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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 5, 1959)
MAIL TRIBUNE, MedforoVOr. Thursday, Nov. 5, 1959 "Xveryone la Southern Oregon Reads The Mali Tribune Published Dnilv except Saturday by M1.DFORB PRINTING CO 83 Worth fit St Ph SP t-6141 ROBfcRT W RUHL Editor HERB GR " AdverrMnc Manager GEPAJJ) LATHAM Business Mgr XRIC W ALLEN JR. Managing HdJtor EARL H ADAMS. CUty Editor HARRY CHIPMAn Teleg Editor RICHAKO JFWETT Sports Editor OLTVE STARIUEB Women i Editor DALE EHICKS'N Circulation Mgr An Independent Newspaper tnterea a serwrnd class matter al Medfor Oregon under Ac of . Marc S 1897 SUBSCRIPTION RATES y Mai In Advance Copy 10c Dail- and Sunday 1 year SIS 00 Daily and Sunday 6 mos 8.0C Dailv ant Sunday 4 mos 4.29 Sunday Only One year $4 JO By Carrier1 In Advance Medford Ashland Central Point. Eagle Point Jacksonville. Gold Hill Phoenix Shady Cove Rogue Riv er Talent and on motor routes Dail7 SIM Sunday 1 vear 118 00 Daily and Sunday 1 mo . 1 JO Carrier and Dealers copy 10c Ail Terms t-asr m Aavance Official Paper Of City f Medfori omciaj paper oi season cennry United Presp International . full Leased Wire MEMBE OF AUDIT BTJRIAU Or CIRCULATION Advertising Representative: WEST HOLIDAY CO, INC Of flees In New York. Chicago. Da-.- troit. San Francisco. Los Angeles. ? ' Seattle, Portland St. Louis. At . lan Vancouver BC NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS "ASSOCIATION HATIONAl EDITORIAL Flight 'o Time Medford and Jackson County History from the files of The Mail Tribune 10, 20. 30, 40 and 50 year 10 YEARS AGO . Not. 5. 1949 (Saturday) ' .Voters of school district 6C ' to vote Monday on $500,000 'bond issue for new high 'school. - Arrangements complete for parents to visit Medford (schools, during American 'Ed ucation Week. : 20 TEARS AGO Nov. S, 1939 (Sunday) r Public hearing on Medford "school district budget sched uled Monday. , From Arthur Perry's "Ye ..Smudge Pot" column:' "The Older Girls are busy swab ting flies and raking leaves. The more they swat, and the more they rake, the more there are, of either one, or both, they say it seems." , 30 YEARS AGO Nov. 5, 1929 (Tuesday) "First car of Rogue Valley turkeys is shipped from Med ford. .Ashland turns on new street lighting system for .first time. 40 YEARS AGO Nov. 5. 1919 (Wednesday) Prohibition rally scheduled at Presbyterian church to night. Calvin Coolidge , reelected . governor of Massachusetts. . 50 YEARS AGO , : Nov. 3. 1909 (Friday) City council and John R -Allen confer on Allen's pro posed franchise for electric roads to city. Troson and Guthrie, Eagle ; Point apple growers, send six boxes of apples , to lung Ed ward VII, England. ; What's Your I.Q.? Nina er ten correct it uperier; seven or eight is excellent; five at six is food. 1. What is the name of the body of water lying between Great Britain and Eire?. . . 2. Which musician was known as "The March King"? 3. Animals tht live on a meat diet are known as carni vores, herbivores, or omni vores? - : 4. Do the leaves of the clo ver fold up at night? 5. Are the Falkland Islands in the South Pacific, or South Atlantic? '"."' ' , 6. Blucher, Mule, Moccasin, and Brogue are all types of what? 7. Which is the only State whose name bears the name of its founder? - 8. All fleas require blood of birds or animals in order to reproduce; true or false? " 8. The White Sands rocket proving grounds are located in Arizona, New, Mexico, or Colorado? ... 10. Is the word "scarves," or "scarfs," the correct plural form of scarf? Answerst 1. Irish Sea. 2. John Philip Sousa. 3. Carni vores. 4. Yes. 5. South Allan tic 6. Shoes; 7. Pennsylvania. 8. True. 9 New Mexico 10. Either word is correct. SENIOR OFFICIAL DIES Red Bank, KJ.fllPD Ed ward H. Anson, 56, of New York City, senior vice presi dent of the consulting engi neers firm of Gibbs and Hill, Inc., New York, died Wednes day while visiting hers. Partisanship EtAl . The present plight of the state of Michigan is an object lesson in what can happen if partisan politics are allowed to run rampart.! The state sixth wealthiest of the 50 is broke. . , . Unless a new tax program is worked out, and in a hurry, state services would have to be cut by some 27 per cent, resulting in 25,950 college students leaving school, a reduction of 420 in the state police force, skeltonization of prison oper ation, a halt of admissions to mental hospitals, and a total lay-off of some 7,500 state employees. ' : ""THE governor of Michigan is G. .' Mennen V (Soapy) Williams, who, because of the pre dominance of Democratic registration, is now in his sixth two-year term But, all during his terms, the legislature has been controlled by the Republicans, the result of what Editorial Research Reports calls "urban underrepresentation. Williams had