Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, February 18, 1954, Page 4, Image 4

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    Page 4
THE CAPITAL JOURNAL, Salem. Oreg
Thursday, February 18, 1954
Capital AJournal
An Independent Newspaper Established 1888
BERNARD MAINWARING, Editor ond Publisher
GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor Emeritui
Published every afternoon except Sunday at 280 North
Church St. Phone 2-2406.
rill Uutl Wlt SiitIh l the AiMrliled rem Tkt Dallca rrin.
Ttif Auoclikd Prtu U ficluilvelr entitled to U uu lor publication of
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AFTER YEARS IN THE JUNGLE-
SOMETHING NEW TO FIGHT ABOUT
New bitterness is said today to have been added to the
etruggle over the Bricker amendment by the requested
resignation of Clarence Manion, former dean of the Notre
Dame University law school from a presidential interna
tional relations committee.
Senator Bricker expressed a view that may be widely
held among his wing of the Republican party when he
said: When the time comes when those who do not he'
lieve alike with the leadership of the government in power
cannot continue to serve in official capacities there is a
serious storm brewing- ahead. I hope he (Manion) contin
ues in this campaign for the amendment and devotes his
life and ability to it.
The dispatch said Bricker seemed deeply moved. Sena
tor Jenner of Indiana said he was "shocked and disturbed
bv the ouster, and Senator Butler, an extreme conserva
tive but disposed to be more moderate in his views than
Bricker and Jenner termed the ouster a political error,
which it may turn out to be.
The removal is causing anger due in part to the high
character and intellectual attainments of Manion. This
writer has read a number of Manion's articles. The man
has a brilliant, logical mind. But he is an isolationist,
thousands of miles away from the Eisenhower administra
tion on foreign policy.
Granted Dean Manion's ability and sincerity, how can
he serve an administration that has already determined
its general policy line in the opposite direction to that
Manion wants us to travel? there was and is total in
compatability," which is just as bad in a government
agency as it is in the home.
We cannot credit Senator Bricker with complete sincer
ity when he deplores the removal of anyone from a gov
ernment agency who is at odds with the Eisenhower ad.
ministration. For if he means this he must oppose the
removal of every new dealer, for most of these are sincere,
too. The reason for holding elections is to decide policy
lines and to install people in governmental positions who
will carry them out. The Bricker theory, adopted to fit
this situation, which he will quickly abandon when another
situation develops, would reduce government to complete
confusion and prevent anything being done.
A political mistake may have been made in taking the
bull by the horns in the Manion case, as Senator Butler
aaid, but we doubt it. Rather we think the Eisenhower
administration is emerging from its earlier frustrations
as a cohesive team composed of men and women of sub
stantially like ideas who know what they want and will
fight to get it. There is a place for men who thjnk dif
ferently all right, but not on the same team. There is an
other opposition team on which they can and doubtless
will play, putting their ideas effectively before congress
and the country so the people can hoar and decide.
HE BUdSTS IHTO THC OrW
WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND
Top Senate Demos'Almost
Boycotted Party Gathering
By DREW PEARSON
MINING CLAIMS PERVERSION
The recent decision of Clarence A. Davis, solicitor of the
office of the Secretary of the Interior, overruling the ad
vance reports of the BLM and the Forest Service and
granting patents to questionable mining claims in the
National Forest near Prospect, Oregon, depicts an abuse
of mining laws that threatens loss of valuable timber to
the government. If gold or other metal can be mined in
the pumice area where claims are located it will be the
first time in history. It is not the minerals these prospec
tors are after, but obviously the green gold of the forests.
In 1948 an Alabama company filed 23 separate claims
on approximately 4G0 acres of forest service land, paying
the nominal ?5 per acre required by the law, and worked
its claims, though other claimants did not. When patents
were applied for forest service recommended adversely
on 15 of the claims, stating examinations revealed no min
erals for commercial development. Both the local BML
management and the Washington headquarters sustained
the decisions, and demanded further exploration to estab
lish their mineral value. Five of these claims had not
been worked to the minimum SfoOO required.
Davis grunted the patents on an appeal by the company,
on report of examinations made by an engineer represent
ing the company and employes of the Bureau of Mines.
Davis added that "the applicants have quite obviously
spent amounts estimated from $150,000 to $200,000 in de
velopment." These figures are the same figures the Forest
Service gives of the volume of the timber on all 23 claims.
