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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 1, 1955)
FOUR MEDFORD (OREGON) MEDFORBvSTRIB UHI "Every Dody In Southern Oregon Reads ine Mail inpune Published Dally Except Saturday by MDFOKlJ frUillL n-iO North Fir St. Phone 2-6141 nrPUTPT U7 RT7WT. F.riitor HERB GREY Advertising Manager X C FERGUSON Managing Editor vrTf A f i CXI fx, riTi FHitnr HARRY CiflPMAN. Telegraph Editor OLJVE STARCHER. Society Editor TrtT T 1 ftCn' Ctin4av 1 Tnr GERALD LATHAM. Circulation Mgr. An Independent Newspaper Entered as second class matter at Medford. Oregon, under Act ol Marcn 3. SUBSCRIPTION RATES Daily and Sunday One year $12.00 Daily and Sunday Six months 6jU Dailv and Sunday Three mos. 3.50 Sunday Only One vear 3 oO By Carrier In Advance Medford. Ashland. Central Point. Eagle Point. Jarksonville. Gold Hill. Phoenix. Shady Cove. Rogue River. Talent Daily and Sunday One year $15 00 Daily and Ssunaay une uiumui Carrier -and Dealers 5c per copy All Terms Cash in Advance Ctficial Paper of the City of Medford Official Paper ol Jackson County " United Press Full Leased Wire MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU Of UKguLfli.i WEST-HOLUDAV COJffANV INC. Offices in New York. Chicago De troit San ITancisco. ixjs hukcic Seattit. Portland. St Louis Atlanta Vancouver B.C. NATIONAL EDITORIAL ASSOdlATllON J J bmiH.M!.'.H.'.l.-W NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION Flight o' Time Medford and Jackson County History from the files of The Mail Tribune 10. 20. 30 and 10 years ago. 10 YEARS AGO Nov. 1. 1945 (It was Thursday) Miss Anne Livingston elected temporary chairman of newly organized Medford unit of Coun cil of Oregon Republican Worn- From Arthur Perry's Ye Smudge Pot column: The city of Omaha plans to buy a couple of army flame throwers and burn the weeds off every vacant lot in town. Like "Phoenix" weeds always rise from their own ashes. The best way to kill weeds on vacant lots is to cover it with cement and then build a service station. 20 YEARS AGO Nov. 1 1955 (It was Friday) Five inches of snow at Klam ath Falls threatens to cancel football game with Medford. Southern Oregon Brewing company plans $10,000 addition to North Fir st. plant. 30 YEARS AGO Nov. 1, 1925 (It was Sunday) "Western Oregon Indians de mand $12,000,000 from govern ment for Indian lands taken without promise of compensa tion. J. C. Mann, Jackson county Red Cross chairman, announces plan for annual chapter roll call. 40 YEARS AGO Nov. 1. 1915 (It was Monday) From Jacksonville Items: Tht wedding of Sanford Richardson and Miss May Nealon took place at the home of Mrs. G. A. Gard ner Tuesday evening. From Local and Personal col umn: George Wilkes, of Imperial valley, is in the city today, look ing for an excuse to remain. George belongs to a family whose members generally suc ceed in discovering the coveted opportunity. When on the trail of real business, they are good detectives. What's the Answer? Can You Get 4 of the 7? Copr. 1955, Editorial Research Report 1. The recent stock market slide was accompanied by a rise or a fall in retail sales, or left them about the same? 2. About one, two, three, four or five of very 10 TV sets now being sold is a second set in the same family? 3. Violence broke out in the strike against the Perfect Circle Corp. in Illinois, Indiana, Michi gan or Ohio? 4. The United Nations charter was drawn up 10 years ago at Geneva, Dumbarton Oaks (Wash ington), Potsdam, San Francisco, or Bretton Woods? 5. President Eisenhower has appeared less or more often on TV than President Truman did, or to about the same extent? 6. About one-fourth, one-third, one-half or two-thirds of all U.S. auto drivers are women? 7. Most natives of the Saai are of French or German extrac tion, or is it about 50-50? The Answers: 1. Retail sales rise. 2 .About two out of 10. 3. Indiana. 4. San Francisco. 5. Much more often. 6. About one Ihird. 7. Most are German. Dead line Sunday Classified is at Boon Saturday. 1 a. m. Monday for Monday; other da 5:30 devious day. MAIL TRIBUNE Editorial Correspondence San Francisco, Oct. 30 The College of the Pa cific is a disciple of "rock 'em and sock 'em football." Both Idaho and San Jose State have complained of unnecessary roughness. The alibi of the coach has been football is a rough game and those who can't play it that way should keep out of it. Ok. But when C of P plays UCLA it will be interesting to see how pugh. they will be. Our prediction is they won't be knocking out teeth and breaking arms and legs when they come up against a team that can slug it out with them if that is the way they want it. Incidently, what were the officials doing while the mayhem was going on? They should pay a little more attention to offside tactics and less to offside plays, unless they can do both. If we remember correctly the University of Wash ington slaughtered the University of Minnesota at the start