Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, November 26, 1956, Page 4, Image 4

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    ? Page 4 Section 1
Capital AJournal
An Independent Newspaper Established 1888
BERNARD MAINWARING, Editor and Publishei
GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor Emeritus
Published every ofternoon except Sunday at 280 North
Church St. Phone 4-68 1 1
Tun Leased Wirt Service 01 rtie Associated rreu and Tna United Press.
- The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of
T.""all news diapaicru-s credited to It or otherwise credited in this paper and
alao news published therein
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Br Carrlsr: Uonthlr, II It. Sl Uonms, 11. Mi one rear, SUM. Br mill U
OrssoD Uontbli. 11.00. Bis Unotbs. 11.00: One Tear. MOO. Br mail Oulalds Orison-.
Unlnl. II Bla unnlni SI.IOi One Year 111 00
i Austria Asks Aid for Refugees
Hungarians fleeing the reign of terror and the threat of
!! Siberian slave camps are still pouring into Austria at the rate
Vwl 8000 to 8000 a night in zero weatner ana me Austrian
. ."-government has appealed to the world for help, and the
'' facilities of the refugee-packed nation for caring for them is
jj Bearing exhaustion. There are no signs of a let up.
' !; '''Though the Russians are doing everything possible to slop
. the flight of tne Hungarians, men, women ana cnnarcn are
braving Soviet bullets and freezing weather in their flight for
. freedom. Many are suffering from frostbite and all are
;' near starvation.
Heroic escapes feature refugee flights. Many had to swim
icy border canals, many were drowned, others frozen to death.
'! While great airlifts arc flying the refugees to friendly coun
,! tries, as far as Australia and the United States and other dis
h tarit lands, trains are needed to take them to offered homes
! in friendly countries.
'"wJBruno Kreisky, undersecretary In the Austrian foreign of
fice told a press conference: "We call on all democratic nations
'to speed up help without setting any conditions," as the flow
ol refugees was creating an "alarming situation."
' ,Rop. Francis E. Walter (D., Pa.) said on his departure for
I hpme after spending four days
' tlje United States government
possible and ask that a least
: lives in America.
'. 'Vienna reports new attacks by Hungarian Reds on Cardinal
j Mindszenty and. the United Stales fomented new fears for the
'safely of the Roman Catholic prelato of Hungary, who was
.; released after eight years in communist captivity ana toon
!; refuge in the U.S. Legation when Soviet tanks launched their
; offensive in Budapest November 4. He Is attacked as a
; "typical representative of Horty Fascism."
;! It is feared the Cardinal may be confined indefinitely in
the United Slates legation, protected by diplomatic immunity,
land the Soviet-Imposed Kadar regime has already indicated
r its contempt of international law in the kidnaping and arrest
j of former Premier lmra Nagy, after giving him a safe con
f duct pledge before he left for refuge in the Yugoslav embassy
'ft" Romania.
jS-It is reported Nagy was flown to Moscow to stand trial as
traitor, probably the last we will hear of him. G. P.
1 Business-Ediicalioii Day
y Do we just imagine it, or is it something that has actually
"feppened?
J- Anyway, it seems that since Business-Education day was
inaugurated just a few years ago by the United Stales Cham
ber of Commerce, there has been, in our community at least,
less criticism of the schools among practical-minded people
;nd, no doubt, less criticism of business and industry by
people at large, which means all of us. ' For in one wy or
aqother all of us are connected with the schools.
ji.And If this is true In our own community it must be true
'everywhere, for Business-Education day is a nationwide ob
ifijrvance. ipAVe've heard the schools criticized for innovations that
ifcost money, and for new buildings that raise taxes. We've
Jheard businesses criticized for their promotion devices, serve
-yourself or personal sales methods, etc., and some people have
ifrowned on the coming of new industries. They preferred
Xthe traditionally quiet community without the complications
brought by new industrial enterprises.
Z Business-Education Day, which Is being observed today,
Jirons out theso things. Businessmen learn about school prob
lems, advances that have to be made, new methods dictated
by the limes, and the classroom space problem. School teach
iors learn about problems of the businessmen, advertising and
vflfeo reason for It, the kind of goods slocked to meet general
t-of special demand, credit systems and what not, and they
jmake a study of the diversity of business and Industry, the
development of markets and the value of payrolls to workers
-and community.
f Business-Education day gels one big segment of the local
ity acquainted with another. It makes for mutual understand-
ff . - '
t A 'Good Year for llie NorlWesl
J Oregon Slate, which might have been knocked out of an
J' undisputed Pacific Coast conference championship by the
; Thanksgiving tie with Oregon, won it after all, thanks to
J U.S.C.'s victory over U.C.L.A. at Los Angeles Saturday,
j ' The Beavers won six and lost one, and the two Los Angeles
schools finished next with five wins and two losses each. It
was Oregon State's first football championship since 1941,
f though they finished second in 1946 with six wins and one
:;loss.
