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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 7, 1956)
o o c- c- O CO qo O ? O o o Q G o o cO o S G G O FO U R KHDT09 C (OfttOCW) WArt. TRTBUHS o Ever-vor-.a In Soutavarn Oregon C Reagi Thar Mall Inbm" Published Sally Except Saturday by MDfGKDctKIT!:.i CO 27-23 N orai Fir Sl r Phont 2-ZH1 -SOBERT W RUHI, Editor HTWf GRE' Advtrtlalna; Manager C F. RAl-D .LA H A j1. Bujir.au Uar ERIC ALLEN J Kauiuii Ediiav EARS H AlJAMb City Editor HaRRY CHIPMA.N Telegraph Editor JflCHfD JEWETT Senrta Editor -.I.IvETARCHFR Society Editor PAtZ ERlZCSoy ClrculaUon Mgr. "a Independent Newipaper Enured aa aecond clam matter at Meaiora Oregon nder Act of Mych 3. 1897 o By Mall In Advance Per Coa lflc Dally and STunda-One year SIS 08 Dally and Sunday Sixanontha 8 00 Daily and Sunday Three mo 4-25 '-Sunday Only One ay;ar M-20 By Currier In Advance Medford. 3 Ashland Cerat Poayt Eaiele Point, Jacksonville field Hill" Phoenix. Slajiy) Cove Roirue River Talent ano on irdlar routi Dally and Sunday One rear $18 00 Dally and S-Jay Onaerionth HO Carrierfnd Dealera 10c per copy All erna Caih In Advance SfflrTal apr of the City ot Medford Official Paper Jar k too county Tntted PreM Full Leased Wire JJEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU Of CIRCiq JION Advertfilng Representative W5T-HOLirjAY COMPANY INC Otttei In Nv York Chicago de trolt FTanclacoc Loa Angelas (-feattle '"Portland St I.oula Atlanta Mancouver B C r NATIONAL EDITORIAL I AJSOCfATLQN ES2'23f I U J .KUimiw:.uuM M EWSPAF ER POBHSHEIS ASSOCIATION Flight 6' Time Medford Jackson County History frorg the flit of The M. Tribune 10? 20. 30, 40 and 0 years ago. 10 YEAJtS AGO J (Pc. B. 194fc (Friday, Two teams ofQ13 persons each will enrSlomeinbers in Jackson County (hamberoof Commerce anf?ualyiembersiaip drive set for Monday through Wednesday. Jrom 315th ur Perry's Ye Smud Pot"coiimn: The Older Girls have started-their annual wishing for a Wf-ile Christina. Aljyays hereiiyfore, to no avail. i J 20 Y3JVRS AGO . c 3 Dec. 6, 136 (Sunday) EThe Jackson coitfnty budget for tfce coming year provides $8,000 for rtDyijP of county roads and $11,00) for the resurfacing of ruaas-aoir iuiureooiung. 0 o Prohibition of tfce entry into Oregon of inferior agricultural Q products front .adjacent states is discussed at inter-county lunch eon at Madford hotel. c eco o 30 YEARS AGO 3 Dr. 1&1926 iMonday) J. A. Churchill, president of 0 Ashjariyl norrfel school, speaks at ISiwanis club. o OrganizatioiPof a company to install reduction plant for d-hancJ,.ngor(ii is under way. o e3bY(i&RS AC? O o c Dec. 6e 1916 Wednesday) irCKogO (portsmen'sO league f ;fcors recommendations at re cent meetingotp an kjlling fe male Chieao pheasants and' cut ting trout lirSlt per day from 75ib50. Horace Cardinell, employed on the Hollowa Snd Bear Creek orchards fjncg 191B. pyointed pomologist for Brazilian govs rn ment. o 0 SO 4EARS 9VGO O Dec. 6.(3 9 & (Thursday) o Dispa'hes from Califarrii say tlt Pr(ftic!nt "Roosevelt's reference 3o the Japanese ques tion ig yesterday sjirech was distasteful to the California dele gation, o 00 0 o A special schtol election to Vote on a ta f$f 90t and elect airPcigr to replace O. D. Owen. Qvho resigned, wll ba held" at Medford Hi?h school. 0 o Whafc YwriQ.7 , Nina or ten eorrer is iperlor: seT-e-j) or eirht is excellent; ctiva or six is rd. o Ql. Is a "ggniometr" an ftijtru ment fog measuring angles, pr is it the same as S pedometar 2. Was the month of July named foSJiljis Gnesar? o 3. "Paul and Tirqotheus, the servants ofJesus Christ" c4te the vJeniOK" wors of which Ftok? 4. ore tfce Arv an ?angf.ages the ame as Indo-European? Is the X.'nirsit j of Michi ganiocated in Saginaw, Jackson, or DetSbit? 6. Did Eleaor ociset'elt re ceive most of heeoformgl educa-' Otion in the United Stes' q7. Which S:ae isVfwn as the . Hoy jnaro times 0will you q useJhe ngure 5 when you wrise tlvei ligureS from 1 oo t 100? 0 O 9. IsJait .nickrftme fo Jacob.aacques. Sr uohn? 10. "To & or not b? ' Shakepeare. Nmehejcharacter owho speaks ifBese lfnes. 0 O O O o, Answers: lMeaAiring angles. V Yesc.. "Philipiims." 4 cYes ST No. Iro no Ann Arbor. 6. No. Eagland.C?. Kentucky .08. .VBnt$. , S.Yes. ill Cwee.