PAGE SIX HERALD AND NKWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OHKCON WKDNKSDAY. SKI'TKMBKR 10. 11H2 FRANK JENKINS Editor Entered eecond clsss nutter at the post office of Klamath Fall. Ore., on August 30, 1906, under act of Congre.M, March t, 1879 MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED TRESS The Associated Presi is entitled exclusively to the use for publication of all the local newt printed In thu newspaper as well as all AP news. MAIL 1 month , 6 months 1 year t 60 (11.00 BILL-BOARD By BILL As this Is written the hailstones ire rapping at the window and the " clouds are looking pretty dark and ominous for a day this early In September. Naturally, with the weather cut ting up such didoes, one's thoughts turn to duck hunting. In fact this uine of year almost anything is enough to turn your thoughts to duck hunting. So now, on a stormy afternoon well before the season opens. Is a good time to get a little Utopian thinking oft my mind so It will be at least partly clear come the shooting time. The biggest Issue at the moment seems to be the most Utopian. That of high shooting. I'm not at all sure but what blazing away when the duck or goose is out range doesn't cost the hunters as a whole more birds than anything else we do. You've all had It happen to you. You go out early, you pick a good spot paying proper attention to the lie of the land, the prevailing winds, the cover, the relationship of your spot to the feeding and resting grounds you know are used bv the birds. You buUd a good tight blind, taking care to make it as natural as possible. You maybe put out your decoys, using all the profound judgement you have built up over the years in the task. You lay out your shells, make yourself com fortable and wait for the birds to come In to your call, or to swing in to your decoys If you aren't up anung the top drawer callers. And about the time you get a nice light in and more coming and everything looks rosv some trig ger happy, dim witted, far sighted jerk will cut loose from behind you while the birds are still a hundred and ten yards up in the air. With just the result one would expect. Your birds, so carefully tolled in. take off at high port and you are left with nothing but a cold gun and a red hot rage.- And just to make It worse than ever this same I FLIGHT In The ROUNDS;! Right quick, before Gerald West or some other Angus breeder or swine grower Jumps all over us, let's report that there are other major e.enis oi ihe counly lair na ture than those given here yester day. It was mentioned that nobody misses a county fair because the Basin has four other events Klam ath Basin Roundup, Klamath Coun ty Fall Fair and Junior Livestock Show, Tulelake-Butte Valley Fair and Junior Livestock Show, and Klamath Basin Potato Festival which add up to something better than a County Fair. These four are -events of quite general interest. Klamath has two other events of top rating that are more specialized. They are the annual Oregon Swine Growers Show and Sale in March, and the annual Pacific Coast Aberdeen Angus Show and sale In April. The Angus show, we particularly know, brings breeders of the black cattle from all over the West. Lake County has 1U share too. The Southern Oregon Ram Sale was just held in Lakeview. The sale saw 250 head fall to the auc tioneer's gavel at an average of 492 a head. The report was that the buyers were a little more choosey this year. Some pens were returned to the barns without bids. This sale was originated at Klam ath Falls In 1934. largely through the efforts of County Agent C. A. Henderson and KPCA Sec. Lee Mc Mullen. It was held here through 1937 and now Is a Lakeview insti tution. IMPORTANT DATES: Sept. 11 and 12 (this Thursday and Friday) for the Tulelake-Butte Valley Fair and Junior Livestock Show; auction to start Friday, the- (Da. . (p. By a seeming coincidence, three letters were received the same day from correspondents who wished to know what harmful effects could result irom taxing too inucu ioame. As the questions Imply, taking Iodine like water is not an entirely safe procedure. Continuation of the iodine beyond a certain point (one wruch varies from person to person) results in a condition known as 1UU1SIU. lodism may produce skin rashes, excessive mucous secretion in the nose and throat, headaches. In flammation of the eyes, and other unpleasant signs. On the skin, pim ples, hives and boils are likely to develop. If the Iodine preparation Is still continued after iuch symptoms de velop, it may lead to anemia, men tal depression, nervousness, sleep lessness, and similar general distur bances. Perhaps even more Important is the danger that excessive taking of Iodides will light up, or cause to