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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 15, 1952)
IIBRAU) AND NKWS. KLAMATH FAU.S. OKBGON WKDNKSDAY, OCT. 15, 1 0.12 page ronn FRANK JENKINS Editor Entered second class matter at the post oltlce ot Klamath Falls, Ore, on August 30. 1006, under act ot Congress. March B, 1878 MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press Is entitled exclusively to the use tor publication ol all tin local news printed In this newspaper as well as all AP news. MAIL 1 month - I 1 .35 $ 6.60 $11.00 6 months 1 year ... BILLBOARD Ily BILL JENKINS A terrifying bit of news turned Up in yesterday's paper. In case you happened to miss It it was In Sam Dawson's column In which he said that science, tile arch-enemy of mankind, has come to the aid of Industry with a new motion picture camera that will take snap shots at Uie, rate of one-hundred-thousandth of second. That is roughly the same speed with which tourists at Crater Lake operate Brownies when that handsome ranger walks on scene, Dawson says that this new camera will let the industrialist see the invisible, such as the knock in n engine, let a manulacturer i apply an electric brake in live- one-thousandths of a second and let you "see an earthquake com ing before it tumbles building on your heaa." portance, of course I'd settle for a Dlain little old box camera of some kind that would let me see mat oionae i as snooting ir when all the film shows is Uie corner of Dudlow's Hot Dog stand . and a small portion of ute beacn below the Breakers Hotel. And as for seeing the knock in an engine, ; heck, all I want is to be able to see, and distinguish, Uie car buretor. The second item. Uie one about applying an electric brake in a fraction of a second, while it may be all important to some E. HAL BOYLE jnw xukk. wi we were pace lng for a three-week trip to Eu rope, and the bed was littered with clothing the suitcases wouldn't T InnlrMt nut at th cwift.f Inwtntr East River mirroring the dull lmaee of array October skv. i i uuuk ui v luiuur low ingm we'll be in Rome'" said Frances. ""Promise you'U show me all the places you saw in the war?" ("Sure," I said. But there -won't be much of U left to show you.") What could be left after all these years ot what Cen. Mark Clark's . Fifth. Army troops in Italy bitterly called "the forgotten war"? Mark Clark himself was off at the other side of Uie world now directing bis second forgotten war this one in Korea. The scars mast be pretty well covered in Italy.:: The earth beau itself quickly. For that matter, a man's mind does & pretty good Job oi neanng itsen, too. aitnougn there is always a tender spot left in the scar tissue. What was left in me of all those distant battles the heat and cold, the mud, Uie spent blood, the growling guns, the people begging for bread la ruined towns? Oddly, the first thing I remem bered was a boy's while face, cry ing silently. He was a ragged Italian child, and an American medic was sprinkling sulfa powder on a gaping shell wound in his head, and the wound was so in fected the smell from it sickened the soldier. "If the boy could get some real tare," said Uie medic. "But after we move on I'm afraid " We did move on- Where Is that little boy now? ("They have wonderful gloves In Italy," said Frances. "We must get some for Christmas pres ents.") I remembered the flashes of the artillery guns, standing almost wheel to wheel, stabbing the night accordions of barbed wire . and a British soldier who broke under Uie tension and lay In the dirt, writh ing, frothing, moaning in his own mental darkness "Poor lad," JAMES WARLOW WASHINGTON Ml when one tarty has been in and Uie other out for 20 years, that's long enougn to provide more than just ordinary campaign ammunition. It's long enough to develop, through endless repetition extended over a generation, a new kind of American folklore with myths and bogeymen now long familiar to men, women and children. Now as before the Republicans treat the New Deal and the "Fair Deal" as If they were giants creep ing through Uie garden of Ameri can life in order to get close enough to smash the door and de molish the furniture. And as If they were shaking a tattered witch before our eyes, the Democrats, as they have been do ing for years, hold up a warning that the horrible "Republican" de pression may get us if we don't watch out. Depending on his party, every candidate starting out has on hand a trled-and-tested collection of slo gans, legends and American scare words like isolationism, socialism, McCarthyism, But it's questionable whether mention . of them changes any cheer or hiss. They've become so familiar. have sunk so deeply into the Amer ican consciousness, have been de bated and thought about so long, that by this time most people have formed full opinions and standard reactions. Recently a correspondent on one of the campaign trains wrote: "The candidate of the party out ol power has more ammunition than the nominee of the party in power. One may criticize whatever has been done." This is true, but In a 'limited way. People DO Read SPOT ADS -you ore! BILL JENKINS Managing Editor SUBSCRIPTION RATES BX CARRIER 1 month l.SS 6 months $ 8.10 1 year SI6.20 people, leaves me cold. The only possible use I can visualise for such a gadget is to use in shutting off the alarm before it wakes one up completely. But the third possibility, that of "seeing an earthquake coming." there is a different loud of poles entirely. Isn't life complicated enough as It is? Is It necessary that Evil Scientists. Ltd. should further burden mankind with a fruitful strewing of mental blocs and hazards? Aren't radio and television the final end? Now these inhuman creatures would have us sitting around watching the screen waiting for an earthquake to show up. What's wrong with the good old fashioned method of waiting till the roof falls In? I notice that fwhile Uiese gentlemen t I use the term loosely i keep going about perfecting ways of putting an ap proaching earthquake on your TV screen they do nothing, absolutely nothing, about stopping said earth quake. If an earthauakr is about to belt I me out from under my hat I prefer I to De taken oy surprise, at -least in a relative fashion. Nope! You can have your earth quake predictor if you wish and sit and watch vour doom approach. Me, I'll stick' to The Old Farm er's Almanac and head for the wide open spaces when Uncle Eph says to. said one of his comrades. "Me was at Dunkirk and I guess he can't take a second one " ("I do hope we get to see the Pope," said Frances, "do you think he can just look at me and tell I'm a Presbyterian? They say he's one of Uie smartest men in Uie-world.") The memories unrolled more swiftly a dead doughboy In a brook, his features luminous under the water, one pale hand touching the bank with a curious languor Ernie Pyle peering from a sleeping bag like a surprisel elf. Standing at twilight on the peaceful Isle of Capri and watch ing Naples burn ...the sight of a flaming Nazi plane, twining down like a lazy falling star in Uie blacc ness nurses pulling wounded men from under a hospital tern blown down in a sudden storm. losing a helmet and picking up another one bearing the Initials of a man who would no longer neeo. It '"Now where have you lost your toothbrush?" said Frances. "Who took care of you during the war? I'll bet you didn't brush your teeth once In .the -whole tour years.") In my mind swam a picture ot the stricken valley crossed by the Rapido River beneath a terrible hill called Cassino it they put up a cross for every man killed or wounded there, it would be white forest. there was a day we tried to make It all the way. and there were just too many Germans and we hid in an old stone farm house an elderly Italian coupie sat oy a dying lire, preferring to face death in their own borne, it face it they must. As the shells beat nearer out side, the wife reached out and took her husband's wrinkled hand In t her own ..... they were still sitting siiemiy togetner wnen we leu and