Sol. Ofqon. Friday. March 21, 1947
mXo Faior Strays Ut, No Fear Shall Awe"
FtM first SUtnnuB, Marc 2S. 1U1
TUE STATEbAlAiN I'UBLISHINC; COMPANY
CHARLES A. SPRAGUE, Editor and Publisher
Miwbtr ( th Asasrtated Press
The Associated Press It exclusively entitled laUwnttw pebMeatiea
el mil mwi tfispelenes credited U II m Mi otherwise credited ta this
Businc, Small anil Big
Marquis Child, one of the better Washington columnists,
U worried over Big Business getting Bigger. He calls attention
to corporation mergers, which often consist of big corporations
absorbing t mailer ones. That has been a peculiar phenomenon
of the postwar period. Many small outfits, burgeoned during the
war. Their bosses made a pile of money; they fear or are un
prepared for competitive business, and so sell out for a fat
price and retire. The big corporation gets a thriving plant which
it can use or a concern with which it can diversify its line.
Childs points out how this performance makes an easy setup
for national socialism. If industry gets into hands of a few big
concerns government can simply move in, take them over and
dominate the whole economy. He credits Senator Joseph O'Ma
honey of Wyoming with leading a brave, but so far unsuccessful
fight, against monopoly which carries just this threat of ulti
mate socmlixation.
One factor that Childs touches on which encourages this
current trend is the tax structure. With a heavy inheritance tax
to pay the heirs of a family-owned business may have to liqui
d'e H to pay the taxes. The owner himself might prefer to
sell to some young men. perhaps those associated with him in
building up the business. But they would have to pay for it
out of the profits of the business. With heavy corporation and
personal income taxes paying for a business now becomes a
difficult matter. The owner finds it much easier to sell to the
big corporation which can pay the cost out of its treasury and if
it needs more money can negotiate a loan at a low rate of interest.
Another thing which induces owners of small corporations
to sell out is the labor problem. They get tired of the haggling
Paul (Vlallon's
BEHIND THE NEWS
(Dtstrthettea ay ftlact Fearmret Sra
Strata, lac KeorwSactioa la waala ar
ai art trtctly arafctalteO.
WASHINGTON, March 20.
The American news dispatches
from the Moscow conference said
our delegation was "embarrassed"
and "the Americans shifted un
easily in their seats" when Molo
tov pulled from
ithe secret files of
J the past, the Yal
ta agreement,
'promising Russia
it half of $20,000.-
000,000 repara
tions from Ger
many. There was
no valid reason
for any reason
able person to be
ji embarrassed or
uneasy.
The truth is
Russia has orob-
Paal huiioa ably already
taken more than her allotted half
more than $10,000,000,000 of the
dollar value at the time of the
Yalta agreement. You, who have
read these dispatches, know she
took the paper off German walls,
machinery which we had to re
capture to run the Berlin subway,
everything she could lay her hands
on. German machinery is today
strewn out all over Russian rail
road sidings. The inept Russians
have merely made it lose its value
by putting it to little or no use,
because it can be no more valu
able to anyone than the sum to
tal of what it produce. Of course
no one outside Russia knows the
itemized list of it. items taken
secretly as they were, behind the
iron curtain of censorship.
The astonishing phase is our
"uneasy and "embarrassed" dele
gation made no mention of this
and strain of labor negotiations with the accompanying fears of matter, did not demand opening
strikes and labor trouble' Not much can be done to mitigate ! of east Germany to find out how
that under present conditions: but its does dispose an owner mucn nas Deen taxen or maze any
to Kive up the fight, if he can do so at a comfortable profit.
It is gcir.g to be hard to buck this trend to bigness among
cirpw aliens. An easing of the tax burdens and some relief on
the labor front would be helpful in enabling small corporations
to it-main rmall and independent.
Oil ami Politic
Loinor Karl Warren of California touched a spark to
tl" i ttutt pi ice increase for gasoline announced by Standard
of Caiitoi n.a. the third price increase since the war. Warren
ln a pfci ' h ular peeve with the oil companies because they
hive b-en fighting his recommendation for an increase in the
gi tax to ptrmil California to expand it highway program.
A -p- lal w sion of the legislature he called for this purpose
faii'-d to at, and now it i up in the regular session, and the
g ri nor accuses 'slick lobbyists of the oil companies" with
working to lefeat the tax irerease.
