Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, June 15, 1955, Image 4

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FOUR MEDFORD (OREGON)
MEDF0RD4!iTBIBUNE
"Everybody in Southern Oregon
Heads The Mail Tribune"
Published Daily Except Saturday by
MEDFORD PRINTING CO.
27-29 North Fir St. Phone 2-6141
ROBERT W. RUHL. Editor
HERB GREY Advertising Manager
. C. FERGUSON. Managing Editor
ERIC ALLEN JR.. City Editor
HARRY CHIPMAN. Telegraph Editor
RICHARD JEWETT. Sports Editor
OLIVE STARCHER. Society Editor
JACK JACKSON Sunday Editor
GERALD LATHAM. Circulation Mgr.
An Independent Newspaper
Entered as second clas matter at
Medford. Oregon, under Act of
jviarcn j, iovi
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Mail In Advance: Per copy 10c.
Daily and Sunday One year $12.00
Daily and Sunday Six months 6.50
Dail'v and Sunday Three mos. 3.30
Sunday Only One year $3.50.
By Carrier In Advance Bedford.
Ashland. Central Point. Eagle Point
Jacksonville. Gold Hill. Phoenix.
Shadv Cove. Rogue River. Talent,
and on motor routes: '
Daily and Sunday One year $15.00
Dailv and Sunday One month 1.25
Carrier and Dealers 5c per copy.
All Terms uasn m Aovanue
Official Paper of the City of Medford
Official Paper of Jackson County
United Press Full Leased Wire
MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU
OF C1HCULA1.UIM
WEST-HOLLIDAY COMPANY. INC.
Offices in New York. Chicago. De
troit San Francisco. Lo Angeles.
Seattle. Portland. St. LouU Atlanta.
Vancouver. B.C.
NATIONAL EDITORIAL
NEWSPAPER
PUBLISHERS
A'SSOdATION
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
June IS. 1945
(It was Friday)
Workers urgently needed at
Camp White because of reacti
vation. From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: A quintet
of 1945 fathers met yesterday
and compared babies. They all
are remarkable. None of them
ever cry.
20 YEARS AGO
June IS. 1935
(It was Saturday)
T. E. Daniels of vMedford re
elected president of the Oregon
State Trapshooting association.
The fifth annual Salvation
Army Young Peoples congress
held in Medford today and to
morrow. ',
30 YEARS AGO
June 15, 1925
(It was Monday)
Ten Jackson county residents
arrested as authorities start cam
paign to stop speeding.
Oregon National Guard to par
ade through Medford tomorrow.
40 YEARS AGO
June 15. 1915
(It was Tuesday)
Actress Maude Adams to ap
pear in "Quality Street" at Page
theater tomorrow.
From Local and Personal col
umn: School elections will be
held in the county next Monday.
There is little local interest to
date, there being but one can
didate, B. P. Palmef.
What's the Answer?
(Can You Get 4 of the 7?)
Coar. 1955. editorial Resajrck Retort
1. The state with the most
electoral votes after New York
and Pennsylvania is: California,
Illinois, or Ohio?
2. The U. S. has more
churches (buildings) than 25
years ago, or fewer, or about
the same number?
3. Speed laws were being
violated by drivers in one, two,
three, four, five or six of every
10 fatal auto accidents?
4. The U. S. had one, two,
or three Presidents, during
World War I in 1914-1918?
5. Col. Peron, dictator in Ar
gentina, is hostile or friendly to
the Catholic church there, or
neutral toward it?
6. Some children are born
with defective hearts; right or
wrong?
7. Chlorophyll is an anesthe
tic, additive for gasoline, green
coloring matter in plants, the
urge to steal, or a woman with
dyed hair?
The Aswers: 1. California. 2.
More. .3. Three out of 10. 4. One
(Wilson). 5. Hostile. 6. Right.
7. ..Green., coloring., matter., in
plants.
NOEL COWARD ILL
Las Vegas, Nev. (U.R)
British playwright - composer
Noel Coward was expected to
recover fully today from an at
tack of flu which sent him to
bed with a temperature of 102
degrees. Coward, who has been
performing he for more, than
a week in his American night
club debut, was unable to appear
Tuesday night at the Desert Inn
hotel.
