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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 3, 1960)
"Everyone In Southern Oregon Reads The Mall Tribune" Published Daily except Saturday by MEDFORD PRINTING CO 33 North Fir St., Ph SP 2-6141 " ROBERT W"RUHL, Editor HERB GREY Advertising Manager GERALD T LATHAM Bug Mgr ERIC W ALLEN JR.. Mng Editor EARL H ADAMS. City Editor HARRY CHIPMAN, Teleg Editor RICHARD JEWETT. Sports Editor OLIVE STARCHER. Women's Ed'.tor DALE ERICKSON, Circulation Mgr An Independent Newsnaner Sntered as second class matter at Medford. Oregon, under Act of March 3. 1807 SUBSCRIPTION RATES Uv Mail In AvVance, Copy 10c Daily and Sunday 1 year $15 00 Daily and Sundiy 6 mos 8.00 Dailv and Sunday 3 mos 4.25 Sunday Only One year $4.20 v Carrier In Ad va nee Medford Ashland 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 Sunday 1 mo 1-50 Carrier and Dealers copy tOc All Terms Cash in Advance "Official Paper of City of Medford Officjal Paper of Jackson ConntY " United Press International Full Leased Wire U.P.I. Telephoto Newaplctures MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS XrivprtMnff Rcnresentatlve: WEST HOLIDAY CO.. INC Of- ices In New York Chicago De-vV-nlt Ron Frnnrlsen Lns Aneeles Seattle, Portland St Louis. At lanta. Vancouver. B.; NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION NATIONAL EDITORIA c&T,r umirw.U'.i m Flight o' Time Mcdlord and Jackson County History fro.n the files ol The Mall Tribune 10. 20, 30, 40 and 50 ves ago. 10 YEARS AGO Aug. 3, 1950 (Thursday) The city water commission yesterday awarded a San Francisco company a contract to furnish pipe for a new pipe line to Big Butte springs; bid price is $890,854. If the 100 degree lempera atures continue for another few days, the city may be forced to tighten water use restrictions, Water Superin tendent Robert A,. Duff said today. 20 YEARS AGO Aug. 3, 1940 (Saturday) ' Both Medford's and Jack sonville's telephone exchang es were changed to the dial system of operation shortly beore midnight. From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudge Pot" column: "Wi!l-kic-for-presidenl buttons arc getting as plentiful as dande lions in May on de depot lawn." 30 YEARS AGO Aug. 3. 1930 (Sunday) The cily is set for dedica tion of the new municipal air port Monday; Northwest Air tour plaOs plan to take part In the celebration. Deputy Sheriff Paul Jen nings f'0?d two shots in the air and captured an escaping burglar near the Elks temple yesterday. 40 YEARS AGO Aug 3, 1920 (Tuesday) G. W, Ager resigned Mon day ns school superintendent and Miss Susanne Homes was nanieu(jD take his place. Many persons have regis tered for fr(jt picking work In local orchards as the pick ing season nears. O 80 YEARS AGO Aug. 3, 1910 (Wed.iosday) Twenty - eight bids were opened by the federal govern ment this morning for a site for the $110,000 federal build ing in Medford. In order to evert any pos sible shortage of freight cars to transport fruit from I h e Rogue valley, Southern Pa cific has sent 20 additional cars to Medford. What's Your I Q.? Nine or ton corrocr it superior: seven or eight is excellent: 'tve si six Is good. 1. Which is fernienU nWfl in processing, green or Mflnck tea? 2. Hnile Selassie is Em peror of what country? 3. Is Euthanasia the name of a country hi Asia, mercy killing, or a dg plant? 0 4. Has John L. Lewis ever worked in coal mines? q 5. Was construction on the Panama Canal originally be gun by the French, British', or Americans? 6. What letter is missing from the remainder of the wordQ.armigan"? 7. Is ceramics the art of making pottery, rugs, or watches? 8. What is John L. Lewis' middle name? 9. If 32 degrees Fahrenheit Is the freezing point of water, what is the melting point? 10. Is nicotinic acid classi fied as a poison, a stain re mover, or a vitamin? Answers: 1. Black. 2. Ethi opia. 3. Mercy killing. 4. Yet, after completing 7ih grade. S. French. 6. "p". 7. Pottery. 8. Llewellyn. 9. 32 degrees F. 10. Vitamin. Hiroshima Anniversary Three days after the first atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima the weapon was declared obsolete, yet the political chain reaction set off 15 years ago continues today to shape world events. The bomb which fell on, Hiroshima packed more power than 20,000 tons of TNT; it wiped out 60 per cent i the city or 4.1 square miles. The Japanese said thathe dead were "too num erous" to count. But the bomb dropped on Naga saki three days later was even more deadly. Brig. Gen. Thomas Farrell, atomic bomb chief in the Marianas, said: O The function of the bomb used against Nagas made the one used against Hiroshima obsolete. The one type used against Hiroshima was discarded in favor of the Nagasaki type. "NLY the personal insistence of Secretary of War Henry L. Stimson saved