Federal laws permit the right to file on public lands
for development of mineral deposits and granting exclu
sive access to ,h claims and eventually ownership if the
claims if mineral resources are proven. Hut recently the
law has been utilized both for recreational facilities and
for grabbing the timber. And scores of such claims have
been filed in the northwest and California. A $500 ex
penditure would yield $10,000 timber and one such claim
yielded $87,000 timber.
The mining laws should be amended so that only min
ing production would be encouraged as has been done on
O&C acreage. This should be pushed by the Oregon con
gressional delegation to stop the perversion now in full
wing. G. I'.
WASHINCTOK Though the
top democratic leaders of the
icnate are suppose' to be among
th; top-ranking leaders of the
democratic party, they came close
to boycotting the gala Jefferson-
Jbckson day dinner 10 r held
in Miami March 6 -athcr than
appear on the same platform with
the party s head, Adlai Steven-
ion.
Inside fact is that the trio who
run the democratic side of the
senate Minority Leader Lyndon
Johnson of Texas, Democratic
Whip Earlc Clements of Ken
tucky and Sen. Dick liussell of
Georgia, the real power behind
the scenes arc secretly groom
ing their own candidate, Mis
souri's handsome, able Stuart Sy
mington. Therefore, when Stevenson ac
cepted an initation to head the
celebrity list a the Miami Beach
dinner, the Johnson-Clements-
Russell group secretly debated
whether they should attend.
Their bright young political dis
ciple, Sen. George Smathcrs of
Florida, who ::i.t the assignment
of introducing S cvensnn, also
considerci whether he should
go through wi'.h it or turn the
job over to Ex-Sen. Claude Pep
per, leader of F orida's liberal
faction. Smathcrs was in a dif
ficult position because Pepper
sernis almost certain to run
against him in 1!).6.
All these political Implications
were solemnly weighed by
Johnson, Clements. Russell, Sy
mington and i mat hers at an is
land hideaway off the Florida
coast where the- spent four days
of fishing and political angling.
In the tnd, they decided Inat
appearing in the same spotlight
with Stevenson would not ncct
sarily constitute an endorsement
of him for rennmination in 1!)MS.
They also agreed to make the
them to refund the original pay
ment to the government, and he
substituted his own personal
check.
ollowing this, McLeod ar
ranged to giv. the chief of po
lice of Hanover, N. H., Andrew
Ferguson, an expensive junket to
Europe, also at the taxpayers'
expense.
Ferguson, whose family came
from Scotland, wanted a trip
back to the old country last sum
mer, so McLeod, who used to
work for the, late Sen. Styles
Bridges of New Hampshire, ap
pointed the police chief as an
alleged guard to a State De
parcment courier. The courier
was quite able to protect himi
self, had done so before' in the
past. Vurthcrmore, he was not
going to an Ircn-Curtain country,
but to such safe and friendly
countries as France and Germany.
However, McLeod trranged
THE WORLD TODAY
Ike May Not Know
Number of Reds
By JAMES MARLOW
WASHINGTON 11 -The Eisen
hower administration apparently
does not know the answer to the
No. 1 mystery of the moment:
how many of the 2,200 ex-government
workers listed as security
risks were Communists?
Individual agencies may know
many Communists each of them
found. But the administration, it
seems, has neither rounded up the
total nor separated the Communists
who were fired or resigned from
those let out for other security
reasons.
Philip Young, chairman of the
Civil Service Commission, said yes
terday he has asked all depart
ment heads to analyze their se
curity separations and break them
down into four categories. This
still may not give a full break
down. But it should provide the admin
istration with a little clearer in
formation about the problem than
its present jumble of categories,
which in some agencies number
as many as 15 or 20.
The administration still hasn't
for the Nn Hampshire police 1 sai1, " ' makc Pub!jc total
chief to take this nice trip to
Europe at a cost of about $2,500.
Other bureaucrats might have
trouble using State Department
pirsnnnel to move their furni
ture or to sci d a friend on a
European trip, bu' McLeod hap
pens to have been the former
number of Communists found, since
it luok over from the Democrats
a year ago. even alter Young gets
all the inlnrmation he asked tor.
Newsmen repeatedly have asked
(or a breakdown. Democrats have
demanded it until now, frustrated,
they are calling for a enngrcs-
stional investigation. It is an' issue
BIG PROJECT FOR ST. HELENS
As meaningful to Oregon as the recent announcement
that General Motors will spend a billion dollars in plant
expansion in the next few years was to the nation is
the announcement that Crown Zellcrbach plans to spend
more than $14,000,000 expanding the St. Helens Pulp &
Paper company, control of which it recently purchased.
