Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, January 21, 1955, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    -(Sec. 1)-Capital Journal, Salem, Ore., Fri., Jan. 21, 19S5
Capital AJournal
An Independent Newspaper Established 1888
BERNARD MAINWARING, Editor and Publisher
GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor Emeritus
Published every afternoon except Sunday at 280 North
Church 5t. Phone 4-681 1.
Foil Ltntd Wire Serried at rb. Assoelsttd Press and mil UniUd Press.
Tha Assoclsted Press U excluslvly entitled to the use tor publication ot
all newf dispatches credited to It or otherwise credited In this paper and
also news published therein.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
r Oarrleri Month! Il lSi an wootm. 17. Ml One Tsar, 111 00. Br rasU 1
onion: Uonlhlj. 11.00; Bis Months. 15.00.' One Tear, . Br mall Outside Ortion:
atoatolr, tl.Jli Sti Mentha, IT.Mi One Tear, 111 00.
Ike Consul Is Congress on Formosa
President Eisenhower is reported to be considering asking
congress for special authority to use U.S. naval and airpower
to help evacuate Chinese Nationalist troops from some islands
along the Red China coast if necessary. These troops would
then be deployed elsewhere for the defense of Formosa and the
Pescadores which the United States is committed to help
Chiang Kai-Shek hold against the Communists.
The Chinese Reds have assaulted and claimed the complete
capture of the long island of Kikiangshan and are menacing
the Tachen islands, 200 miles north of Formosa. But what
islands would be possibly evacuated would probably be deter
mined by military developments. Secretary of State Dulles is
reported to have told congressional leaders that the adminis
tration would like to have the evacuation authority.
Key congressional Democrats are quoted as saying that it
Is up to Presdient Eisenhower and not to congress to decide on
the use of U.S. air and seapower to defend Formosa and its
outposts. They say that as commander-in-chief he has all the
authority he needs to make the decision.
These Democrats recall that President Truman took all the
responsibility for going into Korea in 1950 and did not consult
congress or its leaders, except to report his action. While
objecting to the proposal, they made it clear they will give
their approval to the president if he asks for it,
Mr. Eisenhower apparently wants to make it doubly sure
he has clear legal and congressional authority and approval
before committing American ships and planes in emergency
action. He probably wants to avoid the bitter and carping
criticism Mr. Truman evoked by assuming the authority that
brought on U.S. participation in the Korean war.
Mr. Eisenhower, it is also stated, thinks that his legal author
ity to use the U.S. Seventh Fleet becomes questionable follow
ing the conclusion of the Korean armistice. When the United
States entered the Korean war, Mr. Truman simultaneously
ordered the fleet to protect Formosa. He also asked the Na
tionalist government to stop attacking the mainland. This
latter provision was removed by the Eisenhower administra
tion but recently restored.
The mutual defense treaty signed by Secretary Dulles last
year with Formosa, would authorize the president to use
armed forces. Dulles says this authority "originally derived
from the Korean war, may be tending to become obsolete
from the lapse and passage of time, and the conclusion of the
armistice in Korea." The treaty is awaiting senate approval.
It is evident the president wants bi-partisan approval Dy
congress of any intervention in Asia to avoid creating discord
in the handling of foreign affairs and creating an issue for
opponents to capitalize. G. P.
This One Shouldn't Pass
JOB FOR A TWO-GUN MAN
1 T rXlN "'5r
W THEM WHEM HE Sg f 4
move, you WATE
POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER
Coca Cola Runs Into New
Obstacle in Competition
By PRESTON CROVER
(For Hal Boyle)
CASABLANCA, French Morocco
Ifl This is the sad story of Coca
Cola in Morocco and how a pig
got into the picture.
Coca-Cola sent specialists in Mo
rocco soon after the war to get
the soft drink business going. The
eight million thirsty Moroccans,
barred as Moslems from drinking
alcoholic beverages, looked like
eood Drosnects. Bottling plants
were sold to operators in a half
dozen cities.
By 1951 the operators were in a
fair way to make real money cut
of the deal.
Then a paper in Casablanca, Al
Alham, with but a thousand cir-
A bill to make the office of attorney general appointive in
stead of elective is being prepared by Senator Gill of Linn
County. This promises to touch off quite a contest, which we
hope the "antis" win.