Rtason given for the latest increase is higher prices for
cvj-le oil The previous iruiease was attributed to higher freight
rj Tlie f.:st nvcrej was said to' be due to higher costs of
Ot-t Ktlflg.
Oil company earning have held
rirind It per cent gratt;r than in 1945 for 16 companies, as
accusaUons. (Our military has
some of the facts )
Relates TLeetlnx Secret
The inside reason for this
strange omission of the plain facts
of reparations looting to date Is
possibly due to a quiet secret
story, current in our official quar
ters, as to the nature of the Yalta
conference Mr. Roosevelt is sup
posed to have been somewhat ill,
as was also Mr Churchfll. It was
once said Mr. Roosevelt forgot to
have a copy made of the Yalta
agreements, and a government of
ficial once told me. the agreement
at Yajta was recorded in Ameri
can files only by certain personal
notes of James Byrnes (then an
unofficial adviser) which he made
for his own use and placed In
the safe at his home.
Once Byrnes is supposed to
GRIN AND BEAR IT
By Lichty
"Ne I haven't the slightest Mes where yea could reach my has
hes! he Jaet said he'd be working late at the office!"
DTP
0000008
ITrTDITT
n
(Continued from Page 1)
chairman of the automotive divi
sion. Hubbard, with Walter L.
Sen rock as chairman, and Sidney,
with Mrs. William Weiderkehr as
chairman, were the other quota
toppers.
Public Records
and the local units of govern
ment. Wages are pretty good now
I saw recently that the average James
in coai-mining was aruunu iu a
week. But too few of the mining
families know how to budget
their finances. They squander
money on gauay lurniture, on
drink or other indulgences, accu
mulate little in the way of sav
ings. Mine owners provide very
crude housing, cheap shacks
which they rent for small sums
per month. The mining communi
ties lack running water, sewage
disposal, sanitary regulations. Op
erators are indifferent as to how
the miners live, say they wouldn't
take care of good places if they
were furnished.
The publicly supported services
MUNICIPAL. COURT
John Venteicher, Sublimity, de
ficient lights, posted $5 bail.
C. H. Emery, Sweet Home, vio
lation of basic rule, posted $23
B. Crenshaw, route 8,
Salem, violation of basic rule,
posted $5 bail.
David Benjamin Hague, 1820
Ferry st., violation of basic rule,
posted $10 bail.
MARRIAGE LICENSE
APPLICATIONS
Herbert J. Schwarz, 20, farm
er, and Lorraine Maertz, 22, tele
phone operator, both of Salem.
Herbert C. Lucas, 23, student.
Salem, and Mary Elizabeth Snow, ;
19. student, San Fernando, Calif, i
Emmett L. Gilmer, 35, mill
worker, and Margaret Wedel, 31,
office worker, both of Salem.
Kenneth L. Buchanan, 26, dep
uty county clerk, and Jeannette
Wieder, 23, bookkeeper, both of
nave vrrcrii srin w ma --"" ( are not adequate. Truancy is
lina residence hurriedly by Mr. i ,,, amnn .ki rhiiHrn
i Roosevelt to find out what Mr. I kt ,
at high levels, for 194 ' Roosevelt did agree to " Yalu- vided. and children fwd lor them- James W. Moore, 26, truck
me me..-.. u-imu. , selves for amusement, learn to driver. Junction City, and Luella :
cow may have known this inside crr,. or.i ii,,m. ! r d-h i r-v.
rvjrt-f in tr.e National t ity bank news-letter. Operating costs story and felt some embarrass-n-i
iloobt are higher both because of hiijher wages and because ment about the entire subject for
or :-ei1 to explore new fields. Drilling too must be deeper to b's reason.
rtrit.-ri new ml-bearmit sarins. JTosnecti are for rontinura hi?h v" "rl al "IM"1M' 1- "J "''r-
cnn-iimpiiwi anil volume increase should take care or some i
lloveinc: Warren sdv he is calling on the federal depart-n.-r.t
ol ;u:.ce to mvtstik;dte the companies and see if there
i-i "lMfiipoir. r on of prions bv petroleum companies. Unless col
1 - on tin te thiiwn in violation of the anti-trust act nothing
c j Id be ci! e by the ftxl.-i al government. The oil companies
h rer wnl do well to give some heed to the reaction of Cov
er. .r Wjiiit-i'.. who certainlv is no radical, for oil is still highly
in '..minutbif in political prairie fires.