Kyoto, ancient cultural center of Japan, fvpn being the first atomic target. Stimson in Ais Qtill-unpublished wartime diary is reported to nave noted that "the bitterness which would ton act' could turn the United States in the event of post-war troubles with Kussia. Japan has by no means turned against the United States after 15 years of ambivalent peace, but as the riots in prcQst against the new U.S. Japanese security treaty ings of Hiroshima and traumatic fifffict Accorc assistant managing editor of the Denver Post, who is of Japanese ancestry, If there is any single thing bothering the Japanese people, it's fear of annihilation in an atomic war together witri knowledge that there is not much ley can do about preventing it." THE known dead of the Hiroshima blast was put at 59,853, but estimates of the total num-p doer of. victims, including es subsequently attributed to the bomb, run as high as 260,000. Those killed by the blast at Nagasaki on Aug. 9, 1945, were estimated at 73,884. The United btates had spent .2 billion and utilize 125,000 individuals in what President Truman later called "the greatest scientific gamble in history." As early as 1905 Albert lMiistein had hypo thesized the basic formula upon vChieh atomic research rest, h equals mc2. In March 1989, only a few weeks after the discovery of uranium fission, scientists had called Washington's attention to the possibility of building an atomic bomb. . OW, 15 years after the nuclear powers on further tests of the H-bombs. But 20 months manent ban at Geneva mutually acceptable draft treaty. At the same time, Dr. J. Robert Oppenheimer, who directed the U.S. effort in making the first atom bomb, warns of a "quite new" situation in human history when "new means of delivery and use have made of the command and control of these weapons a nightmare fully known only to yhose responsible." These told the Congress tor Cultural 1 reedom in West Berlin in June, have "added chance to anger as another cause of disaster." E.R.R. Labor-Managermnt Session A labor-management "summit" conference, designed to reduce industrial tension, almost died a-borning last spring when top leaders found themselves facing what they considered "second stri.O,r" management representatives across the conference table. But wounded pride apparently has been mostly healed after a 10-week recess and the second round of talks began Tuesday in New York City. SummiP conferences between antagonists, be they natis or indOiduals, are chancy things. Happily, the first session on May 19 ended after three hours with both sides declaring that the discussion had been "completely amicable and reasonable." Less auspicious 9is the conferees' decision not to permit photographs of themselves together. At best it was a slow a:l halting start 1& an effort inCPiated by AI-CIO President Vjyorge Meany with President Eisenhower's support. In a larger sense, tl summit idea was a product of a rather jtfofiV-Tal public anger over the longest steel striSOnice World War II. EXCEPT in rare instances, labor and manage i ment leaders never have undertaken a serious sharing of views on divisive issues away from the bargaining table, where each side feels compelled to wrest concessions from the other. Yet it is a manifest that bora labor and management stand to profit from'.'ooperative efSlrts that woij&J cultivate wage id price stability and solve such mutual problems as automation and what to do with the men displayed by machines. The climate for progress at the current talks certainly is better than that at the last "peace talks" between AFL-CIO and National Associa tion of Manufacturers leaders in DecemlQr, 1955. Meany at that time offered to negotiate a "non aggression" pact with industry, but the session ended in an uproar over the political power ex ercised by labor and industry, respectively. Meany later complained that the only result of his peace effort had been "an insulting speech" from Charles R. Slitrh, Jr., then board chair man of the NAM. E.R.R. be caused by such a wan Japanese against the demonstrated, the bomb Nagasaki had a deeply inp- to Bill Hosokawa. those who died or. illness Hiroshima and Nagasaki, obey a self-imposed ban infinitely more powerful oi negotiation on a per have yet to produce a new developments, he MEDFORD MAIL Dennis the "PUSH THE BUTTON ! TUAT MEDL THJS LONG'.' In the Day's New By FRANK JENKINS The department of agricul ture, in its publication, The National Food Situation, pre dicts that retC food prices wl DECLINE somewhat in the next few months because of seasonal increases in sup plies of major foods. Food supplies will be large, it re ports, though stocks of pork and several fruit and vege table items will be slightly smaller this summer and early fall than in the same period of last year. rot it adds Even with