a il o D 0 0 n c S n n I! t b I c I I f i I i Capital AJournal AN INDEPINDINT NIWSPAPH-ISTAIUSHED IN 1181 . Bernard Mainwaring (1 897-1 957) Editor and Publisher 1 953-1 957 - E. A. Brown, Publisher' - Glenn Cushman, Managing Editor George Putnam, Editor Emeritus Published tvtry vnln taxc?! Sunday) by Capital Journal Publishing Co., Mrs. Jonnlo I. Mainwaring ' Full Lcaitd Wiro Sarvieo of Th Associated Press and The Unitad Pre. Tho Associated Press il exclusively entitled 'to the ute for publication of all newi dispatches credited to it or otherwise credited in this paper end alto newt published therein. sutseaiPTioN rates y Carrier: Monthly, St. 15,' Sii Months, $7.50; One Year, Ili.OO. ly Mail In Oregom Monthly, $1.00; Six Months, tS.OO; One Tear $9.00. By Mail Outside Oregom Monthly, $1.19; Si Months, $7.50; One Year, $15.00 '' A rch itectural 'Blander I,-. . Deccntralizalion efforts in our largest city, New York, with its population of over 8,000,- r 000, have failed, according to the current (Issue of the Architectural Forum Magazine f , nd the office building boom during the past n. decade in the heart of the metropolis contin lies in full blast. New office construction totals half again as much as in the rest of ' the United States put together. 'j.' Big business slays in the city to be "close . to everything." . The New York increase completed and un derway represents an addition of 40 percent '' more office space since the end of World War II, totaling 40 million square feet and it all v,is in "the two most chokingly congested por tions of Manhattan Island," the Wall Street ij'area and midtown. Original plans, slates the Forum, called for dispersal and decentralization plans but were j! "vanquished by such earthy matters as the Rvalue of the businessmen's lunch, the secre taries lunch hour shopping, the low deprcs Vision birth-rate, the trafic jams and the face-to-&'face contact with business sasociatcs and the f jchance to bring personality to bear." ; i; Most of the new office construction is in , sjialready crowded districts, which are also most rt-readily accessible to everything. Tall sky-scrapers are replacing older structures. But iVthe Korum complains: J.1 "The dominant effect Is depressing mediocrity, i". with block after block of new building as like ono 'another, as fundamentally boorish as block upon V' block ot tenement building just blander , . . ugly ;'end dull, because of a standardized zoning tor ' mula, combined with simple minded modern, con JjStruction out of scale shaped along a 17th ccnlury "street pattern." . . p , , Building of modern skyscraper office build 'iltlgs seem to be becoming standardized along .r assembly line mass production patterns for '', speed and economy, like building of automo 5 piles, but without changing the pattern annu J felly to improve design to appeal to the eye as . well as to pride of ownership. , , BJust what "blander" means in architectural lingo is not known to laymen but the word sounds appropriate to the occasion and con $' notes the "simple mindedness of modern building" even in Salem. There are no sky-scrapers pointing to the sky if not to heaven, i!but a plethora ot both business blocks and dwellings looking "as like one another and .'.;as fundamentally boorish" as uniform sky j scrapers. . i The prevailing architectural trend Is a one 'jistory, flat-lopped building, whether for bust 4; noss purposes or dwelling. The favorito stylo JSis that first .utilized by aulo service stations jand later by motels, adopted now for com 'mercial purposos, stores, offices, clinics, etc. The stylo in modern dwellings is also one r'story, flat-top, glorified by front plate glass V windows where there are only street views to sec, some resembling palatial chicken houses and cowsheds of pioneer days. And often the prideful owners share the blame for the l'. "blander" with the architocL G. P. Crime in the Woods i Thirty-one tree farm owners in Oregon and Washington report these depredations by .. hunters in 1956: damage to gates, roads, log Ring equipment and signs, theft of power saws and gasoline, and the destruction ot one auto- ' mobile owned by a watchman. Charitably they arc called the "lunatic I" frince" ot hunters. '. Why lunatic? That means insane. If ex ,' ainined by alienists they wouldn't be sent to V to mental hospitals. A psychiatrist, no doubt, ,.' would give them normal rating. Why not put them in their proper category and call them criminals? They do these things out of utter disregard ot the rights of others, and some of them for their own gain. Vandals and thieves, who choose to do wrong rather than right, are always about, even In the deep woods. Little progress has been made in sifting out