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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 5, 1955)
4(-Sec. I) Statesman, Salem, Ore., Mon., Dec. 5, 1955 "iVo Facof Sways V$. So fear Shati AuV Fran Flrat Statesman. March 21, Itil Statesman Publishing Company CHARLES A. SPRaGLE, Editor & Publisher. Publiehee) every morning Buine office iM North Church SH. Salem, Oia. Te lephone 4-ll Entered at tlx paatoffic at Salem. Or as eecond clau merer unuer act of Conrw March 1 IS7. Member Associated Press Th AssoetateO Press entitled exclusively to tht ee for republication ef all local neea printed la this newspaper Football as 'Gvilizer' Southern schools were late petting into lop flight football, but when they arrived they """'"" really landed. Biggest "bowl" game for next - New Year's da; will be at Miami's Orange Bowl, and the competition will be between the country's top-ranking teams, both from "border" states: Oklahoma and Maryland. The real proof that football has arrived in the South came last week when some 2,000 students of Georgia Tech formed the capitol and hsieped the coventor's mansion in pro test against a demand from Governor Griffin Pt on that Tech's football team not be anowea 10 play in the Sugar Bowl game at New Orleans if Negroes were allowed on the competing team (Pittsburgh) and if the seating is not segregated. Faced with the alternative of upholding Southern traditions on race rela tions or participating in the Bowl game the Tech students made their choice abundantly clear. They put on a mob-sized demonstra tion that kept Atlanta police and state troop ers busy for hours. They burned Governor Griffin in effigy several times, according to the AP report. Placards, "We play anybody," showed their spirit. Even in Mississippi the college generation ignores ancient prejudice, because Jones jun ior college is all set to play ComptonV Calif junior college in the Junior Rose Bowl tilt in Pasadena on Dec. 10. spite of Negroes on 'its team. Though the Citizens Councils (an updated KKK) protest and state officials from governor to college president and team coach pass the buck, the co-captain of the team and president of the sophomore class aaya, "As Jong as the rulei and junior col-, leges-say they (Negroes) can play, we're gonna play 'em. Previously it has been noted that the younger generation is far more liberal on curing the evil of race discrimination than their parents and grandparents, and these ep isodes (teem to prove it anew. It probably is not safe to stretch the Inference of accept ance of desegregation which these incidents offer too far. The Lord works in a mysterious way, we are told, and this may be one of them. It certainly would be singular if en thusiasm over football and other sports will accomplish what religious teaching, the prin ciples embraced in our constitution and the rulings of courts have not hitherto been able to achieve. At least the erosion of time is working and the walla of prejudice seem doomed. Over in Alabama Governor "Big Jim" Fol som got caught in another bind. A state school, Alabama Polytechnic Institute (Au burn) is due to play in the 'Gator Bowl against Vanderbilt on Dec. 31. So Folsom ordered all the Alabama National Guard planes to prepare for a "weather mission" to Jacksonville on that date. At this junc ture mutterings were heard from the Penta gon which furnishes the planes. Already the . w Air Force had announced it would - investi- Khrushchev's Tirade in Buddhist Shrine Shows 'Lack of Respect' for Asian Hosts Br WILLIAM L. RYAN A? Foreign News Aaalyst In the midst of the gentle, oon drt'!. c Buddhist Burmese, Nh ktta S. Khrushchev delivered him self of a tirade against the Wat in general. Tue tact that he was in a venerated Buddhist shrine made no difference to the Communist boss-bent oa winning friends and influencing people. To the Burmese present, he must have -appeared boorish. But apparently Khrushchev didn't care and that lack ef respect for the feelings of his hosts is a signi ficant aspect of his Asian tour There can be little doubt that Khrushchev and his entourage both worried and annoyed leaders in India, too. But Khrushchev is interested first of all in bis impact on the broad masses of these countries at the moment, and that Impact surely was there The Soviet visitors, to the dis may of Indian leaders, (used the country to make urfnndled attacks oa the West, and to announce they had a mighty hell-bomb and were ready to use it if the United States ever contemplated tangling