where are they now? ("Come on. you day dreamer, we're all packed." said Frances. "The way you look a body'd get I tne laea you aidn t want to go back.") True, responsibility tor anything that's been done, in decisions made or laws passed, rests finally on the doorstep of the party which con trolled Congress and the executive branch. It would be true If the two big po litical parties regularly routed of fice every four years since even tour years of one administration would provide the opposition with a hatful of things to criticize. And it's particularly true in the case of the Democrats, who have controlled both Congress and the executive branch for Uie past 20 years except for two years. But, while the party in for 20 years provides the outs with wid er target than if it had been in tor only four, the 20-year outs provide Juicier pickings than if they had been out for only four. In 20 years the out-party Is bound to develop a character of its own and a history that can be exam ined. In that much time it be comes pretty clearly identified In the public mind with a predictable attitude. YOU DON'T GET "SOMETHING FOR NOTHING!" Rkher milk at lower prices".:, is it a vott-getting promise or a fact? This out-of-state grocery chain hasn't delivered the goods in areas where price is uncontrolled. VOTE. 333 x N. . 14 Adt. kr Ott&ON Hlllt PlOOUCdt' COMHITTtt, Onttt, Wr Mr., til Cnttlt IM f.il. I, Oftt. They'll Do It Every DrOOPIMA PRESERVES EVERyTMlrJo BUT TUE OLD MASlS EQUILIBRIUM"" S&5 i iWTHl SuTSSl IffiRWES?; MUCH WH7 Tt o?& A .Tiff I L YOU LIKE IT iH EKES yT trS5"-V vzgS!? V W Eisenhower Slashes Truman Leadership In Effort To Break Demo Hold On South Bv DON WHITEHEAD EN ROUTE WITH EISENHOW- ER uf) Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhow- er strove michtllv today to smash, the Democratic hold on the Solid i South while holding out a promise ,ox leaaeisiup wmcn wuuia provide a firm base on which to build last ing world peace. For the second straight dav he rampaged through his home state of Texas blasting at the Truman administration with scorn and sar casm. His accusation was the clear Im plication at least that the Truman leadership had failed to win the respect of America's allies and even the Kremlin. And he said these were necessary if peace is to be won. FRANK Soon after Uie railroads went through a hundred years ago they created a slogan that became a part 01 the country's language. Ev ery man who drove the bignways, every child who trudged to school. laced it at every railroad cross ing: "Slop-Look Listen." Packed Into those three words was a warning which. If heeded, would have sved thousands of lives over the last century. Cross ing accidents have cost more lives than have railroad wrecks. Be cause people didn't stop, look and listen. It seems a human weakness to become so accustomed to a warn ing that it loses itn effectiveness. By the time he enters kindergar ten Willie has heard "Willie, don't dear" so often that it goes in one ear and out theother. To really deter Willie it becomes necessary to chain htm to a tree. Which is cruelty to children, pagau, smothers personality and Initiative, psychologists say. Nevertheless of ten only fetters would have saved Willie from some dire experience. America is crowded with grown up Willies who should be shack led to a cart and led to Uie polls. Before something dire happens to them which could be to their lib erty. To be safe and sure at to day's crossroads, we must beed a new warning: "Read Think Vote." There is something very signifi cant about the wording of this new warning. The warning which was Invented to save life and limb said "look, listen." that Invented to save men's freedom says "read, think." Our forefathers who gave us this country didn't need such a warn ing. To be informed they had to read. Sober reading makes men think. Makes them think, uninflu enced by pleasant personalities, charming voices, theatrical sur roundings and dramatized propa ganda. Printed lies have no such traps to distort