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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 14, 1953)
4 The StcdT"""r Salern. Ch-agon, Saturday, Ttbraarr IX 1833 PsaJabed every morning. Business office 1X5 S. . Cesnmeroiai St, Salem. Ore.. Telephone X-S441. carrier la ctttss Daily tad Sunday Daily only , .. Sunday only y ealy tin aavapce) Anywhere ta u a. , for reoubttcatiea " ail local hwi Ua fJwspaperK A Sort of Valentine Ask not of me, love, what is love? PJ. Bailey in Testus" "What is this thing called love?"-asks the songsmith, who ought to know, if anyone does. The entire popular-music industry is built on iove from the jazz of Dixieland' red-light dis tricts to the sweet-swingy tunes of high school proms where so many Americans experience the first faint twinges of puppy love. "Ah, what is love?" sighs the poet. And poets should be authorities on the subject, since it inspires so much of their work from the litera ture of the masters to the diversified sentiment in verse turned out for the Valentine Day greet ing card trade. The Ladies JHome Journal is running an ac count of Queen Narriman's Cinderella-like ro mance with King Farouk. This is love? Time magazine this week has an item about a Dr. Ida who has devoted herself to niinistering to the medical and spiritual needs of Indians. Is that not love? The newspapers are full 5f juicy de tails about a trial involving a $100-per-night call girl and some very prominent and promis cuous New Yorkers. Love? And reports say that people are responding generously to the appeal or aid to the flood-victims of Holland and Eng and, as well as to the current fund campaign to combat heart disease. Is that a labor of love? Perhaps it is enough to say that love, like gold, is just where you find it. On this day, de dicated to romantic love, folk should give free rein to this richest of the emotions, warming thereby their own hearts and those who are "objects of their affections. No Politics by Legislation The Hounsell bill intended to prevent Senator Wayne Morse from running for re-election is a piece of bizarre w h i m s e y that would- cheat Morse's constituents of their prerogatives. How 23 members of the house and eight sen ators got sucked into indorsing this freakish at tempt to grab for the legislature the mejans to wreak revenge on Morse is past understanding. If this bill should happen to pass, it would deprive the voters of this state of the privilege and obligation to pass judgement on Wayne Morse themselves! The right to call upon their representatives in the U.S. congress for an ac counting and then to decide upon the basis of that record whether or not the senator rates re election is a right that voters must guard jeal ously. It has only been a relatively short time that the citizens have had the privilege of di rect election of U.S. senators; the Hounsell bill would, in effect, restore decision of the Morse ease to the state legislature. The Hounsell bill would also, in effect, coerce Wayne Morse to -violate his conscience, if he de sires to re-run for office. The bill prohibits state and national office-holders from switching par- Eisenhower Discovers Ther e is No Cheap, Magical Solution to Major World Problems By JOSEPH and STEWART ALSOP WASHINGTON Tuesday of this week is likely to go down in . history as the first major turning point of the Eisenhower admin istration. It was the day when ''l ".s.' $b hard fact was xacea tnat there are no cheap, magical solutions of any f big problem. land especially tof the Far Eastern prob ' f lem. - Evidently President Eis enhower and J the State , De- 'i'llL-illJ partment pol- icy maaers aia. not foresee the consequences of their psychologically justifiable - but militarily meaningless ges ture ef unleashing" - Chiang Kai-shek. Tlainly, they didnot expect the; ensuing orgy of wishful thinking and irresponsi- ble talking about painless, m i r aie u -lous' ways to humble the Chi nese Commun ists and end the Korean war. At any rate, it can be said that the orgy had ' not gone on for long before the Pres ident decided it Stewart AUm i to apply corrective. .. j Under the President's Instruc tions, the corrective was there fore applied by Gen. Omar Brad ley The chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff followed Secre tary af State John Foster Dulles on the stand of the Senate For- . feign Relations ' Committee on tuesday. : - . . ' .