Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, April 06, 1957, Page 4, Image 4

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    Capital AJournal
AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER ESTABLISHED IN III!
Bernard Mainwaring (1897-1957) Editor and Publisher 1953-1957
E. A. Brown, Publisher Glenn Cushman, Managing Editor
George Putnam.Editor Emeritus
Published every evening (except Sunday by the Capital Journal Co., Ml. Jennie 1. Mainwaring
pull Leased Wire Service of The Aitociated Preti end The United Preti. The Associated Preu li exclusively entitled
to the uie for publication of all newl ditpatchei credited to II or otherwiie credited In this paper end alio newt
published therein.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES '
ty Carrier! Monthly, $I.M Six Months, $7.10; One Year, $15.00. By Mail In Oregon! Monthly, SI. 00; Six Mentha,
$5.00; One rear $9.00. By Mall Outride Oragom Monthly, $1.25; Six Months, $7.50 One Year, $15.00
'World's Powder Keg
The New York Times of April 2 includes
l special six-page seclirtn containing the re
mits of a just completed survey of the coun
ties of Hie Middle East made by a score of
its correspondents with background articles
by its staff. This region because of its vital
oil supplies, containing two thirds of the
world's oil reserves and the conflicts raging
. over Soviet penetration and Arab nationalist
resurgence and the bitter Arab-Israeli con
flict is the number one threat to world peace
with its explosive mixtures and xenophobia.
The Middle East, vast and complex, a stra
tegic crossroads linking three continents,
backward in civilization and unstable in gov
ernments, is keeping the world jittery as its
dictators rise and fall. The era of stability
under British and French colonialism is be
ing replaced by a near anarchy under the
rule of dictators like Nasser in Egypt with his
canal seizure and super power complex.
The Times' articles show all this and much
more to those who have not studied recent
developments, but they offer no solution.
Both the United Stales and Britain are try
ing .their best to curb the Communist pene
tration in an unstable situation mace to order
for Russian aggression, which moans enslave
ment for the Arabs, which many of the Arabs
realize and oppose.
The effprts of both the United States and
Britain and, the United Nations is to bar
Soviet Russia encroachment without war,
with long term approach to the problem. Co
operation of both Egypt and Israeli is sought
and the establishment of a Suez Canal policy
that will insure freedom of passage for all
countries is a prime objective.
At the same time, by proclaiming the Eis
enhower doctrine of military and economic
defense of the Middle . East, the United
States is seeking to give a new dimension to
its long-term approach to the problems of
the area. .
At the Bermuda conference President Eis
enhower and Prime Minister Macmillan
agreed on the rejection of, any Suez settle
ment that docs not conform "fully" with the
six principles approved by the United Nations
Security Council, for "full and just" accord
of the interests of the users of the Suez
Canal. They include "insulation" of the canal
from the politics of any nation.
The scries of Near East crises Is ncaring a
showdown, with peace in the balance. G. P.
Here's a challenge to some efficiency ex
pert. A schedule could be set up so the
young wives would stagger their babies, and
not have a whole slew coming on at the same
time. In an industry employing lots of
girls they could be divided into groups. One
group could have babies in January, another
in February, and so on right through the
year.
More trained girlpower obviously means
more and bigger business colleges. Stag
gered babies would give employment to lots
of nurses in the homes. Or it would stan
dardize baby-sitting, and pretty soon the baby
sitters could organize a union. This would
be no financial hardship on the young work
ing parents, for in this age of sick leave, paid
vacations, and unemployment compensation
it wouldn't be right to penalize the girls by
a dock in pay for time off to have babies.
It looks like a happy solution all around.
Hoiv Senators Slash Budget
The sincerity of United Slates senators,
elected on promises of economy and clamor
ous; for cuts in the President's $72 billion
budget, was given a test last week when the
Senate got its first chance to cut the budget
by flunking completely on the sacred federal
spending outlet the perennial "pork barrel"
rivers and harbors bill.
The bill contained over 100 public work
projects, including at least one for every stato
in the Union, except Rhode Island and Ne
vada. The bill was. vetoed last year by the
President because of the many projects in
cluded that had not been approved by re
quired federal agencies. The weekly maga
zine Time gives an interesting account of how
congressional history repeats itself on econ
omy proposals which must always be at the
expense of the other fellow. Time says
under the caption, "The Cut that Fattens":
As he has (or eight long years, Illinois' Paul
Douglas rose tn takr a cut at the hill. Ho proposed
an amendment authorizing Iho President tn pos!-
Eone the "least esscntinl" one-fourth ol the pork
arrel protects. "Kvery time 1 rise tn criticize Itio
rivers and harbors hill, n perfect swnrm of hor
nets descends upon me, and the questions hu.z."
