Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, June 21, 1956, Image 4

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    Page 4 Section
Capital Journal
An Independent Newspaper Established 1888
BERNARD MAINWARING, Editor and Publisher
GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor Emeritus
" Published every afternoon except Sunday at 280 North
Church St. Phone 4-6811
Full Leased Wire Service 01 Tne Associated Press and The United Preu.
The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the me for publication of
1) news dispatches credited to it or ouierwut credited In this paper and
also newa published therein
91,300,000 In TJirce Years
Enactment of the administration's huge highway program
now seems to be as certain as anything ever is in government
until the president actually signs. So it is in order to take
a quick look at what Oregon is to receive.
During the next three years of a 16 year program our state
is earmarked for $91,300,000, which is a lot of money, even
by present day standards. Of this $69,900,000 will be for
interstate roads, which in Oregon means two, our own Pacific
highway, U. S. 99, and the Old Oregon Trail, U. S. 30 from
Portland to the Snake river.
These are already good roads which have received a tre
mendous amount of improvement since many of us can
remember. But they have not been brought up to present,
to say nothing of future needs, over their entire distance.
U. S. 99, for instance, has been four laned part of the way,
needs it all the way, and needs rerouting to miss the cities
over much of its route. Of most interest to us are two needs,
the reroute between here and Springfield, missing several
towns, and the new route into Portland on the Portland-Salem
freeway. Much rebuilding is also needed south of Springfield.
The Old Oregon Trail seems marvelous to those of us who
traveled the old road so many years, but it ought to be widened
between Portland and The Dalles as soon as possible. The
cutoff between Ontario and Huntington should be pushed to
completion as rapidly as possible, and we can think of two
overpasses in the Blue mountains that ought to be rebuilt.
But thjs road is closer to the public's needs than U. S. 99
because travel on it is lighter.
Our neighbor states are not to be neglected in the new
program. Washington is slated for $105,500,000 of which
$75,500,000 is for interstate roads. Idaho is to get $65,700,000
of which $47,500,000 will go to interstate roads, principally
the Old Oregon Trail which Oregon people use on their trips
east. California naturally receives the biggest western cut,
$376,500,000 of which $268,000,000 will be for interstate roads.
This program may well be one of the Eisenhower admin
istration's chief claims to enduring memory, for its effects
will be as permanent as the roads in Europe for which ancient
Rome is still remembered with appreciation.
Two-Story Passenger Trains
Railroads are making strenuous efforts to improve passen
ger business and installing personal service rivaling that of
air lines, among them experimental two-story trains, luxurious
and roomy.
The Santa Fe is spending $12 million for 47 new Hi-Level
cars to re-equip its El Capitan train for July travel. It has
had two high-level cars in experimental service for over a year
with a consequent increase in passenger traffic and is confi
dent that increased comfort at the right fares will bring back
people to the railroads.
The radical Hi-Level train is built by the General Motors
Corp., ACF Industries, Inc., Pullman-Standard Car Mfg. Co.
and Budd Co. So far this year they have Introduced four
light-weight trains that are lower and cheaper to build than
conventional cars and are intended for short distance (300
miles) runs. The Hi-Level costs
like the Santa Fe's 2224 miles between Chicago and Los
Angeles.
Other designs are of cars of light weight, 85 feet long,
the same as conventional cars, for medium distance runs;
also a light-weight Flying Cloud train for the New York,
New Haven & Hartford, and two new Denver Zephyr trains
for the Chicago, Burlington cV Quincy, with new sleeping type
accommodations or coach passengers. They will be in service
within months.
Last Saturday the Santa Fe demonstrated its new train for
100 newspaper, TV and radio reporters and they will be on
public display in eastern and midwestern cities before going
into regular service.
-The Hi-Level cars- stand 15'i feet, higher than Pullmans
and a little higher than dome cars but are too high to fit into
some city terminals and tunnels. But the height makes possible
two floors with good views from the top floor. There is less
noise. '
The Hi-Level chair cars on the upper level will seat 68 to
72 passengers. Passengers will not carry llicir baggage into
the upper seating level. It will be stored in t lie lower levfl.
Thre are also lounges and restrooms on the lower level. A
stairway is in the center of each chair car. The lounge cars
art most elaborate. G.P.
He Made .Newspaper History
A man named Samuel llorvitz died in Cleveland, Ohio the
other day, little known outside of Ohio. Vet he was responsible
for a very important decision
court which for t lie fust tmio
o( newspapers subject to federal control despite the first
amendment to the constitution.
