Pace 4 Section 1 THE CAPITAL JOURNAL Salem, Oregon, Wednesday, January 16, 1957 Capital AJournal An Independent Newspaper Established 1888 BERNARD MAINWARING, Editor and Publisher GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor Emeritus Published every ofternoon except iunday at 280 North Church St. Phone EM-46811 TtjII Lenicd Wlr Servict ol Th Anoclalfd Pr,, and Thf Unlttd Prasa. Th Auoclaled Prw If exclulivtly entitled to the. ui for pub lication of all new, dupatcni credited to it or otherwiaa credited id Una piper and alio newi publuhed therein. Building Revolution Looms . The current issue of the building magazine. Architectural Forum, predicts that over $1 trillion will be spent in American building construction by 1977. New building will include sky scrapers built like trees, houses made with chemicals, "sand wich" walls and sourceless light are among the many changes forecast over the next 20 years. Almost any building conceivable today can now be built, Forum reports. The major new types of buildings that are beginning to appear are suspended-roof structures, thin concrete shells, space frames, hollow cores, bubbles and domes of great variety. These buildings take advantage of the great rise in strength-to-weight ratio in materials, and to recent progress in mathematical an alysis which makes it possible to fully estimate the destructive forces inherent within a building. Tomorrow's skyscrapers will be different in that they will more nearly reflect the engineering concepts of trees. Today's towers are elaborate steel cages on which arc hung walls, floors and service shafts. Future skyscrapers may reverse this arrangement by mak ing the service shafts large hollow cores or backbones, like tree trunks, from which floors branch out like limbs, and walls become like curtains. A revolution In materials is asserted under way. which will mil lie every basic building materials and may develop many new ize every basic building material and may develop many new ones. Chemistry will play an important role as building supplier with new plastics to rival steel. The wall of the future will be a "sandwich", a multipurpose structure in which exterior and interior surface, airspace, fenestration, insulation, wiring, lighting, heating and air-conditioning form a complex tissue as "organic as human skin." Thermoelectric heating and cooling which promises to do with wires what is now done with miles of expensive piping and ductwork will be built into the house of the future, says Forum. Incorporated into wall panels, it heats and cools without moving parts by a simple reversal of electric current. Radio Corporation of America which has already demonstrated such a room, estimates that the system may be ready for commercial production within five years. In the kitchen this would lead to the disappearance of the refrigerator. A multitude of other changes loom in construction of all kinds of building, for illum ination, heating and cooling, odor control and ironization. Ill a pretty complex world we are planning. The next twenty years will see urban growth in the U.S. reach its crest, with the whole nation more or less urbanized. At the core will be today's central cities rebuilt in patterns that provide more planned space. Today's best architects, says Forum, are preparing for this re building by going hack in history to study such patterns as the walled city of Peking, the Moorish Alhamhra. the villa gardens of the Italian Renaissance as conspicuously shaped examples of city space. But the chances are that this push button Utopia, a world wide Disneyland, will be indefinitely postponed by Old Man Inflation. CP. NATIONAL WHIRLIGIG Liberal Wings Repudiated By Leaders of Both Parties Bv RAY TUCKER WASHINGTON. Jan. 16 Re publican and Democratic leaders on Capitol Hill have defied and repudiated the liberal wings, of both major parties in organizing key committees for the current session. They disregarded t h e known wishes c. both the Eisen hower and the Stevenson-Truman factions. Their selections vest control of committees dealing with social, economic and industrial problems in the hands of conservatives. They took special pains to deprive the White House or Democratic "outsiders" of dominant influence over such questions as taxes, ap propriations, business and industry and finances generally. Only in the field of foreign affairs did they foreshadow approval of Ike's gen eral policies. Although they violated the sac red seniority and preference sys tems when it satisfied their pur poses, they refused to ease t h e path for an Kisenhower Civil Rights program when they re named Senator James 0. Eastland of Mississippi to the Judiciary Committee. And no more than a handful protested against placing such an opponent of Civil Rights in this all-important post. New Dealers' Advice