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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 5, 1963)
S3 ram 4 A iubl!hei Daily except Saturday by MEDFORD PRINT1WG CO ROBERT w auilb ?im MONDAY, AUGUST 5, 1963 MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, OREGON HERB GREV AdverUlln Manlier GERALD T LATHAM. Tlua lftr ERIC W ALLEN JR. Ian; Editor EARL H ADAMS. City Editor HAMY CHUM AlJ. Teles Mttor RICHARD JEWKTT, Sporta Ed tor OLIVE ST ARCHER Women 'a Edltoi DALE ER1CKSON. ClreuUUonJjg An Independent Newipapei Entered aa tecond claaa matter at Medford Oreion under Act or March 3. 1897 SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mall In Advance " Daily and Sunday 1 year S18.00 " Daily ana ouna.y j Dalit and Sunday 3 moa 5.00 Sunday Only One year M-00 ' Single Copy MalJed m r-7 . And Mnt1, Route. . Dally and Sunday 1 year $21.00 Dally ana sunoay ' . Sunday Only I mo. Carrlel and Vendor! Copy too OftlcTaTPaper it City of M'e'ord omclaljwperoljailiai)ll County United Preia International ii I MMimA wire O. P 1. Telephoto Newplcturea "JIEMBER OK AUDIT BUREAU Advertising RPrenuuva; easo Detroit. San lanclco. Lot Anselea Seattle. Portland .' Denver. 2 niwspami rumsHiii ASSOCIATION RATION At EDITgtlAl Memtier California Newspaper Publishers Aaaoctatlon Flight o' Time Medford and Jackson County History from the files of The Mail Tribuno 10, 20. 30, 40 and 50 years ago. 10 YEARS AGO August s, 19S3 (Wednesday) The consolidation ot two Jackson county school dist ricts, Derby and Butte Falls, becomes effective. ; Preliminary report on pro posed Medford storm tewer projects, with an estimated total cost of $229,880, were presented to the city council tor study last night. SO YEARS AGO August 5, 1943 (Thursday) Seven infant pupplei left on Glenn H. Utz doorstep. From Arthur Perry'i "Ye Smudge Pot" column: "The first shlvarce in many a moon was perpetrated on the Main Slem last eve. Enough war es sential gasoline was wasted to keep 14 jeeps running three minutes." 30 YEARS AGO Auaust 8. 1933 (Saturday) Fate of county judge charged with ballot theft in hands of Klamath county Jury; stale charges in final argument accused was "mas ter mind" in theft of ballots on eve of recount by court. Gladiolus show opens in riot of color, with many exhibits. Oregon s Economy Oregon is going about its economic develop ment in tne wrong way, and it hasn t much mor time to straighten itself out, is the message whic Howard Morgan brings back to Oregon. The former Oregon public utility commis sioner has concluded a two-year portion of t term as a federal power commissioner. This has given him the opportunity both to see first-hand how industrialization ana population growth are affecting other pails of America, and to study industrial trends; and he has taken some time to correlate these to the state of Oregon. He has seen a New England river into which a firm employing a few nundred persons has been allowed to dump industrial wastes with a bacteria count comparable to raw sewage from a city ot lso,uUJ persons. And he has seen towns in the bast, not many years ago aptly desenbed as charming, in which the sun is no longer visible at any time because of the overcast of pollutants IVf ORGAN has also seen unemployment and T squalor and slums (one has but to look around Washington, D.C., to see the worst as well as the best of the United States). And all of this is coming our way, Morgan says, unless we do something now to head it off. We don't have to, and shouldn't, give away land, precious natural resources, and tax ad vantages as we re now doing to entice new industry and to encourage the expansion of ex isting industry, says Morgan. In the first place, this encourages industries which are poor neighbors rather than good neigh bors who share the tax responsibility to help Duild new schools, streets, sewaee disposal plants, water systems, and so on. In the second place, industry has been coming to Oregon and will continue to come in ever-increasing propor tion compared with other areas of the country, whether we dispense incidental favors or not. for we have in ample supply the ingredient which most other parts of the country are running out oi iresn water. "We Off-LimiU Boys Hav To Stick Together" y i con- 40 YEARS AGO August S, 1923 (Sunday) Tourist travel here tlnues to break record. Kiwanis club holds its first Weekly luncheon. 80 YEARS AGO August S. 1913 (Tuasday) Petitions circulated calling for approval of road bond election, Capt, Edgar Simpson of North Bend drives from Marshfleld to Medford In 12 hours. What's Your I.Q.? Nina or ton correct h euperler; eeen or eioM ii excellent; five or si h toed. 1. Name the Battleship board which the Japanese signed the surrender ending WWII. 2. Which river in the U. S s sometimes referred to as the "Father of Waters"? There are eight stales whose names begin with the letter N; can you name them? 4. Would a person suffering from herpetophobia fear snake eyes, reptiles, or snake plants? 