Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, October 03, 1952, Page 6, Image 6

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    PACK SIX
UKRAU) AND NK.WS. M.AMATII KAl.l.S. OKKCON
1'IIIDAY, OCT. 3. M.Vi
FRANK JENKINS
Editor
BILL JENKINS
Managing Editor
Entered second class matter at the pott office ot Klamath Palls, Oie,
on August 20. lPOft, under act ol Congress. March I, 17
MEMHKKS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
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ot all in local news printed tn Urn newspaper as well a all AP ne.
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BILLBOARD
II y HILL JENKINS
I don't know why It Is but there
seems to be something about world
aeries time that kills all the other
news there Is. Nothing much of
import haopens while the ton teams
are slugging it out.
Perhaps It Is because everyone
Is hanging over a radio or a tele
vision eel waiting to see what the
outcome will be. The burglars and
purse snatchers who provide the
newspapers with filler news are
huddled in a tavern wondering i(
they wet 'em right. The drivers
of our highways all have their
radios on and are crawling along
the highways, afraid to sDeed for
fear thev would miss part of the
game. Even the politicians are
keeping an ear tuned toward the
ball park- Instead of the great pub
lie soundlni board.
It must make Harry awful mad
i he blows his stack easily anyway
to know that more people are
listening to the bums and the
Yankees than are turning an ear
toward his mud-slinging whiM le
sion smear campaign against Ike.
If you notice, even the war in
Korea has slowed Its tempo. Be
cause the series is being broad
cast to the bovs over there. It s
a great American institution. Too
They'll Do It Every Time
leg l ' . hM Mat
By Jimmy Hallo
SS'EsfTTii
1 LaH
KRlVATE FOOTLOOSE
K:KED TelE ARMY TO
o w im nwrvuu
HE'S STATIONED
KVT DOOR TO
BOARDING HOUSE
bud we can't" take the same In-
Iciest in running our country as
we do in long-range coaching the
I teams into top spot.
The highways are Jammed with
deer hunters pouring over here
from the coast areas. With them
iclosed it will double the hunting
copulation here. There will likely
be a gunner behind everv clump
I of sagebrush. Recommended uni
'torm lor the dav will be bullet
i proof vest, steel helmets and a
sninll shovel for digging foxholes.
A curious market trend has
I shown up. i Mr. Ford please note. 1
The old Model A is still the top
choice for a hunting car. And if
you will notice, the price hasn't
dropped a nickel on these grand
old cars in the past five years.
A car made in 1929. twenty three
years ago, still commands a pretty
:fair price on trie market. Farts
iare still available in most cities, i
I And hunters and outdoorsmen will !
I stick to the old jalopies as long ,
!ss there are env. I still maintain i
,that if Ford would produce the
jMod'l A again he'd rell so manv
i of them you couldn't make 'em
i fast enouih to keep up with the
1 demand. I
V AY NEWS 'BOOT V&JZSS ALL THE TKA SUN K
THAT TWiSFER 1 III DO IS WALklMS S6KTRWJ .
V OP wa-js? Al R,T htKL! J ' X
. h4A :-
LND TMIS IS PFCHOA1ER 3.
HOLMSlCK.WUO'D GIVE HIS
LEFT CLAVICLE TO BE HEAR
WS WIPE AnID KIDS. WHERE
IS HE? "XJU'RE ASKING ??
v.,
I "iRiaJUiTu.
u .
. II I
.Oft. I11 rilYU ta.DKATC. U, UIB l.n lii(.lk
Truman Campaign Moves In Northwest;
Hecklers Appear In Wenatchee Crowd
Adlai Attacks Republican 'Old Guard'; ;
Accuses Taft Of Fostering Isolation
B) lltll til. AS II, (ORNEl.l.
CINCINNATI, O. iiP-Uov. Adlal
Stevenson viio-ne Hubert A. Tult'a
home town today lo accuse tho
Ohio senator and (he Hepubllcan
' Old Uuaid'' ol fostering a new
Isolailonlsm that could lead to
"national tragedy."
The Democratic presidential
nniuliK't aald Kepubllian candi
date Dwiglit U. Eisenhower "Is
supporting all the Isolationists in
lh pauy and asking their up.
port."
