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About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980 | View Entire Issue (March 4, 1957)
I Capital AJournal AN INDfPENDENT NEWSPAPER ESTABLISHED IN III! Bernard Mainwaring (1897-1957) Editor and Publisher, 1953-1957 i E. A. Brown, Publisher Glenn Cushman, Managing Editor George Putnam.Editor Emeritus Pubtilhld awry availing (antapt Sunday) by Capital Journal PubliiKIng Co., Mrl, Jannia L. Mainwaring full laaied Wirt Servica of Tha Atiocialed Preti and Tha Unilad Plan. The Attocuted Preu it axcluiivaly anlilled Id lha uta for publication of all nawi diipalchal credited to It or otnerwiie credited in Ihii paper and alio newt pubhihed therein, SUBSCItlPTION RATES By Carrier: Monthly, $1.55; Si Mentlii, $7.50; One Year. H5.00. By Mail In Oragani Monthly, SI M; Sis Monthi, 5,00; One Vaar $9.00. By Mail Oul.ida Oragom Monthly, $1.13; Six Manilla, $7.30; One Year, $13.00 JAMES MARLOIP Right to Work Laws Kcprcseniative James Roosevelt, Democrat of California, as anticipated, has introduced Into the House hopper a hill to repeal Section 14ib) of the Taft-Hartley law, which provides - specific authority for slates to enact "right, . to work" laws. The right for a man to work .' without being forced to join and pay dues to a union boss is inherent and should be in the Constitution's Bill of Rights, and would have been if union dictatorship had been known at the birth of the nation. Representative Roy Weir ID.-Minn.) follow ed with a bill to repeal Taft-Hartley and re enact the discredited Wagner Act, giving unions their abuses of power. Senator James Murray's (D.-Mont.) bill would authorize com pulsory union shop for the printing industry, thereby repealing .Section M(g) for that in , dustry. A similar bill for the building indus try is being prepared. Right to work legislation has been enacted ' in 18 stales and a case now pending before the Riverside county, California Superior court may decide the legality of a city "right to work" ordinance adopted by the Palm ' Springs, Cal., city council, and provide a new approach to the problems of compulsory unionism. Indiana's legislature has just enacted a "Right to Work" bill and Saturday some 10, 000 labor union men swarmed through Indi ana's state house in shouting demonstration to pressure Republican Governor Harold W. Handley to veto the bill. The governor re " fused and said he would allow the bill to pass without his signature. He has more backbone than most governors scared by political pressure of union bosses. Legislatures in all except three states are now in session and right to work bills are be fore many of them. G. P. : A Pilot at 65 ' Leonard Judson is 65. It's news when a - man that old passes the required cxamina 7, lion and gets a license to pilot an airplane. ; But it is more, than that. Sixty-five is the age at which, in recent : years, it lias come to be preached and prac- ticed that a man should quit, take life pass ively, vegetate, "rust unburnislicd, as though ; to breathe were life." None of that for Jud- , 'Gi lt's hard to figure, It takes some think- -Jng. Judson isn't a poor man. He could " take the train or a Greyhound bus and go ; wherever he pleases. Or, if he wants to fly, he could go to the nearby airport and buy a ticket for New York or London. Not that i either for Judson. He wants to fly his own f'plane. '. Perhaps it's the same spirit that makes one man want to climb a mountain, another 'to make an ocean voyage in a skiff. Maybe the spirit that impelled his forebears to come - to what was to be known as the Willamette jT Valley nearly J20 years ago, when it was a JJ.wild, little known region. It's good to see , "strong family fibre saved through the gener ations. Judson becomes a member of the Sports I men Pilots of Oregon. And he becomes a J member of two other honorable, though tin organized associations one that refuses to ' recognize "retirement age," and another of Teven fewer mmbcrs, who demand of lifo t that dreams become reality. t'Tax Turnabout Governor Holmes and the Democrat lead-. - ers in the Legislature arc unable In maintain " the same convictions on important matters ' of taxation. The Governor, in his message, recommend t;ed an increase in basic school support from j- $80 to $120 per census child. For awhile after the session was under way It looked' .' as if the party' leaders would go along with "him. Now it looks as if the best the school "system of the slate can expect is half of the Governor's recommended increase, and pos sibly none at all. The school aid bill would make necessary '..a 28 per cent increase in income taxes, or $bout $39 "million above the present level. -This of course would make repeal of the in come surtax, also recommended by the