FOUR MEDFORD (OREGON)
MedfordWTribune
"Everyone in Southern Orezon
Reagi The .Mail Tribune"
Published Daily Exceot Saturday by
MEDFORD PRINTING CO
- 27 -25 -North Fir St- Phone 2-H141
RORFFfT w nrwr vmTTZZ
KERB GREY. Advcrtum Manager
GERALD LATHAM. Butineu Manager
KLS ALLEN JR.. Managing Editor
EARL H. ADAMS. City Editor
5RaXCHIPMAJSL Telegraph Editor
RICHARD JEWETT Sporta Editor
OLIVE ST ARCHER, Society Editor
PALE ERIClONCirc ulatlon Mgr.
An Independent N'ewgpa per
Entered as second class matter at
Medford, Oregon, under Act ol
Marcn 3. 1 337
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Mail In Advance: Per Copy 10c
Daiiy and Sunday One year $15 00
Daily and Sunday Six monthi 8 00
Daily and Sunday Three mo. 4.25
Sunday Only One year
By Carrier In Advance Medford
Ashland. Central Point Eagle Point.
Jacksonville. Gold Hill. Phoenix.
Shady Cove. Rorue River, Talent,
and on motor routes:
DailT and Sunday One year f 18 00
Daily and Sunday One month 150
Carrier and Dealers 10c per copy
All TernjjC a.h in Advance
. Official Paper of 'the City of Medford
wncm riper tit Jack ton County
United Press Full Leaied Wire
MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU
OF CIRCULATION
Advertising Representative:
WEST-HOLIDAY COMPANY INC
Offices in New York. Chicago, de
iroit. San Francisco, Los Anstelea.
Seattle. Portland. St. Louis. Atlanta
Vancouver. B C
NATIONAL EDITORIAL
I ASSOCIATION
O W
nmMnxLn
NEWSPAPER
PUBLISHERS
ASSOCIATION
Flight o' Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30, 40
and 50 years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
Sept. 21. 1946 (Saturday)
A well-known man in Pacific
northwest golfing circles, Hugh
"'G. Starkweather, takes over
duties of professional at Rogue
Valley Country club.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: Pumpkins
are coming along fine and pa
tiently waiting for the frost to
get them.
20 YEARS AGO
Sept. 21. 1936 (Monday)
State and CCC men today
mop up fire on Coyote creek
north of Grants Pass and a string
of five blazes on Carris creek
north of Provolt.
With a 10 to 15 per cent in
crease in enrollment expected,
formal registration at the South
ern Oregon Normal school in
Ashland begins.
30 YEARS AGO
Sapt. 21. 1926 (Tuesday)
Jackson county will have the
biggest and best fruit exhibit at
the state fair next week it has
ever had.
Bart Price, driver for Star
Motor company, who is making
a border to border run in a Star
4. will arrive in Medford to
morrow. 40 YEARS AGO
Sept. 21. 1916 (Thursday)
The regular Saturday night
dancing season opens at Nata
torium Sept. 23.
Five hundred people last night
meet at Natorium to form a
local Hughes Alliance.
SO YEARS AGO
Sept. 21. 1906 (Friday)
Shooters are holding annual
carnival at the Stewart place
with the Ladies Booster club
helping.
E. Spencer, who has mining
Interests near Scio. was in
Yreka several days this week in
the interest of a wagon road on
this side of the Siskiyou moun
tains.
What's the Answer?
Can Ton Get 4 of the 7?
Copr. 1953 Editorial Research
Report
1. The states voting Republi
can fnr Pnncress in 1954 mid
term elections have together
fewer electoral votes
than the states voting Demo
cratic then?
2. Which two of these words
don't belong in the title of 4-H
clnbs: Hand. Happiness, rieaa
Health, Heart, Heaven?
S. The President does or
doesn't have to raise duties on
certain imports if informed by
the Tariff Commission they are
Injuring a U.S. lnduscry:
4. The capital of which one
of these states is on tne missis
rivsr- Illinois. Wisconsin
Missouri. Tennessee, Louisiana?
5. The Sphinx in Egypt has
the head of a man ana trie Doa
. of a horse, camel, lion, bull or
man?
e &vnn Harriman was elect
-j n...rT,r,r nf N. Y. in. 1954 by
a very large, a moderate, or a
wrv small margin.'
