O O o
TOUR tJDK!D (OREGON)
Tvrryone in Southern Oregon
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Flight o' Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10. 20, 30, 40
and 30 yean ago.
10 YEARS AGO
Feb. 27. 1947 (Thursday)
Bruce Henselman wins first
annual model airplane contest
ipon&red by Sims Brothers
cycle and repair shop.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: Whiskey,
beer and wine contributed heav
ily to government tax revenues.
For swigging some of the intoxi
cants the thirsty contingent is
entitled to a refund.
20 YEARS AGO
Feb. 27. 1937 (Saturday)
Officials of Medford, Ashland
and Grants Pass high schools
seek method of breaking dead
lock among schools for southern
Oregon debate championship.
Polk county court visits Jack
son county to study methods of
departmental management.
30 YEARS AGO
Fab. 27. 19570lSunday)
For sixth consecutive year.
Fruit Growers' Purcteising com-
mittpp of" the vallev have nur-
chased the pool requirements of
arsenate of lead.
Flood washes out 1,130,000
steelhead at state fish hatcheries
at Butte Falls.
40 YEARS AGO
Feb. 27. 1957 (Tuesday)
."Appreciation" banquet hon
ors Jackson county legislative
delegation by Rogue River Fish
Protective association.
XTa... Anitnltf ral fAa nacteil
by recent legislature abolishes
811 county roaa supervisors aner
jan. i, lyio.
What's Your I.Q.?
Nine or ten correct is superior; sev
en or eight Is excellent: five r
six is good
1. 1791: Was anthracite coal
discovered this year in Penn
sylvania by accident or through
exploration?
2. How many men were in
a tub" in the nursery rhyme?
3. Bible: During the reign of
Saul did the Israelites have
smiths to fashion swords?
4. The drive to attain release
c atomic energy through nu
clear chain reaction began a
team effort unparalleled in his
tory; true or false?
g. Was Samuel Osgood the
fir Postmaster General of the
U.S. after the Constitution, or
the first treasurer?
v' I Ia
O 6. Is Sholem Asch, author of
"Our Destiny", a Jewish or
White Russian writer?
7. Boris II the king of
Kuaania or Bulgaria at me uui-
. -f, r Tit , . II- TT -
q DreaK oi worm ar.n.
8. What is the naval rank of
students at the Annapolis Naval
cademy?
1 9. Though, "grand" means
magnificent. Is it a colloauialism
when used in the sense of
"excellent"?
O AO "I fear the Greeks, even
when bringing gifts." Vergil.
Is this a reference to modern
Greeks?
Jnsers: 1. Accident. By a
jsuniwr. - -- --
flfrue. 5. Postmaster General. 6.
Jewish. 7. Bulgaria. 8. Midship-
rnsat s. i e. iu.
MAIL TRIBUNE
The Flood Threat
Jupiter Pluvius has been liberal with his offerings
this past week. The snowpack has piled up in the
high?r mountains. Lower down, the rainfall has been
greater than normal,
Some creeks which drain sma'
risen out of their banks briefly, then fallen back as
the rain let up. The Rogue
"flood stage, rising enough to cover a few low
lying fields, then dropping. For the past few days
Bear Creek has looked the way a respectable creek
should, rather than as a discouraged rivulet creeping
over and around slime-encrusted rocks.
But there has been no "flood" as such, for which
thanks be. And the seeing-eye weather-dogs at the
meteorological station don't see any immediate indi
cations of flooding conditions although they're
always careful to hedge their predictions.
e e
THIS country is built to absorb a lot of moisture,
and under most circumstances it does so, storing
it up in the form of ground water, snow and forest
floor seepage for the gradual seasonal runoff.
The recent wet weather has come as a series of
heavy showers, not as steady, persistent and drench
ing downpours as was the case in late December
of 1955, when the Rogue staged one of its worst
rampages in recent history.
As long as the weather follows this pattern, the
meteorologists say, the runoff will carry off the ex
cess water before the next shower raises them again.
The rainfall this week has been beneficial. And as
long as it continues to be intermittent, we needn't
fear major flooding.
"THIS does not mean, by any means, that we can
count on having no more floods. In fact, they have
seemingly become more frequent in recent years
possibly because of the steady cutting of timber.
Forests serve to retain moisture ; cut-over hills let it
run off quickly.
