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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 2, 1959)
o o o o o o I o MAIL TRIBUNE, Mrtfori, Or. Tuesday, Jan 2, 1959 MedfosdSWTbibuiis "Everyone is Southern Oregon Reda The Mali Tribune published Dtlly except Saturday by MJJ3FCMD PRINTING CO. 33 North fir St Ph SP 3-141 ' ROBERT W BUHL. Editor HERB GBETr Advertiiiinf Manager GEPAL.O LATHAM. Business Mgr ERIC W ALLEN JR. Managing Rditor EARL H ADAMS. City Editor HARRY CHIPMAN Teleg Editor RICHARD JEWETXn Sports Editor OLIVE STARCHEIfcWomen's Editor DALE ERICKSON Circulation May An Independent Newspaper' Entered as, second class matter at Medforrt Oregon under Act ot March 3. 1897 SUBSCRIPTION RATES Rt Mil Win Advance. Codv 10c. Don- and Sundav 1 vear S1S.00 Dailv and Sunday mos. 8.0C Dailv and Sunday 3 mos. 429 Sunday Only One year $450 Ru rrrifT In Advance Medford Ashland. Central Point Eagle Point. Jacksonville, uoia m, Phoenix Shady Cove Rogue Riv mr Talent and on motor routes. Daily and Sunday 1 year 918.00 Daily and SunUay 1 mo. 130 Carrier and Dealers copy 10c All Terms Cash in Advance Official Paper of City f Medford Official Paper ol Jacwon t-onniy United Press International Full Leased Wire MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION Advertising Representative: WEST -HOLIDAY CO INC. Of. Sees in New York, Chicago. De troit San Francisco. Lea Angeles. Seattle, Portland St. . Louis, At lanta. Vancouver B.C. 0' NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION NATIONAL EDITORIAL I ASfeOClhRTlfra Flight 'o Time Medford and Jackson County History from the files of The Mail Tribune 10, 20. 30. 40 and 50 years ago. 10 YEARS AGO June 2. 1949 (Thursday) , 1 Central Point. Gold Hill, Table Rock and Willow Springs school districts favor consolidation, while Sams val ley and Tolo oppose it, in a sDGCial election. A bicycle safety parade through Medxord lrsiatea mis month. 20 YEARS AGO : June 2. 1939 (Friday) Casting tryouts or the Shakespeare festival begin. From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudge Pot" column: "There is a report three more horse chestnut trees will be pulled out of the way, tomake way for a gas silo." - 30 YEARS AGO June 2. 1929 (Sunday) - Three more inches of fresh snow fell at Crater Lake. . Pinn&kle Packing plant in stalls new machinery. 40 YEARS AGO June 2. 1919 (Monday) - Three men show up at the employment office in response to a call for 37 hay hands. The lightest vote in the his tory of Jackson county is pre dicted for the special state wide election tomorrow. 50 YEARS AGO June 2, 1909 (Wednesday) The Southern Oregon Hor ticultural society is organized as a move to unite fruit growers. Progress in constructing the Rogue river bridge is re ported. What's Your I.Q.? Nine or ten correct it superior; even or eight is excellent; five et six it good. 1. In what book of the Bible is the story of Esau's selling his birthright? 2. What flowers are men tioned in the poem, "In Flan ders Field"? 3. For which New England State is "lAitmeg State" a nickname? 4- Which one of the wives of Henry VIII had six fingers on one hand? 5. Is the male, or the fe male black widow spide the larger? 6. What god of mythology invented the lyre? 7. In what mountains is the Matterhorn? 8. Who found it impossible to put Humpty Dumpty to gether again? 9. Of what important Fed eral Commission was Lewis L. Strauss the chairman. 10. In -what year did the first Continental Congress meet in Philadelphia? -..Answers: 1. Genesis. 2. Pop pies. 3. Connecticut. 4. Anne Boreyn. 5. f emale, o. mercury. 7. Alps. 8. "All the king's horses and all the king's men." 9. Atomic Energy Commis sion. 10. 1774. (September).. FINALLY BOOTED Kassel, Germany-(UP&-Gren-adier Hans Muth, 21, today had his own pair of boots for the first time since he was drafted into the array two months ago. The 7 foot, 7 inch Muth needed size 13 boots, and they had to be ordered specially. ,1 Once Destroyed, Its Gtfhe Thp. Henri Bulletin has been firm surjDorter of legislation to set aside wilderness areas m this country to be preserved as wilderness areas. We have had some reservations about the proposaluntil recently, and have finally come 10 ine conclusion uiai il is a guuu mea. The Bulletin's main point, which it repeats with conviction, is that, "Wilderness, once des troyed, is lost forever." THE philosophy of the Forest Service calls for "mnUinlfl una" rvf trio fnrpsfs. This sirrmlv" means that in each forest area, as many benefi cial uses are to be permitted as is consistent with the long-range good 6 the forest lands the serv ice protects. It is a wise philosophy. But within the concept of multiple use, the aSociateiconcept of maxij mum utility has its place. If