Gov "ernor, a meaningless gesture. iZ.', The Governor recommended repeal of the ?''law permitting a state properly lax when the "state runs short of money from other tax sources. H was also recommended by rc--tlring Gov. Elmo Smith, and it looked as if If tho Legislature was all for it. r. Now only the Republicans are for it. The t". Democrat leaders of the session want il to stay as a cushion to he relied on In event ceo- nomip conditions cause a decrease in the in-, cotn tax revenues. n The biir is tied up in the House taxation ' committee and the Democrats are hoping it never gets out. z Automatic Plane Landings v'7" For years the aviation industry has talked .'wistfully of the day when It would be possi .Cble to make completely automatic l.tmlings ln the worst weather of airplanes. Many ex- perlments have been made in a number' of 'j.'Hystems, but last week tests ashore were sue-j-cessful and will be followed by those at sea; '4he pilot never touching the controls at its SLiirst public demonstration, and promise a Z vast improvement In the efficiency and safety ,of aircraft carrier operation by the new radar lystem. ,. J- The system for landing is produced by "Hhe-Bcll Aircraft Corporation, backed by the .Navy. It Is designed to land a plane auto Srmatically in far below icro weather, nn cell- ' Ing and no visibility. After the mechanism 'Ukei over, the pilot does not have to touch the controls until after the plane is rolling on the landing strip. The plane used for the testing was a wo place twin jet Douglas F-D-.1 Sky Knight, a night fighter. The system has been success fully used in landing airliners and bombers. Many other systems have been tried out, but Bell contends it has the first product developed where it is ready for regular oper ation. The demonstration of the new radar unit, was at the Bell plant at Niagara Falls, N.Y., and the plans for a full-scale carrier test lends support to the company's contention. So does the fact that the Air Force took steps some time ago to adopt the system for its use. The development should not he confused wilh manually operated remote-control mechanisms for taking off and landing aircraft. These have been used extensively in nuclear homb tests to fly drone planes through mushroom clouds. The essential difference is that the latter can jc used only if the ground operator can actually see the plane he is controlling. The Roll System needs nn visibility and no human ground operator. The heart of the completely automatic system is a computer installed on the carrier nr, for land operations, at the airport. The oilier basic unit is a special radar set. also installed nn the ground. More than I200 landings have been made wilh the system on land. G. P. HAY TUCKER RAY TUCKER American Lease of Canal Threatened WASHINGTON Administration and Con gressional concern for the future of the Pan ama Canal underlies official reluctance to furnish Israel with firm guarantees for pass age of her shipping through the Suez Canal and the Gulf of Aqaba. Washington prefers to ooiain inese ngiils tlirougli $ negotiation with Egypt and tne oilier Arabian states in- votveu jontan ana bauui 1 4 Arabia. k&Kfl Freedom of navigation J i. 9 through the world's slra- ; logic waterways the Suez Canal, the Dardanelles and the Panama Canal is now affirmed in formal treaties accepted by the principal countries concerned. No single nation has ever agreed or dared to uphold such a far reaching, right in remote sectors because of the international perplexities and contro versies. To place the Suez Canal and the Gulf of Aqaba under United Nations jurisdiction, diplomatic experts believe, would raise the same danger and threat to the Panama Canal, it would undoubtedly precipitate Russian and Egyptian demands that the U.N. assume jurisdiction over our key waterway. Perpetual Lease of Panama Zone Anti-American elements in Central and South America have insisted for years that the United Stales release or modify its con trol over the Panama Canal .one, which we now administer under a perpetual lease. They did succeed in forcing us to abandon 1.11 air and other bases outside the Zone, although Pentagon experts regard them as necessary for defense of this vital area. Russia has frequently included Panama as one of our encircling "bases of aggression." As of today, no other nation appears will ing to join us in forcing Kgypt to open the Gulf of Aqaba by sending merchant vessels or warships through those narrow waters, in defiance of Egypt, Jordan and Saudi Arabia. Such an act might have as dangerous consequences as the Anglo-French-Israeli attack on Kgypt. Alger Hiss' Slate Department Actlnn The possible peril to the Panama Canal throws a new and more baleful light on Alger Hiss' performance while in the State Depart ment, as recently dscribed here. He gave the Russians and the anti-American bloc in the U.N. the pretext, plausible but invalid, for demanding its internationalization or placing it under U.N. supervision. When the Governor of the Panama ("anal Zone, an American official, made his annual report to the Stale Department in liMti. Hiss quietly foi-iV3f.