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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (March 17, 1963)
- fcVryone 1b Southern oreioa p"flT Tha MU Trtbun." frubllihed DaUy except Saturday by ,UtHEDrOBD PRINTING CO- ROBERT W. BUHL, Mltor HERB GREY Ailverti. nl Manlier GERALD T. LATHAM, Bm. Mn ERICW ALLEN JR.. Mne. Editor EARL H ADAMS. City Editor HARRY CHIPMAN, Telei Editor RICHARD JEWETT. Sports Editor OLIVE ST ARCHER Women;. Editor cSmcJNircujaUonJMir An Independent fH"j' Intered al iecond ''"'?',," Medlord. Oreaon. under Act ol SUBSCRIPTION RATES By MaU In Advence. 7DaHy end Sund.y-1 "' Dally and Sunday- rooa. 10.00 Daily and Sunday-3 rooa, S.00 Sunday Only One year 5,0 Single Copy (Mailed) aOe By clmer-nd Motor Routt. Dally and Sunday J year 2 00 Dally and Sunday 1 mo. L" Sunday Only 1 mo. Carrier and Vendor! Copy 10c ofrTclaTPaper ol City of Meoford OlIicIalperJIJa0BCunty United Press International Full Leaied Wire U P I Telepholo NewBplcturea ofSrlorlsl XLO-lE-RimsSOCI-ATES Ol'lcea In New York. Chi eago. Detroit. San rranclaco Lot Angeles. Seattle. Portland Denver. NfWSPAMI UIUIHIM 'ASSOCIATION NATION At EOlTOtlAl Member California Newipaper PubUihera AnoclaUon Flight o' Time Medford and Jackson County History from tha files of The Mail Tribun 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50 years ago. 10 YEARS AGO . March 17. 1953 (Tuesday) Craterlan' theater book first three-dimensional movie. Jackson county non-high school district board approves budget of $261,180. 20 YEARS AGO March 17. 1943 (Wednasdav) Five city streets to be re paired with $5,952 received from city's share of gasoline taxes. From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudge Pot" column: "The daphne is in bloom and smells as sweet as a $2 cake of drug store soap." SO YEARS AGO March 17, 1933 (Friday, Mail Tribune editor. In front page editorial, chal lenges people of Jackson coun ty to "support the law en forcement officials; stand 100 per cent behind constituted authority and the govern ment under which we live" following shooting of con stable. . Some 26,640 telephone calls received in two hours by lo cal exchange Mowing fatal shooting; twelve operators kept busy. 40 YEARS AGO March 17, 1923 (Saturday) Day is observed by holding 14 St. Patrick's dances in various parts of county. Balmy sunshine starts plow ing in rural areas. 50 YEARS AGO March 17, 1913 (Monday) City police told to "get busy and stamp out hoodlum ism and street fighting among the village smart-alecks." Taxpayers remit $190,000 In 10 days. What's Your I.Q.? Nina or ran correct h luperlor; aaven or eight Is cellent! five oi ii Is good. 1, The number of points on 4in anilpra nf a deer Is. or Is not, a reliable indication of his age? 1 Wa the 1!. S. Constltu tlon signed In New York, Philadelphia, or Washington, DC? 3. The part of a sentence u,rtirh makea an assertion about .the subject Is called what? A WKnt la the International radio distress signal for ships? 5. An author's narrative of his own life is called an ? 6. Name the three great dl' visions of the Federal Gov ernment set up by the Con' stitution. 7. Who succeeded Gen eorge C. Marshall as Chief of Staff of the Army? 8. D.A.V.G Is the abbrcv lated name of which veteran's organization? 9. Would you find penguins at the North Pole? 10. On wh8t day of the week did the Japanese sneak attack occur at Pearl Harbor? Answers 1. It not. 2. Phil delphia. 3. Predicate. 4. S.O.S 5. Autobiography. 6. Legis lative, Executive and Judicial 7. en. Dwight D. Eisenhower, 3. Disabled American Vat rant. 9. No. 10. Sunday. Beauty and the Economy The tourist industry, we are told repeatedly, is Oregon's third largest after forest products and agriculture. We are exhorted to do all we can to bring more tourists to the state, so they can leave their lovely greenbacks here to bolster our economy. TU, r vest ntfnnk- a "vflnotirn Vila rocniirno " which do not deplete any of our physical re sources, and the more that come, ana the longer they stay, the more prosperous Oregon will be. mere is mucn sense in mis argument.. But what is it that attracts outsiders to visit Oregon? IS IT our cities? No they are much like cities elsewhere. Is it our theaters or nightlife or museums? No superior ones can be found in many other localities (with, of course, the excep tion of our unique Oregon Shakespearean Fes tival). What is it then? If. we are not ereatlv Oregon's tourists are attracted here by the op portunity for outdoor recreation whether it be simply viewing magnificent scenery, water ski ing, camping, picnicking, hiking, or beachcomb ing. Few other states offer as varied a diet of out door recreation potentialities. In this lies our at traction. 