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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 1955)
4 Sac 1-Statsman, Salami, Oregon, Friday, Oct. 21, T95S Ho Favor Sways Vs. Ko Fear Shall Atve" from first Stateaaaaa. March It, 1S51 Statesman Publishing Company CHARLES A. SPRAGUE, Editor & Publisher Published erery morning. ' Buirtneta office WO Worth Church St,- Salem. Ore. Tf lephona 4-M11 Cntcred at the poctcfflc at Salem, Ore..' at second tlasa matter unoer, act of Coniraaa March 1. 1I7. Member Associated Press The Associated Preaa Is entitled exclusively to the use (or republication of all local news printed la this newspaper Discovery of Anti-Proton Scientists have been busy smashing atoms trying to locate the final unit of matter. So far they have found that protons which are the core of the hydrogen atom and other par ticles called neutrons make up the entire world of matter. - Protons and neutrons are the buildingblocks. University of California scientists, working with a multi-billion-volt atom smashertfhe bevatron, have discovered a particle of "matter in reverse" which they eall the anti-proton. They speculate that when a proton and an anti-proton meet they annihilate one another or perhaps produce a shower of electrons which are comparatively weightless. Further speculation is offered that the anti-proton may become useful as a supplier of energy through the annihilation cf matter. That of course is for the future. This astonishing discovery will serve to heighten interest in a recent gift of $2,750, 000 to the University of California to be ap plied to basic research. The institute estab lished would be "dedicated to the encourage ment of creative thought and the conduct of research and investigation in pure science." The gift is anonymous, but it insures a' con tinuance of .the type of work which is report ed in the first paragraph. The University of California has made not able contributions to knowledge, particularly in the" field of the atom. Dr. J. Robert Oppen heimer was on its staff before entering the task of developing the atom bomb. Dr. Ern est O. Lawrence heads the team which has Isolated the anti-proton. This substantial foundation will enable the university to at tract and hold and to develop the finest brains working in thepure sciences. This will "fertilize" sister institutions on this coast and yield continuing dividends in the area of knowledge. Debate Over New Guinea 1 Another of the mistakes made at this ses sion of the United Nations General Assembly was to debate the . question of West New Guinea. (The first was to take up the ques-, tion of Algeria which has long been treated as a department of France). New Guinea is an island second only to Greenland in size. The eastern portion of the island is adminis tered by Australia which lies a short distance to the South. The Western half has long been a dependency of the Netherlands. When the Dutch East Indies rebelled and their independence as the Republic of Indo nesia was recognized, no agreement was made respecting the Dutch portion of New Guinea which Indonesia calls West Irian. . Nor has any agreement since been arrived at. Americans who fought their way up the ladder of the islands in the Pacific war got well acquainted with at least the fringes of New Guinea, and with, the "fuzzy-wuzzies" who inhabit it. The people are among the most primitive in the world. They surely are better off to continue under Dutch rule than to be transferred to Indonesia which' claims sovereignty over them. Indonesians have had a hard time of it since their independent gov ernment was recognized in 1949. They have been unable to maintain authority over the medley of islands and peoples which the Dutch left to them. Their treatment of Dutch nationals has not been in accord with prin ciples of international law. As for West Ir ian the territory is quite remote from Java and Sumatra, and historically there has been a minimum of relationship. A U.N. debate over West Irian will irritate wounds between the Netherlands and Indonesia without good result. GRIN AND BEAR IT By Lichfy S tern. twa tram, t "Your figures don't prove you; need, a raise, Snodgrass! ... The amount your wife spends over what you earn, appears about normal! .. ."j Oregon Electric Excursion Railroad fans will have a real holiday on Sunday, Oct. 23. when they make an excur sion round trip between Portland and Salem via the Oregon Electric. And those who used to ride the "green electrics" before service -was suspended in 1933 will get a thrill out of riding the old. route, even if propulsion now is diesel rather than electric power. At Salem, though, the train will not call at the old depot. The rails formerly led from Broad way south on High street, with the