In an address prepared for a
Democratic luncheon rally, Steven
son uld the results could parallel
thiue of the ID'-'O cmnpalgii when
the league of Nations was an is
sue, Warren U. Ilartiliig was elec
ted, and there were "terrible con
sequences In blond and disaster. "
"The new Isolationism," Mieven
son said, "has put on some new
clothes and uses some new words.
But II la Just as dangeruua In
I9.VJ as the old Isolationism, was
In 1920. The new Isolationists have
stopped at nolhlng In their dilve
to control the party.
They have the money. They have
Hie organisation. And the Repub
lican candidate seeks their support
and bows lo their demands.
"Muyhe this Is all very agree.
Over and over, Hlevenson look
back-handed alnps at tail, through
Use of Hie old guard device, but no
said Uial "at least you know where
Hen. 'I'aft slanilt and what he
Hunks about most things, which
la more than I ran aay for I he
general."
Stevenson was mnklni his Hint
campaign appearance In 'lull's
own Ohio -a stale with V key alec
loral votes that turned up In tho
Democratic column In 10 IH by a
margin of 7,000 popular volet out
of almost three million cant.
Ilia achrdule called lot vUlls
and lulornial talks in Covlngliin
and Newport, Ky., In advance uf
the Cincinnati address, and a ma
jor speech tonight at Columbus
drallng Willi the wellare ol the
people after M years ol Dcmwratiu
aUmlnlstralloiiM.
As a prelude lo the Columbus
speech, the Democratic nominee
suld In his ClncUuiall talk that the
Republican Old lluard sees Uncle
Sam on his last legs with the hand
writing on the wall showing bank,
ruplcy, socialism, dictatorship.
" They are entitled lo Ihelr night,
mares," Stevenson aald. "And we
are entitled lo our dirams.
"We know that we live In the
happiest, most prosperous and vlk-
able to the general and maybe 1 ornus country In all history.
this is a personal tragedy. I don't I Alter recommending to Ohio
know: but I do know that It could voters Hie candidacies of Frank
also be a imllonnl tragedy as It ' l.iiu:.ohe lur another term as gov-
was In 1930. ei'mir ami loiiner' I'rice Annum
'Die Old (luaiil, Stevenson aald,
plans to st- a new Isolationism
lo the American people through a
ladio-tclrvislon "hill. 1 camialii
ol spot annoiinceiiienln,
Hlrvrnvin predicted this cam
paign will buckllic. Ho aald ha
uoeMi't hellcvr tho American peo
ple waul Dolillcs and thn presi
dency lo bnconm the plaything ol
hlnh pressure ad-men and ghost
writers,
"This Isn't a aoap opera, "ha
ssld. "This Isn't Ivnrv Hop vs.
I'nliuolive. 'I Ins Is a cholie for
the mo.. I in ii tn til ul ! Ice on
eailh."
lleorue Hall, executive dlreolor
of Volunteers for Hlevenson, aald
Wednesday Ilia til) I' plans a two
million dollar I adlo-1 V "satura
tion'' drive to iwlug )'J key slates
i.od Hie elei'llnn lu Urn. t;inen
huwnr. Bull sent a lelegrnin lo the Fed
eral Coininunicatloiin Commission
lu Washington last night asking an
iiiiineiiiaie invvfiugaiiuii oi tnu plan
and "unproprlatn teM lo see that
the public. Interest la protected."
tie raised a emotion whether
release ol lime by corporations
under Conditions he said would
luvor only one party would con
stitute an Illegal political contribu
tion. While the Republican National
Coininlllre denies, knowing ol sluli
plan. Ball said, Klsenhowrr has
The Illinois governor llred aw.-y ' trator Michael V. DlSulle for the n,!r,,"."y '""'" n''l V record.
at Klsenhower as operating in a
Senate, the Illinois governor gave "'W '"'O'lng It out.
Bv ERNEST B. VACCARO
ABOARD TRUMAN TRAIN tP
President Truman pressed his fir
ing at Ucn. Dwight D. Eisenhower
in Oregon and Calliomla today,
calling him a captive of the "Re
publican Isolationists" whose elec
tion might endanger the country.
wmie nis campaign train "board
the Seattle hall. Ii was estimated cutf remark about Joe Stalin:
by Patrol Chief of Police J. D.
