Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, June 07, 1957, Image 4

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

    FOUR MEDFORD (OREGON)
"Xveryone in Southern Oregon
Readm The Maii Tribune"
abiirca Daily Except Saturday by
MEDFORD PRINTING CO
27-2ft North Fir St Phone 2-4141
ROBERT W RLHl Editnr
HTRB GREY Advert. n Manager
GERALD LATHAM Bujmeu Manager
ERIC AiO-EN JR Managing Editor
EARL H ADAMS City Editor
HARRY CHIP MAN Telegraph Editor
ICHARD JEWETT Sport Editor
OUVE ST ARC HER Society Editor
DALE ER1CKSO.N Circulation Mgr.
An Independent Newspaper
Altered aa second claw matter at
Mediord Oregftn under Act of
March 3 1397
SUBSCRIPTION BATES
By Mali In Advance rVr Cmpy tOc
Dally and Sunday One ywr $15 00
Daily and Sunday Six wiotha 8 00
Daily and Suday Taree oa 4-25
Smrlav Only One vwv 3
B Carrier In Advance Me4fr!
Ashland Central Point Katfie Point.
JackPonvilie Gold Hill Phoenix.
ShadT ovf fogu fever Talent
and on Fnoto? route
Daily and Sunday One Tear $18 00
Dally and Sunday Cne aonti 1-50
Carrier and Dealer 10c ver cony
All Terma Ca h la Advance
CTflHai Paper of the City of Med ford
OfHrlal Paper of Jackson County
ynlted Presa Full Leased Wire""
MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU
OP CIRCULATION
Advertising Representative
WEST-HOLIDAY COMPANY INC
Office In New York Chicago de
trott San Francisco Los Angelea
Seattle Portland St Louia Atlanta
Vancouver B C
RATION A I. E I T 0 I I A i
ASSOCfA'ieN
NEWSPAPEI
B 1 1 S H f S
ASSOCIATION
o' Time
Med ford and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10. 30, SO and
40 years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
Jun 7. 1947 (Saturday)
Henry Bussey and Allen Reed,
both of Ashland, are chosen to
edit the Siskiyou, Southern Ore
gon college, for the coming year.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: The valley
pumpkins, watermelons and can
taloupes are shaping up fine, but
it will take some time for them
to gain rotundity.
20 YEARS AGO
June 7. 1937 (Monday)
Measurement of Jackson coun
ty farms listed for benefits un
der the soil conservation act is
begun today with A. C. Jetley,
Eugene, engineer in charge.
Forty CCC enrollees of head
quarters detachment have been
discharged as members to accept
new jobs as civilian employees
at district headquarters.
D YEARS AGO
June 7. 1927 (Tuesday)
Water users of Hopkins Lat
eral, which includes a large area
formed by more than 200 ranch
ers indicate they will fight pro
posal to increase water rates
from $2.50 per acre to $6.50.
M. L. Ryckman, superintend
ent of hatcheries for the state
game commission, and manager
of Diamond lake resort, reports
east entrance road to lake is
open.
40 YEARS AGO
June 7. 1917 (Thursday)
City council favors rock pile
for drunks to work out fines
who cannot pay them and en
forcement of the state bone dry
law.
Helen Dugan. 10. in fourth
grade of Long Mountain school
near Eagle Point, wins first place
in Jackson county writing con
test. Aid's Twr LQ.?
or ten correct Is superior;
ttvHk or eight Is excellent; five or
six is food.
1. Was the trireme, a warship,
invented by the ancient Egyp
tians. Greeks, or Romans.
2. A Portuguese man-of-war is
,'i iip. sea animal, or bird?
3. Bible: Which character sym
bolizes old age?
Who was inon a. the
'"March King"?
5. Coal oil is extracted from
coal; true or false?
6. Coral belongs to the ani
mal, vegetable, or mineral king
dom? 7. Is pentolite a form of elec
tric light, a high explosive, or a
structure on top of a tall build
ing? 8. The Bohemian pianist and
composer of the light operas
"The Firefly." "High Jinks."
"Katinka." Rose Marie," "The
Vagabond King' was R f F 1?
9. What is the correct pronun
ciation of Puerto Rico?
10. 'Life is real: Life s ear
rest:, And the grave is not its"
what?
Answers: 1. Egyptians, t. lei
animal. 3. Methuselah. 4. John
Philip Sousa. 5. False. It is made
from petroleum. 6. Anial. f.