alterest area is pri marily watershed, that should be its primary use, and all others should be subjected to the protec tion of the watershed values. J-v-' Likewise, if a forest area is primarily in com mercial timber, with few watershed or-recrea-tonaj or grazing benefits, the sustained yield and harvesting of timber should be the rgimary use. w LLDERNESS areas more limited utility est areas. But they do have important featufes. One of them is ecological, for only areas which are left virtually unchanged by humans can offer clues to the relative inter-relationship of water, soil, vegetation, fish and wild Jif e. Also, there is a small but growing segment of the population which finds its greatest recreation al value in the wilderness. Finally, and in the long run probably the most important, the increasing pressures of popula tion, forest utilization and the , other factors of a growing society, soon will provide for the "de velopment" 'of virtually all areas which are not specifically set aside for some primary and im portant purpose, ar kfipt that way. Only by rigid protection will there be any wilderness left for our children and our children's children to see and enjoy. ' , "WILDERNESS once destroyed, is. lost ever. .. - ' . This should give pause to those who object to its being protected by federal law. And there is one additional factor in this situation, put this way by the Bulletin : : '.. We must consider that much of the land in wilderness areas is of very limited commercial use under present standards. Timber, is small, scattered and of low quali in much of the area. Grazing sea- o sons are short, and summertime grazing in forest areas-v is becoming uneconomic. As watershed or game pro duction areas there is relatively little if wy conflict with wilderness principles." - - It is for these reasons, and we find them com pelling, that we join in hoping the congress will, after appropriate studies, set aside these a'seas for posterity., Conservation -is defined as the wise use of land. In the case "of the can only be accomplished by preservation. And preservation can be accomplished best by pro tective legislation. E.A. Labor Peace Hope Despite unresolved differences in some phases of the Pacific Northwest's labor picture, two pieces of news received over the past week end merit a hopeful outlook. 1 The pattern for settlement in the lumber in dustry was set in negotiations last week, bring ing promise of labor stability in Oregon's fore most industry. And Agreement on a settlement for pulp and paper workers was reached, subject only to referendum by union members. With the prospect of labor peace in these two big areas, we can, barring some unforeseen even tuality, look forward to a productive year in what promises to be one of the bes$lumber mar kets in a long time. E. A. - : Ugh! Once or twice, as a boy, we were persuaded (actually, it was a combination of threats and an acute stomach ache) to sample castor oil. We've never quite gotten over it. Sme' sort of subtle trauma has persisted through the years, and even the name of the stuff raises a Jfaint hint of nausea. Thus we were horror-struck, when we hap pened upon ag item which revealed that 119 mil lion pounds of caster oil was consumed in the United States last yir,.and that forecasts are fcglQ million pounds to be vdkd this year. DEADING further we found, with relief, ttat only a small portion of this most-distasteful of all medications is destined to slide viscidly down the protesting gullets of the young. "Most of it, in fact, will go into the manufac ture of paint, varnishes and resins. The magazine Chemical Week reports that there is now a prospect of technological and eco nomic changes in the world of castor oil and the castor bean from which it is produced. We couldn't care less. E.A. ADMIRABLY QUALIFIED Ipswich, England-flJPD-John Davies was fined $14 and barred from driving for one month Monday on conviction of careless driving, his sixth traffic .conviction. "But for your job we would have disqualified you .from driving for a long time," the judge told him. Davies is a driving instructor. usually have a rather than other types of f oi,- ..' , wilderness, conservation , - LESS ALLOWANCE Yorktown, Va.