As a result of California's surprising victory over Stanford,
t a glorious finale for Pappy Waldorf's long coaching career,
; Oregon and Washington moved up ahead of Stanford in the
final standings. As a result three of the top five arc from
J- the northwest, only two from California. What does that glib
-5 San Francisco sports writer who coined "pardon the yawn,''
ts a Califoria reaction to northern football teams think now?
Vj. The 19S8 season was a good one for the entire conference,
j for the teams were much more evenly matched. Any of six
J of them could represent the west creditably in the Rose Bowl.
Cliaiifio
Those rumors thai James
president of the Crown Zellcrhnrh paper company,
' named ambassador to Italy to succeed Clare llmilhe Luce were
I correct. The appointment was announced Saturday.
; I'resiilcnl Eisenhower here
career dipomats, fur Zellerbach is an industrialist, one of the
;' west's greatest. The trend of recent years has been toward j
; professionals for ambassadors, but the United States is still I
unwillinR to pav a salary sufficient to free an ambassador from i
5 spending large amounts of his own money. Most of the
J. ' " " L1. . ...
2 , " "rc " 00
j n. i.uit iiim a career uipininai, nm sue nui an excel-
lent job. Zellerbach will lack diplomatic background, but he
should be very helpful to the Italians in cooperation with
tlieir efforts to Improve national livino si andante,. Nothinc
I Is more Important than this if
s countries ot i oi mo clutches of
J Zellerbach, incidentally, will
Ho spent two years there as an
: plan grants during the Truman
J; The Capital Journal has received a 144 papo "progress edi
I tion" of the Fairbanks News Mmer, which contained a four-
- color picture of Ike and Mamie
5 old Alaska has been replaced
; It was inn.rtiouslv rcporVcel
J, VlovH' lViivVi0n d.rj' bvhrtv. too "low ". really low at I
,V rffiinwie ft i'dk'St W )A? -f)ja M they're a state up IIotc.
J and expecKe :ojni it fr&r 'to itjoj b'eW P hieiog
tncle Sa ftn oti fairrnretrSti . 0
in Vienna, that he would urge
to take as many refugees as
17,000 be given homes and
in Ambassadors
David Zolleruiicli, until recently
would he
goes outside the ranks of the
"!s; , , ...
we are to keen tho European
Huss a.
be no stranger lo the Italians.
administrator of our Marshall
administration.
on the front pane.
Verily the
bv the new. Event In weal her.
in six pouri that tbe "liih" for
NATIONAL WHIRLIGIG
Ike to Keep Firmer Hand on
State, Defense Departments
By RAY
WASHINGTON, Nov. M - Al
though Prosidrnt Eisenhower will
not shake up his cabinet immedi
ately, he has gained a better un
demanding of its various mem
bers' abilities, and he will grad
ually rcviso their roles in govern
ment on this basis. He will take
over some of their authority di
rectly or through new faces to
be brought to Washington,
Ike will keep an even firmer
hand on the Departments of State
and Dei ease in view of their im
portance in the conduct of for
eign affairs. Even if John Foster
Dulles is physically able to re
sume his full duties, and to re
main on pending settlement of the
auez and Central European crises,
their conclusion will require him
to be absent from his desk.
Undersecretary Herbert Hoover
Jr., has not specialized in fixing
or carrying out major policies. He
is mainly State's administrative
officer, a sort of executive man
ager and housekeeper. It so hap
pens that numerous unhappy in
cidents have occurred while he
was in sole charge at State.
President Will Handle Foreign
Affairs
As a result, Ike himself will
handle foreign affairs more close
ly and singiehandedly, as he has
done recently. He may also dele
gate many responsibilities to a
special White House adviser from
outside the government.
Among the men mentioned for
the post are General Waiter Be
dell Smith, Ike's World War II
chief of staff and former Ambassa
dor to Russia, and Governor
Christian A. Hcrter of Massachu
setts. Denials to the contrary,
"Beetle" Smith has been under
serious consideration.
