TUESDAY. JUNE 18. 1963
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, OREGON
Medfori1Tubunb
""tvarydne IrTSouthern Oregon""
R.eadiTneaUli Tribune'
Published Daily except Saturday by
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The Great Church Election
NEWSPAPER
UlLISHItt
ASSOCIATION
NATIONAL EDITORIAL
Member California N'ewepapcr
Publishers Auoclallon
Flight o' Time
Mcdford and Jackson County
History fiom the files or The
Mail Tribune 10. 20, 30, 40
and 50 years ago.
JO YEARS AGO '
. June 18, 1953 (Thursday)
; One of the big public out-
Jngs of the year Is scheduled
Sunday when the Medford 20
30 Club holds its annuul Na-
: tlonal Catfisli derby In Tou
. Vclle Stare park at Bybce
; bridge on the Rogue river.
Robert A. Duff, city super
tendent, announced today that
the city will call for bids on
the demolition and removal of
the old airport hanRar build
! Ing and the old steel control
tower.
20 YEARS AGO
June 18, 1943 (Friday)
Jackson county coal i
poslis being resurvcyed
possible use dirlng wartime
slitirlHgcs.
From Arthur Perry's "Ye
Smudge Pot" column: "There
will be no stale fair this fall
lit Salem. There will be noth
ing at the fairgrounds but the
traditional and usual opening
day rain."
30 YEARS AGO
June 18, 1933 (Sunday)
New Mcdford area lumber
mill scheduled to open with
in week; expected to employ
250 men.
Diamond lake resort to
open for season next Friday.
40 YEARS AGO i
June- 18, 1923 (Monday)
More than 300 tourist cars
registered in Medford In one
day.
Local orehardlsts urged to
hold off on sale of cannery
Bartlclt pears.
BO YEARS AGO
June 18, 1913 (Wednesday)
Steclhcad fish transplanted
from Kogue river to Argen
tine streams reported doing
Well.
First wagon load of supplies
of 1813 season roaches new
inn at Crater lake.
: What's Ycur I.Q.?
Nine of left correct Is superior:
. uven or eight It eiccllrnt: five oi
; lis It good.
1. In what state is the Mia-
ouri river formed?
2. What is the name of the
Hide of a triangle which lies
opposite the right angle?
3. Would you say that about
2, 10. or 21 per cent of the
yersons in Hie U.S. are Mile
rale? 4. How many lines must be
; drawn on a four fool square
; in order (o mark It off 111
(quale feet?
8. What is the unit of cur
: rency in Hawaii?
fl. In what collection of fa-
The Cardinals of the Roman Catholic Church
ask the guidance of the Holy Spirit in electing a
new Pope. With each ballot they call the Lord
Christ to witness that each is "electing the one
who according to God I think ought to be
elected."
It is always to be remembered, however, that
the men through whom the Holy Spirit is to act
are frail human beings, each with his own under
standable preconceptions. So their choice will
in large measure determine the direction in which
the Church of Kome will move in coming years.
Pope John's "aggiornamento", (modernization)
was not popular with all cardinals, as the first
sessions of the Ecumenical Council last winter
made evident.
Fourteen traditionalist cardinals on Nov. 4
expressed to Pope John in a letter their "dis
quietude over false doctrines" being discussed at
the Council meetings. Most of the leading car
dinals made clear their bent, whether conserva
tive or liberal, in the debates.
THE 14 conservatives form a nucleus of about
25 cardinals. These include Archbishop PYan-
cis J. Spellman and Archbishop James rrancis'
Mclntyre from United States and Italian car-i
dinals who hold key positions in the Curia, the
Vatican's central administration, who make up I
the traditionalist bloc. j
Some of them were most distressed by Pope,
John's moves toward an accommodation with'
the Communist bloc. Some wanted the militant
anticommunism of Pius XII revived. Some had
no taste for John's ecumenical aspirations.
A group of about 30 liberals is headed by
Giovanni Cardinal Montini, Archbishop of Milan,
an acute student of international politics and a
reformer.
The known favorite of John, Cardinal Mon
tini is one of the principal papabili men of
papal stature. He declared in a. funeral mass
sermon on June 7: "John has shown directions
for our road which it would be wise to follow.