Porter, who also estimated an ad
ditional 50.000 to 60.000 lined the
streets between the railroad station
and the auditorium.
This whole proposition Is ir
responsible, petly politics." the
President said. "Wo such cuts are
o( strategy" worked over a mass j possible without impairing our sec-
JAMES ;MARLOW
By ARTHUR EDSOX
I For James Marlon )
WASHINGTON (Si The gloves
are off in the presidential cam
paign. The fighting is down to bare
knuckles, and the prospects are
that both candidates will be bat
tered considerably before the de
cision is reached Nov. 4.
H's s light in which we voters
are the only referee. It will be up
to us to decide who lands the most
telling blows. And it might be well,
while we're about it. to judge this
as prize fight is Judged: to pen
alize with the loss ol the round
anyone who lands a low blow.
This campaign started off pleas
antly enough. Nice fellow, the gen
eral. Tine man, the governor.
But gradually the tone has be
come sharper, the words blunter,
until this week each side has used
the same word to describe the oth
er's tactics:
Smear.
President Truman said of the
Republicans:
"Thev are engaging in the great
est smear campaign this year that
we have ever seen in American
politics."
In the same speech, in Havre.
Mont., Truman lit into a remark
Dwight D. Eisenhower made back
in 1945. Eisenhower told Congress
tnen: "nothing guiues Russian pol
icy so much as a desire for friend
ship with the United States."
"His advice carried great weight
and it therefore did a great deal
of harm." Truman said, "perhaps i
if he bad given us better advice in
1945. we wouldn't have had so
much trouble in waking up the
country to the danger of Commu
nist imperialism in 1946 and 1947
and 1948."
The Republican reply, by Sen.
Richard Nixon: "The most vicious
smear in history."
And Nixon departed from nis
prepared text in Alexandria, Va.,
to cry:
"Why. that piano-playing letter
writer!"
Instead of using the short punch.
Adlal Stevenson usually hasTelied
on the short punch-line. Such as:
"Jf the Republicans will stop tell
ing lies about us, we will stop tell
ine the truth about them."
This week Stevenson used the
word "bunk" to describe Republi
can campaign talk.
"I think." Stevenson said, "the
carefully cultivated legend that all
Democrats are wasters and all Re
publicans economical is bunk."
of material for fuiiher attacks on
the uop presidential nominee. Tru-
man told West Coast voters Eisen
hower "has fallen in with a pretty
bad crowd."
"He's in Taft's pocket, and that
Taft, is telling him what to do."
the President said at Everett.
Wash., yesterday.
Then, at Kent, Wash., last night
Truman told another audience of
8.000 persons the "reactionary Old
Guard" has taken the general into
camp, and charged that with some
of the advice Eisenhower has been
urity without in fact wrecking it
. . . This would be sheer folly in
the face of the known dangers of
Soviet aggression."
He said Elsenhower was making
"this irresponsible bid lor votes"
because to get the support of the
t ...- ..,tM... ...... ...... ... ,,. . t.. M
l HAL BOYLE
"I like old Joe. but he Is a
prisoner of the Politburo."
While the President's "give 'cm
hell" campaign biought linn face
lo face wnh fncnuly crowds, many
ol I hi in larger limn those that
turned out ior him In 1948, he
ran into sume heckling.
At Wenatchee, Wash., yesterday
an undercurrent of booing mingled
with the cheers in the crowd wnicli
stale police estimated at between
4.000 and 6.000. Irked, the Prcsi
uent pointed lo tiic rear of the
crowd, raised his voice over some
Ohm senator h HpfealeH lor the cries of "I like Ike." and said:
ni-ID nn.Hm.linn "li k.c In clk-.l. "NOW I SPA A kid bSCk there
low the Taft foreign poiicv, hook, who has been paid to carry that , Ihem less than the grim statistics
hn. nH sinker, diseuised as o 'I like Ike' sign. Well, 1 like Ike - of survival.