of the season. Yesterday the team that many experts have regarded as the strongest on the coast USC invaded the Midwest and was beaten by Minnesota. Also yesterday Oregon State College de feated the same University of Washington. Where does that place O.S.C., Mr. Jewett? All in all this was a disappointing football week end. Once mighty California was massacred bv mighty UCLA, Stanford had more trouble with San Jose State but not MUCH. The thrillin? frame in the East was that between Michigan and Iowa the Wolverines, ending the first half two touchdowns be hind to come out fighting mad and win by two. The Notre Dame contest was disappointing Notre Dame was expected to win on its home grounds they sel dom lose tnere out Navy, unbeaten and with a na tional record for tisrht defense, was exoected to nut. up a better fight. The same in the East be a return engagement between Michigan and Mich igan btate. Micnigan state was beaten m their first meeting, but according to all accounts, outplayed their big Brother, throughout. . Congressman Ellsworth follows Secretary Mc Kay's line, declaring all claims he is not for public power and in favor of private power adds up to par tisan politics. It is merely talk to get votes, in other words, and has no basis in fact. So HE says! - We trust that before "the campaign is over the records in both cases are presented to the voters so they can be easily read and understood. I don t care whether it is public or private power as long as we get it," cries'our veteran representative in the Lower House. That's good political talk, but it is double talk also. Both McKay and Ellsworth have been working against Hells Canyon and the extension of public power anywhere else in the consistently and conscientiously for the extension of private power and the further entrenchment of large private business interests. That is good GOP political doctrine and we have no particular quarrel with them for sticking to the ship. We refusal to admit it. Quite a flurry in Union noon when the pigeons frequenting that popular sun ning place started to drop dead. One of the gardeners at work there filled a basket and there was a search for the culprit. It was assumed some one suffering from a pigeon complex had been scattering poison bread or grain. We could find no one who had any other explanation and were surprised to find nothing in the morning papers about it. . Walking back to the hotel up Geaiy there was an other dead pigeon on the sidewalk in front of the Stewart hotel. Two or three women were sadly con templating same. One of them, looking up at the top of the building, surmised it must have fallen to the side walk to its death. R.W.R. Editorial Comment PARKS ALONG THE ROGUE Public access to fishing spots on the Rogue river has been limited to extensive private ownership of the lands through which the river flows. The state game commissions is moving to open up spots where fishermen can get down to the water. Using game funds the commission is taking title or acquiring ease ments to seven spots along the Rogue river. They will be devel oped as recreational parks with picnic and boating facilities. Pro vision will be made for boat ac cess at particular spots and bank angling will be permitted. Jack son county has agreed to main tain the parks and the access roads. On first reading of the Med ford Mail-Tribune's account of the project it looked as though the game commission was going into the park business, and using funds from hunting and fishing licenses for the purpose. Inquiry however brings information that the commission's chief purpose is to promote the angling oppor tunities along the Rogue. That will be welcomed by those who buy fishing licenses and have felt access to the Rogue was denied them. Oregon has one state park commission now, whose mem bership is the same as the high way commission, and doesn't want two. In this case the parks really will become county parks. Looking ahead it is easy to see pressures mount on counties to establish parks to fill the gap Tuesday. November 1, 1955 we would like tn rp.p wnnld northwest, have worked have a quarrel for their Square yesterday around between city parks and state parks. More people with more automobiles and more leisure time want, and need, more places for recreation. Salem (Ore.) Statesman. Brislol To Review National AMC Meet Faye Bristol of Rogue River, representative of the American Mining Congress, wili review important features of the na tional AMC convention at Los Vegas, Nev., at a meeting of the Northwestern Mining council at 8 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 3, in the Lincoln school gymnasium. Also scheduled to speak are Attorney Bruce Manley of Med ford on geology courses offered through the Oregon Extension service, and W. L. Coombs of Phoenix, on a permanent min eral display in Jackson county. Coombs is chairman of the council's committee on exhibits, which has