1
MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Or.
Thursday, April 26, 190
MntFORDcrWrBISUKI
Everyone In Southern Oregon
Rosds The Mill Tribune11
Published Dolly except Saturday by
MEDFORD PRINTING CO
33 North Ftr Jit., Ph SP 2-14
ROBERT W. RUHL. Editor
HERB GREY Advertising Manatee
GERALD T LATHAM. Bui. Mgr.
ERIC w. ALLEN JR., Mn Editor
EARL H ADAMS. City Editor
HARRY CHIPMAN. Teleg. Editor
RICHARD JEWETT, SporU Editor
OLIVE STARCHER. Women'i Editor
PALE ERICKSON, Circulation M g
An Independent Newspaper
Entered as second class matter it
Medford, Oregon, under Act of
March 3. 1887
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
' By Mall In Advance. Copy 10c
Dally and Sunday 1 year 119 00
Dally and Sunday 6 mos. 8 00
' Dally and Sunday 3 mos. 4.25
Sunday Only One year 14.20
By Carrier In Advance Medford
Ashland. Central Point Eagle
Point. Jacksonville, Gold Mill
Phoenix. Shady Cava, Rogua Riv
er. Talent and on motor routes.
Dally and Sunday J year 18 00
Dally and Sunday 1 mo. 1 90
Carrier and Dealars copy 10c
All Terms Cah In Advance
Official Paper of City of MeTffofT
Official Paper of Jackson County
United Press International
Full Leased Wire
V J.I. Telepholo Newsplcturee
" JffiMBFR OF AUDIT BUREAU"
OF CIRCULATIONS
Advertising Representative:
WEST HOLIDAY CO.. INC. Of
fices In New York. Chicago. De
troit San Francisco. Loi Angeles.
Seattle. Portland. St. Louis, At
lanta, Vancouver, B.O.
0 NIWSPAMR
PUBLISHERS
ASSOCIATION
NATIONAL E0ITORIAI
ASfebCtHTlfolr,
f KJ W
rrn
Flight or Time
Madford and Jackson County
History from the f Mas of The
Mall tribune 10, 20, 30, 40
and 50 years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
April 28, 1950 (Friday) r
A private pilot and lour
other persons here reported
seeing a disk-shaped silvery
object flying above the Grants
Pass airport early today.
County Engineer Paul Ryn
nlng said the state highway
department may increase ex
penditures for maintenance of
the Crater Lake highway in
Prospect area.
20 YEARS AGO
April 28. 1940 (Sunday)
The Greensprlngs highway
eight miles from Klamath
Junction was covered by tons
ot rock and dirt this morning
when a construction blast
jarred loose a hillside,
From Arthur Perry's "Ye
Smudge Pot" column: "Re
vival of the long-standing
dream to build a railroad to
the coast has been removed
from the civic mothballs. As
this is the oldest pioneer hope
of these parts, there is no spe
cial rush about getting the
golden spike' ready to nail
down the last rail."
30 YEARS AGO
April 28, 1930 (Monday)
Canneries unite to fight
closure of Rogue to commer
cial fishermen.
Census count gives Ashland
, I population of 4,028.
40 YEARS AGO
April 28. 1920 (Wednesday)
The C. E. Gates auto conv
pany moves from the Spnrta
building to new headquarters.
The road to Redding Is in
good shape except for a five-
mile stretch between Ashland
and the Siskiyou summit,
i 60 YEARS AGO
April 28. 1910 (Thursday)
- Medford citizens are urged
' to make sure they are count
ed in the census, otherwise
: Ashland or Grants Pass may
(how a larger population.
Medford Commercial club
will give annual "High Jinks"
tonight featuring a profession'
nl vaudeville show.
; What's Your I.Q.?
Nina or ten correct li superior!
,f seven or eight It excellent; five er
tig is ood.
1. What was the name of the
: water boy in Rudyard Klp-
ling poem?
