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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 7, 1952)
PAGK SIX UKKALO AND NKWS. K I. A MATH KAI.I.S. OKKGON Tl'KSDAY. OCT. 7, 1032 FRANK JKNK.1NS Editor Entered second class mailer at the post office ot Klamatlt Falls. Ore, OD August 20. 1906, undrr act of Conjrf s. March I, 1879 MKMBKHS OF TI1K AhtSOCIATF.D PKFSS The Awoclated Presa la entitled exclusively to the use for publication o all the local newi printed In this newspaper a veil aa all AP news. SUBSCRIPTION BATES MAIL BY CARRIRR 1 monlh I 35 1 month 1.35 t months 6 50 6 months t 6.10 . 1 year - 11 00 1 year UtM BILLBOARD by bll.L Jl.NKI.NS Come mil eioveinocr lou.Ui we'll all no to ue pons una vote lur wnav c think is I'litiii. Or best lur us. There uri' inuuy issues, i.illC tHoUiiCU bo "b. wliea ulu others of lesser import. No matter Wiucu CfeUcKuiy a u.ii inns uno uie muj iiuu) .mpoiuui. uiiiig is uiut. the votes cast for It are cast in an honest mamicr. i uui i iniuii honest I" the term that we don't stult balloi boxes or mat no sirong-ariii, goon squad tactics are brought intu piay. I'm talking aoout the nunesiy tnat goes buck ot the vote. The honesty mat luemis uic llluntuuui tutcr u doing what he limits Is right- What he is convinced is best lor Uie public at large and 'or himself as an individual. If Uicse votes are to be honest there can be no such thing as in Uuenciiid a voter. The best any one can do along that line is to point out certain advantages, to be lound in certain bills. And right here I've a few I'd like to point about concerning measures 328 and 323 on the Ore gon ballot. The measure 328 Yes is entitled "Constitutional Amend ment Authorizing Alcoholic Liquor bv Individual Glass." It is spon sored by the "buy less than a bot tle" group and is on the ballot lor the umpteenth time. Let's say right off the bat that when you come face to face with this issue you'U vote as your con science tells you. pretty largely. There are some who have an in grained antipathy to liquor in any form. These will vote against it. There are certain groups, among them the lodges of the state, who are opposed to Uie measure for the opposite reason: They fear that any infringment on present rights will lead the state's voters to speak against liquor as a whole and tciti to bring on local option prohibition. I Some of them, doubtless, also feel that widespread use of the liquor by the drink system might cut into their revenues over their present method of operation.) Be it one way or another, the measure is there to be voted on. I'd like to point out lust one thing about this bill that some may have overlooked. Liquor bv the drink under the present bill would not in any way rob the Knox law of present powers. The state would still supervise the sale of liquor. And would act as wholesaler to the Individual outlet. Unless there is a decline in the drinking habits ot the population the state does not stand to lose revenue. And don't ever forget that the state of Oregon relies in a great measure on the income from liquor In defraying our expenses. The measure would provide for individual glass sale by private clubs, fraternal organi- JAMES MARLOW WASHINGTON What's com ing out of Uie Russian Communist Party Congress In Moscow is bad news for the Russian people them selves. They are being told by their Communist masters they'll have to work harder. In the keynote speech Georgi M. Malenkov, a Stalin favorite, told the party's six million members who run the country's 210 million people they must bear responsibil ity for correcting defects in the economy. He complained that the factories aren't turning out enough work. He wants it stepped up. Which is another way of saying more work from the workers. The speed up. The reason: Russia's own de fense program and its determina tion to pull more closely abreast of the West in industrial output. It's still away behind although making progress. There is always hope In Ihe non Communist world that when