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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 18, 1962)
4 A "Everyone In SwthtriTOrVion Heidi The Mail Tnbunt 7 futfiihfd Daily except" Si turd y'by MEUrunU FRIHTINU (JU. S3 North Fir St., Ptv772-614t " ROBERT W RUHL. Editor HERB GREY A4vartis.ni Maniger GERALD 1 LAIMAM, BUS. Mir. ERIC W ALLEN. JR., Mn. Editor EARL H ADAMS. City Editor HARRY CHIPMAN. Telec. Editor RICHARD JEWETT. SporU Editor OLIVE STARCHER. Women' Editor DALE ERICKSON, Circulation Mir. An Indeoendtnt Ntwinaper Entered second clau matter ai Utatma, urenon, unaer aci m March 3. 1897 ftUHSCRIPTION RATES By Mail In Advance, Copy 10c Dally and aunaay i year i.vuu Daily and Sunday moi. 8.00 Dailv and Sunday 3 moa. 4 35 Sunday Only On year M 20 Iv Carrier In Advance Med ford Ashland, Central Point. Eafla point. jacKSonviue, ooio nm, Phoenix, Shady Cove. Rofue Rlv er. Talent and on motor route. Daily and Sunday 1 year $18.00 Diliv and jsunt.iv i mo. i ru Carriei and Dealers Copy 10c AU Terms taan in AQvinci "Official Paper of City of Medford' Official Paper of Jack ton County United Presi International Full Leaied Wire U P 1 Tejephoto Nevvspictures ""MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU" CIRCULATIONS Advertising Representative: NK! SON RORFRTS It ASSOCI ATES. Otficea in New York. Chl- raio Detroit, aan Francis, ixn Angeles Seattle, foruano. uenver MONDAY, JUNE 18. 192 O&JV PUItllMllt ASSOCIATIOM NATION At f OITOftJAl "P- miiniw'iFTrrM Flight o' Time Medford nd Jackson County History from the flits of The Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50 years ago. MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREGON 10 YEARS AGO June IS. 1952 (Wednesday) Mrs. Eva Boyd, South Pa cific highway, named Grand Champion Catfisherman at 16th annual National Catfish derby at TouVelle State park ihe caught 37 catfish. A three-hour downpour of rain halted operations at White City Lumber company at Camp White by filling pits and shorting out motors and transformers. 20 YEARS AGO June 18, 1942 (Thursday) Capl. Floyd Hart called to active duly with U.S. Army air corps; is officially credited with shooting down German airplane in World War I. From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudge Pot" column: "The first day of summer has come and gone. Was it (censored) enough for you? was the ques- lion of the day. Nkrumah's Conference A "World Without the Romb" conference opens in Accra, Ghana, on Thursday and ex tends through June 28. Without questioning the sincerity of Kwame Nkrumah's desire for nuclear disarmament as a means of reducing world tensions, the world con- lerence in Accra must De viewed in the light of uie great amDiuons oi tne President of Ghana. Nkrumah is a champion of pan-Africanism. Characteristically, he envisions himsplf aa the head of an African federation. And almost everv t .JUL. n ' r . ... . ... act ui ine aaviour lusagyeioj, as Nkrumah likes to be styled, appears to lead in that direction. MKRUMAH is staying home from a meeting of the Casablanca group of African nations in Cairo to be on hand to welcome the rlnWatpa tn the "World Without a Bomh" ronfprpnrn It was he who called the trroun tno-eiripr it i . . . n mrougn a preparatory committee headed by the Rev. Canon L. John Collins of St. Paul's CathP. oral, London. Although virtually bankrupt, Ghana is paying the local expenses of the guests. Ihe conference will bv no means be limited tn nuclear disarmament. Those attendintr will en gage in a broad discussion of what might be aone 10 lessen tne most important international tensions and reduce pressures among nations. invitations were sent to scientists, informed aymen, and savants. A non-trovernmental ermin of 11 Americans will attend, amoncr them James J. Wadsworth, former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations. Grouns are expected from all th. other atomic powers, Great Britain, the Soviet Union, and France, as well as from nations in Africa, the Middle East. Southeast Asia. Eurone and Latin America. MKRUMAH'S own neutrality of late has looked 1 1 to be a neutrality in favor of the Soviet Union. Ti I 1- - .1 T-l . ...... iiui, tung ago ne visited itussia and wnile there made remarks deeply resented in Britain, though Ghana remains within the British Common wealth. (The warm welcome accorded Queen Elizabeth II on a visit to Ghana last November somewhat mollified the British.) Ghana has been accentintr Russian airl nnrl technical advice. And at the Belgrade conference ui nonaugncn nations last September he sound ed like anything but an unaligned statesman. At tnat time he expressed only mild shock" over the resumption of Soviet nuclear testing. Subsequently, on Oct. 19, the Ghana embassy in Washington, in an annarent nbiv In i-m'so Nkrumah's stock here, released a letter he had sent to Soviet Premier Khrushchev asking him to reconsider his decision to explode