- Althoaxh the assembled Sena tors only wished to talk about . Far Eastern aerations, Secre- -iary Dalles made his European : Journey his chief theme. At to such anch-dlseamed expedl- ' eats as the blockade of the - , China Coast, Dalles contented himself with saying that na 1 adventures; .of this. sort Tere, ... V, fcll fc III i m teat ".No Favor Swayt U No Fear Shall Awe Fran First SUtesniaav March tt. 1U1 THE STATESA1AW PUBLISHING COMPANY " CHARLES A: SPRAUUE, Editor and Publisher gnteretfat the -Inn matter UBSCVraiON lAttl Br saau. t lsa ae ma. . la ai counties . Uti pr ma (Benton, Clsckamss. Una, . JO week Marlon. Folic. Yamhill). - na- Dnvlxn la Oregon . a. 75 six mk &00 year la O S. outside Oregon IXMBX OFt printed la - Advertisin repress ntaUvea Ward-GrUSUi New York. Chicago. Saa rrandaco. Detroit). asdtt Bureaa af ClrculaUeas - We've Got What They Haven't In Philadelphia nearly everybody' reads the "Bulletin, says the Bulletin. And in the United States, nearly everybody reads the newspapers, says N. W. Ayer and Sons' Directory of News report. Last year the was 53,748,000. newspapers than planned, so far as ho knew. That-left Gen. Omar Bradley with the task of disillusioning the Senators, several of whom had worked themselves ap ta demanding a blockade tomor row morrnlng. Bradley made the following thorny points. First, international law forbids a blockade without the declara- . tion of a state of war. If we de clared" ourselves at war with Communist China, the character . of the Korean War would be in stantaneously transformed, and we should rind ourselves fight ing alone, with our allies holding aloof. Incidentally, the blockade could not Include Hongkong without a declaration of war on Great Britain, but could include Port Arthur and Dairen, since these ports technically belong to China. Second, besides dividing this country from its allies, a blockade Would invite reprisals. The. Chinese might step the air war in Korea, which they are now capable of doing. They ' might bomb Formosa, which has no serions air defense; at tack Hongkong or at least .eat off Its supplies: and even at- " tack- the American - bases in Okinawa and Japan, which are weakly defended. Ostensibly Chinese submarines might at- , tack the American blockading . . vessels. And the chance . that the .Soviets themselves might la terrene openly, under the terms af the JSlno-Soviet pact, is taken mare seriously than is generally sopposed. Thirds despite all the demagog- : lc bellowing to the contrary, an off-shore blockade to halt Chi , nese import would be relatively ineffectual. What is needed is an inshore blockade, cutting off the coastal shipping that constitutes . Communist China's main internal lines of communications. Fourth, and most important . ' af all, a blockade would cer- talnly be In flaming; it might be 1 . crippling; but It could not be counted on ta bring the Chi nese Communists to hecL Hence ' a blockade should not be' plan- ' i nea cxcepi as one item in broader preoeram af military ud ether, cUpn,a'aIioedta Ore M second aider set ta .f 1MP SJtt six io jo rw me. 1.48 ami at ASvertlatBg caw posteffloa at ties in succeeding elections. In Morse's case it would mean that Morse could not run as an In dependent (which he now says he is); he would have to run as a Republican (which party he has repudiated). Our advice to the eager beavers who want to kill off Morse politically via the law-making-route is to go a little slow. They might instead enable him to drape the mantle of a martyr over himself and run for governor! He doesn't have to run for re-election until 1858 and in politics a lot of things may happen in three years. The Statesman has been disappointed in many things Morse has done, but it is not joining the pack to deny him the privilege of standing as an in dependent candidate if he wants to. papers and Periodicals in its latest circulation circulation U.S. dailies ire reading Vnriek" for total circulation for More Americans are ever before. Well, that means no "alas, poor Yorick" for us! There was a time when the experts were looking, at newspapers and sadly shaking their heads. You're not long for this world, they said, pointing to radio, movies, weekly news maga zines and that johnny - comelately, television. The competition was supposed to crowd news papers into the pale, wasting-away stage. Fact is, though, that the press is sound, healthy and improving every day, thank you. What have we got that they haven't got?' Americans have been reading newspapers for 248 years; it's a national habit. Then too, none of th competitors can compare with newspa pers for inexpensiveness, convenience and per manence. Permanence is the big thing, the secret of the press endurance and success. A name heard on the air is soon forgotten. A face flashed on a screen soon fades. But a name or a picture of a new bride, a new baby, a new draftee in the local paper will last until the clipping is worn to shreds