Rejected The Democrats snubbed National Chairman Paul M. Butler's abor tive Advisory Committee with ap parent deliberation. They empha sized again that the Rayburn- Johnson regime would take no ad vice from such New Dealers as Harry S. Truman, Adlai E. Steven son or Eleanor Roosevelt. In naming Senator John F. Ken nedy of Massachusetts to Foreign Affairs over Senator Estes Kefau ver, who ardently sought this honor, they showed how they felt about their IMS Vice Presidential candidate. They took this way of revealing Iheir resentment against the New Deal-Fair Deal campaign waged hy Stevenson and his run ning male from Tennessee. Honor Frank l.aitsrhe The Democrats' honoring of Sen ator Frank J. Lausche. a rebellious conservative, also offended t h e liberals. They named the man who supported the lale Senator Taft.a Roosevelt-Truman hair shirt, to such important commit tees as Ranking and Currency and Interstate and foreign Commerce. This is an unusual honor for a first-termer, and enables him to oppose advanced proposals on fin ancial, agricultural and industrial matters. The Republicans gave Ike no as sistance in his plan to "liberalize" the GOP. They lodged anti-Administration men in key spots and hazed his most enthusiastic sup porters, as well as Senators for whom he had made special efforts last November. They placed Senator William E. Jenner of Indiana on the important Finance Committee, and named Senator Chapman Revercomb of West Virginia to the committee which "Joe" McCarthy used to smear the Administration-Government Operations. Both men have been listed as non-co-operative by White House spokesmen, Ike him self mentioning Jenner as belong ing to this group. Jenner is a Mc- Carlhyite and an isolationist. Elsenhower Liberals Get Innoeous Posts Three Eisenhower liberals, in cluding two who had served under him, were sent to the foot of the class. They are Senators John Sherman Cooper and Thurston B Morton of Kentucky, and Senator Jacob K. Javits of New York. Cooper was given a seat on the Labor and Public Welfare Commit tees, where few measures of sig nificance will be considered at this session. Morton was assigned to the group handling housekeeping and aldcrmanic chores for the Dis trict of Columbia, a job which Sen ators try to duck, and to Public Works. Javits was shipped to two of the least influential units District of Columbia aod Rules. None of these three Eisenhower liberals can help to advance the White House program or reorganize the Party from these innocuous posi tions. In short. Congress has thrown down a challenge to the reformers and to the revisionists in both major Parties, even though it means defiance of two occupants of the White House Ike and Harry and the Democrats' nom inal leader, Adlai E. Stevenson. For Safely on Hihwnys Dcalh on the highways these davs is ridins on our hark When he snaps his finger, you've had it, and you're another aiatisiic in me national traitic slaughter. There are many ways to curb the growina traffic death' toll First, of course, is more highway patrols, for exDChence has shown that when highways ere well patrolled accidents de crease. But there arc not enough slate police to do this, so a burden of accident prevention falls upon the driver. Insurance rates have just been increased in Oregon for young drivers under 25 years of at!c and simile, (or most of the serious accidents have been ascribed to that age group. Be cause oi ine recKiess superiority that some drivers feel when behind, the wheel other drivers must pay a higher Insurance premium. Isn't there some way In lest drivers psychologically In deter mine their menial dependability? A cnmmillee of experts should be appointed lo study this problem and report hack to the Legislature in time for adoption of a new code for licens ing automobile drivers. For example, in Oregon, drivers may renew their licenses by mail by forwarding the fee. Some drivers have been doing this for years and since they passed their last driver's test they nave tost tncir ncarmg and liicir eyesight has become defec tive. Records show that these drivers arc not Involved in many fatal accidents on the highways, but indirectly they cause many. Why? Because, knowing their physical deficiency, they drive down the highway at a slow speed of 30 miles an hour, usually in the middle lane, on a thoroughfare where traffic usually moves at a speed of 50 to (10 miles an hour. Before long a string of cars lines up behind fur a mile. This type of driver stays right out in the center lane. .Sure, he's a taxpayer and has a right to use the highway, and believes that he Is driving at a safe speed. He is. Safe for himself. Finally, the driver behind, goaded to recklessness by the slow driver, tries to pass, and because his judgment is warped by anger, makes a mistake. There is a collision. Someone dies. The slow driver? He tells his wife. "These reckless fools! 