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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 12, 1955)
FOUB MEDFORD (OREGON) MEDF0RDOTRIBiMI EvertK4 in suuuiern Oregon Reads me Mau iTiDune Published Dairt Except Saturday bi MEDFORD PRINTING CO 07-29 North Fir St. Phone 2-4141 ... ... f KERB GREY, Advertising Manager Z. C. FERGUSON. Managing Editor roir ii iTN ra csrv VAitnr ROBERT W BUHL, Editor HARRY CHIP MAN. Telegraph Edxtot RICHARD JtWKI, boons BBW OLIVE STARCHES- Society Editor JACK JACKSON. Sunday Editor. GERALD LATHAM. Circulation Mgr. An Independent Newspaper Entered as second das matter at Medford. Oregon, under Act of Marcn a, ib " SUBSCRIPTION RATES , Daily and Sunday One year $12.00 Dally ana aunaay oix monuH w-v ' Daily and Sunday Three moa 3-50 Daily and Sunday One month 1.29 Sunday Only One year - 3.50 By Carrier In Advance Medford Ashland. Central Point. Eagle Point . T..b.niii rinM mil Phoenix Shady Cove. Rogue River. Talent Daily and Sunday One year 915.00 - Daily and Sunday One month 3i carrier ana ueaiera oc cop All iermiwiBnianufvw Official Paper of the City of Medford Official Paper ei jicmsob voaaty United Pn Full Leased Wire 'uTT.MTHra OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION Arivrtiin? ReDresentative: . WEST-HOLLIDAY COMPANT. DfC - Offices in New York, Chicago. De troit. San rr an Cisco, uom Angeles Seattle. Portland. St Louis. Atlanta Vancouver B C NATIONAL EDITORIAL I ASSOCIATION v- ! "U'lULI Flight o' Time Medford 'and Jackson County History from the files of The Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30 and 40 years ago. 10 YEARS AGO Jan. i2. 1945 r rr, (It was Friday) German prisoner of war at Camp White wounded while at tempting to escape. From Arthur Perry's Ye Smudge Pot column: Everybody now has $33.47 more than last year, the Treasury department aily announces. The majority of the people, pending arrival of more concrete evidence, will have to take the Treasury de partment's word for it. 20 YEARS AGO Jan. 12, 1935 (It was Saturday) Moving pictures appearing at Medford theaters include "The Painted Veil," with' Greta Gar bo; "Imitation of Life," with William Warren; "South;-of Santa Fe," with Bob Steele, and "Perils of Pauline" with Eyalyn Knapp and William Desmond.: - Influenza epidemic raging in Applegate area; nearly every other home has one or more per sons sick. 30 YEARS AGO Jan. 12, 1925 ' (It was Monday) Q. T. Bergner, former opera tor of Page theater in Medford, purchases Oregon hotel in Ash land for $30,000. Vernon Vawter returns to Medford after attending meeting of University of Oregon, board of regents at Eugene. FORTY YEARS AGO Jan. 12, 1915 (It was Tuesday) A. R. Enyart believed to have discovered lost channel of Jack son creek; discovery touches off great interest in gold prospect ing. Local and personal item: Autoists traveling through, Tal ent should keep one eye on the speedometer and the other on the police, for the authorities of that town have served notice of a campaign against speeders, and incidentally to inflate a more or less depleted treasury. What's the Answer? (Can You Gat 4 of the 7?) Copr. 1955, Editorial Research Report 1. Draft calls beginning Feb ruary will go up about one fourth or one-half, or down about one-fourth or one-half? ; 2. First head of the WACs was Frances Perkins, Clara Boothe Luce, Eleanor Roosevelt, Ivy Priest, or Oveta Culp Hobby? 5, 3. Telephone calls in the U.S. during the" year work out to about one, two, three, four or five a day for each man, woman and child? - . - v 4. "The Four Hundred" was a phrase for High Society coined by- Mrs. W.-K. VanderbUt, S. Ward McAlister, Emily Post, Stuyvesant Fish, or Perle Mesta? 5 Abraham A. Ribicoff is the new Senator from New Jersey, New York attorney general, Su preme Court nominee, Conn ec ticut governor or U5. solicitor gTS, two, three, foorocfivj widows of former .President are bow alive? m - 7. Saul of Tarsus, in the Bible, is better- known under -What Answers: 1. .bout on-half. 2. Mr Hobby. 3. To about one a day. " Ward McAlistar. 