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St. Louis Post-Dispatch from St. Louis, Missouri • Page 19

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St. Louis, Missouri
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19
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i ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH THURSDAY, AUGUST 19, 1945 ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH 3B Specialist Dead DR. ROY H. MILLIGAN LATE MAYOR KIEL'S SUBSIDIES INCREASE FRENCH BIRTHRATE TO 210 PER 10,000 SOCIAL ACTIVITIES WALTER LIPPMANN Lynching by Congressional Committee DIES OF HEART AHACK PORTRAi UNVEiLED It Had Been 146 in 1938 Government Began ANNOUNCEMENT has been made in New York of the en-nrtment of Miss Edith Gibb Collapses After Digging Post Paying Parents.

i'v Daughter Takes Part in Ceremony Two Bronze Plaques Presented. McLane, daughter of Mrs. Howard W. Maxwell of Park avenue, New York, and Locust Valley, Holes at New Home in County. THK testimony before the congressional committees poses the question as to whether Soviet espionage in Washington during the war was as incompetent as it looks.

For even if all of Miss Bentley's allegations were true, they would prove that the spy ring to which she belonged never penetrated the top secrets of the Roosevelt-Churchill diplomacy, of the high command, of the intelligence and of scientific research'. PARIS, Aug. 19 (AP) The time L. I to Thomas Patrick Dillon has passed in France when you could see advertisements reading of St. Louis, second secretary at the American Legation in Berne, dogs, piano and children un wanted," because government sub Compared, for example, with the brilliant achievements of our own espionage against the Ger sidies are paid for children.

mation. Once that is done, the committees can talk only about what may have happened. They can do nothing about what may be happening or may be going mans and the mmm. I Alarmed by her dwindling birth The funeral of Dr. Roy H.

Mil-ligan, who collapsed and died of heart disease yesterday, will be at 1 p.m. Saturday at Union Avenue Christian Church, Union and 'En-right avenue. Burial will be in Oak Grove Cemetery. Dr. Milligan, a specialist in ear, nose and throat ailments, collapsed a short time after digging post holes for a fence in the rear (Picture in Everyday Magazine.) Miss Edna Kiel unveiled a portrait painting of her father, the late Mayor Henry W.

Kiel, and two bronze plaques bearing inscriptions honoring him, the only St. Louisan to serve three four-year terms as mayor, at a ceremony in the lobby of Kiel Auditorium Opera House' yesterday. The portrait, which will hang rate, France began paying for babies and in nine years the fig Japanese, or with the Canadian affair, the ures have gone up from 612,000 births in 1938, or 146 for every inhabitants, to 860,000 in 1947, Bentley spy ring to happen. Thus if the whole Bentley story were true, it would still be nothing but a footnote to what is now ancient history, and the inquiry about what happened in 1943 to 1945 does not add one iota to the security of the United States in 1948. The espionage which is being carried on today is not being carried on by Miss Bentley and her associates.

or 210 per 10,000. In the same period the death rate went down from 647,000, or 154 per 10,000 in 1938, to 535,000. or 131 per 10,000 of his new home on Parker road, a half mile east of Florissant, St. on its own showing got nowhere near the heart and center of cf the real secrets of the war. If, therefore, this was the main spy ring.

permanently on the south wall of the building's main floor lobby, DR. ROY H. MILLIGAN Switzerland. The prospective bridegroom is the son of John W. Dillon and his first wife, the former Miss Sarah Anderson, who died in 1937.

Mr. Dillon and the present Mrs. Dillon live at 5866 Cates avenue. The1" wedding will take place Sept. 11 in Berne.

Miss McLane, daughter of the late Allan McLane, is a granddaughter of the late Judge and Mrs. Allan McLane of Baltimore and of the late Mr. and Mrs. Herbert L. Pratt of Glen Cove, L.

