Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, December 06, 1955, Image 4

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

    5
FOUR MEDFORD (OREGON)
MEDPORD&vTRIBuHX
fverybody In Soutnern Oregon
Reads The Mail Tribuna
Published Daily Except Saturday by
MEDFORD PRINTING CO
27-23 North Fir St. Phone 2-6141
ROBERT W RUHL. Editor
KERB GREY Advertising Manager
E. C FERGUSON Managing Editor
ERIC ALLEN JR.. City Editor
HAkRV CHIPMAN. Telegraph Editor
RICHARD JEWETT Sports Editor
OLIVE STARCHER Society Editor
JACffc-jJACKSON Sunday Editor
GERALD LATHAM. Circulation Mgr
An Independent Newspaper
Entered as second class matter at
Medford Oregon, under Act of
March 3.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Mail Ir. Advance: Per copy 10c.
. Daily and Sunday One vear S12.00
Daily and Sunday Six months 6.50
Daily and Sunday Three mos 3.33
Sunday Only One vear S3 50.
By Carrier In Advance Medford.
Ashland. Central Point. Eae'e Point.
Jacksonville. Gold Hill. Phoenix.
Shady Cove t (tozve River. Talent
and on motor routes:
Daily and Sunday One year $15 00
Daily and Sundav One month Us
Carrier and Dealers 5c oer copy
All Terms casn in aavance
Official Paper of the City of Medford
OffirialPaperof Jackson County
United Press Full Leased Wire
MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU
OF CIRCULATION
W3T-HOLLIDAV COMPANY INC
Offices in New York. Chicago De
troit San Francisco Los Angeles
Septti. Portland. St. Louis Atlanta.
Vancouver B.C
NATIONAL EDITOtlAL
I ASSodl-ATIIQN
Flight o' Time
Medferd and Jackson County
History from the files of The
MaiPTribune 10, 20. 30; and
GlO years ago.
(7 PUBLISHERS
FLIGHT '. .-
10 YEARS AGO
Cpec. B, 1945
q (It was Thursday)
.Iargaret Ruth Bolton moves
into lead of Victory Queen con-rest.
From Arthur Perrey's Ye
Smudge Pot column: Many re
port they have caught colds. Oth
ers, pof) so boastful, admit the
c'oldp caught them.
20 YEARS AGO
Dec. 6. 1935
(It was Friday)-,
Figures from county assessor
show Medford school district
levy to be 23.6emills to raise
$134,303.70.
Dwight L. Houghton named
assistant manager at Medford
branch of United States National
bank of Portland.
30 YEARS AGO
Dec. 6. 1925
(It was Sunday)
Delbert Anderson, George
Creighton, Ord Reed and Harry
Goold among cast in high school
comedy "The Arrival of Kitty."
Medford beats Salem,' 16-13,
for western Oregon champion
ship. O - .
4cPyEARS AGO '
Dec. 6. 1915
Q (It was Monday) J
Dr. J. Lawrence Hill with- j
draws candidacy as school board
director because of wife's health.
,From Local and Persona col
umn: Tom Flynn, the electric
store proprietor on West Main
(Sreet, has had a sign painted
for display on his automobile
di(r)ng a proposed business trip
to California. It reads "Crescent
Cityr Bust." The declaration,
positive as it is, doesn't mean
that Tom will bej busted if he
can't get to Crescent City; rath
er, it means that he'll get there
if the performance break him.
Therefore, it is logical to con
clude that his mission to the
California town is one of more
than uswal importance.
. What's the Answer?
OCan You Get 4 of the 7?
Copr. 1955. Editorial Research RepaH
1. More Americans die of
heart disease in the winter Sr in
the summer, or is it about 50-50?
2. The federal excise tax is
higher on passenger cars than
on trucks, or hher on trucks,
or the sar?
3. The new AFL-CIO amal
gamated labor affiliation con
tains every large U. S. labor
union: right or wrong?
4. Which of these has the
shortest seascoast: New-Hampshire,
Delaware, Maryland, Ala
bama, Oregon o
5. Which strong possibility for
a presidential nomination next
year has been a Unitarian?
6. Ships entering the Ambrose
Channel are proceeding to Bos
ton, "New York, Miami, New Or
leans, SancFrancisco or Seattle?
7. The. Great Pyramids of
Egypt wew built for defense, as
tombs, to study the stars,. to store
gold, or a& altars for religious
rites? y
The Answers: 1. More in win
ter. 2. Higher on cars. 3.