a price decline, food co:Q at retail will re main a little above a year ago. WHY? This, I think, is the an swer. (A) Supply and demand no longer rule the markets for our basic foods. When there is a surplus, we stash it away in warehouses in order to keep up prices for the pro ducers. (B) We all want more money - higher prk., higher wages, higher salaries, larger dividends, larger profits; MORE of whatever it may be that makes up our incomO.. The inevitable resist of try ing lo provide BY LAW more income for everybody is HIGHER COST of production. Higher costs mean higher prices. riMIE moral if any? X It is this: NOBODY can lift himself by his own bootstraps. MORE about food: The Soviet Union, seeking to SURPASS TIM? UNITED STATES in the production of agricultural products, increas ed its total AREA sown to crops in 19B0 by 16.3 million acres. The total acreage sown to crops in Russia this year is reported to be 501.4 million acres, which is 3.4 per cent more than the 485.1 million acres reported for last year. Note please, thai t h c s e figures deal with increases in ACRES - not in bushels or pounds per acre. As Ameri can farmers shrink their acres, they succeed by means of niye fertilizer and better farming methods in increasing production per acre. The Russians don't seem lo be able to do that. At any rate, they remagj short on food. I ET'S put it this way: J The Russian pyoblc mis to pPoduce ENOUGH FOOD. Our probleiQi? what (o do with our FOOD SURPLUS. K EEP this in mind: Socialism (which G repre- Try ancPStop Me By BENNETT CERF o VFTER a long-winded banquet bore had exceeded his allotted time before the microphone by a good twenty minutes, M.C. Jack Leonard rasped, "Thank you for your speeches." Lon Tinkle r(g)rts the founding of an "antique auto" club in Dallas, elig ible, only to Tcxans who own a Cadillac over six months old. There's really been only one completely successful female. Qvlver in history, maintains If. Kcnilrick: Lady Godiva. Sue Carson hai very de cided notions about educa tion. For Instance, she's adamant that no sex instruction should be Included in the high school curriculum -unless, of courso, the teachers really are de termined to loam. Hank Grant has a clever name for his Hollywood TV gossip column; "Letting the Chat Out of the Bag." O I960, by Burnett Cert. Distributed by King feature Syndicate TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. ORE Menace -i i CRAZY DOCTORS GOT A -e scnts the second S of USSR -Union of Soviet Socialist Re publics) TALKS about the more abundant lifer Modern American capitalism PRO VIDES the more abundant life. QiTF. T.EARNKn our lesson at Plymouth and James town, where the first colonists started wiVfT. the socialistic system of POOLING THEIR PRODUCTION, with every body taking out an equal share regardless of what he personally produced. The colonists in both places faced starvation until they sensibly adopted the free enterprise system. After that, they had PLENTY of food. DAY To Observe 40th Anniversary The 40th anniversary! the Disabled American Veterans will feature ceremonies of commemoration at the nation al DAV convention Aug. 21 26 in Seattle, Wash. The laQ time theQialional meeting was held in the north west was in 1946 when Port land hosted the delegates. Chosen to attend the con vention from Jackson county Chaper 8, Medford, are Henry Vr. Hess, junior past command er; Neil Morris, commander; Pat Graham, adjutant; George Simmons, and Harvey Cass man. The Jackson county chap ter and the Grants Pass chap ter will hold a picnic in the east end of the park on the Rogue river at Grants Pass Sunday, Aug. 7. The dinner will be served by the ladies of the auxiliaries of both units and will begin at 1:30 p.m. Wholesale Parts Discussion Fails Portland - (UPD - The second mediation meeting between Teamsters Local 255 and the wSMcsale auto parts com panies o Portland ended Tuesday with no settlement of differences, according to federal mediator Elmer Wil Hams. Williams said the workers and the ten companies were still "about 10 cents apart. The workers' contract with Ihe companies expired ii June, and the federal medi ator was called in alter ne gotiations stalemated earlv in July. 1 Communications Letters to the Editor must bear the name and address of the writer although under cer tain circumstances the use of a pen name or initial for publica tion is permissible. The Mail Tribune reserves the right to edit ail letters with an eye to clarification and condensation Letters submitted for publica Uon must not exceed 400 words Belter Knowledge To the Editor: Your story of Friday, July 29, concern ing the attorney general's opinion affecting mileage pay ments to the sheriff, states that I originally investigated the matter of mileage allow ances and travel allowances for the sheriff's