Salem, Oregon-, Thursday, December 13, 1956 THE CA'PITAC JOURNAD Capital AJournal An Independent Newspaper Established 1888 BERNARD MAINWARING, Editor ond Publisher GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor Emeritus Published every ofternoon except Sunday at 280 North Church St. Phone 4-681 1 Jull Laifd Win- Servlre of The Asiorlatrd Press and Tht tJnllrd Press. The Associated Press Ig exclusively entilled to the use for pub lication of all news dispatches credited to It or otherwise credited in tim paper and alio news published therein. SUBSCRIPTION RATES NATIONAL WHIRLIGIG Rayburn-Johnson Scuttling Of Committee Assures War By RAY TUCKER WASHINGTON, Dec. 13 The I The Buller group was loaded Kayburn-.John.son scuttling of Paul ; down with northern and western M. Buller's Democratic Advisory j liberals against conservatives in committee was a foregone conclu-the proportion of 13 to seven of the sion because of its personnel and 50-memoer body. Its lopsidedness program. J he squabble marks the , was a direct affront to the rela- Dawn in the East 5." n.Vr.! SJ' Ji'i?' !!x 2"!!"' iH"; n VMr ,UM- nr """ sharpest break between the liberal j tivelv restrained Kavburn-John- WUIMUC Jirn, muiiuiij, SIX .llOIUfli, UHC tt, 1 15.0V. ... ........ . '""e;i " 'J "" ' " ' i " ovur whelmed the tr.v , liticaliy. - m r rr. , Iimional party bosses ar.d wheel- u has other serioiis defects. It iuaiiy SCrVe LS nllllOllt 1 ilV horses at the 19:i2 Chicago convent-'contains no members from three non. ji aiiKurs me inu 01 a noious r important volins aroups the cul- ored. the Jewish and racial min- u nas Deen saia Deiore in this column that some of the best noiitk;! er;i public and social service is done by men and women who work I without pay. It is repeated now because of the cloud of public VlirV miifJM orities generally. It is not weighted sufficiently in favor of labor and farm elements, according to their attention, seems to loom over the community bigger than le Thinks U.S. Should ibioc11'"15 t0 th congrwsio,ul1 TA nn i 1 1 ir a 1 Id 1 ! I.I t Aaunn l);iin on those who are drafted or who vohmfcer to work without T. , .h. 1 Jx'xhl South as are the compensauon. t ,7U"; views which a majority of the na To name all erouDS and committees so encatrcd would be , ., , , .... . nosus in ine ;Mesaui r;i Impossible. The list would have to include the city council, the ncsota has forced Am that the fast dwindling i posits in the Mesabi range in Min- mencan com- tional chaiman's choices espouse. Kor that section's advocate, Uut ler named former Governor John S. Battle of Virginia, who has vir Tim nrnxtinn In lot nf nennle lu,lll' lir irom acuve pom. ' - - , r-- nl,,i (:.lv(irnf1r I ii her 11 m w school board, the planning commissions, Chamber of Com-' panics to purchase iron ore from merce committees, the United tuna workers and others, per-, Canada bans some we don't even know about. The ti fc. :.; .... .u... " " ...... 'mind is now iust hW lon will I " '". . "v"."ur .. rui upt'cidi duciiiiuu iniee Luiiiiiiiuees uiai jidvc uccn ut , ' i u Nurlll C.urullna. re about to be assigned to hard jobs are selected. I , ,. i,Brnmni He has passed over such influ- One of these is the mayor's committee that investigated the 1 r, ' h ,'! " i mornni will re. ' fnlinl and dominan' veterans as pas blast that destroyed the Dennis llowarlh home and injured ,r(Ui,.c lot J 0S. Mother mJr I a,!il'Z three persons. This committee has finished its work and made war could leave the United Slates 1 1!" ? " ' ?"u't ,,"". i, .., recommendations that will bolster and make more effective in an oil crisis. '(icoruia an aulhoritv on nation'il the city safety code, and the mayor lias directed that the legis lation be drafted. The committee, directed by its chairman, Robert DeArmond, and with each of its associates doing his prt of the job, did its work in an orderly, efficient and exhaustive way. It got i in(r 0 the im mile lona railroad i results. I Arabia, that runs from Dammon, Mayor While, at his own request, has been authorized by the on the Persian Gulf, to Riyadh, the Present oil reserves in Arabia, if .,..,... ..' vi u..n. ...... it,.,, h maintained, will supply our oil ma(e choiceJ ,. ,he basjs o( needs for a long time, American success in dealing with Arabia is partly due to the build their familiarity with the many great problems that will come be fore the committee." The West also has its complaints. Despite the recent Democratic pains in this area, his pick from t .nnninl a .ilirnnc' nrlvtcnrv fnmmittn in Innlr