Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 7, 1960)
MONDAY. NOVEMBER 7, 1969 MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, ORE. . "Everyone in Southern Oregon t . J L. M.ll ir.lhiin.TI iwiui ig a. t iuuiiv FuEfisheiTBaUy excent Saturday by : S3 North Fir St ,Ph SP 2-8141 ' rrn fri-r tSTTTJl" .4 It sir HERB GREY Adveitiiing Manager ERIC W ALLEN JR.. Mni EdltOl EARL n auaiws uiiy taiior nnnm tnir.nnn mice. OLIVE ST ARC HER Women'- Edttof DALE EBIUKoUWLJreuiawHi Entered ai lecond class matter i Memo. LreRan. unu . w March 3, 1807 By Mall In Advance. Copy 10a Daily and unaay i y" 'S XX Dally and Sunday moi 8 00 Daily and Sunday 3 mot 4.25 Sunday Only One year 20 Rv Carrier In Advance Medford Aihland. Central Point Bii Point. Jacksonville Gold Hill Phoenix. Shadv Cove. Rogue Rlv Daily and Sunday l vear tieno Da iy ani unany i m Carrier and Dealers copy tOe All Terma iaan mnuyy 0'cla1 Paper of City of Medford Officii! Pap ' Count United Press International Full Leased Wire TJ P.i TelephotoNewBpicttirei "MEMBKR Of AUDIT BjmEAU OF CIRCULATIONS Advertising Representative: WTST HOLIDAY CO, INC Of- troll. San rrancltco. Loi Anseles, Seattle. Portland Louli At lanta. Vancoiiverjs- NATION A I E D I TO R I A I vI7 A5y?CftTlto)h .tuimiMU'iifl Flight o' Time Medford and Jackson County History from the files of The Mall Tribune 10. 20, 30, 40 and 50 veart (jo- 10 YEARS AGO Nov. 7. 1950 (Tuesday) Balloting was light during first hours of the Oregon gen eral election today. Representatives of the in terstate commerce commis sion will hold a hearing here tomorow over the proposed construction of a Southern Pacific spurllno from Tolo to the While City industrial dis trict. 20 YEARS AGO Nov. 7, 1940 (Thursday) One person was killed and four others injured, one crit ically, in a two-car smash up on Crater Lake highway's Kincaid hill Wednesday. From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudge Pot" column: "The Republican party came out on the little end of the horn, In the Presidential election, but it is still a winner - it has a new 'titular lender" in the person of Wendell L. Will- kie, its defeated nominee. 30 YEARS AGO Nov. 7, 1930 (Friday) A new Humane society shelter on Midway rd. was completed this week. Several new mail carriers will be added at the Medford post office Dec. 1 to take care of the Christmas season rush. 40 YEARS AGO Nov. 7, 1920 (Sunday) The mercury dropped to 21 degrees in Medford yester day to make it the coldest day of the year. "Siskiyou," according to a letter In the Mail Tribune, is a French word meaning "six stones." SO YEARS AGO Nov. 7, 1910 (Monday) In a front page editorial the Mail Tribune today asked voters to defeat Democrat Joshua Patterson in his bid for reelection to the county court. The federal government this week started improve ments on that portion of Crat er Lake road that lies within the Crater National forest. What's Your I.Q.7 Nina oi (en cornel Is tueerler: Iran ei eight ll excellent) Hva at ill ll good. 1. Anti-trust laws arc con cerned with misleading of con sumers, banking regulations, monopoly, or tax loopholes? 2. Ls a truffle hound a dog that hunts truffles, a pul ley, or a buookbinding ma chine? 3. For what U.S. govern ment agency do the initials GSA stand? 4. Who discovered the wa ter route around the tip of Africa? 5. The Romans regarded Venus as the Greeks regard ed Aphrodite, Minerva, or Cleopatra? 6. A priest is to a chapel as a rabbi is to a Bethel, Syn agogue or Mosque? 7. Of what nationality are most Australians descendants? 8. Arc planets always seen in the same part of the sky? 9. How many lines must be drawn on a four foot square to mark it off in square feet. 10. Correct: "As soon as I saw him I knew it was him." Answers: 1, Monopoly, 2. Dog. 3. General Services Adminisiration, 4. Vasco do Gems. 5. Aphrodite, 8. Syn agogue, 7. English. 8. No. 9. Six. 10, " . . . was he." 0" NEWSPAPER CUBUSH,,, LJ&P-M SOCI ATI ON Concerning Voting It's almost all over, the tale. Nn mutter hnw it turns out. sortie neonle will be delighted, some will ..liii iL. more wiu view me lesuiuj wim iiiiacu mciiugs We would ioin here with Charles Taft, chair man of the fair elections practices committee, in warning against paying any attention to last minute rumors, smears or charges which cannot be refuted m time. If they were legitimate, they would have been brought campaign. Be suspicious ot them. AS TO voting, we believe it to be the duty of airai'ir tirall-infnpmnrl nuiSinn We do NOT. however, go along with the theory that every Tom, Dick and Harry ought to cast a ballot, whether