MAIL TRIBUNf, Mearere", Or.
WeJiteseay, May , If St
"Iveryone In Southern Oregoa
Reads The Mail Tribane"
Published Daily except Saturday by
MJJDFORD PRINTING CO.
33 North Fix St Ph. SP 2-141
ROBE3T W RCTTT.. Editor
KERB GRITV Advertising Manage
GERALD LATHAM. Business Ugr
ERIC W AX1XN JR.
Managing F.ditor
EARL, H ADAMS. City Editor
HARRY CHIP MAN. Tel eg Editor
RICHARD JEW KIT Sports Editor
OLIVE STARCHES Women's Editor
DALE ERICKSON, Circulation Mr
An Independent Newspaper
Entered as second class matter at
Medford Oregon under Act of
March 3. 1897
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Flight 'o Time
Medford and Jackson' County
History from the files of The
Wail Tribune 10, 20. 30, 40
and 50 years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
M 6. 1943 (Friday)
, Glenn Jackson, Jacksoiw
County Chamber of Com
merce president, tells mem
bers of the state highway
commission that the Green
cprings mountain highway
should be improved.
C. Scott HamUtoni sue the
city of Central Point for dam
ages allegedly resulting from
the city's dumping sewage in
Bear creek.
20 YEARS AGO
May 6, 1939 (Saturday)
One of the "Tarzan Boys of
Dark Hollow" is arrested on
a charge of pigeon-stealing.
From Arthur Perry! "Ye
Smudge Pot" column: "The
Older Girls report an epidem
ic of lawnbago among their
better halves, as it if alleged,
because the grass needs mow
ing.", 30 YEARS AGO
May 6. 1929 (Monday)
Senior high school com
mencement exercises are
scheduled for the Craterian
theater May 29.
Three mills plans to cut
timber in the Prospect district
this summer.
40 YEARS AGO
May 6, 1919 (Tuesday)
Six high school athletes
leave for Eugene for the state
track meet. ,
The vaUey escaped frost
damage in March, according
to a report.
50 YEARS AGO
May 6, 1909 (Thursday)
Work resumes in the Des
ert Oil company's drilling op
eration northeast of town.
Thirty carloads of lumber
arrive in the past 10 days to
supply building projects in
this area.
Vhal's Your I.Q.?
Nina er tan correct is suMrier;
avail or eight b excellent; fiva or
ix u good.
1. How long did Rip Van-
Yinkie sleep?
2. Arnustirs is the branch
of; knowledge that treats of
heat, light, sound, or elec
trieitv? 3. The school song of the
Annapolis Naval Academy is
'Anchors Away;" true or
false?
A The nrniriM of th U.S
correspond to what similar
areas in Argentina?
5. Does any existing species
of bird possess teeth?
' 6. Bourbon whisky is dis
tilled from what grain?
7. Name the eight States of
the U.S. whose names begin
with th letter N.
8. In September, 1945, Ja-
pan signed a lormai surrend
er document aboard a UJS
ttattlpshin- name the ship.
' 9. Correct the foUowing:
"Whn Hid vou see?" :-
; 10. What sort of heavenly
bodies are Saturn, Uranus,
and Neptune?
Answers: 1. 20 yaars. .2.
Sound. 3. Falsa (Anchcti
aw.iahl. 4. Pampas. 5. No.
6. Corn. 7. Nebraska. Nevada,
New Hampshire. New Jersey
J.t Manrieo. NW York
North Carolina. North Da
kota. 8. Missouri. 9. whom
did you seer 10. Planets.
Hatfield's Future fr.
Oregon's young Republican governor, Mark
Odom Hatfield, is the subject of a sympathetic
article in this week's Saturday Evening Post.
The article is -interesting reading for those
who have watched Hatfield climb from a brilliant
young college professor of political science
through two terms in the house of representatives,
a half-term in the senate, and a half-term as sec
retary of state before running successfully for the
governorship. ,
The author, Milton MacKaye, states that Hat
field, by reason of his election as a Republican
in what was otherwise (except in New York) a
Democratic year, has made him "potentially a
national political figure."
HPHE article makes a comparison between Hat-
field and Gov. Nelson Rockefeller of New
York. Both, it is pointed out, are relatively young,
both are "liberal" Republicans, both were early
supporters of Dwight Eisenhower, and both ran
campaigns which emphasized a non-partisan ap
proach, appealing to Democrats, Republicans and
uncommitted voters alike.
