SIX MEDTOUD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE
Monday. August 13. 1956
They'll Do It Every Time ,.s By Jimmy Hatlo
tJ.DlMVVlDDy DECIMAL, THE T4X
COiSOUVJNfT.WMEM DISCUS3N3 A CASE
WITH THE IrTrcRrWL REVENUE 6CyS,T4LKS
ABOUT A C NOTE LIKE IT WA5 4 TIP
TVl
4Pf?4IC
J0S7 CMT
let youc
-ILL THESE
EMTER-
T4INMEMT
NOW, LOOK-LETS
THESE T51Vl4LTWEIvrT,
FIPTOR HUNDRED-BUCK
ITEMS-EVERyBOCV KNOWS
HOW MUCH IT COSTS TO
NOW, LOOK-LET'S VY CLilM KJW Ktf-UNU kjk
X VnoTEEPiC4VUNISHO'.'ER X 4 FIVE-DOLL4R DEDUCTION J
I 1 WTOMiW' I
TdKECOTjS CUSTOMER HT
Om the other foot, if me
figures he's got 4 fin coming to
ulm-wow c4ll out the marines .'
Bodies of Manr Son
Sought at Vancouver
Vancouver, Wash. U.R) A
skin diver today searched the
waters of Lake river for the bod
ies of a man and his son pre
sumed drowned yesterday eve
ning. ,
Missing were John Johnston,
32, Vancouver, and his son,
Steven, 9.
Sheriff Clarence McKay said
a boat carrying seven persons
struck an object in the water
and that the boy fell overboard.
His father jumped in to save him
and both were lost.
The river connects the Colum
bia river and Vancouver lake.
The tragedy occurred about six
miles northwest of here.
MONKEY BUSINESS
New Orleans ttJ.R) Eight
fugitive monkeys from a pet shop
led police and several hundred
volunteers on a frenzied chase
Friday. Four monkeys were
caught but the remaining four
were still at large. The pet shop
owner said a chimpanzee escap
ed from his cage and opened up
the monkey cage. The monkeys
then slipped through a transom
to freedom.
"MUTT RATTLES RATTLER
New Orleans (U.R) Mutt, 'a
tiny mongrel dog, held a five
foot diamondback rattlesnake at
bay Friday just a few yards
from where two baby girls were
playing in their backyard. "He
barked at it. lunged at it and
kept it away until we could
get someone with a hoe to kill
it," said the father of the two
girls and owner of three-year
old Mutt.
Rep. Ellsworth Returns
To Home at Roseburg
Roseburg (U.R) Rep. Harris
Ellsworth, Republican congress
man from Oregon's fourth dis
trict, returned to his home here
yesterday.
Ellsworth said he planned to
take a 10 day rest before launch
ing his campaign for reelection
in the November general election.
Gloomy Weather Seen
For Demo Convention
Chicago (U.R) The -Weather
Bureau predicted a rather
gloomy opening for the Demo
cratic National Convention to
day as far as' its particular sub
ject is concerned.
The forecast was: "Partly
cloudy, with a chance of thun
dershowers, particularly in the
afternoon;, continued warm."
' Like Ike' Buttons
Passed Out at Chicago
Chicago (U.R) Two pretty
girls took up posts on Michigan
Blvd. today and handed out "I
Like Ike" buttons.
They were just two blocks
from the Democratic National
Convention headquarters.
"Isn't it a wonderful idea,'
said one of them.
Eisenhower's Message To GOP Convention.
Asks Help To Make Future Equal To Past
San Francisco (U.R) Pres
ident Dwight Eisenhower's mes
sage to participants in the 1956
Republican convention here Aug.
20-24 today called on them "to
help make the bright promise of
the party's future more than
equal to its past."
The President's message open
ed the 160-page convention pro
gram which was released today.
The program called attention to
the GOP's 100 years and fea
tured the slogan, "Peace, Pros
perity, Progress."
Of the 29 specially prepared
messages in the program, only
one, that by Andrew F. Schoep
pel, chairman of the National Re-1
publican Senatorial committee,
referred to the possible battle
for the vice presidential nomin
ation. Schoeppel said:
"Specifically, we are going to
nominate at this convention, the
incumbent, Dwight D. Eisenhow
er, and our vice president, Rich
ard Nixon."
Nixon's message said:
"The idea that government is
the servant of the people is not
a new idea, but, the way it has
been applied for the last three
and one-half years is new and
we are all the better for it.'
Former President Herbert
Hoover outlined the accomplish-
wrofmlYooDSi
St. Martin's Forest
In 1895 two men swung axes
in the wilderness timber to begin
the clearing for a new educa
tional enterprise of the Order of
St. Benedict whose rule of
"prayer and labor" had been
established 1400 years before. A
shed was raised, then a chapel
and living quarters. There was
soon a school in the clearing.
