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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 20, 1963)
4 A THURSDAY. JUNE 20. 1963 MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEOFORO. OREGON UBtni W HUM HIM I GUV AdvOTtUiaa Maul UJ I LATHAMTBiu Wit w AIXEN JTUn fcUCet ai7se U Soutnern OraaoaT" TIM Stall Tnbuna W North tlr , Ph. 1TMI4I ROBERT W IDU. MIW FTHB CI GERALD imc m mi. M ADAMS. City Editor RICHARD JEWETt, SporU Editor OLIVI STARCHER Women'! Kdttos PALE trUCKSON. CircuUUon Mf An Indanamt Kewspapei Entered m eacone dm matter at Maolore. union unw w w March 1. 1UT SUBSCRIPTION RATES Dally ana Sunday I SIS-JO Daily and Sunday 4 ma IB 00 Dalit aod Sunday 4 moe 5 00 Sunday Only Ona rear 19 1 00 Simla Copy (Mailed! SOe ty Carnai And Motor Routa Daily and Sunday 1 year J 00 Daily and Sunday I ma- IJ Sunday only I mo. soe Carrtar and Vendors Copy 100 gifldai Papar or City of Medfore Offltlal Papar ot Jatkaon County United Praaa International rull Laaead Wlra rj. P TaHphoto Nawapteturaa TESffiErTO' AUDIT BUREAtT Ol CIRCULATIONS Advertl.ini rUprnUU.i: KELSON ROBERTS ABSOCI ATES Otneee In Now York. Chl caio. Detroit. San rranelaco. Los Anraleo, Seattle. Portland Denver. tr NIWIPAMt krutiiiHin 'ASSOCIATION MATIOHAt (DITOIIAl Member California Newspaper , PublUhan AaaoclaUoa Flight o' Time Medford and Jackson County History from the flies of The Mall Tribune 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50 years ago. Wyoming Impressions 10 TEARS AGO June 20, 153 (ielurday) , ; An estimated 3,800 "Catfish enthusiasts" turned out Sun day for the 17th annual Na tional Catfish derby and pic nic at TouVelle Stats park on the Rogue river; it was one of the largeit crowdi in the his tory of the event. Articles of incorporation for the Southern Oregon Child Guidance Clinic association were filed in the county clerk's office Saturday, ac cording to clerk's records. 20 YEARS AGO June 20, 114 (Sunday) Five soldiers held In at tacks upon Medford women, From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudge Pot" column: "Pass ing showers art the order of the day. Farmers with hay down wish they would get through passing." 0 YEARS AGO ' June 20, 1133 (Tuesday) Local orchardlst found guilty of first degree murder; asks retrial. Defendant and his family, In ballot theft trial, deny he came home with stolen votei. in vrafin ica June 20, 1923 (Wednssday) Rogue River Valley Golf club formed with John Tom lln, president; Harry Holmes, secretary; and Ben Harder, treasurer. Six crates of Chinese pheas ants released on valley farms. 0 YEARS AGO June 20. 1113 (Friday) Dr. H. E. Morrison, well- known Medford physician, dies. Medford financiers keeping President Wilson posted op currency matters. The packet of informational material bore Lhe lecend. "This is BIG Wvomitiff." That slogan is absolutely correct. Wyoming IS big. In actual acreage it is only a little larger than Oregon. But in flying over it for a good part of three days, it assumes the appearance of going on forever and ever. It is a state of vivid contrasts. One can fly for hours on end over dreary, desolate and barren lands, and then, with almost no warning what ever, find just ahead a snow-capped range of mountains that take the breath away. a IXTYOMING'S population is less than that of '"the city of Portland a little more than 330,000 souls. And, scattered as they are over the vast forests and ranges and deserts of Wyo ming, it gives an impression of nothingness. But in meeting Wyoming people, from the Governor on down, one finds them proud and determined that their state will live up to its vast promise. It is a state wealthy in natural resources, but poor in the personnel and investment capital which some day will turn them into material wealth. THE state ranks high in its reserves of coal, o-aa nnrl nil aa well aa nfrtoi lrcumb nnum minerals, such as trona, a particular variety of clay which has dozens of uses. Long starved for energy, it is now looking more and more to Pacific Power and Light Com pany, which, since it entered the Wyoming pie ture about nine years ago, has increased its capi' tal investment in power jreneratinir and trans- mission facilities from about $12 million to some $100 million or an average of about $10 mil lion each year. In Wyoming, they love PP&L. It is Decoming an ever jarger tactor in the state s ruture. Big transmission lines stretch from Casner west and north, bringing light and energy to areas which have long had far too little for their needs. "What Do They Expect Us To Do Listen To the Kids Prey at Home?" Khrushchev Seeks Maneuverability in Relationships With China and the West 9 What's Yoar I.Q.? Nine n teat oarroal fa ieei eevesi a eafce la anal Wat; rive Ms si food- 1. With what subject does the Lanham Act concern It self? 2. If a contest took place In Santa Anita, would It most likely be horse, dog, or foot , race? 3. A man travels 13 days. going s miles further each day than the preceding day and going 80 miles the last day; how far does he travel? 