by admiring relatives. And the homely little item about the covered-dish supper, the Valentine party or the student recital is there in the paper for all to see. Competition has forced the press to be a mo dern, heads-up institution, constantly improv ing to meet new demands (for more picture, sharper writing, more entertainment features, better news coverage) and in line with technolo gical advancement. This is all to the good. But the competition can't touch us where we really shine: our ability to provide the thrill of seeing your name in print. Nothing can beat the newspapers. make the Chinese Communists see reason by force. The extent jrr -f msot- 7 ci wm uie whole moth-ball fleet would have to bo mobilised merely to maintain and fathers blockada. In justice to a brilliant officer It should be said that Admiral ' Art hllf nmtttnrA wKn blockade ruckus, was snMsly BEND (SI Tha Bend branch misquoted. Radford took almost of the U. S. National Bank corn precisely the same position u pUiM w circuit court suit here Bradley, saying that a blockade VJ!!1 was a practical expedient, but JSi bacV.it. V-800:6- ' ' anly aa a part of a much broad- ar effort. This may be said to make the military judgment un animous. - The Senators, who did not en joy beta; eoafronted with tha hard facta, heard Gen. Bradley very gmmly. Nonetheless, as ana of them remarked. ' "W weren't talking blockada any mora when he finished." Tha whole episode may be taken . as a sad warning against be ileving yonr own oratory. Among the KepabUeans, Sen. Robert A. Taft had been almost v alone in grasping the hard facts before hearing them from Gen. Bradley. . ' But what happened Tuesday nas a meaning going far beyond the change -of minnd and tone among leading 4 Republicans in Congress. v Gen. Bradley's chief point is applicable, and .was in tended to- be applicable, to all the nostrums for ending the Ko rean War that are now being peddled. No single, cheap exped ient will do this urgent job. A; major national effort, involving the major, risks of a wider war in: the Far East, will now be .necessary. ''- .. -This is a truth that should have been understood some time ago. In certain quarters It was- un derstood. Interestingly :- enough, for instance, George F. Kennan, tha alleged - apostle, of ' passive' containment, was strongly urg ing such an increase of national effort from Moscow before, his expulsion- from " -the " Embassy there. But the choice , ahead is immensely grave, and it must not be made in an- atmosphere of .easy self-delusion, i i ' " fCooyrlsht 1953. -: Xtm York Herald Trlbun ln. GRIN AND BEAR IT r ' i "Ifs -tangled farming Lena t February this year comes out even. A squint at your calen dar 'will show that it begins oh Sunday and ends on Saturday. This leaves a dandy white space at the bottom of the calender This leaves a d: C . f ,cr. I. iC - J if tp hi ' '4 and use it to separate days in other months like making Easter a four-day weekend ... ' - a i , Newsedltor Wes Sullivan has submitted aaly two stories for publication hi national magazines. Tha second one he sent ut tale abea a Baany wk eoaldat talk (or maybe woaldaH hm t sold to Jack and Jill, children's mag. Only It wont appear until the April. 1954, Easter laaaa. Seems it was too late for this year's Easter. i ... . : Auto accidents which go around town looking for a place to happen seem to prefer the N. Capitol-Madison Sts. intersec tion. The resident living on the corner got tired of having: wrecks rolling around on his lawn. One week there were four crashes there. So, he finally built a stone pillar to keep those skidding sedans off his turf.' So what happens? Right! Along comes a wreck and wreck the guy's stone pillar. - Sare sign af spring Women earning lata Ladd and Bosk Bank, taking off their coats and weighing themselves. Worrying, probably', how their going to get into last summer's alacks . ... Mast legislators agree that Thursday's Lincoln Day iMOgiaaa fat the house went off with an unusual amount of dash and interest. Some credit probably could so to Sen. Jack Bain, wbo was an the committee. Sen. Bain used to bo an entertainer and knows how to get these shows oat tha Fire Chief Ellsworth Smith had his own schedule changed the other night when he met with firemen and told them their schedules would be changed from a two to a three platoon sys tem of work. Before he went into the meeting room af City Hall Smitty took off his coat and left it hanging in his office.) It was n't until he stepped into the chiily outdoors that he realized his office door had locked. He could look in through the window and see his-coat hanging there containing his office and our keys. A friend took