station in the corner of the Oregon building at State street. This connection was broken years ago. The present route is the old freight route along Front street and through the pa per mill property. The Oregon Electric, a subsidiary of the Spokane. Portland and Seattle, which In turn is owned by the Great Northern and North--ern Pacific, used to be a' money-loser, but since lumbering became active, particularly in the Linn and Lane county sections it serves, the road has been profitable. It gives the northern lines, their penetration of an im portant and growing part of the state. Defective Brakes Latest catastrophe due to defective brakes on motor vehicles was at Cumberland, Maryland, where a tractor-trailer ran wild down a mountain grade, smashed other ve hicles and brought death to five. That was Wednesday. On Monday a mobile crane ca reened down the Snoqualmie Pass highway in Washington and caused injury to eight persons. Previously a truckdriver at Oregon City sacrificed his own life trying to spare injury to others when brakes on his truck gave way. Shortly before that a runaway, truck-trailer in San Francisco left a trail of dead and injured on California street. De fective brakes were at fault in each "case. Standard equipment for tractor-trailer combinations calls for air brakes or a vacuum system. With the former, there is a break away valve which operates automatically when the air line breaks. But all equipment needs to be given frequent inspection to in sure that it will work properly. It would appear from the number of recent accidents that this equipment had not received this attention. Perhaps greater attention should be given to some dual system or set of emer gency brakes which would more surely stop a vehicle or bring it under control when the regular brakea failed. The sequence of bad accidents of this kind is most unusual to be sure, but their number calls for a fresh examination of truck-trailer braking systems in the interest of public safety. We'll try to respect the royal family's re quest for privacy on Princess Margaret's much-discussed romance. All we would say is that if she doesn't marry the guy, the world is going to be set back on its heels along with Peter Townsend. The last appeal for harvest help Is being raised now to assist nutgrowers in gathering their nut crop. This is important to grow ers and to the community. There's a pretty good crop; the prices are good. However the ' late season brings a risk. Marketing walnuts and filberts is seasonal. They need to reach outlets by Thanksgiving and Christmas. It takes time to process them and to distribute them over the country. So it is necessary to get the nuts to the packing sheds as soon as possible. That's how nutpickers can do them selves and the growers a good turn. y State employe wags are saying that the last legislature is responsible for the fact that the-main floor of the state of fice building is beginning to cfack up. They say that the surtax law, passed by the lawmakers, fat tened up so many individual income tax files that the floor couldn't stand the extra weight. Plus the overburdened consciences of tax collectors." Anyway, lots of taxpay ers, themselves broken up over their income tax payments, ! say it is a! relief to see, for a change, the tax department cracking up... j i . Lots of calls to the aeWirooin on a boo- boo pulled in the Statesman's daily "Look and Learn" feature. Monday's column contained the question: "How many cubic feet are there In one cord of wood?" And the answer given: "Sixteen." . !. . Well, a number of read en sawed through the knotty problem, and 'noted the answer should be 128 cu. ft. A cord foot (a one-foot section of a pile of wood) contains 16 cubic feet. Look and Learn is a Gordon Syndicate feature from Cleveland . . . Gordon probably should have his cords examined ! And if you log any warped-brain Douglas fir beetles in the woods these days you might blame it all on the state for estry department. Seems the forestry research division has asked the forestry radio lab for an amplifier to be used in determining the sex of the beetles. In jthe beetle family Mama (unlike some mothers we know) gives off no sound. Pappa beetle does all the chirping. For s6me reason this is important tq foresters who are researching the tirnber-de- Stroyinff Dest. - What th betlM thinlr Af thic astim n broadcast their gender to an unw.aiting world, has not been ampiinea , , , . ' vW;f--t .,-5 , vsm e . . , ' . . ii minis go an, wrrgoa mar As President Eisenhower improves all the politicians will try to cultivate the best bedside manner. t" w . . . . '"' n, "irju. m . soon have a state tree name, without the tree. Oman's of. ficial tree is the Douglas fir, named after eafly explorer David