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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 31, 1956)
o O o o O O O o O O O O o O 00 o Ca O o o 0 3 vJ GO O o t3 S O GO 0 o rOUt iIDC8D.(OREGOt) -v-rver in Soumtrn Oregon Reara). Tr.c .Va;i Tribune" J .iClljr.ea Ua:i fcx'jept Saturday by 0 mf.dfgrd.chi.-.t:!),-; co ejt?-'l .rtr. St i-none,,3-6I41 iSiBfiT W RfHL E-litor fTERU A-l'-erQilng Manaaer GERALD UAT;"XM T.uiini-ia anarer ERIC ALLEN 9r Var.;S. fcdltor El H ADAMS Cltv tdltor HAfcglY 'HIPVAN T'eterbph Editor rt, -JUCKarB JEVW:TT Scorta Editor buVE SlSKCHr Society Ed:T DALE EpICKSO.N Circ.Sitlon Mgr. AIndependent Newspaper 0 Entered aj second clan matter at ajdford Oregon under Act of W BSCH;PTibS RATES E Mali In Advance Per Copy 10c "Daily and Sunday One year $15 00 Dally d Sunday Six montha 8 00 Daily and Sunday Three moa Sunday Only One year S4.20 By Carrr Iq AdAnce Medford. A'hlaSH rr.'l Heint Eagle Point. Ja.5Snville Sold Hill Phoenix. Shady Covio Rogue Rfter. Talent -and on rlor routes: and Sunday One year 118 00 Daid and Sunday One month U0 Carrier and Dealers 10c per copy uA:Terma Cash In Advance flrlal Paper ffi the lty of Medford OfflrlaJ Paper of Jackson County Ungd gjre.is Full Leaned Wire MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF C WCL'LATIPJ Advertisia Repreentatlve: WEST-lTOLIDAV COMPANY ISC Offices In 'w York Chicago da troif San Francisco Los Angelea SSftle Portland St Loul Atlanta Vfln1Suver B C NAUNAl0 DITORIAl ASSOCIATION U O NEWSPAPER PUBLISHER feSOCITION f HjJllV Time o o :8dford and Jackson Ge9nty History from the files of The Mail Tribue 10. 20, 30, 40 an, ?0 years ago. 10 YffliiS AGO ' 31. 1946lTuesday) Tlve chape! buildings at j Camp JVhitare offered by Port land War Asse'a administration's oSiceoof 9eal propgry. 0 Fijom A r t h u J Perry's Ye SmufJUe Pot colugin: Em Mer rick of t$e Nat as a sore finger. It sticks out like ce. o lo yAps go Iic. 31, 193B (Thursday) o " , gnu 0 o " . O I T-K .oV o SecoTid contingent of Boy coasry.$jblishing winter camp & ct Gja?r Lake return to Med- ford Mr? ancOMrs- Hosier HenSrix Haivcv are gutasts of horor at -Danrrgc' given ipy iu?aiora post ofEce, o c30 YSASS.GO De'c.'Sl. 1926 (Friday) q cps broajdcp programs over ethe ait Toribune-Virgin radio Remodeling planned at Hol land KtMelg, the fining room will be m.-jde intaj a specialty coffee hop and restaurant. 40CVEAPS iJ,GO Dec. 31. 116 (SiMidaf) utSrr. Oregon Poulty asso gjation cnpleting arrangements lift) rrgnn ".te Poultry as."ci atiogi'iP annual poultry show in January (An addition to industries of $ie Rogue River vallej was the beginning of manufacture at the GolcpHill plant of the fteaver Ffit-tland Cemi.? company. CM. IThil't YsMr I.Q.7 O Nina or ten correct ts superior: sev en or elsht is excellent; five or & six Is good. of? Did Bering discover both Bering Strait and AWsk'a? cP Is nippocamus a tabled mony.er f a gen ict nippopo- tni? 3. Archaia. Asia. Bithynia: all lree mcntioid as Are W : ; U Vnt.y Tad? 4. Name the books in which Othe American Kennel club regis. Ooters dogs, o 0 5. Wa? Charles Curtis a U.S.' YSce President, an opera singer, OOo Winter? O3 06. The Qpl.Vado riVer separ ates .Arizona fro which states? O 0 7. j the original home of the rubber tree in the Amazon "or Ualayan0region? o 0 8. All epithets are not tfdjec tivc ?ire all adjectives . epf thets? Q9. "Sinp when was genius found re.Tectful." Did Brown O iag or Shakespeare author this ,0 cine? J Answers:0 1. -Pes. 2. Fabled 'ynenster wiA head of a horse. 3. Yes. 4. "Stud" books. S. U. S. O Vice-President. 6. California and Nevada, g. .Jftnaic. 8. No. 9. ftrowning. O r Celebration Halts yiicriuuiuii iif a Pendleton 0u; i. sched ruletl wotk-long rfblfaay celeirra- tion n thJ,"ms:iliS Iyiian.res- q erv:ics.camtrto ahalt. two c?s early, with the death of tie old est living member f thee tribe. 3 A colorfaj IndrSii woman, fc -G knowa cvhly as Itskpocs ir In 6 dian records. died yesterday. Airenc?