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MONDAY,
MlDTORDvlWrBIBUNI
""Everyone io southern CTrexon
Beaaa The Mail Tribune"
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' BOBERf-W RUHL, Editor
HERB UHEV Adverting Manager
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EARL H ADAMS, City Editor
RICHARD JEWETT, Spuria Editor
OLIVE SI ARCHER Women'! Edltoi
DALE ER1CKSUN, Circulation Mr
An Independent Newspapei
Entered n tecond clan matter at
Hearoro. uregun ui ...
March 3. 1897
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History from in files of The
Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30, 40
and 50 years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
Dec. 30, IS53 (Wednesday)
Articles of incorporation filed
In Salem for Beaver Sales Co.,
Inc., Medford sawmill business,
with capitalization listed at $15,-
000; they were signed by Glenn
I,. Jackson, 0. B. Waddcll and
J. I,. Carver.
Claude D. Morgan, son of .I D.
Morgan, Gold Hill, arrived
home after receiving a dis
charge from the Navy; lie
served for three years including
duty in Alaska and Korea.
JO YEARS A(iO
Dec. 30, IIHII (Thursday)
Carlos W. Morris purchased
ene-half interest in Conger Fun
eral Parlors and the name of
the firm was changed to Conger-Morris
Funeral Parlors.
From Arthur Perry's "Ye
Smudge Pot" column; "Horses
are using East Side lawns for
pastures. None of the homo
owners to date are mad enough
to solve the alleged meal short
age with a .;iO-.;iO rifle. They,
however, threaten to point the
district attorney nt the equine
trespassers."
30 YEARS AGO
Dec. 30. Iti;i3 (Saturday)
Jackson County Sheriff Wal
ler J. Olmsehcid and District
Attorney George Codding serve
notice on local madhouses,
speakeasies, and "resorts" to
Stop illicit sales of liquor.
W. M. Clcmcnson, member of
Medford City Council mid pro
prietor of Jackson Hotel, dies.
10 YEARS AGO
Dee. 30. I!i:'3 (Sunday)
Amos R. Willits, young Med
ford businessman and volunteer
fireman, dies in $100,000 fire at
Modford's Page theater; Fire
Chief Roy Elliott injured
Medford Hotel advertised
"tluee elaborate dinner cele
brations" (or New Year's Eve.
50 YEARS AGO
Dec. ,'lo.l!it:i (TiicMlny)
Item in 'Eagle Point Eaglets'
column of tho Mail Tribune an
nounced the birth of Lewoll I)u
pray at Butte Falls.
Advertisement otters five
room house on good lot, assess
ments all paid, near paved
street, for $000 with easy terms.
What's Your I.Q.?
Nina or ten correct tt tuperior;
seven or eight It excellent; live or
sit is good.
1. What Is the C. A. P."
2. What, according to the
proverb, is the "mother of in
vention"? 3. Name the General who was
George Washington's rival (or
command of the Continental
Army.
4. Who was Sigmund Freud?
5. Why is Holland called The
Netherlands?
6. From what is agar derived?
7. Flalbush is a section in one
of New York City's boroughs;
which one?
8. The name of which day of
the week has tho most letters?
9. Shinloism is the principal
native religion of which country?
10. Was the message, "What
hath God wrought?", the first
to be sent by telephone, leleslar.
telegraph or radio transmis
sion? Answers: I. Civil Air Patrol.
2. Necessltv. 3. Horatio Gales
4. German psychologist. .1.
Much of II is heluw tea level,
fi. S f I r f d. 7. llimiMyn. A.
Wednesday. 0, Japan. 10. Telegraph.
4
VjjJJ-AMOCIATIOM
DECEMBER 30, 19B3
Doctors' Attitudes
Organized medicine in the United Slates,
meaning in essence the American Medical Asso
ciation, has always been successful in its lobby
ing battle to kill federal health services that are
not designed primarily to henefit doctors.
The AMA has gladly supported aid to hos
pitals for facilities and equipment to be used by
doctors, and federal subsidies for educating doctors.
But it has balked at
ed to help patients pay lor medical attention.
The cry against such medical assistance is
"socialism."
IiHE contradiction is obvious, but the reason
for it is not. What the AMA really fears, but
it hides its fear behind the "socialism" facade,
is a national health service which would, without
question, make the practice of medicine some
what less remunerative.