Quicker than a hornet could buzz. Douglas' fel
low liberal Democrats, including Minnesota's Hu
bert Humphrey and Oregon's Itichnrd Nouticrqcr,
deserted him. . "Let me be blunt about lite matter,
and' say that 1 am ttol sure which qunrler the
President would postpone," Humphrey said plain
tively. He rend off a list of Minnesnln projects,
then added: "They arc a part of a quarter tlinl
1 do not wan! the President In touch." With equal
candor, Newberger admitted: "On this hill I hap
pen to be 'stuck' . . . Cod Almighty put a great
deal of water in Oregon"!
Ohio Democrat Frank I.ausche rose to hack
Douglas, but betorc day's end I.ausche, too, crum
bled. The pork barrel bill on rivers and harbors
when the senate bocan debate called for ex
penditures of $1,522,000,000. "After nine
hours of baloney and banter" the bill as
passed called for $1,541,000,000 a hike of $10,.
000,000 a typical instance of Senate econ
omy, for which of course all these senators
will blame Ike. Thai's the way the Senate
balances the budget. G. P.
More Girlpou cr Needed
An old nursery rhyme comes tn mind.
"What are little girls good for?" or something
like that.
The question lias never been answered
until now. What they are good for is to grow
up and go to work, according to an article
in Time.
Industrial employment used to he spoken
of in terms of manpower. Now it is girl
power. More girlpower needed is the cry
from the industrialists and the big business
centers. Mainly they want the girls for secre
taries, file clerks and various office jobs. The
shortage runs high into the thousands.
Several causes for tho scarcity arc men
tioned. One is that during depression years,
for economic reasons, not enough baby girls
were born, who would now be just the right
age to fill secretaryships. No doubt the same
drop occurred in the birth rate of boys, but
they aren't Important enough anymore to
mention. It Is the age of girlpower.
There Is another reason. Tho girls are
said to be getting married earlier than for
merly, at an average age of about 20, and,
Inevitably, they have to get time off to have
babies, which disrupts industry.
Why the Secrecy?
What, actually, are flying saucers?
A look through the encyclopedias, or the
dictionary, or the World Almanac for infor:
nation about them is in vain. Government
reports about flying saucers, and it is said
such reports exist, arc padlocked. Why?
The books and tho bureaucrats yield up
plenty of information about the flying mouse,
the flying squirrel, the flying squid, and vari
ous other tilings that fly as well as swim,
crawl or creep. But not a word about the
flying saucer. All that is known about it is
what is printed in the newspapers, so shroud
ed in mystery that no one knows whether it
is a hoax, an illusion, a mote lodged in the
observer's eyebrows, or a fearful weapon
from Mars or Moscow. ' ,
There is a branch of study known as psy
chical research, dealing with phenomena that
include purported messages from the spirit
realm. It is given the dignity of scientific
inquiry. Books have been written about it
pro and con. Why isn't information made
available about a matter of more direct con
cern, namely flying saucers? If some foreign
or interplanetary vehicle is cruising the strat
osphere, whose objective is cither good will
or conquest, folks ought to know about it so
they can get set for the day when it may de
cide to land.
For some time now the subject has been
dormant. But it is revived by Donald E.
Kcyhoc, a retired Marine Corps major, who
is director of the National Investigations Com
mittee of Aerial Phenomena. Ho accuses the
United Stales Air Force of hushing up all the
information that has been gathered about
flying saucers. United States Senator Richard
Russell of Georgia is among those claiming
to have seen flying saucers. He isn't talking.
Major Kcyhoc says the senator has been
gagged.
As for the saucers, (his publication, which
is always happy to give its readers any worthy
information, is skeptical very. But it's well
to be open minded. And Major Kcyhoc is
right in his demand. .
1 1UU
RAY TUCKER
Moisc Still Silent
On Teamster Boss
WASHINGTON "Is Prcsidcnl Fenliowcr
becoming thin-skinned and irritate?" asks
Mrs. II. J., of Tulsa, Okla. "I refer, of course
lo his refusal to invito Senator McCarthy to
an official reception at the While House, and
to his angry answer lo the reporter who asked
if he was going to use heli-
copters to fly to bis golf
course."
