the other used the
same old moon with a fresh
coat of paint.
My opinion and simple way,
the same old convention. Ken
nedy gave it a fresh coat of
paint.
I heard over the air Presi
dent Eisenhower say Thank
God. Others use the word
God. Preachers preach God,
and teachers leach God. I be
lieve if a vote was taken in
the free nations, there would
not be many no votes. I be
lieve there is a God, also, and
if a vote could be taken be
hind the Iron Curtain, the yes
vote would be 99 per cent.
In the Bible, it reads "Ho
that won't be honest with his
fellow man, neither will he be
honest with God."
The Democratic party men
and women have told the
people Kennedy will be the
next president, and the GOP
men and women have told the
people Nixon will be the next
president. I heard over the
a.r the praise Eisenhower
gave his administration.
I wonder what it would
have been if the Delinquent
party had not given support
to them that believe the story
about th? apple. There are
good and bad in both parties.
I heard over the air that we
are ahead of Russia in arma
ments, and that's fine with
Khrushchev. He is not afraid
of the free world for we are
a peace loving people, and we
will not attack unless we are
attacked, and Russia will not
start a missile war. I wonder
what would be yes and no if
a vote was taken on Rev.
chapters 17 and 18. There is
a God in those two chapters,
and In my opinion Khrush
chev has studied those two
chapters also.
I am not speaking words in
the air, I am writing them on
paper. I am in my second
childhood. I may be a juve
nile delinquent.
If I were to name a new
party, I would call it the
Party of Hope, and hope the
people will vote our men in
office. According to the speech
by Nixon, unless Uie- GOP
i
Matter of Fact
By Joseph AIiop
NIXON'S TASK
Chicago - Like the Demo
crats, the Republicans have
now nominated a truly for
midable tick
et. The way
Rich ard M.
Nixon has
handled him
self, and this
c o n v e ntion
too, in these
last few days
is proof
josKrTT alsoF tuun "
proof be needed, of his capaci
ties. He has shown oaring
courage, cool good judgment
and extreme toughness, all at
once. He has rejected both
the paleolithic brand of Re
publicanism, and the much
more pernicious soothing
syrup brand.
In fact, Nixon has taken
the ideal posture for what
should be the most stirring
national debate of this cen
tury; and he has demonstrated
that he has the stature the
debate will demand. In Henry
Cabot Lodge, he has also
chosen a running mate of
quality and stature, who was
the obviously ideal Vice Presi
dential nominee.
THE foregoing paragraphs
sound a bit like one of the
man-who" speeches that are
customary rites at such times
as this. But they are neces
sary, as introduction to an
estimate of Richard Nixon's
task. You have to look at the
man who is going to do the
job before you look at the
job. Otherwise you might
conclude the job could not be
done at all, which would be
a grave mistake at this stage.
The best currently avail
able measure of the job's dif
ficulties is provided by the
elaborate sampling made on
behalf of Nelson Rockefeller
by the Joseph Bachelder or
ganization, of Princeton, N.J.
The sample was taken on the
Saturday and Sunday after
the Democratic convention.
There was much derision
when fragmentary results of
this sample were foolishly
published here by the draft-
Rockefeller entnusiasts. But
the derision was quite unjusti
fied.
To begin with, the Bach
elder sample, taken on the
Gallup system, was impress
ively big. It included nearly
4,500 pollees, or three times
the usual Gallup sample. The
pollees were pro-rated among
the five states tested, which
were New York, Illinois,
Pennsylvania, California, and
Texas. The pattern revealed
was remarkably consistent.
John F. Kennedy led Nixon,
just about 60-40, among the
people who thought they al
ready knew horn they would
vote in November. And the
undecided pollees were about
a quarter of the total in all
five states.
THE 3-to-2 lead for Kennedy
is bad news for Nixon, but
the hitherto unpublished
figures showing the composi
tion of the Kennedy lead are
still worse news. New York
stale gave the median result
of the'ftt'e states polled; so
here are the New York figures
in full detail.
Among each hundred New
York pollees, Kennedy was
supported by 49, Nixon got
the votes of 28, and 23 were
undecided. Among each hun
dred New York pollees who
had voted for Dwight D.
Eisenhower in 1956, Kennedy
was now chosen by 30, Nixon
by 48, and 22 were undecided.
Among each hundred who had
voted for Adlai Stevenson,
Kennedy got the votes of 81,
Nixon got only 2, and 17 were
undecided. And among those
who had not previously voted
- namely young people - Ken
nedy got 45, Nixon 17, and
undecided 38.
In addition, Kennedy won
the support of 30 per cent of
the Protestant pollees in New
York, got 58 per cent of the
Catholics, and took 59 per
cent of the Jewish voters.