4. Correct the following: "He must go and lay down." 6. The city of Talpeh is on what large island off the coast of ChlnaT 6. Name the five slain that have coastlines on the Gulf of Mexico. 7. Caruso, by singing at a certain pitch, could vibrate a water glass so that it shat tered; true or false? 8. "Gopher State" Is the nickname of which Stale of theU.S.T - . Was Nathan Hale a hero of the French and Indian, Rev olutlonary, or Mexican War? 10. In the nursery rhyme, who sat down beside Little Miss Muffet? Answersi 1. Patents, I. Horse race. 3. 850 miles. 4. . lie down." . Formosa. . Florida, Alabama, Mlssis 41 PPL Louisiana, Texas. 7. Tree. , Minnesota., t. Revolu tionary, lo. Spider. IN THE Rogue valley, the population at large has felt but little the chance-over from coal to diesel power on the railroads. But in such a town as Rock Springs, dieseliza tion of the rails came as a major disaster. Most of the town's male population either worked for the railroad, or for the railroad-owned coal mines, which furnished energy for the big Bteam locomotives. When steam lost out. the mines were closed, and the crews of the trains cut down drastically. As a result, much of the town's population became unemployed a situation only now be ing remedied by employment in other industries and enterprises. QNE of Wyoming's chief attractions is its scen v ery, which ranges from bleak barrenness to the sublime mountain ranees the Bitr Horns. the Tetons, the Wind River, the Absaroka. . Near Casper, a siirn on the hirrhwav fwhiYh. incidentally, parallels the Old Oregon Trail) says "Keep Wyoming Green," and in the background the brown dry hills stretch to the horizon. Jackson. Jackson Hole and the Grand Teton National Park, as well as Yellowstone National Park to the north, is tourist country. Well it might be, for it is unimaginably beautiful. But it has its share of "tourist traps," too, as a result. There is a "frontier trading post" in one of the towns which features such items as small hand towels with "funny" sayings usually off-color if not downright dirty as well as beaver pelts, bear claws, elk antlers, and a wide variety of souvenir rim-cracks, including a painting of "Setting Bull (sic) for $299. DUT these things are forgiven, for if a person ' is going to be a sucker for such junk, he can be a sucker in beautiful country just as well as anywnere else. And at Jackson Hole, and at Grand Teton Lodge on Jackson lake, looking westward to ward the unbelievable escarpment of sheer rock rising toward the sky, one forgets and forgives uie suiy xoiDies ot mankind. Too, one is grateful for the miracle of the airplane, which in, a matter of houi-s can carry one the distance that it took the hardy pioneers weeks to traverse. It also allows one. m com fort, to view great stretches of breathtaking iiiuumain ana prairie vistas. THERE is little lumbering in Wyoming, as such, in the sense that we in Oregon are familiar with the harvesting of our great fir and pine forests. There his some production of studs, but little of dimension lumber or boards. Its great wealth, still to be fully realized, lies cnietly m its minerals and in attracting tourists, with agriculture a poor third. The two chief industries arc not incompatible, for in BIG Wyoming, a huge open-pit coal or uranium mine, which would mar the scenery in other states, is merely a scratch in the ground. Wyoming is fascinating, and we hono tn re turn some day. We could spend a long time examining it, from the tiny yards of former coal miners in bleak Rock Springs to the spacious Kittiiutrur oi me mountains; Horn the, stiu-dis-cernible tracks of the Oregon pioneers to the huge iron ore "beneficiation" plant near Atlantic City, and from the barren wastes of south-cental Wyoming to the huge oil fields around Kaycee. One finds a welcome there, too. Bring money. ! E. A. Communications Lattari to tha Editor mutt boar tha mini and aHHr nf h w.i.