-(DPD - Three cannonballs, stolen in recent weeks from the historical bat tlefield here, have been re turned. Officials said one came back in the mail with a note saying the postage had been deducted from the al lowance of the young souve nir hunter who carried it home. Dennis tho 1 - I J4H I GUESS THEY COULDMT (SET ALL TUEfZ STUFF IH TtiBlfZ SUITCASES. Matter of Fact By JosephAlsop PAHTY AT LOWICZ Warsaw - They had a fine party at fiowicz on Thursday in honor of the Body and Blood of Our Lord. It solund's shockingly ir reverent when put that way. Yet it is real ly the best way to de scribe this vast celebra tion of Corpus Christi which was the very opposite of (Irreverent. Toe many years have pass ed since this reporter used to cover "Sunday morning ser mons for the greatest city editor of our times, Stanley walker. It seems more than a little strange to. be doing the same sort of thing, on a larg er scale, more than a quarter of a century later, and on the other side of the iron curtain. But in this part of the world, if you wish to sense the deep est feelings of the people, you must go to the old Corona tion Church iiOBudapest, or to Corpus Christi in Lowicz. SOMETHING else could be sensed in Lowicz. too. as one began to realize on the short drive out from Warsaw. Lowicz is a little town that is chiefly famous as the place where Napoleon met his last love, Maria Waleska, and as the centeP of the district which has the prettiest peas ant costumes in, Poland. The costumes the Lowicz people wear in their Corpus Christi procession make it a great an nual attraction, and half War saw seemed to be on the way to Lowicz. -: Automobiles of every make, motor scooters, motorcycles, and put-put equipped bicycles of every description, even fleets of un-mechanized bi cycles furiously propeUed by muscular bicycle racing en thusiasts, produced a serious traffic problem.- Among . the many forms of misery that humankind is heir to, tatffic problems alone have always been utterly unknown on this side of the famous curtain. What would have been nor mal in Nyack was amazing on the Lowicz road. THE state of the road fore cast the state of the town. The cathedral sauare, with its war memorial to the one-fifth of the population of Lowicz kiUed by the Germans, was one continuous, slowly min ing crowd. The cathedral it self (a minor marvel of Polish baroque, aU fluting turrets, flying angels, and elegiUy gesturing saints) was so lam med one could hardly edge in beyond the doors. As the priest placed the golden mon? strand? on the altar pinnacle, the hymn to the Host poured from several thousand throats with Qxtraordinfty emotftm: losepb Alio- Try and $top Me -By BENNETT CERF- II JUS. LUTETIA. KITTLE writes from Kentucky that she OL'A knows the knitting champion of America. "It's my Aunt (Matilda," boasts rs. Kittle, Tier knitting needle going lickety - split for over 30 years. She's positivelyOthe knittingest woman in the U.S.A. Yes sir," she even takes her yarn to bed with her every night and every now and so often she throwso out a s8dk!" - r 0 Advice t9wives from that sage old philosopher, Peter Linf Hayes: "Remember, girls, your hubby still gets a bang out of golf, hunting trips and all-night poker. Show him you re thinking of him! SpeakQf them occasionally!" . O O A gold digger, glittering, ia the international set, strutted Into the Stork club positively oozing diamonds from very pore. "Trouble with that girl," opined a lass with less taking way, "is that she's getting too big for her brooches." e 133, by Bennett C Distributed by King Features Syndicate. Mcagfg I "With Thy body, with Thy blood save us and bftss us, O Lord!" So it was in the cathedra from this beginning, until the mass ended with the deep and terrible passion of the Polish national hymn, "Q God, from ages past, protector of this Polish land." Out in the square, however, as long as mass continuedpit was more like a poorly provided fun fair. THERE were pastel-colored is to be eaten. Vendors were also hawking little paper parasols and the strange tra ditional delicacy-ornament of Cornus Christi in Poland, necklaces A fried dumplings in the shape of a rosary. But Poland's new prosperity has not got much beyond road transport, and these trifles were the only pleasure offered at the fun-fair, besides the pleasure of slowly pushing one's way through the close- packed mob, to see what friends were there. At least everyone could find a friend, Well dressed professional men and blue jeaned university students, young "hooligans" with their long hair and sober, dark clad forking fam ilies, and people of every oth er sort including even a stray Communist official or two had all come out to Lowicz to the party there. The fun fair in the square was suspended when the mass ended, and the cathedral bells tolled, and the Corpus Christi procession made its way into the open air. It was indeed, a sight worth seeing - the girls and women in their -embroidered bodices? and astounding layers of skirts striped green and blue and red and black and purple and yellow, and the men in their black jerkins and yeUow striped pantaloons; the endless line of banners, berilgponed and bedecked with flowers; tne old men witn their kettledrums; the