The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994, August 21, 1961, Image 4

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    Thousands Strike By Air, ieirj
':-:tIi :v-:' i
Days
lhu -
lllJeiikirt
What about the Berlin situation?
J'he stock market thinks it's bet
ter. It resumed its advance Thurs
day morning in brisk trading. At
noon, the Dow Jones maustriai av
erage is up 1.62 points at 719.82.
The rail average is up 1.43 points
at 142.33.
Prices on the American Stock Ex
cliange moved generally higher
during the morning..
Why?
Well, we and the communists are
exchanging NOTES instead of
Domos.
That is usually interpreted as a
good sign.
Iwhat about the notes?
Here's a samnle:
!Ve, the British and the French
h$ve just sent notes to the Krem
lin protesting what happened in
Bbrlin. The notes are identical.
They say the "scaling of the East
West Berlin border by the East
German communists was a fla
efant and particularly serious vio
lation ot the tjUADKl-FAtt'm'E
STATUS of Berlin."
When the diplomats use language
like that, we can relax. When they
begin to use the short Anglo-bax
oif words is the time to worry.
'Getting away from the affairs of
litis troubled world, mure than i
thousand of the world's astronom
cts are gathered at Berkeley for
the 11th assembly of the Interna
tional Astronomical Union.
'A Frenchman, Dr. G. Courtcs
ot the Haul Provence observatory
at St. Michel, tells his contempor
aries that be has discovered
tremendous glowing object in an
island universe far beyond the
Milky Way. What causes it to
gow? He says there seems to be
no LIGHT around to cause it to
glow by reflection. He thinks it
might be hydrogen gas, and the
gas might be burning.
How big is 11?
lllold your hat.
'Dr. Courtes says it is about 30,
060 light years in diameter.
How big Is i light year?
'.ONE LIGHT YEAR IS EQUAL
TO SIX QUADRILLION MILES.
'That raises another question
How big is a Quadrillion?
,'Wcll.
i A quadrillion is a thousand trll
lions. A trillion is a thousand bil
lions. A billion is a thousand mil
lions. A million is a thousand thou
sands. ;Figure it out for yourself. Any
way, this object that Dr. Courtes
has spotted out in space is QUITE
AN OBJECT. It's bigger than our
national debt.
In conclusion, here is an extract
from the findings of the astrono
mers who are gathered at Berke
ley: ."Astronomers are finding many
lopsided and chaotic galaxies
(Milky Ways) out in space. One of
these galaxies seems to be RUN
NING AWAY FROM VS at half
the speed of light zipping 93.000
miles farther away every second."
r
'.Hmmmmmmm.
It may be inhabited, and lis in
habitants may have heard of the
screwball stale of affairs on our
planet AND ARE GETTING AWAY
FROM US AS FAST AS THEY
CAN.
They could hardly be blamed.
Alligator Too Much
For Army Officers
FT. STEWART, Ca. (AP) A
B.foot alligator proved too ram
bunctious for three Army officers
from Ft. Stewart.
ICapt. II. E. Motley said he and
the other officers were driving a
truck on tho Army reservation
last week when they spotted the
reptile crawling along the road
and "slopped to have a little fun."
i"We took a canoe paddle out
of the truck and poked it at the
alligator." he said, "it snapped
the pa (kilo in two. We start
ed bark toward the truck. So did
the alligator.
"We got another paddle and
tried to beat tho alligator off hut
it splintered that paddle, too."
i Motley said they climbed Into
the truck and the alligator then
crawled under the vehicle, chew
ing off the tailpipo and muffler
and biting the axle.
I At that point, Motley said, the
officers deckled they were no
match for the reptile and drove
away quickly.
The News -Review
Published by N.wi-R.yi.w Publlihini C.
34S S. t. Mala St.. Rntburf, Oregon
; CHARLES V. STANTON
; Editor
; GEORGE CASTILLO
; Managing Editor
Jlrmbcr of the Associated Press, Oregon Newspaper Publishers
; Association, th Audit Bureau of Circulation
.Entered as second class matter May 7, 1820, at the post office at
i Hoseburj, Oregon, under act of March 2. 1873
; Subscription Rales on Classified Advertising Pag
EDITORIAL PAGE
4 The Newt-Review, Roieburg
PIE IN THE SKY
By Charles V. Stanton
Writing in his column In The Days News, Frank Jenk
inn said recently: "These uncommitted neutrals can't be
so dumb as to ignore what has been going on before their
eyes.
