Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, June 27, 1956, Image 4

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    TOUR MEDFROD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE
"Every ooay in Southern Oregon
Head The Mall Tribune"
Published Daily Except Saturday 07
MEDFORD PRINTING CO.
J7-29 North Fir St. Phone
ROBERT W RUHI. Editor
HERB GREY. AdvertislnR Manager
GERALD LATHAM. BiutneM Manager
ERIC ALLEN JR. Managing Editor
EAAL H ADAMS. City Editor
HARRY CHIP-MAN Telegraph Editor
RICHARD JEWETT Sport Editor
OLIVE STAR CHER Society Editor
DALE ERICK.SON circulation Mgr.
An Independent Newspaper
Entered as second class matter at
Mediord Oregon, under Act oi
Marcn j.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES ,
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Sunday Only One year $3.50.
Br Carrier In Advance Mediord.
Jacfctaonvllle. Gold Hill, Phoenix.
Shady Cove Rogue River. Talent,
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Daily and Sunday One year f 15.00
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Carrier and Dealer 5c per copy
AH 1 trim iaaii ill nuvm.r
Official Paper of the City of Medford
O ffidal He per ol Jackson County
UtedJPress Full Leased Wire
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OF UKUULAUUJI
WEST-HOLUDAY COMPANK INC
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troit San Francisco. Los Angeles.
Seattle Portland. St. Louia. Atlanta
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NATIONAL EDITORIAL
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jf" NEWSPAPER
PUBLISHERS
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Flight o' Time
Mediord and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10. 20. 30 and
to years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
June 27. 194S
(It was Thursday)
Harry Watson, 17-year staff
member of Medford hotel, leaves
for Klamath Falls where he will
manage Wi-Ne Ma hotel. '
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: Pressure
cookers are plentiful after the
war-time scarcity. Now the pres
sure is to get something for the
pressure cooker to cook.
20 YEARS AGO
June- 27, 1936
(It was Saturday)
A small grass fire near the
city reservoir was put out yest
erday by the fire department's
chemical crew before any dam
age was done.
New Pacific highway route
over Siskiyou summit hoped to
be finished before winter snow.
'30 YEARS AGO
June 27. 1926
(It was Sunday)
National Guardsmen leave
Camp White after two weeks of
training; camp ends today.
From the Local and Personal
column: Plumbers are now busy
setting in fixtures at the new
high school building, which is
in the last stages of completion.
Grading of the grounds, which
has been in progress for some
time, is also nearly finished.
40 YEARS AGO
June 27, 1916
(It was Tuesday)
Jackson County Industrial fair
planned for Medford about the
middle of September.
From the Local and Personal
column: A report was circulated
on train No. 15 that war had
been declared and when the
train arrived in Medford Mon
day afternoon, the passengers
swarmed out on the platform
buying every afternoon paper to
be had.
What's the Answer?
Can You Get 4 of the 7T
r Copr. IMS, Editorial Jtesearcn
Report
1. The Air Force is aiming for
a fleet of (a) 350, (b) 500. (c) 600,
or (d 1.000 B-52 jet bombers by
1959?
2. Briscoe, Dort, Jordan,-Moon,
Saxon, and Templar are names
of discontinued lines of men's
shoes, automobiles of early
1920's, or tobacco mixtures sold
years ago?
3. Rumania is or isn't one of
the countries behind the Iron
Curtain?
4. Darlington Hoopes has been
nominated to run for President
bv the Liberal, Prohibition, So
cialist or Socialist Labor party?
5. None of the 48 states pro
hibits distribution of trading
stamns: rieht or wrong?
6. Thf Mississippi river forms
a boundary between states
throuehout its course or along
onlv oart of the course?
7. An atheist is the same as an
apostic: right or wrong?
Th answers: 1. New ?oal is
600 .B-52. 2. Automobiles of
1920s. 3. Rumania is. 4. Socialist.
5. Floht (onlv D. C. bans trading
stamps). 6. Boundarr between
states except in northern Minne
sota and southern Louisiana. 7.
Yrron? an atheist says ihsre is
po God: an a an os tic says he
doesn't know if there is or isn't.
