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Z j W . THURSDAY. JANUARY 17. 1963
Rockefeller Cited By Many People as Cinch in GOP Spot
By JACK V. FOX llionairehas been cautioning . lot of "homework" bouti. i .,,...k v.. . .u .."rVI
Sockeye
Salmon
16-ox.
Tin
United Press International
New York - Ojpo - There
is nothing coy about Nelson
Rockefeller when people ask
him about the Presidency and
And a lot of neoDle are ask
ing him about it.
The New York Governor is
aware that he Is well in the
forefront of Republican pos
sibilities at this time. He ac
knowledges without any
phoney modest disclaimers
that this is so.
The fact is that a great
many people, including Pres
ident Kennedy, seem to be
lieve that it is pretty close to
a cinch that Rockefeller will
be leading the GOP ticket in
the next election.
There is one notable excep
tion: Nelson Rockefeller.
Not Candidate
newsmen, politicians and
friends for a long time that
they make one big mistake
about him.
"They just won't accept
what I say at face value," he
has said. "But the truth is
that I mean just what I sav.
And eventually people will
realize it
And what he is trying to
get across these days is that
he is not a candidate for the
Republican Presidential nom
ination in 1964. He may well
be. But he isn't - yet.
A favorite word in the
Rockefeller vocabulary with
regard to the Republican nom
ination is "mobility."
A second is "homework."
Rockefeller's position on
the Presidency can be staled
authoritatively as this
in the next few months, he
The 54-year-old multi-mil-1 and his aides are going to do
Morse Proposes To
Outlaw Drinking in
Rooms of Capitol
m
Km
By A. ROBERT SMITH
Mail Tribune Washington
Correspondent
Washington (Special) - In
the current Senate rules fight
most senators know how they
will vote on
whether t o
curb filibust
ers - but how
will they vote
on the more
u n com fort
able issue of
whether t o
curb cocktail
parties be-
smith neath the Cap
itol dome?
The filibuster issue centers
on changing Senate rule 22,
governing proced les for end
ing debate. The drinking is
sue centers on rule 34, barring
lighted cigars" in the Senate
chamber, for Sen. Wayne
Morse proposes to add a pro
hibition against serving alco
holic beverages in the public
rooms of the Capitol and Sen
ate office buildings where re
ceptions are not infrequently
held.
Launched last spring on
the very night President Ken
nedy was attending a sedate
reception in the Capitol at
which liquor was served,
Morse's campaign to shame
his colleagues into adopting
an anti-tippling rule gained
new ammunition last week
when Sen. Vance Harlke (D
Ind.) threw a party in the
Capitol which the Chicago
Tribune described as "the big
gest, wettest and longest ju
bilee ever staged on Capitol
Hill."
Chandeliers Jingled
The party honored Indi
ana's newly elected Senator,
Birch Bayh. The Tribune's
account slated:
"As it reached its peak late
this afternoon, the huge crys
tal chandeliers in the Senate's
main reception room jingled
to defiant cries of Where's
Wayne Morse?' ... He re
mained discreetly in his of
fice ... A small band furn
ished music and the seemingly
inexhaustible revelers furn
ished a clamor which could
be heard in Statuary Hall 100
yards distance. 'On the Banks
of the Wabash' was chanted
time and again. . ;
"Sen. Hartkc, chairman of
t h e Democratic campaign
committee, acted as master
of ceremonies. He employed
a basketball referee's whistle
to command attention as he
introduced cabinet members
and Supreme Court justices
. , . The supplies of bourbon,
scotch and cocktails never
ran out."
The long history of unin
hibited congressional imbib
ing challenges the claim that
the Hoosier whing-ding was
the wettest on record. But it
exemplifies perfectly what
Wayne Morse wants the Sen- fore the rules fight is com-
ate to outlaw. plcted.
Morse's proposed new rule
would not impar the practice
of a senator keeping a bottle
in a desk drawer or offering
a iriena a drink in his office.