Can't they?
Jenkins, along with many other observers, contends
that the flight of East German
be enough to convince anyone
The East German resident, Jenkins points out, is being
treated as a "serf." Those who would flee to freedom are
facing a wall of bayonets. Barriers have been erected to
halt the embarrassing movement from East to West.
Anyone who will stop and think, even briefly, will real
ize that communism -is failing to give the East German
the things he wants and believes he has a right to expect.
The realization should be sobering to those people and
those nations to which communism is beckoning so invit
ingly.
But again I must question,
Stomach Vs. Brains
When a man's hungry his
ing his stomach.
What does the (Juban
"serf?" He's always been a
thing of his own. He's acquainted with hunger. In fact,
a great many Cuban peasants have never experienced a
full meal.
Here in the United States
stand the situation pertaining to the proverty-ridden peo
ple in other parts of the world. Communists show them
selves much more understanding. That's one reason com
munism has spread throughout so much of the world and
promises to make still greater gains unless we adopt a
ditierent approach.
We seek to win friends ahd influence people by giving
money. We've given billions. But our foreign aid has gone
largely into countries where there are only two classes of
people, the very rich and the
tions have helped the rich,
taxing care or the poor.
The poor vastly outnumber
with thoughts of getting enough to eat, they easily become
political pawns.
In many parts of Asia, Africa, Latin America, a large
majority of people are serfs. They have no hope of ever
being anything except serfs. Their onlv hone is that thev
limn'f Dliirmra lin T
-.w., w umajo uc uiniKjy Bcna. Alley uuii i. tars vvnu men
masters may be. They want only enough to eat.
Promises Believed
While thinking neonle realize that the exnrlna nf nennlp
from East Germany is indicative of communism's failure,
many millions of people don't even think of that aspect.
They only want food. They can't eat American green-
DaCKS.
The Communists don't fill
teeu mem wun promises.
You say that people won
Oh yeah?
We Americans consider ourselves educated, thinking
people, but for the past 30 years we've been electing politi
cians on the basis of promises. We don't need food, but
we listen to any politician who will promise us the soft
life. We sell our freedom to politicians who bribe us with
our own money, politicians
y.iuio u mo smvc, puiuiciuns who speii k Doiaiv as canal
dates and forget their promises when elected. We permit
puuuciuns to pile up mitre debts. DO ltic ana who snnnnrr.
uiuKiuinn ui ii-ee npeiiuiiiir. win
cial interests as a means of
sent to a staggering national
spending, an on the strength
We aren't hungry. Can
ARE hungry for yielding to
true American way of life
pi oniiNea :
Hal Boyle
What's A Citified Cat Do
When She Visits A Farm?
SPARTA. N. J. (APi What
does a city cat do when she goes
to the country?
Well, for one thing, she gives
you the time of your life just
watching her have the time of her
life.
For three years I.adv Dottle
has been a real cool big city cat,
as aloof and sophisticated as the
pampered ladies who dwell on
Park Avenue. She has led almost
as sheltered an existence as they.
For three years she has looked
out at life from the windows of
our eighth-floor Manhattan apart
ment, gravely watching the rains
pelt against the panes, the snow
flakes swirl outside like tiny white
gnosis, tne soaring gulls crying
faintly afar, the rusty freighters
of the world plow up and down
tne cast inver.
For three years Lady Dottie has
been more or less an apartment
house prisoner, but a cheerful
one.
Then we took her for a week's
vacation to a 150-year-old farm
house here Iu the friendly New
Jersey countryside, and it was as
if she had been born a second
time in another universe.
Everything was strange and
new to Lady Dottie. At first she
was lonesome and afraid in a
world she never made.
Everything startled her. She
stepped out on the lawn under the
wide-armed century old maple
trees as gingerly as if she wero
walking on heated glass. Each
time a car roared by on the high
way, screened by a green fence
of sweet cedars, she flattened and
her cars twitched.
A horse bearing a little girl in
a big-brimmed cowboy hat came
ADDYE WRIGHT
Business Manager
DON HAGEDORN
Display Adv. Mgr.