Horvitz was a newspaperman only by accident and indirec
tion. He was a fiesty highway building contractor who got into
lots of fights, found himself
criticism. A man of direct action, lie bought two Ohio dailies,
at Lorain and Mansfield, about 25 years ago so he would
have the means of talking back to his critics and enemies, lie
did plenty of it from then on.
Horvitz conducted the newspaper business as he had the
paving business. A radio station was competing with his Lorain
newspaper. He fought back by
1 SPrs wno USPfl ine ratlin, sometimes re lKim thpir i-nnv n her
times hiking the rates to their disadvantage. The advertisers!
took him to court and the case eventually went to the nation's
highest court. Horvitz insisted that he was protected by the
first amendment to the constitution, guaranteeing freedom of
the press. j
The Supreme Court by a vote of seven to none upheld the
lower court in its ruling that
involved, tnat a newspaper could not manipulate Us adver
tising policies to interfere with
linn (hat is In linln nun rnnrern
This was the farthest the federal courts have ever gone' Y'""" "' cooperate, they . 'h this new sotl.-r approach.
, . , , ... , , , i saut it is natural khrushi-hrv would he
and It took an extreme provocation to make them go that far. j .-,.,, Uo s,,,s have agrPcJ i willing for other Communists out
Horvitz provided this, which may be his one claim to enduring ihal Hie (on-aom cooperation I side Hussia to raise some quos-
fame or notoriety in a calling
back to folks he was mad at.
Furore Over Drinking
Quite a furore has been kicked up in Washington over
charges that Robert B. McLoaish, Farmers Home Adiuinistra-
lion chief, drank too much and
was too familiar with the young ladies at office parties.
McLeaish protests that his drinking has been exaggerated,
that he didn't do it on the job. "1 can handle four or five
drinks," he told a congressional sub-committee, and hell
have plenty of time in which
resigned, apparently on pointed suggestion of Secretary
Agriculture Benson, his superior.
An ironic angle is thai McLcaish's assistant was fired
mm lor too much drinking.
MCL.eai.sn at xne nenring, asserting mat ivirueaisn uranK daily
and was drunk every night after work.
. We welcome this cleanup, with its attendant publicity. and;
wish there could be a lot more
that nffirtal ririnlrinff in VaI.incftnn ic fat- frnm rnnfinrrf in
w-t -t.i ........
AicLeaisn ana nis assistant.
more, but is for long hauls,
by the United States Supreme
made the advertising practices
the victim of frequent press
discriminating against adver
freedom of the press was not :
normal commercial compcti -
l llm oviixntn nf :imilli.r
be entered so he could talk:
with some of his colleagues
to handle them no
he has
of
bv
He reversed the charges on
of it. For we are quite sure
6
Steel Strike of
More Seen 50
By DAVID
WASHINGTON, June 20 There's
fifty - fifty chance of a slcel
strike beginning June 30. It may
last as long as
two months.
1 he fact that a
strike is in the
offing is conced
ed among steel
men, and most
of the discussion
now relates to
how long it will
last. Some .say
a month and
others say two
months, and
there are some
observers fnmiliar with the inside
of the negotiations who would not
be surprised at an even longer
strike. ,
At the moment the possible lm
pact of the steel controversy on
the country as a whole is not gen
erally realized. Because most of
the big disputes have been settled
by negotiation, it is being taken
for granted by the public that this
one will be adjusted before the
deadline of June 30.
Hut the summary way the In
dustry's offer was rejected in the
last few days is regarded as a
sign that David MacUonald, presi
dent of the steelworkers' union,
thinks he can get better terms by
holding out. It is true, of course.
m
Communism Has New Line,
Thev Criticize
By JAMES MAKLOW
AsNoelnled Press News Analyst
WASHINGTON Ui-World Com
munists will now follow a line tin
heard of in Stalin's day: They'll
criticize one another. This could
wreck international communism
if carried too far.
I'ntil that day comes the criti
cism can be taken with a grain
nl salt. It is simply following the
program outlined by Communist
party boss Nikita Khrushchev in
Ins speech revealing the crimes
of Stalin.
The purpose is simple: A Com
munist party in a ihint'onuminist
country may gam more mass sup
port by appearing to operate as
a nationalist parly instead of, as
in Stalin's day, part of a Russian
conspiracy.
