TAGS TV7TLY2 Ti OSTGGir STATZZMAIT. Cdu Oregon. Cuads7 ITcrsIa-. Mry eainr SM-es : AMinn -MOT1 Limy A Marion, Polk Residents Man Posts ii i, n J 1. 1 MP 1 . ' . I , " 't"',-""'""t -' "' -"--'.'-. 'v i.i..i,i-.i.v'mt"-.'--.-i ..." i , . . -) - r , ,' fcj, - ' , ' -" i i rl -vtvl: -v j ..,-.' ... ..;.-.. ; . .- ,..tr$-;-i " - " x i . ' f ' . "5 :' j ' " - . t 3 ' , - . V ' t , - " i . - . , iff "N-t5 i ': i 1 j :i I i '"V'J n " - ti i 1 ; t . - v " r : it I I i. V Vs - f f I t tiy'i&tl . ii-. m TriAii Ji grfvitt,fa-''r ftrt ihn- f i i n"'"'' m i k a. .. .. . sr. r Si. I if- -t"- - - - V ' ' - , s- f '1 K- y fT","'J'T' ''"'" 'w--fy- - ii " ! 1 . ' ' . , ' : ., if )' 1 ' . ' ' t . j :: : ' f , i f . " f" 1 p-,-- ... r 5 ., , J ; r.i, r ? v- ' ft --j . - - . t 1 - il - " - . I 1 1 11 1 1 M nwii ,Mi miitwMwwiu, fc.,.,bJ:jiw.w.iiii:vaiwwJMwikj - "V By ISABEL CHILDS ' Eyes aloft! A H The signal lias been tiven, de dare . the thousadds of men - and i-yromen who man the army obser ! vation rAsta of Marion and Polk eountiesJ .That signal, sounded December 1, found skeleton staffs ready to put this civilian-operated feature of the army aircraft warning serv ice On a 24 hour basis December 8 The history of this wall will in clude mention, of - the 1,500,000 . persons who ; offered their - time. .their eyes and their ears"topro- tect their communities and to as sist the great over-all ' military plan. s-- Some of the stories of the air craft observers of our own home town may be heard at the meet ing called'for 8 o'clock Wednesday -night at Leslie junior high school auditorium. r. Much of that pro gram time is to be taken in dis cassion of the service and the pre- entation of a part of the training program ' for observers by army personnel. Those Who serve the fialem post are requested by Mick ey Blumenstein, chief , observer to be . present; the public is invited nd ? observers . from nearby posts will be 'there; too. Only portion of the program not for public consumption will be a restricted film and , that will : be presented elsewhere in. the build Ing, for 'observers only. Snch meetings of observers '- are among the pleasant by 2 products af a task which, daring - dull winter months and long, cold nights sometimes grows boring. , At Spring Valley, where the post, a small building which was once the wing of a Salem resi aence is mounted on stilts and looks out overdone of the most varied agricultural scenes in Polk county, there was a wood-cutting bee of Which you may have heard. Nights "on hilltoDs are mlH mH ihe Spring Valley post stove burns wood, so residents of the area con tributed fuel, but, busy with seed ing and other spring tasks, -felt they could not cut and deliver it I Silverton has ! the : newest, fin An army truck and a dozen men! est Post ill either Marion or Polk from the signal corps came to their J county. Octagon-shaped tower, it rescue and the woodpile at the has electric lights and oil heat, and post "should last for the dura-1 a neW chief observer, R, B, Bob' tion," declares Mrs. Vivian Strat-1 Duncart congenial Silverton man jon, whose husband is chief ob-1 aS" the Stiff Furniture com- server there. - pany, - . ,i Mrs. Stratton, weekday worker C. J. "CapTowe, who served Registrations Oneii for observers vation post assignments, as a fea ture of his paper. He didn't wait fori volunteers, either when?lining up his help.