5. JJ nactieut governor. ; - e. Mesdame. WjkCg ?d MAIL TRIBUNE The Septuagint Bible For some days there to-attend-to corner of the Septuagint Bible as recently edited, revised and en larged by C. A. Muses, MA., Ph.D., of Columbia Uni versity and published by Indian Hills, Colo., and New York. In view of the recent numerous letters to The Mail Tribune concerning the interpretation of -biblical' ref erences to dates and events, the Septuagint is particu larly interesting to Bible students for the original is the oldest Greek version of the Old Testament. It dates from the third century before Christ and prob ably was made for Jews of knowledge of the Hebrew language. , .. e DECAUSE of our lack of time to study Dr. Muses' . thick volume, and because of our feeling of inade quacy in approaching involved theological matters, we were glad to note an editorial in The Oregonian which sets forth the background of the Septuagint. The editorial also gives some of Dr. Muses' comments on the work of translating into English, a task which American scholar finished in. 1808 after twenty years of labor. Says The Oregonian: Dr. Muses, in his introduction to the revised Thomson translation, contends that the Septuagint Bible is closer . ; to . the original Hebrew than are more commonly known versions. -: f -;. "The oldest Hebrew text in existence in the third ' , century B. C. had been used by the early Septaugint . translators; but it is unfortunate that in post-Christian times all Hebrew manuscripts containing the older text increasingly found their way into the 'genizah,' the ceme tery near every .large ancient synagogue for abandoned scrolls of the Torah and other sacred writings," he says. " . . . The oldest literary evidence of the Bible the Septuagint vellum manuscripts, the Samaritan Pentateuch, . ' and the biblical papyrus scrolls all tend to agree with,' each other more than with the present Hebrew text, which dates no earlier than 100 years after the Christian era had begun. Unfortunately, that late text was relied upon by both Origen and St. Jerome as the 'original' Hebrew in their . work of redaction and translation, and the same dependence . was used by Luther and the King James committee. - - "... Interesting enough, in St Jerome's version, as finally accepted in the Vulgate Bible, we still find the Septuagint version of the psalms, as well as several books from the older version." There is abundant and widely scattered evidence,' says Muses, that the Septuagint text of the Bible was the one in use in the time of Jesus and his disciples. - Undoubtedly publication again in English of this old version is of great interest to Bible scholars. But the Septua gint will never replace the King James version as the popu lar Bible. Compare the' first two verses of Genesis. .The. -King '.-James version says: , ? . In the beginning God ereatod the heaven and thVearih. . 2. And the earth was without form, and void? and dark-; nets was upon the face of the deep. And the Spirit of God1 -moved upon the face of the waters, The Septuagint puts it this way: . ? " ' r - ' In the beginning God. mad the. heaven and the earth. (2) And lho earth was invisible and unfurnished and there was darkness over -this abyss, and. a breath; of God was -brought on above the water. : ; r ' Or, let us look at the twenty-third psalm. The Septus gint version follows: . ; The Lord is my shepherd, I shall want nothing. (2) In ;f . a verdant pasture He hath fixed my abode. He has fed ma ". by gently flowing water (3) and restored my soul. Ha hath led me in paths of righteousness for His name's sake. (4) For though I walk amid the shades of death: I will fear . no ills, because Thou art with me; Thy rod and Thy staff have been my comfort. (5) Thou hast spread a table bofore . met in tho presence of them who afflict me. With oil Thou hast anointed my head; and Thine exhilarating cup is the very best. (6) Thy mercy will surely follow me all the days of my life; and my dwelling shall be in the house of the . Lord to length of days. How much more rhythmic is this jubilant song in the King James Bible: - The Lord is my shepherd; I shall not want. 2. He maketh me to lie down in green pastures;' he leadeth me beside the still waters. : 3. He restoreth my soul; he leadeth me in the paths of righteousness for his name's sake. 4. Yea, though I walk throug the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil; for thou art with me; thy rod ; and thy staff they comfort me. V 5. Thou preparest a table before me in tho presence of mine enemies; thou annointest my head with oil: my cup runneth over. '6. Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life; and I will dwell in the house of the Lord . for ever. The King James version recently has been revised. Some changes undoubtedly were necessary to clarify words whose meanings have changed in the past 350 years. But -the revised version has lost some of the power and majesty of the King James in the process. The Septuagint Bible, though it may be closer to the original,, lacks that full power also. The 54 scholars who in 1611 presented to King James the results of seven years of labor truly must have been inspired. ; " .; -" E.C.F. Tourist Income Stays High i Oregon enjoyed an income of $125,000,000 from out-of-state tourists last year, according to the Port land Chamber of Commerce. The figures, based on data supplied by the travel information division of the state highway department, approximated those for 1953 and were around $4,000,000 more than re ceipts reported for 1951 and 1952. THE figures do not include money, spent by Ore gonians vacationing in their own state as tie lat ter totals are much more difficult to estimate. One of the best guesses as to the amount spent by in-state tourists was arrived at in 1951 and 1952 by questioning motel operators on this phase of their business; The motel men figured 46 per cent of their patronage came from Oregonians in both years and this percentage applied to the state's 1954 figure for out-of-state tourists wculd indicate an in-state tour ist business of $106,000,000. ; i r - ;-. i , V Although the Oregon travel trend is up, the Porfe." land chamber s report points out that adverse weather Sight reduce the tourist business in the year ahead, jostrsarit did 'during part of the 1954 season.E.C.F.- Wednesday, January 12, 1S55 has reposed on the things- desk a review copy of the the Falcon's Wing Press of Alexandria who had lost the Greek Septuagint Bible Charles Thompson, early TtHMCI . J, ritAMK a. oa wy.K-KwwWKWJvS: 6r.MMU MUM jLaM il l i "'-j. nnii vl mmu mi-vsm Xmm tmm X mJhummmmK , , ir1' WINNING OVER HUNDREDS oLentries, here are America's 10 outstanding young men of 1S54, selected under auspices of U. 8 Junior Chamber of Commerce. They will be honored at Lou isville, Ky, banquet Jan. 22. Top, from left: Dr. Wendell Phillips, 33, Concord,' CaL, archaeol ogist; Terence P. Brennan, 26, Notre Dame football coach; Arthur M. Kraft, 33, Kansas City, Mo artist and sculptor; Dr. William A. Spencer, 32, Houston, Tex.; polio research; Major Charles E. Yeager, 31, Hamlin, W. Va., Air Force test pilot. Bottom, from left: Frank A. Rose, 34, Lexington, Ky., Transylvania College, educator; J. Herbert Holloman, 35, Schenectady, N. Y metallurgist; Ernest F. Hollings, 32, Charleston, Lieut. Gov. of South Carolina, public service; : Hamilton F. Richardson, 21, Baton Rouge, La., Davis Cup tennis player despite diabetic han dicap and Robert F. Kennedy, 29, Boston, chief counsel, Senate subcommittee on investigations, for outstanding contributions in halting trade of U. S. allies with Red China. (International) No Doubt Held That Burgess and MacLean Working for Soviets By CHARLES M. McCANN United Press Foreign Analyst There can be no more doubt that ' Guy Burgess and Donald Marlan. h British diplomats who - vanished in ; France in May, 1951, are working for the Russians.. It seems pretty certain, on the basis of a number of peacemeal reports; that they -are in Moscow, act ing as advisers manes juccaiui to the Soviet foreign ministry on propaganda directed toward the West. : ; 4 . But the real mystery of their disappearance remains as deep as ever.' 1 - That,, mystery is why and how Burgess and MacLean reached their decision to abandon their careers arid betray the trust put in them as foreign office offi cials by going behind the iron curtaip. . ' -. ' First, they are not the sort of men who do that sort of thing, even in these days of defections of scientists, officials and secret police agents from one side of the iron curtain to the other. - Prominent Men :': Burgess and MacLean were members of what still may be called the British ruling class. They were' products of the ex clusive "public" school system and of Cambridge University. MacLean was the son of the late Sir Donald MacLean, liberal party leader and former cabinet minister. There is suspicion that both men were strong Communist sympathizers if not Communist agents, but there is no solid evi dence that they were Commun ist Party members. Secondly, Burgess - and Mac- Lean seem to have reached their decision suddenly. May 25, 1951, was MacLean's 38th birthday: He took his usual commuter's train home , to Sur rey county from the foreign of fice to join" his American-born wife, who had borne him two children and was expecting a third. Burgess, that day, had . en gaged a two-berth - cabin on a channel streamer and had in vited an American, man friend in London to accompany him on Editorial Comment Poor Politics . If the way to win friends and influence ; people is to starve them out, then the Federal Bud get Bureau seems to be on the right