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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 27, 1955)
FOUR MEDFORD (OREGON) MEDFORIV&!&TKIBUTfl "Everybody in Southern Oregon Heads The Mail Tribune Published Daily Except Saturday by MJOJFORD PRINTING CO 27-29 North Fa St Phone 2-6141 ROBERT W RUHU Editor KERB GREY Advertising Manager E C FERGUSON Managing Editor ERIC ALLEN JR.. City Editor HARRY CHIPMAN. Telegraph Editor RICHARD JEWETT Sports Editor OLIVE STARCHER Society Editor JACK JACKSON Sunday Editor GERALD LATHAM. Circulation Mgr An Independent Newspaper Entered as second class matter at Medford Oregon under Act ox March 3. 13a i SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mail In Advance: Per copy 10c. Daily and Sunday One vea." S12.00 Dailv and Sundav Six months 6.50 Daily and Sundav Three mot 2-50 Sundav Only One vear $3.50 Ey Carrier In Advance Medford. Ashland Central Point. Eaele Point. Jacksonville Gold Hill Phoenix. Shady Cove Rogue River, Talent and on motor routes: ' Daily and Sunday One year 115 .00 Dailv and Sunday One month 1.25 Carrier and Dealers 5c per copy All Terms Cash in Advance Offirtal Paper of the City of Medford Official Paper of Jackson County United Prtss Full Leased Wire MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU Of ClKCULAIiW WESToHOLLIDAY COMPANY INC Offices in New York Chicago De troit San Francisco Los Angeles Seattle. Portland. St Lovri Atlanta. Vancouver B.C. NATIONAL EDITORIAL V ASSOCIATION J vJ NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION Flight o' Time Medford and Jackson County History from the files of The Mail Tribune 10, 20. 30 and 10 years ago. 10 YEARS AGO Oct 27. 1945 (It was Saturday) O. H. Bengtson, state repre sentative, speaks at Junior Chamber of Commerce conven tion here. From Arthur Perry's Ye Smude Pot column: The auto driving around here is getting scandalous and reckless. The Oregon law permits the motor ists to establish their own speed limit and most of it is. 20 YEARS AGO Oct. 27, 1935 (It was Sunday) Medford Junior high students prepare for annual carnival. Jacksonville Grange ladies an nounce plans for annual turkey dinner Saturday. 30 YEARS AGO Bronze chime clock installed in Jackson county bank build ing. Ashland Ministers announce revival in Ashland by Billy Sun day to start in May. 40 YEARS AGO Oct. 27. 1915 (It was Wednesday) Price of meats' in Mail Trib une ad: round steak, 16 cents pound; sirloin steak, 17 cents pound; and T-bone steak, 20 cents pound. From Local and Personal col umn: H. Nordwick, the local flour mill man, left for San Fran cisco this morning to enjoy the sights of the big fair. What's the Answer? q Can You Get 4 of iha 7? Copr. 1955, Editorial Research Raprf 1. More Americans are watch ing TV on a typical evening than are playing cards, or more are playing cards, or is it 50-50? 2. Spanish Morocco is north, east, south, or west of French Morocco? 3. ohn Roosevelt differs po litically from his father, the late F.D.R. Is Margaret Truman also of different political faith than her father? 4. The first feature talking movie, The Jazz Singer, was shown 6, 12, 18 or 28 years ago? 5. The state which registered most new cars last year was Cal ifornia, Michigan, New York or Texas? 6. Which outstanding baseball player of long ago was called the Flying Dutchman? 7. Which President was the latest to marry a widow? The Answers: 1. More are watching TV. 2. North. 3. No. 4. 28. 5. New York. 6. Hans Wag ner. 7. Woodrow Wilson. Winchell's Daughter, Husband Reconciled Hollywood 0J.R) Wanda Winchel daughter of newspap er columnist Walter Winchell, has reconciled with husband Hyatt Robert Von Dehn, after a brief separation. The couple, married last July 30, left yesterday for a month's visit in Mexico. Von Dehn is the former husband of singer Ginny Simms. FAMILY AFFAIR Westbrook, Me. (U.R) When Steve Swain went away on va cation, his 100-customer news paper route was covered each dav by his mother, assisted by suiter Susan, 7,. and brother, Rsndy, 5. . . - MAIL TRIBUNE I Editorial Correspondence I ' ij San Francisco, Oct. 25 There have been three strange explosions here since our arrival and now a large sized earth quake. All have been featured by front-page banners in the local papers, and the quake by picture layouts with damage estimated at a million dollars. (What is a million dollars these days?.) Well at any rate your correspondent heard none of the front page explosions and never was able to find anyone else in the hotel who had, including the omniscient bell-captain. The quake was different. Everyone in the hotel and pre sumably outside awake at 8 p.m. on Sunday experienced that temblor and some were terrified by it not so much over what had happened as what they feared, with the earthquake and fire of 1906 in mind, might happen. However.the danger has passed now and all is serene. In fact your correspondent some years ago spent the night in the lobby of the Barbara .Worth hotel in El Centro, Calif., with several hundred other guests some of them in their pajamas because of an earthquake shock that was at least five times as long and severe as this one of 49 hours ago. We doubt if the San Francisco papers paid much attention to it, for the most damage was across the Mexican line but it was not a pleasant experience, far more alarming than the Sunday night affair. ' .