Douglas, Recently though, the! International Botanical Con grew decided that Archibald Menxiet actually ran into the tree before Douglas did and insists en changing the name from Douglas to Menziessii or something like that Anyway, 'ev erybody In the northwest from the Douglas jsqulrrel up to the Society of American Foresters has been stumping around in support of keeping the name of Douglas' . . . But signs indicating a chipping away at the old name are being noticed. Latest chop came from he National Geo graphic magazine which, in its latest issue refers to Oregon's noble tree as Douglas fir alright, but also tags on the hated name of Menziessii Foresters are willing to change the name of that pest, the Douglas beetle, to Beetle Menziessii, or some thing like that. But spare, they say, our Douglas1 fir tree . . . Settle Issue of Soviet Entry Into Japan War DTP hlJilQ TO 0313 State Basing Case Against Widow on Wolf j (Story on page one.) McMINNVILLE, Ore. ft A de mand by the prosecution for the death penalty opened the first degree murder trial of Mrs. Mar jorie Smith, 34, here Thursday. Mrs. Smith is accused of killing her husband. . The state's chief witness is ext pected to be Victor Laurence Wclf. 45, electrician and handyman, who had done odd jobs at the Smith home before Smith was killed. That was April 21, when Smith turned oa the ignition of his car after a night of card-playing at a country club. Dynamite, wired to the ignition, exploded, shattering the car and killing Smith instantly. Wolf was picked up for question ing two hours later because Smitji had remarked once that Wolf was "kind of sweet on Marjorie." Gave Confession Wolf confessed at once, saying he; was in love with Mrs. Smith, and that she had talked him into planting the dynamite so she could collect the $21,000 insurance on Smith's life. Mrs. Smith cried bitterly at this, called Wolf a "repulsive old man," and said his whole story was a fabrication. iller attorney said Wolf may have fallen in love with Mrs. Smith silently, and deluded him self into thinking she wanted her husband killed. Court to Decide ' Wolf has confessed in court, and, using an antiquated Oregon law, asked the court to determine the degree of his guilt. jNo decision on Wolf is expected until afier Mrs. Smith's trial. Judge Arlie G. Walker said he hopes to complete the jury selec tion this week, but that in any case the trial proper will not start until Monday. Local attorneys joined the case Thursday, Elliott B. Cummins, Yamhill County district attorney, for the prosecution, and the firm of Marsh, Marsh and Dashney for the defense. Confusioa la Court There was some confusion when West asked prospective jurors whether they had any connection with the Marsh firm. Several said they knew the partners, but were puzzled in attempting to say which Marsh brother was at the defend ant's table. This was understandable. Eu gene E. Marsh and Francis Marsh are identical twins. By the end of the day the de fense had exercised four of its 12 peremptory challenges, and the state two of its six. Tentative Jurors Those seated tentatively: Mrs. Marie A. Bedwell, Carlton house wife; Mrs. Gladys Macy, McMinn ville housewife; Mrs. Singne Scott, Carlton farm -wife; Mrs. Mary Alice Klatzer, Newberg housewife; Mrs..- Susie. Fletcher. Newberg widow rWra-.Eonnie Ha gen, Mc MlnnviUe housewife; Claude Simmons,' Carlton insurance sales man; Stuart Grenfell, retired farmer and brother of the Port land fire chief; Michael Hamilton. McMinnville insurance salesman: Faye Stallcope, retired Yamhill farmer; F. C, Lukes, McMinnville barber; Harry F, Crowe, McMinn vflle farmer. Among those dismissed from the jury were Harry Williams, Carlton mayor; and Mrs. Irene Dillin, wife of President Harry Dillin of Lin field College. She was challenged by the state and dismissed after saying she was opposed to capital punishment. Beverly. Hilton Hotel Offers Awesome Sights (and Prices) l By LILLIE L. MADSEN Farm Editor, The Statesman BEVERLY HILLS. Calif-It has been said that the Beverly Hilton Hotel on Wilshire Boulevard is the world's most modern hotel. Far be it from me to dispute that. I don't see how there could , be. anything else' to be added. As a matter of fact, I don't see how .all that is, has been added now'. Words barely begin to describe the $16,000,000 hot'el which' opened Aug. 12, with 450 outside 'rooms, 33 suites and 8 penthouses, each one individually decorated and pro vided with its q'n private balcony furnished with garden chairs and table Purples, 'lavenders, blues and; same one I which 11 -.1 -. i - I. ... ; ijcuuwa are me iavurue colors in u tscomer, lor Bali Room with its South Pacific atmosphere, may suit, where care--" fill choosing from the tricky a la carte menu can net you a luncheon at from $2 Co $10. Prices Increase ' - The higher you go,' the higher the price. At the top is L'Escoffkx, probably the. 