the smouldering chief home and they got another office key. Tl TFT . Bank W ants Check Error Readjusted Tn rniuwrignt, ueorge aun- mons, came mxa ue iwns -r eo. to doso his i account of $3.40, the suit says. But a teller by mistake drew up a check for $1,803.88, and Simmons immediately cashed the check, and then refused to give back the money, the bank says. The bank also asks interest and court COStS. . : :tT: .. - WETBACKS CHECKED ' JPORTLAND Ifi - Deportation hearings will be held here next week for 24 Mexicans' accused. of ' being in Oregon illegally. - Roy Norene, chief of the immi gration office here, said they had been working as railroad laborers in the Klamath Falls area. GS3S& Better English By D. C. WIIJUAMS 1. What is wrong with this sen tence? ."Mary is some better to day, but she doesn't ' expect to go no more if you will come and see her. . . : .i . , -2. What is the correct pronun ciation of exhort"? - 3. -Which one of these words is misspelled? Tranquillity trad gedy, transcend,' trapezium. -4. What does the word "expi ate mean? ' v" 5. What is. a i- word beginning with rep that means "filled . to capacity"? - , ANSWEKS ' - 1. Say, "Mary is somewhat bet ter today, but she doesn't expect to go anymore if you will come to see her." 2. Pronounuce eg-zort, accent second syllable. 3. Trag edy. 4. To atone for. "We must expiate this erroneous thinking 9. ReDlete , . , I fay Uchty ... gotta study world conditions. eating trands and census statistics afore I da my spring alaating ..." -an unfilled week What to do with this empty week? Weil, taxpayers could manufacture an other week with which to stall off the tax col lector. Men who can't stand the strain of garden work might schedule all the spading for this, non-existent week. If you can't stand your wife's relatives invite them to visit during the week between Feb. 28 and March 1. Legislators could work like mad during this week and get nothing done and nobody would care. Or you can snip that white space off your calender Bumper Light To Continue ; - ; - J Salem Junior Chamber, of Com merce's Tight a Bumper for Safe ty campaign will continue Satur day when Jaycees will sell reflect ing tape at three Salem locations. ' The sales posts will be at the Shopper's Car Park from' 9 ajn. to 5 pjn. and at the Capitol Shop ping Center and Safeway Store lot in the Hollywood district, begin ning at 130 p.m. . The Jaycees sell and Install full length strips of one-inch wide re flecting tape, , in the interest of promoting driving safety. The tape can be seen at great' distances, according to state, city and county safety officials who have approv ed the project. , . j .George Dunsmoor; ; one of the drive's co-chairmen, said that to date 175- strips . have been In sta lled incl uding 10 on local taxi cabs. Strips also were installed on several Salem , police motorcycles. The " project win r continue for two i additional Saturdays, Duns moor said.1 Plans call for Jaycees to be at the Capitol Shopping Cen ter . on - Monday . nlght Feb. 1 6, from 8 to 9 p.m. If this proves successful, - he said, other: night sales activities will be planned.. Investment Eyed In Proposed'Bill 1 The Joint Ways and Means Committee Friday voted to intro duce a bffl permitting the State Board of Higher Education to in vest its building funds in Federal and State securities. ; It was argued that approval of this bill would : save the' state a large amount of money. Under the current setup large amounts ' of building-funds are held intact over lone periods of time without be- Safety ling used or drawing any interest. I :tiIttltlilJi333C4lf ti Study-Repo rt On Retirement Plan A report of a special committee, including some of the top Pacific Coast actuaries, ' recommending creation of an interim committee at the current . legislative session to study the whole retirement pro. blero; was approved by the Joint Ways and Means Committee here Friday. . . - . The special committee empha sized that "hasty" action" should be avoided by the 1953 Legisla ture to recomrnerwling any major changes in the present public em ployes retirement program. It was recommended ' -that -the -Interim Committee include representatives of employe groups, tha state and private Industry. ' A suggestion that the present retirement system be junked in favor of social security was unan imously, opposed by the Special Committee. . - "The social security system was never, intended, nor has it been represented, to be a complete so lution of the problem of retire ment. the report read. "Because of its Inadequate retirement bene fits, we believe that future sessions of the Legislature would be plagued by employe groups until this retirement