Since Stalin never let them
open their mouths, the problem
tor the Hed leaders everywhere
now is .how to criticize one an
other without causing splits or
damage.
This was clearlv explained hut
in Communist doublet alk by the
American Communist party lead-!
ership to its central committee make some concessions anil cre
two months ago That was two ate friendliness instead of hate,
months after Khrushchev made! It is no wonder Khrushchev set
his speech. out. shortly after Stalin's dvath.
That some self-criticism Is the j to win Tito back as a friend if
new line lor ( ominumst parties
everywhere wa made plain yes
terd.iv in the declaration signed ;
'1" Moscow by Klirushrhrv and
i Marshal Tito of uwslnvia. I
should lie hascd on complete free-
dom of will and equality, on
iriendiy criticism and on com
radely character of exchange of
views on disputes between their
parties."
t.ivtn some vears in the prac-
tice
nl criticism, it is possible
Communist parties will de
that
velop internal antagonisms and
break off into sects and factions.
Il that happens, tlu-n all else
that 1'resident Truman did to try
to .stop communism mav seem in-
significant beside his
simple, deci-
lil iiu h.'tn t.. Tit. uln
,T.i.. broke awav from subsen i-!
nee to Stalin.
Stalin had maintained absolute
C()ntni
of Communist parlies
, r ery here until l!4H when Tito
shook loose,
Two years later, whe'n the Bed
! Chinese got control of all China
Cxcpnl rorm.. lv M
sumrd some n
d some indei-i
ncf
'though they
In The Foreels-
2 Months or
- 50 Possibility
LAWRENCE
that in negotiations of this kind
neither side shows its hand till the
very last minute. There is some
expectation of a modification of
positions on both sides, but it may
not be enough to avert the strike,
Basically the steel industry is
in a position where it cannot give
the concessions it is promising in
its latest offer without advancing
steel prices. When prices start up
ward in such a fundamental seg
ment of the economy as steel, it
is bound to influence an upward
spiral of prices in other lines,
America has been enjoying a per
iod of relative stability for many
months but lately there has been
a tendency to move prices upward
in certain major fields. While the
cost-of-living index has remained
about the same, the price of many
things that are made of steel, es
pecially automobiles, may have to
go up considerably. Then emerges
the risk of a buyers' strike, with
all the dire consequences that come
with factory shutdowns and uncm
ployment.
The strategy of the steel union is
aimed at dividing the steel com
panies. At the moment, the V. S.
Steel Corporation, Bethlehem Steel
Company and Itepublic Steel Com
panythe largest of the ten com
panies involved are standing firm,
and there is said to be no chance
of pulling any one of them away
One Another
in. They were, after ell, leading
a population twice that of Hussia.
Stalin himself must have under
stood his absolutism would begin
to disappear when the Bed Chi
nese giit control of China. His
treatment of them for 30 years
was an on-agnin-off-again affair.
When Tito broke away, he pro
vided the West with the first ex
ample of a Bed leader who was
a thorough Communist hut had
the nerve to tell Slalin off. If he
could be kepi alive, he would be
an inducement to others to do the
same. Truman helped him with
American aid. Tito kept his back
turned to Hussia until Stalin died.
But when Khrushchev and his
friends succeeded Stalin, they in
herited an ugly fact: They had
to make the best of a bad situa
tion. The absolute Kussian con
trol over world communism, en
joyed by Stalin most of his life,
was gone.
More Hed countries might as
sert independence and grow fat
on American help. The best way
to prevent it or so it may hae
seemed to the Kremlin was to
not as a servant. Ana lie succeed
ed. But in making concessions to
Tito, he showed other Ked lead-
ers how badly Hussia
them not to bolt.
wanted
lions about the Kremlin from
time to time, provided they didn't
go too far.
G1VKS I S YKKSATH 1TY
0mr W1n
Insincerity is merely a method
by which we can multiply our per
sonalities. NOT A M ATTF.lt OK YFAHS
Justice Holmes
To be 70 years young is some
times far more cheerful than to be
w c" s nui
THE NOHI.K CHAR ACTKR
George Hcni;, rd Shavv
Self sacrifice enables us to sac
rifice oilier people without blush
ing. ' 4
I.Al'NOFRKn. TOO
A govrrnmr; bureau is when
THE CAPITAL JOURNAL
In a separate deal. A solid front
is also being presented by the other
seven in the negotiations Youngs
town Sheet and Tube, Pittsburgh
Steel, Jones and Laughlin, Inland
Steel, Wheeling Steel, Allegheny
Ludhim and American Hulling
M ill Company. Even companies
which are not participating in the
parleys are known to have given
the assurance that they will hold
the line.
