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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 2, 1956)
o fOUH MEDFORD (OREGON) MedfordTribune "Everyone in Southern Oregon Reads The Mail Tribune" Published Daily Except Saturday by MEDFORD PRINTING CO 27-2S .North fir St. Phone 2-I41 ROBERT W BUHL. Editor HERB GREY Advertising Manager GERALD LATHAM Business Manager ERIC ALLEN JR Managing Editor EARL H ADAMS City Editor HARRY CHTPMAN. Telegraph Editor RICHARD JEWETT Sporta Editor LIVE ST ARCHER Society Editor DALE ER1CKSO.N. Circulation Mgr. An Independent Newspaper Entered aa second clam matter at Medford Oregon under Act of March 3. 1837 SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mail In Advance Per Copy 10c Daily and Sunday One year S13 00 Dally and Sunday Six months 8 00 Dallv and Sunday Three mot 4.23 Sundav Only One vear $420 By Carrier In Advance Medford. Ashland Central Point Eagle Point Jacksonville Gold HiU Phoenix. Shady Cove Rogue River Talent and on motor routes. Daily and Sunday One year f 18 00 Dally and Sundav One month 1 50 Carrier and Dealers 10c per copy k All Terms Cah In Ajvancg Of flrisl Paper of the City of Medford P"!yai Paper of Jackson County United Press F ul 1 Leased Wire" MEMBER Or AUDIT BUREAU Ot CIRCULATION Advertising Representative WEST-HOLIDAY COMPANY tNC Offices In New York Chicago de trolt San Francisco. Los Angelea Seattle Portland St Louis Atlanta Vancouver. B.C. NATIONAL EDITORIAL E&y iAsgc5AT6N ujiiMim-iriw NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION Flight o' Time e c Medford and Jackson County History from the files of The Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50 years ago. 10 YEARS AGO Dec. 2. 1946 (Monday) "Service to your community," theme of address given in Med ford by Robert t. Moore, first international vice president of Active International. From Arthur Perry's Ye Smudge Pot column: The ju venile element has started to lose interest in everything but Santa Claus, and ice cream cones. e 20 YEARS AGO ' Dee. 2. 193S (Wednesday) 0 Preliminary wori is under way for development of old Sturgis gold mining property west of Jacksonville by the B-H company. City council adopts resolution declaring due and payable the unpaid balance plus interest of Bancroft assessments delinquent about three years. 30 YEARS AGO Dec. 2, 1926 (Thursday) Banquet with few musical numbers and speeches is held for about 60 alumni and students of the MedforoBusiness college at Medford hotel. Southern Oregon fishing will be the best it has been for many years because of the recent heavy rains flooding the Rogue river and its tributaries. 40 YEARS AGO Dec. 2. 1916 (Saturday) Rogue River Fish Protective association members attend meeting of "live and let live" anglers' club, called by John S. Orth. ' Medford lodge 1168, BPO Elks will hold their annual memorial exercises Sunday at 2:30 p.m. SO YEARS AGO Dec. 2, 1906 (Sunday) Mayor and city council me?t to inspect new septic tank, con structed under contract by Rein hart andgAtwell for Medford. C. H. Pierce sells Barnum property at the comer of Fifth and D sts. to V. 3. Emerick for $2,500. What's the Answer? Can Too Get 4 of the 7? Copr. 1935 Editorial Research Report 1. Richard M. Nixon entered the Vice Presidency from the U. S. Senate, House of Repre sentatives, California governor ship. Marine Corps, or the F.B.I.? 2. About i) 6, (b) 129(c) 18. (d) 24, or (e) 30 per cent of all primary school children are classified as "slow learners"? 3. Most people on Cyprus are of Greek. Turkish. British, Jew ish or Arab origin? 4. Most cancers of the mouth are or aren't first detected by densts? 5. AnotherGstate has or hasn't joined Georgia in letting 18-year olds vote? 6. David Sarnoff is oard chairman of Montgomery Ward. R.C.A.. Dumont Television. Hart Schaffner & Marx, or Neiman Marcus? The answers: 1. Senate. 2. 18 per cent. 3. Greek. 4. Are. 5. i& (Kentucky). 6. R.CJL. iC MAIL TRIBUNE How the U.P. Does It How is your imagination? In normal working order? O.K. then close your eyes and try to imagine this: The Friendly Southern Pacific announces it will run a modern daylight "shuttle train," from Ashland and Medford to Portland and return every day in the week including Sunday. THERE will be no extra fare, iiyfact inexpensive coach tickets will be required only. The train will leave Medford at 9 a.m. and reach Portland at 4 p.m. It will leave Portland at 5 p.m. and reach Medford at 11 p.m. The train will be of the lightest, most modern construction, with comfortable overstuffed seats, both a lounge car and a diner. There will be a hostess, unif ormed stewardess a la airplane transportation, and again like deluxe air travel, appetizing meals will be served and put on your life Belts please ! the meals will not only be for free, but passengers will be allowed to eat all that they can hold, at any time. The new train will be cozy warm in winter and air-cooled in summer, there will be special construc tion and such a low center of