Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, February 05, 1958, Image 4

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    FOUR MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE
MEDFOKD-jjITRIBUNE
"Everyone In Southern Oregon
Published Daily except Saturday by
MEDFORD PRINTING CO
as North Fir St. Ph. SP.2-6141
poPTST W RX7HL. Editor
HERB GREY. Advertising Manager
GERALD LATHAM. Business Mgr.
ERIC ALLEN. JR Managing Editor
EARL H. ADAMS. City Editor
HARRY CHIPMAN, Teleg. Editor
RICHARD JEWETT, Sports Editor
OLIVE ST ARCHER, Society Editor
DALE ERICKSON, Circulation Mgr.
An Independent Newspaper
Entered as second class matter at
Medford Oregon under Act of
March 3. 1897
; SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Mai! In Advance: Copy 10c.
Daily and Sunday 1 year $15.00
Daily and Sunday 6 mos. 8.00
Daily and Sunday 3 mos. 4.25
Sunday Only One year $4.20
By Carrier In Advance Medford
Ashland. Central Point. Eagle
Point. Jacksonville. Gold Hill.
Phoenix. Shady Cove. Rogue Riv
er Talent, and on motor routes:
Dally and Sunday 1 year $18.00
Dailv and Sunday 1 mo. 1.50
Carrier and Dealers copy 10c
All Terms Cash in Advance
Official Paper of City of Medford
JHialPaperof Jackson Connty
United Press Full Leased Wire
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OF CIRCULATION
Advertisine Reoresentative :
WEST-HOLIDAY CO., INC, Of
fices in New York. Chicago, De
troit, San Francisco. Los Angeles.
Seattle. Portland. St. Louis, At
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NEWSPAPER
PUBLISHERS
ASSOCIATION
NATIONAL EDITORIAL
Iassoc-Tatccxn
U
flight 'o Time
Bedford and Jackson County
Bistory frcm the files of The
Wail Tribune 10. 20, 30 and
SO years ago.
lf YEARS AGO
Feb. 5, 1948 (Thursday)
-Residents to vote on $400,-
0Q0 bond issue for improve
ment of the city water system
aa special election Feb. 24.
3t is important to the Unit
ed States' future security that
it; mold Japanese friendship
by helping them rebuild their
country, W. H. Fluhrer tells
Kiwanis club members.
20 YEARS AGO
Feb. 5. 1938 (Sunday)
-Senator A. E. Reames an
nounces that during his ab
sence in Washington, D. C,
his law business would be in
charge of Medford Attorney
Frank P. Farrell.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: "Wed
nesday was Ground Hog day,
but no definite knowledge is
at hand whether or not the
gentleman saw his shadow.
39 YEARS AGO
Feb. 5. 1928 (Sunday)
Membership campaign is
underway to swell ranks of
the Medford post of the Am
erican Legion to 500 mem
bers. ;Community hospital shows
33 per cent growth over pre
vious year, according to di
rectors. 40 YEARS AGO
Feb. 5. 1918 (Tuesday)
-The Beaver Portland Cem
ent plant at Gold Hill starts
operations after shutting
down last month for reorgani
zation and repairs.
CFrom local and personal
column: "Registration of all
German aliens over 14 years
old in the Medford area is
continuing, according to the
pplice chief."
What's Your I.Q.?
f4ine or ten correct it superior;
seven or eight is excellent; five or
six is good.
;1. If you broke your cla
viqle, would that be your col
lar bone, arm, or nose?
2. Bible: The story of Dan
iel; in the lions den appears in
hich book?
S3. Alaska is about two, three
oi four, times the size of
"fexas?
Zi. Is Red Dog the name of
aTfish, card game, or Austra
lian bush dog?
5. Name the author of the
book "Grapes of Wrath."
6. Is milk, beef, or wheat
t$e largest single source of
ItS. farm income?
-7. What book do the Gide
ons place in hotel rooms?
Z8. What nickname and bur
glar's tool (for prying opin
windows) are spelled the
same?
Z9. Which cities in Minne
sota are nicknamed the "Twin
Cities"?
S 10. Was Japan atom
bomber once, twice, or thrice?
; Answers: 1. Collar bone. 2.
Daniel. 3. About two limes
le size. 4. Type of card game.
X John Steinbeck. 6. Milk. 7.
The Bible. 8. "Jimmy". 9. St.
Paul and Minneapolis. 10.
Twice.
PSYCHOANALIST DIES
;New York (IP) Dr. Philip
Raphael Lehrman, 62, a pio
neer in American psycho
analysis, died at his home
Tuesday. He was clinical pro
fessor of neurology and psy
chiatry at the New York Uni-versity-Bellevue
Medical Cen
ter and visiting psychiatrist at
Bellevue hospital.
Klamath Solutiom
One of the great shames in United States
history is the manner in which this country's first
occupants, the Indians, have been treated.