The site was eight miles from
Olympia.
By 1914 only 40 acres had
been logged. Even in 1919, when
the last of the 600 acres of old
growth forest had been cut over
there was a market for only the
logs of highest grade. Stacks of
old windfalls and new logs were
left among the stumps.
After a slash burn a jungle of
bracken fern, firewood. black
berry, vine maple, groundsel,
salal. pearl everlasting, ' and
other such growth came up to
prodive fuel for more fires.
There were five sweeping fires
in the 1920s. Yet within the sec
tion and around ita there were
Douglas fir seed trees that had
survived the logging and that
lived on through the burns.
Th Conquering Trees
Now a cow-track road winds
through the young Douglas firs
to an abandoned cattle corral
with watering trough and calf
shed. The layout was designed
back in the 1920s by a priest who
had a hand for cow country
architecture. In my eyes, when
I visited St. Martin's College,
every joint of post and poles
called for the scenes of sage
brush and rimrock which I'd
known as a boy in Idaho. The
fame of the sagging gate was
FRANKENSTEIN DEPT.
Beacon Falls. Conn. (U.R) It
was a poetic justice, when a
town court judge imposed an S80
fine on the Waterbury . Ready
Mixed Concrete company for ov
erloading a truck. .The firm was
convicted by scales it helped construct.
for a picture of beef stock graz
ing up distant gulches, in dry
air and sharp sunlight in which
one could look to far pinnacles.
But here it was wet weather.
The 25-year-old Douglas firs
were crowding the corral on all
sides. It had been put up after
the last logging in 1919, in
hope that the 600 acres of raw
cutovers could be made over
into range for 200 head of beef
cattle 6nd enough Guernseys to
yield milk and butter for the
400 students, all young men of
mighty appetite. But after 35
years 40 head of Aberdeen
Angus and 25 milk cows were
the number of the entire herd.
Hundred Yean' War.
For a century the white man
has fought the war of trees vs.
grass on the lands of the Douglas
fir region. In the same period,
and ' before it, the pioneers all
over America followed a tradi
tion of clearing land, of trees,
grubbing stumps, burning debris,
for crop fields and pastures, and
for schools and towns.
On the bottoms it has worked,
for there as a rule the soil is
suited to richer crops than trees.
From these lowland clearings
our townsites and farms were
formed. The later comers had
faith that they could do as well
on the uplands, believing that
where trees would grow any
thing should grow. There are
still many who do not know that
the tree feeds through its leaves
on sunlight and air. only quench
ing its thirst and deriving some
minerals from the ground.
The modern science of soil
analysis and classification rates
four outof every five acres in
Western Oregon and Washing
ton as godd for tree growing,
poor for grass growing or for
farm crops. On the land of St.
Martin's soil examaination began
in the 1930s. Now this college isj
serving as a demonstration area
for a land-use pattern for small
forest owners of all Western
Washington and Oregon.
S TARGAZElC
5- 9-30-M
6? 68 81-851
TAURUS
-V APR. 21
MAY 31
bp 35-37 J0-d
W 60-73-75
MAT Z2
JUNE 22
r r
Ol t -25-3J591
64-77-80-821
-Bj CLAY R. POLLAN-
H' Your Doily Adnity Guide ' M
According to ri Start. .
To develop message for Tuesday,
read words corresponding to numbers
of your Zodiac birth sign
CANCER
j JUNE 23
JULY 23
ICS 48-58-63
uo
JU.Y 24
Aud 23
&;51-76-79-86l
VGO j
AUG 24
j3 SEPT 22
HA 7-10-13.31
1 Today'
2 Don r
3 AnOVW
4 Don't
5 .Maintain
6 Things
7 6 .t
8 Vou
9 lc.s
10 Willing
11 Your
12 Wondcrtul
13 To '
14 Slick
15 Throw
IS Intuitive
17 Turn
18 Prcrticn 48 Be
19 Cotlally 49 Your
20 On
31 Admit
32 Om
33 Should
34 To
35 Get
34 Thot
37 Together
38 For
39 Ir-hiihon
40 Wrm
41 For
42 The
43 Out
44 li
45 CuUvrtrJ
46 Shou-d
47 Conflict!
21 No
22 And
23 You,
24 Need
25 Aspects
26 Oov
27 Proceed
28 Your
29 CauhoB
30 In
Good
50 Honed
51 Coreer
52 Your
53 Wxh
54 Soewl
55 Post
56 Todoy
57 Sogirtorlus
53 Srtong
59 Be
60 And
la) Adverse
61 W.rh
62 Relations
63 Todoy
64 Fovoriobra
65 Bottles
66 Errors
67 Or
68 And
69 To
70 A
71 Chant,
72 Disputes
73 Svmootriehc
74 You II
75 People
76 O-
77 To
78 Confidence
79 Socol
0 Cecperetn
81 Be
82 Enterprises
83 Sharp
84 Edoe -
85 Economical
86 tile
87 Be
83 Go
89 Contervornd
90 ploces
C8I4
Neutral
nrr 51 e jj.