- He and" Mrst Stolle merely, went down the list of voti ers,7 got "ho 'kick-backs save ; when they bordered? to duty a woman whose i hew baby" (about - Which they ; had, ; strangely, inot- heard )r was only two months old, or sim-1 times which , are ill Hh, i J V l-A iU By L1LLIE MAD SEN 1.1 r . Daylilies are Just making their appearances a few Inches ' above the ground and so requests for in formation aboutr '' 1 n In " Vi ex-m are also making their appear ances. - ;r';"pt " Y Daylilies ; may be set .out at al most 'any time but, if with xnost 'plants, there are special liar case. I'r': No w that summer Is here and vacation times approach, posts ' 1 tie seeking persons ready' to learn the ropes, to serve as nn- 1 1 Bcniwuci sua - on can, replac ing those who mar, leave their homes briefly to work elsewhere i la .harvest '.fields or iake va- cauons. ,'f.;. -" mrm-131.. .-.i.s l-iV" iJ I ( .- ,. wivuiciuicin win laKe sucn .registrations ; Wednesday "bight, and both Wilber" McCune, Salem, and- Phil M." Schweizer, Mon mouth, Marion and Polk district directors,, will welcome a postal .Perhaps they liked to split wood at home, these army signal corps men who filled the, arms track, spper left, and private track, lower right; with wood donated by residents of . the Spring Valley area, some of whom assisted, so that Observation post, upper-right, might be stocked with foef for ."the. doration. After the job was done, po nsidered "m oat proper." First of these is early spring be fore growth gets under .way. The second time is in late summer just as ' the plants cease 'blooming " However," I have seen t he m planted out in May or in June just before they came into bloom and with good success . ' Daylfllen are not a f assy flow er 1 They , thrive nicely" without any special care or even with out any care at alL Any ordi nary garden soil seems good . enoagh to make nice daylilies. And one will find them growing on i dry' . rocky slopes' or rather mills there; the Mill City -Manu facturing : company supplies the fuel; MiU , City Light and Power, company, - the lights and water, and the f telephone company the telephone service. Chief Observer J. F. Potter, himself an executive with amiil, is assisted by . Gladys Mason, who was recently awarded the 500-hour pin. This ' award is remarkable because Mrs.' Mason also main tains the city's telephone office in a manner which has earned for her -more than local repute. Bat all over the valley, we men- are carrying their share of the Job.; We asked Mrs. Tillle Waarvick, whom we found ser ving the Silverton post with Mrs. P. f H. Tucker, "What' do year families think about your giving three hears to this task each Sunday." And she respon ded, almost sharply, We don't ask 'era!?, .. --i !. . . t 1 wAmra. f Surinr v.it.'. f.j v.-vi -f-a"L.li: vi.i-t.-J card notification If you are avail- left. Amour nw. Mn.i v- -v.- . J able. To these men falls the heavy Marlon side of the rVe, to thai' e A. yet there USA. slrnal eons, freoul M - 'c ,tJn : ZlZ-EL JIl though most chief observers have seems to be no serious fengus MnMa. " " . " -""" taken responsibility well. : . disease bothering them. Per- McQmeapTOmted in the sum- P to come. impossibility here because of the civilian-manned posts but also as an aid in charting friendly flights. tne- posts have proved invaluable. Not long ago you read in your newspapers the story of a couple of young soldiers who "stole" a plane. At no time, army author! ties have revealed, were they ev er "lost," for; the- observation posts reported and the filter cen ters chartedtheir flight : r- A plane crashed 10 nights ago near ugene; . the pUot's life Is credited to toe- woman mamng an observation post who called help and used her own first aid training. " ; -' v . First aid has not been required of the men and women; who scan the skies and listen for the hum that is not the tractor in the field Wilber McCune, ; ; Marion county below or the singing of the .wires district 'director of ground ob- J" outside their windows. ; .'7 '&:-jr'iir&y- r mmmkit. I servauon posu for the army : aircraft warning service, organ Ised this . county for the task before Pearl Harbor.'-.'