7. First woman to swim the
English Channel was Gertrude
Ederle; right or wrong?
The answers: 1. Fewer: 2. Hap
piness and HeaTen don't 3.
Doesn't: 4. Louisiana: 5. Lion: 6.
Very small; 7. Right.
MAIL TRIBUNE
Gobbledegook
A man named Malcolm Cowley, writing in the
current Reporter magazine, voices a complaint that
finds ready sympathy from this reader.
He objects to the gobbledegook-used by sociolo
gists while writing in their professional field.
(Our own personal linguistic objection extends to
many other fields where verbose English is used to
muddy up the meaning possibly to disguise a basic
lack of understanding to begin with).
DUT let Mr. Cowley's example speak for itself. He
quotes an article in the American Sociological Re
view as follows :
"In effect, it was hypothesized that certain physical data
categories including housing types and densities, land use
characteristics, and ecological location constitute a scalable
area. This could be called a continuum of residential de
sirability. Likewise, it was hypothesized that several social
data categories, describing the same census tracts, and
referring generally to the social stratification system of
the city, would also be scalable. This scale could be called
a continuum of socio-economic status. Thirdly, it was hypo
thesized that there would be a high positive correlation
between the scale types on each continuum. This relation
ship would define certain linkages between the social and
physical structure of the city. It would also provide a
precise definition of the commonalities among several
spatial distributions. By the same token, the correlation
between the residential desirability scale and the con
tinuum of socio-economic status would provide 'an estimate
of the predictive value of aerial photographic data relative
to the social ecology of the city."
What the writer was saying, in 160 words, was
rephrased by Mr. Cowley, in 33 words, as follows :
"Rich people live in big houses set farther apart than
those of poor people. By looking at an aerial photograph of
any American city, we can distinguish the richer from the
poorer neighborhoods."
have no objection to big words, or even obscure
words, as such, provided they tend to make one's
meaning clearer or more precise.
But we do have an objection to incomprehensible
double-talk when it is used for no other reason than
to sound impressive or "professional." That goes for
"governmentese," too. E.A.
Lingua
Despite the above, and
English language can be, with proper treatment, a
beautiful, living and immensely expressive tongue, it
is one of the most illogical in the world.
Latin, with its precise
is a more orderly tongue, as
Germanic languages.
English, for all its potential expressiveness and
fluidity, is a hodge-podge of
ian s rulebooks have about
as they have rules themselves.
U0R this reason, it is interesting to note that, more
than ever before, it is becoming a sort of universal
language a lingua franca.
Premier Nehru of India,
ed his attempt to substitute
the training of engineers and
the technical literature is
tongue, and for another it is
ic purposes.
He has acknowledged
be used for years to come in India among science and
engineering trainees, and, even more, that the lang
uage of the British Raj is still the only one of the I
hundreds of dialects and languages in India which is I
anywhere near universal.
A RELEASE from the Civil Aeronautics administra
tion points out that English is also becoming the
international language of
and, as it is spoken at the airport tower in Bankgkok,
Thailand, it is "something wonderful to hear."
Bangkok, now a major air terminal, in one day may
issue landing instructions to pilots of English, Austral
ian, Swiss, French, Japanese, American, Indian, Ma
layan, Chinese, Indonesian, Dutch, Celonese, Laotan,
Viet Namese and Icelandic airlines. Add to this pilots
from Texas or New England, and there is a "bewilder
ing melange" of language, it says. But somehow it
works. E.A.
Clean Rest Rooms
The American Automobile Association recently
took a poll of its members and asked, "what annoys
you most when traveling by automobile?"
The answers revealed that a majority 64 per
cent were irritated most by the same thing that irri
tates this sometime automobilist and his constant
companion : Unclean restrooms in service stations.
The AAA, as a result, called on the "major oil
companies, service station operators and motorists
themselves" to collaborate to keep rest rooms spick,
span and sanitary.
We have a hunch that this irritant is one of the
reasons for the growth
service station, as opposed to the independent, tor
the chains can set up standards of rest-room sanita
tion and cleanliness, and
dependent has no such assistance.
""THE other side of the coin, however, is only hinted
at by the AAA release, when it adds "motorists
themselves to the list of
ing. This same motorist
slopping water on the floor of his own bathroom, or
writing dirty words on his own walls, or tossing used
paper towels around his own house seems to lose
all sense of cleanliness and consideration when in a
service station rest room.
