Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, November 20, 1956, Image 4

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    L
FOUR MTOFORD (OREGON)
MedfordTbibune
"Xveryon In Southern Oregon
Re Th Mall Tn buna"
Hibluhed Daily ExcDt Saturday by
MEDFORD Pit IN TING CO
17-29 North Fir St Phone 2-gMl
ROBERT W RUHL. Editor
HTHB GREY Advertising Manager
GERAX.D LATHAM Business Ma naffer
ERIC ALLEN JR. Managing Editor
EARL H ADAMS Clv Editor
HAftRV CHIPMAN Telegraph Editor
RICHARD JEVETf- Sport Editor
OUVf STARCHER Society Editor
DALE ERICKSON. Circula tion Mgr.
An Independent Newspaper
Entered as second claw matter at
Medford Oregon under Act of
March 3, 1897 ,
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Flight o' Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mall Tribune 10, 20. 30, 40
and 50 years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
Wot. 20, 1946 (Wednesday)
A new ten-yer contract with
the California Power company
Ja approved by the passage of
an ordinance by the city coun
cil last ftlajht.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: The legis
lative, executive, judicial and
Joha L. Lewis branches of the
government are all still func
tioning. 20 YEARS AGO
Not. 20. 193B (Friday)
Jackson county budget com
mittee approves at public hear
ing the county budget of $532,
780.12 for coming year.
Checkup of all types of histor
ical records is being made .in
Jackson county in connection
with a survey being conducted
in every' U.S. county.
30 YEARS AGO
or. 20, 1928 (Saturday) '
A big Legion meeting cram
med full of important business
matters is scheduled for next
Monday night at the armory.
Plans are being made for a
flying circus to be staged at the
. local airport at the fair grounds
- in th near future.
: 40 TEARS AGO
W . 20. 118 (Monday) '
Af!r a most successful week,
th bazaar given in the Davis
riuildirig for the benefit of St.
Vary'i academy closed Satur
day County court orders special
election to b held Dec. 27 for
rt creation of an irrigation dis
trict. 40 YEARS AGO
Sot. SO. 1916 (Tuesday)
No single industry in the
wrld is now paying so large a
profit on the amount of money
invested at the capper industry
From Local and Personal col
umn: Dr. W. S. Jones returned
Isat night from a two weeks
Stay in San, Francisco.
What's the Answtr?
, Can Too Get 4 of the 7?
Copt 1953- Editorial Baiaareh'
Report
' 1. The N. Y. Stock Market on
the day after Eisenhower's 1956
landslide victory fell.' or rose
or stayed about- the same?
2. Gen. E. L. M. Burns, UN
negotiator between Israel and
Arabs, is American, Canadian,
English, Australian or East In
dian?. 3.'Adlai E. Stevenson did or
didn't carry in 1956 any state
that he had failed to carry in
1952? :
4. After the 1948-49 Israel
Arab war Israel got about as
much territory as offered in the
1947 UN proposal, or much
more or much less?
5. Which of these has most
members in the U.S. House of
Representatives: Delaware. Na
vada, Rhode Island, Vermont,
Wyoming?
. 6. John A. Carroll is the new
Democratic Senator from which
western state?
7. About one-third, ene-half,
or two-thirds of all U.S. passen
ger cars are kept in garages
overnight?
The answers: 1. Fell. 2. Cana
dian 3. Did (Missouri). 4. Much
mora. 5. .Rhode Island (2). The
roii. on. t Colorado. 7. About
ball.
t- I J
jjj Newspaper
MAIL TRIBUNE
The Two-Headed Horse
Usually after a campaign the losers accept the
verdict philosophically, and proceed to forget it. Some
even go so far as to quote the familiar Latin pro
nouncement "Vox Populi, vox Dei" the "voice of
the people is the voice of God" and abide sancti
moniously by it.
But not this year as far as the supporters of Doug
las McKay are concerned. The decisive victory of
Senator Morse is something they have chewed on
bitterly for some days, and still can't seem to swallow
without a wry grimace at least.
TAKE our usually temperate and reasonable con
temporary to the north, for example, the Roseburg
News-Review.
Ten days after the election we find it attributing
the ".unfortunate" defeat of former Governor McKay
to "smear" tactics of the Morse opposition.
