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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 5, 1960)
4 MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFOBD, OREGON MONDAY, DECEMBER S, 1910 MEDFORD. rTHfttlNI MEt3ryWe itr'SJoutbam Oreion nmnm TH- Mll Trthlin" Published Dill; except Saturday by MEDFORD PRINTING CO 13 North Fir St., Ph 8PS-S141 ROBERT W RUHL, "Editor HERB GREY Advertising Mlnijir CF.RAU1 T LATHAM Bui Mir. ETHCiV ALLEN JR.. Mnf Editor EARL H ADAMS. OB Editor HARRY CHAPMAN, Telas Editor RICHARD JEWETT. Sporta Editor OLIVE STARCHER. Women'! Editor DALE ERICKBON, CireulatlOB Mr An Indeoendent Newspaper Entered at second elan matter at Medford. Oregon, under aci at March 3, 1S97 cimanTPTinN RAITS By MaiJ In Advance. Copy 10c Dally ana tmnaay i year eio-w Daily and Sunday moa . 8.on Daily and Sunday 3 mos. 4.25 Sunday Only One year S4.20 By Carrier In Advance Medford Ashland, central rani rsaaij Point. Jacksonville. Gold Hill Phoenix. Shady Cova, Rogue RIv Dally and Sunday 1 year S18.J0 Dally and Sunday 1 mo t.so Carrier and Dealara copy loo AH Terms Cash In Advance "Official Paper of City of Me dforeT OfflcJaMpMjJckson County United Press International Full Leased Wire, P.P.t. Telephoto Kewsplcturea Member of AUDifTiUREAtr OF UlRUULft WUHO f The German Trade Talks i J.,.tUlna n nro I nrttjltlva Ttrccf irni.mAV rn.. INC Of fice tn New Vork, Chicago, pe t trolt, San Frincloco. tot Angtlei. Seattle. Portland St Louis., At lanta. VancouveTjJC. Kraft NlWf rArII rutiitHiif ASSOCIATION NATION Al tOITORIAI Flight o' Time Medford and Jackson County History trom tha fllei of Tht Mall Tribune 10, 20,, 30, 40 and 50 vain ago. . 10 YEARS AGO Dec. 5, 1850 (Tuesday) Saturday marked the fourth anniversary of the establish ment of Southwest Airways, now serving Medford and 33 California cities. ; . , The Medford Steel com pany has been found guilty of unfair labor practices by the national labor relations board in Washington, D.C. 20 YEARS AGO ' Dtc. 5, 1940 (Thursday) The executive commute of the Jackson county Demo cratic central committee voted last night to recommend V. D. (Bert) MilleY for the position of actine postmaster of Ash land to succeed resigning Postmaster John H. Fuller, From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudge Pot" column: "This is the seventh anniversary of .the repeal of the Prohibition 'Law. There is as much, if not more, flu than when the'' no tion had nothing legal to fight it, and the Saturday night driving is getting worse." 30 YEARS AGO Dtc. S. 1930 (Saturday) The state highway commis sion will embark on a state wide program of toad im provements to provide jobs for' the unemployed in the state. Two carloads of valley tur keys have been shipped east and will bring prices from 18 to 27 cents a pound 40 YEARS AGO Dec. 5. 1920 (Sunday) A Medford man's car, stolen here in October, has been lo cated in Salt Lake City, Utah. . A mass meeting of local fruitgrowers has been called for Dec. 11. SO YEARS AGO Dec. S. 1910 (Monday) Articles of incorporation have been filed for the First Savings Bank and Trust com pany of Medford, which will be the fifth financial Institu tion iij Jhe city. Another Communist 'victory.' albeit a small one, appears implicit in the trade negotiations now eroine on between bast and West Germany, When rumors of a trade embargo by West Germany began circulating several months ago, Heinnch Rau, kast German deputy premier, said : "We have the longer lever." He was referring to the fact that West Berlin lies 110 miles inside Communist territory and is dependent on trans port for its life. Nevertheless, the Adenauer government on Sept. 30 cancelled the existing inter-Grman trade agreement, effective Jan. 1. This meant cutting on li per cent of &ast Germany s total trade. (The Soviet bloc accounts for 75 per cent of the bast German satellite s trade.) There were inch- cations that the Western allies would follow suit. , . . The Bonn government move was in retaliation for an East German police directive of last Aug ust requiring all West Germans to obtain special permits if they wanted to enter East Berlin..-The embargo would not be lifted until the travel restrictions were withdrawn. PAST GERMANY appeared to be the loser. In the nine years of its formal existence, the rate of interzonal trade has grown to nearly half a billion dollars annually. It came to about 2 bil lion marks ($470 million) in 1959. East Germany receives about 20 per cent of its' vital steel and iron requirements from West Germany. In return it ships goods to West Ger many that could hardly be marketed elsewhere. For Bonn the exchanp-o has never had the asDect of an important business deal ; the exports to East Germany represent a small portion of West Ger many's total trade. ' But East Germany holds face cards, too. The Communists in October warned that arrange ments coveiintr