or not they know anything about the candidates, issues, measures, or their significance. Uninformed, apathetic voters might better stay home, and leave the business of democracy up to those who care enough to inform them selves. But those who have studied and thouerht about the election, we do urge victions. i"NE final suggestion, If you are informed candidates and measures, vote on them; but if there are others on which you do not have well based opinions, leave those ballot spots blank. Too many people, when they see a measure they don't understand, are inclined to vote "no" on principle. This is wrong. It's better not to vote at all, than to endanger what might be a good measure. E.A. Candidate Recommendations FOR PRESIDENT AND VICE PRESIDENT 101 John F. Kennedy (D), and Lyndon B. Johnson (D). FOR U.S. SENATOR (SHORT TERM) 103 Maurine B. Neuberger (D). FOR U.S. SENATOR (LONG TERM) 105 Maurine B. Neuberger (D). FOR REPRESENTATIVE IN CONGRESS, 4TH DISTRICT 108 Charles O. Porter (D). FOR SECRETARY OF STATE 110 Monroe Sweetland (D). FOR STATE TREASURER No Recommendation FOR ATTORNEY GENERAL 113 Carl H. Francis (R). FOR STATE REPRESENTATIVE, JACKSON COUNTY (VOTE FOR TWO) 116 Robert B. Duncan (D). . ... . 118 Evelyn (Eve) Nye (R). FOR DISTRICT ATTORNEY 120 Gerald J. Scannell, Jr. (D). FOR COUNTY ASSESSOR 122 Ray J. Schumacher (D). FOR COUNTY COMMISSIONER 123 Paul B. Rynning (R). FOR COUNTY TREASURER 125 Karl L. Janouch (D). FOR COUNTY SURVEYOR No Recommendation NON-PARTISAN BALLOT FOR JUDGE OF THE SUPREME COURT, POSITION 4 129 William C. Perry. FOR JUDGE OF THE SUPREME COURT, POSITION 5 130 Alfred T. Goodwin. FOR JUDGE OF THE CIRCUIT COURT 131 Orval J. Millard. E.A. Measures Recommendations STATE 1 Fixing Commencement of Legislator's Terms Yes 2 Daylight Saving Time No recommen tion. 3 Financing Urban Redevelopment Proj ects Yes 4 Permitting Prosecution by Information or Indictment No 5 Authorizing Legislature to Propose Re vised Constitution Yes 6 State Bonds for Higher Education Fa cilities Yes 7 Voter Qualification Amendment Yes 8 Authorizing Bonds for State Building Program Yes 9 Compulsory Retirement for Judges No 10 Elective Offices: When To Become Vacant No 11 Financing Improvements in Home Rule Counties Yes 12 Continuity of Government in Enemy Attack Yes 13 War Veterans' Bonding and Loan Amendment Yes 14 Personal Income Tax Bill No 15 Billboard Control Measure Yes COUNTY 16 Dogs Running at Large No recom mendation; except we suggest voters inside Medford city limits not vote. . E.A. and tomorrow will tell be unhappy, and many u- .. : l ni,'r. up much earlier in tne ' a a them to vote their con along the same lines. and convinced on certain Dennis the Menace f 9 'UGLY? You think PUFF is ugly? 0oy,wou EVER NEED NW GiASSff Matter of Fact y WAITING FOR THE VERDICT San Francisco - This huge, amorphous, fast- changing state is a good place to say farewell to the 1960 cam paign, not on ly because C a lifornia is politic ally c r u c ial, but also because I C a lifornia is J o d d ly repre sentative. Senator Kennedy's c a mpaign sa fari passed through the state only a couple of days ago, in a continuous storm of cheers from countless thousands of people whose imaginations Kennedy has plainly captur ed. Vice-President Nixon is now hurrying up and down the state, in his turn, some what shrilly warning of the doom to come if the Demo crats win the election. He too is being cheered by countless thousands. Meanwhile, a reporter who is asked to forecast the out come can only describe the conflicting evidence. The evi dence is multitudinous, but the main. items may be sum marized as follows: 1MIE Republican leaders are frankly worried about Cal ifornia. That is why Vice Presideni Nixon is making a stepped-up final effort here. But the Republicans genuine ly continue to hope for a nar row win. They think the so called religious issue is help ing them, on balance. They believe Nixon has a strong following here. And they pin much faith on President Eis enhower's last-minute appeals for support for Nixon. The Democratic leadership, in contrast, Is soberly opti mistic but far from cocky. Tlie Democrats argue that the Vice-President has little or no appeal except to members of his own party. If this is true, Nixon can hardly carry Cali fornia, where Democrats greatly out-number Republi cans. "Nixon, the Democrats keep saying, "is no Eisenhow. er, and Kennedy has caught fire with our people." In addition, a successful rcg. islralion drive would seem to have aided the Democrats. No less than 150,000 Mexicans, for instance, were put on the rolls In