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About Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983 | View Entire Issue (March 21, 1943)
Sunday Edition Sunday Edition VOL 1 EUGENE, OREGON, SUNDAY, MARCH 21, 1943 ON STREETS So NEWS STANDS 5c NO. 80 CHv Council 'ft Consider )og Ordinance t GLENN HASSELROOTH Swated growlings of garden "So resent canine invasion of j Monday night with L"flil armistice of the "dog f the situation. If JtwiUbe by an ordinance pro- IS-1 - -nM nmntner fit hliiting dogs during April, May, June and The ordinance proposed Jatave its iirst hearing before tity council Monday night at ;J0 in we oj :a-t,H ordinance, sub- i-t to amendment, was released Sirday by City Attorney S. M. .Z... h. Hrew it ud at request ((Mayor E'isha arge and. mem" (, ol We counun, vv. .y yd received numerous complaints i-m "people asking that some L. h, done to help preserve victory gardens." (until Concerned The council is doubly concerned ,but the dog problem since it irailed Eugene resiaems oi me ... .i -in, int at its meeting four neks encourage the plant ed victory gardens and to help .,., build uo a food reserve. L. nrrvtnprtive ordinance pro- Sis for legal control of dogs dur- y the four months, ana provides joilties for violations. Tk.t th ordinance will meet nth considerable approval, even (rem lovers of dogs, was indicated Lmmment from Sidney W. Clay- pool, secretary to the Lane County Humane society. He said Saturday ihtn informed of the ordinance ft. i t. won "very much in favor" i the provisions of the ordinance, iuuthe felt many of the society's ambers would also be in agree- out seerfeacy Cited The ordinance calls upon "all MtrinHc citizens owning doss to tee; them upon their own prem iss during tne emergency ana provides for enforcement "during wil Mav. .Tlln nnd July of BnV httr." Dogs would be permitted tneir owners property a on a leash. Mce officers of Eugene and my special officer appointed by J chief of police and confirmed cj the council would be authoriz ti and directed "to take up and iapound any dog" in violation. A description of any impounded o! would be taken by the police BEE COUNCIL STORY PAGE I Announces Two CD Appointments Appointment of J. J. Kamerman U chairman of the salvage com- tae, and of Frederick W. Dor set, Oakridge, as commander of District One, both under the Lane oty defense council, was n ttmced Saturday bv Judee Clin- Hurd, chairman. Kamerman, local manager of 4j Mutual Benefit Health and Ac tat association, succeeds Judd "jf(ri who resigned from the " committee recently to ac W i full-time position. Lane "Wty has excelltd in all salvage Plgiii undertaken so far, and Is expected hat with guidance Kamerman, this record will ""hue, jU(ige Hurd saldi wrflet was appointed on rec Wmendation of the Oakridge city cil, and he will take over work at area left vacant by the res won of William Kissinger. IK Tunisian Gains Consolidated as Mud Stops Drive ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, North Africa, March 20 u.R Torrential rains have bogged down the fledgling allied offensive in south Tunisia, and American Mme. Chiang Gets$l 00,000 Gift to China CHICAGO, March 20. (U.BA tall, be-spectacled "mystery wo man" was ushered in to see Mme. Chiang Kai-shek, wife of China's leader, today, and from her brief case she whisked a check for $100,000 for China. She was Mrs. Anita McCor- troops today were consolidating mick Blaine, multi-millionaire their rains in a drive toward the '. heiress to the McCormlck reaper coast and waiting for a break in i fortune, a woman of many bene the weather to resume it. factions and positive political fTh British rariin rennrteri that convictions. Her father-in-law American shock troops advancing WM James G. Blaine, who was Guinea, taking one direct hit and 23 miles east of Gafsa penetrated j known as the ' plumed knighf some near misses. Off Kaimana, in Sened, encountered no resistace, I yfnen h ran PT, P'?sid'n.t. on the same area, medium bombers and withdrew.) . I the republican ticket in 1884. swept low during bad weather to Four days of steady rainfall in! The gift was 1,000 shares of at(acl. merchantman in the bay, some sectors had turned the roads ; '7 Fii" i starting a fire on the deck, and plains into quagmires impas-; , ' ""h"j sable for heavy guns and armor, I "fA cat.,$,1. ,eaCh- ,Mada,me and alUed air forces were unable ' Sln" f'LA.6 'n8 from H16 Three Jap Ships Hit by Allies Off New Guinea ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN AUSTRALIA, Sunday, March 21. W Three Japanese merchant men have been bombed and dam aged by