-. although under certain circumstances the use of a Den name or initial for publication li permissible. Tha Mail Tribune reserves the right to edit all letters with a view to clarification and condensation. Letter. suDmmao tor puDiicarion must not exceed 400 words. The letters printed in this column do not necessarily represent the views of the paper, in tact tne contrary is often tha case. well done has been killed by the assembly line. The abili ty and willingness of an em ployee to do better or faster work than another has been throttled by the trades unions. About the only one who can get by on his own nowadays is tne barber - though one might add that the movie star, whose "asking price" for one picture was ten million dol lars, did all right for her self! Big Business is crowding out the cherished small busi nessman by making it diffi cult, If not impossible, for him to compete with such as the company owned service station or the nationwide chain store. And now a u t o m a tlon, which threatens the welfare of all! An employer must be prepared to lay off whole groups with the same non chalance that he displayed when discharging a single workman. What is to become of all these dispossessed people? True, through its Manpower Development and Training act of 1062 our government is hop ing to prevent the tragic waste of human resources -that threatens; but it is foreseea ble that It may eventually have to subsidize the industri al workers of our nation for NOT WORKING in much the same way that it now pays thousands of our farmers for NOT PLANTING. I close with an excerDt from a recent magazine arti cle that suggests, among oth er things, the possibility of even the members of our arm ed forces being compelled to join the ranks of the unemployed! The new revolution in sci ence and technology, which has so enormously Increased man s power over nature, has also reduced enormously the significance of the average individual. With the advent of automation and the utili zation of atomic energy, it soon might be possible for a relatively small group of people to satisfy all of a country's needs - and fight Its wars too - without the aid of the masses." George M. Babcock 427 Hospital dr., Ashland, Ore. The Great Problem To the Editor: My present thesis is that under the pres ent trend . of events atomic war Is not only possible but orobBble. Consider some of the ways it could be brought about: by accident, by escala tion (a small war gets big), by the "chicken game" (suck ed in by our own bluff), by a catalytic third power (Red China gains by war between the U.S. and Russia, for in stance), or by an unbalance in technology. Many more coun tries will soon have the bomb and the probabilities of atom ic war increase Immensely with each new atomic club member. This is the challenge of our time and the future of our civilization depends upon our response to it. Apparently our leaders are committed to the obvious answer, world government, but do not have the political courage to estab lish it as a clear social goal. Anarchy docs not work on any social level. The alterna tive to brute force is court action. If inclusive world gov ernment Is not possible be cause of the different social values of the communists, this does not prevent the civilized countries from developing a court system to settle their own differences with a view to admitting any country that will abide by the minimum rules. Our energies should be channeled into a concentrated effort to find the causes of war. Our greatest need is not "how to build better bombs," but how to avoid the use of them. We must be able to see more subtle solutions to social problems than the blind use ot force. Perhaps there Is no solu tion to our dilemma. Human destruction may be Inherent In human nature, but we owe It to ourselves and to our children to try to find the answer. War Is not Just a problem of governments. War Is a problem of all Individu als. Only Individual people can solve problems. War be comes personal damned quick when the bombs begin to fall, but then it Is too la'te to do anything about It. What each one of us thinks and does, does make a difference. All social problems are interre lated. It behooves us therefore to solve our lesser problems within the context of the all important and all encompass ing greatest problem of all. survival itself. John Chltwood, :2 Alta, Medford A Batter Death To the Editor: Today I found a cat too weak to stand from the last stages of star vation, not having been suc cessful In finding food and water for itself as its owners had hoped - or did they care? A nice yellow cat abandon ed by the wayside In an or chard is In good hands now, having been taken to the Hu mane Society. May its former owners know that It will prob ably not find a home, how ever its death will be more merciful than that of slow starvation beside a road. (Name on rile). Medford Passing of the Individual To the Editor: The historv of mankind reveals that the artisan, in his desire to real ise himself and prove his worth, dared to forsake the beaten paths and strike out on his own, thus contributing to his changing world. Alas. our day seems to want to gel along without him. Individual pride in a job Ballistic Sign To the Editor: In regards to "Watch Out for Indian Up risings Crossing the Road," tourist attracting signs: We would substitute a more realistic one, that would point "To See The Old West" at Jacksonville mu seum (five) miles west. A Jacksonville Boosters Club member, Bert