Listen to this, quote:
VIn the last election we saw the latter (smear) applied
very successfully against Doug McKay. Thousands of Ore
gon newcomers who didn't know Doug's ability as Governor
of Oregon and who were not familiar with the great public
service he had rendered in the past .were convinced by re
peated declarations, half-truths, misrepresentations and dis
tortion that as Secretary of the Interior he was a despoiler
of our natural resources and an enemy of conservation."
,"CMEAR?"
It is not a smear to cite the record and state
the facts.
As Secretary of the Interior, Douglas McKay
WAS an out-and-out enemy of conservation, and a
devoted partisan of exploitation for private profit.
He was never accused of being wicked or dishonest;
he was accused, and justifiably, only of being a de
voted disciple of the theory that what is best for
General Motors IS best for the -country; that where
private profit conflicts with the public welfare, not
the latter but the former should prevail.
These points were made clear during the cam
paign and about the only defense the McKay zealots
offered was to dismiss all charges as merely poli
tics" and point to the fact (which no one denied)
that during the McKay administration more money
had been spent on the extension and improvements
of public parks than during the previous adminis
tration. So what?
AS STATED it was all a matter of FACTUAL
record, and while it was political in the sense
it involved public policy, there was not a drop of
misrepresentation or distortion or deceit in it. More
over, the truth is the people of Oregon, regardless
of party, did not and do not believe in that exploita
tion theory, and when they got a chance to hit it,
they went to the polls and did just that.
"IITE WILL not rake over the coals of the campaign
fires again (anyone who wishes a correct sum
mary of the McKay record as Secretary of the In
terior can obtain same from an article in the May
Harpers entitled "The Republican Giveaway" by a
well known Washington (D.C.) newspaper man,
Warren Unna.)
We refuse, however, to allow that term "smear"
to stand without challenge when it is used as an
"alibi" for the McKay defeat
For it is not only untrue but the exact reverse of
the truth. Anyone who followed the recent senatorial
campaign with any care whatsoever, will agree the
smears were practically ALL on the other side, in
including half-truths, misrepresentations and distortions.
It is admitted now that
in advertising to besmirch
a decade of forceful and conscientious service to
this state whether one agrees or disagrees with the
principles Morse fought for. Senator Morse was
depicted as a traitor, a tum-coat, an apostate and a
two-headed horse and what-have-you.. As he is an
expert horseman, a practical fanner and happily
married many of his supporters were surprised he
was not accused of being a hoss-thief, a landgrabber
and a wife beater. Indeed the viciousness and rank
injustice of this "anything to beat Morse" campaign
became so flagrant, that as this paper remarked
during the close of the campaign many of the voters
particularly the Independents marked their bal
lots as a protest against such low-grade and low
road tactics, in favor of Oregon's senior Senator.
MOW for the McKay supporters to intimate that
it was the smear campaign against the former
Secretary of the Interior, instead of the "smear"
campaign against Wayne Morse, that figured so
largely in the result, can only be compared on the
basis of logic and the truth, with the political tech
nique so dear to the Russian Kremlin, namely
charging the United States and other free nations,
with the crimes against world amity and peace, they
have committed or intend to commit themselves.
THE election is over. It resulted in an overwhelm-
ing endorsement of "We like Ike" the Republican
candidate for President.
' Why not rest content with that? Why not stop,
instead of continuing to hold post-mortems and try
ing to make out the Democratic victory in this state
was something that it was NOT? R.W.R.
Portland Highway Needs Told Group
Portland (U.R) W. C. Wil
liams, state highway engineer.
said yesterday that it will take
approximately S371 million to
handle the highway needs of
Portland in the next nine years.
Williams, speaking before the
Chamber of Commerce, said
that federal highway funds
would help construct some free-
Tuesday. November 20. 1958
over $300,000 was spent
the Morse record of over
days but pointed out that the
money from that source would
not provide the answer alone.
He said that about $200 million
of the needed funds is in sight
at the present time.
Wisconsin's public hunting
and fishing grounds cover 69,315
acres.
Nasser's Telephone Call Gives
'Answers' to Some Questions
By LYLE C. WILSON
United Press Correspondent
Washington U.PJ Precisely
between the first and second
lunch courses and both very
"Wis good the host
listened to the
butler's whis
pered words,
beckoned the
guest of honor
and disap
peared. Over the
host's shoulder
came a polite
apology with
LJL9 C WllHU
the explanation: "President Nas
ser on the phone."
