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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 5, 1958)
Wednesday, Nov., 3, 1931 MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, ORE. MEDF0RDt2feTEIBUHE "Everyone In Southern Oregon Published Daily except Saturday by MEDFORD PRINTING CO. 33 North Fir St. Ph. SP 2-6141 HOBERT W. RCHL. Editor HERB GREY. Advertising Manager GERALD LATHAM. Bustnes Mgr. ERIC W ALLEN JH, Managing Editor EARL H AD4MS, City Editor HARRY CHrPMAN. Teleg. Editor RICHARD JEWETT. Sports Editor OLIVE STARCHER. Women"! Editor DALE ERICKSON. Circulation Mgr. TnjManitMif KujnanT Entered as second class matter at Meciford Oregon under Act of March 3. 1807 SUBSCRIPTION BATES n . 1T.; T n A rlirmfP - fnnv lAr 'Daily and Sunday 1 year $15.00 Daily and Sunday 8 mo. 8.00 Dally ana ounaay mos. i.---Sunday Only One year $4.20. tjj camel in v. Ashland. Central Point. Eagle Point. Jacksonville. Gold Hill. Phoenix, Shady Cove. Rogue Riv er. Talent, and on motor routes: T...i mH Kurt-lav 1 vnf SIR. 00 Daily and Sunday 1 tnp. I 50 Carrier and Dealers copy JOe Ail T r.k I ArfiianM fill ACIIIIg VJU -l - -.. V Official Paper of City of Medford Official Paper or Jacmon county United PTess International Full Leased Wire MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION Advertising Representative: : ' WEST-HOLIDAY CO.. INC- Of fices in New York. Chicago. De troit San Francisco. Los Angeles. Seattle. Portland. St. Louis, At lanta. Vancouver. B.C. NEWSPAPEt PUBLISHEIS ASSOCIATION NATIONAL EDITORIAL. lASSOCH-ATrdN Flight ro Time Medford and Jackson County History from the files of The Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30 and 40 years ago. 10 YEARS AGO Nov. 5, 1948 (Friday) A group of some 30 Holly wood notables arrive today for a week end's visit to Table Bock estates. The Medford Prop Nuts gas model plane club has scheduled a contest for Sun day at the ballpark. " 20 YEARS AGO Nov. 5, 1938 (Saturday) Edison Marshall, novelist, Is expected to pay a visit soon to Medford, his home town.' From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudge Pot" column: "A plot tried to thicken here Thursf- day. It thinned before it could gain thickness." 30 YEARS AGO Nov. 5, 1928 (Monday) ' Two local men, John W. Johnson and Scott V. Davis, leave this evening for their six to eight month trip around the world. Hot tamales and seafoods are expected to feature tq morrow's public market. ; 40 YEARS AGO Nov. 5, 1918 (Tuesday) The current total of influ enza cases in Medford stands at 81. The "flu" mask is beginning to make its appearance on Medford's streets and has caused considerable comment among the street corner gath erings. What's Your I.Q.? Nine or ten correct is superior; seven or eight is excellent; five or six is good. 1. An apothecary shop is another name for a drug store, hardware store, or pet shop? 2. A generation is, usually regarded to be a span of 23, 33, or 43 years? 3. Which extant mammal has the longest neck? 4. Which one of these U. S. coins has a milled edge-penny, nickel, or dime? 5. Insects skeletons are on the outside of their bodies; true or false? 6. Does the word millen nium denote a thousand, or a million, years? 7. Asteroids are enlarged tonsils, minor planets, or the surname of a rich" banking family? 8. Which citrus fruit is gen erally used in concocting a "rickey" drink? 9. Wyandotte, Ancona, and Minorca are names of breeds of fish, fowls, or rabbits? 10. In which House of Con gress does the U. S. Constitu tion stipulate that revenue- raising bills shall originate? Answers: 1. Drug store: 2. 33 years. 3. the giraffe. 4. Dime. 5. True. 6. Thousand years. 7. Minor planets.. 8. Lime. 9. Fowls. 10. House of Representatives. SORT OF AN UPSET Nashville, Tenn. - (LTD -What's in a name? J. Carlton Loser was reelected Tuesday to the House of Representatives. The First Successes The "Make Medford Beautiful" campaign is gradually beginning to resolve . itself into the "Making Medford Beautiful" project. One evidence of this was on the Mail Tribune's first page yesterday. Heretofore, the series of pic tures being printed has been exclusively devoted to what needs to be done. Yesterday, for the first time, we were able to portray an example of "what is BEING done. As the results justify, the pictures will record them. T IS the hope of the committee, and others in 4 terested in making this an attractive town, that more and more frequently it will be possible to "accentuate the positive" and to "eliminate the negative" in recording both the need and the achievement. . The committee is also making plans to be of assistance in "hardship" cases, where property owners have neither the means nor the ability to voluntarily beautify their properties. The