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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 22, 1949)
PACE FOUR HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON TUESDAY, NOV 77, Uf VaAJt JUOUMI SSI tor ox reforms slsaaelns tailor Tke AjhcuM flies la mium exciuervelr Sal gar rapubUcauos 1 ell ma lootti ml hum I Sale feeae. ee well ea all AF detour mr a one-way pontoon bridge. We Im that the bridge wee put up by Um army kWimii when the regular highway bridge burned out lest spring. luuiiiu as opoaane in time to take aa an A avening aneeting to testimony la fsvor of Um uncluttered hhways out of the mounuiru. KnMrad ee hnm elaas mhm el see tali. Ore- m Ausuet w. laoe, ei Mara im eon artMa a KlaMta 8J earrle suaacaiPnoN sati ulla B mm e estates ma S1-2S Br Ball year Siooe 3 ADDISON A Drive to Spokane By DEB ADDISO DELAYED oorreepoeiderioe note on what turned out to bo a M mile drive to Spokane to take In a newspaper meeting: .... R'l about alt your Ufa la worth to remark to. tht little woman, when you've routed her out for a tart on Um road In Um wee amaU hours, that It a Um beat Uma of Uit day. In spite of auch minor flurries, - wa war rollinf out Kit Canon - way (should, set a gold star from tha newsroom far calling the North Kntranca that) before 7:00, ha Yin noted that there waa much mm before dawn activity downtown than during hunting season. Tha ann waa Just reaching Pitt. Mt Scott and Thlelsen. aa they appeared above the morning mist. Tha acanea reminded you of Japanese water colors, only better. Wondered, farther on tea road, why highway signs weren't put up to point out and identify the Three Sisters, the unusual rocky buttee near Terrebonne, MU Jefferson and others, aa they do for the first three mentioned. It seems from hers that tha main reason that Bend la Justly famous aa a beautiful town la that they have kept natural pine and juniper tree growing right downtown. The Wayside Juniper Forest, with many trees now In full berry, and then tha Crooked river canyon at Peter Skene Ogden state park on north of Bend point up the natural beauty and grandeur of Um country. (Same aa Collier state park near ChiloqulnJ a e IT waa startling to see a couple of young buckarooa along aide Um road on up past Redmond and Terrebonne one with a sure-enough revolver hang ing in a holster from his belt. Was It the Holly wood Influence, or just pest control? The first game waa sighted at Hay creek north of Madras. It had just come to mind that a little water, a few willows, a few weed patches and sage brush, and a little grain land made perfect quail pasture, when a couple of coveys of thirty or better were seen. Soon after, there waa a good aiaed bunch of pheasants at Trout creek, just before starting Um seven mile ascent up Cow canyon Into Um wheat country. (No cows were seen In Cow canyon.) We bagged a little game In Sherman county. .There were quite a few crows taking can of the ever-present jackrabblta squashed on the highway. One lone seagull was competing with the crows for one of the bunnies. Apparently be waa a green hand at highway feeding, because he flew up, the wrong way, right into a front fender. As the feathers drifted away, the rear view mlrrow showed a clean kill. C. 'AS we rolled through Moro we gave a few rah- rahs for Malm, but Um two lone residents la evidence paid us no mind. Mora appeared to be a solid, prosperous commun ity of about Malm's sis. A little older looking. good homes and lots of flowers, shrubs, trees and the like. . Maybe the town already had taken off for tha Malln-Moro game. Another Sherman oounty landmark that the travel er will remember is a rock cellar that reminds you of an old fashioned spring house. It stands about four feet high In the west road bank In Kent The Inscription on Um door reads, "Jail House, Kent" ' A good place to raise sand. If you like solitary confinement It wouldn't hold two persons. e HIGHWAY 97 takes you down to Um Columbia river at Biggs. The drive up the Columbia la spectacular for one reason It's BIO. Reduce tha 'perspective and you have a trickle through a -; gully in any east-of-the-mountains flat The drive from Boardman junction around the big bend of the Columbia to Pasco and on Is through dreary wasteland. You head north and - east from Pasco, get Into Wheatland again and finally emerge m country with scattering pines which looks like Klamath county, and before long 'you're rolling Into Spokane. 