4-Sec. I) Statesman, Salem, Ore, Tut;., June 12, '56 ,' SOAP OPERA "No Facor Swayt V$. No Fear S)iaH Awm Fnm First 8WWM. March tM. Uii Statesman Publishing Cotnpuij CHAHLES A. SFRACUE. Editor k Publisher pustoftM eety noraine Bmtm ofnaa ISO Koftli enured aV lm, Pro. fclepiw -aaii tatwM at tM purtoffire M MIm. On "?? tlM miw mi I al Comrw Marra S. Hl . . liaWt Amc1iU4 rraas ., , ' tM Aixwutr Pma aautioa excluaitrot to Ihe" . , tor neubUMUM a ail ImI aewa aristae aa , ... Una aawaaaat. Prws Conference Risks) i i 1 - sl Wednesday .'resident Eisenhower made some comment respectinf "neutral natlonl which later he had to explain away lest they damage relations with our own al lies. Speaking of certain non-Communist neu trals like India and Indonesia he said that the desire of new countries to remain neutral should be respected the USA stayed neutral , for its first J50 year. He added that .neutral -tty In other countries Is not always to the dis advantage of the United States. ' After this comment was puotlsned, nervous Nellies In our diplomatic and military ser - tm llAa.tMa aft ' As! 1jb ttfttiMlft liltl 111 ftl liance with the United SUtes the Philip pines, Thailand, Pakistan would conclude they might be better off to be -neutral" lika India and Burma.- So Thursday the White ITouse issued a fresh statement to "clarify" the President's meaning. As Is often the case the new statement adds more wordage and not much light What the President seems to mean ii that while we have to respect the de sire of some nations to remain neutral, those that are lined Up with the USA are on a good team. Tbe United States isn't going to attack .any nation, but countries that are lined up tith a country that is aggressive may find f themselves in difficulties. tl'K.fr It .) at Ia t. that itaolartno' IB. ft not it iuui. u y v m Mww . tional policy orally in press conferences la Iretty risky business. President Eisenhower as been quite successful in such conferences In being both frank and cautious, but last Wednesday he slipped. Foreign policy Is too important to be discussed "ad lib." Russell Favow Deeper Cut C The House backed its foreign affairs com. mittee and passed a bill appropriating only 3.8 billion for foreign aid instead of the $4.9 . asked by President Eisenhower. Often the ', Senate reduces cuts made by the House, and it may do so this time, Senator George of Ceorgia favors restoring about $500,000,000 to the appropriation. His colleague, Senator Russell of Ceorgia who Js chairman of the $enate Appropriations Subcommittee which -will consider the measure, says tbe program ought to be chopped another billion. Russell has double responsibility, since he is also Chairman of the Senate Armed Services Com mitteehe is the one who did such a good ' Sb of presiding at the hearing of the Army- cCarthy dispute. That he 'favors an even ' more drastic cut than that made by the House Shows that memoers witn a great sense oi re sponsibility in not agree with the admlnistrsr : tioo'f foreign aid, budget' J j i'T't" " saawaaswaBBaaaaxaaaaBaaaaBxa his home near Pratum was devoted to the up building of Sunday Schools1 both in this im mediate area and around the world. He was active in the work of .the American Sunday School Union and ' attended many of its world conferences. Among his many activi ties he found time for a number of years to serve as correspondent for The Statesman in bis community. He lived to the ripe age of 78 and of him truly it may be said his works will live after him, especially in the Sunday Schools which he fostered. 2 Governor Harriman chose a good stage on which to announce his active candidacy for the United Hatters and Millinery Workers that "this (his) hat is in the ring.". Hell find, however, that Adlai Stevenson has a pretty long lead. v- I S ! ' The Hardy Record Industry J The phonograph record business, ever since it waa given a start by Thomas Edison's genius 79 years ago, has been Just about the , hardiest' new Industry of them alL It has had its up and downs, and at least ' twice seemed pretty well down for tbe count, but here it is again breaking all-time records, and no pun intended. Last year, 200,000,000 platters were turned out and sold. There are still among us many who re member the first records cylindrical and - difficult of storage which gave a fairly good reproduction. Then came the thick platters, i slightly better in tone and more easily adapt- ' ed to living room space particularly since both sides could be used. And the advent of portables was a life-saver, too. But hand cranking the phonograph was a chore and the whole device still was in the stage of the ' push-putt washing machine which was fast outmoding the scrubbing board but still com prised hard work. Motoriiation in both Instances