Stalin dies his political heirs will wreck the party in their struggle for pow er and so eliminate Russia as a menace. This can be only wishful think ing until it is known at last whether Stalin has handplcked a successor to take over after him without trouble. So speculating on a pos sible Stalin heir has become al most a Western hobby. There was a lot of this specu lation some weeks ago when it was Keep a good roof over your Head . . . it's easy with the Budget Plan way to pay. As an example, if yours is an average size, 1-story, 2 bedroom home with a 26 ft. by 34 ft. roof, we will in stall a roof of 3-tab as phalt composition shingles for as little as $6.39 a month on the Budget Plan! Other materials are priced accordingly, let us give y6u a free estimate Main & Spring Ph. 3144 BILL JENKINS Managing Editor rations, railroads operating inter stale trains and commercial estab lishments .icre food Is served, iiiht uuec.it mean every tavern In the stale. It allows for a large measure of control. But here is the important thing. Tunc w.u ikvui be u major nuici. a major resort or a recreational aevciopincnt requiring lodges, guest cabins and out-of-state trade uuilt in Oregon as long as we stick to the present buy-a-botlle-cvciy-iime-you-waiu-a-druik si stem. Whether we like it or not Uie tourists and Uie class ot people who would come up here for a long vacation just won't go along with the bottle system. They'll bypass Oregon on Uieir way between Washington isame law as this pro posal would effect) and Calilomia where the liquor proposition is relatively wide open. We have here, in Klamath coun ty, one of the greatest potential recreation areas on the Pacific Coast. In the entire Northwest. But it will never be fully developed until we can get facilities. Until we have dude ranches and out-of-doors recreation spots built up bv commercial interests we will do little with the area. And these places won t come in until such time as they can expect a reason able return on their investment. There is a crying need for hotels in our state. None have been built, on a major scale, for a good many years, with a growing population and with an ever-increasing travel Droblem the hotel situation is one to be looked at. There will be no new building, and there will be little large scale remodeling done on present hostels until we can offer the traveler more than we can now. This diatribe is certainly no brief for tht liquor interests. It is inerelv a straightforward statement of what I like to think of as fact. You have to have a peg to hang every action on. The Knox law. as we know It now. was designed with the ( stated) idea in mind of pro moting temperance in the use of alcoholic beverages. I cannot see that llnuor by the drink would tend to increase drinking. I con sider the bottle in the room a much greater menace than the drink over the public bar. After all. in a room your inhibitions are controlled-only by a handful of friends and four walls. In a public lounge, bar or whatever you wish to call it, you are neio m dv all tne social mores connected with group living. nut tne Dig point is stui the com merclal development of our state And I believe that this law will be. if passed, a move in the right direction. After all. we. as a state. lose no control. The Knox law is still in there, and vou can add plenty of teeth If you want 'to. learned Malenkov would deliver the keynote speech which Stalin had reserved lor himself at previous congresses. Did this mean Malen kov was the crown prince? Aiayoe. fiui &iann certainty took the play away from him before Malenkov could open his mouth. Last Thursday, just before the Con gress began, the monthly maga zine Bolshevik appeared with one of Stalin's infrequent articles. sunn said there would have to be a "five-hour" day. This didn't conflict with Malenkov. Stalin was just making a pen talk about how mings oucnt to be in the luture in a socialist state. He didn't say when, though. But that was only part of what he said in 50 