MAIL TRIBUNE
A Necessary Decision
Those Oregon cities and school districts which in
the past two years have voted themselves new tax
bases can breathe easier, thanks to the supreme court's
recent action in clarifying an earlier decision.
That earlier opinion had been read to mean that
when a taxing unit had established a new tax base by
the vote of its people, then it could not take advantage
of the constitutional provision which allows an in
crease of 6 per cent per year in budgets, to meet ris
ing costs.
AT THE time, the Mail Tribune said, "It is to be
"hoped that the supreme court will make a speedy
end to the confusion, for the well-being of 18 cities
and many school districts depend on it. And time's
getting short"
The court took cognizance of the need, held a re
hearing on the matter and last week clarified the
earlier decision.
A MONG the cities affected are Jacksonville, Gold
Hill and Phoenix, and on July 5 Medford voters
will cast ballots on a similar proposal.
' It is fortunate that the supreme court was as
speedy as it was, for the end of the budgeting period
is rapidly approaching. The areas affected can now
make plans for current and future budgets without
the fear that their income will be arbitrarily "frozen"
simply because the voters approve an increase in the
taxing base. E. A.
The Voters9 Job
For a combination of reasons, this spring is seeing
a much larger number of elections than usual. Ex
ceedingly important local questions will be decided
at many of them.
Between April 28 and July 15 there will have been
12 elections of major consequence to a large number
of people in Jackson county.
yHESE INCLUDE:
School District 6C bond election, for new schools
(approved).
Eagle Point school bond election, for new build
ings (approved). :
Phoenix sewer bond election (approved).
Medford school district budget election (approv
ed). Ashland school district budget election (ap
proved). Central Point Rural Fire Prevention district budg
et election (turned down).
School District 6C budget election ( approved ) .
Elections in 23 school districts of the country,
and for rural high and non-high school boards (June
20). , , .
Central Point Rural Fire Prevention district budg
et election (a revote scheduled after the proposal was
first turned down; June 23).
Medford city budget election, including increas
ing the tax limitation (July 5).
Annexation election in two areas adjacent to Med
ford (July 5).
Medford and Rogue River Valley Irrigation dis
tricts, election on approval of negotiations with fed
eral government for repayment contract on rehabili
tation work on canal systems of two districts (July
15). . :
,.
LL THESE elections can be viewed two ways:
1. A waste of time for the voters. .,' .
2. The democratic process in action.
We prefer the second view.
While the day-to-day operation of any system of
free government can and should be handled by the
elected representatives of the people, the people
themselves quite properly reserve the right of making
the final decision on many questions of importance.
This is what is happening in Jackson county this
spring. For the continued effective operation of these
many units of government depend on the continued
understanding and support of the people living in
them. !
IT ALL boils down to this: The voter and taxpayer
in a free society bears the ultimate responsibility
for the well-being of that society.
It is not an onerous job, nor a particularly compli
cated one. But it does demand an informed public; a
public which in large numbers will take the trouble
to study issues, come to, intelligent conclusions, and
then make their decisions known as the polls.
As long as a goodly portion of our . citizens will
continue to do this, we have nothing to fear from "for
eign isms" nor alien philosophies. E.A.
Phoenix
Phoenix Phoenix Neighbors
of Woodcraft will meet Thurs
day, June 16, at 6:30 p.m. at the
home of Mrs. Mabel Bourne on
Calhoun rd., for a picnic sup
per, with Mrs. Bourne, Mrs. Lil
lian Coleman and Mrs. Ora
Smith serving. Members and
their families attending are ask
ed to bring a covered dish, vege
table, salad or dessert and their
own table service.' '
Miss Izabelle Poling arrived
in Phoenix Monday from Mar
accaibo, Venezuela, South Am
erica, to visit her mother, Mrs.
Ida Poling, and her aunt, Mrs.
Thomas Mitchell. She is a tea
cher in a private school for the
children of the employees and
executives of an oil company in
Maraccaibo.
The Thomas Mitchell family
motored to Crescent City, Calif.,
Wednesday, June IS. 19S5
and Coos Bay June 7 and came
back Friday. They visited Az
alea state park near Brookings,
and report that the azaleas are
beautiful this year and the wea
ther was ideal on the coast.