Answer: Every President I
have known personally or
journalistically Taft, Wilson,
Harding. Cnnlidgc, Hoover,
Roosevelt, Truman, Eisen
howerhas been exlremelv
sensitive on certain subjects.
The only possible exception
was Coolidgc, who permitted ray tuckkh
nothing to interfere with his sleep or his
digestion.
How About Morse?
"Has Senator Wayne Morse shown any in
terest in the current investigation of Dave
Beck's operations in his state of Oregon?"
inquires C. U. B of Williamspnrt, Pa. "I un
derstand that Morse was the recipient of the
Teamster Union's political and financial sup
port when he was re elecicd last year."
Answer: Senator Morse, the great liberal
and protector of the workingman. has not
peeped on the question of Heck's alleged
"theft" of union members' money, his mis
management of his union and his defiance
of the United Stales Senate.
Heck Was Strong; for Morse
As C.R.B. notes. Beck went down (he line
for Morse. The teamsters spent thousands
of dollars on Morse literature, they rang
doorbells for him, and they insisted on union
members supporting him. Without their sup
port, Morse might have been defeated.
Morse has no defense because of the fact
that he is not a member of the Meridian
Committee. For no man in House or Senate
bulls into so many legislative and national
and foreign problems as Morse. The Congres
sional Record is cluttered every day, and at
a cost of $80 a page, with his interjections
and interpolations on every subject from the
police department of Washington to the grass
grown in the Gobi Desert.
But on Beck and alleged labor corruption
in his own state, the great liberal and re
former is as silent as the Teamster Union's
boss.
JAMES MARLOW
Dulles Can
Change Tune
Overnight
WASHINGTON IjB - The best
way for a newsman to be sure he
knows what Secretary of State
Dulles means to say is to get it
in writing.
Dulles stenographers take down
every word he says at a news
conference, type it, and give him
a copy. He then edits and changes
his words to suit himself.
Thus n e w s
mcn who heard
him say one
Ihing sometimes
read, in the
'A transcript of his
remarks, that he
said something
else. This hap
pened again at
vesterday's con
ference. He told news-
ja.mki MAiu.owmcn Dag Ham-
marskjoid, United Nations secre
tary general, had made substantial
progress in his talks with Egyptian
President Nasser.
Changes Wording
For some reason Dulles had sec
ond thoughts and decided to soft
pedal the progress angle. In the
transcript he changed substantial
progress to "some progress."
litis practice brought him into
stiff argument with newsmen last
fall when, at his Oct. 2, 1036, news
conference, he was asked about
a reported split between the Unit
ed States and its British and
French allies.
He said "there is some differ
ence." This language put the dif
ference in the present tense, giv
ing it the appearance of something
sliii going on.
But ho edited to put the differ
ence in the past tense by knock
ing out the verb "is" and saying
there has - been some differ
ence.
Fundamental Difference
He also spoke of some differ
ences on "fundamental things"
but in the transcript changed this
to have him saying "our approach
is hot always identical."
At his next conference, Oct. 16,
newsmen objected to this editing
job, asked him to let the trans
cript quote him on the language
he had actually used.
He said: No ... I must re
serve the right in case I make a
blunder inadvertently which docs
damage to international relations
to correct those blunders. , . "
Correct Keforc Publishing
Reporters who get exclusive in
terviews with Dulles such as
two reporters from Time and Life
magazines have had in the past
lit months might have less wor
ry nbout corrections later if they
had Dulles read and correct their
copy before they publish it.
n January ltou, Life magazine
carried a piece on Dulles by
i ime s Washington bureau chief,
James Shcplcy. It was based on
a personal , interview with Dulles
and caused a storm in the capital.
Shcntev ouoted Dulles as sav
ing, "The ability to gct to the
verge of war without getting into
the war is the necessary art.' This
statement, now famous, became
known among Dulles' critics as
the "art of brinkmanship."
Did Dulles really say what
Shoplcy said he did? Dulles was
asked at a news conference. He
didn't deny it, exactly. He said
the quotation was "substantially"
accurate but I would never my-
scll have expressed myself in
quite that way for publication."
Hadn't Reviewed Article
Dulles also explained he had not
reviewed this highly laudatory ar
ticle by bheplcy.
Now another Time man lis
diplomatic reporter, John Robin
son I, lack) Heal has written a
whole biography on Dulles, also
highly lnudnlory.