NOV 22
Pl.24-4l.47
I65-CS7-
teats-
SEPT 23
OCT 23
4-15-29 34 4fl
147-53-87-891
SAGITTARIUS
NOV 23
17-20-36-571 VI
? 1-74-88-90
CAPRICORN I
DEC 23 T
JAN 20 V-tOi-
69-7083-84V5f
AQUARIUS
LAM 21
rrV ta Ci-
C2-43-56 1
nscES
FEB 3VSi
MAR 21
3- 6.19.224T
C7-61.73
ments of the Republican party
since its inception.
Mr. Hoover said:
"For over one hundred years
of its existence, the Republican
party has insisted that free en
terprise is the foundation of our
economic life and of free
men."
The program included wel
comes from California Govern
or Goodwin J. Knight and San
Francisco Mayor George Christ
opher. The Republican governor
predicted "another resounding
republican victory throughout
the nation in November."
Hall Predicts Victory
Leonard Hall, chairman of the
GOP National committee, also
predicted victory in the forth
coming elections.
"The spirit of the 'great cru
sade' the president launched four
years' ago still warms our hearts
and inspires our 'minds. That is
why we enter this 1956 presi
dential campaign confident of
another overwhelming victory
November 6th," he said.
Gov. Arthur B. Langlie of
Washington, who will be the
convention's keynote speaker,
said:
"The greatest contribution we
as American citizens can make
to our country is to work as nev
er before to strengthen the foun
dations of the political support
which will assure the continua
tion of the far-sighted programs
which have been carried for
ward in the past three and one-
half years and the preservation
have been brought to the gov
ernment of this nation."
Senate Minority Leader Wil
liam F. Knowland of California
said:
"The challenge of Internation
al Communism is an unparal
leled opportunity to awaken the
moral conscience of men every
where "to injustice and to re
state the principle that the state
is the servant and not the peo
ple." -
Mentions Communnism
House Minority Leader Joseph
W. Martin Jr., of Massachusetts
also mentioned the Communism
problem. He said "so long as we
cling fast to our bright and
ancient faith of freedom and
equal opportunity for all. the
pagan terrors of godless Com
munism never will find hospit
able footing in our beloved Am
erica." Meade Alcorn of Connecticut,
vice-chairman of the committee
on arrangements, pointed to the
"unprecedented numbers of per
sons engaged in the dissemina
tion of news" and predicted "the
most extensive coverage ever giv
en a political event"
John Clifford Folger, chair
man of the GOP finance commit
tee, appealed for fulfillment of
financial quotas and said:
"However loudly it may be
denied, our opponents have the
biggest coffers."
In addition the program includ
ed statements by other promin
ent Republicans, including all
cabinet members, and a detailed
of the dignity and. integrity that history of the party.
A
What homemaker isn't? But do you
ever pass up a good buy because you
have no place to put it? Food storage is
no problem for the lucky lady with a
HOME FOOD FREEZER
HOME FOOD FREEZER
SOLVES THE "BARGAIN
STORAGE PROBLEM!
The homemaker who owns ,
A HOME FOOD FREEZER
buys meats, fruits, and vegetables in
quantity, in season when they are best
(and cheapest) and has them fresh at
her finger tips the year 'round for
quick, delicious, inexpensive meals.
3i-
A HOME FOOD FREEZER is a supermarket
in the kitchen, leisure time in a
, busy day, and money in the
homemaker's purse!
THZ CALIFORNIA OREGON POWER COMPANY
A Western Company owned and operated by Western People
M0i
Important gasoline development for high-compression engines:
From aviation fuel -new pick-up for your car!
SUPREME I
, mffUMF-y
Ethylene dibromide, originally designed for
airline fuel, is now in Chevron Supreme. It's
Skypower newest answer to the power
needs of every car on the road! This formula
vaporizes harmful deposits that other gasolines
allow to form in your engine's combustion cham
ber. You can feel the result: lively response
when you need it in traffic, added power that
makes steep grades easier, new freedom from
knock when you accelerate.
Skypower insures clean burning helps stop
valve corrosion and ring wear. You also get
famous carburetor-cleaning "Detergent-Action"
in Chevron Supreme to increase gas mileage,
preyent stalling. If your car does not require
Supreme, get all the power it can deliver with
Chevron Gasoline. Try a tankful . . . and for con
venience, use a Chevron National Credit Card!
We take better care of your car with S. O. products
STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF CALIFORNIA