It is interesting, then, to note the contrast
between the attitude of American doctors and
that of their British counterparts.
The British Foreign Office has recently re
ported that not only has its National Health
Service been a complete success from the patients'
standpoint but it has not
doctors. Medical schools are overcrowded, says
the Foreign Office.
In Britain; widespread healing is considered
a good thing, apparently. Capital Press, Salem,
Male Perfumes
Call them colognes, after-shave lotions or
what you will, the latest and hottest item in the
toiletries world is men s pertumes. the advertis
ing copy writers arc using every subterfuge in
the book to tell about their products without com
ing right out and saying that effeminate word
perfume.
The whole emphasis is rugged masculinity.
"Mark II is a man's essence, expressed in no
uncertain masculine terms," the copy says. It is
pictured with a black panther. Gillette is spend
ing $2 million this year introducing Sun Up, its
new cologne.
Recognizing that women are more likely to
buy perfume for their men than men are to buy
it for themselves, Moustach cologne makes an
outright pitch to women buyers.
X7E WOULDN'T be poking so much fun at
' male perfume if it was really authentic. The
trouble is that all these scents leave a man smell
ing like a drugstore instead of like a man. There
are some really wonderful male smells, but so
far they have not shown up in perfumes.
Anyone who has had a working man or an
outdoorsmart -for a father knows what these
smells are.
Take Old Sawmill, for instance. The clean,
pungent smell of freshly cut wood which clings
to a millman is something a child will remember
all his life. The smell of Fresh Hay. There is a
nostalgia of summertime, the security of farm
life, in this male aroma.
COME of the smells may not conform with the
acceptability standards of the perfume indus
try, but they arc masculine and genuine Wet
Leather, Well-Oiled Rifle, and the most virile
oi ineni an, naro uays worn.
It isn't likely that any of these will be bottled,
and even if they were, they wouldn't have the
aura of authenticity.
We sympathize with the copywriters who
have the task of convincing men they must buy
a bottle of perfume in order to smell like men.
Oregon Statesman.Salcm.
America, the Beautiful
nillliojiri! nllovs j.lnn.v much nf ihc n:itinn's
$10 billion interstate highway system appear to
have semi-permanent, if not permanent, status.
According the the Bureau of Public Roads, only
21) slides have agreed to limit their use on in
terstate roads in return for federal cash bonuses.
Congress in .1 !)(!, extended the six-year-old bo
nus authorization for two more years. Hut Road
Bureau officials say it is not likely that many
more slates will come in at this late day.
All in all, l'.MiH was not an auspicious year
for America the Beautiful. Legislation to estab
lish tt National Wilderness Preservation System
and protect virginal lands against depredation
still remains tied up in the House Interior Com
mittee. The Senate has tw ice passed it since 1!HU by
comfortable margins, but mining and timber in
terests have been able to block its consideration
on the Mouse floor.
rIRTY AIR is mounting a smelly assault on
the nation's nostrils, even in the countryside.
Congress cautiously approached the air pollu
tion problem by authorizing !!'" million over
four years for a research program.
Water pollution continues to render more
and more of the nation's streams unfit for man
or aquatic life.
The right to peace and tranquillity and to
quiet enjoyment of property has been invaded
by the cacophonies from motor vehicles, airports,
industrial parks, even the power mower next
door. City fathers in Baltimore attracted nation
al notice when they outlawed the use of transis
ter radios on public buses.
And that Federal Communications Commis
sion proposal to limit the number of broadcast
commercials which offend both eyes and cars
has been left for dead. F.R.R.'
federal programs design
driven away potential
"Mind If I Look Over
'
Strictly
Personal
By Sidney J. Harris
(C) Field Enterprises. Inc.
WAS LINCOLN WRONG ABOUT CIVIL WAR?
Although I yield to no man in my admiration (or Lincoln's
character, I have sometimes of late been beset by the uneasy
notion that he was wrong about the Civil War.
Supposed he had allowed the South to secede when it wanted
to? What might the results have been, for both sections of the
country, for Negroes and for Whites?
Slavery would not have lasted very long, anyhow; il was dis
appearing all over the world. The North would have flourished
industrially, much as it did; the South would have remained an
agrarian country.
We would have been spared bloodshed and bitterness; and
now, a hundred years later, we would not be resuming that
fratricidal conflict.