The white man's record is spotted with
broken treaties and broken promises, with cruelty
and double dealing with the people whose first
and greatest offense was to be technologically
inferior to the invaders.
In recent years, as the passions engendered
by battle have cooled, and as the record has
become more generally known, the U.S. has had
a tendency to do a bit better by the Indians
although just how much is still open to question.
A LL this is history, but it is history that is still
"being wrritten.
Across the hills in Klamath county there is
a problem which is now being -debated, not only
there but also in Washington, D.C., and which
concerns both the future of the Klamath Indian
tribe, and the economic
for many vears to come.
There are many complexities to the problem,
but in its simplest terms
a balance between what
to expect in simple justice from the government,
on the one hand, and a protection of the state's
economy, on the other.
THE Klamath tribe is
of federal guardianship, as are some others. This
involves an end to the reservation, and payment
to individual Indians of their pro rata share of
the assets of the tribe, which consist largely of
a huge stand of prime Ponderosa pine, one of the
largest and most valuable
But the problems involved in such a move
are considerable.
Some of the Indians
do not. The tribe is divided approximately 50-50
on the question.
And how to pay the Indians their share of
the assets?, The forest, which is valued at more
than $118,000,000, is not the sort of thing one can
put on the market one day, sell the next and
that's that.'
fT COULD, presumably, be sold piecemeal to
the highest bidder. But if this were done, with
some four billion board feet of timber being
dumped on the market all at once, the price
would more than likely
the Indians of the values to which they are
entitled.
In addition, such a procedure would violate
a principle which, through the years, has come
to be a cardinal one in timber management that
of sustained yield, preserving continuing values
in the industry which furnishes the biggest pay
roll in the state.
No, the people of the state cannot afford to
have thrown away this asset in such haphazard
fashion. Nor would it be justice to the Indians.
,
IXT'HAT, then, remains?
' There' is a possibility that some of the
large timber companies could buy large portions
of the timber tract, with a guarantee that they
be harvested on a sustained yield basis.
But there is no guarantee that they will make
any such purchase, or, if they did, there is no
guarantee that the , tracts they were willing to
purchase would be of sufficient size to save the
major values of the reservation.
In addition, there are the ticklish problems
of the Indians' fishing and hunting rights, and
the problem of what to do with the other parts
of the reservation, including grazing lands, farm
lands and marshlands (which are natural wild
life areas).
THE remaining possibility is federal purchase
of the reservation, and for it to be adminis
tered under the Forest Service policy of maxi
mum beneficial use, with the rights of the Indians
to be worked out while the values of the reserva
tion are being preserved.
Both Senator Richard L. Neuberger and Sec
retary of the Interior Fred Seaton have proposed
legislation to this end. The bills differ in some
instances with each other, but both recognize the
desirability of federal purchase over other meth
ods'. The big question, of course, is whether the
Congress can be persuaded to make an invest
ment of the size necessary probably more than
$121,000,000 at a time when economy in non
defense areas is being stressed.
OEARINGS on this subject are under way in
Washington this week. We hope they gain
attention from the members of congress, for only
if they are fully informed as to the ticklish and
difficult problems involved can they be hoped to
make an intelligent decision.
The federal government owes to the Indians
what is rightfully theirs. They owe them not only
the individuals' pro rata share of the tribal assets,
but, perhaps more important, they owe them the
chance to become educated, responsible members
of society something which so far has been
largely impossible through the reservation set-up.
And, while it is largely a federal problem, the
government owes this state the consideration of
not doing something which could badly damage
the local economy by destroying a tremendous
asset.
At the same time the obligation to preserve,
Wednesday. February S. 1958
well-being of this area
it boils down to finding
the Indians have a right
one of those the govern-
left in the U.S.
want termination ; others
drop sharply, depriving
'AM3QDY WANNA PLAY S0MS
Syrian-Egyptian
Merger is Threat
To King Hussein
By HAROLD GUARD
United Press Correspondent
London (IP) The merger
of Egypt and Syria into the
United Arab Republic is a
matter of deep concern for
King Hussein of Jordan.
Reports from Amman indi
cate Hussein already has in
itiated moves for a "King's
Union" with Iraq and Saudi
Arabia to counter the "Re
publican Union" of Egypt and
Syria.
Jordan's influential news
paper Falastin urged strong
ly, in an editorial, union with
Iraq. There were reports that
Hussein had called for a "sum
mit" meeting with King Saud
and King Feisal to discuss
their policy toward the Egypt
Syria merger.
Favorite "Whipping Boy"
Perhaps no other Arab state
has greater reason to look
askance at the union than
Jordan. Hussein has been the
favorite "whipping, boy" of
Egyptian and Syrian propa
gandists. Egyptians and Sy
rians were behind the at
tempted coup d'etat against
Hussein last year.