- oofficials said her exact aie was iSLknown 'put t'Gt she was past 95 and prinably -was 0 closer & i00 yers old at ter death. O KTL TRISUNS 1956 in Retrospect The newsroom staff asks itself as each year comes to a close, "What was rhe 'biggest' story of the past 12rs8Mhs? The individual members do not always agree. But in the course of the poll a few stories emerge as being, more important or more interesting or more signifi cant than the others. AS 1956 was an election year, the campaign and its " results naturally took a top billing, including the changes effected by the county's voters, who went solidly Democratic for contested county partisan of fices (except surveyor) for the first time in many years. There have been many "post mortems" conducted on the election in an attempt to determine why. The visits of Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt and Vice President Richard Nixon were high points of a year which also saw all the candidates for major state of fice arrive at one time or another. . a DOTH telephone companies serving valley people continued their rapid expansion and improvement projects. Work at Southern Oregon college, which will total millions in new buildings in the next few years, continued. - Two big suburban areas voted to join the city of Medford, and the Medford school district grew great ly through consolidation and annexation. Other areas progressed with civic improvements. Construction began on the $22 million Talent proj ect, which will do so much for the agricultural econo my of the valley. Work began on the "Mission 66" im provements at Crater Lake, which will total some $4 million when completed. Construction started at the new Rogue Valley Memorial hospital. Medford resi dents approved a long-range capital improvement pro gram to include streets and sewers. The major flood of December, 1955, continued to have an influence on the thinking of valley petfple through 1956, reinforced by the "high water" floods of February, and resulted in a f lurry of protests, pet itions and hearings on flood control which have pro duced as yet no results, but which may, in the long run. TUST a year ago, we concluded that the "big story" of 1955 was the fact that 1955 was probably the most prosperous in the histoiy of Jackson county. Both agriculture in most of its phases, and the lumber industiy, boomed at record levels that year. During 1956, however, a slump hit the lumber markets, and the last half of the year was the leanest in a long time in that field. Crops other than fruit (which enjoyed a successful, if not record-breaking, year) did less well in 1956 than in 1955, on the basis of estimates. All the figures are not in yet. As a result, 1956 could not be called the most prosperous. But it was a year of solid accomplishment and progress, and the consolidation of gains. TTHERE were lighter moments, too particularly in the stoiy of the Stumbo boys' tangles with the highway department over a strip of property they owned athwart Highway 99, and in the f lurry over the Bermuda shorts worn by Medford High school boys a picture of them was carried by many newspapers in many parts of the world. Another of interest was the drama of the rescue of two Boy Scouts who were injured in a remote area along the Rogue river, boated to Agness, and flown to Medford by Mercy Flights, Inc. (The latter, inci dentally, was completing its seventh year of service is the year ended, having carried more than 600 patients). In court and crirninal matters, the stories of great est interest were probably the trial and conviction of Billy Nunn for the muider of a 14-year-old Klamath Falls boy, and the continuing attempts to secure a new trial for Hugh D'Autremont, one of the three brothers convicted in the 20s of the Siskiyou tunnel murders. AN ITEM of major controversy during the year was the debate over the location of a future Highway 99 freeway in the Medford area, which will be con structed in three or four years. As the year ended, it was still unresolved officially, although it appeared likely the four-lane freeway would follow the Bear creek line right through Medford, much to the distress of many residents and the ardists whose lands lie along other proposed routes. The Christmas shopping season in Medford was what economists sometimes call "spotty," with some lines doing better than in prior years and others doing less well. Generally, it was rather slow up to the last few days, but some merchants made up the difference h the Saturday and Monday before Christmas. J7ROM a news standpoint, then, 1956 was an inter esting but not startling year. There was no one spot nex-s story which clearly and obviously outstrip ped the others in importance and interest, although news staffer? were unanimous in selecting the election campaign as the top continuing story of the year. But there was a continuing grist of news which reflected the growth, the general, overall prosperity, the continued development of Jackson county. And we see no reason to alter in any marked way the conclusion we reached at this time a year ago, as follows: "... Barring a. war, the continuing growth of the Americas economy and population as a w:hole, and of the -west aid of southern Oregon in particular, would seem to constitute a-pretty firm guarantee of a "continued tigh level of prosperity."