117HILE, to Oregonians, v tnnnsts is hirr. mnnev participant it is all aesthetics. The thrill of a big fish fatigue after a long ride or hike through the woods, the smell of a camptire, the beauty ot a Crater Lake or a sweeping cliff on the coast, a sunset over Mt. Hood or reaches of sage country marching rows of forested green to pale purple all intellectual ana emouunai the individual can really and then only for their The kev to each of these is their naturalness. The less they are touched by the hand of man, the more attractive they are to the observer. With few exceptions, man sullies whatever he touches, and the more he touches, the more he sullies. TOURISTS in Oregon are not seeking, in the main mgn.mgrlo rrnnrra TMipv nrf Rppkinir Tia- tural beauty, as unspoiled To the extent that we allow our rivers, our streams, our air to become polluted and choked, we are destroyintr the recreationalist to seeK us we erect billboards, flashing neon alleyways, asphalt jungles, or automobile wrecking yards, we are in iact repeinng We cannot, of course, 1 i 1. . 1 "l was wnen me wmie man too late for that. But the time has long since passed when we should call a halt to over-development, over-commercialization, over-paving, over-lighting. WE HAVE no New York or San Francicso to ntrnrf. tho mptrnnolUnn snnhistipate. What we have is natural beauty for the lover of the outdoors. If itJs. craduallv or destroyed, we have then effectively cut the basis out from under our third lamest industry. This aesthetics natural beauty becomes a matter of dollars and cents importance to every resident of the state. Anything which diminish es it, diminishes the economic health of Oregon, E.A. Too Many Bugs The nhrase. "sex offenders." has a nasty con notation to it. It arouses passions, and an under standable desire that our loved ones particu larlv children be protected. Curbincr "sexually ostensibly, the nurnose of 1 ' 1 I e unacr consideration oeiuie wie wieguu iegioi' ture. The principal one is In essence, it would is "suspected of being "sexually dangerous may be given a "hearing" in court, before a judge and at least two psychiatrists, and if found to be "sexually dangerous," can be committed to an institution for treatment. rESPITE the worthy there arc some bujrs First, it would be a fruitful field for mis chievous or malicious individuals, who might wish to harrass an unliked neighbor, and sign a complaint acrainst him. Second, there is no peers only the say so of two qualified psychia trists." How many psychiatrists, no matter how well qualified, are competent to judge whether a person is "sexually dangerous" or not, unless some overt act has been committed? e TTHIRD, there is no institution in Oregon equip- ped to treat such "sexually dangerous" per sons and, indeed, little or nothing is known about what sort of treatment to give, or how ef fective it might be. Thus, mark you, a pei-son could be deprived of his liberty simply on the suspicions of a few persons, and without ever having committed any crime whatsoever. There are too many dangers in this bill, and it is not based on known medical facts. It should be killed. E.A. mistaken, the bulk of outdoor recreation for - makino - business, to the biting, the wholesome Diamond Lake, the long in the high desert, the hills, lading from daiK these are a matter for sausiacuuri which umy assess for their worth, worth to him. as possible. incentive of the outdoor out. To the extent mat mm. keen Oregon just as it '....-L . U T. 'r. nisi sei iuuu neie. us rapidly, allowed to be dancerous" persons is, a package of bills now il 1 !-1 House Bill 1129. provide that anyone that objective of the measure, in it. trial by a jury of one's Mouse Bring U t I ..attHslSilsaaaaatasV r d VB. fatw. SSSl Matter of Fact (c) New YorJO!ejlrTlbunejndlcaJl ADENAUER AS SALAN Bonn It was just after Gen. Charles de Gaulle, new ly installed in power, had ap peared before the vast crowd in the Forum of Al giers with Gen. R a o u 1 Salan at 1 is side. "I have under stood you," he said, and the wait- ajmp ing tnousanas answered with a great roar of delight. In the soft Algerian even ing, on the superb terrace of the Hotel Saint-Georges high above the troubled city, there was a celebration-dinner of young parachutist officers or ganized by Ma, de Saint-Marc now, like Gen. Salan, rot ting in jail. ,The young men were elat ed; and why not? Had they not brought de Gaulle to power on their shoulders, with Gen. Satan's complicity? Was not the triumph of de Gaulle the sure, the absolute and final guarantee of France's undying commit ment to their policy of "Al geria Francaise '? But this reporter, who had known some of the parachut ists on operations in Indo China, ventured the opinion that the commitment was not quite so final. And he even dared to suggest that Gen. de Gaulle would be promoting "Algerie Algerienne" before very long. e a FOR a