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The News-Herald from Franklin, Pennsylvania • Page 4

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The News-Heraldi
Location:
Franklin, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
4
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WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1951. THE NEWS-HERALD, FRANKLIN "AND OIL CITY. PA The Editorial Page Labor's Walkout Threatens "Doesn't Anybody Believe In Peace Any More?" Washington Calling vn win rule vr a According to Harry Ferguson, foreign Whole Mobilization Effort news editor of the United Press, it's unlikely there will be a war in Europe this By peter EDSOX pute that had gone two years un-year WASHINGTON Walkout of settled. Yet when they called at- union labor representatives from tention to their grievance in a Americans who are supposed to know the Wage Stabilization Board pre- manner that inconvenienced the By MARQUIS CHILDS WASHINGTON A great deal of- indignation has been vented recently over the action of the Argentine Juan Peron, in suppressing La Prensa, which was once one of the great newspapers in this hemisphere. Peron used most about it think that way; they are the sents the Truman administration entire public and interfered with rtinlnmats nn TTnrlp Sam's navroll hphinH with a sight more serious defense production, the reaction was against the railway employee the Iron Curtain and in the danger spots The wage stabilization formula worked out by the public members of WSB Chairman Cyrus Ching, the device of a kept trade union to silence what had been one of the strong and authentic voices of freedom in the Western world.

The indignation expresses in the press of this country i-a natural and healthy reaction But in excoriating the indigni ties that Peron is inflicting on in the Middle East. This is helpful and assuredly comforting. Recently a series of meetings were held so they could compare notes. The first one was held at Paris ant was attended by our envoys stationed it nations behind the Iron Curtain. The second one, in Istanbul, was made up of U.

S. diplomats in the Middle East. No two of free institutions, it would be risu a tne debate in Con-gres; over limitation of troops to Europe. The long state-ment of the United a i Policy Committee is a direct threat the whole home-front mobilization and stabilization effort. This statement purported to be a criticism wen to examine at tne same time certain trends here at home.

Childs the men who attended these meetings had precisely the same ideas about the chances 1U1 Ui uv- of government policies on wages, almost unanimous agreement that neither prices, rent controls, taxes man-Russia nor her satellite nations was readv Power and small business. It was also a blast against Mo to strike. If and when the Russians or theij allies do something that starts another world war, it is likely to happen in one of three places Germany, Yugoslavia or Iran. Germany and Yugoslavia are points of friction because rival armies are sta bilization Director C. E.

Wilson and his so-called big-business associates who are at the head of the preparedness program. Mr. Wilson's office let it be known there would be no immediate comment after the Labor Policy group's statement was issuer! Economic Stabilize 'on Admini- tioned on their borders. Iran is a potential strator Eric Johnston's office le trrmhlo snot herause it is rich in oil and 11 be Known he would have no no modern war can be fought without oil. comment over the veekend.

This was to give everyone concerned i chance to cool off. Mere Snat or Divorce? Whether or not the walkout of the three la bo- members of the Wage Stabilization Board is a tem- Based on what the U. S. diplomats have learned and what newspaper correspondents in the three vital areas have Clark Kerr of University of California and John T. Dunlop of Harvard seemed to offer reasonable room for collective bargaining.

Wage increases and cosi of living increases would have been allowed up to the best increases obtained by the most favored unions the coal miners and the auto workers. This formula was agreed to by the employers' representatives J. Ward Keener of B. F. Goodrich, Henry 'hui of Swift and Reuben Robertson of Champion Paper Co.

Cheer for the Kremlin As a wage "freeze" structure, this formula was most certainly built of rubber ice. Vet the representatives of organized labor decided they couldn't accept it. Like the farmers who are protected by their parity formula and the employers who are protected by profit percentage margins, the union leaders felt they had to have their own sliding scale escapes from controls against inflation. 1 Selfisn interest came to the fore. National welfare and general public interest be damned.

In one sense, this walkout of the union leaders probably gives the Communists just as much cheer as, say Senator Wherry's opposition to sendinf U. S. troop reinforcements to Europe. It is a demonstration of disunity at home which gives aid and comfort to the enemy abro i. The other side of this argument is that the union labor leaders, representing some 16 million members, thai ie have been slighted in defense planning.

Organized labor leaders were represented the advisory coun cils of National Security Resources Board when it looked as thougij Stuart Symington would be the big man in mobilization. When the rug was pulled fror" under Mr Symington and C. E. Wilson was made head man, the union representation was left powerless. A similar advisory body was -et up on manpower Secretary of Labor Maurice Tobin was to head up this program.