'world's most expen- sive restaurant, where you can't' begin a dinner for less than $13.00 a person, and you are apt to enl up at $23 to $35 a plate. But whit food! ; v This restaurant is adjacent Id" the Star pa the Roof, eighth flour, equivalent of the Top of the Mark in San Francisco,, and giving a few hundred miles of view the . is so costly in an hour or two rooms and restaurants. The grand ' at a little more than $t a head- Ballroom can accommodate 1,000 the accompaniments, of cotrse, :a persons. In the exclusive Nordic liquid form. In either place, you, room, guests at private dinner rub elbows with the prominent on" parties sit down before walls shim-! the rapidly growing television star, mering with 25,000 kapa shells. 'dom and the waning motion pic each shell hand flattened, and hire industry. polished. If the keynote is yellow j Kitchens serving the hotel, cover in a room, then yellow it is from "two acres, leading one observer the bathroom tissue to'the electric ltd wonder aloud: "They have so many ovens, I wonder how they remember where they put tha outlets Drp Carpets In describing the hotel upon its turkey.' opening, I recall Bob Hope said; beef, squab Irhe carpets were so deep that; entree. ? guests looked as if they were i Egyptian Art walking on their knees and they Beautiful shops completely lost their faces in the! Une t'ne lobbies. I towels. Of vourse.-'those are Hope-: one of the most interesting is tho isms, but many of the carpets are ' Ancient Egyptian Art Gallery, inches deep and fh luscious pur- managed by M. A. Mansoor Sons pics and blues two colors one and filled with enchanting modern Incidenlly, turkey. Iamb; are the top-choice of every kind and of these wouldn't have dreamed of putting together just a few years back and towels are thicker than most folk's carpets. imports from the Mediterranean, Middle. East and India. . What is termed "white pecky cypress", beams alternate with The weary traveler at the Bev- apricot panels to dramatize the erly Hilton can rest his head for j main lobby. The subterranean $135,000. the rate of a five-vear' garage houses 1,000 cars. ... And pentnouse lease, or tor an ordinary $12 a day You can eat from 6:30 a.m. to midnight at very moderate prices in the two-tone blue Coffee house (mark you: Not Coffee Shop) on the Garden Floor overlooking the magnificent pool and garden. Or, if you feel a little more flush, the State Board to Consider Report On Hospital Site The State Board of 'Control, at its next meeting here October 25, will consider reports of the state engineer and state department of ! geology and minerals dealing with " engineering problems involving a proposed site for the $14,000,000 mental hospital in the Portland area. j Three proposed sites were rec-j ommended by an advisory com-; mittee previously appointed by the board. Two of the proposed sites j are located near Wilsonville and: one near Hillsboro. . ij the hotel must do a lot to alleviate any unemployment problems in Los Angeles. From four to five bell boys greet you at the doors which open automatically, and 9? many French-speaking men pull put your chair, serve you cCifce and see to all your needs simulta neously in the restaurant?. . Staying; at the Beverly H iien is an experience but one you a.e to ask for from two to three W3eT s In advance, as most of tho c 453 rooms are spoken for that long ahead of time. Full Grain Cowhide Moccasins f'T73Sr3 with Heavy mU4 (mpattiti Ml Mid hl. Calam 4, fraaa and era, lag. $4 S, f tcial $395 JIM'S FAMILY SHOES 1295 S. 12th Ptnny Savr Stamps By J. M. ROBERTS AP Newt Analyst The Pentagon report and Gen. MacArthur's reply leave us- just where we were with regard to Russian participation in the Japa nese war and the price paid for it by the Allies. The ,fact is that Roosevelt and Churchill acted on military advice in trying to get Russia into the war.. The price they paid, in terri tory that wasn't theirs and con cessions of Chinese rights without consulting China, can be argued about all night. The military reports and Mac Arthur's -statements do indicate that many believed Russia would enter and take what she wanted regardless of the concessions, and that if the Allied leaders were giving away something they didn't own. they also were merely giving away something Russia was going to have anyway. . The implication, by omission of some of the facts, that Russia entered only at the last moment to seize unearned benefits after failing to relay Japan's surrender feelers to the Allies, is a distortion. Russia, for her own reasons, didn't relay news of the Japanese feelers, and it is quite possible she