- The reaction to earthquakes on the part of the California native sons and the visiting firemen are very different. The visitors are as a whole thrilled by the experience and unless they have been crowned by a falling brick wouldn't have missed it for the world. The San Franciscans are not thrilled, don't like to talk about it, and when comment can't be avoided, play the inci dent down, as of no consequence, usually ending their remarks with an observation that they greatly prefer these mild quakes to the hurricanes, tornadoes and cyclones that visit the eastern part of the USA once or twice a week! Thus local pride triumphs here as it does in most communities especially west of the Rockies. As a matter of fact, while practically all the quake experts agree there will eventually be another "Big Shake" in San Fran cisco as severe as that of half a century ago, there is almost equal agreement that the extent and destruction of the quake will be far less. A great deal of fun has been made of San Francisco for terming that 1906 quake a "fire," but it is un doubtedly true that the main destruction was caused by the fire, and had the water supply not been destroyed by the shake the disaster would have been a decidedly minor , instead, of a major one. That temblor lasted only a bit over one minute but was of great intensity. If a similar one should occur today, with the improvement in building and water-system construction, it is practically certain there would be no catastrophe approaching that of 50 years ago. It would be nothing to welcome, however. . Meanwhile we would agree with a certain beer advertising that "It is LUCKY if you live in Oregon." - Football is like war in many respects, none more than the secret of victory is to get there f ustest with the mostest men. That is what the Chicago Bears did against the SF 49'ers here Sunday, coming from behind to win in the final quarter by putting up such a mass of interference on ground plays that the local team good as it is just couldn't throw the invaders back. Or at least they didn't which adds up to the same thing. V ' Tonight's "News" has a banner lay-out that sounds like a baby (Dear Little Snookums) announcement, to-wit: "Takes first step first photograph also." It does not refer to any baby however but to "Ike" Eisenhow er, President of the United States, who looks fit as several fiddles. R.W.R. Progress Against Job Bias The old adage, "you can catch more flies with honey than you can with vinegar," would seem to apply to the administration's attitude on eliminating discrimination in employment. The government's powers o'f persuasion against job discrimination were to be emphasized at the National Economic Oppor tunity conference in Washington this week. . r . The conference had been called by President Eis enhower after a meeting Aug. 27 with Secretary of Labor James P. Mitchell. When it became apparent that the President's health would not permit him to meet with the group, those who had been invited said that they wanted to attend anyway. Vice-President Nixon, chairman of .'the President's Committee on Government Contracts, was to act as host. DACK in January, 1953, President Tinman's Com mittee on Government Contract Compliance re ported that many government agencies were failing to enforce non-discrimination clauses in contracts with private companiesThereupon, Jess Larson, out going General Services Administrator, on Jan. 21, de clared that "persuasion or cancellation" of contracts would be used to force companies with government contracts to end racial or religious bias in employ ment. President Eisenhower on Aug. 13, 1953, issued Executive Order 10479, creating a 15-member com mittee to strengthen compliance with the fair-employment-practice provisions of federal contracts. The committee was to make recommendations to contract ing agencies and to encourage educational -programs. Also it was empowered to receive complaints of vio lations. i THE committee wTas greeted at its first meeting on Sept. 14, 1953, by a letter in which the President declared that "on no level of our national existence can inequality be justified." Moreover, "within the government itself, tolerance of inequality would be odious." The committee on Apr. 20, 1954, revised the fair-employment-practice clause in government contracts so as to define specific work situations to which it applies. These included: "employment, upgrading, demotion, or transfer; recruitment ... ; layoff or termination ; rates of pay, or other f orms of compen sation; and selection for training (including appren ticeship)." On Oct. 26, 1954, Mitchell announced that thereafter contracts made by the District of Columbia also would bar job discrimination. i The committee on Jan. 13 last was able to an nounce an anti-bias agreement covering jobs on Washington streetcars and buses. And on Oct. 1, Nixon called the committee's wrork "one of the most exciting stories of this administration . . . that without fanfare or ballyhoo, working quietly and persuasive ly, literally thousands of job opportunities have been opened up to Americans who previously were not able to obtain positions in these fields." E.R.R. Thursday. October 27, 1953 MdttBr Of FaCt By Joe and Stewart Alsop THE HERTER CANDIDACY Washington The hard-headed political professionals are taking more and more interest in the embryo Re publican can didacy of Gov ernor Christ ian Herter, of Massachusetts. The Herter candidacy is in the embryo stage, in the sense that the extremely able Massachusetts governor has JoMph Also not yet indicated his decision to run even to those closest to him. It is also a strictly regional af fair, thus far, with few if any repercussions outside New Eng land. But it is a real candidacy, in the sense that Governor Herte can almost certainly be expected to run if Pres i d e n t Eisen hower neither runs himself nor designates his successor. And in the fu ture this Her ter candidacy can have the most far-reach-i n g national T a nariiiccinne if only because St Alaop of its possible effects on the for tunes of other Republican hope fuls, such as Vice-President Rich ard Nixon in particular. . To dispose first of the reasons for thinking that the Herter can didacy is a real thing under the conditions named, they are of an extremely practical nature. A man who wants to have a try for high office always thinks first of removing any possible disqualifications. Governor Herter suffers from two potential disqualifications the doubts about his health, caused by partly crippling ar thritis; and the doubts about his eligibility for the Presidency, caused by his having been born in Paris. Action has been taken already to remove one of these disquali fications. Governor Herter's doc tors have advised him that his arthritis is not progressive: that his condition is actually improv ing somewhat; and that it con stitutes no bar to any political effort he may wish to make. TJIS BIRTH in Paris would ap---pear to pose a more serious problem. In fact, however, both Herter's parents were American citizens and he was registered at the U.S. consulate immediately after birth. Thus the lawyers have no doubt at aU that Herter is one of the "natural born" Am ericans who are. alone eligible, according td the Constitution, to enter the White House. The prob lem, really, is not whether Her ter is eligible, but how to' re move the slight cloud of doubt by having his eligibility legally declared. Various ways of getting the necessary legal judgment have already been explored in the Herter camp. One of them is to have the Governor enter the New Hampshire primary next March; and then to have the Secretary of State of New Hamp shire question his eligibility, so that the matter can be referred to the Federal District Court. Other devices are also being dis cussed, by all of them and here is the significant point revolve around a test of the Governor's right to run in the Presidential primary in New. Hampshire. . Right here, of course, is where the professional polls see the Herter candidacy assuming great national meaning. The New Hampshire primary is the first and therefore the most closely watched of the whole long series of Presidential primaries. In the present instance, New Hampshire has particular inter est for Republicans, in view of the. state's close White House connection with former Gov ernor Sherman Adams. If Pres ident Eisenhower means to indi cate his preferred successor, but wishes to avoid any formal, pub lic statement, Governor Adams can do the job for him in New Hampshire. As has been stated, Governor Herter's candidacy will not ma terialize if the President chooses to run again or wishes to desig nate the . Republican nominee, direcUy or indirectly. Herter was one of the original Eisen hower Republicans, and he is an Eisenhower man through and through. But if the race is open, Herter will enter the New Hamp shire primary. A New Hamp shire . race between Governor Herter and Vice-President Nixon will then be a strong possibility. . . ... IN -SUCH a test, Nixon would presumably be supported by the New Hampshire faction of Senator Styles Bridges. Herter would have two assets his own great and deserved popularity in New England, and the backing of the anti-Bridges faction. In sim ilar tests in the past, the Bridges faction in New Hampshire has been repeatedly trounced. In short, if the test occurs, a Her ter victory is by no means impos sible. This single possibility is of course enough to arouse the in terest of the political