the guilty ones. It isn't easy to do. Hut J there is evidence that legitimate hunters, '. realizing that one of the privileges of sports V men is endangered by the culprits, are in- creasing their efforts to control them, and ' seemingly with some success. W. 1). llitgen- stein, executive vice-president of the Indus J trial Forestry Association, reports that tho . depredations weren't as numerous as in the Jji year botore. Fifty-four tree farmers reported ,! no damage. '', The record of fires traced to hunters does j," not show improvement. While there were V, only nine during the lilSfl season, considered T Rhinll in comparison with the number nf hunt tj el's in Hie woods, it was five more than tho ;. tree farms reported the previous year. ,V i The t.'ix'i.'iying tree farmers welcome uuest t;, h'tnicrs who nmducl themselves like spurts n.en "'id gentlemen. Thev report that over j J30.0I10 hunters last year bagged I:l.f:l0 big n n "mo iinim"ls inim the tree farms of western Oregon and Washington. The score was 10,. 1150 deer, 1-HW elk ami Will bears. Most were legitimate hunters. The hunt ing area was 4.4il2!l4:i acres. And there are. laws to protect the game that they presum ably complied with. Hut the unimliaioil nnnietim.es wonders if the odds aren't consid erably against the animals. V K West on Control Board In an open forum letter to the Capital Journal, Kx-Govcrnor Oswald West, under v''(i.e Ilemocratie administration the State r '3rd of Control law was originated and en a:;cd e law, says: 'Abolishing the Slrte Board of Control and VMlini Its powers in fie governor is a most unwise piece of legislation, . . "I think, it was one of the most construe . : 'i "" I had control of the penitentiary but gave it up. We divided responsibility for institu tions among the members of the board. "Guided by experience," Mr. West contin ues, "1 was one of its earlier promolors. It has proven to be in the interest of good gov ernment by freeing itself from politics and being guided by good businessmen. "As a Democrat 1 hope to see it defeated for if enacted it will turn bad for the Demo crats. I hope the Democrats don't make damn fools of themselves by passing this bill and I hope the Republicans in the Senate have brains enough to defeat it. "What would happen should we elect a crooked or screwy governor?" asks Mr. West. It's happened in many other states. As the Capital Journal has remarked before this measure is merely to make Oregon's govern ment political spoils as it was in intervals before the Oregon System was adopted half a century ago and a step backward. G. P. RA Y TUCKER Committee Split on Budget Reduction WASHINGTON The sharpest and most serious revolt yet against the Eisenhower budget has broken out behind the doors of one of the most influential political and legis lative groups on Capitol Hill the House Rules Committee. Besides consisting of re- sponsible veterans of bothw' parties, almost every piece of legislation must receive this body's approval before it can even be considered on the floor. The bipartisan and indig nant attack was provoked during consideration o f House Resolution 170, which was dismissed as "ridicu lous- ana aamn loonsimess bay tuckk when it was proposed by Representative Ed gar W. Hiestand of California, with the back ing of 65 Republicans. It would record Con gress as favoring maximum expenditures of $65 million, or almost $7 billion less than Ike has asked for 1B5B. Under Its provisions, half of the saving would be used to reduce the $273 billion pub lic debt, and half would bo devoted to cut ting taxes, Resolution 170 has no manda tory effect, It merely expresses Congres sional scntiincnt, i But if shoved to tho floor by Rules, H will set the stage for an economy debate and demonstration that should shatter Administration complacency. Result of Postelection Survey Resolution 170 has an interesting back ground. It resulted from a confidential, post election survey conducted by a Republican Task Force under the supervision of Repre sentative John II. Ray of New York. It dis closed that the voters' principal concern and. grievance were high taxes, new spending pro posals and the lack of a sense of thrift at Washington. The report, which filled three thick' vol umes, revealed that foreign problems. Includ ing Hie Suez Canal crisis, the Middle East Doctrine and even the thought of an atomic war, were secondary. The discovery shocked the Republican leadership, including the Pol Icy Committees of House and Senate. It led even Joseph W. Martin, Jr., and Senator Styles Bridges, White House friends, to speak out for economy. The resultant resolution was embraced by every member of Rules, regardless of party. Witnesses waiting to testify