a 50 megaton miciear nnmii. "And Here It Lao, We Hope " 1 VS) l ' 1 . , Foreign News: Rusk's Trip Dictated By Uneasiness in Nation's Capitol R.r PUTT urufenu i ,1 li.li ... . . . . By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign News Analyst N o t e a form the foreign news cables: Rusk's Visit In London it is believed that Secretary of State Dean Rusk's visit to Europe is dic tated by Wash ington's u n easiness that West German Chan ccllor Konrad Ade nauer and French Presi dent Charles Kewsora de Gaulle will gang up" when they meet i-aris early in July. Adenauer has been sulking lne reDUKe he received from Washington after Bonn leaked American Berlin peace Plans. He has been hinting lately that he may give closer support to some of de Gaulle's ideas on Europe, which run counter to the U. S. viewpoint. the highlands and the coastal railway, it will be extremely difficult for the farmers to gel rice from the fertile delta area to the poor farming areas in the central and northern portions. Trad Pressures High government sources in Tokyo say Japanese business men are pressing the govern ment to increase trade with Communist China by offering a deterred payment plan. They believe the Peiping re gime might look favorably upon such a plan for two rea sons.' First, it would provide quick relief for Red China's hard-pressed domestic econo my; second, it could be used to force West European coun tries to offer better trade and payment termt. I Tightening the Screw - In Berlin it is being pre dicted that the Communist East Germans will tighten still further East-West Berlin travel restrictions. West Berliner already are banned completely from East Berlin. People from West Germany may visit the east ern part of the city only for 12 hours at a time. COMMUNICATIONS Letters to the Editor must beer the name end address of the writer, although under certain circumstances Ihe use of a pen name or initial tor publication is permissible. The Mail Tribune reserves the naht to edit ell 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 reoresent the views of the oaper; In fact the contrary is often the case. 30 YEARS AGO June 18, 1332 (Saturday) Medford merchants stock up on taxable Items before bit lion-dollar federal tax bill goes Into effect. New Jackson county court house at Main si. and Oakdale ve. expected to be ready for occupancy by Ocl. 1. 40 YEARS AGO June 18, 1922 (Sunday) Women's Christian Temper ance union and Medford and Ashland Ministerial associa tion start movement to recall Jackson county sheriff. Total of SI persons in 17 ears arrive at Medford city camp grounds to spend the night. 80 YEARS AGO June IB. 1912 (Tuesday) Portland man arrives here to Investigate possibility of building road to Oregon caves and constructing a lodge there. Man held for San Francis co police on forgery charge escapes from "unbreakable" Medtord city jail. AT A U. S. trade fair in Accra last November, Nkrumah declared that his nation follows "a nolicy of positive neutralism and nonalignment." He said Ghana made no apology for trade and aid from the Soviet Union, China, and the Soviet bloc. On the other hand, he declared il. wnnlrl ho "profound tragedy" if the press and others in the United States led anv "section of onininn" to support or conspire "with those who are in triguing against African unity." The dark side of Nkrumah's nan-Africanism is reflected bv his discard of the Rritish tmrlitinn of individual liberties he inherited. Scores of political opponents have been arrested for "dan gerous activities.'' Ridiculing the Saviour Presi dent cost im to 15 vcars in un . The press has been tethered. If this is a fnrP. taste ol an African federation led by Nkrumah, iiuwever neutral it niignt tie, Britain and in deed the free world have .just cause for alarm. E.R.R. Whal's Your I.Q.7 Nine er ten correct is superier; even er eiht Is eicellent; five oi els Is toed. 1 Dors the population of Worth America exceed that of South America? 2. In what body of water Is fh l.tff ( Man? 3. What is the name of the league organized in 194,1 among Egypt, Syria, Leba non, Iraq, Hashemile King dom of Jordan, Saudi Arabia nd Yeman? 4. is Arizona rlassed as a plains state or a mountain state? V in what sport did Helen Wills Moody gain her greet est fame? 6. What happened to Bene did Arnold after his treason was discovered? 7. What country is the largest producer of wool? 8. Who, In American politl. ral life, was known as the "Kingflsh"? 9. From whal language art he Romance languages de rived? 10. How many sensations of taste are there? Answarsi 1. Y. 2. Tha Irish sea. 3. The Arab league. 4. Mountain stete. J. Tennis. I. Became a British officer. 7. Australia. 8. Huey Long of Louisiana. 9. Latin. 