That's Washington. The host
was Dr. Ahmed Hussein, the am
bassador of Egypt. The place
was the Egyptian Embassy on
swank Sheridan Circle. The
guest of honor as a jovial fat
man, Moustafa Amin. Moustafa
and his twin brother, Ali, pub
lish Akbar El Yom, which is
Arabic for news of the day, a
Congressional Funds
For Investigations
Reach Record Amount
Washington (CQ) The 84th
Congress was the "investigat
ingest" Congress in history, if
money is a valid yardstick. And
these expenditures are expected
to continue rising.
In its two-year span the 84th
set aside a record SI 1.3 million
for Congressional investigations,
compared to the previous rec
ord of 58.173,164 held by the
83rd Congress.
Senate committees were au
thorized to spend $6,289,055.38
in new money, plus $522,644 in
carryover funds money author
ized but unspent by the 83rd
Congress. House committees
were given $4,510,199.89, all in
new money.
A good share of this money
just how much is undeter
mined went to investigate
Communist activity in the Unit
ed States. The House Un-American
Activities Committee was
granted $500,000 for its 84th
Congress probes, the fifth high
est amount granted any com
mittee. In Senate
And on the Senate side, the
Judiciary Committee whose
Internal Security Subcommittee
is in many respects the counter
part of the Un-American Activi
ties Committee received the
largest probe authorization in
the 84th Congress, $1,932,338.69
in new money, plus $136,464 in
carryover funds.
Senate and House committees
Communications
Letters to the Ednor must beer
the name and address at the writer
although under certain circum
stances the use ot a pen name or
initial for publication is permis
sible. The Mail Tribune reserves
the right to edit all letters with an
eve to clarification and condensa
tion Letters submitted tor publica
tion must not exceed 400 words.
Esperanto Explained
To the Editor: Any person in
terested in learning languages
should investigate the possibil
ities of Esperanto. Esperanto is
a simplified language, based on
familiar west Europe language
roots (telefono, telephone; birdo,
bird; skribi, to write; etc.). The
language has no irregular verbs;
its accent, spelling and pro
nunciation are uniform for
these reasons it can be learned
much more quickly and easily
than any national language.
There are Esperantists in 80
nations an estimated several
million and many are anxious
to correspond with Americans
in Esperanto.
Because Esperanto is compar
atively simple it requires no ex
pensive texts. At the present our
non-profit organization offers a
free correspondence course in
Esperanto, though students must
supply their own texts.
For free details about Esper
anto, the second language for
everyone, write to: The Esper
anto League, Route 1, Meadville,
Penn.
Adrian Hughes,
Hillsboro, Ore.
Sunshine Camps
To the Editor: When you eat
breakfast grapefruit tomorrow,
ask yourself why is it, that, in
the West, the sweetest grapefruit
is desert-grown? The answer, of
course, is sun-chemistry.
What's good for grapefruit is
similarly good for kiddies. Our
race was evolved in the out-of-doors.
Now we condemn our wee
bairns, in thousands of homes
in our Canadian Border states,
to being huddled in furnace
heated rooms.
Now that we have air-travel,
it would-be possible to organize
sunshine centers all along our
Mexican Border -states from
Texas to California. We have
Boy Scouts. Campfire Girls and
even municipal camps like our
Camp Sacramento.
Why not midwinter Sunshine
camps for sun-starved young
sters? C. M. Goethe,
Crocker-Anglo Bank
Building,
Sacramento, Calif.
mass circulation newspaper dis
tributed from Cairo throughout
the Middle East.
Fields Tough Question
Moustafa Amin, a good news
paperman himself, was fielding
some tough questions thrown by
the newsmen present when the
phone call intervened. The call
had been put in yesterday. But
until there is more direct serv
ice between Washington and
Cairo, as the ambassador ex
plained, one must expect a bit
of delay. Even when calling a
president!
Newsmen had been trying to
pin Amin down on the amount
of munitions sent into Egypt by
the Soviet Union and satellite
nations. It wasn't much, he in
sisted. How about the $50 million
worth of munitions which Israel
claimed to have captured, he
was asked. Amin thought that
far too high. When he returned
to the lunch table, Amin said
he had passed several questions
on to Nasser and that the replies
are required to report their
probe spending semi-annually.
According to a Congressional
Quarterly study of these reports,
the 84th Congress spent $5,271,
491.10, about 46.5 per cent, of
its investigation funds in its
first 18 months. Eighteen Sen
ate committees reported spend
ing $3,150,128.84; 21 House
committees, $2,121,362.26.