spelled a new impetus to improvements, just as it did : for the refrigerator industry which eventu- , ally killed off the old ice-boxes much to the discomforture of children who no longer could hop on the back end of an ice-wagon for a cool mouthful on hot summer days. ' In the meantime, radio started knocking the props out of records and the industry al most went under. But it wouldn't stay that way. There was a considerable lull in buying during the battle for long-play-tvpe produc tions a decade ago, but eventually the auto matic record changers and other innovations ' which breathed new life into the business were made adaptable to two or three, and now four, speeds. So records both old and new could be played on the same machine, and customers dropped their sales resistance to go all-out for their own favorite music which could be played whenever they wished. Now, with hi-fi increasingly popular for Its truer reproduction of tone, there seems no end in sight, TV notwithstanding. The picture is one of adaptability and change, of American ingenuity and progress. Records are a source of enjoyment for all ages and itll Uke some development not now foreseen to alter the pattern of increased ac ceptance. Oregon adults certainly took a back seat at Salem Sunday. A 14-year-old lad from Grants Pass, Larry Horn, won the handicap cham pionship at the state trapshooting tourna ment, defeating a veteran in a shoot-off. And 12-year-old Gary Schafer won the champion ship at a Shrine golf tournament at Salem Coif Club. You Just can t keep the younger generation down. ' Editorial Comment THE NEW MAN BEHIND THE DESK Advertising artists get more imaginative every day, and generally, we tee it at aa Improvement. We enjoy the humanized cars ia the Mobilgas ads, the tubercular, one-eyed model used by Hath away Shirts and old redbeard, the Schweppetman. But when the imagination turns to things " anatomical, we yearn tor the old days when whiskey ads carried photos o( the bottle in question r,- and when a print of a tired man illustrated the haiard of neglecting the daily pill. We never liled' those T-sone ads,' with the T planted between tbe glotua and the gowhichit. Then along came that ad drawn by a plumber-turned-adman. It shows a man whose inside are pure, ' right-angle, copper tubing, lead pipe and Orange burg, in appropriate places. It's supposed to show how a pill takes hold fast where it should and sends its goody-molecules all through the sanitary sys tem. It's not the sort of drawing we want enlarged and tinted for our living room wall. But the latest is a Curtiss-Wright electronics di vision ad that shows a transparent human head. Inside is a radio-type diagram with places for re sistors, capacitors, switches, relays, tubes, trans formers and even a thing called a Plus El' The ad boasts "Higher I.Q. for Industry elec tronic brains" and goes ea to tell how imaginatively an electronic brain performs when it contains a C-W distortion eliminating voltage regulator. This ad hat a highly distorting affect oa our brain voltage. We fear that some day soon we'll enter an office and see a clear plastic head behind a desk. It win be filled with wires and bright colored little cylinders and we will be told metal lically to shove off, that we're obsolete. Albany Democrat-Herald. mmmmmmmmm Eisenhower's Second Illness Forces : I Reconsideration of Re-Election Bid Plan By STEWART AUOP T WASHINGTON - It is good to know that the President's opera - tion was a brilliant success, that ; bit recovery should be complete within sis weeks, and that bis .doctors agree that his illness need not . bar him from a sec Toed term. Evea so, there .Is no, ducking - the fact that the President and "the country are i avaln annarpli : , i . i. . familiar que a- tion whether a man In his eon : ditioa should attempt to carry the crushing burden of the Pre ; aidency for four more years. The ' question caa only be intelligently r : J 1 I t - L i I ucvKicn vj m iraiw ana carnut ; weighing of the medical factors, vand of .other, more intangible, T but equally Important factors al wel . . , i 5. " The world's greatest medical 'authority on the President's dis- - ease, ileitis, is Or. Burrill Crohn, who first diagnosed the disease as benign and operable in 1932 T before that,' the patient usually , died. Since 1932 Dr. Crohn has treated some 700, cases of the disease. . , a -; Dr. Crohn agrees, on the basis of this experience, that the Pre . sident should have recovered . fully la Six weeks. Moreover, Dr. Crohn points out that there is virtually no chance of mallgnan- - ey developing, since the small intestine ia almost Immune to ' malignancy. It is thus quite rea 'sonable to hope that the Presi- dent has many years of active and happy life ahead of