been studying possi bilities of locating a mineral display in the county for the general public and tourists. NEWS AGENCY OBSERVES Tokyo CU.R) Kyodo News Agency marked its 10th birth day today at ceremonies in its main Tokyo offices. The news agency was organized during the Allied occupation on Nov. 1, 1945. after the pre-war do mestic news agency was dissolved. Fear of Full-Scale Israel-Egypt Fight Has Good Foundation By CHARLES M. McCANN United Pres Correspondent There appears to be real rea son for fear that war may break out any day between Israel and Egypt. It could be caused by one of the border incidents that now are a mat ter of almost daily occur rence. If it happen ed, almost un doubtedly oth er Arab coun- Ciiarles JUcCanu trjes on Israel's frontiers would be drawn into it. It would be a war in which Russia would be among the vic tors whichever side won, be cause chaos in any part of the free world aids the Communist conspiracy. Israel now has military super iority, and the Arab nations al most certainly realize it. Egypt Fears Israel Egypt is buying weapons from Communist Czechoslovakia on Russia's initiative because it fears Israel. Israel fears the potential mil itary power of Egypt and other Arab countries because Israel is ringed by them, and they enjoy enourmous superiority in popu lation. Influential elements in Israel are talking about the advisabil ity of a "preventive" war against Egypt before that country gets all of its Communist arms and its troops learn how to use them. This talk takes into considera tion the fact that the rainy sea Matte? Of FCICt By Joe and Stewart Alsop BIG BROTHER'S EARS Washington A little more than three-and-a-half years ago, a routine inspection of the Amer ican Embassy in Moscow brought the surprise of its collective life one of the counter - in telligence teams that have to be em ployed, in this charming era of ours, to keep our Em- Stewart Alsop ! bassy secure. , At an apparently irrelevant point, far away in enormous Spasso House from the Ambassa dor's office-library, the team's electronic equipment studdenly began to pick up the quiet con versation of the Ambassador of that period, George F. Kennan, at his office desk. The revelation that the U.S. Ambassador to the Soviet Union was unconsciously on the air stimulated a fairly inten sive search for broadcast i n g apparatus, as can be imag ined. What was found, however, was no ordinary, easily - detec table hidden radio sender, but something Joseph Also altogether new to the investiga tors. After all but tearing the place apart, the despairing investiga tors took down the office-library's big, ornamental Grand Seal of the United States, which had been sent out to be painted and repaired about four months earlier. In the Great Seal, hid den behind the eagle, they dis covered a match-box sized device composed of a specially ma chinedQmetal cup, a thin metallic diaphragm that covered the cup and a tiny antenna that pro truded to one side. There were no batteries, no wires, no con nection with electric power of any kind. But this mysterious ob ject was presumed to be the source of the ambassadorial broadcast because no other sus picious object could be discov ered by the most meticulous search. The Soviet organizers of the unintentional a m b a s s a dorial broadcast were of course auto matically notified that their trick had been discovered when the broadcasts suddenly ceased. But secrecy is now an end in it self in the American govern ment. The discovery in Spasso House was automatically triple wrapped in security classifica tions. Hence it took many months for the mysterious ob ject from behind the eagle to reach the American experts who were technically qualified to identify it. rpHE EXPERTS then discovered J- that this object was a resona tor, designed to receive and to bounce back, a highly selective radio beam. Its diaphragm was simultaneously agitated both by the radio beam and nearby hu man voices. Thus the sounds of the voices was included in the electronic echo that the resona tor bounced back. The American counter-intelligence team had picked up Ken nan's voice by wandering, by son is due in Palestine in about one month. If Israel attacked before then, it is argued, the rains would bog down the Egyptians before they could organize an effective coun terattack. Israeli Prime Minister Moshe Sharett went to Geneva to ask the foreign ministers of the Un ited States, Great Britain and France, now attending the Big Four conference there, for arms to offsett those Egypt is getting. Apparently Sharett got no firm promises. Instead the Western allies are trying to get Russia to stop its meddling in what has become a crisis. That is most unlikely to happen. Syria Offered Arms It is reported from Cairo that Saudi Arabia, one of the Arab countries, has been offered "Czechoslovak" arms and has practicaUy decided to take them. Syria, another of Israel's Arab neighbors, is