But drinking parlies, which
he regards as "a desecration
of public buildings," would
have to be held off Capitol
Hill.
The Oregon teetotaler is
latest in a line of reformers
who have insisted on changes
in the social patterns of the
lawmakers on Capitol Hill.
Favorite Libation
In the earlier days of the
republic, drinking was so
common in Congress thr; sen
ators commonly carried alco
holic drinks or wine to their
desks. A favorite congression
al libation of the early loth
century was "switchell,"
made of ginger, molasses, a
sprinkling of water from the
celebrated Capitol spring, and
heavily laced with rrm.
When an anli-drinking res
olution came up for Senate
consideration in 1866, Sen.
James A. McDougall of Cali
fornia contended that alcohol
ic beverages "elevate us, en
able us to seize great facts,
inspirations which once pos
sessed are ours forever." He
also declared defiantly: "I be
lieve in women, wine, whisky
and war." The ami-drinking
resolution was defeated.
In the Prohibition era, "one
of the great scandals of the
times was the boldness with
which liquor was sold in the
Capitol, writes Herbert As
bury in "The Great Illusion."
Liquor dealers kept "large
stocks of booze in the base
ment of the Capitol and in the
Senate and House office
buildings in order that con
gressmen might; be given
prompt and efficient service,"
he adds.
Could Ban Parties
Beacause Mor?e is no Prohi
bitionist, he would probably
agree with a Boston congress
man who, in 1788, said: "If
any man supposes Ilia' a mere
law can turn the taste of a
people from ardent spirits to
malt liquors, he has a most
romantic notion of legislative
power." But a Senate rule
could ban cocktail parties
just as a 1902 bill outlawed
open sales of liquor in the
Capitol.
Probably no senator today
would be so bold as Sen. Mc
Dougall in declaring his alle
giance to "women, wine,
whisky and war," but the
huge crowd at the Hoosier
shindig last week suggests
that many still believe in the
middle two.
The big question is how
many would be brave enough
to stand up and be counted
on the Morse anti - drinking
rule - if the Oregon senator
can maneuver the Senate
into taking a stand on it be-
the forthcoming Presidential
election.
One of the principal ques
tions they are going to seek
an answer for is whether Ken
nedy can be beaten in 1964
and under what conditions.
A lot depends on what the
Republican party does in the
way of organizing and revita
lizing itself on a national
scale.
A lot depends, too, on how
the affairs of the world and
the nation turn in that period.
Not until that homework is
done, not until he satisfies
himself that he has had a good
fighting chance to defeat Ken
nedy, will Rockefeller declare
himself.
Until that time, the watch
word is "mobility.1
Nixon Criticised
Rockefeller believes firmly
that Richard Nixon could
have beaten Kennedy in 1960
had not Nixon gone into the
Chicago convention with the
nomination all tied up in rib-
oons.
Nixon froze out all compe
tition - Including Rockefel
lers. The Governor made a
show of being available at
Chicago, but no one took him
seriously and the interest
around the nation was never
aroused as was, for example,
Kennedy's maneuvering with
Lyndon Johnson.
So Rocky - as he is now
tagged - is definitely out to
avoid making the same mis
take with regard to his pos
sible candidacy.
He disagrees wllh those of
his boosters who inveigh
against the "Conservatives" in
the Republican party building
up Arizona's Sen. Barry Gold-
water to "stop Rockefeller."
He doesn't like to see the
GOP run down the chances
of its two new stars - Penn
sylvania's William Scranton
and Michigan's George Rom
ney - on the grounds they
haven't the time to build the
image required for a Presi
dential candidate.
Rockefeller feels the Re
publican party must have live
ly competition. It must par
ticularly have the give and
take of debate on the key
issues of the day.
Kennedy Replies
Throe weeks ago President
Kennedy spoke before . the
Kconomic Club in New York.
A short time before that,
Rockefeller had taken off on
the Administration for its
failure to "got the country go
ing" as Kennedy had prom
ised in his 1960 campaign.