Senator Gill denies that the measure is aimed at Attorney
General Robert Thornton, and in a way tt isn t, for it won't
take effect if it becomes law.' until the end of Thornton's
term. But we susDect its backeround includes the fact that tors in the life of the United
Oretron has a Democratic attornev eeneral in m otherwise Bp- States Senate, have undergone a
Jolt to Seniority
Boston Globe
Tradition and seniority, two of
the most jealously preserved lac-
SEARCH CALLED OFF
DETROIT LAKES, Minn. (UP)
Sheriff D. A. Wennerstrom called
off his search today for Harold
Ryen wanted for abandonment.
Wennerstrom discovered that his
wife had let Ryen into the county
jail because he was tired and
hungry and wanted a place to rest.
publican state administration, to which he has occasionally
been an irritant.
Here we open one of those "long stories" in which there is
much to be said on both sides. We know this because it has
been said, and we imagine much more will be said, with
Thornton's request for a Multnomah County grand jury inves
tigation of the Liquor Commission situ pending. We express
no opjnion on the merits of these controversies, for they need
have no bearing on the reaction of the citizen who has no in
terest in the personalities involved but wants the best possible
job of governing done.
The reason we do not want the attorney general appointed
by the governor is that we do not want him under the control
of the governor or the state administration. It will be better
if he is responsible to the people. Then if he finds anything
wrong, which it stands to reason he will occasionally, lie will
be free to challenge it without fear of removal. We do not
think the present governor would abuse his privilege if he
were to appoint an attorney general, but we have had gov
ernors in the past who would have done so, and we probably
will again.
Let's keep the attorney general independent of the other
state officials. Senator Gill said in support of his bill that
"the governor should be permitted to hire his own lawyer,"
and we would agree with this, if he needs one the year around.
But we don't think the attorney general is the governor's
lawyer. He is the people's lawyer and should remain directly
responsible to them.
A Splendid Choice
There Is always more than one man in a citv of our si?p u-hn
could properly be chosen for the community service award of
the Junior Chamber of Commerce, or the senior award to be
made in a few days. We aren't and never will be a "one man
town" or a hundred man town in community service.
But we venture to observe that seldom has an award been
made that will be more universally accepted as the right one
as that of Mark Hatfield Thursday night. A brier recital of
his activiles before his name was announced covered an aston-
iMiniR range, i nev were so numerous one was hound
uuiiurr now ne comet gel any work done out at Will;
University where be makes his living must of the year
High point to date m a career tha' will contain many
was Mark's election as slate senator h.-re in November, ii
tno uckoi. lie is the yoiitiecst member
severe jolt. By naming tormcr
Vice-President Alben Barkley to
the Foreign Relations and Fi
nance Committees, Senator Jo
seph O'Mahoney to the Interior
and Judiciary Committees and
Independent Senator Wayne
Morse to Foreign Relations and
Banking, the controlling Demo
cratic forces have stood prece
dent on its head.
Theoretically, the first two De
mocratic Senators are "fresh
men," having been absent for
some years from the Senate; and
freshmen they would have
to begin all over again to build
seniority, resting content with
assignments to the lowliest and
least important Senate commit
tees. The previous Legislative rec
ords of both, and the onetime
Wen's" prominence, apparently
made adherence to seniority rules
awkward.
These appointments are never
theless, refreshing. They signify
victory for experience and abi
lities already proven over dead
routine. All too often seniority
n the Senate means a sort of
mediocrity's progress" toward
the top in committee assign
ments.
The assignments of Senator
Morse emphasize the precedent
shattering mood of the Democra
tic command. Senator Morse en
joys favor for quite understand
able reasons. His vote enabled
the Democrats to organize the
Senate; his aid gave Oregon its
first Democratic Senator in dec
ades; and last, but not least his
attitude spurs the Democratic
leaders to hopes for his ultimate
conversion.
to
incite
TOM Tl'RNS PROPHET
By THOMAS E. DEWEY
I am firmlv conviccd that it
more (;) Kisenhower - Nixon slate)
ldint; , m iiiihl win Imp tump nvprwbelm-
llf the Sl'n:ili" rnwl l.iflw i ..in l,n il ,1.. I
: u.. -1 jiiiif,- iiil . mull ih -ijvwi mot
ink uy on pievious worn m the house will be on. ot the most , in ISM.
im.s I my im iWsl Known ol so many ii-(.f
wholesome things lie has done for the community and its
I'"- - jouinat is pieasea to add its contuatula
atti uie uuicis.
a, ions
Chamltrr and Council Merrr
Boarci of both the Salem Chamber of Commerce and Salem
Industrial Development Council have both approved the
latter Wednesday merger of the two organizations, effective
April 1. Ballots on the move were mailed to the 1.1). C. mem
bers the same day.
