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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 21, 1959)
QtjC 3letU$'ltemCtJJ Published by News-Review Co. Inc., 545 S.E. Main St., Roteburg, Ore. Cbarfes V. Stanton Editor and Manager George Castillo Addye Wright Assistant Editor Business Managtr Member of the Associated Press. Oregon Newspaper Publisheri Association, the Audit Bureau of Circulation Entered as second class matter May 7, 1920, at the post office a Roseburg, Oregon, under act of March 2, 187J Subscription Rates on Classified Advertising Page EDITORIAL PAGE 4 The News-Review, Roseburg, PARTY CONVENTION By Charles V. Stanton The Democratic Party in Orrfron this year is preparing to do something it has been contended in this column time and again should bo done. The narty is planning to hold county and slate conventions. Details haven't yet been worked out in full, but the general plan has been announced. Committees are being formed to handle details. Appear ances are that one of the first conventions will be held here in Douglas County. If the Democrats get together for caucus and conven tion, we may expect that Republicans will follow suit. It is in keeping with the past that Republicans are slow about adopting new ideas and methods and will be forced into ac tion by the more liberal and free-and-easy Democrats. Hut I think it is safe to assume, both parties will use a semi convention system in the immediate future. It has been my belief for many years that our existing primary system is next to useless. In fact, I see in our present method the complete destruction of parties event ually and the substitution of a system favorable to self starters and opportunists. No Parry Brakes The political party vehicle presently is completely with out brakes. It must take any passenger who wants to ride on the party bandwagon, regardless of ability, party con tribution, general efficiency. All a candidate needs is suf ficient popularity to get voles and the party must accept him. If we are to continue our present practice, why should we have parties? Of what value is a party platform or policy? No candidate is required to follow party dictates. He can do as he pleases. He is more or less independent in his political actions. He can follow a course exactly op posite to that charted by his party, and there's nothing the parly can do about it. It can't boot him off the band wagon. It can't put brakes on his career. It must carry him regardless of whether he pays his fare or is a con genial passenger. It seems to me that a political party should have some voice concerning what candidate, or candidates, should bear the party name and label. It seems to me that the party should tell those registered with that party whether a candidate has qualifications and policies entitling him to wear the party name and to represent the party in an elec tion. Such policy would not prevent competition. 'Where two or more qualified men sought the same office it wouldn't be necessary for the party leaders to favor one above the other, provided both qualified one man was a good Democrat, one who had contributed to the welfare ot the party, and effective manner, and had all necessary qualifications, while his opponent was a demagogue and opportunist, seek ing to no elected only because he figured he could get the most votes by enlisting as a Democrat, the party should have the right to make a recommendation to its members. No one would be bound by the recommendation. Anv self starter still could get into the race. But to get the party nod he would have to prove himself worthy. Strong Parties Needed Many times the statement has been made in this col umn that we need strong political parties. I don't believe, however, that parties should become so strong that an in dependent wouldn't be considered. Political candidacy al ways should be open to any man seeking office. The 'man should be considered on his merits. He should bo able to enter the primaries as an independant. If. however, he elects to enter a campaign as a representative of a politi cal party, then the membership of that party should have something to say whether he is or is not acceptable. Another thing is that we have divisions within political parties. Democratic leadership in Oregon in lata venrs has swung far to the left. That is a radiail departure for Ore gonians who for many years have been in the conservative ranks. Hut the Democratic Parly also has a conservative clement. Conservatives haven't had much chance in late years. The play has been taken away from them bv the so-caueu minerals. the Liberals probably will control any party conven tion. At the same time the conservative element will make demands. Compromise is one of the most valuable factors in politics. It Prevents rxt romps ill Pit hni i i I'nnl inn Wit U the party meeting in convention, it undoubtedly will be able to exert a measure of discipline, will reach a more favorable compromise with its conservative wing, will put some teeth in its policies and platform and will exhibit a far more responsible side. It may take several years to work out a satisfactory convention system. But the fact that the start has been made is most gratifying to me. W. Governors' Meet Bans Presidential Policy Talk SUN VALLEY. Idaho (AP)-If there is one thing Democrats who will attend Ihe Western Gover nors Conference agree upon.