choir boys with their tinkling bells; and at the end, the Host in its monstrance under its silken canopy. Hhe whole crowd bowed in silent reverence as the Host was carried through its ranks. . AFTER that, the object of the day's excursion had been officiallyoattained. But in all honesty, it must be, said that the real object, at least for the many thousands of sightseers from Warsaw, had not been quite attained as yet. Most of them have been be lievers - mt Poles are - but pleasure was what they chiefly sought in Lowicz. . So the town's sole restau rant was packed as in a sub way rush. Everx other res taurant and cafe within iO kilometers was soon crowded, too. The roadside from Lowicz to(yarsaw was strewn all aft ernoon with groups of cheer ful picnickers. The muscular "and she ain't been seWi without f Red China Worried Over Southeast Asian Kingdom of LaosTrying To Stir Trouble By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign Editor Red China, having swallow ed up Tibet, now is. busily tryirip to stir up trouble in the tinylSouth- east Asia king dom of Laos into which the United States pours about ' M $35 to $50 mil lion aid mon ey annually. The present C o m m uln ist S9 tactic is to charm a conspiracy under way7 among Laos and her nghVrs, Thailand tnd Soujh Vit Mam, to form' a military alliaw tied to NATO's South astasia counter-part, 1ATO. , O Tfcfc alliance,, says Red Chia's official newspaper, th Piiping People's Daily, "jpuld fct as an accomplice and a willing pawn of the United States aggressors,!! feat, landlocfed "kingdom f tht elephants," is just a pinpoint on tne map geo-' graphically, economically and in population, It is another of the small nations to which the United States has contributed heavily in the years since World War II, and which in turn have, if nothing else, contributed heavily to the averageCu.S. citizen's awareness, if not knowledge, of. world politics. Common Frontier G Lao s misfortune is itsustra tegic importance in the World struggle Between the free na- Hatfield's Veto Record Attacked At Labor Meeting Portland (OH) Gov; Mark Hatfield came under fire at theMultnomah County Cen tral Labor ' Council meeting Monday night for vetoing labor-backed legislation. State Rep. Edward J. Whe lan (D-Portland), who is exec utive secretary of the council, charged that Hatfield vetoed more good bi than any other goTCrnor. Bills Cited Whelan cited several billsJ he said he believed shoulo) have .become law. The in cluded1 HB 72 providingrthat the public -utility commis sioner could set minimum rates for log-hauling in Ore gon; HM 47pproviding that medical -.records of injured workmen he made- available to the workmea: HR 496 pro viding for occupational dri vers licenses; HR 138 provid ing for permissive collective bargaining for public employ ees in political subdivisions of the state, SB 500 which would have provided for a free choice of doctors for injured workmen, and others. O Lobbyists Unneeded. Whelan charged Hatfield's veto record "proves beyond any reasonable doubt that the employees, in this state no longer need to maintain lobby ists in Salem when they have a man in the palm of their hands who will veto any good legislation which is in the best interests of the working peo ple in this state." bicycle racers even took a quiet dip in the little river. It was all very innocent and gay and simple and above all very astonishing. For if religion is there al ready, and pleasure comes creeping insidiously in, and faint traces of prosperity be gin to appear as well, how can a theoretically iron soci ety keep its iron , unrusted? That is the question which makes the party at Lowicz really worth describing. (Copyright, 1959. New York Herald Tribune, Inc.) O " : Service Opens Ashland Office Ashland An Ashlmd of fice for the Adoption Service Plan to care for destitute Kor ean children has been estab lished by Mrs. Harry Neu mann, 148 North Laurel st., it was announced today. Foster and adoptive parents interested in providing homes for Korean youngsters may apply to her by letter. The Adoption Service plan, begun Oct.! 15, 1958, by Ik Chu Kim, works with war orphans and other destitute children, Mrs. Neumann stated. O The organization hopes to find many prospective parents in the United States and other foreign countries of the free world "so that we can get help for these starving chil dren," she reported. O The United States Military Academy was established by Act of Congress in 1802; the United States Naval Academy in 1845. O tions and international Com munism. Its borders touch Red China, Burma, North and South Viet Nam, Thailand and Cambodia. Of a special interest to the In the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS Delayed