track. If it isn't then it would appear there's some mighty poor politics going on in Washington these days. The Statesman's Washington correspondent, A. Robert Smith, quotes a high administration of ficial as saying the $20,000,000 Rogue River reclamation project is being left out of the budget for 1955 because Oregon voters re fused to return Republican Guy Cordon to the Senate and thereby gave Democrats control of that body. There is no official word, on the matter yet. That will not be out until President Eisenhower sends his detailed budget mes sage to congress next week. But from Washington dispatches on present activities there, prospects are not too bright. It is known that just before Cordon left of fice in December he attempted to loosen funds for ;the . Rogue River project. "But the boys-in the (budget) bureau feel, 'Why should they help Cordon. He was defeated'," the administration official said. ,1I...WJ)-.. ia brief visit to France. But . Burgess rented a drive-it-yourself . car and after, re ceiving a telephone call . at his apartment drove down to ; Mac Lean's home. He took two suit cases.: He was introduced to Mrs. ' MacLean as ''Ronald Styles." .. After dinner, Burgess took his suit cases, MacLean took a brief case and they drove to South hampton... MacLean told his wife they were going to see a-friend and might stay overnight. Bur gess and, MacLean took - the steamer to St: Malo, France.' and were driven by car to Rennes, a railroad junction point for Paris. There they vanished. Telegrams apparently- dic tated if not written by Burgess and MacLean reached their rela tive ,while British secret police hunted them. It was evident that MacLean maintained close con tact with his wife. She went later to Switzerland to live with her children, - now three. They disappeared Sept. 11, 1953. Burgess sent Christmas greet ings to his mother in London in 1953 and last month. The letters were mailed in London, appar ently by a crewman of a Russian ship or a Soviet embassy agent. But ' they only deepened the mystery of the two diplomats. A Nkhol's Worth of ... - Comment On This and That By HARMAN United Pratt Washington (U.R) - What's new in Washington: The Defense Department got a letter from a 10 - year - old boy in Okla homa. He want ed "aU the in formation you have about air planes." And he wanted same in a hur ry ."Please send it by guided missile'? the Harmon Nichols lad said. The 84th Congress already has a hopper full of proposed new measures and resolutions, all of which will be referred to com mittees.. " ' ' One of., my favorites was dropped in the box by Sen. Barry M. Goldwater, the Republican On the basis of that statement, we - would say the designation "boys" is right. Maybe a few men should take over the budget job. Another inept, inopportune and unworthy statement also is at tributed to them in regard to Secretary of the Interior Mc Kay's espousal of the project "The budget bureau has seen the Oregon election returns and they know McKay came out on the short end." ' "' We do not believe President Eisenhower would want that kind of evaluation placed on re clamation needs of this' country. We do not believe he would want men in responsible positions who were foolish enough to indulge in that kind of archaic thinking, let alone voice it aloud. If his aids think that punishing Oregon to the extent of refusing' to bud get projects which Congress al ready has authorized will bring this state back into the GOP fold, they've got holes in their collective heads. We've an idea the attitude as reflected to Smith comprises the best Democratic propaganda pro mulgated by , Republicans . in many., a. year.rOregon , (Salem) I Statesman. - :::K - :: - ::: w:-x-:- Communications Letters to the Editor must bear the name and address of the writer although .under certain circum stances the use of a pen name or Initial, for publication is permis sible. The Mail Tribune ' reserves the right to edit all letters with an eye to clarification and condensa tion. Letters submitted for publica-. Ition must not exceed 400 words. Milk and Butter - To the Editor: The . people of the Rogue valley and Oregon are asked to use more dairy products, but as long as the price of milk and butter is as high as at pres ent there will be very little con sumed. ' ' I am from Minnesota and I left there about ten years ago for personal reasons but my rela tives are still there. My sister wrote me the other day that Grade A milk sells for 16 cents a quart in all retail markets and the dairies have a lot more expenses there in the winter than they