problem is solved by the enactment of a supplemen tal plan... Wer therefore, cannot advise .the substitution of social security for tha present system. House Bills '. Bills introduced in tha Oregon House of Representatives Friday: HJB. CO Multnomah Delrtlon: Relates to the mercer and eosohdaUon ot nonprofit corporation and corpor ation without capital stock. II. B. 421 Chindgren and Hill: Re peals laws which relate to tha as aets of the Oregon Sural Rehabilita tion Corporation. HS. 422 rCommittee on Agriculture: Regarding articles In cold storage. H.JB. 423 Committee on Agriculture: Relating to county meat and herd inspectors. H.B. 424 Committee on Agriculture: Repeals section 32-601 to 32-813. O.C.L.A., relating to county dairy herd inspectors. UB. 423 Committee on Agriculture: Repeals section 3S-701 to 36-705. O.C I.A relating to Inspection ot linseed oOa. H.B. 42S Committee on Agricul ture: Repeals sections se-601 to 36-604. O.CI.A, relating to the Inspection of illuminating oils. H.B. 427 Committee on statute Re vision: Repeals sections 29-202. 29-216. O.CX..A.. relating to tha manufacture and distribution of lime.. H3. 42S Wallace and Saa. Uerrl fiekl: Regulatea the dealers ta used motor vehicles. H.B. 429 Layman: Permits the em ployment of children under 14 years ot age in certain agricultural har vesting. EB. 430 Hatfield: Provides that county sheriffs shall be "nominsted and elected oa nonpartisan basis. H.B. 431 Wallace and Hill: Relates to the Oregon Falrview Home: des ignates Inmates as mentally deficient. EB. 433 Wallace and Hill: Com panion bill to No. 431; changes tha term "feeble-minded' to "mentally de ficient." . . H.B. 43 Davis: Relates to rural fire protection districts: provides notices of elections in sod districts. H.B. ,434 Committee on Ways and Means: Eliminates the two-tenthsmill tax heretofore collected for educa tional aid to World War veterans. H.B. 435 Hill and Stewart: Pro vide that salaries of county officers and deputies. Including district Judges whose salaries are paid by the county, shall have salaries fixed by budget committee of the county. HJB. 436 Hill and Stewart: Com panion bill to HB 433. Provides for appointment of county budget com mittees by governor. H.B. 431 Husband : Relates to support"-of dependents: permits district attorneys to represent petitioner in certain cases. . HJft. 1H HfTf and Husband ? Relates to o Deration of rural fire protection districts: authorizes Inclusion of ter ritory within municipal water aupply coTDoretloQ. ' HJB. 43 Geary end Sen. Hitchcock: Permits high school prlnclnaU to ex cuse certain pupOs from physical and hearth Instruction programs. HJB. 440 To. Corbett. Gearv and Sens. Hardle and Hitchcock: Relates to water resources. Provides for ap pointment of committee by the Gov ernor. Approoriates SMJMM. HJB. 441 Hill: Comprehensive meas ure orovidln for voting machines. . HJB. 442 Joint House and Senate Clackamas County Delegation: In creases the salary of Judge of district court of Clackamas county. HJB. 443 Joint Hous and Senate Clackamas County Delegation : In rmaaes salaries of county officers of Clackamas county. Senate Bills Bills Introduced in the. Senate Friday: t - ; S3. 260. by roads and highways committee Relates to protection, preservation and use of highways. .SB. 270. by Senator Gill Permit ting tha Oregon National guard to sell a' quonset but at Lebanon. - S.B. 271. by veterans affairs com mittee Authorizing certain applicants for licensing by state to be examined before completing educational require ments. . ' 1 SJB. 272. by assessment and taxa tion committee Authotizae. tax . com-r-1 to furnish county assisanra Information on real and personal prop erty which it gets from Income tax returns. " - SJ3. 273. by Senator Hounsell Pro hibiting - office holder from running for reelection on different ticket In succeeding election. SJBk 274.- by agriculture committee Relating to control and application of certain chemicals by aircraft. S-B. 273. by Senator Day Relating to- production, processing, distribution and sale of meat food animals. S.B. 276. by MaOtnomah delegation Opens tributaries of Johnson creek to ' appropriation of "water between December 1 and Juno 1. S.B. 277, by Multnomah delegation Relating to appropriation of waters from CUtakanie maakantrte. and San dy rivers, and Seappooea and Tlllasq.ua CTSJB?2TS. by Senator Brady Relates to persona released from Institutions to which they had been committed be cause fit mental disorder. - SJB. 27S. by Multnomah delegation Relating to the public employes re-tirefi-ent system. SJB. 280, by labor and Industries committee (substitute for SJB. 73) Relating to regulation of equipment