moment, there was' greater danger in the air than there had ever been dur ing rough days in the Indo Chinese war. The thought that tc terrace was at least 20 feet high became uncomfortably vivid. But the young officers flush of fury died suddenly away, into shouts of incredu lous laughter. "Come now," the younger officers said, "this great man whom we alone have brought to power will never betray us!" And so there was another round of toasts. This anecdote from the for gotten past is highly relevant in Bonn today for two quite simple reasons. On the one hand, Chancellor Adenauer and the Germans, by their friendship and support, have brought Gen. de Gaulle to his present position of command ing power in Europe, much as Salan and the paratroopers brought him to power in France. On the other hand, Gen. de Gaulle plainly in tends to deal with the Ger mans and with Adenauer much as he dealt with the paratroopers and Salan. ' GEN. de Gaulle has largely concealed this fact so far, by his great charm, by his peculiar gradcur, and by Uic knack of mystery which he so supremely possesses. Yet the fact is undeniably there, in the very center of the Euro pean and German political landscape. To prove that It Is a fact, one need only list the major things Gen. de Gaulle wishes to do and is trying to do, which are directly contrary to German vital Interests. To begin with, de Gaulle is bitterly hostile to the Amer ican presence in Europe, lie openly hnpes to secure an eventual American retreat to the U o , and he may be plan ning to force a quite early withdrawal of American troops by pressing on the sen sitive button of the balance of payments. Yet the Germans regard the American military presence as their main de fense. To continue, Gen. de Gaulle is determined to impose on the European Common Mar ket an inward-looking, re strictive and protective line of economic and agricultural development. This is all very well for France, which does two-thirds of its export busi ness with the Common Mar ket countries and the nations of Uit franc-zone. k Forth Mountain mm By Joseph Alsop BUT a protective, inward looking Europe will be fatal for the Germans. They live by trade far more than the French do, and they also do two-thirds of their export business with the U. S. and other nations outside the Common Market. To survive they must export, and to ex port, the Germans must ac cept imports. Finally, there is the matter of the famous French "force de frappe," with which Gen. de Gaulle apparently hopes to defend Europe after he has forced the withdrawal of the American troops. The Germans are unan imously convinced that as a defense of Europe de Gaulle's "force de frappe" will have the approximate value of an umbrella lacking not just its covering, but also its spokes. Furthermore, there is the longer range question, wheth er it will really suit the Ger mans and the other Europeans to have France the sole inde pendent nuclear power in Europe, if and when the U. S. ever withdraws. a e SUCH are the main conflicts between Gen. de Gaulle's obvious intentions and Ger man wishes and interests. The conflicts were not much weighed in Bonn in the first genial glow of Franco-German reconciliation. At first, it was not well received here, either, when the able State Secretary of the Foreign Of fice, Dr. Karl Carstens, went to Washington and was rather insistently reminded that a forced withdrawal of Amer ican troops and the imposi tion of an inward-looking eco nomic policy on Europe might not be exactly helpful to Ger many. Yet the conflicts above-listed are now very much in the mind of every important Ger man official and political leader, even including Gen. de Gaulle's warmest German admirer. Chancellor Aden auer himself. In truth, It will not be easy for de Gaulle to deal with this whole nation as he dealt with Salan and the French parachutists. Betting against de Gaulle is always dangerous. But it is highly premature to conclude that de Gaulle will surely bend Europe to his will. What of France, De By ERIC SEVADEID The governments of the West, our own included, have been gazing with wild sur mise at the limitless ex panse of Gaul lism since he anno u n c c d France's free hold claim to tho fiitiirA rtf rWjjLTU in I ' these two sivereid months t h e cries and criticism have con centrated on his threat to undo the Herculean labors of 15 years for European unity and on the future dangers of a Europe once again living and acting from the national istic instinct and nothing more. Save in private, almost no one of public consequence has tried to answer the question of whether France has. or will have, the capacity to provide consistent and lasting leader ship for a "Europe of Father lands." It Is a seriously de batable question. If the pres ent French government can entertain dreams of such