rail service to and from Berlin would be affected by expiration of the trade pact. Other traffic accommodations were threatened. "This includes technical arrangements for goods traffic between West Berlin and West Germany, which will then (upon expiration of the trade pact) be devoid of any legal basis," declared Er win Seimer, high-ranking East German trade of ficial. East Gennany provides other services to West Berlin, including the elevated railway used; by both parts of the city and electricity for the Gatow airport in the British sector. CO THE Adenauer government, Berlin's mother hen, on Nov. 30 announced that it was willing to resume trade talks, though travel restrictions still stand. It was not a complete Red victory. The West German spokesman will be. Kurt Leopold, representing a special trade office in West Ber lin formally dissociated from Bonn. Most of the east-west contacts have been through the Treu Hand Stelle, or interzonal trade commission in Berlin, a quasi-official body manned by govern mental personnel. The Reds, their eyes on at least implicit recognition, had been urging negotiations at a higher level. Also, the previous agreement had treated West Berlin as part of West Germany, and pre sumably talks toward a resumption will be on that basis. East Germany had wanted to drive separate bargains with West Berlin and West Germany. NEVERTHELESS, the Reds enter the chamber itrifk of ill q nour cf PAVstrfV. Afr.onr.ir rr KTw 5rt 1 L. 1 1 Oblli O 1 1 V OKI Viigv"! I1J.UOVU aa Ull 41WTI W assured West Germany it would replace in 1961 "the necessary raw materials and goods it might lose if trade with West Germany were not con tinued. - ' Soviet Premier Khrushchev is supposed to have given private assurances that he will do nothing more to exacerbate the Berlin problem the original ultimatum is now more than two years old until President Kennedy is installed in of fice. But in advance of the inevitable bitr leaerue bargaining, the West would appear to have lost a gambit. b.K.H. Dunce Caps on Parade Dennis the Menace OtONV y MAR mbMusou? l saio wouvoya LIKE TO KICK ME A COiSPU GCOO HARD OHES? Performance of New Congress on Labor Law Revision Seen Answer to Question By LYLE C. WILSON Washington -rtJPD An inci dent on the Potomac! Did Senators John F. Ken- """jrM nedy and Lyn- -sfHisx i don B. John- r 1 son offer to bargain away a principal la bor plank of the Democrat ic presidential plat form in exchange for the support of tjit c wllaoe sen. narry r. Byrd, (D-Va.) for their presi dential and vice presidential candidacies? The answer to that astonish, ing question is: Yes, Sens Kennedy and Johnson did just that. The sequence ot events was like this: . The 1960 Democratic plat form contained this pledge: "We will repeal the auth orization for 'right to work' laws." Virginia has such a law bar- wwr nr. r i ...Communications ... Letters to the Editor must bear the nam and address et tha writer, although under certain circumstance! the use of pen nam or initial for publication is permissible. The Mail Tribune reieiTet the right to edit all letters with a view to clarification and condensation. Letters submitted for publication must not exceed 400 word. The letters printed in this column do not necessarily represent the views ol the paper; in fact the contrary is often mo ease. . Swallowing Camels. To the Editor: It seems that Blue Sunday or Sabbath is as hard to come by as Day light Saving Time or r a t- poison in our pure water. Jesus walked with his dis ciples in the corn field on the Seventh Day and they plucked the corn and ate it. He was found fault with because it was against the old laws that people were used to. People do lots worse things on Sunday than buying food for their families. Why "strain at gnats and swallow camels"? (That's in the Bible too.) The camel .we swallow is all this filth that comes un awares upon the young peo ple today. For one example, and prob ably the worst, is these little books found everywhere by the ton, called "pocketbooks." There is very little in t h e book pertaining to the sub ject on the cover. Just a few pages in the front and then changes off to another story full of vile and obscene lan guage. If the do-gooders had the nerve they could use Larry Nation tactics to get rid of them if nothing else works. There is no proof as to which is the seventh day or Sabbath. The names of the days are not mentioned in the Bible. Moreover, our calendar has been changed many times. It hasn't been too long since Sunday was the seventh day, Scientists now tell us tnat the earth is at least 60,000 years old. In all that time we have no way of knowing any thing of reformers -there must have been from time to time and what they considered good or bad. But you can rest assured judging by history available there was many "camels swal lowed. Mary E. Atkins 1634 Orchard Home dr, Medford. What's Your I.Q.? Nine er tan correct ii luparier; avert er eight la eacallant; rive e sis Is good. ' 1. In what year was the North Wing of the United States Capitol finished? 