reported consider ing a similar offer. Russia also has just renewed a friendship agreement with the Arab state of Yemen and has arranged for an exchange of dip lomatic envoys. Egypt has concluded new mil itary alliances with Saudi Ar abia and Syria. Just what the United States, Britain and France will do or can do to ease the present sit uation is uncertain. But the Palestine issue, which is not on the formal program for discussion at the Big Four Gen eva conference, may turn out to be the most important item dis cussed there. sheer, happy, unlikely accident, into the narrow path of the elec tronic echo the resonator was sending to the Soviet intelli gence. This triumph of Soviet ingen uity (which seems to have been based on an American com mercial patent of 1945) long ago did all the harm it could do. There are good reasons now, however, for disclosing and dis cussing this something startling episode of several years ago. In the first place, both the episode itself and the device that produced it are still officially hidden from the American pub lie, although the Soviet intelli gence has of course known ev erything there was to know from the very beginning. There are reasons to-believe, furthermore, that this is not just another ex ample of the customary ostrich headedness of American official dom. There seems to be another ma tive, in fact. The Moscow reson ator - is a wonderfully easily concealed listening device. Fur thermore, since it requires no wiring, it does not come within the scope of the anti-wiretapping laws. According to credible re port, it is now being used by the Federal flatfeet to circumvent the rather trifling limitations which the anti-wiretapping laws place upon police invasions of privacy. TT IS only one among many such devices, of course. Para bolic microphones of small di mension can now be beamed to pick up conversations at dis tances of many hundreds of feet. Experiments are being made with more advanced listening systems, that will use the win dows of your room or the walls of your office as resonators, ' so that there need be no bother about planting such an object as was found in Kennan's Moscow office. These devices not cov ered by the anti-wiretapping laws are of course additional to the bewildering variety of wire tapping devices and to the other devices by which telephones are transformed into listening me chanisms even when not in use. Big brother's ears, in short, may be anywhere and every where nowadays. Besides being used by big brother's govern ment, furthermore, the same ears are being more and more widely used by commercial spies, private detectives and plain blackmailers, as has recently been shown by the wiretapping scandal in New York City. The ancient right of privacy of all American citizens is being rapidly eroded away by the triumph of electronic technology. But not very long ago, when a major national magazine tried to explain how this was happen ing, the Defense Department re quested silence .on the subject. Presumably the idea was to keep the country from realizing how very sharp big brother's ears are getting. (Copyright 1955, New York Herald Tribune, Inc.) Homesick Russian Telephones Wife Washington (U.PJV. S. Ti mofeyev, a homesick member of a Russian housing delegation touring this country, can't for get how his wife, Nina Vassily, cried when he left home. The National Homebuilders Association, host to the Russians, arranged for Timofeyev to call Moscow today and talk to her. . tj, ,j t : mfffifli fir wri-iruiM TESTIFYING before House, judiciary subcommittee, Peter A. Strobel, commissioner of pblic buildings service, de nies he used government post to promote business for New York firm of which he is partner. (International) In the Day's News BY FRANK JENKINS What is happening at Geneva? I wouldn't know, of course. But Allen Dulles, chief of the U.S. Central Intelligence agency, gives us some good advice. He says: "No lasting security is possible in the world as long as the pres ent Soviet system remains. The men in the Kremlin have great facility for changing their tac tics as convenience and circum stances dictate." HE DOESN'T mean that we must turn in and destroy the Soviet system by preventive war. He does mean we mustn't kid ourselves or let anyone else kid us. Our job is walk softly . and carry a big stick. AS TO Geneva, the dispatches tell us the Big Four foreign ministers met in an attempt to find some common ground to deal on how to reunite Germany and achieve European peace. However, the dispatches add, there are many fears they may face a stalemate in ' East-West views which show little chance of being reconciled. The best opinion seems to be that they will direct their arguments toward winning popular support, particularly in Germany. THAT LENDS added interest to another dispatch from overseas. Doctors expect West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer to make a full recovery from