Can we turn away from this bold path toward
universality of the Church and Roman ecumen
ism in the light of Church history to come?"
CARDINAL MONTINI is one of a handful of
Italian candidates who would continue fully
Pope John's reforms.
Outstanding among the others are Giacomo
Cardinal Lercaro. Giovanni Cardinal Urbani,
Gustavo Cardinal Testa, Alberto Cardinal di
Jorio, and Carlo Cardinal Confaloinieri, secre
tary of the Congregation of the Consistory. All
are considered papabie.
Also classed among the liberals are the other
three U.S. cardinals Richard James Gushing,
Albert Gregory Meyer, and Joscnh Elmer Ritter
three cardinals, from Germany, and seven of
the eight French cardinals, who call Cardinal
Montini "Le Dauphin."
The remaining two dozen cardinals stand
roughly in the middle. Of the college of 82 car
dinals, 32 are Italian, so the choice of an Italian
Pope is likely, though not inevitable.
THE lines are not all 'so clearly drawn as the
O Ki-i.'i tvi l ivl-i r iiilimt -i
As The Guardian of Manchester has observed :
"It would be a mistake to see in this (election)
any straightforward conflict between liberals and
conservatives, or to look for a clear issue."
The Ecumenical Council so fired the imagina
tion of the world that no successor, however con
servative, would fail to call a second session. This
was, indeed, the major monument of a Pope who
naci reached tne hearts of men in a few bnet
years as perhaps none of his 2(il predecessors had
done. E.R.R.
Middle East Power Equation
r .. .
Odd Twist of international Politics
Leaves Only Russia 'For Agreeemnts
By PHIL NEWSOM
UPI Foreign News Analyst
It is an odd twist of inter
national politics that at this
particular moment about the
only major
THE SUMMEH OF DISCONTENT!
laaajaagji' V
European
leader with
whom the
President of
the United
States can
deal is the
premier of the
C o m m urnst
Soviet Union.
"""am Such is the
state of disarray among the
United States' nominal allies
that permanent agreement
presently is not possible with
Britain, West Germany or
Italy.
President Charles dc Gaulle
of France, with veto power
in the European Common
Market and determined to
pursue his own independent
nuclear policy, complete the :
allied picture of confusion, I
uncertainty and irritation. I
Aside from De Gauile, the !
is Socialist Harold llson.
just back from talks with
Khrushchev in Moscow. With
him he brought 'a Russian
one figure representing a de-1 proposal to buy from Britain
Communications
Let (erg to the Kdltnr must
bear the name und address of
the writer alihouyh under cer
tain eircumittHrK'r.'H the use of a
pen name or liutliil for publica
tion is permissible, The Mail
Tribune reserves the right, to
edit all letters with an eye to
clarification and condtnf.it Ion,
Letters submitted for publica
tion must not exceed 400 vordi.
A1of fer of Fact
By Joseph Alsop
C New York Herald Tribune Svnillrate
Slart Movement
To the Editor: This is a
word of appreciation for the
recent splendid editorial on
Pope John XXIII written by
"E. A." Theodore Roosevelt
some 40 or 50 years ago wrote
that the world had seen many
good men and many great
men, but very few men both
good and great. Pope John
XXIII and "T. R." himself
both were of that select few.
So right now this letter is
an appeal to all "men of good
will'' to pray to Alimighly
God to send Divine guidance
to the Cardinals as they elect
a new Pope, so that if it is
God's will, ho be a mail with
the same broad ideals as
those of Pope John XXIII,
who when he opened a win
dow in th"? Vatican said he
wanted to let some fresh air
Into the Church.
He said that Protestants
should be called "separated
brethren," and not 'heretics,"
that every man should be
permitted to worship God ac
cording to his own conscience,
and he constantly worked
and prayed for closer fallow
ship among all the followers
of our Lord. He may have
started one of the great move
ments of history.