Ore. Mon., Aug. 21, 1961
residents to the West should
of the failures of communism,
will people THINK?
only thinking pertains to fill
peasant care about being a
serf. He's never had any.
many of us fail to under
very poor. Our contribu
but they haven't gone far in
the rich. Filled constantly
rrl . J ti. L
them with frmrl hut thpv rln
t swallow promises?
who promise us security from
e Diavinor inorsip. with snp.
gaining reelection. We con
debt, to continued deficit
of promises.
we blame people who actually
promises when we desert thp
In return for pie-in-the-sky
galloping down a side road
Lady Dottie had never seen i
horse before In her life. She flat
tened, her ears went down' and
she began to back crawl like
crab. An apple plopped to the
ground from a tree behind her.
She leaped three feet into the air,
then streaked for home like Willie
Mays on a base steal.
Then she became aware of the
grass. Cats love an occasional
taste of green things. That first
day Lady Dottie nibbled so much
grass she was too nervous to eat
her food she became sick at the
stomach twice.
But each day she has become
more venturesome and self-confi.
dent. Her veneer of sophistication
has vanished. She spends the long
summer hours chasing chip
munks ana prowling the wood
piles and barns looking for field
mice. She has developed an inor
dinate appetite for milk.
"She must be catching and eat
ing those mice," said my wife
"How do you know?" I asked.
"Cats always drink more milk
when they make a menu of
mouse," replied Frances, who
comes from a small town in Mis
souri. "Everybody knows that
Well, 1 didn't know it. and I'm
still not sura it's so. Wives are
always making a big sweeping
statement like that, and then try
to convince their husbands it's
gospel truth.
Three bluoiays in a sidcyard ce
dar tree are Lady Dottie's chief
enemies. Every time they see her
black and white body slipping sin
uously near, they alert every oth
er wild thing in the area by
screaming at her.
Lady Dottie doesn't like being
given "the bird" by a trio of hirk
jays. She would swarm right up
the tree after them except for one
thing. Wa clipped her claws in ad
vance, so she wouldn't harm any
feathered thing.
But she has proved her valor
in a better way. Twice dogs have
wandered into the yard. Lady
Dottie's bark never arched in
panic. Her yellow eyes widened j
and glared like two angry egg
yolks, and she crouched ready to
attarx. r.ach time it was the dog
who turned and left.
No night wanderer, I.adv Dottie
comes indoors willingly at bed-i
DEAR ABBY
Abigail Van Buren
You're Oversensitive Lady!
DEAR ABBY: My older brother
recently passed away. It was
God's blessing because he had
been sick in the hospital for over
a year, and there was no hone
for him. While he was in the hos
pital I went to see him often, and
brought him little things to cheer
him up. The week after his fu
neral I got a note in the mail
from my brother's wife THANK
ING me for being so kind to her
husband. Abby, I am deeply hurt.
This man was my own flesh and
blood brother, and I don t think I
need to be THANKED for being
good to him during his illness. I
want to speak to his wife about
it, but my children tell me to for
get it. I am not going to forget
it. But first I want you to tell me
what to say to her.
HEART-BROKEN SISTER
Dear Sister: I agree with your
children. Your brother's wife did
not want to slight you; therefore,
when she thanked everyone else
for their kindness to her husband,
she included you. Let the matter
drop. Your sister-in-law has
enough to worry about.
DEAR A3BY: My husband
drinks. When he really gets a
snootful, he goes out on the porch,
flaps his elbows and crows like
a rooster. - What is the meaning
of this?
ROOSTER'S WIFE
DEAR WIFE: Maybe he's trying
James Marlow
The Real Issue On Berlin
Is Showdown With Soviets
WASHINGTON (AP) If you
read the fine print in Vice Presi
dent Lyndon B. Johnson's pep
talk to the West Berliners, you'll
notice the distinction being made
between dream and reality, but
not as bluntly as stated here.
It's the kind of distinction
which might make peaceful set
tlement of the Berlin rumpus a
little more possible.
The dream is that the Commu
nist government of East Germany
doesn't exist and that divided
Germany can be reunited. The
reality is that it does exist and
that Germany won't be reunited
any time soon.
When Communists sealed off
East Berlin with barbed wire to
stop the flood of East German
refugees to West Berlin last week,
depressed West Berliners com
plained because the Allies did
nothing more' than protest.
There could hardly have been
direct intervention without war
with the Soviet Union.