gravity the "Aerotrain" will take sharp curves safely and at a good speed, allowing it in spite of half a dozen stops to average nearly 50 miles an hour. i ou don't believe it? Well, neither do we. But that is the sort of passenger service the "Union Pacific" is going to establish on December 18 between Los Angeles and Las Vegas, Nev. he distance is slightly more than it is from Ashland to Portland 332 miles to be exacfi And the train has been sold out for some weeks in advance. s "llfE GRANT Medford is no Las Vegas-thank trie , Lord! and9 Portland is no Los Angeles, for whjch also let us be grateful. But the principle is the same. The Union Pacific instead of trying to "price oyt" itspassenger sevice, and becoming solely a freight line, is not only determined to keep its passenger service running, but so improve and modernize it, that not only will trie traveling public be better served, but the tritditional passenger deficit, will be materially reduced, if not completely cancelled, e e Many travelers have marvelled at the constant and increasing prosperity o? the Union Pacific. Well oil land "grants may have been a factor, 'but keeping up with the times and refusing to go to "sleep at the switch," has,' we believe9, been more a factor and more responsible for the enviable position the U.P.' holds and has held in the ral transportation pic ture of westeiti United States for so many years. R.WjR. . Tragic Misunderstanding m e On one thing there seems general agreement, nfcmely :9 the popularity of the USA has reached a new low in Europe. In view of the Suez crisis, and the part Vncle Sam played in it, a feeling in Britain is understandable, but to learn an even greater hostility exists injlungary comes as a surprise and shock. e How come? 9 0 . Did not Presi4entfEisenhowrer send a warm mes sage of sympathy to the unfortunate victims of Rus sian brutality, and agree to an increase in the number of refugees thi country would accept and succor? He did. s e But that appears to b one cause of the resent ment and illf eeling. e g 0 For that is all he did do. The poor, afflicted people of thisetragic country, expected "more. When they cried out for help they expected something more effective ethan a message of sympathy, good will and atemporary change in the U.S. immigration laws. e We don't refer so much to the ruling classes in that border state, but the plain people the rank and file and as usual in such casls they were the chief sufferers. 6 "They had no right to feel resentful." Probably not. But to understand whyithey did one needs only to review the USA diplomatic and military record what the USA did in two world wars and what was said to the Russian satellites shortly after the cold war with Russia slipped into high gear. o IT WAS Secretary of State Dulles, for example, who talked about uprisings and "liberations" of the captive peoples. Then President Eisenhower stated over and over the tion of this country to continue its championship of the cause of human freedom." e A S STEVENSON remarked many years ago9, it takes two to establish the truth, the one who SPEAKS and the one who LISTENS. TTQ IS fair to assume the people of Hungary only - listened. So to them, at least, it was not a surprise when the blow from Moscow fell that the crowds in Budapest waved and cheered while others prayed when a car with the U.S. emblem on its windshield passed by. Later they asked when their liberators would arrive. When they found they were not to arrive, how could anyone familiar with the U.S. record and the Hangarian temperament expect any other reaction than the one that occured? Un wan-anted? Yes, from a technical, factual Sunday. December 2. 1958 of piqiie and resentment! "unshakable determina fAGttQt" Of FCfCf By joe and Stewart Alsop BULATED SECOND THOUGHTS Washington A convulsive effort to glue the shatteed West ern Alliance together again, and ' to repair some of the terrible damage . done to the whole Western posi tion by the Middle East crisis, is now going on in Washington. The mst im portant part is a yet un of this effort announced b, u t nevertheless firm administration decision to make up the desperate prospec tive West European oil shortage, caused by the closing of the Suez Canal. Official estimates place the likely cost to the U.S. treasury at over a billion dol lars. There was even some consid eration given to calling a special session of Congress to get the money but has since been decided that available funds are enough to tide things over until the regu lar session. The idea of a special session h- - l Stewart Alsop was Of course. to put it mildly, distasteful to the Administration, for obvious political reasons. And it was also feared that a special session would dramatize the issue, and thus infuriate the Arabs, per haps leading to the cutting of the oil "pipelines fron? Saudi Arabia. For such reasons, the decision3 to see Western Europe through the oil crisis has not been an nounced with the usual blare of trumpets. ut