bim. I But there Is a snlaas aide to the snedleal letoTe as wet. As Dr. Cra ha iata out, Ike Preat ' deat'S eaerattoa, tavaWag ''Ummattow ef awveral laebee a latofUae, k aaaat ItitlaeUy a ma Jar tyrratlaa, AlthMgh the bean h Mt flrrrtty tovahred, the Presldeat'i heart attack aaa his age are aaqimtlaaablr eanali eating faeUrt. Flaafly, kaaea aa Dr. Craka's exptrleace. taert It a 13 ehaaee af recirreaee at JWUs. t There is, of coarse, a some what similar chance ef recurr ence of coronary thrombosis. In Sum. uke bU heart attack, the President's operation has been no minor indisposition. Even after his recovery, Dr. Crohn and other doctors consulted agreed, a physically vigorous campaign by the President must be ruled out. 8e mack far the medical (ac ton. The PresMent't persaaal prestige is Bwhapa Um auat ua - aartaat at the laUagtble factors , ia be weighed. Ia a tpeeeb aama stars aga, the President said: 1-Certalaly the presllge at Um failed States tine the last world war has aerer aeea aa high as K Is this day." The tUtemeat Is apea to dlsaato. Bat hardlf aayaaa wiU diipeto . thai the prestige af Dwtght D. Elaeahewer has aerer baea Ugh er, all aver the warld. -i K Almost single-handed, the Pre .sident has removed the false 'face of the United States as an unstable and warlike power. This has been, perhaps, his single greatest aervice to his country. His second greatest service has been to restore a large measure df the national unity which was so sadly lacking only a few years V the President decides to withdraw, the trreplaceahla aa lieaal asset at his warld prestige win ha teat. A aertod at extreme vpaUtleal eearsslea wttl alae a - inhered la, la whlrh the vMeat - lNwtlaaaahla which the Praaideat has ana aa snach to still wlB agala ha toadly beard. Yet, at ia the case of the medi cal picture, there is another side ef the picture which must also be considered. Ever since his heart attack, there hat been a tendency among his subordinates to shield Mr. Eisenhower from the unpleasant responsibilities of hit office. A case in point wat the urgent message on the Mid dle Eastern crisis from British Prime Minister Sir Anthony Eden, which was apparently con cealed from the President. Military leaders, appalled by the accelerating shift la the warld power balance to tbe Cent muatst blae, cemplala that the President la aa prelected that they have not heea able to make kaawa la hln the real ease far a sharply stepped aa defense effort. Again, there It heavy pretsare aa the National Secart ty Ceaaell to avoid traahHag the President with apUt paten. The retell hat heea largely to trans form the NSC Into a mechantora far reading the lowest rtmm.n deaemlaater af Indecision. Since the President's latest trouble, the tendency to over protect him is sure to grow. Per haps this is not too great a price to pay tor his prestige abroad and his leadership at home. But It is silly to pretend that there is no price to pay; or to dis regard the risks involved in a second term for a man of stxtv five who has had a coronary thrombosis and a major ab dominal operation within less than eight months. At before, the final decision will rest with the President him self. But it is not only legitimate, but right and needful, that the matter be fully and frankly de bated by the country. (Copvrtfht IMS, Now York HoraM Tribune Int.) (Coatinncd from page on.) employes the nature of whose employment involves no risk to national security. This should simplify greatly the work of offi cials charged with protecting our government against subversion. This writer served for a few years on a regional loyalty board. Some of tbe cases the board had to consider seemed far removed from risk because of subversion, for eiample a female employe in a government Indian hospital, or a manual laborer at some non defense installation. We discussed the situation, noting that a great deal of the time of the FBI and of the civil service could be saved or employed more usefully if the security program were restricted to employes where the risk was genuine. Tbe Eisenhower admin istration revised tbe security or ganization and abolished the re gional boards. No change waa made, however, ia the applicatioa of loyalty standards to all em ployes. The political clamor for getting rid of the Reds was too strong for that Now the court bat intervened to throw a mantle of protection around government employes in non-sensitive jobs. The text of the opinion was not given in the press reports. Pre sumably Congress could change the law and make the security tests universal. From the stand point both of security and of the practical working of government the ruling ought to stand. So many errors have been made in applying the loyalty tests as Harry Cain has pretty well proven that the