on its behalf were not even heard because of. the committee's obvious approval. Representative Hiestand did not get a chance to read or explain the origin given here. Democrats Not Optimistic on Budget The shift in sentiment is significant be cause even the idea of a $65 billion ceiling was greeted with skepticism when it was first discussed in the corridors. "Cutting the budget by even $5 billion just Isn't going to be done," declared the realistic Speaker Sam Rayburn of Texas. A fellow-Texan, Senate Majority Loader Lyndon B. Johnson, reacted similarly. In a colloquy with Senator Harry F. Byrd of Vir ginia, who demands at least a $5 billion slash, Johnson said that "1 am not optimistic about the results." Senator Johnson's Kxplanation Johnson explained the reasons for his want of faith. Lunching with a fellow-Senator a few days ago, the Texan said that he had sug gested the feasibility of a small percentage cut--4. 5 or 6 per cent in every appropria tion bill. "Yes." the other replied. "I agree whole heartedly with you, provided you except the cost of defense. We must build a strong national defense." Johnson then tried the Idea on another rolloiguo, who was a member of the Appro priations Committee. Ho answered: "1 will be happy to do so. 1 want to see the budget reduced, provided that you except the public works bill.7 A Smile or Tiro: On account of a state line re-survey, a farmer who lor years had "lived in North Da kota'' suddenly discovered that his dwelling actually was in South Dakota. Some nf his friends thought he'd take the change pretty hard, because he'd always been proud of North Dakota, but the farmer accepted it philosophically. "Oh, well," he remarked, "the older I get the less 1 like those North Dakota winters !" Tlin Vitrrnw, JAMES MARWW pa I M Ike Budget Still Being Poured Over WASHINGTON 11 - No budget in recent years has caused as much confusion as the one Presi dent Eisenhower handed Congress 57 days ago. He asked for almost r 72 billion dol lars, a record for peacetime. What follows is a quick run down on the con- fusion that spread after Ei senhower sent his budget to Congress Jan. 16. Secretary o f james MARLOWthc Treasury Humphrey at a Jan. 16 news con ference indicated this was the tighest budget the administration could offer. He said: don't think there is anything in sight at the moment that can be done better than is now pro posed in this budget but I think we ought to improve it as time goes on. Almost immediately he made a second statement which seemed, and still seems, contradictory: "I think there are a lot of places in this budget that can be cut." This immediately raised two questions: 1. If this was such a tight budget, as he said, how could it be cut? 2. But, if he thinks it can be cut, why didn't the administration do il? Several times since Jan. 16 Humphrey has said cuts could be made but never although asked by newsmen and Congress has he said where. It's extraordinary for a Cabinet officer to say a President's budget can be cut the moment it reaches Congress, and Eisenhower was asked about it at His news con ference Jan. 23. He said there was no differ ence of opinion between him and Humphrey but he added that, if members of Congress can make cuts, "it is their duty to do so." This added nothing to anyone's understanding, since everybody knows Congress has the duty to cut the budget, if it can. It was about as informative as saying a policeman can arrest people. Either because of (he size of the budget or because Humphrey stimulated them into hoping cuts can be made, businessmen and others have been flooding. Con gress with demands for reduc tions. Eisenhower is aware of this. The demands arc coming from Congress too, and particularly from Eisenhower s own Hopubli cans. At his March 7 news con ference, Eisenhower showed signs of backing away, suggesting some of the programs he asked money for might be slowed down. Meanwhile, Pcrcival Brundagc, lite budget director and therefore the one man who should know more than anyone else about what went into tho budget, made a statement. He said he sees little hope for substantial cuts in spending for at least two years. Tilings got so whacky that the Democrats in the House no doubt for political reasons pulled a switch by asking Eisen hower to tell them where cuts could be made, thus trying to shift responsibility from Congress back to the administration. At his news conference yester day Eisenhower said he hod nev er asked Congress to cut the budget. Hut he repealed: If Con gress could cut, it should cut. That Washington Traffic DAVID LAWRENCE Split on Eisenhower Doctrine Ballot hy Senate Demos May Reflect Split in Party REX MAXWELL History in The Mahiiig ,. Mnr. 11, 1916 