people's thinking. They are much more easily detected. "Read, think, vote" recognizes a new era of communication, con venient and thrilling In Its overall application, but alarming In its ac ceptance as the last and only word by lazv mind, easily led; and par ticularly children. There is start ling reason to shout from the house tops: "Read. Think." To many Reds Arrested For Pillage , BORDEAUX. France I Two di rectors of the Communist news psper Les Nouvelles de Bordeaux have been arrested and charged with provoking pillage. The charge was an outgrowth jf a Communist sscklng of the U. 8. Information Service office here last May, The Reds smashed into U8IS headquarters during gntl-Rldgway riots, tore up large numbers of American publications and caused heavy damage. The newspaper published a story calling the raid "a ''victory for France." The two directors are Henri Bordage and Raoul Martinez. Time , it I M JDOT TO THIS tW WUBBy MASM'T TASTED OMe OF H5R RJT-UP JOBS .'AMD HE'S THE OMiy OKE IM TOWN1 WHO HASnIT.' icrr VttLt WAIT i 7 X IrJSIST VOO TAKE W r i . 7 i WO OLE MOW 1 I 6AVE-.IVE Warmed by a series of rousing birthday receptions yesterday his 62nd birthday the general aimed his fire on Ft. Worth and Dullas today. Then he will fly Into Tennes- see for speeches at Memphis and ivuoxvuic ociure returning to ivew York He chose the Alamo in San An tonio the birthplace of Texas In dependence from Mexico to out line his views lust night on how best to achieve peace. But before he spoke. Texas Oov. Allan Shivers called him the can didate who stands for the Demo cratic principles that Texans re spect. Shivers said there were many Texans who never before had voted for a candidate "who wore any TRIPP just "look and listen." "Read, think, vote" also recog nizes man's dependence upon the printed word If he Is to think and vote Intelligently. Looking and list ening may be sufficient at a rail road crossing but it gives little true background of the man at the throt tle of the oncoming locomotive. There is no sure way to find out as the train dashes by. The engineer could mug an Infectious smile, wave a cheery salute, toss off a bundle ot money, and get the yokel vote for president of the railroad. Then crash into the rear end of a tratnload of deluded excursionists, who thought they were en route to Utopia. No Intelligent person could read himself Into any such fool's para dise, against his will. Plenty can be led there If what they see and hear Is not checked against the past and current record: In history books and unfettered, unbeholden printed me dia that speak what they think, whether or not one agrees with their conclusions. Our Democracy faces the threat that led Illiterate peoples Into bondage. They, perforce, had to de pend upon what they heard. They heard what despots wanted them to hear. They were lost before they learned that they were mere pawns In a web of political intrigue. One need not be illiterate to be likewise enslaved. He needs only to stop reading and thinking to drift with a tide of national shlftlessness. Wherein he falls to produce as much as he consumes; comfortably and unconsciously approaching closer each year to the brink ol economic disaster. One who reads and thinks there by checks what he hears and will choose his course through logic and 1 understanding, particularly if he reads the history ot nations that have fallen. Then, when he votes, whichever way It mav be, -he can say to his children, with sincerity and reason: "This is my Judgment of what is best for us." Right or wrong, he was not led by the mob or the glib words ot selfseeklng demagogs not even by well meaning politicians. WE GIVE S.BdH GREEN STAMPS 3 Fashion Cleaners 129 So. 7th Ph. 5563 LI A JAx.DCKlvlA'-HERES Y CUE FOR MXM? AOTHEr? I By J imniy 1 1.ulo MY MAIMA sear me oftfR.