-! it to the U N. under pro vision of the U.N. Charter which he helped to write. It provided that U.N. members holding trusteeships over "'occupied coun tries" must report annually on their adminis tration. Hiss sought to make the Zone a U.N. as well as a U.S. responsibility. Spruille Bladen's Protest Spruille Itraden, then Assistant Secretary for Latin-American affairs, did not learn of Hiss' action until he read of it in the news papers. He protested indignantly to Dean Achcson. Iticardo J. Alfato, then Panama Foreign Minister and chairman of its U.N, delegation, arose before the trusteeship committee to de clare that Panama retained full sovereignly over the Zone, and to demand correction of the Hiss viewpoint. The British voiced con cern lest the Hiss statement jeopardize its hold on Gibraltar, which Spain seeks to re cover. Scrap of Paper, to U.S. Panama authorities at State inform the writer that the Kisenhower Administration does not recognize the legality of the Hiss construction. It regards the document as "only a scrap of paper," especially in view of his subsequent trial and conviction. But In view of Moscow's deliberate and palpable misinterpretations of every Ameri can declaration and policy, the report and the Middle Fast crisis make a handy peg on which to hang future demands for interna tionalization of the Panama Zone and Canal U.S. intervention in Arabian wi'crs without a treaty might plunge the Canfl Into even deeper international controversy! Middle East Problem Still Plagues U. S. WASHINGTON un - How will the United Slates look in all this Israeli-Arab controversy? That question has been tem porarily obscured by the more sensational on-again-off-again ef forts of the State Department to get the Israelis to pull back out of territory claimed by Egypt: the Gaza Strip and Aqaba Gulf area. It will move up front and con- ler as events unfold. Friday, after 'A weeks of talks ' wilh Secretary of Slate Dulles, the Israelis an nounced to the United Nations they would pull hack, the slale- jamki .MAHi.owmenl was made by Mrs. Golda Meir Israeli for eign minister. Until then Israel had demanded of the United States or the U.N. guarantees that if it did withdraw Egypt would not be per mitted to use Gaza or the gulf area to resume raids against Is rael or blockade shipping. No Guarantees Given Nn public guarantees were giv en. But Mrs. Meir said Israel was basing lis willingness to withdraw on "assumptions" and in ''confi dence" that U.N. forces would move in when the Israelis moved out. Those words were ' bound to raise questions: Had the Israelis some secret promise, nr agree ment from Dulles that the United Stales somehow would be able to get the U.N. to put its troops in the vacated areas? The Arabs had opposed any promises or guarantees to Israel on the grounds that an aggressor Israel had attacked and seized the territory from Egypt last fall snouid not lie rewarded for ag gression. dm Long, Long Trail Awinding HAL BOYLE Things q Columnist Might Never Know But for Mail m4 NEW YORK Ifl - Things a columnist might never know if he didn't open his mail: That the odds are you are right-eyed as well as right-handed . . . the right eye dominates the vision of 60 per cent of us, the left eye is the boss for 25 f IJL-I Ll'lll. 1IIC remii ning 15 per cent have a m b i dextrous eyeballs and arc "switch 1 o o k-ers." That Hippo- hal bovle crates, the "father of medicine," treated eye ailments by prescrib ing a restricted diet , , . and hot foot baths! Inventor Is Unknown That spectacles were first intro duced in the year 1300, and their inventor is unknown. ...bifocals were invented by a Philadelphia printer and proverb maker called Ben Franklin. That il is no wonder a baby cries at the first sight of its father ...until iLs vision becomes coordin ated, the infant sees its old man upside down and wilh each eye separately . , . enough to frighten any child. That if you are head of a family of four and have an annual in come of $5,000. every time the Happy Fella," believes he is the first to age his looks with a liquid while shoe dressing. That Rep. Victor L. Anfuso (NY D) has introduced a bill in Con gress to allow parents a special tax cxempiton of up to $1,000 for expenses incurred in sending their children lo college. That at the University of Missouri, one out of every five . students is married. That when the nations of the world take up