So President Kennedy sent
Johnson over to boost morale and
promise American support in pro
tecting West Berlin but not East
Berlin from communism.
Johnson delivered the message.
But, while saying nothing at all
about active support for the East
Germans, he did say this: "In
the short run, the barbed wire is
there and it will not go away by
a wave of the hand. But in the
long run this unwise effort will
fail.
"Lift your eyes from these bar
riers and ask yourselves: Who
can really believe that history
will deny Germany and Berlin
their natural unity?"
In other words: The Allies will
not interfere in what happens in
East Germany, and any unifica
tion of the two Germanys must
remain a long hope only.
What history does make clear
is that the allies do not consider
East Germany or East Berlin a
problem to fight over. Their
hands-off performance . now is
only a repetition of 1953.
That year anti-Communist Gcr
mans revolted, the Russians
smashed them with tanks, and
the allies did nothing.
To the allies, their real prob
Iem is to keep the Communists
from closing off West Berlin
whose ZVa million people, 111)
miles inside Communist East
Germany, give their allegiance to
the West.
The Allies have refused to rec
ognize the East German Commu
nistsSoviet puppets but hardly
more so than the other satellite
governments as the legitimate
rulers of East Germany.
To do so would be to agree to
the permanent division of Ger
many, which is the last thing
West German Chancellor Aden
auer wants. So the West has kept
needling Premier Khrushchev to
permit unification, knowing it's
the last thing he wants.
It makes good propaganda, but
it solves nothing. And there is
some irony in it.
The Allies, because of agree
ments with Moscow, claim the
right to keep troops in West Ber
lin. All allied military supplies
and personnel for that city must
pass through or over East Ger
many. These supply routes are
controlled by the Russians.
But this amounts to only about
five per cent of all traffic in sup
time. Only bums sleep outdoors,
she sleeps at the feet of my wife,
purring so loudly it sounds like
distant thunder.
This happy week of enchanted
freedom will soon be over for Lady
Dottie. Will she ever be as ion -
tent again in a big-city apart -
ment?
When she gazes out the wind -
dows with her great inscrutable
eyes, what will she really see
the cozy comfort there, or the life
of liberty she has known in the
country here?
or
HaVei im ml
to tell you it's time you woke up.
He's a lush.
DEAR ABBY: I feel terrible. My
best friend dropped me because
my sister had her baby three
months early. My friend told me
to my face that she couldn't go
around with me any more because
it might hurt her reputation.
Abby, I never did anything
wrong, and I don't think it is fair
that I should suffer for something
my sister did. What should I do?
I am 13.
NEEDS A FRIEND
DEAR NEEDS: Your "friend
doesn't know the meaning of true
friendship, so you haven't lost
much. Just continue to be a good
girl, and you will win the friend
ship of someone who accepts you
for what YOU are, and realises
that you are not your sister's
keeper.
CONFIDENTIAL TO LOVE AT
FIRST SIGHT: Look again.
"Are things rough?" Let Abby
help you solve your problem. For
a personal reply,' enclose a stamp
ed, self-addressed envelope and
sent to Box 336S, Beverly Hills,
Calif.
For Abby's booklet, "How To
Have A Lovely Wedding," send 50c
to Abby, Box 3365, Beverly Hills,
Calif.
plies and people moving to West
Berlin.
Secretary of State Dean Rusk
said Sunday night the other 95
per cent is civilian traffic which
the East German government lets
through by agreement with the
West German government.
So, while the West does not of
ficially recognize the East Ger
mans as legitimate, it does in ef
fect recognize them and is deal
ing with them every day.
Now Khrushchev wants the
West to give official recognition.
But he says whether or not the
West does, he will turn control
of all traffic to West Berlin over
to the East Germans before the
year ends. So the West, for Aden
auer's sake, may still try to re
fuse official recognition while
settling for guarantees that the
routes to Berlin will not be shut
off.
Rusk said Sunday night sub
ordinating all other reasons for
defending Berlin to this single one
that the real issue on Berlin is
a showdown with the Soviet Un
ion, meaning, of course, can the
Russians cut off the city?
But the West after its standoff
attitude on East Berlin and East
Germany in 1953 and again now
and in view of Johnsons state
ment can hardly any longer
make much of an issue on unifi
cation. Negroes Finance
White Missionary
ROCHESTER, Mich. (AP) A!
white minister last week finished an
intensive training program f i
nanced primarily by Negro
churches, to prepare him for his
forthcoming assignment as a mis
sionary in Hong Kong.