It was notable that Kenne
dy, in his speech, turned
hail of fire on what he said
were the shortcomings in eco
nomic accomplishment i n
New York State. Aides report
ed back to Rockefeller that
the businessman audience
found the situation of Ken
nedy already campaigning
against Rocky amusing
enough that they broke into
laughter.
Rockefeller found it amu
sing, too, aitnougn ne says
some oi the figures Kennedy
quoica, particularly on un
employment in New York,
were misleading. The distor
tion, according to Rockefeller
lies in the fact that the state
has such efficient unemploy
ment aid mat such statistics
give an unrealistic picture
beside states which lag on
helping the unemployed.
Une thing is certain - if
Rockefeller docs take on Ken
nedy, a prime, perhaps the
prime, issue will be the na
tion's rate of economic
growth. It is in this area that
Rockefeller feels the New
frontier is most vulnerable.
Has Candor
Candor is one of Rocke
fellers most refreshing characteristics.
jn nis re-eiccuon for an
other four years as Governor
last September, he was up
against a lack-luster Demo
crat named Robert Morgcn-
tnau, son of the former Secre
tary of Treasury under FDR,
Except for that name. Mor-
ganthau had little to recom
mend him as a political office-
seeker. He had never held or
tried for public office before,
He was painfully shy in meet
ing people. The Democratic
party in New York was so
divided that he was not even
mentioned as a nominee until
almost the last moment be
fore the September conven-
tion.
Rockefeller beat- him by
500,000 votes. That is a solid
margin in any politician's
book but it was short of the
victory margin which Rocke
feller had taken incumbent
Gov. Averell Harriman when
Rocky first sought the Gov
ernorship In 1958.
Victory Predicted
To make it really cmbaras-
sing, Rockefeller's campaign
manager had predicted on
election eve that his man
would win by a 1,000,000
vote plurality. Rockefeller
has - to put it mildly - told
the campaign manager he
wished he hadn't made that
prediction.
Why did his margin de
crease this time?
Rockefeller has a number of
ideas why it was so. But a
primary one is that he did a
number of things in his first
term as Governor which were
unpopular with voters. Chief
among them was to raise the
New York State income tax
and bring under withholding
DU0.000 persons who had not
previously been subject to
such taxation.
The Governor has said that
his move unquestionably left
a "residue of ill will." But
such is his '-Modus Pcrandi,
that a few would doubt he
would do the same thing all
over again.
Don't Start Boom
At the present time, the
Rockefeller camp is sending
out word across the nation
not to start any Rocky-for-
President boomlels.
Rockefeller takes the posi
tion that no one is authorized
to act at this time as his rep
resentative or agent. When
and if the occasion comes, he
will let them know.
Rockefeller believes t h e
party has a lot of work ahead
if it is to knock Kennedy out
of the White House. He be
lieves it can be done and in
tends to help all he can.
But one thing you can bet
on:
Nelson Rockefeller docs not
intend to be the Alf Landon
of 1964.
The Medical Roundup
. it,. i
Emeritus ConiuIUnt In Medlclnn
Myo Clinic
Cmtrltui Professor of Medicine,
Msyo clinic
(Rentier and Tribune Syndicate.
1963)
Ruptures Treated by Surgery
mere must be thousands of
men with one or two ruptures
in the groin who so wish they
could avoid
surgery that
they can very
easily be vie-
t i m i z e d by
men who ad-
vertise to
cure ruptures
with medi
cine, or. per
haps with an
1 n j e c tion of
other in the
or
Alvarez
something
groin.
Actually, If
people could
only see the caDlne hni in
the abdominal wall which ap
pears when the protrudlne
knuckle of bowel is dropped
back into the abdomen, thev
would see how hopeless it
would be to try to close such
a hole by giving medicine by
mouth. It just cannot ho donp
They might see how difficult
u must ne to stick the sides of
the hole together by injectine
some Irritating drug into the
cavity.