-lJ Jis-mlet (J W O O , Fifteen Years Ago. . . Fifteen years ago today (it was a quiet Sunday) waves of Japanese Navy bombers .swept over Hawaii and destroyed much of the American Pacific fleet, then at anchor in Pearl Harbor. In Washington, Japanese envoys were then talk ing peace, but a day later congress formally de clared war against the Empire of Japan. The Presi dent of the United States called December 7 a "day which shall live in infamy." THE years that followed changed the lives of all of us even those not yet born. It changed the face of America, ended the last vestiges of the Great Depression, put a generation into olive drab or Navy blue or Marine green. It added to the language. It gave thousands their first glimpse of other lands and other peoples, and even other parts of their homeland. It placed a reluctant America in a position of world leadership political, military, economic. DEARL Harbor Day was the end of an era, the odd, uncomfortable, sometimes frenzied period between two great wars. It marked our entry into a new kind of world, one which has been tragic in many, many ways, yet bright with, hope in other ways. It is a world which has seen the birth of the United Nations, and the death of millions; the growth of freedom in many areas, and its extinction in others; the shifting of power, and ideas. It is a world of flux and violent change some good, some bad. Pearl Harbor day, which so many of us can recall with such clarity, is history, but its repercussions are still part of our lives in more ways than we can count, after 15 years which were both so short and so long. E.A. . . .And If the years since the start of World War II have been eventful and tragic and hopeful for our west ern civilization, how much more so have they been for the peoples who have lived under the crushing weight of tyranny during the same period? The stories coming out of Hungary are enough to make one's hair stand on end-stories of gallantry and cruelty, of unimaginable courage and of stark cowardice,' of wild hope and equally wild despair. In an era of machine guns, tanks and mines, they are reminiscent of the tales of the American and French revolutions, when the new idea of freedom often seemed more important than life. IT IS infinitely to be regretted that our. instinctive desire to help these tragic people must be balanced against an infinitely more tragic World War III. Isn't there anything- that we, in this peaceful and prosperous pre-Christmas America, can do to help? Under the circumstances,- about all that can.be done is for America to pour out its sympathy and concern in gifts of money and food and clothing and medicine to the victims, in the assurance' that the refugees can be helped, and the hope that those still oppressed can be reached' with some small share. pHIS can be done locally' AID IN TRANSPORTING REFUGEES: Tlie Oregon ' Committee fcr Hungarian Refugees is attempting to raise $15,000 to provide transportation -to Oregon from the east coast for Hungarians for whom homes have been found In Oregon. Funds can be sent to the committee at Room 205, YMCA Building, Portland. Or checks sent to Mayor Earl Miller. City Hall, Medford, will be forwarded. CASH FOR EMERGENCY ASSISTANCE: The American Red Cross is accepting donations for Hungarian relief ' through its Jackson county chapter both for refugees in Austria and elsewhere, and for those still In Hungary as it is possible to aid them. The goal locally is $1,650. A "Tag Day" campaign is being planned locally to raise 0 Red Cross funds on Dec. J 2. The International Rescue Committee, Inc., 62 West 45th Street, New York, N.Y., is now concentrating on assisting . Hungarians. It has lorig record of aid to victims of com munist tyranrty.. All pTqceeds of a new booklet by "Life," "Hungary's Fight for Freedom," will go to the IRC. The American Friends Service Committee - an use cash o dooatiorrs for its werk. This agency too has a long history of aiding the suffering. Its Portland office is at 1108 S.E. ' Grand ave., and in San Francisco it is 1830 Sutter st. A -number of churches ar.e conducting drives for both . money and clothing. CLOTHING: Members of the Jackson county chapter of the Oregon United Nations association have been asked to 0 gather clean, usable, warm clothing, blankets and diapers and Tjring them to a chapter meeting af St. Mark's Episcopal ochurch' Dec. 13. Contributions from non-members would also be welcome. Beta Sigma Phi's five local chapters have also under . taken a used clothing drive, to close soon, and articles can .e taken to the K. A. Hayes residence, 1012 Mt. Pitt St., or the Nicl PeWitt residence, 320. North Keeneway. There niay be Other bona fide groups conducting simyar campaigns which may have been missed m this quick survev . If they wash their appeals will' be publicized. (Mail Tribune em- plovees this week decided to forego tneir usual Christmas' party, giving intra-otfrce gifts to Hungarian relief. The paper s managenent is donating the amount it usually spends on refreshments to the same cause.) In view of the need, enough. E.A.