2. In which year did' the U.S. Congress meet for the first time in Washing ton, D.C? . ' i 3. In all history who Is said to hold the deepest interest in Christianity? 4. Who is the author of the poem that immortalized "Enoch Arden"? 5. The process of removing oysters from shells is called what? .-..' 6. With what sport do you associate the name ot Sam Snend? 7. Why were the old coun try schoolliouscs painted red? 8. "I am as fit as a . . , ." - what? 9. What Federal Depart- ment or Departments are re sponsible, for the supervision and enforcement of reforests tion regulations? 10. Was Samuel Osgood the first Postmaster General of the U.S. or the first Treas urer? . Anawerii 1..1I00. 2. 1100. 3. Jesus. 4, Alfred Tennyson, S. Shucking. I, Golf. 7, Be cause red was cheapest. I. and iZZ. :io.1 in and standing in a corner. - New York General. i lilies. The hundred or so Ku Klux Klansmen who came out of the bushes in Atlanta last week to protest against Negroes being served at store lunch counters were forbidden by an enlightened Georgia law to conceal their chivalrous features behind masks. The law permits them, however, to wear sheets and what look like dunce caps, and this they did. Negro citizens of Atlanta also demonstrated but not in costume. There was no violence, al though in the past the K.K.K. disguise has always implied the secret and cowardly use of force against the weak. The Negro leaders are wisely teaching the peacable principles of the late Ma- naima uanani "THE Ku Klux Klan may still exist in Louisiana, but it isn't in the news there at the moment What is in the news there is a State Legislature which solemnly debates a resolution charging the Supreme Court of the United States with being influenced by "Communist ideology." In the nor mally gracious and easygoing city of New Orleans white men, women and adolescents are proving the superiority of their race by trying to terrorize four, small Negro girls whose parents take the bupreme Court seriously. The South is fundamentally sound. However a tiny Southern minority may be right when it puts on dunce caps. Its mistake consists in not without it we lose. What a beautiful, wonderful world Honesty, Purity, Unselfishness and Love could make if we lived them, taught them and fought for them. Then, fear. hate, greed and selfishness would be banished from the earth with all the evils they do breed. Must the world suf fer more before we see the great need? The fight is on, Evil against Good. Which side are you on? . Frances Ray Ralston, Wash. . WhyT To the Editor: Perhaps someone can explain why any woman would want to be a man's fifth wife, or why any man would care to be a wom an's fifth husband. David Frisch P. O. Box 292 White City, Ore. Evil vs. Good To the Editor: Will selfish ness destroy the world or will Love save It? Selfishness or self Idolatry has destroyed the Ideals of Communism as well as much of the good in re ligions. It has weakened de mocracies and nations of the free world. It is the basis of broken homes and delinquent children. But for selfish de sires there would not be crime and brutality. Even our edu cational system, of which we are presently not very proud, is a victim. Taxpayers are un willing to pay attractive wages. Teachers too frequent ly are not concerned about the future of their students. Our courses of study and methods create self idolatry rather than educate or ad' vance knowledge. Law makers, government officials, labor leaders, cm' ployers and employees are too often more concerned about their ambitions than the well beim ot our nation and Its survival. It shows we haven't been teaching enough Ideals or de veloping the ability to thinK constructively In homes, schools or churches. We've left out love, the antidote for selfishness. The need for moral rearma ment is great. With it we win, Demos, Take Note To the Editor: Democrats in Oregon are worried- that coalition of so-called con servative Democrats and Re publican senators will elect a President of the Oregon Senate inimical to the best interests of the Democratic Party and the people ot Ore gon. The rank and file Demo crats, the voters of the party, should take note of what is happening and never forget it. We cannot believe that legislators who seek to enact such feudal legislation as a little Landrum-Griffin bill in Oregon are true Democrats. Democrats, the rank and file members, believe that Democrats ought to be able to elect from among their own membership who should lead them. And Walter Pear son ought to remember how four years ago, for hundreds ot ballots, loyal Democrats stood by him refusing to yield to either Republican threats or cajolery. Pearson should also remember the