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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 21, 1954)
( 4 Sc lK-Stcrtesman, Salem 4' (JDrcflontatcsman "No Favor Swayt Vi, A'p Fear Shad AxotTl front First Statesman. March 28. IS51 I CHARLES A. SPRAGUE. Editor and Publisher Publls&cd vry morning Business ottic Z80 ' North Church St. Salem. Or, Telcphona -441 ; Entered at tbm jOtlatBca at Salem. Or, aa second ! i da matter under act ot Congreta March S. 1S78- i Member Associated Press U . ; The Associated Press' u entitlea exclusively to the UN fo repuoUcation ot ait local news printed la this newspaper. Wind-up of RFC Since the Reconstruction Finance Corpora tion closed its lending window nearly a year ago it has liquidated $307 million of its assets through collections and through sales to pri vate lenders. In addition jit has transferred to other government agencies $1631 million worth of loans and securities it held. But it stiUhas $283 million worth of investments on hand. RFC as such is winding up its affairs. Further liquidation will be handled by a branch of the U. S. Treasury. I .. f j The break-up of its present residue is as follows: $183 million in business loans, $26 million in a loan pool with private banks, $10.5 million in railroad holdings, $30.3 mil lion owed by banks and $33 million worth of indebtedness from state or local! units of government. It" may be assumed that these are the "slow paper" accumulated by the big lending agency which functioned through the depression and the second world war. One of its slow loans is the $17 million advanced to Carthage Hydrocol, j Inc., in which Guy Gabrielson, former chairman of the Republican national committee, was a principal officer. This went sour, but a big oil ' company has taken over; the .property and has agreed to take care of the loan. Undoubt edly as with the liquidation of most other lending agencies there will be paper which even the government may never be able to collect on. However, the RFC did perform a useful function. It distributed credit aggre gating well into the billions; and its overall; operations will show a profit to the govern ment, not a loss. '! r In later years the need for its existence was no longer clear. Some of its off icers jbrought it into disrepute by their playing around aid politicking. S o Congress decreed its end. There is, however, a Small Business Admin istration which has set up shop with author ity to make loans of limited size to business concerns. - 1 ' .. . "1 Lafferty and two commissioners of Clacka mas County have succeeded in delaying the cut of the big melon for the O & C counties j of Western Oregon it's around $6,000,000. They have appealed the case in 'which Clackamas County sued two 'cabinet officers on the controverted land matter. While the matter seems to have been made moot by the enactment of the Cordon-Ellsworth; bill the county's appeal ties up the distribution of the accumulated sum in the( kitty." .There is one comfort, the - main issue is settled, the counties are to get 75 per cent of the pro ceeds of sales from these lands. Having wait ed a settlement for years,. the counties can endure delay of a few more months. Analysis Indicates It's Too Ear Conclusion By JOSEPH AND STEWART ! ALSOP WASHINGTON A lot of; peo ple have assumed that Frank lin D. Roosevelt, Jr., for incom- prehensible reasons of his own, has committed political suicide. in fact, u ne . has done so, it has been for the best of reasons. A couple of weeks ago. New York's Tamma ny boss Car-' mine De Sapio announced that he and the other New York lead ers bad decided 'Wtf Jcmrpk Aisorj b former, Averen Harrimatf for the Demo cratic nomination for governor of New York. De Sapio and his co leaders claim to control a net ma jority of the delegates to the 4 form com i n g State Democrat ic Convention Thus what they say goes or it always has in the past . ' Yet y Bag Roosevelt almost- immedi ately announc ed that he would continue his tight far the wAlsbg nomination. ; : This seemed to many people . an Insanely empty gesture, ' alienating to no purpose the' most powerful figures in the Democratic party In New York. Why did Roosevelt do It? ,, The answer tells a good deal about big time Democratic poli tics these days , and about Franklin D. Roosevelt, Jr. Most of Roosevelt's advisers told him to bow out gracefully when the decision to back Harriman was announced. Roosevelt himself was rather inclined to do so. Then he got the first of a long series of telephone calls from upstate Democratic leaders who had previously announced for1 him. - " - v Trank.M said the first call er, "if yea chlckea on this one, yon better not show your lace i ... , , . L - - i Ortw Tues. Sept 21, 1954 Reed President Resigns Reed College is to have another president. Dr. Duncan 