Mr-nar of Foot-aiul-Moiith I)ieae
I.jjt ar in the effort o provide more beef our government
041 t tl- Dorder for importation of cattle from Mexico. It
w t Iiik however btfoie the gate was hastily slammed shut
w'' n mmv (arne of the spread of hoof-and-mouth disease among
Mfvuifi h 'i Ite!v the disease has been discovered 350 miles
fr m the Texas border, and this has caused great alarm among
a"Miwrt ciVlenvn Th.-v fear this disease which plays havoc
w.th htds cf cattle
S.nce Mexico is ill-prepared to stamp out the disease the
'ed Sliitts is b'ing asked to extend a neighborly hand skill
tina: ans an.l vaccines) to stamp out the disease in
.i.f) But Dr. B T Simms formerly of OSC. now chief of the
culture (.department bureau of animal industry, reports
' the prcre5i.t in working out control measures with Mexico
made an adequate legal and diplo-
j matte answer to ivioiorov Dy pnni-
i iiik l 1 1 111 1 l iri.-Hidin aufi i ii' j : uiemsei'es
i and nullified Yalta However his sanitation.
was a sort or aeiensive answer,
' and if he had raised the question
of how much the Russians have
already looted out of Germany he
: would have put them on the de
' fensive.
' Censorship Delusion Cited
The Russians are getting away
smoke early, frequent poolhal Is
and movies. While health services
are provided by company doctors
the hospitals are inadequate.
What is needed is an attack all
along the line, and it ought to be
gin with education of the miners
in home-making, in
n health rules, in
budgeting finances. A much bet
ter job should be done by the
public schools if only to enforce
attendance. Mine villages should
get running water and sewage
disposal. These things are of
greater importance than wage in
creases, because thousands of
shire, Ore.
JUSTICE COURT
Lea till Sara Oden. 10 Williams
ave., no operator's license, fined
$2.50 and costs.
Arthur Carl Kennedy, 2635 S.
Approval of
Sales Tax
Held Possible
(Story also on Page 1)
Rep. Earl Hill of Cushman, a
leader in the house -faction which
pushed through the sales tax
measure by a 38 to 22 vote Thurs
day, told representatives there
was little basis to the belief that
the sales tax could not win state
wide approval merely because it
has been beaten previously (the
last time 269,276 to 96,691).
He said the income tax was up
for popular vote repeatedly from
1912 until it finally was endorsed
at the ,1930 referendum.
Other proponents of the meas
ure said it was essential because
other tax measures, which sales
tax opponents declared would
meet the state's needs, also might
be carried to referendum and the
state left without adequate means
of support.
Special Session Feared
Rep. E. H. Condit of Clatskanie,
in explaining why he voted
against the sales tax, said he
planned to be married and go to
the beach July 4 "and if there's
a special session of the legislature!
then I'm going to be hard to get
along with."
The possibility of a special ses-;
sion also was voiced by Rep. M.
P. Gallagher of Ontario, who :
urged that other tax measures be ,
passed conditionally so they
would become operative to pro- j
vide needed revenue in event the
sales tax issue was defeated in ,
referendum.
Major opposition rested on
contentions that the sales tax (1) j
I
Summer st., no operator's license, I
fined $15 and costs. i
Roy G. Petty, preliminary
hearing set for March 28 on !
charge of escaping from Marion
county Jail.
CIRCUIT COURT
Wilfred Weathers and Dorothy!
Weathers vs. Lulu Marie Jerman
and Portland Trust and Savings
Bank: Order of dismissal, upon;
settlement out of court
Farmers Underwriters associa-1
tion, et al.. vs. Dent B. Reed and
Claire Reed: Complaint asks
judgment of $1000 in settlement
of alleged indebtedness. 1
Delmer E. Wood vs. Vernon W.
Hall ford: Plaintiff asks $1250:
damages for death of two horses, '
allegedly caused by defendant's '
operation of automobile. j
PROBATE COURT j
Edwin H. Foster guardianship:;
Order approving annual report. t
Mary Engi guardianship: Order,
approving annual account.
D. Clifford estate: Order closing
estate.
Sally Bush estate: Report of
appraisers. i
Mathilda Spelbrink estate: Re-1
port of appraisers. !
Frank F. Rahn estate: Report :
of appraisers. 1
' would. ie defeated for the sixth
time at referendum regardless of
state's budget can be balanced :
without it, by adoption of pro
posals contained in the tax study
commission's report of three
months ago.
