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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 8, 1963)
FRIDAY, "Everyone in SouthernOregoo Re.d The Mall Tribune" Published Dally except Saturday by MEUFORD PRINTMG CO S3 North FirSt, Ph ITi-iUl ROBERT W RUHL. Editor KERB GREY Adverti.inf Manafer GERALD T LATHAM. Bui Mgr ERIC ALLEN JR . Mn Editor EARL H ADAMS. City Editor uarrv r-HIPMAN. Telei Editor Rti-HARD JEWETT. Sooru Editor OLIVE St ARCHER Women ! Editor DALE ERICKSON. circuiauon mar An Indenendent Newspaper Entered second class matter at n . i j-. Aft nicaiuia uiciuu uim .-- - -March 3. 1897 SUBSCRIPTION RATES Rv Mail In Advance "Daily and Sunday 1 year I1S.00 - Daily and Sunday S moa 10 00 Dailv and Sunday S moa. 3.00 Sunday Omy One year 3 00 Single Copy (Mailed! ue hv Pair.M And Motor Route. Daily and Sunday I year Ml-00 Daily and Sunday 1 mo s.io EnnHiv flnlv 1 mO. 50C - Carrlel andVendora Copy luc Official Paper of City of Medford Official Paper of Jackson County United Press International full Leased Wire DPI Telephoto Newsplcturea MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU Of CIRCULATIONS Advertising ReprrMntatlve: NEl.SOtf ROBERTS 4t ASSOC1 !' ATES Ol'lcee In New York. Chl ' caso Detroit. San Francisco. Loa : ' AngHt-s Seattle. Portland Den'er. NATION At EDITORIAL c6T,3N A NEWSPAPER PUBLISH!. ASSOCIATION Flight o' Time Medford and Jackson County History from the files of The Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30, 40 and SO years ago. 10 YEARS AGO Feb. 8, 1953 (Friday) . A 500-foot earth slide near Toketee falls last night swept five men down a hillside above the Clearwater river in Douglas county; a Medford man was killed and two other men, one of them from Med iord, are still missing. A jury's verdict of innocent was returned shortly before noon today for two valley men who had been charged with assault with a dangerous weapon. 20 YEARS AGO Fob. B, 1943 (Wednesday) Mcdiord building and con struction work down 40 per cent from 1941 because of war emergency. Dr. R. Franklin Thompson president of College of Puget Sound, Tacoma, Wash., slated to be main speaker at annual Lincoln club banquet. 30 YEARS AGO Fab. 8, 1933 (Friday) Members of Jackson coun ty "Good Government Con gress" adopt resolution call ing on President Herbert Hoover to "re-establish law and order In the county. William Ulrich, 75, pioneer resident of southern Oregon, dies after lengthy illness. 40 YEARS AGO Feb. 8, 1923 (Saturday) : Ashland sanatorium gutted by fire; damage is estimated at $10,000. Dr. J. W. Morrow, Port land, national Democratic committeeman from Oregon, predicts Sen. Charles McNary will be defeated In 1924 elec tion, during brief stop in Medford. SO YEARS AGO Feb. 8, 1913 (Monday) i Rogue valley orchardisia i request that County Judge i'rank TouVelle proclaim one il..y us "squirrel puisunlng day." Sheriff Singlcr announces that Jackson county residents tan pay their taxes at their local bank "ns usual." What's Your I.Q.? Nine or ton corract it superior; seven or eight is excellent; five or jis ft eoed. 1. Persons born between Feb. 19 and Mar. 0 arc born under which sign of the Zo diac? 2. Correct tho following: "Only one of all those play ers were properly dressed." 'i. Are the male or female birds of most species the more brightly colored? i. When Is Maundy Thurs day observed? 5. Is cedar, ouk, or pine wood generally used 'ir mak ing lead pencil,-? 6. General Montcalm tell In the defense of what city ill North America? 7. What Doctrine forbids European powers Iroin inter vemns in American affairs? 8. What is the Capital of Liberia'' 9. Is Carl Sandburg famous for his poelry, play-writing or photography? 10. Which WOtiid you cai, and what would you do with the other: Jerky and J rkin? A n s w t r it I. Pisces. 2. ". . . was properly dressed." 3. Mala. 4. Thursday balort Easier, i. Cedar. 6. Qu bee. 7. Monroe. 8. Monrovia. 9. Poetry. 10. Eat lha Jerky; wear lha Jerkin. 4 A- Km FEBRUARY . 1963 Stroessner's Paraguay Paraguay since 1900 has had 42 presidents, including four in one year. However, since Gen. Alfredo Stroessner seized power in 1954, the land-locked, subtropical country about the size of California has had only one president. The formula was simple; Stroessner was unopposed in 1954 and 1958 elections. In this Sunday's election Stroessner is allow ing the opposition to put up a candidate a 63- year-old attorney, Dr. Lrnesto uaviian. bven ne says: "I don't think we have the slightest chance of winning. DARAGUAY in many respects is a sort of musi. cal comedv Latin American state. It has re fused to follow to its sister nations into the 20th Century. South of the fledged dictators hold sway only in Haiti, tuba, and Paraguay. The custom of arbitrary rule is more firmly established in Paraguay than in any other Latin American