Horace W. Thompson,
:t(i42 Hllsinger rd
Mcdford
Politics and the Raca Crisis
Washington - The political
departments of the Kennedy
administration are very much
more worried
t .4
If
-V
t -J
Alton
Camouflage Common
To ihc Editor: When, in
World War 11, the Nazis made
a terrorist bombardment of
Rotterdam, the beginning of
the Holland invasion was by
parachutists in Dutch uni
form. Remembering such
mimicry, one asks: Did you
ever study how the Viceroy
butterfly mimics the Mon
arch? The Viceroy's cousins are
basilarchias like the hand
some orange, black and
whites one sees In the Sierran
piedmont. The Viceroy, how
ever, has spurned the colors
of his clan for the Monarch's
brick; red. Some say the Mon
arch may have a taste dis
agreeable to Its predators. At
any rate the Monarch is well
tilted to survive. Its expand
ed range is from India, 'way
across Europe and America.
to our Sierras.
Camouflage Is widespread
Small nations, like men on a tightrope, de-;
pend for their safety on balance. Nowhere is this!
equilibrium more crucial than in the Middle East,!
where the Arab nations and Israel are in hostile ! n'Ki; the animal world w0
confrontation. Egypt now threatens to upset the ;'S tigers of AfaV zebra":
existing balance of power by constructing, with I Our California house finch
the help of German scientists, rocket bases can-1 nmlc b " nnndsonM! " "ol-
okl- f Kl.,.,i,,, r i t.. u:t :.i i . . lywood starlet. His female is
aw.t u , , " 111 "u" K'i'iiiiu-iu-; molded and dull brown. Our
giuuim ungues. I ralilcMuikc is patterned like
his terrain. Down on the
rty. ucNcti, nil' mih-w niun is .nm-
, co i ore a, cifinnniuis, luumucrs,
CO ,-. I, l r.,M,. anrtn,ti- Tim
west uerman locnnieians working in t-.trviuian uiuU-rwmg moth h.is camon-
jet aircraft factories. Article L't! of the Herman : " :!;'d "piht wings. Kvcn his
Federal Constitution says that German citizens "Vl
must not, when abroad, participate in activities; ism.
which could promote destruction and war. What : Kvon ,1,e bUl'e is
should be .lone about such citizens is not spelled StMJ?.
out., inn a ionn uispaicn to i ne .cw liepulilic; c. m. Goethe.
ISRAELIS say there are SO German rocket ex-
ports in Egypt, along with several lutiuhet
suggests mat west t.ermany 'could conliscate.
their passports ; or it could bar them from all
state employment foiwermore . . . or it could
simply issue a straight statement, calling these
black, or off-brown, sheep homo."
Although the German government has been
examining the possibilities of takintr action
Wcs is the fable of the fox Uirailist its CXliatliati' siiuv l:iti M:uvh niitViinir
an4 ll,n an.wx..? . . . . .....
7. I the Tropic of Cancer
north or sonlh of the Equator'.'
B. Where is (he Acropoliat
B. direct Ihc following:
"Much waler hat flown over
the dam."
10. Who wrote "The Ameri
can's Creed"?
:t7:il Tea St..
Sacramento, Calif.
Aniwern 1, Montana. 2. Hy
polenuia. 3. Two per ctnl. 4.
Six. i. Dollar, t. Atiop't. 7.
North, t. Alhani. Graaca. 9.
"... hat llowad . , .' 10. Wit
. lim Tyler Page. -
Couldn't Catch Train i
To the Kditor Oiht upon ;
a time, there vu passengers j
trains in southern Oregon and j
I met them with my tnxi-i
enbs All passenger trains had !
to stop in Ashland for 20
minutes to allow the passeiv 1
gcrs time to rat Sometimes
ci p;sseni;er would fail to get ;
'pack I'll the tram in time audi
I'd have to catch the train
at Siskiyou
Now 1 never did catch a
pa-enger train with the old,
one cylinder Hnij-h It i
coiiiuii i eaten a passenger
tram It couldn't catch a slow
freight tram going over the
mis. It rotildn'l even
toji, itch the caboose on a Colo-
,,,,1 ... r icin Kocny Atinintain Canary
k;.. M.,u; n:.... i.. .. .i. i- iv i I'iH-K i ram loancn with civiia-
" v.... v i.i nii iiiTu.i.-is,-uii,u, 'mite ir a person mused
ical corise-
tn auences oi me
' f 1 Brim racial
crisis than
they like to
admit in pub
lic.