State Needs Cited
Rep. Lyle Thomas cited as the
states needs another $2,000,000
for the school support fund, i
around $3,000,000 additional fori
public welfare, and $10,000,000 to;
make up the present prospective j
deficit. )
To meet these needs, Thomas j
suggested: j
( 1 ) Transfer to the general !
fund of $7,000,000 in surplus ;
funds of the corporate excise tax
act, as earlier proposed by Gov.
Earl Snell; (2) enactment into law ;
of the house-approved cigaret
tax bill designed to raise $4,000.
000 next biennium; (3) adoption
of the house-approved 1 per cent ;
withholding tax measure esti-!
mated to yield $2,000,000 in two
years; (4) placing the tax com
mission on a self-sustaining basis'
instead of appropriating $1,000.-;
000 from the general fund, and (5) 1
subjecting to state income tax the
now-exempt federal income tax
levy, estimated to raise $8,000,000
the next biennium at a cost he
estimated at less than $5,000,000 i
to taxpayers who would have
more deductions from federal tax.
Other Bills Proposed j
Rep. Giles French, terming thei
sales tax measure the worst bill
he had seen on the subject, sug
gested passage of other pending
legislation, including proposals to ;
tax slot machines, reduce income!
tax exemptions, and levy a 10 ,
per cent tax on liquor. i
The sales tax was endorsed!
earlier this week in an address byfj
Gov. Earl Snell. who said he i
never was "enthused" about the '
plan but indicated he believed it 1
now necessary.
Public Urged
To Discuss
Medical Plans.
Discussing pre-paid or social'
ized medical service plans before
the Salem Lions club Thursday,
Dr. W. W. Baum urged all citi
zens to interest themselves in the
subject and to discuss their opin
ions with their doctors and legis
lators. Dr. Baum. Salem physician
who pioneered In hte development
of Oregon Physicians Service,
spoke at the noon luncheon of the
club in the Marion hotel.
The medical profession gener
ally oppose over-all "socialized
medicine sponsored by the gov
ernment. Dr. Baum said, because
it considers such a plan unwork
able. Principal objections, he ex
plained, are the limited number
of doctors and the unlimited de
mands for service which likely
would result.
Dr. Baum pointed out that a
municipal medical service plan
had to be abandoned in Detroit,
Mich., when the normal demand
for medical service increased
fourfold with advent of the plan.
He added that treatment of spe
cific illnesses or injuries, which
may be predicted in a given popu
lation, constitutes only 20 or 30
per cent of the total service, the
bulk of which consists of con
sultation and non-predictable
services.
SORBOE EXPECTS 125
PULLMAN. Wash.. March 20-(JPj-
Coach Phil Sorboe said today .
he expected 125 candidates next ;
Monday for the opening of spring j
football practice at Washington 1
State college. 1
Rose Society
Plans Show
Plans were made for the annual
rose sho wto be held at the YMCA
June 7 and 8 by the Salem Rose
society at the society's meeting
last night in the "Y.
Howard J. Grady. Portland, of
the California Spray Chemical
corporation, spoke on "Pests and
Diseases of Roses and Their Con
trol and a round table discussion
on fertilizers was led by Earl W.
Benbow of Dallas.
Dr. E. E. Boring
See Better
Look
Better
. . . with glass from Boring- Optical Co. Yes, now Is
the time to let Dr. Boring or Dr. Hughe, registered opto
metrists, give your eyes a thorough examination.
Dignified Credit
BORING OPTICAL COMPANY
SB
Dr. Ssss Hagbes
383 Court
Phone CMS
similarly with many delusions on j families on smaller incomes live
the American public and this more Recently and comfortably,
may further explain our embar- , proving it can be done,
rassmer.t in Moscow. The key de- 1 Here we are remote from coal
lusion behind all this may be the , mming districts, but we are dis
fact that most of the American tressed to see pictures of the
people believe Russia ha lifted . strjngy streets, the unpainted
one porthole in the iron curtain shacks. the outside privies, the
to let the world see freely without j fUes tne wallowing hogs, the un
censorship its own conference. j kempt dooryards. We'd like to see
In a way it has Yet the whole, ; h H,t,c-
I
V
e
M
a 4
th
t d!
truth is the American newsmen
must use Russian facilities to get
out their news, Russian telephones,
telegraph instruments, radio all
manned by Russians. The Russian
government, which controls all
these instruments knows instant
ly every word sent out by the con
ference if not before. No words
have been deleted the last check
I made.