1 To cross Um Snake river at Pasco, you follow a These Days T HI line Is taken by many that although at waa altogether correct to fool the American people aunng we lews, ins time has coma not to fool them any longer. Roger Baldwin, the head of Um American Civil liberties union, wrote: "I have no paUenoa with liberals who have not yet learned that all communists and their agencies are nrst, last and always the agents of Soviet politics. There was a reasonable basis for cooperation with the communlau In Um 1930s when they seemed to oe eiiecuve supporters or democracy against fascism. There Is none now when the evidence is so clear that whatever Ideals they eiprees, they are Um servants of a police-state philosophy opposed to every principle of what ws regard aa liberty, a e e a A CTUALLY, what is true about the -""Mnli A Party In 1949 waa true In 191. when the third international waa organised. It waa true every year during the 1930s. It waa true when the Harold Ware cell was organised in Washington la IBM. It was true when the Dies committee gathered lu wealth of data and supplied Um department of justice with what la now admitted to be Um truth. It was true during the war when we supplied Soviet Russia with tl 1.000.000,000 to use for our destruction as well as Hitler's. It la a leu day to suggest even that "they seemed to be effective supporters of democracy against fascism." They never seemed to be anything of the sort. e e e THE purport of Roger Baldwin's article In "This Week" Is that while the communists are repre hensible, nothing ahould be done to Imperil their freedom of speech, lest that become a precedent harmful to all of us. I suppose the philosophy behind that Idea la that words are not weapons; that speech to just hot air, letting off steam, and Um more, the better. But words are weapons, particularly when they work their way Into text-hooka used in schools and colleges. I have recently been reading "World Geography", by John Hodgdon Bradley, a distin guished geologist and published by Otnn and com pany. On page 368, he makes this point: "The Russian attitude toward racial differences has been more scientific and humane. It to based on the belief that people of any race can be happy Individuals and cooperative citlsens if they have a decent standard of living and an education. The government of the Soviet Union, working on this belief, has achieved almost miraculous results among people whose level of culture was for Um most part extremely low." THERE to no evidence that Soviet Russia has accomplished a solution of racial differences. Soviet Russia has advertised Its superiority In this respect There to plenty of conflicting data, particu larly of the Imprisonment and exile of middle-class intellectuals, leaving the components of tha Russian empire without naUve leadership. Certainly no Kir ghiz, Turkomans, Ostlaka, Yakuts, or Jews are m Um polltburo today. In this same book. I find Um following: "... In extending lu Influence Into Chinese territory, the Soviet Union has respected Um sov ereignty of Chins, and haa kept the friendship of the Chinese people who live In the affected regions . . This statement to demonstrably untrue. In 1934, Soviet Russia made arrangements to support revolutionary movement In Chins, violating a treaty with the Chinese government Michael Borodin and General Bluecher-Oalens were attached to Um revo lutionary government Prom 1923 to 1977, Oalens trained and led a revolutionary army, of which Chiang Kal-8hek waa a part, first as bead of the Red army school known aa Um Whampoa military academy and then aa commander-in-chief. Chiang broke with his Russian associates when they plan ned to take control of his country during Um Christmas week of 1933-7. Their plan of total eon- quest and possession of China has now been accom plished by Moa Tie-Tung, Chu Teh. and Li Llh San, all of whom were In Um 1933-77 effort and who have since remained as servants of Soviet Russia. Bradley's book to copyrighted in 1945. The date of Russia's efforts to conquer China was fully available In 1945, as tt was in 1933. ' e see V JY point Is that words can establish themselves VI so firmly that they come to be believed. SIDE GLANCES v j J 11111 eare, whereas atones. a.T, ay see a a aw. am "Just look how much I've lost eft that diet to buy new wit!" now I'll hav Boylw't Column Notre Dame Doesn't Belong On Same Field with Pros By HAL BOYLE NEW YORK uP) Could undefeat ed Notre Dame knock off one of the top professional football teams? That has been a favorite topic this season with a number of Dlgskin Historians of the sports pages. impressed by the record of 39 games without a loss rung up by the Ramblers, a number of writers have opined that the righting Irish couia oeat many a au uv sunu- . as, of tanned V J r k thart the lJ erase, nit, J v', it it Prank kafeaaS. :..