pages covering Marx ian economics and foreign affairs. The statement will be examined in the West for possible clues to Rus sian intentions. Since Stalin has never been ac cused of being too obvious, the full sigmucance of what he said may not be clear for years. Nevertheless he insisted as al ways in the familiar "Who, me" technique of the Communists that Russia has only peaceful Inten tions. But he offered a nredletion! countries would fight among them selves. He said the struggle among mem in me iuiure lor markets was inevitable." This was inter preted, along with some other things he said, as trying to drive a wedge between the Allies. As a Businessman I like t1 BILIfrtUKE because... I LIKE CONVENIENCE It's right downtown, near oil my clients and financial centers. AND I LIKE SERVICE 1 day laundry service. Stenographic service. t Men's club and plunge. REASONABLE PRICES IS00 ROOMS WITH BATH FOUR DININO R00M3 FOUR COCKTAIL LOUNGES Nemt f lh WO ID FAMOUS BILTMORE BOWL m is They'll Do It Every A. Kid with A BiKE SOOH WILL HMD POP MAS A A4ECHAMICAL AtlMD- LiAUiUrt TCTXIRLE WTTU VTtJH COASTER FKAKE,a10?VL JUST STAHO .ASIDE WMII.C i .TOPCATF-WUEKl I WAS -jf e AW Rs3? APART Stevenson Soys Ike Helps Russians By Calling U.S. Economy 'War-Born' Bv JACK BIXL SAGINAW. Mich. UV-Uov. Alui E. Stevenson of Illinois today ac cused Oen. Owight O. tscnuower of giving 'comfort'' to Soviet Rus sia by labeling American prosper ity as war-bom. Stevenson, tne Democratic pres idential nominee, said in an ad dress prepared lor Uie opening of a live-day campaign tour in the midwest and south that there Is no greater disservice the Republican candidate could do to America in its world role than to suggest that our economic strength at home is a war prosperity." "When the general sneaks of our prosperity as being war-born, who can gam comfort except the So viets, who shout lo the world that we have undertaken our defense program, not to insure peace, but to prevent a depression at home by waging war abroad?" the Illi nois governor demanded. He add ed: "We expect this kind' of talk ; from irresponsibles and Isolation lists, but not from a man who was formerly looked upon as an under standing leader in world allairs." Stevenson, scheduled to arrive THE DOCTOR SAYS Bt EDWIN P. JORDAN. M.D. Few things play a more impor tant part in the health of grow intr children that what they eat. They must have enough calcium for their Bones ana leem. enuun iron for their blood, enough cal ories so that they will have some left over for growth after vigorous exercise, and enough vitamins, n is at school age that young sters first begin to get away from the dietary control of their homes, nd vet as much attention should be given to food at this tune as at any other. Breakfast and supper are usu ally still taken at home, but lunch eon is often another matter, and yet this is just as important as Ue other meals. Many schools nave caieierias where the youngsters choose their own food. Some children do poor lv .t this, and should be carefully instructed by the mother as to what they should have eacn day, ana how much to pay for it. A bottle of pop and a piece of pie a la mode is hardly a balanced meal. Of course, the lunch should be considered in relation to what food Is given at other meals. If, for example, milk is not taken at noon. In addition to milk, lunch should certainly be obtained at breakfast and Supper, then it should include some protein lood such as meat, eggs, cheese or fish, some bread and butter or potato, and some green vegetable or fruit. Often parents prefer to give the youngster his own lunch to take from home. If milk can be obtained at school in addition, well and good. If not. a thermos bottle ot milk can be included. The same principles apply to the home-prepared lunch is to those just mentioned. Sandwiches, but tered and filled with meat, eggs, tomato, lettuce and the like, changed from day to day, are usu ally satisfactory and attractive to most youngsters. An apple, orange, peach or some similar fruit will supply another important need. If the child has a sweet tooth, a piece of chocolate "I'M sssssKjssiywysii Tscw jtX i : . i v x Time "- J-lEtL FsJ UR VET JDE DO Pr?.l ikl.tt heh-meh-you NL5 AKElcX)K jriKTT AKT riklV rccu TO fCT IT T06ETNER AOAlU 1 TOO MN lAj PgW MINUTES, xt . 