quiet assurances that the problem will be han dled in one way or another have been conveyed to the Europeans. The Effort to glue things to geiher again has taken other forms as well, like President Ei senhower's strong statement re agirming support for the Wes ern Alliance, and the decision to send Secretary Dulles off to the NATO meeting in Paris, less than five weeks after his cancer operation. The official American re action to the Middle Eastern crisis has gone through three phases. The first phase, was simple fury; in this initial phase, there was much talk of "letting the British and French stew in their own juice." One very high administration policy-making of ficial was widely quoted as say ing it was now American policy to "write, off Britain and France." President Eisenhower was 'pefsorftlly in large part respon sible for phase two. He rebuked his furious subordinates, and emphasized the importance of the Western Alliance. At the same time, he initiated the pol icy of putting the main empha sis of American policy on work ing through the United Nations, and the Western Alliance was correspondingly down graded. During this period, policy was being made entirely by the President, under Secretary of State Herbert Hoover Jr.o and a handful of high administration appointees. a T'HIS phase culminated last week, when the United States joined the Soviet Union in de manding at the U.N. that Britain and France evacuate Egypt "forthwith." At this point, Brit ish Foreign Minister Selwyn IAyd communicated to the British government his doubts that .the Anglo-American alli ance could any longer be con sidered valid. Within the last few deys, how-1 ever, the voices of the profes sional foreign policy specialists, at the second level of govern ment, who have been dubious all along about the direction of American policy, have begun to be heard, and certain hard facts have begun to be faced. There is, for example, the hard fact that failure to 'make up the oil deficit would leave, not only Britain and France, but all Western Europe and ultimately the United. States- too, stewing in their owi juices. Expert studies have shown that the prospective oil short age would create a desperate economic depression in Western Euroge, with four million or moe unemployed. This would mean pouring the vast Ameri can investment in European re covery down the drain. More over, it could have disastrous political consequences in Eu rope. It would more than restore all the ground the European Communist parties have lost as a result of the Hungarian revolt. It could even bring in a strongly anti-American government in Britain, thus denying to our i v&L standpoint, but from a human. standpoint certainly quite understandable. So what? Well Teddy Roosevelt's slogan was "Speak soft ly but carry a big stick." If he were alive today he might change the word ing to something like this : "If you haven't a big stick or if you have one but don't intend to use it, not only speak softly but choose words with great care." R.W.R. Strategic Air Force the British bases on which SAC is crucially dependent 'PHIS third phase of sober sec - ond thought, in short, has served to remind the American government that the Western Alliance is as important to the United States as to Europe. Hence the convulsive last min ute effort to repair the enor mous damage which the alliance has suffered. But the question remains whether the damage can really now be repaired at all. For without the strategic area and the resources of the Middle East the Western Alli ance is not worth very much. And Egypt's Colonel Nasser, who looks like emerging from his military defeat with an enor mous political victory, wants just what the Soviets want to eliminate all Western power in the Middle East, including American power. In sum, the sober second thoughts may have come too late. Copyright 1956, New Work Herald Tribune Inc. Edilorial Comment' BALLOON FOR MORSE In his weekly newsletter. Sen. Dick Neuberger of Oregon scents enthusiasm in California for Sen. Wayne Morse as a Democratic candidate for vice president or perhaps even the presidency in 1960. Senator N'Suberger's comment follows: l "After our 350 speeches dur ing $h Oregon campaign in be half of Senator Morse and the rest of the Democratic ticket, Maurine and I went south for an interlude in California. There we addressed several schools, the Westside Jewish Community cen ter, the Democratic Women's forum of Los Angeles county and a number' of other fine groups. Thunderous applause invariably greeted the comment that Wayne Morse must be considered as a possible presidential or vice pres idential nominee in 1960. "We both emphasized that there was ample precedent for service on a national ticket by a man who had changed parties. After all, Lincoln went to con gress as a Whig but to the White House as a Republican. Willkie was a Democrat as late as 1938, yet the Republican nominee for president in 1940. Furthermore, Senator." Morse's political cour age