intn flCSCt't Capitol. This railroad Was ,). rnnGlnl water rales, and tee if they can be adjusted, without further b.uilt bv Arabian-American oil talive Kui,h Gr(,cn 0f Orejon. a increase, to meet the cost of the projected new water supply j LAmerican svcrnnlont forci(!n I J,,-? line from Maylon tsiana. . , , , I policy, in dealing with backward j jty such western issues as This committee will nave a hard job. H faces interest rales tountries has been a policy of help I pow(,rt mining and cattle qucs that have increased since the bonds were voted, and it is con-1 and aid. We have of course also : iionSi ' and monopoly is Senator fronted by a public that is hostile because of the removal of given European countries aia. the summer irrigation rates, resulting in extra heavy summer I Urrat Britain has in the past water costs to the users. A very serious question wil. h--' SS.aHy InhllKL'im the committee. Will it have to advise the city council to curtail ' , m and lhe poorer countries. the construction program and build a smaller line a line tli:tL KritiKli troubles with India and tee, oddly, are generally regarded Will be inadequate for a growing community'? Kgypt. her oil troubles In the mid- us 'puiitkul "lame ducks'" Harry A third comittce, authorized by the directors of the Cham-; die east, and her worries overs. Truman, Adlai K. Stevenson T' sK Nk.afi.rWi-,., k Joseph C. O'Mahoney of Wyoming, he is not included in the Butler board of directors. Political Lame Duck. The "big names" on lhe commit ber of Commerce, is to make a study of the constantly mount ing fringe area question. Its study will include population growth in these areas, their desire for city services and the cost of these services, and an unbiased appraisal of the feasi bility of annexation to Salem or incorporation ot separate email cities. An acute fringe situation brought the decision to form this committee, and it is wise foresight that some of its members will be fringe area residcnls. The committee will have available assistance from Willam ette University, the University of Oregon Research Bureau, and any city and county officials it wants to call upon. This lon help will lighten its hurden to a degree. Rut at best the com- The reason for our government Singapore prove, 1 believe, the American foreign policy ot help nnd a itl has been a good policy. American oil Is still coming from Arabia. It seems to me, however, the American policy in our dealings with Kgypt has been somewhat inconsistent. The suggestion we might build lhe Aswan dam on the Nile, then changing the deciding not to build the dam, was not a very wise procedure, in my opin- POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER mittee has ahead of it many days ot hard work. Growth of llic Suburbs The Federal Census Bureau reports as the results of a sur vey made Jast March that the nation's cities and suburbs are growing in population four times as fast as tne rest ot ine country. Within the metropolitan areas, the suburbs are growing in population six times as fast as within the cities. The survey covered metropolitan areas, defined by the Cen sus Bureau as cities with 50,000 or more population, together with one or more adjacent counties. But it is evident that the trend, at least in Pacific Coast stales, where suburbs of small er cities are booming, follow the same pattern. The Bureau estimates that there were 96.200,00 people liv ing in metropolitan areas last March and 611,100.000 else where. It also shows that women are widening their numerical superiority over mcn in the civilian population. In l!l."0 there , lnp wm-( were 97.3 men to each 100 women. This dropped to 9;i.l melt Building lhe Aswan dam, I be per 100 women in March 1056. This feminine gain is attributed lieve, would strengthen our friend to a higher death rate for men and increased military forces,1 ship and tics with the Arab world, not covered with survey. I believe it would be the best mid- The metropolitan population including suburbs increased sl policy our government could 14.8 percent since 1950 as against an increase of only 3.4 per- nt ""s """' cent in other areas. The overall population increase was 9.8 . percent for the period. I Wc it Iot Inforinod The women's gain in metropolitan areas was also morej (),, St 'TC'lilion Isstir marked. There were 93 5 men to each 100 women in lO.'il). and' ,. ., ... r r , 1 II nil- r.u.i.r. . I've just r Kstes Kefauver and Kleanor Koosevelt. Moreover, because of their leading roles in the 1952-1956 elections, it is felt