1 It's gelling so thai a safe driver is afraid to drive:" Why not revise our system of licensing drivers? Why not give every driver a complete examination everv two voars when his lirpnse r-vmrns' stimuli! nnw,nn u.Iia ; -...-l.r.l.i venc. j.i.. ...i..' i . ... ' '. l" ' i. i. ii!iiuuii May 27. UHl. u , n . ..' 1 De ara"ly wcal,nn' ""J01'1 toi Franklin I), Roosevelt declared an i.i.s. niii uu-y ,ii. "unlimited national emergency" How many of you would ride In commercial airplanes if the and on August 12, I'HI. the rccnicst punts, once tney bad a license, could renew them by mail from that time on? How many? M. F, ENDURANCE J. J. Rousseau The first thing a child should learn is how to endure It is what we will have most need to known. Much Depends on Answer To Request ly President WASHINGTON history repeal itself? Will Congress hesitate to give the President of the United States in advance power to act in a possible emer gencyand will there be another world war due to an enemy's mis- colonial ion of the intent of a vacillating Am erica? These questions are asked be cause of the strange parallel now developing here with what happened just before World War I. World War II and the Korean War, respectively- On March 4. 1!M7, the Congress adjourned and the resolution of authority requested by President Wilson to arm American merchant ships failed of passage because of a notorious filibuster. Just 2U days later the President was asking lor and Congress was passing a reso lution to ratify a "state of war" which had begun when the imper ial German government sank American ships without warning. The Rerhn government had calcu lated that America would not inter- Doolcv Kajjrr lo (Ivl SlarWd of the President to extend the term of service under the Selective Set viie act was granted by a mar Kin of only one vote in the House of Representatives 20.1 to 202 This was widely interpreted abroad as Indicating a division in America's ranks weakness and vnccilation. Less than four months later the President was asking for and Congress was voting a declar ation ol a state of war with Ger many and Japan. The Nazi govern ment had calculated that America would nut intervene By DAVID LAWRENCE Jan. 15 Will , stances, not to act upon general implication. I wish to leel that the authority and the power of the congress are behind me in what ever it may become necessary for me to do, we arc jointly the ser vants of the people and must act together and in their spirit, so far as we can divine and interpret it. What happened? A filibuster led by "liberal Republicans," notably the late Senator George Norris of Nebraska, resulted in the failure of the Senate to get a chance lo vote. When Congress adjourned on March 4. Mr. Wilson issued a statement to the country that same day in which he said: Although, as a matter of (art the nation and the representatives of the notion stand back of the executive with unprecedented unanimity and spirit, the impres sion made abroad will, of course, be that it is not so and that other governments may act as they please without tear that this gov ernment can do anything at all. . . A little group of willful men. representing no opinion but their own. have rendered the great gov ernment of the United Stales help less and contemptible." After war came, the Senate re vised its rule so as to invoke "do lure." whereby two-thirds of the Senators present could cut nlf rie. President ' "ale. 1 hat rule was abandoned some years afterward, and it is signilicanl that the Senate is go ing to debate soon a restoration oi that very provision. Rut the importance of this bit of history is that American mis fortune has followed every con spicuous exhibition of weakness in Congress. President Eisenhower and Secretary Dulles are being told today by several prominent Democrats in Congress that the requested power is already pos sessed hy the executive and that the situation can be met by declaration of opinion rather than by an authorization to act. lo his everlasting credit, former You're the Driver, All Right y-m I F0RGT who's 1 1 POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER Original King of Jazz Era Undamaged as Age Advances '56 GROUP VOTE ANALYSIS NO. 1 Negro Vote for Ike Rises 18 Points in 4-Year Period -By GEORGE GALLUP American Inituul of PubUe QrtnlOKl cal activity will turn on the Negro vote. The Northern liberal win of the In January I9.V1. the secretary of 1'resident Truman has come out Although hampered by failure of the Slate Senate to get organized, Speaker of the House Pat Donley is going as far as he can to get the legislative ship cleared for action. Quite rightly he is urging emphatically th.it all of Governor Holmes' recommendations, particularly those dealing with finance and taxation, be gollen into lull