The merger will undoubtedly be approved and certainly
should be. The industrial development is a proper Chamber
of Commerce feature and one of its most important. It can
surely be handled effectively within such an organization,
with the help of a large, vigorous committee such as has been
created by the I D C.
We would be less sure of the w isdom of Uirninii iiulustri.il
development over to the Chamber were it not for the cam
paign for more members and more financial support that is to
be conducted for the Chamber in April. The Salem Chamber
is woefully undernourished financially and has been for years.
Salem, ahead of the civic procession in so many things, has
lagged badly here and must catch up, with a strong, healthy
Chamber able to do the many community tasks only such an
organization can do.
culation, carried a small story
about Coca-Cola. This American
beverage, the paper said, was fla
vored with pig's blood.
Now to a Moslem there is noth
ing more abhorrent than a pig.
He wouldn't wear pigskin gloves,
let alone eat pork.
The report, utterly false, spread
like wlltlflowcr. The circulation
of the little paper mounted. It's
advertising increased. Other soft
drink dispensers began buying
space in the paper to show how
their beverage could ' be drunk
by all gct.u Moslems.
As the news spread through Mo
rocco, Coca-Cola dealers began
hauling their unsold bottles back.
Bottlers had to bu them all back,
ind sales dropped almost to noth
ing, i
The wildest kind of stories were
circulated. The company waited,
postponing a denial, hoping the
story would die down. But in Mo-
PRINCETON, N.J. Fear of an
rocco there is a saying that what
is not denied must be true. So the
story continued to spread.
Finally, a venerable and well
known pilgrim who had made his
journey to Mecca consented to
write a story about how delightful
it was that he could buy Coca
Cola along the hot route across
North Africa. He could buy it in
Cairo, a great Moslem center, he
said, and even in Mecca.
That began to help. Then the sul
tan's son, Moulay Hassan, allowed
himself to be quoted at a bicycle
tournament as saying he would
like a drink of Coca-Cola.
Sales began slowly to climb.
But the end was not yet. Na
tionalists moved in. They declared
a boycott against any beverage
which used sugar, because sugar
Morocco is a French monop
oly. The nationalists were eager
to do anything to harass the
French. Terrorists backed up the
boycott by burning stores and
shooting merchants who sold to
bacco and sugar products. Down
went sales again.
This reporter talked to one bot
tling plant owner who said annual
sales of S00.II00 cases had been as
sured him but sales in 19a4 were
about 30.000 cases. With sales of
.10.000 cases a year a man can't
support a factory able to bottle
500.000 cases. Some are taking in
side lines of beer and fruit juice.
The reporter toured around in
the bazaars of several cities and
tried to buy Ccoa-Cola. The signs
were still up, glossy and red, but
the drink was hard to come by.
THEY LEARN FROM US FAST
Omaha World-Herald
"0 My, Otomi-San" is a very
popular song in Japan although
the words make no sense and
everybody hates the tune. These
people are becoming Americanized
at a frightening rate.
WHERE WE ARE WEAK
Methodist Bishop Arthur Moore
If there be weakness in the
modern church, it has come not
because we have denied the teach
ing concerning the Holy Spirit,
but because we ignore it
Those twit's Contracts
Omaha World-Herald
A foexhall coaching vacancy at
the University of Tennessee has
set off the usual chain reaction
of coaches breaking their con
tracts. Such contracts generally pro
vide no protection tor the school.
If a coach want? lo go. he goes.
WOSST POMBIS IK WD Y
Tului World
Waging a preventive war would! Of course if a school wants to get
be somewhat comparable to a rid of a coach w ho has a contract.
Iran's nullins out his hair to kcn-p that s another matter, lie
it from falling out.
IOAI1 A1IKAIVS UKTTW1
v EZRA BENSON
I am convinced that for gri
culture the road ahead will be
smoother than the one we have
been traveling.
CHANCED THE WEATBFg
MEMPHIS. Tenn. tl'Pi-l'cggy
Joyce Meriwether decided a
change in the weather was all
uclit with her.