with the Soviet Union in i war. " Khrushchev and his flock know what they are about, however. Apparently they do not consider their attitude in the Asian countr ies a mistake, but on the contrary feel that some such show is called for. There are several sides to the Khrushchev-Bulganin junket, and one side obviously is an eager ness to impress upon the Westers countries that the Soviet Union is cutting a wide swath in the Orie.it. The broad masses of Burmese and Indians were not witnesses to the lapses of courtesy on the part ef the Soviet leaders. They were, however, witness to - tht lavish welcomes given Khrush chev and Bulganin, and to the degree of popular frenzy which accompanied their visit, for ex ample, I Calcutta, which is a hotbed of Indian communism. It bespoke Soviet power, and that is what Khrushchev wants to demon strate. Thus the Khrushchev junket to Asia, as well as being a fishing expedition for allies and influence, Is in the nature of a threat against the Western world, it is enough ef a threat to cause grave concern In the West, too. j The ' Soviet visitors ' attitude demonstrates o,uita unmistakably , ' ' ,'"' ::'"; ""' " planes to, take . ' ipl.i hfill used by abundance of to the nations of Europe that Moscow can-and might-in the twinkling of an ye turn over from its outward policy of reason able softness to its former harsh Stalinist policy. Tbe Russians on this trip have told the world: 1. The Soviet' Union Is not afraid of the United Slates-it Is just as strong and powerful and m" 2M ,n Iuy powerful nu- S?" ZrfTL. . vllea States had better watch its step S. The Soviet Union is the friend of oppressed peoples and the foe of colonialism, but the United Time Flies: 10 Years Ago Dec. 5, 1945 Jean Wolcott. 18, sponsored by' Miller's store, is Marion county's Victory Loan queen. .Announcement of the winner was a feature at the Salem Chamber of Commerce lunch eon, the queen eandidates being guests at the meeting. T5 Cleo B. Pohrman, whose r draft number 158 was the first drawn in the national draft lottery, returned home aboard the troopship , Cape. .Victory. Pohrman, a Portlander, was one of 37 Oregonians who held draft number 198. The 50th anniversary of the opening of the Salem General hospital will be celebrated Dee. 12. It was first established in a house on South 12th and Fer ry Streets, long since torn down. The original minute book of the bo.PiUl is presarvod tti - discloses the early history of the institution. 25 Years Ago Dee. t, 193 , The most costly and one of the most spectacular fires In the history of Salem swept the Larrper warehouse and left a loss, partly covered by Insur ance, which neared $690,000., Three tralnloads of paper burned. A fire-bug wis sua pected, ,.' t . ; ',' Morrii Bryant, ton of Mr. and . him and his fAjrnds to football i : ' i game, mai is in violation 01 rmrs cover ing loan of the planes. No segregation issue . a rise i on thji 'Gator Bowl game, but Folsom will have to look up other means of trans portation to and from Jacksonville. REA at Kotzebue From Alaska comes ' word that a cooper ative has obtained an REA loan for an elec tric light plant at Kotzebue, an Eskimo vil lage on an arm of Bering sea above the Arc tic circle. A few of the buildings had elec tricity when we visited the place in the sum mer of 1954: the Wien Airlines "hotel," some of the government institutions and the Stand ard Oil station. But there were no electric lights for the cabins of the villager 900 of the 1,000 being Eskimos. During the Arctic summer lack of electricity is not serious, but in the long Arctic winter light at the flick of a switch will really transform living for these natives of the Northland. It .is a sample of how civilization is' creep ing up on remote places and peoples. We observed that at Kotzebue, where the machine-made goods of the white mapSnd the white man's groceries were being purchased and used by the Eskimos. One night they a program of native dancing at the the National Guard. It was very interesting, and one could tell it was the in heritance of many generations. Few of the younger people, however, particinated. Next day we asked the leader why this was true. He explained that the young people prefer the American dances. The latter were per haps less strenuous, but also less picturesque and descriptive, The real motive probably was to desert the primitive life and to adopt that of the "superior" or "more advanced" race. When electricity comes to lieht the snug, earth-banked cabins of the