But this is only a contributing factor. The wea
ther remains the key to floods. When conditions are
just so with soils wet, a
and heavy rainfall there
There will be, at least,
together sufficiently to reconcile its differences over
river development, agree on a plan to limit floods,
and see that it is put into effect. E.A.
The "Feel" of Spring
We recorded here the other day the fact that a
couple of cases of spring fever were reported in
Jacksonville during the sunny days there recently.
Well, the signs of approaching spring are all over
the place these days.
We welcomed with delight this week the covey of
quail which marches through the back yard night and
morning during the spring and fall months.
Buds are out on the rambler rose which climbs
the garage wall.
The grass i3 beginning to recover from its winter
time brown, and put on its brilliant green.
THE black and white puppy romps tirelessly these
days, and is occasionally stricken with wander
lust. One recent morning, after a heavy shower, the
hills across the valley showea up clear in the pure
all- unsullied by the usual pall of hovering haze and
mill-smoke.
The other day we spotted a flock of sheep, liber
ally scattered with tiny, shambling, awkward, black
faced lambs.
Perhaps the surest sign, however, is the rain.
Even when the downpour is strong and steady, it has
the smell of freshness. And when it is soft and gentle
and misty, it has the veritable, quickening, and inde
finable "feel" of spring. E.A. '.
Rogue Valley Manor
Rogue Valley Manor, Medford's proposed retire
ment home, after months and months of planning,
finally is in a position to start contracting for space in
the beautiful new building, construction on which
is scheduled to start late this summer. . .
Attractive, four-color brochures telling the details
of the manor and of the occupancy plan which goes
with it, have been printed and are now being dis
tributed. The structure to be built on top of Barneburg
hill in the recently-annexed southwest Medford area
at a cost of some $5,000,000 will be a credit to the
community. It will be the second retirement manor
in the state. The first is
lamette View Manor near Portland.
THE retirement manor is something which we be
lieve will be an increasingly familiar thing on the
American scene, for the
tion is increasing, buch a retirement facility will ap
peal to many thousands of people who have the re
serves and the modest income necessary to obtain
residence.
Rogue Valley Manor, while not sponsored by any
denomination, has on its board of trustees min
isters .of three churches.
THE Salem Capital Journal, in commenting on the
recent news release about the manor, said :
"Medford has set an example that other strategically sit
uated cities, especially Salem, as the state capital, should
follow. It is badly needed for as life expectancy is increas
ing generally, its necessity also increases. It is a much-needed
project for community cooperation and a major one for
the Chamber of Commerce and our churches to initiate for
those entitled to comfort, enjoyment and security in their
'golden age'."
E.A.
Wednesday, February 17, 1957
1 watersheds have
river has gotten close to
heavy low-lying snowpack
will be other floods.
until this valley can get
the highly successful Wil
average age of the popula
Franco Moves One Small Step
Toward Monarchy; Keeps Power
By CHARLES M. McCANN
United Press Correspondent
Generalissimo Francisco Fran
co appears to have moved an
other step toward restoring the
Bourbon mon
archy in Spain.
He seems
also to have
moved a step
toward giving
some of the
sweeping pow
er he has held
for more than
20 years.
Charles mcCsjus , These de
velopments seem indicated by
Franco's drastic reshuffling of
his cabinet, the first since July,
1951.
The representaUon of men who
favor the restoration of the mon
archy is a little stronger in the
new cabinet.
And Franco has provided for
the appointment of a prime min
ister at some future time.
There is every indication, how
ever, that Franco, now 64, in
tends to stay in office for the
forseeable future.
Franco is now his country's
"caudillo"-leader-of the empire,
chief of the state, commander in
chief of the armed forces, prime
minister and head of the falange
political party.
Dictator Sine 1938
He has wielded dictatorial
power ever since he was named
chief of state on Oct. 1, 1936,
two .months after the outbreak
of the civil war, as leader of the
nationalist rebellion against the
leftist-tinged Republican govern
ment. King Alfonso XIII had been,
overthrown in 1931 when the
Republicans won an overwhelm
ing victory in a national elec
tion. Alfonso died in Rome in
1941.
The civil war ended in 1939.
Franco remained head man. On
March 31, 1947, he announced
that Spain was to become a mon
archy again. He appointed a reg
ency council which, in the event
of his own incapacitation or
death, would name a king.
