PAGE SIX HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON TUESDAY, FEBRUARY B, 1052 FRANK JENKINS . Editor Entered M Moond clM matter ht tilt port oftloe of Klamath Fall, Or, on August 20, 1908, under act of eonfresi, March I. 1171 MEMBERS OF THIS ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is entitled exclusive! to the ue (or publication of all the local news printed In this newspaper a well u all A? news. SUBSCRIPTION RATE8 By Mall , months 16.50 By Mall year Ill.W ... "OREAT OAKS . . ." KLAMATH FALLS As my namei has been mentioned in con nection with the Juvenile program to be established In Klamath Falls. I feel it necessary to explain my position In regard to the problems as they exist at present. First of all. I am not against the organisation of a "Youth Coun cil" and wish to have it under ttood that I will stand ready to give of whatever services I may be able to render toward making tuch nn organisation function, llowevei. I do feel that it will take a concerted effort by a great many people to moke this council effective. As lack of public inter est has been the downfall of other such organizations, can we expect better fate for this effort? In niv attempt to get at least some direct action on the juvenile problem, it became necessary to talk with a number of our public officials as well as many parents. I wish to make it very clear that I have complete confidence that the welfare of our children Is of the utmost concern of our public f-chool officials. It is very true that all do not see things in the Fame light and that some liberties have been taken by various stu dents, but 'we can be assured of the full cooperation of Mr. Brown and his staff on anv problem that AB(7s (Editor's Note: This is the ' sixth of 10 stories explaining bow to make ont your Income tax re turn for 1951) WASHINGTON Wl You may be puzzled over the problem of de ductions for personal expenses and expenses connected with your work. They're not handled the same way by everyone. A taxpayer whether he's some one's employe, like a businessman, or a professional man, like a law yer, or a man in business for him selfmay have various expenses. All three men may have personal expenses, like medical bills. If those expenses are large enough to require itemizing,' all three men ' handle. them the same way: They Itemize them on the 1040 long-form and claim them In full. And all three may have had ex penses connected with their work. In that case the professional man or the businessman can claim their business deductions separately from their personal expenses. But the expenses of someone who Is an employe, even including ex penses connected with his work, are all treated as personal ex penses. He can't claim them sepa rately from his personal expenses. It's easier to understand if you start with the basic rules: Under-sS.OOO people using Form 1040-A or the 1040 short-form auto matically get a deduction of about 10 per cent for personal expenses, like medical bills. They don't have to itemize or claim them. They're allowed for in the tax table used with those two forms. If under-5,000 people have per sonal expenses greater than 10 per cent of income, they should use the 1040 long-form. There, because they are under-$5,000 people, they must itemize their deductible per sonal expenses but can claim them In full. The $5,000-and-over peopie must file their return on the 1040 long lorm anyway. They don't have to Itemize their personal deductions unless they're unusually large be cause They get a standard deduction of 10 per cent of their income up to a limit of S1.000 which they just take off their income before It's taxable. If any of the $5,000-and-over people want more than the 10 per cent they, too, must itemize. The Itemizing for all personal deductible expenses on the 1040 long-form is done on page 3 under six headings: Contributions, inter est, taxes, losses from natural causes and theft, medical and dent al expenses, and miscellaneous. That "miscellaneous" is a catch all, as you'll see. Now see the difference between a professional man, like a lawyer, or a businessman), and a news paperman who is an employe. Say the lawyer spent $400 for subscriptions to law journals and law societies. For him they'd be a business expense connected with his work. He'd list that business on a sepa rate form called Schedule C which is where professional men and business men list their busi ness expenses in order to deduct them from their Income before It's taxed. Now his total Income