--J : TELLING THE EDITOR ; I Lettera artaue Sara aiaat eat ke a leaser thaa see wares, atast Be 1 I writtee Ujiaij aa ons aioa mi tae I eeeer. anS airi ee isnae Sr tke ' I carrect NANS AMD AOOStsa ef tfca writer. Ceelrlbstlaas fallawlas taeee ' rales are waraUr walceaiee. ' WMswwwwavs1 MAUN, Ore. (To the Editor) In his "Day's News" column of Novem ber 11, Mr. Jenkins pours his biting ' sarcasm upon President Truman's welfare program as follows: "Just leave It all to Papa. Papa , knows where the money comes from. Papa Is wise. Papa LOVES YOU. Papa will see to It that you iw laaea care 01. -"Don't worry your heads about prooiems.' Just run along and have a good tune. Papa knows wiiab ae is ooing. Mr. Jenkins ought to know. He is one oi mat favored group, the newspaper publishers, whom "Papa" haa been taking care of for m.,.. moons, as witness the huge deficit pk oiiice depsrtment large- " w less than cost rates granted newspapers and magazines. Most of these publishers, like Mr Jenkins, predict dire ruin If "Pspa" doesnt stop spending for the com mon welfare. Then they right-about-face and ery out In anguish If some one sug gests that "Papa" take away their financial nursing bottle. As witness the following from tha Gallop Poll In The Herald and News, August 17. last "Postmaster General Donaldson's proposal to Increase second class rates used by publishers and third and fourth class rates used by di rect msll sdvertlsers projected a Doctor Soys Surgery Is the Best Method For Removing Eye Cataracts J. L DEAN Public Accountant ad Auditor Office at Mt Nertb Tth It By EDWIN p. JORDAN. M. D. A common penalty of old age to the development of a condition of the eyes called cataracts. A cataract involves that portion of the eye which serves as Um tons. The lens la normally clear but becomes clouded In cataract and this nro. duces a blurring of vision. Perhaps it can oe explained best by com paring It with the lens of a camera. If a camera lens were not clean, or something happened to Um glass to cloud It a picture taken through mat lens would also be blurred and jurry.- How much ruszineas there to de pends on Um amount of cloudiness in the lens. If only pert of the lens Is Involved, not all of the field of vision will be disturbed. If the whole ens i is ciouaed, then all objects will be blurred. There to no reason to believe that w.ain mas to the development ...d, mougn. oi course, eye torm of protest from the publish tag end advertising worM "Publishers declared that Um new rates. If adopted, would put an In- VJa. ,xtr o0" "urden on the distributing of newspapers and MaVAafuuiCS. It does make a difference whose ox to gored. . . ett (Editor's Note: The u m .-a News' ox lent very bsdlv enrwi o our total circulation, only 13 per cent la delivered by the so-called sub sidised" second -class mall. Ws de liver the other M per cent by our uwn pnrai earners, so far as news papers are concerned, the second class msll "privilege" to a relic of the hone and buggy days. We make use of K in these times about as much as wa make use of a horse nd buggy. "Pspa can do away with It whenever he chooses and we will offer no complaint.) strain should be avoided for other reasons. Heredity, and particularly Increasing years, seem to have more to do with most eases of cats, ract than anything else. A beginning cataract, in which the clouding to slight to spoken of as incipient When the process of clouding has been completed It to caned 'ripe or mature. Unfortun ately medical treatments that is drugs thst hsve so far been discov ered have not proved of value In dissolving material which clouds the lens nor can they restore nor. mat vision. Operation Is the best treatment for cataract When the cataract to "ripe" or mature It can be removed and full vision restored In unoom plicated cases. In recent years, sur gery of the ere hss been so Improv ed that it to possible to remove the lens with a cataract In It at early stages of development la msny The Doctor Answers QUESTION: Can sinus trouble