budget cuti" !1 1'ke Ike so well that I would What Is it like
! ghostly log, as "not tulklnu sense over most of his speech to the Birvpiinin. lu Die unclunali ail-
i it. . . l-.i .JT ri.... .J -...I t-nl-ti. ......... I lll'PSH. Ill errp.'l nillu-H pll In IIK.-I
lo wie American people in pruiu will uimm uu u,uin.iuii,..ii,. - - ,v ..nipi
Ising lo cut taxes while sliengili- "Whal Is really at Issue III this 1 Republicans lo desert Ihelr parly
ening our armed fnrcos and our election." he said. "Is the role ol on the Issue of li.oliilunlm.
allies. this country In the world." In loi'o, ho suld, some republl-
cans hud misgivings uboul whether
; iuiiMMirt ul Hauling would help pro-
i note peace and liilernutlonal coov
.. ' il align. I lie liberal Republicans,
he suld. made Hie fatal mistake
i .111 Ihlllklliu (hrv Cftolrl 1'ittil ml tw.il.
eles of the linrdlng admUUsira-
NEW YORK i.fl The war In, wives and kids while they bounce nrni,
Korea has become a pointful Issue
here at home.
But It Is still a life and death
matter lo the American soldiers
on Ihp rlpt-li In an Blrnluilp ullill "I i.i,,t, l, ,.ni,l ,l,p. i
lull of holes. i real duiiger of liberal Republicans
I don't think very many ol Ihem
like it, but they seem pielty good
over there lighting In what some namred aboul II .. most of Ihem
! leel Is
batlle.
forgotieii laboratory of
t u.ll Mil
ine pontics ih u an nur, jjrtCK yard."
sav pretty much the sume thins
that they d lather fight a war here
H.1 III
making I ho identical mistake to
day.
"I respect Hie general and honor
him for his mlllluiy services and
lor Ine part he u a played In
their owiilthe past In executing our bh parti
san iiir.ii.il policy. Hut everv day
Muuioln's book is a fine eyrwit- thai p.issci shuwi more clearly
ness nrlnier lor the home folks in Unit the same Old Ouard Is In
their day-to-j no mn .control
'1 am dismayed and disheartened 1 send mm oacg to tne Army u i day existence on a so caueo swim i u,uy wish that his own eio- mat auiH'arru in ue an oiiiliiue
that a man whom we all once had a chance. And Umt Is what nonl" III the bare . boned terrible qUeni summary i4 his Korean lin- reierriicn lo blevciiMiir imslilon
respected, and a man whom Iil am trying to do." I hub 'messlons could be rend In every ,lhat It acluullv is Taft -uclraled
getting lately. "I am afraid he w ill I trusted implicitly, has thus turned ( Truman told a Democratic rally . , Mudi,i Kves one of Ihe , pulpit and legislature in America j lur the nomination by Klsenlmwer
wreck our toreign policy, and the i his back upon the things we thought In Tacoma last night It would be' . .. ulci,lre yel in "Dill: as a inutile lo th frustrated sol-i -who Is In roinmaiul of Ihe OOP
peace ol the world." Ihe Hood for." la disaster to put In the White , .uldi p, Korea" a series o I dlers who fought and still fight as a result ol en alliance formed
Then to a cheering. Democratic I Whistle stop talks also were : House a general who knows nolhlng ;'. , . i.ripl . viuneites of what ' ihcre This Is It: lwlUl general at a New York
rally In the Eagles hall at Seattle. ! planned In California before Tru-iof every day American problems , "" ... . he kuwn as "World I "The combat nun In Korea CUV meeting lasi inmith,
Truman said Sen. Robert A. Taft i man goes Into San Francisco to ! and who campaigns down "the ; - anH.,.Half " ' lights under the dreailesl rondi-1
reported after his New York Cily Upend tonight and speak tomorrow. I dreary road to Uie past.'
,nv meeiiug issi miimn,
Pounding at the Old Ouard, tifr
breakfast with the nominee that The Truman train pulled into In his Tacoma speech. Truman '. .... voul,rr 0i his famous :0I odds. He looks lot w ard lo lew Jhe l eague ol Naiioni. raised larllf
change of , pictured tlsennower as a man pro- doullbov ,., of the last w ar. ' 0 the llltle compensations Ainerl-1 ''"'"V" ,"'. """Y"r ,
they had agreed to cut 10 billion Eugene. Ore., for
i;:&l&.