profes sionals in the Herter candidacy. With Massachusetts, New Hamp shire and a considerable num ber of delegates from the other New England states, . Herter 1 would be an extremely import ant regional candidate. Although still regional, his candidacy would automatically and im portantly affect the standings of all of the other candidates. The real question for Herter himself, meanwhile is whether he can raise himsalf from the regional into the national class. As an excellent governor of a big state who is also a 100 per cent Eisenhower man, he meets two thirds of the Republican specifications. But whether he can put himself over nationally remains to be seen. x (Copyright 1955, New York Herald Tribune, Inc.) In the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS Business News note: In the January to September period of this year, General Mo tors had an average of 622,000 employees. Its payrolls in that period came to a total of two and one-third billion dollars. These figures were made pub lic today in Detroit in a state ment preceding the corporation's third quarter report to its stock holders. VI'HEN you think of General " Motors, I suppose you think of its owners as a small group of portly gentlemen, very well dressed, each driving a Cadillac (with perhaps two or three more in the garage at home) and each owning a private yacht. If so, you're wrong. According to the latest fig ures available at the moment (which are several months old) General Motors has a. total of 459,099 stockholders. That is to say: For every three General Motors employees, there are two General Motors stockholders.' Putting it another way, the Owners of G.M. are almost as numerous as the WORKERS for G.M. WHAT the demagogs want us 1 ' to believe is that America's great corporations are owned by a few fat and happy individuals who have the world by the tail with a downhill pull. Nothing could be farther from the truth. Our great business corporations are owned by HUN DREDS OF THOUSANDS of people who are investing their money in these large enterprises. American Telephone and Tele graph has 1,300,000 stockhold ers. Standard Oil of New Jersey has 297,000. General Electric has 295,060. United States Steel (known as Big Steel) has 225,- 000. And so on TN HIS annual message, Presi- A dent Petrus Peterson . tells delegates to the 1955 session of the National Reclamation assoc iation, which is meeting this week at Lincoln, Neb., that de spite present agricultural 'sur pluses reclamation development is essential to help meet the na tion's food and. fiber demands of .the future. ' He pointed out that industries are laying plans now - to meet the demands of a population growth of 45,000,000 persons in the next 20 years, but critics of reclamation say the reclamation program should be STOPPED. He added: ' "Our critics seem to assume that a project planned, in 1955 wiU add to the food surplus in 1956. They seem oblivious to the FACT that urban development, industrial plants, airports, high ways and other-enterprises are annually TAKING OUT MORE ACRES OF GOOD AGRICUL TURAL LANDS THAN WE CAN HOPE TO OFFSET BY RECLAMATION." WHAT the president of the National "Ronlamatinn an. ciation' is telling us is that the bulk of the GOOD land in the United States has already been developed. About all that re mains open for development is the arid and semi-arid land of the West Good land is being covered up faster by industrial and hous ing developments, highways, air ports, etc., than the remaining good land can be brought into production by reclamation. At the same time, our nation is facing a population increase of 45,000,000 persons in the next 20 years. Which is to say that all the remaining irrigable land in the West will be NEEDED by the time it can be brought into production. DON'T KILL. OFF IRRIGA TION. . If that is done, our nation will regret it. . 11HAT be is telling us is pecul- iarly true of southern Ore gon. California is the nation's most rapidly growing state. It is already and will continue to be the West's dominant market. Southern Oregon lies close to this dominant California mark et.; California is covering : up good land faster than any other state. . ". So -' " - V There ' will be a market in California for every additional acre of good land that can be brought under irrigation in Southern Oregon. Let's keep that fact clearly in mind in our plans German Reunification May Be Hindered by Referendum in Saar By CHARLES M. McCANN United Press Correspondent r The Allied bid for the reunifi cation .of Germany is not likely to be helped by the result of the Saar referen dum. Ger m any's future 'is the key issue to be d i s c u s s ed at the Big Four foreign minis isters con fer-ence- which opened today in Geneva. " There is no i n d ication, of Ctiarles lHi- aon course, that Russia is going to change its policy. That policy is to keep Germany divided. Aside from that, France may be somewhat lukewarm in its support of the United