Oblivion
The Mail Tribune's Washington correspondent, A.
Robert Smith, keeps a sharp eye out for happenings in
the nation's capital which have an interest to the peo
ple of Oregon.
In yesterday's paper he had an article about
"something of interest," a bill which is designed to
"turn over federal forests and grazing lands to local
private interests or the states."
CMITH'S story says:
"The most valuable lands covered by the bill are
the national forests and Oregon's O&C timber
lands." And he. adds, "The National Lumber Manu
facturers Association announced its advocacy of (the)
bill in its directors meeting several weeks ago at Seat
tle." We should think so!! The bill is an open invita
tion to destroy the careful, long-range program of
conservation and protection of the nation's forest re
sources which date back to Theodore Roosevelt and
Gifford Pinchot.
XE ARE glad to note that the budget bureau is op-
posed to the bill, and that Smith notes it is doubt
ful if any action will be taken on it at this session.
We are less happy about the reaction of Wesley
A. D'Ewart, assistant secretary of the Interior for pub
lic land management, who said he is in "sympathy
with the objectives" of the bill, though not in its pres
ent form.
As we see it, the measure is potentially one of the
most dangerous to Oregon's long-range economy ever
contemplated.
gMITH describes the bill as follows :
In the form in which' it was introduced, the bill would
call for creation of federal-state land study commissions in
every state which asked for one. Each commission would
make a study Of government and private forest and graz
ing holdings in the state and report recommendations for
changes to the president.
The president, under the bill, would then be compelled
to "prepare a plan for the disposal of the lands recommend
ed for disposal" which would involve sales to the highest
bidder. In drafting this plan, the president would be direct
ed to "provide that, so far as practicable, such lands shall
be disposed of in tracts of such size and number and under
such terms and conditions as will best serve the purposes
of the federal government, the state, and the general pub
lic, taking into consideration the predominant land needs,
if such exist, of present land owners in the vicinity of such
lands and the need of potential purchasers for a long-term,
low-interest rate purchase program to enable them to pur
chase such lands." ' , , '
Al - -
THE Forest Service opposes the bill which, it said,
"might result in possible large-scale breaking up
of the national-forest system." It also questioned the
bill's constitutionality,' inasmuch as the president
would be "required" to follow a commission's recom
mendation. Constitutionality or no, the bill proposes a gigantic
"give away", which staggers the imagination. It
could well mean an end to orderly natural resources
management It could well throw the lumber industry
into chaos, to the benefit of a few big companies and
the extinction of smaller firms.
JACKSON county's lumber industry increasingly is
few large holdings which are being managed on a sus
tained yield basis. If the national forest and O&C
lands were opened up for sale to the highest bidder,
it would do two things :
1. Destroy the federal timber-management and
conservation control of the country's largest single re
source, and,
2. Allow that control to go to the highest bidder,
which means, obviously, the bigger companies.
THE first of these results would tear away a pains
takingly developed system of fire control, access
road construction, silvicultural research, and efficient
administration. The forests would suffer, no matter
how conscientious the new owners might be, for they
lack the resources the Forest Service has at its dis
posal. The second result would mean that the small operator,-
now almost entirely dependent on federal tim
ber, would be squeezed out, and that the new owners,
while presumably they would follow good forest man
agement practices simply out of self-interest, would be
under no obligation to do so.
The proposal deserves just one thing oblivion.
, E.A.
What's the Time?
What time is it at quarter-past midnight? And at
half-past noon?
These are two non-earth-shakine Questions which
kalways tend to give us a slight headache.
Quarter-past midnight is commonly given as 12 :lo
a.m. But "a.m." (ante-meridiem) means before noon,
so actually the symbols 12:15 a.m. indicate twelve
hours and fifteen minutes before noon, instead of
twelve hours and fifteen minutes after noon.
LJALF-PAST noon, or 12:30 p.m., poses a similar
"problem, for 12:30 p.m. (post-meridiem) indi
cates twelve hours and thirty minutes after noon, in
stead of a half -hour before 1 p.m.