Nominally, the heir to the
throne would be Alfonso's son,
Don Juan, who lives in exile in
Portugal, Spain's next - door
neighbor on the Iberian Penin
sula. But Franco has been groom
ing Juan's son, Don Juan Carlos,
for the throne.
Franco and Don Juan met in
1954. They agreed that Juan Car
los, now 19, should go to Spain
to complete his education an
education pointed toward his
eventual assumption -of the
throne.
Gets Military Training
Juan Carlos is studying now
at the Zaragoza Military Acad
emy. He is being coached by
sDecial tutors in problems of
In the Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
What of the Middle East?
Senate Leader Lyndon John
son, an able and patriotic Dem
crat. says this morning after a
talk with Secretary Dulles that
it looks like the United States
and Israel are moving closer to
agreement on how to get Israeli
troops out. of territory they oc
cupied when Israel went on the
warpath last fall.
Senator Johnson adds:
"The big question is whether
Egypt will go along."
WHAT of Egypt?
' As to that, an important
meeting is on in Cairo this morn
ing. It includes four Arab chiefs
of state President Kuwatly of
Syria, King Hussein of Jordan,
Nasser of Egypt and King Saud
of Saudi Arabia.
King Saud is briefing Nasser
and the rulers of Syria and
Jordan on his recent talks with
President Eisenhower. What he
is saying to them hasn't been
disclosed, but he has indicated
previously that he thinks. Presi
dent Eisenhower's Middle East
policy is not unfair.
flHIS is the point:
-1- Nasser is the Arab trouble
maker in the Middle East. He
can't get where he wants to go
without the help of the other
Arab countries.
Maybe Saud can calm him
down.
ANYWAY
" As long as they go on
talking instead of shooting, there
is hope for a peaceful settlement.
IlHY are we mixing into this
' Middle East mess?
Here is one reason: ' -
Experts of American farm
products had been doing pretty
well up to the time the Suez
ruckus started. But, the depart
ment of agriculture says, U.S.
farm" exports are expected to
DROP during the first half of
1957.
Why?
The agriculture department
says the Suez crisis has trimmed
the pocketbooks of many of our
foreign . customers. SO foregin
purchases of our agricultural
surpluses are falling off.
TTHIS is the nub of the situa
tion:
If we are to remain as pros
perous as we would like to be
we need a peaceful world to
do business with.
That's what we're trying 'to
1' JpB
bring about.
statehood and government un
der Franco's direction. Later he
is to attend the naval and air
force academies.
The idea of the restoration of
the monarchy is not very popu
lar with the leaders of the Fa
lange party. Some of these lead
ers are bitter opponents of the
Prestoration idea. Others believe
that plans could be worked out
by which, under a king, the party
might still be the real power.
There may be a serious clash
at some future time if Franco
decides that the time for a mon
archy has come - or if some-
Matter of Fact
THE GREAT SHAKEUP
Moscow The Soviet govern
ment is about to undertake the
most fundamental and far re-
aching re
o r ganization
of its own
structure that
has been at
tempted in
many years.
This is the real
meaning of
p r o m i se of
further decen
tralization that
Joseph Alsop
emerged from the recent plenum
of the Central Committee of the
Communist Party.
The board outline of the tre
mendous changes now contem
plated was sketched for this re
porter by Nikita S. Khrushchev,
who described them as "absol
utely fundamental." The details
were subsequently filled in in
so far as they have been decided
upon in a two hour interview
with the head of the Gosplan,
the State Planning Commission,
N. K. Baibakov.
"We intend to do away with
the industrial ministries al
together, both at the center and
in the republics," Mr. Khrush
chev told me. "Instead, all in
dustrial enterprises in each ter
ritory of the Soviet Union will
be directed by territorial depart
ments. As for plans, these will
also be drawn up on the spot,
but the Gosplan will examine
and review the plans initially
prepared by the territorial
departments, to see that they
fit with each other from ter
ritory to territory and guarantee
maximum progress and effi
ciency." IN ORDER to understand some
thing of the truly extraordin
ary significance of this seeming
ly mild announcement, it is first
of all necessary to understand
the present organization of the
huge Soviet economy.
In brief, -all of Soviet indus
try is now monolithically or
ganized under the "industrial
ministries" whose scrapping was
revealed by Mr. Khrushchev.