Ask any station operator. He'll tell you that after
cleaning up a rest room six
his opinion of the traveling
Friday, September 21, 1956
Franca
despite the fact that the
construction and grammar,
are the Romance and the
illogic, and the grammar
as many exceptions to rules
for instance, has abandon
Hindustani for English in
scientists. For one thing,
not available in that Indian
too imprecise for scientif
that English will have to
airways communications,
of the "chain" type of
enforce them, while the in
those who should be assist
w-ho wouldn't think of
or seven times in one day,
public is pretty low. E.A.
Suez Still Leads as Topic in
Week's Balance Sheet of News
By CHARLES M. McCANN
United Press Correspondent
The week's good and bad
news on the international bal
ance sheet:
Suez:
Deadlock and disunity marked
the eighth week of the Suez
Canal dispute.
Pre s l d e n t
Gamal Abdel
Nasser of
Egypt remain
ed unyielding
in his determi
nation to exert
complete con
trol over the
canal.
JCM lA Delegates of
Charles M. Mctaun 18 countries
met in London to discuss a plan
for a "Suez Canal users associa
tion" to counter Nasser's action.
Under this plan, canal users
would try to send ships through
run i m w
t " ' ''41
Babson Ponders on
Wonders of Brains
By ROGER W. BABSON
Gloucester, Mass. If I have
any real hobby, it is the study of
the human brain. In fact, if I
were to live my
life again, I
should devote
myself to the
develop m e n t
and harnessing
of the human
brain.
Any school
superintendent
who insisted
ttuEe w. Baoion that first-grade
children should be taught psy
chology would probably be
called "crazy." On. the other
hand, I believe if he did not use
this long word, but merely began
in the early grades to teach the
child about his own brain, he
would be praised. After 12 years
spent in Gloucester public
schools, and four years in the
Massachusetts Institute of Tech
nology, I had never heard of
pychology. Yet it seems only
common sense to begin education
by teaching a . child about his
own brain, with which he will
learn everything in the years
to follow.
As so many children are start
ing their first formal education
this month, I urge that their in
terest be aroused in the wonder
ful machine which every one of
them has in his head. It makes
me cross to see the attention
which is given by the press to
the new electronic computers,
while so little space is devoted to
the human brain. In fact, Thom
as J. Watson, late President of
International Business Machines
until his death a few weeks ago,
once said to me, "If one of my
machines is worth a half mil
lion dollars, the brain which
every child has is worth ten mil
lion dollars."
Telephone. Systems
Every child who has entered
school this month has in his head
the equivalent of telephone
wires to every part of the body.
Whenever, we touch anything,
see anything, hear anything,
smell any odor, a telephone
message is immediately sent to
our brain. There it is automat
ically directed to one of these
switchboards, which in turn
makes a permanent impression
upon some part of the brain sim
ilar to the small circular impres
sions on a long-playing phono
graph record.
There are many such switch
boards" with millions of plugs.
The chief switchboards are the
following 12: Desire, Instinct,
Memory, Industry, Common
Sense. Expediency. Reason. In
In The Day's
According to Elections Regis
trar David O'Hara, it will cost
about $325,000 to hold the gen
eral election in Oregon this fall.
Of this total, the state will pay
about $125,000 and the coun
ties about $200,000.
That will amount to about two
bits a head, depending on just
what Oregon's population is.
NOT too bad.
Where else could you get that
much show for a quarter?
SENATOR ESTES KEFAUVER
says in Minnesota that an
agriculture department study
that was ordered by congress
shows that a food stamp plan
which the Democrats endorse in
their platform would cost con
siderably less than the Eisen
hower administration proposes
to spend on its farm program
next year.
He added:
"The Democrats don't claim
that a food stamp plan for chan
neling surplus farm products to
needy citizens would be a cure
all for the farm problem. But. it
will be a mighty long step toward
curing it."
TTMMMM. Let's see.
Boiling the food stamp plan
down to its bare essentials, the
government would give stamps
to needy people. The needy peo
ple would take the stamps to the
food store and get their groceries
for nothing.
Simple, isn't it?
the canal with their own pilots.
If Nasser refused, the users
would boycott the canal.
But dissension arose at once
in the conference. Some of the
18 nations thought the plan too
risky and demanded that the
canal dispute be put before the
United Nations.