the question of ter ritorial rights on the moon, the United Slates will have a legal claim.. .in 1948 it became the tirst country on earth to establish ra dar conatct with the lunar satel lite, Pensioners Live Abroad That of the 171 pensioned for mer municipal employes of New York city who live abroad, lot. are in Ireland. That if the human race con tinued to increase at the present rate in 5,000 years the population would weigh as much as the earth itself. That chairs originally were used only by exalted persons such as kings and priests, and common nm and slaves sat on the floor or on stools and benches. ..at least a fourth of mankind still takes the load ott its feet by squatting, ralhcr than silling. That some anthropologists, who As Long As Nerd Be And Egyptian President Nasser had insisted weeks ago that U.N. Hoops could occupy Egyptian tor- THE OPE!S FORUM rut Ikn hnlir fan hn)r 1 Df)n ciaarlu U.S. cost ol living index goes up ; po'slu.a positions, believed pro a point-say from 118 lo 1 19 it nnc(,d ch ir-sit t ing is one of civ ilized-man's greatest physical er rors. That it was Benjamin Disraeli who observed, "If every man were straightforward in his op inions there would be no conversation." Independence Man Claims Court Erred in Report to Papers; Writer Hits Bank Law costs you $34 a year. Creamed Gray Hair That young actors have used everything from whipped cream lo theatrical makeup to make their hair look gray for elderly roles. ..but black-haired Richard Torigi, baritone co-star in the Broadway musical, "the Most from Lincoln County such prosti tutes and bawdy house madams who arc now figuring so promi nently in Portland vice investiga- To The Editor: Please permit me to correct the gross errors in your newspapers rl.ili.rl Fell '.' 11157 Hi'li-irln" to the item on Page (i Column 1, Sec- "ens Delore ine united siaies tion 1 entitled "Former Police Senate. I refer to Helen Hardy, Officer Settles $100,00 Suit". "e'en Smalley, James B. Elktns rilory only so long as it pleased Correction 1. W. J. Mulfcey is not and otners whose operations were him lo let them stay. a former police officer, he is pres- so adequately covered by the main So world intention centered on 1 ently Chief of Police of Newport, news Hems of the "Capital Jour- Henry Caliot Lodge, United States Correction 2. Ihc suit was for , n.u jesivruaj representative in the U.N. and $1100,00 instead ot $100,000. therefore a spokesman tor Dulles. I Correction 3. The case was not when he followed Mrs. Meir bo- settled out ot court. II was dis- forc the U.N. He said he didn't consider Is rael's wilhdrawl "conditional." He made a long speech so in volved that it could, possibly, seem like one thing lo the Arabs and another to the Israelis There was no enthusiastic re sponse from the Arabs In the, U.N. and the Isrnelis, judging from the extraordinary Cabinet meelin" Ihcy held over the weekend, were having second thoughts about withdrawing. Talked To Arnhj Dulles, anxious that the Arab nations in the Middle East would not think Ibis country had worked out a deal wilh the Israelis, called in the representatives of nine Arab countries and told them that Israel had extracted "nn prom- ises or concessions whatsoever" from the United Stales in return for agreeing to Ihc troop pulloitt. nut ine Arnns. alter the confer ence wilh Dulles, were reported in i.ei s wail and see mood. The Israelis npnarenllv weren't happy either. Last week, sh rllv before hi government said it would null1 hack. Israeli Prime Minister Dav id Iti'ii-Gurinn wrote to a friendlv .nndoii editor and told him his country's struggle "is not neainst an enemy hut against a friend the United Stales government." He said: "It is our earnest hope thai the wisdom and sense of air play of the American people will prevail over considerations ot mis taken political expediency." Vtnikrtl To tiring I'rnrr Dulles and President Eisenhow er had worked for ihc Israeli with drawal not only to bring peace to missed by the Plaintitt. The Plain tiff moved (or dismissal following the taking of the stand by the 1st Defense witness, whose open ing remarks indicated he would tell the truth. Correction 4. Let me quote to you the exact words of Circuit Judge Fred McIIcnry. "This case is dis missed without costs to cither side." Correction 5. The Defendants in this case led by Otto Cahill. were primarily responsible for ousting Yours truly, George Utlcy 129 Oak St., Independence Editors Note: The story refer red to was taken from Associated Press. The Lincoln county clerk, according to Associated Press, said Friday that the suit was dismissed because of an out of court settle ment. The clerk also said that the correct figure in the suit was $100,000. Newspapers and the As sociated Press must rely on the