5. Ballentine who came out from Massachusetts Institute of Technology about three years ago to head the college has ten dered his resignation. He says he reached this decision some months ago, so it was not hast ened by the recent Velde committee hearings in which thiee Reed professors were quizzed by the committee. Two of them have been continued oii the faculty and one was dropped, by the trustees. j ' Ballentine says he ; found resistance to change in the status quo: too deep-seated to permit him l to make . the changes which he felt are necessary.. This has its roots in the liberal tradition - surrounding Reed College. As it has developed the president was a sort of chairman of the board, with little, author ity over the.' operations of the school. The faculty asserted its claim to authority in faculty matters, and even student discipline was not "within the, president's prerogative, as Dr. Ballentine found out The college was started that ay. It's first president, William Trufant Foster, want- ed it to be a place where the winds of intel lectual freedom- might blow freely. Withal, however, it developed as a genuine center of learning where brain rather than brawn has been exploited It is now, the responsibility of the trustees not only to find a new presi dent; but lo define or redefine what his func tions arei Reed College is too valuable an. institution to be over internal U.N. Membership 1 The ninth session , of , the United Nations General Assembly opens today in New York City. Before it convenes, however, it is clear that owing to the veto of the USSR no appli cants for membership in U.N. will be ad mitted at this session. A special membership committee will report that the political cli mate is such that there is no prospect of gaining approval of any nation for member ship! There? are 14 countries which seek to become members. T h e Soviet Union has vetoed admission of any unless it could put over a package deal and get more of its satel lites admitted. : The otherjvexing question which will arise ! early in the session is the seating of Red China. It looks as though the opposition, headed by the United States, will prevail again this year. Oncej this is settled the U.N. will get down to business on its new agenda. Statesman correspondent A. Robert Smith, reporting from Washington says that Secre tary of the i Interior Douglas McKay enjoys telling how Ion his recent trip to Alaska a farmer gave: him a box of assorted vegetables which he had converted into a delicious salad aboard his dining car on the Alaska railroad. So that is how one gets a good salad on the Alaska RR. have your dining car and a farmer who furnishes choice fresh vegetables. fWe'li testify that in the regu lar dining car ( where a concessionaire furn ishes and serves the food, the meals are ter rible, worsts we encountered in Alaska. mmm& That FDR, Jr. north f the Bronx ever again.. . Other upstate Democrats told him' the same thing,1 in equally forceful words. The background of this ' enraged upstate read. Hon, is Interesting.! j f Roosevelt has been campaign ing upstate for delegates since the early spring. From the start, be was quite aware that he could always be outvoted at the con vention by the city bosses. But he reasoned that he could get so far ahead that the city men would not want to risk a messy fight. Ironically; in his efforts to corral upstate delegates, he suc ceeded all too well I i ' " 1 Upstate Democrats are for the most part lonely figures, 1 hud dled together for warmth in over whelmingly Republican territory. Before Roosevelt, no Democratic candidate for the gubernatorial nomination had bothered to cam paign upstate, since Al Smith's first try in 1918. Thus when Dan O'ConneH, powerful Democratic boss of Albany, came out for Roosevelt, the upstate Demo crats delighted by Roosevelt's unaccustomed attentions fell all over each other climbing aboard tne i Roosevelt bandwagon.' ji. This enthusiasm was. Indeed, Roosevelt's n d 1 ( . In the beginning. De Sapio and the other big city men rather In dined to Roosevelt. But by midsummer, It was .becoming obvious that the contemptible I upstarts from upstate , would claim the credit. If Roosevelt were nominated. This, the big , vCity men decided, could not be tolerated, s I r - i When Gov. Thomas E. Dewey took himself out of the race, it was clear to De Sapio and the others that they would have to act quickly, it the Roosevelt bandwagon was not to get com pletely out of control. The able and respected Harriman who has, incidentally, acted with dig nity and restraint throughout--had already quietly announced bis availability. At a hurried i conference m the Biltmore Hotel, ; De Sapio, State Chairman Rich ard Balch and the other city leaders decided to back Harri man. -;. . ' ' 1. - It had been intended