advocated an income and cor- poration profits tax, blocked it, and passed creased sales tax, only use tax. lnen, last month, the state supreme court outlawed the 1 per cent,. because the state sales tax to 3 per cent i IT IS still unclear what though it must be assumed that the governor and the legislature will work out some sort of a state in business. , This is a problem which affects only Mich igan immediately but rabid partisan politics and urban underrepre sentation' are universal in this country. There isn't much to politics, except to choose both parties for office their party feelings overcome their larger re sponsibility to the people But in a nation where it is not only possible, Dut not uncommon, to eral hundred times more Y . - A J unaerrepreseniation represents a real prooiem. "IXRITING in the current Harper's magazine, T T Richard Lee Strout many constituencies in one vote for a candidate is worth hundreds in another constituency. . He gives as examples these : In California, State Sen. Dick Richards represents the 4,151,687 people of Los Angeles county; State Sen. Charles Brown represents the 14,014 residents of Inyo, , Mono and Alpine counties. A vote in the latter counties is some 300 times as potent as one in Los Angeles. In Vermont, Legislator Louis Cahoon represents the 49 residents of the town of Victory; Legislator Joseph Moore represents the 33,000 residents of Burlington.- One Victory vote is worth 600 Burlington votes. , i In New York State, New York city, with some 8,000,000 people, has 90 members in the state as sembly; upstate New York, with 7,000,OCfO people, has 118 members. , . - fNE result, Strout points out, is the strangling wof cities by legislatures dominated by up state" members. Because of limitations imposed upon their powers, they cannot handle all their own problems, and receive little if any state help. This is one reason, the article declares, why cities increasingly have looked to the federal government for help in urban renewal, air pol- uiuun control, sewage disposal, nospiiai construe Uon, and others. ". . Now it can be argued, ly, max rural legislatures are sounder and more reliable than those dominated by cities. This is an argument stemming from the old Jeffersonian concept that a nation of sturdy, independent farmers and artisans is crowded industrial cities type oi men for government. JEFFERSON had a point,' at the time. But if v that great democratic mind were to" return to this nation today, it could not help but be im pressed by the vast changes created by the in dustrial revolution. America today' is not the America of the early 19th century. . : As circumstances change, our institutions of government must change with them. And it is uuii-JJgUk Uiaii UUC UiOU B VULC iMUJUlU WClgU U much more heavily than another's. It is somewhat less of a problem in Oregon than in some other states, for reapportionment here has been periodic and, it would appear, rela tively fair. i EJesewhere, however, some rethinking and revising will be necessary if voters are to regain political equality, one of this nation's highest ideals. E.A. . All Settled , Poor Harold Stassen. From bov-wonder e-overnor of Minnesota at an early age, to perennial presidental hopeful, to defeated candidate for governor of Pennsylvania, to defeated candidate for mayor of Philadelphia. remaps ne snouid attend to the handwriting on the wall. - : Actually, it was all settled wav hack in-'19ifi We attended a press conference for him in" Port land that summer, and health, education - and clared, "I don't trust that eyes. . .. . And THAT settled THAT. E. A. as governor. but the legislature had its own version of , an in slightly disguised as a cent increase, to 4 per constitution limited the the result will be, al have to get together to compromise to keep the the underlying causes- be done about partisan responsible people from people who will not let they serve, have one man s vote sev important than anothers, ' I V points out that there are the United States where and IS argued frequent - the best, and that the do not produce the best the family secretary of welfare afterward de man. I don't like his Dennis the Menace I5;-zjWit Matter of Fact STORM WARNING ' NUMBER ONE Hongkong In Commun ist China, too many storm warnings have been given in re cent months. The warnings pf I ""j suggest that m e i I J I v t h e . Chinese JT "' people are- en- ZA A. ' a pe ll "s-! riod of na I I if. I I tional agony Joseph Aisop crudely com parable to the agony endured by the Russian people during we early five-year plans. Among these storm warn. tags, the darkest and most meaningful is certainlv th recent, abrupt change in the army high command. Amid a drumfire' of denunciations of "right ODDOSltlonists." Minis. ter of Defense and hero of th