The proposal of the steel com
panies that a five-year contract be
agreed upon and that certain wage
increases be granted does not
mean that, in the event of a "na
tional emergency," there couldn't
be a withdrawal of either side.
Certainly if war is threatened and
wartime controls are imposed,
there would have to be a reexami
nation. This is to be specified in
the contract. The industry, more
over, in order to get some assur
ance of wage stability for the next
five years, has included an esca
lator clause so as automatically to
provide wage increases within that
five-year period whenever the cost
of-living index rises. This plan was
first embodied in the General
Motors contracts with the auto
workers' union when Charles E.
Wilson, the present secretary of
defense, was president of that
automobile company.
The prospect of a strike has
caused discussion as to what the
ultimate effect might be on steel
production for many years. If it
be considered that there is today
an overproduction and that inven
tories are too large, the strike will
help to melt away those inventories
and redound to the benefit of the
industry in one sense, but it must,
inevitably hold back some of the.
$39-billion capital-goods expansion
which is in process this year and
which, so far as plans are con
cerned, has been expected to be
the same size next year.
A steel strike, therefore, will
raise havoc with the industrial
position of the nation and yet, if
the steel executives five in to the
wage demands they face, the coun
try will have to pay higher prices
for steel and many other products.
It's a difficult situation for the
nation either wav. i
Oil ME&Y .
' . Will Ct-tl...
. $ 9.00 $12.59 $19.30
tMah. $18.00 $25.08 $38.60
M . $27.oo $37.67 $57.90
'CtlcvtaM ttl m rM, iMlrianl.al Wn, lex ' un lnflm.
OIL HEAT IS THE NUMBER ONE FUEL IN
SALEM
You love money every month with economical oil heot.
A new oil furnace can be InitalUd in your home in just a
few houn time and on easy budget terms. And with oil
heat you are the boss . . . you control your own fuel sup
ply . . . no monopoly to deal with ... no demand meters,
no minimum charges, and your first gallon costs no more
than the last. Oil is healthier, too!
NATIONAL WHIRLIGIG
Decision Makes It Easier to
Be a Part Time Congressman
By RAY
WASHINGTON, June 21 Mem
bers of Congress will find it easier
to earn money on the side with
out violating the law under a
recent decision jn a federal court
in New York. The ruling also
weakens the Democrats' case
against Murray M. Chotiner, Los
Angeles lawyer and Vice President
Nixon's friend, for it holds that
the line dividing legal from politi
cal activity is thin, shadowy and
difficult to define.
Before discussing the New York
case and its implications, it is
helpful to report on congressmen's
outside operations. Relatively few
live on their congressional salary
or devote full time to law making,
although they can afford to do so
under their increased salary and
the new pension system.
A majority are lawyers, practic
ing part-time. Others are officers
or directors in large corporations
and small enterprises. Many are
in the real-estate business, farming
and the retail field.
Outside Advantage Of Being A
Congressman
No matter what their profession
or occupation may be, it is a ma
terial advantage for a man to be
an M.C., or for a firm to have
the name of an "Honorable" on its
window or letterhead. It lends
a man capable of winning elections
must be a popular fellow around
town. It is a definite asset to a
lawyer and his partners, as Capi
tol Hill legal lights concede.
It is interesting, and possibly
significant, that Representative
Emanuel Celler of Brooklyn, chair
man of the House Judiciary com
mittee, saw fit to publish this
particular decision jn the Congres
sional Record.
Celler described It as an "im
portant opinion." for it was the
first prosecution under the low for
bidding a congressman to receive
compensation for services rendered
by him or his partners in federal
matters, provided that he had full
knowledge of the source and reas
ons for the fees. It was designed to
prevent members of congress from
profiting from direct or proxy use
of "influence."
Federal Court Trial
Ex - Representative T. Vincent
Quinn of Queens, New York City,
became a member of the law firm
of Schwaeber, Quinn and Saver in
August, 1948. He was elected to
congress the following November
and served one term. Under the
partnership agreement, each mem
ber had a $20fl-a-week drawing ac
count, and shared in the firm's
profits.
It was conceded by the three
defendants, for the two partners
were Indicted for aiding and
abetting Quinn s alleged offenses
that Quinn did no work for the
firm no legal work, that is. He
showed up for a few hours some
Kridays not every Friday and
then saw constituents or wrote
letters connected with his political
JOD.