Eskimos, displacing the seal-oil lamps or the candles and kerosene lamps bought at the trading post, then a new chapter in Eskimo evolution will be written. Price Increase for Newsprint Crown Zellerbach is about the last of the big manufacturers to fall in line with the newsprint price increase. Its raise is $4 a ton, making the price $128: (In depression days the price got as low as $40 a ton). Pub lishers were busy protecting the price rise" even before it came. They pointed to the high profits of paper manufacturers in proof that a price increase was unjustified. As free enterprisers, however, publishers should know that the law of supply and de mand works in paper manufacturing as with commodities. With demand for newsprint running well ahead of supply and the price on the "grey" market some $60 over the con tract price.' the mills responded as do enter prisers in other lines: they boosted the price. " Demand, however, is having the usual ef fect: many mills are installing new machines Xor newsprint. At least three big newsprint machine! will come into production in Brit ish Columbia in 1957. It is possible that, with a falling off in business newsprint may be in oversupply by that time. Whether the price will then go down will depend on how tight the competition is. In the 1930s it went below the cost pf production and each de crease was welcomed by publishers who were having struggles of their own to sur vive... . i No, this publisher doesn't relish the price Increase but knows enough about the work ings of our economic system (and of human nature) to understand it. And we are willing to absorb this increase with assurance of an 'newsprint. States threatens to impose colon ialism . once again on the under developed nations. 3. The United States is not the only source of economic help for ambitious new nations. If these nations act reasonably toward Moscow, the Soviet Union can do much for them. The leaders of the Asian countr ies likely see through the Soviet approach. But the Soviet visi tors do not appear to be very con cerned about the leaders. They are more concerned about popular pressure which can be brought to bear against those leaders. From The Statesmen Filet Mrs. A. N. Bryant. Salem, had been notified of his selection for membership in the league of Curtis salesmen, honor or ganization of the Curtis Publish ing company. Oregon's population Increase in the past 10 years kept almost an even pace with .New York state, the latter gaining 21.2 per cent in the last decade while Oregon went ud 21.6 per cent in the last ten years, " 40 Years Ago ! , Dec, SV 1915 This mushroom town. Hope well, Va., town of 23,000 peo ple, grown up sinct last sum mer with the great, new explo sive plant of the DuPont Pow der company, was almost wiped off tbe map by a fire. Damage was estimated more than a million dollars. .Zri f y Dancing will be the diversion m V me jivihw vs win Florence Hofer and to form a club. Some of the guests par-i ticipaling in the club's activities I were: Barbara Sterner, Helen Deckebach, Myrtle Albright, Mary SchulU, John Carson, Jr., Rollie Axle?. Harry Mills, Allan Bynon and William Huggins. To Uke the place of E. T. Sims, State Bank examiner, who resigned his position to go to North Powder, the State Bank ing board elected E. F. Slade, who has been connected In the office of Bank Supt S C. Sar- lt, , . , ; . j HRJN AND REAR i r, -f,-t 7?Tfws . , , . . . Anu gionus uimmnm good faith at Geneva! ... Is trying to break (Continued of a divinely directed control of 4he evolutionary process " Kise ley's inclination to question the Darwin theory is prompted by the exposure , of the Piltdown skull as a fake. According to the" natural selec tion theory evolution proceeeds so that a species to survive de velops certain traits or charac teristics just a little superior. Quoting, or paraphrasing Wal lace: "Natural selection could only have endowed the savage witn a braia a little superior to that of an ape, whereas be actually pos sesses one but little inferior to that of the average member of or learned societies." Wallace was puzzled over this. The Piltdown skull had a "mo- J L. : U . . ( i 1 . . " "v." arparently primitive fsce." and Was Credited W.th an ace Of aomelhinif over a milliiHi vi.nr someuiiDg over a million years When not many months aco it was proved to be a hoax, the mystery of the sudden emergence of the human braia again dis turbed anthropologists, . or at least Dr. Eiseley. This exposure "points to man, in his present form, as