for the year was $9,400. After deducting that $400 for business expenses, he finds his Income was $9,000. Now he shifts over to the 1040 long-form ' where he reports bis Income and figures his tax. On that long-form he could take for personal expenses the standard deduction of 10 per cent (S900 in his case) of $9,000. But suppose BILL JENKINS Mtnttflng Editor ..JJ', confronts us. We must understand that our publio schools can func tion properly only If they receive the full support and cooperation of the people whom they serve. If you have a boy or girl in high school, take a few minutes and drop in at the high school and I am sure that you will come away greatly impressed. Our big problem is going to be In getting protection for our chil dren while they are not on the public school grounds and there fore not under school control. I can not help but feel bitterly to ward the places of business who flagrantly disregard our written as well as moral laws In their dealings with our children. I do not feel that any business depend ent upon the welfare of this com munity should allow teen-agers to purchase liquor or cigarettes. Nei ther can I condone our city police administration for allowing this condition to exist. It is the duty of each parent, who feels that our various public agencies must exert more effort toward protection of our youth, to make himself heard. A few words with your councilman or the head of the department involved will not be wasted. "Great oaks from little acorns grow." L. A. Marshall 1HSS Earle St. he had deductible personal ex penses, like medical bills and charitable contributions, which ran to more than 10 per cent of his Income. In that case in addition to listing and taking his $400 In business de ductions on Schedule C he'd item ize his personal expenses on page 3 of the 1040 long-form and claim them In lull. too. But It's different with someone who is an employe, like that news paperman. Say he spent $100 for things to help him in his work, like newspapers and magazines. (This $100 was in addition to a number of personal expenses' like medical Dills ana cnantaoie con tributions.) But in his case he couldn't list that $100 spent to help him in his work on Schedule C. In fact, a person classified as an employe can't use Schedule C at all. That's strictly for professional and busi nessmen. Let's say the newspaperman's salary was $7,000. If the total of that $100 for newspapers and mag azinesdoesn't amount to more than 10 per cent $700 in his case of his income, he simply takes that standard 10 per cent deduc tion on the 1040 long-form. . But suppose his total personal expenses were more than 10 per cent of his Income. He could claim them In full but he'd have to item ize them on page of the 1040 long-form. Under the proper headings on that page he'd list his contribu tions and medical expenses, plus deductible taxes paid on his home, and under "miscellaneous" he'd list any other deductible expenses he had. Including that $100 spent for newspapers and magazines. So he could deduct for exnenses connected with his work only if because he was Itemizing all his personal expenses he included the money, spent In connection with his work, among his personal ex penses. In that way all his ex penses were treated as personal expenses, not as business expens es. That's quite different from the lawyer who could deduct for busi ness expenses on Schedule C and then in addition deduct for per sonal expenses on Form 1040. New Power Line Goes Into Service REDMOND tf) The Central Electric Cooperative put a 28-mile section of Its Post Paulina line Into service Saturday. Thirty one consumers, all cattle ranchers, will receive power from this section, part of a 65-mile line being constructed bv the Coopera tive In the Post and Paulina area of Crook County. Central Electric now has a total of 644 miles of line. WORLD INSIDE TEXA8 DALLAS WlCan you tour the world end never leave Texas? Ii you want to see America first, you can visit New York, population 20. cat baked beans in Boston, see the sights In Washington and visit Mi ami and Atlanta. Going abroad you can travel in Ireland, Italy, Normandy and Tunis. You can waltz in Vienna, population 30, dine on French pastry in Paris, swing east to Toklo and finally visit Mos cow. All ire Texas towns. STOP DOG ODORS! Just fitd mw Km -l Ration -wilt idtr-tttpakii cMenphylKi Ken-L-Ration'i lean red meat (U. S. Govt; Inspected horn meat) nour- ishes your dog new added chloro- ' phvllin ends unpleasant dog odors. Only Ktn-L-Ration gives you .this big extra benefit . . , and at no extra cost. Ridt your dog of bad body and breath odors in 7 day . . , or your money back. - TheyH Do It Every Time F" V v f ITS A GAS sss'S'. . WD ay. V I ITS -HO CMCCOLWT lgfe ARC 6RZAT Ktt I f IT OWT BE- m . KJURE ?iZW WOSg M5 A I I IT Is JUMPING lWrT7rK?.Xi-V VEAI4.