States British argument. for reunifica tion. France hardly can be blamed if it thinks it detects, in the Saar vote and related develop ments. a "sort of "Here we go again" warning against the re vival of a powerful, armed Ger many. . Saarlanders, their nationalis tic spirit whipped up by a for mer Nazi, rejected the proposal that they accept "European" status by a vote of 67.71 per cent, to 32.29 per cent. ' The former Nazi is Heinrich Schneider. He has made himself a hero to nationalists through out Oermanv. Von Paoen Returns France must have noted that when Baron Franz Von Panen, master of intrigue, returned to the Saar to vote against the pro posed European statute, he was serenaded." .. Papen is the slippery diplo matist who-knifed the pre-war German Weimar Republic to Washington How Democrats See the Issues Washington What do the Democrats think are the major issues which can be used effec tively against the Eisenhower administration and the Republi can record in Congress? The Democratic National Com mittee has its own answers to this question, but right now it is in the process of taking a sur vey of 5,000 party workers across the country from Gover nors and;National Committee men to county and district' lead ers to find out what they think are the most exploitable polit ical issues. The purposes of the poll are these: , It is designed, as National Chairman Paul M. Butler said in his letter accompanying the confidential questionnaires, . "to play a vital role in shaping our strategy in the months ahead." It is designed to provide the substance and the feeling of par ticipation in policy-m a k i n g throughout the party and to be gin to limber up the machinery for the Presidential campaign. It is designed to be a guide to the Democratic leadership in the upcoming session of Con gress and to provide useful mi terial for all of the Democratic Presidential aspirants. w m . rpHE survey was started before Mr. Eisenhower was stricken, but the officials of the Demo cratic National Committee are convinced that the results will be even more valuable now that it is probable that the President will not run. . Here are the twenty "leading issues for 1956" for which the Democratic National Committee asked fellow Democrats to select the ten "most significant" from the standpoint of public opinion in their community or to add others if they wished: 1. Tax favoritism for rich. 2. Falling farm income. 3. Lack of. Presidential lead' ership. 4. Small business failures. 5. r.O.P. anti-labor policy. 6. Hot-and-cold foreign policy. 7. Misconduct in government (Talbot, Dixon-Yates, etc.) 8. Cutting armed forces. 9. School crisis. 10. Ike's failure to lead own P&rty. . 11. Public power giveaways. 12. Growth of monopolies. 13. ' Favoritism for big business. 14. Phony government security program. 15. Slowdown in air power. 16. Undermining civil service. 17. Ike's vacationing. 18. Human rights. 19. Bankers' highway program. 20. Rising cost of living. Obviously the phrasing of these issues is. weighted with partisan words. The first 'ques tion could have tieen objectively asked: "Did the Administration's tax' reductions benefit the rich primarily or did they benefit the whole economy?" Or," to take an other example, ' it could have been more fairjy worded to have asked: "Has the Eisenhower ad ministration strengthened or weakened the Civil Service?" But most politicians in both par help Adolf Hitler gel into power. There is also .the fact that Sepp Dietrich. theformer com mander of Hitler'sv elite body guard . the Leibstandarte Adolf Hitler" was released from a United .States government- orison last Saturday. : Dietrich was one of Hitler's pioneer strong armed men. He was sentenced to life imprison ment in 1946 for the: slaughter of American prisoners in the Battle of the Bulge; among other crimes. s '. ( In France,, they are still sen tencing German war criminals. France endured occupation by German Nationalists in World War II. It can not be expected to draw nice distinctions be tween Nationalists and Nazis. Adenauer's Health . Finally, there is the fact that Chancellor Konrad Adenauer is not making too good a recovery from his recent attack of pneu monia. He will be 80 years old next January 5. ... ' With Germany' rearming. France and the Western world generally would have grave reason to worry if . Adenauer died or was incapacitated. Papen's brief emergence from obscurity was interesting. Hit ler sent him. to the Saar in 1934 as a hatchet man, to help build up the 1935 plebiscite vote which resulted in the Saar's re turn to Germany after it had been under League of Nations administration. It could be that Papen would like to get back into politics. even though he is 77. He has sounded off a couple of times about his views. He would like to see Germany a rearmed comv try, "neutral" as between East and West. If that happened, he or men like him would be able to betray either side. By Roseoe Drummond ties are frightened