become active, a deep-seated tu berculosis or other chronic Infec tion which may be otherwise under control. It is certainly not fair, however, to say that iodine can lead only to harmful effects, aince It is use ful in the treatment of a number of conditions. Perhaps its most Im portant contribution has been in the control of goiter. Today, there are not nearly as many people with enlargement of BILL JENKINS Managing Editor SUBSCRIPTION RATES BV CARRIER $ US I month I 1.35 6 months s 1.10 1 year (16.20 JENKINS bang-happy numbskull slays in the same area all dav, cutting loose with joy ana abandon at every bird thai heaves in sight no mai ler how high it may be. I suppose it is little short of Idle dreaming to hope Una someday these beastly types will slay at home and leave the hunting to those who appreciate what thev are getting. It has been going on for a long time and I suupose it will continue for a long tune more. But what a shame it is. To let one or two hunters spoil the sport for ev eryone in their area. And that can be quite an area, too. I have never figured out Just why they blaze away when the birds are so high. It must be for one of three reasons. Either they are 1) shooting one of those ten gauge magnums and figure that anything within radar range is fair game, or 2 haven't got any judge ment as to height and distance, or i3) they are just blazing away for the fun of it figuring that the bang of the gun and the smell of powder is all the fun they'll get out of hunting anyway. Whatever the rea son, there's one in every crowd. And no real way to clear 'em out. I'd like to see a law banning any shotgun above twelve gauge, but the boys who shoot the can nons will disagree with that, and they have a perfect right to. so that doesn't go far toward solving the problem. And if a man is lack ing in depth perception then he'll blaze away at everything he can see through his bifocals. And final ly, if he's a powder burner he's a powder burner. 'Noiigh said! But wouldn't it be nice If every one would wait until the birds were in range? You figure out what in range is. friars another tricky question. But when I started shoot tng birds some twentv years ago they told me that If you couldn't see a duck's feet there wasn't any use in pulling the trigger. And with the orice of shell what it is today I mm mat s pretty good advice. 11th. at 7:00 p.m. California time or 6:00 Oregon time. Oct. 17 and 18 for the Klamath Basin Potato Festival. Who will be the new Oregon Potato King? Not to mention Oct. 1 for opening of the Oregon deer season; and Oct. 24 for openir.c of the Oregon quail and phea&an,. ana me Oie. Calif. duck and goose seasons. According to word from the Old Trapper on Aug. 22, the potatoes needed another two or three weeks of growing weather before a killing frost. If it does clear up and freeze after this misplaced autumnal equi noctial storm (it's a couple of weeks before the equinox) things still should be hunky-dory . . . that is, if you're not within earshot of a grain, seed or hay man who got caught in the rain. StIU on livestock and the ele ments Let's draw another angle to the remarks of Bill Bach in "Telling the Editor" Monday. He pointed out that the migra tory Mule Deer herd that inhabits the Eastern Klamatb-Western Lake county forests this time of year took an awful beating from the long winter and the burned winter range. There just aren't many Mule Deer this year. Now, you "chamber of com merce" sort of fellows who are hell for inviting everyone In to take our game and fish can do both your friends and the deer a favor by telllne them to go hunt black-tail this fall. (Note to Jack Dutcher of Lake of the Woods and other Cascade re sort ODerators: This Is the year to promote your fall deer hunting.) Dhdan the neck from goiter as there used lo be simply because of the wide spread use of iodized salt. One might wonder why this has noi, causeu more cases of lodism, but the reason lies In the fact that the amount oi ioame present in salt is so exceedingly small. The use of iodized salt for the prevention of goiter goes back many years to studies carried out In Michigan, where it was found that school children In counties in which iodine was practically ab sent from Ihe drinking water showed an unusually high propor tion of goiter. In one of these counties (Hough ton), in fact, over three-fifths of the children showed thryoid en largement. This was contrasted with another of the four counties studied In which only about one fourth of the youngsters were af fected with enlargement of the thy roid gland (goiter), and this was wis area in wnicn tne water had the largest amount of Iodine. In suite of remarks nt th hetrin. nlng of this column of the danger