There are scores of them, and in
essence they resemble govern
ment departments much less
than they resemble a General
Motors Corporation controling,
not just half the business in its
industry, but 100 per cent.
The right way, then, to gauge
the meaning of Mr. Khrush
chev's revelation is to imagine
all the industrial part of the
American economy organized in
to a series of super-super-Gen-
eral Motors Corporations, each
with its own vast empire of coal
mining or ferrous metallurgy or
automotive construction or
machine tool building. Then Im
agine the sudden dissolution of
all these " giant industrial mon
oliths, as it were at one stroke
of the pen, and you will have
some idea of the extent of the
contemplated shakeup.
In mere numbers of highly
placed persons affected in the
republican capitals and above all
here in Moscow, the shakeup
goes beyond anything that can
be easily pictured by one hab
ituated to our system of society.
As Mr. Khrushchev boasted.
"Many tens of thousands of
engineers and technicians wiU
be released from office work for
productive work in old and new
enterprises."
e- .
yA N A G ERIALLY, the new
A" system will be far more dis
persed than the old system, in
terms of planning it will be al
most more centralized. Indeed,
one of the points that stand out
most strongly is the actual in
crease of responsibility of the al
ready huge Gosplan organiza
tion.
To form the new basis of the
pyramid, as Mr. Baibakov ex
plained it, the whole area of the
Soviet Union will be divided in
to a number, as yet undeter
mined, of economically coherent
territories. In each territory,
new development center or ter
ritorial department will be
established, having the appropri
ate planning and other branches
and being directed most probab
ly, by a territorial economic
council.
All the enterprises in the ter
ritory, previously controlled by
one industrial ministry of an
other, will come under the ter
ritorial department when it is
established. The Depart ment
wiU be responsible for develop
ing the current and long range
development plans for the ter
ritory as a whole and for each
of its industries. Territorial
plans will be submitted, through
the planning branches of the
republican governments, to the
Gosplan in Moscow, for final re-
thing happens to him wflich
makes the restoration an Im
mediate issue. Army leaders are
strongly monarchlstic. A lot of
army men do not like the Fa
lange. But for the present, Franco
seems to be in no hurry to make
any change in the .governmental
system.
His first step, when he gets
ready, is likely to be the ap
pointment of a prime minister
who would take- over some of
his heavy burdens of govern
ment while leaving him head
of state.
By Joseph Alsop .
vision and coordination men
tioned by Mr. Khrushchev.
DON'T intend to loosen
the strings of the scientists
and researchers on our indust
ries," Mr. Baibakov said.
Therefore major plans or "pro
jects" for all industrial enter
prises will continue to be pre
pared in the innumerable "pro
ject institutes," which are the
foundation of the Soviet plann
ing pyramid. These are now
mainly clustered around the
about-to-be dissolved industrial
ministries. In future, the most
vital project institutes will in
stead be attached to the Gosplan
and the Perv'ukhin organization,
and branch institutes will be
established where appropriate
in the territories say coal pro
pect institutes in the Kuzbas,
Donbas and Karaganda Basin.
In day to day management of
their enterprises, however, enter
prise directors wiU now be more
free than before. As subordinate
parts of great monolithic or
ganizations, enterprise directors
were formerly forced to keep
looking over their shoulders to
wards the1 head office. Now they
themselves will have primary
responsibility, and the territorial
departments will be discouraged
from interference in purely man
agerial problems.
SUCH is the broad outline of
the new departure which is
to change the whole administra
tive and perhaps the economic
map of this country. As explain
ed by Mr. Baibakov, the central,
reason for this new departure
is simply the inability of an
absolutely centralized govern
ment to manage such a large
economy as this.
"Our economy is planned and
wiU always be planned," he said.
"But our economy has now
reached such a size that we here
in the center cannot always see
all the little details. That can
be much better done on the
this statement, as Mr.
Baibakov frankly admitted, was
the inability of the central plan
ning mechanism to combat real
ly successfully the empire-building
tendencies of the industrial
ministries and their subordinate
enterprises. All wish to be self
contained a tractor f a c t o ry
making its own nuts and bolts,
for instance. And economizing
investment by preventing this
impulse towards wasteful self
containment, rati onalizing in
dustry in other ways and achiev
ing the fullest use of local re
sources, all demand locally
based planning.