interest aroused by this campaign r the number of people volunteering their services, those calling fo point out "eysores," and' those who are just quietly going ahead and making de sirable changes on their own is considerable. WHEN Mayor John Snider first announced the campaign, it was greeted by mixed reaction. Many people were enthusiastic, but there also were some doubtful people who thought it would n't succeed. Well, it is beginning to succeed, and we pre dict that, in this case as in so many others, success will breed success, and that the campaign will carry along, month after month and year after year, to make Medford the beautiful town that it can be and should be. E.A. The Mother Tongue Language the sounds men make to com municate with their fellows is something that is. very much taken for granted. familiar with it does one viiij vw j www-' rooiWa fno far tJint. it is language of Shakespeare, for instance, is not the "English" which is spoken in America today. Probably an Elizabethan Englishman and a mod? em American could do well enough to communi cate, after a fashion, but each would puzzle the other. In Shakespeare's day, some words had mean- Inrre WVr 'frVov ctTd cinra Inst. .nr. nthpr Wnrds IllgO IliilVI ill. I V. Ull.w .w.wy ' haye since picked up meanings which they did not nave men. , . Also, hundreds of words are "new" new, that is, toTthe extent that they would have meant nothing to Shakespeare. ALMOST any word which derived from mod-torl-irVlrmr ( anfnm nWlpr. telephone, neon. oWtvifitv would have been meaningless gobbledegook to'an Elizabethan. " Pronunciation also has changed, although it is less easy to trace that difference, for there was no art of voice recording in those days. (Phono graph is a new word, too.) It is the differences in word usage, coupled with pronunciation, building up over a period of time, which eventually result in new languages. ' -- .-. . LL western languages Even Latin, the "mother" tongue of so many latter - day western languages, is a derivative tongue, as is Sanskrit, the classic ancient language of the Indian subcontinent. In recent years, philological scholars have traced almost all western and middle - eastern languages back to one tongue, which they call the "Indo-European Language." ' How they did so is an adventure in philologi cal detective work comparing words and their use and pronunciation and relationships in differ ing languages. One such process, for instance, was found in the word "laks," which they established as Indo European for "salmon." An article in the Scientific Arrierican describes the process somewhat as follows: "The word laks still survives where the fish occurs; in Russia, the Baltic countries, Scandinavia, Germany, and is the familiar 'lox' of Jewish delicatessens. During the western migration it was replaced. Tq the south where there are no salmon it also disappeared. But in many regions, laks took on an altered meaning and survived. In Turkestan it is used for fish in general. In Sanskrit 'laksha' came to mean 'many,' a derivation from the salmon-shoal in the sense of a great many.' Lac also has the meaning of a 'red substance' in some regions, obviously stemming from the color of salmon, and is the word from which came the English 'lac' and lacquer." DY SUCH a process, the language detectives JJ determined that the Indo - European tongue originated in a small are.a on the Baltic sea in what is now northeastern Germany, abqut 6,000 years ago. As these people, presumably a hardy and vigorous group, spread, so spread their lan STiaee. and as time nassed ( and lapkino- a written language to stabilize cnangea according to location, until it had be come a "super family" of languages, including the Teutpnic and Romance groups, plus Celtic, Slavonic, Albanian, Greek, Armenian, Iranian and Indie. In all, some 81 current laguages stem, directly or indirectly, from the mother tongue. Actually, it ineans that virtually all languages, exceDt the oriental, the native Afripan. the Ampr. Indian, and the Polenesian and related tongues, stem irom one little spot - , a p.harifrinr thinsr. The nnd sn nn. ad infinitum1) have a common root. the spoken tongue), it in Europe. E.A. " Dennis the Menace g3i His name is Bert, slit i call wmMr.ckft Yack.' Election's Meaning Written In Influence On 'Ambitious Young Men's' Political Fate By LYLE C. WILSON UPI Correspondent Washington-(UPD-What hap pened in Tuesday's election can be told today in what it all meant to several bright ly ambitious young men. They are: Vice Presi dent Richard M. Nixon who suffered a po litical reverse of the first Lyle C. Wilson m a g n 1 1 uae. For Nixon, the election was a Democratic flash flood which wrecked his Republi can home base of political operations in