' 2. What was the battle-cry
Of the Texans In their strug-
' gle for independence from
Mexico in 1836?
3. To kiss the Blarney
Stone, would you walk up
m YVa
twelve steps, wade through
4 water, or hang by your feet?
t 4. What is the plural of
alumnus?
Ef. Can gasoline be produced
by condensation from natural
as?
6. What name Is given an
, alluvial deposit at tin mouth
of a river?
7. What canal connects Lake
. Erie find the Hudson river?
Would a ml tor box most
likelv be used by a pharma
cilt, carpenter, or butterfly
collector? '
i- 9. Was George M. Cohan of
Irish, Jewish, or Scottish an
'teatry?
! 10. The English alphabet
i luu how many letters? .
Aniwerst 1. Oungi Din. I.
"Remember the Alamo." 3.
Hang by the feet 4. Alumni.
. (. Yes, 6. Delia. 7. Erie Canal.
. Caipanlar. . Irish. 10. 21.
Ray Johnson
Following is the substance of an editorial
aired over Radio station KMbU earner mis ween :
"Ladles and Gentlemen, It Isn't often that we ap.
proach the microphone in an editorial manner, but
this time we feel that It is important that certain things
be said.
"The broadcasting Industry has been and Is current
ly going through a period of scrutiny and being sub
jected to the analysis of regulating bodies and the
general public as well. We do not deny that to soma
degree the criticism the industry is receiving Is merit
ed. We feel that the recent rigged television quir pro
grams and the payola scandals were not In the public
interest.
"We do not believe, however, that the newspapers
and other printed press are acting In the public interest
by taking this opportunity to attack broadcasting in
view ot the fact that they are as guilty, If not more so,
of many of the very things that they criticize broad
casting of. Payola, for instance, is a very old practice
In the newspaper and magazine industry Indeed..
"Editors, reporters and others In the newspaper
Industry have received everything from potato chips
to free dinners, trips, entertainment, even cash, for
special favors and special consideration, by eager and
enterprising representatives of commercial interests.
"Television and radio have been cruelly criticized
by the press for the programming of violent and sug
gestive materials. We're not sure that Die Industry is
guilty of this, but If so, we submit that newspapers
and magazines are guilty of printing this very sort
of thing to a far more dangerous end to make the most
of the sensational aspects of crime and sex ...
"Broadcasting has been and Is being investigated.
Newspapers could be next ..."
DAY Johnson, manager of KMED, who spoke
the editorial on his station, was kind enough
to en-ant our request for a copy of it. As printed
above, it lacks only a
NBC's Morgan Beatty,
similar vein.
Kay also was kind
KMED has no quarrel with the mail Tribune,
and he also offered free time and facilities to
answer, on the air, if we
This won't be necessary. It so happens we
agree with much of what he says, and want to
compliment him, not only
of his industry, but for the initiative to exercise
the right to voice opinions on the air a right the
broadcastinir media have exercised only infre
quently in the past.
WE WOULD quibble
Tinwpvpr.
Ray is taking in a
castigates1 the entire "press" for the venalities
of which a portion of it is guilty.
"The press in America includes more than
1.700 daily newspapers, many times that num
ber of weeklies, as well
azines, from Time-Life-Fortune
Century, and from Shoes
Damnine "the press"
lawyers are shysters and all doctors are quacks,
based on the fact that some lawyers and some
doctors are shysters and quacKs.
IT IS true, and deplorable, that a segment of
the press does use sensationalism as its stock in
trade.
The San Francisco Chronicle, once a respon
sible, high-quality metropolitan daily, found it
self headed toward bankruptcy, and decided to
take a leaf from the sensational book of the San
Francisco Examiner. Today it out-Examiners the
Examiner.
It has printed columns of lurid details about
the sensational Finch-Tregoff trial and about the
sprightly doings of Beverly Aadland usually
under huge, Page 1 headlines, often in color.
