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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 5, 1963)
IS 4 A FRIDAY. APRIL S. 1963 "Everyone in Southern Oregon n .- Tk. U.ll TViK,,n ' Published Dally except Saturday by Mturunu mini unu t-u 33 North Fir St., Ph. 77a-6141 ROBERT W RUHL. Editor HERB GREY Advertising. Manager GERALD T LA 1 tl AH. BUS mg Ugr lilor ERIC W ALLEN JR . Mm Edl EARL H ADAMS, City Editor HABRV CHIPMAN, Tele. Editor RICHARD JEWETT, Sports Editor OLIVE ST ARCHER Women's Editor DALE 1R1CKS0N, Circulation MT An Independent Newspapel Entered as second class matter at Medford Oregon under Act of March 3, 1897 SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mall In Advance ... Daily and Sunday I year 118 00 Daily and Sunday 6 mos 10 00 Daily and Sunday 3 mos 5.00 Sunday Only One year 19 00 Single Copy (Malledl 300 By Carriei And Motor Route. Dally and Sunday 1 year 121 .00 Dally and Sunday 1 mo 1.75 Sunday Only 1 mo. 50c Carriei and Vendors Copy 10c Official Paper of City of Medford mnclaMPerjfJacltson County Untied Press International full Leased Wire U. P 1 Teiephoto Newsplcturee "MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU Of CIRCULATIONS Advertising Representative: NELSON ROBERTS & ASSOC1. ATES Of'lces In New York. Chi cago Detroit. San franclsco. Los Angeles Seattle. Portland Dun'-er. I -a1sociation I MEDFOi- D MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD. OREGON Pears and Smoke There was an interesting story on the Mail Tribune's farm page last Tuesday, describing how Elk Lumber Company is planting orchards in a "green belt" surrounding its big plant just off the North Pacific Highway. The project has several purposes. It will pre vent residential subdivisions from encroaching too closely on the industrial site to the benefit of both the mill-owners and prospective home owners. It will make these acres an economic asset, rather than a liability. It also will provide a use for some of the plant's by-products, notably sawdust and bark mulch, which right now constitute a major head ache both for mill owners and for those who resent the smoke created when the waste products are burned. " No, You Be Our Guest" NATIONAL EDITORIAL ascmtin Memoer California Newspaper Publishers Association f Flight o' lime Medford and Jackson County History from the files of The Mall Tribune 10, 20, 30, 40 and SO years ago. 10 YEARS AGO April S. 1933 (Sunday) An intensive air search was under way in southern and central Oregon today for a rented light plane missing since Saturday with four per sons aboard. Medford man dies in Chc halis, Wash., hospital of in juries received March 28 in an automobile accident near the Washington city. NE side effect of considerable note will be "an improvement of the attractiveness of the area no small item in a valley which is rapidly becoming overcrowded, and built up with a va- . i i i it i ii i n neiy oi structures, noi an 01 mem signiiy. It is also a small reversal of the trend which has taken much of the best and most productive agricultural land out of production to give way to homes and businesses. All in all, it is a notable experiment, and we wish Elk every success in its undertaking. AS A MATTER of fact, Elk is a forward look ing and progressive firm in other ways, too. Manager George Flanagan informs us that it will be possible to virtually eliminate all excess smoke from his plant in the near future, with the installation of another steam boiler and gener ator. His company was the first hereabouts to use waste by-products as fuel to generate steam to make electricity. And the excess nower is so d to racinc rower & Light company. tsmoke rrom a properly regulated furnace is tar easier to control than that from an old style, unproductive mill burner, Flanagan points out, and in this way he can not only eliminate me smoke nuisance, but also put to good use waste which otherwise not only would go unused, but which presents a considerable problem in disposing of it. FLANAGAN points out that the larger, be tie r 1 financed mills could do the same thing, but some of the smaller concerns probably could not afford the considerable capital investment re quired for such a solution. As a matter of fact, waste sawdust anrl Viurlr pose a major problem for the smaller mills. On ..eT.t .dumber of me uue Blue are mose wno complain bitterly, people think that I'm a fool Tough Hassle Seen Ahead in U.N. Over Financing of Peace-Keeping Operations BY BRUCE W. MUNN j more for the common pot than i ers" which should pay the , but lobby wits were suggest United Pr.ts International j he absolutely has to. bill ing the next step might ba United Nations, N. Y.