Wrong. 4. New Hampshire. 5.
Adlai E. Sienvenson. 6. New
York. 7. As lombs.
o -
MAIL TRIBUNE
'The King Can Do No Wrong'
The character of the campaign on foreign affairs will in
the main be determined by the way the party leaders ap
proach the search for these policies that have not yet been
found. The primary responsibility is with the Administra
tion, with the party in power. If they choose to stand pat,
as Dulles seemed to be doing this week, they will precipi
tate a severe Democratic assault on the record of the results.
Our position abroad has in fact deteriorated. It is easy to
prove it. It is known to every disinterested observer. Dulles
will be making the mistake of his life if he stands pat on
his policies and the record.
Walter Lippman in Mail Tribune
We hope Mr. Lippmann is right, and that his
sound advice is followed. But unless there is a marked
change in .the political temper of the Republican
leadership it won't be.
We don't refer to the President's leadership for he
isn't leading his party at the present time. We refer
to the party leadership in the House and Senate as
exemplified by Messers Martin and Knowland, for
example.
CONGRESSMAN Martin and Senator Knowland
have already perfected their campaign strategy
and it is a simple one.
Any criticism of the Republican administration's
foreign policy is to be promptly dismissed as "playing
politics" in fact, it is attempting to disrupt the coun
try's unity and destroy its morale, for the sake of
votes.
TPHAT is one side of the picture.
The other is to build up the ancient myth of the
Divine Right of Kings, only in this case, it will not be
a king but the President "who can do no wrong."
It is figured President Eisenhower's great personal
popularity will spike-the-guns if any of the opposi
tion so the opposition won't dare question the Presi
dent or his infallibility as chief executive, for fear of
adverse political reactions and results.
'THIS is undoubtedly the present Republican strat
egy. That it will be changed because of the warn
ing of Walter Lippmann or any other news com
mentator is unlikely to say the least.
.' This is true, we believe, regardless of whether
President Eisenhower runs or doesn't run for reelec
tion. Tr. all reminds nne somewhat of the "Keen cool
with Coolidge" slogan back in the SOMEtimes "gay"
20's.
Calvin Coolidge never enjoyed the great personal
popularity and following of "Ike" but he was well
liked. There was not only peace but tremendous pros
nerit.v at the time and the G.O.P. theorv then was that
nothing could beat the Republicans if they just stood
- - . -m - ..1 , 1 1
pat, didn't rock the boat, threw away tneir nearmg
aids when the enemy started to shoot, and let Nature
take its course.
The subsequent election proved they were politi
callv rieht.
Well, they may be right this time.
Right or wrong one thing is, as we see it, for sure,
namely:
There will be no confession of errors by the G.O.P.
regarding foreign policy or anything else not ONE
little "miss" will be admitted.
For that would destroy that myth that won before
and the party leaders are confident can win again.
So they reason let the Walter Lippmans and other
high-browr intellectuals talk about moderation and
admission of failures in the past, so they may be cor
rected in the future, ah they wish, that may be ok
for. a treatise on abstract ethics, but it has.no place in
practical very practical every-day politics.
CO AS befits a party led by a great military man
if there is an attack and of course there will be
the best defense will be a vigorous offensive.
What if the enemy does point to failures here and
there regarding foreign policy, i arm policy, or any
other policy, it can be easily demonstrated that all
these failures were due not to Republican errors but
to the errors of the Democrats, which the Democrats
"inherited" and all the Republicans need is four more
vears to correct them.
TTHAT is the basic strategy of the Republican cam
paign to date.
' With all due respect to Walter Lippmann, one of
the most intelligent, best informed and realistic com
mentators in the county, we have little hope that
anything he says or will say, will alter the course al
ready established. by the GOP leadership. R.W.R.
Bus Flips Over North
' Redmond (UP.) Eight per
sons, injured when a Trailways
bus with 22 persons aboard hit
an icy spot and flipped over on
Highway 97 five miles north of
Madras, were under treatment
in a local hospital today.
Hospital attendants said the
injured spent a "good night."
The accident occurred about
I 1:15 p.m. yesterday. State police
said the bus spun completely
around, skidded 75 feet off the
highway and sheared off a tele
phone pole.
Officer Floyd Chestnut blam
ed frozen slush for the accident.