country. It has been under military or civilian dictatorship almost continuously since it became independent in It is hard to iret facts Stroessner's Paraguay. easy inside, apparently. One correspondent ior a North American newsnaner writes of seeing in nocent students horse-whipped in the streets and political prisoners, also rocKs Dy nana ipr tne streets oi Asuncion. - i I .... . HIS guide tells of the "Pena Hermosa, the Chaco iclanl nnnnantvzt inn pnmn uVtprp flpnr.ri isl as common as leprosy. But equally responsible observer from the United States reports: "A reliable foreign diplomat told me that -he sought in vain i- 'i! ' T1 cenirauon camp in raraguay. , . - Certainly Paraguay is no hotbed of democ racy. Its press is controlled although some pa pers are allowed to criticize' the regime. Between 40 and 50 per cent of the national budget goes to the military and the police. The army is re ported to control contraband operations from Puerto Stroessner to Uruguay's free port Nueva Palmira. Stroessner .in 1954 decreed a state of siege which has been renewed every 90 days since. The government has been called "the most extreme case of predatory praetorianism in all of Latin America. DESPITE his tight rule, Ul WJ. CllH 11 Will tilt; J Illicit tJtUVxO bllClir may have helped to keep him in power. Of $1 million in military aid allocated tor raraguay in the past 12 years through June o0, 1902 some $600,000 has bean delivered. Another $S00,000 is allocated for fiscal year 1963. Other post-war aid through last June came to about $44 million. Why support this mild-mannered little dic tator? The most obvious reason is that although his party is named Colorado, or reddish, he is staunchly anti-Oommunist. I he Communist party was outlawed in October, 1955. And while other Latin American nations embarrassingly in the Cuban crisis, Stroessner's government announced its immediate and un qualified support of President Kennedy's stand. A less pragmatic reason may be a better one. Stroessner is bringing democratic institutions to Paraguay, albeit at a glacial pace. The alternative to Stroessner probably would be raraguay s ac customed chaos. In any years the general-dictator-president has been echoing this theme: We are progressing and will soon be ready for the luxury of democracy." E.K.K. Shot Guns i icsclvlllu U1L' IdUIIU avarice of man can be a cessivp whitlinir. for OXailltllo. hits SO dptllfitfifl this great resource as to threaten the survival of some species conventions, treaties and pacts notwithstanding. Now comes a report to press tor open-seas (pelagic) sealing when the United States, Canada, the Soviet Union, and japaa-su- cown ir. i okv changes in the four-power seal treaty. Seal catching on the open seas has been pro hihited since lifil, when such thoughtless slaught cr had reached the point where fewer than 25,000 Piibilof seals remained. Today, seals bred on those American islands in the eastern Bering Sea are estimated to number l.o million. About 100, 000 are harvested on the rookeries there every summer by humane and Soviets harvest 11,000 seals from a small 200,000. member herd on their islands of Commander am: Kobbcn in the North Pacific. TMIE United States and Russia, i 1 Power treaty, each divert wit per cent of their catch to a kind of "quid pro ouo" sealing. The Japanese government picks up about if 1 million every vear under this agreement. Hut Japanese fishing interest have been putting: heavy pressure on their ngiu to snot-gun seals on tne high sea. Many skins are ruined by this method, of course, and 10 to 2" per cent of the animals shot escape only to die later, or sink before they can be dragged aboard the boats. Hut Jan'anese fishermen want work and thev see seal lucrative sideline. American and Russian dele gates to the meeting are expected to unite in defense of the present arrangement lest the seal be threatened with the same end that threatens the whale. E.R.R. Rio Grande today full- 1811. from the outside about For that matter it is not under the lash, splitting a lew months later an tor evidence ot a con- II Stroessner has received tw were backing and filling event, for the past few and Seals Ul the stas against the discouraging task. Ex- that Japan is preparing MoRaav to- consider selective methods. The under the t our ithout charge 15 Canada and Japan as for outlawing prelude government to obtain the i intT as a i "I'm Bro.dmir.ded I'm Just A Willing To Work For A Democracy" "trt JrWt4e4 rrM rW Communications Letters to the Editor must bear the name and address ot 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. Letter submitted for publication must not exceed 400 words. The letters printed in this column do not necessarily represent the views of tJ- paper, in fact the contrary -is often the case. Asks Questions To the Editor: In his letter of Feb. 5, Mr. Raymond D. Roberts sounds off on every subject from high taxes to the South Sea Islands.. In reply to his letter, I want to ask a few questions. Firstly, is Mr. Roberts aware of the cost of national defense? How would he pay for this? With baked food sales or, perhaps, a multi-million dollar rummage sale? The need for income taxes is all too apparent. Secondly, is he aware that the 61st Congress passed and the several states ratified something called the . 