of too much Iodine, the fear that iooi,ea salt, or even natural salt containing Iodine, might be harm ful Is not justified, j This Question has Been thorough ly studied end evidence of harm to the body has not been found. In Iodine and Its salts we have an other example of a highly valu able substance, but on which should be treated with respect. They'll Do It Every AMD EaJ COUVtoCE5 HERSELF -TrillS) Xt sXI FONT THINK ID TAk'E) A SHOE THAT PI&M'T FIT, -UH-ATRlPLt SMALL, ARE Tvrey not ? UH FERHAFS A HALF-SIZE LACAr-B-P A SURE VWVy . LM-e-i Akin John L. Lewis Divide WASHINGTON Ifl John L. Lewis seems to be trying to di vide the coal industry with a shire-the-woik plan calling for heavy penalty wages after a third day's work In any one week. The Idea, casually mentioned by the United Mine Workers president in preliminary contract talks with coal operators, has the owners buzzing. The facts are that Lewis' miners are working about 3 j days a week on the average. Some of them, mostly in the North, work a full five days, and even a sixth day at overtime. But many miners. mostly in tne soutn. work only two or three days a week. Lewis has been harping on the idea of a work apportionment plan for some time. At his un ion's 1948 convention, Lewis said if the mine owners couldn't figure out some way of letting all the miners share the available work. maybe Uie union had better come up with a plan. It wasn't long after the 1948 con vention that Lewis put the indus try on a three-dav work week, eventually culminating in a full fledged strike. The labor contracts between Lewis and the coal operators J Stevenson Backs HST Foreign Policy; Outlines Program of Action In Asia By KKLMAV MORI.V SAN FRANCISCO (f Gov. Adlal Stevenson stood solidly today on the foreign policy of the Truman administration and, with a warning of peril, outlined program for action in Asia. "America is threatened as never beiore," he said. The way to avert It, he told a nation-wide television and radio au dience from San Francisco, is to give material aid to the new na tions of Asia, to recognize their desire for independence, and to show them that the United States is not pursuing a policy of dom ination. Speaking with unusual serious ness, the Democratic candidate for the presidency made these points last night: 1. "I do not think war Is an inevitable part of this contest be tween freedom and tyranny." 2. "With 85 per cent of our bud get allocated to defense, It is the Soviet Union which now fixes the level of our defense expenditures and thus our tax rates." 3. Republican nominee Dwight D. Eisenhower's "10-polnt program . . . does not contribute much to our foreign policy discussion.'' 4. "I believe we may In time look back at Korea as a major turning point In history a turn ning point which led not to an other war, but to the first historic demonstration that an effective system of collective security Is possible." 5. "I wsnt to assure our friends in Asia that America will never seek to dominate their political and economic development." This was Stevenson's most im portant effort on foreign policy. It was a peak point as well In the whole campaign he is waging through the West. Nearly 1.900 Deoole seated on two floors of Veterans Memorial Auditorium heard the address. The basement audience watched him via a projection on a screen. His demeanor, and the whole pat tern of presentation. Indicated how much importance Stevenson hlm- seu piacea on this address. He dispensed with the quips and Jokes that usually take up the first four or five minutes of his talks. His face was solemn, almost grim V 1 01 f tin rrHwrriitn! OUCH! KLAMATH FALLS At last Ore gon has a new geographic loca tion. The loyal state of Washing ton would resent it tool Following the political picture and opinions on the coming elec tion, map makers of the electoral rearrangement of votes, I find In the Herald and News, Sept. 6 Issue, an A. P. Service map that Oregon and Washington have pulled a switch. After having circled the world and 27 states Im only glad they left us In the United States any. way. I was told the other day by a new resident that they were plan ning on moving to Oregon from the District of Columbia , , . Someone back there asked "Where la Ore gon?" and I believe It now, Steve Peteri ( Edllor'i Note: Peters I pain fully right. An Associated Press election map carried en page 3 of the Kept, t Herald and News switched the location! of Oregon and Washington. We are luggeil- Time tnl t Naaa Me, ' 13jt TWEM A PAIR OF tfACkEp up A 5 HOt THAT PIPN T Ml, ly-nTc iv5? vm,i tiwu r vi-wl UAl'P I 1HOSE FOR. WE WEAR A LOOSE, WPRcf; A WRLESflUB ERiy FrnTP SHOE r WATS IrSSANS TOGti iax-y tete A A IT Lie DAP -1 I Said Attempting To