This is really big business for a community the size of
St. Helens. The project will also be felt in Portland and
indeed throughout the whole state, for the purchasing
power generated by the construction work and the larger
payrolls to follow the expansion will be very great.
i Much of the benefit of such an announcement right now
I will ho novrbnlnfrienl. 7.nlloi-linrb thn tvoat'a ln1i,,r
paper manufacturer. It is one of the best managed con
cerns in the entire nation, to be ranked in its field with
General Motors, Dupont and other great leaders of Amer
ican industry.
This great company clearly subscribes to the idea that
America's best days are ahead, not behind, that the next
future yean call for expansion, not contraction, for con
structive, not negative planning.
Those who are trying to be the advance men for an
other depression should take note, as should those who
lire timidly echoing their counsels of despair. For people
like General Motors and Zcllcrbach bet a lot of money on
their judgment.
assistant to Krnetnr Bridges, building up to a heat which may
chairman of the senate appro- become explosive,
priations committee who helps i This is the background:
allocate funds to the State Do-1 On April 27, 19.i3, President F.i-p.-rtment.
Ano'hcr McLeod sonliowor announced a new pro
friend is Sen. Joe McCarthy, also Kram. a successor to one set up
a member of the appropriations 1 lQa before by former President
committee. When a bureaucrat I T,rllman' 1,k fnr a',dK('1 nd
has two powerful fri ndt on the!0' Wvcrnment workers who were
,nnrnrili.,n rnn.mil.. h, j. ! d.,S.lo'al "f "nsidcrcd security
-it,- - rtckc
Truman's program was really
two programs in one: U loyalty
lor firing employes of questionable
loyalty and 2 security (or tiring
people who might be a risk to
government security, like drunks
or others who talked too much or
homosexuals who might be black
mailed into giving away secrets.
Eisenhower's program telescoped
those two programs into one. called
the security program: there was
no more distinction between ques
tionable loyally and security risk.
A man could be classified as a
security risk, and therefore fired,
if he was a Communist, follow
traveler, a drunk, blabbermouth,
homosocuol or came under any one
of a number of oilier forbidden
categories.
And there was another great
distinction:
The Truman loyalty program
covered all government workers.
That is, no mailer what job he
held in government, high or low.
a man found to be a Communist,
(or inst ince, could be fired on loy
ally grounds.
But. imiler the Truman program,
a man could he fired as a security
risk only if he worked in a few
agencies which had big secrets In
volving national securily, such as
the Slate and Defence departments,
and the Atomic F.nrrgy Commis
sion But I lie Eisenhower security pro
gram applied to the whole govern
ment. A man found to he a se
curity risk, although not disloyal,
could be fired no matter where he
worked in the government.
And nil department heads were
instructed to report their security
cases to the Civil Service Commis
sion, i. a si winner loung made a
he
sometimes ab vc State Depart
ment discipline !
Alienating India I
Though it rappers to be on
the other side of the globe, a
forthcoming American policy!
move in 1 akistan may be as im-'
March 6 dinner a great show of! Prtanl as the los of China to
democratic unity with democrats ! iilr hrr wnrl(l s"m" observers
of ill political shades slapping 1 "' ,h' proposed military
harks ai.d breaking bread to-1 P'11"1 "h M"-lcm Pakistan will
get her i alienate the second mint popu-
NOTE -Meanwhile, the Slev- lm'' n'"'"n11in rM In.lia.
enson-appointed democratic n-! ,, . T nhTT 1
tional chairman, iteve Mitchell, I "LrZ, , t "",' 'V
h. ,, i,..i- .. , ,i. ( ongresMiian I.manuel teller of,
has been plav ng up to the con- v .. v , , , ,
,. ii, ni. New or who had a significant'
deliberately rold s touldcred the
liberal elements in the South,
and has even gone out of his
way to boost Senator Met'lellan
of Arkansas who hacked Strom
Thurmond of South Csrolins
igainsl Truman In 1048.
Friends . t Court
Scott McLeod, the State De
partment security officer who
brought a storm of democratic
wrath diwn on his head as a
result of his Lincoln Day speech
es, has had wrath brought down
inside the Slate Department for
some time.