S ami George D. Merriweather
took out a marriage license.
make it pay through the nose.
Why don't the colleges get to
gether through one of their va
rious organizations and end this
nonsense? They could do so by
agreeing not to give contracts of
any sort to coaches, hut to hire
them on a year-to-year basis as
faculty members are hired, per
haps with whatever faculty "ten
ure" provisions are in force.
This might not end the bidding
for coaches, hut it would put a
stop to the immorality of free
style contract breaking.
IS THIS A SLY DIG?
Sherman County Journal
Never mind, Oregonians. We
may not get much legislation but
we'll get more than our share of fire,
the Congressional Record.
U. S. Willing to
Give Some Isles
By JAMES MARLOW
Associated Press News Analyst
WASHINGTON (Al The United
States apparently is ready to kiss
off some of the islands held by its
ally the Nationalist Chinese of
Chiang Kai-shek and let the Com
munists have them without Ameri
can opposition.
The United States is committed
In defendine Chiane's main forces
on Formosa and the nearby Pes
cadores Islands. Until now the ad
ministration has been vague on
what it would do if the Reds
slammed at Chiang-held islands
nearer the mainland.
The answer now seems to be:
nothing. This week President El
senhower and Secretary of State
Dulles described as unessential to
Formosa's defense the Tachen Is
lands, held by Chiang but now un
der Red assault, and Yikiangshan
Island, just captured by the communists.
The Reds proceeded with their
attack on both. They alone know
whether they will be satisfied with
the Tachens and Yikiangshan or
will use them as stepping stones
for attack on Formosa. They have
expressed determination to take
Formosa.
The present shooting was re
flects a change in events, wliich
Eisenhower probably could not
foresee two years ago, and a
change in his administrations
mood.
One of his Crst official acts after
takine office in January 1953 wasi
to announce he was cnanging tne
orders of the U.S. 7th Fleet, an
act widely interpreted at the time
as opening the door tor cniang
to attack the mainland.
The statement was a world sen
sation. But very little happened.
Chiane made some raids on the
mainland. But he did not have the
strength then to invade the main
land and now seems to lack the
strength to hold his outlying is
lands. .
When Chiane fled to Formosa,
after the Reds chased him from
the mainland in 1949, President
Truman said this country would
not defend Formosa. He changed
his mind after the Korean War
started. Then he assigned the 7th
Fleet both to prevent attack on
Formosa and prevent Chiang from
attacking the mainland.
Defense of Formosa has Deen
American policy ever since. But
Chiang seems so unable to cope
with the Red assault on the outly
ine islands that Eisenhower is re
ported considering asking Congress
for authority to use naval ana air
forces to evacuate Chiang's men
from the islands near the mainland
if that is necessarv.
Until now the United States has
been playing it alone in defense
of Formosa. Now it seems tne Ei
senhower administration would like
to get the United Nations into the
dispute, if only as a peacemaker,
between Chiang and the Reds.
This week Eisenhower said he
would like to see the U.N. seek
a cease-fire by both sides, although
expressing skepticism that either
would accept U.N. intervention.
If the U.N. stepped in, by agree
ment on both sides, and assumed
the obligation of preserving a cease
both sides would be practi-
NATIONAL WHIRLIGIG
Power to Investigate Now
A Big Democratic Weapon
WASHINGTON The musical
chairs Speakers of the House of
Representatives, Representatives
Sam Rayburn of Texas and Jos
eph W. Martin, Jr, of Massachu
setts, swapped more than gavels
and other prerequisites when the
democrats assumed control of
the 84th congress. They exchang
ed the most politically dangerous
weapon at Washington namely,
the power of unchecked investi
gation of the executive branch of
the government.
"Joe" may now regret his witty
remark after the republicans won
a majority on Capitol Hill in the
1!)46 elections. He said then that
"We will begin each session with
a prayer and conclude it with an
investigation."
"Mister Sam" and his demo
cratic pals now echo that state
ment with the exception that
they may forget to say their
prayers in the attempt to dis
credit the Eisenhower administra
tion and to reinstate their party
in the White House in 1956.