There is only one sennlhlo
thing to do with such a hnln
and that is to operate; to join
me layers o: me muscle, and
to sew them together. Often,
the surgeon has to sew nn.
layer-over the other, much as
one buttons a double-breasted
coat. During the process,
a cnannci must be left for the
spermatic cord to go through.
This runs from the testicle ui
to the base of the urinnrv
bladder. The reason why
women seldom have inguinal
nermas Is they have no sper
matic cord to cause trouble.
wncn a woman has an inguin
al ncrnia, u is usually the
rare one In which a hoop of
bowel slips down alonaaldo
tne big artery Which comes
out of the abdomen and- goes
down the thigh.
Mass of Hard Scar
ear specialist, who made an
electronic "audiogram,"
which is a map of the pa
tient's hearing for sounds of
different intensity and pitch,
(rate of vibration).
After much treatment
which did not at all improve
the child's hearing, the moth
er took him to another ear
specialist who made a careful
examination. He was honest
enough to say immediately
that the boy was completely
deaf In one ear, and in tha
other ear much of the hearing
was gone. The doctor also said
honestly that he saw no hooe
of improving matters, be
cause he felt sure that ir
reparable damage had been
done to the organ of hearing
in tne inner ear. He tust could
not hopi to rebuild 'the in
jured tissue. The doctor ad
vised that the child be taught
lip reading, and this is now
being done.
Would Be Unwise
Naturally, the mother keeM
hoping that in some institu
tion more can be done for the
child, and she wants my opin
ion as to whether It would
pay her to take him a long
distance to a great clinic. I
fear that this would be un
wise. If an able car man says
mat me inner ear is damaged,
I don't know of anything that
anyone can do. -
The mother Is Drohahlv
hoping that her child can
have one of those wonderful
operations which are now
being performed on older peo
ple, but these persons usually
nave a sort of arthritis that
affects the three tiny bones in
tnelr middle ear; often they
have a bone stuck in the little
window between the middle
and Inner ear. This type ot
trouble IS not what has dam- -
aged the hearing ot the child,
and hence the-. now type of
K?) 3- 6- 8 2d
TAUtus
APR 21
MAY 21
69-7t-83-M
CtMIM
MAY 22
JUNE 22
f M6-19.36I
40-48-81 A
CANCia
Ct,mY23
IP57.59.66 69
HV70-76-85 8(J
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VMOO
AUS, 21
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5-3339-iIJ
01-04 67
STAR GAIEK'y
dj k.LAi a. rymipc
JK Your Doir Activity Guide M
l' ' According to Iht Stan. f
To develop messoge for Friday,
read words corresponding ro numbers
or your ioatoc birth sign.
tPT.
OCT.
M2-M-5S
1 Smfki-
2 Kt.n
3Nfw
4 Soil
sirs
6 Luck
7Doy
9 Plugging
10 For
11 Don't
12 You'll
13 B.
14 Argue
15 Seller
16 01
17 Remind
IS Or
to Gomib,
20 You're
21 In
22 You
23 Someone
24 In
250uohr
2 About
27 To
2d Remits
70 The
30H,gh
3IA.e
37 Beginning
33 Time
34 Love
3b Molung
36 Am
37 Btond
38 Futs
39 To
40 Dynamite
41 New
42 Over
43Whot
44 Driver's
bJo
46 And
47Seot
4A Now
Thv
-SO Small
SITop
52V,i,t
53 Show
54 Friend
55 Items
56Doy
57 A
M Turn
50 Knock
60 For
($Good OSJAdverse
61 Over
62 Or
63 PuiclfOses
64 New
65 Parent
66 At
67 Leaf
68 Door
69 Gear
70 Or
71 Porties
72 Be
- 73 Agoreivve
74 Start,
75 Money
76Jetter
77 And
7BAnd
79 Week-end
R0 Plans
II Keep
B2 Aloof
S3 Good
84 Humor
8b Brings
86 News
87 Owe
88 You
89 Tronioctioni
00 Arrives
Vu't.."l
scoesio
(OV. 22
MM.27.52.fi
64-42-45 J
SAGITTA8IUI
ncc 22 l-AI
15-17-23 26jTH
M3-49-87 88 "sU
CASeKOtN
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JAM1 20 V-JvV,
l5l-54 40 43Vr-
pl-77-79 80VS-
AOuASIUI
'AN. 21
FIB. If D J
20 21-29-44rrJ
47-72-73 Vi
risen
MAR. 21
4- 7.10 35T.