for stating, handling -or transporting lfarald petroieam gas. - ; S.B. 21. by Senator Bownsen Re quiring : fall - candidate qna Mfirattons of oercons appointed by county central committee to fin candidate vacancy after primary election. Tax Echins . i ; PICZUP 6V DELTVTnY nau z-zsgs ; , ccssobsmo j Approved Lite Father, Like Son aBBiaianawasaiaWt t&m..w.:0mm'''mm" - aS Ik - ; "-"T i 1 r Plsnta and flowers are the eaaunon interest af this father-san team, gardener T. C Lata (left) and his son. florist Don Lata. Tha father does outside work and the sen operates tha shop on North liberty Street. - - . (Father Liitz, Son Mst rei7 Diito (Florist SEnop (Kdlter'f aote; rather aai sea coaablaatleas are feang la a wide variety ef Salem professions, basinets and trades, rollewlng - Is another la a Statesman personality series en suck partnerships.) A bang on the head resulted in the Lutx Flower Shop at 1278 N. Liberty St. The shop is owned and operated by Don Lutz whose fath er, F. C. Lutz, is in the gardening business. The shop got its start because Don Lutz, who stands 6 feet, 3, got tired of hitting his head on the ceiling of the basement room which the Lutzs' used as a flower shop. So he built a new one, with room for his extra inches. His father, who didn't have that trouble, was the one who started the whole thing. He went into the gardening business "because I like flowers." What he grew his wife sold. It was she who trained son Don to become a florist." When his mother died, Don took over as florist which, as he says, Tve done practically all my life." He likes particularly to work with funeral wreaths and bridal bou quets and he can compose a mean centerpiece. . - ' " . The sight of tha .six foot fiver wafting-violets and sweet peas in to dainty combinations for a brid esmaid or a tea table may well -be one of the more interesting parts of the business, at least as far as his customers are concerned. The flowers Don sells no longer come from his- father's gardens. The elder Lutz gave up his green houses during the war "because I couldn't improve them any. Since then he has confined him self strictly to landscaping. Any way, he admits, "shrubbery Is my favorite flower." He's the outside, I'm the inside," says Don of their partnership.. , . . . - . Pruning is T. C. Lutz specialty. He admits that the chief bugaboo in his field is not tha Insects but the amateur gardeners who try to tell him how to do his business. "I Just listen to them talk and then do it the opposite way," ha says. About planting so says, "it's no use tellin what you're goin' to plant Just go ahead and do it and FluoHdadon Plan Backed Members of the Salem Credit Association Friday passed a reso lution approving fluoridation of Salem's water supply. The group took tha action fol lowing a talk on fluoridation by Dr. Willard Stone, Marion County health officer. The resolution calls on the city council to. install the necessary equipment to implement the fluoridation program. The number of Oregon commun ities have fluoridated their water supplies in a move to prevent tooth decay. The Credit Association took the action tt its noon luncheon at the Golden Pheasant restaurant. 24-II0U3 DRUG SERVICE Open Daily 0 A.M. to 11 PeT.l. Duly Ffcznr.ackt en" Cell -11; PH. t3 o A.r.i hzt F:o 3-9123 cr 4-22tt : mm n Prescription &rs, 1C3 So. liberty fy , 1 : 1 M when you're through ask them how they like it." F. C. Lutz came to Salem from "Ioway," in. 1905. .He says, there was only one house in the whole town for rent and he couldn't have that for his wife and five children unless he took an option to buy it. So ha did and sent to work for the state as a gardener. Less than a year later he took over as head gardener. This job he kept for eight years after which he started "free lancing." And he still Is. "Because my family could n't live on what they paid," his wife had started the floral shop. Don Lutz worked with his fa ther in the landscaping business until his mother needed help in tha shop. . This was when he was S years old. He's never gotten out. And, he says, he doesn't want to. This in spite of the fact that, say the. Lutz', Salem isn't flower minded. "You never hear of a man picking up a bouquet of flowers or a youth buying a corsage un less it's for a. special occasion,; they say. "Ye gotta be dead to get flowers here, they say. COMINO SOON ' Tomorrow's Car -.Today Watch for Announcement Sfalo an3 Federal Tax Be tons Prepxrred In Tour Horn Reasonable Bats. Phons 4-391S BUILDEOS At Last a Sldlna that . Needs No Paint Low la Cost Permanent Flreproo! Flawlesa Beauty Uillaneilo - Alaninm Co. SS35 Portland Road Phone 2-8053 end 1 1 LiiLws t4iaei umijj;ijsistsiS!.':Niti!