This may sell newspapers. But it is not respon
sible journalism, and to the extent a PORTION
of the press is guilty, we grant the truth of John
son's criticism.
DUT to damn in the same phrase, "the press,"
both the Chronicle and others of its type, and
such papers as the staid, responsible, supercon
scientious New York Times, is grotesque.
It is also unfair to the thousands of weeklies
and small dailies whose staffers knock themselves
out gathering and reporting the news of their own
communities, as accurately and responsibly as
possible, and whose closest brush with "payola"
is an occasional cup of coffee from the communal
pot at city hall.
The whole business of exerting "influence"
on the media of communication, as a matter of
fact, is an "iffy" business. Offers of favors are
more apt to repel than to favorably influence a
conscientious reporter or editor.
And there is a difference, we maintain, be
tween taking an expense-paid trip to gather fac
tual information for news stories, and accepting
gratuities to play certain companies' records. It
is a difference in substance, not in degree.
CXCEPT for these few qualifying observations,
" we will go along with Ray Johnson's com
ments. And we'd like to point out, too, that while
there are some editors who take almost as a per
sonal affront any criticism of "the press," there
is also a large body of conscientious editors who
deplore some of their colleagues' extravagances.
But in doing so, they attempt to be specific,
and not critize unjustly those papers which are
trying to do an honest job of bringing news, com
ment, wholesome entertainment, thought-provoking
opinion and informative advertising to their
readers.
TV now, (and radio a few years ago,) is more
subject to such indiscriminate criticism because
the networks are the determining factor in mak
ing most stations similar in the impression thev
give.
but, again, we agree
lieving that mounting criticism of irresponsible
newspapers is nnthtno- in
r-i 1 o
E.A. ,
s Editorial
recorded broadcast by
who editorialized in
enough to point out that
desired.
on a vigorous detense
with one or two points,
lot of territory when he
as a wide range of mag
to the Christian
& Leather to Horizon.
is a little like saying all
with Rav Johnson m be
hp. uriincro-pi nff lichtlv.
- ' an-- - o"
Dennis the
... ANO PLEASE MAKE MOM AH' WD CAUN&.
IF THEY HAVE A MIDNIGHT SNACK
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 paper; in fact the contrary is often the case.
Those Reds, Again
To the Editor: Regarding
the article "Cheap, Silly, Ir
religious." I feel a little dis
appointed c o n c e r ning the
depth of your reasoning con
cerning this matter of the Na.
tional Council of Churches
and am wondering If you have
read some ot the more factual
books on the methods of Com
munism such as "Masters of
Deceit" by Edgar J. Hoover,
Have you ever taken time to
look up the Congressional
Records concerning the fine
lobbying for "Freedom" done
by the National Council of
Churches? Here is an exam
ple: "We Join with countless
rank-and-file Americans as
well as prominent citizens in
the demand to abolish the
House Committee on Un-Am
erican Activities and the Sen
ate Internal Security Sub
committee."
The National Council of
Churches has a record of po
litical lobbying straight down
the old red line. The charge
made in the training manual
from the Air Force that there
is considerable evidence that
the National Council of
Churches is infiltrated by fel
low travelers and card carry
ing communists is a light un
derstatement when one looks
at their record. By the way,
the facts of this charge still
stand unchallenged!
I hate to undermine your
naive belief that a religious
organization should be above
all suspicion of being any
thing but pure and Innocent.
According to Christ's accusa
tion of the "religious," they
were usually the ones who
fouled things up. If you have
read articles written by the
"Red Dean of Canterbury"
you would soon discover that
Communism works very effec
tively in the cloak of so-called
Christian religion.
Another little Job of re
search some enterprising edi
tor should do is to reveal the
facta on how organizations
such as National Council of
Churches became what they
are. Not by the vote of the
individual churches and Chris
tian people. Churches all over
the country are beginning to
find this out and withdraw
membership which was never
even given In the first place.