Perhaps they should be written 00:15 a.m. and
00 :30 p.m. Habit being what it is, they probably never
will be, though. E. A. -
CRICKET VIA TV
London U.f5 , Australian
Prime Minister Robert G. Men
zies, a cricket fan, has a port
able TV set in his. official limou
sine so he can watch the England-Australia
cricket game now
in progress while traveling
around London, the Daily
Sketch said today.
Wednesday. June 27, 1 958
Deserved
Chicago U.R Neighbors of
Mr. and Mrs. John O'Neil said
it won't be the same when the
O'Neils make their scheduled
move from their west side
home. The O'Neils plan to take
with them their eight dogs, five
cats, five parakeets, four pig
eons, two love birds and three
canaries.
Guatemala
To Get Tough With Opponents
By CHARLES M. McCANN
United Press Correspondent
Guatemala's soft-spoken
"strong man" has decided that it
is time to get really tough with
the enemies of
his regime.
H e charges
that Commu
nists, working
u n d erground,
are plotting a
subversive
movement.
As the re
sult. President
Carlos Castillo
Charles alcCann
Armas has invoked a system of
modified martial law. Police
have fired on demonstrating
students in Guatemala City, the
capital.
It is evident that CastUlo Ar
mas has decided to try to sup
press by force the growing un
rest among workers and students
in his little country which lies
just south of Mexico on the Cen
tral American Isthmus.
Unrest An Inheritance
The unrest is an inheritance of
the extreme leftist regime of
President Jacobo Arbenz Guz
man, whom Castillo Armas over
threw in June, 1954, with the
Heart Association Lists
Requirements for 'Club'
A ' recent bulletin from the
Oregon Heart association listed
the requirements for member
ship in the "Coronary Club."
They are as follows:
1. Your' job comes first; per
sonal considerations are sec
ondary. 2. Go to the office evenings,
Saturdays, Sunday and holidays.
3. Take the brief-case home
on the evenings when you do
not go to the office. This pro
vides an opportunity to review
completely all the troubles and
worries of the day. ' "
4. Never say NO to a request
always say YES.
5. Accept all invitations to
meetings, banquets, committees,
etc.
6. Do not eat a restful, re
laxing meal always plan a con
ference for the meal hour.
7. Fishing and hunting are
a waste of time and money
you never bring back enough
fish or game to justify the ex
pense.
8. It is a poor policy to take
all the vacation time which is
provided for you.
9. Golf, bowline, pool, bil-
Hards, cards, gardening, etc., are.
Editorial Comment
The Lamentable
Cult of Glumness
It may or may not be true thaU
Adlai Stevenson has been ad
vised to '"make at least one gram
matical error a day." But it does
seem to us that "the new Adlai"
is a more solemn man than the
Illinois governor who earned a
reputation as a wit in 1952.. If
Mr. Stevenson should win the
Democratic nomination again,
we hope he will not listen too
closely to "advisors who insist
that the candidate conform to
the American tradition of solem
nity. A dash of humor, a wry
quip, placed in just the right
spot, does not indicate that the
public figure regards national
problems lightly. Rather, we
think, it shows perspective, an
understanding that this moment
in history is just that a mo
ment in history.
VTET the tradition persists. Who
- ever saw a smiling picture of
George Washington? And the
years after the Civil War saw a
generation of solemn presidents
or so they seemed, although
they could have been grinning
like Chessy cafsbehind the facial
brush that was popular in that
era. William Howard Taft, a
jolly fat man, was dead serious
in his speeches. And Wilson, an
egghead who set the Stevenson
pattern of eggheadery, once said
of the presidency.- "The office is
much greater than (its occupant)
can ever be, and about the most
he can do is to look grave and
self-possessed enough to seem to
fill it"
Even FDR, noted for his
gaiety, tried to be solemn in his
speeches. Nonetheless his two
most successful political speeches
were those in which he chided
Republicans for "attacking my
little dog Fala," and in which he
linked the names of "Martin,
Barton and Fish."
,
ALL these men, President Ei
senhower included, are fol
lowing the advice given a young
man by Sen. Thomas Corwin, a
former governor of Ohio and
secretary of the treasury. He
told this young man, "If you
would succeed in life you must
be solemn solemn as an ass.