- . ' Fog, Then Snow One of our subscribers mailed us a little poem, the the day, but since we ordinarily do not print poetry. it has-been returned with However, the last stanza should, we feel, have a bit wider distribution. It -went: o 0 Raindrops falling 'from "the skj . " Oh. what a wefcoma sight . . . .1 shall very sincerely pray . Oh Loi;d', no fog tonight! .' Pevharts the pott would intead of "fog," the word stituted. E.A. Friday, December 7. 1S56 Today through these agencies : to contact this newspaper the $1 usually spent for such offerings '.seem little thanks. consider it applicable if, "snow" were to be' sub . Mid-East Tension Eases This Week; Hungary Still Serious By CHARLES M. McCANN United Press Correspondent The week's good and bad news on the international balance sheet: Tension over the Middle East eased materially this week. Strained relations between the United States 'UUKIWXlumim anrt ito allips J Great Britain a, and France, improved. The Hun garian s i t u a tion remained serious and ex plosive. The puppet gov ernment of Premier Janos Cbarles McCann Kadar defied a demand that United Nations observers be admitted to the country. Russian tanks opened fire on demonstrators in the streets of Budapest on the third of defiant anti-Communist pro cessions. Industrial paralysis F 1ft f . ! f ftialfiiTir iW i a,ro: Babson Sings Praises Of Florida's Assets By ROGER W. BABSON Babson Park, Mass. This time of year I begin to think of the South. The birds are no longer here to wake me every morn ing but have gone to a warmer cli mate; and so I hope to leave for the South fairly soon. Hence, if my good California friends will forgive me, I will this week de vote my column to "The South." California does not now need to be boomed, it is already boom ing. Florida holds a future both for itself and for you. Practically all of Florida is still growing in many directions. Light industries are finding the South more and more the ideal spot. Labor is somewhat cheaper and absentee ism is far less than in the North. People are healthier and seem happier in a climate like Florida. In Florida's expanding econ omy there are plenty of jobs for people who are willing to work. There appears to be room for everyone. Certainly, the South is always looking for young people willing to learn some trade. The cattle and farming industries in Florida are growing. Builders and engineers are needed. In fact, most professional men can settle in the South today and have no difficulty finding work. Men and women still' think of Florida as the ideal' place to re tire. Every year thousands go to Florida to do just this. Sub sidizing retirement at 65 years of age has helped to bring these people South. They know that living costs are cheaper there, and this will be especially true if the United States is goipg into a "cold cycle." After the North, it is a climate in which- to sun and play outdoors.' I do advise, however, that every Southern home provide artificial heat. Fuel bills are comparatively small and clothing is less expen sive. No elaborate or expensive winter clothing is needed, al though the women still want one little fur jacket! Rents are lower. One ca.n build a very modern hquse that may be planned to make housekeeping light. People are finding it. constantly harder to get servants and hence are using that money to go out to their local Country Club for some meals. Future for South The constantly increasing pop ulation of the United States is bound to affect the population of Florida and other Southern states. Cities will grow there very quickly. Think of your own small town where you live and you can see for yourself that since the war there has been great growth all around you. Construction companies which you knew as little concerns be fore the war have grown into very large operations. This will happen to many present-day small construction companies in the South as more and more year-round homes are built. Most Southern cities will have to enlarge their airports to han dle the traffic and also to make them safe - for the jet age. All the South needs more parking space for cars. Taxes are low in Florida, which has no State in come or inheritance tax, though it does have an "intangible" tax. Land as Investment After the next stock market crash people will recognize that good real estate, especially.in an inflationary era, is the best in vestment. I have always advised buying a' small .piece of property .on the outskirts of a small town and sitting tight until the 'town grows out to you. If you should sell acreage land, hold onto the mineral rights. Often