Industry With 'Shares Plan1 begin expiring Sept. 20 and Lewis reportedly has come up with a new share-the-woi'k Idea. This, according to the reports, calls for a penalty timc-anda-hall pay rate for any work done on a fourth working day In a week, and double pay on any filth day. The Initial reaction of the oper ators Is that the Northern owners, particularly the steel companies owning the "captive" mines, don't like it. The heavy penalty pay might force the steel firms to quit mining coal on fourth and fifilt work week days and go out and buy coal on the commercial market. That probably would mean more business for the Southern mines. So the Dixio owners are Inking a longer look at the idea. The Lewis demand is cauMng some heavy thinking among the operators. Members of the South ern Coal Producers Association, representing about 120 million tons annual production, discussed the situation at a board meeting here today. The Bituminous Coal Operators Association, a new alliance of owners principally from Pennsyl vania, West Virginia, Ohio and a few other Northern states, also were holding a board of directors ly serious! He put more emphasis Into the strategic areas of his text. And be did not, as usual, taper of! with ad-libbed remarks. He Just stopped. He began by ripping into Elsen hower's speech on foreign policy, delivered last week in Philadel phia. He said seven of the gen eral's 10 points were echoes of the program the Democrats have been following. The other three, he said and his voice was icy with sar casm were simply "throw Uie ras cals out." Actually, there were points of similarity in the statements of both candidates. Both said peril confronts the United States. Both said the United States has not adopted an Imper ialistic course oi action. But whereas Eisenhower called Korea a case of errors In Judgment Stevenson strongly defended the actions of the administration. He said: "As an American. I am Droud that we had the courage to resist wat ruthless, cynical aggression: and I am equally proud that we bad the fortitude to refuse to risk extension of that war despite Com munist provocations and reckless Republican criticism." He said the Communists, having failed to win on the battlefield, are now trying to out-last the free nations for a ceasefire. "Tne con test with tyranny," the governor said, "is not a 100-yard dash it is a test of endurance." This statement, and all his re ferences to Korea, drew roaring applause from the crowd. He made no promises of an early peace. Turning to an analysis of Com munist elforts to win over the new. ly created nations of the Orient, he said these nations "regard freedom and national Independence as the doorway to International or der Just as we do." The Communists, he said, are posing as the champions of the Asiatic peoples. "The Communists may well believe that In the as pirations and grievances of the East, they now have the key to world power." The effectiveness of their tactics In the Far East, he said, was based on this fact: Ing to Associated Press Ncwsfea turea in New York that the guilty map maker be sentenced to a re fresher course in Fourth Grade geography. With our own faces a blazing red because of our lack of observation we find comfort only in the fact that at least ONE MAN knows exactly where Oregon Is . . , And thus, our congratulations to Peters. LOST DOG KLAMATH FALLS Would you please put this letter In the paper? Maybe it would help me find my little dog. He's been gone over three weeks from the vicinity of Klwanls Park In Mills Addition. He is very small, white with brown ears and has a tail like a fan. He's a chihuahua and toy fox and he Has a license. If anyone knows anything about him at all won't you please cull 2-3282? I miss my little Chlca because he was my pet for five years. My mama said we would giva a reward. Sue Ann Simpson By Jimmy Hallo ?HP1 I CANAL EaATS, ALSO with this line cf Losiq r.y J.lHDOU IS G MOW ING. WE'l L KV !CTIut.viT ur iHtM PcrvRB THEVKE cKi-RCN IN GIVES HIS "ICES ROOM., ptENT i'clumc, meeting today at Pittsburgh. Union sources claim one advan tage of the Lewis Idea, besiiirs slim ing the work, would be to keep the marginal mines going by giv ing them an assured market. 