5. Is an erudite person rude, learned, or uneducated individual? 6. Hoop snakes actually curve themselves Into hoops, taking the tail into the teeth and rolling along; true or false? 7. Complete the Biblical quotation, "It is easier for camel to go through the eye OI a needle . . 8. What is Uie modern birth- stone for September? 9. Was Uie first diplomat to represent the U. S. abroad John Adams, Benjamin Frank lin, or John Jay? 10. Name the author who wrote "Rip Van Winkle," and -me Legend of Sleepy Hoi low." Answarst 1. Missouri. 2. Tho Mississippi. 1. Nob., Nav, If.H.f N.J. N.M., N.Y., N.C Jf.D. 4. Reptiles. S. Learned. . False. 7. ". . . than for a rich man to ontor into the Kingdom of Cod. I. Sapphire. Ben). Franklin. 10. Wash ington Irving. fPHE MAIN thing Morgan would have us do with regard to Oregon s economy, then, is to prepare our state for the invasion sure to hit our children and grandchildren, and even most of us living today. He would have us concentrate on passing protective laws and forming active programs to assure the conservation of our nat ural resources, their reclamation where neces sary, and orderly planning for their future use to fullest advantage for all citizens. Morgan emphasizes that this is not some thing to nod our heads about and set aside for some other day. It is a fact that life in Oregon within the next generation will be completely different from what it has ever been before, be cause of the flow of people and industry sure to L IK. L I.. - lJl. uuine iicie, ye nave umy a lew years in wiucn to plan, to avoid becominc a blitrhterJ area like . . . . v ' . . many in the hast which had natural blessincs despoiled and looted. The second main thine Moriran would have us do with retrard to Oregon's economv is to iec- . .i . w . v .. . " . ognize mat we cannot solve all ot our own prob lems without help. UNEMPLOYMENT, he says, will never be solved in Oregon so lone as it remains a na tional problem. If we attract more jobs to Oregon, we will merely attract more unemployed workers from some other region of the country. But if we worn with the other states and the federal government to defeat unemployment nationally, then when we get new jobs in Oregon they will be filled by the unemployed in Oreeon. closer to the ideal of one new job per new , immigrant or youngster coming into the labor force. freight rates to Eastern markets, power in ter-ties between the Northwest and the South west, and other regional and national matters beyond Oregon's power alone to control, are all areas in which the state should be workintr. m stead of pretending that the federal government and other political subdivisions are the natural enemies of Oregon, says Morgan. Morgan's message is not a comforting one, but it has the ring of prophecy. His anticipation or the problems to be raised bv the new life which will be forced upon this region, and his suggestions tor heading them off, are logical. We hear a warning voice; now, will we do any- iu:. i i r .-. i r r. i uiiiig auuui in uapnai i iess, saiem. Foreign News: Summit Meet Possible; Berlin Threat Dims; China Hinting By WILLIAM J. FOX United Press International Notes from the foreign news cables: Possible Summit The gathering of high-powered statesmen in Moscow this week could well lead to a summit meeting at the Unit ed Nations in New York this fall. With the signing of the partial nuclear test ban agree ment out of the way, the dip lomats now go to work in In the Day's News y 'RANK JINKINS Communications Letters to tho Editor must bear tho name and address ot tho writer, although under certain circumstances tho use of a Den name or initial for publication Is oermissible. Tho Mail Tribuno reserves the rinht tn adit all letters with a view to clarification and condensation. Letter submitted for publication must not exceed 400 words. The lettara printed In this column do not necessarily represent tho views of I.) paper. In fact tho contrary Is often tho case. Summer Arts Blend Southern Oregon is building an enviable reputation as a summer cultural center. The Oretron Shakespearean FpsMvnl nt Aah land, the oldest of America's summer Shake spearean theaters, has inspired emulation all over the nation. Ashland's nichtlv reuertoi-v will hp complemented this month by a promising new venture, the twlight and starlight concert of the Peter Britt Gardens Music and Arts Festival Assn. concerts, under the direction of John Tra deau, conductor of the Portland Pons mrhpstia. will be in the historic