1 here by air about noon from Springiield. III., thus prepared to Itake the offensive against his op ponent, busily ciimpuigiiuig In the (Pacific Northwest. Elsenhower's statement on which Stevenson teed off was made m i several speeches. At Philadelphia Ion Sept. 4. the general declared (that "today our Initiative, imag ination and productive system are once more tied and shackled to .war and the prospect of war," 'adding: I "Our economy is a war economy, 'our prosperity is a war prosper ing'" m . j Not so. said Stevenson. Instead, Ihe contended that "our high stand jard of living has been maintained : since the Korean outbreak, not be cause ot the defense program but I in SDlte of It." I "It has been maintained for the 'simple reason that our great pro- ductile 'ver has increased total 'national output by more than Ihe I defense burden has increased." the 'Democratic nominee said. I Stevenson's prepared Saginaw speech was only a preliminary to a ma lor address he has sehedtiled 'tonight In Detroit on all phases of can be included for dessert. The youngster should actually eat the lunch which Is supplied. Some children, unless watched, will trade off their fruit for a piece ol pie and pop. and thus not gel the balanced meal which they are sup posed to eat. A little tactful ques tioning and checking-up every lew days Is in order. The importance of a good diet for growing children cannot be stressed too much. But at the same - time parents should not hound their children about food ev ery day. If the diet week by week Is satis factory, and if the child is grow ing normally and getting neitncr are that he lor she) Is eating all too fat nor too thin, the chances right. Red Barrels Said Leaky WASHINGTON ! The bottom appears to have fallen out of a Communist manager's claim that his Russian barrel shop overful filled its production Quota. The publication Soviet Moldavio. a copy of which has reached the State Department, recalled that the manager of the consumers goods shoo of the Brichan'-k Tim ber Enterprise recently claimed all its quotas were filled up to 150 per cent. Now. said Soviet Moldavia, mem bers of the collective farm Novaya Zhizn New Life report this "un pardonable mistake": "Last fall we bought five sleighs I which were made bv that shop. ! Every one of them was no good. Then our Kolkhoz bought eight oak barrels. On the way to the Kolk ho7.. the bottoms fell out of three ! barrels. The other barrels arc (leaking." By jimmy Hat lo TRY AtfYTUhlQ OMCE. iie lira ir-r .r, THE JOB. I'VE KESIaMED' AAS twit-.. know how UIC BlVB 1 IT IN A MEyP 7 QtlP lirtrrf the Communist threat Inlernul ami external. The siieech will be tele vbeil and radiocast 10:30 p.m.. EST. C'BS. The Detroit speech was billed as Ihe climax of an nltcinooii ol motorcade campaigning through Ypsilantl, W a y n e. Wyandotte, Ecorse and River Rouge in Ihe highly 'industrialized area of Mich igan. In his Saginaw text. Stevenson said that "Ihe Idea that a huge military establishment is necessary for our prosperity is repugnant to evcrv imuul.se I have." He said the American economic future is bright, contcnoiug that annual outlays for farm and in dustrial equipment should rise 13 per cent, railroad equipment 3U per cent and truck niaiiulacturc 60 per eent. "We shall need about 20 per cent more steel. 