the Los Angeles area alone. But the local opinion polls, while showing that Ken nedy has gained ground im portantly since September, also continue to show an un predictably close race, , ADDING up the evidence, this reporter is Inclined to guess that California will end in Ihe Kennedy column; and if Kennedy carries Cali fornia, he is virtually certain to be the next President. But instead of dealing in mere guesses of this sort, it is more Interesting to take each of the possible results, and to see what the reasons for tills re sult will be. If Nixon is the winner, the reasons will not be far to seek. Somewhat mysteriously, the Vice-President rejected the great opportunity given to him by the stirring drama of the Republican Convention. Instead of talking in his own voice and speaking his own mind, Nixon chose from the outset to present himself to the electorate as a sort of syn thetic Eisenhower. The man himself is certain ly more interesting and morel if Two Apologies In an editorial on this page recently, Attorney General Robert Y. Thornton was criticized for what we thought was a misleading "cost estimate" on Measure 15. He informs us the cost estimate is prepared by the state treasurer, assisted by the department of finance and administration and the tax commission, not by the attorney general, as we Indicated. We extend to him our apologies. Two letters In communications recently, both attacking legislative candidate John Grcgoy, apparently were sisned with fictitious name and address, Mr. Gregory Informs us. This too we regret. E.A. Joseph Alsop impressive than the "image" Nixon thus sought to project. But since Nixon made this choice, there can be no doubt that a Nixon victory will be, at bottom, an Eisenhower vic tory. It will be a national in dorsement of the Eisenhower viewpoint, which is blandly optimistic about America's situation in the world, but deeply conservative and even pessimistic about the poten tial of the American economy and social system. If Kennedy wins, on the other hand, his victory will not constitute a rejection of the Eisenhower-the-man, who is still much loved. It will mean, rather, that the coun try now feels the need for a new viewpoint and a different impulse in the management of our affairs. rTHE widespread business--- man's opinion, that Ken nedy is a wild economic radi cal, has no visible foundation in any identifiable fact. But Kennedy most certainly does not share the intense conser vatism of President Eisenhow er, who has been described, by none other than Vice Pres ident Nixon, as "really to the right of Bob Taft about do mestic matters." Above all, Kennedy is not apprehensive or pessimistic about the American economy. He does not fear that the smallest movement will de range the free American sys tem. Like Nelson Rockefeller, he believes' that there is no problem which cannot even tually be solved, and no neces sary bill which cannot be fully paid, by the device of stimulating national growth. His economics, in fact, are the economics of the Rockefeller Report on this subject. In Kennedy's eyes, more over, growth is now a life-and-death matter, for world reasons. For Kennedy also be lieves that vastly greater American efforts are urgently needed, if the forces of free dom are not to lose the dire struggle for the world. The choice in this election then, lies between strong faith in the American growth po tentlal plus grave doubt about the world future if the Amer ican potential is not used to the full, and the exact reverse on both counts. (c) 1960, New York Herald Tribune Inc. Portland State Names Public Service Alan Portland - (UPII - Mark How ard of Portland Sunday was named Director of Public Service at Portland State col lege. Howard, who has been pub lic information officer for the State 'Board of Health and re lated state agencies since 1948, will assume his duties Dec. I. Eisenhower Plans To Vote of Gettysburg Washington - (UPD - Presi dent Eisenhower plans to cast his ballot for Vice President Richard M. Nixon shortly aft er the polls at Gettysburg, Pa., open at 7 a.m. Tuesday, the White House said today. The chief executive plans to fly to Gettysburg by heli copter from the White House south lawn. Eisenhower will return to Washington immediately af ter voting. Foreign Desk: Canterbury and Japanese By PHIL NEWSOM UP Foreign Editor From the foreign editor's notebook: Iceberg Meeting One top source in Vatican City ls calling the forthcom ing "courtesy visit by the Archbishop of Canterbury to Pope John XXIII an "ice berg meet ing". Not be cause it is ex pected to be frigid, but be