?'' problem. When people arc the busiest they work the best!". Mrs. : Blosser v exclaimed '- in response to my auestionincl TT J. Hawkins, who has been at the state library, where she I chi observer when the post (;acluf St" Pa"! 3 director of air defense. "What is required Is a devo-' tion to dnty, an nndentandlng of the fact that If they and thou sands of others like them did not work falthfuUy at their vol- , onteer task, the army, would to day have, to turn 'two divisions of fighting men Into the obser: vation posts of the Pacific coast alone. I take my statistics from Brig. Gen. Gordon P, SavUie. heads the Victory Book campaign jor uregon, puts m a regular Sun day shift at the post, and we found -ier; mere a week ago studying uuuugn iieia glasses the ; move . . ; ments ofr a buzzard. , "When they . simply float, they're horribly de- cepuve;. sne said, and we agreed with her that had there been a tractor in the field below we'd haye been tempted to send an' "army flash" over the tlnhnn. which would have .. alerted the countryside because ours would certainly have been an otherwise .uncnarted plane." To get back to the woodcutting when it was finished, the cam. munity celebrated with one of its - m5US dinn at the schoolhouse, r inviting the young army men, who to this day talk of Spring Valley chicken as they do of their own . iouiers cooking. v. In many another rural, area, where social life has been cut to the minimum by wartime work requirements, the obser- -VatU. a ; """" nas served as a cen jter of Interest. . . . , iicia a pie so cial, which netted mnw for the upkeep of its post That social followed a program for ob servers, at which representaUves vl me lourtn fighter command , " r-kvucs nu . laixea over problems of the aircraft warning -r..., wmcn me ground ob servation organization is an in- itu ai part. . : Ty : j . -: . Central Howell area are confident , thir wiirbe as well-spent at the post . wa me schoolhouse for the tasty; pies baked by women wi uie community. For Robert O Bye is chief observer there, and Is credited with havin dnn ,n xceUent job in keeping the post In smooth operation." I quote Mrs. aymona ii. Werner, observer. From the staff of observers there. Leonard ' Roth, Alfred Dettwyler. Alvin Land and Al- uairv IUUC IBIB IM type of service where uniforms. are worn and weapons carried. Chief Observer Bye's wife and Mrs. Werner have 500-hour pins, which signify actual time on duty. - Almost ever y post actually 'consists;, of two buildings. The small, observation building 'prop er is preferably on stilts so that the observer's eyes are some 23 to 25 feet above the" ground, the ears well-removed from ground noises.' At Jeast one window is in each wall, and a catwalk of board walk " provides " standing room when 'atmospheric conditions' make outdoor observation neces sary. Somewhere nearby is usual ly a privy, for most of the posts -e located at some distance from cJ,er civilization. " 'Till City's post buildings and 1 , r.ishin . were - donated by the was first established, is a veteran , afronauucs, is ro auena of World War 1, and to Justice of . the Peace son fell so in lrv with tVi nnct location" 1 that he has purchased off ere-8everal this summer, a 100-acrerranch not far away Wljl ,W one representative from where he. is now raising turkeys each P.. teaching among other by the thousands. ' things how to recognize different w i " "' ' ,, types of planes. Can' knows from cmprionM " I -. . .. . observes Nelson "that a gob of ?T observers are C asked I acccng theSpecial training class In Port- 3S Alf O.Nel- Zg-iS'l Schaecher;whomw?f"at tS rith the Dost HeJd bX P" ""ny the class, to be - ' - - man r9 Iflil AA.t it- - a I A - ' .1 J-.lJir ... - a. ff-J? last Sdaj. ion county posts, establishing one thrive best in full sunshine or at i-ieTl where the army or- least with onjy partial shade. A h. dered it - few