10. Fouri weel, sour, bitttr. tally. A Form of Insurance To Ihe Editor: The propa ganda barrage of the Ameri can Medical association in its attempt to defeat the King Anderson bill in Congress re minds me of the old Spanish proverb: "It is better that a man die on his feet than that he be compelled to live on his knees." Probably every state in the Union has some form of in digent relief program. In many slates an attempt is made to palm it off on the un informed as a state pension. In most stales it is admin istered by an army of politi cal appointees who have al most a power of life or death over the aged, the disabled and the children who, through no fault of their own. are forced to crawl to one of these appointees to beg for the means of sustaining life. The Kerr-Mills bill is noth ing more than a provision whereby Ihe Federal govern ment offers help to the slate on a malchine husis if r when the state complies with the requirements of the law, and in no way removes the stigma of indigency from those who are compelled by circumstance to heg for re lief, lis provisions have hern accepted by only about half the slates and most nf tho funds provided for have been spent in Massachusetts, New York and Michigan. The King-Anderson bill pro 1,1,4a. r ... .wi mrm oi insurance, paid in advance during the working years, something the citizen can demand as his righl in his hour of need, that he can accept without sacri ficing his self respect. True it only partially fills the need! since il partially covers only hospital and nursing care, and does nol extend tn doctor's oius. social hecuntv, itself Is not perfect, but is being im proved as we gain more ex perience with it, and it is Ihe best plan of protection for old age and disability yet de veloped. The AMA claim that the King - Anderson law would cause a deterioration In the quality of mrdiral care is un realistic since It has nothing tn do with doctor's care or doctor's charges, it is one nf the weak points in the hill that it dors not, hut even if It is amended at some future time to include doctor's bills, 71 per cent of British doctors say their system of nationalized medicine has helped them pre vent serious illness by giving the patient attention in ad vance of emergency, which is almost never done in private practice. That such health plans have failed in other nations is be lied by the fact that 59 na tions, including all the major nations of the world, have adopted a nationalized health plan of some kind, and none have abandoned it. To call it a form of Social Ism is only a plea to preju dice. So is our Post Office, our public schools and our public highway system, but can anyone conceive of us at tempting to turn them back to private enterprise. The cri terion by which to Judge each forward strp In self govern ment is not In name calling. but in what il will do for those it seeks to serve. T). Ivan Frills Ontario, Ore. Red Strategy Military sources in Saigon expect the Communist Viet Cong guerrillas to launch campaigns soon to cut off ma jor rail and road arteries. The campaign will take advantage of the monsoons in an at tempt to disrupt the rural economy by keeping farmers from getting their goods to market. The sources say if the guer rillas succeed in cutting or seriously disrupting traffic along the few major roads in Time for Condemning Pockets Of Conservative-Minded Here By LYLE C. WILSON United Press International Washington UP1j This is the season for deploring and condemning t h e scattered pockets of conservative-minded voters who seek to put F ft Strictly Personal By Sydney J. Harrii lc Fifld EnterprlBM Inc. Competition in Steel The United States, with far and awav I ho world's greatest capacity for production of 'steel, continues to import more steel that it ships. And the competition it going to get tougher. aicei users nere brought in a record 4.4 mil ion tons in 1959 to make this nation a net. im porter, in part because of the nrolnnp-od strike in the domestic industry. Imports slipped to 3.3 million tons in 19(i0 (no strikei anrl 3. i millmn tons last year. DUYING to hedge against a strike shot imports for the first three months of this vear to 953,- AAA . e. . ., . . ' ui;u mns as against Di-'.uuu tons in the similar 1961 period. Hut demand for foreign steel plum meted after steelmakers reached their agreement with the union. Indeed, domestic production is rr ii n t n i . . " dH "l"ii. ror if siraignt weeks production has however, a largedngshot sagged, in the Inst full week of June output was out of lh gabbed !jn in t'i ifi ci'in oi capacity. The menace of foreign competition was dra matized in early .June when the U.S. Navy ad mitted having bought 3.500 tons of high-grade armor plate for guided missile frigates from West German mills. The price averaged 30 per cent below American bids. Under the Huy Amer ican Act U.S. firms receive an advantage of onlv fi per cent (12 per cent for small business and distressed areas) on open advertised bids. THESE are some of the relationships President Kennedy must have had in mind when he told his news conference, April 11, that a