16th Amendment? It provides that "Congress shall have the pow er to lay and collect taxes on income from whatever source. Mr. Roberts then belabors Mr. Dcllenback's cat control bill and confuses this with high taxes. Has Mr. Roberts taken the time to read even a draft copy of the bill? Does he. In short, know what he is talking about? There is no provision for State taxes or even a cal license fee in tho bill. The bill would permit, but not compel, counties to set up cat control programs, If desired. The need for cat control is obvious. Does Mr. Roberts have any facts to support his contention that the bill is not needed? Is he aware that peo ple abandon, to starve or fend for themselves, some 25 mil lion unwanted animals each year? Docs he know that 50 million kittens are born each year in (he U.S.? That less than half find homes? That another 25 million animals are destroyed each 1 year in pounds because no one wants them? That many million more run loose? A friend of mine has recently lost more than 30 chickens, including full grown hens, to raiding cats. These "wild" cats are the very ones that people abandon to "live off the land." The bill is needed to prevent the decimation of game birds. Such a program would be administered at county level, not in Salom, as he contends. The cost would be as little or as much as the county anted to spoi.d. There has been quite a bit of sarcasm directed at Mr, Dellciibitck from those who should know better. It's about time someone had a kind word for him and I. for one, admire his couraee for cham pioning a cause llutt left him open to ridicule, lie can count my vote any time. This is not intended as a personal attack on Mr. Rob erts, but I wish he would get the facts straight before sounding off in a public forum, as this means that any reply should be in the same forum. As for your trip to the South Seas. Ray, let me be the ftr.it to wish you a Bon Voyage! W. L. Stevens Jr. 52 West Vilas rd. Central Point Editorial Reply To the Editor: In reply to an editorial in lite Medford Mail Tribune of Sunday, Feb ruary 3, miiJ, the Phoenix l'.ln.,f H..t,..l u.--. ,t to te known that the fun con- ot the report of the bu rrau of Educational HcM-arch of a year ago regarding the school building needs of the district were not fully publi cised because sli the patrons of the district already realize the nerd for physical educa- Hon, lunchroom, and voca- llt'MM! HhllVllllllini i.i 111 ill and were aware that plans were ready to correct these conditions as yoon as the boundary harassment which block a school bond issue were discontinued, 12) some of MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, OREGON these inadequacies were al ready corrected through the use of regularly budgeted funds, such as four additional classrooms built at the high school and junior high school last summer, the acquiring of an option for the purchase of additional land area at the Talent Junior High school, and the' grading and resurfac ing of playground areas at all schools. A building program to correct the crowded phys ical education and lunchroom facilities will be placed before the people as soon as the set tlement of school boundary issues clears the legality of a bond issue. The report indi cated no overcrowded condi tions in academic classroom areas that were not immedi ately remedied. We also wish to point out that the bonds for the Phoenix High school will be retired in 1964. The money raised for the annual bond and interest payments to retire this bond issue can then be used to fi nance the proposed building needs, so there would be little, if any, rise in the district tax levy for the completion of the necessary building program for the Phoenix School dis trict. It is but fair and just to point out that were we to con solidate wiUi District 549C, whose levy is already 4Vi mills above that of Phoenix, the additional tax require ments for the Medford build ing program would increase the levy for the consolidated district several mills more. This would mean, for Phoenix and Talent residents, a mater ial increase in taxes above what they are now paying. The Phoenix-Talent school board has publicized that por tion of the report attesting to the quality and progress of its educational program. Build ing recommendations of the report have been studied by the school board, and