All the great monuments are
built over solemn asses." The
young man was James A. Gar
field, the most solemn of the
solemn, and he rose to be Presi-.l
President Decides
moral support of the United
States.
Arbenz Guzman and his fellow
leaders were exiled. A number
of leftists were executed. The
Communist party was outlawed.
But rank and file Communists
remained active underground.
They had the support of many
workers, who had benefited by
land seizures and other national
ization decrees of the Arbenz
Guzman regime. To them stu
dents, who as in other Latin
American countries are political
ly active.
Reds Inspire Demonstration
Workers turned an officially
sponsored May Day celebration
on May 1 last into an anti-government
demonstration. There
was little doubt that the demon
stration was Communist-inspired
On Sunday, Castillo Armas an
nounced the discovery of a Com
munist plot to spread disorder as
part of a subversive movement.
Castillo Armas decreed a sys
tem of modified martial law for
30 days.
A few hours later, workers
and students -demonstrated de
spite the martial law. Police
and soldiers broke up the demon
a waste of time.
10. Never delegate responsi
bility to others carry the load
at aU times.
11. If your work calls for
traveling work all day and
drive all night to make your
appointment for the next morn
ing. :
- If you meet these qualifica
tions, send in your application.
Consumer Prices
Go Higher in May
New York (U.PJ Consumer
prices rose 0.2 per cent in May
to the highest level of the year
while the purchasing value of
the dollar dipped one cent below
a year ago to 98.8 cents (1953
eauals 100). according to the
National Industrial Conference
Board.
The board's all-items con
sumer price index now stands at
101.2 (1953 equals 100).
Sharpest change over the
month was registered by food,
which advanced 0.7 per cent.
dent. Monuments
have been
erected to him. .
- Abe Lincoln
was fond of a
good story and told many, al
though he usually kept them out
of his public speeches. The story
is told about two women travel
ing in a railway coach during
the Civil War. One declared she
feared the South would win the
war "because Jefferson Davis is
a praying man." But, her com
panion told her "Abraham Lin
coln is a praying man, too." Ah
yes," said the first, "But the
Lord will think Abraham is jok
ing." YET how wonderful it is that
Mr. Stevenson, a few days
after his defeat in 1952, could
begin a speech by saying, "The
other day a funny thing happen
ed to me on my way to the White
House."
And Abe Lincoln, stung by
Stephen A. Douglas' reminder
that he had once tended bar,
could retort, "Yes, but what the
judge didn't mention is that
while 1 quit my side of the bar,
the judge has remained on his."
And there is Harold Ickes say
ing that "Dewey has thrown his
diaper into the ring," and Alice
Roosevelt Longworth saying that
"Ike has thrown his halo into
the ring."
Once a Washington gossip col
umnist "reported" that Al Smith
had packed his bags and was
leaving for the Vatican where
he was to be FDR's personal rep
resentative. The story was not
true. The President wired Al
Smith simply, "Unpack."
TF IT is true that great political
leaders have been, for the
most part, humorless creatures,
it is just as true that some of the
worst of the world's leaders have
been as humorless HiUer, Mus
solini, Robespierre, Cromwell.
The tradition of solemnity may
be laid no more at the feet of
George Washington than at the
feet of Oliver Cromwell.
The witty aside, the humorous
view of a solemn problem, is of
fensive to those who regard hu
mor as mere joke telling. These
people, humorless themselves for
the most part, fail to understand
that humor is not only a means
of making people laugh; it is
also an unsurpassed means of
making them understand. Eu
gene Register-Guard. -
stration with clubs and gun
butts.
On Monday the government
learned that university students
planned a parade in protest
against the martial law decree.
The government warned the stu
dents sternly that the parade
would not be tolerated. Never
theless, the students turned out.
Three Students Killed
Police fired on them. Three
students were killed and 19
wounded.
Castillo Armas has charged
several times that Communists
were plotting to overthrow him.
Now, apparenUy, he has decid
ed to try to break up the leftist
movement if he can. It is indi
cated that a number of oposition
leaders including newspaper edi
tors may be exiled.
Castillo Armas is convinced
that Communism is a real
danger not only in his country
I Tut in the whole Western Hemis
phere. He predicted In an inter
view with the United Press last
Feb. 2 that the Reds will make
a determined attempt this year
to strengthen their position. He
urged that all 21 American re
publics work together against
Red infiltration.
