The Mill City enterprise. (Mill City, Or.) 1949-1998, October 30, 1952, Page 3, Image 3

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    for What it's Worth
All Building Supply
Needs
AT
Kelly Lumber Sales
M
r
NEW RETAIL LOCATION:
East City Limits on Highway 222
Phone 3215
MILL CITY I
Scott Young Bags
Large Black Bear
S—THE MILL CITY ENTERPRISE
October 30. 19">2
By CLIFFORD P. ROWE
Forest Grove, Ore.
Editor’s Letter Box-
(Editor’s Note: We are with-hold­
(Continued from Page 2)
ing publication of this week’s con­
Marion Forks — The black bear
Cardwell if you want a good man to
tribution by Mr. Rowe, which is a which has caused excitement in the
represent you is the state legislature.
letter setting forth “the Case For the j Marion Forks area all summer, was
JOHN T. RUSSEI.I., Sweet Home,
Republicans” because of its extreme J recently shot by Scott Young, owner
Former Editor-Publisher New Era.
libelous character especially on the of Marion Forks lodge.
Paid
Adv.
527 Kay St.
point that the government is perme­
This bear frightened women and
ated with communism.
Late news children in the nearby camp, Wilson­
reports now show that the chief ac­ ville. It was killed after it invaded Illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
cuser, Senator McCarthy now appears the lodge basement and destroyed
I
to be the real friend of Communism property.
in America, when he was the only
Previously the huge bruin shredded
defense witness for Communist Earl a tent belonging to Chris McDonald,
Browder in his trial in March, 1951.) Art Olmstead, and "Doc”. Not con-
1 tent with ripping the tent, it smashed
the gasoline lantern and pilfered
BASSETT’S WELDING SHOP
cooking supplies. Only one dish re­
mained unbroken in the tent after th<T
Phone 1141
Phone 116
bear's visit.
Gooch Logging Supply
"Everything for the Logger
I
Elect...
Jess W.
DETROIT
SAVAGE
Republican
State Representative
For Linn County
BUSINESS MAN — FARM OWNER
CIVIC LEADER
Pol. Adv. Pd. for by Jess W. Savage, Albany, Ore.
MM
MM
MM
MM
MM
By MRS. S. T. MOORE
Mrs. Irving Steers has as her guest
this week her mother, Mrs. A. H.
Hanson of Seaside. They spent Tues­
day in Salem.
Paul Dillard of Eugene visited this
week at the home of his nephew and
family, the Howard Deans.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Ramsey and
children visited relatives in Portland
last weekend.
Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Hellwig spent
last weekend at the coast at Rock­
away Beach and at Astoria where
they visited the Gustafson family,
former Mongold residents.
Visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Nolan
Rasnick are Mrs. Rasnick's daughter-
in-law and two children, Sherri and
Pamela, from Corpus Christi, Texas.
They expect to remain in Detroit for
about two months while James Grif­
fin, Mrs. Rasnick’s son, is in Korea.
He sailed Tuesday on the USS Japan
and will be on the assignment until
March.
Mrs. Fannie Noble spent a few
days in Detroit this week before leav-
I ing for Los Angeles, Calif., where she
| will join two of her sisters, one of
horn will come from Illinois for the
family reunion in Hollywood.
Mrs. Noble has been in Stayton the
past few weeks at the home of her
daughter, Mrs. Kenneth Baldwin,
where she has been caring for her
youngest grandson.
Mrs. Frank Moore and son Frankie
have returned to the ranger station
after spending two months at Monu­
ment Peak lookout.
On her way home Mrs. Moore lost
her red Irish setter, "Finnegan”, and
for several days his whereabouts was '
unknown.
He was finally reported I
safe and returned by a Marion Forks
party who had picked him up ex­
hausted on the highway.
Johnny Mason, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Chick Mason, returns from Tacoma
this weekend where he has spent two
months attending a specialized clinic.
His health is reported to be much
improved.
BECAUSE is will require each type of vehicle to pay its pro­
portionate share of taxes.
BECAUSE is will not change the amount of money paid by
trucks...it changes the taxing method only. All charges
will continue to be set by the Legislature, as in the past.
F BECAUSE it will not increase registration fees and fuel taxes
< v* <
Branch Store Lyons
Sweet Home, Philomath
on private automobiles.
BECAUSE it will not thange the status of farm vehicles.
BECAUSE it will not shift road-tax burdens from one type of
carrier to another.
BECAUSE it will not Impair the present Oregon Highway Com­
mission’s construction program nor impede Oregon's long­
term highway planning.
rue
TRUCK TAX
VOTE 330 X YES
What makes
Olympia
so satisfying?
For nearly half a century
Olympia has devoted its skill
in creating a light, yet satis­
fying beer.
Today, the third generation
of the same family is dedicating
this experience and its modern
facilities, plus the rare brewing
quality of its famous water, to
produce Olympia ... /fwer»«’i
Original Light Table Heer.
Salem Heavy Hauling & Equipment Co.
1405 N. Front St.
SALEM, ORE.
Salem Phones:
2-1924; Night 2-4417
Lyons Phone:
143
HAULING AND MOVING HEAVY MACHINERY
and Mill Equipment Up To 25 Tons
Including D8 and HD14 Cats, and 3g-yard shovels.
Complete Rigging Outfit, Winch Trucks, Low-bed Trailers
Adlai E. Stevenson
by Noel F. Busch
VI — War and Peace
Stc’enson’s first excursion into
the war zones took place in 1942
in the form of an inspection tour.