In short, this extraordinary
development, which will revolu
tionize the planning and man
agerial setup of the second
largest Industrial economy in the
world, is two things at once. It
is both a symptom of Soviet suc
cess in promoting industrial
growth and a proof that this
growth has produced its own
built-in problems of extreme
complexity and difficulty.
1957 New York
Herald Tribune Ine.
House Bill Being
Opposed by Miners
Cave Junction House Bill
319, which would impose a four
per cent tax on the net profit
of all minerals mined in Ore
gon is being protested here by
petition.
A delegation of local miners
and rock collectors will take
the signatures to Salem on
March 4 when the bill comes up
for discussion at a public hear
ing. - The petition, already signed
by more than 100 points out that
the proposed minerals extrac
tion tax would hamper mineral
development in the state. Min
ers in this area are urging action
against the bill as it comes at a
time when renewed interest in
mining may bring new indust
ries into Josephine county.
Husband Delivers Son .
Aboard Speeding Train
Southampton, England (U.R)
A 22-year-old U. S. Air Force
sergeant was the proud father
today of a son he delivered him
self on a speeding express train.
Sgt. Felix Johnston, of Ft
Worth, Tex., was aboard the
London Southampton express
with his 19-year-old wife, El
marie, when she was taken ill
Tuesday night He yanked down
the shades of their compartment
and acted as midwife. Mother
and baby were taken to a
Southampton hospital where
they were reported doing fine.
Eisenhower Now Faced
Decision on Choosing
Successor Nominee
By LYLE C. WILSON
United Press Correspondent
Washington (U.R) The time
is approaching when President
Eisnhower , must come to grips
with another
political deci
sion. He must
make up his
mind w h ether
he wants to
support Vice
President Rich
ard M. Nixon
for the 1960
R e p u b I i can
Lyle c. Wilson nomination.
Perhaps Mr. Eisenhower will
want to shirk that one.
But presidents, like kings,
have responsibilities in common.
One of them is to designate or,
in the case of a king, to produce
a bona fide, unquestioned heir.
A president's responsibility
for an heir is more to his party
t'lan to. the nation and has noth
ing to do wtih blood lines.- It is
a various responsibility," some
times being without substance.
In the case of President Eisen
hower, however, it is real and
substantial.
Old Guard Through
Mr. Eisenhower's responsibil
ity to designate, rather than to
produce, an heir is real and sub
stantial because he is attempting
to build a new party. He and
others are telling the Old Guard
Republicans that thev are
through, their policies outmoded
and their appeal to the voters
going if it has not already gone.
The President has set up the
party of modern Republicanism
an Eisenhower party as clearly
as the New Deal of the early
Communications
Letters to the Editor must bear
the name and address of the writer
although under certain circum
stances the use of 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 conden
sation. Letters submitted for pub
lication must not exceed 400 words
The Nursing Home Problem
To the Editor: This letter is
written in the hope that citizens
in our community may better
understand the reasons for the
petition presented recently to
the Oregon State Welfare Com
mission by the 121 members of
the Oregon Licensed Nursing
Homes, Inc.
Approximately 3,000 aged and
infirm men and women are now
receiving welfare assistance.
Over 2,000 ofi this number are
patients in homes of the nurs
ing homes association.
At the time of the petition the
State Welfare Commission was
paying the following rates to
nursing homes for welfare pa
tient care: Ambulatory patients,
(able to walk) $100 per month;
semi-ambulatory patients $115
per month; wheelchair patients
$135 per month; bedfast patients
$150 per month; bedfast patients
requiring constant nursing care
and medication $180 per month.
Consider these figures for a
moment. The most modest hotel
charges about $4.50 per day for
a guest who is perfectly well.
This does not include all meals,
help with bathing and bathroom
duties, alcohol rubs, sympathe
tic attention to the lonely and
confused old people who look
to nursing home attendants for
everything from reassurance and
affections to hair combing and
new home permanents for elder
ly ladies. This hotel receives $133
per month for a room only.
Nursing Home administrators are
asked to supply all these services
to an ambulatory patient for
$100 per month.
Nursing Home administrators
are facing financial ruin when
they accept welfare patients, and
yet how can they turn them out?
Many of these unfortunate peo
ple have been in the same home
for years. Where will they go?
Their families, when they have
families, will not take them
back, not for twice the remun
eration paid by the state; county
homes cannot possibly accomo
date them, they do not have the
beds or space.