3U jier cent more construction equipment and SO per cent more metallic ores." he suid. "Production ol electric power and equipment should almot double." The Illinois governor said Ihe real problem of the country Is "how can w produce enough to meet the demands of the second half of the 20th century?" Stevenson tore Into the Republi cans for what he said was the GOP atlempt to contend In elec tion years "that they believe heart and soul In all of Ihe things they Ined to break." He said Republi cans had voted against the inter ests of the farmers, laborers, bus inessmen, consumers, housewives, "our children, the old lolks and our free friends abroad.'' He said tho heart of the rteDiib- jllean party is alined at "abuiulniice jfor the few with Indifference for ! the mass of people." I "In foreign affairs It leads to In decision and obstruction, with the 'risk oi Its grim sequel, war," Stevenson declared. "In domestic affairs, it Is always too llltle and jloo late, obstruction and mistrust I of everything that has been w on for the mass of people. I "Now I do not accuse the grn ieral i Elsenhower of deliberately wanting Uiese things," he contin ued. "If Uie truth must out, I haven't the foggiest notion what 'he as an imvidual stands for. His t view seems to change, as on tltie I lands oil. social security, farm ! price supports, foreign assistance, laetensc, as he learns more about life in America from hla advisers." j Stevenson ridiculed Elsenhower's pledge to restore the "Integrity of Ihe dollar. He was all for that, too. the Democratic nominee said. But he added he wants to jnake sure Americans have enough dollars to buy the goods and services they need. "I remember the dollar was very sound In the depression," he said, "of course, there were not many of them around. But at least the dollar was verv sound. "And every lime It got sounder prices fell lower, more men were thrown out of work, more holdings were liquidated, more buslncssmn went bankrupt, more farms and so were foreclosed. In fact, the dollar got so sound In ID33 that It close every bank in this country." He sold the Republicans had ac cused the Democrats of "Inter ferrlng with liberty" In their cca sures to meet the depression. "On behalf of my party, I am proud to plead guilty to that charge," he said. "Certainly we interfered with liberty. We Inter fered with the liberty to starve." Eisenhower Attacks Harry Truman Over Pover Development In Pacific Northwest n v don wiini iii:ad ADOAltl) KMSKNIIOWKIt MI'KC t.t ,1.. , i .. i ....... i . . i, I........ hower vli'liuillv Ignnrinu Adhil SlevriiMin Inttny lo feud Willi Pirn Ident Irunmn over which parly would (in (lie most for the I'acillc Northwest In water nower drvel- opmeut. The tlOP cnnvlidiilp drew a bend mii . i iinii.il iii pi line mini', in ridicule and feoin while iiir-ltlug Ihrouuli Wiishliiiiton Into Oregon on ii- a'.Hitii' ii iiiiiiiiiiiiiriiiiii .iii.r. in siiii iiiiiii inn ma uie til. called tor him to niiike titlk at seven ciliea unci towns In Wash ingloii and Oieuon- wiih the nmlur seech at Poillnnd, Ore., ul 1:4! FRANK TRIPP . ,.v-i... ,J,,.V , , ;.-. t tfSL.ii..-;. .s.,. w.il v There's no known reason lor the tuie on the ini'lodlou. The lllea lire fly. Though slightly frosted by nowl.ioun assembled In Ilia kitchen. Hlio in the iipcouiiiry. unci hohug in I closes the pal lor und piuilry doors, wherever It l.i that Mies go In the props open Ilia porch duor mid Winter, the mikcs who lake pole j goes to buttle In earnest. Hie of nature's vugui les ugiee llml this iswuims light buck but ul Iriigth Inst Slimmer bloke all records lir Uiry relieul, lo reluiii In hull nn the fly di'pai nieiit. I hour anil bring their li lends Willi Of all the vu-.l lli.n l reiilm, Ihe flu w.,u his ,.h.,-.. i.-asi i iii.v lin moves light lulu colliige mid castle "'l heies where Aunt buri.li geu. lo spread disease ami iliscoiuloit. Ue best of II. r Hies, liver each pie As lur bark as leeonis drhe nun f'"" I1''"'" n queer giiilnet. such js has been lighting ilics. '"k,,,' " " "nr 11 I" Slaves waved palms oxer Cleo- ; ne screen hemisphere with a puira and the Caesura Phut noil's H"iulle on lop. hlio has dlllereni lair dnugliler (ought flies iluoiirh !"'