One wrath-provoking incident
occurred some minths ago when
McLeod v ar.led to move his per
sonal lurnitiirf from one house
tr. another and drafted two
members of the State 'epartment
security organisation to help. The
moving occurred on a Saturday
afternoon and the two men were
paid overtime. They were paid.
In it the Indian leade' vigorously
! warned against the I'. S.-I'akistan
: cmilltary alliance.
! "Look at the advantages you
could gair if y spent the same
amount ot mot.ry in helping l'nk
islan economically instead of
helping her militarily," Nehru
told t eller.
"Instead, what you are doing
will cot India a lot o( money.
It will upse' my ficyoar plaa.
For, uhen I'l.kistai. milds up its
army, 1 have to build up the In
dian army to meet the threat
frotr the north. That lakes mon
ey out of our r onmny."
"But is India equipped 'n re
sist Russian aggression?" Con.
gressman t eller ased.
"We have a sufficient army,"
Nehru replied.
"What siir?"
"About h,,lf million men,"
said Nehru, adding, ' But more
important we have the Hima-
furthermore, not by McLeod but lavas for protection. Do you
Demos Old Hands
At Confusing Foes
By RAYMOND MOLEY
It would be too broad a charac
terization to say that this piece
is written in praise of the leaders
of the left side of the Democratic
Party. It will, however, offer a
note of admiration for their saga
city, without adding the hope
that they will succeed. For what
ever may be said about the havoc
they wrought when they were in
power and the dangers of letting
them control again, it has to be
acknowledged that they arc, in
the fine art of politics, sophist!
cated, professional, expert, or
whatever else you choose to call
people who know their way
about.
"About what?" you may ask.
The answer to that is another
story.
It is elementary in political
contests, as in other forms of
competition, that you direct your
attack at any discernible weak
ness in your opponent. If he has
a temper that needs a stiff rein,
try to break his control, and if
the effort is successful, his irra
tionality will injure him. If his
following is not well integrated,
try to divide it. If your own fol
lowing is not well integrated, try
to get your adversary to unite it
by generalized attack. Finally, if
your opponent is politically
naive, lead him into damaging
statements or admissions.
Most of these rules were fol
lowed in the recent pother over
so-called "be kind to Democrats"
week. And the harvest was rich.
First, there was the wailing
about the Republican charges of
"a campaign of fear." This was
smearing, thev said. Sam Ray-
burn was one of the complain
ants. This is the same Sam Ray
burn who said in November, 1951,
that "if some of these fellows
that have been talking like, well
I might say Bob Taft, was to get
elected president, and the people
were to think between November
and January 20, that they were
going to put their threats into
performance, money being as
scary as it is, we might have a
great panic in that time. I fear
that myself.
There was real political smart
ness in that statement because it
obviously helped Eisenhower's
chances to get the nomination.
And Rayburn must have known
even that far in advance that un
der Eisenhower there would be
more kindness to the Rayburn
school of Democrats. It also pre
pared the way for a scare cam
paign before the 1952 election.
With this current series of com
plaints came a series of sugges
tions that Democratic support
would be withheld if such Repub
lican attacks continued. This, as
well as the complaints, should
have been laughed off. For neith
er Sam Rayburn nor Senator
Symington nor any other Fair
Deal Democrat can control the
votes of conservative Southern
Democrats.
But the Democrats apparently
knew that the president would
respond to these tactics exactly
as they wanted him to respond.
His statements that he believed
it would be unwise to engage in
too partisan attacks were imme
diately interpreted to be an at
tack upon Senator McCarthy and
ether Republicans who were out
campaigning. This apparent chas
tisement by the president blunt-!
ed Republican attacks and in
some cases actually prevented
them. Senator Ferguson, for ex-i
ample, went to Brooklyn with a j
speech prepared that was an at-!
tack upon past Democratic rule.
He threw his speech aside and
gave a mere historical summary J
of the glories of the Republican
past. j
In all the chatter that followed ;
the president's admonition, there!
was no attempt to distinguish be-1
tuocn the two factions in the
Democratic party. Ex-I'rosidont i
Truman and Senator Humphrey !
came under the same protective
rule as Senator George and Gov
ernor Byrnes.
! Reporters who are looking for
j news as well as a chance to strike
i a blow against Mid Western Re
j publicans also use this suscepti
j bility of the president. Questions
! in press conferences are some
j times phrased like this: "Mr.