When Mr. Wilson appointee' Dr. Arthur Flemming as his owr manpower director, the union ad visors were le with nothing to dc The sop thrown to the union in the oppointment of George Hi Harrison of the Railway Clerks a part-time adviser to Eric John The state' legislature in Georgia has before it a series of bills which would go a long way toward imposing political controls on the press of that state. Two of these bills have already passed one house of the legislature, the Senate. They are being pushed by Governor Herman Talmadge, whose motive resembles closely that of Peron.

Talmadge is angry at the Atlanta newspapers, the Journal and-the Constitution. Assailing his demagoguery, the Journal and the Constitution and other Georgia newspaper as well have fought Talmadge's plan to keep the cities and larger towns in permanent subjection to the rural counties through the county unit system of voting. Those bills will not pass the legislature this time. Last-minute opposition caused them to be pigeon-holed in the House. If they were to become the law of the state, they would unquestionably be declared unconstitutional in any test in the Federal courts.

But even though this is true, it seems to me that we cannot afford to be complacent about what is an ever more pronounced trend away from freedom and the free competition of ideas. The mounting cost of newspaper publication, which like everything else is bedevilled by the spiral of inflation, operates increasingly to restrict competition among newspapers and therefore also among competing viewpoints. This coincides with the current fear and suspicion growing out of the Communist conspiracy and the threat of Soviet imperialism. These fears are being deliberately exploited by those who want to stifle any dissent at all from the narrowest kind of "Americanism" as defined by special and often selfish interests. It has always seemed to me that the South has a particularly acute awareness of individual freedom and encroachments, real or threatened, on that freedom.

This may be because the South suffered under an alien rule imposed by dictatorial means in the tragic aftermath of the Civil War. Newspapers in the South have frequently battled demagogues who set out to stifle any and all opposition. Northerners who imposed their rule on the South wanted to change the basic folkways of that region by fiat carried out with bayonets. That attempt failed, as it was bound to fail, and one heritage has been a heightened sensitivity to anything even faintly resembling an effort to impose Northern customs and Northerner laws on the South. been writing, the situation is about as ioi- porary spue spat or- the warning oi i a complete divorce remains to be 10 rru r.

seen- The three labor members 1. GERMANY. The Russians are not are. or were, Harry C. Bates of the going to move until they are ready for an Bricklayers, Emil Hieve of the atomic war.

The reason is that their troops JxtUe Workeer Walker would run into a small force made up or out in protest against the 10 per American, British and French soldiers cent plus fringe wage increase stationed in Western Germany. Once the 0uy gQ Russians had exchanged shots with the ministration can try to find other Allied forces there would be almost no labor representatives to sit with way for either side to back out of a full- btas.thSrth nJ rrit- Irtn 4-r on itnmiri 22 Years Ago WASHINGTON MERRY GO ROUND iieugcu war. ua.i, wuuiu icaia an owimv uaiumi may try ro run wae FEB. 21, 1929. The Kiwanis Club back home after having been at the Y.

M. C. A. fathers and sons' banquet two WPpks am nnH at fhe Rntari? Pliih attack on Russia and that is something she apparently does not want to face up to now. Bj DREW PEARSON.

wnn puoiic representatives only. That, however would require an amendment to the Defense Production Act. What public reaction will Hp 2. YUGOSLAVIA. This is a tempting WASHINGTON The bitter row over labor oarticination meeting last woek.

held its reaular srrrnr fr intsn-nntinnal Hnmrminism which break' "wn in sta- oiuzation program is uncertain Would like to Stamp out Marsnai mo De- mere are two possibilities. On; is that the walk-u 0f l-'io representatives will be regarded a-a strike. It is defiance of fore his revolt against Moscow's dictation can spread. The way the Russians probably would like to do it would be to have such olli'ot. on TTiinrrsrir Pnmanin anH RlllffflHa the mobilization picture boils down partly to a clash with luncheon at the Exchange Hotal at Gen.

Lucius military governor of Germany, now noon today- A- s- Karns was the right-hand man to defense mobilization Czar Charles E. Wil- There is also a lot of peeve against Harry S. Truman theTSilS ersnay- still with us, arrived over night Clay, a hard-hitting, hard-working Army officer, ac- and snow was still falling this to giving and taking orders, was continually clash- morning, ng with, Lilians he served as right-hand man to war T- Mrs- P-ile 0s le" the winter at Daytona Beach, Fla. jermany, he established what is probably a record for any Walter Stover was pleasantly American official. He cabled his resignation to the State surprised on Feb.