being one of the young est and newest of all earth's swarming inhabitants." Human evolution then must have been "explosive" and that, according to Wallace, implies "a divinely directed force at work in man." So firmly grounded is the Dar winian theory of natural selec tion in the opinions" of scientists it is doubtful if yet there is much reversion to the Wallace enneep - un ui uie ungin or me numan brain. Eiseley himself projects rather than accepts the hypo thesis. This is his conclusion: "Ironically . enough., science, which can show us the flints and the broken skulls of our dead fathers, has yet to explain how we have come so far so fast, nor has it any completely satis- factory answer, to the question asked by Wallace long ago. Those! who would reviite us by pointing to an ape at the foot of our fam ily tree grasp little of the awe with which the modern scientist now puzzles oyer man's lonely and supreme ascent. The true aecret of Piltdown, though thought by the public to be mere ly the revelation of an unscrtipu- .lous forgery, lies in the fact that it has forced science to re-examine the history of the most miraculous creation in the world the human brain. 1 And there for the present we Better English By D. C. WILLIAMS 1. What is wrong with this sen tence? "I am not sure but what I will be there.'' J. What is the correct pronunci ation, of "research"? 3. Which one of these words is misspelled? Supercilious, super fluity, superficiality, superlative. 4. What does the word "ennui" mean? 5. What is a word beginning with pr that means "living by preying on other animals"' ANSWERS 1. Say, "I am not sure but that I shall be there." 2. Accent both noun and verb on second syllable, not the first. S. Superficiality. 4. Boredom. (Pronounce ahn-wee, accent first syllable). "His man ner of living produced a state of ennui." 5. Predatory. Subarriptlas Rates y emrrtai la eioest Dally and Sunday S I 4 per ma. Daily anly Mb per mo. Sunday only Jt week ? Bail Sea day asuyi la advaacal Aaywhere la U I JO pet max -- - - an vine. I OS rtat By aull Dally aae Saadayi i la advancvi ta Oragoa f I it per max I ao sla ma MM year U 0 I autase Oragoa I 4 par raa. . (" ssasaaae Aadfl Bureaa at CirealaUea Bareaa af aayertsstag ANPA Oregas) Stawapapar rakHakert Assetriattae AevarttaUit earaaaBtatJeari wsrd-Orlfflik Co., eat "llieay Ca.. hew Vara Cklasga - taa rtewteaa Sesaet FT Rv T.loMv i i , . , . ... delegates was drinking toasts injmoutn and bark again bv various Capitalist lie that we were merely tip a cold; . . . from page 1) shall have to leave the question, but the Fiseley article uiil give cheer to the fundamentalists who have long scoffed at tha whole "monkey business ' of evolution. Cars Collide; Two Injured A Salem woman and a 9-year-old Rickreall girl were hospitalized following an auto collision late Sun day morning at Vista avenue and Commercial street. Theresa Beckley of Rickreall re ceived a fractured left arm, Salem General Hospital attendants said. Mrs. Jean Hiebert. 2580 Bluff, Ave.. nin. l,Arn;(Al;,l t ..l : . I - "-o...lli.u u. ..u,v.,uu ui 3 ,H-VB,'rr will he puhuV'v a head injury. Neither was listed , or-d bv thX in Fenous Condition. j of Crntrrl Howell Scnool Dutrirt t'o. ; Gerhard Smith of Rirkrpill 4I,C' Morion County. Oieon. for th ucmara smuri 01 tuikreau. !purchase at lr- thin p,r nd i i ncrestfs grandfather, was cited! scmird intcrc t. of th, foiiowin d. by state police for not Stopping at,rrihfd neaotiabl fencral-obliration rfr, linht u, m """- . '. IE. EriCKSOn of Rickreall, passeng - era in the Smith car, were treated at the hospital for bead lacerations. Richard Beckley, 11, Theresa's bro ther, was treated by city first aid men for a nose injury. The child ren's mother, Mrs. Mildred Beck ley, and grandmother, Mrs. Alma Smith, were apparently uninjured. Mrs. Hiebert's husband. Elmer John Hiebert, listed as driver of the othe- car, also was apparently uninjured. Ll IT T I-.al- Kt 11 llVCSlOfK Llub to rorm Statriman Newi Service LINCOLN - A 4 H livestock club comprising the former Lincoln. Spring Valley, Zena and Brush College clubs is to be organized and officers elected in a meeting 8 p.m. Monday in the Spring Val- ley Community Center Building. Parents as well as prospective members of the proposed Happy Livestock Club are to attend the meeting, according to George Randle, leader, - and Mrs. Freda Brog, assistant. Wreck Victim to Go to Portland Statrimaa Neat Service STAYTON William J. Long or Turner, who received a head injury Nov. 10 in a collision on the Marion-Stayton road, is being transferred Monday to a veterans' hospital at Portland, Santiam Memorial Hospital attendants said. Long has remained in a semi-conscious condition - since the accident. 