A final spending tally for the
entire Congress will not be
available until 1957, but not
all money authorized for probes
will be spent. Committees of the
83rd Congress, for instance,
spent only 65 per cent of the
funds available to them. If the
84th spends at the same rate.
total probe spending for 1955-56
will reach about $7.4 million.
The Senate Judiciary Com
mittee, in addition to receiving
the largest probe authorization
in the 84th Congress, also re
ported the greatest spending,
almost $1.2 million prior to
June 30.
Other high spenders on the
Senate side were the Banking
and Currency, Government Op
erations, Interior and Insular
Affairs, Interstate and Foreign
Commerce and Labor and Pub
lic Welfare Committees. All re
ported spending betwfeen $200,
000 and $300,000 between Jan.
3, 1955, and June 30, 1956.
In the House, the Appropria
tions Committee was authorized
$1 million for its investigations
in fiscal 1956-57. The Govern
ment Operations Committee was
granted $995,000, then came the
Un-American Activities Com
mittee. Government Operations
was the most prodigal spender.
It used up $261,766.18 of its
authorization in the first 18
months. Runners - up in the
spending derby were Appropria
tions ($356,770.05), Un-Ameri
can Activities ($343,381.60),
Small Business ($210,912.56) and
Judiciary ($106,220.06).
Joint committees are not re
quired to report their spending
and were not included in CQ's
tally of authorizations. How
ever, five joint committees with
essentially investigative func
tions were authorized to spend
S906.049 by the 84th Congress.
The money was allotted for
all committee expenses for fis
cal 1956 and 1957.
A sixth joint committee
Atomic Energy, was granted
$480,835 for all its expenses dur
ing the two fiscal years. This
committee handles legislation as
well as investigative work, and
no breakdown is available on
what portion of its funds went
for investigations.
Vote Influence Pr.obe
The most prominent investi
gations conducted during the
second session of the 84th Con
gress were those connected with
an- alleged attempt to influence
the vote of Sen. Francis Case
(R-S.D.) on the natural gas bill.
A select committee headed by
Sen. Walter F. George (D-Ga )
first investigated the charge.
Subsequently, a special commit
tee headed by Sen. John L.
McClellan (D-Ark.) was set up
to conduct a wide-ranging probe
of corrupt practices in Congress
and the executive branch. This
committee, too, confined its
study almost entirely to the gas
bill.
Other favorite subjects for
probes in 1956, as in 1955, were
communism and subversion,
military programs and business.
Since it was an election year,
campaign financing and spend
ing were scrutinized by Congres
sional probers.
No 1956 investigations caught
the public interest to the extent
of the Army-McCarthy hearings
in 1954 or the Kefauver crime
investigation of 1951. And, as
always, much of the probe
money financed myriad studies
by committee staff members.
Most such studies led neither
to hearings nor headlines.
(Copyright 1956.
Congressional Quarterly)
were as follows, in the Presi
dent's own language:
Will Investigate Arms
"Tomorrow it will be an
nounced in the newspapers that
I have asked the United Nations
to create a committer to investi
gate in Isreal what the Israeli
actually captured. Egypt will ac
cept the committee's findings
without question."
Amin estimated that the Is
raeli booty was limited to 30
tanks and 50 troop carrier
trucks. He said Nasser denied,
as follows, that he had sought
the aid of Russian volunteers:
'There are no Russian volun
teers in Egypt today. We fought
this battle alone and we are
insisting on fighting it alone in
order to avoid World War III."
Amin had been asked about
reports that Egypt had encour
aged other Arab nations to na
tionalize foreign oil holdings.
He came back with this answer
from Nasser:
"Egypt never intended to ask
or to encourage the Arab na
tions to nationalize oil. In fact,
Egypt respects all contracts be
tween foreign countries."
In the Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
Still no shooting as this is
written. But we aren't out of the
woods. A lot of face remains to
be saved in the Suez area before
we can breathe more easily.
The British and the French
want to ge off the hook they
hung themselves up on when
they moved in shooting. Nasser
is still smarting with humilia
tion over the poor military
showing he made.
The United States is cast in
the role of peacemaker which
is always a hard one to play,
with plenty of brickbats forth
coming and few bouquets.
Bur
st. Matthew says (v-9):
"Blessed are the peacemakers;
for they shall be called the chil
dren of God.
And our wise Ben Franklin
said:
".There never was a good war
or a bad peace."
So let's keep on trying.
SOMETHING new is added to-
' day.