The comparable percentages
for Nixon were Protestant,
46, Catholic, 20, and Jewish,
17. The rest, of course, were
again undecided. It is hard
to say whether the religious
breakdown or the breakdown
by previous votes contains
worse auguries for the Re
publicans. TT CAN be stated, addition-
ally, that the results of the
Bachelder sample were not
dramatically different from
the results of almost simul
taneous samplings ordered by
Nixon himself, to test Vice
Presidential possibilities. In
these tests, which showed
Lodge running very nearly as
well as Nelson Rockefeller,
there were a few divergencies
of real interest. For instance,
Nixon ran a little behind in
California, but he did not run
a mile behind, as in the
Bachelder test. All the same,
the over-all story was again
sharply discouraging.
picks up the tab, we better
get the pen ready to sign our
lOU if he is elected.
Marshall H. Waggoner
Box 753
Central Point, Ore.'
Italian Premier Assured of
Easy. Impressive Victory
By PHIL NEWSOM
UPI Foreign tailor
From the foreign editor's
notebook:
Smoother sailing:
Italian Premier Amintore
Fanfani appears assured of an
easy and Im
pressive v i c
tory in this
week's confi
dence tests in
the Senate
and Chamber
o f Deputies.
His margin
may well be
o ne of the
I'nii. newsom widest in
Italy's postwar history and he
may accomplish the unprece
dented feat of isolating both
.lytjew
Today & Tomorrow
By Walter
NIXON AND LODGE
The campaign which is now
beginning will be waged at
many levels both above and
under the ground. Mr. Nixon's
choice of Ambassador Lodge
was made, it is apparent, in
the belief that in the upper
and open levels of the cam
paigning foreign affairs are
the main concern of the coun
try and the main subject,
which can be mentioned, by
which votes can be won or
lost. Lodge was not chosen, as
was Lyndon Johnson, because
he has any political strength
of his own, say'with the farm
ers, with labor, with small
business or with big business,
or with any of the ethnic
groups. He was chosen be
cause he is a well known fig
ure and an attractive person
ality, identified with seven
years of debate against the
Russians.
Mr. Nixon's choice means
not only that he expects for
eign affairs to be the main
subject of the open and visi
ble arguments. It means also
that he does not expect to talk
very much or very emphati
cally about the internal prob
lems of this country. Rocke
feller would have done that,
Nixon cannot do it. This is not
because the two men are very
far apart in what they think
ought to be done. We can see
that from Nixon's St. Louis
speech and from the Nixon
Rockefeller contact last week.
Where they do differ is that
Rockefeller believes in a fis
cal policy which will pay for
what needs to be done while
Nixon is tied to the essential
ly deflationary fiscal policy of
Eisenhower. Without a break
with this policy, Nixon is in a
very poor position to contest
with the Democrats in the
field of public needs, begin
ning with defense, going on
to education, and coming to
all the aims announced by Mr.
Nixon in his St. Louis speech.
"lIXON'S fundamental han
dicap is that he is tied to
a rate of growth which is too
small for our expanding pop
ulation and for our expanding
world responsibilities and do
mestic needs. Because of this,
he is under a great handicap
even in the field of foreign
affairs. For the issue there is
how the balance of national
power, which has visibly turn
ed against us in many parts of
the world, can be righted.
This can be Hone only by big
investments of wealth and ef
fort in our military, economic,
scientific, educational, and
cultural capacity. There is no
way to the "victory" which
Nixon calls for without spend
ing a lot more money, and -if
fiscal stability is to be pre
served - without producing a
lot more wealth to provide the
extra revenue.
Inhibited from dealing with
the real issue in foreign af
fairs - which is what Rocke
feller wanted to do - Nixon is
concentrating on the question
of who has the greater expe
rience in foreign affairs, and
particularly in debating with
the Russians. It is, of course,
a perfectly good question to
raise in a campaign. Nixon
and Lodge, who belong to the
parly controlling the execu
tive branch of the government
One must add that there is
bound to be an important
pick up for Nixon after Chi
cago, just as there was a pick
up for Kennedy after Los An
geles. But it will be extreme
ly surprising if this post-convention
pick up is sufficient
to show the two contenders
running even with one anoth
er as the race officially be
gins. If Nixon starts the race be
hind, and perhaps rather far
behind, the outcome remains
wholly uncertain, however.
For Nixon, like Kennedy, is a
special sort of racer. The
horse players might have seen
a race on a par with this
election, if Native Dancer and
Man o' War had both been
born in the same year,
(c) 1960 New York Herald
Tribune Inc.
the Communists and neo
Fascists from their fellow
travelers. Things, which appeared
headed for the worse during
the bloody July Red riots,
took a definite turn for the
better the moment the four
middle-road parties restored
their postwar alliance. The
pledged support of his Chris
tian Democrats, of the Social
Democrats, Republicans and
Liberals assures Fanfani of a
comfortable majority in both
houses. This will be further
increased if the left-wing So
cialists and the rightwing
Monarchists "abstain, as ap
pears possible.