office. This is not precisely true and I feel the public should A-Ae better knowledge of the inquiries actually made. My interest in mileage and travel allowance Payments centered on the manner in which pay ments were made to all de partments and not specifically the sheriff's department. It has been tlQ custom in Jackson county to make pay ments on claims that were not supported by some evi dence. It is my contention that this is inadequate ac counting and since payment is to be made tfftly for "actual and necessary" expenses, then some proof must be submit ted with the claim. I am sure no business man in Jackson county would be inclined to pay for services or goods or makr any reimbursements without proof of his obliga tion. This is the business prin ciple I felt should be adopted in county bookkeeping. When Sheriff Joe Walsh first learned of my inquiries, he felt that my efforts were directed toward his office and that I had impugned his in tegrity. Mr. Walsh informed me at the time we discussed this matter that he would write for an opinion. Shortly after this I discussed the mat ter with County Judge Earl Miller who concurred with me that it was sound business. The attorney general's opin ion of July 7, states that "such claims are audited 'as other claims against the county.' " From this I would presume that one must have something to audit. IIoweve, the opin ion also states 0.at "the man ner and form in which these claims are submitted to the county court or commission ers vests within their sound discretion." I will therefore await the county court and their wishes in this matter.. Later in your story there is the infereifte that I had been engaged in "playing politics." This char is much over worked by some Republican members of the county gov ernment and sometimes in flamed by the press. And, the charge has usually been co incident with any question of procedure or legality of pro cedure. I am sure the public will agree that county ouiciais should be most severe in ad hering to laws designed to protect their interest. E. M. Madden County Clerk Dick Nixon's Dream To the Editor: There is one thing) that we learned from the Republican convention that everything that was done wrong for the last 100 years was done by the Democrats and, of course, the Republi cans took credit for all that is fine. They tried to tell us that everything is all hunky dory with us and the rest of the world. But there are a few thing they failed mention thingO that Qtfect us here at home like the high interest rate that is costing us millions daily, and the billions it costs to store the grain surplus But we should "ivorry about small matters like this, be cause if the Republicans get another Jpasc on the White House everything is going to be taken care of without any burden to anyone. According to Dick, the Democrats made a lot of promises, but made no provi sions to i.v for them. He overlooked the fact that they have only to plug some loop holes where there is some thing like seven billion dol lars annuallyoi"g down the drain. This would help quite a lot on medical aid for the old people with a little left over for the building pro gram. Dick is not going to make any promises but he is going to see that every student has aiQollege education, all the old people are going to be taken care of. the farmers are going to be rolling in wealth, and the slums arc going to be converted. This is not going to be called by the ugly word "expenses," it is going to be an investment. All this cannot be accomplished with this high-s pending Democratic Congress. What got me was the pic ture he drew of the President down on his knees begging this high-spending Congress for a few more billions to spend on foreign aid and try ing to make it a misdemeanor for anyone to criticize the For eign Aid Program. They need ed few more billions to tend Repercussions of Red Change In Tactics Seen in Politics0 By ARTHUR E. ROWSE Editorial Research Reports (Editor1! note: New Krem lin thundering against the United States - and new threats and challenges to ihe free world raised by vents in Cuba, the Congo, and other places - strongly influenced the I960 Demo cratic and Republican par ly platforms. Foreign pol icy and national security will in bR likelihood be paramount issues of the coming presidential cam paign.) Q Washington - Soviet Rus sia's wrecking of the summit conference, its with drawal from the disarmament conference, and general Com munist iersion to virulent cold-war tactics have shocked the free world and heighten ed intentional tensions everywhere. The abrupt change had far reaching repercussions also in American politics. It robbed tithe Republicans of all possi bility of campaigning as the "party of peace," d it open ed to the Democrats new ave nues of attack on the Eisen