ltev. James Elvin had been in- stalled as pastor ot Salem's First Congregational church. His work wilh the Congregational church in Salem had started Jan. 1, 1915. Houser Bros, were no w lo cated in their new store on State street. Among their dis plays were six large hunting scenes painted hy Henry l.oe of Salem. Sitear in Sa lem on this dav i'N maxwki i. II venrs ago had a price of SH n hundred, nil increase ot 65c since Mar I, UUii. e Mrs. V. 1". Lord hail told the Salem Floral society that the city would lie known as the "city beau- litul" a few years hence if the Society's plans lor beautifying lo cal streams were adopted. (In the IBM's Salem was called the "city ot maples.") e e Pc Moss entertainers, for 43 years under the same name and oldest orf.inu.Hion ot its kind in the nation, were scheduled to pre sent Salem wilh a program of classics, original and (oik songs MVMoss family, self-styled "Lyric Bards .slnrted from Cove, Oreg in 1872. The troupe consisted ot father, mother and five children. In isa.1 t h e family jellied ill Sherman county at a site now called PeMoss Sprint:.. For so years this musical family traveled thretuh the t'niteil Slates, Canada and Furore ) expressed by a few Democratic senators who do favor interna tional cooperation on the economic side and also military assistance where America is invited to aid lest the growth of a Democratic party bloc in opposition to such policies may tend to hurt the po sition which the Democrats as a party have token in the past. Certainly the trend away from policies of international coopera tion is noticeable among the Dem ocrats in the Senate despite the valiant elforts of Senator Lyndon Johnson of Texas, majority leader, to keep the party in line. A sizable bloc of Democrats is defying the DR. WILLIAM BRADY Sound Teeth Depend Upon Right Foods The resignation of Anthony Eden reminded me of a news picture of the man someone sent me a year ago. T It ojuan m,mt picture revcaledSs' ' At i ui-Ldii nidi ii(tf m become familiar! Tsl in pieiurcs ol -ar-' Rrilisla itotisMli.il-flE V": ..w ... . years, namely,; bad teeth. I was going to' say n c g 1 cctcd , leeth. hut 1 re- $ charging the bad f r a i n from brady teeth of the British people In poor dentistry or to austerily or lo nar row, overrchned diet or lo all of these factors combined, until I can study the question firsthand. Can't Ilely on Grants Not that I can judge such mat ters better than other students but just that 1 have learned through painful experience that you can't rely on the judgments of investi gators whose studies are subsidized by "grants" from corporations in the pharmaceutical or implement business. I was privileged to spend one week in England six years ago, just long enough to realize more than ever before how much we owe old England for the sacrifices she made and is still making to keep the world free. English Can't Afford It For many years it has been a typical Yankee boast that Ameri can dentistry is the finest in the world. If dentistry in England is not quite up to the American stand ard, tiie reason or one reason for WASHINGTON.-Fully a week has gone by since the Senate passed the Eisenhower Doctrine and the vote reaveled a serious cleavage inside the Democratic party. But this correspondent has noted a curious silence in the press dispatches on the fact that such a split has occurred. If the Republican Party had divided in the same wav and a substant- ial number o f It e p u b 1 i -can .votes had been casl-it against the ros-M.jl oiuuon, me air would have been filled for sev eral days with outcries about the "failure" of the Eisenhower leadership and o. lawrenck about the new strength of the so called "isolationist" or "right wing" bloc in Congress. But it so happens that '43 Re publicans supported the Eisen hower Doctrine Resolution in the Senate and only 4 were against it. This is remarkable unanimity and a tribute to the Eisenhower lead ership. Democrats Elfecl Split II so happens, on the other hand, that, although the Democrats con trol the Senate, onlv 31 Demo cratic Senators voted for the res olution and 18 were recorded as against it. Does this mean that the Demo crats now have an "isolationist" wing in the Senate and that the Republicans have abandoned their "isolationism"? K so. American prestige abroad which we have been told "has sunk low" during (he Republican era because of a fear of Republican isolationism must be bouncing back upward. Or is (here a nervousness now in Britain and France and grave concern over the "isolationist" wave in the Democratic Party which might bode ill for the whole foreign-aid program in Congress this year? Again and again during the last campaign, (he country was told by Democratic