- E.A. Monday, December 31, 1951 renef of farmers and orch- Three Soon About By CHARLES M. McCANN Unhad Press Correspondent Great Britain, Greece and Turkey may start negotiations soon on the future of Cyprus. Britain, which holds the east ern Mediterra nean island, bag offered its people a con stitution which would give them a meas of home rule and the hope chane c arm mat some time in the future they might get the choice of remaining in the Brit ish Commonwealth or leaving it. Greece, which wants Cyprus, has rejected the proposed con stitution as outlined might pro vide a basis for negotiation. Greece Claims Island Greece, though it never has possessed Cyprus, lays claim to it on the ground that 400,000 of its 500,000 people are of Greek racial stock. Turkey wants to protect the rights of the 100,000 Turks in Cyprus. It holds further (1) that Cyprus was Turkish until it came under British rule in 1878; (2) that the island is only 43 miles from the Turkish main land and 683 miles from the Greek mainland. Hence, Turkey holds, if there is any change in the sovereignty over Cyprus. Turkey should get it. Though Greece has rejected the proposed constitution, dis patches from Athens quote gov ernment sources as saying that it might join Britain and Turkey in talks on Cyprus after a forth coming debate in the United Nations. This debate may come late in January. Greece wants to argue that the people of Cyprus have Airlines Outstrip Other Transport; Big Future Viewed By EDDIE RICKENB ACKER Chairman of the Board Eastern Air Lines Written For United Press The airline industry's $2 bil lion orders for a fleet of some 400 jet-powered airliners made important headlines in 1956. Even more significant, how ever, is the tact that the 4b mil lion passengers, who traveled 28 billion miles by air during the same year have made the U.S. scheduled airlines the coun try's primary passenger carrier. outstripping both the railroads and the inter-city buses. No realistic estimate of the economy of the industry's rapid ly approaching transition to jet power can be made without link ing these two facts. Coming Age The coming "Jet Age" will be truly revolutionary, possibly the first real mechanical "revolu tion" in commercial aviation his tory. Through the use of these new sources of tremendous jet power, the airlines will be able to bring a much greater and travel-conscious public the su perior convenience, comfort and economy of almost silent, vibra tionless flight, at speeds up to the speed of sound itself (about 700 mph), and at rates favorably comparable with any other means of transportation for dis tances of 300 miles or more. On the other hand, there is no question but that the develop ment of a greatly increased level of public air travel must be made as a sound foundation for the coming of the great jet air liners, which will not o::ly double our present airliner speeds, but will triple our carry ing capacity. The S422 million re-equipment program Eastern Air Lines has adopted to enable us to do this job, while the largest undertaken by any airline, is still generally typical of what the entire in dustry is doing in this regard. Airliners On Order To care for today's growing volume of air travel, the airlines have also ordered 365 piston powered airliners, with 73 more in prospect. Eastern Airlines, for instance, is adding new multi engined radar-equipped Golden Falcons and Constellations to its fleet. The first of 40 jet-prop Elec tras are scheduled to go into service in 1958. In 1959-60, when our fleet of 20 great 600-mile-an-hour-. 56,000-hp, straight-jet air liners equipped to carry 112 to 135 passengers, are in operation, we will have tripled our passeng er airlift capacity. Any evaluation of airline econ omy and future growth must also consider the important facts that, although the airlines have now become our country's primary passenger carriers and although the American public is enjoying, and will continue to enjoy, great er income and more leisure time than ever before, less than 10 per cent of the travel-conscious pub lic has yet experienced the su perior convenience, comfort and economy of air travel. Beyond this, it must be real ized that the dynamic industry and expanding economy of .this country is geared to the speed of air transportation. ay Future the right of self-determination. Britain wants to air its charge that the Greek government is supporting the campaign of vio lence in the island. But the Unit ed Nations can take no action. U.S. Enters Dispute The United States has now en tered the situation. The State department in Washington is sued a formal statement