that their ex tremely radical philosophy has been twice rejected by the elec torate. This quartet, living and think ing in days of past glory and vic tory, refuse to recognize that the voters' current mood leans toward "moderation." In fact, both Governor Averell Harriman of New York and Tru man, who teamed up so unsuccess fully at the Chicago convention, denounced Stevenson when he ad vocated a moderate rather than a radical approach to social, eco nomic and political problems. Tru man actually forced Stevenson to swing sharply to the left in the campaign. Average Age of Committee Members The average age of Chairman Butler's "twenty wise men and women next year will be 56.5 years, ranging from Irumans 73 to Senator Kennedy s 40. Save tor . . Ith f,,n. mn,lwt U'hn u-ill h tin. would cease any tuiiire aggressive - . acts against Israel, and that Kgypt 50 when the group tries to 'Rudolph the Reindeer' Made This Song Writer a Success By HAL BOYLE deciding not to build Nasser s dam, was because ot nts aeaungs with Communist Russia, and hia opposition to the Baghdad pact. It could be remembered the U.S. did not cut off aid to Communist Tito of Yugoslavia for hi ties with Itussia. It seems to me. since we are helping France and Britain with their oil problems, our gov- eminent should re consider the de cision not to build the Kgyptian Aswan dam. If America built the Egyptian dam. we should try to get a guar antee from Nasser that Kgypt ...... ll ...,tl.. nni-nulrlHeH live of the S'uez canal to ail nations of-' uld be well above only 91 men per 100 females last Match. In the rural areas, wnere men nave always (unnumbered women, they continue e cjnt(in Tenn. affair. to do so, but the women are catching up. The 104.4 men to: u seems to me you pick some 60 years. Three of the most prom inent members Truman, Speaker Sam Rayburn and Mrs. Roosevelt are more than 70. each 100 rural women in 1950 was down to 102.4 last March The census study divides rural areas into two kinds, farm ing and non-farming. In the exclusive farming areas, men out numbered women 110.7 to 100 last March. Men 55 and over outnumbered women 127.8 to 100 while the male lead was even greater, 1206 to 100 for the 15-19 age group, atlributed to the earlier age at which young women left farms. The trend to the suburbs is understandable. Many people prefer to live outside the congestion and crowds of the city, now that the auto has solved the problem of speedy transput' Salem 39 Yrs. Ago By REN MAXWKI.L Dee. 13, 1917 O. M. Plummer. representative of the United Stales department of agriculture in this locality. :u! your editorial on ' placed a story in the Capital Jour nal 39 years ago to say that Mar ion county needed a county agent in accordance with the federal plan for increased production. Marion County's $1700 share lor the salary of V. H. Brown, acting agent for the past three months, had not been included in the county budget. Kur 1918, Plum mer pointed out, the government would pay the agent SI ixhi and the slate and county $1700 each mak ing Brown's total salary $I4IK). NEW YORK (JI Some day Johnny Marks would like to wrile a hit song about the 4th of July 'The funny thing is that it was "The only uy accident that the song had or maybe even the 29th olia Christmas theme. Anybody who February. sits down and says he'll write a "Any day but Christmas, he Christmas song is welcome to try said. but I'll guarantee it won't be a It is unlikely, however, his pub- good one." lie will let him. Kor better or Johnny, who Is 47 and looks like worse. Johnny has become as a Greenwich Village poet (he's lueniiuea pnn mnsimas songs as- actually a Greenwich Village Stephen Foster is with sentiment al ballads of the Old South. Putting the Christmas spirit to music isn't exactly a chosen career with Marks. It's a kind of strange doom he tries to escape but can't. In 1949 Johnny was a moder ately successful song writer (he has published 75, written ahotit 750) when he composed a little ditty entitled "Rudolph, the Red Nosed Reindeer." Johnny, who had struggled for as long as two years to get some landlord), says all his Christmas songs have been accidents. His other hits on this subject were "The Night Before Christmas Song," "When Santa Clause Gets Your Letter," and "Everyone's a Child at Christmas, "Last year I made up my mind definitely I would never write another one," he recalled. Then, last February, while reading some poems by Henry Wadsworlh Longfellow, he came ! across one called, "I Heard the nf his Ki.no rernrdH hH In