I. She attended Chapin School, New York, and was graduated from Westover School, Middlebury, and Vassar College where she was elected to Phi Beta Kappa. A member of the Colony Club, she made her debut in 1944 at the Junior Assembly, New York. Mr. Dillon holds degrees from both the University of Pittsburgh in 1947.

was painted by William Howard The French Government has in French, St. Louis artist who now creased compensations bonus and WHAT'S IN A NAME? jl A Li is a member of the faculty of the Louis county. Workmen said he dug several holes and then complained of pains in his back. He walked to his automobile sat in it and then got out and lay on the ground under a tree. The construction workers noticed that he was not moving and summoned a physician and an inhalator.

Taken to County Hospital, Dr. Milligan was subsidies for families having children. Now, a family of five with three children is paid a monthly compensation of 10,500 francs Washington University School of Fine Arts. It is about three feet by four feet and flanked by the PLENTY, IF YOU'RE IN SHOW BUSINESS two plaques. MRS.

HERMAN MONROE REA II The former Miss Marjorie Ann Stewart, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James B. Stewart, 5111 Enright avenue. Her marriage to Mr.

Rea took place Monday, Aug. 2, at Maple Avenue Methodist Church. Cunliff, representing a group of the former mayor's How London Producers React friends, made the principal ad dress. Mayor Aloys P. Kaufmann accepted the portrait and plaques to the Right Man From the 'Audience.

in behalf of the city. Former and Harvard. He became a secre Mayor Bernard F. Dickmann attended the ceremony. Wilbur Evans, Municipal Opera baritone, Wedding in Canada.

tary in the diplomatic service in March 1941, at Toronto, returned to Harvard for courses in the Russian language and was sent first to Kubishev, Russia. Subse rOL. RALPH L. JACKSON, superintendent, since 1929, of (about $35) which equals the average departmental wages fixed by the government. For four children the rate per month is 14,000 francs (about $46) and compensations go up according to the number of children.

There is a special subsidy for the first child born within two years of marriage. It amounts to 21,000 francs (about $70) and has been extended to each birth. There are als compensations to encourage mothers to stay at home and not to work, plus certain advantages offered to big families, such as reduced rate tickets on railways. JAMES F. GAMBLE TO EDIT MISSOURI VACATION GUIDE sang "One Alone" and Ah Sweet Mystery of Life," two numbers that were favorites of Mayor Kiel when he was president of the ton, was married Monday in Wind Immoral Excuse.

It has been argued recently that though the injustice to individuals done in this inquiry is regrettable, the national interest is being served so well that it justifies the sacrifice of a few innocent persons. That argument Is profoundly immoral It is also profoundly unintelligent. For the injustice of the procedure is proof of its incompetence if the inquiry cannot distinguish clearly the innocent from the guilty, then it is not clearly directed against the guilty. The safeguards, entirely lacking in these committees, which the law provides for the protection of the innocent are Integral to the procedure by which the law convicts and punishes the guilty. For the safeguards are designed to ascertain the truth, and when the safeguards, developed in the course of centuries under our law, have disappeared, the truth about the innocent and the truth about the guilty go down together.

When innocent men can be lynched, guilty men go scot free. Municipal Theater Association. sor, to Mrs. Eve Mallory of Brockville, Ont. The ceremony was quently he served in Vladivostok, and, after attending the San Francisco Conference, in Warsaw, Poland, where he went in July 1945.

After a brief leave in One of the bronze plaques said: performed by a Presbyterian min "Henry W. Kiel, 1871-1942, Brick ister at the home of the bride's LONDON, Aug. 19 (UP) Think it's tough to break into show business? Well This fellow went to the London Palladium last night as one of the paying audience. The Andrews sisters picked him out of the crowd" and asked him to join their act. He sang a song in a hoarse little voice and brought down the house.

Then he did a dance with Patty Andrews and got another ovation. layer, Builder, Business Man; February of this year he was assigned to Berne. son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Wallace W.

Stuart, and was followed by a luncheon. There were only a dozen guests and two three times Mayor of St. Louis, 1913 to 1925. Brother to his fellow man in all walks of life." The other said in part: "At his death, he was called 'St. Louis's best beloved pronounced dead on arrival.