-vr 5HE WANTS YW TO TASTE TUIS-.. . other mantle but that ot the Demo cratic parly." He said: "Our decision to de part from tradition has not been an easy one. It hud lo be based on Issues and concepts more funda mental than puny regularity. It had to be strong enough to over come the accumulated prejudices of many decades . . " Then he added his belief that El. senhower rather than Democratic presidential nominee Adlui Steven son could best capitalize on social gains "meanwhile ruthlessly shearing away the red tape, oust ing the bunglers, eradicating the Communists and socialists." Police estimated that from 15.000 tn 90 Onn nnnU vathereH l !h Alamo Plus t hear Elsenhower. Tn . i. - . - .i I " "V. " ? M. " "If we Americans do not fully re- spect our own leadership, you can be certain that this leaaershlp will have diminished prestige abroad. And. unless our leadership Is re spected abroad, it will neither be trusted nor freely followed. "Our cspaclty to influence other nations will be frittered away, can you blame the peoples who dwell In the .h.rit,, f Ih. Kr.mlln f, In the shsdow of the Kremlin for failing to understand the kind of leadership lhat could still say, tn IMS. of a ruthless dictator: 'I like old Uncle Joe. He is a decent fel low.' " (This was a reference to a ststement by Truman In IMSi. Then Elsenhower said that the Congress of Uie Soviet Republic met last week for the first time In 13 years and "a Moscow leader launched an attack upon an Amer ican." He said: "Such a thing never happened before. But the auack wasn't leveled at the man who said he liked old Uncle Joe Stalin. I'm proud to ssy. that It was dl- reeled exclusively at me and my efforts to help promote a strong and secure free world." F I ..nhin'.r . . ... I h.s . ton. points as Uie essential cornerstones tor world peace; I. An America that Is strong militarily and spiritually. 3. Integrity In Uie national lead- ershlp In Wafhington which would have the respect of other nations, 3. Free allies with a common bond ot Interest so "soundly forged" that no aggressor would dare attack 4 An active United Nations made Into "a workable road to world peace." FOR CITY itVf V A. Nf ... 1951-1952 AUDIT Purchasing Control During the administration of Folic Judqt Robtrt Elder a purchaia control system was actirattd resulting in the lorgeit increase In unappropriated General Fund surplus accruing to the City within the past ten yean. The lurplui unappropriated in the General Fund en July wt, 1951, amounted to $50,717.99 and en June 30, 1952, aggregated $64,845.88; gaining during the year )he mm of $14,127.89. The further deyelopment of this pur chasing system to all fundi will yield additional tar ings in the future. I have served by appointment at Police Judge and it i my desire to be elected your Felice Judge. I will serve you faithfully at ell times, with respect. Your vote en election day will be deeply appreciated. Stevenson Promises Clean Government: Says No Easy Way To End Korean War Ily J'A( K MM. I, SPOKANE, WshIi. i.tv-tlov. Atllnl P. aievpnson said today (hat tun. Dwlglit 1?. Klacnhowcr knows full well "there Is no trick that can cud the Korean Wat." ' The Democratic presidential nominee, encouraged bv repurts of humming strength in Utah If not Wyoming pushed hla cumpalgn to the Paclllo Northwest Willi a (.harp attack on his Republican oppo nent's stand on Korea, foreign pot. Icy and publlo power development. Saying that Elsenhower has Im plied "lhat we could bring our men home (mm Korea suon If we would only train some South Kore an aoldleis to lake their places," Stevenson declined In a speech prepared for a slreot-curimr rnllv: "I will not play politics with war and pence. Our men are fighting In Korea' so they will not have tu fight In Alaska or Spokane or Omaha. "They will come home from Ko rea Just an soon as our nallnniil safely penults. And, for my pint. I deplore the suggestion that Uiev come home any sooner. -mere is no trick that can end the Korean War and I am sure the general knows this full well." As he had In Wyoming and Utah yesterday, the Illinois noun nor preached the Democratic doctrine that Americana never had It ao kond, In a material way. lie added to this the in online. In a seech prepared lor delivery In rennieion. uie.. later in the after noon, that If he Is elected "I In tend to run a clean, honest gov ernment. " "What Is more." he said, "I know what 1 am talking about. 