m"s " LnriSUnaS Day.' struggle for two months before semi-relfgious theme, the Tbey Say Today Quotes From The Newt By UNITED PRESS BELFAST. Northern Ireland An Irish Republican Army statement on recent raids against the Brit ish in Ireland: We shall fight until the invader is driven from our soli and vic tory is ours." NEW YORK Designer Mollie Parnis on 1957 fashions: "1 predict that the 1957 ward robe will at last go in one suit case." PITTSBURGH Carl R. Kobb, vice president of the Mellon Na tional Bank & Trust Co., on re placing two Lapp reindeer who were Irightened by visitors: "We're sorry they have been so overwhelmed by the great number of their admirers." AUGUSTA, Ga. Presidential Press Secretary James C. Hager ty on Vice President Richard M. Nixon's pre-Christmas trip to Aus tria to report on the Hungarian relugee situation: ". . .The vice president plans to report to the President and the Congress on the full scope of what is necessary and practicable and - iff to recommend what further steDs ! t Slump in Home Buying to Get Congress Study Next Month By JAMES MARLOW Associated Press News Analyst WASHINGTON ( You want to buy a home? The rate of home buying has been going down. It has been getting tougher to bor row money to buy a house. This situation may not improve much, if at all. Congress for weeks to come in the new year will be looking into the broad question of Homebuild ing, borrowing to buy homes, and the government s money policies One committee started doing so this week. It remains to be seen whether anything will be done to make it easier to borrow money, There is a big scramble for loans. It seems would-be home owners and small businessmen are at the tailend of the parade. Money Is tight. Banks are looking around to see where they can get the best return on their invest ment. Six times in the past 18 months, the government has tightened up on the banks by raising the charge on money which member banks borrow from the Federal Re serve. This in turn makes these mem ber banks less loose with the money they lend. They can turn to federal securities, high-grade cor poration securities, tax-exempt municipal bonds to invest their money. A bank has some continuing ex pense in handling a homebuy ing loan whereas if it purchases certain federal securities, it may have no other expenses, although it may earn only 3 per cent on those securities. It has been suggested that it the government wants to tighten up on credit it should do so in the field of credit buying the installment payment plans that consumers use. This was done during the Korean War. It's un likely to be revived soon if at all. The government has sought for years to encourage homebuying and to encourage banks to make loans to home buyers through two principal agencies: the Fed eral Housing Administration (FHA) and the Veterans Aid ad ministration (VA). Until Dec. 1 both insured fnr guaranted loans on homes, pro vided the interest rate was no more than 4"i per cent. On Dec. 1 the government upped the in terest limit on FHA-insured loans to 5 per cent. In addition, there's a charge of '4 per cent for the FHA insurance. The Eisenhower alministration couldn't raise the interest ceiling on VA-guaranteed loans. Only Congress can do that. It's ques tionable Congress will when it re turns next month. One thing is certain: The higher the interest rate, the higher the cost of a home. On a $10,000 home with a 25-year mortgage, for ex ample, the H per cent interest nivke approved for FHA loans adds $900 in interest to the total amount of repayment. The government's purpose in letting FHA loan interest rates go up was to encourage banks to make more home loans, since their profit would be greater. May be it will have that effect. Per haps not. But if the banks hand out more leans under the FHA program, with its 5 per cent interest, they may make fewer to veterans who seek a VA-guaranteed loan with a maximum interest of 44 per cent. A Smile or Two Ottawa Journal Teacher: Now suppose a man working on the river bank sudden ly fell in. He could not swim and would be in danger of drowning. Picture the scene. The man's sud den fall, me cry for help. His w ife knows his peril and, hearing his screams, rushes immediately to the bank. Why does she rush to the bank? Little boy: To draw his insur ance money." sW)sswiwsw!sai!iw!5aa Gene Au.ry agreed to gamble on victory of hope over despair. "hoi'V ,te T the novelty number. hnted Johnny, who broods about !?,? ,? AfJ A ,k g That recording has now sold,11"" " world is