to keep the decision secret for a few U-j&Vi h: ' ' . -H:;V-,1 ':-: S ' '?V: i : '' I . wrecked through dissension policies. That bank cashier who cashed $417,000 worth of checks not covered by cash in the bank, "all for the benefit of the customers" is the prize? example of a "bleeding heart." Evidently, he didn't think about protecting the interests of depositors. ,: ly for Any t Is All Through days, to "bring Junior into line." But the news leaked premature ly, so that Roosevelt first read about it in the newspapers. This in itself did, not incline him towards throwing in the sponge gracefully. Then the calls began coming la from the enraged upstate Democrats, who had had the rag palled oat from uder them. Calls also came from equally enraged labor leaders, ' who had not beei consulted ei ther and certain considerations - , began to occur to Roosevelt. r For one thing, it really began to seem that there was at least a bare chance that he might ac tually win.' Even from De Sapio's own baliwick, there were bints of revolt. There were other reasons to believe that the leaders' con- . trol over their delegates was not as completeas they claimed. Even so, as Roosevelt has known fron the start, it will take Va .miracle a sudden stampede, for example if he is to be nomi nated. But even if there is no miracle,! he will not be badly hurt He can and will Show that he is a loyal Democrat by work ing hard for his old friend Harri man'a election. Suppose, nevertheless, that Harriman ts defeated. Demo crats all over the state win remember Roosevelt's last ditch fight for the nomination. They will say that be could have wen, and especially if the national elections show a Dem ocratic trend, Roosevelt win automatically become a man to reckon with. I As for the big city leaden, Roosevelt's father fought Tammany, too and by the time hs was aady to make peace, he could negotiate from strength. Some such line of reasoning undoubtedly led "Roosevelt to defy the leaders. It remains to be seen how this reasoning works out in practice. But it is not the reasoning of a foot And those who shudder at the mere sound of bis name may as well face the fact that it is still much too early to count young Roosevelt out of big-time politics. (Copytifht, 1954. New York Herald Tribune Inc.) GRIN AND BEAR ". . . AW H thcted, I promse mot to wok Uk my ftllow Seoofors to met! , ..jl hnrtsfyote mf octhitks mjsett! . ; ." j Dtp H H H lUB TOD CEMI I j (Continued from page 1.) i , I so drastic a course as that. Most of the other states are waiting for the formal decree before de termining a course of action. The border s1 tales, Delaware Kentucky, Maryland and Kansas will comply with; the ruling. Kan sas has begun to and some local communities in the other states also. The District of -Columbia where, the Negro proportion of school children runs over 50 per cent is readjusting its organiza tion in the effort to meet Presi dent Eisenhower's ! hope that it may be a model for the other areas in racial integration. j. Alabama and! Louisiana may incline to resist desegregation. Other states like; Arkansas, North Carolina, Texasj Tennessee, Vir ginia and West Virginia are sort of "coasting" although their of ficials and leaders are devoting a great deal oj thought to the problem. Oklanoma is in a dif ferent category.) It was not Set tled until 1889 and has never had race segregation against the In dians who make up a large part of the population. It will work out its solution along with Kan sas and Texas. ; What is of great significance is the action of a group of South ern leaders to set up the South ern Education I Reporting Serv . lice "an objective, fact-finding agency established by southern newspaper editors and educators with the aim of providing accur- sMasas6SKBaiasj - Time Flies FROM STATESMAN FILES 10 Years Ago Sept. 11, 1944 Mr. "and Mrsj Fred Gait i are receiving congratulations on the birth of a son, stetan j-aui. iiars. Gast a prominent .ciuo woman now makes berJ home in. Port land), j , Two important appointments fell to Justice George Rossman of the State Supreme Court here, while attending a meeting of the American Bar Association in Chicago. The judge was elected vice president of the American Judicature society and named to the committee on administrative law. .! ' . I v Afrwirnn airfaarne trooos in a A,mtir nun ispized the vital tower. Rhine bridge at Nijmegen intact and British tanks raced over it and deep into Holland through enemy defeases. 