have here. am referring to the dairies or creameries, not the producers. I am wondering why the seven cents a quart difference. The producers aren't getting it. Also how come the .increase in price of butter here of late? When the price was lowered last spring I started to use butter again, be cause I was able to afford it Now it is over 70 cents again and I am forced to stop. I may be wrong but all I can figure is that there must be something wrong in Oregon. E. Hi Braunig, ; Rt. 1, Box 104, Talent, Ore. , . W. NICHOLS Feature Writer from Arizona. He suggests a measure which would make it legal to send live scorpions through the mail. In a speech, Don Paarlberg, as sistant to Secretary of. Agricul ture Ezra T. Benson,, cut loose this intelligence: "The time was when the tired husband came home from work and asked his wife, "What's cookin. Today, L with frozen" foods,, he is more likely to ask, What's thawin'?" Benson himself, by the by,' also can coin one. He said in a speech about increased production: "Sometime, the ' top producing cow will cock a disapproving eye at a scientist and say, "look, this has gone far enough. You've got the last pint." The Army spent two - years making a beautiful documentary film called '"This Is Your Army." Since the adininistration ordered sharp cuts in the budget .for the Army, unhappy Pentagon offi cers are wryly suggesting the movie be re-titled "This Was Your. Army." , ' Speaking of the. Pentagon, some of the big faces there are red. The heraldry branch de signs coats of arms for Army units and writes spirited mottoes for them. Soldiers of an armored battalion at Fort Hood, Tex., proudly wore such a coat of arms for a time. The motto: "Videre Parere Est." Along came a GI latin student who translated it: "To see is to submit." It seems that the heraldry branch really meant "Videre Parare : Est," which means, "to see is to pre pare." TM : GIARDELLO FINED - 1 Philadelphia (U.R) Joey Giardello, leading contender for the ' middleweight . boxing' title, was back in business today after paying a $500 fine instead of taking a 75-day suspension by the Pennsylvania State 'Athletic Commission Chairman Frank Wiener for Giardello's part in a South Philadelphia brawl last October , in which a gas station attendant . was beaten. The com mission ruled his conduct "det rimental to - the boxing profes sion." In the Day's Hews By FRANK JENKINS Politcal note: The Democratic national com mittee, has opened up on. Presi dent Eisenhower's proposals in his State-of-the-Union message to the. Congress the other day. It asks how the President can talk about Russia's steadily growing military power and then justify proposals to CUT American armed i orces. I WOULDN'T know, gentlemen. But President Eisenhower is rather generally recognized as the world's ablest soldier. It's just possible that hemight know more about military matters than a bunch of carping politi cians. . (I doubt if anyoneeven the members of the Democratic na tional committee really sus pects Ike of deliberately WEAK ENING the United States of America so that Russia can take over.) -. H AZARDS of modern life note: - In the town of Mystic, Conn., the other day a sea gull dropped a clam from up in the sky. It hit a woman in the head, gashing her head with its sharp edges, and bounced from her skull into a Store window, which it .smash ed into smithereens. B UT How can that he called a haz ard of MODERN life? Haven't sea gulls been dropping clams out of the sky for millions of years? ' JJTOUE enough. But back in those earlier eras of time -when sea gulls first learned that they could crack a clam's hard hull by flying the critter up into the wild blue yon der and then dropping it on a rock PEOPLE were so SCARCE down below that practically no body ever got -hurt. - Now they're getting so thick that it's no longer safe to throw a rock at a marauding cat. ' - B Y the way That clam the sea gull drop ped must have been one of these geoducks (pronounced GO-ee- ducks) that Puget ; Sound resi dents boast so loudly about. .Question: How did it get back to Con necticut? . . .;' ; QJ PEAKING of the hazards, of J modern life, I suppose you must have noticed that the -city of Portland in the air-condi- ticned Pacific Northwest had a touch of SMOG the other day. - That brings .up a statement re cently by a smog , expert one Lauren' Hitchcock, of - Los An geles that smog is one of the four chief threats to the future of our great cities the other three being .congestion noise and the high cost of living. He says that getting CLEAN AIR for our Bigtowns may cost as much in the future as getting good water, Jj suggestion, sir: Instead of concentrating our industries in the big cities where, - among other things, they'll be sitting ducks for a hy drogen bomb why. not scatter them out into the clean, open country, where living is BETTER? - ' Native of County Dies in Portland Miss Eleanor Flora Maule, a long-time teacher in southern Oregon, a native of Jackson countv and daughter of pioneer residents here, died after a pro longed illness in . Portland last Saturday. Funeral services were held to day in Portland. She was born in Medford on Aue. 16. 