- r-7?w 1 NtKYC" fcrt mi k E IWl V f r faV 4k ak JNk ,.,,.w.,,,..w..,,....,W. No political realist Imagined that UMT was going to have an easy time in Congress m a year when the lawmakers must face mothers, fathers and service-eligible young sters of voting age at the polls. it has been hopea, nevertheless, that enough legislators would hear the call of statesmanship to Insure the prompt enactment of this vital aeiense measure. First reactions in the new session do not encourage this hope. i Already there is talk of a limp compromise: the proposal that for the first year of a UMT program the protected 60.000 trainees be drawn from volunteers. The verv essence of any sound military training program is that the burden of service shall fall fairly upon all younat men. Deferment for good reason may play some part In the plan, but exemption complete ireeaom irom service has no proper place. VIOLATION To lnsumirate a UMT plan with a call for volunteers ii therefore a total violation of the spirit and purpose of the program. It puts a premium upon ine man who does not choose to offer his services, bestowing special favor on him at the expense of his volun teering comade. If. in spite of all. Congress should initiate the program on a volun teer basis, it will amount to the lawmakers saying: "We do not have the nerve to put this plan Into effect on a compul sory footing, as it should be. There- tore, we are risxing Damage io PURCELLVILLE. Va. Uf John Baired Shinberger made 13 para chute jumps as a pioneer organizer of the American Army's Paratroop Corps. But it was while he lay badly wounded on a Belgian battlefield in 1944 that he made the biggest Jump in his eventuful life a de cision to Become a sty puuv. A German mortar had burst In red ruin a moment before. It killed one man and wounded five others. including Lt. Col. Shinberger.- a 34- year old battalion commander. The steel fragments mangled one of his arms., opened an artery In the other. As he lay mere wiui nis life flowing from him, the young West Point graduate felt he would die. And' he experienced a deep re gret. He had always in his heart of hearts wanted to be a minister and preach the Lord's Gospel. Now he never could. Shinberger lifted his eyes ana made a compact with Heaven. "Lord," he prayed, "if You let me get off this battlefield in one piece, I'll work for You the rest of my life as a Christian soldier to the best of my ability. I won't put it off anymore. I ll Decome a min ister, whether I'm good or not." He survived, although he spent more than five months in hospit als. As soon as he was well, he set about carrying out his pledge. It took courage for him to turn his back on his brilliant profes sional military career. But Shin berger had spiritual fortitude io match his physical bravery. He re tired from the Army and enrolled as a student in the Virginia Theo logical Seminary. Todav he is rector of three small Episcopal churches In the Virginia dairy country. Both he and his pretty wife. Lisa they have four children are happy In his new calling. The ex-paratrooper, still in rug ged trim at 43, is a popular pastor. People of all denominations come to him to talk over their personal troubles. They like his sensible, down-to-earth manner. But Ehlnberger himself is sun humbly uncertain whether he is as he says "a good preacher." He talked about lt as we sat in his study, where bang pictures of his two great heroes Konert Lee and Stonewall Jackson, who was a deeply religious military leader. "Ever since I was a kid,' he' AIR ij rrTvin tvihi-th mere ntmJ$ IVIfZ'S -w-Jl Let us help you plan your business or pleasure trip! "Reurvotioni Madt Anywhere Without Cost" World-Wide Travel Bureau. RAIL , Winemo Hotel Ph. 8873 HOTELS v nr. Sfm a JL 3 the whole UMT concept by askuig lor volunteers this first year." The wise and brave course is ad mittedly difficult for a politician to follow. The average coiiRi'essin&n's mail undoubtedly is runtime heav ily against UMT. But most of those who write are not thinking of the welfare and saiety of their country. They are simply thinking of themselves, TWO TASKS It is a lawmaker's business to rellect the views of his constituents to