19 at the home negarcuess ot the merit- of the oxiico ao xxu.mj, 4, attack Yugoslavia while Moscow stood on fusal to cooperation the govern-the sidelines Dretendine she had nothing ment's stabiii ton was considered insnffipipm iijii a i. to do with it. JBut the American diplomats orgamzea ia- whether or not mobilization bost Recently a series of editorials in the New Orleans States discussed the threat of "government by treaty." The newspaper believes that the sppmpH in aweempnt that Hunffarv. Ro- A wusons offer to invite a labor representative into his Department as military governor of Germany three times in of Mr. and Mrs.

H. P. Lyons, oince as Rocky Grove, the occasion being right of, each state to determine its pattern of on-level adviser will Dacifv the one day. state laws on matters within the state is jeop ooys remains to be seen. Illustrative of Clay's difficulties his birthday anniversary.

Refreshments were servec by Mrs. Lyons, Miss btella Lyons and Mrs. Wallace Dunlap. iiqjjiijcucu wnen tne ranroar' mania and Bulgaria did not have armies yardmen played sick. large enough and well-equipped enough to The had a labor dis make a war against Tito a sure thing.

The i i satellites will have to be muscled up be- AAOUnfa'n UGW fore Moscow gives the word to attack. 3. IRAN. American envoys in the Mid- die East noted that Russia had stopped 0lina the connoisseurs of drinking talking toueh to Iran lately. They attri- whisky turn up their sensitive south, causes him very littlp with labor leaders is one backstage incident involving the appointment of a manpower commissiofi-er.

President Truman had telephoned mobilization czar Wilson ask-ng him to appoint ex-Sen. Frank Graham of North Carolina as man--ower commissioner. Former pres--ient of the University of North Carolina, Dr. Graham served as i member of the War Labor i uuuie. His chief enforcement officei Dwight E.

Avis, said under ques 'oning from Rep. Robert Ooughton, North Carolina Demo crat, the head tax writer, that he buted the changed attitude to the fact that noses at that brown, store boughten likker with labels on it 'Che stuff is in- "da nis most trouble in Alabama Georgia, Virginia, South Carolina 3oard in World War II and played it has become known in that section of the world that the United States is stepping up its military and economic assistance, not only to Iran, but to Greece and Turkey. and North Carolina. Last year his a Ptent part in keeping labor re- isems KnocKea over more than lauons on an even Keei. 00 stills in the last state alone Wilson seemed to welcome Tru- T-Men Growing Old man's suSgestion.

but later when Graham called on Wilson and Gen-Mr. Avis SaiJ nnp nf his nrnk oral Plav tho latter morlo it rlmr 1 i to sear heir stomaches What they prefer is crystal-clear dew from he end of a cc )-per coil on the top of a Carolina mountain; that is salubrious fluid they buy in mason jars, to which they give ardized by treaties ratified by the Senate when those treaties cover broad areas of human activity. Specifically the New Orleans States is concerned over the Covenant on Human Rights adopted by the United Nations and which the Senate is asked to ratify. The editorials call attention to the action of a court in California declaring California's Alien Land Law illegal becaused of its acceptance by American representatives to the U. N.

of the Declaration of Human Rights. As a remedy the newspaper proposes amending the Constitution to forbid the invasion of domestic law by treaty unless specifically authorized by act of Congress. This, together with other safeguards', would remove the danger of "government by treaty," as the New Orleans States interprets it. In my own view the danger is not so great as represented in these editorials. It is more theoretical than actual.

But nevertheless the viewpoint is a healthy corrective. Too often in the past the idealist has assumed that a new law, a new charter, a covenant, would work an automatic and immediate transformation of society. That was one of the great illusions about the Soviet Union that a new political system could transform a people who had lived for centuries under absolutism shut off from the rest of the world. Change that is meaningful can come only through education and understanding. And that is still another reason why the channels of learning and information must be kept free.

lems (the moonshiners may be that Graham would be only one pleased to learn this) is the age ff his agen's. They're growing old. "Many of the men are running away from them at. tho ctiiic All along the front in Korea, the tempo of the American and Allied advance has been stepped up. Our planes flew more than 800 sorties yesterday, registering heavily against the foe's supply lines.