form as early as pos sible so the House can give them thorough consideration. Since finance bills must originate in Hie House it is evidently Dudley's idea thai they should be exhaustively debated and. if necessary, amended beiore they go to the Senate for further considera tion. The first bill to appear was one to repeal the income surtax It hears the names of Hi p. Clarence Barton and his House lax commiiiee. mil ocuiaiiy n was inirmiucoti oy nearly everyone Stairs were engaging in a war in In Oregon who pays state income taxes The surtax is that nn- "''' Korea "to repel aggression " popular. And its repeal was recommended by bulb the retiring congressional resolution had r.m..rnnp nnil lite in..flcnr hem rCUUCstcd 111 aiiWltH'f 311(1 tllC While Speaker I.oolcy is'loyal to his chief, and expresses il ' Zfler LTZ "m h ny savins v.nvprnnr noimcs message produced RcnrrM hih tntrrwni' enthusiasm in the Legislature, he adds that the House will not The IdiKiiiue used hv TreMdent be a mere rubber stamp for the (Governor's recnniniend.it ions. ! Wilson in asking tor authority to cHlree tor. (EDITOR'S NOTE: Following li thr first In a lertfi of i pedal I reports hy the Gallup Poll nn ! how major groups In the popu lation voted In last November's election. Today's report deals with the Negro vote.) PRINCETON. N.J.. Jan. 15 Of all the major groups in the na tion's population, the one that shifted most to the Lisenhower Nixon ticket last November was the Negro voter. In a special post-election analy sis, based on survey data. Institute statisticians found a falling away of Negro voters from their old Democratic allegiance that amounted to 18 percentage points nationwide. In 152. Negro voters gave Adlai Stevenson 79 per cent of their vote, In lfl.ifi, Stevenson polled 61 per cent ol the Negro vote, Official election figures, which have just become available, show the Eisenhower-Nixon ticket re ceiving 35.5fl9.270 votes, compared to 26.0.14,590 for the Stevcnson Kefauver ticket. An incomplete canvass of the vote for third party candidates shows a total vote of approximately soo.ooo. Based on the nationwide major party vote only, the Eisenhower-' Nixon ticket polled 57.8 per cent, compared to 42.2 per cent for the Stevenson-Kefauver ticket. In its final estimate of the elec tion outcome, the Institute gave the Eisenhower-Nixon ticket 59.5 per cent an error of only 1.7 per cent. This is the third election in which the Institute's new "precinct sampling" system has scored al most perfect accuracy Although the Itepuhlicnn party has historically been looked upon as the champion of the Negro, the Negro vote has been heavily Dem ocratic since New Deal Days. Negrofs in the 15 states outside the South have constituted one of the most solid voting blocs for the Democrats. During the 1956 campaign, the Republican party emphasized a drie to win back the Negro vote. The extent of the GOP's success can be seen in the following tables: NK(iHO VOTE 1956 Stevenson-Kef auvrr 61 pet. Eisenhower-Nixon 39 NEt.KO VOTE 19.12 Stevenson-Sparkman 79pct. fcjsenhower-Nixon 21 By way of comparison, here is the vote of whites in 1952 and 1956: WHITE VOTE 19SC Eisenhower-Nixon 59pct. Stevenson-Kefauver 41 WHITE VOTE 19tt Eisenhower-Nixon . 57pct. Stevenson-Sparkman 43 During the next few monlhs. a great deal of legislation and politi- Salem 51 Yrs. Ago By BEN MAXWELL Jan. 16. 1906 President Theodore Roosevelt ' and the commission had decided that the Panama canal should be due bv contract and under the supervision of the commission of engineers. Capital Journal had noted that some enterprising boat builder Democratic partv will be battling ' could make a good business on for a civil rights program that will man-v of lhe "dent streets o be designed to woo back the Negro Salem. Cottage street had several voters who defected from the ood sized lakes on it. (Paving Dartv last November f Salem's streets did not begin Onnnnorl in I ne u:na nt thn Ulllll a vt'dl Idiri w ntrii v. ui n. aioi t Democratic party will be Southern !cd on CoU? s,reel ?s reported by conservative Democrats who will I Lne CaPtal Journal Weekly for attempt to block legislation de signed to improve the lot of the Negro in the South. President Kisenhower on the part , only occasionally - sipping hot wa of manv Vet-roes was "vole (nr i 'er. had broken his last by eating 11,0 m .nj i i, ,k. "i popcorn and canned tomatoes. Oct. 31, 1907 Claude Barker, a young religious enthusiast in North Salem who had gone for 34 days without food and By HAL BOYLE vfir vnnir iAll the kings, they threw of what Westbrook Pegler so aptly called "the era of wonaeriui non sense" are dead, dignified, or re tiredexcept one. At the aze of 67, Paul wnneman. th nrioinal "King Of JaZZ." looks a party then. ih.. weren't fooling. -What killed the big bands' Well, I quit myself. But