last Thursday in which it said that "the making by the United Kingdom of proposals for self government could be the first step toward an eventually peace ful and generally acceptable fi nal solution of the Cyprus prob lem." The statement noted that the Headlines Eyed by U.P. Writers United Press correspond ents around the world look ahead at the news that will make the headlines. Kadar and the Kremlin Vienna hears that a high-ranking Hungarian delegation will go to Moscow this week. Pup pet Premier Janos Kadar may lead it. The reason: To get a briefing on what lies ahead for the country, politically and economically. After two months of industrial paralysis. Hungary needs immediate aid to stave off chaos. The Russians may offer some political concessions in an attempt to appease the still-rebellious workers. It's pos sible that Kadar will be told he'd better quit. There is still talk that "Titoist" leader Imre Nagy might be restored as premier. Maybe Fred Hall, lame duck Repub lican governor of Kansas, may get a sub-cabinet job in the In terior Department. That is, if the two Kansas senators agree. The White House has asked them if they would approve an ap pointment for Hall. Hall failed to win renomination this year. Hall has been feuding with Sen. Frank Carlson. But Carlson is likely to leave the decision to his colleague Sen. Andrew Schoeppel. Schoeppel may or may not regard Hall as a pos sible contender for his Senate seat in 1960. Japan Look for new Japanese Pre mier Tanzan Ishibishi to name a minister of state in charge of defense, which he now holds himself. Ishibishi favors business executive Juichi Tsushima. But he may choose Adm. Kichisaburo Nomura, who was ambassador to Washington at the time of Pearl Harbor. Nomura's handicap: Japanese leaders shy away from In the Day's Hews By FRANK Problems of state bob into the relaxed and let-down week that intervenes between Christmas and New Year's Day. Queen Ju liana's problems for example. Juliana is the hereditary ruler of The Netherlands, which in this country we normally refer to as Holland. All down through history, queens have been sup posed to have it pretty soft. So far as things go around the house, they have no worries. Come the first of the month, when the bills flock in like snow flakes in a winter storm, they just pass 'em on to the royal treasurer and he takes care of the situation. If the household bank account runs low, a new tax is levied and that's that. It sounds wonderful. But Ju liana is fed up with it. She wants to run her own life. In her annual Christmas broadcast to her people she up and says so. SCREWBALL? I wouldn't know. But note, please, that all over the world people are demanding the right to RUN THEIR OWN AFFAIRS. Why shouldn't a queen yearn to run HER own affairs, just like millions of commoners? IN Britain another queen takes to the air waves. In a royal Christmas broadcast Elizabeth pleads with her people to be tol erant, to be reasonable, to be SENSIBLE. Specifically she urges "healing of the serious rift that has imperiled the unity of the British Commonwealtn as a result of the recent Anglo French attack on Egypt." She calls for UNITY. What she means is this: "We pulled a boner. Let's admit it, instead of trying to lay the blame on some body else. Let s forget our wounded pride and get down to business and work with our al lies, for if we don't we'll get into serious trouble." CJO much for queens - - who are ! -J b born to their jobs. ; Let's turn now to ELECTED officials in this case President j Sukarno of Indonesia. i SUKARNO has a rebellion on hi hands. It is a peculiarly embarrassing rebellion. It is em- barrassing for this reason: ' Begin Talks of Cyprus proposed constitution as out lined "seems to be unacceptable in certain respects by some who are concerned with the matter." "Nevertheless," the statement continued, "the United States still hopes that our three allies . . . . will strive to agree upon a way of moving together to ward a solution . . ." This statement appeared to be aimed at Greece. Both Britain and Turkey are ready to talk. The State department seems to ieei mat oreece, aespiie us in sistence that it must have Cy prus, may come around to nego tiating on a realistic basis which would make agreement with Britain and Turkey possible. of Future the thought of returning to the prewar custom of naming mili tary men as chiefs of the defense departments. GI Loans Despite hard money trends, there is no prospect for an early boost in the interest rates on GI loans. The administration will ask Congress to increase the rate on home loans to ex-servicemen. But Rep. Olin E. Teague (D-Tex.) chairman of the House Veterans Committee, intends to sidetrack the proposal. Slight Thaw Improvement is predicted in relations between West Ger many and Russia. They've been long near the breaking point. The thaw started last week in talks between Chancellor Kon- rad Adenauer and Soviet Ambas sador Andrei Smirnov. Smirnov flew to Moscow to report. Mere talks are expected. One thing the Kremlin would like is the re moval of Defense Minister Franz Josef Strauss. The Russians say he's "dangerous." War Crime British Prime Minister An thony Eden is pondering whether to bring a war crimes charge against Egypt for the death of Lt. Anthony Moorhouse, who suffocated in a closet after being kidnaped by Egyptian guerrillas. To bring the accusa tion successfully, under the Geneva Convention on treatment of war prisoners, Eden would have to prove specific charge of murder. Public Relations Incidentally, Britain may over haul its entire public relations setup as the result of the Suez Canal dispute. Britain took a propaganda beating from Egypt throughout. Its dignified attitude didn't make headlines. President Gamal Abdel Nasser's free swinging statements did. JENKINS For a long, long LONG time the Indonesians weren't allowed to run their own affairs. They were a colonial people, under the rulership of the Dutch. They yelled bloody murder over the injustice of it and demanded the right to run their own shebang. Under the leadership of Sukar no, they pulled loose from the Dutch and set up their own gov ernment, with Sukarno at the head of it. NOW a considerable number of them are dissatisfied with the government as administered by Sukarno and under the leader ship of an Indonesian army col onel by the name of Simbolon they are REBELLING against Sukarno just as Sukarno re belled against tha rule of the Dutch. So Sukarno is calling for UNITY which in this case means UNITY BEHIND SUKAR NO. w HAT I'm getting at Is this: We're hearing a lot in these days about the cruel injustice of rulership of one set of people by another set of people. We're especially critical of th system of colonial empires, under which one people holds rulership over another people. We're pretty sure that's BAD. But No sooner did the Indonesians get out from under the thumb of the Dutch than they began to get restive under the thumb of the leader who got them out from under the thumb of the Dutch. Now they're staging a re bellion against him. AND in Britain one segment of Britishers is dissatisfied with government as administered by another segment of Britishers GASH! I PACIFIC A INDUSTRIAL Dick Hans, Manager 16 S. Central Ph. 3-5308 Today and By Walter ON THE KfAKING OF POLICY With inauguration day not far off, a large part of the Presi dent's business is the picking and choosing of men to fil the offices that become, or by his decision, are madeo va . cant. It is nor mal at a time like this tS think not orrly about who is alter UcMlinn to be sent to this or that foreign capital, and who is to replace whom in Washington: It is a time also when the administrative machinery comes in for eap praisal. This is especially true of the machinery for conducting for eign policy. We know thai the constitutional machinery comes down to us from a very different age. In this century, since the time of the first World War and the administration of Woodrow Wilson, there has been built up, largely by improvisation, an ex ceedingly complicated rnachinery for conducting U.S. foreign poli cy. So complicated is it that serious thought is being given to creating a new office for the Vice President with the power and responsibility to see that all the different departments and bureaus responsible for a "poli cy" do in fact administer the same policy. There is even talk of a constitutional amendment to give the Vice President, who as presiding officer of. the Sen ate belongs to the legislative branch, a greater authority in ! the executive branch. EXPERIENCE shows, I think, " that there can be no such thing as the one best type of machinery for conducting for eign policy. All depends upon the person of the President and upon how stabilized or how fluid is the world situation in which the policy has to be mad and conducted. In tranquil times, & tor example, the President ohas usually been able to leave for eign affairs to the- Department of State, which has administered them along the reasonably welt settled lines of a fixed policy. This was the case, for example, o under President Coolidge. But in the crises of the great wars, under Wilson and again under Roosevelt, the conduct of foreign affairs has been drawn into the White House. The Sec