a separate and very profitable sale can be' nlade of these rights alone later on. The' oil industry has yet to hit the big jacVpot in Florida and the Southeast,' but it is coming some day. Kueei IV BabfOD still gripped the country The British and French forces which invaded the Suez Canal zone started to withdraw in com pliance with a U.N. resolution. U.N. troops drawn from mem ber countries took up positions in the canal area as the Anglo French forces pulled out. The situation was further im proved when the threat of a clash involving Syria, now domi nated by a pro-Communist fac tion, and Iraq and Turkey sub sided. But the easing of tension- left the British government still in serious trouble Largely due to the Suez situa tion. Chancellor of the Ex chequer Harold MacMillan was compelled to admit a critical loss of gold and dollar reserves. He announced that the United States and Canada would be asked to waive interest payments totalling 5103,800,000, due this month, on world war and post war loans. Prime Minister Anthonv Eden, Florida and other Southern states will continue to attract tourists both winter and sum mer. Now that the airlines and hgtels have special summer rates, the South has a whole new income undreamed of be fore. Remember Daytona Beach with Its world-famous hard sand racing beach. Cypress Gardens, the Everglades National Park, Hialeah and its pink flamingoes, Key West with its famous deep sea fishing, Lake Wales and the beautiful Bok "Singing Tower," and Marineland with its magnifi cent aquariums. Finally, if World War III should come. Central Florida should be a very safe place in which to live. It should escape bombing and also be sure of plenty of food and fuel. In the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS For the second day in a row. Hungarian women demonstrated defiantly in Budapest streets: marching with bouquets, flags and black wreaths in mourning for Hungarian patriots killed in the anti-communist rebellion. Although the Russians moved tanks and armored cars into the city as a precaution, they ordered Hungarian communist soldiers and police to handle the job of dispersing the women. I7HY the Hungarian commies? " There are two reasons: 1. It looks better to the world at large. ' 2. RUSSIAN TROOPS MIGHT REFUSE TO SHOOT DOWN WOMEN AND CHILDREN. That would be bad. It might touch off a revolution in the Rus sian army. Shooting down wo men and children in the streets is bad business. AS FOR the Kremlin commu nists, give them no humani tarian- credit. They would order the killing of women and chil dren in a moment if it served their purposes.) Tj'ROM London this morning A Fears of mounting inflation, unemployment, wage strikes higher taxes and crippling fuel shortages are dealing a hard blow to British morale. Another unwelcome taste to many Britons is the thought that the London gevernment has had to go once more (hat in hand) for help to the United States to an ally which opposed the Anglo- French venture. in Egypt. IT'S bitter medicine. But Good may come of it as good sometimes comes even from tak ing castor oil. rNE of the most coloritul cere- " monies in the world is the changing of the guard at White hall, at the other end of Pall Mall from Buckingham palace in Britain's ancient capital.- If you haven't seen it in person, ' you must have seen it often in the movies, for the drama of- it ap peals to everyone with even a drop of theater in his blood. Well The guard is changing not merely at Whitehall, but all over the- world: Once, mighty Britain is step ping out and handing over and her lusty child-of the-New. World is stepping in and TAKING OVER. This is a pregnant moment in history. TRITAIN represents the old and " the United States of America represents the new. In the old world, Britain was the leader and the piaster a very able one, leg us admit, in the world of its day. It was a wofld of empires and subjects, wth a RULER -at the top. The new world that is coming up is quite different. In this new wofld, ALL PEOPLES WANT TO RUN' THEIR OWN AF FAIRS. ;" ' They, ought to have a chance, to run their own affairs. In any recuperating in Jamaica from a collapse due to strain, came under attack by some of his own Conservatives as well as the Labor Party opposition in Par liament. . Speculation was ia creased on the possibility that he might be ousted. Hungary The United Nations General Assembly, meeting in New York, demanded by a vote of 54 to 10 that U.N. observers be permitted to enter Hungary to investigate conditions. The Kadar puppet government refused. It refused also to permit Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold to go to Budapest. Soma angry delegates talked of the possibility of throw ing Hungary out of the assembly. Tens of thousands of women and . children marched through the streets of Budapest, nnder the guns of Russian tanks, to show their hatred and defiance of the Communist puppet regime and its Rusisan masters. The demonstrations started as a procession of mourning for the men and boys, women and chil dren who were killed, in a heroic, hopeless fight against Russia's Red army. They con tinued for the. second day in de fiance of the Reds. On the third day, men turned out again. They clashed with pro-Red demonstrators. Russian tanks and Communist police opened fire on them. Fighting continued in moun tainous areas, where rebels still held out. But Hungary remained almost paralyzed by workers who re fused to return to their jobs or who, returning, sat idle at their machines. About 100 of the team of 140 athletes and 40 officials who represented Hungary at the Olympic Games in Australia an nounced they would refuse to go home. They said they would seek asylum in Australia", Western Europe,, the United States and Canada and Latin America. o 0 " Budgets for System c Of Higher Education May Be $63,570,931 Eugene Operating budgets from all funds for the state sys tem of higher education will total $63,570,931 -if requests sub mitted in the biennial report of the state board of higher edu cation released this week are ap proved by the 1957 legislature. Of this total, 516,001,536 would be obtained, from con state income a n d' $47,569,395 from state appropriation. In submitting the budget re quest, Chancellor John R. Rich ards pointed out that the seven system campuses enrolled 25 per cent more students during the bie'nnium just closing than dur ing the previous biennium and that'a further increase of 19cper cent is expected during the pext biennium. Budget Request The total budget requested for instruction and general services, $46,349,549,- will include funds to. employ an additional" 275 teaching faculty members and grant present faculty members salary adjustments ..which will make their positions more near ly competitive with those in -private industry and at other in stitutions. Under the proposed budget, student-teacher ratios wjlf be re stored to the 1954 level. In creases - in upper-division and graduate students, a reflection of the increasing demands of our civilization for highly-trained technical and scientific person nel, require lowering the student teacher ratio and employment and retention of an increasing number of outstanding, exper ienced faculty personnel. Relatively small increases have been asked for added iSfir vice staff and teaching supplies and equipment. An increase of $200,003 in the fund for re habilitation of older buildings and land purchases will provide .$935,000 for this purpose. In stitutional .executives had pre sented requests-totaling $1,700. 000. - Separate Requests Separate budget requests. ara made for the 'medical school teaching hospital and clinics, fecT eral cooperative extension serv ice,, and agricultural research. Total -budget for the medical school teaching hospital' and well-ordered worjfl all- peoples SHOULD run their own aifairs. rVNLY America ean lead " a ' world in which all peoples" .want to run .their own shebang. Whether we like it -or not, this new world that is coming up wilj be run either by America, or by Russia. If it is. run by- America," the' hopes and the aspirations of people "who want to manpge their own affairs can be realized. If It is run bv Russia, "FREEDOM IN -TE ".WORLD TVILL BE DEAD. ' . '" ; i The point is that Britain can't ' lead this new world because of ; the hatreds tlat acose in the days of empires a nd colonial " dependencies. These are fateful . alays which, we, axe living. Repeal of Amendment BamngThirdjTerhio Now Under D i s cilss i o n By LYLE C. WILSON United Press Correspondent Washington (U.R) H Presi dent Eisenhower were? 10 y,ears younger, "congfessionsl Republi cans proliably would move quiSc- ly irt the new Congress to r peal the 42n3 Amendment to the Constitu tion. o That arftend ment was pro- posed ift 194f by the Repub lican 80th Con gress. It was ratified ;SO quickly y numerou states as to suggest that it trujy represented "the popular will. Tha effect of theamesdment was to plaee a two-term limit on o Rep. Augustine KelJey (D-Fa.) wantt to repeal. He calls0 the amendment "a GOP device for posthumous dishonor of the great FDR.!,' However that may be, the Republicans , never0 got around to serious effort toward' such an amendment during Mr. Roosevelt's lifetime. o 0 Amendment's Best Argument