effort now should be directed toward the essential of the program: Safeguarding the nation against subversion-within the government structure by hold ing strict standards of loyalty to all in sensitive positions, but giv ing to ail employes fair hearings whenever charges against their loyalty are made. Aa we get farther away from the hysteria of the McCarthy era we can establish most sensible loyalty procedures. The Supreme Court has forced that in its recent decision. Better English BY D. C. WILLIAMS Time Flies FROM STATESMAN FILES 10 Years Ago Jane 11, IMS Mrs. E. B. McNaughton of Portland was appointed to the State Board of Higher Education by Gov. Earl Snell. She replaces R. C. Groesbeck, Klamath FaHs, who resigned. 25 Yetrs Ago Jane U. 131 Returns from the state income and intangibles tat to the state of Oregon will total $2,700,000 this year, according to estimates of the State Tax Commission. 40 Yean Ago Jaaa 12, 111! State Senator C. P. Bishop of Salem, one of the Oregon dele gates to the national Republican convention, has been named to represent Oregon as one of the committee to deliver formally to Justice Charles E. Hughes noti fication of his nomination for president of the United States. 1. What is wrong with this sen tence? "We left as soon as we were through with out work, but the foreman objected to us leav ing." 2. What is the correct pronun ciation of "caloric"? ). Which one of these ords is misspelled? Perspiration, perspi cuity. Derogative, pertinence. j 4. What does the word "aqui line" mean? 5. What is a word beginning with ha that meana "playful rail-1 lery; banter"? j ANSWERS I I. Say, "We left as soon as we; HAD FINISHED our work, but the foreman objected to OUR LEAVING." 2. Accent second syllable, not the first. 3. Prerog ative. 4. Hooked; prominent like the beak of an eagle, applied especially to the nose. "Many great men of history have had aquiline noses." 5. Badinage. Ike Healthiest Of Candidates, Doctor Claims CHICAGO ( A stomach sur-; geon says President Eisenhower , "wilt be in better physical con-. dition than any of his opponents Republican or Democrat have : been at any time in their lives." j when ,he recovers from his ! emergency intestinal operation. Dr. David Allman, Atlantic City, N J., said Sunday he based his opinion on the President's military career which h said put Eisenhower "in tip-top" sh pe to overcome sickness. "The President hat already demonstrated his wonderful re cuperative powers by the way he came back from his heart at tack," Dr. Allman said. Dr. Allman, who is surgical di rector at Atlantic City Hospital, is a candidate for 1937 president of the American Medical Assn., which is meeting in Chicago. He described Eisenhower'! op eration as "a routine thing these days nothing we consider real ly serious." Dr. Allman said the Presi dent's operation was no more dangerous that the one Adlai E. Stevenson, candidate tor the Democratic presidential nomina tion, underwent in 1954. Stevenson was troubled in the spring of 1954 by recurring kid ney stones. On April 12 of that year he underwent surgery for removal of the stones. Communists Blamed for Argentine Plot By ROMAN JIMENEZ BUENOS AIRES If) - Vice President Isaac Rojas said Moo day night a communist hand was behind the plot to overthrow Ar gentina's provision! government Ia aa interview. Rear Admiral! Rojas said documents seixed from the rebels "showed -that proce dures, methods and organitatiin of the revolt were typically com munist.' Admiral la Charge The admiral took charge of gov ernment forces Saturday night to snuff out the revolution. Rojas' charge amplified that of provisional President Pedro Ar amburu who told a news confer ence that the revolt "had a com munist head with a Peronist and nationalist body" with ramifica tions in the rest of the Americas. A high government source dis closed Monday night that Aram bum had commuted death sen tences for 11 arrested rebels, who may still face life imprisonment. Military courts were deliberating the fate of more than 300 others arrested alter the revolt was crushed. The government had an nounced 3t have been executed. Guidance Reported Rojas said captured plans for the plot disclosed another com munist type element the fact that cells were formed to carry out the objectives. He added that the objectives themselves contained many com munist type ideas, including at tacks on factories and churches, and robbing banks. At the news conference. Aram- bum said the revolt neighboring countries. Jinks to Peraa Fishpotcer Hauls Angler 12 Miles NAHA, Okinawa A fish towed a fisherman 12 miles to sea off this Island Sunday and left him stranded ia a tiny boat. Gaiin Tokeshi, 22. who hooked what he termed aa "undersea monster." was rescued Monday by aa Air Force