allied planes off New Bri tain and New Guinea, the allied high command reported today. . A 10,000 ton cargo ship was at tacked by a medium bomber oft Cape Vandenbosch, Dutch New Daail tn DnM " " " Joti School Kids Collect 779,670 Pounds ' Scrap in Drive Noil, already arrlalmp rham- fx school for collection ot P iron and steel, climbea ""l higher in the records witn "aouncement that 119,610 rds of scrap have been eith ; collected or delivered at their Ration during this wartime A. Daniplsfin. acciclant i.M 'b leader, revealed the news MWrday sfter being informed Miss Rankin, Noti school who brought him a re 'or 71.435 pounds. In Jan "T. the school was ahead in contest with 46,965 pounds r ,C"P. and later they brought w 1 receint tn- 1 jan Tile deal ,k:.u .l- Rlrr. " niii cincneQ uie lift . Ji. N'0,i sho01 was made ' r Ihey founH an nirina . . l the Forcia and T-arnen ts ?? asked about crappin it fan "'P"16"'- This was u. Danielson said, but lasv Hr I , note was received from i Jr,n in which he enclosea ""'Pt lor th escran salvaEe. ,'N-GTON, DC, March 20. V 1, na' 4594 Indians. Ha-.K " '"'roduced in the Sir?1 lay. There are W the Umii c... THESE THREE OBSERVERS and scores of others from posts 22 and 40 nearby Eugene will gather at the Eugene hotel this afternoon for conference. Shown above are Francis W. Kelley, Jr., chief ob server for post 40, Mrs. Marie Hewitt and Bill Wheeler, on the porch of the recently completed lookout building. Speeches by civilian de fense and army officials, an army movie and other events are planned for the meeting today to give the observers at the two posts a better insight Into their duties. (Register-Guard photo Wiltshire engraving) Traveling at 400-Miles an Hour In P-38ls Exhilerating-Whoops By ERNEST FOSTER BURBANK, Cal., March 20. (U.R Traveling at' well over" 00 miles an hour in a Lightning P-38 fighter plane is exhilerating fun until the pilot begins to pull out of a power dive or swoops- into, a sartical bank. . .. . !' Then, with the weight of your body multiplied by at least six times, your head sinks down on your chest, your eyes seem to be yanked from their sockets and you really press down on your seat. You wish that you hadn't had that chicken-a-la-king for lunch. Jimmy Mattern, crack Lockheed test pilot and former round-the- world solo flyer, took me up in a Lightning today to demonstrate the new army air force technique of training a flying student in in tricacies of maneuvers and flight characteristics while he squats in a piggy-back seat formed by re moving radio equipment from the cockpit. A few other newspapermen and I were the first civilians ever to be carried as passengers in the speedy single-place craft. Mattern's confidence cheered me as he helped me with the para chute and told me how to count and pull the ripcord in case of ac cident. "But you'll never need It," Mat tern commented. "These planes are the safest and easiest to han dle that I've ever flown." We cramped ourselves in the cockpit, with me perched above WAR FUND 1943 RED CROSS LANE COUNTY QUOTA $41,400 35,000 1 30,000 25,000 20,000" 15,000" 10,000 1 U 5,000 1 Three American divisions were ready to roll toward the Gabes bottleneck as soon as they had the footing, while to the south the British Eighth army, after blast ing the Mareth line, awaited Gen. 1 Sir Bernard L. Montgomery's com mand to advance. Poised on the south-central ; front were the American 1st and 34th infantry divisions and the 1st armored division, the forces that chased Marshal Erwin Rommel back through the Kasserine pass after suffering a setback last month. Their hold on the Gafsa area secure, they were ready to push east and southeast from El Guettar. , The Americans were within 70 miles of Gabes, the coastal city which the axis undoubtedly was preparing to defend with all its might. If the allies succeeded in blocking the 12 mile strip between Gabes and the Chott Djerid, the Afrika Korps would be trapped between the British and American armies in a small segment of southern Tunisia. A Royal Air Force statement thus described the axis position phans of China. Meat Rationing Deadline Hears Off the Gazelle peninsula, which is near the big Japanese shipping base of Rabaul, New Britain, heavy bombers attacked an enemy cargo ship. Results were not ob served. Installations Hit Madang, facing Astrolabe bay on the north coast of New Guinea, above Lae, was visited by a heavy bomber which attacked Japanese installations on nearby Beliao lisl- and Chuguev Capture Claimed by Nazis"; Reds on Defensive LONDON, March 20. (1MB The Red army reported tonight that It was locked in fierce defensive battles in the Chuguev area south east of Kharkov but on the central front had captured more towns and villages in the enveloping drive aimed at Smolensk. The Soviet midnight communique broadcast from Moscow Ignored the Donets river front, where earlier reports said the Russians had wiped out a German wedge driven into their positions as a tremendous battle on a broad front moved to- - - ward climax. 