25 Years Ago - Septal, ms Eleven frienos of Major John Coolidge entertained with a bach lor dinner in celebration of his coming wedding to Miss Florence Trumbull, daughter of Gov. and Mrs. John H. Trumbull. i , i . A . " A new automobile-entrance at the state fair ground will be in operation this year. This is the 17th Street entrance which has been used for pedestrians only. Everett Lisle, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Lisle, left for Spokane, where he acceded a position as a YMCA secretsryr He graduat- ed from , Willamette I University and Ch caeo Y.M.C.A. collepe. T o 40, Years Ago Sept 21, 1914 : t 1 A bride-to-be greatly enter- then be carefully dri particular tamed : before her marriage to iy between the toes. Soft; clean, Earl McMechanj of North Yak- ibL gocks protect the feet from una, Wash., was Miss Lola De- trivial injury and absorb perspira long. Miss Gertrude Erixon en- tion. Tight shoes or even walking tertained with 4 shower, a few on creased hose may be 4 risk, of the guests were Miss Lenore ff any infection at all develops. Staley, Miss Velma Hoover, Miss . patient should immediately Anna Yantis and Miss Lucille pIace himself rnder the tare of ' Ue- I S , s his physician. It is onlyin this Cards have bfen received in way that many diabetics will save aaiem announcing trie birtn ot - a boy to Mr. and Mrs. Thurlow Wewanur: U Sheridan. Mrs. Mr. M.: I have hay fever and Tyler , Smith was Maude Haw- neglected to take my desen ley Young; i sitization . shoU this yearj How Th nan. n-L nnuUcc nlant at Arlington. Va.. was put out of commission by a wind storm, The (antennae I were blown against the towers and the cir- cuit grounded. IT By Lichty ate, unbiased information to 1 T school administrators, public of' ficials and interested lay citi zens on development in! educa tion" arising from this Court de cision. Chairman is Virginius Dabney, editor of the Richmond Times-Dispatch; vice chairman Thomas R. Waring, editor Charleston' News ; and Courier, and the executive director is C. A. McKnight, editor of the Char lotte, N. C. News. The organiza tion has received a grant from the Fund for the Advancement of Education, to be expended by the George Peabody College for Teachers at Nashville and is pub lishing a paper. Southern School News, giving accurate and un slanted news reports on what the region is doing' with respect to carrying out the Supreme Court ruling. This should prpve of great help to Southern educa tors and editors and legislators as they tackle this problem.v Within a few months the Court will deliver its decree! setting forth the steps which roust be taken and presumably giving the tane allowance for putting the decree into effect With a meas ure of patience and forbearance on all sides the practice at segre- gallon will be brought to an end, and that, I hope, without , any such absurd resistance las the abolition of public schools. That would be a form of cornmunity suicide which surely the intelli gence of Southerners will not permit ' j wmmwmmmwmmmmeam Your Health L ' Br r 1 : Dr.' Herman Bundesen DIABETIC NEEDS SPECIAL CARE FOR LEGS AND FEET Amoutation of one or both legs is often the result Of poor foot care on the part of the dia- bebc, especially in older f people. More is required of these people than simple diet care and insulin ShotS." '.:, I Good treatment of the feet is extremely important for gangrene is 40 time mojre common in dia- oeuc persons wan in oiner; people. They have an increased tendency toward hardening of the arteries and a greater susceptibility to in- fection. They are also more sub- ject to severe forms of neuritis of the legs. .. . . lo ; fliahetes, tne pancreas, a W touted below the first part s1 bwL. does ve enough of the hormond known as insulin. ! Insulin is necessary for normal tissue metabolism and the normal use of sugar within the body.1 When it is lacking: ex cesses of sugar appear in the urine and in tne blood. The person who suffers from diabetes must maintain icleanli ness and explicitly follow his physician's instructions about foot treatment He should refrain from dangerous self-treatment jof his M nA dmnM take neriai tre. cautions against any injury that Muld to his kgS. any in- jury does occur, he should also have prompt medical care. ; t In a recent study of diabetics who had to have amputations, be cause of hardening of he arteries or! gangrene, 30 per cent; ot tne amputations were found to be due to oersonai negiecu r. . i. t t j " Diaoeucs snouia iry w prevent foot infection by daily bathings of the feet and the feet and legs should be gently washed with -soap and water oauy. me leet snouia meu- iega uvu ouiuwuuu. Question and Answer Can I HOW get telief? f ' Answer: The anthuamine drugs can offer you much relief, during the hay fever season, when used unaer me urccum h your pnysi- oan. Jet Airliner's Speed Said Near Sound SEATTLE. Wash, i (UP) Amer ica's first jet transport the Boe ing 707, will approach closer to the speed of sound than any trans port has before when put through more performance tests soon, Boe ing officials said Monday. The big, swept wing tanker transport