cause difficulty In the throat such ss phlegm 7 ANSWER: Yes, Indeed. Mucus and Infected material from Um si nuses esn drop down In back of the tnroat. This frequently causes lrrl. tatlon and results in hawking and spitting. Starts RSTUTLT to nOtt HUH CeMIMdJ mff CMt Jest nab aw Mawaarals . ..are aapa nelly ee aeeiasjely r aoee Iseeat sad aeaiaar easts enMa, Majaeareetaeeejeilv hates Weak ap Incal eeeereatiea la the as- war esmeniai traet. las Vai. play. tor-pay teams. And some even hsve crawled e 1 e a r out on t h e limb and proclaimed that Notre Dame could outacore the best pro elevens. I am no fond ex- PO average but Leahy's boys In BOYLE can whip Um Cleveland Browns 111 be I lad to eat without benefit of gravy the football they do It with. And that to one proposi tion i aon t mind ending with a preposition. Saw Both In successive weeks I watched No tre Dame tar North Carolina's Tar heels. 43 to g. and the Cleveland Browns retain the leadership of the All-America conference by blanking the New York Yankees, II to 0. They were games that demon strated the best In amateur football and tne best In professional foot ball. And tha only possible conclu sion an Innocent bystander could draw was: " Notre Dame and tha Cleveland Browne dont belong on the same gridiron any more than a Jake Lamotta has any business In Um ssme ring with a Joe Louis. In their classes both teams nlsv nearly perfect football, but they are not In the same class. Frank Leahy can employ tha discipline of the old college try If his boys don't play their hearts out they're yanked. But Coach Paul Brown of Cleveland, just as much a perfectionist aa Leahy, has Um sdded discipline of the dol lar. His men know If they don't win they won't eat next year at least not with the Browns. AU-Areund His team doesn't merely do most things well. It does everything well. There to a specialist for every job, paid well to do It right. And Um job to done right It la easy to foretell what would happen If Notre Dame ever took on the Browns. The Ramblers were held to a one-touchdown Ue at the half by a fast-charging North Caro lina line that mussed up the South Bend backfleld. But In the second half the Notre Dame reserve power wore down the Tarheel forward wall. It wasn't until then thst Quar terback Bobby Williams could get his passes clicking. Against Cleveland, Notre Dame would find the situation exactly re versed. No amateur outfit In the land, no matter how strong or tal ented, could stand up against the Browns. Their forward wall features hefUes like Forrest Ortgg. a 380 pound tackle about aa Impregnable as sn elephant Irian Splinters The simple truth to that by half time the Browns would hsve torn the Notre Dame Una to splinters and smothered Its back so often they would have a feeling they were playing In eiderdown quilts. And meanwhile Cleveland would have passed or linebucked the dased Ramblers silly. Against the powerful Yankees last Sunday the Cleveland quarterback. Otto Oraham. a shr 195-pound lad who likes to plsy the violin, com pleted 19 of 34 passes for 383 yards. Hs had thrown 89 consecutive pass es for 383 yards. Be had thrown 89 consecutive pauses In five tames be- before one was Intercepted. Mae Speedle. an end. caught 11 Oraham. flung passes for 228 varda. a can. ferenee record. Poellsh Thoeght Yes. Notre Dsme la mlzhtv but it wouia oe mighty foolish ever to trot out on a gridiron with a pro team like the Cleveland Browns. For professional football separates tne men from the boys, and there Is no wsy for the boys to brides me gsp. Ths World Today By DBWITT MACUNEIE AP rereega Affairs Analyst Other Sid, Now Former State Chief Byrnes Attacks Government Policies BILOXX Miss.. Nov. 33 IXk former cabinet officer made a sharp attack on government fiscal policies last night and called for a drop In taxes and the nstlonsl debt. In his second assault on the Tru man administration, former Secre tary of State James P. Byrnes told the Southern Oov amors' conference thst federal taxes snd the nubile debt constitute the real trouble now besetting this country. Cere The cure, added the former ad- mlnlstrstlon stalwsrt, was to be found neither In a larger public debt nor In a heavier tax load, but he saw no Immediate remedy. Deficit spending will continue, he declared. Byrnes' first attack on the ad ministration came In a recent speech at Washington and Lee uni versity. There, he charged the fed eral government with "statlam." with