and statesmanship qualify him for higher national office. "Although Oregon has. only six electoral votes, this need not be a major handicap. Wasn't Ore gon's Charles L. McNary nom inated for vice president at a time when Oregon possessed a mere five electoral votes?" So there you have it, the first out-in-the-open balloon goesa up for Wayne Morse for a to'p spot on the Democratic ticket in 1960. We would be surprised if Sen ator Morse wound up in 1960 as the Democratic presidential nom inee, for there are too many populous and powerful eastern states who will have candidates. However, the vice presidency is something else again and Sena tor Morse might very well turn up as the Democratic vice presi dential candidate on the pre sumption that he would pull with him a strong block of western electoral votes. Stranger things have happened. Ashland Tidings. In The Day's Salvador Dali, Spanish im pressionist painter (shall we just say screwball and let it go at that?) has a new technique. For him, no more brushes. No more paints. No qjore smeary palettes, to get your thumb dirty while holding the thing. Pernaps not even a smock. He just loads up an ancient arquebus original version of the scatter-gun with pieces of lithographic pencils and lets fly with it at a stone lithographic plate. When the fragments of pencil leqds hit the plate, they make marks on it. The irferks look strangely like what a hen would make if she dipped her feet in printer's ink and scratched vigorously on a piece of paper. He says: "It creates a violent most explosive and tremendous force on the stone, with lines of force or tension in every direc tion fast, violent and clean." He calls it a PICTURE. He describes his new art tech nique as "bulletism." HmmmmmmI I wonder if maybe it isn't about time after all. for Armageddon, AMERICAN correspondents in London and Paris report in- Communications Letters to the Editor must bear the name and address ot the writer, although under certain circumstances the use of a pen name or initial tor publication is permissible. The Mail Tribune reserves the right to edit all letters with a view to clarification and condensation. not exceed 400 words. Pleads for Help To the Editor: We are turning to you, the free American Press, for your support in Operation Freedom Chain. We are asking your help on behalf of the brave Hungarian people whose heroic reach for Freedom has been ground under the treads of Soviet tanks. The fighting is over now, the guns silent once more. But the misery remains: Refugees, in danger of being deported to Si beria, are pouring into Austria at the rate of 2000 a day. Within barely three weeks, their num ber already has reached 60,000. Government and private organ izations are striving to meet these demands but there Just aren't enough funds, i Although you are thousands of miles away, we feel sure that there are many among your readers who would like to help. And so we ask you to put your link in the Freedom Chain by printing this appeal in your newspaper. Such support on your part, would, we feel, be another ex ample of trig tremendous good the free press )n do for causes like this one. Let us not forget that the Hun garians fought and died not only for themselves, but also for us and the whole free world. If the world could not help where help had so long been promised, it is to be hoped that it paused long enough to register that for the first time Communism's own gen eration rose against it; and that those who he the courage to choose the unknown hand of the West to the familiar fist of the East should not be forsaken. We are suje that you will not let us down. J. Coudenhove-Kalergi Operation Freedom Chain Executive Fleischmarkt, 3, Vienna, Austria Life Editor Scored To the Editor: The brave, fear less and freedom loving Hun garians are fighting for their liberty on four fronts. They won a glorious victory on two fronts. They licked their vicious, cruel and merciless Communist Gov ernment and the diabolical se- gret polite, who practiced the most insidious tortures on the true Hungarian rebels. After their victory, these brve Christians were duped by ap peals from some turncoat leaders to lay down their arms and ne gotiate for the withdrawal of the scum of the earth the Rus sian Communists. They were doublecrossed, of course, 3y the Communists as well as the "rest of the civilized world. At the conference table their leaders were seized and President Eisen hower's war buddy, Zhukov, made a sneak attack on the help less patriots. The United Nations instead of kicking the Commu nists out, are saying meaning less words. The United States instead of breaking off diplo matic relations with all Commu nist nations, is talking of send ing food and medifine. This third front will help the Rus sian Communists because they will use it in their name to calm the people down and give up. The fourth front all the Com munist Satellites and all free dom-loving people must fight, is the insidious world-wide invisible News