The immedi
ate cause of
this concern is
their recent experience with
the Area Redevelopment bill.
The bill broke no new ground.
It merely asked for authoriza
tion to spend another $450
million on an established pro
gram - and a program, too,
for which there is proven, in
deed desperate, need in less
fortunate mining and industri
al regions, like West Virginia
and parts of Pennsylvania.
Yet the old coalition of Re
publicans and Southern Dem
ocrats defeated the authoriza
tion in the Hous-e of Represen
tatives by a vole of 209 to 204.
The defeat was particularly
striking tor three reasons.
...
UIRST of all, the floor man
agcr of the bill was one of
the wiliest, m os t respected
Southern Democratic mem
bers, Rep. Albert Rains of Ala
bama. Second, the Adminis
tration lost only one Northern
Democratic vote, in the person
of Rep. Otis Pike of New
York. Third, an unusually
large number of Republicans
- no less than 15 from Penn
sylvania and elsewhere - also
voled with the Administra
tion. That means that despite the
best efforts of Rep. Rains,
House Republican Leader
Charles Hallcck managed to
round up the votes of 57
Southern and border-state
conservative Democrats. To
this end, it must be added, the
spectre of racial crisis was
craftily caused to haunt the
House debate.
There was a harbinger of
the vote of Area Redevelop
ment a little earlier, when the
Republican-Southern D e m o
crat coalition approved a rid
er to the Reorganization bill
By this rider, offered by Rep
Clarence Brown of Ohio, the
President was forbidden to es
tablish a new Department of
Urban Affairs by Executive
order.
...
rpo PUT IT bluntly, these
A two succeeding votes mean
that the racial crisis is tend
ing to frighten the Southern
Democrats back onto the con
servative reservation. After
Rep. Brown's rider carried the
House, Rep. Hallcck gave a
coekahoop off-the-record lec
ture on the errors of those
who had been saying the Re-publican-plus-Soutliern
coali
tion was a thing of the past.
Despite Halleck's crowing,
the coalition had been show
ing grave signs of weakness
before the racial crisis boiled
up. The tactical cause of the
weakness was the defeat, in
the last election, of several
ultra conservative Southern
Democrats hy even more con
servative Republicans. The
lesson most Southern politi
cians drew from these defeats
was that safety now lay in
miming as a Democrat rather
than as a conservative.
Until recently, therefore.
Southern support for the Ad
ministration had been grow-
Transit bill, are plainly up for
grabs. Worse still, the bills
most in danger are those like
the Youth Opportunity bill,
the Vocational Training bill to
aid school drop-outs, and the
other measures which add up
to a modest attack on economic-educational
roots of the ra
cial crisis.
After the Area Redevelop
ment bill was beaten, 'the Re
publicans whooped and hol
lered, as though the U. S. had
just won a war," as House
Leader Carl Albert bitterly
said. It is hard to sec a cause
for rejoicing in the denial of
badly-needed aid to desperate
areas where unemployment
runs as high as 20 and 30 per
cent of the work force. But
there is more to it than that.
If Rep. Hallcck and the
other Republicans of his kid
ney are going to take advan
tage of the racial crisis to
strengthen their alliance with
the conservative Southerners,
then what does Halleck mean
to do about the racial crisis
itself? The answer, it seems
obvious, is that he and his
friends mean to play politics
with this increasingly ugly na
tional emergency.
Politics is too much scorned.
Politics is the proper pursuit
of politicians. But when the
gravest kind of national emer
gency looms up, as is now hap
pening, the nation ought to
come lirst, and it always docs
come first with politicians ca
pable of national feelings. Se
rious Republicans like Presi
dent Eisenhower ought to be
hammering that lesson home
to Halleck and his coterie.
has yet been done. Noting this reluctance, and
the interest of the German military in making
advances in weapons technology, (VL, Sulzberg
er of the New York Times asks: ''Could it . . .
be possible for some secret (German, planning
staff to try to gain new knowledge about either
atomic explosives, through Israel, or missiles,
through Egypt, or both?"