'Mils, tluy say. would mean a substan tial Industry operating at throttled down pace In peacetime, and capa ble of being quickly stepped up In wartime. While pressing his share-tlie-work plan on the bituminous In dustry Lewis also Is negollullni: with tne Pennsylvania Anthracite Operators. He has asked the an thracite, or hard coal, owners lor a 20-cent boot in Ihe 30-ceut a ton loyalty they pay to the union's wcUarc fund. The anthracite Industry, rom-en tralrd III Eastern Pennsylvania, already has a plan lor leveling out production among mines. The union and the owners merely get together periodically and apportion Inresecable production as among mines. Such a plan has been avoid ed In the multi-state bituminous in dustry for fear of running afoul of the anti-trust laws. There are an estimated 320.000 working Soft coal miners, about 65,000 anthracite miners. "When we think of communism, we think ol what we are going lo lose. When many of the Asian peo ples think of communism, they think ol what they are going to gain especially if they believe thev have nothing to lose." The answers, from America. Ihe governor declared, are contained in two words, "defense and devel opment." He then advanced his program, using India as an example, and shooting a feathered dart at the Republicans: "It would seem to me that the Republican critics could better demonstrate the good faith of their concern for Asia by doing some thing about India, today, rather than talking about China, yester day. Tearful and Interminable post mortcms about China will save no souls for democracy In the rest o! Asia, the Near East and Africa." India, he said, affords an oppor tunity for the United Stales to demonstrate Its "good works" by giving material assistance to grow more food, develop power, and provide "help in Ihe ways of peace and social progress." The other nations of the Orient can be assisted In the same ways, and so bolstered against the Com munists, Stevenson said. "The answer to the Inhumanity of communism Is humane respect for the Individual. And the men and women of Asia desire not only to ri.se from wretchedness of body but from the abasement of the spirit. "In other words, we must strive for a harmony of means and ends In our relations with Asia, and In deed with the rest of the world." As a part of his delense of the administration's foreign policy, Stevenson praised tho results ol the Marshall Plan and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. Stevenson was applauded heavi ly at nine points. He squelched three or four other beginnings of applause by continuing to talk. By HAROLD McKAY Student Body President Clayton Hannon has selected the nominat ing committee which will name candidates for the post of third vice president of the student body. All candidates will be voted on by the members of the Freshman Class. Chairman of the committee Is Shirley Schorn. Other members In elude George Hanson, Ed Barron, Susan Geary, Larry Yarnell, Jack ie Ackerman, Gary Robin and Erma Jo Scogglns. The latest figures from the of fice show that KU ruin gained 27 students this year. Klamath had 1267 students registered as of last night. That compares with 1240 at the end of the lirst week last year. The total by classes shows the freshmen leading In the number ol students with 393. Sophomores have 362, Juniors count 258, and the sen iors trail with 254. Some of the English claHies had X-rays taken today and the re mainder are slated to get theirs tomorrow. Yesterday's violent rainstorm caused considerable disturbance around school. Students who came to school dressed for tho Warm weather which has prevailed since school started had to either walk home In the rain and hall or call parents to come and get them. Eisenhower Sweeps Through Midwest; Wins Help of Sen. Taft Supporters II y JAMI S DKVI IN INDIANAPOLIS Ml-Clcn. DwIrIiI D. Elsenhower wound up a Mid west camiMiIgn tour today Willi linimlM's of lieartv support III o callrd Tail territory. Police estimated that at least a halt nhlllim llmisirrs turned out to wrU-omn the lti'puhllrait presiden tial iioiiiiacn yenlriday and last niitht 111 lndlanaiHills. That was his last nt"P before Hying to Washington tndav lor a bricl rhat with the OOP National Cominlilee staff. He will continue on by iilauo to New York this tilternoon. Indiana, like Ohio, gave Us sup port to Urn. Hubert A. Tall oi Ohio lor the presidential nomina tion at Ihe ltrpiibllcan Notional Convention at Chicago laat July. Hill in both elates, Klsciiliower won plrdiic.H of all-out nupiKirl Irom purtv leaders, with tho exception nt Taft himself. And In Indianapo lis, the heavv publlu outpouring ijuvr the general hope oi grass vools strrniith, Taft, who was In Washington during Elsenhower's Midwest trip, is slated to meet the general soon tu determine how much ol a part he will plav In the campaign. Police estimated thai 350.000 per sons welcomed Elsenhower as he drove into Indianapolis In the alter noon. As the general drove from Ills hotel to the Butler University Held house to make an address last night, crowds were lined In the darkness on both aides nt the sirert along alinosl every foot ol the live-mile route. Police estimated this outpouring at 125.000. The Held house Itself