by objec tivity and as the campaign heats up the voters wiU have to use their own methods to screen political claims. . A LL the replies to the question- naire have not yet been com piled but the consensus which has thus far developed is that, as the Democrats read public opinion, the Republicans ' are most vulnerable on these issues: (1) declining farm prices; j(2) public power plus the 'Dixon Yates wrangle; (4) labor policy, generally including - failure to amend the Taft-Hartley Act. . The way the Democrats rated the questions suggests that neith er the government's security pro- gram nor civil rights will figure very strongly in the campaign and that there will be no major controversy over any important aspect of foreign policy. .... One arrow in the : projected Democratic strategy will now probably not be aimed at all. If Mr. Eisenhower were, to be the Republican nominee, the Demo crats felt they had to begin cen tering their attack directly upon the President in an effort to cut down his " above-the-smoke-of- partisan-battle prestige. ' , ' On the premise that he will not seek a second term the Dem ocratic leaders will do what they feel will be more effective- turn the attack almost exclu sively on the Republican party, leave the President untouched for the most part, credit him for the best deeds of the Admin-' istration and blame everything else on his subordinates and the Republicans generally. The Democratic object will be to separate the President's pres tige from the Republican party and its success, will depend in part on what the Republican party does in the coming session of Congress. Copyright 1955. Nw' York Herald Tribune, Inc. OUR MEMBERSHIP in Associated Funeral Directors' Service ena bles us to handle funeral services TO or FROM ' any city - usual ly at con siderable s a v i n g s" for you. ; CHAPEL MORTUARY Across from the Courthouse frank Morgan FUNERAL McKay Declares 0 Giveaway Charges 'Pure Polities' Corvallis, Ore. (U.R) In-., terior Secretary Douglas McKay said today that Democratic charges that the Eisenhower ad ministration has been giving away national resources are 'pure politics. McKay made a detailed de fense of the administration's con servation policies in a speech prepared for a Republican Club lunch here. "Perhaps you have heard the claims by some people that our conservation and parks programs have been going to pieces, that we ve been giving away things with both hands," he said. "Such charges are pure politics. There is nothing to them." Accused Giveaway King The Democratic Digest, pub lished by the Democratic Nation al Committee, accused McKay in this month s issue of being the administration's "giveaway" king. McKay conceded that the In terior Department "has disposed ol, and not given away, seven small wildlife refuges which to taled 6226 acres." He said thT refuges had declined so much "we just could no longer justify the cost of administration." But he said the Migratory Bird Commission, of which he is chairman, has approved the pur chase of 30,189 acres in wildlife refuges at a cost of $645,000. He said the administration has add ed eight wildlife refuges and ac quired 79,946 additional acres for preservation. Preserves Protected McKay said President Eisen hower had signed into law last ' July a new program to protect wildlife preserves. Under the old law, he said, "a mining claim could be used as an excuse for' grabbing timber stands, sites for. summer homes 'or hunting camps." . The .interior secretary also said the administration now is developing a 10-year plan to. equip the national parks to re-, ceive 80,000,000 visitors a year by 1966. . . ". Recordings Used . To Promote Area Tape recordings, developed in Medford'by the tourist and con vention committee of the Jack son County Chamber of Com merce, with the cooperation of rdio station KMED, are :being Used to publicize Rogue valley vacations in all parts of the United States. , The 15 minute record, featur ing the voices of Angus Bowmer, Jennings Pierce, and Russ Jami son, tells of points of interest including Jacksonville, Crater Lake National park, the House of Mystery, and the Shakespear ean festival at Ashland. The recording has been played by stations in Tucson, Ariz.; Du luth, Minn.; Seattle, Wash.; Min neapolis, Minn.; San Beftiadino, Calif.; Santa Barbara, Calif.; Cedar City, Utah; Reno, Nev.; Boise, Idaho; Sioux City, la., and North Bend, Eugene and Port land, Ore. Oregon Journal Changes Type Face Portland (U.R) The Ore gon Journal today announced it will change its body type maga zines Monday to give readers a new type face in its news pages. The newspaper said the new type, larger than its present faces and would make the Journal one of the world's easiest news papers to read. The new type is called nine- point Intertype Imperial on a nine-point-base. r, The newspaper said change over would cost thousands of dollars. For Action, Use Tribune Wonf Ads Harold Snodgrass DIRECTORS I I I