f rank Jenkins creasing criticism of American policies in the Middle East. In London the other' day nearly a third of the membership of the Conservative party (presum ably the die-hard Tories who re sent the disentegration of the once vast British empire) signed a motion declaring that the U.S. attitude in the Middle East is "gravely endangering the Atlan tic alliance. AP's James King, who has lived in England for the past ten years, says the average English man feels he has been let down by the United States in the Suez crisis, and adds that a growing bitterness toward Americans is evident in Britain. French Premier Mollet has gone so far, Paris dispatches re late, as to express his "bitter ness and anxiety" at American policy in recent months. WHY all this criticism? It's quite simple. When we do something fool ish and get ourselves into seri ous trouble, we always - look around for SOMEBODY ELSE TO BLAME. , Nobody ever likes to blame himself. HPHE British and the French, JL members of the Atlantic al liance, decided to take the Suez canal situation into their own hands. So, saying nothing to anybody, keeping their decision a dark secret from their fellow members of the Atlantic alli ance, including the United States, they WENT IN SHOOT ING and got themselves in VERY serious trouble. So now they're looking around for a whipping boy. , That's about the size of it Letters submitted for publication must influential power which dictates what we must see and read. It seems to be Anti-Christian and Pro-Communist and perhaps even International Brotherhood. A good example of this may be seen in "Life Magazine." While one of the owners of this maga zine sat on a platform in Madi son Square Garden in front of 12,000 Hungarian supporters who were protesting the rape of Hungary by Russian Commu nists, tlifc sanctimonious hypo crite's magazine was showing horror pictures of Hungarian Rebel brutality. These pictures seemed designed to discredit the brave people and maybe justify the Russian action. There were one or two minor pictures of Russian brutality, but there was no detailed account of the brave Russian soldiers in tanks mow ing 20.000 unarmed men, wo men and children. Americans must rise in rebel lion against the brain washing controlled communications which we have obtained for 50 years, or we shall some day find ourselves fighting on many fronts. Joseph M. Howard 350 West Vanderbilt dr. Corpus Christi, Tex. Objects to Withdrawal To the Editor: It is a well known fact among mining circles that the Rogue river from Ray gold dam 'n Jackson county to Gold Beacn in Curry county has been noted for its gold produc tion for as far back as 100 years. For more than 60 years, the com munities of Gold Hill and Grants Pass thrived entirely on the local mining interests. All the gold and other rare minerals have not been "worked out" yet. This is proven when every time the river banks have been submerged by high water or flood there is a fresh supply of placer gold and nuggets found by prospectors and miners up to the time of the closing of the Rogue to placer mining in 193 or thereabouts. Withdrawing any mineralized land within one half mile of Rogue river would prevent any hunting for buried treasure. Around 60 years ago there was reputed treasure of considerable amount of gold dug up on the Sams Valley highway within a stones throw of the river. Arojnfd 1924 an $84 gold nugget was found near the old Gold Drift dam site below Sav age Rapids dam on the river. A Jackson county native son who now resides at Kerby in Josephine county first learned to pan gold at Woodville, now Rogue River. He may well be the world's champion gold panner today, as he took first prize among five contestants at Jack sonville on August 4, 1956. His time using a medium size gold pan was 36 seconds. There is no assurance that an other financial depression will not happen, in case one did ma terialize there would be miners on the river again. Bert Kissinger, 520 Boardman St., Medford, Ore. Materials Solicited To the Editor: I hope that you will print this in behalf of two elderly ladies who would so much appreciate gifts of old clothing of either cotton or wool materials with which they can make crocheted and braided rugs for their Christmas giving. They could use old cretonne or chintz drapes or hangings, no matter how faded, and they would be happy to receive scraps of new materials with which to make doll clothes and quilt tops. If anyone has odds and ends of sewing thread of any color they no longer need, that too would be appreciated, as well as odds and ends of any color cro chet thread or yarn. Faded and worn house dresses, housecoats no longer wanted and even sleeping garments, any color ex cept all white, would provide wonderful material for rug mak ing. If anyone having the above materials to give away will they phone 2-5067, Medford, a way will be found to pick thero up. But if it coud be brought to 534 North Bartlett st. it would be highly appreciated. If