Bus driver Stanley Younger, 56.
i The Dalles, said he was driving
cautiously through some slush
when the bus suddenly hit a
frozen, spot, spun around and
turned over.
The bus was on franchise to
Trailways from Greyhound Bus
lines. It was en route , from
Klamath Falls to Spokane.
The injured included: Mr. and
Mrs. Cecil Day, Yakima, Wash.;
Mable Black, 81, Ogden, Utah;
Betty Ashton, 25. Paso Robles,
Calif.: A. L. Ortiz, 28, Geiger
Air Force Base, Spokane: Iris
Porter, 48, Stockton, Calif.;
Tuesday. December 6, 1955
of Madras
Louis Walker, 47, Grandview,
Wash., ,and Kenneth Rackham,
11, Carmichael, Calif.
Mrs. Day and Mrs. Black were
described as the most seriously
hurt. Mrs. Day suffered a brok
en collar bone and back, head
and arm injuries and Mrs. Black
suffered from shock and possi
ble internal injuries. The others
were said to be not seriously
hurt.
Two Appear in Court;
One Case Dismissed
Richard Dale Akins, 30, Can
yonville, was bound over to
grand jury in district court Fri
day on a charge of grand lar
ceny. Akins was charged with
the theft of a well drilling tool
from Goff brothers well drillers,
Medford.
Akins was released on $1,500
bail Nov. 25.
A charge of contributing to
the delinquency of a minor
against Jimmy M. White, Gold
Hill, was dismissed by district
court Judge Rawles Moore, be
cause of insufficient evidence.
Australian
Campaign
As Insults
By CHARLES M. McCANN
United Press Correspondent
Australia's parliamentary elec
tion campaign is approaching its
climax in a free exchange of
insults.
The vote will
be taken Sat
urday for 'all
12 1 members
of the House
of Represent
atives and for
30 of the 60
members of the
Senate.
Austra 1 i a n
elections are
traditio n a 1 1 y
uharies itieiaun
wild and woolly. But in this one
feeling is running especially
high.
Labor Party supporters are
calling Prime Minister Robert
Gordon Menzies a Fascist.
Menzie's backers are calling
Herbert Vere Evatt, the Labor
Party leader, a Communist sym
pathizer. Meetings Marked By Jeeri
Election meetings are marked
by hoots, jeers and scuffles.
Menzies was shouted down
eight times during one recent
speech by opponents who de
manded, among other things,
"Give us an Australian policy
for Australians, you mug."
Menzies, sweating freely but
unbowed, shouted back that his
interrupters were "a band of
yahoo Communists."
The election stems directly
from the "Petrov case," which
became an international sensa
tion. Vladimir Petrov, third secre
tary in the Soviet Russian em
Matter Of FdCt By Joe and Stewart Alsop
MESSY BUSINESS
Washington Two of Presi
de n t Eisenhower's principal
aides Budget Director Row-
la n d Hughes
and Atomic
Energy Com
mission Chair
man Lewis
Strauss may
be in serious
trouble. The
trouble results
from the
AEC's ruling
that the Bos
t o n banker
Adolphe Wen-
Joseph Alsa
zell was found guilty of "con
flict of interest" when he served
as a Budget Bureau consultant
in the Dixon-Yates deal.
Conflict of interest is a criminal-
offense, indictable under
federal law. But the Wenzell
case involves far more than that.
It also involves a flat, clear con
flict of sworn testimony, as be
tween Strauss' and WenzeU
and perjury is also an indictable
offense, and it further involves
an attempt to hide essential
facts, not only from the public,
but from President Eisenhower
himself, which is not indictable,
but is still a most serious of
fense in politics.
The facts are as follows: Testi
mony before the Kefauver sub
committee of the Judiciary Com
mittee estab
1 i s h e d that
Wenzell wore
two hats as a
Budget Bu
reau consult
ant. In one hat,
he played a
prominent part
in negotiating
the AEC's Dixon-Yates
con
tract. In the
other hat, he
Stewart Alsop
served as an official of the First
Boston Corporation which act
ed as financial agent in the
Dixon-Yates deal.
When the AEC cut its losses
on the Dixon-Yates contract, the
government became liable to
pay a cancellation fee, estimated
at about $3,000,000, to the Dixon-Yates
interests. But if Wen
zell's wearing of two hats con
stituted conflict of interest, the
contract was illegal, and the
cancellation fee could not be
paid.
The matter was thus referred
to the AEC's legal department.