1 nave cieancu up a lol of evil Re publican practices In Illinois and : cracked duwn quickly and ruthlpsM ly on iiiifti'oitduct wherever I have lound It." The Illinois governor said that If he Is elecled, he will run an eco nomical government. He said he knew about lliut loo. . THE DOCTOR SAYS By I-:DWIN P. JOItDAN, M. D, Part of a long letter from a ; reader w ill aerve to Introduce most IlllDOrtallt BUblPCl. a u b i t c I. She I writes: "I learned earlv about how an ! Inferiority comnlex devrloD, bv bavins to wear peculiar c.othes. nd b having no Hme lor play or social adjustment. Another lesson ih iti-i nilot.llu wis thai If I Intended to survive 1 was going ! equally useful for those who are to have to fight back occasionally. I ""o writer of the letter quoted Is It any w-jnder Uiat I soon devet-: 11 beginning of this column, oped a critical, auspicious. dls-1 ' Pamphlet Is called "Gelling trusllul dislike for people?" 1 "cady to Retire," and can be ob Tnis reader says she married at , ",c " ,,le non profit tduca. " ,' .flnv 1 V POMCd. She adds. 18. has two sons, and now 33 years But now. with the boys away at school most ol the lime, my home Is like a morgue, and days drag, and I am wondering about what lo do with Uie remaining 30 or so years of my life. I am really not ?.. i.. .11., i rf.v.Ton iw elderly that I can t develop lewr tresis even It I do wear interests. glasses for reading, aewing and close work, but I have got to change my attitude toward people." This reader presents a problem "cn minions. "S.y Jween Uie ages ol 40 and H, are I 'wed In varying degrees . The buy V" ol ra sing children to P"'"1 "r u,7 remn,r" less lndeoendenl and adult slip by rapidly, and suddenly the mothers In particular, are faced with carv ing out new Interests and acllvlllet to replace those which kept them busy for so many years. Practically the same probelm hits the fathers, too, but later ' hen they come near the time to iretne from Uieir life work. Both problems, however, are similar, Most human beings who are ,iot physically or mentally IncapaeU i la"'d do hot take well to doing nothing. Consequently, planning and adjusting either to the growth 1 of a family or retirement requires POLICE JUDGE - Robert M. Experienced and Qualified 19 Years Law Enforcement Your vote wili Vili ho airoaflv iH 1 Appreciated "I have run a tlght-tlxtetl, bal anced budget government In I'll-nola-and 1 hail lo do II, Incidental, ly, without niiii'h help from a He publican Legislature,'1 he declared, adding: "When It comes to economy in government, I will gladly weigh the experience and training ol a governor any day aloinihiile that of any military man. Until tills cam. palgn, I had not heard that "gener als were exactly celebialrd for Ihnlr devotion lo economy." In Bait f.ake City's Jain-packrd Mormon Tabernacle last nlitht, Ste venson made a quick revlilon In Ills picpurcd text wilrn lie sensed the temper ol the crowd deleting 111 particular a blast at Elsenhower for his assertion that American prosperity Is built on war orders lu industry. He seemed to have picked up the crowd and carried It with him, which he apparently fulled tn-do III an earlier appearance at Casper, Wvo. In his prepared lext, he had anld lhl was "the Kremlin alory" and gave comfori to the Commuulsta. He deleted this and oilier passage. The oflltial explaiiulliui front Wil liam Flanagan, hla press secretary, was Hint Uie changes were made because the candidate was running out ol radio and television time. The Democratic nominee more than matched the crowds which greeted Elsenhower on hla visit t Hall l,e last Filday. Police said Stevenson attracted about 10. 000 more persons on the streets, but i,.a i onn r.w .... ... .1.