. big unea (or plutieis. Ihe bulhushe.i, bruising Moses out , P"1 '"' l",1.r lHer ones (or They stowed aboard the aik In bowls, lliey bull e Ihe tiles. Ihe lion's nuiiie. niibc right In , A.1 ""u'l'i'"' Uiey move, lo Ihe Nouh's beard-hence, the lly i '"' with the lood lined only lo The contemptible miles have!""""' serving. Ironi then on thwarted science. No sooner a pni-' " "NX'nslblllly Is Ihe diners, lln son to exterminate them Hum Ihev r" f w." ''""d' "S1"3 develop nnmunily and cut it as uj'" XM other, food. About the only enemy that ' . ' ' '"!'" ' i'U-lie a lew they haven't taken over as a utility .J1 l ,"vl"t'1 ' V" 7"? ''I'1"',' ,., ihe reliable old lly swatler. ' " oasheilum p usleied whose ancestor Is as old us Uie lly. "I0,'lri, ",r, hul U, ml J.m" Does vour childhood recollec- rw besides It really hurl Hon of I'lics go back lo a couuliy Al'"l far" to hurm even a lly. kitchen? Mv iwstorul picluie "own at Donovan saloon they hung, in memory something like , I .ic l", ls a sweltering day. lute An- ! ,V""'l '.' "".'l'" gust Aunt Surah hits a big kellle ol canning tomatoes off tne lire long enough to loss in another slick of hickory from tho knotty pine wood box. She opens the oven Inr a look at two green apple pies, mops her brow with the comer ol her gingham apron, and rushes lo close Uie screen door. Tige Just nosed In and led It V.' Za ' , L i i, " 1 bottom anyway: and the big hole f" T"', ' ."j: "jr..1'?.'. "'ai'prlc;'. Mience W tiiitfhfri vt It s I li I iMnlll mosquito bar. ta.-ked on new each vear - and over every window. Aunt Sarah's next chore Is to clear out the llles. When their buu diowiis the cackle of the hens, that's Uie lime. From the ceiling hangs a bunch ol sweet clover, wheie dies are supposed lo gather. They do. but there isn't room for all and they swarm through the hot, pleasant odored kitchen like bees. Aunt Sarah grasps her wea pons, one In each hand. They are gelling battered, she thinks; she must make some new ones; will after the next baking. 'I lie Pills, bury sack will be empty by then Not hard lo make; just a Hour sack cut Into long one. inch snips from the open end and fastened to a sawed-olf broom handle: nn indispensable persuader lo shoo flies outdoors. Kirsl Aunt Siiruli lashes aboiu the parlor; careful to miss the whatnot and Uncle Jimmy's pie - IF YOU mm ' ' ' ' i II Cllh 2A Coih Mm. You Oaf Mo. You Col I I 111 8. OB I t 1147. IX 17 J50.M 15 277.J0 27 391.51 21 3as.0l 34 531.36 27 498.96 Other omounts up to $2500 WE INVITE YOUR INQUIRY By Phone . . . 8128 or come m at 121 South 9th. ..TODAY!!) It. in. (I'8'i'l, The talks were M'heduli'd lor Tiiruma, t'eiitiulla und VuiH'ouver, Wash., ami I'oit hind, tjiileiu, Aiiuiy and rliigenc, Ore. - L ust lilghl In Heiitlle, KlKenhowi'i relened lo Truitiitn aa "an expert in polltti'ul ileiiiagoKUery" giving Uie people "a .'ouiM' in ihiiim-hm' llitlon." An he culled the Till ninii regime a "whole hug" guv enmieiit upi'i'iillng im'the theory Unit "the ledelul govei uiiienl lilll.it do evervlhiiig fm u.f and to us." The croud nl some 6.IHMI that Iniumed the Civic lie Arena cheered lustily. Hsenhowcr liennied. An addlllonul ft.lHMI tier. Mini were seated lit a high M'hoitl foulball stadium liearby. listening t them. i ue pies cuiue out ol tne oven. ,"., ": V.'"T :'.:,,, ,' ".7, ,,., ,-,v,..,,,, new. Hot Summertime he ptoticctrd us the llrst lly extermliiutui and was well equipped uruiiiulli ally for Ills task. At the price o a beer lor .each iippcuruuce he would stiinil at the bur while nil the files settled on lum. I When Mils fullered clothing whs , well obscured he would move like n riinrinu'ii rutinl dm m il ihe lriir bout thU that I Willi I.W.I M i " " - . f."'" I'""!11 I '' 1C -Mc. "' ' ''""fie ol rugged r"""'"" "," r ."' " " , bar flies on llielr way buck In with Ihe first entering customer. Hquawkcr knew: better thun to shake lo far from the door. It was bad lor his proletslon. Man Fined For Trespassing Robert William. Unities, lit, nl 21 la Wniilliiiid, was lined 1 s:!.S in District Court yesterday lor hunt ing deer on (Misled land. He pleaded guilty lo a charge of trespassing, filed by Harold Den linger, owner of the land. "A mnther'i rare for