what del stroyed most of them was the bandleaders got fat-headed. Over a perioo 01 iu years inev taueht 20 years younger, still oouing over me vv Lu 'nBers m. L-ith lhe lemDesiuous energy mat sit-mi u. ihuuiis. made the 1920 s one of history's i Guy Lombardo didnt. That'i most memorable decades. I why he s still big. The otheri Paul who for a time at the oio loaue me a.ugi-i. uiSBer than Hippodrome conducted his band: their bands. atop a white horse ican Anuroi ine greaicsi emeriainer I (Ver Toscanini match this claim?', has knew? Bing Crosby, as of now. put together a golden anniversary : But Sinatra will be another record album to celebrate his 50 1 Crosby. Sinatra is fabulously gen- years in music. erous. lio you Know mat guy'i The album has taken many an given away zo ,aaiuacs to pto. aging jazz lover oacK 10 ine springtime of his life when Bix Biederbecke. who died young, blew a trumpet as no man has since, and a young unknown called Bing Crosby was one of three Rhythm Boys" and didn't have a race horse to his name. The rest of this piece is a mono logue of "memories and summaries by "Pops" Whiteman, who keeps the 1920 s wrapped in his soul but r-mains as fresh as tomorrow: "They didn't call it jazz when I started. They called it ragtime. I began nn the viola in the Denver Symphony Orchestra in 1906 when I was 16. By 1909 I had my own orchestra and came east. "I had 9 pieces and I built the band up to 46, counting the sing ers. "Those were the years! Tn 1925 I grossed $680. 000 before taxes, thank the Lord! "They talked about the J125.O00 party that Texas oil man just threw. Around 1922 our band played for a party for Clarence Mackay on Long Island that cost J465.0O0. "I got a $10,000 tip myself- not unusual in those days. When pie he likes? 'I wouldn't write off this Fl. vis Presley too fast either. That guy is a symbol to a lot of kidi with troubles but he's got some thing in his neck, too, and it comes out. "Talent is God-given, although lot of performers don't bother to give God equal billing. A thous- and guys can practice equally hard but only one has the spark, "What destroys many perform ers is that their head gets so bit it gets in their own way. And ai their head gen bigger, their heart gets smaller. "That never happened to Bing. You notice he never has a bad word to say about anybody ex cept himself. Perry Como is tht same way. "I still do all right. I keep busy in radio and television. "In this world you are either over-secure or under-secure un til, if you're lucky, you find the right groove. "There's nothing left that I particularly want to do. But I can tell you one thing I don't feel bored!" turned up in a special depth inter view survey conducted by the In stitute during the election cam paign. A special team of Institute re porters, working in Negro districts in several large northern cities, found that wilh many Negroes it was ' Eisenhower" when they were praising the Republican party and "the Republicans" when they were damning it. Interviewers reported that the typical Negro voter still feels eco nomically most secure as a Demo crat. "The Negro's first concern today is that of getting enough money to feed, clothe and keep his family in decent fashion. Only after this is accomplished does he find the time and interest to think about the civil rights problem. "With most Negroes, the GOP will have to offer something more than the personality of Kisenhower before they will consider a whole sale switch to the Republican parly, ine report concluded. When Northern Negroes were asked In the survey which parlv had done the most for Negroes in the last 10 .--ears. 67 per cent named the Democratic party. 16 per cent the Republican party and 17 per cent said there was no dif ference between the two parties or expressed no opinion. During fasling his weight had dropped from 1R0 to 130 pounds. Fred T. Merrill of Portland had presented an application to t h e city council for use of the armory floor as a skating rink. 'Then the armory was on the third floor of city halll. Grading right of way for the Willamette Valley Traction Co. had been completed to Chemawa and electric trains were expected to be running to Portland come June- of 1906. I First electric car from Port land arrived in Salem Jan 18, 19081. E. L. Irvin. the "practical shoe man." 326 State St., was cutting prices this day 51 years ago: regu lar $2 shoes for misses, SI. 55: $2 shoes for boys reduced to $1.45 and $2 shoes for women priced at $1.50. COULD, BE Sherman County Journal Some day Americanism is going to break out attain and some one is going to do something all by himself and without asking the government to do It for him. ii k urn Sugar Ray Robinson Every one reaches the end of lhe road some time. stiile. Dean Acheson. announced that Ainerua's defense perimeter I did not Include Korea