Wars solve absolutely nothing. We fought the First World
War to rid the world of German militarism and inherited
Hillerism. We fought the Second World War to check Naziism
and Fascism and today there is more hatred, more violence,
more revolution, more narrow nationalism than ever before.
Anil, likewise, the Civil War solved nothing; It only post
poned a decision (or a century. It (reed the Negro (loin
slavery, hut it did not center full citizenship upon him.
The Smith would have learned the error of its ways, would
have repented anil reformed, or would have sunk Into back
wardness anil poverty. For no nation that treats men as
properly In the modern would can use its resources to the
- fullest. Economically, psychologically, morally, slavery was
doomed, for II goes against the current of human history.
The Civil War gave the South a permanent sense nf in
Jury and rejection; and it gave the North a false sense of
superiority. The nation's wounds were not hound tip; they
were merely covered with a flimsy plaster that quickly dried,
curled up, and fell off.
Men's minds cannot be changed by force. Indeed, force usually
reaffirms their stubborn defense of principles and feelings. It
makes them go to extremes they would not otherwise consider.
It summons up all their virtues in the service of their vices.
The South was wrong about slavery, but right in Us desire to
leave the Union when it found it could no longer subscribe In the
doctrine that all men are created equal. This desire should not
have been denied them by force for it was this denial that
bred in them the mass neurosis we are witnessing today.
Lincoln's mistake was in believing in "unity" at all costs.
Rut the "unity" achieved at the cost of civil war had no basis in
fact or feeling. For, a century later, the wound is still suppurating.
Everybody's lor Ike
-And Vice Versa
By Arthur Hoppe jcjrV' J
The secret's out. Governor
Scranton of Pennsylvania says
he can now reveal the truth.
Mr. Kisenhower has urged him
"to give a good deal of thought"
to running for the Republican
nomination. So, he says, duty
calls. And at great sacrifice he
will reluctantly accept a draft.
If he can organize one in time.
It just shows you the tremen
dous value all politicians place
on that pearl beyond price j
the endorsement of Mr. Kisen-i
hower. Who, of course, has also
publicly urged Mr. Lodge to re-
: turn from Vietnam to run. And
who thinks of Nixon as his pro
tege. And who looks on Mr.
' Milton Kisenhower as his broth
er. And who is also known to1
approve heartily of Mr Hal
field, Mr. Pnkscn. Mr. Dewey,
(Mr. Hoover and President Lin-'
1 coin.
j Hut it docs cause problems.
I Take the letter I received, per
haps by mistake, from a Mr.
Sammy F. llogan, tvo Grecnnlls
Golf Club, Gettysburg, Ta.
"Pear Ahhy." it begins, "I
gut a problem. 1 been caddy
ing here at Greennlls 17 years
and the other day they give me
the General. Now he's a nice
old gaffer, 1 guess Hut just like
us, he has his bad days. And
this one was.
j "He slices two out of bounds
off the first tee, hooks a third
i into the rough and w inds up
1 with an eight. On the second
hole he hacks out a six and I
think maybe things are going to
! improve Hut on the thud he
; takes a seven and on the fourth
( a dogleg to the left lie winds
up with an eight. I am gelling
a little tired mushing through
the swamps hunting for his
balls. So as I hand him his
I driver on the fifth lee. 1 lake
MEDKORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD,
Your Shoulder, Swami?"
the liberty of saying, 'General,
you don't look like you got your
mind on it today.'
"And he says, 'Son, it is true.
I have a problem. I don't know
which of the 2H Republican can
didates to support for the nom
ination, seeing as how I have
endorsed them all. And it is
ruining my backswing.
"'General.' I says, because I
figure he should get it off his
chest, 'leave you tell me whv
this is such a problem.'
'"Well, son.' he says, 'being
President is the most awful job
in the whole wide world. No
body can imagine the terrible
burdens and the horrible re
sponsibility. So we must have
some man in there who can
stand the pressure, who can
keep cool under fire, who knows
how, above all. to (ace up to
these horrendous decisions.
Only I cannot decide which of
the 28 has got it in him. And
this is why I cannot keep my
head down today.'
" General.' I says 'you can't
let problems like that ruin vour
game. That's what golf is' lor.
Why, the day my sainted mother
passed on, 1 went out and broke
SO, may she rest in peace. And
when my wife left me I shot a
Tti. Yes, sir, golfs the only an
swer to your problems. Only
you never want to gel the two
mixed up.'