an elevated role, it is not only because Charles de Gaulle has a stronger will than any cur rent European statesman, but because there Is "a role wan dering aimlessly about in search t. a hero to play it" to quote Gamal Abdel Nasser from another context. Nasser, Today & Tomorrow By Walter (el 1863. The WHAT ABOUT IT? The first report on man power, which the President has just transmitted to Con gress, raises a question about u n e in payment to which there is no obvious answer. Why is it that for five consecu tive years since 1957 both under Llppmann Eisenhower and under Kenne- dy-the average rate of unem ployment, 5.5 per cent, has been so much higher than it was in the years immediately after the war, when the aver age rate was less than 4 per cent? Moreover, in the past 10 years, there has been three business recessions; and after each recovery, the rate of un employment has been higher than after the preceding re covery. These facts indicate, as the Labor Department study ac companying the President's report puts it, that in recent years the American economy has been moving away from full employment rather than toward it. e IT WAS by studying this gloomy situation that the administration came to the conclusion that corporate and individual income taxes arc so high that they are depress ing consumer demand and spending for capital invest ment. Though I believe whol ly that this is a sound conclu sion, I am moved to ask whether the administration remedy for economic stagna tion is adequate. What moves me to ask this question is a reading of two lectures by the managing di rector of the International Monetary Fund, Mr. Per Ja cobsson, one delivered at New York University and the other at the American Bankers As sociation meeting in Washing ton. In reading these lectures, we must begin by remember ing that Mr. Jacobsson is a very distinguished Swedish economist, whose ideas de scend from the same original source as those of John May nard Keynes. Mr. Jacobsson, therefore, is in favor of the prescription, which comes from Keynes, that In order to overcome the sluggishness of an economy it is necessary to expand the demand for goods and services. a lyHERE Mr. Jacobsson dif- fers from the administra tion program is not about the tax cut and the budgetary deficit. He differs about wage policy. In substance, he says that, while expanding demand can stimulate growth, it will not cure unemployment un less it is accompanied by a freezing of production costs and particularly wage rates. If I read him correctly, he says that it is quite possible to stimulate the growth of the economy without making much of an impression on un employment. It is very inter esting and quite significant that Mr. Jacobsson cites as his authority none other than John Maynard Keynes him self. Keynes, he says, thought that, while it is necessary that "demand should be increas ed," he was no less insistent that "in time of marked un employment, money wages however, in what may have been a fitful gust of modesty, added that he did not mean the role of leadership but of "Interaction and experimenta tion." De Gaulle means lead ership. , The role is there by default. Britain chose not to seize the leadership of Europe at the close of the war when she alone wore the hero's mantle, though whether she had the strength to do it at that time is another debatable question. Italy has renounced any role of power whatsoever and, in deed, remains uncomfortable as a spear carrier in the wings. Germany is not only amputated, but still on parole, obliged to report her behavior to the constituted authorities at intervals. There is only France. It is a France blessed by some in dividual leaders and thinkers of brilliance, a France finally cleared of an unmanageable and unmanaged empire, a France with the beginnings of modern military power, with a modernized, efficient indus try, but, underneath all this plaster, a France that may still suffer hemorrhage at any moment from social wounds unhealed since World War I and possibly since the French Revolution. One generalizes about a whole people, especially a peo ple as gifted as the French, at his own risk, but it seems to me from consider able Lippminn Washington Port should be kept stable for un employment to be reduced." As a matter of fact. Lord Keynes went further than that. In his celebrated book, "The General Theory of Em ployment," Keynes declared that in a given organization, equipment and technology, real wages and output are uniquely correlated so that "in general, an increase in employment can only occur to the accompaniment of a de cline in the rate of real wages." This decline in real wages would happen if money wages are frozen (while busi ness is slack) while prices rise during the period of recovery from the recession. TtfR. JACOBSSON'S