California. Party damage was duplicated gener ally around the country.. Nix on's plus mark is that he is by instinct a take-charge guy. He was able therefore to emerge from the wreckage of the Re publican party today as politi cal head man of the Eisen hower administration. Nelson A. Rockefeller, Re publican governor - elect of New York, was al plus and no minus on the election returns. Rockefeller smacked down Democratic Gov. Averell Har riman's reelection bid. He smacked it so far down that Harriman already is disap pearing into the political shadows although he was only 48 hours ago a possible Demo cratic choice for president in 1960. Rockefeller did more. He won big enough to carry to victory with him New York's Republican candidate for the U.S. Senate, Kenneth B. Keating. By these feats, Rockefeller became a major contender for the 1960 Repub lican presidential nomination -the only man who seems now to have any chance what soever to beat Nixon for that nomination. Knowland All Through - Sen. William F. Knowland who abandoned the Senate Republican leadership to run for governor in California was a Republican presidential prospect when this week be gan. No more. Knowland shook . up California politics by forcing himself into the gubernatorial contest arid compelling Republican Gov. Goodwin J. Knight to step aside and to run for the Sen ate. They both lost and Cali fornia, the second most popu lous state, fell to the Demo crats for the first time in 16 years. It will be a long time before Republicans take that state again, perhaps, but long er before Knowland has an other even outside chance to aspire to the White House. Sen. John F. Kennedy con tinued his Barly-foot perform ance as' front runner for the I960 Democratic presidential npminatipn. Kennedy sought reelection in Massachusets. To Try and Stop Me By BENNETT CERT IN A NEW SURVEY of advertising business called "Madison Avenue, U. S. A.," Martin Mayer insists the advertising fra ternity is much maligned. Far from talking like high school sophomores, says Mayer (example: "Run that one up the flagpole, Manny, and let's see if someone sa lutes"), the actual ad ex ecutive is blunt, direct and businesslike. When a pros pective client once asked an agency president what he'd do if a carefully detailed campaign was rejected, the president replied smoothly, "We'll present our second best idea." . Stung by the general as sumption that every poor soul in the advertisirig business has an ulcer, a Tide magazine panel recently queried 1,400 top ad execu tives on the state of their health. Only four per cent admitted they suffered from ulcers. Eighty-eight per cent declared they were in perfect shape, ready to wangle an account away from a rival at the drop of a thermometer. ' O U58, by Bennett Cert Distributed by King Features Syndicate. maintain bis favorable posi tion, Kennedy needed a smashing victory over a lost cause Republican -opponent, Vincent J. Celeste. Kennedy got it. He clobbered Celeste by 3 to 1 or thereabouts, an achievement which will be favorably noted by the grass roots Democratic politicos who are quick to love a win ner, ii New Jersey's Democratic Gov. Robert B. Meyner, also young, substantially held his own in the game of presiden tial politics by getting his man elected to the U.S. Sen ate. His man was Harrison A. Williams Jr., who defeated Republican Robert W. Kean. The Republicans had expect ed to win that one, despite the general Democratic trend. Leader Loses Out Still another young man, Democratic George M. Lead er, of Pennsylvania, plodded with New York's Harriman into the political shadows. Leader lost a U.S. Senate con test to Republican Hugh Scott. Like Harriman, Leader had , been counted until the returns came in as among the Democratic presidential pos sibilities. Missouri kept Democratic Sen. Stuart Symington among the party's live aspirants to the White House. Symington's reelection, however, lacked the spectacular thump of a runaway majority such as Kennedy won in Iyjassachur setts. Wins Sixth Term Gov. G. Mennen (Soapy) Williams was the Democratic young man of the hour in big, industrial Michigan, Williams, in political cahoots with big labor's Walter Reuther, won an unexampled sixth term. Williams, almost automatical ly, became the man left wing Democrats of the North, East and West would most wel come as head of the 1960 par ty ticket-and, by the same measure, Williams is. the man whose nomination Democrats of the South would most pro: test. Not so young but mighty big in politics today is Ed mund G. (Pat) Brown, the Democrat who ran Knowland out of politics in California. Brown may riot figure greatly as a presidential possibility, himself, but as Caliifornia's new Mr. Big he will have a big part in choosing the