Republi can animosity that refused to accept his leadership. Like wise, he ought to remember that it was combined party loyalty two years ago that put him where he is now. Has he, like Demosthenes of old suddenly acquired quinsy that he can no longer speak for Democratic good? Demosthe nes' friends pointed out that the quinsy was probably silver quinsy. Is this a Hu'-field charm quinsy ailing the once stout Pearson? Democrats should clip this letter and paste it on their walls as a reminder that those Democrats who enter into this evil alliance are really enter ing into an alliance to pro mote Republican perpetuity of state rule. Democrats should let the name of those senators promoting this party splitting alliance become a dunghill to their nostrils and pledge themselves to never, never again put an X before those state senator s names. Far bet ter it is to vote for a Repub lican than a Republicrat (one elected as a Democrat but who votes Republican). Democrats, let these sena tors know how you stand and if Harry Boivin or any other man desires to lead as a Dem ocrat, he should be of the Democrats elected. Poor in deed to cry leader of the whole senate, the Republicans never even tried that. The state is registered Democratic, A diffused Democratic party is the only hope tor Republi can dominance in state poli tics. Democrats beware of any politician who allies himself with Republicans on these procedural matters. L. A. DuBose ' ' 1985 Glencoe rd, Hillsboro, Ore." x substantiated as no evidence of spacemen. Now that did not come as a surprise at all. The whole theory has been a rather com plex something in the realm of the fourth dimension, that is, providing such a law exists In the cosmos? It reminds me of a mystic I once encountered out in the mountains around 45 years ago. He wore long black hair and possessed a dowsing rod which he claimed was an in fallible guide to locating prec ious minerals along with gold. With all propriety I asked the wizard why he did not carry along any tools to dig out his treasure when he detected the exact location? He looked at me with great consternation a minute or two, with a twin kle in his eyes, and replied with a rather low pathetic voice, "I let the other person do the digging.'1 Evidently he figured he got paid for the information. He disappeared just as canny as he first appeared on the scene. Bert Kissinger, 520 Boardman st. Medford. ring the closed shop, enacted by the state under protection of the Taft-Hartley Act. Byrd denounced this platform promise to repeal the section of the Taft-Hartley Act which enabled Virginia to act. This was the first indication that Byrd would not endorse the Kennedy-Johnson ticket. This indicator proved to be 100 per cent accurate. congress convened in re newed session after the na tional conventions. Kennedy sought a meeting with Byrd at this time and, the Virginia senator being agreeable, Ken nedy and Johnson called on him in his Capitol Hill office. The nominees were accompa nied by Sen. George A. Smath ers, (D-Fla.) These three visitors were painfully aware of Byrd's dis trust of numerous provisions of the Democratic platform and, especially, of his public protest on the issue of right- to-work. So, there was a dis cussion of the platform during which Byrd emphasized his sense of outrage, notably on the closed shop issue. Kennedy then told Byrd that he had no idea of acting to repeal right-to-work laws. Johnson concurred. This incident on the Poto mac raises, of course, some questions. One of them Is this: Did Kennedy and Johnson mean it when their endorse ment of the Democratic plat form covered it wholly from the first word through the last or, did they mean what they said to Byrd? ' The answer to that question will come when the new Con gress is in session. Organized labor went all out for the elec tion of the Kennedy-Johnson ticket. Big labor . believes with considerable justice that Kennedy and Johnson could not have been elected without its help. There will be art effort by labor's representa tives in Congress to kill off at the source all state right-to-work laws. That would be by amending the Taft-Hartley Act to with, draw the . authority . under which the state laws have been enacted. To this amend ment there will be great oppo sition. Big labor will expect Kennedy and Johnson to help them overcome that opposi tion. And at that point, tha showdown will come. . There are other Democratic platform promises which are In a similar sort of political limbo. One of them is tha pledge, if it was a pledge,' to repeal the 27 per cent tax ad vantages enjoyed by the oil, gas and other extra-active in dustries by reason of deple tion allowances. There may be quite a ruckus about that. . Foreign Desk: British Labor Party; Chinese on Offensive By PHILNEWSOM UPI Foreign News Analyst Notes from the foreign news cables: FHIX. NEWSORI