F niarr Regret Held Possible
The enlightening articles in the
LHJ reveal the facts, and make it
clear that joint effort is needed
to eliminate the conditions which
are a disgrace to America and
really are not necessary.
ter
'rtifMnr! . ''.gly kIow
Tlte menace is gen' i me and if the disease gets a start in
T -tas it mignt spread to the dairy and beef herds of the north.
II -:e is e 'orm of isoltionim the whole country should ap- might have ideas he would regret
pi.iv- lieiom from this hihlv infectious disease among cattle;
a'o one ftim of in turrit tion.ili.sm it should approve: helping the
M -can get rid of it in their country
Pheasant Dinner
For Patients
But the overall truth of the mat- 4 CM
r is that In Moscow a reporter, OllVCriOII
l et Hub Bill l).Y
About the only bill making a change in our system of liquor
cor Trol v, I.k h is alive is MB 207, now in the hands of the sen
s' alho..c traffic committee. The bill seeks to loosen some
of the reMr.c tion on club-; and really opens the way to con
sil 'tiitlc ;r...e The prt-ser.t law requires clubs really to func
tion a plairs wh.'re meals aie served before obtaining club
I ic-". . Iiom the commision MB 207 would require them to
hi.e kitctwn and rfmin room equipment and space and food
or. hand, but these could be mere window dressing, for there is
no requirement that the club function as a restaurant.
having had once he gets home I SILVERTON Silvetton hos-
heard a great leader once say he pital folk dined on wild pheasant
used to go out to California an- and quail Tuesday which cost Joe
nually and make great decisions j Charles Bello $100 and Gaylon
swiftly in the balmy air there. Duane Amon $25 in justice court.
But when he came back to New
York and started thinking his de
cisions over, he changed every
one of them back to his original
idea. Travel mav broaden one too
Bello and Amon, both from Sa
lem, were arrested Sunday by
Chief of Police Victor Grossnickle
for having the pheasant and quail
in their possession. Additional
much and travel to Moscow might i charges on Bello were killing and
even broaden s logical man into . hunting game out of season. Both
embarrassment and uneasiness. I pleaded guilty and Bello was fined
For this reason you may see a ; $100 and costs, given a 60-day
surprising bit of news develop j suspended jail sentence, besides
shortly. It is possible the delega- ; having his .22 standard pistol,
tion may find it necessary to move . with which he did the shooting.
the conference to some other place, j confiscated. Amon was fined $25
say, for instance switzeriana, and costs and given a 30-day su
0teiwic!v proposed in behalf of veterans the bill makes where it is really beautiful in the j pended sentence for being in the
spring, it ts possible tnis may oe i company of Bello while in the
done long before the allotted time I possession of the out-of -season
no reffience to veteran. It would be well to let this bill die in
conimU-e Present laws are liberal enough with respect to clubs.
Editorial Comment
Frem Oar
Cen temporaries
ST. rATTUCK
Greet as he ws m a miioiiary to Erin. St Patrick is equally
sini(i.a)t ctside tt his sttndir.g as the foremost Irish religious
fi i:e 1 an .mpoctan necuiar sense he was a preserver and fur
ther of civile tion He did moie than Christianize Ireland; he brought
tht tled, mhlch up to his lime had been exceedingly dim in the
w--ern eeeen. into cluee contact with Europe and especially with
R me.
Fr Ike tenefit crt civilization this was just in time. The lamp
of education was lighted in Ireland to burn brightly there during
th- per wi when the grent barbarian migrations almost blacked It out
on the asManUnd of Europe and in North Africa. Britain as welL
DoriMg the Dark Ages Ireland was the educational center of the
w i 'd. The monastic schools carried on the Latin culture and fos
ter trl tfae arts and the sciences. In their turn, before the Anglo
N r man iaticoiu upet the traditions! life ef Ireland. Irish scholars
m.ed eowei fully in the Caioungian revival of learning on the
Continent.
As a personality Patiick was remarkable. His power of per
suasion, lor that was all he used, must have been immense. When
he returned as a mi uji:M"y to the country where he had once been
a slave titer were few Chiistians there. The people and their rulers
weie dotnsMted by the Druids, who did not willingly give up their
powers privileges. Yet Patrick overcame them all; when he
died the Irish people were Christian. He had wiped out not only
hed'hertiam but sieverr This gentle though Bold soul wss a great
liberal o& his time. In his own words he was "Against every knowl
edge that binds the soul of man.'' (San Franci-co Chronicle.)
of the conference. Marshall is
known to have intended to re
main six weeks at the start.