His wife said he had complained of pains between his shoulders recently and had had a physical checkup. He often went to the site of his new home and enjoyed helping in the construction job. He had purchased the 20-acre tract in 1941 and construction of the home was started in May. He and his wife planned to occupy it in October. Born in Pinckneyville, 111., he attended schools there and then took his undergraduate work at Eureka College, Eureka, 111.

He received his medical training at St. Louis University, graduating in 1915. He had practiced here since 1920. His office was at 607 North Grand boulevard. Besides membership in the St.

Louis Medical Society, he was a fellow in the American Medical Association and a member of the Academy of Otorhinolaryngology and of Alpha Omega Alpha, an honorary fraternity. He was 58 years old. The present family residence is at 7575 Stanford avenue. University City. ANYBODY SEEN A 'CHUTE JUMPER AT WASHINGTON attendants, both of Brockville Mrs.

Harold Dobby, matron of Miss Joan Davis Parke, debutante daughter of Mrs. Carter Davis Parke, 10 Beverly Place, has been visiting in West Chester, for two weeks. Last weekend she was in Princeton, N.J. She has now gone to Ard-more. to be with friends.

BARUCH 78 TODAY; IN 'FINE HEALTH'; GOING TO RACES Encroaching Tyranny. To Attend Eastern College. SMITH COLLEGE, Northampton, will number among it Vi Tn on -fivo vnn -n cr urnmAn we should have to conclude that Thomas the Russian intelligence service was remarkably inefficient. But with all their long experience with secret policy and spies and informers, and witU all the opportunities open to them in wartime Washington, it is hard to believe that the Russians relied much on what an inexperienced woman like Miss Bentley could turn up for them, Three Years Late. It i much more probable that the Bentley rin was one of those feeders of.

gossip, rumor, clues and fabrications which every intelligence service employs, but with caution knowing that espionage of this type is not clearly distinguishable from a racket, and that people who make a business of being renegades and informers are quite likely to do just what Miss Bentley says she has-' done: to betray their foreign employers as they have betrayed their own countrymen. The evidence shows not only that this particular spy ring obtained no secret information of any consequence but that, such as it was, the FBI broke up the ring three years before the congressional committees went into action. This is a pretty good reason for thinking that congressional committees are not equipped to perform the indispensable work of counter-espionage. To expose a spy ring three years after it was dissolved by the regular agencies of the Government is rather slow work, and hardly reassuring that these committees are competent to deal with the problem of espionage. The record suggests that in a serious case involving secrets of state and American security, they would be able to do no more than lock the stable door with a loud bang long after the horse had been stolen.

Committee Handicap. The fact of the matter Is that secrecy is essential to counterespionage. It is not true, as some have been saying lately, that publicity is the best weapon to combat the operation of a foreign secret service. These committees, which use publicity, are extraordinarily unsuited to the task of detecting secret operations while they are in progress. For in order to make a public case they must expose their own sources of infor Special to the Post-Dispatch.

JEFFERSON CITY, Aug. 19 James F. Gamble resigned yesterday as head of the recreation section of the State Division of Resources and Development to supervise publication of a new Missouri vacationers' guide book. He will be assisted by G. Edward (Gus) Budde, executive secretary of the St.

Louis Sports Council and former executive secretary of the State Conservation Federation. Gamble was appointed to publish the booklet, "Missouri Shows You," by directors of the Missouri Recreation Association. The booklet will be issued next January for the 1949 vacation season. The recreation association includes organizations interested in promoting the state as a vacation center. Gamble's resignation is effective Sept.

1. honor, and George Fulford. on whose CoL Jackson met his bride, best man. Col. and Mrs.

Jackson are honeymooning on Mackinac Island, Mich. They will return to Alton Sept. 1, accompanied by her 14-year-old daughter, Nancy Mallory, who will live with them. The bridegroom left for Windsor last Saturday, accompanied by his son, Ralph Borden Jackson, and his son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.

Charles Borden Jackson, all of whom returned home after the wedding. They arrived in Canada in time for a cocktail party at the home of friends and a dinner at the Essex Country Club, the day before the ceremony. CoL Jackson is a graduate of Princeton University and did graduate work at Harvard. His father, the late Col. A.