High explosive. 8. Rudolf Frienl.
9. Pwhere-toe-ree-coe. 1. "Gai"
Longfellow.
EX-CPERA SINGER DIE
New York iW Miss Ella
Flesch. 54. dramatic soprano and
former member of the Metro
politan Opera, died Thursday
after a long illness.
MAIL TRIBUNE
Editorial Correspondence . . .
Rice Mountain Lodge, Paul Smiths, N. Y., June 3rd: Fortu
nately for Billy Graham it takes many kinds of people to make
a world. If it didn't, and more terrible, if the world were made up
of the type of genus homo represented by the undersigned, Billy
Graham would be making small wages as a third-rate ham actor
in Hollywood, instead of eating caviar and cucumber sandwiches
at the Stork club after his daily killing at his Madison Square
"Medicine SHOW."
We have to admit we did not attend any of Billy's perform
ances while in New York but we did read extracts from his
exhortations which we record with shame our favorite NY
newspaper, the Herald Tribune, printed each issue on the front
page, and is still doing so.
That was enough for us.
We admit a certain prejudice, just as we have admitted a
certain prejudice against Richard Nixon, and for essentially the
same reason. They are (to us) basically the same type, namely:
they haven't a sincere, honest conviction in their heads, they
are both phonies and frauds, neither giving a hoot about prin
ciple in this world or the next, but their only GENUINE con
cern is THEMSELVES, and particularly their place in the upper
income brackets.
That is this department's judgment of Messrs. Graham and
Nixon. We don't expect everyone to share it, but we do find a
certain pleasure In expressing it.
We don't believe Billy Graham believes in a nether-world
Devil and a golden-paved Heaven any more than Richard Nixon
believes that T.V.A. is "creeping socialism" or that his S18.000
gift from the L.A. Tycoons was SOLELY for the benefit of hard
pressed California taxpayers.
In short, they are both essentially fakirs, one pursuing an
evangelical career and the other a political career solely for
what profit political, financial, social and otherwise they can
get out of it.
We just don't like fakirs period!
see
Billy Graham constantly expresses his undying devotion to
Christianity, but in reality, Billy is no more CHRIST-like than
Buffalo Bill. He is a shrewd promoter of Billy Graham and is
adroit in capitalizing on the fears and frailties of mass human
nature, not so much fighting the Devil as using him as club
a threat of torture and damnation from which"the wrought
up auditor can only escape by joining the procession to Billy's
double-gilded altar.
Again it is nice work if you can get it. And handsome and
histrionic Billy Graham HAS it.
It is the same with Richard Nixon only in a different field.
Nixon talks a great deal about American democracy and his
dedication to the public welfare; but he cares no more about
either except as they give him votes than he does about
spending his remaining days in a monastery cell. Like Billy,
Dick is a shrewd promoter of Richard Nixon. And like Billy,
he is to date making a great success of it financially and otherwise.
m
What is the answer? A certain shrewd Yankee who lived
in Bridgeport, Connecticut, not far from here, gave the answer
many years ago. When asked to explain his great success he
answered simply but very much to the point, quote:
"A sucker is born every minute.".
Speaking of "suckers," the Mohawk Indians who sold the
Adirondacks for one fourth of a' cent an acre to the white
"invaders" might be so classified. They were excellent fighters.
but poor business men. The British crown got a cut to award
title which amounted to 2 cents an acre so the early English
settlers got their estates at less than 3 "cents an acre. At the close
of the French-Indian war the crown lands remaining were given
to the veterans of that conflict at the rate of 50,000 acres for
each officer, and 5,000 acres for each private. There were not
many of them however, for in
sides did most of the fighting.
In reading over the history of that period it is interesting
to note how true to type the upper class Englishmen were. Half
a dozen of them, for example, bought up millions of acres in this
region, and proceeded to lay out baronial estates. They revived
the cherished feudal system, imported slaves from the West
Indies, leased small tracts to their white servants and retainers,
and with all sorts of wild game abounding, lived the life of a
Colonial Colonel Riley. With ten beaver skins buying a cask
of rum, and five a muzzle loader, they lived high, wide and
handsome until the radicals of that time, sometimes known as
"embattled farmers," decided (as the Communist of today) that
the existing government should be overthrown, and a new and
better one (better particularly for the rank and file) should be
established.