All these points are valid, and it may be, in
deed, that the future holds national political
promise, for Hatfield. The role most often men
tioned is that as a vice-presidential candidate on
a Rockefeller ticket
But there are several factors which might
mitigate against this possibility. , ,
H
ATFIELD'S almost-meteoric career has been
marked, for one thine:, by jumping from one
candidacy to another almost too fast, in the
eyes of some critics. He left the state senate to
run for secretary of state, left that office in mid
term to run for governor, and if he were to seek
higher office in the mid-term of his governorship,
it could be used against him (although this would
carry. more weight with Oregon voters than it
would with those in th& nation at large). ... ,
More urifcortant than
lot of people, Republicans and Democrats alike,
believe is his lack of forthright, courageous lead
ership in the short time he
.' .
IS campaign last fall gave the impression, if
nnt the snecific assurance, that he would be
H
able to maintain and improve state services, while
holding the tax line, or even reducing them.
This mav be leiritimate camDaiem talk, but in
view of the financial problems facing the state,
it may come back to flaunt him, particularly if
the state's tax nliffht becomes more serious within
the next two years as
, Anu, pussiuiy must, uiipuiuuib ox Aiamciu.
has somehow failed to "project" his image and his
views since takinp- office. He has been over
shadowed by the bickering within the legislature,
-1 1- " 1 1 i- T U ....l-imia
ana ins puuiic pruxiouiiceiueiiis nave, it suiueuiuw
seems, a querulous quality not in keeping with the
image of a young, courageous and liberal-minded
political leader.
M
ARK Hatfield is a uersonablej friendly and,
xvp. believe, able
ground, both educationally and through experi-
if 1 1 TT 1 J.1 3 J
ence, is unexcepuonaDie.
of youth, eood looks, an
ffirthrnmino" child.
His war record, his churcn contacts, his aDiiity
j. I i 1 1 i... ,Ci-V. ...J.
" m m ' m
in minirie ireeiv aim un
from all segments of society, from college pro-
e . i i n i. j i.: i i
lessors to lumuerjacjtus, an
a t i 1
nca stean.
Desnite all these, and desDite his thousand
per cent record in elections up to this point, Hat-
iieia nas sun to get across to many peopie wnat
l 1 1 i Xl i 1 ' J 4 I 1
n is, in nara lerms, mat
to do.
It is well-known he is
and the sales tax. But if
bigger things, he must
what he is for, too. H..A.
Another
It is the hone, surely,
son county that the air
the Iruit growers can put into enect tne inree
phase plan announced yesterday morning.
DesDite a small minority who would end or
chard heating out-of-hand, and be damned to the
consequences, most reasonable people acKnowi
edsre the necessity to protect the fruit from frost,
so long as genuine attempts are made to mitigate
the smoke nuisance.
But at the same time, people can be forgiven
if they view the assurances of the committee with
a jaundiced eye. They've heard such talk before.
Yet the smudge smoke this year was worse than
it has been in recent years. '
WE WILL believe in the good faith of the or-
chardists this time, and will continue to do
so until proven wrong.
Burning of tires (which we were told several
years ago would cease forthwith) should be ban
ned outright. A five-year program of replacement
of the smoky type of pots is not unreasonable.
(But the practice of buying used ones, cheap,
from California where they have been outlawed,
will hardly build good-will.)
Judging by the reaction of many good people
in the Medford area, the orchardists will be given
another chance to make the necessary changes.
If not, however, we believe that the state air
pollution authority will be "pressed" (in the un
fortunate phrase of one
I enforcing the law. E. A.
this, however, is what a
has been in office.
can certainly happen.
vcmnp man. His back
ne nas uie auvaiitage
attractive wife and a
1
euuai ueims wiui ucuuic
suuiu illui m guuu yvu-
ne sianas ior ana eeri.s
against traffic accidents
Hatfield is to eo on to
get across the image of
Chance
of most people in Jack
pollution committee of
of its spokesmen) into
Dennis the
I JUST tOSTW TEMPER. KM
Senators, Agency Chief Defend
'Right to Know But
By FRANK ELEAZER
Washington - (UPD - It was a
heartwarming sight: Two sena
tors versus a bureaucrat, each
side outdoing
the' other in
defense of our
right to know
how the pub
lic money is
spent.
But I guess
nobody won,
least of all us
taxpayers.