I feel you sincerely are try
ing to fight something you
don't know anything about,
and In doing so are contribut
ing to smearing people who
really know what the Reds
are doing to us.
If the Reds are to succeed
In their Infiltration of our
land. It will be because edi
tors, news agencies, radio, TV,
etc., will continue In reporting
without revealing the facts of
the situation. I realize this is
a rougher Job than Just quot
ing other liberal papers.
When a country falls to the
Reds, it's the liberal element
that puts them In. When the
country is taken the liberal
leaders along with the con
servatives are shot or sent to
camps, unless they complete
ly give in to the brainwashing.
Lynn D. Berntson
112 Washington at.
Medford
Our Way Is "Sunk"
To the Editor: It has been
said that, "a little knowledge
Is dangerous," and that is
true, because It might start
people to thinking. And think
ing begets knowledge, and
knowledge Is power, If it is
used. We must realize that we
are Just emerging from the
dark ages but we have been
so prosperous, with a relative
high standard of living, that
we have been contented and
complacent.
But the machine age has
Menace
brought problems. These prob
lems are largely taxes and Ir
responsibility. Hence the low
standard of our culture. Our
escapist literature and art,
Escape from boredom. Sex
and mayhem is our cultural
fare. Cowboys, Indians and
Alfred Hitchcock on TV. Any
thing else is controversial and
is frowned upon.
Controversial topics Involve
conflict of class interests. And
there is the crux of our dilem
ma. We live in a complex
class society. We live in a so
cial system of so called "Free
Enterprise." A system of
catch-as-catch-can. A sort of
an anarchy. But by and large
this system of "Free Enter
prise" is a system of class rule.
That class is a class of the
crafty.
Ours is a commercial tyr
anny. It expresses Itself most
emphatically in inflation, and
taxes. Its abuse of the under
dog is a glowing example, the
neglect of the aged, warping
the minds of the youth, the
abuse of the wayward, unem
ployment and economic un
certainty, badgering the desti
tute and unfortunate.
Our American institutions
are creatures of their environ
ment. We too are creatures of
our environment. Even the
unfortunates caress the chains
that fetter them. They go to
the polls on election day and
feel that they have done their
patriotic duty, or to church on
Sunday and feel they have
praised the Lord and maker
in ample measure. Through
the years and the days, time
is devoted to selfish pursuits
and endeavor. It is the way
we are conditioned. We cannot
see Justice for the other fel
low, in the light ot our own
desires.
Deplorable as that may
seem, no change can be made
without changing our way of
life, and our outlook on social
Justice.
Society died with the pass
ing of debate. As we do not
approve of controversy, de
bate is not permissable. Our
social structure is so frail that
it would collapse under the
impact of debate in public. Po
litically we are moral cow
ards. We dare not express a
valid opinion on penalty of
being accused of being called
a communist.
We are sinking Into the
quicksand of our own crea
tion. Our way of life is
"sunk." Our great danger is
that some hot head will "fire
on Fort Sumter."
Walter Rcece,
Gallce rd..
Merlin, Ore.
Eternity Is Real
To the Editor: The other
day a valley resident asked,
"when are you going to write
a letter against the Cath
olics?" Now such a question
has caused me a bit of con
cern. Why didn't this person
ask when 1 was planning to
write against Uie group he
worshiped with?
My intentions in writing
any letters are not to tear
down any one's character. A
minister friend was taken to
task for preaching against a
certain group. I believe he
quite well summed It up
when he said, "we have not
been preaching against you,
we've been preaching the
Bible."
I believe that God has His
children scattered among all
church groups. We are saved
Individually. It Is a sad situ
ation when one gets the idea
that because you don't belong
to his or her church that you
are all wrong.
However, If any group or
Like. Man. Dick Clark Bugs Those Cats
On the Committee;
By DICK WEST
Washington IUPD Hello all
of you out there in northern
radioland. In southern radio-
land, hello
you all.