didn't, want peace before she could get to the front. But she did enter the Far Eastern war three months after the German surrender, as she had agreed. The. main failure of the Allied leaders was in ignoring the fact that the things for which Russia asked their approval were part of a formula, made blatantly public ever a long period of "years, for Communist conquest of all Asia. As for the political gambits of the MacArthur-Democratic dispute over pre-Yalta and post-Yalta de tails, neither side seems to have made much hay. Mac Arthur still says he favored Russian participa tion immediately after Pearl Har bor, cooled off on it by 1944 when things were going to suit him in his own war, and was merely pur suing the Yalta verdict in his ref erences to Russia eniry there after. 'v i : . - The Pentagon report doesn't show that he was asked or gave his advice directly in connection with Yalta, as the Democrats im plied, and he says he wasn't and didnt. As for what he might have said had he been asked, we have his word that he didn't want Russia then, and you can't go behind that. The record shows other military leaders were warming up and then cooling off about Russian partici pation from time to time, too. Time Flies: Hindsight frequently interferes with what historians select as the most pertinent part of a given rec ord, as well as with personal recol lections of attitudes at given times. That makes humans, but no liars, out of those involved. All we can be sure of is that if Russia had done what she was going to do anyway, without Allied approval if necessary, the world would have had notice, a year or so before it did, of what it should have known all the time about her postwar intentions. (Continued from page. 1)1 provincialism manifest in de mand for "local" ownership. It has been evident also in the baiting of Idaho Power Company because it is a Maine corpora- Portland Commission and the people of Portland do not want to act irresponsibly; and antici pate that some formula will be found Which will respect the tion. i is a matter of common j. legitimate j interests of From Tht Statesman Filas 10 Years Ago Oct II, 1145 Col. Vivian Z. Brown, native of Salem and veteran of two wars, returned to his first army station. Ft. Lewis, to become chief of dental service there. Relatives and friends of William Roth have been invited to an open house held in honor of his 80th birthday, at the home of his son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Elfstrom. Felicitation go to Mr. and Mrs. George Birrell on the birth of a son at the Salem Deaconess hos pital. Mrs. Birrell Will be remem bered as Jean Eastridge. 25 Years Ago . Oct. 21, 1930 It will not be possible for the state to refund any of tha $1,000. 000 collected under the intangibles tax law, without legislative sanc tion, it was declared state offi cials who have given careful study to the opinion of the Su preme Court holding that the law unconstitutional. ? Secretary of ; Commerce La tnont, chairman of President ' Hoover's special cabinet commis sion to aid Jobless, announced mil lions of dollars are to be expend ed in public construction and will be available until every type of unemployment has been reduced. Ten members of the Portland Breakfast club will be guests of the Salem ham-and-eggers this week at the Gray Belle. The com mittee of the Salem organization is M. C. Moynihan, Douglas Mc Kay, Dr. E. A. Lebold and Carl Armstrong. " 40 Years Ago Oct. 21, MIS ' i . With the erection of a two-story $20,000 store building at the cor ner of State and Liberty Streets, last of the frame structures in the business district of this city will be eliminated. About fifty men and women, all of whom received their higher education at the University of Oregon or are affiliated with that institution, attended a banquet nd participated in the prelimi nary organization of the first Ore gon alumni chapter in Salem. ; John Prentiss Poe, Jr., a fam Ouj Princeton football player in" the early nineties, was killed while fighting as a private in tho British army along tha northern boundary of France. knowledge that capital is fluid. that it goes where it believes it can obtain the best return. The West's development has been possible only through an inflow of capital. If now units' of gov ernment assume hostility to in vestment of outside capital the springs which supply it will speedily dry up. Americans protest vigorously when soooe foreign government summarily confiscates the prop erty of foreign corporations and call it irresponsible. Refusal of a franchise renewal is not con fiscation of company property but the effect is similar. Is not the city . commission dodging the real issue, which is the difficulty of private opera tion of city transit facilities