Naturally these Adirondack "barons" sided with. England, but
did everything they could to thwart and defeat the revolutionary
Reds," but when the latter won, they not only lost everything they
had, but were lucky not to lose their heads .
The Rockefeller family now owns a portion of one of those
baronial estates, thousands of acres and scores of ponds and lakes,
but the present generation for some reason not exdained to the
undersigned as yet, seldom visit there. "Sic transit gloria mundi."
R.W.R.
Graduation - Commencement
We have thus far been spared the agonies which
must face the man who makes a commencement ad
dress. "What," he must ask himself, "what can I say
that is new and interesting and vital and important
on an occasion which is of such concern to those in
volved? Hasn't it all been said before?"
Yes, probably it has, one way or another. ,
But the commencement speaker, despite this han
dicap, has an important role to play, for graduation
is a high point in the life of most young people, and
it is an occasion when a message of inspiration and
high idealism, coupled with a warning about practi
cal realities, is both necessary and appropriate.
IT IS well for us all to be reminded, from time to
time, that man cannot live by bread alone, and
neither can he live without bread.
It is this marriage of the things of the soul, spirit,
heart and mind with the things of the body and en
vironment which sets man apart from other living
creatures.
Too much emphasis on one can lead to asceticism
or other-worldliness ; too much on the other to exag
gerated materialism or hedonism. Only in a healthy
balance of the two can most of us, who labor to keep
the wheels turning and mankind moving forward,
find our success and our reward.
TTHE job of finding this happy compromise is a
task that no man can perform for another; each
must find the way himself.
And the occasion which we celebrate for our high
school seniors at this time of year is both a gradua
tion from one plane of life to another and a com
mencement of life in a broader field, where the di
rection signs are not so clear, the way not so smooth,
the decisions more difficult.
Graduation-commencement is a transition between
a time when responsibilities are light, and when
Friday. June 7. 1957 I
the conflict the Indians on both
'llSTttf.gErTr. DMte 1AAC HFff
&ps- turn; trwABYw7?ym7VPM,e&rr
Basic Changes Seen
Result of Program
By ROGER W. BABSON
Babson Park, Mass. Skyrock
eting labor costs have forced
employers to resort to unprece
dented techno-
logical re
search. This re
search is teach
ing employers
that they can
get on without
many routine
workers. Even
with the pres
ent high em-
Roger w Babson ployment level,
this should sound a warning note
to high school and college gradu
ates. Out of electronics has come
the basis for vast new develop
ments in automation. A sim
ple example of what l means
is the "electric eye" which
opens doors at the proper mo
ment without being actually
touched by anybody. Another il
lustration is the record-changer
and turntable on our phono
graphs, including the automatic
stopping device. Of a more com
plicated nature are guided mis
siles that can chase and over
take an airplane without any
human guidance.
This same principle of elec
tronics is being applied today
to operation of a manufacturing
plant by a dozen employees, in
contrast to the several hundred
formerly needed. And remem
ber that these can be women as
well as men since their chief
duty will be merely to press
push buttons. Labor in general
is not aware of the vast extent of
the changes ahead. Employers,
it is true, will always need hu
man help, but not for a great
many present-day jobs. Their re
quirements will turn more and
more toward the intelligence
and judgment of graduates with
a high I.Q.
New Approach to Warfare
Russia has always thought in
terms of massed armies to over
run Jturope when the time
seemed ripe for an attack. How
ever, with the Free Nations of
Europe learning to use nuclear
weapons, wars are swiftly mov
ing onto a push-button basis.
The great masses of Russia.
China, and the Moslem nations
will be only a nuisance to clutter
up a battlefield under such con
ditions. Premier Nehru recog
nizes this, and that is why he is
so eager to remain neutral. Elec
tronics and the atom will cause
tremendous changes not only in
warfare but in education!
I envy our young people who
are to graduate this month. They
will have far more opportunities
than we oldsters had. I wish the
schools and colleges would wake
up to these changes. Better pen
sion off the professors who can
teach only the orthodox old-
fashioned courses, instead of
forcing these courses on our
young people so that they can
get a degree.
Character Will Tell
I predict that the above
changes will mean that young
graduates will need good char
acter more than ever before. Bet
ter training in homes, churches,
and schools will be absolutely
essential in this new electronic
push-button age. Wise are the
young people who take evening
courses now to prepare them for
the better jobs ahead.