Although the hook was not pub
lished until today, other reporlers
got advance copies ol it and at
yesterday's new conference asked
Dulles about two Heal statements
which raised eyebrows' in Wash
ington, particularly in Congress.
Ileal, who had personal inter
views with Dulles, said the secre
tary's withdrawal last year of aid
for Nasser's Aswan dam was
intended to expose Russia which
had talked of aid to Egypt and
was now trco to make good as
a phony.
Stntcsnicnts Thrown Out
Beal also said President Eisen
hower had sent Nationalist China's
President Chiang Kai-shek a "se
cret, personal letter . . . satisfy
ing him that the United States
would help defend" the islands of
(Juemoy and Mntsu off tho Hod
I bina coast.
Dulles threw down both state
ments. He said his withdrawal of
aid for Egypt was not an attempt
to force a Middle Fast showdown
wilb Russia, and he said this
country had made no flat commit
ments to defend Qucnioy and
Mntsu.
Charity Begins Where?
DR. WILLIAM BRADY
ji,::
w
HEAR Vtou
DON'T
TOO HMtt WHEN
OUR. FOREIGN
FRIEND HAVE
TROUBLE PAVING-,
1
u.j. ivs-s i tvr y rrr i v
fe, was just VWilm
i- V
DAVID LAWRENCE
Boost for Economy: Senate Has Okayed Bill
Setting Up Congressional Budget Group
Someone Must Draw Line in
How Not to Catch the Cri
DR. BRADY
WASHINGTON By a virtually
unanimous vote, the senate has
just passed a bill which, if tho
House of representatives approves,
may do more to harmonize the
views of the executive and legis
lative branches f
of the govern
ment ,in th ei
making of the
federal budcet
than anything gS, JjC 'i
wnicn nas Dccn ' .
ciirtnnctnrl h n . T
fore.
For the bill
would create a
joint committee
of 14 members
seven from Lawrence
each house who would have an
adequate staff to study and eval
uate all the items in the budget.
It would save the time of every
body involved, because it would
IS
m
mean one set of hearings. It
would furnish the viewpoint of all
groups, including those which
want to see economy practiced.
The same kind of bill has passed
the senate on different occasions
in recent years only to be defeated
in the House of Representatives,
many of whose members tradition
ally feel that, since all the money
bills must originate in the House,
they must be given attention ex
clusively by its committees.
Cites Reasons for Bill
Senator John L. McClellan of
Arkansas, who is chairman of the
Senate committee on government
operations, has sponsored the new
bill. In his report he gives many
persuasive reasons for. the adop
tion of the measure. He particu
larly takes cognizance of the ac
tion of the House on March 12
last in adopting a resolution re-
REV. GEORGE SWIFT
After Crucifixion, Cross
Became a Symbol of Faith
Tomorrow, according lo the"
Christian calendar, is called Pas
sion Sunday, from the Latin word
meaning "to suffer." So tomorrow
wo will see pictured in our minds,
Calvary, a hill with three crosses
on it.
On these crosses, for three hours
hang three men. One of them was
the thief who is supposed to have
died impenitent. One was the thief
named Dismas who was received
that same day into Paradise. The
third is, of course, Our Lord Him
self. Symbol of Faith
To the primitive Christian wnrld
the Crucifixtion was considered to
bo so tremendously important that
the cross almost at once became
the symbol of tile Christian faith.
It was the sign by which nnc Chris
tian knew another. When church
buildings were built, the cross tow
ered high above them. The cross
adorned every Altar. It marked
the Christian grave. It later adorn
ed the covers of our Prayer Books
and Bibles.
Christians still use the sign of
the cross in various places in their
services of worship; on entering
our churches; before receiving
Communion; we make the sign of
the cross on the foreheads of all
persons who receive Baptism.
Cross, Church Bound
Crosses mark conveyances of
mercy, hospital ships and umbu-
lanccs. ,ao the cross, and our
church, our worship, and our faith
are all somehow inseparably bound
together.
It is interesting to note that while
the great Socrates died a much
publicized death, his followers did
not make a symbol of the instru
ment of his death, a cup of hem
lock. For from the cup of hemlock
came forth only death. From the
cross of Christ came forth the Re
surrection. We do not worship Christ, how
ever, because He died on a cross,
but we reverence the cross be
cause Christ died on it. We re
member the Crucifixtion because
the One crucified rose from the
dead, and because He said, "Be
cause 1 live, ye shall live also."