taking over mere snd more the powers snd Drerocatlves of lo cal governments. Last night he told the Smith's chief executives: We should devote to cutting ex penditures some of the thought ws srs devoting to taxing and borrow, lng. But cutting expenditures to not seriously considered In the execu tive departments and new taxes will not be seriously considered In eon- STUFFY NOSE? RASPY COUQN? et I MM Menthel vaeers Ceagh sseaicatloa DOWM-r slansw suae1 lellsf Vff m com -aty has a grass. So deficit spending will con tinue," Byrnes ssid. Dangerous "Big government Is more dsn gerous than big business," Byrnes added. "Little governments esn reg ulate big business. ., but It to difficult to regulate big government. "The spenders, while deploring deficit spending, assert aa an ex. euse that there was deficit spending during the Roosevelt administration. . . . But who can forget that In 1933 the banks of the nation were closed, farmers whose mortgages were foreclosed were deserting the farms, factories were Idle snd ths unemployed wslked the streets hun. ry7 ralareT "Only a spender with no sense of responsibility could fell to see the difference," ssid the former U. S. supreme court Justice. To lls seven years ago, barring a few days, that America's die tlnguished British guest. Field Mar. shal Viscount Montgomery, gave me the toughest chase I ever ex. perlenced In rounding up a subject for an interview not that he waa trying to avoid me, but It Just hap pened mat way, This waa In the Libyan desert In December o I '43, Just before the crucial bat tle of El Aghella between Monty's Eighth army and ths Oer mens under the famous Marshal Rommel. The British general was moving his headquarters for the great show. down, and he personally waa hopping from Mackenzie place to place so fsst thst ths Brit' isn press unit to which I was at. tached never could catch un with mm. r-ineuy my colleagues threw uo their hands, gave me an armored car with s military driver snd said Uo rind Monty youraelfl" A counle of days later we finally ran to earth tne man whom Supreme Allied Com. mender Oeneral of the Army Eisen hower has described as "one of the great soldiers of the war. , , a fig ure who will live always, not only In British but In world history." MOBILE HQ The general waa In his caravan a little "headquarters" offlce-on wheels which could be got under way In a few momenta. When I knocked he gave me a cheery "Come In I'm glad to see you." and grinned when I told him about my long chase. Ths first moment of an Interview with a stranger often to the most important, for It to In this brief In stent thst the Interviewer slsee up his subject I find that In my notes of the Interview I recorded this first Impression: "There burns rh his grey eyes the unmistakable flame of the crusader. If he were not a great general he would be In some other field of lead, ershtp and It would Involve Ideal ism, If rve sited up my man right iy." KELIGIOVB There would seem to be nothing In subsequent developments to change that viewpoint. Associated with that thought Is the fact that he la Intensely religious, and In a manner of speaking fought with the Bible In his hand. His own battel cry was: "Let Ood arise let hit enemies be scattered." He told me of messages he wss receiving from sll over the world snd ssid: "I wss particularly touched by one letter from a Sunday school teacher In Atlantic City. He wrote to say that the boys of his classes were praying that I might have strength In the coming battle." And dont these messsges help you?" I asked. "Don't they strengthen your morale?" He nodded, and there was mois ture In his eyes. RABBITS FOOT Speaking of morale. Monty's name waa synonymous with success to his men In the desert It was the rabbit's foot they carried Into battle. Morals wss a fetish with tha general, too. "Morale is the thing." he told me. You can do anything with sn army If lu morale Is high. . . Morale depends on success. Olve the troops sueress and their morale Is high. At another point Montgomery said: "A battle Is a contest between two men two commanders to see which can outwit the other." He turned to a life-sue head-end shoulders photo of Rommel, and re. marked: That's Rommel. I captured that. He's a grand soldier but we shell beat him." "You ars confident" I remarked. "Your own morals Is high." Montgomery looked me straight in tne eye and nodded. Notion Today Social Security Tax Goes Up