Korean war, Gen. Peng Teh Huai, was suddenly cashiered ana replaced by his ailins old time rival, Gen. Lin Piao. Much more significantly, the Chief of Staff, Gen. Huang Ko-Cheng, was also cashiered and replaced by none other than the chef of the secret po lice. Gen. Lo Jui-Chlnff. Among those who know far more about China . than this reporter there is a certain tendency to exDlain thi ex traordinary event in relative ly ordinary terms. Superfi cially, there are some grounds tor doing so. IXDR over ' a year, Chinese A Communist publications meant to be read by the inner group nave oeen re vealing a sharp, three-point argument about the "PeoDle's Liberation Army." Persons unnamed have been sharply lectured because they hanker ed for a modern, Soviet-style army, instead of an army sun organized on the "im mortal" principles laid down by Mao Tse-tung for the guerrilla war. The same unnamed nersons have been lectured,., because of their resistance to domina tion of the army by the sacred Communist party's political commissars. And the lectures have also insisted on the rightness of the widespread use of army units as labor troops and of the require ment, established about a year ago, that all army offi cers annually serve one month in the ranks. Evidently this dispute about army policy has been serious. It could quite easily explain the simple dismissals of Gen. Peng and Gen. Huang. One can imagine the veteran Peng Teh-Huai presuming on an as sociation with Mao Tse-Tung reaching back to the time be fore the famous "long march." One can picture him affronting Mao by his obstin ate arguments for truly pro fessional and modern armed forces. . THEN too, Gen. Lin Piao's return tn active) nnlitirs after long illness, was an nounced by his appointment to the inner group of the Chinese Politburo about a year ago. One can equally well imagine Gem Lin in flaming Mao against his rival, Gen. Peng. Yet the dispute about army policy cannot reasonably be used to explain the strangest and most dramatic feature of the changes in the high com mand. This was the choice of the secret police boss, Gen. Lo, as the new army Chief of Staff. This is almost on a par with Stalin's naming Marshal Beria to run the Red army when he exiled Gen. Zhukov. And even .Stalin dared not do this, no doubt because , of the bitter enmity that always ex ists, in au such societies, be tween the professional army and the police apparatus. Why then choose Lo in stead of a pliable . army 'car eerist? There is also evidence to answer this question. For example, Chinese army officers- used to be allowed to , W A i By Joseph Alsop have their families with them. But all the "dependents" (our own ugly word) were abrupt ly sent back to their villages at almost the exact moment when all the villages of China were entering the remorseless meat-grinder of the rural com munes. The simultaneous loss of privilege and exposure to the general misery must have been a severe shock. The ef fect of this and comparable measures on the army was in turn revealed in an astonish ing passage in Gen. Lin Piao's speech on the tenth anniver sary of the Chinese revolu tion. e "WING to the fact that "the, overwhelming ma jority of our officers and com batants are farmers," said Lin darkly, "it is quite natur al that some comrades . . , consider their problems based on interests of a transient and local nature . . . and pet ty bourgeois ideology." This is a wonderfully un ashamed admission that being a peasant gives rise to danger ous thoughts about the. Chin ese peasants' and workers So viet Socialist Republic. It is one of several pointers indi cating that the party leader- shin changed the high com mand because they feared that the communes program was causing actual disaffec tion in the army, the main prop of the regime. Perhaps they also noticed that whereas the Hungarian army ended by fighting side by side with the Hungarian people, the secret police, the AVO, were admir ably loyal to their employers. From such pointers, one may deduce the nature of Gen. Lo Jui-Ching's task. But one wonders what will hap pen to the Chinese people when the ex-ecret police chief . has reformed the Chin ese army to his liking. (c) 1959 New York Herald Tribune Inc. Writers Guild Vote Authorizes Strike Hollywood flJPD- More than 450 members of the Writers Guild of America have voted to give its screen executive board authority to call a strike against major motion picture studios after existing contracts expire Nov. 17. ; The union struck 56 inde pendent studios last Oct. 10. It has signed contracts with five of the independents since Sunday. A union spokesman said principal point of dispute was a union demand that writers be paid for movies made after 1048 which have been sold for use on television. . Cal Care To the Editor: With the