M. Jackson, was associated with Western Military Academy for many years. Tha other day in a brilliant anti-Socialist book published in England, called "Ordeal by Planning" and written by John Jewkes of the University of Manchester, I found a passage from the Times of London which was written more than a hundred years ago. It is worth quoting and pondering: "The greatest tyranny has the NEW YORK. Aug.

19 (INS) Bernard M. Baruch, America's "elder statesman," is celebrating his seventy-eighth birthday today by going to the races at Saratoga. Asked for a birthday interview, Baruch laughed and said: "I'm not that old! Old age is always just 15 years older than I am." His 78th birthday finds him in smallest beginnings. From prece 'fine health," Baruch said. While dents overlooked, from remonstrances despised, from grievances who were graduated in June from John Burroughs School.

They are Miss Betsy Lee Bowen, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Hugh M. Bowen, 4448 Maryland avenue; Miss Ruth Naomi Edison, daughter of the Irving Edisons, 9900 Litzsinger road, Clayton; Miss Joanne Ruth Gravely, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

Joseph J. Gravely, 7134 Maryland avenue, Clayton; Miss Mary Curtis McKinley, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lee McKinley, 244 Linden avenue, Clayton, and Miss Mar-iorie Jeanne Mueller, daughter of Dr. and Mrs.

Robert Mueller, 512 Purdue avenue, University City. Among St. Louis women planning to return to Smith are Miss he would not discuss national or international affairs, Baruch said: Later he said he was going to write a musical show for production in London. "I'll take it," Producer Emile Littler said. "No, I'll take it," Producer Val Parnell shouted.

"I'll buy the screen rights, sight unseen," Film Magnate Ben Goetz said. "Can 1 please publish the score?" Music Publisher Jimmy Phillips begged. Nothing tough about it. Not if your name is Irving Berlin. ENGLISH WOMAN ABANDONS FLIGHT AROUND THE WORLD MARSEILLE.

France, Aug. 19 (AP) Mrs. Richarda Morrow-Tait announced today she has abandoned her attempted flight around the world in a small plane. Mrs. Morrow-Tait said she made the decision because of time lost from London to Marseille, and because the plane was damaged when it struck a hole in the Ma-rignane field here.

Repairs to the plane were expected to keep the 24-year-old former artist's model in Marseille until Friday, when she plans to fly back to London. She had taken off from Cambridge, Eng. He husband and their 18-months-old daughter, Anna, watched the takeoff. Mrs. Morrow-Tait was accom "I have a lot of work laid out for the next few years.

I have an outline of work that will keep me busy for some time." FUNERAL FOR ERNEST A. HOLM Laura Schwab, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William S. Schwab, 7103 J.

B. Howard, who has a good eye for parachutes but a bad memory for names, appealed today for help in locating a former paratrooper who's working his way through Washington University, by baling out of planes at air shows. He wants to give him a job. Howard, who operates a parachute service at 4468 St. Louis avenue, has been staging a parachute-jumping act at air shows, but he has an artificial leg and hasn't been doing any jumping himself for about two years.

About six weeks ago, he said, he met the Washington University student when the latter was preparing to make a jump at a show at Kratz Field. Howard boggled when he discovered that the young man didn't have any equipment of his own and was simply picking up any GRETA GARBO TO ACT AGAIN HOLLYWOOD, Aug. 19 (AP) Actress Greta Garbo is returning to the screen after a seven-year absence. Producer Walter Wanger said yesterday she had signed a contract to star in a picture he will make in Europe next spring, the principal scenes to be filmed in Paris and Rome. Maryland avenue; Miss Janet Mc treated with ridicule, from powerless men oppressed with impunity, and overbearing men tolerated with complacence, springs the tyrannical usage which generations of wise and good men may hereafter perceive and lament and resist in vain.