The firm specializd in tax law,
with particular emphasis on negoti
ating with Bureau of Internal of
ficials rather than appearing ir
courtroom litigation. In one in
come tax case, the indictment
charged that Quinn shared in a
$7,500 fee. However, all fees went
into a "common fund," with no
indication of the specific cases on
which they were earned, and they
were deposited in a joint bank ac
count. Other Charges In Indictment
The indictment also charged that
Quinn received money with the
knowledge that It was for services
performed in government matters
by his partners while he was a
congressman. Quinn listed income
from the law firm s earnings for
liMfl, 1950 and 1951.
The evidence showed that in one
Here's Proof I
Yev'll bi warmer ill year ten, mi fr
Uts money, toe, with rftptndablo oil hoot.
dhOPy ,
IN SALEM .
MORI PEOPLE CHOOSE OIL HCAT THAN
ALL OTHER FUELS COMNMII
CHEAPER, SAFER, MORE DVEMAOI
TUCKER
matter specified In the indictment,
Quinn telephoned an Internal Rev
enue agent. In the January-March
period, 1949. after he entered Con
gress, he made three inquiries of
regional New York! counsel on
the status of a case, without dis
cussing its merits.
Judge Dismisses Case
Holding that there was "not a
scintilla of evidence that he
i Quinn) took any part, direct or
indirect, in his firm's work," Fed
eral District Judge Weinfield dis
missed the case without permitting
it to go to the jury.
Chotiner is not a member of
congress. He has the right of every
lawyer to practice before govern
ment departments. And if he did
not get a friendly welcome because
he had managed campaigns for
Nixon, Chief Justice Karl Warren
and Senator Knowland, conditions
of political noblesse oblige prevail
ing at the Capital since George
Washington's day have changed.
Chotiner may cite the Quinn de
cision in his next appearance be
fore the McClellan committee.
POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER
Cancer of. the Mind Dread
Affliction of Middle Age
By HAL BOYLL
NEW YORK OB Curbstone
comments of a pavement Plato:
There is a disease in middle
age that cripples more people
than heart attacks. It exacts a
greater toll than the motor car,
accidents, and pneumonia or so
I believe.
This disease is cancer of the
mind. Its symptoms are an un
reasoning discontent with life, a
feeling of futility that sears the
souls of so many people in their
middle years.
Recently a man I have known
for years came up and spoke with
me. In the midst of a casual con
versation he suddenly blurted out:
"Tell me, what do you do when
you know for sure you aren't go
ing to go any further? What has a
guy got left?"
My friend was deeply depressed.
He was suffering from his first
onset of "middle age sickenss,"
one sign of which is that a man
gets tired of himself and starts
thinking he is a human failure.
For the life of me, 1 couldn't see
why, and I told him so. To begin
with he was wrong. His job fu
ture didn't lie in the past. He
hadn't reached his limit of promo
tion in his field, and his fears that
he had gone about as far as he
could go were strictly premature.
But even if he had at nearly
50 achieved the top job and Income
of which he was capable, was
that much a disaster?
This man owned his own home
and his own car. He had kept his
family comfortably fed, sheltered
and clothed, and all were healthy.
He had educated his two children,
and both had turned out well.
Neither was a cop fighter or a
poolroom shark.
By any sensible standard this
man was a real success. He had
done far better than most men
throughout mankind's troubled his-
Da(so
' A FISHER
IN THE
100 Formulated
Fume Proof
EXTRA!
For an Additional
r
A four inch ell purpose
IkwIi valued W 2.M will
eae grvtn w4acm awWg a
tjaftow ejr ifuwo eff (his Brryei
Salem, Oregon, Thursday, June 21, 1956
Salem 35 Yrs. Ago
By BEN MAXWELL
June Jl. 1921
Cooperation of Rotary. Kiwanis
and Y.MCA had been solicited for
establishment of a public play
grounds for Salem children during
the months of July and August.
U-Pick strawberries had a price
U-riCR llionuv.'"- -
of 2 cents a pound at the luiip
farm on Wallace roaa.
Contractor Oscar Holmes and his
crew were engaged in re-building
Gail hotel at Dallas, recently dam
aged by fire.
United Confederate Veterans had
adopted a report asserting that
the war between the stales was
deliberately and personally con-
hv Abraham Lincoln and
that he was personally responsible
for forcing the war upon the South.