re cent publicity concerning the care of animals in the city and county, I would like to give credit to a little-known group called Cat Care. It is composed of a few local peo ple who are using their time, energy and money in trying, through humane education and active welfare work, to eliminate the cruelty and ne glect of cats and kittens in the valley. They are finding homes, when possible, for cats, inves tigating cases of neglect or ill ness,' and helping people who are financially unable to give their cats medical care and supplying free literature for anyone interested, on the care of pets in general. I have used their services in obtaining a cat for a friend and thereby learned of their work. . Of. the many groups need ing public support I would recommend this group as they are actually accomplishing a great deal by hard work and yet expect no fanfare or pub licity for their efforts. (Name on file) Medford, Communications Tastes Differ, All Right ' To the Editor: Your editor ial of the 3rd, "And 'The Mo vies'," while thoughtful and perceptive for the most part, revealed in its final paragraph a naivete usually associated with 'ivory tower' estheti cism, quite different from the realism one expects of a news paper editor. Movies will never earn "a blanket commendation" from people with your standards of taste; and for the same rea sons that the whole content of a Public Library, or for that matter of your own news paper, would never earn such a commendation. I need only mention "Mutt and Jeff' and the astrological chart. Movie theaters like news papers are first of all a busi ness. To stay solvent we, like newspapers, find it necessary and profitable to cater to a wide spectrum of taste and in terest. Pictures with the values of "Anatomy of a Mur der" are not available every day. Many of those that may rank with it, or even surpass it, simply do not have the same boxoffice potential. If the movies ever do earn such a blanket commendation, I'm afraid it will be our epitaph. As to our triple bill, "The Blob", "I Married a Monster From Outer Space" and "I Bury the . Living", will you contend that the taste and in terest of the people who at tended (and they were nu merous) is illegitimate? Some of these people I'm sure would consider your taste in movies inferior . to theirs,; others might be urbane enough to recognize that it is merely different. Or do you object to the quantity Involved? If so you would have had more to com plain of on Halloween night, because then we added "On the Threshhold of, Space" to the above, making it quad ruple bUl! If quantity be a sin, please note that we are not the only offenders, because the other drive-in theater also had four features on that night.. ' In my own opinion the pic tures themselves were of varying quality, none of them Academy Award prospects but each with some merit as entertainment. "The Blob" think was the best, neatly plotted, competently acted, well directed; a respectable though minor Item of movie craftsmanship. Finally, I think you will find that the admissions charged for "Anatomy of a Murder" aren't dictated by a desire to keep juveniles out, but are determined by the be lief that the public is willing to pay such amounts for pic tures of the caliber offered. Jameson D. Selleck v Lithia Drive-In Theatre Box 407, Ashland, Ore. Don't Patronise To the Editor: In regard to the television shows "$64,000 Challenge" and "$64,000 Question," which have caused such a furor ; over being "rigged." If people who buy the nroducts of firms who trv to mislead the public with their advertising were to try the boycott method of control, I'm sure the quality of our radio, television, newspaper and, magazine advertisements would improve. In the above mentioned cases the Revlon firm should be shown by the ladies (are there such things?) that such activities would not be tolerated. ' . ' There is a firm in Medford which has been involved in misleading advertising for some time. I wrote the firm. protesting said ad, however, there has been no change in its attitude and until such time as they 'cease to use the mis- leading advertisement to which I referred, I shall avoid purchasing their products. I sincerely hope others will see the light also. . Floyd R. McCabe, Mt. Pitt Star Rt, Butte Falls, Ore. Bad Name - To the Editor: In your Communications column of Oct. 28, a Eureka, Calif., man told of how he was ridiculed by a group of youngsters. No doubt they were either grade school or junior high students. I am not saying they weren't M.H.S. students, they could have been, but by the descrip tion they sounded more Juve nile. M-H.S. students usually know how to act with out-of-town visitors. M.H.S. is proud of the way their students be have at out-of-town as well as our home games. It was too bad