This Is your
teen-a g e disc
Jockey report
er about to
scatter a little
chatter your
way. So p u t
down that
homework
Dick west ana lend an
ear, hey.
Your teen-age disc Jockey
has been over in the House
caucus room tuning in on the
Dick Clark investigation. It's
a gasser.'man. A real gasser.
Like those cats on the House
Oversight Committee seem to
individuals raise themselves
up against God and His in
spired word I feel it my Chris
tian duty to be on guard.
All of us here in America
enjoy the freedom of worship
ing according to the dictates
of our conscience. This prin
ciple has made America
great. The great crime wave
and lack of true Christianity
are not to be blamed on God.
In fact the real cause of our
troubles are that we have
spurned God.
No I am not against a man
because he is a Catholic, Pro
testant or Jew. But if that in
dividual Is exerting an influ
ence contrary to the freedom
God has given us, then I need
not have a part in his ideas.
The enemy of all good has
many clever snares laid out
for unsuspecting souls. The in
spired Word of God has given
ample warning. None need be
in doubt or tossed about, not
knowing where to turn.
Every conceivable barrier is
constantly being placed in the
pathway of God's earthly chil
dren. Soul defiling habits becloud
the reasoning powers of
many. Others are so bent on
the pleasures of this life, that
they have no time for God.
This short life here is but a
proving ground for the here
after. Events all around us
should cause us to look above
and beyond to something far
better. Our constant aim and
goal should be to help some
one. Earthly pleasures are
only temporarly. Eternity is
real and everlasting.
Henry Johnson, Jr.
2400 Highway 66
Ashland.. .. . .
The Moral Battle
To the Editor: "To Give Our
Young Men A Goal" is an
article printed in brief In the
current (May) issue of Reader's
Digest, and should be read by
every citizen interested In the
future of our great country,
and especially in the youth of
our great country.
It is the Navy s answer to a
Juvenile problem, unfortu
nately in existence, not only
in the Navy, but in every com
munity in the U.S.A. Obviously
the answer has not been that
of sheer discipline alone.
The article seems timely in
this particular area, since re
cent discussions locally have
brought the problem before
the people of the county for
remedial action.
The U.S. Navy started a pro
gram to show its fighting men
why the United States of
America is worth fighting and
dying for. A like program
could be started In the home,
the schools and the commu
nity. I quote: 'If It is to be won
(the moral battle), we as a peo
ple must stop merely giving
lip service to our Ideals and
start living them again. If we
are to stay strong, safe and
free, there must be a spiritual
renaissance-STARTING NOW
(emphasis mine) in every
heart, mind and conscience in
this country.'
This is not propaganda in
tended to increase recruiting
production, but merely an at
tempt to bring to light a pro
gram ordered by the Secre
tary of the Navy and the re
sults obtained over a period
of several years.
Murray J. Emmerich
Recruiter-ln-Charge
Navy Recruiting Station
Post Office Building
Medford
Polly-Ticks
To the Editor: A few morn
lngs past KMED mentioned
that someone else had men
tioned that ' the Democrats
have gotten up more medi
cines than there are ills.
They called It the "Romance
of the year."
If any part of It ia "Ro
mance," I've wasted by long
life dreaming. I should have
been awake and helping stir
together more remedies for
present use. Our. country's
working people are getting
hip-swing in their pocket
books. Any pain In our necks
is not brought on by carrying
over-loaded billfolds, so please
pass the Spring vitamin cap
sules Just in case of bombs.
For some time, working
people have found it difficult
to earn bare existence, let
sasiu,";'
think that our boy Dick has
been doing the old payola bit
or something. I mean, how
corny can you get?
Real Free Enterpriser
Like everybody knows that
Dick had an interest in a lot
of record companies. He's a
real free enterpriser, that lad.
So what is that? A crime or
something?