open-air amphitheater of me rerer Dim uaraens in Jacksonville, a com munity or cnarm and redolence of Oregon's past. Both Ashland and Jacksonville exploit the region's pleasant summer climate in hlonrlino- th aits under open skies. The Peter Britt Gardens concerts, which berin Auc 11. are enhancement of a tradition of all Oregonians. The Oregonian, Portland. "We know of no spectacle an rirliVnlniia oc the British public in one of its periodical fits nf morality." Thomas Babington, Lord Macaulay 1 ein lotnv - Mark en tho Moon To the Editor: I've always been under the impression that according to a state law II candidates must file an account of all campaign ex penses. Have read the papers very carefully but, to date haven t seen where our Gov. ernor has filed such a state ment covering his many po litical trips at the taxpayers expense: Olympla, San Fran Cisco, Illinois, Washington D. C, Massachusetts, New York and Miami, to say noth ing of the regular tri-weekly state Journeys. After putting his man speeches together, cross-word like, I have come up with humdinger of an idea. Save the taxpayers the $20 billion estimated cost of placing man on the moon by sending him up there free. How? Very simple, just take three of Mark s political trial balloons, put two side by side on the ground, cover with a fire proof tarp, enshrine the astro naut snugly atop the third and place it on top, point him in the right direction and then touch a match to those under nealh. BANG I I I WHOOM and he will be up there be fore the gas and smoke is cleared away. Bring him back? No need to, as all he has to do Is release the gas from the ascension balloon and, Presto! the snow and ice the moon is supposed to be covered with will be melted and in short time the entire planet will be covered with a green, luscious growth. As the supply of balloons will be inexhaustable, others can go up in the same manner and in a short time the planet will modernized to the ex tent ot drive-ins and snack bars. Reward? No thanks. Being of a very modest nature I couldn't accept, but willing to do a small task, the privilege of lighting those to send Mark up there. Claude M. Hall 2860 Placer rd. Sunny Valley, Ore Wo ARE Proud To the Editor: Just a word ot appreciation for the very fine reviews done by uuve Starcher, George Bell and Eva Hamilton on the Shake spcare plays. The insight, perception and sensitivity displayed should make you very proud to have them on your staff. The re views were equal to anything appearing In any metropoli tan daily. Viva la Tribune. R. D. Werner 531 Pennsylvania avc. Medford Now Imago To the Editor: Your recent editorial, "Sundown No More," reporting the "new' treatment racial minorities are receiving in Medford, was superb! Since it was developed in part from Inquiries 1 had made for a report I am pre paring for the next meeting of the Medford Human Rights Council, I think your readers should know a few additional facts that you shyly chose to leave out. (I can hear some of your readers now; "Eric Allen shy?" And I can hear their laughter.) The Human Rights Council Is trying to determine its ac complishments and explore future responsibilities. What other towns arc diing or have done is of interest to our of ficers and members in evalu ating our activities. The question I had posed to Mr. Mark Smith, director of the Civil Rights divlsio of the Oregon Bureau of Labor. was, "in the area of civil lib erties, how does Medford stand in comparison to other communities in Oregon?" Mr. Smith answered that he considered Medford one of the most progressive com munlties in the state and he went on to say: 1. That probably the Med ford people did not realize now the Medford "reputa tion" had changed in Port land and San Francisco. 2. That Medford's progress was important because the community had not wasted time explaining or apologiz Ing for circumstances that had created the earlier, well deserved, "bad" reputation. 3. That the "new Medford Image" among officials, mi nority citizens and minority group leaders up and down the Pacific Coast, was "due solely to the editorials writ ten by Eric Allen." I can hear you say that you couldn't have done it alone. that many other peode have worked hard to help make our town healthier and hap pier and fairer, in fact and in spirit. And that of course Is true but, when leadership has been exercised, and results have been accomplished, then rec ognition is due. And so I hore von feel a lit. tie less lonely in the editorial chair. Speaking for vour many friends, and in the he editorial sense: "We salute you! Well done!" Robertson E. Collins P.O. Box 1309 Medford From Washington: The big nuclear powers plan to sign (at Moscow) the test ban treaty almost exactly on the 18th