The Rjv. Thomas Tune, 32, put
in 60 hours a week 10 hours a
day, six days a week over a two
month period preparing for his
new job.
He completed his capsule course
in Chinese, a prerequisite for his
forthcoming foreign assignment in
Hong Kong. Ordinarily the course
takes a year but he did it in six
weeks.
Tune is believed to be the first
United States white evangelist
sent by a Negro church to do
missionary work abroad.
Officials at Michigan Christian
Junior College near Rochester
also believe he is the first student
to take such a cram course in
Chinese in a Christian college any
where in the country.
"I feci like a guinea pig," said
the Kentucky-born minister, "but
the experience has been extreme
ly worthwhile and enjoyable."
"My course in Chinese was
something like the one the army
offers in eight weeks to teach
Cuban refugees the English lan
guage," he explained.
The Murray, Ky., minister said
he completed a book on spoken
Chinese in five weeks and then
concentrated on reading and writ
ing the language.
Two Mountain Climbers
Are Happy On Survival
ESTES PARK. Colo. (AP)
Two young mountain climbers,
rested and once more well fed,
were happy today at surviving two
rainpcltcd nights on 14,255-foot
: "ngs i eaK.
I Ju''o K. Mast. IS. of Richmond.
! Ind.. and Richard Boldrey. 20. of
' St. Clair Shore. Mioh., walked off
j the peak and met- mvmhfns of a
! searching party whioh set out at
, aawn r rtday.
Miss .Mast is a freshman at Kal-
amazoo (Mich.) College and Bol
drey is a junior at Roosevelt Uni
versity in Chicago.
i
Editorial Comment
SP'S HEALTH SECRETS
Eugene Register-Guard
The cover article of the August
11 issue of Time will, no doubt,
be read with interest in many
parts of the land, but in none will
it be read more avidly than here.
The article deals with the South
ern Pacific Co., and this is the
heart of the' SP's most valuable
rail freight service area. The
"friendly Southern Pacific" has
probably been subjected to more
criticism in Oregon during recent
years than anywhere else west of
St. Louis. At the same time, the
SP is one of Oregon's principal
taxpayers, and. in Eugene, a mat-
or employer. What's good for the
SP may not be necessarily good
for Oregon, but whatever happens
to the SP is of vital importance
to uregomans.
The Time article used the per
sonality of SP President Donald
Joseph McKay Russell to give col
or to its lengthy compilation of
facts about the tP. Then, citing
this railroad as the healthiest in
an industry that is generally sick,
almost sick to death, Time con
trasts the SP's performance with
the nation's overall railroading
situation. Time's facts seem to
lead to the conclusion that the SP
is relatively healthy because of
aggressive management and would
be healthier if this management
were not so bound by government
al regulations. Then, by inference,
it indicates that other U.S. rail
roads would similarly benefit if
they had Don Russell's concern
for efficiency and costs along
with less regulation or, at least,
fewer government - imposed dis
advantages in their competitions
with other transportation systems.
Of course, the SP's current at
tempt to gain control of the West
ern Pacific is included in the Time
report. Considering this as a con
test with the Santa Fe, and re
membering the so-called jinx ef
fect that Time cover stardom has
had upon a number of athletes,
politicians and others, aP boosters
may be dismayed that President
Russell's picture appears on the
Aug. 11 cover. In any event, all
who do read the Time piece will
be impressed by the great num
ber of jinxing problems with which
Russell and all other U.S. railroad
presidents must cope.
Time makes it quite clear that
the SP is not trying to merely
stay in business though dozens
of other U.S. roads would be glad
of just that prospect. Under Don
Russell's throttle hand, the SP is
HERE ARE A TEW EARLY HINTS THAT WILL ASSURE YOU
OF A COMFORTABLY HEATED HOME DURING THE FALL
AND WINTER SEASON:
Have heating equipment cleaned and inspected.
ft Be sure pilot light and burners are working properly.
ft See that all controls are in perfect working condition and that equip
ment is properly vented.
0 Check heat supply to each room.
Clean or replace air filters if necessary.
Replace old or inadequate heating units with modern automatic gas
heating equipment NOW hofnr. thc cold weather rush.