- . . ... .. ' . . mo oreinow iioiu tne laoernacie, jammed to capacity by boUl can- ' ' Stevenson's text changes enlly were made on a spui iiiuuiriH urvisiuii io seeu run rr. nark, on a high level, without branching olf Into .Unci, on Kl- senhower and Sen. Hubert A. T. i nsi. ...,i..r i i ......it... moment decision to keep his re """V" - 'w wn-hlsdlence was moaUy ..-(.it..-," ..A.i i some Intelligent thought, prefer- I ably belore meat events actually occur. Some Useful activity which the ! person likes and dues well wh.T l. ...elst de.... ,7. ,,, . ... . ! k.""1 '.' Kr"1'' ! pamphlet has come lo mv alien Uon which seem, to me should be l particular value. and. while r snuuia oei deinfd lor those " aro about 'to rein e, h should be almost - """""""" " "e 38th St., New York It, N.' Y lor 2J cents. DIES AFTER ItEMft'K BERLIN OT Max Becker, 11. Jumped Into Tegel lake Wednesday nlJ lwo.year-old grand- d , drowning. When be reached ahore, he dropped dead ol nean attack I fr J W Specialist In 1 V CUSTOM COLOR MIXIH5 M U A D a ed. ft and 1229 Eatf Main Sr. Itttrt t. Dm 'lit Me cur ui IUMU ttUt. 0r 4 erult an all Z. rtuUUit IM Man, tf i7,u, ; w .1 l Mi.. Ml la ftr rar.raaaa avf..... th.l M a. Ml ..rr auk .rt.Lt. -Ul I... r ra.L. u.rt M.tt aw Ntxnt-Uatlm w r- t Iftaralt liaWira (BtntfaJiittniHi! Oregon utf 2Jttm town 4r U Umwnn Of Ouem Hmnmm UiffiFh at aMtwfaOj nmftiud Traflic Court fudges and moM ouooh rswuttr isn m Fold silent for I lie first lew mlnu'.oa of Ills lulk, the crowd anon wurini'il to Ills thesis Hint II Americana tinvo enough faith In ihemselven, they can leud the world to peace and prosierlly. Ho was interrupted ;U limes by applause In Uie last 20 minutes of hla 30 minute talk. Expanding hla views on Korea Hlevensun on lit In his prepared Hpnkane talk Hint the United Hiatrn Incea "a long, lough bitter atruggln to preserve fieedum" all over Uie world. "We know In our heniia, all of us, that II Is childish to ilipon there Is any slmpln solution, any eniy aimwei ," ho auhL "The lives of our suns are involved now, whllo we are fighting In Korea, The lives of everyone would be Involved It Hint t'linlllct wete to glow Into world war. ... "All of us know that v. nut Is abend Is a dangerous, expensive, painful truggiea struggle Hint can only be won lor eaca and freedom If we are willing to put our brains, our money, our sweat and our blood into the effort. "Those are the fucUi. You know them I know them. And we once had reason to suppose that Uia generrl knew them " Instead, he said Elsenhower "has been asking people to vole for men who have protested ami opposed and hamstrung our for eign pulley measure." Turning to domestic Issues, ho said Klseiihuwer "did not always talk sense lo tne ropie in n- eussinu such mutters as powrg ,t.,,t,IIMt(.ttl "" . .. , . , ' "" .?AreJmed". nnveriuncnl engineers dreameu i i,i...r nd "planned" Clrnnd Coulee l)m r-o tl e-'ifor "ninny Republican years" be V 1 ! ii ., stnl ted In 1034. It took ." ,. ." n . .... it,, I Franklin D. Itoos e ve It to gc t the ' l"rd- 1,0 " lU: l "J" ', " . OOP members o 'Tr eo ed the project a "while ele- r" ... .-coio,,,! fraud, "Th, U steps Umi need to be tnkeu lo strengthen and develop our nation they oppose before Ihev are done and while thry are being dune. Altcrwards they take the credit. Well, the Russians snv they In vented baseball. He said he gathered from F.ljen- IS"" , '", 0 .,, WV the government r.hnuld b. mixed up in resource development at all " "He used some very ugly Ian- u" ."TV' .Z . ,u .. no,,' . , - " oe,,,,!,-,' busiuesa." he anld. "What la all this about a 'wnof, hog' government pushing tta no lnln evervona'a life? T "It Pi a myth, a fable-end It comes mast strongly from a man who has spent virtually his en tire life as a servant of that gov ernment he now professes lo tear so much." riNI mOTOORAFHY STUDIO PHONE 4526 - PAINT STORE rhont 3324 "Bob11 Elder I OF OREEOI CIIIIS -gssss . . . . ""' W " w a -rTtalJS" if i! th.M4. ha. Zm Z .. , h..l rr7rt.ta.at Z rt. a.. Ur, a tall In. ra Sat Pianos of Higher -Education Tswr harrmtf. th Mf arrawali tf la, Prosecutors Conlercnct Adv. by Robert M. "Bob" Elder