THE DOCTOR SAYS-
1 A
dollars off the budget in the f is- crews too late at night for ary j tected since boyhood by "total, mil- -...dmt,, rom high school irn soldiers could expect In Prr i ?, , 1
cai jear iso ana inouier so on-: appearance oy me rresiuent at tne ! nary social sccurny iruiu wic , , - ...... under the G mill, vious w ars, lie iigius a name in , ""'." " "''"
cms ana -.. ... . . .u i... t.n.i r.i...,flk i.pt killpfl I ."ii. m
depression and was
iare ol Hitler and
(town where in 1948 he stirred up i bread and butter problems and " d nmmJuifiy gels a Job as a which Ills best friends get killed
lions a vear later.
More than 3.000 persons Jammed a political furore by the olf-the-1 anxieties of civilians
Eisenhower Train Moves To Wisconsin;
McCarthy Travels With GOP Candidate
By DON WHITEHEAD (munlst-in-govcrnment campaign.
Aboard The Eisenhower Special I That answer could come at the
171 Gen. Dwight D. Elsenhower first whlstlcstop at Green Bay or
and Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy 'at the next stop at Appleton, which
(R-Wis) rode Into Wlsconsinjis McCarthy's home town,
aboard the same train today to "We had a pleasant talk." was
share at least for a day the pollti- ! all McCarthy would say to report
!w.r corresr' and If an account of Ihe action I J ' 'br' "
,5 K Wl he lound l;.Ppeur, at all In his home town "(em ce Jo ,,, Wlj,
! KoreV in lel.ers home to hi, .Id j paper It appear, on page 17 under T.enhows'femo f
lwo'.low because. n!" won't be . vltiory lW"'
goes on a dirty pairoi aim neverane ior ori.use .,c 1(pn 1)u( iit,rn llly or j,p,
anyway, because this Isn I that kind Rl Ttt, r Hllld lhr OM tiiiard
r. ra 1 relttnnr in C111111111111 t hit-
slow, grlndhiE, lonely. Kr,.on , K(lr(, ..,H,.,
By EDWIN P. JORDAN. M. D.
Mrs. G. D. Writes that her hus
band was operated on for gastric
ulcer, and wants to know if that
is the same as cancer.
The answer is that it is not the
same as cancer, but cancer can
form in or near an ulcer pocket.
It is important to be sure that one
is dealing with one and not the
other, since the treatment is not
the same for both.
Coming to a discussion of ulcer
of the stomach, it should be said
first that there are two main kinds.
In one the ulcer is located in the
stomach itself and in the other it
lies below the stomach in the first
portion of the intestines known as
the duodenum.
The symptoms of these two types
of ulcer are not quite alike, nor
are they always tie same even
hen the ulcer is in the same spot
In two different patients.
The pain of an ulcer in the stom
ach proper usually comes on soon
after meals and is associated with
some tenderness just below the
breastbone. It is not always con
stant and may disappear, perhaps
leaving the patient with no symp
toms at all.
Other digestive disturbances or
sensations are common. Vomiting
several hours after eating is one.
Tne pain when present may be
burning or gnawing in nature and
may command go for several hours.
The symptoms of an ulcer in the
duodenum are not too different and
the physician cannot tell from the
symptoms alone where the ulcer is
located.
In duodenal ulcer, however, the
discomfort or pain is more likely
to come two or three hours after
a meal rather than immediately
after eating. Vomiting is not as
common as in ulcers located in the
stomach itself.
Actually, the diagnosis of the
location of the ulcer depends on the
results of careful history taking,
examination of the stomach con
tents, and looking into the stom
ach or photographing the lining.
If the ulcer eats through the
wall of the stomach, the contents
will be spilled into the abdominal
cavity, and this is a very serious
complication indeed.
Such symptoms as those men
tioned, therefore, even if thev are
not present continuously, should
not be neglected because of the
danger of the serious complica
tions of bleeding or eating through
into the abdominal cavity.
Republican 'Truih' Team
Slates Washington Talks
camDalm.