The prospective appointment has
met strong objections from with
in the department, but Dulles'
health and Hoover's inexperience
furnish Eisenhower with amnio
reason for such a strengthening of
mis department.
Public Wants U.N. Police Used
To Enforce Middle East Truce
.By GEORGE GALLUP
(Hirer tor. American Inr'Hin of Public Opinion)
PRINCETON, N. J.-Thc United
Nation's plan to set up an emer
gency police force to patrol the
borders between Israel and Egypt
has the overwhelming backing of
American public Opinion.
Approval in this country runs
7-to-l in favor among those ex
pressing an opinion in a nation
wide survey just completed by the
American Institute of Public Opin
ion. Interviewing in the survey took
place following tho adoption by
the United Nations General As
sembly of a Canadian resolution
authorizing Secretary General Dag
Hammarskjold to raise an "emer
gency international UN force" of
volnntecrs to police the peace in
the Middle East.
Under terms of the resolution.
which the world organization hopes
will lead to the eventual settle
ment of the Suez and Arab-Israeli
disputes, UN troops were to be
provided by the smaller powers.
A cross-section of adults across
the country, representing all walks
of life, were asked the following
question by Institute reporters:
"Do you approve or disapprove
Salem 20 Yrs. Ago
By BEN MAXWKI.L
Nov. 2fi, 193S
Wesley Loney, 9a, oldest man In
Woodburn and a Civil War vet
eran, had celebrated his birthday.
On this Thanksgiving day 20
venrs ncn The Capital Jnurnnl ran
supplement, hnnin a iiumc to
Christmas City." These were spe
cials: Geo. E. Allen advertised a Chi
nese brass candelabra tor 85c.
The Man's Shop had all wool
flannel robes for men from 7.50
to $25.
Millers' were selling women s
puro silk undies for S1.98.
Dubain Fur Co. had tailored
coats for milady from j:5 to S'J50.
Nelson Rros., Inc., offered a
Grunow radio for $1 down.
They Say Today
Quntrs From The Ncw
Bv I NITK.I) PltK.SS
LONDON The 19.V1-M edition
nl ".lame's, fielding Ships
." ' ,. ,. , j
tier o sunniannrs os uu- imnu
Stall's:
"U is the most siciiificanl d
velnpmrnt in Russian grand stint
rgy since the Second World War.'
MILWAUKEE Sen. Joseph R
McCarthy 'R-Wis on reporter! el
,nrl" ; of Wisconsin Republican lead
ers to dump him in Is:
I "I intend to run In 19 and will
p,, rVfrr effort to win.
' '
WASHINGTON Air Force Capl
Joe B. Bruce ol Bardwell. Tex
aboard a B52 that made a record-
i"11"" . ,N"
over the North
Pole, on his failure to deliver his
dauchter's letter to Santa Clans
"the post olficc was snowed In
up there.
NO ONF. IS THAT GOOD
Ahraham l.lnroln
n mAn is cood ennuch to gov.
ern another mnn without that
man's copscnt.
lilllVS NOT LIKE THAT
ILirrv Emrrson KoMlirh
(ind is not a msmtc hell boy lor
horn we can press a button to
get things.
TUCKER
Defense roil Possibility
Eisenhower has prepared for (he
possible departure of Defense
Secretary Charles E. Wilson by
rcjying heavily on Admiral Arthur
W. Radford, chairman of the joint
cnicis ol stalt.
In a time like the present, how
ever, a civilian chieftain at (he
Pentagon is actually a "fifth
wheel. Such problems as push
button weapons, strategy, tactics
ana tne simultaneous organization
of two kinds of forces nuclear
and conventional are matters for
trained experts.
This is the principal explanation
for the transfer of General Alfred
M. Gruenthcr from SHAPE to the
presidency of the American Red
Cro.'s. He will be on call with re
gard to both military and diplo
matic questions, for he probably
snows more aoout tne resources
and capabilities of our European
auies ana tne iiussians man any
otner man in tne tnrce services.
Since Gruenther is the nresi
dent's favorite bridge player, the
two can arrange for private dis
cussions without arousing Penta
gon jealousies.
.
Trusted Adviser
Treasury Secretary George M.
Humphrey is Ike's most trusted
adviser on domestic affairs, and
Ike wants him to remain. Ezra
Taft Benson has the president's
confidence in his persistent effort
to get rid ol the 19 billion farm
surplus. Commerce Secretary Sin
clair Weeks can stay on because
of past political service to the
UO!'.