It was a
Frank Eleazer
meeting of the Senate's sub
committee on constitutional
rights, headed by Sen. Thomas
C. Hennings Jr. (D-Mo.). AU
the fuss was about foreign
aid.
Hennings took the position
this costs billions of dollars
and that the people who put
up the money are entitled to
know 'what's done with it
Sen. Roman Hruska (R-Neb.),
said he couldn't agree more
because "this is public bus
iness." Even Leonard J. Saccio,
acting foreign aid boss, could
see this' was reasonable. In
fact he said we taxpayers
should be "fully informed.?
He said he bets doUars to
doughnuts his agency is the
niost thoroughly investigated
in town, and that he likes it
this way. :
Kay Words 'Just About'
Saccio said he lets Congress'
investigators who keep the
lawmakers informed so they
can teU us see just about
every record he has. Hennings
said the key words here were
"just about."
The things Saccio's agency
guards from the congresisonal
gumshoes, it develops, are
papers called "evaluation re
ports." Hennings seemed to
think they contain some in
teresting stuff. Saccio said
maybe so, but it's for his eyes
only.
' He said what happens is
that the agency picks teams
of good men to go out to the
66 countries on the foreign
aid list and bring back pri
vate reports on how things
are going. If they couldn't
count on the agency keeping
their rports confidential, he
said, these feUows might not
tell the whole story
Challenge Saccio
Hennings and Hruska said
these reports sounded like
just' the kind most needed by
the congresional watchdogs.
They chalenged Saccio's right
to withhold them.
Saccio cited precedent, a
presidential order, and an at
torney general's ruling ia
support of his refusal to pro
duce them. He said the whole
thing boiled down to "execu
tive privilege" derived from
the constitutional division of
Try and Stop Klo
By BENNETT CERT
ALGERNON SWINBURNE was leaving his London club one
evening, and looked for hit hat. AH the poet could find
were four top-hats belonging to ether members of the club. In
a raee. he threw the toDnera
on the floor, and was doing
ax war dance on them when
a hall porter came running
up to discover the cause of
the commotion.
"Where's my hat?" thun
dered Swinburne.
"Sir,1 replied the porter,
"you had none. You told me
the evening was so fine you
decided to come without
one." '
"You are absolutely cor
rect," agreed the poet, his
anger vanishing: Then, look
ing at the ruined hats on the
floor, he added, "I imagine the
theirs, either."
it. Israel Weisfield Botes that tbe jeep Whkh carried the Third
Army Catholic chaplain in World War U hen the iaaortpUce,
."Bringing Up Father.1 - ; .
lKa by Bennett Cert. SfstrfMtei IT KHf 1
Menace
powers among the Congress,
the executive, and the courts.
Hennings' subcommittee has
been doing battle with this
same argument for almost
four years. Somewhat wearily,
Hennings said he was a little
sick of this "executive privi
lege." - Hennings could have quit
there, while ahead, but he
continued:
"Some of us (in the Con
gress) don't have much privi
lege in the government. A fel
low 'can get up anywhere and
ask where I .stand. There's
not much that some of us can
conceal."
Headline Publicising Payroll
Saccio was much too smart
to comment on that. Or maybe
he just hadn't seen . all the
stuff in the papers about sen
India Needs More Help in Fight
For Development; Sources Eyed
Washington - India gained
its independence at just about
the time the cold war was
starting. '. Although basicaUy
democratic in forms of govern
ment and habits of thought,
it has done its best to foUow
a neutral course in the great
struggle between the free and
Communist worlds. Its ener
gies have been 'concentrated
on pushing forward projects
of economic development vi
tally needed to raise the liv
ing standards if India's huge
and rapidly growing popula
tion. In that task it has re
ceived substantial aid from
the United States and the
World Bank and also from the
Soviet Union. -
All through the underde
veloped countries of the East
recently emerged from colon
ial status," the main aim and
longing is to gain the means
for a better life and to do it in
a hurry . A looming question
for the smaller lands is wheth
er they will be able to folow
the exampe of democratic
India or perhaps be forced
into accepting that of Com
munist China. Peking's sacri
fice of human liberties to pro
duction goals may be lost ito
sight if Red China continues
to make spectacular material
strides. ThuSjSubstantial prog
ress against poverty cannot
be delayed in India if that
country is to retain its present
strong position of leadership
in South and Southeast Asia.