crash boat after he was spotted by the pilot of an incoming ship. Tokeshi said be cut the fishing line after a gruelling struggle with the fish and then discovered the boat's three-horsepower mo tor was soaked with salt water and would not run. Blazing Guns Of Bankers Chase Bandit STOCKBRIDGE, Ga. IfV-A bank president and his wife, victims. of Secrecy Okeh Says Court on Alien Probes WASHINGTON Ift-Splltting M, the Supreme Court decided Mon day the government may use sec ret evidence m weighing aa alien's applicatioa for 'suspesuioa of de portation. Justice Reed delivered the ma jority opinion. Joined by Justices Burton, Clark, Mintoa and Harlan, Chief Justice Warren and Justices Black, Douglas and Frankfurter each wrote separate dissenting opinions. The case concerned Cecil Regi nald Jay, S4-yearold native of England, was ordered deported ia 1952 for membership ia tbe Com munist party after hu entry te this country ia 1921. He was a party member between 193S and 1940. Jay did not challenge the fair ... dhff Iklal atakitna est taut kaann mm a holdup a year age, blazed away " r' with ni.mit unndav at a inn. but asked for suspension of de- bandit, apparently wounding him PortaUon. The Board of Immigra- before be escaped without any money. Mrs; Charles T. Loder. wife of the president o the citizens bank, fired four times at the man after he thrust a paper bag into a cash ier's window arid demanded "fill it up." Loder engaged In a gun battle with the would-be robber oa the sidewalk, firing five shots at the man before be reached a car and tion Appeals informed him the re quest was denied 'la light of con fidential- information available. Jay then began proceedings ia U. S. District Court in Seattle, but tbey were dismissed. The, District Court ruling that the confidential information had been properly used was affirmed by the VS. Circuit Court ia Saa Francisco. Jay's appeal to the high tribunal Insisted be was treat- L . u i. .w-j L. 'ed unfairly because of the use of Tbe citizens bank was rdbbed byi. erJiommtim a lone gunman on May 4, 19SS of S4.S00. Stockbridge is about IS miles southeast of Atlanta. Mrs. Loder said she and the bank's vice-president. Hugh Callo way, were at their cashier's win dows when the msn. wearing dark imperilled ' glasses, entered at midafternooa. "He walked up in front of Mr. I Calloway's window and shoved a "By wiping it out we defended paper bag into the window," Mrs. not only the liberty and democra- j Loder aaid. "Then he pointed a cv of Areentina but also of all the pistol at Mr. CaUoway and Mid American continents, he said. He declined to name the coun- the secret information. Reed said for the majority that suspension of deportation "is not given the deportable aliens as a right (but) is dispensed according to tbe unfettered discretion of the Attorney General." Reed added: "We are constrained to construe the statute as permitting devisions based upon matters outside the administrative record, at least when such action would be rea- tries he thought were linked with the Argentine plot but stamped Chile and Uruguay as two na tions through which money was passed from Panama where Peron is now in exile to Ar gentina, to finance the revolt. Ike Photo First Color For French Papers PARIS -The first color pho tograph to appear in a French nevspaper Showed up Monday in the Paris L'Aurore. It was a portrait of President Eisen hower. L'Aurore said henceforth it would print a color picture daily. mn (mm AND BEAR IT By Lichty JLM Ww LMpCL State School Posts Due for Confirmation PORTLAND Appointment of twe top officials in the State System- of Higher Education are to come up for confirmation In the state Board of Higher Education mating here Tuesday. Philip G. Hoffman, dean of the general extension division is to become dean of the, faculty at Portland State College, and J. W. Sherburne, head of the Oregon State College psychology depart ment, is to succeed Hoffman. Their appointments, if confirmed, will become effective Sept. 1. Hoffman's position is to be a new one, created because the college has no academic deans. He will take charge of the academic pro- 1 gram at the school. I Hoffman was a professor of his- tory at the University of Alabama nciore nc came 10 me state sys tem in 1953 as vice dean of the extension division. He became dean last year. Sherburne taught at Ohio State before going to OSC in 1938. As dean of the extension division, he will head the statewide night school program, the correspond ence courses and other activities of the division. Court Closes Tug-of-War For Youngster PORTLAND UP A 3 year-old boy was taken under court pro tection Monday after police re ported they found his parents in a tugging match over him. Tbe parents, Marcus and Evelyn Renhard, were divorced at Grants Pass about 11 months ago. The mother took Johnny, but recently; the father took the boy from a nursery school at Eureka, Calif. 