was packed to the rafters with about 15.000 persons and another 10.000 or 13.000 wrre sealed In a football stadium McCarthy Landslide In Wisconsin; Promises All Out Support For Ike By don wmiti:hi:ad MII.WAUKEK LPI-Jubllanl Hen. Joseph R. McCarthy was the land slide winner tod.iy of Wlsconslr'a OOP senatorial nomination, lie called his vlcmiy an eiu'oi semi-ni bv the people ol '-niy campaign to rid the governinrn; ol subversive Japanese to Take More Responsibility Of 'Defense TOKYO ifi Japan intends to shoulder a greuter burden ol the delense ol Hokkaido, the northern most Island separated only by a narrow strait Irom the glowering power of Russia on Sakhalin. The veteran U. 8. First Cavalry Division now stands guards on Hokkaido, in whose coastal waters the Russians rattle the sabre by seizing Japanese lishlng boats. Hie Japanese press Is lull ol accounts ol plans lo put more mus cle Into the National Police Re serveAmerican muscle of tanks and howitzers. The National Security Board says that a regional corps ol 25.0IK) mm will be organized and mech anized and sent to Hokkaido. Some press reports say that un der this plan. Ihe Japanese grad ually will replace the U. S. cav alrymen as a defense force on that northern oulst. The Japanese delense force for Hokkaido will be laid out along the lines of the U. 8. Army, which has been training the National Po lice Reserve. The Japanese corps will be equipped with 105-inm artillery, 155mm tractor howitzers, antiair craft guns and 30-ton Sherman tanks of World War II, all Irom the U. 8. Army. Press accounts report that some tanks and 106s already have been turned over lo Japan and moro NEW YORK Wi Of the millions of American combat men In the second world war the one most likely to win Immortality Is prob ably the famous young "Major of St. Lo." His name was Thomas D. Howie, and hometown Irlcnds In Abbeville, S.C., are today dedicating a gran ite marker lo him. Hundreds of his scattered com rades will wish they could be there too, lo pay honor to a man who has becomo a symbol of valor to the American army. His tale Is a strange one. He died In the green hedgegrows ol Normandy In 1944. But after the passing of eight years, I can recall no other war time event neither In Europe nor Korea so aad, and yet so eternal ly Inspiring, as that young major's bittersweet vlctory-altcr-dcath. Major Howie was a tremendous soldier, and he must have been Just as fine a man before he put on a uniform. I vlsllcd his battalion Ihe day St. Lo foil, and I recall how Ills men, still mourning his death on tho eve of tho great attack, praised him lor his kindness and called him "the best olllcer that ever lived." It was his concern for the wel fare of his troops that had cost him his life. Before hitting the ditch during a sudden German mortar barrage, he paused and turned to see that his men were safe and death took him, standing. Shortly before he had attended a stalf conference at which he hod expressed his determination to lead his own battalion first into Bt. Lo, the bitter bastion of the Nazi de fense line. His last words on leaving the conference wcro a cheery, "ice yuu In St. Lo." That became the battlfccry of the 9lh Infantry Division" see you In St. Lol" and when the command ing general organized a tank and doughboy task force to smash Into the city, he remembered Tom's last wish. By the general's order, Tom's body, still clad In full combat gear, was placed In an ambulance In the task force column, I looked In and saw him. Amid the thunder of guns, the armored column bearing the dead hero fought, toward St. Lo. Down pock-marked roads It . Hod Souk . 1 nearby to listen lo the ipeech over an amplifying aysleiu. In the apeech, broadcast nation wide. Elsenhower delivered anoth er f his Increasingly Ireiiurnl glbea at hla Deiitocraiiu tip mucin li.r the piesldrni'V. Uov. Aillal E. btevenson of Illinois. Hilling the Democratic idnilnli tratlon of President Truman as one thai "fumbles and atuinblea and lulls flat on Its laca every couple ol weeks," Elsenhower aald: 'Why, my distinguished oppo nenl la using every trick III the book to get himself nil Ihe hook ol tin pioseut administration's ord." "When Hie hand-picked heir wants no part nf tho heirlooms, why should we?" The Allied wartime field com mander was Interrupted 40 limes by applause, Elsenhower aald lie went Into politics because "no American call stand lo one aide while hla country becomes the mev ol lear-munuera, quack doctors and bare laced looters." He drew a laugh when In aald a heavy registration to vote would mean an election dav turn-out that would "dwarf every itatlallc ex cept the Democratic nation debt." In Ills quest for Midwest support, Elsenhower: In Cleveland complimented