their plans for building improve ment will be brought before the people of the district at the proper time. E. R. James. Superintendent 1 noenix School io- Value of New Law To the Editor: Sunday was a happy day for us, even though we had to fight our way out of the frost and rain softened driveway to the paved road, that Is such a long, long way from the "stickcy" reads of pionoor times, thanks awfully to our very efficient Jackson county road department second to none In all Oregon that might include contlgeous states. Our main objective was the Eagle Point Grange hall that was putting on their annual Groundhog Dax dinner from noon to past 4 p.m. as they lluH ninl, lili-n DC ...an.. in a. tii-v h.A nian., i. So it was that hurried calls I g .tSZLi of editorials I "Bn s job .n m? ''"anc" were dispatched to nearby 1 1 VrfeSJ appearing ,n The great state of Ohio has markets for more food sun. 11 S Ohio n. I bccn llvln8 " UP undor Dcm- olies. This raised a tr-w rv. brows to the value of the new Stindnv law thai in do away with such emergency buvinu. Although arriving fairly much more interesting The ?iarkcd editorially on what early, the two io of Ions i grapevine word is that Ohio's i ,lapp!'1ed nex,;.a 9 f p" CC,U family style tables were well ncw Republican governor is sP,ndln " P"'" filled. We managed to find ! g real pro He talks the poli-1 mcn,s T',ls w"s to overcome spot for we two. Platters of j tieians' language He is an 1 8 sPcndin8 ra,e Prevailing at sausaKc Willi i no limits, seemed organization man and tough. ' fbm,t $" m'l"on T5.1!"" the piece di- resistant, but ! h.come. The Dispatch said: creamed potatoes well gar- . 1 e grape vine is describ-, -stcpSi considered drastic nished with brown meat- m hJis as a publican ( by somc and practicai by oth graw was a close second, so "arr-v ? lruma"- That is high ierJi especially taxpayers who too were hot buns along with 1 snsp - beans, applesauce and i luscious salad, milk or coffee oi course, tne cup never less than half full by watchful I husbands w ith big steaming ! pots of it. It wa a most ami- deserves to be commended for able gathering, strangers at The political Nice Nellies the bold, forthright action it the tables were immediately may not embrace Rhodes. BuU took to bring order to Ohio's old acquaintances Judged by i there is the beginning now of financial house." their lively repartee and com- a love affair between the po-1 The- Columbus Citizen-Jour-mentary of day's events. All litical pros and the governor I nal was equally enthusiastic, State Department Quakes at Thought of Canadian By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign Newt Analyst Officially, the U.S. State Department had "no com ment" dn the fall of Canadian Prime Minis- ter John Die fen b a k e r's Conservative government. Inward 1 y, it quaked at the very thought that a Canadi an general election might be fought on iff Q3U the issue of U.S. intervention in Canadian affairs. Diefenbaker, a master at emotional oratory, promised to play down anti-Americanism but said the question of foreign domination certainly would be an issue in the elec tion which would be the sec ond for Canada within less than a year. For an emotional subject among Canadians he scarcely could pick a better one. in all It gave one a feeling of good fellowship, of being with one's kind and that all is well in our beloved America. However, the frosting was spread on the cake as we hur ried on late afternoon to a gathering of the clan at the home of one of my wife's kin folk. There is always to me a something sacred like at such meetings. The women visiting in the roomy kitchen-dining-room. Children playing, we males in the living room, never a dull moment. The main discussion concerned the state game commission's doe killing permits, quite evenly divided by two seasoned out-of-doorsmen who lifted its con troversial parts to liberal in spection, most of us listening, especially when it veered to round-year fishing at the new ly enlarged Emigrant lake, the big question being, can trout survive along with the finny-ray tribe. Seems like they can with each specie duti fully staying with Nature's great law of segregation. The frosting was finished with generous helping of ice cream and cake, then to home with memory of 8 wonderful day. F. J. Clifford,', j Route 2, box 200F, Central Point, Ore. I Wa?'Sty,2),w,iei wfs ym nol knocking progress, 'Pog-Face with a rifle any Word Reaching Washington on Gov. Rhodes Reported Good I -iB f rnrinl. fcsa?. . J?283 pit, rHitrii approval of Rhodes' perform- i.. r,rri is the more iniDortant. Butlabout s83 nlill'on in the red .r-..i. .,. . K ' ' " '- i'"'"-""1- - be". Democratic politician : " ... Hou5e un"1 Jonn r Kennedy l"me "'fn- Rhodes is earthy. Election Fought on U.S. Issue Past Performance As for Washington, it had only to look at history. Three low points in U. S.