represent them. But it is also his business to act lor the good of the country in times of stress. Unless Congress can figure some tt'nv In rpnpnl th Ritc.inils It must I Ha fnrttA m pflnrwlp Ihitt these ere perilous days. Unprcpa redness was a luxurv we managed to enjoy without fatal consequent in the two world wars. Hardly a military man alive be lieves we dare indulge in it again: the risk of crushing defeat is too treat. . lho.se who insist on thinking in terms of former wars or who simply wish to give way to selfish emotion are firm against the adop tion of UMT. The most charitable thmg to be said about them is that they do not understand what kind of world they are living in. UMT Is one vital initredlent in America's considered formula for security in a dangerous world. H is incumbent on thoje who would eliminate it to demonstrate how they would protect the United States in national emergency. said, "I wanted to be a clergyman. But I didn't feel I was worthy enough. So I Just kept procrastinat ing." He feels his Army training has helped him in his new work. "But sometimes I'd like to get the co-ordination you find in- the Army in order to get people to put their principles more into their dally living," he said. "Too many are satisfied just to have the preacher baptize them, marry them, and bury them." Leaving the Army to enter the ministry doesn't seem as unusual to him as it does to others. "During West Point's first hun dred years about 45 per cent of its graduates became clergymen," he cmlled. "In fact so many did that they had an investigation into it." La Framboise Family Hies YAKIMA. WaRh. Ifl When Mrs. Phillip J. la Framboise, Yakima, travels by plane, airline officials do some hurried reshuffling. Tli. 14.vmi nlri mnthpr fttrorle pertly up the passenger ramp of a wormwesi urnnps uis- 1 klma municipal airport Monday night with a fistful of tickets. With her were 11 children, rang ing from 13 years down to five months, all bound for Anchorage, Alaska. The mother said it was no little task to-get 11 voungsters ready for a 1,500 mile flight. On the other hanri. the airlines also had Its hands full. Nortnwest aaaea a spccim mew crdess on the Seattle-Anchorage flight for a total of three. It also opened a private waiting room in the Seattle airport for the convenience of the Yakima mother during her five-hour wait in that city. The family is flying to Anchorage to Join the father, a landscape gardener. NEW MARSHAL WASHINGTON Wi John A. Roseen was nominated Monday by President Truman to be U.S. mar shal for Northern California, suc ceeding Edward J. Carrigan. 1 STEAMSHIP - - s -v. . BOOK I HOW pOR By Jimmy Hatlo A Dime PRESENT AW A MILLION BUCKS' WXTti OF NERVE". VmTCHIMG the CO COUPLE PUT OfJ A 613 ACT AS THEy PRESENT -xiTriER booby-prize GIFT"" Yanport Flood Blame Argued PORTLAND W The Oregon State, Multnomah County, or Port land city government not the federal government had 'he re f ponslblllly of proicctlng Vunporl, according to U.S. attorneys. The attorneys filed a 165-pauc brief here Monday. That was Hit latest development In the trial of six million dollars in damage suits ugalnst the federal government growing out of the 1948 Memorial Day flood which wiped out the war housing project. The trial of 20 suits, represent alive of more than 3,000 filed, ended here last Aujust. Tlie U.S. attorneys' brief alo said the railroads should not be held accountable. It was through a railroad till that the flood wa ters burst on to the city. The gov ernment was operating the rail roads during 1948 because of a strike. Attorneys for the suing Vanport residents now have 60 days to file a reply to the government's brief. Yar Massacre Russ Action? WASHINGTON l.f Col. John H. Van Vliet has explained to a Congressional hearing why he Is convinced the Russians, not the Germans, were responsible for the Katyn Forest massacre In World War Two of some 10,000 Polish war prisoners. The American officer Is the au thor of a long-mlsslng secret re port on the slaughter. He said the Germans showed him and several other war prisoners the bodies in 1934 In an effort to prove the Russians bad committed the atrocity shortly after the Sov iets captured the Poles In 1940. Soviet propagandists have long claimed that Hitler's armies killed the Poles when the Germans over, ran Katyn Forest. 