In the Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
Back in the pleasant litUe
farming community of Eldora,
Iowa, in its lush setting of corn
and soybean fields and blue grass
pastures dotted with sleek cattle
and fat hogs, they recently held
a Farm Day, and the promoters
of the event were fortunate.
They got a couple of Big Names
fnr thoir nrnpram Rerrfttarv
of Agriculture Benson and Dem -
ocratic Presidential Candidate
Kefauver.
So the country folk are
poured in from all around and
the merchants were happy be
cause in addition to listening to
the debate that is the big event
of-the day the visitors .would
stock up on their needs for the
next week a busy one in this
season of the year back in the
Corn Belt.
SECRETARY Benson led off the
debate. He told his hearers it
will take the NEXT THREE
YEARS to get the new farm soil
bank into full operation. In his
grave, sincere way, he sought to
establish the fact that the new
soil bank program won't be any
get rich quick scheme that its
purpose is to get American agri
culture back onto a basis of bal
anced supply and demand.
" He concluded his explanation
of the soil bank with this state
ment: "We have measured our farm
policies on the basis of WHAT IS
GOOD FOR THE FARMER
AND THE NATION not on the
political applause meter."
SENATOR Kefauver said:
"The lack of leadership
which the (Eisenhower) adminis
tration has so deplorably demon
strated in meeting the farm crisis
is again being mirrored in the
timid and reluctant manner in
which the new 1956 farm act (in
cluding the soil bank) is being
administered.
"Reliable calculations indicate
that as much as a BILLION eight
hundred million dollars of addi
tional farm income THIS YEAR
could result from proper admin
istration of the farm bill. Farm
ers will not get this aid (this
year) if the delaying, bungling
policies of the administration
continue."
T ETS put it this way.
Secretary Benson knows
that if we are to SOLVE the
farm problem we must quit sub
sidizing surpluses to hang o"er
the markets of the future like a
dark thundercould. He knows
that if American agriculture is
to be saved it must be got back
to the point where supply and
demand are in a reasonable state
of balance.
He knows that will take time.
Senator Kefauver wants EV
ERY POSSIBLE DOLLAR
POURED INTO THE FARMER'S
LAP THIS YEAR, so that in
gratitude for the handout the
farmer will VOTE DEMOCRAT
IC in November.
That is putting it pretty ruggedly,-
but it is about the essence
of the big political debate in El
dora. F CONCLUSION, let's quote a
paragraph from the business
news of today:
"The automobile industry is
reported to be working its way
out of the most difficult situa
tion it has faced since before
World War II. Estimates from
Detroit are that the inventory
(surplus) of new cars in dealers'
hands will be down to 700,000
by July 1. In March, the industry
had an inventory of more than
900,000 cars."
rTVE this a thought:
Suppose that in March the
government had stepped in and
BOUGHT UP.AND STORED the
surplus of automobiles.
In that event, where would the
automobile industry be now?
THE answer is short, but not
sweet:
It would be IN A PICKLE. .
Major Airlines Face
Probe of Fare Lists
Washington (CQ) The
big United States airlines are
about to stand trial for the first
time in 18 years.
The question: Are the major
domestic passenger lines gouging
the public by charging excessive
fares?
A "guilty" verdict, besides
bringing down fares, could usher
in a new era of commercial avia
tion by forcing the Civil Aero
nautics Board to open the sky to
new competition.
The CAB, a powerful five-man
federal agency which rules com
mercial aviation, last month an
nounced it would investigate
passenger fares charged by the
13 main domestic airlines. The
investigation, the CAB said, was
prompted by the high profits air
lines made in 1955.
Congress to Decide
In the upcoming court of in
quiry, the CAB will sit as com
bination prosecutor, judge and
jury whiie the Air Transport
association wiU do much of the
defending for the airlines. The
13 airlines to be investigated are
members of the association, an
active trade organization. But
the decision likely to count the
most will be the one Congress
makes from outside the CAB
hearing room.
Some of the lawmakers like
Sen. John J. Sparkman (D-Ala.),
chairman of the Senate Small
Business committee, and Rep.