-HIPI)-, That principle extends to U. ft. members may make adoption of the department a tough hassle is in store for j the United States, which is re-: payments to the controller at stores' layaway plans to keep the U. N. General Assembly I sarded bv both its friends and any time and in any amount, ! the peace. wnen n meets in special ses-1 mere acquaintances here as sion next month to discuss the open-handed backer of financing of U. N. peace-keep-1 U. N. enterprises, ing operations. ; The United States told the Prospects are that the best ! committee of 21 that it would to be expected is a stop-gap j pay only its assessed share of arrangement to meet the costs j future operations-32.02 per of the Congo operation and cent-and not a penny more, the maintenance of the U. N. I unless other countries paid Emergency Force (UNEF) in up. In the Congo, the U. S. I the Middle East for the rest I share has been something be- Strictly Personal By Sydney J. Harris fc Field Enterprfi8. Inc. 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 riaht to edit all letters with a view to clarification and condensation. Letters submitted for publication must not exceed 400 words. The letters printed in this column do not necessarily represent the views of trsa paper. In tact 'the contrary is often the case. Blessed Is Ha To the Editor: In to a communication that sent in recently, wherein I said that Satan and his angels were stars of darkness, this also would I have known, Apostle Paul: "false apostles, deceitful workers, transform ing themselves into the apos tles of Christ, and no marvel; for Satan himself is trans formed into an angel of light. Therefore it is no great thing If his ministers also be trans formed as the ministers of righteousness"; "this I write as a warning, that you seek to know the Lord, that you be not deceived, for in the days to come they shall, above leaching wonderful ways and knowledge, shall do miracles, that would deceive God's very elect if possible. Who among you 'knoweth1 the mystery (in (jal. ch. 4.) that we might know one another." the Congressional regard soon. Record 20 YEARS AGO April S, 1943 (Monday) Vandala ransack home oi R. K. Puddycomb at Shady Cove; sheriffs deputies in- VLSnssiuil. I . , , , . .... . 1 - ' ,T ! I ' 1 ......... sm " Ttom Arthur Verrv'a "Y.iniiu Wstn considerable lUSUIlcatlnn. RhfiUt air or crazy lor writing these let- SmvuJte ot" column: "Beck I pollution. On the other is the fact that the wastpH?'' but so was Noah' wnon In 1933. It ihisi nisi V a i-u-iiX. 11 w ltt"v ulal -lne w.aw I he warned of the flood, and I in t'n . I 1 1 M I III Mil' ID T r7 Tir. eani-v.v.nvviin I . m .i x . ' " " . nv v-viiiuiiut iiicuiuu ni me .same sniru that Noatl Din ycsieruay, or me aay dc- ii - . - . , . . " "" ore, the nation was luiUJy u Sung no oi it except buraimr, and that it Implored to observe 'Eat provides no off setting income. More Meat Week.'" Tho amnllfir mill nnavntnr te in fh.'a UtA J , 1 J "fVIWHWI JO III KUaia 111111, CI 1 1 1 ( simply doesn t see anv wav out of it. He has mir sympatny. 30 YEARS AGO April t. 1(33 (Wednesday) Walter Olmsccld appointed Jackson county sheriff to fill term of ousted incumbent, Pear tree buds develop rapidly during warm weath er; first orchard heating of season expected. Mr. Smoothy, sitting in his homey living room, backed by a set of Encyclopedia Brit tanicas and some volumes of the Texas Oil-lease laws, de clared: "Further evidence of the conspiracy of our communist ic bureaucracy was uncover ed yesterday in a large city in Texas. Jefferson Q. Davis, prominent oilman and banker of this city, was accosted in the street by an uncouth de nizen of the slums and asked for a dime. "Such audacious, arrogant and immoral behavior strikes at the very heart and fabric of American individualism and properly rights. This is the result of the diabolical plot of men like Franklin Roosevelt to subvert and undermine the government. "I do not believe in govern ment interference, but the only solution to outrages like this is to pass a law making it illegal." For a copy of this report, please send 50 cents and the top of an old oil derrick to: Frank Crum While Cily, Ore. of the year The financial problem is likely to be tossed to the next regular assembly session, meeting in September, for long-term solution. Last fall, the assembly ap pointed a working group of 21 countries to "study special methods for financing peace keeping operations of the United Nations involving heavy expenditures, such as those for the Congo and the Middle East." , The group met privately 18 limes in February and March tween 17.5 and 50 per cent The United Nations assesses on the basis of ability to pay. On national per capita income figures, the smaller powers argue, t