Hertzel Plaine, a junior AEC
lawyer, studied the case and
wrote a straightforward opinion
that conflict of interest was
clearly involved and the con
tract was therefore illegal. The
Plaine opinion apparently threw
the AEC into something of a
turmoil, and with good reason.
ONLY last July, Plaine's chief,
liam Mitchel testified that the
Dixon-Yates contract was "legal
and binding." The Plaine opin
ion was so inconvenient, indeed,
that Arimiral Strnncc n rrrrrl in rt
j ' - . " . - - .... - ' - . j Qtv.uxuui5
tn tH K"pfan7pr ciihpftmmi'toa'c
information, actually sent for
young Plaine's security file, pre
sumably on the grounds that
writing such an opinion was po
tentially subversive.
. At any rate, Sen. Kefauver
and Sen. Clinton Anderson got
wind of Plaine's opinion, and
this in turn became known' to
Admiral Strauss. Thereafter,
Mitchell hurriedly reversed his
own former opinion and ruled
that Wenzell was guilty of con
flict of interest.
Election
Hears End
Swapped
bassy, surrendered himself to
the Australian Secret Service in
April, 1954. He surrendered also
a mass of documents which he
had collected as Russia's chief
spy agent in Australia.
The documents led, for one
thing, to the disclosure that the
missing British diplomats Don
ald D. MacLean and Guy F. De
M. Burgess had long been Rus
sian spies within the London
Foreign Office.
They disclosed also, when an
Australian royal commission
pxamined them, that one of
Evatt's chief aides had given in
formation to Petrov.
Evatt Wrote To Molotov
Evatt, to the astonishment of
even his own supporters, wrote
to Russian Foreign Minister
Vyacheslav M. Molotov asking
him' if the Petrov documents
could be forgeries. Molotov re
plied that they were.
Menzies decided to call an
election to take advantage of
Labor's embarrassment. His coa
lition majority was substan
tially aided by a split in the
Labor Party which has resulted
in the formation of a small "Anti-Communist
Labor" group.
The election, if it gives either
side a substantial victory, will
be important to the United States
and its allies. Menzies is for
complete cooperation with the
free countries against1 the Reds.
Evatt ' tends somewhat toward
"neutralism." He wants to admit
Communist China to the United
Nations, and to withdraw Aus
tralian troops from Malaya
where they are helping Britain
fight the Communist rebels.
If Labor suffers a real defeat,
Petrov will be responsible.
The implications of this rul
ing are far-reaching. Both the
Kefauver subcommittee and the
Dixon-Yates interests are certain
to ventilate the whole sorry
business at great length. Both
will try to prove that Hughes
and Strauss were wholly aware
of Wenzell's dual role during the
time when the contract was be
ing negotiated.
Wenzell has testified that he
himself became worried about
his peculiar position and that he
consulted Hughes about it. As of
this writing, the position Hughes
took on the question is not
known. But it is known that
Wenzell continued to serve as a
consultant after his talk with
Hughes.
Wenzell aso testified under
oath, last July, that he "explain
ed to (Strauss) what my work
had been in the Bureau .
what I had done and my whole
connection there." Strauss has
testified that he did not know
Wenzell was a Budget Bureau
consultant and thought he sim
ply "represented his firm, The
First Boston Corporation, advis
ing'. . . on the availability and
cost of financing.
' Thus a direct conflict of sworn
testimony, as well as conflict of
interest, is involved. Finally
there is the way both the public
and the President have been
misled throughout, which will
also be thoroughly aired.
T AST YEAR, for example,
when the President said
that all the facts on the Dixon
Yates contract were publicly
available, the Budget Bureau
and the AEC hurriedly drew up
fact sheets. When Wenzell's
name, which had not previously
been publicly mentioned, ap
peared on the AEC's fact sheet,
the Budget Bureau asked the
AEC to eliminate it. An at
tempt has been made to explain
this on the grounds that Wen
zell played no important role in
the negotiations. But consider
Mitchell's own ruling: It ap
pears that Wenzell, while hav
ing a conflicting private interest,
acted as one of the principal ad
visers of the government in the
negotiation of . . . the contract
Finally, the evidence is clear
that the facts have been consis
tently misrepresented to the
President himself, as for ex
ample when he said that Wen
zell never worked on the Dixon
Yates contract. Altogether, it
has been a messy business. It is
the messier still because Wen
zell, an outspoken man with an
honorable personal history, but
a business lamb among the
Washington wolves, is likely to
be the only fall guy in the end.