1 Post-war Polite Force' Favored Tn4 itfil inn thhImU- 4U r1.66" ".Lk'r e new prorm will taw tough as its predecessors and that the average American will get consld by the enemy is thought of as roughly in the shape of a man's head, with the neck in the narrow section that reaches down to the Mareth positions, then two hands of the air force already are gripped around his throat squeezing it tighter every day. The squeezing process will continue until, the grip shifting, the whole head has been crushed." This promise to choke the axis could be applied to the land and air forces of the American, Brit ish and French allies, All were bent on the same project. Son of Eugenean Dies in North Africa The 1943 war fund campaign of the Lane county chapter of the American Red Cross was 71 per cent complete Saturday, with headquarters announcing that a 71 Per Cent of Red cockpit, with me perched aoove; A T J I ehAduhimimyirPdiuhe Cross Quota Turned In pulled down the transparent top of the plane, spurted up the run way and lifted the plane into the air. m.. anrflA nf fVio T.ichtnlng's steep climb already has become no i total of $29,677.75 has been re ' . . ... i , u. .sfs iniceived in donations and nledses. secret 10 axis njcia, w say that within a startling few sec-1 Since Friday, $2,928 was taken onds we were looking down upon in. The goal for the fund is $41,400. southern California's lofty snow-1 he national deadline for dona capped Sierra Madres. The angle j tjons js March 31,- which leaves of climb was so steep as to lodge , oniy io days to complete the local me like a lead weight against the j campaign, headquarters said. Since rear corner of the cockpit. Mat- the fund is in interest of the war tern gradually leveled the plane j tjme emergency, providing aid for and gave a demonstration of speed . soldiers, the drive is not a "nor more than 400 miles an hour just mai" roi call. One day's wages is as amazing. ! asked of all givers. . The two Allison liquid tooled Incomplete returns from some motors with their combined 2300 committees show that a number of horsepower produced a deafening them have either surpassed or al- roar, but it was possiDie io e- most reacnea ineir goais; Fraternal committee, quota $500, A riTiiiiflw i1 in" ' 1 1 4L W , v;?v SEE TRAVELINGG STORY PAGE t . Meat Dealers to Find Out About Point Rationing Wednesday moot dealers of all parts of Lane county will be infnnried j creased their totals' since Friday's on details of the poini rammnm , report. raised thus far $622.50, Residential committee, quota $4,000. raised $4,531.07. Business firms, quota $3,000, raised $1,896.25. Payrolls, quota $4,000, raised $3,529.97. County, quota $14,000, raised $4,478,511. Other committee have not In system as It will affect meat sales at a meeting to be held Ylednes j. .,..in 1 g at Wilson Junior high under Joint sponsorshm of the Eugene vocational school and the war price and rationing board. Mrs. Catherine Lamb nf the EVS will preside, and J. Ed Turnbul 1. district OPA head, will speak. All meat shops In this area are asked to be reoreiented. and wherever possible both employers and em ployes are aked to attend. Fi'ms will be shwn which give ' the latest Information on meai -i timing, which goes Into effect I Monday, March 29. The benefit piano concert given SEE RED CROSS STORY PAGE I 4 FARMERS GO BACK PORTLAND, March 20. 'hi jack Murray, personnel manager for the three KaUer shipyards in this area, said today that Dakota farmers who came here to spend the winter in the yards art begin ning to return to their farms. De spite this, he said, employment In the yards Increased 7500 last month, bringing tht total to bout 88,000, RONALD C. HAWKYARD erably less meat and fats to eat than he has enjoyed in the past. -; OPA officials said the meat ra tion probably would work out an average of 2 pounds a week for each civilian. Individual rations, Meanwhile the official Nazi news agency DNB claimed that Chuguev, 22 miles below Khar kov, was "firmly in German hands" and that the Germans had cap tured Scvsk, 80 miles northwest of Kursk and 20 miles east of the Bryansk-Konotop railway, along; CHICAGO, March 20. 