h e United States should pay about 45 per cent of U. N. costs. Russia and its allies held their traditional position that since the Security Council is responsible for peace-keeping operations, only the council could impose binding assess ments for such work. The assembly authorized the Sll.5 million monthly appropria- and reported this week that it lions for the Congo and Mid- was unable to agree on any method of financing the opera tions. The problem, of course, is fundamentally a human one. Nobody wants to ante up die East forces. Furthermore, the Commu nists argued, the Congo and Middle East operations were necessitated by "the aggres sive acts of the colonial pow- The Father of Our Conspiracy By Arthur Hoppe In the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS There's trouble again in Argentina. The Argentina navy launched a revolt against the government of President Jose Maria Guido THE SIN OF OUR TIME i and started warships on the) Exactly one hundred years way to Buenos Aires, the cap. ago, in a burst of typical 19th I "al- ' force him ou' Of of. centurv optimism, Victor "S" SMt armyst0? Pal' p and as this is written the re- n u g o wiusc , volt seems to have fizzled, an essay on Dispatches report that for the "future ofi"10" than a year Argentina man" i n has knowi neither political .... nor economic stability. Over which he ; P 100 cabinet minister's have the 20th cen- .me and gone' And wn" ury war wiU Lhese poIitical "Sument be de"d Xl h3Ve raged' Arenti"a has re- scaffold w W 1 bli&S?, ritH bo dead hat- 52 6 bllllon dcbt' whlcn ' dbetd: fronUei f,""?1 .to.2,' "l Argen- boundaries will be dear, dog-! lma 5 lmal exporls- Karri red will be warned, do I also. I have not written In vain nor vainly. If their hr anv fnnl il le h who did not take this matter Mental Exercise seriously or In hear!, ihat hp 10 l"e Editor 40 YEARS AGO April 5. 1S23 (Thursday) Bids on construction of Crater Lake highway to be opened in May. Lewis Ulrlch installed as exalted ruler of Medford Elks. i0 YEARS AGO April i. 1913 (Saturday) Rogue valley orchardisls light smudge pots for first time this year in peach or chards, heating not required in pear orchards. Hundreds of persons stand bareheaded along line of march of funeral procession for Edward Root, longtime raeaxorq resident. What's Your I.Q.? Nine or ten correct is suoerior: even or slight is eaccllcnf; live or lis IS good. 1. .Manic 111c largest city in a Western State that has the same name as the largest city in u now England stale 1. In what century did Ihe Pllcrims land at Plymouth KOCKT THE day probably is coining when air pollu tion resulting from forest products manufac turing will be gone, because the emnhasis is shift ing away from dimension lumber to the use of the wood fiber itself. But that day is not here yet, and particularly for the small mills faced with tremendous capital costs if and when they change their methods of operation and their end products. Meanwhile, if anyone can figure out a cheap, clean, easy and preferably productive way of disposing of the sawdust and bark, which is 'now in such vast surplus, he will not only be doing the small mills a favor; he also will benefit those who are sick to death of dirty smoke in the air. And he'll probably become rich, too. E.A. Law Not the Answer might have fear of God, for he who feareth, is as he that lovcth, for both are by faith for no man feareth what he doesn't believe. But this thing also would I have you know, that from now till Ihe end of days of the "man of sin" is a period Of about years, give or take a few. But let no man be lax toward God, thinking there is much lime left, for who knows when the beginning of these things shall be, or who hall remain, or who shall not, But as the Lord sayeth, watch and pray always. And this sayeth the Lord also, lhat he will not suffer any of his to hear more than they can bear. Blessed is lie who reads the book of the Lord, and more blessed is he who keeps the saying of the book. Ted M. Sletten, Route 1, Box 24, Rogue River, Ore Regulation vs. Prohibition To the Editor: I should like to answer your editorial. You probably can't sec because 3. What la the last in the title of 1 h i 1 well known book and motion pic lure: The Crapes of - ? i. wnal is the common kahln lllim.. Omrorf W . Ullllll . VH UJ ,,j. m egg and a type of hunting? 5. When I he Speedwell" was found to be unieaworthy, III passengers transferred to what ship.' 8. What country is known as "Land of Ihe Mornlni Calm"? 7. A stoul person appears! slimmer when dressed in light-colored clothing; true or! false 8. What country Is named for an imaginary circle on 1 the earth? 