next Democratic nominee. In the day - after - election dawn, big labor stood amid the coast-to-coast Republican wreckage flexing muscle like a Paul Bunyan in a forest of stumps. The tide of right-to-work laws and state constitu tiorial amendments appeared to have been turned. The right-to-work proposition car ried in agricultural Kansas, lost in Washington, Ohio and California. Ohio's Republican Joyful Democrats Have Small Worries Over Congress Control By FRANK ELEAZER UPI Correspondent Washington-(UP Top Demo crats today should have been, and for the record were, delirious- with joy. Their party had won con trol of House -and Senate by whopping majorities. Privately, that's exactly what had some' congressional leaders worried. In the House it appeared Speaker Sam Rayburn would have votes to spare, by the dozen. Senate Leader Lyndon B. Johnson also was to be amply supplied with Demo crats. List Three Reasons From the standpoint of some Democratic strategists, this won't be an altogether happy situation, because: On past performance, an over whelming Democratic preponderance in either cham ber may lead to poor party discipline. Each member will feel his vote isn't needed. Gov. C. William O'Neill who had made right to work a ba sic campaign issue was licked by Democratic Michael V. Di Salle.v Harold W. Handley, a Re publican right to work advo cate in Indiana, was a sur prise loser to Democrat R. Communications Letters to the Editor must bear the name and address of the writer, although under certain circumstances the use of a pen name or initial for publication is permissible. The Mail Tribune reserves the right to edit all letters with a view to clarification and condensation. Letters submitted for publication must not exceed 400 words. The letters printed in this column do not necessarily represent the views of the aaper; in fact the contrary is often the case. Road Neglected To the Editor: To tax pay ers, this is food for thought. We here in Griffin Creek school district pay among the highest taxes in the county. We have the most dangerous road conditions in Jackson county and it starts at the mouth on South Stage road and continues throughout the length of Dark Hollow. On ' two places where the creek crosses the road, cul verts are so small that we still have to waller through as did the Indians 100 years ago. The county has surveyed this road at different times but did nothing. There have been two deaths and many accir dents. We need a two - way road. We the taxpayers have paid for the road a long time ago but we "are still forced to waller through as did the Indians and subject the school children to death and injury due to neglect on the part of public officals. This road starts three miles from the courthouse and I am sure it is the most dangerous in the county. Leroy and Laura Kirkendall 2612 Dark Hollow rd. Medford Don't Let It Happen Again! To the Editor: On Oct. 31, a school bus overturned and in: jured several children. This could happen again and it will happen again unless we do something about it. Let's put the blame where it belongs'. It is said that a car crowded the bus off the road. The driver of this car was at fault for reckless driv ing and for not stopping at the scene of an accident. But was it his fault or the bus driver's fault that the road was not wide enough for the two ve hicles to pass safely? We can't stop these reckless drivers, but we can try and prevent them from doing things like this, by improving our road conditions. Had the road been a few feet wider this would not have hap pened. We have people to take care of these roads. I wonder if they have ever seen a school bus on its side in a field, filled with children screaming with fright and pain. I have, and it isn't a very pretty sight. Let's improve our' roads before this happens again. ' Mrs. D.. S. Kendall, Dark Hollow rd., Medford.' Dangerous Roads To the Editor: Two men have just left our home. They called with a petition regard ing the danger and urgent need for improvement of our county roads, Dark Hollow and Pioneer. I gladly signed this petition Guaranteed to restore Firm Fit and Suction to loose Dental Plates or no cost ! PERMANENT. WASH ABLE. SANITARY PLASTIC LINER. One application lasts many months professional quality can not harm plates. USERS PRAISE IT! RHEAL Dtital Plat LINER complete Kit for both uppers and lowers. NOW only . . . $2.9 Central Rexall Drug W Give "S&H Green Stamps MAIN" &' CENTRAL On the other side of the aisle, the effect will be just the opposite. Republicans, like Democrats, tend to close ranks when heavily out numbered. With Democrats in un questioned charge of Congress during the next two years, voters may be persuaded in 1960 to blame Democrats rather than Republicans for