BEiV MAXWELL
History in the Making
Amendment Due
Kllgrnr Keglsler.Guard
We raised our editorial voice in
protest when Rep. Herman Chind
gren of Clackamas County intro
duced a bill lo "control" rifle
ranges by effectively eliminating
them. .Many other voices joined
our chorus.
Now, we read, Mr. Chindgren
is taking a second look at this
bill. He says he will "draslically
amend" it. That's fine. We think
such a hill, properly worded, could
contribute tn the common safety.
The amendments, however, should
work tn set up a bill which will
have its emphasis on positive safe
ty and the encouragement of safe
shooting practices. A negatively
worded bill will result simply in
even more unregulated "plinking"
in areas where such practices are
dangerous.
April 6, 1930
A new milk ordinance for Sa
lem's city charter had been drafted
by J. E. Rlinkhorn, city milk in
spector and Wil
liam Trinrile,
city attorney;
adding C and D
grades of r a w
milk and B and
C grades of pas
teurized milk.
Mrs. T. M.
Hunt of Inde
pendence had
discovered i n
household b e- ben maxwell
longings a jar of choke cherries
canned by her grandmother 100
years ago. They were well pre
served and of bright color. (Not
likely canned in lfUO. The process
of hermetically sealing cooked food
for future usage w-as discovered
about 1800 by Nicholas Appert. a
Frenchman who sought improved
provisioning for the navy. Glass
containers were first used. A patent
was obtained in 1825' for the tin
case. Home canning did not attain
wide popularity until well alter the
Civil War.
Ruth Howe. Salem high school
senior, had hceo awarded the prize
winning cup for best individual act
ing shown in the state high school
drama tournament held at Eugene.
Salem's Chamber of Commerce
was preparing for the coming tour
ist season with a first run of 6000
new state highway maps pointing
out Salem with a big, red arrow.
Don Upjohn Capital Journal's
Sips for Supper, had written that
many local motorists misconstrue
the meaning of the while lines
marked on the city's streets. In
stead of regarding the lines as
something tn run their car be
tween they figure their car should
be parked so that the white line
comes directly under it.
A first known shipment of flow
ers from Salem by airplane had
been sent by D. W. Eyre, presi
dent of the United States National
Rank: to his aunt in Illinois. The
flowers were daffodils from the
garden of Mrs. Nell Pearmine. The
shipment weighed a little over
three pounds and the transporta
tion charge was M.95.
GETS INSIDE KNOWLEDGE
OKLAHOMA CITY HV-J. Wiley
Richardson accepted co-chairman
ship of the special gift division of
the St. Anthony Hospital expansion
fund, and he got some first hand
: facts.
I Richardson broke a knee and
' had In be hospitalized for a long
! period in traction. He had a spo-
cial phone installed and used his
1 time, soliciting over the phone.
questing the President to indicate
the places and the amounts in his
budget where he thinks substan
tial reductions may best be made.
This, he says, is a c ear indica
tion that the congress does not
have adequate information upon
which to act in carrying out its
constitutional responsibilities for
maintaining adequate controls
over government expenditures."
Ground Swell for Economy
Mr. McClellan reminded the
Senate that members of congress
"have learned from contacts with
the people back home that there
is a tremendous ground swell 'of
public sentiment for economy in
government, and demands for ac
tion in eliminating unnecessary
expenditures in the operations of
the government."
But, under tne existing pro
cedures, with different appropria
tion committees and small staffs,
it is not possible to do more than
listen to witnesses from the ex
ecutive branch who are morally
bound to support the budget as
submitted. Members of congress
have to depend on what they can
pick up from the outside as to what
items might really be cut.
For Sake of Economy
Taking a leaf out of the splen
did record of the joint committee
of internal revenue taxation, Mr.
McClellan and the 71 co-sponsors
of the new bill believe a great
service can be rendered by the
joint committee type of operation
in ine Held of governmental econ
omy. Just now, of course, with the
congress in control 'of the Demo
crats and the executive branch
in control of the Republicans.
mere is a natural antagonism
belween the two branches. But
the division of the government
on this basis is not usual and the
reform will be as useful, if not
more so. when both congress and
the presidency arc in the hands
of the same party.
Special Fields to Cover
The new committee would, to be
sure, be made up always of
seven members of the Senate Ap
propriations Committee, which
now numbers 23, and seven from
the House Committee on Appropri
ations, which now numbers 50
members. But in such a large
membership of the appropriations
committees today, there are vari
ous subcommittees appointed and
it is virtually impossible for the
entire committee to know as much
about the items as the other sub
committees which have special
fields to cover. '
The theory back of the joint
committee idea is that a large
staff of experts, who serve con
tinuously from one session through
the next and so on. will build up
a knowledge of the budget opera
tions that will be invaluable tn
congress.