"He thinks this over, nods,
gets a grip on his club and pars
the nexl live holes. As we come
into the clubhouse he takes me
aside (or a private chat, the
details of which I urn not at
liberty to divulge at (his time.
Hut that gets me to my prob
lem :
"I know the General s ex
perienced in these things, but is
it really true that me being
President would cut live strokes
off my game'"'
OREGON
Foreign News: Cypress Settlement Seen;
Chou To
By
PHIL NEWSOM
L'PI Fnrelrn Newi
Analyit
Notes from the foreign news
cables:
Cyprus Settlement:
Britain expects to be able to
restore order in Cyprus, but
foresees considerable difficulties
in re-establishing a working re
lationship between the Greek
fc) New
ROCKF.FELLKR VS.
GOLDWATER
NEW YORK, N. Y. - A ha
rassed, far f''nm wildly enthusi
astic Barry Goldwator has pass
ed the word to his key support
ers that he will seek the Repub
lican Presidential nomination,
even though President Kenne
dy's assassination seems to have
knocked the patented Goldwater
strategy for Republican victory
into a cocked hat.
A word passed in this manner
is, of course, very different in
deed from a formal Goldwater
announcement, irrevocably com
mitting the senator to the rigors
of the race. But it is pretty hard
to see how Goldwater can go
back on the word that he has
passed. Indeed, his formal an
nouncement is likely to be made
at any moment.
Senator Goldwatcr's problem
is summed up in the rigorous
impulsive person of former Sen.
Wiiliam Knowland of California.
Knowland long ago let it bo
known that he would head the
California slate of Goldwater
delegates. The Goldwater can
didacy, in fact, was regarded
by Knowland, not just as a fine
thing in itself, but also as a
fine opportunity for a political
comeback by Knowland.
w
HENCE the doubts about Gold
watcr's willingnes to stand,
arising from the radically chang
ed national political situation,
have caused Knowland to put on
a fair imitation of an enraged
bull elephant an animal he
frequently resembles and can
therefore imitate with great dra
matic effect.
All over the country there are
other politicians like Knowland,
who have been bombarding
Goldwater with demands that he
run because they, too, are com
mitted and hope to gain from
the commitment. Their bom
bardment has been supported
by a powerful barrage from the
hot-eyed extremists of the Gold
water movement, like the ultra
right wing Young Americans for
Freedom.
The old political pros, who
merely thought Goldwater was
the most likely nominee and
were therefore thinking about
climbing aboard the bandwagon,
are now holding back in droves.
Even a good part of the inde
pendent oil money, which had
: been so lavishly pro-Goldwater,
, is reported to be having shabby
second-thoughts which irre
I sistibly recalls T. S. Eliot's lines
! on the abandoned Burbank-Mark
Antony:
"Defunctive music under sea
"Passed seaward with the
passing bell
"Slowly; the god Hercules
"Had left him that had loved
him well."
'PHIS retreat from Goldwater
is happening, of course, be
cause the Goldwater strategy
rested squarely on the expecta
tion that the southern electoral
votes could easily he captured
from President Kennedy, by
making the Republican party
into the "Lilywhite Party" in
a strictly nice way. of course
As the first southerner in the
White House since Appomatox.
President Johnson has damp
ened that expectation, to put it
very mildly.
But the committed Knowlands
and the hot-eyed extremists are
still there, unchanged by the
drastic change in Goldwatcr's
prospects. So the word has re
portedly been passed And this
news that the word has been
passed by Goldwater has in turn
been received by Gov. Nelson
A. Rockefeller with genuine re
lief and pleasure.
This last bit of news may
surprise those who do not under
stand that politics has close
links with chess. Yet lor Gov
ernor Rockefeller's personal
chess game. Senator Goldwater
is a positive necessity.
Rockefeller cannot hope to
overcome the effects of his re
marriage on the delegate-owning
Republican professional politi
cians, except by proving himself
Iz.l1:
Paris?; Sino-African Trading
and Turkish Cypriot factions.
Mediation between Archbishop
Makarios and Turkish leader
Frazil Kuchuk will be required
to set administrative machinery
functioning again. American
"advice" may also prove a
helping factor in the delicate
forthcoming negotiations re-establishing
a balance of rule be
tween the Greek and Turkish
factions.
Chou To Paris?