anniversary of the bomb at Hiroshima that signalled the age of nuclear China more tightly into dip weapons. The signing has lomatic isolation because of their bland and quiet way to see what other agreements might be worked out between East and West. W. Averell Harriman led the way with his open explorations that led to the nuclear arrangement. Now Secretary of State Dean Rusk will go about checking Soviet intentions on further relaxation ot cold war ten sions. He will probe and prob ably question, but he is ex pected mostly to listen, for Wsshington sources say there will be no serious negotia tions with the Soviets without full consultations with the Western allies. Whether these probes will result in further rounds of quiet diplomacy or to a full-blown summit per haps at the United Nations remains to be seen. But the fact that Soviet Premier Niklta Khrushchev appears determined to drive Red been set for today, the eve of the anniversary. It was at 9:15 a.m., Hiro shima time, on Aug. 6, 1945, that crewmen of the U. S. bomber Enola Gay watched the parachute borne bomb erupt into the fireball that killed the city of Hiroshima. Three days later, at 11:02 a.m. Aug. 9, in Nagasaki, the second atom bomb in history its beligerence in their ideo logical batUe, indicates there will be continued easing of cold war pressures. Discount Threats Western officials are dis counting threats made against Berlin traffic by East German Communist Leader Walter Ulbricht. They expect no trouble in the immediate fu- in... 4KB. c : the starter's gun for the nu clear arms race ETATEFUL question: ' What would the present world be like If we had re sisted the temptation to drop The Bomb on a Japan that was already facing defeat? with his new co-existence campaign, will keep a tight rein on the East Germans. American Satellite Nationalist China is quiet ly trying to tell Premier 1 their throate from Sinkiang Khrushchev that if Chiang I and Manchuria which they Kai-shek gets back to the feel would be likely if mainland, a capitalist China I Chiang's forces conquer Ilia won't necessarily be an Amer- mainland again. The Nation ican satellite. The National-1 alists would like to convince ists fear that t h e Russians would rather deal with Com munist boss Mao Tse-tung, no matter how difficult he gets, rather than have an Amer ican client government run- nine China. The Rusians are I not anxious to have American I forget about Uncle Sam if rocket bases looking down they go back to the mainland. the Soviets this wouldn't necessarily follow. But, in view of the vast amount of aid already given to Chiang's people on Formosa, it will be hard lo sell Moscow on the idea that the Nationalists will Strictly Personal By Sydney J. Harris let Field Enterprises. Inn. PSYCHIC PAIN I was spending the week end with a friend whose character and outlook on life I much ad mire. On Sat-1 urday morn- j ing, I accom-) panied him to his barber, in the little town where' he spends his summers. The barber was a Herri sullen and un responsive man, and when we left I asked my friend why he put up so equably with such surly treatment. "I wouldn't care to have my hair cut by such an unpleasant fellow I said. Si A NOTHER question: WHAT IS COMMUNISM? Well, THIS is communism: A T THE East German town of Hohegeis, two persons a man and a women, presum ably man and wife, reached the point where they could take it no longer. So they made a break for liberty across the plowed strip of land that lies to the east of the twin barbed wire fences Me Tarzan, You Un-Self-Governable By Arthur Hoppe Honestly, you won't believe where I've been. But I've been trekking through the that constitute the boundry hefrt of Darkest Africa between Communist East Germany and the Free West. They were dressed like farm driven onward by the inner certainty that somewhere in the primordial vastnesses workers, and the man carried i""?1 thrlve t'lbf of '?bled White Apes. Not ordinary run-of-the-mill fabled White Apes, mind you, but White Protestant Middle-Class Apes. No boyhood reader of Mr. Edgar Rice Burroughs could believe otherwise. What else, not killed. He we boyhood readers ask, his scythe and could" have transpired in these many decades since last we left Tarzan all alone in a scythe over his shoulder, When they were well out Into the cleared strip, two communist East German bor- aer guards opened fire on them. The women fell with a bullet In her leg. The man was hit but threw away managed to scramble over the first fence. He was hit again, and dived into a clump of th tunele with Jane? And riisn Deiween tne iwo rows Cheeta? of barbed wire. Many Incidents io tne tailor: in ansunr to Mrs. R. s. Ashenberner'a letter published in vour namr July 26, 1963. She refers to an