-Canadian relations-in 1891, in 191 1 and in 1957 - were sparked by charges or fears of U. S. dom ination. In 1957, Diefenbaker upset Washington Report By William (e) United Feature Syndicate GOING ON INSIDE Washington Much more is going on inside than would appear from the outside as r Britain re groups after the torpedo i n g by De Gaulle's France of Bri tish efforts to enter the European common mar ket. England, wmu as so often in her lon history, is seem ingly down but very far from out. And, as so often before, she is not without cool diplomatic resources in this seemingly disastrous set back. True, her present exclusion from the continent of Europe is little less than an economic and political Dunkirk, brought about by the same France whose massive but re luctant forces broke and left British troops naked to Nazi fire on the beaches of that first, and literal, Dunkirk. But the new British stra tegy, if not yet wholly fixed, turns first of all on the policy of saying little but doing much. The British counter-attack to General De Gaulle will not be frontal; rather, he is to be flanked. . IT may be said on highly competent authority that Britain now means to do the following: To draw ever closer, politi cally and in defense matters, to Italy and to the other as sociates of De Gaulle in the common market West Ger many, Belgium, Holland and Luxembourg all of which are unhappy at France's Harsh veto of British mem- you understand, but giva ma a ole time ah! the ir.Jantry of Oiiio. This recalls Leo Du - rocners cracK: mce guys finish last. The reference to Rhodes with the most socko impact is that he is a Republi can Harry Truman. The Re publican party would be bet ter off today if HST had not been born a Democrat. Rhodes Axes Costs The editorial report on I Rhodes is that he is doing a i erali: auspices. Private ac- coumants audited the books and told Rhodes Ohio was The Columbus Dispatch re- i have watched the i accper into debt despite high j taxes, already have been tak- I en by the new administration to effect solvency. I 'The Rhodes administration I" predictions and rode to power in a campaign liberally larded with suggestions that U. S. dollars were taking over the Canadian economy. In the year before, Canada's trade deficit with the United States had amounted to $1.29 S. Whit. bership. This process has al ready begun, with Prime Min ister Macmillan's arrange ment with Premier Amintore Fanfani for far more intimate relationships with Italy. To seek informal under standing among the five Germany, Belgium, Holland, Italy, Luxembourg t hat even though Britain is out by the sole decision of De Gaulle, the five will not per mit the market to be made into an instrument for direct punishment of the trade of the excluded British. THE first indispensable, however, to the British purpose is to build these ties into real political associations for they still think their economic problems will hard ly be solved outside the com mon market and still think that one day they will yet enter it. In the meantime, however, the Prime British aim is to avert a situation in which De Gaulle might attempt absolute political mastery over his five common market partners. It is such an eventu ality which really most troubles Britain, apart, of course, from the heavy blow to plain self-interest which the act of exclusion has brought. For if the point should be reached where De Gaulle had total political mastery among the six or thought he had he might then proceed to do what all the West fears. This is to make some sort of deal between his continental "third force" and the Soviet Union. There is, of course, no suggestion that the general an undoubted western patriot, is also a wrong-headed one would ever consciously sell out the West. 1 ' flHERE is, however, serious concern that his dreams of "grandeur" might cause him so to overestimate the real power of this "third force" as to put all the West in danger from a Russian antagonist who would have no difficulty whatever in evaluating the true limits of that, power. There is a concern, in short, that a part of the West might one day be thinking of send ing a boy to do a man's job with a very tough fellow, Nikita Khrushchev. Now, to avoid all these possibilities, and also for their own vital interests, the British figure they desperate ly require the continued friendship of the five within the six. This is why they speak comparatively softly about De Gaulle. They want no all-out rupture because they fear that if the five were abruptly forced into a sinr pie. either-or position -s be tween France and Britain, the five might have to choose De Gaulle because of their im mediate economic interests in staying with him. 1 as for example: Saving Comes First "Gov. Rhodes and his fi nance director, Richard