The delegates might be able to
think with less embarrassment,
more ease and above all with
greater clarity in Switzerland
or even in a telephone booth at
the south pole.
Ram Donated as
Prize for Show
A registered . Romney ram do
nated as an award by Dr. C. H.
Seagra ves, Clackamas county vet
erinarian, has given impetus to
plans (or the Clackamas county
spring lamb show, sponsored by
the newly organized Clackamas
county livestock association. The
show will be held the last week
in May at the Canby fairgrounds.
Those who already have indicat
ed they will sho ware Harms Bro
thers, Rufus Kraxberger, John
Weber. El wood Feist. C. E. Kraft
birds.
The birds were shot late Sun
day afternoon from Paradise
road. Judge Alf O. Nelson turned
the birds over to the hospital and
the pistol to the game commission.
Also fined in justice court were
George Hayes. $5 and costs for
having no operator's license; Al
bert Hauck on a charge of driving
with four in the front seat, $5 and
costs; Norman McAllister, $49.50
on a charge of driving an over
loaded log truck.
Red Cross Drive
Hits 70 Per Cent
Approximately 70 per cent of
Marion county's $49,000 quota in
the current Red Cross fund drive
has been turned in, Fred Star
rett, general chairman, said
Thursday at the Lions club lunch
eon. With the Salem automotive
and Fred Diety all of Canby; Wil- section over its $2800 quota and
liam Staehelv of Oreeon C i t v. I two rural areas toooing their
i Louis Schwabauer of Hubbard and marks the total yesterday was
IV.
C. Dopplet of Molalla.
nearly $34,000. John Stark is
Y WIGG LYr.
i
BWjaeSBSSSSSBSBBSSaBSSSSSBSSSSBSBSBBW
NBC Honey maid
Graham
Crackers
1 -lb. pkg.
2-lb. carton
470
2J
H&D Spinach 2s tin 16e
Luncheon Heat Rath's
Snowflake Soda Crackers ... 2 -lb. earten 44c
Orange Juice cur. cow 10c
H&D Apple Juice n isc 3?-. betu 27 C
Whole Kernel Corn HD 12-ei. tin 15c
Diced Beets Del Mente 393 Glass 12c
Prepared Prunes Starr 3e3 Glass 18c
2,Vs tin 19c AH Sweel Margarine
i2-. un 42 C Olive Bntler Gr.Bdee
Argo Corn
or Gloss
Starch
90
l ib. pkg.
.l-ib.
..5-es. class
45C
18c
MANKIND
DOG FOOD
OTTER
MINCED CLAMS
H's On
LEEDS
DEVILED MEAT
Vi's Un 10c
LIPTON'S
NOODLE SOUF MIX
3 for
MISSION JIFFIES
FRESH EGO NOODLES
16-es. pk.
MISSION MACARONI
OR SPAGHETTI
27-es. pkc 25C
OVAL. TINE. PLAIN OR
CHOCOLATE
35 c
49c size
65 c
Tenderleaf
TEA
rjn XI ISC
A customer's confidence is worth a lot to us as we are ever
striving to purchase the very tops in quality meats at prices
that we can again pass on to you at a saving. REMEMBER
it's economical to buy the best and the most tasteful.
THIS WEEK'S "HIGHLITES" INCLUDE
Special Lean Gronnd Beef u,. 43 C
Ground frem Swift's branded gov't, insp. toef. Ne waste
delicious. Make inte patties or leaf. Serve bet with hash
brown potatoes.
Swill's DsTr Frankfurters
7e sise ..
WAXTEX WAX PAPER
20c
125-foot roll
Sise aill-kllll ICS Lb,
They cut at a mere touch of your fork
49c
Turkey
This Week Only.. Lb.
450
Place order for that Easter ham new while prices are rlft-at.
Swift's Preminm - Armour's Star - MerreU Pride - Cascade
FOR MEAT TO EAT WE CANT BE BEAT
-HERB CURTIS
fif
s Ileal
For Babies
Strained
Diced
as)
BBBBBBBTe43aaBaBBBBBTeBBTaam
2 I7oiih Capilol al Ilarkel