Incident In. voiving a child struck bv car, driven by teen-agers, and ine apparent disinterest snown by the police unon their arrival. The lady asks for an explanation. Here is one. incompetence! mis word covers a uroat aeai oi me soinns-on srmmrl this valley. The teen-am punks do as they please, and the city police are unahlo tn do anything about it Either unaoie or unwilling. I ve witnessed manv ItiH. is and under, out at 2 or 3 the mornina. imnicim annKing beer and hot red oing around one of the local truck stop cafes, and other all night establishment in ntH. lord and vicinity. Curfew' This is the biggest farce of u. In the last Sunday paper an account was given involving the arrest of two teen-age boys arrested by the Central Point police for violation nf curfew. This was supposed to have solved a rash of prowl- "iK in ana around Central roini. inis Is really a loke in mid April of this year iu-.vear-old boy was struck n a cross walk by a teen-aner driving a car. The boy wasn't seriously injured, and ua. back In school in a couple of ciays. No one was punished fnr mis incident either. The driver of the car said e did nothing wrone. so for uie most part this aati.ifitvt the local law. Two witnesses gave halfhearted accounts of the incident, and two others ercn't allowed to sav anv- thing. Medford and its little sister ities deserve the same treat- ment Portland received some time ago. When the city law enforce ment proved Incompetent, the State Police moved in and cleaned up a few filthy situ ations mat had been passed up. One thing we do have in this area, and that is a State Police force comparable to any other state of the union. No. Mrs. Ashenberner, the incident of which you spoke WATCHING tourist - Ho- hegeis Is a resort town. and hundreds of tourists were in the vicinity - described to the correspondents what hap pened. He said: "The man and the woman were running across the bare And yet many burning Questions remained to be ans wered - the most burning of all being the one we Western visitors to Africa always ask: Would these indigenous na tives prove ready for self-gov ernment? So, oh, how my heart leapt up when my sturdy native pi T. i In wmn WM samba rounded a bend in the shot .in the leg and fell. Then, tortuous Lumumba and there auaaen y, i saw a soioicr m at ,ong last ,ay tne Lost City an East German (communist) of Greystoke Tribe -uniform come out of theseveral hundred ranchstyle bushes at the edge of the bare hom with Datlos and Dicture strip. He was a sergant, I think. He stood behind the first fence, took a dead aim at the wounded man and fired. "The poor refugee crumpled under the fire of the guard's submachine gun and fell. He was dead. Shortly afterward, about 25 East German soldiers and a communist armored car rolled up. They led the limp ing, bleeding woman away The blood-covered body of the slain man was picked up and removed later. windows plus a large bill board reading: "Welcome to New Tarzana Acres. Restrict ed Lots, Low Dn. Payment to Vets." Stepping cautiously ashore. my trusty .0006 Mouser at the ready, I was greeted by a distinguished-looking Ape in Bermuda shorts, a Hawaiian sport shirt and dark glasses. "You are unbelievable" I cried. "My name," said the Ape coldly, "is Dr. Billie Sol Livingstone. And you pre sume. I apologized, and Dr. Liv ingstone, after selling me a split-level ranch house and 12 communism continue to exist tons of non-existent fertilizer in a world that Is Increase- scientifically desif.ned for my Ingly ' concerned with civil non-existent lawn, seemed liberties and the rights of mollified. Indeed, he kindly man? explained tne weird system of There is no such thing as government these White Pro- civil liberty under commun- testant Middle Class Apes Ism. have somehow evolved. As you might suspect, it's unbe lievable. "We have," he began, "two deities: Gop, the great white elephant, and Dem, the bray- WAT'S communism. A FINAL question: a-Pan anvthinff aa STIITT. ing jackass. The followers of each are irreconcilable foes on every issue." Gop and Dem differ wide ly, then? "Completely." he said, "depending on which is in charge. If Dem rules, Gop is against everything Dem does. Then, when Gop lakes over, It continues Dem's pro gram, over, of course, the vi olent opposition of the fol lowers of Dem." I asked why. Dr. Livingstone seemed puzz led. "How else," he said, "could we preserve our tra ditional two-deity, system?" Amazing, I said. And how was the tribal leader chosen'.' "Basically," he said, "it de pends on which Ape has the most coconuts." Was weallh the only criterion? "Holy Ed gar, no!" said Dr. Livingstone. "To occupy the White Hut. an Ape must also have good teeth, a firm handshake and wavy hair on his chest. A large and