about the place the Loggers rooting sec tion had to sit. But it was far beyond our control. The grade school football teams had to sit somewhere. - This is one point I can truly say, I don't : tnimc me nign school students were in . on. To me it sounds like a group of junior high students trying to act big. At the home games I have noticed groups like this making nuisances of them selves around the concession booth, and in sections re- Disarmament Efforts Facing Numerous Stumbling Blocks . By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign Editor In recent weeks, and to the exclusion of almost all else, Foviet nrooaganda has ham mered away at the theme of world dis armament. Less ' obvi- mis hut thpro -M for the look ing, are the Russian "gim micks" which (yVJ seem certain oil Newsom to doom iu- ture efforts toward disarma ment to the failure of all such in the last 15 years. In the coming months there will be no less than three separate international con ferences with disarmament as a common topic. One already is at work m Geneva. It is the meeting of U.S., British and Soviet representatives seek ing - agreement on a ban against nuclear weapons tests. Early next year a 10-nation United Nations committee will meet in Geneva to con sider a bundle of disarmament proposals, including Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev's proposal for "total and gen eral disarmament in four years," a step-by-step plan proposed by British Foreign e Drummond Reports ' (Walter Lippman is again traveling abroad. Reseee Drumond reports from Washington in his absence.) TIED LOANS GOOD OR BAD? , Washington-It is reasonable that serious doubts should be raised about the wisdom of the Administration decision to attach a "Buy American" string to much of our eco nomic aid. This is a sharp turning away from the liberal, anti- restrictive trade policy we have practised-and preached -with notable success . since the end of the war. It seems to me that all parties con cerned, the Administration particularly, ought to give tiiis action a thorough second look lest we get embarked on a policy which will dd far more harm to America and to the free world than it will do good. . I am not suggesting that we should not try to redress the $3 billion imbalance in trade the U. S. is experienc ing, due to the fact that, with tourist dollars flowing abroad in increasing volume, we are buying abroad more than we are selling abroad. We should, therefore, be anxious to arrest the drain on our gold reserves But the real issue is not whether we need to correct our trade imbalance but whether the course the Ad ministration is taking that is, requiring recipients of the Development Loan Fund to buy American products even when it is decisively un economic for them to do so is the best way to go about it. rpHE new tried-loan policy, J- requiring other govern ments, as condition ot sucn loans, to purchase in a single market the U. S. market- irrespective of . cost, would not contribute more than $100 to $200 million to our balance of payments. The question is: Will not the drawbacks and harm which this policy will do to our long, constructive effort to build in the.whoK free world a competitive, freer flowing, multi-lateral trade system be far greater than the . dollar advantage? There is certainly an impres sive case to be made against this action and the principal arguments are these: 1 it will further cut the commodity aid we are fur nishing abroad at a time wnen President Eisenhower had de clared that Congressional cuts have reduced it ,below the minimum necessary. 2 The economies of many underdeveloped countries will be seriously hurt. 3 Just because the Soviet Union ties all its loans to the purchase of Iron Curtain goods is no reason we snouio; served for M.H.S. students only. I think the schools should tell and explain these things to their student bodies. When they start wising off it gives the students that are doing a good job a bad name, and also gives the high school a bad name. . (Name on file), Medford. THE DANMOORE HOTEL .1217 SW Morrison St. PORTLAND, OREGON AIL transient guests. All thosa who coma, return. Rates not high, not low. Frae garaga, TV's and radios. Reputation for cleanliness. Children under seven ne charge csr Minister Selwyn Lloyd and several others. Gromyko Gimmick Unnoticed Finally, in the spring it is expected that the United States, Britain, France and Russia will meet at the sum mit for further disarmament discussions. Generally unnoticed but clearly defined by Soviet For eign Minister Andrei Gromy ko at the closing session of the Supreme Soviet in Mos cow was this gimmick: "Control (inspection to see that disarmament terms are carried out) must correspond to the extent and stage of dis armament. Control without disarmament would be an at tempt to establish espionage." - In other words to the West: "Lay down your arms first, and then we will let you see that we also have' laid down ours." - With Communist deception in the rearming of North Korea as an existing example, the West find it impossible to agree to any such condi tion. Ignores International Force . Another : gimmick is the Khrushchev proposal that in dividual states be left with "strictly limited contingents of police" to maintain internal order. ' do the same. The fact that we have not done this in the past has been the most visible proof that we were not trying to make economic satellites out of the recipient countries. 