33-mllrs west Of Smolensk, Russia. In 1913. Van Vliet told a special House committee Monday that when In saw the bodies sucked In eight layers "like sardines in a can" the uniforms and boots on most of them were new and showed few signs of wear. His experience In prison camp had taught him. Van Vliet said, that clothing and shoes of live prisoners wore out quickly and were slow, to be replaced. Van Vliet said that before the Germans took him under guard to view the bodies he had been con vinced the Germans were responsi ble but. what he saw changed his mind. The congressional group asked Van Vliet questions designed to clear up whether his original re port on the atrocity had been hushed up. He said his five-year silence was Imposed at his own request, Non Support Charge Filed Here rna nf nnn.MinTwirl. ttf Wife and ,four minor children resulted In arrest Saturday aiiernoon oi John Arthur Oarnham, 38, Miller Island Rd. In District Court Monday morn ing Oarnham asked for time to consult an attorney and was held In the County Jail in lieu of $2500 ball. The four children named In the rnmnlaint raneed from 12 to 2i years in age. DIES PORTLAND W The editor and publisher of Portland's Japanese semi-weekly newspaper died here Friday of a heart ailment. He was Iwao Oyama, 65. See This Gorgeous Flowering Shrub Change, From White to Pink to Purple in Your Yard! Sensational "flJIOPj CHANGING" HYDRANGEA' J q jg G ml N olhftr Si JL l0Tly. tti Mnah pink gntt tlon of your hoaf, or border, i Orow nnvwherf, Hhipped J Im 4 H. Inr city tratmftlii itllnir. PWid fine for It plu tea for ponliif. hundlltif, fl for U, ti for 5 tolfiitM, C.n.fVn vlcom. JiildfBfitlon niftMnt-H or Monfv TUcfc. KXTRA fill T If roa ardor r more. flowering Rif Twit Ontwond. Kriist Nunerlea, Dept. li;iiT, lUoomlnRlon. III. Nsmo ' ,.,.., . AMrtU lis m , .Ti-t, L w fan.. wigMw . JnS i ' READY FOR OLYMPICS Imoitrne Opton. Kalliy Roilolpli, Andrea Mead Lawrence, Sandra Tomlliuon, trainer Her bert Jnrhtim, Jnuttte Kurr end Hetty Weir of I1, S, Alpine uniai. meet for practice on slalom com so In Mucin-n, Stvllicrianil. . at - IWTS,. I'M .-'.. ."A . a? FICHTINC THE ELEMENTS Toni of water surge upward as bow of t'SS Wisconsin plumes through heavy teas during a rainstorm off East cojvt of Korea where big battle ship, as part of a L'. N. force, has been blasting Red-held ports. There are tevetal kinds of heart dlser.si for which in the past little could lie clone, but which now can be treated cllcctlvely In iniiiiy In stances by the u.ic of delicate heart surgery. Even with the progress In this field of recent years, the end litis not yci been reached since Investi gators hi'c still finding new meth ods by which they can extend the benefit. of heart surgery to more und more people. One ol the most important de velopments of heart surgery has been that used In the treatment ol to-called "blue' babies." or Infants born with congenital heart disease. The bluish color of the skin which Rives tlie common'nnmc Is caused by lack of oxygen altnchcd to the hemoglobin or coloring matter of the blood. In blue babies the deliclency of oxygen is tho result of a mal formed heart or of the larse blood vessels near it. Fuch defective structures, permit' the blood from the veins which contain onlv a little oxygen to mix with the blood from the arteries. There arc several kinds of mal formations of the heart which will permit this mixing of oxygen-con-mining and tion-oxvgcn containing blood. The various kinds arc too numerous and too complicated to describe In detail. They enrrv such lechnlcn! mimes ns coarctation ot the aorta, tetra logy of Fallot and pulmonary ste nosis wllh intact ventricular sep tum. But It does make a differ ence to the patient because some kinds i.-nn now be successfully ireatcd by surgery and other can not. In one of these conditions the passonewav between the heart nnd and one of the large blood vessels which ;hould normally close be fore birth fulls to do so. Tills Is called a patent or open ductus ar teriosus. This opening can be closed by heart surgery with great success. Some of the other congenitnl mal formations of the heart, for remits of disease) can also be treated Blooms Usually Last From Summer Right Through Winter! 'lowrlnr hnih bin omit no Inn it tir it Thll amnln "Color rtintarliit?" Ilt-rt. rmngr ninnm in rsriy ftiimmftr Wllh llinuiintli f fftiowy flswrra . . . la tr I he riivr (urn flnillv In (nil lo royal piirplr. Trim inairao or ruiirif orr wnin rroil rnmtn, ihrr o.Un l.ttt rlffhl thronffh wlnltr. f.vtn ih rtit f lower Ii vn for moil (hit. ' Wonarful fhrtib for nlnnllnc round ronnrlii- " 4VU . "' rat ia l.J'rfV. n Y i, .r l turtifl -.Si 7 ft. mccev fully by nursery, but not nil of Ihcni. For this reason careful rtudv of eiic-h case has ox be conducted In ortl'-r to niiike a diagnosis and to decide whether or not surgery r would cllcr chances ol relief. I For the child with congenital i heart clit-ea.se who cannot be treat ed by Mirgi-ry. certain precautions ; are particularly nerrsrary. Su.