9. Who was President of the IT. S when llus country ' purchased Alaska" 10. What Is another name for the wild American horse chestnut? The proposed Sunday closing law is, happily, dead for this session of the legislature barring some unforeseen event which could revive it. out 11 would 0e our prediction that It may f WU have very Uttle invested rear its ugly head again in subsequent sessions "lon freeway. The Thun- particularly if its supporters keep Ken Rink; on ou ICm!. 1 -J. any many others, would like luiihe, a rormer Multnomah County Demo cratic Central Committee chairman, is a' political operator of great skill and savvy. He was the one who handled the successful attemm tn ,.,.t a 1 -a.1" ,.d daylight saving time approved last fall. RINKE recently pointed out to us that there .... tj Buuouiiiuai socio-economic reasons mil the attempt to tret Olio , 'IV fit th. ....... I closed, at least in part, to commercial activity. He is a persuasive man. and he convinced us that many merchants to say nothing of their employees do indeed have a problem out ne (ini not convince US that the wav about it is to use the police power of the t0 l'i!,)st' sU"'l's 011 any day of the week. ine raio Alto Times said recently: ' We sympathise with businessmen who have to rneei Sunday Competition when they don't want to BUI invoking the power of government to restrict competition Is a dangerous practice it could backfire It wc let government Close down businesses on Sunday, why couldn't it use Ihe same power on Satur day Or Wednesday, or Friday, or in the afternoon or evening or morning ' "We have enough regulation of business bj govern ment without asking for more This DrafmatJc nnnmnph ulna fl.n rlla. .,.;.:.... 4. Po.ch.d y 'M.yiTowlr- "" l") lu some religionists, make Sunday . Kor... 7. f.i... g. ecu.: W not ollly undesirable, but actually "or. 9. Andrew Inhs... dfimmentji te. ,, iu. Mwaj o. Buck.T.. I S i oui.pu.sfmy open society to divert anv traffic th I happen to have three acres which all is within BOO ft. of the freeway. The view is clear In all directions and I might some day like to have a sign is huge as the .Medford Hotel or Mark Antony, Also 1 am sure thai anyone who would drive 300 miles to the SO Miracle Mile area to enjoy the beauty of the Pacific ocean would believe the beauty of the Rogue Valley is the roof tops and hack yards viewed from Ihe Freeway Some things are beautiful aiid tO tro S"mr U,'n" are commercial. fj The freeway is commercial State and is paid for largely bv commerce it was created to expedite travel, not for Sun day drivers to see the scenery You sivcak of rciMilation hoi you advocate prohibition Leon L Evans. 113 South Front it., Medford P S. You need not punt this as it is directed to you per sonally as you can wield great influence on people thru your paper and I might add Influ ence the ability of some of your advertisers to pay their blUl and be successful After wait I ing anxiously all week end, I see oy your column that I solved Ihe problem in logic correctly, as did my mother. It took us each about an hour and twenty minutes to do it, but we both felt it was well worlh the effort and frustra tion involved. Thank you for publishing the problem, and the comments of some of the people who tried it. Since I am 17 (like the "person of your acquaintance,") I vowed I wouldn't go to bed Friday night until I had solved it. After finishing it, I gave it to my Mother at 10:30. This is a pretty rotten thing to do to an avid puzzle-solver. I hope that family you mentioned finally got their dinner. I know just how they feel Problems like the one vou published are good mental exercise. They stimulate the reasoning power of sadly un exercised minds. Besides hav ing a physical fitness pro gram, I'm in favor of a men ial - fitness program, consist ing of problems like these. I hope you publish more of them, as I enjoy them very much. , Sally Wakefield 1315 Bundy st. Medford Peaceful Wordl To the Editor: Your readers may not know lhat certain "peace" groups sponsoring pe titions tor disarmament and All. 'Tis spring. The sap is flowing in what orators call "The Sturdy Tree of Our Democracy." Mr. Robert Welch, taproot of the Birch Society, has blossomed forth with a revised edition of his great historical work, "The Politician." All because of democracy and fair play. In the first edition, as you may recall, Mr. Welch said Mr. Eisenhower was "a dedi cated, conscious agent of the Communist conspiracy." But in the revised edition he strikes this passage out. "peace" leave an embarras singly long record of actively supporting the same causes and activities that Soviet and American Communist pa pers, organizations and spokesmen promote. Some of the more obvious lies of the communist party line are that we must agree to peace on USSR terms, that communism is in truth gentle and harmless and grants free dom to its subjects (more than USA does), and ultimately that It is "better to be Red than Dead," so it is useless to resist communism. Some of the more obvious activities are their bitter de bates, petitioning and court trial resistance to exposure of communists and their activ ities in America. If your readers want the facts." they are easy to ob tain by writing to the FBI, Senate Internal Security Sub committee andor the House Committee on Un-American Activities, Washington, D. C. This address will be sufficient. 