Miss Eunice Blocker from Jo
liet, Mont., is visiting this week
at the home of Mrs. Thomas
Mitchell.
Mr. and' Mrs. Martin Seit
zinger' and their four youngest
sons from Arkansas are visit
ing at the Mark Norton home
this week. Seitzinger is a bro
ther of Mrs. Norton. They stop
ped on their way out west at
Los Angeles and Pasadena, Cal.,
to visit another son, Mike, and
a daughter, Anne. Anne came
with her folks to see the Nor
tons, and she will go home the
last of this week.
The Martin Seitzingers are
also visiting another brother and
f amily, W. F. Seitzinger.
iff
ADENAUER WANTS SOLIDARITY President Eisenhower
(left) and West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer
shake hands following their meeting at the White House.
In center are James B. Conant, U. S. ambassador to Ger
many fleft), and Secy, of State John Foster Dulles. Adenauer
pressed for a common Western lineup in the forthcoming
Big Four "summit" talks with the Soviets. He also urged a
bold disarmament plan to ease the cold war and help
unify Germany.
Slaying of Publisher
In Morocco Reveals
New Terrorist Group
By CHARLES M. McCANN
United Press Foreign Analyst
The assassination of a French
newspaper publisher in Morocco
has brought into the open a new
and dangerous
aspect of the
s i t u a tion in
French North
Africa
P u b 1 i sher
Jacques
was
killed by a
machine gun
ner last Sat
urday as he
Charles McCann came oux oi an
office builting in Casablanca.
Lemaigre-Dubreuil was not
murdered by native terrorists, as
so many Frenchmen have been
in Morocco, Tunisia and Algeria.
There seems to be no doubt
that he was shot by a fellow
Frenchman an agent of those
French settlers who are fighting
to the bitter end against in
creased home rule for France's
North African possessions.
Lemaigre-Dubreuil was one
of the Frenchmen in North Afri
ca who favor home rule. .
These Frenchmen say that the
natives must be given the great
est possible measure of self-government
if Morocco, Tunisia and
Algeria are not to go the way of
Indochina.
Threatening Letters
Lemaigre-Dubreuil, who only
recently had become the princi
pal owner of the Casablanca
newspaper Maroc-Presse, had re
ceived a number of threatening
letters. Other Frenchmen who
favor home rule have received
similar letters.
A Nichol's Worth of . .
Comment On
By HARMAN
United Pran
Washington (U.R) Some odd
things about Washington.
For one thing, some 2,000
rented dress
suits, dinner
coats, and cut
aways are in
constant circu
lation in the
capital.
This business
is better in the
winter. But in
the summer
some senators
and congress-
Human Nicbolm
" men, who are
not used to dressing for an eve
ning out, rent the summer suits.
A white coat, black pants, and a
soft shirt with studs, and shoes
and even a phony carnation for
the buttonhole if necessary. The
price per coat, shoes or collar
runs for whatever the traffic
will bear. A coat, may be $5 for
the evening, returned in the
a.m. A whole suit double that
price. With flower pitched in if
you return it in the morning
with coat, pants and studs.
Do It Yourself
Time was around town when
three outfits rented evening
dresses for government gals, and
also the ladies of Congress.
All three went out of business.
It seems that "the gals would run
down to Ihe rent people, try on
the pretty gowns, and run home
and think it over. A lot of them
had been trained in the needle,
thread and sewing machine busi
ness, and many of them went
straight to a drygoods store,
bought a bolt of frilly stuff and
showed up at a party with a du
plicate of whatever looked good
at the rental. ;
. Back to the mzn. One of the
renters has in stock, for instance,
pink shorties, like they wear in
Britain, with navy blue coats to
match and flashy sport shirts.
All for $13.50 for a week end.
There have been no congression
The French government has
taken an exceedingly serious
view of Lemaigre-Dubreuil's
assassination.
Some people in Paris hold
that, in the long run. the most
serious struggle in Morocco at
least will not be that between
the French and the natives but
between Frenchmen themselves.
As soon as the news of Le-maigre-D
u b r e u i 1 ' s murder
reached Paris, the government
sent Roger Wybot, chief of the
French secret service, to take
charge of the investigation into
it.