retary of State has not been the Foreign Minister. He hr.s been either a powerful figure in do mestic politics, who could .help the President with Congress and with public opinion, as for ex ample William Jennings Bryan and Queen Elizabeth has to call for unity behind the govern ment in power just as Sukarno is calling for unity behind Sukar no. And in The Netherlands Queen Juliana is fed to the chin WITH THE WHOLE SYSTEM OF RULERSHIP, under which THE QUEEN can't do as she pleases but has to do as other people think she OUGHT TO DO. Where will it all end? Oil Exploration Ground Work Laid Pendleton (UR) The groundwork for oil exploration work in the Westland area adja cent to Hermiston in Umatilla county, is being laid. Hugh D. Smith, a raflchet In the area, said that 90 acres of his land had been leased to a Pendle ton group. He said other farm ers in the area have combined to lease more than 1000 acres to the group. . Earlier drilling has indicated that valuable oil deposits may be under the surface in the area, spokesmen sai'd. FUNERAL SERVICES - a e In Every Price Range Since 19 OS PERL Funeral" Home Phone 2-6675 Tomorrow Lippmann and CorU Hull e- r he has been hfgh civil servant l$e -Lansing? In such times, when the Vhite House has been the real Foreign Ministry, the Presi- , dent has usually employed spe cifl agent for the really deli- . cate negot;tions. The best known of these are of course . Col." Houe and Harry Hopkins. . But Jioth Wilsfii and Roosevelt . employed,, many other special , agftits wSwJ operated cuitgde the foreign service and the Tepart flient of State. O O O pHPHE situation under Eisenhc- eris quite different IrofS any . thjit has gone tf5re. Although we are not at w-ars the world . situadioij is profoundly unsitled, . afd U.S. foreign policy in the critical afeas of turope,- Ajia and Africa is having to be reap-Q prafted. replanned, ajid refastj iontsd. AccordirPg to tiie prece- O tdents of our history1, this would be a0time when fcretfen policy . would be made and directed ejp the President" 0 . Rnt npn Fispnliflwer is rt that jeind of President. It isar? ' to 'say, I think, that except in the recent emergency when Mr. Dulles was ill, the President titg not make and conducl foreign policy. What h does to judge and to choose among alterna tives that are brought ft) him by his staff officers. This wqjjldo mean that the responsil?ilit fr initiatinfs. for making, for build ing -up policies woulci fa9 upon the Secretary of State. But the fact is that Mr. 9uIS has a peculiar conceptiorPof his office. It is one, which req8ir8s him not onlv to make anrj, direct foreign policy but also in the big matters to administer it per sonaljy. Tliis"' has meagt his be ings awav from his office soq much of tbe time trt it nas been impossible, for him to be in intimate touch with the coiuct of foreign policy. 0 O o THUS, there is no ne here In Washinpfon who ha hieh all thority and devotes all his time - o ---o" tothe making of foiSign poflcy. Yet foreign policy cannot be made by the Un3r Secretary of State, conferring with, let 3.s sa the Secretary of the Treas ury and the Secretary or jje- fense. Under our system of gov- ernment, the tsential business 6f making high toreii policy cannot be delegated successfully beyond the Secreiry of State, and in time of great crisis it can not be delegated at all. The President's way of work ing being what it is, he ngpds closelycand connually at hcd a Secretary i State, who. in ef fect, is another self. Without that, the responsibility for mak ins.' foreign policy gets pushed off and chewed up in a compli cated bureaucrat machine. Copyright 195B, q New York Herald Tribun Inc. e Bloody Skull DagcecP o o GEO. J. TAYLOR O The African eBief, B a p p aO Kali, danced round anfj ninj the pyramid of blood? skulls. Up slipped a mjg-o siontry to whis- per to the chief "God hacfcfa Sn who died for your sinS." Laar on this chief, Kappa Kail, camg to the mfionary for more teachinf, as to God's Son0.0 1 Then he asked lor r, " baptism and wa tojd brjgg converts and so show hig faith. Kappi Kali was way for so& weeks nd came back with $ group of-converts. Then he was baptized. Out raf his con?rsion the whole section hag peace aSU God a gVeat sol winner. John 6:44 tells why we musf pray forj the lost until they tuxn. This mesjge sponsor! by a Scappoose family. 0 Adr. o O 0 O (I "i4j BURL'S every family ma" make offlneraP ar rangements Which are In keeping with Its mearaj. A selection of tervlces In o every price range Is of- feed to satisfy individual preferences "and tS meet all financial circumstances, o Convenient Terms? o o o "Certain c O O P O o 0 e