The just-concluded visit of former West Ger- s.lkiy
man ueiense .Minister t ran?: -.loser Straus.-
T 1 1 1 I . . .
israei provided iresnn questional
Measures Signed
By Gov. Hatfield
Salem - iUPIl - The following
measures have been signed by
the governor, his office an
nounced today:
HB1036 - Assessment liens
of corporations.
HB1134 - Extradition.
HR1170 - Assumed busincsi
names.
HB1 194 - Unlawful entry
of dwelling or railroad yard.
HB1308 - Unauthorized use
of personal property,
HB1316 - Chaplains at state
Institutions.
HB1371 - Surveyors and
engineers.
HB1395 - Supreme court
fees. .. ,
HB139B - Post - conviction
relief.
HB1761 - Collection agency
business regulations.
HR201 1 - School for deaf,
school for blind budgets.-
HB2013 - Budgets for Hill
crest and MacLaren schools.
HB2014 - Budgets for cor
rectional institution, peniten
tiary. ' HB2019 - Circuit and dis
trict judges budgets.
HB2033 - Corporation de
partment budget.
HB2027 - Department of
Education budget,
HB2035 - Department of Fi
nance and Admiuistr a t i on
budget.
HB2048 - Department of
Justice budget.
HB20fiS'- Committee on
Natural Resources budget.
HU2100 - Capital construc
tion funds for Board of Control.
ing. not very dramatically but ; . .
unite steadily. And until re- Envoy To ignore
eenlly, the Kennedy adminis- .
tration's political managers Official CfciecfODS
were healthily confident that T .l,,f:,,,--l D ,-.,..
most of the President's lew 1 Multtratial Party
lative program would be ap-1 Ca?H' Town; South Africa -proved
bv this session of Con- i lrt J"s,,',h Satterwaitc. U.S.
un- with s.,tiu.rn iamlvissndor to South Africa.
gree of permanency is Soviet
Premier Nikita Khrushchev.
Thus special importance is
attached to the U.S.-U.S.S.R.
agreement on a so-called "hot
line" to run between the Ken
nedy and Khrushchev desks
as a step to prevent war either
through miscalculation or mis
understanding. Negative Agreement
Since it represents neither
progress on disarmament nor
on nuclear inspection, it is
at best a negative agreement,
demonstrating primarily that
neither the United States nor
the present leadership of the
Soviet Union seeks or wants
a war.
Yet in Western Europe
where U.S. interests chiefly
lie, there are problems des
perately needing solution,
ranging from the Common
Market to questions of trade
with the Communist bloc and
Western defenses.
British Prime Minister Har
old Macmillan's government
is seendal rocked and there
are reports that he may save
himself now only on a prom
ise to resign before the end
of summer.
Confidently standing in the
wings waiting to take over
smatnc in
IliUIIIJ III
Hoover R
Serious Condition
New York - ll'PI) -Former
President Herbert C. Hoover,
suffering from anemia and in
testinal bleeding, remained in
"very serious" condition today
at his home.
The 88-year-old Hoover was
"sleeping most of the time" at
his suite in the Waldorf Tow
ers in Manhattan, according
to a medical bulletin signed
by four physicians Monday.
The statement, as tersely
written as the one which dis
closed Friday that Hoover was
seriously ' ill, said he had
shown slight improvement
since Sunday "in that his fe
ver is less and' his heart ac
tion'morc regular."
In the Friday bulletin, his
doctors said he had been in
serious condition for a week
with anemia and bleeding
from the gastro - intestinal
tract.
a $280 million oil rcfincrv
Want Elecl Outlet
British industry also is in
terested in supplying the Rus
sians with steel for a huge
oil pipeline, as are the West
Germans.
Both fall within the U.S.
concept of strategic goods
banned from the Communists
by allied agreement.
Eoth are sources of conflict
not only with the United
States but between the Brit
ish and Germans as well.
De Gauile's veto of British
membership in the Common
Market has left the nations
of Western Europe farther
apart politically than before
the market's inception.
The smaller nations resent
De Gaulle's high-handed ac
tions and fear that the in.
ward-looking market forced
upon them by France may
lead both to U.S. retaliation
and an increasing lack of
U S. interest in the fate of
Europe.
For the final outcome much
will depend upon the still
untried leadership of Ludwig
Erhard, presently tabbed as
successor to Chancellor Kon
rad Adenauer.