The burning question was;
Would Eisenhower give his full en
dorsement to the candidacy of Mc
Carthywho has become the most
bitterly controversial Iigure m
American politics due to his Com-
I knows II they're going to sign a
I truce five minutes after he starts
out. so he's maybe wasting nis
ll nlnl.t n.nrip nn inpntlnn nf Vli- Utile." JOC WlUCS.
- .... ... .n.. .i ii,- ..... I .Somewhat to his surprise he "It's
n10niPfl ! nuns ine cuow is ui-im i uituuiu - ut .-v -.u,p wmiw ol tne tinio senator.
Elsenhower gavp no Indication ! war two hot meals a day even i fighting In It, hot happy, but yUe th, old Guard takes the
after the meeting what his position in the Ironl lines and morale good spirit, not 111 a Ireiiay ' IM,fctlon thnl "Ihe greatest threat
would be ;ls higher In the Infantry than In hatred against an enemy which lsll0 our iiriy t, , wor,t coin-
Last August In Denver. Colo., 1 Ihe rear areas oecause ine rm-1 as piuiiii aa it is v.nuu. uu ,mlnp,m hut llie cost of federal
government' another open allu
sion to ll'p Ohio senator.
After his bid to keep Ohio Dem
ocratic, Hlevrmnn files hack lo his
home bn'e at Sprlnafleld. 111., to
night, then heods tomorrow Into
Iowa and Mlnnerota.
cal spotlight of the presidential iers. They caught him In a hotel the general was asked In a news tion system will enable the for- ilclenlly and wuh uurpose.
Texas Governor Shivers
Reaffirms Ike Backing
haliway as he emerged from the I conference If he Intended to sup-1 ward lighter lo go home In nine "In the minds of many peop.e
surprise meeting wilh Elsenhower I port McCarthy, w ho in a Senate , months Instead of 18. lhc phrase 'professional soldier"
and GOP National Chairman Ar-! speech linked Gen. Geoigc C. Mar. There Is very little griping, and j has a stigma very much like pro.
thur Summerlield of Michigan. snail Eisenhower's old Irlend and a sergeant explains It to Joe this i fes.-ional politician." It implies
A detailed program of Eisen- Army comrade to what he called 1 way. cynical" and mercenary motives,
hower's activities for the dav is- a "conspiracy" aimed at weaken-! "No matter what kind of a Job . Yel soldiering Is as necessary and
sued aboard the general's train Ing the United Stales and strength, you aie doing In these mountains. legitimate a profession. In a world
ening Russia. ;you can lind somebody a lot worse iwnicn sun mates war, as are pou.
"I Will support him as a member . off." t ncs in a worm wnicn aim neeos
of the Republican organization,"! Joe Is aJso startled when a group .laws.
, Eisenhower replied." ... I am of Navy pilots return to Iheir car-1 '"I think that, due to Korea, we
inot going to campaign for or give ;rler "to see the sun bouncing off ihave a professional army for what
blanket endorsement to any man I so manv bald heads. may be the first time In our hls-
who docs anything that I believe to i "A pr'clty big chunk of this war lory, and maybe we'll have reason
AUSTIN, Tex. W) Democratic
Gov. Allan Shivers of Texas says
he fears "Stevensonlsm would be
Trumanism with a Harvard ac
cent" and that he will vote for
Republican Dwight Eisenhower in
November.
Shivers gave as his primary
reason for opposing Gov. Adlai
Stevenson:
"1. He is too closely associated
with the Truman crowd to be able
to 'clean up that mess in Wash
ington.' "2. That association, and the
obligations incurred during a hard
KALISPELL, Mont. Wl Three
Republican Senators who came to
Montana as a "truth squad" to
"correct mis-statements and false
hoods by President Truman on his
current whistle stop tour defended
the GOP record on reclamation
here Thursday night.
Sens. Homer Ferguson of Michi
gan, Bourke B. Hickenlooper ol
Iowa and Francis Case of South
Dakota came here after stops at
Billings and Great Falls.
They stressed answers to Tru
man's charges of a bad GOP rec
ord on reclamation.
None of the Senators mentioned
Truman's statement that Gen.