of the so-called night-bloom- cnT r . y u,. T" Elmer Cook, West Salem. Was hag varieties such as H. citrina Stoltord publisher of the 'i, und Hyperion fade rathe badly in ; , . Polk, organizing posts there, but too much sun. They do not need iTTT Jl? yun' press of other, duties made con- to be reset every year. In fact whose f air-haired fiery-eyed imall tinuance of his service impossible they doweU if let alone for sev- sons stood dose to his knees as lie and Schweizer is said to be doing era! years. When they become too v 4te dof? 51 c a splendid jobi Glenn Wick, with crowded it is time to dig them up, last war he .waited at the border the county fire association is area throw away the dead roots and of his native Switzerland, so an- supervisor for the western half St out the best and youngest tious . was he to leave, war-torn 0 p0ik. - appearing ones. - . . Europe. - - i" ' v 't s , V v " " . " Taken at random, here are some There are many more varieties But his companion at the post other "chief observers, noth oth- Hated in catalogues than most, of n.n inJCffest ta cur" erwise mentioned here: Perry- ua realize until we begin an in- f11 J conflict Schaechep has a son dale,' Harold Stapleton; Indepen- vestigation. We frequently think t X0?-? he denc, Tom Sharp; Stayton, Wen- of day lilies as consisting of but looked with, almost homesick eyes die Weddlej Aurora, William Hay- two or three .varieUes. I saw a at the signal, corps insignia on the cox; Hubbard, Mrs. Forest Loop; st recently in which almost 50 snouUle05 -mJ.iu,drV r - Chemawa, L. E. Schulz; Scotts varieties were mentioned. One Nothing less than a World. Al- Mills, Carl Millard: Sublimity, expert advised a planting of at manac could list the men and wo- J Vernr Scott; Liberty, Jessie- Wil- least 25 varieties if "the best were men who serve, their country tal lianas; Route mis quiet- unassuming way in I Kleen. Marlon and Polk counties alone, were we to tell of the sons in the service, the past war records they themselves T hold or . " the myriad other tasks they, perform willintf- JyvOne post alone, to be proper ly manned lahould have 112 reg istered workers, ready to serve at lease once ' every ; two weeks. - , -. Mt Angel is the only post with so many volunteers that they can serve ; just once a" month, and to remind thtm f th-.!r- Am cn. wwa , Bw0, fcJMUV regularly prints a list of obser- 5, Salem, -H. -M. WSse oir. (DttDneirwiise By ETHAN GRANT Zyli U ' This may, shock, a few at least uiaci w r " i w is inai unn wvr i - i ... m , , . roast turkey goes mighty good me5e1 to ' V whether the craft ttavmr.rfunfer J,WM with Uncle Sam's fighting men." sighted is one motor or two,:and J11 Turkey, must have some appeal . ed . not . to guess if - they J?? d Wellow to chief observer, or nhL can't be sure of that I i :y t or even Pubert .W. Service of serving - has i appeal for turkey Calimk in . the' "army flash" SS t W,n raisers:Ivan Blosser. chief at the message .which takes precedence f".1! ay could St Paul post, has 5000 in training over all other use of any telephone t Z't w ' wn!" fnr th;:iarf. Th,wi .- w line - th fthArvr tut. tn was "rred -by the owl. and the ber. " iT": theumbeV oi planeTtype !PpoorwiU and sometimes' even Material for a. new post was on e, bi of multi-motor and color M - hand when we,'visited the St Paul these facts can be determined) JiJn: ,1?' W1U ,ay site last week, and by today the altitude, either very low, low, high T? othin Ptic in a gan- stilts must .have risen, with the or very high,i whether ' seen or "",7: L"Lm. -s r -. hi!rfM. : 4. ij ! gander -is-, a waddling hunkof aid of many hands. Based Ton the heard, distance from the post and l?, JJ, nunc ox Dlans used in Clarkam m,mt the direction in which heading aers with a tendency to hiss Mo plane can fly over the Wil