"At present, common minds no more see a crushing tyranny in a trivial unfairness or a ludicrous indignity, than the eye uninformed by reason can discern the oak in the acorn, or the utter desolation of winter in the first autumnal falL Hence the necessity of denouncing with unwearied and even troublesome perseverence a single act of oppression. Let it alone and it stands on record. The country has allowed it and when it is at last provoked to a late indignation it finds itself gagged with the record of its own ill compulsion." Afee, daughter of the J. Wesley McAfees of St Louis Country Club grounds; Miss Joanne Fistere, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

Joseph Fistere, 26 Fair Oaks, Clayton, and Private funeral services for Ernest A. Holm, member of a pioneer St. Louis family, were held at the Wagoner undertaking establishment, 4146 Lindell boulevard, followed by cremation in Valhalla Chapel of Memories. Mr. Holm was 82 years old and died yesterday of infirmities at the home of his sister, Mrs.

Otto L. Teichmann, 4944 Lindell. For nearly 50 years he was secretary of the old Charles Rebstock whisky dealers here. He was a bachelor. Miss Sarah Merrill, daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. Claude K. Rowland, 7024 Forsythe boulevard, Clayton, plan to depart soon with their son, James Kerlin Rowland, for Winston Salem, N. to visit their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.

John J. Thrower for several weeks. James Rowland, who returned recently from Deer Lodge, after a month's stay with friends, will enter Stanford (Calif.) University next month as a junior. He was graduated in June from Phoenix (Ariz.) Junior College. Mrs.

Lewis T. Apple of Hunt-leigh Village is spending two weeks at the Biltmore Hotel in Santa Barbara, Calif. Mr. ana Mrs. Claude D.

Merrill, 427 Orchard avenue, Webster Groves. Miss Merrill will depart Monday Russian Theater Aid Dies. LONDON, Aug. 19 (AP) The Moscow radio announced today the death of Mikhail Tarkhanov, a leading figure in the Soviet theater. The broadcast quoted a Tass dispatch which did not say when, or where he died or give his age.

panied by Michael Townsend, 25, ior iiarnsDurg, where she will serve as a bridesmaid the following Saturday in the wedding Cambridge student and former member of the Royal Air Force, who was the navigator. She had hoped to be the first woman oi jmiss trances imager to Donald Shettle Jr. Miss Fager has visited St. Louis as a guest of the Merrills and of Miss Frances MacDonald, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

Donald to circle the globe in a light plane. Rita Hayworth Visited Spain. LONDON, Aug. 19 (AP) The Madrid radio said today film star Rita Hayworth has been in Spain for a two-day visit. The broadcast said she was accompanied on her arrival by Aly Khan, 37-year-old sportsman son of the Aga Khan.

She left today for Lisbon, the broadcast said. old parachute to use -whenever he made a jump. Furthermore, the man was using only one chute, and Howard thinks two are, to say the least, desirable, in case the first one doesn't open. Persuading the young man not to make the jump, Howard took his name and address so that he could hire him for the next show he was asked to stage. There's a MARQUIS CHILDS Protector of the Forests MacDonald, 6 Lenox place, who was her roommate at Bradford AUGUST FUR SALE Now in Progress Nw styles, fer 'furs, new low prices.

Come' and tale a look. Free Storage Lay-Away iviass.) Junior College. Desirable Summer Dresses To Head Rural Bible Crusade. OZARK, Aug. 19 The Rev.

Hugh M. Mclnnes will become director of the Rural Bible crusade of Missouri, with headquarters here, Sept. 1. He succeeds the Rev. Paul C.

Guiley who resigned to accept a pastorate in Illinois. The crusade is seeking contributions to use in paying off a debt of $1000. sroo show coming up at Lebanon, Sent. 12. and a chance for the lalhts Budget riatt young man to make $35 or $40, McCALL, Idaho.

WILLIAM JAMES, America's great philosopher, wrote about the need of mankind to find a moral equivalent for war. He was speaking of the need to find, in time of peace, some great unifying force that would release all of man's energies for creative good as they are released in war for destruction. but Howard lost his wauet a lew weeks ago, and with it the man's JwiArwtkeld Burns and Tears VI Re woven Cartfully and Expertly 239 W.EUCLID- FO-455I Wedding and from tJI AH Sales Final grace ashley 4904 McPherson Ave. (8 Olive-University Car to Door Family Grewps Oven Mond.yi FURRIER Phone CE. 437S name and address, 'lne man is about 22 years old, and his mother is a nurse at Barnes Hospital, Howard said.