howerQdministration. At the same time, both parties were Malayan Jungle Warfare Ends With 31,000 Skirmishes By DON C. 3ECKER United Press International Kuala Lumpur - (UPD - A dozen years of jungle warfare began on the Malaya penin sula in the early spring of 1948 when an Australian Communist sOpped into Sing apore, carrying with him a directive from Moscow. The Communist terrorist emergency in Malaya has ended now and the "national liberatic army of Malaya" which once numbered 10,000 has been reduced to a few hundred hiding in the hilly jungles. The 12-year was was never spectacular. It consisted of about 31,000 skirmishes, large and small, in remote rural areas in the heat and ness of thick jungles. Although) there were no big battles to make headlines, more than 11,000 persons were killed. War of Nerves The Reds used hit-run tac- to other Dictators so there would be a few more coun tries we couldn't 0t foot on. But Dick is going to remedy this so that all countries will accept us with open arms. We don't know how, he didn't tell us. But he assured us, without making any promises, that everything is going to be all right. The Eisenhower adminis tration has been the greatest ever, but it is nothing com pared to the next four year if he is elected. This, accord ing to Dick's speech, is his dream. He has promised us one of the hottest campaigns ever waged, but it is only the Democrats that will be spend ing any money. And, if I re member correctly, most of this is coming out of the U.S. Treasury, according to the Re publicans. It irks them not a little that for once the Democratic candidate has a few dollars. That is an old gag about buying your way into the White House, but they know it won't work be cause they have tried to buy votes too often. What impressed a lot of peo ple as well as the news com mentators was that every time they asked Dick for a com ment on any subject he would say it was too early, or he would have to see his com mittee or the President. He made quite a show about who out of four names, was going to be asked to be his running mate, but a delegate had al ready told the public that the President had asked Lodge two weeks earlier to be the man. This (doesn't sound like it was fixefej Now that Dick has taken Rockefeller to his bosom he will have all the old right wingers to appease as they were not too happy with this union. I gather from the President's speech that he is not too happy about it either. So, all in all, Dick is going to find it will take a little more than a dream to get him into the White House. Frank Christian 314 West Main st Talent, Ore. Now Many Wear FALSE TEETH With Little Worry Est. talk, Isuph or snerze without rfsr of Insecure false teeth dropping. Jllpptns or wobbling. FASTEKTB holds pistes firmer and more com fortably. This pleasant powder has no faimmy. gooey, pasty taste or feeling. Doesn't cause nausea. Its alkaline (non-acid). Checks -plate odor" (denture breath). Oet FASTSXTH af W drum- counter. put under obligation to re view defense and foreign policy requirements. The result of the reapprais al, from a party standpoint, is reflected in the platforms hammered out at Los Angeles and Chicago. Both Demq cratic and Republican docu ments pledge all necessary action to make and keep the country strong. While the measures pro posed to that end, and measures proposed to meet the responsibilities of the United States as leader of the free world, differ in de tail and in emphasis, the plat forms express a close under lying identity of aims. No less was to be expected, be cause foreign policy is deter mined primarily by national, not political, interests. Conduct To Be Attacked It is the Eisenhower admir? istration's conduct of foreign policy, rathQr than the policy itself, which will be attacke and defended in the politic Campaign. Differences of opinion about conditions, needs, and the way things have been done or should have been done will form the grist of the debate on forei(jj tics in attacking villages and small sfurity forces patrols made up of Malays, British, Australians, New Zealanders, Gurkhas and others from the commonwealth nations. It was a nerve-wracking war becau neither side ever knew when the fight would begin. Rural dwellers never knew when the terrorists might attack a village or a rich rubber estate. The Communists never knew when they would be face-to-face with a skilled and heavily armed security force patrol. The security forces never knew when they would walk into an ambush. It was a costly war - the Malayan government has esti- damp-Ornated $500 million The Communist world was bold and cocky in 1948 as it is today. But then the Com munists were fighting and not reOing on more subtle means of subversion. In China they were driving the Nationalist forces from the mainland. In Southeast Asia they thought the lime was ripe for more armed revolution. Moscow Decision John Hyde, a one-time edi tor of the London Daily Worker and a member of the party's London secretariat, de .ribed the Communist prep arations in a paper written for the Malayan government in connection with the end of the emergency. 