07-41-74
operation' to "free up the
stapes" would not.heln him.
, I once saw a man who had I" Mother with ' a hard-df-
tried the. so-called injection hearing child should get in .
treatment for hernia, He had I touch with the John Tracy
In his groin a mass of hard I c,,nic. B08 West Adams, Loa
scar as big as a lemon. I oer-1 Angeles, Calif. They send out
sonally would not ihink of I vey helpful correspondence
taking any chances with such I course,
a treatment. I would much f
prefer an operation. , Dr. Alvarez says there ere
Actually, an operation for
hernia can quickly and safely
be performed by any able
surgeon. Usually, if the hernia
is not too big, and the surgeon
is expert, the results will be
permanent and satisfactory.'
The mortality is very low.
What Is bad Is to let the her
nia get as large as a grape
fruit or larger: then It may be
Impossible for the surgeon to
bring together enough good
muscle to close the hole. In
that case, he may. have to stick
in a bit of gauze made of a
special type of metal which is
well accepted by the man's
tissues. Occasionally, after a
repair, a great big hernia will
break open again.
Deafness In a Child
I am much interested in the
letter I Just received from a
mother of a small boy who
has a hearing problem. Long
ago, the mother first noticed
that he was not hearing as
well as he should, but as so
often happens in these cases,
it took her three years to con
vince her husband that she
wasn't imagining things. .
Eventually, she got per
mission to take the boy to an
many persons Who have never
had a convulsion who never
theless are epileptic. You
may obtain a better under
standing of the' disease by
reading his booklet, "What Is
Epilepsy?" which may be ob
tained by sending 25 cents
and a self-addressed, stamped
envelope with your request
for it. Address Dr. Walter C.
Alvarez, Dept. MMT, The)
Register and Tribune Syndi
cate, Box SS7, Dcs Moines 4,
Iowa.
Imhausen Found Guilty
In Medford City Court
Donald Imhausen, 723 West
11th st., Medford, was found
guilty In Medford municipal
court yesterday on a charge
of assault and battery. He was
fined $30 by, Judge Justin
Smith Jr. .
A similar charge against
his brother, Ira Imhausen,
was dismissed by Judge
Smith -.
The charges ag-lnst the
brothers grew out of an alter
cation at a Front st.' tavern
last Nov. 12. ,
52k
A
n
PRESENTED MEDAL-Presidcnt Kennedy and Gen. Lauris
Norstad are shown in informal conversation at the White
House after the Chief Executive presented the Distinguished
Service Medal to Norstad for his role in protecting the na
tional security and contributing to world peace. Norstad re
tired Jan. 1 as supreme commander of NATO forces In
Europe. (UPI)
Village Variety & Garden Shop
Hunting and Fishing licenses Issued
PAY ELECTRIC & WATER BILLS HERE
"Medford' Only Independent Variety Store"
Next to "Piggly Wiggly"
2-Day Photo Finishing Service
POST OFFICE ALWAYS OPEN
771 Stewart Avenue 9 A.M. to 9 P.M.
Weekdays - 10 to 6 Sunday 773-7002
HARDWOOD
WOODEN FOLDING
CHAIRS
Imported from Yugoslavia
A Bargain at $4.77 ea.
CLOSE OUT AT $2.39 ea.
1961-1962
CAR MODEL
KITS
AMT
Reg. SI. 49
Now While They list
75
WHILE THEY LAST!
5 Spring Flower Bulbs
With Each Purchase