Ohio, ails on their loyalty lo Ben. Tall and expressed hoiw of meeting him soon. In Indianapolis, flatly endorsed Hie re-election bid ol Hen. William E. Jenner of Indiana, who bitterly criticized Elsenhower's warllin" chief and comrade, Clen. George C. Miii'sliall. Jenner a yoar ago termed Mar shall "a living lie and a "front man for traitors" as a result of China's turning Communist aller forres that w ni.d dcjl'f-' It." He promised Ills "all-out sup port" to Republic" presi(le:i: ul nominee Dwlgiit D. Klsenhrv.er and pledged 10 the voters he would continue his Co.iiniunlsn.ln.Rnv. eminent charge i. whim soma pen. pie regard as thi act ol a patriot and olhera see in smear tarfes. heavy equipment will be supplied this month and In October. There has been no aunoiini-ed target dale for the establishment of the Japanese defense forces nn Hokkaido. However, the National Security Board says It will come soma lime alter the police reserve Is changed lo the "security lorccs" Oct. 15. The board hopes to creole a force strong enough on Hokkaido to cope with any emergency. While the emphasis serins to be on Hokkaido, the Japanese gov ernment hopes to expand the po lice reserve to 110.000 men. Us present otrcngtli Is about 66.000. Tho Japanese Communists, who oppose any rearmament and de mand that Ihe reaerve be disband rd. boast that the recruiting cam paign for the reserve Is running Into rough sledding. This Is conceded. Hie word "army" Is unpopular In Japan Jusi now. The memory of Ihe war Is atlll fresh, and politicians on the left Insist that Japan's economy cannot stand rearmament. Ihe Japanese government, how ever, has undertaken In Its security agreement with the United States to assume gradually the task ol defending Itsell In tumultuous Asia. The plans laid out for Hokkaido appear to be the first strldo in thai direction, rolled, past stricken trees whose limbs hung down like broken aims, past meadows where no bird sang, but bullets did. Churning clouds of yellow en veloped the vehicles, sweat grimed the faces of firing soldiers. As I remember It, a German ar tillery bombardment cut the col umn as It passed a cemetery on the outskirts of a city. The am bulance was needed to rush back the wounded. Tom, lying on a stretcher, was transferred to a leading Jeep. Tho column trundled on. It smashed through the last ring of German defenders and entered the fallen city, a sea of flaming ruins. Doughboys quickly lifted the dead young major, ao silent on the stretcher in all that crash of sound, and ran through enemy sniping to a nearby shell torn church. And they placed him atop Ihe rubble of the church wall, and left him there, and went back Into the battle. In death his comrades had won for the major tho last goal of his lllo he was with "the first into Bt. Lo." Entering the city the next morn ing with mop-up Infantry squads, I had my last glimpse of Tom his flag-draped body lying In state on an altar of rubble. A. I the troops who went through St. Lo that day, and there wcie mony, heard of the young major and paid him tribute. Some dolled their helmets as they passed. Some knelt. Five years later. In 1919 I re visited St. Lo and the rebuilt church before which now stands a monument telling of Major Howie's sacrlllce and his triumph. The French pcoplo still deck the monument with flowers, and ro mcmber him In prayers. They feel his traglo story led many Americans to contribute funds to help St. Lo rlso again from Its own rubble. The new marker to his memory In Abbeville Is a fine hometown testament that will porpotuato to later generations the strange saga of MaJ. Thomas D. Howies heroism selfless courage and fidelity to his men, who repaid him in the best way they could. Those who knew Tom, of course, need neither marker, monument, nor memorial lo remember him. Marshall served II an imUiaiv Iheiu. Elsenhower alma dnaurlbeit Marshall is a "period example. ol patriotism," Jeiiunr also liaa criucir.ro:, inn Elsenhower has upheld, Hi North Allauilu Treaty Organization, thn United Nations, md Aiuirlcm en try into Ihe Korean War. In backlog Jenner deiplta their dllleroiirea, Elsenhower told hi Duller University and radio au dience that political victory de pended upon a "united parly." "Victory rainra from 111 elforls nf many men and women, not al ways teeing eve to ry on ivery question but always In the matter o parly responsibility Joined as a Irani." Elsenhower aald. "We Republicans are not aervll puppets of a dictated party line. Wo don't have loyally oatln, We don't have party purgei. ... We want Independent minds ind Pirn who apeak their minds." "In linn campaign." Elsenhower conllniird, "I am requeuing voters to iii)Oit the entire Hepubllcan ticket from ton to bottom