One thing that makes you
sick, sick, sick is all this Jazz
about Dick playing his own
companies' records on his own
dee-jay show just so we
would go out and buy them.
We liked those records,
didn't we, gang? I mean, they
were absolutely and positively
the most. They were songs to
Red Chinese Premier
India, Border Clash
By PHIL NEWSOM
UPI Foreign Editor
A smiling Red Chinese Pre
mier Chou En-lai left New
Delhi like a conquering hero
this week,
leaving a defi
nitely chilly
Prime Minis
ter Jawaharlal
Nehru behind.
Whereas
Chou manag
ed to wave
several times
before the
door of his air
r-Qll l e W bl'IH
liner closed behind him, Nehru
confined himself to a single
wave at the last moment.
Furthermore Chou Insisted
that friendship between Red
China and India was "im
mortal." It appeared Nehru was not
so sure.
Both Stand Firm
These were suface results of
Chou's week in New Delhi,
during which he and Nehru
spent more than 17 hours in
consultation over the border
dispute which has disrupted
seriously relations between
their two countries.
Both were committed to a
policy of no retreat and both
held to it.
The territory involved cov
ers 51,000 square miles along
the Sino-Indian frontier which
India considers hers by treaty
and tradition. It runs along
the so-called McMahon Line
which follows the Himalaya
Mountains and the water
sheds. About a third of it is
all but inaccessible.
Two areas were in specific
dispute. One was the Ladakh
Region of Kashmir bordering
Tibet. Here the Chinese have
built a strategic road linking
Tibet with the provice of Sin
kiang. The other was in India's
Northeast Frontier Agency
where Red Chinese forces oc
cupied Longju, killing three
Indian border policemen in
the process.
Chou claimed Ladakh by
right of "history" and said
Longju was north of the Mc
Mahon Line which India con
siders the official boundary.
Both views were exactly the
opposite of those held by
Nehru.
alone medicine for their ail
ments. Shaw! I can't cook up a
thing to groan about, right
now, but if some blamed
thing developes, I won't lay
It to the Democrats just to get
a free pill. I'll just grin and
bear it, but no one can blame
me for thinking; or will they?
Long years ago I forgot all
about romance: we sit by the
fire, play canasta or our har
monicas, and look hopeful
about the weather.
My husband's a Republican,
so being at the polls is a
MUST. We Democrats "gotta"
be on the job! Don't let weath
er or high water keep you at
home on voting day.
Yours for more and better
medicine and better "Ro
mance." Pearl Spackman
Jacksonville, Ore.
Habits
To the Editor:
about habits:
Speaking
Don't feed the birds In winter
If you're inclined to shirk,
Or they'll be there all summer
To remind you of your
work.
Don't be a little selfish
Establishing that trend,
For selfishness can make you
Become Its dearest friend.
Don't start a little habit
You plan to later drop,
For it will soon convince you
It's something you can't
stop!
Mrs. William T. Jeffcry
S21 Mnycttc St.
Medford.
DILUTED EVIDENCE
Greensboro. N.C.-d'PO-Coun'
ty Prosecutor Horace Koregay
said Wednesday that from
now on confiscated moonshine
will be kept In the basement
vault of the courthouse. He
complained someone had been
substituting water for the
moonshine kept in his office
closet for use a evidence.
What's Payola? Hey
turiv hv and songs to eat
double-decker hamburgers by.
If your hamburgers leaked a
little mustard on the records,
they sounded even better.
But don't worry, gang. Dick
Is playing this thing real cool.
He went out and hired the
"Computech" company to
analyze the records he played
on the "American Bandstand"
show.
Computech Backs Clark
According to Computech,
the analysis showed that Dick
played the records that were
most popular, regardless of
whether he had a financial In
terest in them.
But I guess those committee
cats don't dig mathematics or
The deadlocked stale of the
talks left these unofficial re
actions in New Delhi:
The dispute may not lead to
war but it will take years to
settle, with a corresponding
and continuous strain on rela
tions of the two countries.