0J.R) with Tomarovka, 17 miles north- Madame Chiang Kai Shek, wife of west of Belgorod. I the Chinese generalissimo, an "German troops In the Khar-! nnced today that she favored I kov-Belgorod sector yesterday eaue of nations and a postwar reached the upper Doneti on a international police force, but she broad front," the DNB dispatch warned with a stern set to her said. "The Donets was crossed d"'nty Jaw th'it the great powers at several points." I never again must allow an aggres. However, Moscow reports said sor,to W way with his plunder the Red army was clinging firm- , M JaPan dld with Manchuria. ; ly to its main positions along the She said in response to press upper Donets, at the same time conference questions that . the acknowledging intensified Ger- league of nations which followed Guinea, on the Huon peninsula 60 . man efforts to establish strong World War I included Great Brit miles from Lae, fires were started ! footholds on the north bank of aln, and France and an observer among buildings by heavy bomb- the river. ( from the United States, but it was crs. Defensive Battles ! impotent to prevent Japan from After dusk Saturday, heavy al- snatching Manchuria from China I lied bombers roared over the town I units waged fierce defensive bat-' This is an example, she said, of ties," the Soviet midnight com- what brute force must never again munique said in Its single brief be allowed to get away with, reference to the southern front. I She differentiated between It added that one Red army , rule Iorce. which she termed in rmniinn killed Bon German I humane, and police force, which ii results. Amboina was a big Dutch troops and wrecked 16 tanks and i necessary to maintain law and or naval base seized by the Japanese. ) armored cars in repulsing Nazi I dor. . Southeast of Amboina in the attacks, while a band of tank- i The first lady of China spoke Kai islands, allied planes swept in ; borne tommygunners attempting with complete assurance and auth two waves over Langgoer which t0 break into a village was blown , ority in response to questions of has been receiving increasing at- up by exploding mine fields. more than 100 members of the tentlon from General Douglas he occupation of a number -nicago press. She looked rested MacArthur's air Arm. The medium 0j inhabited localities was credit- ! nd happy in a black print frock bombers scored direct hits, then : cd jo Red army columns beat- j with black velvet jacket, although ing toward Smolensk, one of 1 "he explained her doctor had d them within a few miles of , vised her against making her Dorogobuzhi, on the Moscow rail road 52 miles east of the Ger man anchor base for the whole central front, . Four hundred Germans were reported killed In the storming of a Nazi defense position captured by the Russians, and heavy losses were inflicted on tank-ted Ger man infantry -undertaking a Rplow there nt Finschhafen. New wflstiiNUiun, March 20. (U.R) American housewives tonight had one more week in which they could buy meat, butter, cooking fats and cheese without ration coupons. The office of price administra- I 0f Amboina on the island of Ac tion on Wednesday will make pub- I bolna some 600 miles north of Dar lic a list of 200 point values for J win, Australia, dropping 500 about 200 items In these catagories I oound bomb and Incendiaries but in its newest and largest wartime ; clouds prevented observation of formation Beginning March 29 all meat, canned meat, butter, lard, mar garine, shortening, cooking and salad oils, canned fish and most cheeses will come under point-rationing, using the red stamps in war ration book No. 2. The blue stamps in this book already are be ing used for canned and processed lood rationing. strafed the village on Faan on their way back to base. . Churchill to Speak Sunday Afternoon all LONDON, Sunday, March 21. P Prime Minister Winston Churchill will speak to his na- however, will vary considerably : tln Bnd Sp0.' . BiP' counter attack In one sector, as the red coupons car be lused in- : iddre'ss exDected to outline allied Below Bcly, northeast of terchangeably for meats, fats, can- , addrff?.e5efk. " " J I Smolensk, the high command said r."