cause there is more beneath the surface than the first piiil nkwsom announce- ments and comments show. It can now be revealed that arrangements for the meeting in December were worked out in delicate negotiations over the past six months. Don't ex pect any immediate spectacu lar results In compromising some of the differences be tween the two big churches and establishment of a mode of unity. Cabinet Shakeup Look for a major shakeup in the cabinet of Japanese Premier Hayato Ikeda fol lowing the Nov. 20 elections. Ikeda has said in his cam paign speeches that he will stick mostly with the mem Washington Report By WILLIAM WAITING THE CHANGE Washington - A rare hour of brooding pause, a long mo ment of silence and waiting and expecta tion now be gins to per vade Washing ton. This is the eve of a great change - from eight years of the Eisenhow er administra tion to an en tirely different administration of new leaders in a new world. It brings an odd quiet to this ordinarily frantically political city. It is not unlike the sudden, exhausted calm which falls late on Christmas eve when shops so recently so clamor ous with customers are in an instant empty and the lights in the show windows are go ing out, one by one. One moment you had been moving about among the urg ently milling men of the two national political committees. The next moment you find these pros starting to pack up their charts, speaking wearily and softly at last - of their partisan hopes, and beginning to let the mimeograph ma chines run down. ONLY rarely do the fortunes of politics bring total new ness to this national capitol. Not since 1952, when 20 years of Democratic control of the White House were ended in the election of President Ei senhower, has there been any sharp and absolute break be tween past and future. And the most recent such break be fore that had occurred in 1932, when Franklin D. Roosevelt defeated Herbert Hoover. Thus this city now senses the near approach of the third truly new national political atmosphere, the third truly new group of top leaders, it has known in three decades. And while the prudent still avoid flat predictions as to whose newness it will be-that of Democratic candidate John F. Kennedy or Republican candidate Richard M. Nixon somebody's newness is surely at hand. If Nixon should win, the great broom would sweep WHIIam Whit Try and Stop Me By BENNETT CERF TtTHEN JOEY ADAMS visited Israel he was impressed " with many signs of progress on all sides, but remarked that ho hadn't spotted a single golf course. "Golf?" shrug ged nis guiae. "now can wa have golf in a land as tiny and beleaguered as ours? One long drive could become an inter national incident!" The producer of a recent Broadway comedy that had been roasted to a f are-thce-well by the criUcs met an old classmate and asked him, "Boon to see my new show yet?" "No, and Via not planning to go. either," was the frank reply. "I hear it's a disaster." "Are you kidding?" countered you read our ads?" A popular restaurant in Philadelphia burned to the ground. The owner of the cutery across the road professed to be hcart nirii. "Poor Joe," he sighed. "It's the first time in three years the food's been hot enough in his dive!" O I860, by Btauett Out. OlttrlbaM Sine eaturej Syndic! Shakeup; bers of his short-lived pres ent cabinet when he forms a new government -that is, if he and his party win the elec tion, as they are expected to do. But sources close to the premier say that only about three posts will remain un changed. Ruble Revaluation Members of a Russian trade delegation which now is in the West German capital of Bonn are hinting broadly that the Soviet Union early next year will revalue the ruble so that it will be on a one-to-one basis with the American dollar in interna tional trade. This ties in with similar reports from other sources in recent weeks and appears to be part of the Soviet cam paign to claim that its econ omy is on a par with that of the United States. At present, the nominal exchange rate for the ruble is four to the dol lar, with a tourist rate of 10 to one. Berlin Traffic The Communists are build ing up a propaganda cam paign that could set the stage for interference with Berlin traffic. Western officials wor ried by Communist charges that illegal war goods are be ing produced in West Berlin S. WHITE wide. Republican though he is, he would bring in his own advisers - and from his own generation, on the whole. For campaign purposes he may be at this moment Mr. Eisenhow er's junior. But as president he would be just that - the president, without rival in the