Now, some observers point
out, Jordan could provide the
land link between the Egypt
ian and Syrian parts of the
United Arab Republic.
Authoritative quarters did
not expect three kings to be
critical of the Egypt-Syria
move toward Arab unity. But
none of them was expected to
fall in with the idea of feder
ation under Egyptian Presi
dent Gamal Abdel Nasser.
It was believed that the
trio would move cautiously
because both Saudi Arabia
and Iraq depend on Syria for
the safe passage of their oil.
From this angle it was ex
pected that the big oil com-.
panies would step up their
plans to avoid pipelines over
Arab soil by linking Persian
lines to Turkey at Iskenderun.
In London oilmen said the
Kirkuk oilfields in northern
Iraq could be joined to this
system. They said the big com
panies were expected now to
press for a quick decision.
Turkey and Iran already
have reached agreement on
the route and on Persian cred
its to Turkey for building it.
King Saud was believed to
have other reasons for cau
tion. His court was understood
to be split between those who
favor and those who oppose
present policies in Egypt and
Syria.
Hussein was also said to
have reasons to tread careful
ly. Jordanian exiles in Syria
were known to be maintain
ing contact with Communists
inside Jordan.
Hussein's former chief of
staff, Col. Ali Abu - Nuwar
who led the abortive coup d'
etat against the king last year,
is in Cairo, urging Jordanians
to go the same way as Egypt
and Syria.
King Feisal of Iraq also was
said to have its ticklish prob
lems in northern Iraq where
this asset for generations in the future is a press
ing one.
Both principles and practicalities are involved,
and we hope the Congress can be made to see
that federal ownership is the only true solution.
JF, HOWEVER, Congress won't budge, those
who know how serious the problem is should
be prepared to step in with an alternative plan
to salvage what can be saved, with a maximum
of benefit to all concerned. And this is tough
But it is also urgent, for it the existing termi
nation bill is allowed to stand, on Aug, 1 it will
become effective; the reservation will be broken
up, and everyone will lose the Indians, the
lumber industry as a whole, the federal govern
ment, and future generations of Oregonians.
" E.A.
THREET-HANOEO fiSKET0All?'
the common frontier maic.es it
imperative to maintain friend
ship with Syria.
Independence "Vital"
Britain and the United
States have both declared the
independence and integrity of
Jordan to be "vital."
In August last year the
United States sent its Sixth
Fleet to the east Mediterran
ean to support Hussein when
he was being threatened by
his left-wing opponents egged
on by Egypt and Syria.
British Foreign Secretary
Selwyn Lloyd and U. S. Sec
retary of State John Foster
Dulles agreed during their
Washington talks last year
that Hussein should be sup
ported. It was against this back
drop that the three Arab kings
were expected to take stock
of their position and decide
what to do keeping in mind
that Jordan, Lebanon and
Israel are the three countries
astride the overland routes
between Egypt and Syria.
Many Favor
Retaining KOAC
Salem (IP) The first of a
series of hearings on whether
the state should sell state-
owned radio station KOAC at
Corvallis was held here Tues
day afternoon.
Most of the 50 persons who
appeared were strongly In fa
vor of retaining the station
rather than selling it and de
voting full time and money
to educational television
alone.
Dean J. W. Sherburne of
the General Extension Divi
sion of the State System of
Higher Education said there
was no doubt the station
would be continued this year,
but that the future was beset
with economic difficulties.
Superintendent of Public
Instruction Rex Putnam noti
fied the group he was well
satisfied with the station's
programming for the public
schools.
The Oregon audio - visual
association strongly opposed
the sale.
Secretary of State Mark
Hatfield presented a state
ment in which he said he felt
not enough time had elapsed
during simultaneous program
ming of KOAC-radio and
KOAC-TV to make a deter
mination. Hatfield suggested that the
radio station be continued
through the biennium so that
the relative values of televi
sion and radio could be de
termined. Further hearings were
scheduled in Eugene today,
Portland, Feb. 6 and Red
mond, Feb. 7.
Brussels (IP) Jungle beasts
in the Belgian Congo Pavilion
at the 1958 Universal Exhibi
tion here will be cooled by an
air conditioner manufactured
in La Crosse, Wis.
In the Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
President Eisenhower
breakfasted the other morn
ing at a downtown Washing
ton hotel with the members
of the Republican national
committee.
The breakfast led off a high
ly political day.
This, you know, is an elec
tion year, with control of the
congress at stake in the Nov
ember voting.
TKE told his hearers there
are no secret weapons in
politics. The ingredients of
success, he said, are GOOD
CANDIDATES, faith in a good
cause and HARD WORK.
He added:
"When we have all three,
we have the formula for
victory.
THEN he gave them the
word with the bark on.