Dwight D. Eisenhower, Republi
can candidate for president, had
given poor advice on Communist
Teachers Fired
On Red Charge
NEW YORK Iff Six New York
City school teachers have been
fired for refusinst to tell a U. 8.
Senate Internal security subcom
mittee whether they were Com
munists. Their dismissals, ordered by
Bupt. of Schools William Jnnsen,
were ratified yesterday by the
Board of Education.
The six are Meyer Case. 48:
Louis Cohen, 46; Mrs. Mary I.
Danlman. 63: Henry F. Mlns. 49;
f ouls Relln, 42, aivi Louis Splndell,
43.
aims shortly after World War II.
They made no reference to Tru
man's charge that Eisenhower's
"military mind" makes him un
suitable for the presidency or the
charge that Elsenhower "surren
dered lock, stock and barrel to
Republican reactionaries, includ
ing Senator Taft."
Hickenlooper called the Truman
administration "the most corrupt
administration this nation has ever
had."
He said Truman's charge that
Republicans stuck a pitch fork in
the back of American farmers "is
false" and "a worse statement has
never been made by anybody in
public life."
Hickenlooper said the first per
manent long-range farm program
was put Into effect by the Republi
can 80th Congress, which also
"provided for a 70-group air force
trimmed to 48 groups by the
president."
Hickenlooper Also accused Tru
man of trimming the army to 1
million men from a 2 million asked
by the 80th Congress, and of
"scuttling" plans for an extensive
aircraft carrier setup for the Navy.
Care told the 3.000 persons in the
Kall.'.pell high school auditorium:
"our purpose here 13 to tear
Triimn apprt."
On Truman's claim that Hungry
Horse Dam near Columbia Falls
would not have been built under
the GOP, Case said "Hoover Dam
was started under a Republican
administration, and more than 4127
million was appropriated for Hun
gry Horse Dam by the SOlli Con
gress." The Senators leave for Spokane
Friday.
McKay To
Introduce Ike
PORTLAND Iff Gov. Douglas
McKay will introduce Gen. Dwight
D. Eisenhower when the Rcpubli
can presidential nominee speaks at
the Portland auditorium next Tues
day afternoon.
The general Is scheduled to ar
rive In Portland from Vancouver,
Wash, at noon. City, state and Re
publican party officials are to meet
him at the depot and accompany
him in a parade through downtown
Portland.
Eisenhower is to talk for about
half an hour at the auditorium and
if time permits he also Is to speak
briefly outside the auditorium.
Scats at the auditorium are not
reserved.
The general's train will leave at
2 p.m. and later in the day he has
scheduled rear platform talks at
Salem, Albany and Eugene.
Newscaster
Takes Spill
EUGENE W Newscaster Glenn
Hardy, on a speaking tour 01 the
Pacific Northwest, escaped injury
Thursday when his automobile
overturned south of here.
He was driven to town by Phil
White, a Eugene resident, to keep
a speaking engagement. Hardy
said he planned to rent a car to
continue the tour.
HUNTERS
Coleman Equipment
' StrvioJ by factery trainta"
repairmen
SWN LAKE MOULDING
campaign, would lead almost In
evitably to a continuation of the
bungling Acheson lorelgn policy,
a continuation of Communist cod
dling in high places, and other
features of the corrupt Truman ad
ministration that have sickened the
people of America.
3. It would mean a continuation
be uii-Anierican in its mcmous and
procedures."
And of Marshall, he said: "If he
was not a perfect example of pa
triotism and a loyal servant ol
the United States, I never saw one.
. . .1 have no patience with any
man who can find in his record of
service lor this country anything
lo criticize."
Since the August statement, Mc-
Is being fought by guys who carry I to be grateful for It In the years
pockets full of pictures of their I ahead."
The
KIRBY
Coll 2-0131
No. 3 Lvtton
Co.
If not, Indeed, an acceleration, ot earthy won a landslide primary
the trend to the left that is carry- election victory which he called
ing us swiftly toward socialism in an endorsement by the people of
many forms and guises. his tactics to root subversives from
4. It would mean the retention government. Jlis enemies charge
and perhaps the expansion of the
strange and disturbing "paramount
rights' doctrine under which Mr.