Insiders do not rule out the
possibility of a Paris visit by
Red Chinese Premier Chou En-
lai before he returns home. Dur -
ing his North African swing,
Chou dropped a number of re
marks recalling his stay in
Matter
of Fact
By Joseph Alsop
York Herald Tribune syndicate
in open combat against another
admittedly popular Republican.
For this purpose, Goldwater is
the only satisfactory opponent
in sight.
TJENCE Governor and Mrs.
Rockefeller are charging
into the (ray in New Hampshire,
the first primary state, only a
few days after the new year.
They will campaign there to
gether every weekend until New
Hampshire votes in March. And
they really seem to enjoy this
grisly prospect, because t h e
governor is convinced he can
beat Senator Goldwater in New
Hampshire.
Even so, the Rockefeller camp
regards the California primary
as the real test. Here, a pre
primary poll, which has shown
Rockefeller trailing Goldwater
by several miles, now shows the
governor only a few hundred
yards behind. For the ebullient
Rockefeller, any gain at all is
almost a guarantee of victory.
In the changed circumstances,
it must be added, it genuinely
seems more possible for Rocke
feller to defeat Goldwater in
these primary contests on which
Rockefeller is building his chief
hopes of being nominated. But
between hopes and delegates,
there is always a wide gap.
...Communications...
Letters to tht Editor mutt bear the name and iddreit of the writer, although under certain circumstances
the use of a pen name or initial (or publication is permissible. The Mail Tribune reserves the right to edit
all letters with a view to clarification and condensation. Letters submitted for publication must not eiceed
400 words. The letters printed in this column do not necessarily represent the views of the paper; in (act
the contrary is often the case.
No Scat Belts
To the Editor: When we were
driving the old REO taxicab
around Southern Oregon, we
didn't have no scat belts. There
wuzn't nuttin' to fasten scat
belts to but the gas tank. No
body wanted to get throwed
through the windshield with a
tank full of gasoline strapped
to the seat of their pants.
The only tiling wot ever went
through the windshield wuz a
jackrabbit chasing a dog. He j
wouldn t have gone through the
windshield if he had been wear
ing his seat belt. Maybe his
belt would have, but his seat
wouldn't.
Everett Acklin
Ashland, Ore.
All's Fair
To the Editor: This letter has
gone to the President of the
United States; the House of
Congress; and the Governor of
the State of Oregon.
Sirs: All is fair in love and
war; business and politics?
Whoa!!! Please save the Ten
Commandments, the Constitu
tion and the Bill of Rights,
lladley A. Yow
109 Oak Drive
Central Point, Ore.
P S. Guns don't kill people
people kill people! Money
doesn't buy principles! Too
many laws mean legal corrup
tion! Poverty and Taxes
To the Editor: As one who
shared your feeling of uneasi
ness at Christmas because
many are not enjoying what we
might call the American stand
ard of living. I would like to
call your readers' attention to
two outstanding recent maga
zine articles.
In the Dec. 21 issue of the
, "Post" there is for those who
have never experienced poverty,
or even observed it to any ex
tent personally, a shocking pic
ture of poverty amidst plenty in
America. The question immedi
ately arises as why should the
richest nation on earth allow
poverty that would never be tol
erated in such countries as, say,
Denmark and Sweden1
I Perhaps the January "Prog
ressive'' (founded by the liberal
Wisconsin Republican Bob La
Follctto) provides part of the
answer. We are told. e.g.. of a
Houston, Texas, oil investment
adviser who had an income of
S.'.ntio.ooo in a single year but
legally paid no taxes at all that
Paris in the early twenties and
saying he would like to see it
again. It will be up to Presi
dent Charles de Gaulle to de
cide whether he should be in
vited. If Chou does go to Paris,
it will be a further sign that
French diplomatic recognition
of Red China is likely soon.
Sino-African Trade:
Aside from the possibility of
diplomatic relations between
I France and Red China, there al -
! so is talk of a sizeable buildup
in Sino-French trade. In Paris
it is believed that Chou is using
i his African tour to step up Red
Chinese trade with former fearing a possible U. S. protest.
French African territories who ; Aside from some mild words of
would pay for their Chinese caution, the protest has not
goods with financial assistance been forthcoming so that Jap
received from France. anese are going full speed
French Referendum:
De Gaulle who likes to use
national refcrendums as proof
of the peoples' support for his
policies, is said to want another
for 1964. But he is having trou
ble finding an issue of sufficient
interest to bring out the voters.