The area inspected was the entire
Pacific theatre and the group did
not return to Washington until
February 1943. On his first Euro­
pean tour in the summer of 1943,
Stevenson headed a Foreign Eco-
nomic Administration mission. He
met General Eisenhower in Na-
pies, where the
General was con
l,uctinS an inspec-
Eisenhower
vW.s.nil, ‘ Well, well,
I
nd you were
JKJ here. How's ev
Kw*'”— Jl lSerylh'ni Suing'’"
Stevenson said
^■everything «.is
ffn-v
going as well as
Gov. Stevenson l°uldu bc e.xP^t
ed. He and the
General parted on friendly terms,
and have not seen each other since.
Stevenson’s wartime travels,
aside from his tour of the Pacific
and a trip to the Carribean, in­
cluded visits to Algeria, Tunis, Sic­
ily, Italy, Gibraltar, Liberia, Eng
land, France, Germany, Luxem­
bourg, Holland and Belgium. He
was no sooner back in the United
States than he became involved in
the United Nations Conference at
San Francisco.
As Secretary of State and Chair­
man of the U. S. delegation and
the Conference, Edward Stettinius
had a hard row to hoc. Moreover,
the whole population of the U. S.,
as represented in San Francisco by
the press, were upset because they
could not find anyone who knew
what was going on. Eventually,
Stevenson was summoned in his
familiar role of troubleshooter.
His first move was to arrange to
attend the U. S. delegation's meet
ings so that he would be aware of
what was going on inside them.
His next move was to establish
himself, after the meetings, in
Room 576 at the Fairmount, whence
he dispensed information to the
correspondents.
Stevenson’s next job was at the
Preparatory Commission meeting
in London, scheduled for the fol­
lowing August. He was deputy of
Stettinius, who having resigned as
Secretary of State after the San
Francisco Conference, headed the
U S. delegation with the rank of
ambassador. Due to illness, Stet­
tinius presently returned to the
U. S., leaving Stevenson in charge.
As the 1947 autumn meeting of
the General Assembly, to which he
was an alternate delegate, drew to
a close Stevenson decided to enter
politics in his home state.
In considering a career in poli­
tics, Stevenson was behaving in
a characteristically conscientious
fashion. During the war, he had
come upon an item in the Stars
and Stripes to which he attributes
in large part his later decision to
enter politics. "It was a public
opinion poll in which seven out of
ten American parents said they
didn't want their boys to enter pub
lie life," says Stevenson. "Think of
it! Boy,» could suffer and die in
their cold, muddy, bloody cam­
paign for the things we believe in
but parents didn’t want their chil­
dren to work for these same things.
I decided then that if 1 ever had a
gr
M . - .
EL fc-
chance, I'd go into public life.“
His considerations, however, had
one serious drawback. The politi­
cians had never heard of Steven­
son.
Practical Politics
"Where the hell did you dig up
this guy Add lay?” a party leader
inquired sadly (of Jacob Arvey,
Adlai’s sponsor for the governor­
ship). "Let alone not knowing him.
the voters can't even pronounce
his name. He'll get his ears beat
back.”
Stevenson chose an unusual cam­
paign procedure. He promised no­
body anything, including Colonel
Arvey.
•
His campaign was based on the
issue of corruption, as exemplified
in the regime of the incumbent
Dwight Green, who opposed him.
When Stevenson defeated Green
by 572,000 votes, while Truman
was nosing out Dewey in Illinois
by a mere 34,000, it was one of the
most dramatic reversals of the
they laughed when ! sat-down at-
the piano variety ever recorded in
the long history of U. S. politics.
Stevenson was unencumbered by
political obligations and brought to
politics only honesty of the lay va­
riety, and acted as though that
were the only kind.
Performance
When Stevenson took office in
1948, he inherited a state in which:
three thousand miles of highway
were in urgent need of immediate
repair or reconstruction; mental
hospitals were overcrowded, obso­
lete and understaffed; aid to public
schools was less per capita than in
any other state in the union, illicit
gambling operated with the profes­
sional endorsement of local police;
payrolls were padded but legiti­
mate state salaries had not been
raised to meet the cost of living;
and charges of every sort of cor­
ruption, often well founded, had
undermined confidence in the gov­
ernment generally.
in three and a half years in of­
fice, Stevenson effected some note­
worthy changes.
Stevenson set his newly reformed
state police force to policing over­
weight trucks, instead of cheer­
fully waving them on their way.
He reorganized the highway divi­
sion, to eliminate graft in handling
contracts and get set lor a major
building program.
Schools. During his term the
state's contribution to schools rose
by $139,000,000. Illinois' education­
al program is now generally re­
garded as one of the nation's best.
Mental Hospitals. Under Steven­
son, 85 percent of the attendants
were put under civil service. In
1950, Dr. Karl Mcnninger of the
famous Kansas Clinic, was invited
to inspect the hospitals to see what
improvements had been made and
what further ones were needed.
Wenninger pronounced the Illinois
mental hospitals among the best
in the country.
Economy. Illinois currently ranks
lower in per capita tax collection
in relation to per capita income
than any other state except Ne­
braska and New Jersey.
Administrative Methods. Steven­
son put through seventy-eight bills
aimed at technical improvements
in the efficiency of governmental
machinery.
Copyright 1952 by Noel F Buech
Published by Farrar. Straua 4 Young — New York.
7ts the Water”
WORRIED?
Use Our Modern Moving
Vans Next Time You
Move or Ship
by Freight!
Light Refreihment Beiträge nf
.MilHnnt of Temperate Pe'rple
mwu tttwmt c«
ttrwu »si
T.ed. Mwk* ».« U S Sat OW
l l 1
Wright Truck Line
Phone 125
“Ship the WRIGHT’ way’’
Stay ton, Ore.