Others urged further negotia
tions with Nasser.
Soviet Premier Nikolai A. Bul
ganin suggested in an interview
with the International News
Service a six-nation meeting to
seek a "just and practicable" set
tlement. He named the United
States, Great.-Britain, France.
Russia, Egypt and "neutralist"
India as the six nations.
Because of the disunity in the
London conference the United
States, Britain and France the
sponsors of the users association,
were compelled to revise their
plan in hope of getting agree-
spiration. Imagination. Religious
Faith, Hope, Love. These last
three are the most important for
the good of mankind. But from
a business point of view, per
haps industry, common sense, in
spiration, and imagination will
give school graduates the best
salaries and job opportunities.
In my business I am especially
interested in getting people with
keen imagination, who can cor
rectly see into the future. I be
lieve the great opportunities lie
with those who have cultivated
this power.
How Our Brains Work
Each child possesses hund
reds of thousands of living cells.
Some are pressure-sensing cells:
others are seeing, tasting, and
smelling cells. All of these have
"private telephone" lines to the
brain, which automatically tran
smit messages by the "dial
system" to the right switch
board, which in turn makes the
permanent record.
I believe that children could
become tremendously interested
in their brains, and that this in
terest could add 100 per cent
to their educational results.
Children are always interested
in animals. When it is shown
them that moths have smelling
powers to find their mates sev
eral miles away; that the in
stinct switchboard in the heads
of dogs enables them to find
their way home and hunt out
criminals; and that the robin on
the lawn has far better eyesight
than we have, children will wake
up to their own precious pos
sibilities. Should Be Taught
Children should be taught
that in their heads they carry
a telephone system with more
private lines than the telephone
systems of our largest cities.
Getting children to use more of
these thousands of private lines
and dormant switchboards will
make for healthy, happy, and
prosperous lives.
The real task facing our
schools is not to develop more
knowledge but rather more rea
son, self-control, and imagina
tion. The ability to solve prob
lems which have never yet been
solved and to see more correctly
into the future should be our
real goals. I especially appeal
for work with children because
children can learn more in the
first 12 years than they will be
able to in the next 40. My clos
ing thought would be to impress
upon these children the great
importance of the switchboard
entitled religion, with its sub-
switchboards of faith, hope, and
love.
News
By Frank Jenkins
A ND The Keef adds it would
onlv cost about a billion and
a half a year which is probably
quite a little less than the present
highly complicated' farm aid pro
gram costs.
BUT
If simplicity is all we're look
ing for .
The farm problem could be
simplified even farther. Just
count the acres each farmer has.
Estimate what he ought to make
from each acre. Then write him
a government check for the
amount and let him go fishing
That would reduce the surplus
but quick! .
NOTHER problem:
Money is SCARCE these
days.
What shall we do about that?
THE money scarcity . could be
remedied as easily as the
farm surplus problem could be
solved. Just start the govern
ment printing presses and turn
out money by the truckload. Give
everybody who wants to build a
house a bale of it and let him
sail in.
. Bov! What a lumber market
that would create! ' .
TT sounds wonderful.
The heck of it is that it doesn't
work.
Why?
You will find the answer,
think, in Genesis 1-19: "In the
sweat of thy face shalt thou eat
bread."
ment.
Red China
The Chinese Communist Par
ty held its first congress since
1945.
Speeches by party leaders
lacked any belligerent tone.
Peace, disarmament and nation
al industrial development were
the themes.
Mao Tse-tung, the No. 1 Chin
ese Red leader, noted "a trend
toward relaxation in the inter
national situation."
Marshal Peng Teh-huai, de
fense minister, said that the
armed forces now numbered 2.7
million fewer men than they did
at peak strength in 1949.
Premier Chou En-lai outlined
a vast program of international
development for his country's
second five-year-plan, to start in
1958. The plan called for doub
ling expenditures on construc
tion. '
"Mr. K" Rides Again .
Nikita S. Khrushchev, leader
of the Russian Communist Party,
roused keen diplomatic interest
by paying an unexpected visit
to President Tito of Yugoslavia.
Dispatches indicated that the
visit was a surprise to Tito him
self and a somewhat unwel
come one because it might hurt
his chance of getting continued
American aid.
Officially, Khrushchev was
just taking a vacation in his
visit. Speculation in Western
capitals was that he was trying
to induce Tito to give up his
policy of balancing Yugoslavia
between West and East.