A RED CHINESE broadcast
claims the Chinese communists
suddenly have approved sweep
ing pardons for anti-communists
who have "reformed. The
broadcast says a "parliamentary
committee" has decided to per
mit charges to be dropped
against all COUNTER-REVOLUTIONARIES
who committed
"lesser crimes but made a clean
breast of them . . . and to com
mute death sentences and give
lighter sentences for other
crimes."
HMMMMMM! That's a confes
sion that there HAVE BEEN
counter - revolutions in red
China, and that the rebels were
sternly dealt with as were the
"rebels" in Hungary. It further
suggests that the communist gov
ernment of China is a little
SCARED by the reaction of the
Chinese to the stern punish
ments that were dealt to the
troublemakers and is pulling in
its horns a bit.
That lends further substance
to the belief that the horrible in
stitution of communism is so
foul that in time it must fall of
the weight of its own foulness.
TF THAT is true and what has
-- happened in Hungary has cer
tainly torn the mask from the
foul face of Russian communism
and shocked the world as noth
ing has shocked it in recent gen
erations time is working on
our side.
If we can restrain the shooting
long enough maybe communism
will trip on its own feet.
"INE more straw in the wind:
Radio Budapest in appar
ent defiance of the Russians
has broadcast Yugoslav Presi
dent Tito's charge that the Rus
sian communists were to blame
for the Hungarian revolt.
Watch Tito. Keep your fingers
crossed. He's a communist. He's
a BIG communist. He may as
pire to be the big toad in the
communist puddle.
But
Anything that causes com
munists to quarrel with commu
nists instead of trying to con
quer the world for communism
is good.
Actor Kelly Bequeaths
Estate To His Widow
Hollywood (U.R) Actor Paul
Kelly bequeathed nearly all of
an estimated $100,000 estate to
his widow, Mardell, in a will
filed for probate Monday.
Kelly's estate, listed in excess
of $10,000 but estimated to be
worth $100,000, was left to the
widow with the exception of
$1,000 bequeathed to his adopt
ed daughter, Mimi Kelly.
The veteran actor died Nov.
1 of a heart attack. He was 57.
MRS. J. W. WHSOH,
of Houston, Tex., sars:
"I tried all aspirins but
St Joseph Aspirin For
Children is the one for
my children. They lis
it; I'm sore of dosace."
ST. JOSEPH ASPIRIN FOR CHILDREN
IfAottQF Of FdCt
"RE-STALINIZATION?"
Washington The ominous
word, "re-Stalinization," is be
ing heard more and more often
in the experts
anal yses of
the current de
velopment of
Soviet policy.
Even today,
even after the
un s p eakable
horror of the
blood bath in
Hungary, the
betting is still
Stewart Aisop
somewhat against a "re-Stalinization."
A complete return to
the methods and policies of their
late master and teacher, Joseph
Stalin, would be difficult and
risky for the present masters of
the Kremlin.
But for the
first time
since the great
post - -Stalin
change in the
Kremlin, a de
cisive return
to all Stalin's
methods a n'd-
policies is now
-iuieuii aosub besinnine to
be considered as at least quite
possible, although not yet prob
able. The evidence is positive,
moreover, that the Soviet lead
ers are still debating their fu
ture course, and that the altern
ative of "re-Stalinization" has by
no means been excluded. For ex
ample, a few days prior to
Wladyslaw Gomulka's depart
ure for Moscow, apparently au
thoritative reports came from
high satellite sources that the
Kremlin was preparing-to crush
both the newly independent Po
land and Marshal Tito's Yugo
slavia. The basic military dis
positions for a Soviet move
against Poland had been made
even before these reports were
received.
-
TZEEPING two strings to their
bow whenever possible is of
course the first rule of Soviet
policy-making. Most likely the
military dispositions were pre
cautionary and the satellite lead
ers who definitely expected-mil-itary
action against Poland had
been purposely misled. After all,
it would help the Soviet rulers
to soften up Gomulka for his
time at the Kremlin bargaining
table, if they let Gomulka know
in advance that they were con
sidering military action.
Most likely, in fact, the true
situation was discerned by one
of the ablest European observers
in Moscow, who warned his gov
ernment of the possibility of an
attack on Poland, but predicted
that it would not take place un
less Gomulka impressed the Sov
iet rulers as too rebellious and
intransigent. This warning was
conveyed before Gomulka's ar
rival in Moscow and thus far,
fortunately, the S o v i e t-Polish
conversations seem to be going
rather well.