?"' "'..Y"u? ; u. 1 Snvlet unit nutdanked a Ger- wnicn may coiuhiii units ui , 7. - . .. nrnmisPd Invasion of Europe. I man stronghold and attacked it His radio address, to be dellv- : from two sides. Alter bloody ered at the beginning of the ; battle the garrison w th drew, usual mid-evening news program leaving 300 dead on the field and that has millions of British Us- 1 prisoners and large quantities of teners every night, will be beam- ! arms in Soviet hands. H tn the tinted States and all : 'A strongly fortified German po- consumer under the new program. I tne aued nations. sltlon crumpled under a Red army it was indicated. Churchill is expected to speak : onslaught south of Lake Ilmen, OPA during the next few days ( for neariy nn hour. The broad- ' where Marshal Scmyon Timoshen also will publish a revised list of cast time allows 75 minutes for . ko is pounding at the approaches point values for canned and pro- I the speech and news comment 0t staraya Russa, headquarters of ned fish and cheese. It will rest I Prspec in me coming ; jeer. , - . - entirely with the individual h,. wnicn may column .mis ",--- --r r . ... wife how she apportions the 16 points a week available for each member cj her family. There probably will not be more than 4 ounces of butter and 2 ounces of cheese available for each cessed foodstuffs in April. On the ! following. basis of reports that high point I The prime minister's address, values set for the first month of ; the first delivered by radio to canned foods rationing had result- the entire nation since he went ed in slower movement of goods ; on the air Nov. 29 after the from grocers' shelves than previ-: North African Invasion to warn ously anticipated, It was widely I Italy to get out of the war or believed the new list would mark 1 be knocked out, is expected to a general scaling down of values chart for Britons their duties and prospects in a promised jci of offensive war. It comes when Foreign Secre i tary Anthony Eden is visiting j the United States, and Churchill may take the opportunity to rlarifv Britain's relations with its allies in war and in the peace Liquor Rationing To Be More Stringent PORTLAND, Ore., March 20.- (U.R) More stringent rationlrig of 1 follow liquor in uregon win Decome ei fective at 10 a.m. Monday with one quart ot whiskey and four-fifths of gin allowed each permit holder per week, L. F, Allen, state liquor commissioner, announced tonight. Purchases of rum and brandy were still uncurtailed, he added. Oregon's first formal rationing of liquor went into effect March 8, with each permit holder allowed to buy two quarts of any kind of whiskey and one pint of gin per week. The new restriction approx. imates the rationing quotas ob- the 16th German army, Turkish military sources in An kara, which estimated the German losses at 70,000, said they believed the heavy Red army counterblows had put a crimp in a Nazi plan for a major spring offensive pattern ed after that of a year ago. transcontinental trip in the inter est of China relief. She said the world's historic ex perience with ideals has shown that they must be Implemented by force. . . China, she said firmly, has na territorial ambition's except to re gain all lost territory. What China does wish to ac quire, and as swiftly as possible, she said, is planes, more planet and ammunition. If farm ma chinery is sent to China, she said, it should be for small farms, but after the war there will be tre mendous market In China for. all types of farm equipment A telegram from the war depart ment arrived last week to inform Mrs. H. B. Page of Eugene that her son, Ronald C. Hawkyard, had "died Feb. 14 in the North African ' tainihg in Washington. area." No word as to how death Allen said the increased" cur- struck was contained In the mes sage. The letter has not arrived yet. Technician 5-c Hawkyard had been in the army for two years and ! tribution. was one of the first to go to North Africa. He was drafted from the' New York area where he was' working at the time, and was in! the first armored regiment. He is survived by a sister, Mrs. Robet Farquharson of Eugene. i Spring Styles to be Unveiled Wednesday Spring will arrive officially for Eugene business Wednesday evening at 7 when downtown mer chants unveil their windows for the annual spring opening and dis plays of seasonal merchandise. Windows will be done in patriotic themes. Sharing honors In the eyes of window-shoppers will be the pa- .4- r.1 th- Itirn pnmnanlM nf the Uilment was not the result of l0ng0 state Guard, the rifle com pany and the OWAC, who will be gin their march at n down win 4,000 Not Yet Signed Up For Ration Book 2 Approximately 4.000 persons In the Eugene area have not yet reg istered for war ration book 2, President Loy W. Rowling of the chamber of commerce revealed Saturday. All who have not registered are asked to do so at earliest possible date, since future quotas for ra tioned Items will be based upon the final count Books are to be obtained at the board office. 