President, do you endorse the di
abolical attacks now being made
by that fiend, Senator McWhatsi
; gan?" They arc looking for this
I sort of answer: "Of course. I nev
' er, never speak of personalities.
But 1 am against diabolical at
tacks by all kinds of fiends."
And the reporters have their
story and the Rayburns chuckle
over their morning oatmeal and
sugar buns.
POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER
'What Does It Mean to Be an
American?' Question of Day
NEW YORK What is
America? What docs it mean xo
be an American?
This is "Americanism week,
and these questions are being dis
.mini from niilnit and platform,
Yet they are questions that each
man must search his own heart
thrnneh tn find his own answers.
And manv answers have been
given since Patrick Henry said in
a speecn in ine lonimemdi
gress on Sept. 5, 1774: "I am not
a Virginian, but an American."
Just to refresh your own think
ing, here are some observations,
serious and not so serious, about
the land of the free and the home
of the brave:
"The next Augustine age will
dawn on the other side of the
Atlantic. There will perhaps be a
Thucydidcs at Boston, a Xcno
phon at New York" Horace Wal
pole, 1774.
Salem 13 Years Ago
By BEN MAXWELL
February 18, 1941
A recommendation of "do pass"
had been received by the Jones
bill aimed to stimulate the manu
facture and sale of wine made
from Oregon fruits.
.
Employes of eight state institu
tions had their working hours re
duced from 72 to 60 a week.
Jesse Jones, secretary of com
merce and federal loan adminis
trator, had told the house bank
ing committee that the "United
Stales is nearly in the war."
Carter Motor company, 240 Cen
ter street, had advertised their
best buy as a 1935 Studcbaker se
dan for $175.
Bv HAL BOYLE
"I am willing to love au man
kind, except an American" Sam
uel Johnson.
". , , . Knavery seems to be so
much the striking feature of its
America's inhabitants that it
may not in the end be an evil
that they will become aliens to
this kingdom" King George III,
1782.
"America means opportunity,
freedom, power" Emerson.
"Equal and exact justice to all
men . , Thomas Jefferson.
America is a country of young
men" Emerson.
"The youth of America is their
oldest tradition. It has been go
ing on now for 300 years"
Oscar Wilde.
"Our reliance is in the love of
liberty which Cod has planted in
us. Our defense is in the spirit
which prized liberty as the heri
tage of ail men. in all lands
everywhere" Abraham Lincoln.
"Sometimes people call me an
idealist. Well, that is the way I
know I am an American. Amer
ica is the only idealistic nation in
the world" Woodrow Wilson.
"Most Americans arc born
drunk . . . they have a sort of
permanent intoxication from
within, a sort of invisible cham
pagne. . . . Americans do not
need to drink to inspire them to
do anything' G. K. Chesterton.
"This will never be a civilized
country until we expend more
money for books than we do for
chewing gum" Elbert Hubbard.
"The first requisite of a good
citizen in this republic of ours is
that he shall be able and willing
to pull his own weight" Theo
dore Iloosevelt.
"The American people never
carry an umbrella. They prepare
to walk in eternal sunshine" Al
fred E. Smith.
"The cement of this union is
the heart blod of every Ameri-
More than 500 skiers and sports , Can" Thomas Jefferson.
fans were reported active on the
slopes of Hoodoo Ski bowl.
British ministry of home secur
ity had reported 1502 civilians
were killed md 2012 injured by
air raids during January.
DANGEROUS HITCHHIKERS
Hood River News
There is a difference in pick
ing up friends in need of a ride
and picking up hitchhikers, al
though some of our migrant
workers seem to think our na
tives are cruel because they do
not share rides. The FBI has re
ported that escaped criminals
resort to hitchhiking more than
any other form of free trans
portation. Two out of every five
thumbs, reports the bureau, can
be identified in the FBI finger
print files.
WRESTLING JUST A SHOW
Pendleton East Orcgonian
Entirely too much fuss has been
The less we have to do with
the emities of Europe the better
Not in our day but a not distant
one, we may shake a rod over the
heads of all, which may make the
stoutest tremble. But I hope our
wisdom will grow with our power,
and teach us that the less we use
our power the greater it will be"
Thomas Jefferson.
"He defeated the Americans
with great slaughter" Inscrip
tion on the tomb of Lord Corn
wallis, who surrendered at York
town. "A national debt if it is not ex
cessive, will be to us a national
blessing" Alexander Hamilton,
1781.