Lyons Glace Fruit Co. of San
Franrisen had nurchased 400 tons I
of cherries in this locality to be
barreled here and shipped to Cali
fornia for processing.
City Recorder Mark Poulsen had
issued a permit to Eyerly, Burgess
and Rhoades for construction of a
$500 service station at 167 South
Liberty street.
tory, which has been a long search
for safety, a full stomach, and a
warm place out of the cold to
dream in for a while.
Why should it make him either a
better or happier man if he should
now go on and pile up enough
money to become the richest fellow
in his part of the cemetery? What
if he doesn't ever get a bigger job?
Should that make him feel living
has lost its luster?
For some, reason, although
middle age has been in the world
for quite some time, it catches
most people by surprise and too
often with a deep dismay.
The middle-aged wife, whose
child, en are grown and flown, is
inclined to brood that she has ful
filled her purpose in life and is
no longer needed. The middle-aged
husband, recognizing it is now
highly unlikely he can ever realize
the grandiose dreams of his youth,
feels himself a rut-bound prisoner
of time.
This "middle age sickenss"
turns some people crabbed and
sour. As any doctor knows, it
leads to all sorts of maladies in
others. Many even lose all zest
for life and shrivel to death, like
a flower caught by a late frost.
We laugh in this country at eld
er lands that still practice ancest
or worship. But older lands than
ours laugh at us for two of our
commonest religions success wor
ship and youth worship.
A dream is a great thing to live
with, but a poor thing to be killed
by. It is refreshing to the spirit
to admre the stars on a summer
night; but only a child weeps be
cause he cannot clutch them in
his hand.
We are doing a lot of "educa
tion for living" nowadays. Why
doesn't some philanthropic found
ation start a project to teach
adults that middle age isn't the
OUTSIDE
WHITE
CI
THORSEN PRODUCT MADE
WEST FOR WESTERN USE
Covers Easily
Self Cleaning
An Outside Paint That Lasts
ROYAL OUTSIDE PAINT COMPARES
WITH OTHER BRANDS SELLING AT 6.65
Now Only
Open Monday
and Friday Nights
'til 9
Penny Savers
They Say Today
(Reg. U.S. Pal. Off.)
Bv UNITED FKtSS
WASHINGTON Robert B. Mc
Leaish, recently-resigned Farmers
Home administrator, on charges
he carried on a kissing game with
married women at a Montana
party in 1954:
"1 simply don't believe in that.
even it i werewun.
OXFORD, England Former
President Truman, in his first out
spoken comment on foreign policy
since starling his two-month tour
of Europe:
"As things stand, our only guar
antee of peace in the world is the
power of the free world to strike
back. But this is a poor way of
doing business. . ." '
ESTES PARK, Colo. Elmer W.
Rvr,i. 0n how it felt to be swept
173" trt 0Vl.r Chasm Falls west of
Estes park:
"1 remember being in the water
at the top of the falls. But I must
have hit my head on a rock in the
first few feet. I don t remember
anything else."
NEW YORK A steel Industry
spokesman, on chances of settling
the wage dispute between the steel
workers union and the steel com
panies: there win nave 10 ue some
real old-fashioned horse trading in
the joint negotiations if a strike
is to be averted."
POINT PLEASANT, N.J. Gus
Butehlo, who saw the Venezuelan
airliner that crashed into the ocean
with 74 persons aboard as "a fiery
light in the sky:"
"Suddenly the flare burst into a
huge, burning, sun-like orb before
dropping slowly into the sea."
IN A NICE WAY
Two women talking. One said:
"My husband Is a safety expert in
a large company." The other said:
"Safety expert? What does he do?"
"Well," said the first, "if women
did it, they'd call it nagging."
critical point of no return In life,
but merely another bend in the
road and not a bad place to
pause and have a picnic?
OOX OFFICE
O
ARABIAN HORSE SHOW
June 23 & 24
PENTACLE THEATRE
Bell, Book and Candl
ST. PAUL RODEO
AND DANCE
July 1 thm 4
MOLLALA BUCKEROO
July 1 thru 4
WILLAMETTE
CONCERT SERIES
1956-57 Season
For Reservation!
Dial 4-2224
For Yea
rs
236 N. Commercial
141 Alice Aveooe
ticketsN
( now on sale )
nth Stal-jthe taxpayer s shirt is k$'
o
o
o
K.-B s
;v.-