By actual certified cost analy
sis taken over a six-months per
iod (January through June,
1956), in 21 representative Ore
gon nursing homes, the average
cost to nursing home administra
V :(tfe--.Ji
THE HAND
OF HELP
Vn the hour of need . . Is
extended here to all who
grieve, regardless of
race, social position or
financial standing.
C M. Litwiller
For over 22 years, Mr. and
make the final tribute one of
as one of real solace and
"Night or day" dial 4541
runerai
Home
Mountain View Chapel
Hwy. 66 at Normal
Officer 88 N. Main
ASHLAND
We Never Close
1930s was a Roosevelt party.
The Roosevelt party never re
quired an heir to succeed FDR
Mr. Roosevelt alwavs was avail
able and acceptable.
Mr. Eisenhower cannot snlva
this problem as FDR solved his.
Mr. E. will be benched after
Jan. 20, 1961 by an amendment
of the Constitution which for
bids a third term. Like FDR.
Mr. Eisenhower is sponsor of a
new party which seeks to move
party foundations considerably
to the left of the old stand. He
will urgenUy need someone to
carry on to Drevent tho Tt
lican party from shifting back
to its old moorings.
Terrific Pressure Expected
The time is comintr anri faii-w
soon, therefore, when a great
many Republicans will be ex
pecting Mr. Eisenhower in nams.
his man. The pressure for that
win duuq up and become ter
rific. How can the President nam
his choice, however, in view of
his public record? Through the
long 1956 discussion of his vice
presidential running mate, Mr.
Eisenhower ducked a decision
by holding that nomination of a
vice presiaential candidate was
strictly the prerogative of the
Republican National convention.
ine t-resiaent created the im
presion that it would be discour
teous or impertinent for him to
interfere. How much more dis
courteous or impertinent would
ii oe men, tor him to interfere
by designatine his choi fnr un
spot on the. 1960 ticket?
The President's alternatives
are difficult. Shall h norm i o
free convention at the risk of
witnessing the nomination of an
Old Guardsman whn ,, 1,1
strangle the new-born party of
in u u e r n nepuDiicanism? Or,
shall he take charge of the na
tional convention and control It
as many presidents have dona
before him?
tors was determined to be $5.08
per patient day. The average
welfare rate is $4.09 per day, a
net operating loss of 97 cents
each day or approximately $30
per month for each patient.
Over 67 per cent of all Datienta
)in nursing homes are welfare
cases. An average 20 bed home
wiU carry at least 13 welfare
patients. In other words, even
a small 20 bed home is incurring
a monthly loss of approximate
ly $390 plus an additional loss
on the unoccupied beds. (This
average is 10 per cent on a state
wide level). True, the nursing
homes did receive a patient rate
increase of 10 cents per 'day
last November, but this amount
is ludicrously inadequate.
Last December the Nursing
Homes association was forced to
take a drastic measure in order
to awaken the Welfare Commis
sion to the gravity of our situa
tion. By unanimous vote we ap
proved a letter informing the
Welfare Commission that as of
February 1, 1957 all welfare pa
tients in our nursing homes
would be retained at the follow
ing rates: ambulatory patients
$5.25 per day, semi-ambulatory
patients $6 per day; wheelchair
patients $7 per day; bedfast pa
tients $7.75 per day; bedfast pa
tients, requiring constant nurs
ing care and medication $9.25
per day; plus 50 cents per day
for all involuntary or incontin- 1
ent patients. These figures repre
sent a 60 per cent increase over
present rates. They were determ
ined after a thorough analysis
of the findings revealed through
the six months survey made last
year by certified public account
ants and or licensed public ac
countants. The Nursing Homes associa
tion has now agreed to hold in
sbeyance the rate increases
scheduled to take effect Feb. 1.
We are deferring this deadline
so that the Welfare Commission
may have time to request this
additional appropriation through
proper legislative channels.
Erma Milledge,
Milledge Convalescent Home,
12 South Orange st.
Mildred Wilkins,
Medford Convalescent Home,
120 Laurel st.
Claire G. Bringle,
Bringle Nursing Home,
106 South Orange St.,
Medford, Ore. I
Mrs. Litwiller
Mrs. Litwiller have sought to
beauty ond dignity, as well
comfort to those left behind.
Ashland.
7- .-tm- -
"It Is better to know us and not need us,
than to need us and not know us."
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