Party spokesmen that tho Republican administra tion should not be returned to power because it could not com mand a united party. Again and again Adlai Stevenson hammered away at that theme, and many of the so-called "liberals" look it up in their writings. Said Ike Out of Control Much was said. too. to the ef fect that President Eisenhower wouldn't be able to control his own party in his second term be cause he wouldn't be running again and couldn't be of fuYthor use to Republican candidates in future elections. Hut it turns out jit is evident the average English- that something sensational has j man just can t afford it. I thought happened. Never before, has such' of this and other things when I unanimity prevailed in the Re-;found few Englishmen smoking publican party on an international (pipes 1 had expected to find most issue, w ith the possible exception ! smokers smoking pipes. A tobac of the vole in t9.Vi on the resohi-jconist who sold me a tin o( lo tion authorizing I he President tnjbacco for approximately Sid 'a use the armed forces lo protect 'pound I which would cost $2 a Formosa. pound In this country, said tncy'd It Is significant, too. that, al-! ,rt'i;r to, smoke pipe, but (hey though (he Formosa Resolution 'couM " lo"Scr afford ll. was opposed in the Senate by I 1 regret 1 was unable to investi onlv two Democrats and one Re- gale toolh-brushing in England, publican, apparently at least 15 ; But 1 imagine and hope the health Democratic senators now would: authorities, children, grown-ups. refuse to give the president of and dentists have a little more the I'nited States the same author- common sense about this silly ity lo use American armed forces j practice than w e have in Yankee tti deal with troubled situations; land. abroad. f It is time for us to grow up and ! dismiss the childish habit of brush :ine teeth, which as anv one with The Democrats in the House of i.q. of a 12-year-old must see. does Representatives have not gone i not prevent decay. We 'ought to along with their colleagues In the 'grasp this fundamental fact: That Senate and. under the statesman-: soundness of the teeth and (ree like leadership of Speaker Ray- dom from decay icavilies. denial burn, voted in ovcrwhclmins num- caries' depends on good nutrition hers for the Eisenhower Doctrine (rom nfancv to old ate. and keep Resolution. But this is only serves h , h , functi0I,al lo emphasise the lack of unity " .mnn. the llfsnocrati in Centre condition depends on consulting as a whole. 'your dentist as early and as often; i.inv tiirtsi ef liaro hii b'as circumstances rcquir. i leadership, and some of its mem bers are talking like the Republi can isolationists of the 1920's. They can hardly be classified as "mod ern Democrats." Has Escaped Writer! This development is a discourag ing one, but it seems to have es caped the notice of the many writers who are always in the forefront of the critics of the Eisenhower administration wilh the vague charge that the Stale Department has "no foreign pol icy" "or that it "lacks imaginative ideas." Plenty has been written, more over, about a trivial circumstance that occurred when tho new dis patches from the Middle East hap pened to be good one day and Ike called this to the attention of the country in a casual remark dur ing one of his speeches:' v ' HAL BOYLE Mayflower II Being Readied For Ocean Crossing to U.S. BRIXHAM,. England Wi-Stuart A. Upham, a weatheroeaien man who believes in wood and canvas, is the builder of Mayflower II. She is a lady, Upham insists, a strong little ship which will duplicate this , spring the voy age across the Atlantic -made by the Pilgrim fathers in 1620. Mayflower II is in her essen- hal bovll lials looks, size and straining ropes a replica of the sailing ship in which the Pilgrims ven tured to the new world. Tho new vessel is a eift of the British peo ple to the people of the United States. UDham and about 35 craftsmen have been working for about a year and a half. Upham sizes up the ship taking final form and says with affection gleaming in his eyes: A Beautiful Tiling "A proper wooden ship is the most beautiful thing man ever created." And what's the beginning of a good wooden ship? The acorn, ot course, saia UDham. "It's honest oak that we need to withstand the corrosion of salt water, and the battering of the sea." Upham prowls the Devon and Cornwall countryside, looking for likely trees. They ought to be about 21)0 years old, and they do not have to be straight and state ly. A sturdy, gnarled and twisted oak gladdens his heart, because wooden ship needs bits and pieces of strange shapes, Gets Good Treatment We can bend wood In the steam bath," said Upham. "But then the tiny fibers which constitute