steel price rise would make it "more difficult for American goods to compete in foreign markets, more dif ficult to withstand competition from foreign im ports, and thus more difficult to improve our bal ance of payments position, and stem the flow of gold." E.R.R. , Ships End Stay Af Rose Festival Portland -11PH- The U.S Navy left Portland today, her alding the end of the 1962 Rose Festival. The festival fleet has been moored at the Willamette riv er seawall and provided the setting for church services Sunday for many Portland ers. The only official event re maining on the schedule is the Queen's baseball game Tues day night hetween the Port land Beavers and Ihe Hawaii Islanders. On Saturday an estimated .170.000 persons saw the Grand Floral parade. POPULATION PROBLEM Cambridge. England - IUPI) -TtSPCA officials want who ever loosed 4R rabbils on the lawn of Trinity college as a prank to come gel their bun nies before the inevitable hap pens. Inspector Stanley Ty nan estimates that each nf 40 females among the rabbits could produce five offspring and the RSPCA would have 24B bunnies In a month. Try and Stop Me By BENNETT CERF- npo THE SURPRISE of everybody at a recent stupendous, J- all-star benefit performance, the hit of the evening was scored by a miniature talking poodle who brought down the house with a series of su perb imitations and snappy new jokes. While the applause of the audi ence was nt its height. "' AUTO-SUGGESTIONS Speaking of "auto-suggestion," as I was recently, re minded me that a chemistry professor at Stanford some years ago tried an unusual ex periment in class. He held up a vial labeled "Vio't Per fume," and asked the stu dents to raise their hands as soon as they could detect the odor. Within 15 sec- iuru onds after he had removed the cork, every hand in the front row was up; and in less than a minute, three-fourths of the students indicated they smelled lh rts ynu mignt ex pect. the vial contained noth ing but water. jni may oe a case of sug- Kcsiioiiiiy, put I also suspect that 11 has something to do with our waning sense nf smeii. -ne human race is gradually losing its olfactory powers, and we are ashamed to admit - just as a person growing deaf ill subbornly iimiai iimi ne can near well No lest an authority than Dr. Richard van Misee of Harvard some !me ago told a convention of ihe Ameri can Association for the Ad vancement of Science that in a "few generations" the human sense of smell will be completely atrophied much at the small toe hat been steadily degenerating through the ages. Whet would then happen to our tense of taste is a matter of grave specula tion: it U doubtful whether we can taste at all if we are unable to smell what we are eating or drinking. Dur ing a cold, for instance, when our noses are stuffed up. food and beverages lose 'heir flavor. some conserv ative back bone into the R e p u b lican party. These con servatives are denounced as rightists, now a dirty word. They are ac- wiiion cused oi reck less rule-or-ruin intent. All of them are tagged with the shoot-the-m o o n futility of seeking to impeach Chief Jus lice Earl Warren or of pic turing Dwight Eisenhower as a Communist sympathizer. The bill of particulars is phony. Their alleged intent to rule or ruin is unproyed. It is a fact, however, that in some areas little pockets of home less conservatives arj exam ining with interest the success of organized leftists in shap ing Democratic p: ty policies. For example, the Liberal party in the State of New York, For another, organized labor in Michigan. For several more, any of the heavily-in dustrialized states. In these areas, the organized lefl-of- center can be a 1 i is the tail that wags the dog. Gov.' Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York was deploring last week the effort to organ ize a conservative splinter party in his stale. Unless the shoot-lhe-mooners obtair con trol of that proposed splinter, ils effect merely would be to give New York's conservative Republicans some leverage on party policy. What the conservative or ganizers seek in New York is the kind and degree of lev erage on the Republican par ty that the splinter Liberal party imposes on the Demo cratic party of New York state. When the Democratic and Liberal parties in New York support th-- same nom inees, it often happens that their man is elected with the aid of Liberal votes and would have been defeated without them. That Liberal party is to the icii oi the Democratic party. It is a parly with an organiz ed labor foundation. It pres sures the Democratic party toward candidates and poli. cies Ihe older party might not otherwise accept. It is no more ridiculous to accuse the Liberal party in New York State nf Communism than It is to accuse all unhappy con servative Republicans there or elsewhere of seeking to im peach Warren. In Michigan, Ihe AFL-Cin is no splinter group. Instead it dominates the Democratic party and