anything that goes wrong, de SDite GOP control of the White House. Democratic leaders recall only too well what Harry Trupian did with a similar situation in reverse, in 1948. Could Complicate Matters Johnson's strength as Demo cratic leader of the Senate is as a backstage operator. His performance with a shoestring Democratic majority in the 85th Congress was generally conceded to have been superb- The simultaneous initiation into the club of a big block of new Democratic members, in- Vance Hartke in a race for the U.S. Senate. It was not in the cards for the Republi cans to lose that one, but they did. So, industrial Indiana, Ohio and California seemed to be going labor's way on right to work. Conservative politicians will shrink from making that challenge again. and am so thankful for the thought that some effort is being taken before someone gets killed, particularly after the serious school bus mishap tast weeK. mere is a very dangerous blind corner too narrow to accommodate two vehicles at oncp and in addi tion there is a bump on one half of it as a driveway takes off there to go up the hill. This is almost directly in front of our home. Last winter there was a col lision there. Traffic was blocked until police took over. Many times I've witnessed "near accidents" there. We hope you may help pur sue this need to a reality. Mrs. W. Person, 2860 Dark Hollow rd., Medford. Danger Spot To the Editor: Your head lines in faundays paper prompted me to write you. About two years ago I had the same experience as the 35 children and on the same road. I had never realized that the western section of Dark Hollow and Pioneer rds., were impassable in such dangerous places, but I found out the hard 'way. Had it not been for a large tree Shat stopped me after rolling, I'd have gone six or more times. I was' the eighth at this one particular spot. The first thing I did was measure the road. It was 12 feet four inches with loose shoulders. The car I met measured over six feet wide and so was mine. I then called on Commissioners Keating and Wendt, also Engineer Rynning. They told me they had just been over the road and it was iq very good con dition. The following morning Mr. Wendt and Mr. Rynning went out with me to where I had my $500 repair "jolt." I parked my car on the ex treme right and asked them to pass. They said ii was im possible and would do some thing about it. Months had passed and nothing was done to the road. Then one morning I met what I had always dreaded, at this very blind spot I met the school bus and he wasn't I doing a mere 15 m.p.h., but between 30 and 35. I stopped against the upper embankr ment. By the grace of God the bus stayed on at this extreme dangerous spot. I later saw where there was only one track of the rear duals, the Plagued Day And Night with Bladder Discomfort? Unwise eating or drinking may he 8 source of mild, but annoying bladder irri tations making you feel restless, tense, and uncomfortable. And if restless night, with nagging backache, headache or mus cular aches and pains due to over-exertion, strain or emotional upset, are adding to your misery don't wait try Doan's Pills. Doan's Pills act 3 ways for speedy re lief. 1 They have a soothing effect on bladder irritations. 2 A fast pain-relieving action on nagging backache, bead aches, muscular aches and pains. 3 A wonderfully mild diuretic action thru the kidneys, tending to increase the output of the 15 miles of kidney tubes. So, get the same happy relief millions have enjoyed for over 60 years. New, large, economy lize saves money. Get Doaa' Pilli todaxl eluding several with a liberal bent, could complicate John son's well-k n o w n wheeling and dealing. Assuming, as senators do, that Johnson hopes to remain front and center among Demo cratic presidential hopefuls for I960, this infusion of new Democratic blood also might be expected to push Johnson somewhat toward the left in his management of the Senate. Democratic National Chair man Paul Butler already is in with a prediction that the 86th Congress will be "more progressive and liberal." But ler foresaw, among other things, a curb on Senate fili busters. More Liberal Members Speaker Rayburn isn't run ning' for president. He isn't likely to be pushed much one way or the other. However, there was a band of several score liberal Democrats in the House in the 85th Congress who constantly were pressing for a more liberal party posi tion. Their number will be bolstered in the 86th Congress. ! To the extent that the lib eral newcomers replace con servative Republicans, the off setting influence of the con servative Southern bloc will be diminished. The Southern hold pn com mittee chairmanships and oth er congressional posts of pow er won't be loosened, how ever, and