loyal family also helps. It saves squabbling over Cabinet posts." I asked what ail tnese qual ities had to do with leader ship. "With what'.'" s;ud Dr. Livingstone. Well, 1 know it will come as a shock to all boyhood read ers to learn that the heirs ot noble Tarzan have descended lo an unbelievably weird cul ture rife with corruption. demagogucry, and oligar-! chical tendencies. But we must manfully do our duly as representatives of our high ' Western civilization and re- i luctantly rule that these poor, backward Apes arc far from ready for self-govern ment. "He's in pain," replied my friend, "and I have a great sympathy with pain-especially the kind that can't be seen with the eye." "What do you mean?" I asked him. "I mean that people like him are suffering from intensa psychic pain," he explained. "Most of us can sympathize with someone suffering from cancer or a broken leg, or any physical ailment. We make al lowances for them, if they ara cranky or withdrawn. "Yet the really awful pain of the human animal is psychic pain, of which the person himself may bo unaware. It's my belief that men and women liks my barber are suffering acutely, almost all the time, and I feel sorry for them. I don't say I'll go out of my way to ba with then but I won't go out of my way lo avoid them, either." "A lot of people suffer but aren't that unpleasant," I demurred. "That's irue," he said, "but each personality copes with its problems in tho best way it can-sometimes in the only way il can. Some people drink, soma lie. some are cruel, and the really unharmv ne simply retreat into a pri va'.e world of their own. My barber has a person ality we call 'n-.iserable'-bocauss he's in misery much of the time." "It doesn't make him any more likeable for me to know lhat," I said. "No. it doesn't he agreed. "But. then, a beg ger isn't likeable. A lepor isn't attractive. Uuforlunate people shouldn't have to be winning in order lo win our sympathy. In fact, ih less winning they are, ti'8 more we should feci sorry for them. "H seems to me." lie con linueri, "that all of us could handle people IiUc thai much ocucr u we understood lhat they arc in Dam. Not physical pam. which wc can easily idcmify with, but mental pam o! some sort, which began at an early ase. Once we grasp "11 idci. we no longer aeiu mem, or anlly toward isn't the only one of its kind locally. There are many, and will continue to be, until the right people open their eyes. G. L. Murray, P. O. Box 904. Central Point, Ore. Illusions To the Editor: The new test ban treaty sounds good to both sides because we can continue to enjoy our Illu sions, while the Russians can keep right on supplying them. inis latest promises to be the most successful since Barnum. Now that thev have fallen out with their former Chinese Comrades, what more Perfect illusinn rvlnl4 h. trived than for the Russian scaUered Halls. Small craft to blame the latter for their warmngs were ra"d along own future infractions? When fallout comes out of Asia, as it shall, it should be as suspect as the recent pollt leal one. so opportunely man ufactured. Harvey Robertson 103 North Central avt. Medford Tropical Storm Becomes Squalls Miami -1TP- Tropical storm Arlene. a deflated hurricane, "fell apart" early todav and became an easterly wave of squalls east of Puerto Rico. Another moderate easterly wave moved through south riorida bringing rain and re- react unplcns Iheir unpleas antness. They arc. as il were, patients in life, not people, ;i"d they carry their sick bed around with them every where they go." "I'd still rather get my hair cut by a friendly barber," I said. "So would I." he smiled. Bui even though my going to him doesn't make him anv better, in some way I like to think lhat it makes me bet ter. It gives me a greater tol erance for people of his sort, and it helps me to subdue mv own dissatisfactions. When I see his unexpressed and un known poin at being what ha has become. I fed renewed eratituHo ti-,-5 r , to govern himself do so. On live ins.de that , heU Pror, the grounds that he deserves ; ablv lhat s !, . i ,,' , him more than' I should." Oh, I know this decision will cause trouble. It alwavs docs. And sometimes I think maybe we ought to lay down our burden of higher wisdom and let anybody who wants what he gets. THE STWVTHtT "THE SCANDAL" EXCLUSIVE in THIS MONTH S1SSI.E II ! a mm . u r i. if i-i' mmmm 'i -c,Z77't-' V.: 1 the southeast coast. The weather bureau at San Juan. P. R.. in its final ad visory on what had been the year s i:it hurricane, said Arlene was completely dis organized and winds were not expected to exceed 25 (o 30 tw aour. . 1 1. i i 1 I .1 A JSrt ' w O r.P"h.? '.I' "," rU' ,n " ,h" Welle Btms-n,. which says, 'All tho world loves a lover !" n,.n,a which