CURE HEATING TROUBLES BEFORE COLD WEATHER COMES
VISIT OUR OFFICE OR CALL YOUR
HEATING CONTRACTOR TODAY
Live modern... for less... with
PHONE OR 2-1653
hiehhalline it toward the day when
the government willing, that is
it will operate a "transportation
supermarket ' in wmcn snippers
are offered the choice of rail, high-
i.way or water movement of their
freight.
No doubt the SP will always be
subjected to boxcarsful of criticism
in this locale, if for no other reason
than that it is the only railroad
operating east and west out of
the Eugene area. But after-reading
the Time article there will be
fewer who complain that the SP
isn't trying, and trying hard, to be
one railroad that is not forced into
receivership. There may even be
more who will pause and realize
how dependent the SP and this
lumber - manufacturing - shipping
part of Oregon are upon each oth
er for mutual successes.
FISH FLOUR
Eugene Register-Guard
Fish flour made by grinding
up and dehydrating whole fish
is now reported to be the world's
cheapest and most abundant
source of animal protein.
Furthermore, the U.S. and Rus
sia are vying with one another to
see which can develop means of
producing this highly nutritious,
easily transported, easily stored
food item in volume quantities.
Both intend to use fish flour for
shipment to needy nations. Each
hopes for a cold war victory as a
result.
"Insider's Newsletter," publish
ed by the same people who put out
Look magazine, says fish flour is
tasteless and odorless. In research
laboratories it has been proved
a powerful deterrent to both mal
nutrition and diseases resulting
from improper diet.
According to this report, Russia
is rushing plans to produce fish
flour on factory ships right at sea.
In the U.S. a Massachusetts cor
noration has a plant ready to be
gin commercial production as soon
as standards are established by
the Food and Drug Administration.
Here, for once, it seems tne com
war rivalry may be producing a
valuable contribution to the whole
of mankind. All of our shipments
of standard si'rplu food items to
underdeveloped lands, and all of
the Russians' exports of foods
which they have literally taken
from the mouths of their own peo
Die. have been of no lasting signi
ficance. But. if fish flour can be
economically produced in either
the U.S. or Russia, it can soon
be produced in or near Chili, In
www
Wrm Reception!
'CALIFORNIA-PACIFIC
UTILITIES COMPANY
donesia, India and Korea. Millions
who might have starved or have
gone through life half-starved may
be fed reasonably well.
This outcome, whether it be ac
tually initiated by the U.S. or the
USSR, would auger well for the
cause of human freedom. Remov
al of the fear of want would be a
deterrent against "belly commu
nism." Thus it should oe Ameri
ca's aim to see that fish flour
production methods are perfected
quickly and these methods, rather
than the mere product, are estab
lished in every nation where they
can be utilized.
PEA SHORTCAKE
Springfield (Mass.) Union
The countryman is capable ot
helping his peers in many ways
if only they would accept his coun
sel. He could begin witn nis fam
ily, but as a man learns, his help
meet and offspring, especially teen
age daughters, often have different
and intransigent ideas.
Consider the matter of pea
shortcake. Green peas, fresh from
the garden, are a special delight
to a man who raises a big crop
along a six-foot-high trellis. The
pea crop is important; it gives a
man a cnance to wont in nis gar
den early in the spring; it is
heartening to watch the vines
climb head high. The blossoms are
attractive, and the masses of long
pods promise a big crop.
Two centuries ago, peas wera
important. Scientists think peas
reached our shores from the West
Indies about 1700. Etymologists ar
gue pleasantly and futiley whether
we should write "pease" or "peas."
Wo know that in India, the land of
cowpea origin, there are some 50
different names for this legume.
The facts are interesting but
relatively unimportant. The vital
concern is to change the nation's
eating procedure. Garden peas, not
over 30 minutes from vine o table,
should always be served as pea
shortcake.
Open two crisp-crusted biscuits
in a soup plate; use plenty ot
butter or margarine on them. Then
over the four halves pour a full
pint of peas and the juice in which
they were cooked. Be sure there is
plenty of juice. There is some
thing peculiarly tasty and" satis
fying about this dish, and any man
who lets wife and daughters block
him from his constitutional right
to this flavorful dish deserves to
have a mess of wiry parsley driz
zled over his meat and potatoes.
PACIFIC BUILDING
A GAS