in many situations the ' old coalition of Southern Democrats and conservative northern Republicans still can be expected to prevail. Churchill To Get High French Honor Paris (UPD Sir Winston Churchill arrives here today to receive France's highest honor from a wartime com rade-in-arms he has sometimes criticized but never ceased to admire Premier Charles de Gaulle. Britains wartime prime minister is flying in from a Riviera vacation to bury the hatchet. De Gaulle will give him the Cross of a Companion of the Liberation at cere monies scheduled at noon Thursday. The only other foreigners who have received the Liber ation Cross are both chiefs of state President Eisenhower and Moroccan King Moham med V. Coya Knutson Loses Reelection Oklee, Minn. -(UPD- Andrew Knutson, who failed to con vince his wife, Coya, . she should quit being a congress woman, got his wish today. She lost her bid for reelection. Mrs. Knutson was defeated by a lanky Republican and former legislator in her 9th District race, Odin Langen, Kennedy,. Jpnn. But the Knutsons appar ently had other troubles. An drew refused to talk about it, but reports said he planned to file an alienation of affections suit against his wife's secre tary, William Kjeldahl, 29. other was over the edge. I couldn't rest in peace and again called at the courthouse relating the incident, the pos sible results and responsibili ty. After about five calls I finally gave up and the follow? ing year they finally widened this one place with ditch cleaning dirt. This was and is only one of the many im passable places on this road. In closing I believe we do have a capable road depart ment, but' how is it being used? Why are the Dark Hol low and Pioneer rds. in this section so neglected and the other end so well taken care of? I know there can be given many reasons and excuses but are they truly justifiable? Surely something ' must be done for the safety of the many cnuaren ana people that travel these roads. W. H. Frohreich 303 Berry dale Medford QUIET AND DIGNIFIED Li C. M. Litwiller Ample for every need. A setting of simplicity and reverence that will endure in memory throughout the years. Litwiller's Mountain View Chapel . .' . Weddings and funeral service. LITWILLER Funeral Home Mountain View Chapel Hwy, 66 at Normal Office 88 N. Main ASHLAND VV Never CJos In Ihe Day's News By FRANK JENKINS The Nobel prizes this year have created some very, VERY good propaganda for America. The communists, by refusing to permit Pasternak to accept his literary award, have painted themselves be fore the world for what they are. They did it themselves. We didn't force it pn them. T ET'S look at somp reac tions: The Swedish Writers Fed eration has drafted a protest to Moscow, a s have other groups throughout the world. Japanese writers and ciyic leaders are angered. Norway announces it is re considering its cultural agree ment with Russia because "the case of Pasternak has revealed that the Soviet Un ion and Norway have totally different conceptions of the world culture." Sweden and Norway have been intrigued by NEUTRAL ISM. They have gone out of their way in the past to avoid criticism of Russia. The Pas ternak incident has brought home to the cultured and decent Swedes and Norwe gians the hard, cold fact that as between a monster and a decent person, decent people CAN'T BE NEUTRAL. - TS MONSTER" too rough a word? Listen: In Moscow Vladimir Sefn ichastney, head of the com munist youth organization Komsomol (the purpose of Komsomol is to make good communists of Russia's youth); speaking in the presence of Khrushchev and other Soviet leaders, denounces Pasternak s "a MANGY SHEEP" and WORSE THAN A PIG." What kind of "culture" is that? BERTRAND Russell, him self a Nobel prize winner, says this morning he ip DIS GUSTED with the Soviet au thorities who forced Paster nak to reject the honor. Bertrand Russell is one of the world's most distinguished socialists. He doesn't disagree when he hears himself called a rad ical. But he gags at this latest revelation of the brutal boor ishness of the leadership of the Union of Soviet SOCIAL IST Republics. FOR years I have believed that the institution of com munism is so foul that in time it must fall of the weight of its own foulness. I now believe it more firm ly than ever. Both Robert Burns and Rudyard Kipling had to pay for the printing of their early poems. ' Good Reading for the Whole Family Mews Facts Family Features The Christion Scienc Monitor One Norway St., Boston 15, Mas. Send your newspaper for the time checked. Enclosed find my check or money order. I year $18 O 6 months $9 0 3 months $4.50 Nome Address City r Zone State L f. -J. r i V ' Nj Mrs. Litwiller 'It is better to know us and not need us. than to pped ut nd pot know us."