Much Aid Required
Development of the Indian
economy by methods accept
able in free countries requires
a vast in-pouring of foreign
capital. Since it attained inde
pendence in 1947, India has
other gentlemen won't be using,
'Internal Interference' Charge by Reds
Provides Contrast in Communist Thought
By PHIL NEWSOM
UPI Foreign Editor
One source of Red China's
current indignation with India
is the charge that the latter's
Interest in Tibet constitutes
interference in- Red China's
internal af
fairs. It provides
an interesting
contrast
in Commun
ist thinking.
For exam
ple inv Com
munist eyes it
is not inter-
Phii Nswsom ierence in a
nation's internal affairs when
Red propaganda agencies at
tack established non V Com
munist governments of Asia
or Europe which accept U.S.
aid.
It is not interference in
U. S. internal affairs when
the Moscow or Peiping radios
make vicious attacks against
officials of the U. S. govern
ment. "
Don't Talk
ator's payrolls. In general,
these are almost as secret as
Saccio's "evaluations" and
possibly in some cases as in
teresting. Hennings has declined to
make his payroll public, until
the Senate as a body decides
this should be done. So has
Hruska.
Hennings is chairman of the
Senate Rules Committee,
which has before it just such
a proposal. He didn't make
any announcement ' : though
about getting it approved any
time soon.
And Saccio didn't say any
thing about changing his
mind. ' " v,:-
So I guess we shouldn't
look for new enlightment
soon, from either side of the
table,
received a cumulative total of
around $2.6 billion worth of
aid of various kinds from
abroad. The United States has
been the source of approxi
mately $1.6 billion. The World
Bank has loaned more than
$500 m i 11 i o n. Communist
sources have supplied about
$300 million.
A large part of the aid to
India has gone to supply for
eign materials or technical as
sistance needed to expand ag
ricultural and industrial pro
duction and carry out objec
tives of the government's eco
nomic planning. An industrial
policy announced in 1948 di
vided the economy into public
and private sectors. Nearly a
score of key industries were
designated state monopolies,
and a large number of other
industries were left entirely
to private enterprise. In the
middle was a mixed group in
which new government-owned
companies were to operate
alongside existing private
companies.
Five-Year Plan
Economic planning was car
ried further in 1951, when
India initiated its first five
year plan. The plan called for
expenditure of nearly $5 bil
lion in the pubic sector of in
dustry and anticipated an
equa outlay by industries in
the private sector. Emphasis
was on expansion of agricul
tural production. The second
five-year plan, started in the
spring ox 1956, doubled public-sector
expenditures to $10
billion and shifted the empha
sis to industrial expansion.
Foreigin aid, though greatly
increased since the second
five-year plan went into ef
fect, has still not been suffic
ient to cover Indian foreign
exchange deficits. PlannedHn
vestments recently had to be
cut back $500 million for that
reason. Most of the American
aid has been in the form of
loans rather than grants. The
United States has supplied
$518 million for technical as
sistance: $130 million in de
velopment assistance loans be
fore 1957 and $175 million
since that date; $150 mijlion
in. Export-Import Bank cred
its to purchase heavy capital
goods; and $664 million in sur
plus agricultural commodities
sold for rupees, most of which
were loaned back for Indian
development projects:
Source Depleted
The greater part of the
loans has been made repay
able, In rupees. The chief cur
rent source of such "soft"
loans is this country's Devel
opment Loan Fund, set up in
1951. Further aid to India
from the United States de
pends at the moment on how
far Congress' goes to meet ad
ministrative pleas for support
nf the foreif n aid oroaTam
President Eisenhower has
It is not interference in in
ternal affairs when Russian
tanks rumble into a presum
ably sovereign Hungary to
quash an internal revolt
against a hated Communist
regime.
Reds Not Worried
But it is interference in Red
China's internal affairs when
India expresses sympathy for
the Tibetans and gives sanc
tuary to the Dalai Lama when
he flees his Tibetan capital
of Lhasa after a series of bro
ken Red promises. -
It is characteristic of Com
munism that its spokesmen
are not worried by inconsis
tencies either in word or deed.
But the Red Chinese attacks
on India seem particularly in
consistent. It is very doubt
ful the Red Chinese want the
Dalai Lama back since he has
opposed them consistently and
since, in the Panchen Lama,
among Buddhists, they have a
hand-picked candidate to suc
ceed him as Tibet's ruler.