lamette valley and ever be out of sight and hearing of at least one post . J. ' Not just to protect this country me Mt Angel building will be simpler than that at Silverton, but serviceable. welcome ;- assistance of the neighbors has made the job at St and . honk. But if you will look I closely, you will perceive rather easily that a gander possesses an intensely interesting sort of rhy- i uim. And you will always find some- Paul a pleasure, declares Blosser ! in case of enemy action-although thinc in ItlT0 and his dark-eved wife. itViA'srmv nAm i. " i wwv vmj t 'Wiiruivwvi. vu i mrrm t t.. ..! at. . - .5 ' - i i v afcox-u i ivuim uus; uanrest umel Oh. Ouft no a surprise air raid would be in hrk. IT Is the quaint old owl. V f Who sits and hoots all dav. Does he give a hoot Or a root-a-toot-toot If it's March or June or May? ii'oetry is always an interesting subject But J do think much of It- needs modernizing. For in stance, Eugene Field's most popu lar poem, "Little Boy Blue. Little ; Boy Blue, T Come blow, your horn; ? " The sheep are in the meadow. The cows are in the corn. Where's the little boy . ?' That looks -after the sheep? j Why, he's over in Tunis Driving a i jeep: Personally, I never cared much for Shakespeare's works, although X did find the Study of his life a pleasure. There was so little of it It seems that nobody really knew much about him. A' few years ago a heated controversy , arose over the authenticity of his wri tines. Some 'claimed . he had an aman uensis. But it has always seemed to me his . affliction was night mares. In the study of his life, one of the most gratifying discoveries was that they dug his grave 17 feet deep. Pve an idea it was dug by a group of .upperclassmen who merely wanted to ? make sure. : Neither a borrower nor lender be If your IOU's can do this to me! It's an odd fact but the world almost never appreciates the poet All th Croat nncfm '.ifh.. t.-J Uis arm s-i In the sling, R. B. Baker of independence received the independent incomes or went awara as ooserver or ine monto' before the mike at radio station hungry. And of the lesser lights, EOIN. Daker broke his arm cranking his car to go to the post, took onlv a few mod.mc ir.na time to have it set and reported for duty only a few minutes late, strike nav ore. thai r: - With him Is Johnny Carpenter, right who made the presentation wealth v man. hut nni n mnfh - Salem alone f has if our - who have earned the 540-hour pins. Mrs. Blomenstein, . ' Mrs.' Lacy Mitchell. Gerald Christofferson and Mrs. WObur McCune, while 12 have the 109-hour armbands. Included far that list" to be pub-' lished during the coming week in The Statesman, are ; renrc- sentatives of most of the pro fessions and the trades, a num ber of the offices of the state and private enterprise, mer- , chants and . housewives. ' Perhaps the fact that more than 80 men in the armed services have closei relatives : serving ' that post has something to do with the continued-' service,: these . folks have given.-.: '. j -: m:: i- , Out-bf-T6wn Guests to be obtained. This list included ones that ranged In blooming time from early May until September. Among the early varieties listed were Dust' Apricot Tangerine. .Mid-season j flowering , sorts -i in cluded Winsome, Aureole, Ajax, Mikado, Luteola, Cinnabar, Gold eai Dream, Jtoyal, Tarouga; Vul can. . Later ones - were Ophir, Hy perion, Margaret Perry, Ster of uoid and Gay Day.. ; -.-a HOSSERADISH: And new comes . the question "Where can I get horseradish, is it easily grown, f and how t large r does ' It stowT I nave only seen it pre pared In glasses. I have a bit of space, can find no old-fashioned , horseradish on the market and want . some." , ' t . v.