1 w 1 (Itarlei If. (laggett. Manager Centrally located in downtown Salem, the W. T. IIODON CO. MORTUARf offer and convenient access to. Salem'i cemeteries, Throuoheut the years, every effort It irrodern to better serve talem. PHONI 94179- Sm Tetm Wins Sports Car Event mcture on page i) Competition proved tight Sun day in a 32-mile "hare and hound" event sponsored by the Salem Sports Car Association over a winding course . in the Salem and Polk County areas. Approximately 20 cars, mainly from Salem, competed. f - inc. uxiYCi'iitfvigaiur icam ui Mr. and Mrs. Dick Donn, Salem, won top honors in th Judging, bared on a complicated point sys tem. They drove a Volkswagen. Three teams tied for second place and .mother three duos shared (-third place. All were from Salem. Second place finishers were: jDave Brunkel and Sharon French, driving a Hillman Minx; 1 Mr. and Mrs. Jay Brown, in a Pontiac; Mr. and Mrs. Max Bauer, , Vo'kswagcn. Third piece: Mr. and Mrs. Don Kowitz, Studebak er; Richard Anderson and Richie I Brunjtel, Volkswagen; and Wade Carter and Mary Rouk, Jaguar. The race course extended from a South S.-lcm area sports car I firm to Independence and Mon- round-?hout routes. Lime bawl were dropped along the way byispread rapidly northward to Ore-! "hpres" as clues, with points based on number of line bags mirsed and on mileage above the estimated 52 miles. UF Report Meeting Set Eloction of directors and possi- blc announcement of the 1956 into the insect's body. Once inside, camDaiqn chairman will highlieht the threads continue to develop and a "Report of Progress" meeting thus destroy the aphid, of the Salem United Fund cam-1 The beneficial insect being . im gaign. The progrm aLso will in- ported from the Near East are elude reports frm various divi-; microscopic wasps that lay their sions. f ' J eggs inside the aphid. The wasp Special recognition will go to larva hatch and feed on the insect's Elmer A Berglund and Kenneth I body. Potts for work done in the suc cessful 1955 Salem drive. NOTICE Or BOND SALE Central Howrtl School District Na. 4C Marln. I niintv nr.,u jhv the undrrsiunrd until 7:M o'clock , p m . Standsrd Oregon Tim, on th'1 firil H-iV nf nMmh,r 1 1, mri , - oiinon nouns ni nia cnooi aiMrjct. -'-iin the principal amount of I13 0OOO0. 'dated January 1. 19M, In denomlna- tion of SI .000 each, and maturing aerially In numerical order as fol low! : Maturity Dales Amount January 1, 1997 I2 OO0 00 January 1, 195 $2,000 00 January 1, 19S $2,000 00 January 1, 19B0 $2 000 00 January 1, im . SSOOOOO January 1, Iwt $2.000 00 January 1, 1963 .?. $1 000 00 Thc bondi will bear Interest pay able eemi-annually at auch rata or rates. In maHtsles of th ef 1, not exceeding four per eent, .t annum, as shall be specified by tne fturceas ful bidder. Both the principal of and the Interest noon the bonds will 'be pi u; the office of the county treaa- of Marion County. Oreeon.- Mnds will be sold to tha him est bidder, but the district school board rserves the right to reject any or all bids. Unless all bids are re loctert. the bonds will be awarded to tv-e bidder eomolylng with the terma of tne notice of sale, and submitting the bid which provides the lowest emit to. the school district. Each bid must be unconditional muM bo accompanied by a certified rharlt or cashier's check In favor of 4ha district, of or upon a bank doine. business m 1he State of Oregon, in t ie sum of $26 00, and must be en- rlosed In a sealed envelope pddressetl to tha undersigned and marked on the outside "Proposal for Bonds." No Interest will be allowed on the depne.it with the bid. but the check of the successful bidder will be re twined as part payment of the bonds In secure trie school district (gainst any loss resulting from fail ure of the bidder to comply with the terms of his hid. Fach bidder shall Include In his bid a statement of the total Interest rnst to the district, if his bid be ac repted. The successful bidder will be fur pished with the written opinion of Winfree .McCullnch, Shuler tt Savra. of Portland. Oregon, to the effect that tht bonds constitute the valid and legally binding obligations of the said school district Tha bonds will be delivered com plete, without undue delay, at the expense of the school district, at such city In Oregon as the successful bid der shall name. , Dated at i Salem, Oregon, this 1st day of December, IMA. EARL SCHAR. Clerk Central Howell School District No. 40C, Marion County, Oregon. D 5. lj.