Further, in attacking India,
they are attacking the one
major non-Communist nation
which has been their most
consistent apologist.
Pressure on Nehru
The result has been increas
ing, pressure on Indian Pre
mier Jawaharlal Nehru from
politicians at home to take a
new look at India's foreign
policy. '
. In his recent public utter
ances, Nehru has appeared
more hurt than angry at Pei
ping's intemperate attacks. He
has denied charges that the
Tibetan revolt was fostered
from the Indian side of the
border.
He has labelled some Red
Chinese charges "irresponsi
ble" but he has been careful
to say they were uttered "in
excitement and I hope the ex
citement will pass."
But his irritation has shown
through, especially in a recent
statement to the Indian Par
liament that he was unable to
say why certain Red Chin
ese maps incorporate slices of
Indian territory and border
recommenaea an appropria
tion of $700 million for fiscal
1960 to replenish DJL.F.'s now
Virtually empty treasury. Sen.
J. W. ' Fulbright (D-Ark.).
chairman of the Foreign Re
lations Committee, has pro
posed that D1.F. be given au
thority now to lend $7.5 bil
lion over the next five years
at the rate of $1.5 billion a
year. Editorial Research Re
ports.
Political Parties
Borrowing Some of
Other's Techniques
Bt RAYMOND LAHR
Washington-flJPD-If imitation
is the sincerest flattery, each
of the political parties is flat
tering the other.
The Republicans . are pre
paring to publish a magazine
to give the party line to the
faithful. This is an idea bor
rowed from the Democrats,
who have had their own live
ly magazine going since the
summer of 1953.
Now the Democrats are pre
paring to salute former Presi
dent Truman on his 75th
birthday Friday with fund
raising functions linking 15
cities by closed circuit tele
vision. They borrowed this . idea
from the Republicans who
raised about $3 million in
1956 by using closed circuit
TV in the same way to cele
brate the third anniversary of
President Eisenhower's first
inauguration.
Hope to Fatten Purse
The Democrats have no $3
million goal, but they do ex
pect to fatten their bank ac
count with receipts from about
49,000 paying guests. For their
money, the TV viewers will
get a mixture of Democratic
oratory, entertainment, a Tru
man speech and filmed high
lights of the Truman years in
the White House.
The former President has
been bouncing around Wash
ington and New York for the
past two weeks giving advice
ito Congress and making
unihibited comments on al
most every subject except bis
choice for the 1960 presiden
tial nomination. If and when
he answers that question, he
will surprise a great many
Democrats if he endorses any
one but Sen. Stuart Syming
ton from his home state of
Missouri.
Truman Partisans
The TV show will no doubt
please the Truman partisans
who want to assign him a
place among the great presi
dents while the political de
bate about his administration
it still far from finished,
areas under Indian protection.
One school of thought in
New Delhi believes that envy
lies at the root of Peiping's
unbridled attacks against In
dia. WUI Support Red China
This school believes Pei
ping is jealous of India's rank
in world politics and was an
noyed at Moscow's suggest
ion that India should be . in
cluded in a summit confer
ence whUe Peiping itself was
ignored. '
-In a world of power politics
Letters to the Editor must beer 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 rioht to
edit all letters with a view to clarification and condensation. Utters
submitted for publication must not exceed 400 words. The letters
printed in this column do not necessarily represent the views of the
paper; in fact the contrary is often the case.
Against Ordinance I Criticise Sentenes.
To the Editor: At the last'
regular meeting of the Shady
Cove Grange, it was moved,
seconded, and carried without
a dissenting vote that: The
Shady Cove Grange is op
posed to the present proposed
planning ordinance, and that
a letter be sent to the County
Court, and the Medford Mail
Tribune stating our action.
Anna Beryl Kee, Sec.
Shady Cove -Grange
"We're Being Robbed"
To the Editor: In his
WoodsWater and Wildlife"
column in The. Medford Mail
Tribune May 1, 'Hank, De
Voss, instructor on the Med
ford public school system
staff sounds some wise words
of warning. Hank potently
puts it:
"We are being robbed and
don't know it."
That's been one of the ter
rible great blights on the fair
face of Oregon through most
of her first hundred years
stolen, wasted and destroyed
natural resources.
Had President Theodore
Roosevelt's May 13, 1908
declaration, command, been
heeded and adhered to, Ore
gon's economy might have
been stabilized assured, per
petuated, and later tax wor
ries greatly lessened.