c Best argument in favor of the amendment was that presidents ar not the best judges ot their own fitness to continue in of fice. And, further, tUatclose associates of a proven presiden tial vote-getter are more likely than not to urge him to keep running-even though they may realize his physical incapacity That was the way it was witjjj3 Mr. Roosevelt, some of wgose best friends knew or. suspected his physical condition' before he I unaeriooK a - iourin term cam paign.' FDR complained ca lot about living in Washington.bSt it is at least reasonable- to be- lieve he miglit have0 sought fifth term if he. had orvived Mr. Koosevelt was us when clinics for the ienniuMo Is $5, 378080, of which 5 ;r cent win come r r o"m non - state sours." o 0 State0 appropriations riSjest ed show an increase of S1.639.- 914 oveibthe past biennium, ri- rSarily due to increased cost o; supplies and services and the I facfe tht0 thg1 teaching hospital will be operating for the first time during an entire twoyeag i budgetary0period. 0 0 J . The federal cooperative ex-o iL-iiMuii seryice receives an esu- a maiea 4Z per cent of its iacorne- irom federal and coffnty iinds.0! A budget increase of $227,700 for the biennium will pjovide 12 additional couniy agents and j extension specialists to serv Oregon's growing agricultural industry., 0 o ! ResearchFunds o C Agricultural research 1 unds provide for ft research dari ments cat theo central station at Corvallis and 13 brfncj? stations c ana experimental areas located in agricuRural regions of fhe stata. f o Increase staff and supplies tfl yrovide needed reseSrch, in- i eluding prwision for a lower ! Willamette valley experimajit 1! station, wuld require a budget addition of $246,754 for the next : biennium. Forty per cent of this i sum will be provided from fed eral funds and, service fees. 0 Tlfe chancellor describi the budget request a "minimum consisted! with needs" and add ed thajt "proposals for important "new services havee beeno elimin ated exeept Jor services request ed in tha-agricultural divisions" considered essential in view of the importance of agriculture ii Oregon's economy. We have a o a Secret 0 o Asle About Our ' o Double-Date Wave o o o "Teen-age0 'HoliiUte". o l.te i. vtusoo SOFT .NATURAL - LOVELY -call WIMIE'S 0 o o FOR A LOVEHER YOtJ o . O0 B for the beouty v sreoyou 0 Q E for Brows and Igshes we .A for efft we have to offer U unfogettable glamour for the Danced T t'wne to Call for Kolidcfy Appointments ' X "yours for gMamour and rmcince he diedApril 12, 19?5. He would have baeru 71ovears..old after a fiffh teisn Mrft Eisenhower thaj, first chief exgeutiv? affected by the to-tejyn limitation is 66. He willob$ 70 yars old at 'fee end of his present Ijfhite House term. 0 Subtract 10 years from that ae figure and jou would have aman stijj of anige to aspire in 1S60 to further presidential serv- Pice Sind a cSndidae who con- gressignal Repubcans would be eaijpf torun. Rep. ftelley Sght vte, ynder sffch circumstances, for a repealer to repudiate what he re.gads as an acjon designed to dishonor, Roosevelt ProiecHcti For Democrats Mot cojressional Democrats, however, probably would vote to keep the amendment in force as a protection against another Ei 'Senrjp'aTer presidential candi dacy. o Mr. Eisenhourer (polled ore vots th;n any njan before him. The United Press continues to tabulgte the presidential popu lar 0vote which stancStoday like LisenhowfT, Adlai & tevens& ....25,845,65? Others . 383,068 Returns are off Siar from 37 states, cmpleti bu unofficial from five and almost complete from six.Of 134,968 precincts, nStionwide. rihere were 461 ,iiing today cir$ared to 484 noshing prseincts lajg Mofday. rbffJandc?roEfecfecf As Pr&ident rof NAM PorUjs nck-dJ.R) The National AcssriciaJjSh of Miufacturersjhas elected Portlands Industria'rist Ernest G. Swgjrt is its ew presidiait. 0 g) Swifiert. who is President of afthCHyst" CrrtfSny here, served NAM and was fleeted to the top cost by the 170-member board of director of the association at the Coggreg!f Atnerican In dustry in New York. ' Swigoa-i was born in Portland, the desceniiant ofa nioneerfam- f. He has lade4 HysterSinct it was lounged in 1929. t o o U. P. VICE PRESJbENTO New York (U.R) William H. McCan, United Press genefll manager for South America, was elected a -ice president of the U.P. Jflaursday, 0 ONfl 14 Sftoppgng Days 0 t:i -L:. 1 o 111 wiiNiimux IT'S, A l's left all my Holiday Worries Behind! I get my Christmas Cash from DM90 Of MCaa MUU I PACIFIC INDUSTRIAL Dick Hant, Manager 16 S. Central Ph. 3-5308 STYLE SALON winn MAKE ODELL DOTTIE HALL, Receptionist enrftnds o o 0 i Jv I