I iVi III i 100SOLTYE-CA-614JJ on WASHINGTON at TENTH "Fire is the most, menacing enemy. The Forest Service is geared Something approaching that is the United States Forest Service. If ever I have seen men dedicated to a cause, anl faithful and ef JPola Stout IVoofens Cxclusiv In St. Loufiat wioirs to fight it with modern weapons. Fire jumpers the paratroopers of peace are rigorously trained in Floor Lamps Operated ky May Dest.

Store Ca. Give and Redeem Eagle Stantaa 5E the technique of parachuting out 0 aA 3 STOKES Clayton Vlaza DE. 2121 1282 FORSYTHE 4954 MARYLAND of planes to put out fires before they can spread. By radio and telephone from a network of lookouts omes the warning of the first small blaze. It is plotted on the map, a dispatcher sends out a plane and ficient in that dedication, it is In the guardian-ship of the mountain heart-lands of the West which tinder law rests on this service.

It is a service a decentralized mm Pill sEim FOODS II Webster WE. 170 40 W. LOCKWOOD Varkside RO. 2988 302 N. KINftSHICHWAY soon the Forest Service para- troopers are dropping on the fire with equipment to fight it.

any govern- 'S a i ts orcaniza- 4jJ2 II uld oe. 1U Kangers in Parachutes tion Forest supervis William James or and raneers TO STRAUB'S FOR THE FINEST Shelf-Cured Cheddar Cheese AGED TO PERFECTION SHARP, TANGY AND SO TASTY. THIS MAKES A GRAND ADDITION TO THAT CHEESE TRAY OR FOR A LATE SNACK. Lavande Extra Vieille superb toiletry 150 3-oz. bottle Rich with the loved scent of lavender.

Extra old, extra stimulating. By Roger and Gallet. Plus Federal Tax Famoua-Bair Teiletriet Maia Fleer Weleks -5a brie 3orecciA I for Fall The enchantment of black and the allure of new fall shades Gauntlet Grey, Stuart Green, "Warwick Brown, 49' LB. Green Turtle Soup Applesauce Se awe with ham A OO-r roast aprk TTini OJ6 Ancora brand Tia 98C with sherry adaedl Marmalade Pineapple Red Robe dessert chinks Tin Supervisor John T. Mathews of the Payette National Forest, with headquarters in McCall, has a force of 60 smoke-jumpers.

For these 0 summer jobs he had 483 applications from young men prepared to undergo the stern training and then to drop from a swiftly moving plane in a remote part of the forest. An almost equally menacing enemy is the destruction of soil caused when too many sheep and cattle graze in the mountain meadows. At this point politics of an explosive variety enters in. Here in Idaho the Forest Service has had considerable co-operation from ranchers and stockmen. They did not join with livestock associations in Wyoming and Nevada in a move that seemed to have as its ultimate goal the removal of public forests from federal guardianship.

The. scarcely concealed objective was to turn these lands over to the states and thence, in all probability, to private ownership and exploitation. 43c It-Ox. Jar 35c Crosse) It Blackwell Seville tye have a lot of independence and authority. They make the decisions on which the well-being of forest and river and valley depend.

A Needed Rigor. Since it is part of a large bureaucracy, the Department of Agriculture, it has some of the blights of bureaucracy. The red tape, manifested in innumerable Tecords, often seems excessive. Lumbermen and stock growers frequently accuse the service of arbitrary and dictatorial decisions. But seeing the vast devastation that has been worked by fire and erosion and the narrow margin of security, I think I would incline to side with the service in any such argument.

Without the water from the watersheds which are protected by the Forest Service, the livelihood of thousands upon thousands of families in the West would disappear. And that FEATURED FOR FRIDAY LAKE SUPERIOR TROUT AVERAGE 2j TO 3 LBS. EACH. BAKED FISH IS SO TASTY. SERVE WITH FRENCH FRIES.