Independence
Britain took a new step in its
long-range program of holding
its vast Commonwealth together
by giving its smaller units home
rule. It was announced in Lon
don that the' Gold Coast, its val
uable cocoa-producing colony on
the west coast of Africa, will
be given independence as a full
member of the British Common
wealth effective next March 6
Communications
Letters to the Editor must bear
the name and address of the writei
although under certain circum
stances the use ot a pen name or
initial for publication is permis
sible The Mail Tribune reserves
the right to edit all letters with an
eye to clarification and condensa
tion Letters submitted for publica
tion must not exceed 400 words.
He Doesn't "Like Ike"
To the Editor: Here are the
names of the so-called Senators
and so forth that don't like the
declaration of independence
These birds introduced legisla
tion during the present congress
sponsoring this Atlantic union
plan. Their goal is government
of all the world. This is the red
goal. We have one vote in 60,
and mind you this Atlantic un
ion committee inc. is exempt
from taxation.
Dr. Milton Eisenhower. Gov
ernor Harriman, Tom Dewey,
Adlai Stevenson, Dwight Eisen
hower, internationalist; Richard
L. Neuberger, Estes Kefauver,
Sam Coon, B. Frisk, Charles
Gubser, Cecil R. King, Thor C.
Tollefson, James Roosevelt,
George P. Miller, Gracie Pfost,
and Dulles is also a one worlder,
he and his cohorts in Washing
ton. Here it is.
1. Ultimately a world gov
ernment delegated powers.
2. Complete abandonment of
U.S. isolation.
3. Strong immediate limita
tions of national sovereignty.
4. International control of all
armies and navies.
5. World wide freedom of im
migration means by-by to our
wage scales and the hindu stand
ard of living.
Have Americans lost their sen
reliance, and are so apathetic
that they will ostrich in the
hole and do nothing. In the final
show down it is the American
people who are the guardians of
their own liberty, if they still
have the guts. Join and vote the
For America, Constitutional par
ty. Before you vote use your
judgment. In my opinion, who
ever destroys the sovereignty of
the United States is a traitor,
what is your opinion?
Washington is a red rats nest,
ninety-four strong in the con
gress and senate and there from
practically all states.
The "For America" party tol
erates no surrender of American
independence, and stands for
constitutional states rights and
individual liberty. Also, ex-servicemen
agreeing, send card with
name and address.
G. S. Reilly
338 North Laurel st.
Ashland, Ore.
(Constitutional party.)
79 Coses of Disease
Reported Last Week
Nineteen cases of communi
cable diseases were reported to
the Jackson county Department
of Health during the week of
Sept. 9.
They included two cases of
mumps, one case of measles, one
polio case, and three cases of in
fluenza in Medford. Others re
ported diseases were whooping
cough, strep throat, amoebic
dysentery, encephalitis, infec
tious hepatitis, and impetigo.
Read and Use.Ciawnned Ads
Eisenhower Prospects
For Farm-Belt Votes
Truman Won in 1948
By LYLE C. WILSON ,
United Press Correspondent
Washington (U.R) President
Eisenhower is prospecting for
votes today in the general area
where Harry
S. Truman
drew a 1948
bead on Thom
as E. Dewey
and dropped
him in his
tracks.
That was in
1948 when Les
Biffle toured
the farm belt
L,1C C MllSOO
disguised as an egg-and-chicken
peddler to discover that Dewey
and the Republican Party were
in deep trouble. Biffle then and
for years past was an officer
of the U.S. Senate or of the
Senate Democratic caucus.
Biffle, one or two politicos of
organized labor, and Mr. Tru
man were among the few who
saw the farm rebellion coming
as the presidential campaign de
veloped eight years ago. Biffle
got much of his information of
the state of the public mind
among some of the seven group
ed states which variously are
washed by the Great Lakes or
the Mississippi and Ohio rivers.
These or Else
They are changing states.
barring Indiana which hasn't
gone Democratic since 1936. The
others are Illinois. Iowa, Michi
gan, Minnesota, Ohio and Wis-
Congressional
Quiz
(Copyrlsht. 1956
Congressional Quarterly)
Q From what day to what
day does the fiscal year run?
A July 1 to June 30.