Jan. 1; Here's How it Works By JAMES MAKLOW WASHINGTON. Nov. 33 uPt-On January I the social security Us to going up from the present 1 per cent eaca to 1 H per cent each on all em. ployee and employers covered by tne law. This Increase of one-half of I per cent In the social security tax will affect about 1,100,000 employers snd about 30,000.000 employers. Congress voted for this Increase In 1947. Seta This Is the way the tsx works and how u will woik after January I The employe You're a covered employe. Now you pay a yearly Ui of 1 per cent on whatever salary you msks Up to 31000. There's no Us on anything you mass over 93000. So the highest tax such sn em ploye hss to pay now to 1 per cent of 33000, or 330 a year, earned from any one employer. When the m per cent tax a year on the first 33000 goes Into sffect the highest Ux Is 341 a year. What happens In the esse of sn employe who chsngee jobs during the year? Suppose he esmed as much as 33000 from ons employer snd paid tha maximum tax on that 330 and then went to work for another employer during the year. (is he all finished paying his so cial security Ux for ths year? No. He has to pay 1 per rent of his pay up to the first 33000 of It earned from the second employer. (But lant 330 the moat an em ploye haa to pay In any year now 7 Yea. But when he pays more then that hs can get a refund by asking the Inurnal revenue bureau for tt at the end of the year. The bureau col Wets the tax.) Eaasleyer Ths employer You hsve to match, out of your own pocket whatever Ux your cov ered employe has to pay: 1 per cent of hie salary up to the first 3300 of It So ths moat an employer has to psy on sny employe's salary la 330 now, or I per cent of 83000. Suppose the employe's total salary la IMX)0 or 310.000. No matter. The employer pays only I per cent 3:0 on the first 13000. HupiHiae the employes salary la 31000. The bnaa pays only I per cent of 31000, or 310. When the Ux ges up to v, p., rent January I, the employe and the employer each will hsve to pay 1 S per cent of ths employe 3 salary up to Um first 31.000, or a man. mum of 349 eawh (So, while ths combined Ux on employer and employe now Is only 3 per cent, sfter January I It will be 3 per cent ) Why This Is an explanation of how the tax Increase cn January I came about. When the social security art waa peered In 1918. congress said the Ux ahould start In 1917 and would run this wsy: 1937 -8-8 1 per cent esch on employes and employers: l0-3 IS per cent; 1943-4-83 per rent 1948-7-3 3't per cent; and start ing January 1. 1949 3 per cent But as 1940 began to roll around with Uie tax one to go up from I to I's per rent congress voir to keep It at I pet cent Year elicr a year It voted to freeie the Ux tf I per cent to prevent an Increase. But In 1941 congress voted to keep Uie tax at I per cent on em ployers and employee through 1949 and Uten let It gu up to 1 S per cent on each, starting January 1. I9M. 1 Blnre congress hasn't changed what It agreed to In 1947, the tax rise of one-half of one per cent elans January 1. Beromes Law This year the present rnngreaa. before It went home, considered a bill to Increase racial security Uses on an Increasing scale until they reached a total of 3'. per cent each on employes snd employers in 19o and therealter. The house passed tills bill la le tills year. But the senate didn't So the bill didn't become law. Therefore, the law paaaed by congraaa In 1947, and not chained since, goes Into ef fect January I. Businois Boost Heavy Federal Outlays Seen Spurring Business Next Year dsy ws hsvs 'unexampled prosper ity.' If Um government csnnot llvs within 1U Income, whst will It do should we hsve a serious recession In business?" Byrnes, who had ssid he to con sidering seeking democrstlc nom- Instlon as governor of South Caro line next year, divided advocates of big government Into three groups: 1 Those who honestly believe that local govemmenu have failed to discharge their responsibilities; 3 Those who feel thst govern. ment must plsy a greater role and yet are opposed to a government doing everything; and 3 The selfish men who crave the power to spend the money of others. These lsst he termed "a dsnger ous group." They ere In every de psrtment and agency and want to suy there, he declared. "The big. ger the government the more mon ey they have to spend." Hans Norland Fire Insurance, 27 Pine Street 1 iii 1 rAlakU l I OTIH Enjoy Firosid Dining on THANKSGIVING