his recent bronchial pneumonia. But indications are that he won't be able to resume full activity until early next year. TVfORE GOOD news from the doctors: A medical bulletin from Den ver says that President Eisen hower had a good night's sleep and awoke feeling refreshed and cheerful. The doctors announced after an exhaustive and careful examination that his heart es caped enlargement during his illness. They call that an excellent sign. PRESIDENT Eisenhower and Chancellor Adenauer are GREAT leaders. People all over the world have FAITH in them. Leaders in whom' the people have faith can work wonders The longer Ike and Adenauer can be spared, the better the chances for peace in the world will be. PRESIDENT EISENHOWER'S health is improving so satis factorily that his doctors are per mitting him to sit in on an im portant policy conference in his hospital room. Present at the conference were to be his brother, Dr. Mil ton Eisenhower, who is a for mer executive of the department of agriculture, Postmaster Gen eral Summerfield and Secretary of Agriculture Benson. It is accepted as a foregone conclusion that the farm prob lem and what to do about it will be the chief subject of dis cussion. DPEAKING of the farm prob- lem: In the little town of Spencer, la. the other day a supermarket operator named Cliff Ritchie de cided to tackle a one-man pork surplus operator pork being an important agricultural product in the state of Iowa. So he put on a sale in his store. Choice bacon went at 13 cents a half pound and pork chops and roasts sold for 29 cents a pound. Name-brand pork sausage was priced at 19 cents. By mid-afternoon he had sold 7,000 pounds of pork, his stock was exhausted and his buyers were out rustling for more pork in all the neighboring towns. He called his special sale "Operation Pork-Lift" and said it was inspired by a desire to show that the best way of getting rid of surplus food is to EAT IT. That just about tells the story. GIFT RETURNED Detroit (U.R) Alice McLin- tock regretted today that she shouted at a thief who snatched a S3. 50 gift purchase from her. She told police Sunday the thief returned the gift but grabbed her purse and fled. Washinqton WHAT IS A 'CABINET SPLIT Washington Twice, now, a White House spokesman has giv en out an honest-Injun, cross-his-heart denial that there is or was and who would ever think such a thing? a split in the Cabinet over farm policy. It is important, therefore, to see exactly what is being denied and to determine whether the denial reaches to the substance rather than just to the words of the information which has been published in this column. Two different things are be ing denied. The White House is denying as "completely unfounded and untrue" an article in a farm magazine which stated that some members of the Eisenhower Cab inet had sought to bring about the removal of Secretary of Ag riculture Ezra Taft Benson. That looks like a good denial to me. I see no reason to ques tion it at all. It is certainly possi ble for Cabinet members to dis agree over policy and programs without wanting to bring about each other's removal. T1HE White House is also deny- ing that there is any breach or any split in the Cabinet over what Mr. Benson is doing or not doing. I hear otherwise. Now everyone in Washington knows that no . Administration likes the correspondents writing about "splits" in the Cabinet. The White House doesn't like this kind of information to leak and I can appreciate that the words "breach" and ' "split" sound perfectly awful to some, quite understandable to others. This is the reason it seems to me that the White House denial touches the words of what has been printed here, but does not really deny the substance. One member of the Cabinet, remonstrating with me for re porting that there had been a split in the Cabinet over farm policy, remarked: "There just hasn't been a split. Why, there has been no more disagreement over farm matters than there has been when we discuss the defense budget or other contro versial issues." To an outsider this certainly sounds like confirmation, not de nial. The denial is over words and it is obvious that one man's "split" is another man's "dis agreement." T has happened is that there is honest and sub- Communications Letters to the Editor must bear the name and address of the writer although under certain circum stances the use ol 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 tion must not exceed 400 words. A Sign of Shame? To the Editor: To those In Medford who call themselves Christians and Americans ha ha. Wonder what our Blessed Saviour would say if he was to suddenly appear as he promises. He who loved and died for us, who suffered torture and death so we could inherit a beautiful happy life in a place where color, creed or race and money will make no difference, and where all will be loved. And now, to think this could happen in our wonderful Amer ica which was