Democrats' Careful Plan
The democrats' program of in
vestigation has been worked out
with mathematical precision. It
will not be the haphazard, hit-or-miss
methods which the GOP em
ployed when they merely toyed
with this blunderbuss. The areas
By RAY TUCKER
Salem 26 Years Ago
By BEN MAXWELL ,
January 21, 1929
Lady of the Fountain, for 25
years a landmark on the Oregon
State College campus, had been
demolished by vandals using
sledge hammers.
The "pro-shaker," one who goes
to peoples homes and mixes doz
ens of different kinds of cocktails
upon notice, had lately become
an aspect of London's social life.
Dr. David Starr Jordan, now 78
and chancellor emeritus of Stan
ford university, had stated that
he noticed no difference at all
between students of 1916 and those
of 1929.
Minimum temperature in Salem
this day 26 years ago had been 16
degrees.
Ically admitting they were separate
Fear of War Reaches Lowest
Point in 7 Yrs., Poll Finds
By GEORGE GALLUP
(Director, American Institute of Public Opinion)
other world war has shown a
sharp' decline in the United
States as the number of American
voters who today foresee an arm
ed conflict in the near future i s
the lowest it has been in seven
years.
Only about one person in every
10, or 11 per cent, sees the Unit
ed States on the brink of war
today.
In 1948, an identical survey by
the Institute found nearly three
limes as many (32 per cent) be
lieving that a major war was im
minent. Two years ago in Janu
ary, the figure stood at 21 per
cent almost twice as many as
today.
At periodic intervals the Insti
tute has put this question to a
cross-section of adults in all walks
of life:
"Do you think the United
States will find itself in another
world war within, say, the next
year?
The following table shows the
7-vear trend:
War in One Year?
May, 1950 57
Nov., 1950 56
August, 1951 ..58
Jan., 1953 48
Today .48
24
18
20
25
30
19
26
22
27
22
Vick Brothers, 2S0 North High
street, were advertising the new
Pontiac car f.o.b. the factory for
$745.
"How Swimming Grew Up" was
explained in a pageant presented
by a group of Salem girls in the
YMCA swimming pool.
IT'S PRETTY BAD
St. Louis Globe-Democrat
World tensions are getting so
bad even the earth quakes.
countries and their fight was not
a civil war.
That would freeze them. It would
about ruin Chiang's hopes, and any
American hopes, that he might
someday retake China. And it
would just about finish any hopes
his followers on the mainland
might have for liberation from the
Reds.
of Eisenhower operations have
been mapped out carefully and
tactically in oii-tne-recorrj plan-
ning.
In their Inquiries into Ike's
first two years, the opposition has
two main purposes, it seeks to
repudiate for all time the McCar
thy cnarge mat me democrat"
were the "Party of Treason." and
the recorded Nixon indictment
that F.D.R. and Harry S. Truman
were "soft, vacillating and incon
sistent" in their attitude toward
communists at home and abroad.
Pursuing historic policy, the
democrats will seek to recreate
the impression that Presidr.ni
Eisenhower and his "millionaire
caDinet, as wen as ms wealthy
friends and associates, have been
unduly friendly toward "Big Bus.
iness," and neglectful of Henry
A. Wallace's "common man" anil
Truman's "little fellows."
Unfounded Charge
Democratic hammering at the
McCarthy-Nixon allegations has
already forced a republican state
department official to admit that
the senator's 1950 charge that
there were 205 fellow travelers in
the diplomatic service, was com
pletely unfounded. Ike himself
has conceded that only the com.
munist party should be listed ,as
"disloyal."
The Senate Civil Service Com
mission, now headed by Senatot
Olin D. Johnston of South Caro
lina, will attack administratiri
reports that Ike has routed out
"security risks" retained by Tru
man. Johnson expects to show
that many of the ousted person,
nel were hired by the republi
cans, and that the majority were
discharged for indiscretions or
aberrations that unfitted them
for public employment.
Oddly, Eisenhower himself ap.
pears eager to eliminate this ir
sue from the realm of politics.
Defense Appropriations
Cut Weighed
Two of the ablest democrats on
Capitol Hill will scrutinize a field
where Ike may be extremely vul
nerable, in view of his military
background.
Representative Carl Vinson ami
Senator Richard B. Russell ol
Georgia, who, head respectively,
the Armed Forces committees it
the house and senate, will ascer
tain whether cuts in defense ap
propriations have not weakened
instead of strengthened the
Army-Navy-Air Forces. They are
born skeptics on this question.