The typical salesgirl is in the
process of becoming obsolete.
Before long she will be replaced
60 per cent by self-service coun
ters, 15 per cent by push-button
vending machines, and 25 per
cent by highly paid, intelligent
salesmen whose job will be to
secure new customers . ftew
qualifications are a must for the
June graduates who hope to get
good jobs. The field of adver
Ik ...
they become heavier; between youth and maturity.
It is, naturally enough, a time for celebration and
light-heartedness. This is as it should be.
But if we had a piece of advice to offer a gradu
ate it would be that from now on the stakes are big-
rroi- on1 Vin rrnmn ic tnno-TlPr T.l'fp Will ha mftl'O rll'ffi.
cult. But the rewards are
Ct-i ,-. t5-- A ,J fUrtTr'i-o n-riTfVi
require. E.A.
RPPnCP TUATM1M ' TT'a
tising and selling is still in its
infancy, and marvelous oppor
tunities exist for those willing
to train properly for it.
What the Changes Mean
(1) Manual and routine labor
will graaually become obsolete.
(2) Those who cannot readily
learn new skills will be kept on
at reduced hours, but with the
same take-home pay. This will
boost the Do-it-yourself indus
tries! (3) Only the serious and intel
ligent employees will get raises
There will be no limit on salaries
for those with the necessary
character, brains, initiative and
loyalty.
(4) Our great problem will
not be to raise crops, build
homes, or manufacture goods
but to get people to buy. Hence,
instead of subsidizing farmers,
we may eventually subsidize
merchants and salesmen.
(5) I advise young men to be
come expert machinists instead
of lawyers, trained outside sales
men instead of inside pencil-
pushers, and after graduation
to attend night school to pre
pare for the "new age."
Lowry on Two
Interim Committees
Salem State Senator Philip
B. Lowry, Medford, has been ap
pointed to two legislative in
terim committees to conduct
studies and report to the 1959
legislative assembly. The ap
pointment was made by Senate
President Boyd R. Overhulse.
Seven other senate interim com
mittees also were named.
Lowry, a Republican, will
serve on the taxation committee,
which has been allowed a $25,
000 expense appropriation, and
cn a committee to make a spe
cial study of the effect of already-enacted
legislation. This
committee will have no funds.
Lowry also was a member of
the 1955 taxation interim com
ittee. Speaker of the House Pat
Dooley said he has not yet de
cided on the bulk of his appoint
ments, although several repre
sentatives have been named to
the House highways -and taxa
tion interim committees.
District Ranger Plans
To Attend Jamboree
Cave Junction Ray Ellstrom,
district ranger at the Illinois
Valley Ranger station, and his
son Bob will attend the Boy
Scout Jamboree at Valley Forge
this summer. Ellstrom will go as
one of the leaders from Bend,
his former home.
Others from the valley who
will make the cross-country trek
are Noel Turner, Carl Hammer
Jr., Loren Meredith and Scout
master Eugene Pulley. They will
attend the pre-Jamboree training
camp near Medford June 22-23.
American Students Plan
Climb in South America
Lima, Peru IP) Two visiting
American college students said
today they will leave next
Thursday for Huarez, capital of
Ancash. province, to attempt the
ascent of the tallest of Peru's
White mountains.
Tom McCormick, 23, of Stan
ford university, and Richard
Didrick. 19. of Arizona univer
sity, said two other Americans
Virgil D. Day and N. B.
Clinch ' will arrive in a few
days to join them in the climb.
Yale University, founded in
1701, was first known as the
Collegiate school. It was changed
to Yale college is 1718 after
Elihu Yale, who gave it $2,000.
bigger and more satisfy-
tVin DvtrQ e-f-fnv fVliTr
H-Test Hazards, Japanese Trial
Of U.S. Soldier, Hold
By CHARLES M. McCANN
United Press Correspondent
The possibility that radioac
tive fallout resulting from nu
clear weapons tests may harm
children of fu
ture g e nera
tions was a ma
jor topic for
discussion over
much of the
world this
was
gree-
m e n t among
Charles McCano S C ientistS.
Some asserted that the danger
was sufficiently grave to war
rant the suspension of all tests
of nuclear weapons.
Others, admitting that there
must always be some danger,
said it was negligible.
President Eisenhower and
British Prime Minister Harold
Macmillan, leaders of the two
Western countries which have
developed the H-bomb, agreed it
would be a good thing if the
tests could be "nded.