Gen. MacArthur is making good his promise of a "real offensive." of six assistants, and would report not to mobilizer boss Wilson but to Clay through Wall Street investment banker Sidney Frederick C. Othman continued. "Of course we now use Coast Guard Dlanes Under these hamstringing con- the nose test ap- preciatiyely, and pour down their from the air, but it is very difficult ditions. Graham politely declined.

Roosevelt appointed labor men among the top executives of war mobilization, so labor was always a part of the war effort. Now labor has scarcely been consulted. Long Tom Connally Sen. "Long Tom" Connally of Texas is famous for his gruff side remarks, but it wasn't until the hearing on Atlantic pact strategy that one of his remarks made television. The colorful Texan was presiding at the joint foreign relations-armed services quiz of Secretary of State Dean Acheson.

As he called the roll, and came to the name of crime-busting Sen. Estes Kefauver, there was silence. "He's off chasing crap-shooters," Connally grumbled into an open microphone. There were roars of laughter from the audience. "That's off the record," boomed "Long Tawm," and went on.

Washington Pipeline Ex-Congresswoman Helen Ga-hagan Douglas is selling her home, in Beverly Hills, in order to pay the campaign debts incurred in running for the Senate from that state. A lot of people promised to cough up for Helen before she ran, but when she was defeated they ran too Judge Ferdinand Pecora never served in the State Department, but has this definition of a diplomat: "One who remembers a lady's every birthday but never remembers how old she is." Sign of the times: Lieut. Sam Ingram, who built bleachers, grandstands and stadiums at Hamilton, N.Y., now building bomb shelters for industrial plants Van Heflin, now starring in "Tomahawk," helped dedicate the new lighting system at Mount Rushmore Memorial while he was producing the picture. "Tomahawk" was filmed in the Black Hills, with South Dakota Indians as the supporting cast John Gunther reports from Tokyo that, while dining irom suucLb sucn a stream as to give na tnese mountain distilleries wole uranam suosequentiy TRAGIC TRUCK ACCIDENT the Bureau of Internal Revenue a And there's just no substitute for went to Alaska, showed how skill- tu rm- n'r fnnt "tdudcne. wdiiuiig in oetore daylieht and lui ne was in nananng iaDor re iuc na uum v.uuu..

ur so said the boss revenuers in laying in wait." of Fifteenth Street, resulting in the death appearing before the House Ways The statesmen were none too of a 26-year-old Bradford driver, certainly and Means Committee to uphold enthusiastic about boosting the lations by smoothing out a difficult situation threatening to stop vital construction of Air Force housing and Army fortifications. Clay Stages a Vishinsky. On another occasion General Clay had called a closed-door con stirred this section as few other events of .,,..11, a lujccicu uuusi on umiiung wnisKy again whisky taxes. They insisted the Rep. Herman P.

Eberharter Penn- new taxes wouldn't make their sylvania Democrat, for instance task any harder. Not even in North pointed out that it costs $9030 39 Woua the past month. It brings to the attention of proper authorities the need for definite warning to produce a tank car full of alco ference attended by Secretary of aiuuuct. hol One of these T-Men told me af but the Government taxes it Labor Tobin. Selective Service Di far ud the grade that sharp and narrow terwards, in fact, that a Carolina So They Say 44 YEARS AGO FEB.

21, 1907. Charles Emery Borland, cashier and bookkeeper of the Evening News Printing died on Thursday morning at his home on Twelfth Street. Mrs. J. D.

Chadwick and grandson, Foster Lamberton, and Mrs. C. D. Elliott left today for a two months' visit in Jacksonville, Fla. Auction.

Going out of business Sale now on. Robert C. Hall. It is announced that a picnic and ceremonial will be held at Monarch Park on June 13 by Zem Zem Temple, Ancient Arabic Order of the Nobles of the Mystic Shrine. Q's A's Who composed "Silent Night, Holy Night?" A The verses were written by Rev.

Joseph Mohr and set to music by Franz Gruber in 1818. It was known simply as "The Tyro-lese Song," because it had first come from the Tyrolean Alps and with that title it was printed in 1842 for the first How does Buffalo rank among fresh water ports? A The Port of Buffalo, with 37 miles of waterfront, is the greatest fresh water port in the world in value of tonnage. What is the world's most common metal? A Aluminum, which has been estimated to make up 7 per cent of the earth's crust. It is more common than iron, copper, lead or any other metal we might name. Where did "lollypop originate? A In Australia.