4 Not only will the "Buy American" policy hurt the na tional economies we are try ing to help, but it would hurt the U.S. politically because U. S. aid would have a less fa vorable impact on the under developed and uncommitted nations and people. 5 We are weakening our ability to counter the effec tiveness and lure of Soviet aid offers. 6 We will undercut the cause we have helped bring to such useful fruitiofa the cause of persuading other na tions by our example and ar gument to accept the U.S. thesis that a free, competitive world trade system is best for everybody. TT IS perfectly true that X there are new factors in the world trade picture. We are losing trade and dollars to our allies whose impoved produc tivity and economic health we have helped to bringv about. Today other free-world na tions, especially , Germany, Britain, France, and Japan, are able to and should bear a larger burden of foreign aid through loans. It seems to me that these facts lead tis to the heart of the question. Should we not first try, as I think we can, to enlist the cooperation of our economically strong allies, without any "Buy American", or "Buy British" or "Buy Ja panese restrictions, to strengthen further the freely competitive world trade sys- ten in which we all share equally before we take steps away from this healthy sys tem, before we ourselves em bark on this "Buy American" tied-loan policy which turns away from the competitive world trade system we rightly want to promote? . (c) 1959 New York Herald Tribune Inc. ho.se who call on us rightfully expect the greatest 4 1 measure of satisfaction . . . reasonable price -...complete understanding Aaou from ths Courthouse - HANK MOtGAN - HAIO10 SNODGIASS, FUNERAL DKKTCW DAY OR NIGHT Any police force large enough to maintain internal order in Russia or China for example, certainly would be large enough to overrun any smaller disarmed neighbor in the event the larger decided "discipline" was necessary. The Khrushchev proposal made no mention of any in ternational force to handle or monitor inevitable disputes between nations. The machinery for such a force already exists unde.r the United Nations charter but its use consistently has been op posed by the Communist na tions. ' These are among the rocks that can sink any honest effort toward disarmament. In the Day's Hews By FRANK JENKINS Charles Van Doren, who" ad mitted Monday ' he entered the quiz show competition (and stayed in even after learning that the questions were rigged) for a chance to make some quick money is broke. The trustees of Columbia University this morning ac cepted, -without comment," his resignation as an English teacher. He is under suspen sion from his $50,000 job -as a TV commentator. He says taxes took most of his win nings in the rigged show. With what was left, he bought him self a flashy sports car and a fancy apartment. As he left Washington yes terday, he told reporters: "'I owe more than I have left.": - Easy come, easy go. ' TTIS intellectually d i s t i n H guished father, who won the 1940 Pulitzer prize for poetry and is the author, among other works,, of An thology: of World Poetry, could have cited for him back at the beginning of his pursuit of the easy dollar these lines from Sir Walter Scott's Mar- mion: "Oh, what a tangled web we weave "When first we practice to deceive." . " Tl ARK VAN DOREN might l'-i-also have quoted to -.his son, when he was first be dazzled by the glamor : ,of quick money, these lines from Goldsmith's The Deserted Vil lage: "111 fares the land, to has tening ills .a prey, - . -- "Where wealth accumulates and men decay; - - 4. i uies CU1U ' IMt US'. - sua jr flourish or may fade, ''A break can break them, as a breath has made." ' WHEN Oliver Goldsmith whote those lines, a long time ago, I don't think he had in mind big CONSTRUCTIVE industry such, for example, as the' Ford industrial empire, which brought mankind a hew tool. ' :." '. ' " " I'm pretty . sure he " was thinking of the quick buck. o HELP US! Wa need clothing, shoai, diihts, furniture, and bedding. - s . .We tfek Up. ' HELP OTHERS! The 'Salvation Army' SPring 3-7335 PHONE SP 2-8030 IS