prototype, laid up since Aug: 5 when its nose wheel as sembly was damaged in a ground accident, will be put through a con tinuing program of flight evalua tion during the coming weeks, j Boeing's test crew, headed by the company's chief test pilot, A. M. "Tex" Johnston, said the 15 million dollar privately built plane will be flown to the speed at which it reaches tts "buffet boundary," the first indication the speed of sound is being approached. , M The plane already has flown at speeds above mach .8, or four fifths the speed of sound, Boeing said. Within eight days after the maiden flight July IS, the strato- tanker, or stratoliner in the com mercial version, had climbed to 42,000 feet Upon resumption of flight test ing, the 7uTs four Pratt and Whit ney JT-3 turbojet engines will be shut down to determine the low est speeds at which the airplane can be safely controlled with one or more engines out of operation, The airplane will also be pulled out of a dive with - such force that the structure will be subject ed to 80 per cent of the 1 design limit Boening announced recently that the Air Force will buy a , "limited number" of the tanker-transports Oregon's Fair Employment Law Praised PORTLAND (UP) Oregon's non - discriminatory employment policies over the past five, years have benefited, rather than harmed, employers, according to W. E. Kimsey. commissioner of the State Bureau of Labor. Kimsey, who is to retire this fall- said a full report would be re leased this week covering the five- year period in which Oregon has banned racial, religious or national discrimination against actual or prospective employes. Kimsey said that none of the fears expressed by opponents of fan employment practices Iegisla tion have proved to have any basis in fact "No rights have been jeopard ized, employers have gained, not lost business, Kimsey said. "No employes have walked out in pro test against the hiring of a mem ber of a minority group, the bu reau has sot been flooded with groundless complaints and no new problems have come into being." he added. - ! Kimsey said that 116 complaints had been filed with the labor bu reau during the period, 111 based on color. Most complaints came from within Multnomah county, which has 83 per cent of the state's Negro population. Employers were named in 80 per cent of the com plaints, labor unions in 18 per cent and employment agencies in 2 per cent - . . j U. S. Shelves Long Term Bond Plans WASHINGTON tfV- The treasury Monday shelved its desire to issue a long term bond and announced it will complete the "bulk" of this year's cash borrowing with a new four billion dollar short term se curity. ' ' :The decision, treasury officials said, was a 1 deliberate effort to avoid competition with long term lending funds to be tapped shortly by state and commercial interests. These borrowings for business ex: pansion and highway building are expected to provide working capi tal for. employment-making proj ects. ' : 1 Secretary of the Treasury Hum phrey announced that on Sept 23 the treasury will offer for sale four billion dollars worth of 2-year, 7- month treasury notes. Books for subscription will be open only the one day, Thursday. The notes to be dated Oct. 4, 1954 and mature May 15, 1957 will pay 1 per cent interest, Hum phrey said. This is the lowest rate of return to be placed on a com parable issue in at least 10 years. The new issue will pay slightly more than a 2-year, 9-month issue of December, 1944, which carried Vk per cent; interest i 3r brej&onC$tiitt$man Subscription Rates By carrier ta title: i -Daily and Sunday-. 1.45 ptx ma. Daily only " 125 per me. Sunday only .. .10 week By maO, Snaday raryt ' (ia advance) S SO per mo. Anywher in V. S 2.7S six mo. .... SM year By man. Dairy ani fsaoayi In Oregon f 1 JO per mo. (In adranca) M tlx mo. MM year la V. 8. outside . Oregon - - ,, 1.43 per mo. Aadlt Bnraaa mt Clrcalatta Boreas ot Aevnttsmg. AWPA ) Oretoa Ntwtpaper ! rFhttsr Aasodatiat) ! AfTCTttsrag Represent Ores: Wara-Crttllta : New York, Chleaso, : ani rraaeiaeo. Detroit Dulles Plans Unveiling of 4 . - Atomic Plan WASHINGTON (UP)- Secretary of State John Foster Dulles will formally unveil America's new atomic pool plan this week in a major address before the United Nations General Assembly, in formed sources said Monday. They revealed that Russia has ignored an llth-hour invitation to participate so that the free world now has, no recourse ; but to go ahead with the project alone. . Dulles is expected to lead the fight against Red China's admis sion to the U.N. where the ninth General Assembly session opens Tuesday and to make his speech Wednesday or Thursday. He spent the weekend at his Lake Ontario retreat getting ready. - N Reply A State Department official said Monday that "the Russians have not replied to