Kissinger 322 So. Riverside ave. Medford Whyt To the Editor: It Is very ob vious you have no intention of seeing justice done in the Butte Falls School District. You have printed a number of articles and letters In favor of Mr. Copeland, but not ONE word have you printed in fa vor of Mr. Stratton. WHY? Mr. Copeland and his sup porters, including Mr. Clevc Twitchcll. have used ail man ner of lies and half-truths In this controversy. It is very ob vious we can expect no jus tice at the hands of lhe Med ford Mail Tribune. WHY? I brought a letter in lo your office to be printed. As soon as you found this to be in op position to your views, you threw the letter back at me. You did not read the entire text to detrrmine the case. WHY? I'll be very happy to buy the tar for a good old-fashioned tar and feather party By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign Mews Analyst In his early years as un disputed spokesman for world communism, much of Nikita Khrushchev's success could be attributed to his flexi bility. Thus he was able to move at will within the vast Com munist peri meter, keep ing the West off balance at f . era allies In the Day's News y FRANK JINKINS From Washington: The Supreme Court Mon day barred Bible-reading and recital of the Lord's Prayer in public schools as part of required classroom exercises. Such a practice, it said in an 8-1 ruling, is unconstitutional. THE ruling was on tases from Maryland and Penn sylvania, but the decision would apply also In many oth er states where such customs are followed as part of school day opening exercises. The court did not speU out whether such observances would be possible on a PER MISSIVE, rather than a re quired, basis, but did bar the establishment of such exer cises by majority rule. WHICH is to say: Your child can not--.be REQUIRED, as a part of' a classroom exercise, to repeat the Lord's Prayer. BUT Sup ppose your child CHOOSES, at any hour of the day, in school or elsewhere, to say with reverently bowed head: ' . Our Father which art in Heaven, "Hallowed be Thy name. "Thy kingdom come. Thy wUl be done In earth as it is in Heaven. Give us this day our daily bread. And forgive us our debts, as we forgive us our debtors, "And lead us not into temp tation, - but deliver us from evil. "For Thine is the kingdom, and the power, and the glory forever. Amen." ' points as widely separated as the Strait of Formosa, the Persian Gulf and the Baltic sea. With the eruption of his quarrel with Red China, a large portion of that flexibil ity vanished and new dangers appeared. In the month of June, as he prepared for two important conferences, Khrushchev has been trying to restore a mea sure of his freedom of move ment. From the standpoint of the Communist world, the most important of these meetings begins July S in Moscow when Soviet and Red Chinese representatives meet in an at tempt to iron out the ideo logical differences now pull ing them apart. Later in the month, also in Moscow, high-level U.S., Bri tish and Soviet delegates will meet in an attempt to break the stalemate over a nuclear test ban. In the two meetings there are interlocking issues. At stake in the first is a de cision on which of the two Communist giants is to have the final say in the course of world communism, and for Moscow whether it is to be forced into a second class role In Asia. In the second is the ques tion whether the three nu clear powers finally can reach accord so as to bring their combined influences against continual spread of nuclear weapons. In both, maneuverability is Important to Khrushchev. And this may be the reason for delaying his final okay on Strictly Personal By Sydney J. Herrls fe- Fluid CntarpriMi. Inc. WELL In that event The decision will not apply, THE court's ban is upon the REQUIREMENT that these words be spoken. It is based upon the first of the ten Or iginal Amendments, which reads: "Congress shall make no law respecting an ESTAB LISHMENT of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the free dom of speech or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble and to petition the Government fo.' a redress of grievances." THE court's decision bans all REQUIRED (hv lawl Bible reading. Your child, or you. or any body else, cannot be REQUIR ED BY LAW to repeat the simple and beautiful words of the Golden Rule, as found in Matthew (7:12): "Therefore all things whatsoever ye would that men should do to you, do ye even so to them, for this is the law and the prophets." But If at some moment your child CHOOSES to bow his head and repeat those tolerant words, no couct of law can PREVENT him from so doing. WHAT of the Supreme Cnurt'i latest ruline? Evangelist Billy Graham, who Is crusading In Germany, says this morning: "I am shocked at the Su preme Court decision. Prayers and Bible reading have been