- it is thai presidential politics should be kept off stage. Six of them and five of their Republican counterparts will be on hand for the Thursday opening of Ihe five-day conference at this southern Idaho resort. Some of the observers seem to think Gov. Edmund Brown of California will take this opportun ity to wet his political finger and wave it aloft. Brown and hi aides have de nied any such intentions. Fellow Democrats say in effect: "That's fine. This is no place for I960 maneuvers, anyway." Democratic Govs, Joseph J. llickcy of Wyoming, S. L. R. McNichols of Colorado, John Bur roughs of New Mexico, Allied Rosellini of Washington, Grant Sawyer of Nevada, and Brown will attend. Gov. William A. Ecan of Alaska said he ia too busy. If Nixon Rum? Asked in in Associated Press Ore. Mon., Sept. 21, 1959 as party members. But if who had acted in an efficient poll if (hey thought there are other Westerners heside Brown who would he strong nominees. Mickey admired McNichols, Bur roughs couldn't think o( any, Ros- euini sain mere are oiners. Saw yer said he knew of none, Mc Nichols liked several he did not name, and Brown also admired several, including McNichols and Rosellini. Do these Democrats think their party should consider a Western er, particularly a Califomian. if it appears Vice President Rich ard M. Nixon might be the GOP choice? To Ilirkcy, the thought lh.it Democrats might he concerned with what Republicans do was "un-American." McNichols said: "I don't think that (the state in which a man resides! has anything to do with it. I have no prennliccs against a California candidate or one from any other section." Sawyer was more emphatic. He said: "If Nixon wins the nomina tion, a Weslerner should certain ly be represented on the ticket ; not particularly a Califomian." -In The Day's News .By FRANK Thi is written in Portland, whore Ihe 100-day-old Oregon Cetennial exposition endrd last night in a hlazcof glory. The slory was The Oregon Story Ihe dramatic epic that yanked the Centennial out of its doldrums and ended it on a note of high achievement that sent some 3700 Orcgonians home at midnight with a new i thrill of faith in their state whose glamorous history had so much to do with the expansion of the United Slates of America from the Allan lie lo the Pacific and its rise from a struggling union of 13 little col onies lo the rank of the world's greatest nation. For some three hours the great figures of the past strode the mul tinle stages and thronged the arena of the Exposition auditorium. The packed audience mere wasn I even spare space for two addi tional feet to have stood upon watched while Ouecn Elizabeth I summoned Sir Francis Drake be fore her and commanded and com missioned him to find the fabled Northwest Passage. He didn't find it but he found waters thronged with sea otters and other wearers of fabulous furs. Furs then were WEALTH. They saw the crowned heads of Europe Russia, Spain. Britain lay their plans to get their share of this wealtn. They saw Napoleon broach his crafty scheme to sell Louisiana lo the infant U.S.A. and thus found a nation that might STOP ENGLAND, Napoleon's foe. They saw President Jefferson com mission Lewis and Clark to find Ihe great River of Ihe West and the path it might provide to the Western Ocean. Thev saw a Yankee trader enter the Columbia and lay the founda tion that eventually established America's lawful claim to the Ore gon Country. Ihcv saw the great arena crowd ed with the wagons of land-hungry settlers and missionaries and In- James Marlow Psychological Problem' Seen In K's Outbursts WASHINGTON (AP) Nikila Khrushchev sounds like a genial undertaker. The Soviet Premier can tell jokes but he has repeat edly talked of death in one form or another since he came here. A psychologist might find it gloomy that Khrushchev, who switches from humor to anger in a flash and who has Ihe power to turn the cold war hot instantly, dwells so much on corpses. graves, annihilation, burial and death. He told the West three years ago "We will bury you," explaining when he got here that he had meant communism would prove itself superior lo capitalism. He said he didn't mean the physical act of burying. Nevertheless, "bury" must be high in his consciousness. At the United Nations he spoke of the need to bury a dead man meaning the Formosan govern ment of Chiang Kai-shek and urged that the "corpse" be carted away. At one time he mentioned the power of nuclear