accuracy of public officials in re porting such law suits. DR. WILLIAM BRADY Removal of Tonsils Can't Be Called Mere Minor Operation The over-ready operators boast that when THF.Y operate they "get every bit of tonsil." The truth is that no matter w h o operates, portions of ton- I remain in the throat after most tonsillect omies. T o nlillet'lomy j ii! properly called a mnjor o p e r ation be cause it subjects 1 the patient to all the perils that attend serious operations shock, hemorrhage, cardiac ar rest" as the coronar explains sud den cessation of hcarlheatl, and anoxia. Resides these dangers of any operation under general an esthesia, tonsillectomy is attended i .tPJ fl nn. BRADY (he child can com? home in a day or two, etc. Kvery little while an aggressive operator who thinks i: i .!.:,. : f. u;J nA- iiii'uiifii vi i in. a (a in nit uhui jit -t , , . , , , suades some parents of limited-'1" -"' " ""'" This Law Will Not Bring Mother Home To the Editor: A letter to the two children in Beaverton who wrote Representa live Leon Davis. Dear Children It's not a law to close banks on Saturdays that will bring moth er home but a repeal of, some of the existing laws, and the non passage of others, now proposed. To begin with, a law to close banks on Saturdays, or a law to prevent a merchant from having a sale, to name two, would in fringe on our rights as citizens. Such laws passed in other coun tries, under the guise, that "tfiey are good for the people", resulted in what we now call "Iron Cur tain countries," We don't want that. Our Legislature, children, has passed laws, and is about to pass more, that lax and make people pay so much that mothers have to go to work to make the extra money in order that there be enough to buy the things you chil dren and the rest of the family really need. To do this she must partially neglect you, she doesn't want to, but must. It could be the 45 per cent sur tax on incomes, the lowered a mount of income tax exemption, the clative responsibility act, the added properly tax, and a lot more that forces mother to ne- LOST FREEDOM FIGHT NEW YORK (UP) - Actress Zsa Zsa Gabor had this comment on the wedding of her mother. Mrs. .lone Gabor, to Hungarian Count Edmond de Szigethy. "He was a freedom fighter, but when he came over here, he soon lost his freedom: Quick." intelligence to let him remove the family's tonsils en masse -?- and this is always worth a picture and a few humorous lines in the pa per. Every iittle while, too read ers send me clippings of stories of tragic happening!! in the course of or soon after attempts to "get every bit of tonsil tissue." If this operation were necessary. No children our legislators arc going right along spending money the state doesn't have, but will get by the increase on property, in come, gasoline, and other taxes, and by passing queer, if not silly laws so in the end mother will have to have two jobs, instead of one. and then you won't sec her at all. It doesn't really matter to them ic Middle East but to avoid a by additional ha7ards, such as in- that in my judgment Ihc attempt !oda' "d ,ne '"tl,re ' Oregon. tin showdown tight in the U.N. I halation of n bit of tonsil tissue The Arabs wore demanding j or hlood clot, which lodges in sanctions against Israel if it didn't .bronchial tithe or lung and perhaps pull hack. If the .Untied Slates !C.I1ISM atoloolasis (collapse of a iNuM-ti sum sanctions, it would 1 (1 never reler to such tragedies at you arcn t rPccivin(! he at. Here. Rut. although I am painfully 1 tention and care she could give aware that most of my i former) j'ou by staying home and devol- lcolleasi.es despise me for it. cs. : ing ncr lime io ner lamity, wnicn penally those who siring along sprndin! worc curtailed 'and'even with the A MA, 1 am bound by con- lowered, as it could be. Just a science and tear of God to say minor item, you our children of The Story Of n A Miracle in Plastic Is th Fitting of Contact Lenses Painful? Another question always follows this when we answer, "No, the fitting of contact lenses is not painful." That question is "But don t you have to make a mold ot the eye or something?" In former years a mold of the eye was necessary In the fitting of contact-lenses, but that is a imng ot ine past. There is no pain involved in the fitting of contact lenses, however, there is a short period of discom fort, but it is no greater than one experiences in (be filling of dental plates. The eye is insensi tive to gross pressure and it is this fact that allows a person to tolerate contact lenses. This fact is little known, but it proven in the fact that we can open, our eyes' under water while swim ming. For further information regard ing contact lenses telephone or consult: T. W. Sahlstrom, O.D. Roy B, dunes, 0. D. Optometrists Vision Specialists Pr'.tctice limited to eve examina tion and contact lens fitting. 