fuse wisecrack: Senator Morseoieclares his intention to campaign against his Democratic colleague, Sen ator Richard Neuberger, when Mr. Neuberger comes up for renomination and re-election in 1960. Congratulations, Dick. It looks like you've got it made. ' TtfORE of the same: On the way back to Ge neva, after attending the fu neral of America's great sec retary of state, the foreign ministers conferred at length in a plane flying at some 30, 000 feet elevation. I suppose that's what one could call diplomacy at the highest level. , v IjiROM Los Angeles: A A lumber company f-esPi aeni ana live companions nave left here to try to conquer the Colorado river IN RE VERSE (that is GOING UP instead of COMING DOWN) in two outboatfl boats.. "Wfcy am I doing it?" the lumberman asked. "I'm doing it because it's never been done successfully barore. It s a challenge. I have the river in my blood." 1I"ELL, it's his money he is spending and it s his life he is risking. I can think of more con structive ways to spend his money and risk his life, Dut I hope the time never comes in the United States of Amer ica wnen a man isn t per mitted to spend his money and risk his life in whatever way he chooses-so long as the ex ercise of his right to do as he pleases with his life and his money DOESN'T IN FRINGE UPON 5R LIMIT THE RIGHTS OF OTHERS. npHE bgreau of the census has just published a study of public employment in which it gives statistics as to the number of people employed in federal, state local GOV ERNMENT throughout the country. For some reason, it chose the month of April of the year 1957 and collected sftnistics as of that ionth. The figures are rather interesting For exmaple: In Oregon, the total number of people employed by ALL units of government in April of 1957 was 75,988. The distri bution was as follows: Federal employees ...... 19,217 State employees 18,618 Local govt, employees 38,153 FT TOTAL, it looks AWFUL. But when broken down in relation to population, it isn't too bad. In Oregon, the number of federal employees figures out at 108.6 persons per 10,000 population. In Washington, the corresponding figure is 200. In California it is 172. The na tional average is 131. In Oregon, the number of state erirployees per 10,000 population is 105. In Washing ton, it is 85. In California, it is 71. The national average is 71, exactly the same as in Cal ifornia. In Oregon (in April of 1957) local governments employed 216 persons per 10,000 popula tion. In Washington, the figure is 240. In California,- it is 256. The national figure is 210. T SUPPOSE it takes a lot of employees to run the gov ernmental affairs of 10,000 people. Still- o It seems a bit out of keeping that in a remote and non-spectacular state such as Oregon which has no immense gov ernment enterprises such as the spectacular atomic enter prise at Hanford up in Wash-ington-FEDERAL civilian em ployees should outnumber STATE employees. Personally, I'm inclined to go along with Thomas Jeffer son in his statement that "that government is best which gov erns least." Centennial Wants Brighter Mural Portland- (DPD -The $25,000 mural that decorates the Cen tennialcibuilding here has not pleased the eyes of all mem bers of the Centennial Man agement Committee. In fact, Monday the com mittee demanded that Hansen Studios, which painted the 500-foot mural, brighten up the colog. C. Howard Lane, member of the committee, said the original colors in the model shown the Centennial Commission were "m u c h more colorful." O . "The colors out there are washed out," he said. Communists is the fact that Laos has a 620-mile common frontier with Kbrth Viet Nam and Red China. Heightening this interest is the added fact that pro-West ern Premier Phoui Sanani- kone is rooting out leftist in fluences in the kingdom and is turning more and more to the West. Hanoi, capital of Commu- ist North Viet Nam, and Pei- ping fear the nexfcstep may be to permit the US. to estab lish bases on Laotian soil. Laos is a tropical country, with few roads, scarcely any industry and with a popula tion that only can be esti mated since there never has been a real census. It is be lieved to be about two mil lion. u . Control Centers on Brothers U.S. interest in the country goes back to the French de feat in Indochina and the fear that the weak, newly inde pendent nation would almost fall automatically to the Com munists without strong sup port. Prior to Sananikone's as sumption of office last Au gust and his take-over of spe cial powers in January, the struggle for thetontrol of LaoS(fead centered on two half brothers. The brothers represented an irony of Laotian politics. On the one side, frankly pro- Press Conference By Able and Baker Attracts Big Crowd By FRANK