846 Olive street. Applicant must bring j area of half-nile. dwindling supplies, but was rath er an effort to curb multiple pur chases made for later illegal dis- ametle Thr exhibition will cul minate at the armory with com Detitive drill and display of train ing, to which the public Is invited. Speakers will be Brig. Gen. Ralph Cougill, Salem, commanding gen eral of the Guard, Col. Elmer V. Wooten, acting adjutant general nf the Guard, and possibly Governor Ear I Snell The spring opening is being sponsored by the retail merchants division of the chamber of com merce, and has no connection with the activities planned by the Guard. Indianapolis Shaken By Sewer Explosion INDIANAPOLIS, March 20. W A thunderous explosion, ap parently set off by the Ignition of pent-up sewer gas, wrecked underground power lines and plunged much of downtown In dianapolis Into darkness tonight. No casualties were reported, although the blast shook hotels and other downtown establish ments and shattered " window panes over an area of several blocks. Officials of the Indianapolis power and light company said that underground cables carry ing direct current had caught fire and were burning over an The mas- Ration Board Needs Volunteer Workers "If you can write, there's I Job for you!" Loy W. Rowling, chamber of commerce president, announced Saturday that more volunteers are needed for short shifts at the local war price and rationing board. "Women and men of Eugene who will give two or three hours each week can be of great assistance right now," Rowling said. . Persons willing tn pledge one evening or one afternoon each week are asked to call the cham ber office, telephone 192, and they will.be given Immediate as signment by Mrs. Mary Miles, chairman of the volunteer com mission of the rationing board. Rowling said that the cham ber believes many housewives will be willing to work one af ternoon each week, and that many men in offices, stores, and shops, will give one two-hour shift one evening per week. Stu dents and others who will ac cept assignment are asked to call the chamber. American-Filipino Units Still Resist on Luzon Major Flood Again Threatens in Ohio CINCINNATI, O., March 20. (U.B From Marietta to Cincinnati, along the flood-swollen 400-mile length of the Ohio river, cities and towns battened down tonight against the second major flood In 10 weeks as rescue and disaster agencies prepared to evacuate families from stricken areas. Little property damage was re ported as yet as compared to the $3,500,000 loss from the January flood, but five persons drowned In flooding waters of Ohio and Ken tucky. No lives were lost In the year's previous flood. The Muskingum river poured turbulent waters into the Ohio at Marietta, a river town scarcely re covered from' the January flood which inundated the business sec tion. Below Marietta at Portsmouth, the Scioto river gushed more wat er Into the steadily rising Ohio which, was expected "tentatively" to crest at Cincinnati at 63 to 65 feet by Monday or Tuesday. , George Crone Home . At Veneta Burned ; VENETA The George Crone home burned to the ground Sat urday morning. Most of the fur niture was saved. The two-story, ten-room house was partially cov ered by insurance. The blaze Is believed to have started in the flue. All men of the community gathered to help put out the fire and in taking out the furnishings. An estimate of the loss has not been made.. By United Press American and Filipino troops still are resisting the Japanese invaders In the mountains of Lu zon, the Tokyo radio acknowl edged Saturday In an English- language broadcast recorded by , and Mrs Charles Teeters of tr- Millard Volgamore Prisoner of japs Millard Volgamore, U. S. navy. former Lane county resident, is i a prisoner of the Japanese In the! Philippine islands. The navy de-! partment this week reported the i news to his father, Carl F. Vol gamore, now of Vancouver, Wash., and former resident of Mar cola and Dorena. The letter from the navy department contained cablegram from the Red Cross regarding the youth. Millard was reported missing about 10 months ago. He Is a grandson of Mr. . with him the copy or copies of war i ter transformer at t substation ration Book 1 of all persons he several blocks I way caught fire , the federal communications com- em and a nephew of Mrs. Law- is resistsjruii lor. 1 and was destroyed. mission, ' rence Brown of Eugene. 1 YOU DON'T NEED "SPECKS" to read Register-Guard Want-Ads the typ Is, lust as big as front page stories and It's not only fun lo read Want-ads It's profitable. See Today's Big Section. 100' of bargain!. t