But they agreed also as did
many eminent scientists that
it would be risking disaster to
stop the tests while the danger
of an attack by Soviet Russia
still existed.
As Eisenhower put it, this dan
ger can be eliminated only when
it is possible to reach an agree
ment with Russia, backed by an
air-tight system of inspection,
for a ban on nuclear weapons.
In the United States, the
plight of a 21-year-old soldier
from Ottawa, 111., became a ma
jor issue.
Army specialist Third Class
William S. Girard was on duty
on a firing range near Tokyo
last January 30. His orders were
to keep off persistent Japanese
FW' jj There
H'Vifi i-s-Mj sharp disa
ortimunications
Letters to the Editor must bear the name and address ot the writer, although
under certain circumstances the use of a pen name or initial tor publication
is permissible. The Mail Tribune reserves the right to edit all letters with
view to clarification and condensation. Letters submitted for publication must
not exceed 400 words.
Support of Schools
To the Editor: I wish to recog
nize the support that the people
ot jacKson county have given
their schools.
This continuing support has
been expressed in many ways; in
the strong affirmative votes on
school budgets, support of de
sirable legislation, promotion of
youth activities, development of
an outstanding health program,
establishment of the Child Guid
ance Clinic and the Child Deten
tion Home, and in the general
concern for the betterment of
our schools and community.
The active participation of in
dividuals, press, radio, television
and many groups, including the
P.T.A., School Boards Associa
tion, service clubs, churches,
professional and civic organiza
tions and other governmental
units, has played an important
role in providing a better com
munity in which to live and
work.
However, there are still a large
number who do not participate
in school elections. In this re
spect, we have the responsibility
of using all the means at our
command to furnish information
in clear and plain languagfe so
that our people can have an un
derstanding of our problems and
procedures.
Some of the pre-school in-serv
ice programs for this fall will
direct attention to effective
means of reporting to parents
and the general public. It shall
be our purpose to cooperate with
the schools to carry out this pro
gram during the entire year.
It is our desire to merit this
continuing support and coopera
tion by striving to do the best
possible job in our classrooms
and in administering our schools.
Alf B. Mekvold,
County School
Superintendent.
Portland GSA Office
To Be Closed June 30'
Portland IW The Portland
office of the federal govern
ment's General Services Admin
istration will be closed June 30,
assistant regional GSA Commis
sioner Robin L. Small said today.
Small said the closure will
coincide with his discharge
from the position. Notice was
sent by William A. Holloway of
Seattle who became new GSA
commissioner for Oregon, Wash
ington, Montana, Idaho and Al
aska two months ago.
North Hiway 99 Half Way Between Medford and Central Point
OPEN UNTIL 10 P.M. INCLUDING SUNDAYS
WEEK END SPECIALS
Have You Tried
Near Beer?
Botne
civilians who trespassed on the
range to salvage empty shell
cases for sale as scrap metal.
As a warning, Girard fired an
empty cartridge case from his
grenade launcher. He was mere
ly trying to frighten off a group
of trespassers. But he fatally
wounded a Japanese woman.
Under the "status of forces"
agreement which covers juris
diction over American soldiers
stationed in some foreign coun
tries. Japanese authorities de
manded the right to prosecute
Girard. American authorities
TV Program Points
Out Tax Bite Growth
To Average Citizen
By LYLE C. WILSON
United Press Correspondent
Washington (IPI The third
birthday of "The $64,000 Ques
tion" should not pass without a
reminder that
thoughtful citi
zens have been
getting a sugar
coated tax les
son from the
popular TV
program.
It is a les
son in what
the income tax
at current rates
Lyle C. Wilson
does to middle and upper brack
et taxpayers. "The $64,000 Ques
tion" early got a lot of free and
interesting advertising on its tax
aspects in such unlikely places
as the columns of the Wall Street
Journal, the editorial pages of
The Saturday Evening Post and
the monthly letter of New York's
First National City Bank.
White Cane Sale
To the Editor: Recently the
Jackson Council of the Blind
held its annual souvenir white
care sale on the streets of Med
ford. We thank everyone who
bought the little souvenir canes,
or stopped to inquire what they
were for. We greatly appreciate
the interest shown by the people
and also the kindness of the
Navy Mothers who stopped the
sale of their flowers so that we
could go ahead with our sale.
We appreciate the news cover
age given to our Council by the
Mail-Tribune, not only for the
sale but also throughout the
year.