all vau wear!" Men' Kami l.aumlry, lltli land Klamath, phone t Jill. t:i7irrn NEED CASH FAST ...SEE ME NEW Pi I AT 11 T hi m )u. mmn ayt -DEE HOCK, Monogtr ? Wc invite you lo compare our friendly, straight' forward loan service with any other service avail able. Give us just five minutes , . . ami we'll show you the difference that makes a Pacific" Industrial loan so convenient, pleasant, so perfectly suited to your special needs. ' So if you need cash in a hurry . . . lo pay past due bills . . . cut installment payments . . . meet cmcr fiency expenses . . . buy clothing or appliances . . . in fact, for any urgent need ; . . TRY PACIFIC, the company that proves it has your interests at heart. NOW YOU $ up to ON YOUR AUTO FURNITURE SIGNATURE PAeiFicinDUSTmat to the speech through loud apeak- era. j The crowd cheered ngiiln when 1 1'! ise i il in we r rit ul of Truiiiau'a at li.u'ks ngaiiiM him an tho lte;-ub-' lli'iins; I "You have been conducted through an underworld of liuag iiniiiy devils." He went on lo oullliie Ills own Ideas iiliuut Ihe development nl Western resoiin en which lm Bind j would menu "the (nil use of private iresniiires plus a iH-al-alatefederal iliiiriiiershlp" in rei-liunalloii pro grams. He turned thumbs down on a federally continued Columbia Val ley iiuihnrily which would he ann ular to the Tennessee Valley Au thority. I "The present iidinlulslralliurN an swer to further resource develop. Iiient," ho suld, "In Ihe valley ! mi I In nit v . a kind ol nuperguveru nient hlue prlnled In Washington, II. C, mid iiiunuid from there. i You don't need inure super gov ernment." And then he referred lo Ihe "whole-hugger who wnnl a Cnl iimlilii Vulley authority, n Hrnuiiaii I'lnii. mid siKMulired medicine." Itnthrr Hutu a leileral Columbia J Vulley authority, rllseuhower ar gued, there nhoiild be a "new Inter ; stain bndv" in which atule inem 'hers wont have equal authority Willi federal meniliers Hi winking out navigation ami flood conltial ! programs. Kisenhnwcr Jtibbed at those he ii'iilled "Hie s'y apostles of Fair iDeullsiu." And he studde1 ins : speech with references lo "whole I hog" government. "Ilv deliberate design," he said. ;"tlederu government I seeks to lree.e out the itiltlnllve and euer Igies of local, stule and private liigrncles. whenever It thinks llml Iney are doing anything (Hal in. Hinges uiHin the awelluin ledrrul empire. 'Huts, the wltule-img men. lulllv proceeds toward the creation ;ol a mote extensive and stilling ; monopoly than our country had ever seen." j President Truman has called Kl- sculiouer the. "Hunt man" Inr iniieclnl Interest lubbyisl. In reply 'to this, Klsculiower aula: "Hut 'uu lolks know that the greatest special privilege, the ( greatest lobby, the greatest con jteiiiraliuu of tower ever known Is how updating, lull apred ahead, i rigui down on ine riiluinnc to pet 'lieltiule llseli in Hiwer." j Kir.ciihowcr said the Kepuhlli-ans origiiinied the reclamation pro I grunt Ml years ago to speed the : development ol Ihe West, Hut he isnid Ine IM-purtmeut ol Interior nuw Is "seeking a monoiHilv ovkkf I tioio-powei piuductiou aim dlsuT ibullon." ' "Here we have tho real whole hog." he coniuieiiled He said the Northwest must have all Ihe power It needs lo develop Hums p miiMiund flood waters and In Ineiense power production of existing diuns. He said Ihe region's IHiwer development ' must and will go lorward. " Hut he added: "The way to do II Is bv flmrlng ol effort, rather thun by Its concentration. ... W need to get awav from the Idea I Hint we can do only what the fed eral government win do." Illsenlimver a'scrted that one federal projects are paying for themselves, then local and slala 'government should "laka over the financing, lake over the projects for llieir own peonle. and get their I region out ol hock to the lederal government. , . . To do this we need an administration which be lleves In keeping government close I to the people." ' AT OUR OFFICE IVIIAITII CAN BORROW 25 00 00 i warn ss itt SAFEWAY