BUTTERED BEETS. CLAYTON PLAZA PARKS! DE Lamb Stew 85c 69c 88c 29c 48c Meaty new peas ai "Windsor Blue, and Red Tortoise are captured in WELEK'S lovely fabrics. Black and the many other new shades will, this year, more than ever before, hold you in their spell. This wide choice of colors and fabrics which blend in se well with the new woolens, is an inspiration to fashion. 4 Soft rayon crepes, pure silks, crisp taffetas and brocades, and rich gr.tins are all at WELEK'S.

Come see them. Eastern Sole Broil to perfection Lb. Beef to Stew Solid lean beef Lb. STRAWS Chuck Pot Roast aeeel with eeodles and ejreen vegetable u. 73c 8282 FORSYTHE DE.2I2I 302 N.

KINGSHIGHWAY RO. 2988 Fountain i Restaurants Raid That Backfired. RED DELICIOUS APPLES 2 FANCY FINE EATING APPLE FILL YOUR FRUIT BOWL Eqqplant i Pascal Celery But that move backfired. Farmers, sportsmen and conservationists were quick to see that it threatened everything they valued, including the base of permanent development in the whole region. Frightened politicians, who had HAVE LUNCHEON AT STRAUB'S! DELIGHTFUL LUNCHEONS AT OUR FOUNTAINS OR IN OUR DINING ROOMS, EXCELLENTLY SERVED AND SO REASONABLE.

COME TODAY FOR LUNCH OR DINNER. 15c. 2st.lk,45c Each fallen in with the move, hastily tried to run to cover. The men of the Forest Service- would be only the beginning of a chain of consequences fatal to the empire of the West. From the high protected watersheds, the mountain streams run down into the rivers.

The flood water from melting snows in the spring is stored in reservoirs built by the Bureau of Reclamation. Then during the growing season this water is released to farmers in the valleys through an elaborate irrigation system. Magic by Water. It works a magical transformation. Land that supported only sagebrush and sparse grass blooms with rich crops.

While the hills are brown and desert-like, the valleys are green and fruitful. This fruitfulness begins in the smallest rivulet high in the wil the zull-time personnel is only BAKERY TREATS COCOANUT DEVIL'S FOOD LAYER 78c ROUND TWO-LAYER DEVIL'S FOOD LAYER. WITH RICH MARSHMALLOW FROSTING COVERED WITH TENDER, FRESH COCOANUT Butterick Pattern Ko. 4371 aoouc 2500 are dedicated to the concept of a permanent growth of tne forest or what remains of it. Tit ova wb.

H.UU 4t mi .4 FEATURED AT OUR FOUNTAINS FOR KID AT AND SATURDAY TUNA FISH SALAD SANDWICH ON WHITE BREAD OR TOAST WITH RADISH AND SWEET PICKLE AND A RICH CQC STRAUB CHOCOLATE MALT ALL FOR 07 FEATURED IN OUR RESTAURANTS FRIDAY AND SATURDAY "CAMP CREEK" DUCKLING DINNER HORS D'OEUVRES, SOUP DE JOUR, ROAST YOUNG DUCKLING WITH RICE DRESSING. CHOICE OF POTATOES AND VEGETABLE. TOSSED GARDEN SALAD. HOT BREAD AND ROLLS WITH 025 BUTTER, CHOICE OF DRINK AND DESSERT FOR JL English Pecan Ring Cherry Coffee Cake get-out logger who leaves nothing behind, closes down his mill, throws men out of work and leaves 1) Roena. pen-race a ri coffee cake loch OJC Each Don.

33C PARKER HOUSE ROLLS PERFECT DINNER ROLL The Loveliest Fabrics Are Here 315 No. Tenth St. wnoie counties witnout tax revenue. Petty congressional economies and inflationary prices have seriously hampered the work of the Forest Service. But the dedication of a devoted body of men is there to build on for America's future.

derness of the national forests. The precious water must De guard- OPEN EVERY DAY EXCEPT SUNDAY PARKSIDE PLAZA STORES OPEN EVERY FRIDAY TILL P.M. 1 and guided from the stream bed at 8000 feet to the irrigation canal in the floor of the valley..

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