-M. MlnifirtsS'i r f iiaaswyaasjii p. sap esyasiiaai' I''pyaaamayesaa a is laajliss an a ma i- :- ' J ukiJ' j fci- ' . y.- . - .. A Jjr v.'- ': " ' 'T .-' v. " : niaWl' J" .. - i ' " paa- v ,v --- aajaWat"""-" . Jr V - - ,tf t," ae- " rn ' lUrN Air Warfare Made Against Alfalfa Pest By LILME L. MADSlTN Farm Editor, The Statesman Air warfare has now entered agriculture in a new form. An air borne enemy of the alfalfa grow er's n. mber one insect pest is be ing spread throuchout the state of California, with scientists from the University . of California directing the battle. Sunday news releases from Calif ornia said that bodies of spotted alfalfa aphidj killed by an internal fungus are being' placed in test plot approved by the state agri cultural commissioners; Spores from the fungus, carried by wind currents, land them on live aphids and gradually destroy them. Rapid .Spread This novel form of biological warfare was disclosed Sunday by P, -t i . D ln,,r.n Ak.:.mN nf ,V. University's department of bio- ad ,een Jdesk one el logical control, which is also in offices was found near the safe, porting and spreading beneficial f but n , ,ttfnpt t0 u" tt wa un' insects that attack the spotted al- j fucceuss'u' becf"se combina falfa aphid llon nad been tnan8eJ- The safe ... ' . . , ,-. was not damaged. Discovered in February, 19.4. in, . . ... San Diego County, the aphid has gon and is considered the most destructive pest ever to strike falfa on the west coast. The fungus was also noted for the first time in San Diego. Since then a similar species has been found in natural stands in Riverside County and has been introduced and established in other parts of, the state. Tiny Threads After landing on an aphid, Clau sen said, the fungus spore gcr- minates and sends tiny threads The insectary on the Riverside University (California) campus, is producing 1.000 of these parasites daily for release In the alfalfa fields. At present they are being alfalfa plants, but efforts are be- inn morto t Hsvoinn ctrnthoti. nlanl " juices that wU facilitate produc- o her srimtUU are hdninff thit . u n" SCirnilMS are noping tnai thc "beneficial insects will 'not. .... , k,,... inu,,P frl. .-;". -."" tests show they feed only on aphids. and the theory is that when aphids are gone, they will starve to death. Whippoorwills do not make nests, but lay their eggs on bare ground or among accumulations of leaves. vias lyildia, tA&Ui- Mi . : ( Savings at First Federal Savings Are: r . klAFE Each saver's funds are insured to $10,000 AvAllABII-No watting yean for full earnings F IRST-ls federally chartered and -supervised -, c ' '' k ARNINGS Savings earn more FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS Convenient Downtown location 129 North Commercial lijrfa'ssiifrfl fsir'f ( T'V-.?-. i - II ' Thieves Raid OffifS" Salem Doctors Ransacking of three doctors' -offices -and attempted entry of a fourth at the Doctors Clnic, 1437 State St., was discovered Sunday morning, but the victims reported after investigation that they could find nothing missing. Entered were tht offices of Dr. Wiley Young. Dr. Landy J. Franx and Drs. Harold E. Poole Allan L. Ferrln. Several doors were pried open in the process. An unsuccessful attempt also was made to force the door of the office of Drs. Edward A. Lebold a Robert F. Anderson. Narcotics displayed in plain sight in some of tha offices were apparently not disturbed, police said, . aAliough all drawers and doors in the offices entered were opened. A safe combination which L"0 ,lnerPn"" ww of- lcers sa,a' maicaung uvat the "-:' """ nur al-;" oiscoverea oy u u. wrong. building custodian. ANCIENT CELEBRATION P O N L A T '- TAILLEBOURG, France Mrs. Marie Crouzet. her four daughters and one son noted her 100th birthday Saturday. The children range in age from 70 to 80. wmm tm mmH ttm m dirm key" ke4 mp$ is Urff ftriat Erv pht t mmm Metre a fall vtry Mhte Ma tut itN rtrpct-eifMilmc ptithbutloftP Owtet tSfKMH inifff mm Miif 'VirfcMia' N MlteYete e tvsxt Utall m$ath yajtjgtell with -fr4riifff HatVeitsMlee, e7pari ptwt ( fmbreclibl? frey plaMK Molt nfifm 'de f tjeoi tmfi9 $! trtee f Louis du Buy 991 N. Capitol Ph. 3-4770 ll'N:l''H'H!IJfl t SAVE SAFELY AND EARN MOKE Rale on " JOUHi Savings Rec'd by Dec. 10fh Earn from Dec. 1st: taws riliiilnii'iii;:i -4 amplo parking tpaeo made to keep fecIIHIee ,