Q The Federal Reserve
System which includes all na
tional banks and many state
banks was established under
which President: (a) Andrew
Jackson; (b) Grover Cleveland;
(c) Woodrow Wilson; (d) Frank
lin D. Roosevelt?
A e) Woodrow Wilson, in
1913.
Q A hot political subject
is the possible revision of the
existing federal tax rates. In
dividual income tax annual rates
now range from what low to
what high?
A The lowest rate is 20
per cent. The highest rate is
91 per cent on net income
in excess -of $200,000.
McGralh Convinced
Of Democrat Victory
Pendleton (U.R) J. Howard
McGrath, chairman of Sen. Estes
Kefauver's advisory committee,
says he has ''every reason to be
confident of Democratic victory
in November.
McGrath, former attorney gen
eral, arrived here yesterday a
day ahead of the vice presiden
tial candidate. He said "We've
been out since last Friday and
everywhere we've been we have
been told our meetings were the
biggest yet of the season."
McGrath said Kefauver prob
ably would return to Oregon
during the campaign.
-mm
KODAK VoW 135 CAMERA, Model C
Sure, inexpensive
Versatile-plus! This fine but low-cost miniature focuses to 2
feet; has a fast f3.5 lens for fine results even on dull days;
and shutter speeds to 1 300 for action. Drop-in, no-thread
system makes it apple-pie-easy to load, and the "red-dot"
emngj proviae oox-camerff
CAMERA $33.75
For ALL Your Photographic
Needs It's
consm. With Indiana, those
states represent 118 electoral
votes and the Eisenhower-Nixon
ticket must get most of them on
election day or else.
Wendell L. Willkie got three
of the seven in 1940 when he
bucked FDR. They were Indi
ana. Iowa and Michigan. Dewey
took Indiana, Iowa, Ohio and
Wisconsin in 1944. Four years
later against Mr. Truman, Dew
ey took Indiana and Michigan.
Mr. Eisenhower, of course, won
all seven in 1952. Adlai E. Ste
venson four years ago gained a
lone state outside the South
West Virginia and dropped
four Southern states to the Re
publicans: Florida, Tennessee,
Texas and Virginia.
The key to the 1956 presiden
tial election probably lies, as
in 1948, among that cluster of
seven states, especially, in Iowa.
If there is sufficient farm dis
content this year to swing Iowa
again to the Democrats, there
probably will be new faces in
the White House next year.
Farm. Labor Hold Balance
If farm discontent combines
with the efforts of organized
labor to swing Indiana from its
firm political moorings, the Re
publicans would be wise to save
their campaign money for a bet
ter year, 1960 maybe, or 1964.
Dewey and his 1948 strate
gists thought they were in trou
ble on the labor front. Most of
the big industrial states had
backed Dewey, however, when
the returns were in. Such states
as Michigan, Indiana, Pennsyl
vania, New York, New Jersey,
Delaware and all of New Eng
land save Massachusetts and
Rhode Island.
Iowa returns reflected that
trend. Dewey carried the east
ern and considerably industri
alized counties of Iowa. But he
foundered in the tall corn fields
yonder West. It shouldn't have
been difficult for anyone to dis
cover that 1948 trend in Iowa.
The fact is, the trend was dis
covered and reported but few
believed it, even among the dis
coverers.
Editorial Comment
ADLAI 'COMES CLEAN'
Adlai Stevenson must be given
credit for his frank statement
Monday that he believes Alger
Hiss was guilty of the crime for
which he was convicted, which
was technically perjury, but actu
ally treason. He was put on the
spot by questioners, evidently
anticipated that he would be and
had the answer ready. -
The question became "hot" in
the present campaign because
Harry Truman, who originally
called the Hiss investigation a
"red herring" recently repeated
his belief that Hiss wasn't guilty,
although the conviction was ap
pealed and upheld by an appel
late court after thorough study.
Truman is probably as mad at
Stevenson now as be was before
and during the Chicago conven
tion. Stevenson risked this far
from insignificant displeasure
when he "came clean." He should
not be further involved in the
Hiss matter. He once gave Hiss
a character reference, but this
was that his reputation had been
good, which it was, prior to the
revelation of his disloyalty.
Salem Capital Journal.
capture its beauty
on KODAK
COLOR FILM
way to color slides
simplicity in color slides.
FLASHOLDER $7.95
CAMERAS
PHOTOGRAPHS
120 East Main St.