is part of il. Among the h e a vi 1 y-industrialized states, the left of center pres sure on the Democratic party comes lrnm organized labor and lo some extent from rn. cial groups. All of these alliances, stra tegies and tactics add up to the political dominance en Joyed now by the Democratic party in the United States. As the pressure groups nudged the Democratic party increas. ingly left-of-center, the Re publican party was drawn In the same direction. The efforts of conservative Republicans to halt and to re verse that trend was predict able and inevitable. But there is nothing sinful about it. Not even if it succeeds. Washington Report By William S. White (el United Feature Syndicate STATE OF BUSINESS Washington To the usual ifs and maybes of any con gressional election year has now been add ed a large, uncomfortable query which few politi cians had thought only three months ago could be present this time. What Whit. will be the stale of American business come late October? All hifalutin' lore lo the contrary, congressional cam paigns are usually fought nol on great issues applying hor izontally across the country. On most occasions there is no single, merged nationwide campaign; rather there are hundreds of little campaigns, often quite separate in nature and tone. This year, however, there is some prospect of something approaching a national refer endum, as distinguished from the customary series of essen tially local political encount ers, on the general issue nf the country's economic condi tion. flHIS is now a probability because the economic state of the union is not a divisible thing. What Is true of it in Kansas will always be roughly true in New Jersey. The ques tion thus becomes larger and more complicated than wheth er the voters like and trust old Bill Jones better than old Tom Johnson. Bread-and-butter issues when, rarely, they are appli cable on an approximately uniform and national scale are intimate enough in one sense. But they tend to deper sonalize candidates in favor of the issue itself. Republican strategy for this years congressional campaign is plainly centering on two assumptions of a national na ture. The first is that econom ic anxieties will be greater in October than now. The second is that "the Democrats," as a kind of corporate body, can be indicated as to blame. sponse from among frustrated or fearful voters for the vari ous economic nostrums so dear to them. Obviously, the Democratic center and right-wings will be far better pleased if business is better. For 98 per cent of ine uemocratic center and right wing are also basically pro-business. This is a way of saying thai whereas 98 per cent of all the Republican par ty is pro-business, 98 per cent of a great majority of the Democratic party is pro-business. And it is another way of saying that il is simply and inherently easier for the Re publicans to take if not necessarily to win upon something like an all-parly stance on any Issue centered around business. In the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS Foreign aid is roMin,. lH(. politics in rather unexpected ways. The solidly Democratic sen ate, for example, voted last week to prohibit all but sur plus food assistance "to com munist or Marxist-dominated countries." Yugoslavia and Poland fell into that category. Both are dominated by USSr! TN ALL t a k i n i the triumphant poodle bv the scruff of the neck and pulled him off the stag". "Sorry, folks," yelled the poodle as he disap peared into the wings. "It's my mother. She al ways wanted me to be a doctor." A nohle experiment of Tat Csllnhsn, owner of a mMtmvn e.ilnon, has ended in fa'lure. Pat hired a fiitl-hlnnriM Indian lo one aa assistant ha.rtrn1er. hut had to 1ft him go at the end nf a fortnight. He couldn't be broken of a. habit of charging Kt.OO for a Majhaltaj. In primitive limes, appar ently, man's sense of smell was almost r., keen as that of animals. Vestiges of this still remain In emergency situa tions, when we can "m.ll" fear or hostility n the imo,. i"'"" "iniinei us. But. as we j become increasingly civilized I and industrialized, our noses i are losing thier old power to rielec-t and discriminate. St. Jerome writes thai St. llilarion was ahlr. after meeting person for the first tune, tn detect his vices by merely sniffing his horiv or even his garments. And a 19th century Englishman named James Mitchell, whi was born deaf, dumb and blind, could easily distinguish visitors bv their individual smells, and also estimated their charac ters with remarkable acrur- Group Attending Beef Congress A delegation from Jackson counly is attending the Beef Performance Congress and the Seventh Annual conven tion of Performance Registry International on the Oregon Slate university campus to day through Thursday, ac cording to Earle Jossy, county extension agent. j iiirscisy the program will; he the annual beef field day. i It will include such subjects as beef carcass standards, the 1 new dual grading of beef, I range improvement tech'j niques, and other related sub jects. Wednesday the program Will hp nn nrnrlniirtr. 