going, lie;,;""., ' ift NEW DELHI Prime Minister g Jawaliarlal Nehru on a change he S noticed in the attitude of Commu- s nist Chinese Premier Chou En-lai: 5 "I suppose the Chinese have settled down and are more confi- $ dent." 3 - spot in the South now and then, without giving thought to this: There are no Negroes in the stale police, state highway ditarl-nu-nt or the prison organization. In lad 1 don't see many on the stale payroll at all. So why not dee them up here before you talk about sonu'lhing you arc not so well informed on? lluw would you like your girl or lioy to lie in school where they were 10 to one'.' And why are the tatinn. The short work week has provided leisure for garden-' Negroes so much heller' than the ing as well as recreation the larger home sites provide. The suburbanites have all the conveniences of the city with out its noise and turmoil, plus lhe charms, quiet delights and picturesque landscapes that help make life mote enjoyable. As William Cowper wrote two hundred years ago, "Cod made the country and made made the town." II. I1. jNixou Slill Han Ikr's (!onf. rimer President Eisenhower is again emphasizing his reliance upon Vice President Nixon, who made a speech in New York last Indians? Thcv aie still segregated You may be a news man, but 1 say you are not well inlonncd on this question, tio down to Missis sippi and see lor out sell. Te Sluwly. tBir, X. Winter. ftoii-l'urlismi Office llilltetie Keglster-Gtiaril It is significant that the slate's ilislnrt attorneys, in their Port- more than 5 million. Some 94 oilier 1 PM the words to music. The re recordings of Rudolph in M dif- sl,l,: A recording by Bing Crosby fcrent arrangements have sold 20 -which Variety, Billboard and oth million more discs. rr trade magazines predict may Little Rudolph, now nn eslah- last as Io,,2 'ls Rudolph. lished world-wide Christmas clas- While making the recording. sic. has earned Johnnv better than ,IM'S' "'"'"ng that Longfellow was half a million dollars, will prob-j""' author, told Johnny dryly: ably earn that much again by the I '0u nau a pretty fair lyric time Marks' copyright expires 48'wnl('r on lhls one." years from now and the little rein- Johnny, who now operales his deer gallops into the public do- own Publishing firm (by an odd main. coincidence it's called the St. In the first three years after K'"h's .Mu.sic Co-'- ays: Rudolph appeared on the scene' . hls ,s ' 1 .hope I'll never more than 3(H) imitative Christmas anomer mnsimas song!" noveltv songs appeared, but ouick-1 .avs " fervently and lv tinkled into oblivion. Hleans But alon8 'J'in Pan Alley , tax "Time after time people have 1 lht,);', '"Y 11 s ,on lne- Johnny tried lo get me to write sequels c , hclp "imself. Christmas is about R u d o 1 p h," said Marks i 1, 'onR" )ust a holiday for Ru "but I never will "olph s fatht,r. It s a life sentence. "It took me only a week lo write lhe song or a week plus 20 years, if you count the time it took me to learn what to throw away. I still rewrite it now and then in my mind changing a word here and there until it drives my wife SPECIAL GIFT WRAPPING VAIUE1 Thrtt big rolls oj paper or foil uilh ribbon t Compare this value anywhere! Each box contains 4 rolls of beautifully designed gift wrapping paper or foil 20 in ches wide. Continuous length no waste folds, or creases. Ribbon to match. f66 II Par Box m it What a Conscience! Boston Globe The Internal Revenue Depart-1 15 ment is reported to have received K this letter: 8 "Twenty-five years ago I cheat- K ed the Government on my income w 1 have not had a decent ' night's sleep since. ( g "I am enclosing $25. s "If I still can't sleep, I'll send S 365 N. COMMERCIAL OPEN MONDAY AND FRIDAY NITE TILL 9 P.M. A Ciipltnl Journal editorial had j noted: "Only a work until shiniest day uf the year, and the flowers are still blooming outdoors! wherever (here is the least pro i lev! inn. The .steady rain ami warm wt'iiiher for this time of lhe year give promi.se uf Ihis condition re maining until the days begin tu Kiow longer and, as the old ayin1 goes colder." j Gov. Withycombe had appealed to county officials not to destroy J confiscated boolled boo?e. H turn-! vieus uil b l lift U hi n II ' 8 ' b'"' nnM- " ed over to the federal governmen: Views with the While House. iin support of a proposed law 1 5, ...,M K r .t.iiii .n Now it is announced that Nixon will fln to Central Kurope which would lake their offices pm(t nlcoho (hrrphy Stained llsr() to corner wiin omciais and in sue up t lie Rreatly channel "m i''lulV11 r.uus. (.n. hv