The cabinet member who has
risen high in Presidential esteem
Is Labor Secretary James P,
Mitchell. He has won friends for
the administration by his fair and
impartial handling of labor s prob
lems, as the Republican vote in
industrial areas on November 6
revealed. Ike would hate to lose
him to any of the corporations
which have made him financially
I attractive offers.
of the United Nation's plan fo
set up a police force to patrol
the borders between Israel and
Egypt?"
UN FOLICE FORCE?
Approve 70
Disapprove . 10
No opinion 20
Analysis of the survey results
shows majority opinion in all ma
jor population groups to be over
whelmingly in favor of the pro
posal, with sentiment among those
who have attended college run
ning better than 14-to-l approval.
Here Is the vote by education
levels:
Col- High Grade
lege Sch'l Sch'l
Approve 8." 72 60
Dlsapprnve 6 11 10
No opinion 9 17 30
A considerably larger propor
tion of men than women express
approval of the UN emergency po
lice force, as the following tabic
shows:
Men Women
Approve 78 64
Disapprove 10 9
No opinion 18 27
By geographical regions of the
country, the highest vote of ap
proval is found in the East 11-
to-i in tavor.
The vote by geographical re
gions:
mid
Fast West South West
Approve 77 68 62 74
Disapprove 7 11 11 9
No opinion 16 20 27 17
The UN police force, now in the
Suez Canal one. Is commanded by
Canada's Maj. Gen. E. L. M.
Burns, formerly chief of staff of
the UN's Truce Supervisory Or
ganization in Palestine.
Eventually, the forces are
peeled to total 3.500 to 6,000
troops from some 13 countries.
Institute surveys as far back as
1948 have shown American public
opinion strongly in favor of the
idea of establishing a UN police
force to he used when needed in
settling international disputes
In April, 1948, sentiment was
3-to-l in favor of a police force
made up of volunteer soldiers Irom
small nations with a reserve force
made up of soldiers from the big
powers to be used wben needed.
Two years later, in October
tn.yt, at a time when United
Nations forces were fighting
Korea, the American public nver-
whelmlngly approved ot the I nitro Hungarian people. I have written
Sl.-iles providing troops along with! the president asking him to de
those of other countries for a I N claro a day ot national prayer and
pome lorre sunjeci lo can inr
service anywhere 111 the world
Tho vote was W per cent in
favor, 10 per cent opposed, with
7 per cent expressing no opinion.
Under terms of the current UN
resolution, the United Stales.
Great Britain, France, the Soviet
Union, and Nationalist China were!
barred from contributing troops lo
the emergency police force in;
Egypt.
Copyright, 11)56 American
Institute ol ruble Opinion
"All Kinds of INSURANCE
and SURETY BONDS"
VISIT US IN OUR
tV21No
HIGH
1
THE CAPITAL JOURNAL
fiftev 1 1 ill
OPEN FORUM
Recent Comer Claims
Building Work Sloppy
To the Editor:
What does it take to wake the
people of Salem to the need for
higher standards ot workmanship
and stricter requirements for hold
ing licenses? What a shame that
It required the tragedy of the ex
posion of the Haworth home to
bring about an investigation.
I will leave it to the "experts'
lo analyse the final cause of this
particular "accident" but any ob
servant person who has had to
hire work done on his home re
cently can see background "con
tributing causes to such trage
dies. It is the slap-stick lacka
daisical, do-it-in-hurry-and-hopc-it
holds attitude which seems to
be the accepted mode of operation
of all too many workmen. I've
heard too many homeowners say,
Sure, but what can you do about
It? That condition has existed
for some time but tho Haworlhs
had to be blown sky high before
anyone would put aside the smug
idea lhat every licensed firm or
workman of Salem is above ques
tion or reproach.
Almost a year ago we moved
to this clean and honest environ
ment from the so-called gyp-center
of the world. Strangely enough, we
got good work done there at hon
est prices. We felt it safe to relax
our vigilance in this honorable city
and have paid dearly for it. In
the process of remodeling here we
have called various well - known,
and presumably reliable, firms to
do a few simple jobs. In almost
every case, we have had to call
in at least one other outfit to
correct the blunders of the first.
Each time, when we finally found
the honest workman who took
pride in his skill, the job was done
properly at reasonable cost. In
the meantime, how can any un
suspecting home - owner know
which company comes up to stand
ard when the holding of a license
does not necessarily insure com
petence or reliability?