VET as sound a judge of Soviet
-- intentions as Marshal Tito of
Yugoslavia has also been impres
sed by the possibility of a sud
den Soviet reversion to unres
trained savagery. Perhaps in re
sponse to the same reports from
the satellites mentioned above,
Tito some time ago ordered his
considerable army to strenghten
the defenses of the Hungarian
and Bulgarian frontiers. This was
noted by Western representatives'
at Belgrade. To their alarmed in
quiries, the Yugoslav spokesmen
replied that Tito certainly did
not expect an attack, but. was
also unable to rule out the pos
sibility. ;
Further confirmation that Tito
fears a Kremlin victory for a"
faction urging re-Stalinization is
also contained in the Yugoslav
leader's truly remarkable speech
on the events in Poland and
Murray Chotiner
Married in Phoenix
Phoenix U.R) Vice Presi
dent Richard M. Nixon's 1952
campaign manager was reported
to have married here Monday.
Albert Chotiner, brother of
Murray Chotiner, said Murray
had been wed to Ruth Huntley
Arnold.
Murray Chotiner was men
tioned in connection with inves
tigation of military uniform con
tracts. In appearances before the
Senate Government Operations
Subcommittee, Chotiner denied
using White House contacts in
behalf of his clients.
The couple was reported to
have departed for Hawaii fol
lowing the ceremony.'
Dr. Virgil
DENTIST
Announces the Re;Opening
of His Office
For the Practice of General Dentistry
304 FLUHRER BLDG. - MED?ORD, ORE.
Telepho
Office: 2-2414
By Joe and Stewart Alsop
Hunsjary. In this speech, Tito
not only offered the first auth
oritative account of the debate
withjn the Kremlin. He further
seemed to hint that the Satalinist
faction, presumably headed by
Viacheslav M o 1 o tov, currently
had the upper hand.
PENALLY, it is veryo obvious
that the grim and terrible
situation in Hungary must be
dragging the Soviet rulegs in th
direct ion of re-Stalinization.
Judging by the reports from '
Budapest, there seems to be very
little doubt that Soviet policy
makers now have only two re
maining choices. Either they
must rule Hungary by bloody,
naked, unrelenting force. Or
they must canpletely relax their
grip on Hungary, even though
they will thus permit HgngSry to
be transformed into anQactrtffj
anti-Soviet statt on their borders.
The first alternative is physic
ally possible A treat power like
the Soviet Union can still iake
a solitude and call it peace," 9
'remark that wajaljcgedly first
made 18 tenturies ago by a
painted British chieftain about
Britain's Roman oeeupiers. The
second Hungarian alternative is
supremely alarming to the Krem
lin: and if Hungary were tile
only problem, they would surely
choose to rule by force. But if
they are driven to rule Hungary
by force alone, then theQfate of
Foland will be sealed too in we
end not probably while Gom
ulka is in Moscow, but as titte
goes on and the bloody policy
of Hungary generates bloodiness
everywhere. At worst, however,
an attack on Poland would rislt,
a third world war. q
At best, moreover, on the rule
of bloodiness generating more
bloodiness, making war o Pc-p
land would eventually force the
Soviet rulers to renew their war
against their own people. These
dangers are the great deterrents, o
which still make re-Stalinzatioo,
only possible rather than probg5
aDie
1956. New York
Herald Tribuse Inc.
Mr, -Insurance
FRED
BRENNAN
Phone 2-4940
BACK IN THE
DOUGH AGAIN0
Yes. you might say we'ra
back in the dough aeain.
MEDFORD INSURANCE
AGENCY has moved
n's original location in
Fluhrer Bakery Bldg., 27
North Holly.
ONLY
28-
Shopping Days
Til Christmas!
ITS A
o
CINCH!
I've left all my
Holiday Worries"
Behind! I get my
Christmas
Cash
from
e 3
I PACIFIC
INDUSTRIAL
Dick Hans, Manager
16 S. Central Ph. 3-5308
H. Mohr
Residence: 2-5961
T o
f?J AGENCV has moved" to LJ
1 Hi original location In
m m Fluhrer Bakery Bldg.. 27 I i
l-iS Larger quarters enable us
to handle all lorn of in
surance more efficiently.
For proWssionab advice
z 1 brine pur insurance O
k a problems to m.
ptl MEDFORD INSURANCI j n
H- . AGENCY rJ U
O
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O
O
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