our last note one month ago on the atomic pool proposal." And even if a reply should come, officials now feel certain it would not be favorable uuiies proDaoiy will make a strong point of Russia's "indiffer ence" when he outlines the atoms- for-peace proposal. He is expected to point out that Russia's refusal to join means the pool cannot be as effective i nor as closely tied to the U.N. as President Eisen hower originally hoped. ' For one thing, experts pointed out, this country must keep much firmer control of atomic materials it makes available for-pool proj ects man would be necessary if Kussia also were contributing. Some diplomats also feel there should not be a close tie with the U.N. where Russia might be able to kibitz on Allied plans. Mri Eisenhower said in a Labor Day statement that the United States and six other allies Brit ain, Canada, Australia, South Afri ca, France and Belgium had agreed to set up an international atomic agency. The aim is to har- ness the atom to peaceful projects mat win better mankind. Wife's Jewels Said Sack's First Concern PORTLAND tfl Detectives tes tified Monday that George Sack's first question after viewing the body of his wife in the morgue was what became of her jewelry ana personal enects. The Portland apartment house owner is on trial here charged with first degree murder in the death of his wife, Goldie, last Feb. 16.. ' Her body was found two davs later in a clump of bushes on the outskirts ot Portland. - The state is attempting to prove that Sack killed his wife because of marital difficulties and because she had a legal interest in his business affairs. ' Sack has denied any .uuvwuue of how the woman died. Activities Resume At Oregon State CORVALLIS tff) Student week activities continued Monday at Ore gon State College with an estimat ed 1700 freshmen and new transfer students on the campus. Dormi tories and living groups oened Sunday. Registration for both new and old students is scheduled Friday and Saturday. Freshman ' enroll ment is expected to show about 120 more than were registered at the end of last year's period. That figure was 1.611. GUARANTEED Watch Repairing " We Fix Them When Others Cant THE JEWEL BOX 443 State St, Salem, Ore. Open Fri. Nights Till 9 p.m. in tfie POST Millions are reading and talking f about the life story of Groucho ; Marx in The Saturday Evening Post Last week's issue was a sell out Get this week's Post today, ' and start laughing at M f Old M a Groucho, by his son, Arthur. NOTRE DAME'S TESiV CnSBIIfliJ Fans were amazed when Leahy's job went to a 25-year-old lawyer with no varsity coaching experi ence. Fred Russell reports on The Sew Wonder Bof tf S'otrt Dame. ?f Itsaie 0 00 ' em Government ! Limits Set U.S. Apart' j Limits on the 'federal govern ment and the rights guaranteed to states and individuals are what distinguish the United States gov ernment, it was declared Monday oy bupreme court Justice Wil liam C Perry. ; 1 The Oregon justice addressed Salem Chamber of Commerce in a; Constitution Day message. The program. was sponsored by Mar ion County Bar Association. j f "The government of the United States is not a concession to peo ple from someone higher up; it is the creation of the people them selves," Justice Perry said in his talk on the constitution and bill of rights. f S The documents,, ie stressed, re flect an inherent respect of one man for another. i The speaker was introduced bv Reginald Williams, president-elect ot the bar association. ! It was the chamber's opening luncheon in a series of weekly program for the membership at, the Marion Hotel. j tion to ! Honor New City Teachers ; I New teachers on the faculties of Salem schools and Willamette University will be honored at a reception sponsored by the YMCA and YWCA from 8 to 9:30 p.m. at the YWCA. . ? Program leaders said the in formal occasion is undertaken to give the newcomers an opportu nity to find out about the YM and YW, as well as obtain information about churches and Salem gener ally m contact with persons out side their profession. Board merrn bers and executives f both YM and YW will be on hand to meet the teachers. , BOTTLED TOBACCO . jMAYSVILLE, Ky. (fl Allenf Reed stuck four pop bottles, neck down, into his tobacco plant bed to hold up the canvas cover. A flourishing young plant has grown into each of the bottles. !- ...-TCi For A Real Thrill In Home- ing I See Ihe Classified ; Section l!0W! I '. ' . -" i j'- - - - ,. ' ; I 1 Notional Home j Week's here! The on- nuol event that brings j you on extra special j selection of outstand- ( ing home buys I through the States I ' man Journal Class!- I fied columns! I - Yes, the home you've been wishing for, et a price you've been hoping to get , is 1 right within your reach! Just check the i Real Estate columns! A-l-H0- Recep Shopp .. ..7 Ml