All candy is called "lolly" there; the "pop" was probably added in America where children popped the stick into their mouths. What major league baseball team has won the fewest pennants? A St. Louis, American League, has won only one pennant, in 1944. In what battle did General Jackson acquire the nickname' "Stonewall?" A The name originated during the First Battle of Manassas when Gen. Bernard Bee rallied his men with "Look there stands Jackson like a stone wall." rector Hershey and Presidential Aide Daniel H.

Stowe, to discuss turns exist at the foot of the hill. Possibly monshmer was doing such a bjg business he "i ou of the genu a sign to go "Slow, Test Brakes for Next 300 Feet," might help. Or "Safety Limit for Trucks 20 M. P. We have full confidence that those ine delicious, and illicit article.

Takes More Than Color So he bought standa; tax-paid my man said, "and filtered it through activated charcoal fido.ioi.iz. Ana now you propose to raise that enormous tax a third m- he said Rep. Robert W. Kean New Jersey Republican, said a gallon of whisky cost 90 cents to make and it is taxed now -t $9. "That is a iemptation of 90' per cent for somebody to break the law and now you are proposing a 1200 per cent temptation," he added.

"I just suspect that some of these mountaineers havp a tradi manpower problems. Clay, at that time, was all set to announce his own man as manpower commissioner, but he had scarcely begun to talk when White House Assistant Stowe interrupted. He advised that he had instructions from the President that the manpower commissionership was not to be discussed. Stowe did not say so, but the President knew, even then, how vigorously labor felt on the sub AS wealthy and as prosperous as we are, we ought to pay every dollar of this rearmament out of current revenue. I rather think the people would like that.

Rep. Sam Rayburn Tex.) EUROPE is safe. The war is going to be fought in Asia and Stalin, being a shrewd strategist, will not lightly open a second front in Europe. Dr. Hu Shih, former Chinese Ambassador to U.

S. experienced in highway conditions in all to remove the color. He then was sorts of weather will handle the situation -Probably didn't get away with expertly. it, though. Takes more than color The remarkable feature is that ro t0 fool a friend of home-made other car was in the path of the speeding TS, the white- truck, which, out of speed control, at haired deputy commissioner in tion of making their own booze," commented Rep.

Hale Boggs, Lou- ject, and he did not want Gen- JCL ne 1Q noi warn yen- isiana Democrat 7.71 least, could not be checked before it hit charge of the Alcohol Tax Unit don't want anv' pjpi. i. eral Uay dictating the appoint- with Maj. Gen. Charles Willough- Bible Brief untv, tv.

mem. L.llll. said he -doubted if boosting the whisky tax from $9 $12 a gallon would cause him anv work Bootlegging most of the nation, by, Mc intelligence officer, Willoughby proposed the following toast: "To the second greatest military genius in the world Francisco Franco." ou. UUL wnen next am C-olin, i hope nobodv tries to nalm off a ti. except in the drv states nf thr the New York Central tracks beyond Otter Street and plummeted into French Creek.

Upon the minds of the hundreds who stood in. the chill of early morning and realized that a man was dying in a submerged cab 20 feet from shore there is definite feeling that something must and will be done. siuie wnis on me, It's a Great Life racea wnn tnis message irom the White House, Clay got red under the collar and stamped out. Later he got his way. His own candidate, Arthur Flemming, of the Civil Service Commission, became manpower commissioner after being pushed through by Wilson himself.

This is one of the reasons labor is so sore. Beloved, when I gave all diligence to write unto you of the common salvation, it was needful for me to write unto you, and exhort you that ye should earnestly contend for the faith which was once delivered unto the saints. Jude 1:3. FAITH in God, faith ifi man, faith in work: this is the short formula in which we may sum up the teachings of the founders of New England a creed ample enough for this life and the next. Lowell.

PRESIDENTIAL PARDONS The President of the United States has the power to pardon only those persons who have been convicted of crimes under federal law. By CLARE SWISHER. first of all if those privileges are Maybe, just maybe, mind you, lu ue retained. Thanks to the hasiV a couple of bombs and a stab of invasion might do us some good. land we have been able to divide ourselves into religious, racial, nationality, political and other groupings.

Big Business Tycoons. Another reason is the number of big business tycoons around Wilson and the manner in which they dominate the mobilization picture. Loma make Americans of us all you know. I'm serious. Plenty of other BIOLOGICAL WARFARE Biological arfare is the use of bacteria, fungi, and the toxic products of living organisms to cause disease or death in men, animals, or plants.