0 e "The decision which launch ed civil war in MiQiya also turned OBurma, the Philip pines and Indonesia into bat tlefields," he wrote. "What makes the whole grim episode particularly dis turbing is that the fateful de cision was made, not by the local Communist parties - al though they acquiesced - but by a handful of men in far away Moscow." All four of those commu nist rebellions 13ve been crushed - the Philippines, In donesia, Malaya and Burma -but the costliest was in Ma laya. Postal Employees Get Driver Awards Vancouver, Was h. (UPD Three safe driver awards from the National Safety Council have been presented to mem bers of the Vancouver post of fice. They are Chester A. Win sor, Wilford J. Nevin and Stanl R. Mode. TO THOSE WE SlRVE In beautiful surroundings, in s quiet location, we serve with devotion to duty, all who call. LITWILLER FUNERAL HOME Highway 66 at Normal Ave. Ashland Dial MU 5-4541 Only local member of Oregon & WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 3, I960 affairs - along with new pro posals or programs advocated in the platforms or by the campaigners. New proposals on foreign policy in the Democratic plat-, form include pledges to re-' view the country's system ot pacts and alliances and seek a shift of emphasis from mili tary to economic aid wher ever possible; to set up a na tional peace agency for dis armament planning and re search; to be i the lookout for "any evidence that the Chinese Communist govern ment is genuinely prepared to create a new relationship based on respect for inter national obligations." A new Republican pledge, is to encourage underdevelop ed countries in Africa, Latin! America and other parts of the world to form "regional groupings to work out plans! for economic and educational' developmtOit." The Republi can platform also suggests that the United Nations taka the initiative in Jeveloping "a body of law applicable ft t! peaceful use of space." Determined Opposition Both paQies pledge deter mined opposition to Commu nist aggression, faithful ad- herence to obligations to th nation allies, readiness to negotiate safeguarded arms control agreements, mainte nance of the Monroe Doctrine, continuation of foreign aid programs, and support of other generally accepted prin ciples of American foreign policy. q Foreign policy figured prominently in American po litical campaigns in the early years of the repOblic, when the United States depi.ded trade with European coun tries and sought to remain neutral in the numerous arm ed conflicts among them. But after the War of 1812, the nation was absorbed by prob lems of internal development and by the long struggle over slavery. With one or two ex ceptions, no foreign question became prominent in a na tional election again until the end of the 19th century. Imperialism was a major0 subject of debate in 1900, two years after the United States had acquired new interests in the Caribbean and the far Pacific as a rOult of the Span-' ish-American War. Fear of involvement in foreign wars made campaign material i in 1916 and again in 1940. Democrat-: and Republicans battled over the League of Nations in the 1920 campaign, but after World War II par ticipation in the United Na tions was accepted without queston. Since that time, with the United Sates assum ing the role of chief defender of the free world in its peril ous struggle with internation al communism, foreign policy has been inevitably a subject open to full and free debate before the voters in the quad rennial national accounting. Not Far Apart The two party standard bearers of 1960 do not appear far apart in their vi'fj's on foreign questions. Vice President Nixon natur ally has supported the pro grams of the admOiistration of which he is a part. But his agreement with Gov. Nelson A. Rockeftller, at their sur prise pre-convenjjon meeting in New York, on the need to take up more advanced posi tions in the foreign field in dicated that he will move ahead on an independent course as the 03mPa'gn pro-' ceeds. ? Sen. Kennedy in mid-June outlined a 12-point foreign policy "agenda" which in some respects went beyonjj the subsequently adopted Democratic platform. Strong emphasis was put on develops ment of new approaches and new programs to break open the way to greater progress toward easing and solving' world problems. During the" campaign it will be up to the candidate to give some hint specific plans and pro posals to iat end. a National Funeral Directors An'a Hi C. M. Litwiller Mrs. Litwiller q