Copyright 1955.
New York Herald Tribune Inc.
Meredith, N. H. (U.P.) Guy
Cochran has purchased this
town's old fire station for a dol
lar bill. He's going to tear it
down and use the lumber to
build a home for himself.
SUN LIFE ASSURANCE
SUGGESTED BIBLE
READING VERSES
The Medford Council of
Church Women each year be
between Thanksgiving and
Christmas sponsors . a pro
gram of daily Bible reading,
recommending a different
verse of the Bible for each
day during that period, in co
operation with the American
Bible associalion, the Med
ford Ministerial association
and the National Council of
Church Women.
Following are the passages
recommended for today:
Matthew 25:31-46.
In the Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
Oregon State College Econo
mist M. D. Thomas tells the Ore
gon Seed Growers League,
which has been in session at La
Grande, that the federal soil
bank proposal is the hottest farm
subject now under discussion.
He added:
"The soil bank proposal is ap
parently more acceptable to
CITY FOLKS than any other
farm assistance measure."
THAT'S
a new angle to the
X
farm problem. But, after all.
it isnH an unreasonable angle.
The city folks, you know, PAY
TAXES. And it's TAX money
that is used to pay the high
parity subsidies that have kept
prices of certain basic crops such
as wheat, corn, cotton, etc., high
enough to encourage heavy over
production of them.
The farm folks produce the
wheat, corn, cotton and such.
The city folks CONSUME the
bulk of them at prices that have
been kept HIGHER by the high
parity system. So far, they
haven't complained. They have
felt, evidently, that since the
war the farmer has had the hot
end of the readjustment poker
to handle, and so they have been
willing to help him out.
TUT
Suppose they got tired of
it. Suppose they said to them
selves:
"This farm subsidy business
is the bunk. It keeps HIGH the
prices we have to pay for food
and fiber and all it does for the
farmer is to build up surpluses
that are cramming the storage
warehouses to the bursting point
and hanging like a dark thunder
cloud over the markets of the
future."
Suppose they added:
"It's a crazy scheme. We've
gone along with it so far in the
hope that it would help the farm
er to readjust from inflated war
markets to the normal markets
of peace time. But it just doesn't
work.. It's even getting the farm
er into a dangerous 'situation.
"So we're through. We've
HAD it! Hereafter we're going
to vo'i against every politician
who proposes further subsidiza
tion of agriculture thus keep
ing up prices of the foods and
the fibers we have to buy and
still not doing the farmer any
real good."
THAT could happen. And, if
it did happen, it must be re
membered that about two-thirds
of the voters are city folks and
only about one-third farm folks.
So
You see
If it is true that the soil bank
proposal is more acceptable to
city folks than any other farm
assistance measure it's a rather
important political consideration.
S
MUCH for the over-all, na
tionwide situation.
Let's take a look now at the
agricultural situation in South
ern Oregon and Far Northern
California.
CO FAR, we've been hurt rath
& er than helped by this system
of high price support backed up
by acreage control for certain
crops none of which we grow
in any considerable quantity. As
acreage of corn, cotton, wheat,
etc., has been taken out of pro
duction of these crops that we
DON'T grow it has been put
into production of crops that
we "DO grow such as barley,
potatoes, grass seeds and so on.
Thus our markets have been
glutted. We have suffered severe
ly from this new SUBSIDIZED
production.
TN CONCLUSION, let's take a
look at the probable effect of
this new soil bank proposal.
This seems reasonably certain:
THE SOIL BANK PROPOSAL
WOULD CREATE AN IM
MENSE MARKET FOR THE
SEED OF SOIL BUILDING
CROPS, INCLUDING GRASSES.
Southern Oregon is a large
producer of small seeds. We
could be a LARGER producer'
if the market warranted expansion.
WISHING MW7MAKE IT SO
The future independence and leisure you ere
hoping for will be yours only if you prepare
for it. It is never too early to make provision
. for happy retirement. Don't let it become
too late. How about today?
CHARLES E. JONES, Local Agent
Phone 2-9772
COMPANY OF CANADA
Communications
Letters to the Editor must bear the name arid address of the writer, although
under certain circumstances the use of a pen name or initial for publication
is permissible. The Mail Tribune reserves the right to edit all letters with a
view to clarification and condensation. Letters submitted for publication must
not exceed 400 words.