DAY in o cozy atmosphtrt! TURKEY and All the Trimmings In Addition to Our Usual Excellent Many. Children's Portions, Open At 4 P. M. For Yotir PUwiure. Phono 1390 or 455 For ReMrrotlons. By CHARLES MOLONY WASHINGTON. Nov. 33 (l Business activity will be bolstered by increasingly heavy federal out. lays through the first hslf of I960, the commerce department pre. dieted today. In overspending lu Income bv about 33.000.000.000. the government will be adding to Income of Indl viduala and eorporatlona and thus stimulating them to re-spend, a de partment analysis said. Order etaeklen The department's monthly "Bur vey of Current Business" also saw a spur to business In backlogs of orders for steel, coal and aluminum by business firms whose Inventories dwindled during the strikes. It figured cash outlays of the gov. eminent aa distinguished from bookkeeping figures In the budget at 348.300.000.000 In Um current fit cal year. Of thst It said, 837.OOOMO.000 will be spent on goods snd services s higher level than that atuined in any time during Uie past three years" Heavy Oatlays Since government payrolls count. ed ss "services" are running ebout 310JOO.000.000 a year, that In dlcated outlays on materials will be heavy, and Uie department noted that Uie spending pace to quicken. lng. Most of Um impending speed-up In outlsys was attributed to "na Uonal defense procurement of equipment materials and supplies," with public works plsying ths see. ond biggest role. The department said the federal government not only win be stlmu latlng construction activity directly with IU own public works, but also will be Inducing others to increase spending for construction. Matched Grants Sutes, It explslned. will be spurred by mstchlng grsnu-ln-sld from tne federal government for nlgnwsy work, etc. Local housing authorttlss. able to get advances from the federsl gov eminent, slso "will Ineresse low. rent housing construction toward tne end or the fiscal rear fnest June 30)", it aald. Private Homebuilding Itself was seen as getting a boost from gov eminent purchases of ouUUndlng mortgsges so that the mortgage holders may re-lend the money far new housing construction. The department said the business trend generslly continued "mod erately upward In October despite the steel and coal strikes. Lot Him Sovo You FIRST VOICE They tell me that tne son or ood who created and upholds sll things, has stripped Himself of His eternal glory and gone down to the Land of Iji Men. SECOND VOICE Tee. He haa gone to take human birth and to grow up among tnem aa Uie Son of Man. Then sinless Himself, He u to oie 1 or tneir sins and give mem new oays ana new waye. LET HIM SAVE YOU ONE SUnd on It that Christ uieu 1 or your every last sin. Tske your stand and Ood gives you new birth Into eternal life with June. ment Day out and Resurrection glory In. TWO Being born sgsln, receive Christ Into your heart to feast with you and you with Him. bo come tne new ways and new days that prove the new birth Into eternal uie. Yes, out of his Father-heart, Ood would see every lsst one of us ssfe with Him In the home nest. So ft was he sent Christ to seek and to save that which Is lost. Your part to to let Him ssve you. Sea Acts 18:11 Bible. t . Portland 1, Ore. This anaeo aald far be land family. City Building Permits Slump Issuance of building permlu by the city went Into a decided slump J during Uie last week. J Only three permlu were on the wuiku pre aai nignt 1 or approval by Uie city fathers, amounting to just 38431. Ons permit waa for construction of a 87000 residence by James H. Walllnder at 914 Jefferson. The other two were for building of a new laundry room at 818 Broad. 31000. and a new roof at 4lh and Fine for 3413. Actor Dan Dailey Hospitalized HOLLYWOOD. Nov. 33 1P Den Dailey la In Cedars of Lebanon hot pital today, recovering from what his physician cells a very aevera virus Infection of the respiratory tract The movie song and dance man waa stricken yesterdav while re hearsing dance routines with Betty Ore ble for their new picture, "My Blue Heaven." Dailey will remain hoepiullsed at toast another day. APFLE CONTAINERS WASHINGTON. Nov. 33 lP, Tha agriculture depsrtment has turned Thumbs down on use of fiber ship ping containers for export of Pa cific Northwest apples but han ap proved use of wooden containers for tray-packed apples. L73! . gw yh SEVEN STAR, asm, Ml OfllJ GW SEVENS14J y viiui iiu 1, r 'krr r- J ) it.