-ll I children niu.U. of course, be rare- lullv examined and every eflort mint be made to avoid Infection und e:cpsslve physical strain. Fate Smiles Then Frowns DURANT, Okla. i.H It took two tiles, hut fate llntillv caught up with 48-vear-old Henry Allen Wilson, a highway department em ploye. Stale Trooper' Verll Martin re i ported I ruck driver Loyd O. Couch iol KtiiiEtis City swerved Just In time to avoid hitting Wilson who v.ns working on a section of U.S. Mllihwtiy 69 two miles south ol 'Dtirnnt. I Couch swerved across thi center line and Inlo some wet concrete. The truck slid and smashed Into a barricade. Tho biirHcade went sailing through the ah right at Wilson. Hc.wus hospitalized with a crushed kneo and cuts. CHIKF TKIPPKD LANCASTER, O. Lfl Ohio's liquor permit chief pli'iulcd RUiHy lo a cnuritc of drunken drlvltiK Monday. Frnncla K. Cole, 38, of Columbus van fined $100 by Muni cipal Judcc William C. Plckerlmr, ,-nid nl.so lo.st Ills rlRhl to drive lor 60 days. ' " ' 1 . . ..... K -f -1 ', i iii OUR FAMOUS for WOMEN'S SHOE SALE MUST END WED., FEB. 6 THE Model Shoe Store Once Famous,'' Now Vagrant NHW YOltK l.n Two friend mil tin t'll) Themlity to bull out Maxwell Dodi'iilirlin, once latnmi.t Uiwnwletl Village poel-tiovellut held by Hinoklyn police on a chuigo uf sleeping In tho subway, They said Ihev worn Inking him In his favorite village oale to read poetry, The itl-ycm- old llodeiihelin, un kempl and neeiiiliiidy bewildered, said ha had no complaints, "Tills Is the Hint lime 111 all my llle I've ever been In Jail," he re marked, "they were very nice, very courteous, I did not mlpd It a bit." lie wns Inslrurted to appear Feb. II lo iiunwer the charge. Pollco snld llndrnhrlin and Mix other men wero arrested early Mondnv nn disorderly conduit cliurge.-i when I hey were liiuiid filccplng on Hibwnv aeutn. Hud ho pleaded ittnllv, tlodeiilieim cuiild have gone tree for a $2 line. During his hey-day, 13 of Iloden. helin'N novels and nine volumes of his vertte hriiiiKhl liltn fame. Itut he was on relief bv 193(1 mid the same year was adiudKed ntt iiculs ulcoholln at Ilellevue Hospital. Hospital Tank Blast Fatal CHICAGO LP All nm-Hllieiio dink exploded In a hospital opet. attng room Tuc.Mluy and a depun coroner fald It caused Iho death of u Roman Catholic priest who win undergoing surgery. '"those things do happen, but not erv ollen." Thomas A Carter, deputy coroner, until of the acil. tient. The prlrst was the Rev. James P. Cunimings. 36, who had been on sick Irttva from his paiurnte for a year and was being operated on lor ulcers. The explosion occurred In Ht. Francis lloopltnl In suburban Kvntt t.lon. drier nnld attendants there told him the prlrst luhsled lint rmokt end gasen which filled the loom after the blast. Carter said the anesthetic wan a combination of ether nnd ryelopro pane, administered under pressure, he added the cause of the expliv ilon was not known. Tlie gases, he explained, are highly Inllammable However, the deputy coroner said attendants told him they saw no (lame; that they only heard a 'big boom" and saw the machine vi brating after the blast. It ripped Ih machine's Inhnlator bag In rhrtds. and tort oil Its glass and plastlo valvrs. Park Animal Feeding Nixed WA81I1NOTON if No longer may vlritora lo the National Tarks leed the wild animals. Announcing this Tuesday. Set 3 relary of the Interior Chantim said too many neonle are belni attacked because ol the mistaken belief Hint animals found In the National Park are tame and can be handled as pets. "There are Instances too num erous to mention where supposedlv 'lame' wild animals turned on their benelactors," the National Park Service eU In recommending the ban to Chapman, "more than ono deer raised Irom a fnwn has tram pled or gored Its owner to death " Tlie regulation prohibits "teed Irg. touching, teasing or molesting of anv bear, deer, moose, bison, mountain sheep elk or antelope. The service for aome time has fnrblddrn the feeding or bothering of bears. It said bears "continue to pre. rent the principal problem of pub lic saiety." K FINAL CLEARANCE DRESSES SUITS COATS BLOUSES i 2 skirts' hostess robes GOWNS 0 SLIPS MILLINERY AND LESS HOSE 719 MAIN 1 f M.ndA . -