weapons to take a "terrible toll in human lives" and at another warned they could cause the "annihilation of human beings." Morbid Phrases Listed Ho referred to the colonial svs- tem as "moribund," said a ques tion about the Soviet Union s part in crushing the Hungarian revolu tion was a "dead rat stuck in your throat," and talked of Easl West peace as a "question of the life or death of people." He wondered out loud in I.os Angeles if he should commit sui cidethis was supposed to be a joke because he couldn't see Dis neyland, and he called for American-Soviet assurance of peace lest the earth be "covered with ashes and graves." Khrushchev is not a simple man. Now, having elbowed bis way to the top of the Communist heap, he is used to having his wav without contradiction. That Sens. Kennedy, Symington, Humphrey Gird For Drives To Capture Party Support WASHINGTON (AP) Three Democratic senators popularly be lieved to be in pursuit ol their party's presidential nomination are going to be out on the cam paign trail from one end of the country to the other this fall. The three, Sens. John F. Kenne dy (Mass). Hubert H. Humphrey iSlinn). and Smart Symington (Moi. were off on speaking trips 1 almost Ihe minute Congress ad I journed last Tuesday, j Of the trio, only Humphrey is opcnlv a candidate, and his an nouncement was made for him by friends. But the schedules they will he following in the next three months leave little doubt ot what they have in mind. Tho two other Democratic sena tors who are possible contenders (or the IDtVO White House race, Lyndon B. Johnson (Tex) and F.s ( Kcfauver tTenn), are confining their touring this fall to their home stales. Both are up for re- i election next year, ' Oregon In Itineraries Humphrey's Senate term also ' expires next year, and he w ill de- vote part of his time to Minne : sola in the next few weeks, break : ing off how and then for sprints j to other stales. Both Humphrey and Kennedy will spend several riavs each in W isconsin and Oregon, IvO of the slate where they are most likely to clash in (he lftii) presidential primaries. Aides of Kennedy, Humphrey, JENKINS; dians and fur traders and with ad venturers of all sorts. Later still ' They saw the discovery of GOLD in California and Southern Oregon the treasure that turned the eyes of the world toward the Pacific Coast. . .the gold that financed the Civil. War that settled once .and for all that the United States would be ONE NATION, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all. lt was a wonderful story. It can't be retold here. But it was skil fully and thrillingly told there in the arena of the Exposition- audi torium last night. V . It sent its Oregon audience home with a new understanding of the greatness of the part played by their state in their nation's rise and with a new vision of its place in the future. It was a fitting climax to the Hundred Days out of which a new and more vital and more, dynamic Oregon will be almost certain to arise. You can't stop a common wealth whose people BELIEVE IN THEIR DESTINY. The Oregon Story sent those 3700 Oregonians home BELIEVING IN THEIR STATE and with new faith in its destiny. What of the Centennial? Well. . . It didn't show a profit. It is probable that it will cost the tax payers of the state maybe a couple of million dollars. But what's a couple of million dollars to a mil lion and a half people if the enter prise financed by the two millions reinspiros them with hope and en thusiasm? Divided up equally on a per capita basis, it amounts lo only a little more than a dollar and a quarter apiece. Out of the Centennial. I think, has come a NEW knowledge of Ihe romantic and fascinating and SIG NIFICANT backgrounds of .Ihe State of Oregon that will he worth far more than a dollar and a quar ter to each of its people. may explain his sudden spurls of anger when he thinks he is short circuited or affronted. But there is another possible ex planation: that he is a lot less self-assured than he tries to ap pear. It would be easy, judging from things he' says, to consider him arrogant. But that may be only a com pensation for deep-rooted inferior ity. Khrush Not Confident His repeated boasts about Soviet power and his brandishing of rockets, even on this visit, are not the language of a man truly self-confident that Soviet power is acknowledged and respected. Ho spends too much time trying lo compel respect too much time at least for a man who firmly believes he has respect. He is quick-witted. He's tough. But he is also impetuous for ex ample, his bad temper with the mayor of Los Angeles and (his raises questions about his stabil ity and his patient endurance un der stress. This is probably a matter of concern for Western leaders in dealing with him. It's possible he's been putting on an act here, using temper, backed by Soviet power, as a kind of blackjack. But the temper is there. If Khrushchev's performance so far could