-" ' y And I thought horseradish was something one could always ob tain, that everyone had some in a bit of . garden or knew someone who had plenty of it - growin g along a' fence row in the coun try;" ?' . vV.V ;. : The questioner' rather intrigued l v. v v v u cnn urr ' mr-- B. Redmond- of. Sweet -Home,f at- If-'t ?me material tended the commencement? r,C M.n h, 1 h : W a J S ments.; He owned a large share of big newspaper. Ogden Nash but is he a poet?. ' , Suppose, we. write one in the Odgen Nash style and let readers I Attend Commencement aecrae ior inemselvesVrlt needs a v tt ' tt i title, so well call it "After The I At JClierson rutty."; ' . y I,.' . AFTER THE PARXT - . '. .-". wnuH-.wv- tended the rommPmmt- "iHC1-v"J l wish when my wife and I -V- -5 ''ThuradaT nlrfit Thir thought of it as something in the HV!,beJ?lnf and ughter,'Gene MarV Redmond, Une,?f ten like pickles the party is over, that she was a member of the graduating wve (not in shape but for the could say goodbye; ; cia--. . .7,v;..4 -3? same reason.) - 'Then my garden I wish she would come straight Mrs: Edim Person of Salem, eful. 14 ..V . .Tr , and daughter, Mrs. MenalkaS See- -hckltJ PPt of the And not leayeme adding there lander and Mr. Seelander of Oak- f? lo6J "" -1, .Tlthjmy; n- iand,;Calif, were also present to book miht have the same effect covered dome, . . . . " , -"" n-...t.. ' I find that man? nnrwnM While she keeps saying it was ter. RuthTerhune be graduated. houses do carry the roots. If nice, : ; . ; f ' nthM -ir.(nm I vou know of immmn wIm h ane time we ve had.' and . how r. ,t- mm-w.-.,! I some trrowincr In hi irj . " . i . o . vvuiiitcinuiviUa wi uua I - w r su VA- oyc1 the food and Charles A. Sprague and Miss Doris 'rts can be had from root cut the games and r how' much Mill nf Saiom nH ntn fhari- tings. Just dig a soade down, tak .ie w h Gice . ; , Harvey of Portland, and Miss Bar- P wf oi the plant set it out and Which reminds her thatshe's left bara Colgan of Salem. ' - her purse. v -: And when khm vam hak Irtctl ; to get it and comes out again JllOlte : Visit llelatives she remembers her hat'which rri--, ' , reminds m that hr JEFFERSON Mr., and Mrs . is getting worse. . Cecil Holt will leave Saturday by J tumn. We are told that it. is best a time, as the horseradish soon loses its pungency. Four gardeners have written : , me this week to complain that ', their parsnips did not come up. .They want me to tell them why. : Not one of them tells me how long the seed has been in the j ground, , whether it was fresh V seed, or what type or soil they ; planted it In. 1 - "Parsnips are rather slow of ger mination. I believe earlier in the season, I repeated :the informa tion which bad been given me by an expert vegetable gardener. He said to plant radishes with' the parsnip seeds. The. radishes would be large enough to use when the 'parsnips had a fair start on life. By pulling, the ra dished the par snips , were thinned out The rad ishes, mark; the tow long before the parsnips come tip and permit the cultivation of the so3 with out disturbing the little parsnip seedlings. We are alsd advised to plant parsnips rather thickly. While not knowing how long the parsnip seeds have beetf in the ground, I would advise against digging .up the soU again until at least three weeks have pased. I can report that my own parsnip seed was in 12 days. But I bought " eed which was guaranteed to be of 1942 vintage. . . One "gardener! writes that she had "winteredw over her parsley, and the other day went out to get some to find that only the tops were left withering in the soil. The roots were all gone." . My guess would be mice. Field mice are particularly fond of parsley. They rained an en tire 12-foot row of mine last year, before I discovered them at work. v Mrs. S. O. O. wants to know how early she can set out helio trope without clanger of frost ANSWER: In an ordinarr vear. I would have said : the first of May. But with frost this past week, I just wouldn't venture to guess. However, it Is getting so late into the season, that frost or no frost we are going to have to take a chance ff sr. tn - N. W 1.11JUJ the plants out of doors this sum mer. Heliotropes like a rich soil and a sunny location. Protect them- if possible . from any east or north winds. Grown against a definitely southern exposure, they are exceptionally fine and give a delightful fragrance to the garden. And now "for the prize winning paragraph In my garden mail. this weeks' ;f'-. '" r'f ; ; -. "It must be nice and peaceful to garden In the city,, writes a country gardener-" where there -are only an occasional stray dog or child to battle. Today has been bor's cow. ate off my early peas. Some stray horse's trampled over my roses during the night The sheep were sheared and the noise' they make' in again assorting themselves into families hai made gardening almost unbearable. Oh. for. "the quiet and peace of Htv life!" - Reuben Jensens Visit Mother on Trip South BRUSH CREEK Rueben Jen sen visited here briefly this week on his way south from Astoria Mr. ' J ensen, who has been sta tioned in civilian work under Presidio direction, for the past four months Is at Monterey. He previously taught for the past nine years at Astoria. H came north to bring his. wife, the for mer Esther Girod, south with him." She has been teaching a: Astoria this winter. , On their way south they stopped fora visit with Mr. Jensen's mo ther, Mrs. Anna J. Jensen here. Czechs Hang Flag it will grow. However, whereas ! one thinks of horseradish as! something Which will grow in any j garaen soiV iV does thrive much J; SCIO Scid1 Sokols; Czech better in a rich loam. Digging and ; athletic organization, ha3 hung a grating are best done in late au- service" flag in the lod- 3it -7 . .? s-. . 1 rai " Cn-. TJ - V. -.l: SeeTslaTn ""S T 0! S She keeps standing there and ..1 and daughter Mr. .nH teg about everything to- Mi Julian BaUtsky and son, John 5fy Jterday and also mchaet Balftskxiis to me army, the days Of yore. . i- . j u. 2 And when .finally I think she is Holt is foreman of a Southern Pa- J? ! .K ; cific bridge gang, and is having a She - remembers that she .wants vacation. ; ": we recipe xor tne an 1 . --. r wants to know , f y V " . ,.. .'K -., ,.- I . 1 " "i to dig and prepare a lew roots at honoring several former members now in the armed forces. Then - spends half an hour , copy- -, , ing it while -I'm just stand ing patiently 'holding my hat And listening to her and the crickets , - ; And . frogs- and- other -creatures . -that . sleep all day , and- stay ,. up all night over in' the thick ets, ; , . ' . : And think of my hard day tomor row, . 'V' -:, - Wt And how that when the party's at our house 111 haye to help her - with the fixings and be told ; to be" careful -and not break any of the dishes she's had to borrow; ' .. - And know I'll have to, lie And say it's all right if the wom en want to spend - a whole week saying goodbye, . . ; Instead of going straight away : From the party., on the same day. 1 r 1 1 k- III I ta about . your, need, for Auto-1 mobile -insurance protection , under the . ' . . -.' Oregon " . -Motor Vehicle' Safety Responsibility Act Complete iniormation.; No ob- v ligation Corne In and see us. I sincerely hope Mrs Nash won't mind my aping him.. - Or that my wife doesn't get the idea I mean this.7 ' ;. . . Ec:!:2 Ci Uusv;crl!i Next to Grand Theatre PHONE 4947, All Kin 's cf Insurance 1 nu nn rrn rm nn nn tt n rm -rn iiDiiiMairiiiiij. 7-'- v r in K7J Pens - Pencils - Scrap Books Photograph Albums - Ii i IU folds - Notebooks . Writing Portfolios ' Stationery ' Booh 'Enfcr FiVcJjT ear Locking Diaries - Latest Books - Grad uation Greeting Cards. . 3,aw, .141 XT. CcmzaercicJ a7 a u v 0 fc