at every atn In every stale I visit." Ha said the people nf eaah Itata were the best )n lge of whom they wanted In represent them, "You Itnpubllcaiia hen In In diana," lie aald. "have lelected your candidates lor United mates senator and repreaentatlves In Con gress In your II distrlcta. "1 believe that every one of them will support Hie program which t .shall present to Congress If I am elected president. I. therefore, urge their election and ask ymi to spare no rdnri lo see that they aro aenl to Washington. " Desptie thin endorsement, Cale .1. Holder. Indiana Republican t-hiili mull, told newsmen ho was illsupixiinlrd that Elsenhower hod I not speclllcaliy menuoneu jenner I by name. Itut there wos n truce belwe? McCarthy and leu Nchinltl the liinll he delea'ed In yesterday s primary election Mr Hvj aenatotin nomination. Hchmltl charged McCarthy had won through "an amazing and fraudulent Imax'' perpeiroied on the voters, and he added: "The result of tills election l an appalling thing. . . . When thn lull truih dawns, many people will recall their siiport of Joseph R. McCarthy In this election Willi shamo." I The 43-year-old senator, seeking j his second term, brushed this al . lark aside by saying: I "The people of Wisconsin hav ! spoken lor me. They have given lull endorseiiiiil to my campaign to rid Uie guvernnieni of subter t aive forces that would destroy It." j With 3.379 preclucW out of 3.3JI rcixirieci. the coiiui was; McCarthy 3.TJ.KHJ Schiniit 130. Mil Four other OOP senatorial can didates ran far behind. McCarthy's victory will pit film In the November election against either Thomas Kairchlld of Verona or Henry Kcuss of Milwaukee, the candidates lor the Democratic senatorial nomination. Ealrchlld held a substantial lead over Kcuss early today, but re turns from Milwaukee County were chipping away al the margin and Uie outcome was uncertain. McCarlhy'a spectacular victory Indicated that perhaps he had soino support from switch-voting Democrats who crooned the line to give III in help. Cross-voting la legal In WIcntiMn, where voters are lint required lo register by parly al llllallon. Mill this wan only speculation and there wa.s no way to check It. The pie-election guess had been thai any such cross-voting would help Schmltt and this was one of the concerns In the McCar thy camp. However, tho senator oulstrlpiied both Dcinocrallo candi dates und his flvo Republican rl vols by more than 100,000 voles. Only a third of the state s pre cincts had been reported when Schmltt threw In (he towel at 10:65 p.m. with this bitter state ment: "The result of this election Is an appalling thing. The effect upn.i mo pcr.sonully Is utterly unlmpot. taut. I did not cuter this campaign because I sought or needed a Job. "What Is Important Is that a man with Uie most corrupt record ever made by a Wisconsin senator Is overwhelmingly endorsed by Wis consin voters. "Tho inosi amazing and fraudu lent hoax cvcr.pructlced by a high public llguro upon the votera of any slate Is approved by the people o a atulo which once Insisted upon the highest standards of Integrity, honesty and decency In publlu life, "I remain socuro III tho know ledge thut I was right In this fight. I am proud of the part I pluyed and I am deeply gratelul to my many friends tor the help and as alliance Ihey gavo inc. When the lull truth dawns on many people they will recall their support of Joseph K. McCarthy In this elec tion with shame." The senator at the hall-way count Was ahead In nil but two of Die state's 71 counties. He also was leading almost 2 to 1 In dense ly populated Milwaukee! County, where Schmltt had been expected to havo Ills greatest strength. The senator received tho news of his victory at the home of a friend In his home town of Apple ton. Ho was asked If he thought the election was an answer to his orlllcs. "Hothlng will ever answer my critics," he replied. McCarthy went on lo say he In tended to support Elsenhower and his running mate, Ben. Richard Nixon, "because It would be a caiastropho for this nation If a man like Stevenson were elected president." "We can't hove a houscclcan Ing," he added, "unless wo have a chnngo. I Intend to fight corruption and communism and to cxposo thn foreign policy that has boon so bad tor America and so good for Com munist Russia." Other Wisconsin primary con tests saw all Incumbent congress men eight Rnpubllcnn and one Democrat apparently winning ronomlnatlon. In the Seventh Dis trict, Stale Sen, Mnlvln R, Laird of Marshllcld won the GOP nom ination to succeed Iho late Rep. Reed Murray (R of Ogdciiaburg. On the gubernotorlol front. Gov., Walter Kohlcr was nominated By the Republicans and William Prog, mire was chosen by the Domocroti. Both wore unopposed.