1888. attended school here and graduated from Ash land Normal school. - Later she taught in various schools for 20 vears. After she retired from teaching, she lived in Portland, where she was active in volun teer work for the Veterans' hos pital. ".; ; -j . Miss Maule's parents, long de ceased, were Milton and Eleanor Murrav Maule. Survivors in clude three brothers and several neices and nephews. s,:i TOO MANY STOP SIGNS San Francisco U.R) An of ficial report by the citjr works director today confirmed what motorists have said all along- the .city has too many stop signs. Reconditioned o RANGES o REFRIGERATORS : o AUTOMATIC WASHERS o WRINGER WASHERS All IN A-l CONDITION Priced Very Reasonable CITY APPLIANCE, Inc. . "AAedferd's fedusive HOTPOINT Dealer" ' 127 N. CENTRAL - Opposite Penney - PHONE 3-5743 Is That So? ' By Eugtit Bam , Ranger-Naturalist When hatched from its egg, the grasshopper is a miniature grownup and like all insects has a hard shell skeleton on the out side of its body which it must break if it Is to gain adult size. But the grasshopper does riot break its skeleton once, it does from each one! Before breaking and shedding its old rags, it grows a new un dersuit one which is soft and . can expand before hardening. ; , Another- astonlshine - fact: should the' grasshopper meet, with an accident and lose his head, which is the front part; or his belly, which is the rear part, he can still navigate without trouble. That is because his legs,' attached to the middle part,: the, thorax, are controlled by local ly-operated nerves.. . : The female starfish produces over ' 200,000,000 eggs a year. enougn to overrun me sea in a couple of centuries. Fortunate ly,, only a few ever reach matur ity. because thousands of fishes prey upon them. But the starfish in turn preys upon the oyster,: and well that it does. The off spring of one oyster and her liv ing descendants total right around a mere 6,600,000,000,- 000,000,000,000,00 0,0 0 0,000,000 and if it were not for the star fish, the sea might soon be over-; run with oysters. V . Most starfish have . five arms under which are hundreds of feet. At the tip of each arm is an eye, a small red disc. So, re gardless of ' what direction it takes, it has one weather . eye ' looking ahead, two to the sides, and another pair covering its retreat. Should it lose an arm, it can grow a new one, replete with eye. . Feet for Smelling Among the hundreds of feet, a certain few are designed for. smelling. The foot,, provided with the sense of smell, moves about, feeling and sniffing each nWprt which micrht serve . as chow. Being in the shape of a foot, it can be used as a foot, But speaking of smelling or gans, some male moths, can smell out a virgin moth three miles away! But more of that at, another "amazing" session. .-. (Released by - McClure Newspaper Syndicate) Free: By special arrangement with the editors of the Encyclo pedia Americana, my panel -of judges will award each week to the reader who sends me the best question on nature and wildlife a complete SO-volume set of this . world-famous refer ence work in a handsome Seal craft binding. Each week,, new nuestions will be considered. sorry, i . simpiy can s answer your many uiexiiuy icfcKxs. Plpn address vour Questions to: IS.THAT.SOj co-Medford Mail Tribune, Box 575, Sausa lito, Calif. THEY WANT THEIR MONEY Denver - (U.R) The Western Foundation Construction comp any, in a civil suit filed Tues day, asked that the multi-million-dollar Denver Club skyscraper be sold so it pan be paid $11,871 for the work done on the base ment. - WEATHER By United Press Northern California: Fair ex cept considerable fog central valley. Financial Independence does aot fast fiaaata. h h fcollt over a period of tin, bit by bit. Your sayings or investment ac count is tho place for your fund of tho future. FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS t LOAN ASS'N J of Medford .27 North Holly ' An Institution Dedicatee! To Those Who Savo SALE