Through this Conservation
Week a number of news items
will apear in Jackson county
and other Oregon newspapers
with reference to natural re-
cources. Each may convey dif
ferent viewpoints, but all will
doubtless contain food for
thought, much serious
thought.
John Gribble
Chairman for
Jackson County
Conservation Week
The judgment of history on
Truman presumably will be
based on his foreign policy
rather than his domestic pro
gram. The monuments of the
Truman administration were
the Truman Doctrine to keep
Greece and Turkey free, the
Marshall Plan, NATO, the
Point Four program for back
ward countries and the decis
ion to fight in Korea.
His domestic program did
not fare so well in a Congress
where the dominant conserva
tive coalition thought that it
tasted too much like an ex
tension of the New Deal.
A glance back to 1950
shows Truman advocating the
Brannan Plan for agriculture,
federal aid for schools, nation
al health insurance, repeal of
the Taft-Hartley law and a set
of Civil Rights proposals.
MIDGETS WANT RIDE
Hollywood -JUPD-The Little
People of America, an inter
national organization of mid
gets, appealed to the Pentagon
Tuesday night to allow
midgets to aid the U. S. satel
lite program by riding in the
rockets.
j
C. M. Litwiner
YOU
MAY BE
ASSURED
. . . that each individual requirement and need is met wherf'
your loved ones are entrusted to our care.
The "Better" Service since 1935
LITWILLER
Funeral
Home
Mountain View Chapel
Hwy. 66 at Normal
Office 88 N. Main
ASHLAND
W Never Close
this reasoning does not seem
entirely valid.
Nehru is a man with an ap
parently infinite capacity for
turning he other cheek.- This
week he announced that re
gardless of Peiping's attacks,
he will continue to support
Red China for membership in
the United Nations.
But pressure for a review of
relations with Red China is
building within his own party
and it seems Nehru may not
be able to fence-sit forever.
To the Editor: Th ir
year sentence
gave td
part with
Judge Main
for his
in
the cattle theft of Dec. 27.
1958 Why did he give the
older man a suspended sen
tence and the boy, he goes
to the pen? It looks like in
justice. Chester "Keene,
142 Glenwood rd.,
Medford.
Editor's note: The names in
the above communication
have been deleted. A check
of circuit court records shows
that the "boy" who received
the three-year sentence had
prior criminal convictions,
and had a record of parole
violation. These facts, dis
closed in pre-sentence inves
tigation, are taken into con
sideration by any judge
passing sentence.
in
Cemetery Cleanup
To the Editor: I.O.OJ".
cemetery, Central Point, clean
up has been scheduled for all
day, Friday, May 8.
All persons who are inter
ested in the improvement
project and clean-up are in
vited to participate. I do hope
all persons with friends and
relatives in that cemetery will
be interested for that truly is
the worst looking cemetery I
ever saw.
Bring hoes, rakes, shovels,
wheel-barrows and lawn
mowers to work with. . t;
C'L. Bergman,
Eagle Point.
Importance of Clinic
To the Editor: As ,we are
now in our membership drive
for the Child Guidance Clinic,
I would like to impress upon
the people the importance of
the clinic.
The clinic will see children
up to 16 years of age. Our
staff works with the parents
and teachers when necessary,
and the child, to solve their
problems. Many children are
guided safely through these
problems and on to a well ad
justed life instead of becom
ing one of our delinquents
who goes on as a "mixed up
kid" getting into trouble
eventually.
I feel the clinic is import
ant and should be sponsored
by everyone in this locality
who have an interest in chil
dren and youth.
Betty Dusenberry
Box 44 -
Trail, Ore.
HELP FOR POLICE
New York (UPD A law
which would permit the city
to use 100 "metermen" to re
place police handing out sum
monses for overtime parking
was introduced in the city
council Tuesday: Under it,
uniformed but unarmed civil
ians would begin handing out
the tickets starting July 1.
Helps Yen Overcome
FALSE TEETH
Looseness and Worry
No longer be annoyed or feel lll-m-ease
because of loose, wobbly false
teeth. FASTEETH. an Improved alka
line (non-acid) powder, sprinkled on
your plates holds them firmer so they
feel more comfortable Avoid embar
rassment caused by loose plates. Get
CAS TEETH todaj at any drug couotam.
Mrs. Litwiller
"It is better to know us and not need us
than to need us and not know us."