Italy also presents special
problems. There also, Moro
is attempting, to set up a left-of-cenier
government by
agreement with the leftwing
Socialists. The outcome of
that maneuver could have far
reaching effects upon the
mixed" nuclear force advocat
ed by the United States for
NATO.
With Britain also luke
warm toward the plan, the
picture remains one of gen
eral confusion.
iv G-he Day's News
Ey FRANK JENKINS
Mishmash in the news:
An American Presidential
advance party arrived in
Shannon Friday to make ar
rangements for President Ken
nedy's visit to Ireland June
20 to 24.,
The party of 40 was headed
by Pierre Salinger, press sec
retary, and Kenneth O'Don
nell, appointments secretary
of the President.
THAT PROMPTS a question:
If it takes FORTY peo
ple to make the arrangements,
how many people will there
be in the party for. which the
arrangements are being made?
fpHAT question is partly an---
swered by a dispatch from
Chelwood Gate, the quiet Eng
lis village near which Burh
I Grove, the private home of
British Prime Minister Harold
Macmillan, is located. It is
here that the visit of state by
the President of the United
States to the Prime Minister
of Great Britain will be held.
The dispatch says:
"This quiet corner of Eng
land is wondering where to
put all those visitors when
President Kennedy and his
party arrive this month. It
will be the biggest influx of
visitors seen here since the
16th century, when Henry
VIII used to go hunting in
these parts."
"The President is assured of
a bed - for he will stay with
the Prime Minister. But for
the 110 members of his party
the prospects are not so
bright."
THE DISPATCH continues:
x "William Grove, propri
etor of the Red Lion pub, just
up the road from Macmillan's
home. says he can accommo
date TWO. The Stone Quarry
another hostelry about a half
mile from the Prime Minis
ter's house, can accommodate
eight.
"But what about the 100
others in the President's party
and the 100-odd members of
the press corps that will ac
company the U. S. Chief Ex
ecutive?" ,
Ifrictly Persona
Ey Sydney J. Harris
(ci Field Enterprises lnc
WE COMMONERS think we
' have problems when we
get word that Uncle Herbert
and Aunt Emma and all the
children are arriving day after
tomorrow for a stop-over visit
on their way to Crater Lake.
But -
Imagine the dilemma of the
Prime Minister of Great
Britain and his lady when
they learn that a couple of
weeks hence they are going
to have to put up not only the
President of the United States
and his staff of 110 but 100
odd nosey reporters as well. '
Greatness has its problems.
plains that by
"r e m arkablc
men" he does
not mean what
i ( the modern
world calls
"c e 1 e b r i
. ' tics" or "pcr
j sonalities."
"F r o m my
point of view,"
ODD NOiii in tne news:
Informed sources in Mos
cow intimate that Lt.-Col. Val-
most men with resourceful h;s vosiok 5 functioning per
minds tend to be impatient lcclIy as ne wen( jmo hjs mh
with and contemptuous to- orbit C2rly Saturday morn.
ward those. who are slower, ina. may he ioinod hv . .
MANNED by a
REMARKABLE MEN
In I he recently translated
book, "Meetings with Kc-mark-
ahln Men " hv C. I r.urriiirff.
the author ex-! wcahcr, less aoie to cope with on( Sputnik
Harri"
he writes,
remarkable man who stands
out from those around him by
the resourcefulness o his
mind, and who knows how to
be restrained in the manifesta
tions which proceed from his
nature, at the same lime con
ducting himself justly and tol
erantly toward the weakness
es of others."
I found til is three-part defi
nition o a remarkable person
to be one of the best I have
come across, an c x c e 1 1 c n t
inner and ouler problems. Jusl
as lack of restraint is the typi
cal sin of tile creative man.
lack of tolerance is the beset
ting vice of the productive
man, the maker, the builder,
the leader, the manipulator of
institutions and movements.
A truly remarkable man,
Gurdjicff seems to be saying.
requires three balanced com-
Vv'OMAN.