the wood are twisted out of their na tural shape a little, and we lose something in strength and dura bility. But if that twist grows naturally the wood comes into my ship in just the form it wants to be. and there s nothing like tim ber to appreciate good treatment." Mayflower II is a ship of fi'.ie appearance, but not built with beauty a first consideration. It is a faithful replica, and the first Mayflower was a practical mer chantman, a 180-ton freighter full of creaks which hauled wine from the Mediterranean ports before the Pilgrims chartered her. Stands Up to Storms "Mayflower II is not grand as a schooner, or sleek as a yacht, but a very presentable craft," said Upham. "She's a bark, that's what she is. We put every em phasis we could into making this a rugged ship, and she will stand up to storms. "Mayflower II is a live ship, daintily balanced and full of spir it. When we launched her last September, she slid down into the water eagerly, and then danced on the waves as if she were a ping pong ball. Then we pulled her back into the dry dock. It's her boudoir, where we are dress, ing her to go calling overseas. "But she's been a headache. We've never built a 17th Century ship. We had excellent designs from Mrs. William A. Baker, the American naval architect, but we had to feel our way along, redis. covering many of the old tech niques." Will Sail With Ship UDham. who is 49, will sail to America with his ship. In his youth he sailed some of his com pany's fishing vessels out of Brix. ham Harbor. 'So I know a few tricks on a sailing ship," he said. "There is this business of fresh water, for instance. We'll sail with what we need, and there will be no dis tilling. But I have learned that the way to conserve water is to provide only a very small hand pump on the tanks. So our new Pilgrims will have to work hard to get a cup of water, and won't be wasting any." BEVOS TAKING WORST Portland and Los Angeles are. in effect, trading a lot of ball players this spring because their big league bosses made a trade. So far Los Angeles has got more of what made Portland third than Portland has received of what made Los Angeles first. Sherman County Journal. IN A STEW FOND DU LAC, Wis. (ffl-Truck driver George Post timidly ex plained to his employer he arrived with stewed tomatoes and fried bananas because a gasoline heater used to keep the produce from freezing in winter flared up and cooked everything. TAXES ARE GOING UP The governor. Senator Corbett and House Speaker Dooley talked to the Portland Chamber of Com merce and called attention to the state's population growth. They failed to note that taxes' are going up more than ten times as fast as population. Sherman County Jour nal. October 20, 1940 Mrs. V. K. wrote . . . "Please accept my sincere thanks for all of the care and attention given to the funeral of my husband, Mr, J. K.( last Mon day. Everything was perfectly arranged and exactly ss he wished." The above taken frnm our Ifle of unsolicited Jetten, HOWELL-EDWARDS FUNERAL HOME House Demos Approved CITY TRANSIT LINES ESAITS off FARE EFFECTIVE MARCH 15, 1957 CITY FARE (Adults) 15c Cosh With Transfer 20c c, CHILDREN (Free Transfers) . , . lQc Cosh (5 Yean and Under 12 Yean of Age) SUBURBAN FARE ''.'.'Z'l5c With Transfer 30c co,h CHILDREN (Free Transfers) ..... 15c Cash (5 Yean and Under 12 Years of Age) EXCEPTION No transfer required between Liberty and Stare, Bus Stop, and Meier & Frank's Store. Also no transfer! required on direct serv ice to or from the State Office Buildings at 7:45 a.m. and 4:45 p.m. (city time). (After 6:45 P.M. Nights and All Day Sundays and Holidays) NIGHTS, SUNDAYS, HOLIDAY FARE CITY FARE CHILDREN (Adults). 20c 10c Cash Caih (5 Years and Under 12 Yean of Age) (FREE TRANSFERS ON NIGHTS, SUNDAY, HOLIDAY FARES) NOTE TO OUR PATRONS PASSENGERS WISHING TRANSFERS SHOULD DEPOSIT FULL FARE, INCLUD ING TRANSFER CHARGE IN FARE BOX. TRANSFER ALLOWS ONE HOUR "STOP OVER" DOWNTOWN. STUDENTS USING "SCHOOL TICKET BOOKS" ON SCHOOL DAYS WILL NOT BE CHARGED FOR TRANSFER. PATRONS WHO HAVE TOKENS MAY USE THEM IN PAYMENT OF FARE AS FOLLOWS:' THE SMALL TOKEN PLUS 3c FOR CITY FARE (EXCEPT TRANSFER) THE LARGE TOKEN PLUS 5c FOR S'JBURBAN FARE (EXCEPT TRANSFER) THE MAJORITY OF OUR PATRONS WHO CONTACTED US DURING THE PAST TWO MONTHS INDICATED A WILLINGNESS TO PAY AN INCREASED FARE RATHER THAN HAVING NO SERVICE OR, IN THE EVENT WE CON TINUED TO OPERATE, CURTAILED S'.RVICE. WE SINCERELY HOPE THAT THE INCREASED FARES, SHOWN ABOVE, WILL NOT RESULT IN A FURTHER LOSS OF PATRONAGE. TO GIVE A FAIR TEST TO DETERMINE THE EFFECT OF THE NEW FARE STRUCTURE, WE ARE NOT MAKING ANY CHANGES IN SCHEDULES AT THIS TIME. MAY WE CONTINUE TO ENJOY YOUR PATRONAGE. CITY TPNCIT UNFS