any article of clothing given seems too good for rug making I will personally see that it is given to a charitable organiza tion. Thank you. Mrs. Ruby Rusque 534 North Bartlett st. Medford, Ore. Inventors Need Help To the Editor: I wonder how many people in this land of ours are truly interested in inven tions? How about all those gadg ets the housewife has that makes her life more leisurely? Or your husband and mine who finds his work easier because of someones painstaking efforts and hard work at perfecting an invention he has worked at for many months or even years? The sad part of this story is that many wonderful inventions are still sitting in work shops, their inventors lacking the money to make our lives even more leisurely than now. I'm thinking of just such a fellow as I'm writing this. He POTLUCK . (By M-T Staff and Contributors) The fog, or smog, or whatever you want to call it, was a major topic of conversation ail iasi week, and the week before, too. It was the dirtiest fog many people had ever seen. One man whose car-top is white found it had changed to a dirty gray brown color after standing out for a few hours. Another man called to assure that what people were looking up at, at mid-day, was not a flying saucer, it was the sun. "I know I remember the sun," he said. Two news staff workers couldn't get their cars started on different cold mornings. And we suspect that a lot of other people had the &me trouble battery trouble as we watch the number of parked cars with the lights still on, the result of people driving with lights in the fog and forgetting to turn them off because it was "daylight." Ashland escaped most of the fog during the past two weeks, and its residents are pretty smug about it. The Ashland Tid ings had a Page 1 headline Fri day which proclaimed "Banana Belt Weather Here." Hmph. It went on to report that the sun was shining there while Medford choked in a thick blanket of smoke-and-fog, and that the temperature was 30 degrees warmer in the Lithia city than the county seat. And a Tidings columnist sug gested Mercy Flights, which couldn't get planes off during the week, should change its base of operations to Ashland. (An office functionary sug gests that if Medfoni had as much hot air as Ashland does, we wouldn't have fog, either, but we think that's an unkind remark.) Single girls, we arc inform ed by a single girl we know, who get beyond a certain un specified age, are a bit touchy when people ask them "How come you never got married?" One such single girl, we are informed, thinks she's found the perfect answer to such impertinence. Her reply from now on, she says, will be: "I met a man and fell in love with him, but he had two heads and my parents didn't approve of the 'match." A couple of the younger and more athletic members of the news staff at the M-T retain their figures and thejr training by dashing downstairs and to their parked cars before the meter officer gets there. The city's announcement that such practices will be frowned on in the future to the extent of J2.50 caused minor conster nation in the office, among those who feed the meters while await ing their next newsgathering assignment. ' It is said that professors are absent minded. What about judges? A distinguished mem ber of our judiciary last week stumbled through the cold fog for several blocks to a garage where he had left his car earlier. He arrived only to remember tke garage man had delivered the car to the court house parking lot several hours before just as he had asked him to do. Curiosity may have killed a cat, but not the one that's been loitering around the corner of Sixth and Ivy sts. lately. In the manner of cats in cold weather, it likes to perch and nap on the warm hoods of automobiles. One day last week a car park ed near the corner and the oc cupants l&'t on a shopping jaunt. The cat approached, jump ed to the car's rear trunk, climb ed to the roof, jumped to the hood, then climbed inside the car through the driver's window, which was open. It Inspected the front seat, the back seat, items on the rear-window shelf, and the floors, then It came out the open window, across the hood, up to the roof, down to the trunk, and then to the pave ment. It then stalked across the street, climbed to the hood bf another car, and went to sleep. Our sports editor reports that his home telephone has a long extension cord, so his , wife can carry it with her as she does her household dut ies. Our man Inlep.ioned home the other day, and the call was answered by his pre school daughter. He (sked to speak to "Mommy." "Just, a minute," small daughter replied, "and I'll take you to her." has a wonderful invention, some thing that would help a man in a certain type of work immense ly, besides making whoever in vested a little capital a tidy sum in return. For those who are able, why not find these inventors and give them a hand? Your life and mine will be better for the effort. Mrs. Delbert Casey, Route 1, Box 358, Central Point, Ore.