ELEAZER UPI Correspondent Washington -(0PD- Reporters here outnumber congressmen two to one, and a visiting village idiot could call a press conference with reasonable as surance somebody would come. Any prime minister at all is a cinch on arrival to draw maybe 18 or 20 news and pic ture men. A ipieen should be good for 50 or better. But to count on a turnout of 100 or so you have to be somebody special, as in this casanpf two monkeys, named' Abrc Smd Baker. The MissesAble and Baker were just bawc from' a short Caribbean tour, aVyou prob ably saw. And in looking back on it there is reason to sus pect tharright from the start these monkeys were trying to make people out of usTiews- men. Mob on Hand dn the first place, they couldn't make up their minds when to appear. Throughout the day there were bulletins from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, a local travel agent for mon eys, constantly revising fteir stimated time of arrival. At 4:58 p.m. the city news wire on which we all depend for such vital information this fourth and final communique: "The NASA now advises the space monkeys will arrive at Andrews Air Force Base at 8 p.m. NASA also promises there will be no further changes." On the strength of this an appropriate mob of reporters and lensmen was on hand at the airport to accord Able and Baker the kind of recep tion considered their due as VIPs or very important pri mates. The girls came in on sched ule, but were tired. Their advisers passed out word any comments they had on the 15-minute trip out, in a Jupi ter rocket at 10,000 miles an hou,- or the 6i hour final Counsel With Mr. Insurance Fred Brennan lr W. ' "" "" "i XiLJ Fred Brennan Or Call Mr. Friendly Bill Fish Phone SP 3-7343 MEDFORD INSURANCE AGENCY 27 NORTH HOLLY ST. Communist if not actually a card carrier, was Prince Sou phanouvong" and his Communist-supplied 6,000-man army called the Pathet Lao. The Pathet Lao controlled two of Lao's northernmost provinces and was the potential spear head for a Communist drive to take over the whole coun try. . O In the job es premier was Souphanouvong's half - broth er, Souvanna Phouma, a neu tralist. Nation in Ferment Personally and socially, the two were friends. But their armed forces frequently clash ed, keeping the nation in a constant state of ferment. A year ago Souphanouvong appeared to be winning the upper hand and it seemed the country was about to be swal lowed by the Reds. Souvanna's neutralist poli cies proved, his undoing and it was into this chaotic .situa tion that Sananikone stepped last August. An early step was to re nounce the 1954 Geneva ac cord which ended the Indo china civil war but which bound the Indochinese nations affected not to join any mili tary alliances. By renouncing the Geneva accord, Sananikone cleared the way for Laos to joint SEATO. That's what has the Reds worried. leg of the trip back, in an Air Force plane at 275 miles an hour, would have to wait for a press conference the following day. Followed the Uproar This was set for 2 p.m. In the space agency's conference hall, a remodelled carriage house in an alley. I lost the address and might never have found it except for the snarls, cries and general uproar on which I set an unerring course in from the street. Politely, as is customary among us reporters, I fought my way inside and towards , the focus of action. Climbing finally over the frontmost row of undertaker's chairs I q was confronted with a riot scene on the stage. "Where are the monkeys?" " I yelled, into the ear of a lady I had just elbowed po litely aside. "I think," she replied, icily, over the furor, "thev are the ones without cameras." It was possible almost at ' once to confirm this. The monkeys were smaller. They also were the ones who weren't making a sound, or at least if they were nobody could hear it. Too Bushed To Go On Unfortunately, monkeys are sensitive to temperature changes, and by the time the lensmen were through the mercury stood at 105 on the stage. Able and Baker were too bushed to go on. Escorts rushed them off to rest af the local Army and Navy hospitals, respectively, and 15 other space experts were run in as their spokes men. In one hour and 20 min utes we drew out of them what it was the girls had wanted to say. - This was that space travel was nothing, compared to meeting the press. Our next visitor, according to the city news wire, is Lud wig Erhard, the vice chancel lor of West Germany, and I feel kind of sorry for him. Everybody knows how tough it is to follow an animal act. TWO OF A KIND will beat a FULL HOUSE If they happen to be FIRE & HAIL This is the season for both so keep your FULL HOUSE by having adequate insurance -against those TWO OF A KIND. Bill Fish O O