Emanuel Celler (D-N.Y.), chair
man of the House Judiciary com
mittee, already have urged
changes in aviation policy. Other
Congressmen will not make up
their mind until after the CAB
investigation.
Congress could demand a
change in CAB policies and, if
that failed, could amend the
Civil Aeronautics Act of 1938.
1 The Act prescribes conditions
for issuing flying certificates and
setting fares.
Sparkman said. Certainly
there is room under the law to
establish additional trunk lines
There is definitely need for more
competition. Sparkman added
that the trouble Is not the Civil
Aeronautics Act itself, but how
the CAB has been administering
It.
Said "Rubber Stamp"
Celler said, too, that more
competition was essential.
don't believe the CAB has been
abiding by the antitrust laws.
They have been more or less rub
ber stamping everything the Air
Transport association has pro
posed."
Just what Is the situation re
garding airline profits and com
petition?
CAB figures show that the air
line business is booming. Profits
after taxes for the industry as a
whole averaged 11.8 per cent in
1955. The CAB considers 8 per
cent a fair profit when figuring
mail pay.
The profits after taxes for the
13 major airlines individually in
1955: American, 14 per cent;
Braniff, 11 per cent; Capital,
21.6 per cent; Continental, 7 per
cent; Delta, 11.4 per cent; East
em, 13.4 per cent; National, 15.1
per cent; Northeast, 7.3 per cent;
Northwest, 10.7 per cent; Trans
World Airlines, 8.9 per cent;
United -8.7 per cent; Western,
14.9 per cent. The 13th airline
Colonial, lost 9.6 per cent, ac
cording to the CAB.
The overall profit trend shows
a sharp climb up to 1951 and
then a slight recession. The prof
its averaged by years for the 13
airlines; 1946, -1.5 per cent; 1947,
-2.9 per cent; 1948, -1.7 per cent;
1949, 6.1 oercent; 1950, 11.2 per
cent; 1951, 14.6 per cent; 1952,
14.2 per cent; 1953, 11.3 per cent;
1954, 10.4 per cent; 1955, 11.8
per cent.
"Not Excessive" ft
The Air Transport association
says those profits are not ex
cessive when figured over the
No Other Starch Gives
You The Vano Touch
That Means So Much
Perfect Starching
Easier Ironing
No Sficking
No Scorching
No Lumping j
No Mixing
No Boiling
No Guessing
No Waste -s
- I
If you're not using Vano,
you're working too hard!
long run. But Trans American
Airlines (formerly North Amer
ican), the most vocal of the non
scheduled airlines trying to get
CAB permission to fly regularly,
says they are and dares the CAB
to let it enter the field and
prove it.
The CAB has full power to
regulate airline fares and to de
cide which airlines shall be certi
fied for passenger traffic. It has
started three fare investigations
in the past, but none has ever
gone to the hearing stage. The
CAB, in addition, has not certi
ficated any new airlines for
domestic passenger service since
the Civil Aeronautics Act was
passed in 1938.
Its own defense of this closed
sky policy was given to the Sen
ate Small Business committee
last year: "While a review of the
Board's decisions in route pro
ceedings would appear to sug
gest that no opportunities exist
for a new carrier proposing do
mestic passenger trunkline serv
ice to obtain a certificate, the
Board does not believe its past
decisions can be interpreted as
foreclosing the possibility of en
try by new cariers into the trunk
line field."
Sees Dangers
Asked by the Committee then
what was the big danger in ad
mitting new arlines into the do
mestic field, the CAB said: "The
dangers of unrestrained compe
tition are many, but the primary
danger is the liklihood that there
would not be any stability m the
services available, and many im
portant points and entire areas
might not be served at all."
With the fare investigation
keeping the issue in the public
eye. Congress appears certain to
make the CAB justify that posi
tion or change it.
(Copyright 1956,
Congressional Quarterly)
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and it smells good, too. Leaves no
typical insecticide odor. Proved
fast, easy, effective. At all stores,
lewtter DicawUbla Coitate Prxsact
flies
9
w 1 I I
9 mmn t
fWJIILJB.?
mm
4