government or in the structure of his party. TF KENNEDY should win, a like broom would sweep- and even wider. So the inner scene here is remindful most of all of twi light. One long day is ending; another is just over the rim of the clock. "Twilight" de scribes the mood of many here - in the White House, in the high, politically appointive posts of the bureaucracy, and in the capitol. There, too, cer tain members of the House and Senate are drawing, whether they sense it or not, toward the close of their ca reers. A whole era is ending. A cavalcade of history is now fast tailing off into the past, like a parade of troops which, seemingly endless, all the same comes at last to an end on the last, lingering note of the last band in the line of march. TN THE OLD lands in old days the expression was "The king is dead; long live the king." In Washington now the spirit is the same, though fortunately the harsh word "dead" is not applicable. In Washington now the spirit is this: "Farewell the past; hail the future." For nostalgia is not by a long way the whole tone, though it is the keynote of the city's mood. For while many here are thinking of Auld Lang 5yne-if it comes to that-many are thinking far more practical thoughts. If Nixon wins, who will go into what cabinet job? If Kennedy wins, what will happen to so and so? It is not the tail end of the big parade - as it never is the tail end of any big parade which really holds the eyes of many. It is the head of the big new parade now forming up at the other end of Penn. sylvania avenue. (Copyright, I960, by United Features Syndicate, Inc.) tha producer angrily, "Don't Ruble Revaluation and shipped to the West. They deny the charge. Algerian Mediation An attempt by some of France's former black Afri can colonies to mediate in the Algerian conflict is in the Communications Letters to the Editor must bear the name and address of the writer, although under certain circumstances the use of a pen name or initial for publication is permissible. The Mail Tribune reserves the right to edit all letters with a vievr 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. Second Choice To the Editor: More on our old friend (??) Paul Rynning. I personally think that if Paul Rynning gets into office as county commissioner, any hope we may otherwise have for decent roads may as well be thrown out the window. I'd much rather see some one in that office who had no experience at all, in their thirties or forties, than a man of 70 to 80. Experience is fine but we don't need that as much as we need fresh ideas. In one respect, it's nice to know the ropes, but Paul knows too darned many ropes. What I would like very much to know, why doesn't Paul Rynning retire and get a good rest. Some years ago I read of a man running for office who had a big political rally and after the speeches were all over he cornered a lady in the audience and asked that she vote for him. Said she, "I won't vote for you but will say 'you're my second choice.' " Pressed for her first choice she said "Anybody, just anybody.'.' That, in short, Is my atti tude toward anyone who has held office for over 20 years, one office, mind you. That's not like moving from be ing member of a city council to mayor to representative in a legislature to state senator to member of U.S. House of Representatives to U.S. Sen ate to Vice President to Pres ident. That could be consid ered as being a progressive type of politician, in a sense, anyway. At least one would progress from one office to another. But to spend one's life in one office! That's just too darned long. Like the lady I just told about, Paul Rynning is my second choice. Floyd R. McCabe Butte Falls, Ore. Repudiate Tactics To the Editor: Charles Por ter has demonstrated that he does not have to resort to un fair tactics in order to win an election; he has concentrated entirely on his own record and the issues, never stooping to question his opponent's mo tives or patriotism. The same cannot be said for Durno, who by employing McCarthy's technique of guilt Editorial Comment EDGE OF The well-heeled campaign of Edwin Durno for Congress has slipped over the edges of propriety in many respects, but the ads which asked "Why does Porter encourage Castro?" are the worst examples of political innuendo in Oregon cam paigning today. Why does Porter encourage Castro? Of course, the answer is he does not. But the ads ask the question and leave the impression that he does, or has. Porter's campaign budget of $12,000 leaves him precious little with which to answer these in nuendos, which are provided in great