As long as the guy who pays
the bill just shrugs his shoulders
helplessly at inferior workmanship
and inadequate standards of li
censing, we can expect the un
pleasant consequences of bumbled
jobs. If the situation can not be
.remedied in any other way, how
about a Better Business Bureau,
or Contractors Exchange with high
standards for membership, so that
home-owners can select workmen
by some less hazardous method
than trial and error?
Very truly yours,
Jacqne Wonsetler,
1080 Pali Drive.
Proposes Dec. 7 Day of
Mourning for Hungary
To the Editor
Because of mv sorrow for the
mourning (or them. Their only
crime was lo light and die for
freedom. Our guns could not help
them, but would only mean their
complete destruction. There's a
belter way for a Christian nation
to express its sympathy for them
and its disgust for the barbaric
savagery of their Soviet opnrcs
sors.
Let all the nation join in a day
of prayer and mourning, both for
those who made the ultimate sac
rifice, and for the cause of op-
NtW QUAKTtKS
IMMONIC DU APllll
lUUDlNOI lit H-OOOO
Christmas Bell Ringers
Tito's Making
His Favorite
By ED
AP News
WASHINGTON W-Marshal Tito
is feeling his oats.
First the Yugoslav president
hurled at the Kremlin the label
"Stalinist" a swear word in the
Communist world today. At the
same time he called on the Rus
sians to grant all the satellites
the sort of freedom Yugoslavia
years ago won lor itself.
Then Tito accused the Kremlin
of kidnaping ex-Premier Imre
Nagy of Hungary. Nagy and
group of officials were snatched
by Russians as they left the Yugo
slav Embassy in Budapest.
And what was the Kremlin's re
action to this tough talk from its
oil-again, on-again friend Tito?
The usual name calling and
threats of reprisal?
Not Quite. They took six pages
of Pravda to defend themselves on
the Stalinism and satellite
charges. They did ask Tito lo low
er his voice lest he play into the
hands of "imperialist and fascist
elements."
And then, most interestinclv.
they accused Tito though in fair
ly mild language of spreading
the idea that "Yugoslavia's path
to socialism is the only true and
even the only possible path for
socialist development in almost all
countries."
How times change.
This is lust what Tito was
charging the Russians with doing
when he broke with them during
the Stalin regime. Only he was
complaining, of course, that it was
the Kremlin which was taking the
our-way-is-the-only-way line.
I no mmself came up with some
interesting thoughts.
He said the Russians were
pressed people everywhere.
What more fitting time could we
onserve than Dec. 7, the anniver
sary of another time when treach
ery endangered our own freedom
ask tne people, Mr. Editor, to
Jause at 9 a.m. on that Friday
and gather in their churches
everywhere for memorial services
and prayers for the gallant Hun
garian nation.
I-el us show the world that this
great Christian nation has not for
gotten the cause of freedom, nor
the treachery of those who would
try lo snuff out its unquenchable
name,
THOMAS LOVC1K,
3275 Liberty Rd.
Daily Bible Reading
Psalms 46:1-11: "God is our refuge and strength. A verv present
help in trouble. Therefore will not we fear, though the earth be re
moved, and though the mountains be carried Into the midst of the
sea: though the waters thereof roar and be troubled, though the moun
tains shake wilh the swelling thereof. There Is a river, the streams
whereof shall make glad the city of God. the holv place of the taber
nacles of the Most High. God Is In the midst of her: she shall not be
moved: God shall help her. and that right early. The heathen raged
the kingdoms were moved: He uttered his voice, the earth melled
The Lord of hosts Is with us: The God of Jacob Is our refuge. Come
behold the works nl the Lord, what desolations He hath made in the
earth; He hreakelh the bow. and cutteth the spear In sunder: He burn
etii the chariot in the fire: be still, and know that I am God: I will be
exalted among the heathen, I will he exalted in the earth. The Lord of
hosts is with us: the God of Jacob Is our refuge
today is your day in I
DOWNTOWN
SALEM (J
SHOP PjyL
UNTIL JJ
j Beit of Service Wide Asiortmenti
I lOAcreiof tilling Mtrthindiii '
the Kremlin
Whipping Boy
CREAGH
Analyst
wrong to intervene in the Hung
arian revolt. But he adds in the
next breath: "If with their inter
vention they saved socialism in
Hungary, It was necessary and
ail this will one day become pos
itive." In other words: You shouldn't
have done it but if it turns out
all right for our side you did the
right thing.