a part of the American public school life since the Pilsrims landed at Plymouth Rock. Now a Supreme Court in 19R I says our fathers were a 1 1 wrong all these years. In my opinion, it is the SUPREME COURT that is wrong." He will find many to agree with him. and would welcome the chance to lead the group in search of Justice. Floyd R. McCabe Mt. Pitt Star Route Butte Falls, Ore. O Editor's note: Mr. McCabe is entitled to his own opinions, but he is not entitled to use the Mail Tribune to express vicious and possibly libelous sentiments about members of his community. As for the Mail Tribune's coverage and fairness, we shall let them be judged by fair-minded readers on their ow n merits. PERSONAL PREJUDICES Freedom of speech is an essential right, without which a civilization cannot flourish: but what use is it to people who refuse to exercise free dom of thought? We do not miss what wa lack nearly so much as what wa are deprived of: nobody misses an eye at the back of his head, but everyone would fael deprived if he lost one aye in front; it is lha taking away that up sets us more than not hav ing in the first place. There is an optimum point in compassion-It is a senti ment rarely felt by those who have not suffered at all, and never felt by those who have suffered too much; for the ab sence of suffering makes men think they are gods, and the excess of it turns them into beasts. Perhaps tha central para dox at the root of the hu man personality is that ev eryone agrees with Socra tes's injunction: "Know thy-self'-and everyone resists such self-knowledge with all tha power at his command. The men who lack "ambi tion" get nowhere; but the men who possess It in abun dance too often lack the sweet er virtues that Justify it. Tne irony of tha skeptical temperament was tersely described b y Rosenslock Huessy, when he observed: "He who believes in noth ing still needs a girl to be lieve in him." The boy who receives a "good" education in a protect ed environment, with only his own kind around him, pays the possible price of never becoming a man; whereas the boy who grows up in a more barbarous and diverse and threatening environment, pays the possible price of becoming a man too soon-another form of Immaturity that is just as crippling to the personality. The former learns nothing of the real world until too late; the latter learns it too early; and the basic task of modern society is to create an atmo sphere tor children in which a creative tension is main tained between the dangerous and the protected. a To tha often-asked ques tion. "Which part of medi cine is a science and which part is an art?." it is tempt ing lo answer that treating tha patient is a science, and keeping him from going to someone else is an art. more can be told about a nation from its advertisements than from any other aspect of its high or popular culture; what we think about ourselves is one matter; which stimuli we respond to give a much truer Index of our motiva tions, desires, and the kind of magic we believe in. The raison d'etre of every war.-whatever its surface reasons, has always been to protect lha future of our descendants, if not for our selves: but what sense is a war that annihilates the fu ture for everyone's descend-ants-and does this not ran der modern warfare a con tradiction in terms? i the "hot line" between Mos cow and Washington and his sudden withdrawal of Jiis of fer of two to three on-site In spections of possible under ground nuclear tests on So viet soil. Over the heads of the Chi nese, Khrushchev holds two important weapons. One is Soviet economic and military aid to Red China which has declined steadily since their quarrel broke into the open and now is virtual ly non-existent. The other is that a belliger ently uncompromising atti tude by the Chinese might force the Soviet Union to seek closer relations with the United States a possi bility abhored by the Chi nese as one of the strongest curbs against their own am bitions. That the Soviets might eventually feel such a need is at least worthy of specula tion. - President Charles da Gaulle holds that an econo mically and industrially ad vanced Russia will become less and less willing to risk its gains in war. But the Chinese not only promote wars for which they dematid Moscow support, but also have shown their will ingness to act independent of Moscow. In Asia and Africa they also are promoting ra cial color lines to the Soviets' obvious disadvantage. . A further risk to Moscow is the fact that the Chinese may soon be able to exploda an atomic device of their own. Its early effect will be psychological but finally it also could pose a threat to tha Soviet Union. These are some of the rea sons for Khrushchev's need for flexibility, and perhaps also help to account for Mos cow's recent seeming hesi tancy to act