Sympathy of many Oil City and Franklin friends goes out to Attorney and Mrs. A. B. Jobson in the loss of their daughter, Mrs. Barbara Carman, fatally injured in an early morning traffic accident in Cleveland, O.

is tnere anyone in the hnnco j.i wise good Cltl: mVin a ncie aic some ui uieui. wno will deny that religious bod- p.m,i fmm THE NEWS-HERALD FRANKLIN AND OIL CITI, PENNA. timber Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers Association. zens have for gotten how to be 'es quite often put the future of Continental Can; Fred Searls, on Americans. neir particular churches ahead of leave from Newmont Mining, a J.

What has hap- me general welfare of country? p. Morgan firm; Sidney Weinberg, penea tnrougn sives religious head of Goldman, Sachs, invest- Consolidation ot FRANKLIN EVENING NEWS Batak-fished Feb 18, I818. by James B. Borland, and tho VENANGO DAILY HERALD Established Sept. 8.

190O Consolidated May 6, I91H. Published daily except Sunday by THE KE WS-HERALD PRINTING COMPANY Corner 13th and Liberty Streets, Franklin, Pa. the years is that "ceuurn. ment bankers; Howard Chase, of many of us have tnere a member of a racial General Mills; Alfred Howse, of PORTRAITS By James J. Metcalfe I Thank My Friendi 7 JHANK the many friends 1 have Stalin's so-called "interview" revealed more than he probably intended.

Things aren't going well inside Russia or with the satellite nations. A greater revolution than the Bolshevik uprising of decades ago may be in the making. Deen so dusj ton ucnj out mat nis the Forest Land Development claiming the wpie many times over have general economic adviser to Wil- freedoms guar- thought in terms of race instead son. The operations of Weinberg's anteed by our of country? Goldman, Sachs investment house Constitution that there an immigrant to these rhirino tho rionrcccinn inr-iHentallv. Wayne W.

Bleakley, President; George A. Fancy, General Manager: Roy Brower, Production Manager; James A. Murrln. Editor) Richard A. Ludwtg.

Man- aging Editor. Swisher our obligation to shores who can deny that many a was on, nf tho rpasnns whv Con- With their encouragement and with National Advertising Representative Theis A Simpson Company, 893 Seventh Avenue, New fork, N. I. Full Leased Telegraph Cable Service of the United Press Association. both Constitution nationality group still thinks, feels gress passed the Securities and As the COSt Of living rises, one finds an(j country has gone into a self and behaves Old Country style Exchange Act.

real enjoyment in those things which have created limbo. rather than as Americans? While these are skilled business-been forgotten or nedected in the DassinS Quite naturally the Commies Too often our own political men, they serve as "no-dollar" Deen iorgouen or iiegieuiea in me Posing havg tQ these precious gr0ups openly have revealed that men. In other words, they are paid Oil City Office, 44 Seneca Street. Phone 61-214 monuis. rAuept, ux uuuiie, me nwu ui freedoms of ours.

They say ana tney piace party above country, not by the government but by Their faithful company They sympathize when I am They lift me when I And they are always at my side heed my beck and call Indeed they are the truest friends That anyone could find And that is why their faces are Forever in my mind, And that is why their special names t. ever in my heart why I treasure them and hope That we shall never part I thank my friends eternally Who are so good and true And hope that I may serve them with The' deeds I try to do. 1951, Field Enterprises, Inc. All Bllhl Beimtd. Subscriptloi Rates: By Carrier In Franklin, Oil City and Route towns- per week 30c; per year In advance $14.00 By Mail Within Venango County per year, outside County In State 17.75; outside Stat', af Pennsylvania $8.50.

Mail subscriptions not accepted where carrier delivery is maintained Commercial Job Printing Department Phone kW8 TELEPHONE ALl DEPARTMENTS 85S food. Print what they please; ana, at first snag, point quickly to rights guaranteed everyone under our 1951 IS giving emphasis to the deep Constitution with its famed right to hold office above what is their own companies, thus are in right for country. the difficult position of serving If you ask me, I'd say the Bill one master but being paid by an- of Rights has been too good for other. us. We've shamelessly used those These businessmen can do an freedoms.

important job for their govern- We've been Protestants or Cath- ment, but they need to be counter- (Continued on Page 5.) balanced by labor representatives. Entered at the Franklin Postoffice as Second ClauT Matter. -abiding faith Christianity, freedom of amendments. at Because of our constitutional worship and the opportunity to hope, at rights weve been able t0 forget least, for brighter tomorrows. that we must remain Americans.

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
1886-1972