Senator J. William Fulbright ol
Arkansas will place under review
the overlong "bull market" in
Wall Street, while Senator Paul
H. Douglas of Illinois will try to
determine whether Treasury Fed
eral Reserve money management
has favored great banking inter
ests. Similar studies will seek tc
show that a few friendly corpor
ations have obtained an unfaii
share of war profits.
The Dixon-Yates, TVA-AEC
contract, as well as Interior's gen
eral conservation program, will
be depicted as a deliberate effort
to hand over power, timber and
mineral resources to "trusts"
owned and managed by GOP in
terests. In short, there will be
grim, no-holds-barred infighting
on this front.
No
Opin
14To
11
Yo
College 4"c
High School 9
Grade School 17
FEARLESS WISCONSIN
M.wvwnv u-i ii'pi.i K.n in
HIE Onir.K Wilt " " abolish the Wisconsin "naval mill.
Omaha World-Herald I tin" was introduced in the Legis-
We're ahtavs disappointed that-lature Tuesday. The authors of the
the papers don'l carry a picture of bill said they didn't fmure Wis-
... I- ti. .. IO K.xst. 1 ISVWin u-mil.l tut QttnL.,a lr.m
dressed women, eating lunch out -either Lake Michigan or Lake
ol paper sacks. Superior.
Yes No
August, 194832 54
Mac, 1949 15 74
Mav, 1950 (before
Korea) 22 70 8
Nov., 1950 29 55 16
August 1951 ...26 64 10
Jan., 1953 21 67 12
Today -11 ' 78 11
A significant feature of today's
poll is that -voters with the most
education are the most optimistic
about maintaining peace.
Here is the vote by education
levels on the likelihood of war
within the next year:
No
No Opin.
91 i,
m 11
ts 1
The importance M a survey
like today's lies in the relation
between fear of war and th pub
lic's attitudes toward suck ismwi
as defense spending, taxss, mili
tary training and freig policy
questions.
While Americans have genurr
ally been on the optimistic side
as far as chances of avoiding an
immediate war are concerned, it
is interesting to note that they
have been considerably more pes
simistic on the question of war
within longer period of time.
A trend of Jfntiment since 1950
has likewise been kept by the In
stitute on the question of war
within the next five years:
War in Five Years?
No
Yes No Opin.
March, 1930 -41 42 17
Prior to 1950, the survey asked
about the possibility of war in
10 or 25 years. An August, 1947,
poll found 73 per cent believing
there wuold be war within 25
years.
In the past, the American pub
lic has taken a much more pessi
mistic view than the British
about the chances of another
major war.
During 1950 and 1951, majori
ties as high as 58 per cent in this
country said they expected war
within 5 years. At about the
same time, the affiliated British
Gallup Poll found only 27 'per
cent believing there was much
danger of war and only 16 per
cent of the 27 per cent said war
would come within 5 years.
The rest either named a long
er period of time or said they
couldn't make an estimate.
In September, 1948, an interna
tional Gallup Poll found the peo
ple of Italy, United States, Can
ada, Norway, Holland, Denmark
and Sweden all more pessimistic
than the British and Finnish
peoples that there would be an-i
other big war within the next 10 '
years. 1
Free PARKING
OFF THE STREET
46 CARS-Paved, Curbed, Lined
9 FAMILY CARS Under Roof
Finest Parking for Funerals in
Salem
Our Last 1,000 Funerals:
Under $250 ....
$251-$350 . .
$35. -$500 . .
$501-$650 . .
$651-Over . .
138
276
468
99
19
I
CLOUGH
zJ&Ml
Church t Ferry Sts.
FUNERAL HOME
' Phone 3-913
BANKING is EASY
iHiiSSSsSt
190 Fairgrounds I
WhH TWII llHk nt
Willamette VullVv Dank
Alflplf psrhiHg Splice is available always
to uomtrs of the Willamette Valley Bank.
AaT from conesn4 downtown traffic areas,
both banking oflicsjs provide fast and efticicic
service ror :J0 to 5:30 6 days i week.
Banking rrrn n: 10:00-3:00.
Sidewalk Teller Window Service:
8:30 10 10:0O;3:00 to 5:30.
MAX! SAlfM S INDEPENDENT, HOMI-OWNED SANK YOU iankinO MIADOUAITEIIS
ice:
University Branch:
1310 Stole!
All cftpuiff liwirtet fo 1 1 OfiCt ty f. . . C