1! .... r. v,..uw itui, I lui US this, the GOP is g calculated risks. There is always the danger that Republican viewing-with- aiarm may turn out to have been wrong or may be seen as unjustified defeatism gloom-and-doom stuff. But these are also unavoidable risks, because there is no oth er general issue the Republi cans can usefully raise. They are largely foreclosed from attack on foreign policy, since their own congressional leaders have supported t h e Kennedy administration, if with some muttering, on the biggest of foreign questions -Berlin, resumption of nuclear testing and so on. The Democrats, for their part, have as yet nothing ap proaching a common cam paign strategy - and wi have in October, eilher far as Ihe business issue is concerned Invariably less well-knit in party terms than are the Republicans, the Dem ocrats appear likely to run this time more than ever nn the basis of every man for himself. VTOT willingly, perhaps but V E R Y EFFECTIVELY. The effect of the senate vote is lo prohibit all U.S. aid lo them other than by sending to them surplus food from our vast surplus stores. The view of our stale de partment is that in Yugoslavia and Poland our job is to WEAN THEM AWAY from Moscow. It thinks we can do that most effectively by help ing them to stand on thpir own feet without Moscow's am. HPHE state department Is con- cerned also about a re striction by the house ways and means committee into President Kennedy's bill. This restriction would deny to Po land and Yugoslavia the pre ferential tariff treatment ac corded to "friendly" countries under the most favored na tion principle. The house has not yet taken up this bill, but is expected to shortly. In foreign aid and trade matters, Yugoslavia has been treated by this country as a friendly nation, and Poland has been given special concessions. WHY these two proposals one in Ihe house and the other in the senate that seem lo go contrary lo state foreign aid policies? This answer suggests-itself: Members of Ihe house and Ihe senate have been hearing from their constituents on the subject of foreign aid which, to say the least, isn't TOO not copuiar out among the voters. -so ' IIS a big problem. It has wide ramifications. What of the starving Chinese, for example? Should we feed Ihem, thus removing from their communist rulers the burden of doing so? rpHEY. too, haven't a clue ONE suspects that few of us nut in fha ... ,uc ui-u spaces The very day a new burglar a'.inn was installed In the Nx nffire of the IjOon Valley Movie Talare. a robber pni'ed a pistol through the window and demanded the day s receipts. Lent Tuttle, the cashier, preened his font on the alarm pedal, and a moment later hia telephone rang. The rohtter grubbed the receiver and heard an annoved vol' complain, "This la poh,-e headquarter, lni. Will you k'ndlv get your foot off the pedal that rings that fool new alarm of yours over here ?" O lttl. be Seiuvett Cent. Distributed by Kuyj reaturw Sredkate The SOIUP of enioll ft.-;.!. 1 . ... , , cnucK wagon rn only close to nature, the farther away we get. the more NEW CLINIC NEEDED bluen and debased it becomes. Watford. England IPl-This The urban creature, puff- town needs another prenatal ing on his imarets. breathing clinic but not because of a ris in polluted air. victim of a ing birth rate Women doing dozen upper rrspiratorv vir-; physical exereisra in the rlin. and record keenin. Th. .". .. LI ou""lM . " I . 1"""Jiel to give the last .j , , j , - ",'r '"i'iviij oi- iiKc come uctoher. and Una answer But out. and last day will he devoted But. unlike the Renuhliean. side th. o. . ,Z2"l meetings. Jossy ; no conceivable answer lo that Plan aid to our friends and ,, -"! "in resny no mucn comraars.in-arms during the Ihe to solidify them as a iwlv last aar u-m hiK vn ovr anyhow. For. again unlike the disagrees - most of' us get Republicans - - 9R per rent I nuzzled wh .... ...!, nit- l,M.llrtl I business to business said Tuesday. June 19. mummy i.ai-wre lattiemens , association meeting at North's uses a year, has nn more need for his no.se than a burrowing mole has for lit eyes lc are so vigorous they have weakened the floor arid off;, fills fear It will cave In. pro- ure out anv vat inP,.HM the Democrals are i benefits that ba. i ... in a position here where sev- through foreign aid as it has . . onn.- iiimi nirfy oc oiner ocen adm ni.Aj men s poison The prospects for the Dem ocratic politicians on the par ty's small but articulate left wing would actually he pro moted by bad times For then they would expect some re- more oe less all over the world. There are times when it al most appears to us that those we have aided most have the least genuine friendship for us Buying friends just doesn't lerm tn pay off.