Truman felt free to claim the Texas
tidelands a dangerous doctrine
and a brazen action upon whicn
Mr. Truman has already placed
his stamp of approval."
It was the first time In modern
Texas history that one of the state s
governors has come out for a Re
publican for president. Former
Gov. Coke R. Stevenson, during
World War II, severely criticized
the Roosevelt administration at
times. And the late Gov. Bcauford
H. Jester was often at cross pur
poses with the Truman administra
tion. But neither ever broke with
the Democratic party.
"I must and will cast my vote
on Nov. 4 for the man whom I think
is best equipped to do the Job that
must be done," Shivers told a
state-wide radio audience. "I will
vote for Texas-born Dwight D. El
senhower for president of the
United States."
He said 1952 was a year of de
cision "a time lo place principles
above party and the interests of
our state and nation above tradi
tion and habit."
Referring to the Stevenson can
didacy, the young Texas governor
said, "It Is the same old story.
Policies to which most Texans are
bitterly opposed would be part oi
the Stevenson administration, and
Trumanism would still be the order
of the day."
He linked the Democratic presi
dential nominee with "corruption,
ineptness and Inefficiency In high
places. Infiltration of Communists
Into high governmental positions,
an unstable and stalemated foreign
policy, a taxing and spending poli
cy ... Imnoslng an increasingly
heavy burden on our citizens; a
new and dangerous doctrln of par
amount, rights under which the
government can claim the proper
ty of states and Individuals with
out compensation. "
HOTELS
OSBURN HOLLAND
EUGENE, ORB MEOFORD
Thoroughly Modern
Mr. and Mrs. J. E. t'arley
and Joe Earley
Proprietors
that in his methods he has
smeared Innocent people with
out turning up a single Communist.
Last night at Peoria speaking"
In the Bradley University field
house he turned his fire against
Democratic economic policies.
Eisenhower asserted that a
'false prosperity" exists in this
country and that "whatever eco
nomic gains have been made since
1932 have been due, not to admin
istration Ingenuity, but to war or
threat of w jr."
He a rgucd the Democrats
couldn't claim credit through eco
nomic planning for raising living
standards, increasing wages, or
reducing employment.
"War. not the Fair Deal, broueht
about the end to unemployment,"
he tald. "The legacy of war, not
the Fair Deal, helped to sustain a
high level of economic activity."
The general promised that a Re
publican administration would cut
federal spending by 20 billion dol
lars within four vcars as the first
step toward lower taxes.
"My goal." he said, ' assuming
that the fold war gets no woree,
is to cut federal spending to some,
thing like 60 billion dollars within
lour years. Such a cut would elim
inate the deficit In the budget, and
would make way for t substantial
tax reduction."
He said a GOP regime also
would do awav with "high-handed
Interference and regulation from
Washington" with policies that
would "give free play to the Indi
vidual and curb the unlustlfled ex
pansion of government."
Earlier In the day, the general
had declared there was "no itmr."
in American soldiers carrying the
burden ol the ftghllnr In Korea
when millions nf SouMi Koreans
could he, trained to defend their
country.
"That In a Job for the Koreans."
he said. "We do net want Asia to
feel that Ihe white man Of the
West is his enemy."
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1 N .aUrnate VusWe J4ai.Tr- I
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On Saturday, September 27, Ihe following
newt release wai Issued to the Portland
newspaper! and news services
WE BELIEVE THE SUIT
WAS FILED FOR PUBLICITY
PURPOSES TO FOCUS
ATTENTION ON OUR
OPPONENTS' CLAIMS.
THESE CLAIMS ARE SO
EXAGGERATED AND
UNTRUE, WE WELCOME
THIS SUIT WHICH WILL
ESTABLISH A TRUE AMOUNT
AFFECTED BY THIS LAW.
WE WANT THE PUBLIC
TO KNOW THE TRUE
FACTS ABOUT THESE
ISSUES..
VOTE
330 X YES
TO END THE
TRUCK TAX MESS
o
OREGON HIGHWAY COUNCIL
til.r lllli, r.iM.ntj Marl Inui, S.cnloryi 421 1. 1. Grand, Porllond, Or.goa