settled by people of all races, colors, religion; where God has blessed us all, especially in our beautiful Med ford. Have the people who settled our beautiful country suddenly accented Communism, racial hatred, a thing our wonderful President is fighting against? I for one, and many more in this valley, am ashamed. We live in a place where people are so un christian and stuffy as to perse cute a family because of color, whose boy is at point of death. May our wonderful Lord and Saviour decide not to appear till the slate is wiped clean in Med ford. Let's hoDe when the book of life is opened that I or my beloved's names are not found with this awful stain against it. All those who say "Lord, Lord," will be told, "Depart from Me . I know you not." Why I wonder? Stop and think of the punish ment you are in for when the day of resurrection comes. May God forgive you all. This will make good reading for foreign head lines and will be wonderful read ing and fine publicity for our beautiful Rogue valley. A sign should be erected out side Medford, all ways, like this: "Do not enter if your color is not white as just angels live here." Name on File, Ashland, Ore. SUN DFE ASSURANCE By Roscof? Drummond stantial dissent within the Cab inet over whether Secretary Benson will move fast enough, far enough and fully enough to deal with falling farm prices particularly with a Presidential election in the offing. The divergent opinion within the Cabinet is not over flexible versus high rigid price supports. That is settled as far as the Ad ministration is concerned. No Cabinet member is urging or asking Mr. Benson to abandon the flexible price support policy. The divergence of opinion is over whether Mr. Benson will be prepared to take sufficiently sweeping and emergency meas ures to deal with the farmers' cost-price squeeze or will stop short of politically attractive measures on the ground that they violate basic principles of a free - agriculture - free - economy philosophy on which the Eisen hower Administration has stood in the past. Call it serious split or just ser ious discussion, there is mean ingful disagreement among the President's Cabinet advisers. The disagreement is sharper than is desirable to put before President Eisenhower at the present time and the pressure on Mr. Benson is not only from the Congressional farm -bloc poli ticians but from some of his own anxious colleagues. A DAY after a White House spokesman flatly denied that anybody in the Administration wanted to bring about the re moval" of the Secretary of Agri culture, Mr. Benson introduced the topic himself in his speech before Minnesota farmers. "I am going to see it through," he said, "just as long as the President wants me to remain in his Cab inet." He is on one condition: That he isn't pushed or required to carry government subsidy so far that he feels he is creating a "socialized agriculture." But he can be pushed too far; Mr. Benson will oppose farm measures which head toward government control and which have.no terminal point in the use of Federal funds. Mr. Benson does not wish to resign nor does he have any present intention of resigning. He will serve as long as the President wants him and, what is equally pertinent, as long as the President supports him in the essentials. Mr. Benson would rather be right as he sees right than Secretary of Agriculture. (C) 1955, New York Herald . Tribune Inc. Christmas Overseas Mailing Advised Now Those planning to send par cels abroad through the mails have but a short time to do their mailing if they expect the packages to reach their destina tions by Christmas time, accord ing to a Post Office announce ment today. The time has passed for mail ing parcels to the Far East, with assurance of delivery, al though it is possible that some packages could still be deliver ed. Oct. 15 was given by the Post Office department as the latet date to assure delivery there. Packages should be mail ed immediately for delivery to Africa and the Near East, and they should be mailed by Nov. 10, or at the very latest by Nov. 15? for assurance of delivery in Europe and South and Cen tral America. These dates apply to surface, or ordinary mail. Air mail will reach the destinations much sooner. Dead line Sunday Classified is at at noon Saturday. MR. INSURANCE Fred Brennan Woe is me! Our stained glass church window was smashed by a little stinker with a new gun or slingshot. Replacement is expen sive for 'art' glass. Would a fine arts all risk policy written on the windows cost much after offsetting by a reduction in the fire insur ance? For Information Call - MEDFORD INSURANCE AGENCY. Phone 2-4940 WISHING tV0iV7MAKElTSO The future independence and leisure you are hoping for will be yours only if you prepare for it. It is never too early to make provision for a happy retirement. Don't let it become too late. How about today? CHARLES E. JONES, Local Agent Phone 2-9772 COMPANY QF CANADA