be summed up in a sen tence, this might be it: he lacks the grace of . a man who is really sure of himself. Yet Khrushchev himself, in talk ing at the U.N., pointed out how disastrous the instability of one man could be at a time when one trigger-pull on a hydrogen we;ipon could start a war or destroy a city. He said then: "The world has reached a point where on the strength of no more than some ridiculous accident, such as a technical fault in a plane taming a hydrogen bomb or mental aber ration in the pilot behind the con trols, may translate war into real ity." and Symington report that each senator has had to turn down more engagements than he could accept. Congress ran so Lite this year that some dates for early September had to be canceled. Kennedy's office said requests for appearances have been comi.ig into his office at the rate of 6.000 to 8.0(H) a year, which figures out to around 20 a day. "We have some people spending all their time just writing regret letters." an aide said. "We can accept less than 1 per cent." Munich 'Suds' Festival Opens; 45c Per Schooner MUNICH. Germanv (API .Municn s annual ociober festival opened totlav with beer the price of Bavaria's favorite bev- crage iroosieu live cents. The hike from 1.70 marks 40 cents to 1 90 marks 45 cents for the famed stein holding about a quart resulted from high I or laoor cosis. orewers said, and j w ill only last until the festival lan.U lift A MEAT DESTROYED MEXICO CITY (AP) - Seven teen hundred pounds of purported I pork sausage have been detrovcd by the Health Ministry. Officials explained it was more (haa 70 per cent horse meat. Girl Quits Parents On Their Departure For Native Russia BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP) A tall and pretty blonde teen-ager chose to stay in Argen tina while her Soviet parents and her elder sister sailed away to the Soviet Union. Margarita Celia Lisowsky, 15, told reporters today she had been fighting for months against her parents' decision to go to the Soviet Union but finally knuckled down Friday. Argentine policemen, however, saw her board the French liner Provence as she was about to sail and told the girl she could refuse lo go with her family because she was born in Ihis country. She agreed and police escorted her from the vessel and took her to a slate home for unattended chil dren. 1 There she told newsmen her father, Pedro Lisowsky, worked as a carpenter specializing '.n lay ing down 'parquet floors; that he and her mother came to Argen tina nearly a quarter century ago hut for months had been planning lo go home to Kazakhstan. Sister Changes Mind Her sister l.idia Ana. 21, and also Argentine-born, agreed to go with her parents but Margarita twice in June and again in August forced the family to abandon travel plans. She said she told her parents she was strongly against communism. After long" insistence by her par ents, she agreed lo go but when Ihe police offered their protection slip changed her mind. "This is my country." she said. "I do not want to go to Russia even for a short time." No comment on the case was forthcoming cither from the So viet Embassy or the Argentina foreign Ministry. Propaganda Clash Slated AC World Fair In India WASHINGTON (AP) - A major propaganda skirmish between Communism and capitalism is ihinng nn fnf lha Vir.i W.M Agricultural Fair in India this winter. This fair will he a h,iiion, in the propaganda field," George V. Allen, director of the U.S. In- formation Agency, said Friday. Allen outlined American plans for the fair at a news conference along with Secretary of Agricul- ...... .b.n ... uMiauii, ijunmu i. Gardner of the Atomic Enercv Commission, and Nathaniel Know- les. general manager of the U.S.1 exhibit The Soviet Union, Communist n,in onj ii,, r tries will have exhibits at Ihe fair in New Delhi from Dec. 11 to Feb. tily nd formula. 14. i it's the same in the forests. But The U.S. exhibit will cover five the questions that need to be ans acres and cost about two million wcred in making up biological de dollars, including industry's con- ficiencies are: What? When?How? tributions in machinery and the And how much? like. Benson said the exhibit will aim Agencies Cooperate at convincing Asian farmers that vital increases in agricultural pro- duction can be pbtaincd only with a free economy. the Atomic Energy Commission will demon strate "the new tool of the farmer Ihe atom in Ihe production of better and cheaper food crops." Plastic Bags Kill 2 Little Sisters J1EXBURG, Idaho (AP) Two sisters were found dead with plastic bags over their heads. They were Jackie Olson. 