"Put none but Americans on
guard tonight" George Washing
ton. 'The desire for riches is their
ruling passion" Due de la Roche-foucault-Liancourt,
after a visit
here in 1798.
"To rouse the Americans' eager
interest, their distinguished con
sideration and their undying de
votion, all that is neccsary is to
hold them up to the ridicule of
made about Herman Hickman s J the rest o( thc universe. Dickens
expose of wrestling in recent , won them to him forever Dy mer.
Issue of thc Saturday Evening ciioss projections of typical
Post. Hickman s story wasn't new. Americans as windbags, swind
The sports public has known for crs and assassins" Bernard
years that wrestling is a show. The ' Shaw.
point is that the actors arc good j "America is one long cxpector-
goon cnougn to onng inousanns ation' Oscar Wilde.
out to sec their shows every week.
COSTLY .MISTAKE
HOUSTON, Tex. (UPt-Seaman ; we find the joy of life and the
1 feel that you arc justified in
looking into the future with true
assurance, because you have
made a mode of living in which
Jessie J. I.ockler. looking for a ; iov of work harmoniously com.
taxi, saw a car and climbed in ' bincd. Added to this is the spirit
with the order: "Take me nnv-tof ambition which nrcvades your
v. here, never mind the fare." The I very being, and seems to make
driver took him to city jail where ! thc day's work like a happy child
at play" Albert Einstein, 1931
he was fined $10 for being drunk
in a public place. The car Lock
ler thought was a taxi was a police
patrol car.
America is a tune. It must be
sung together" Gerald Stanley
Lee.
know how the Chinee .iring in
and
by the State Department
When this writer queried the
State Department regarding this
highly Unusual, i. not illegal) them in through Calcutta
transaction, tne otticial rep . across lndi They cannot get
was "No comm. nt.' Finally, and j supplies cross the Himalayas to
following pub.lcation of t h e I supply their own ti oops. So how,
above facts, it was learned that i then." could thv state an at
McLeod had called In the two i tark?"
Statt Department men, asked tconumifd r. , comma n
supplies for the.r troop, on the f"1"', U,e "1h''C! l,ouso, whklh
Tibetan border' Thev MntT.--tKm,lfnAt
had been dropped.
Domocr its eventually would have
asked how many of t ho lirod peo
ple were Communists since the Re
publicans had made Communists
in government an issue in the 1952
, campaign and were going to use
I it in this year's election.
JUSTICE ALWAYS
IMPARTIAL
Impartiality is thc life of jus
tice, as justice is ot all good
government. Justinian.
But the Democrats began de
manding an answer uhen some
Republicans went beyond the sim
ple White House statement that
1.4.iS securit.. risks were lired and
began implying most of them were
Communists.
For instance. Bernard M. Shan
ley, Eisenhower's special counsel,
said in a speech Nov. K that l.4."ni
"subversives have been kicked nut
of the government " Sen. McCarthy
iH-Wisi followed this up by saying
practically all of the 1. 4 uere
lired (or Communist connections or
homosexuality.
Later in his Slate of thc Union
message Jan. 7 Eisenhower said
security risks dropped from the
payroll now totaled 2.2UO
Newsmen asked Eisenhower for
a breakdown. He referred them
to Ally. Gen. Browncll. who had
developed the present security pro
gram. Mrownell relused a break
down nnd referred newsmen to
Young Young refused an answer
and referred them hack to the
White House
Then the Democrats' demands
for an answer grew louder. i
MM BE WISE!
HERE IS YOUR OPPORTUNITY TO
ECONOMIZE!
DRESS UP FOR EASTER & SPRING
IN A NEW
SUIT OF CLOTHES
SAVE 33 to 50
NOW AT JOES
UPSTAIRS CLOTHES SHOP
SELLING OUT SALE
There it still t good selection of suits, topcoats, sport
coali and slacks to choose from in juperfino quality fabrics,
new smart styles in all sizes from 35 to 50 with an ex
cellent selection of sizes 36, 37, 38 end 39. Now on sale tt
'6 to i off Joes usual tow prices. Sale ends Sat. Feb. 27th,
Then Joe goes on a buying trip for t brand new stock.
Will reopen about Mar. 25th.
OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT 'TIL 9
Upstairs
442
tofe
Clothes Store 51.
Above Morris Optical Co. Next Door to Nohlgrcn'i
Rcstauronr. Look for the Flashing "Save $10.00"
Sign Above the Entrance.
JOE'S