CAP Progress
To the Editor: In announcing
my resignation as commanding
officer of the Medford squadron
of the Civil Air patrol, I want
the public of Jackson county to
know how gratifying it is to re
view the progress which has
been made in the past few years,
progress due in no small part to
the wholehearted cooperation
the CAP has received not only
from the senior and cadet CAP
members but also the citizens
and business men and women of
the entire community.
The building has been reno
vated and improved so that it
now serves both as a meeting
place and as a possible emer
gency station in case of need.
Four cadets, William Neal, Al
bert Eaton, Johnny Foust and
Jim Merritt, have had trips
abroad. We were hosts to five
foreign CAP exchange cadets
here in Medford, under the
same program. We have heard
from many former CAP cadets
now in military service, who
have told us to keep up the
training program, for It has
meant a great deal to them.
We have participated in two
air shows, the dedication of the
airport terminal building, and in
Armed Forces day celebrations.
We have participated in several
air search and rescue missions.
We have acquired a Link trainer
and CAJr radio equipment, as
well as other items including
building furnishings, equipment
and flags and flagpole.
My resignation does not mean
am quitting the CAP, but
means I am passing the respon
sibility of leadership to some
one I feel is more capable and
able to cope with problems as
they arise. I will still work for
the good of the organization in
whatever capacity I am needed
other than as commander.
The progress 1 have men
tioned has taken the help of a
great many people, and it
from the bottom of my heart
that I extend my sincere thanks
to each and every one who has
helped the CAP and me person
ally as commanding officer.
sincerely nope that the new
commander,- Lt. Robert Thomp
son, will receive the same co
operation so generously and un
selfishly given me.
Marella Luschen, Capt., CAP
Former Commanding Officer
Medford Squadron
More On Library
To the Editor: A few days ago
I read with interest Mrs. Lynch';
letter concerning the Children's
Library and yesterday was
equally interested in Mr. Allen's
reply. After reading it I thought
perhaps I should wait and see
just what the results of the pres
ent changes and plans are to be.
However I can't help thinking
that all too often one of the
"good things" to go when ef
ficiency moves in is the personal
touch. For the most part the
Adrienne's
PRE-CHRISTMAS
Save . . Save . . On These Reduced Groups!
50
COATS
75
SUITS
Boxy, Tailored, any
Style you wish .
Vi Sizes, Regular, Misses
Where Your 5c Buys
See Our FASHION
Don't Forget . .O
Every Wednesday 6:00 p.m.
Adrienne's
214 East Main
OPEN WEDNESDAY UNTIL 9 P.M.
adults who use the upstairs li
brary have their reading habits
formed, but young minds re
spond to friendliness and attrac
tive, curiosity - arousing sur
roundings. A child authority in
recent article suggested that
parents can do much to improve
their children's reading ability
by taking them.gn hikes, arous
ing their curiosity, answering
their questiftns willingly.
These are "time consuming''
things and perhaps should bff
limited to the home or KhooL
A good many other mothers join
ed me in the feeling that the
Children's Library was render
ing a real service to parents, tea
chers and children. I know of
one grade school teacher who
advised her class to make a spec
ial effort to go to the library to
see the truly worthwhile carved
doll display. For several that
could have easily been their fg-st
introduction to the Library and
undoubtedly many stopped to
choose books artfully arranged
nearby.' My small daughter's
Summer Vacation Bible school
class was taken on a field trip
to the library 0where they could
see so many interesting things
while the use of the library was
explained. Many an excited child
was begging mother later in the
day to take them back on an
other visit.
You can't force a young child
to love books. They need to be
encouraged by the warn, inter-
r. .1 1 -1 V ' , .
cat ui muse who love ana unaer-
stand them. Tjie people of Med
ford had something of which
they could all be justifiably
proud. Let's not make the mis
take of sacrificing too much on
the altar of efficiency.
Audrey E. Roberts,
915 West 10th St.
Medford, Ore.
MR.
INSURANCE
Fred
Brennan
The merchandise and money we
handle is subject to loss through
armed robbery, theft, or destruc
tion at night, or the dishonesty of
employees. Is an insurance policy
available to protect us from loss
through all types of larceny? .
' For Information Call
MEDFORD INSURANCE
ACINCY O
Phone 1-4940
1
TOP PRICE
Shop Our
an EXTRA Garment
and DANCE TV Show
o
Phone 2-7169
1