L. Krabach, put the objectives of the state administration into focus with the simple statement that the emphasis will be on saving, not spend ing. "If they can accomplish their aims, they will have done a job that has been need ed in Ohio for a long time." Emphasis on saving and against spending is developing as an issue that could be big in the 1964 pre:ldential cam paign. Rhodes seems to be on top of that issue. That is an advantage he has over Gov. Nelion A. Rockefeller of New York. Rockefeller is a pay-as-you-go man and against deficit spending. But he also is a big 'spender Another advantage Rhodes has over Rockefeller is mat miodes is a politician's politician. He came up from the orecinct level as an organ ization man. Rhodes' Republi caniaiti is unquestioned. His advantages over Repub lican George Romney of Mich igan are about the same, espe cially bona fide party identi fication. The contrast with Pennsylvania's new Republi can governor. William W. Scanton. is not to sharp. Scranton is also a political pro. an organization man. billion. But at the same time, U. S. investments . in Canada were spiraling sharply up ward. From a comparatively mod est $2 billion invested in 1929, by the end of 1957 the sum totalled $8.6 billion. In I960, it was $10.2 billion. Income tax payments to the Canadian government from these investments in 1957 came to $800 million and the companies involved employed more than half a million Ca nadian workers. But what concerned the na tionalists most was the fact that U. S. money had taken over a heavy proportion ot Canada's natural resources-75 per cent ot her oil and gas and half of her mining. Ties With Britain Early in his career as prime minister Diefenbaker called upon Canadians to shift 15 per cent of their U. S. purchase orders to British suppliers in order that Britain, in turn, could have an increased abil ity to buy Canadian wheat. Under ...Diefenbaker there have been measures to restrict the flow of foreign invest ments, which necessarily hit the U. S. hardest. As a prairie lawyer, Diefen baker gained a reputation for his ability to use the emotion al appeal. As a prime minister he also has gained a reputa tion as a man indecisive on matters requiring a quick de cision. -. It was Diefenbaker's inde cision on the question of nu clear weapons for Canada that brought the U.S. chal 1 e n g e and Diefenbaker's charge of ''unwarranted in trusion in Canadian affairs:" Strictly Personal By Sydney J. Harris (c Field Enterprises. Inc. NOTICE IN WOMEN A magazine I was reading in the barber shop not long ago asked a dozen prominent men In vari ous fields, "What do you first notice in a w o m a n?" Some of ' t h e a n s w ers, of course, were suggestiv e 1 y facetious, and others were ' Harris solemn; but the only reply that showed any real insight was made by Oleg Cassini, the dress de signer. He did not mention (he figure or the posture or the clothes or any other super ficial aspect that might be ex pected from one connected with costuming. He said, rather: "What I notice first about a woman is her mouth, then her eyes . . . Her mouth tells me how she feels about her self. Her eyes say how she feels about other people - in cluding me." It it astonishing how many women utterly fail to comprehend that what shows in their mouths and eyei can totally cancel out lha effect oi their clothes and their cosmetics. In fact, the belter groomed and the mora carefully made-up, the greater the contrast between their ex ternal appearance and their inner fcrpeal. Such women spend bil lions every year on devices 'and decorations to improve their figuret and their looks - yet if the mouth it resent ful and discontented, if ihs ... )?.. -V 3Trjoni! ce!:j- luting, all of their vast ex penditure! of money and energy and time might as well have been tossed down lha drain. t This is especially true of older women, who unmistak ably reveal in their eyes and mouths the way they have coped with life, the adjust ments of maladjustments they have made, the philosophy they live by, the attitudes they have adopted toward men and other women and status and possessions and the whole fabric of their emo tional experience. If such adjustments and at titudes have been healthy and honest and generous and humorous and compassionate, then the figure and the clothes become wholly subordinate to the personality; after awhile, wo see nothing but the spirit shining out from such a per son. Contrariwise, if the emo tional structure has been ravaged by envy or petulance or telf-pity or excessive van ity, then the expensive and well-tailored clothes, the im peccable make-up and hair styling seem like a clown's costume, showing up in piti less contrast the bitter mouth, and the tortured eyes that dis close a basic dissatisfaction with one s self and with the world. ra1 V.