1 wrote, I received, I read and I am horrified at the vol uminous evidence of commu nist activities in America dis guised by "peaceful" words. Mrs. V. W. Emery, 642 Liberty, Ashland, Ore. Actually, he admits man fully, this dogmatic conclu sion was perhaps a trifle un fair. And he now wishes dem ocratically to leave the reader "entire free to draw his own conclusions." Between one of of two dogmatic conclusions: Mr. Eisenhower is (a) "a Com munist." Or (b) "A mere stooge" of the Communists. Probably his brother. And what could be fairer than that? Which is all very odd be cause I've just been hard at work revising my own great historical work: "George Washington - Dedicated, Con scious Tool of George III." a a As collectors will re member, I proved beyond any doubt in the first edition that Washington Was Herli. cated. I also documented con clusively (from papers in the Bettman Archives) that he was conscious. And who, on reviewing the indisputable ev idence, could question the life long card-carrvinir mw. ship of this native-born alien me mi. Vernon Hunt Club, to Known secret cell? Tory He 5 A Boy To the Editor: To Paul Dix, Jr.: Baby Paul's all liny today, Shorn is every golden curl; All because a stranger said: "What a pretty baby girl!" Mary Louise Reed 2743 Orchard Home dr. Medford 'Let's." as I mil H ..,n look at the record. Who owns Bermuda today? And Jamai ca? Not to mention vast Can ada. Which is less than 90 miles from out shores. Indeed irrefutable statistics show that during this supposed patriot's administration, no mas will be dead; man will live. He will possess some thing higher than all these a great country, the whole earth, and a great hope, the whole heaven." These ringing words were inspired by the Industrial Revolution, by the discoveries of Darwin and Huxley, by the advances in science, medicine and technology. In Ihe latter half of the 19th century, it I seemed as if man might at last conquer the conditions of his existence and create a new Eden based on Rationalism, Progress and Humanism the three rciging deities in the pantheon of that era. But it was not to be. Hardly more than a doien years after the turn of th. new century, ih. W.stern world wa plunged into the fiercest and bloodiest of all war.. Twenty y.ars after th. end of ihat. another war engulfed half the world. And now, again 20 year, later, we are poised on th. brink of th. moit calamitous conflict that can be imagined indeed, it cannot even b. imagined. War is more virulently aliv. than ever, hatred il gr.at.r and deeper than ver, frontier boundaries are mor. sharply defined and more passionately de fended, and the new doa- ma. of communism and fascism h.v. become pan demic. Th. savagery, but chery and irrationality of the 201h century have out stripped anything known to man since the dawn of civilisation. EJmmmmmmm "From the standpoint of fig. ures, Argentina isn't TOO BAD off. To be sure, her pub lic debt is two and a half times the annual total of her exports. But The public debt of the United States is TEN TIMES the annual total of its exporls of goods and services. Theo retically, we are four times as badly off as Argentina. 'TWERE is a tremendous dif-- ference, however. Argentina's BAD trouble lies in the fact that she lacks the kind of people who can turn in and EARN THE MON EY with which to pay off her debt - which is the way all debts have to be paid We HAVE that kind of peo ple, and when they get the kind of leadership that be lieves in PAYING DEBTS in stead of letting them pile up they will turn in and pay off our national debt. Never before has one age been so wrong about the next. Except for the rare dissonant voices of a Nietzsche or a Kierkegaard, all the sages of the 19th century failed to see the upsurging of our prim itive drives, the recrudes cence of hatred, the bloody tides of racism and national ism, the fears and anxieties that would plague modern man. Why did this come about? PORTLAND'S Packy, the baby elephant that made such a' stir in the news a year or such a matter ago (he was the big tourist attraction in Portland last summer) is back in the headlines. A