in world affairs. Matter of Fact By Joseph Alsop ici Ntw York Herald Tribune Syndicate Ml ONLY CHRISTINE . IS MISSING Washington These days, other people's troubles are a positive pleasure to report. Hence it is highly agree able to note that the Chi nese Commu nists have just charged Nikita S. K h r ushchev with every crime in the Aimp calendar ex cept un-Marxist entanglement with Miss Christine Keeler. Merely by reason of its vicious intensiveness, the new Chinese attack is a breathtak ing document. Peking's old grounds for complaint have now been amplified to cover a whole series of internal Soviet developments which bear Khrushchev's personal stamp. The matter of "criticism of Stalin" is raised. The decis ions of the Soviet Communist 20th and 22nd Party Cong resses twin peaks of Khrush chev's de-Stalinization cam paign are openly called in to question. "Certain persons are re buked for "combating the so- called 'cult of the individual (while) enormously exaggerat ing the role of certain individ uals." Khrushchev's dealings with the wicked Yugoslavs are characterized as a be trayal of the people of the world." So are his unkindness es to the virtuous Albanians. fOMPLAINTS are made v' about "certain persons who have "interfered crude ly in the internal affairs of fraternal parties'" - which Khrushchev u n s uccessf ully tried to do in China. Equally bitter complaints are register ed against "putting economic pressure on other fraternal countries" - which Khrush chev has done with China. Khrushchev is nowhere named, to be sure. But this is a piece of politeness on a par with the remark of a Mississippi National Conven tion delegate about one of the early Dixiecrats. "He's man leader, and ah follow him. But of c'ose he's this sorry world's prize s. o. b. and has many other dee-fects besides!" Such, then, is the charming fraternal letter which the Chinese party sent off last Friday, for the delectation of the plenum of the Soviet Communist party's Central committee, which is now in session. It would not be very aitfcrent if Gen. de Gaulle sent the next Democratic Na tional Convention a crisp lit tle essay on President Kenne dy's foliies and errors as lead er of the West. "THIS is by no means the least curious aspect of the new Chinese document. The point is that there was a kind of logic in the earlier, rather less vicious Chinese attack on Khrushchev, because, this winter and early spring, Khrushchev's position and power were clearly being challenged by opponents at home. C By zeroing in on Khrush chev personally, the Chinese may then have hoped to strengthen the opposition to Khrushchev in the Soviet par ty. In effect, they gave Khru shchev's enemies the added argument, that sacrificing Khrushchev was the only way to patch up the dangerous trouble with great, fraternal China. Today, however, none of the Western experts In the Soviet branch of demonology expects the smallest personal trouble for Khrushchev at the current Central Committee plenum. Khrushchev is thought to have contained and overcome the opposition to him and to his policies that arose after Cuba. If any one suffers, his enemies are expected to suffer. Maybe the Western experts are all wrong about this. But if they are not wrong, the Chinese letter to the Soviet Central Committee plenum must be regarded as a de liberate attempt to inflame the Sino - Soviet dispute at a politically delicate moment, in full view of all the Com munist parties of the world, and only a fortnight or so before Chinese and Soviet del egates are to meet for a dis cussion of the two parties' differences. . "THE forthcoming Sino -So- viet meeting in Moscow on July S is the key fact, of course, which gives the Chi nese document a downright lurid, sulphur - and hellfire aspect. When you are about to discuss a brotherly dis agreement in a spirit of cctntr promise, you do not talk like this. Logically, in fact, the new Chinese document ought to be the prelude to a kind ' of ultimatum, which the Chi nese chief negotiator, Teng Hsiao-ping, will slap down on the Moscow conference ta ble with a "take it or leave it" announcement. And as there is no hope of the So viets' taking a Chinese ulti matum, such an approach would produce a decisive Sino- Soviet break - a split in the Communist movement like the ancient split between the Eastern and Western churches. By lining up all the Asian parties, the Chinese have pre pared for such a split. Tha teaching of Lenin himself about such matters also calls upon the Soviet party not to tolerate what the Chinese are) asking them to tolerate. But in the matter of a split, it is still even betting, either way. HEAOQUARTTRS tti'vt I NAA.CP BeVH SKousMl )L C a. as,- Is " 'Wouldn't it be our luck to win our rights about tha lime a war breaks out and the whole world is blown to kingdom cornel'' 1