8, and Jan Tompkins, 4, half sisters and daughters of Mr. and Mrs. . Al Tompkins of Rcxburg. Officers said a neighbor found the children in the Johnson motel while Ihe mother was asleep about 10:45 a.m. The neighbor called for help. Police tried lo revive them with resuscitators. hut were unsuccess ful. A physician said the younger girl had been dead at least an hour. The father was in Salt Lake City, working for an aluminum company. Madison County Coroner Russell Flamm said there would be no in quest. AGAINST TESTS LONDON (AP) Britain's la bor party promised today that a Laborite government would not resume nuclear weapons tests even if other nations broke the! truce now in force. ANNOUNCING NEW HEARING AID Representative , ED SHIPLER CALL OR SEE TUES., WED., THURS. Of Each Week at CHAPMAN'S PHARMACY 663 SE Jackson OR 3-4533 Shakespeare's Touring News By GEORGE CASTILLO Asst. Editor, News-Review The sun rises shortly after 6 a m. early in September at Sttatford-upon-Avon. I know because I met it one morning while waiting in line for two of Ihe few remaining tickets to a play in the Shakespeare .Memor ial Theatre. The theater saves about 110 seal and standing room tickets until the day of performance. The rush for them is terrific. The doorman told me a group of students held places in the line 'H hours a day all the previous week. They, luckily, had gone by the time we arrived in Stratford. I was sixth in line when I arrived at the theater shortly after 6 a.m. The fruits of the early rising were tickets to "A Midsummer Night's Dream." It was good and the acting of Charles l.aughton as Bottom, the tailor, made it better. Rut I was just as impressed wi:b the first show I saw at Ashland's Shakespearian Festival. I was more impressed with the Ashland setting which appears to duplicate the Elizabethan atmos phere in which Shakespeare's plays were performed. The Strat 10-Year Research Designed Lag By Nature, Boost Land By PAUL WELLS SEATTLE (AP) Spectacular benefits for mankind, made pos I sible bv atomic science, may be i in the "making at Fern Lake, 18 miles northwest of lacoma. A unique 10-year research proj ect, now in its second year, is expected to provide the answers Dy whicn: t l.ln, tirill ftrm wiV 'bigfat, healthy fish - their iocnrf , hunrirerirnlri uuinucia ...... - Surrounding scrawny forests will he lush i.nd verdant, with trees tripling their rate of growth Scarce game in these areas will be abundant, ( - Goai 0f u,e research teams is to fjn(i what causes certain regions an(1 their lakes to be poor? Why thcir Uces are stunted and grow slowly, fish suffer malnutrition j '. h.ni in find " j . fairi ;mnte The remedy is fairl ' P: Any farmer knows that crops ann animals need the right kmc I of fond or fertilization. He supplies them in scientifically correct quan- That's what thi coopcra t i v e project at Fern Lake, believed to be the first of its kind, seeks to fjd 0ut. It s being carried on by the University of Wasning t o n, Washincton Stale Game Depart ment and the Atomic Energy Com mission. "So far as we know, never he fore has a project of this scope hecn attempted in its natural en vironment, said Dr. Lauren a Donaldson, director of the univcr sitv's Laboratory of Radiation Hioloev. The project has its genesis in iVn almni). flPP Without the lessons on the peaceful uses of the atom learned at Bikini, En' wet ok and the Marshall Islands 5.000 miles away. Anthony Eden Stricken In Sequel To Surgery PF.WSEY, England (AP) Sir Anthony Eden, 62 stricken Friday Friday with a fever, showed "some improvement in his gen eral condition" today, his physi cians reported. They said the fever was subsiding. The former prime minister, who resigned in 1957 after the Suez fighting, suffered a similar, attack two years ago and under- went surgery to correct a bile duct condition. Last spring Sir Anthony was stricken twice within a month by. attacks described by physicians liver fever. Physicians said then the attacks were not unex I pectcd sequels to his operation. Town, London Impress -Review Assistant Editcr ford theater is little different from any other show house. Stratford Impressive More impressive to me was the town of Stratford itself, where Shakespeare was born and died. Many of the buildings have been retained or restored as they w?re in Shakespeare '. day. The streets are all narrow and winding. 1 almo.-t expected to see the great bard round the next corner. 11 strallora maKcs nisiory come to life, London does even more. My wife, Shirley, and I spent five days there awed by the tremen dous monuments left by a thous and years uf history a history from which the United States sprang. We walked the same walkway paced by Sir Walter Raleigh when he was imprisoned al,t h e Tower of London. We stood on the spot where Anne Boleyn's life end ed under a headsman's ax. We walked the venerable stones at Westminster Abbey over which most of the kings and queens of England strode to their corona tions. We even found a little out-of-lhe way alley near Fleet St. where Charles Dickens had quaffed a few ales and written some of his im mortal lines. the Fern Lake research would! never have been feasible. Radioactive isotopes, or tracers, will be the tools by which infin itely precise experiments