Many people do not know that
the White Cane is the "eye" of
the blind. When it is held out
the law states that the motorist
must stop and allow the carrier
of the white cane to cross the
street in safety. So the purpose
of the souvenir white cane sale
is -is much to acquaint the public
with this law as it is to raise
funds to carry on the work of
the local and State Councils as
well as the National Federation
of the Blind.
Again, we thank you!
Sam Evans, Chairman,
Souvenir White Cane Sale.
Editorial
Comment
STEWART REAPPOINTMENT
Quite a number of county as
sessors were gunning for Sam
Stewart, member and chairman i
of the State Tax Commission, I
whose term was due to expire ,
June 4th. Stewart has been driv-'
ing hard for reappraisal of prop- ;
erty over Oregon, and stirred up j
opposition from some assessors ,
who felt he was too aggressive.
Jealous of their prerogatives,
they felt he was crowding their ,
preserves.
In spite of this open opposi-1
tion, Stewart was reappointed
and Governor Holmes deserves
credit for resisting the pressures.
The reappointment confirms at
state levels the policy of reap
praisal and equalization of as
sessments which the tax commis
sion has long favored and which 1
Legislative Assemblies have en
dorsed. Oregon Statesman. Sa
lem.
Watermelons
r
c
CITY
lb.
Spotlight
first agreed to, then refused e.e
demand. 0
The State and Defense depart
ments, with Eisenhower' at,
proval, finally decided that ja
pan should try Girard.
The decision brought ahUt-f
congressional and popular rette
tion of American soldiers to tot
eign courts.
Eisenhower expresses! emfl
dcnce that Girard woulsj be
treated fairly. If he were 1H,
the President said, the Uit4
States would take diplomnO
action.
The First National had aa em
phatic point of view about in
come tax rates. It was that th
personal rates were confiscatory
to the point of discouraging in
dividuals from taking risks to
make more money.
Some Interesting Calculation
Back there when the TV pro
grams were just beginning, th
bank distributed a letter which
said, in part:
"The program has provided a
vivid illustration of the way
confiscatory personal income tax
rales stack the cards aunst risk
taking ventures."
The bank calculated that a
contestant who was single and
had an income of S4.000 annual
ly would have to win $448,711.11
to acquire S64.000 of actual,
take-home prize money.
A single person with $4,000 of
annual income would be as
sessed $15,400 in taxes if he
reached the $32,000 winning lev
el. This would reduce his actual
prize money to $16,600. If this
contestant tool the last, long
step, doubling his $32,000 into
$64,000 the additional tax biU
would be $23,292. The take
home prize would be increaassl
by only $8,708.
"Thus," the banlc conclude!,
"he is risking tn assured $1V
000 for a chanc to win an ad
ditional $8,708."
The banlc argute! that th
same tax situation dhich dis
courages contestant from reach-
ing from $.2,000 to $14,001 at---plies
also to businessmen with
venture capital who rfuC to
risk it by reason of ti; limita
tions on their poiibl aiR.
The Poet's Commeat
The Saturday Ivenin Fact p
marked that:
"What high taxstian Is ioinf
to the free enterprise systeit is
a subiect which is about s in
teresting to the avTfe mn su
a treatise on medieval rieta-
physics."
The Post contended, ho'ver.
that the famous TV show would
cause millions of persons to
give some thought to the efttft
of the tax laws on business."
About the time this editorial
writer and others were guessing
that the TV show would con
vince the voters that taxes wer)
too high on the well-to-do, ther
was a rundown on the tax rec
ord of the past 20 years. Th
trend was the other way fc-it-.
. i : i : . i '
taxes Mtrauuy uuiiuuk uii ine
big and little fellow alike. Th,
record showed that in the 20
years from 19.36, the govern
ment's take from Individual in
come taxpayers had multiplied
64 times.
MONEY
At Crater Finance you may
borrow for any worthwhile
purpose on your
FURNITURE - AUTO
SALARY
and repay In monthly Install
ments. You may chooso the
terms most suitable to you
up to 24 months.
Loans may be paid In ad
vance or in full at any time.
Crater Finance
CORPORATION
135 Pine St. - Central Point
Phone NO 4-1273
Frank Wilkinson, Mgr.
Convenient Parking
MR!: El
t) o
GROUND
BEEF
$3 00
lbs. i
C
' o