1 The mother swore out a kid-. naping warrant against him, and ' he was arrested at Vancouver, Wash., 10 days ago. Released on bail, he took the boy to his home here. Mrs. Renhard began giving to Portland, but was hospitalized at 1 Cottage Grove briefly after an automobile accident. Sunday police said a fight was reported at a Portland home There they found Mrs. Renhard and her aunt trying to pull the boy array from Renhard. the police said. They quoted both parents as saying they had court orders for custody of the child. Juvenile court directed that the boy be placed in a nursery here while the custody question is settled. onable.' fill it up.' Warren said that in "conscience" "I reached for my gun which' he could not agree with the ma was in a drawer and started shoot- jority, adding: mg. I told Mr. Calloway to duc." lacrifiees to form too much She said she and Calloway dived ' the American spirit of fslr play under the counter as the man start- j both our Judicial and Adminis ed shooting at them. trative processes." "I shot four times," Mrs. Loder Bac, Mjd tne eore 0( our Con said. "Mr. Loder ran out of his stitution system is that liberty office at the rear of the bank and must never ukfn lway by started shooting at he man as he shortcuts and lhat fair (rials in ran out ot the door. liH.i.n rmirt.miitt never hm IIC .C . tfUIIII l.U.DI US, bridge minister, witnessed the side walk gun battle and said the robber , appeared to be wounded as he eri tered the car. I s dispensed with. "That system is in grave dang- -er. Black said, mis case empna- ! sites that fact." 4-li SCHOOL STARTS CORVALLIS i nearly 1.900 4-H Club members will attend the' annual Oregon 4-H summer school on the Oregon State College cam pus the next 10 days. The first session will be held Tuesday morning. fllMPAIR I I Ovorai4Mvcfor 1 All tl NS by tr II arama1 ladnciwa. I . Ceaiatatn I a 1 i It am wrea aauiaww. Drunk Driving Count Faced by Horseman SACRAMENTO, Calif, tf The California Highway Patrol says its just as wrong to be tipsy on a horse as in a car. Oliver Amitage, 41, was ar rested on a drunk driving charge arter his horse crashed into an automobile Saturday night. Officer Charles Millar said Armitage was riding in the wrong lane when the animal banged into a car driven by Grant Sizemore, 49 The horse was killed. luring SfcaaMw'l NEEDHAM'S Stationery Office Supplies 463 State Street, Salem, Oregoa OOX OFFICC o TICKETS NOW ON SALE "COFFEE TIME" By State Employees June 15th at 16th Y.W.C.A. BENEFIT Ballet . . . June 15th ARABIAN HORSE SHOW June 23 24 ST. PAUL RODEO AND DANCE July 1 thru 4 MOLIALA BUCKEROO July 1 thru 4 WILLAMETTE CONCERT SERIES 1956-57 Season Not to belittle other branches of the armed "forces Colonel. but OUR file system is the ONLY one suited to the defense needs of the nation! . - . Pair Pleads Guilty to Gold Sale Scheme SAN FRANCISCO (v-An Oregon I timber salesman and a California i miner pleaded guilty to illegal gold traffic conspiracy Monday, just as , their trial was scheduled to begin in Federal Court. F.lbert S. Osburn, 49. of, Cave i Junction, Ore., and Guy Pye, 59. of Auburn, Calif., each pleaded to the conspiracy count in a three- count indictment. It also charged them with violating the Gold Re serve Act by illegal sale and pos session of gold. They asked dis missal of these counts, and the court reserved decision. July 3 was fixed as the date for fixing their sentence, after a pro bation department report on their records and character. The possi ble maximum penalty is i years in prison and a $10,000 fine. Secret service agents said the pair did not mine the gold themselves and probably obtained it from miners. PBone 4-SSU Subscription Rates By tarrlri la etttail Oatlv onljr . 1 JS pr mo. Dally and Sunday S MS pi me Sundu oniT .10 Hk Bj mail Sunday only! On advanrd Anvwhtr In U S I N pn mo. 2 li fix mo. IN vtr By Bull. Dally aaS Sanaiyi fin advance) In Orf on , I 1 10 p mo. I SO tlx mo. 10 SO Ttr dj Your VA X:J I I V .'!.. 17 r I In U S outitda Oregon . . 1.41 par mo. MiaMr Antftt Burns of ClrcaltUoa Sanaa of AdnrtMnf ANPA Ornoa NrwaaaS! PUklHhm AnoctaUn Adttrnuni KaTMauUa Ward-Grltntk Ca. Wjl Holllda? C Nrm Vnrk Chlrasa Saa franrttra OftroM r l " i - I xm7 Checking Accounts for Everyone Everyone should have a checking account, to day. If you're tired ef walking mile after mile and standing for hours in weary lines . . . con sider how relaxing it would be to poy your bills by mail. We have checking account plans to suit the needs of everyone. Come on in, today. We'll wel come your account. GCUAUAl JJCvnTL 2715 8. Commercial Member F.D.I.C. .tar "for- J avv.. , - is - -