piece in the Orcgonian says of him: "The petulant little pachy. derm has been fast becoming a spoiled brat. For the nasi. six months he has been run ning with his father, Thon glaw, who is something of an adult delinquent, and was threatening to develop into a juvenile delinquent. "So they separated him from his bad-example father - . . Packy went wild, kick ing and flailing his guardians with his trunk. It took a half dozen attendants to handle iiie reoeiiious boy elephant. He finally had to be chained in the woodshed - the back room of the elephant house." Which is to say: They spared the rod and risked spoiling the child sPCC than 1 D H.TTT I . -. w.a i.iiaULsIt in ennaro Tn.. miles of sacred rvW.i, UB r"sons are various md flUESTION ".....ueaieu out the main reason, in my opinion, is that men concentrated too much On nnnlrnl - ,U: , iru. i-, , ' u. uieir environ- no, iet us ask ourselves , mcnt, and too little nn nnnii has been named re- of themselves n,. advance can soil fell forever into the clutches of the George III "..lupus empi Try and Stop Me By BENNETT CER F A BR.W E KNIGHT tackled a dragon one dav who simplv was too big for him and. sad to relate, ended up as the main course of the dragon's dinner that evening. The draaon lurinermorc. was heard to murmur approvingly, "Tender is the knight." A glib and articulate police commissioner waa invited to address a ladies' club, and the well -satisfied members .nirroun.leii him when he rten.ndad from the Podium, "Commissioner." gushed one lady, "I've al ways been interested in learning just how they op erate those lie detectors. Have you ever seen one in action ?" Seen one'" Commissioner. The snapped the 'Madam, I married one squarely pcaicruy bv urhra.. long-time associate of Bene dict Arnold? Who, by actual example, advocated sabotag ing our great American cherry-growing industry And who initiated the practice of ....uwing American money across the water. A practice which has cost S98 billion in the past 15 years alone. "There can be only one con clusion: Washington got his orders direct from Bucking, ham Palace. Let him deny it If he dares!" And though Mr. Washing- ion has never denied un charge. I wish, in a spirit of democracy and fair r,ia.. . strike that last passage. 'And auuailiuic: Or was the mastermind be hind him the sinister, shad owy figure of his brother Milton Washington. A very shadowy figure, indeed. Or perhaps even that of his fa mous cousin. Irving. Better known in the glossaries as Irving (Comma) Washington. A known Hannoverian. Every reader is entirely free to draw any conclusion he wants. Anv of these three. Because that's me American way. our supremacy over nature only increased the distance between the per fection of our means and (he confusion of our ends Our capacity for doing evil out stripped our desire to do good The central problem of our age is not political or econ omic or military. It is the problem of raising our hu manhood to the level of our technology 0r else havinir our technology obliterate our humanhood. Our failure to see (his, and to act upon it, is the sin of our time. How's Packy doing now? HfELL, he seems to be back on the right track. The Oregonian's story reports: "He is beginning to mind his manners. He is no longer .....c io is Keepers. He eats his elephant spinach (hay) and m,kS UP his oats and apples. When he is a good boy, he gets a sugar cube or two from Al Tucker, his charm school professor. "He comes when he is call ed, and is beginning to mind other commands." "THE SUGAR lump treat 1 ment seems to be working all right in Packy's case. But Let's not forget that they took him to the woodshed FIRST. Official Report To Ihe Editor: The follow, ing il the official authentic Sam Smoothy Report No. S,4','(! Which will be read into re are three tliiriits. Robert Benehtev nse.i in must XKVKK under ANY circumst.nceV-tell a min 1 That he has no sense of humor. 2. That h,s problems are not as serious as voura. 3. That his business is less complex, and 'easier to man.c. than yours. O 131. by Bennett Cerf. Distributed, by Kin. rearurra Syndic.!. Well, it just shows that Mr. Welch and I basically believe in freedom of choice Which is the heart of democ racy. It's just that the choices Mr. Welch offers are a bit limited. Even so. despite what most everybody says, I m honestly glad Mr, Welch and his Bircii Society are still flourishing. Because democracy really is kind of like a tree-roots, branches and ever-renewing blotaorna. But how healthy is the tree of democracy, I ask you in all seriousness, unless j it can produce a few nuts? ,-, la "It's either th. deep p.netr.ting, ..If-examination and .n.lytn that come, with middl..g,, or jult Pin 0ia Spring F.T.rl" t