abundance by the $36, 000 campaign budget which the Durno forces will admit to. Everyone knows Porter has met Castro and talked to him, and that Porter applauded the overthrow of the bloouy Cuban dictator, Batista, by Castro's forces in early January of 1959. Question: who didn't applaud Castro's victory? There were those who did not, but they weren't admitting it at tha lime of the overthrow, for Castro rode to worldwide acclaim for having ousted the tyrant. Congressman Porter, whose name is cheered throughout Latin America wherever free men are allowed to gather, went to Cuba a few weeks after Castro's triumph and met the man, was alarmed by some of the things he saw on tha horizon, and warned about them shortly thereafter in a speech on the floor of the House of Representatives. We do not have that speech at hand. But he said he clung to high hopes for Cuba after Batista's downfall and wishprf flastrn, would step aside, allowing more experienced heads to govern the island nation; and at the least, he advised Castro to shave his beard, don non-military clothing and return Cuba to something near normalcy and free elections as rapidly as possible. He expressed fears of Castro's inexperience and worried about some of Castro's advisers oulsiHp the 2Rth nt July Movement. What Porter said has been merit of freedom-loving peoples evervwherp. Thp 2Rih nf July Movement has been forgotten and Castro has edged far to the left; Cuba is for all intents and purposes a Com munist satellite. (There is strong evidence this could have been prevented by actions of friendship toward Cuba by the U.S. administration early in Castro's regime.) - - - Since his first trio to Cuba Porter has repeatediy sounded the alarm at what was hap pening in Cuba. Did he retain hope that it would work out agreeably in the end? Yes, he did. For approximately the first year Castro was in power. Congressman Porter clung to a hope the situation could be saved that Castro would realize his errors. Porter did that. And so did all the rest of us. Encourage Castro? Of course Porter did not oiti,o,,nK the Congressman was encouraged by Castro's initial victory and disappointed by its eventual meaninglessness. This emo tion has been shared by millions. The full truth is not, of course, to the Reouhlimn pnrfl. date's advantage, so he puts out the simple message "Why does Porter encourage Cuba?" tie doesn t wait for tha answer. Coos Bay World, Rome; wind. Three black African leaders arrived In Paris re cently to confer with Presi dent Charles de Gaulle. Pre mier Mamadou Dia of Sene gal is expected to undertake a similar mission to Algerian rebel leaders in Tunis, by association, has attempted to smear Porter by question ing his patriotism and link ing his name with that of Communist leaders. The fundamental philoso phies of the two men are so different that the entire cam paign could have been devot ed to discussion of these dif ferences and of the issues af fecting the voters. It is most unfortunate that Durno has seen fit to cloud this cam paign by injecting unneces sary extraneous matter con cerning Porter's loyalty: he, like everyone else, knows Porter to be a loyal, consci entious American and it is an insult to the voters' intelli gence to waste their time on such falsehoods. A man who resorts to tricks like this to gain votes dem onstrates an inability to guaga the voters' wishes: in past campaigns candidates who at- . tempted to smear their op- . ponents were repudiated on election-day. I hope the voters ; of Oregon's Fourth District i will express their distaste for j such tactics by casting their votes for Charles O. Porter who, by his conduct in tha last four years, has proven himself worthy of the Peo ple's trust. ' Henry F. Padgham, Jr. Box 294, Medford. Stop and Think To the Editor: I have read most of the communications with the good and bad of the candidates. I know how I am going to vote. Do you? This is to those that are on tha fence, wondering which way to go. If you had a larger business and needed a business man ager, would you hire one that was always on the job or one who spent one-third of his time talking vacations or play ing golf? That is what we have taking care of our U.S., tVa largest business to all of us. If we elect Mr. Nixon wa will not need a congress, so that will save us money to pay more taxes. Mr. Nixon will take Mr. Eisenhower and Gov ernor Rockefeller to the White House with him. This may sound foolish to you, but before you go to tha polls, Tuesday, stop and think. Nina Simmons ' Central Point, Ora. PROPRIETY borne out. to the - . and di