hut that this I would be lelt lo the V V lo pro-Met-I. Six months later, the Army. Navv and Air i-'orce of the I'nitod Molly in favor of granlinc the power that I're-idenl Kisenhower : FOHl 'M is asuing lor. mil will the other Democrats follow him. or will they wllillle down lhe pending resolu tion and give the impression that the President of the I nileii Stales dues not have the wholehearted support of the Congress? And if this happens, will .inniher war till of such a nns Soviel Russia? II will he recalled that in Julv 19.19 the late Borah, "liberal' This attitude, if maintained throughout the session, will be P."1" tnr rmNl ,orc" "' lhr , '.'l"',"8 "Y" Srnl "'ere wasn't helpful to the stale and to the new administration. S.S. Schools iMifilil I'sp Kooiiisi in (lluirclirn To the Kditor: Your recent articles dealing with the oxercrowded school conditions in the Salem school system has been read wilh some concern Since lhe Junior High school: can't be built lor the conv.nfl school Senator William year. wh couldn't the school nepuoucan. was board rent -lor a nominal Ice sul A Reminder of Oilier Days Permanent retirement of old SP locomotive No. l?85 arouses nostalgic memories. Driving from the farm to town SO or more years ago In the near at hand, it might take t'nited States aboard its merchant ships in 1917 was almost identical with that of President Eisenhower in his message of January 5 this year. Mr. Wilson told a joint ses- . sion of Congress on February 26. 1917, that, since adjournment was chance of a world war and hence he didn't want to vote lo give the President certain discretionary powers requested by the executive in connection with the embargo on arms Mr. Roosevelt had told Con gress he needed this legislation so as to wield America's influence on the side of preventing a world wtgon or the hack, with the dog trolling alongside, was likelv ! unusual length of time to assemble to be precarious if the road paralleled the railroad track .. ' J "'Jj"n"e th' n"1 t'on8r'"", " When me train came along, pinion oy a locomonve jusi ukc . , ,, , anj.M jn U1,w ,, alpr u,, War II broke old 1785. belching a great cloud of black smoke from its u,at (ai1 , Mmx (r(im you full out slack, you had to keep a tight line on the horses to keep them and immediate assurance of the Will history repeat itself now" from running awav. Hut the due wasn't scared. No. sir. He authority which 1 may need at any The testimony being recorded this fnre nut nflpr flip train liniment to exercise No doubt I week in lhe hcanncs on tin hcicnt classrooms from various churches ' These classrooms are vacant during the week and could be used especially by the first second or third graders who re quire only one teacher and who use tables instead of desks. 1 realize that a good m a n v things would need to be ironed out. but. lo me. it seems better war. The Senate foreign relations than jamming a hunch of young committee refused to act About slcis together or staggering shifts Anna Smith Salm. Ore. 9 Non-Stop Buses Daily befween Salem and Portland Senate .,, ,. ... ii., ,i i.i u- i.l flueaov possess thai auinornv inn-inn relations comniiucr ami ve never niiew vuieun-i ine H'K luumiij uimii,iii in ium ,., ..-.i . i., h.. i ,r.H .-r, ran,milie ! . pull I moving ints-senger train off lhe trark or was just Irving ,h. i,, ,,, .,,,, , . ' , , .m.i,' .h Co. nraite n lmprfi. feme of the politicians we have to lis-Utuulinnal duties and powers: bull (Copyright. I9S7, New Ttrl l . Heraj TrAWt. a" 4X4-0? JO Cxtwrt campaign remind ui of that dog. S. S.l prefer, In the present circum- El.mu KNI E Cicero He is an eloquent man who can trr at sublets of an humble miture iwt'a aVr.-iry. Itfty thinay impfes- vely. a-tj miCcrtii) mm only $"350 ONE WAY if 4 'fJ" "I've -hoveled -the whole world used every fuel - and I know Standard Heating Oils are best' 1 ! . f .' ' - j & M . I if 'Si ; a 'At mug-t "Sir 1st ""-""" " ' i nr urniiin nn ii 'mim t Retired Army Colonel William Troy, now of Portland, says "Moving around with the Army all my life, I've had to keep myself warm any way I could. Now that my family has its own home, we're living in the best com fort we know with modem oil heat and Standard Heating Oils. It's the only combination that has every thing safety, cleanliness, economy and real comfort I know; I've tried everything else." frfrfu rtitoai a--Kiiio naTnalM-iniii-ai viifciiiiTlMia.iiiwairair.' ywii' OUN0 IRlt Call your Housewarmer your local Standard Heating Oil Distributor for -the most modern heat your money can buy 1. Clean every drop rums to pure heat 2. Automatic delivery with your Housewarmer 'i keep-filled service. 3. Money-saving suggestions are part of vour Housewarmer s personal scrvice. Artd (or economy, remember...no other type of fuil has higher burning efficiency Slajidard Oil Company of California o