Wybot was ordered to investi
gate the French police force in
Morocco as well as the murder
itself.
Strong Complaints
There have been strong com
plaints, some of them by offi
cials, that while Moroccan ter
rorists are punished drastically
by French courts, French counter-terrorists
who kill Moroccans
escape punishment.
French Premier Edgar Faure
presided last .night at a cabinet
meeting in Paris to consider the
counter-terror situation.
There are two organized
French groups in Morocco.
"Presence Francaise" (French
Presence) represents the anti
home rule settlers. "Conscience
Francaise" (French Conscience)
represents those elements who
believe that home rule is
essential.
The French government now
believes that the anti-home rul
ers, or some group of them,
have organized a definite terror
ist group and that the machine
gunner who ambushed Lemaigre-Dubreuil
was a member
of it.
.
This and That
W. NICHOLS
PmHim Writer
al takers on this deal so far.
I got a lot of other information
from Eleanor Early. The lovely
Eleanor is an old hand at re
search on such business in the
capital and other cities.
Famous Corsets
One of Eleanor's favorite
stories is one about the Folger
Shakespearean Library, located
near the Supreme Court and Li
brary of Congress. There rest the
corsets of Elizabeth I.
Miss Early dug up the fact that
Henry Clay Folger, who founded
the library, learned that the cor
sets of the Queen who served
during Shakespeare's time were
on sale at auction.
Folger dispatched a cable call,
made a bid and before he knew
it, he had a bunch of rare corsets
on his hands.
And for a long time, they were
right out in the open. As of now,
though, they are underground,
down in the basement of the li
brary with other relics.
Every year the capital enter
tains some half million kids. AU.
of them frisky, but someday to
grow to voting age. There is
pressure from the hill to be nice
to all the young. They have pil
low fights in hotels. The Willard
Hotel, for one, has started using
foam pillows. The same hdtel has
started to weld room numbers
on the doors. . Some kids bring
along their own screwdrivers to
take home a souvenir if room
numbers aren't welded on.
Portland Airman Dies
In Marysville Wreck
Marysville, Calif. (U.R)
An Air Force enlisted man from
Portland, Ore., was killed Mon
day night in a highway accident
one mile south of here.
Dead was Airman 1-C Delbert
Bond, 23, of Portland. He Was
killed when the automobile in
which he was riding overturned.
A companion was uninjured.
In the Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
Interesting note from Wash
ington in a year when the na
tural rainmaking processes in
this part of the world seem to be
out of kilter:
If congress provides the
money, the federal government
will make an intensive study of
rainmaking processes. (Remem
ber the ancient gag to the effect
that if we had some ham we'd
have a ham and egg sandwich if
we had an egg?)
1I7ELL, the senate appropria
' tions committee has recom
mended that $80,000 be provided
for such a study. If both houses
of the congress concur in! the
committee's action and the Pres
ident signs the bill and the
money becomes available, the
study will be made by a com
merce 'department advisory
committee on weather control.
It will be conducted from an
observation point on top of
Mount Washington in New
Hampshire and will seek an
swers to these questions:
How much can rainfall be in
creased by seeding clouds?
And under-what conditions?
And at how much cost?
fpHE senate committee that
- recommended the 880,000
appropriation was influenced to
do so by this statement from the
department of commerce advis
ory committee:
"No reasonable person fa
miliar with developments in the
field can any longer doubt that
under certain circumstances
rainfall can be produced or in
creased with artificial nucleat
ing agents."
What next?
"NE difference between the
J older world and the newer
world is that when the older
world faced a problem that was
beyond its ken it shrugged its
shoulders and muttered 'e'est? la
guerre," and let it go at that. The
modern world calls in the re
search scientists and tells. them
to GET BUSY.
QJPEAKING of problems, Ore
gon blackberry growers have
been worried in the past by
their inability to get enough ber
ries off an acre of ground to
make the operation pay.
The researchers have just
come with a new hormone spray
which, they think, will produce
an extra $100 worth of berries
from an acre at a cost of $5.
California onion producers
have been plagued by the fact
that onions have a bad habit of
arriving at maturity ALL AT
THE SAME TIME. The result is
a glut on the market in good
onion years.