At home, at least, Nehru re
Editorial Comment
Way Out Needed
(Editor's note: The Jackson county budget committee
Is considering a request for $2,000 for the coming fiscal
year to help finance a family counseling service, an exten
slon of the child guidance clinic. At last report no decision
had been reached. Because of its timeliness, and because
it describes so well the needs, we are printing below por.
lions of a recent editorial from the Coos Bay World.)
Do you know the lonely
and clothe her children, raising
days off? She lost her husband not through death, but by
divorce, because there was no one to help her save her
marriage.
Do you. know the lonely
ward of the: court because both his parents were killed in
an automobile accident? The neigbhors click their tongues.
They could have told you something like this would happen.
The couple "always drank too much." And there was no one
they could turn to for help with the problems that led to
the wild drinking bouts.
Do you know the teenager
school? Incorrigible, he's called. His unhappy parents noticed
years ago, when he was just a little tyke, that something
was bothering Wm like the time when he took the pencil
from the dime store. But there was nobody they could find
who seemed to be able to help them find any answers to
their problems.
You should know those
of yours, right here in Southwestern Oregon, where there
is no family counselling service, no psychiatrist or psycho
logist. ..
Ministers and welfare department personnel,' even phy
sicians, for the most part are
with anything but the most
called on constantly to help solve problems beyond their
depth. Dedicated though they are, this is a source of bitter
discouragement to the most conscientious of them.
These are all questions which are no longer being laugh
ed off by professional people
and illnesses of the body and
These and other related questions concerning the mental
health of this area are no longer being laughed off by a group
of devoted doctors and community leaders here who have
banded together to try to find a way to bring emotional
help to a community which has none.
They realize, too, that the
deal of creative potential through persons who are so hem
med in by emotional problems that they cannot find a way
out to accomplish what they have ability to accomplish
for themselves and others.
A way out that's what this
this coming weekend for ourselves and our neighbors with
problems in living. COOS BAY WORLD.
'Jug Dairies? Warned
Of Need for License
Salem-flJPD-With the usual
spring 'surplus of fluid milk
in the offing, the State De
partment of Agriculture warn
ed today that all "jug dairies"
with more than one dairy cow
must be licensed by the state.
A jug dairy is one where
milk sales are made on the
dairy premises in gallon Jugs.
V-
DEVOTED
SERVICE
I
fytd Jtotiuaw
"Am MOtSAN . HMOIO WOOOtASJ, FUNIIAL DMCTOtJ
someimug. Anyway, tnJ
Drougm in inese tnree it,i
tlcians to give the Compute!
aiituyaia a guinK-over.
If you guys and dolls thin
you've been having trouble i
sophomore algebra class v
should have heard the w0
inose siausucians sling
figures around.
They claim their fif
show that Computech'i analjl
sis was all wet. They claM
our boy played his own reel
oras more man me records oj
oilier cuutpaiiies.
r-ersonaiiy, i don t get it
But those committee mi
looked hep. So for the mcl
mem mais me way the deci
mai poini pounces,
Leaves
Unsolved
gained some of the stature he
lost when news of the dispute
leaked out after being official
ly buried for five years and
when he agreed to negotiate
with Chou.
Indians were happy that he
naa rejected iirmiy ail Chi-
nese aemanas.
woman who is working to feed
them In frantic haste on her
little boy who will be made i
who is being sent to a state
people. They are all neighbors
not adequately trained to help
minor difficulties. And they are
who deal with the disfunctions
mind.
area may be losing a great
group is going to be seeking
THE
DANMOORE
HOTEL
12)7 SW Morrison St.
PORTLAND, OREGON
All transient guests. All those who
come, return. Rates not high, not
low. Free garage, TV's and radios.
Reputatlon for cleanliness.
Children Under
Seven No Charge
. i
:A
Ml
sJtjlll
A
I