view, and even more that of Lord Keynes, differs from that of the administration in this respect. The administra tion has been trying, and with considerable success, to keep wage increases from exceed ing the rise in the productiv ity of labor. Mr. Jacobsson's view is that this policy will not lead to the same reduction in unemployment as would be achieved if, during the expan sion of demand, money wage rates were kept consistent or rising more slowly than pro ductivity. Mr. Jacobsson argues that this unpopular remedy for un employment is necessary be cause, in the past few years, we have been in a "new situa tion." The post-war inflation has worked itself off; since 1959, wholesale prices have Been practically stable, and the cost of living has not risen much. During the inflationary years, individual firms could grant wage increases because they could raise prices with out a decline in their sales But with inflation ended, most firms cannot raise prices with out losing sales and therefore reducing their profit margins In this kind of situation, Mr. Jacobsson believes, it is not possible to cure unemploy ment merely by cutting taxes and expanding demand. It is necessary, also to stabilize la bor costs. VfEEDLESS to say, this Is an A ' unpopular remedy. As ev idence of it there is Governor Rockefeller's recent state- ment about economic growth. He too wants to expand de mand by cutting taxes. But he is discreetly silent about wage policy. An analysis of the figures shows why the country is more likely to put up with the existing unemployment than to brace itself to the disagreeable remedy which Keynes and Jacobsson recom mend. Who are the unemploy ed? In the main they are the politically feeble. They are young people many of them without votes. They are the older workers. They are Ne groes. They are workers in de clining and unstable indus tries and in the depressed areas. They are in general un skilled workers. There are some 4 million of them not counting another 2.5 million who are partially employed. All of them together are not a politically formidable group; and as long as they are taken care of neither party is likely to take on the kind of opposition which the Jacobs-son-Kcynes formula would arouse. While the evidence of past Gaulle, and Glory? French residence that there exists in France a deep seated social disorder. It was shock ingly revealed at the time of the Dreyfus case, again in the squalid defeat of 1940, again in the incredibly messy pan orama of Algeria, with Frenchman against French man; and the organized plots to kill De Gaulle still suggest implacable hatreds between groups and classes. Can this poisoning of the blood be cured in the ten years De Gaulle reportedly allots himself? One is entitled to wonder, and to wonder if the nation which has osccllat cd so vary long between po litical authoritarianism and semi-anarchy, which has nev er achieved internal peace, can preside over the external peace of Europe. It has always seemed to me that France is not much more of a true community of men with a common sense of iden tity and general purpose than is, say, greater New York a human melange which, I suspect, would come apart at the seams under heavy shock, as France has come apart in the past. Dc Gaulle has said that he cannot conceive of a France without glory. I had thought he meant that such a France would not be HIS kind of France. But perhaps he meant something very differ ent that unless France ridts the crest in "grandeum," it tiiiiii -.-i-w-. THINGS YOU WOULDN'T KNOW ABOUT IF YOU HADN'T READ THEM HERE Actor Peter Lawford'i wife hat a brothar in politics ... An early day tattler doing tha f irtt four minute mil wat prevented from doing it by a bear doing a three minute mile . . . William Tell't ton died at th age of 87 from head injuriet after falling over an apple crate . . . More than half the people in tha world have to go to bad at night without a turkey tandwich . . . Poptidet ar served on toatted bunt in Alaska . . . General La coined a tort of a phrase when he turrended to General Grant laying, "You haven't jutt been whittling in Dixie, Grant baby". . , .. Dan Beard, founder of th Boy Scoutt, uted to walk around in hit ttalking faet . . . Termites har been known to attack wood when thy couldn't find anything better to eat . . . Thit newspaper hasn't won Pulitser Prise for at least 29 years . . . Th ancient Ro mans got pretty tick of all-number dialing and who wouldn't with numbers like VII VII II VI I IV I, Area Code V O III . . . All words tound peculiar when spelled without an a, , i, or u . . . George Wathington received a battlefield promotion from Pfc. to general. WHAT IN THE WORLD DO THEY MEAN BY THAT? DEPARTMENT In the March 16-22 issue of TV Guide on the star of th Dr. Kildaire series: "Richard Chamberlain's