tho Wjp n0partmrnl t0 nict.t situation since the flareups in Poland and Ihinttary. He will " '. . . . a pressinR military need. go there as the president's personal representative, This has two sides, of course. Nixon risks spectacular re verses in his popularity, if he stumbles. Hut if makes Rood, as he admittedly lias thus far in his foreign missions, lie ains greater stature both abroad and at home. Election of Robert F. (lohlcr, 37, as president of Prineelon university indicates two current trends, one general, towards younger people in positions of leadership, and one education al, toward professional teachers as presidents of colleges and universities, instead of "big names" from other fields of en deavor. The biggest of these, a decade ago when lots of col leges w ere seeking I hem, w as Dwight Kisenhower. w hom Columbia, another ivy leaguer, crabbed oil as us president as tor the stair soon as the government had no more military battles to win. Mi. Venn's Both current trends appear wholesome. Venn, would make the attorney's office "non ," uhifh is lhe basis on we already elect our Kuce ne district par 1 1 -at h ich jii(li;i'S. We think of no reason why it could he impnrtaut if a district attorne i a Pi-tiiocr.it or a Ke publican, If il is Kuoil public poli cy to h;ic on the ciicuit bench nun who was elected without ci m sulci at ion lor his political atlili.itmns, it .should be equally M'od pulicy to lia e the same it ol in.in piescitling the ease Death at Tacoma nf John Philip Weyerhaeuser of he fam ous lumber family recalls to many the kidnaping of his nn, Georpe, which filled the papers from coast to coast 20 years ago. The boy was released unharmed on payment of $200,000, most of which was recovered when the kidnapers were soon At the dawn of a ?0 year in terval of aridity a Capital Journal advertisement on this dav in l;i'7 told of Revo, an Anheuser-Busch product: "itself a nutritive drink the year-round soft drink." i Mayor H. ,, Sleeves declared Salem to he officially thy Pec. 1.1. PH.i. Sale of beer Was aaui legahed heie Apr. 7, A new municipal comfort station under construction at High and State streets would soon be ready for use. a Capital Journal news story had slated. (Such a facility of comenienee lor public usage n Salem has been lacking for many proposal, unani mously backed by other men in his position in Oregon, should receive prompt and careful Icjtis- -Vtais-' native consideration. --. - . Cherry City Raking company THANKS OU ICtNOK N ! had received a communication M.trk Twain lrom Ihr fdral fd admmistra- 1 am thankful that the sood Cod iW in Salem lhat the lisp of jrv xarAilnrl i. . 1 1 . an 1 , I - J hirM 1 rA hntaa -.1 k.. arrested, later rr,t to Alcatrar. The result was to rlisrotirace ,h ' h, u. A, ' ,,. ', (or ...,., rrf ", the "snalrh" racket. George, incidentally, ls now at Oregonian.jihu regard we hae to do il at our proper observance of wheatles lives at Eugene. ioun nsk. ( ri.iy. Two ul il He Tiitcrestiiii Corvittlls C.n?ette-Tiiues The 1M7 legislators, like Jason, are going to .vpend most of their time seari-hini: for the golden fleece. The lleeee. in this case, beinc a tax that the voter's don't have to pay. I'nfoi Innately most sources in this category liave about dried up. The Kuitene Register-Guard sug gests that the Legislature present the people with a ballot on which they must chose between higher personal income taxes or a new sales tax. The paper should add to this proposal a slate property levy then the voters could turn down all three possibilities at the same time. Seriously, thouch. it wi.uld he inlereslini; to see the voters go to the polls lo make a chnu-e anions the three money raising proposals. TIip l'ijr and the Cow Sunshine Magaine A rich man once said lo a friend. "Why is it everybody is alwav ci itii iing ine Inr being miM-ily. when ei-ry cue knows 1 lwie made proisinn to leave ecithini; I possess lo chanty uheti 1 tin-'" 'Well." said the friend, "let me tell oil about the pis and the cow. The pig was lamenting lo the cow one d.iv about how unpopular he wa. 'People are always talking about your gentleness and your kind eyes. said the pig. 'Sure, you give milk and cream, but I give c-en more. I give bacon and ham I give bristles, and they even pickle my feet Si ill nobody likes me Why is this?" "The cow Ihnug'il a niinule. and then said. 'Well, maybe it s be cause I pie while lm still hv inj.' " i, ONLY AT KAY TYPEWRITER 5 UNBELIEVABLE CHRISTMAS SPECIAL! 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