Detailed Analysis Impossible
Detailed analysis of the budget
by congressional committees is
not possible under the present
system, and only a superficial ex
amination is given to what is rec
ommended by the executive. Con
versely, the budget bureau has to
accent programs created out of
previous legislation by congress
and has no means of passing judg
ment on whether existing laws
should be repealed. The budget
bureau in those instances merelv
estimates the cost of operation
and assumes a continuance of the
laws. A joint committee could
look constantly Into the question
of whether the laws that require
appropriations from year to year
m'"h! be modified, if not repealed.
The move lust made hv the
Senate is in the direction nf efft-
i ciency and could be the hais nf
! some real economizing. Will the
House pass the new hill or insist
Ion the same haphazard wavs that
jhave prevailed in the past' The
j American peonle will he deenly
i interested in what happens to this
i bill in the house of representatives.
Somewhere, one must draw the
line between reasonable precau
tions against catching the cri
(common respir-u n-mm
atory infection )ir :v'
or reckless ex
posure to what- iSP' i
ever uie i iiiaj jy
prove to oe.
It would be
Utopian to ex
pect every one jjs
with the cri to
wear a suitable
mask (such as .
that described in
a previous piece) whenever within
spray range of other persons. If
some such precaution were cus
tomary for every alleged "cold,"
the cractice would prevent an in
calculable amount ol uiness, ior
the respiratory infections make
most ol the everyday worn ol aoc
tors.
Some Simple Good Sense
On the other hand it is simply
good sense to dodge or evade in
fection when one can do so with
out offending anybody or being con
sidered eccentric.
By "unnecessary or reckless ex
posure to whatever the cri may
prove to be" I mean, not just
ignorance or carelessness about
cough or sneeze spray, but more
particularly disregard of polite
conversation spray.
From the advice medical and
health authorities give the public
about this, one might infer that
safety lies in avoiding the uncov
ered or unmasked cough or sneeze.
Rendering A Disservice
This is not true, as physicians
and health authorities should know
by now. Doctors and nurses wear
masks in the operating room to
guard against conversation spray
infection. When physicians and
health authorities caution people
about uncovered coughswand
sneezes," yet adhere to the tradi
tional policy of "dignified silence"
regarding conversation spray, they
are rendering a disservice.
The effective range of conversa
tion spray is not over five feet.
In quiet conversation, it is only
two or three feet. Remember, it is
not just the visible or palpable
mnictnrp rlronlets in conversation
spray that may contain the germ
r a Facniralnru infxMmn
but the invisibly and impalpably
fine droplets as well.
Via Conversation Spray
Anyway I say the usual way such
respiratory infections as measles,
scanei level, Liin-ivt-iipuA, shihu.
pox, diphtheria, epidemic meningi
tis, infantile paralysis, mumps,
wnuopiog tuufsii. oiil jwic uiiudi,
tonsilitis, laryngitis, hrnnchitis
nnnlimnnia COrVZO influenza Of
tuberculosis spreads is via convcr.
sation spray, inis is wnai i oe
licve. And I conduct myself ac-
nnrrlimrlv ovtn at risk nf nffanrl.
in; the ignoramus who doesn't
know wnai auruism means.
GOOD HURT TOO
Honorable union men will be
hurt by the senate investigations
about racketeering. They should
have thought of that before.
Sherman County Journal
REAL ANGLER
NORTH BAY, Ont. WV-It's not
everybody who can catch a fish as
long as himself. Tommy Haight, 5,
pulled a 33-inch lake trout from
Trout Lake near here, hauling tht
13-pound catch through an ice hole.
LARGER BANANAS
We note that banana producers
hope to make the fruit larger in
order to get more business. Have
they considered growing smaller
ones? Sherman County Journal
J CHRISTIAN 1
I SCIENCE J
HEALS
KSLM KL0R
10:15 A.M. Channel 12
Sunday 4:30 P.M.
Willamette University
1957-1958
Distinguished Artist Series
PRESENTS
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PHONE EM 4-7337
Hail: iiHJ J, k
"iiiini'-mii
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2 locations to get prescriptions
405 State St.
617 Chemektrta
We Give ) Green Stamps
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