sole claim to fame is that h is famous." JUNGLE GOURMET NOTE "What ar we having for dinner tonight?" Inquired the cannibal chief, horn from a hard day at th office, "Baked beings," replied hit wife. LEGISLATIVE REPORT We treasure a note from one of our legislators in response to our letter suggesting some action on a pending bill: "I am pleased to see that your comprehensive analysi of this problem is not prejudiced by knowledge of th subject." V5 IF DEPARTMENT If the expression "There are more ways than on to tkin a cat" it true, why is it that most of ut don't even know th one way? If dog foodt ar now mad with polyunsaturates, why it ii that torn dogt ar still worrying themselves tick about their health? If thit it a free country, why do we ttill have to pay for everything? KNOW YOUR NEIGHBOR Klamath Falls is the duck capitol of the world, having more ducks per capita than one can conveniently shake a lake at. It has been said (not by us) that they had to widen their main street to paint the white line down the center. It is famous for yams, lambs and hams and as a sort of a back door to Crater Lake in Jackson County. ABOUT THE IRISH Only a third at large in area. Ireland hat a million more people than Oregon. It exportt linen, New York copi and certain important ingredients of Irish coffee. Before the great potato famine of 1846-48, th population reached 8't million. Hunger drove millions to emigrate to Amer ica where they war welcomed at good cititent, St. Pat rick's Day (celebrating th day that St. Patrick chased the Blarney stone out of Ireland) it observed here by people from County Donegal, County Mayo and th County Court. recoveries does not at first glance seem to confirm Mr. Jacobsson's theory could it be that he has a point? I should like to see a qualified spokes man of the administration ar gue the issue which without in the least pretending any expertness of my own I have ventured to raise. Is it possi ble to reduce unemployment substantially by the tax bill alone? comes apart; that it lacks the social cohesion to endure ad versity or mediocrity, which Britain, for example, can en dure and yet remain Britain, a homogeneous people. A few great men of gener ous vision like Jean Monnet excepted, most Frenchmen, from peasant to Paris intellec tual, are spiritual isolation ists; they arc driven by cen tripetal, not centrifugal, cm tional forces, many of them to the point of undisguised contempt for the American "do-good" psychology and tra dition, Rightly or wrongly, any number of visitors to France share the impression that they distrust and dislike foreigners because they dis trust and dislike one another. For the most part, they seem profoundly disinterested in other lands and peoples. That is their privilege; and this is not to say that our own quite different faults work less hardship on others. It is to say that a people so con stituted are not nature's choice for the sustained leadership of a common alliance. It is to say that a man who believes power is everything In diplo macy has a long way yet to go before he can convince others that the political pow er of France rests on social foundations dependable in all weather and built to last. (Distributed 1963. by Th Hall Syndicate, Inc.) (All Rights Reserved) I Communications Conscience It Tender To the Editor: Curiosity hat been said to kill a cat, but the nature of human being have this merciful lesson for himself to learn. Each person in his life sDan has enough sins, enough troub les of his own private fail ings and evils, to entertain himself for a double lifetime. So the curiosity of another person's affairs could only strive from envy or an evil mind. The evils, worries, miser ies of a fellow person are real ly his own private inherit ance. Yet there are busybod ics inquisitive enough of an other person, to seek out hii morals and virtues, to do in justice to a soul who has sup posedly never known to sin. Maybe by digging deep enough they may find hit grandma was an illegitimat baby. But if there's anything bf hind a locked door or a bar red window, there will b sure a nose poked at the key hole or thru the bars. They would train their eyes to see if there be anything that would blush if the lights were turned on or to sec anything of shameful manners which is not an inkling of their busi ness but the owners. Nothing pleases a busybody more than to be fed with tales of tragedies, or illnatured se crets. Tell a busybody of saints and royal families and its out of line to their interest. There is nothing meaner un der the sun than for one busy, body to gather tales in anoth er busybody's territory. This is inescapable aa it alwava reflects in attitude and convic tion. A Busybody s conscience is tender and frequently tor mented. E. Dykes Gregory rd.. Central Point, Ort. I