In the Day's News
By FRANK
From London:
Secret reports reaching West
ern governments from Moscow
say there has been a sizable
shift recently of Soviet army
units from Central Russia to
ward the Communist Chinese
border. Receipt of these reports
has been acknowledged in Lon
don and Paris by high officials
of several important Atlantic
pact powers.
According to informed offi
cials, Soviet troops are under
stood to be heading toward the
frontier of Red China's Sin
kiang province.
rTHERE'S an ancient proverb
to the effect that when
thieves fall out honest men may
hope to come into their own.
Still
Let's not go so far as to hope
that Red Russia and Red China
go to war. History tells us that
when nations nf that size go to
war to the knife and the knife
to the hilt the rest of the world
is pretty apt to get dragged in.
TN OUR general time, there
! have been two wars to prove
it:
World War I.
World War II.
year. Not only for individuals,
but for companies involved in
the oil business, Congress has
provided very favorable tax
treatment in relation to
most
other business concerns. Among!
the effects is the case of jh
Paul Getty, who estimated the less ""Known souls witn wnoss
value of his holdings at several j fate we are connected by a bond
billion dollars, or H. L. Hunt ! of sympathy,
(former sponsor of Dan Smoot), -Many tjmes a day I rcaliza
whose estimated income is some how much , d
SdO million a year perhaps $14 , ... . , .,,
million of which is ta:: tree. i mncc We 15 hulU uPon u'8
If it would help end poverty labors of my fellow men, both
I'm sure many of us would be livin8 and dead, and how earn
glad to have our already high ostly I must exert myself in
taxes raised, but at the same 1 order to give in return as much
time a more equitable system
of levying taxes should be in
stituted.
(Name on file)
Ashland, Ore.
Philosophy
To the Editor: The beginning
of a new year gives many peo
ple renewed hope (or better
things (o come than past years
nave iHiuii-u. iu aian uie new
year right, here is a bit of con -
structive philosophy by Albert! MANITOWOC, Wis. (UPD
Einstein: i Police searched (or a live sheep
"Strange is our situation here ; which vanished Sunday from a
upon earth. Each of us comes Nativity scene here in sub-zero
for a short visit, not knowing weather,
why. yet sometimes seeming to Officers were advised, "if you
divine a purpose. From the see him. he's wearing a wool
standpoint of daily life, how-1 coat."
"And while driving home, slay
He has ruled out the idra of a
referendum on creating the of
fice of vice president, which hs
doesn't want anyhow. A refer
endum on abolishing the senate,
another pet De Gaulle idea,
would stir up little enthusaism.
It might be held on De Gaulle's
plans for European political
unity.
Sino-Japancse:
j Look for Japan's alreadv sub-
! stantial trade with Red China
to make giant strides in 1064,
especially in critical industrial
machinery. The Japanese have
been going slow in the last vear
ahead.
The Japanese industrial fair
in Peking last October was a
resounding success. Millions of
dollars worth of sales were con
cluded, including an agreement
under which Peking will pur
chase 57 industrial machines in
1964.
JENKINS
We had nothing to do with th
starting of either war but ws
got dragged into the fighting
just the same.
There's another proverb:
HISTORY TENDS TO RE
PEAT ITSELF.
That also is worth remember
ing. UROM Washington:
Senate and House leaders
hope to complete action on a
final foreign aid bill to lay on
President Johnson's desk this
week.
QUESTION:
Why the strength of foreign
aid in the congress despite its
lack of popularity out in th
hustings?
This thought occurs:
It's sometimes easier to keep
the children quiet by giving
them candy.
TJUT
" To most of us nut in Uia
sticks, who PAY THE TAXES,
this further thought occurs:
The more candy the children
get, the more they WANT.
There's plenty of evidencs
that it works the same way in
the case of foreign aid.
ever, there is one thing we do
know; that man is here for ths
sake of other men above all,
' for those upon whose smile and
wen.being our own happiness
,,. " , . . ..' " '
Spends, and also for the count-
! as I have received.
This kind of philosophy put
into universal practice might
help us to establish a peaceful
world.
Happy New Year to everyone.
Lvdia Burnham
814 Warne St.
Prescott, Ariz.
Missing Sheep
- ,, . , ... ,
' cosily faennriea
away (mm polire roadblock'
O
jo- re mine tonight:
i