under existing conditions? Local ownership will not of itself solve this problem. Many cities have sought a solution in municipal ownership, at heavy and continu- owners and employes of the present company supplying street trans portation io Portland. The chief concern should be to insure con tinuance of safe and adequate transportation under private ownership J and to avoid the necessity of bringing it under municipal ownership. The above was written before the report ! came that Alderman O'Hara wojuld seek a revocation of the franchise of . the Cily Transit Company which serves Salem. The company is bound by the terms of Us franchise; but the city council again should look beyond cancellation to see w hat would happen . then. The i plight of City Transit has been well publicized.! You can't get pulling power from a sick horse by hitting it in the head. For Salem as for Portland and many other cities the problem Geography Teachers to -i Gather Here l ! The annual fall meeting of the Oregon Council of Geography Teachers wiT take place in Sa lem Saturday in Collins Hall on the Willamette University cam piis. Dr. G, Herbert Smith, Willam ette president, will welcome dele gates at the opening session at 10:30 a.m. Sen. Mark Hatfield will speak on European politics. I Following a noon luncheon at the Marion Hotel, Homer J. Lyon Jr., executive assistant at the Oregon State Forestry depa-t-rnent," will speak on Oregon for ests at 1 p.m. j Other speakers Saturday after noon, prior to the 4 p." 'Ijourri ment, include W. J. Kvarsten of the Marion County Planning Com mission, on county planning prac tices; Ivan Oakes, executive sec retary o: the Willamette Basin Project Committee, -n te com mit'ee's activities. A short busi ness meeting will be held at 2 O'clock. I The sessions are open to the public. I f N Appointment ! - , - , V 'Necessary for- :': PLAN PAY FOR YOUR DENTAL PLATES while ' WEARING THEM Ask About the New i ;Transpartnt : .. Palate Dental Platts Today Waar Yaut New Plata lm mediately After Tetth Art Extracted PAY BY WEEK OR MONTH Plates Repaired' Whife You Wait 125 N. Liberty St. Salem, Ore. F J.J. is to maintain bus operations not ing cost to the taxpayers; but ( to hamper! them. I note no agitation for that in Portland. The commission action may be just a tactic to force consessions from the traction company when a new franchise is ' considered. Recent history shows that the realities force concessions the other way if private operations are to be maintained.: I bold no brief for the Port land Traction Company and have no personal interest either way in its operations either as inves tor or ai patron. The San Fran cisco interests which control the company may not be very well skilled in street transit manage ment though their local execu tive, Gordon 'Steele, certainly is. What I am concerned with is that our communities deal fairly with others who have iavested their capital or guided tho investment of the capital of others to this region. I am quite sure that tht Better English I'D By D. C WILLIAMS 1. What is .wrong with this sentence? ("There are less peo ple present than previous." 2. What; is the correct pronun ciation of j "status quo"? 3. Which one of these words is misspelled? Marvel, hazel, embezle, IwiveL . j 4. Wha dees the word "ini-! native" (houn) mean? Answers j 1. Siy, "There are fewer peo-! pie present than previously.' 2. j Pronounce the a as in state, not as in static. 3. Embezzle. 4. A first move; an introductory step. "Who is going to take the initiative; in this matter?1 4' OrfcmC?f ataman triut. t-M i Subscription Rates By carrier la cltica: Dally and Sunday S 1 43 per me Dally only Us per mo Sunday only - JO waek By villi Sunday aaJyi in advance) , Anywhere In U I I .80 per mo. J 75 ix mo ' 100 year By nail. Dally mad Saadayi (in advance) la Oregon . t 10 per mo I 50 aix mo . ; 10 90 year la O S outside Meaaaer Aadtl Bureau at tlreuUOoa urea a f Arrtilnr ANPA Orecra Newspaper rakllahera AeaaeiatiaB) ASvtruttni arpreteataUvaii ; Ward-Grifflta Ca., Weat flnUlday C 'Hew Tort Caleac an rraaelse Detract (10THES S : SHOP SALEM'S QUALITY CLOTHIERS FOR MEN . ESTABLISHED SINCE 1941 - ; BECAUSE OF A NEW SELLING PLAN WHICH WE WILL ANNOUNCE. LATER, WE ARE CLOSING OUT OUR ENTIRE NEW 1955 FALL AND WINTER STOCK Of Finest Qualify, Expertly Tailored SUITS TOPCOATSSPORT COATS SLACKS AND FUR FELT HATS Now Patterns ana Styles, 100 Wool Worsted Fabrics REGARDLESS OF LOSS ' Prices Slashed- for Quick Disposal flllTr Regular J-UIIJ $50 to 75 TfWnATC Refular ivrwHij NOW $295L$3950 143 ti 155 NOW $OT50 M . and $32 50 SPORTCOATS ?5$ 1 65?u. H 875 FUR FEIT HAIJ 4d $69S Open Friday Kile Till 9 o'clock . 387 I I CLOTHES 387 Slale SI. J.J. f SHOP Slate Sf. Ntxt Door To HirtrrYan's Jowelry Store it