reveal what basic elements are needed to make fish, plant and forest life abound. In our Pacific research we learned that tiny amounts of cer tain minerals are biologically im portant for growth in living lorms, and we learned new ways of de tecting and studying them," Dr. Donaldson said, "incse same techniques will be used at Fern Lake." Old Methods Haphazard Fertilizing of lakes, forests and soils is not new, but it has been haphazard'and inexact. Donaldson calls it the "scoop shovel method which is inefficient and expen sive." Research has been done inde pendently elsewhere on some pha ses of the over-all problem. But what makes Fern Lake unique is that it represents the first time the entire question nas oecn approacn. ed in a single concentrated project. The yearly cost will run as high as S100.000. The AEC is footing about $24,000 of (he bill, the Uni versity and state the rest. Forestry, game, soil, fisheries and zoological specialists are pool ing their knowledge and discover ies. Later occanographers and meteorologists will con tribute their skills. How are all these branches of science related to the business of rehabilitating lakes and forests: Let Prof. Stanley Gessel, of the university School of Forestry, and John"R. Donaldson, son of Dr. Don aldson, tell you. "Everything tics to g e t h e r." Gessel explained. "If trees and ground cover arc sparse, game disappears. Vegetation and game help keep the soil enriched. With out it, already poor soil becomes poorer." Rain Leaches Elements Donaldson, an aquatic chemist who is in charge of the Game De partment part of the work, broke in: "And with areas exposed, ex cessive rainfall leaches away Fall Housecleaning HAVE YOU IN A "TIZZY"? Here's How You Can WIN! Call on us for help ond save yourself. Just phone OR 3-4596 for prompt service. We Will Beautifully Dry Clean:. ONE I DAY Jf SERVICE WE GIVE GOLD 'fy P"1'" ' BOND STAMPS , CIEANERS 1929 N. E. Diamond Lake Blvd. Ph. OR 3-4596 FREE Pick-Up and Delivery The swirl of history, art and drama of which England is so ! proud was loo much for five days, but we still had time lo talk to some of the people of the city. People Are Friendly 1 They are friendly and kind but many are still misled in their con ceptions of America. I Despite the great numbers of Americans who have flooded j through the country in the last 15 years, many .ngusnmen sun leel the U.S. is a land of brawling, bumptious millionaires, who are culturally sterile. They have only the mildest de sires to visit the U.S. One London printer's big desi.'a was to see the Grand Canyon. He felt Europe could show him other , better natural sights than the U.S. has to offer. The people here seem to think it's natural that we should want to visit their land, hut they see no earthly reason why they should i come visit us. j The desire for a better under : standing among peoples of the j world doesn't seem to have reach 1 ed Britain. I Our next slop is Edinburgh, j Scotland, where the big annual i festival of music, arts and drama ! is going on. To Discover Productivity more and more needed elements. This, in turn, affects lakes and fis'h life. Without minerals drain ing from higher ground into the water algae does not thrive. With out algae, plankton have little on which lo teed, fish eat the plank ton, so when it is scarce fish are, too. "When fish disappear we lose the only 'uphill movement of nu trients.' Basic elemenls are inevi tably carried from higher ground to the sea. The Only way the proc ess can he reversed is for fish to bring the elements back as they migrate upstream (o spawn and die. "This has a tremendous effect on game life. A classic example occurred just to the north when a slide blocked Hell's Gate on Ihe Frascr River of British Columbia years ago and halted the salmon runs. It wasn't long before trap pers found game animals much scarcer on the upper Frascr." Groundwork Started Much basic groundwork must be completed before the radioactive isotopes are iut to use. But even with eight years remaining in the project a start on use of "hot" tracers was made this summer. Already rate-ofgrowth curves have been charted for plankton from various levels of the 25-foot deep, 20-acre lake. The graphs cover many types of organisms and times of the year they thrive. Water temperatures also are care fully recorded. Graduate forestry students also have: (1) Catalogued all types of plants, trees and vegetation in the area, (2) made an inventory of the soils, thcir water storage and food value, and (3) charted the rnmDlete hvdrologic cycle which includes total rainfall and what happens to it afterward. Gcassy? Stop Heart Gas 3 Times Faster Ctrtilrtd laboratory tests prorf BELL-ANS tab. lets neutralise 3 timet as much stomach acidity in one minute as many leading digestive tablets. Get BELL-ANS today for the fastest known relief. 35 at druggists. 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