American." They think it may be a blow to Japanese trade and say the end result may be resumption of Japanese trade with Communist Chin. That's the businessman's but no so far the government's view. Sorrowful Santa To the Editor: I'm writing this to inform you That taxes are taking away The things that I find most essential My workshop, my reindeer, my sleigh. Your voting has forced higher taxes So I'll make my rounds on a donkey. He's gabby and handsome without glasses But you'll know if I miss you at Christmas That Jack has me stuck in the snow. Sorrowfully, Santa Claus Nuclear Ban Talks Recessed Geneva-niPB-The Big Three nuclear test ban talks recess ed today for two months. The United States, the So viet Union and Great Britain agreed to resume the two- year-old talks Feb. 7. Western sources said the recess would give President elect John F. Kennedy's ad ministration a chance to re view past progress and chart future moves in the nuclear conference. However, U. S. delegate Charles C. Stelle said the re cess was arranged because "the experience of recent weeks does not offer the promise of Immediate prog ress." Stelle, Soviet delegate Scmyon K. Tsarapkin and British delegate Sir Michael Wright negotiated the recess during the past few days. Tsarapkin said the Soviet Union saw "no pressing need" for the recess. He said the So viet Union agreed to it "at western insistence. ' Stelle said "There is no sign of Soviet willingness to make progress in Important areas." Build for the Future ' Top sources in Britain's La bor party say they now are PJ"1! taking it for -VJ granted labor will uc unaDie t o challenge Prime Minis ter Harold Mac millan's C o nservative party, at t h e polls for at least another year. They be lieve the Labor party's "im age" in the eyes of the British voters has been ruptured bv the party's internal feuds over one - sided nuclear disarma ment and nationalization of in dustry. Their first job now, they believe, is to settle those quarrels. Both Macmillan and Labor party leader Hugh Gait skell are anxious to establish early personal contact with U. S. President-elect John F. Kennedy. Vice President-elect Lyndon Johnson came home with a "want to see you soon" message from Macmillan to Kennedy,. Red Split ' Communist China has taken the offensive in the quarrel with the Soviet Union over peaceful co-existence with the West. Eastern diplomats in Berlin say the Chinese are circulating among Eastern bloc nations a long memoran dum defending the Chinese position as one part of this offensive. The Chinese oppose Niklta Khrushchev's co-exist ence policy. Dig the Dollar The Communist Czechoslo- vakian government has fig ured out a way successfully to drain dollars out of the United States. Czech citizens are for bidden to receive packages from abroad but may trade dollar gifts for coupons good at state-owned luxury shops called Tuzex Stores. " Amer icans with relatives in Czech oslovakia are pouring dollars into Prague which otherwise does little trade with hard currency areas and desperate ly needs the dollars. , Washington Report By WIUIAM S. WHITE WUIlam t. UFOi and Treasure To the Editor: It was no spectacular moment - in - the day's special events when we heard a radio commentator announce recently that there was no authentic foundation for belief in the existence of U.F.O.'s as 15.000 reports have been investigated and NEED RAW MATERIALS Washington (UPD A trade group predicts that by 1980 the United States and Canada will need twice the amount of industrial raw materials they now consume and will have to seek some outside North America. The Canadian-Amer ican Committee, composed of 60 trade experts, said in a re port Sunday that during the next two decades "both coun tries will . . . become more de pendent upon sources of sup ply outside the North Ameri can continent." Fourth Nuclear Power Britain quietly is dropping her original strong opposition to equipping NATO with nu clear weapons. Britain espe cially is expected to support American suggestions for a NATO-run small nuclear sub marine force equipped with the Polaris missile. She may offer some of her own nuclear weapons to the alliance in the new year. FREE-HAND PORTRAIT Washington - This is a small, free-hand portrait of a young president-elect at work in the back sitting room of an old, pleasantly shabby red brick house in Washington's Georgetown section. John F. Kennedy seems ab solutely relax ed - and 10 pounds heavi er than two months ago. There is not a trace: of "nerves."' He is, however, deeply sober and full of long thoughts over two main concerns. The first is filling his cabi net with the right men, as he estimates men, and not nec essarily with the "best guys" or the most desperately par tisan of Democrats. This cor respondent does not really know just how any past president-elect went about this responsibility. This correspondent