Researchers on the Davis
campus of the University of
California have developed a hy
brid that, they claim, makes pos
sible onions, that are not only
outstanding for size, color and
uniformity of shape but are
capable of COMING TO MA
TURITY AT VARYING TIMES
T hate to suggest it, but I sup-
x pose the next problem will be
how to induce people to eat
more onions and blackberries,
thus reducing the surplus that
will accrue from the . better
growing methods developed by
the, researchers.
AND
If people are taught to eat
more onions and blackberries
Will they cut down on their in
take of other foods such as
Klamath potatoes and Rogue
River pears? i
The world, you see, is full of
problems.
H
ERE'S another one:
How to get more automobiles
over our existing highways with
fewer accidents?
A Boston gentleman by the
name of Thibodeau, who is
the general - manager" of the
Automobile Legal association,
wants MINIMUM speed laws
adopted by all the states. He
thinks the "loitering" motorist
is as much a highway menace as
the speeder and the reckless
driver. He says the driver whose
pace is slower than the normal
traffic flow forces cars behind
him to take chances out of pure
frustration. '
I suppose everyone who has
been caught at the back end of
a long string of cars piled up be
hind a slow-poke driver on a
two-lane highway will be in
clined to agree with Thibodeau.
JN conclusion:
If we could solve all our prob
lems by the simple process of
PASSING A LAW, it would be
wonderful, wouldn't it?
Swiss Swell Graham
Crusade Facilities
Zurich, Switzerland (U.R)
Swiss sponsors of Billy Gra
ham's Zurich crusade said today
they had underestimated public
interest in the American evan
gelist and have been forced to
rent additional facilities to ac
commodate the crowds fxpect-
ed at his Saturday revival
meeting.
Methodist preacher Eduard
Voellmy, president of the Zurich
branch of the Graham-sponsoring
"Evangelical Alliance," alsa
disclosed that the Swiss radio
had reversed itself and agreed
to broadcast two hours of the
Zurich meeting.
Good Chance
Social Security
Br RICHARD AND MAURINE
NEUBERGER
Washington, D. C. (Special)
Lowering of the Social Security
retirement age for women from
65 to 60, as proposed in the first
bill I introduced in the Senate,
may be the major social reform
enacted by the 84th Congress.
Since Jan. 18, when the Neu
berger bill was introduced, sim
ilar proposals have been offered
by Republican Senators Wiley of
Wisconsin and Potter of Michi
gan. The reduction in retirement
age also recently was endorsed
by Lyndon B. Johnson of Texas,
the Senate majority leader.
Have Mail
My office has received more
mail approving the lower age for
women's Social Security benefits
than on any other proposal. The
volume of this mail has been so
great that there has been some
delay in answering it. The
change makes sense to people
generally. Millions of employed
women now must retire at 60 or
even younger. Furthermore, the
average wife is usually a few
years younger than her husband.
If both a man and his spouse be
came eligible simultaneously for
Social Security, it is obvious that
elderly couples would enjoy a
far higher standard of living.
Many families now are forced
to live on inadequate benefits
for several years until the wife
reaches present eligibility age.
At present only about 20 per
cent of married men who retire
at 65 have wives immediately
eligible for wives' benefits. If
women could qualify at the age
of 60, about 60 per cent of the
families would draw benefits for
both husband and wife immed
iately when the husband reaches
the retirement age.
It is my firm belief that Con
gress will reduce women's qual
ifying age either this - year or
some time during the session
Is That So?
London. With SAS To get
the final facts about the mega
pode a misrepresented bird, if
ever there was one took me on
an almbst halfway round the
world flieht bv Scandinavian
Airlines System to the London
zoo. And now, for the first time
this newspaper's readers will get
the facts in some detail about
this strange bird. ( .
Except for its disproportion
ately large, clawed feet really
No. 16s the megapode looks
like a small but handsome
brown and yellow turkey. In
fact, he may be called "brush
turkey" or "mound builder."
When the male is a year old,
he begins to work industriously
and by himself rakes together
tons of forest litter to build an
enormous mound, at least five
feet high and 15 feet across
a future nest for the bride he
has not yet met.
After a year's work, he is
joined by a female the union
lasts for life.