Tito was talking about the first
clashes in Hungary, at a time
when one Communist regime or
another would have held power
no matter who won.
He holds the Kremlin was dead
right, though, in slaughtering
Hungarians by the thousands when
it looked as If "reactionaries"
were moving in.
You can see his reasoning there,
even though you deplore it: If
Hungary can get away with de
throning a Communist government
what's to stop other countries
from doing it, too? Yugoslavia,
for example.
Unquestionably there's a rift be
tween Belgrade and Moscow.
Associated Press correspondent
Harold Milks reported from Mos
cow last night that the Nagy af
fair may have widened the rift
"beyond the possibility of imme
diate reconciliation."
Tito fired a ship-sharp protest
to Budapest over Nagy's disap
pearance.
He sent an almost identical one
to Moscow saying he expects the
Kremlin to do "everything neces
sary" to get the safe conduct
agreement carried out.
Moscow hasn t replied yet but
her answer can hardly be any
thing other than some form of:
Who. me? Tito has made it plain
he means: Yes, you. He isn't buy
ing for a minute the Budapest
legend that Nagy and his friends
scotted off to Romania of tlieir
own volition. Outside the ranks of
Kremlin supporters, nobody else
is buying it, either.
COULD IT HAPPEN HERE?
Sherman County Journal
Texas is growing very fast and
has low per capita taxes. Legisla
tors take note.
HABITS ARE PRECIOUS
William James
Habit is the enormous fly-wheel
of society, its most precious con
servative agent.
Salem, Oregon, Monday, November 26, 1068
pnnR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER
Cars and Phones Increasing
Faster Than People in U.S.A.
By HAL
NEW YORK m - Things a col
umnist might never know if he
didn't read his mail - and browse
in old bookstores:
That the number of both cars
and telephones in the United
States is increasing faster than
the number of people.
That four million persons born
in the southern states moved to
other sections ol America be
tween 1950 and 1955.
That about 92 per cent of Amer
ican girls get married and about
85 per cent of them land a man
before they are 26..
That Jacqueline Cochran, who
runs a cosmetics firm and became
a top airplane speed pilot, was
an orphan who went to work in
a beauty parlor at 14.
That Larry Mack, youthful head
of a slenderizing firm that has
caused U.S. gals to shed five mil
lion pounds of fat. says Italian
woman have the world's worst fi
gures. That tiny Elaine Malbin, the op
era star (she's only a half inch
over five feet), keeps in trim by
lying on her back and doing bi
cycle exercises with 10-pound lead
weights built into her shoes.
That the biggest objection many
women have to pipe-smoking men
is, "they spend to much time try
ing to keep their pipe lit they
have no time left to talk."
That a generation ago most
medicines came in Huid form.
Now between 80 and 90 per cent
comes in pills, capsules and tab
lets. That the brain is fed largely
if .
2 (
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XSh
(TRTIFIEn GEMOLOG1ST OF
; State ind Liberty
BOYLt
by sugar ... and faulty sugar
metabolism may be the chief
factor not only in diabetes but
also in arthritis, some chronic
heart ailments and schizophrenia,
a mental disease.
That about 8 out of 1,000 people
throughout the world suffer from
schizophrenia, regardless of their
race or whether they are rich or
poor, savage or civilized.
That Americans spend 128 mil
lion dollars a year on deodorants.
(Remember the old days when
all a guy had to do was chew a
nickel package of sen-sen?)
That only a third of the 70 mil
lion Americans licensed to drive
cars are women ... it only scemi
like there are more.
That more than 500.000 U.S. chil.
dren now ride to school regularly
in autos . . . maybe that's why
leather manufacturers complain
teen-agers no- longer do enough
walking to wear out their shoes.
Although the average American
is "eating higher on the hog,"
more than half of the 161 pounds
of meat he consumed last year
was beef. Most of the rest wai
pork.
That it was Francois de li
Kocneioucaid who said, Most ol
our faults are more pardonable,
than the means we use to conceal
them."
NEW TITLE FOR US
Sherman County Journal
In the light of the election may
be Oregon should be called thi
mustache state.
- FILLED FOUNTAIN PEN
1 tt
THAT NEEDS NO INK BOTTLE
71
lit IreitiU.II , 8
III Wolchmg lt . g
eefT III hie Sl.tf
OFFICE SUPPLIES
CHAIIS SAFES
M4I5 Salem, Oreeefi
THE AMERICAN OEM SOCIETY
Dl, 4.22i4
i