701 I.iveslcy Building Phnne Salem Oregon EMpire 4-7001 Come see , 4, MW t Consult Our Copy Experts WITHOUT COST OR OBLIGATION You'll see jlep by step how your beloved fomily photo gtophs con be restored to their original charm... made into lasting copy portraits, miniatures, ond oil pointings. Once-A-Year Sale! M AIIC1I O.XLY 10tq40 Off copies restoration work oil paintings miniatures Photograph Studio $ond Floor nntMT friends of Israel in thts portion of Iuhr1. and pneumonia emmtry mid amonu Antericnn al-ior- Wl'pks "T, linK access, lies Hbro.id like Kranec and Brit -1 Not Minor Operation The perpetrators of the atrocity strive constantly to sustain the If it didn't back sanctions, it would anccr Ihc Arabs, whom to remove the tonsils in their en tirety is rarely justilinble. Give Die Kid a Break just concentrate on more money and more spending. You both know of that famous speech President Lincoln made at Trior to the conversion of prac-! (iettysburg. and in which he said lice (nm. a profession to a husi-! "lh;it government of the f . , i people, bv the people, and for the ness by loo mahy trick specialists . peopl( shaU not perjsn (rom this 'with due a polonies to the thought-! earth". Well children that has ful maioriiy of dedicated seicn- been changed, it has been revised lists! the minor operation called to: "This government of the legis- Kisonhowcr is Irvine lo win over i popular belief that removal of the tonsillotomy instant a n e o u s 1 y lalovs. by the legislators, and for with his Middle Kast program. I tonsils is a minor operation, that , clipping or slicing off the the ob- the bureaucrats, shall not perish strutting portion ot lonsi.i was the me prnptc. HO VI Ml "ELL History in The Mnhins Mar. 4. l!44 Cuy Cordon, M, Roseburg at torney, had been named by tJov. Karl SncH to succeed the late Sen. Ch a r 1 c s Me Nary. A few minutes later Former llov criior Charles A. S p r a g ti e had said there was a strong proba b I 1 i tv that he would enter the race ( o r Cordon's seat. standard, comparatively sale and cenerally effective method of dealinc with enlarged or hyper-1 Irophied tonsils. After all. there's nothing malic-, nant or harmful in ton-.il tissue.' Franklin IV Ilnnsevelt bad this. On the contrary, there is reason day started his 1Mb year as proi-ito believe such tissue 'called dent by altcndmc divine services. round-cell, adenoid, or lymphoid Prayers were voiced th.it nations ; tissue1 in the tonsils, the pharyn nl the world would soon be guided geal tonsil or adenoid body, in into the way of justice, truth and lymph nodes in the spleen' and peace. in-many parts of the body, may be ; functionally concerned in protect- Tom Bowman, member of Sa- ing against infection. Anyway, if .em's street cleaning crew, had vou are a parent, grandparent, tinned 'over M Ml in pennies .uncle, aunt, or guardian of a child gleaned Horn the streets lo the Red who has enlarged tonsils. I beg you Cross. Kecenjty he had purchased to give the child a break. , a .ir bond ,, small cotn ob-. ' l.iniod in Ihf s.tmf manner. j This time ol the yrar it is well .1 K. Kvan.. state hospital su- to runrmher that in most school prrintrndrnt. hail received board children the tonsils are larser ot control approval lor A federal than they are in the summer time. Mayor I. M. Poushlon. Hoi-order j nurse program at the institution , H some ine.vperirnced doctor takes Alfred Mundt and Water ("ommi-1 uhich would train eicht cadet look at a child's throat and ev stoner W illiam L. Phillips h.id nurses lor six months at a cost ol ' claims. "Oh. my. those tonsils are filed their declarations as candi- n.txo to the state. (enormous, hypertrophied. or very dales to succeed themselves in i had they'll have to come nut rtsht I this year's elections. i "l k' pn fT" ! away, plr.ise don't let the mod- I tr' M e raeMlV . the teal mrrrh.1nt rush yen. Wot a Klorist "Frosty" Olson had esli- j picluig it t clia paper ot the reasonable hile-say five or i I mated that the floral tributes (or,,thret ttr of an M year months Very liVely the tonsils Senator McSary s (uncral num-old mat .-toil n ftt County Jour- will shrink to about normal r Ibcrcd over 1.0O0. jnaL j when the child jets outdoors aain. G Cecil V.. Klelcher. m Hilltop drive. Salem. Oreson. am m.S MAXVO'l.l. NEW dvg)lepmnfi in inturafita tovr9i makt it wilt te tentult in tspir nc(t firm tiVi iht HUGGINS IN SURANCE AGENCT, 373 N. CHtmtv ifftt Tby go tot iniurtnt prob lmi lid i t kid 6M far ICE CREAM and thty ai ttwough m Iktit work that tk-ar WON'T ba any doubt in vewr mind about rur protfClion. You wit I find bt tar in tut tnit aatnc ioi whan tha North Polt itam M MET I totvttir.Mur- t 1