A week apart the four-pound
female lays half-pound, pale coffee-colored
eggs, a clutch of 12
to 14 eggs in a matter of about
three months' laying. For each
egg, the solicitous male scratches
open the great mound of vege
table matter a compost heap
really and closes it promptly
so the eggs are deposited at the
same level, about three feet be
low the surface.
Only the male takes care of
the nest zealously, day and
night, taking time out only to
hasten off for short feedings of
berries, fallen fruits, insects and
small crabs.
Generates Heat
Meanwhile, the rotting com
post generates heat a heat
warm enough to incubate the
thin shelled eggs artificially. -
During the incubation, there
is the ever-present danger that
the rotting compost might gen
erate too much heat. To meet
this, he opens the huge nest each
day to take its temperature.
' Perhaps the built-in thermo
stat is in his nose it is not
known. At any rate, when he
finds the nest too ; warm, he
opens it and exposes it partially
to the cool evening air; but when
it is too cold, he leaves it open
Father's Day June 19, 1955
MEDFORD'S FINEST MEN'S STORE MAIN AT CENTRAL
Seen for Lower
Age Limit
which starts in January, 1956. X
hope it will be this year.
Bipartisanship on Diamond
Oregon was the only state
who contributed more than one
player to the Congressional Odd
Sox team which lost its annual
softball game to the National
Press Club. This year the score
was 13 to 9 for the newspaper
men. The two Oregon players
were Congressman Sam Coon
and I. Coon caught for the Con
gressional! and I played first
base.
In four trips to the plate, Sam
struck out and flied out, got a
base on balls and a single. In
four trips, I walked once and',
singled three times. Sam made
several spectacular catches of
high fly balls directly in front
of home plate. My unused
muscles have been aching ever
since the workout! -.
Hells Canyon Bill Morn
As a sponsor of the Hells Can
yon Dam bill, I rejoice that it
has been reported favorably by
the subcommittee.
Of course, it is regrettable
that two Senators from . the
Rocky Mountain states, who are
promoting a $1,659,000,000 pow
er and reclamation project in
that region, have seen fit to op
pose a $356,000,000 undertaking
in the Pacific Northwest. Is it to
be the policy of these Republi
can Senators to insist that Fed
eral projects shall be built in
their own area but denied to the
Columbia River Basin?
The Western states can pro
gress together only as a unit.
Yet Secretary of the Interior
McKay, and now leading Sena
tors from Colorado and Utah,
have taken the position that the
Federal treasury contains funds
for development in the Rocky
Mountains but not in the Pacific
Northwest. We must try to save
the West from such a Jekyll-and-
I Hyde policy.- -
' ly EnfM luras -.
tanewNateralirt
during . the day ' to allow the
noonday sun to warm it A con
stanfc 94 degrees is maintained
The large eggs take some 50
days to hatch and to this must
be added the three months' lay
ing intervalmaking a total of
almost five months' vigilant care
by the male. . j
' Comes now a yet stranger
fact. When the young hatch, this
father doesn't recognize them.
If they get in the way of his
great, raking feet, he kicks them
out behind him unceremonious
ly. But the young arc equal to
the occasion. They have strength
enough to work up through the
three-foot thick covering. They
can feed independently. And
more, too. Fully feathered, they
can run on their first day and
if occasion calls, flutter up to
a six-foot high perch.
(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 30-volume
set of this world-famous refer
ence work in a handsome Seal
craft binding. Each week, new
questions will be considered.
Sorry, I simply can't answer
your many friendly letter!.
Please address your questions
to: IS THAT SO; co Medford
Mail Tribune, Box 575, Sau
salito, Calif. ,
THE SOFTER GENERATION
Hartford, Conn. U.R) W a 1
ter G. Davis said on his 100th
birthday anniversary that his
children don't visit him too often
in his third-floor apartment. "I
can climb the stairs," explained
Davis; "but they can't." t
ttOIlEY GR017S
quickly when invested here
. . . where INSURED SAFETY
and "LIBERAL EARNINGS
await your savings. Open an
account tomorrow and get
these worthwhile savings
from now on.
FIRST FEDERAL
SAVINGS A LOAN ASS'N
of Medford
27 North Holly
As- Institution Dedicated
Te These Whe Save