Question:
Is ' there- NOTHING
these Russians can't do?
that
I pROM Mrs. Auguste North--a.
rnn f rMir.,.;r-
"Answering your inquiry of
the other day, when I was a
I teen-ager and lived in Hump
! tulips. Wash., an elderly In-
"he can be called a I poncnis to his nature: intcllec-1 dian told me that the name
tual prowess, spiritual diffi
dence, and emotional stability.
When any one of these is lack
ing, what we have is only a
part of a man, no matter how
impressive his achievements,
or how commanding his per
sonality. And such men, of course,
can be counted en the fingers
of one hand in any generation.
But tins is the standard we
should -keep fixed in our
minds, for judging not only
yardstick for judging the sla-! others, but ourselves as well,
ture of men. living and dead.!
who have influenced society.
meant 'hard to pole,' meaning
that I he Indians (the Quin
aults) had a hard time poling
their dugout canoes upstream,
probably because of the swift
current.
"He also said that Hoquiam,
a city near Humptulips, meant
'hungry for wood' because the
large amount of driftwood at
the mouth of the river looked
like it was being gobbled up
by the water."
I'm passing the word on to
Kerb Caen.
the
has served notice on the gov-
THE SHIFT In the (rend has "nnwnX that he plans to host
1 sapped this confidence ' nu, tirac.al Fourth of July
Quite suddenly. whole series "'P"n o"11
of measures, like the Mass jJPProval .
. ' Foreign Minuter Eric Lou v
earlier ailtr.l ihe riml.u-.hr
train when I had thr old , corps to hold oniv one reeep-j
Bruh car, he just missed it Hon to celebrate mtional i The
period. j days. This would milMnntical- riik-.if!
Everett Aeklin, j y rule out multiracial cm-rra:itl
Ashland. Ore I bassv fetes. es (
Of course. $uch a man
must have resourcefulness
cf mind. This is. in a way,
the easier, for it is freely
given to some as a gift, like
musical talant, or coordina
tion of body, or the flair for
making money. Some of the
world's worst men have had
exceeding resourcefulness
of mind.
The second and third,
however, are the real key
to remarkableness. Consider
the author's subtle and tact
ful phrase, "who knows
how io be restrained in the
manifestations which pro
ceed from his nature."
This means, as I under
stand it, that the man of ex
ceptional menial abilities
and drive mmt iearn to dis
cipline himself so that his
egotistic drives do no! over
whelm his capacity- for do
ing good. All that is sclt
centered, idiosyncratic,
yaingloncus. rr.ust be sub
dued to the special 51 is he
has been endowed with.
This is the hardest tatk for
riists end writers and all
persons with creative talent.
r
n
if
iimd Stop JVIe
Ey DENNETT CERF-
j A FEW INSPIRED book dedications:
; y . Inez McEwen dedicated her "So This Is Ranching" to
j "My infant grandson, the only gent on whom I've been able
to pin anything."
I Mar Kcllin-cr dedi-
cited one of his volumes
to the bargain basement
. of a depqtrrent slorr,
, for designing "underwear
that doesn't bind while
seated at a typewriter."
Vice - Pres, dent Tom'
Marshall dedicv.ed his
merr.o::s to "President
i Wooarow Wi!-on, f;om
; his only Vice."
' Franklin P. Adams in
1 scribed one volume of
verse to his "Loving Wife,
but for whos- constant
:r.trrri:p'.;or.s, tha bock wei.ii have been finished s.x months
earlier."
You sr.
barber th
fc:r. He
M'.ir? IN
i-.ca is, so
third cnnsi.'. in "cc
; himself just.y and te
touard the ueakTV
o'ocrs." Here, acu
' !,k ;-h sra.n ef s-V:t the claim of & St. Paul
t he hi a '.'.'.. on for customer who are losing their
.:;? trill .1 :-.e.v tonic lon'.ainir.c alum and lemon.. He
" :i '' hir rh'.it it does ahrink their
that l.-.c iu.r they have left f,U bt'.ter!
.T.;c:t' no l.r,:.: to trt nmcttnt of r' a man can do." in.
-:'M P.. bt P-n:h-. ' prei i led, cf course that it isn't the
v.ork fces S'JPPOSKD to he coir.g at that moment."
C -f- t "iatt Ci.-t. iJitlntutfl bjr Killf reatma lB4kU
vr-f-r-:-?!;-,;,