Third Force:
The week end meeting of
Lippmann '
during seven years have more
experience in the executive
branch of the government
than have Kennedy and John
son, who have been in the
legislative branch. But this is
not the main question. ,
CONSIDER, for example,
Nixon's celebrated argu
ments with Khrushchev in the
kitchen exhibit at the Ameri
can Exposition in Moscow,
Nixon had the better of the
argument. Indeed he won it.
And what were the results of
winning this argument and all
the other arguments we have
won. Has the frontier of free
dom advanced one inch? Has
the empire of tyranny reced
ed at all? In the year that has
passed since Nixon stood up
to Khrushchev in Moscow and
since Lodge won his debate in
New York our position in the
Far East has deteriorated se
riously and our position in
Cuba and in Latin America
has certainly not improved.
What does all this show? It
shows that the job of dealing
with the international Com
munists is not the job of argu
ing with the Russians, wheth
er at the Exposition in Mos
cow or at the Security Coun
cil in New York. The Russians
are for all practical purposes
impervious to argument, espe
cially to public argument.
Their calculations, which are
often far from accurate, are
not in terms of words or prin
ciples or ideals. Their calcu
lations are made in terms of
power - in terms of missiles
and tanks, and technical
schools and trained engineers,
and steel and oil and houses
and Sputniks. Nixon won his
debate. Lodge has, so he tells
us, won all of his debates. But
nevertheless the Communist
influence is expanding. Why?
Because the struggle between
us is not a debate at all. It
is a conflict of power against
power, and this country has
allocated too small a part of
too small a product to those
public actions which make for
national power.
That was the real point of
the Rockefeller effort, and I
am inclined to believe that
Nixon, if he were elected
President, would turn - be
cause he would have to and
because he would want to -
from the Eisenhower to the
Rockefeller position. It will be
hard for him to do this while
Eisenhower is still in the
White House. But Nixon is a
subtle and a clever man, and
he may be able to manage it.
(c) 1960 New York Herald
Tribune Inc.
Services at
ill
sacred responsibility.
The smallest details are
cared for by competent
hands.
6
PERL
runeral
SPACIOUS
MONDAY, AUGUST I. I960
Chancellor Konrad Adenaueri
of West Germany and French
President Charles de Gaulle
could be the start of a surgej;
toward closer political unityj
of the six European countries
which form the common mar4
ket. De Gaulle has stated pub-)
licly he sees great value in a'
European "third force" to act
in world affairs between the
United States and the Soviet
Union. i
TIED Reconnaissance: j
" A Chinese Communist
delegation going to Tokyo to
participate in observance of
the anniversary of the Hiro
shima atom bombing appar
ently wants to check the feel
ings of the Japanese govern-:
ment toward Red China in the
wake of Premier Kishi's fore-;
ed resignation. They will be
wined and dined but they are.
likely to be disappointed in'
their official reception. Japan!
has no intention of assuming
formal relations with Commu
nist China until the latter is
admitted into the United Na-,.
tions. . I
JAPANESE elections: j
The betting, in Tokyo is
that new Japanese Premier;
Hayato Ikeda will call new na-
tional elections in October, or?-:
possibly November. Hopefuls
within the ruling Liberal--Democratic
Party already! are
maneuvering to become ' the
next premier, but hard-head-:
ed Ikeda may surprise them
and to retain the coveted post.'
Refugees Storm
Mexican Embassy
Cludad Trujillo, Dominican.!
Republic-WPl) - An embattled
group of political refugees
guarding the doors and win
dows of the otherwise unpro
tected Mexican Embassy today:
following an assault on the
building by knife-wielding
young hoodlums.
Up to late Sunday night
about 20 grim-faced teen
agers loitered outside the
front door of the embassy,
which Uiey earlier had smash
ed, clashing with those inside,
in a supposal attempt to gain
asylum. t
Some older men believed
to be army intelligence ag
ents, could be seen lurking
in nearby streets barren of a
single uniformed policeman.
Mexican Charge D'Affaires
Jose Rojas conferred with.
U. S. Charge D'Affaires Hen
ry Dearborn and other rep
resentatives of the foreign
diplomatic community about
the tense situation. He warn
ed he may have to ask his
government in Mexico City
for the immediate dispatch of
a security force to take up
posts on the embassy grounds.
MAFIA FOE DIES
New York - (UPD - Michael
Fiaschetti, 74, former detec
tive who battled the Mafia
during the early part of the
century, died Friday at Brook
lyn Veterans' hospital. Fias
chetti was credited with send
ing 100 men to the electria
chair. . ;
More Comfort Wearing
FALSE TEETH
Hera Is a pleasant way to overcome
loose plate discomfort. PASTEETH.
an Improved powder, sprinkled on
upper and lower plates holds them
nrmer so that they (eel more com
fortable. No gummy, gooey, pasty
taste or feeling. It's alkaline (non
acid). Does not sour. Checks ''plate
gjr' (denture breath). Qet FAS
TEETH today at any drug counter
Perl's
ITT
riome
PARKING LOT