does feel he knows, however, that few can have gone at .it in so coolly objective a spirit as now. Kennedy s whole search has been for men just to do a job. If he appoints the wrong man, it will not be because he was pressured into it. , NO ONE faction, social, eco nomip nr irlpnlneipal hac got the Kennedy ear to the ex clusion of others. For this president-elect Is pre-eminently an actionist -never a theorist. And this president-elect, like his pro gram or not, does most deep ly intend to do everything he can to be president of all the people of the United States. No one could be more aware that nearly half of them voted for another man. His first and last cabinet purpose is to put an admini stration into the field which can work, repeat work. He wants his cabinet officers to be performers at their assign ed tasks. My strong guess is that when any politicking is necessary, JFK will take charge of that department. NO ONE goes into the cabi net solely because he was for Kennedy before the Los Buy American Japanese businessmen are not happy with President Ei senhower's directive to gov ernment agencies to "Buy More Federal Aid To Education Urged Cottage Grove - 0J?l) - The Northwest Regional Assem bly Sunday urged the federr.l government to provide more financial assistance to higher education. The 60 leaders of five North west states said however, they do not want federal control of colleges and universities The group, consisting of lawyers, newspaper editors and business-men in addition to educalors, asked that the non-subversive disclaimer af- fadavlt be removed from the National Defense Education act. The assembly said "the need for assistance to higher education Is so real and im mediate that every sourca of funds - individual, corporate, community, state and federal - must be drawn upon for sup- Port." Angeles nominating conven tion. No one is out solely be cause he liked another pro posed nominee. The Demo cratic primary fights are as dead to Kennedy as, say, tha Louisiana Purchase - or the war between the states. And no one will eet anv- where with Kennedy by tak ing private potshots at his top convention rival. Vice President-elect Lyndon Johnson. tor me second Kennedy problem is intertwined with the first - and is master of the two. This is the hioh necessity, in Kennedy's mind, to keep together the perhaps illogical but effective instru ment which won the election. Democratic party cohesion is the keynote of all Kennedy's efforts. , He will surely run his own executive family, beginning with the cabinet. But he will allow great freedom for the Democratic Congress to run its purely internal affairs. Here, too, however, the sleep less Kennedy aim will ba maximum use of party strength-in-unity. - rpHUS current senale plans tor tne new party leader ship there will be well re ceived in Georgetown.- John son, the old Senate Democrat ic leader, goes upstairs to the vice presidency but there endlessly to watch over the scene below. Becoming lead er will be the moderately lib eril Sen. Mike Mansfield of Montana. At Mansfield's el bow will be the energetic and quite liberal Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey of Minnesota, as assistant leader. The third man, Sen. George Smathers of Florida, will be secretary of. the Democratic caucus. - Mansfield and Smathers were backers not of Kennedy but of Johnson for the presi dential nomination. Hum phrey was for Humphrey -until the bitter contest with Kennedy in the now-forgotten. West Virginia Primary. The net of it is that Kennedy has not tried to place a single Kennedy - before - Los An geles man into the Senate hierarchy. This is, for one il lustration, what is meant by party cohesion. (Copyright. 1960. by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) Try and Stop Me By BENNETT CERF 'C'DITORS and columnists around town were intrigued re cently by a communication from a perfume company which said in part, "The old-fashioned method of applying perfume just here and there is not the way to get the most out of the product. Perfume should be applied the way a gen eral deploys his troops: in all strategic areas. Suggested spots: temples, wrists, crooks of elbows, throat, crooks of knees. Applying fragrance to the legs is most import ant, since fragrance rises. If it's applied to the throat and temples, it doesn't have far to go- except to the ceiling and who can smell it up there? Apply perfume always to the legs, and you'll find that you enjoy it as much as everyone else AND ... The editor who showed me this revolutionary document added, "The first secretary who shows up in THIS office with perfumed legs is going to get it GOOD'" a "Children nowadays," observes Shirley MacLaine, "are practi cally at high school age before they discover that 'damn' and 'commercial' are two separate words!" O IMS, fer Beaastt Cart Distributes by Xlag Features a41et