Thrusting out his chin, he
said he has COMPLETE CON
FIDENCE in EACH of his
cabinet officers, thinks ALL
of them are doing a fine job
and has no intention of re
placing ANY of them.
That is to say:
He ISN'T going to fire Sec
retary of Agriculture Benson
who is regarded by weak
kneed Republicans as a liabil
ity rather than an asset in the
coming campaign.
LET'S put it this way:
Secretary Benson has
honesty and courage. In his
own mind, he is certain that
the tough and knotty farm
rjroblem must be solved the
RIGHT way if it is to be
solved at all, and he is equally
certain that the right way is
the HARD way.
He dosen't hesitate to say
so.
It is interesting to learn
that Ike is going to back him
to the finish.
IN HIS pep talk at the break
fast, President Eisenhower
made a couple of good cracks.
Warning against letting the
kind of campaign program he
had outlined be drowned in
"dismal wails of despair" from
the demagogues, he defined a
demagogue in these terse
words:
"A demagogue is a person
who ROCKS THE BOAT
HIMSELF so as to persuade
everybody that there's a ter
rible storm on the water."
Admitting that the political
prophets think the odds are
running heavily against the
GOP, he said:
"These calculations over
look this decisive element:
What counts isn't necessarily
the SIZE OF THE DOG IN
THE FIGHT the deciding
factor is the SIZE OF THE
FIGHT IN THE DOG."
Siiverton Scout
To Meet President
Siiverton (IP) An 18-year-old
Eagle scout from Silver
ton, Robert Vetter, was sched
uled to fly to Washington to
day to meet President Eisen
hower and other top govern
ment officials as a representa
tive of scout councils in four
Northwest states and Alaska.
Vetter won the trip in
speaking and essay competi
tion with other Boy Scouts in
region 11 composed of 27
councils in Oregon, Washing
ton, Idaho, Montana and Alas
ka. He is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Harry Vetter and a sen
ior at Siiverton high school.
White ants are not ants but
termites.
Try and
By BENNETT CERF-
'fNE OF THE BEST laughs I ever got," recalls Jack Benny,
"was the time a fellow playing a holdup man pointed a
gat at me and barked, 'Your money or your life' and I took
a full minute to decide. A
piece of business they also
liked was when Rochester
was sharpening a pencil and
I suggested, 'How's for
sharpening that in the fire
place?" The new housekeeper, ac
cused of helping herself to the
master's liquor when he was
not cn the premises, waxed
properly indignant. "I'll have
you know, sir," she declared
heatedly, "that I come from
honest English parents."
"I'm not concerned with
your English parents," countered the master. "What's worrymg me
is your Scotch extraction."
We loved the reply a famous British astronomer gave a reporter
at Idlewild who asked about flying saucers. Snapped the astrono
mer, "No comet!" . .,,.'
O 1958. by Bennett Cerf. Di.tributed by Kin, Feature. Syndicate.
-L
DAIRY -
East Main St.
Yes, our Cream can
and our eggs beaten
Stassen's Eyeing . Governorship
Of Pennsylvania Not
13 .r TVTT r WIT rM i i- 1... ln !
By LYLE C. WILSON
United Press Correspondent
Washington (IP) If Harold
E. Stassen is to be dropped,
as reported, from his disarma
ment job with
the Eisenhow
er administra
tion, it is not
s u r p rising
that he hopes
to land in the
Pennsylvan i a
governor's of
fice. A Repub-
Lyie c. Wilson lican S e nate
seat will be up for grabs this
year in Pennsylvania, the
term of Sen. Edward Martin
being about to expire. Stas
sen seems not to be interested
in that.
Much elamor and more
publicity attaches to members
of the U.S. Senate. But more
often than not senators, com
pared to the governors of
their states, are political ci
phers. Stassen is aware of that.
He used to be a governor him
self.
He Was Youngest
He was the youngest gov
ernor in the United States
in 1939 after his election by
Minnesota Republicans. Stas
sen was twice more elected,
rpsienine in 1943 for naval
service. That is quite a record
for a man who now is merely
in his 51st year.
As recently as 1941 Stassen
still was getting youth
awards. The International
Society of Christian Endeavor
selected him in that year for
its international youth's dis
tinguished service citation.
Three years later he was seek
ing the Republican presiden
tial nomination. He then was
37 years old.
Stassen tried again in 1948
but lost the nomination to
Thomas E. Dewey of New
York, another young man in
a hurry. The man from Min
nesota then made a move
which surprised the politi
cians but which Stassen may
now convert into a very smart
maneuver. Stassen abandoned
his mid - western political
mooring to become president
of the University of Penn
sylvania. Begins To Fade
That connection continued
until 1953 when Stassen join
ed the Eisenhower administr
ation as mutual security ad
ministrator, at which point in
his public career, Stassen be
gan to fade as a political
fieure. He began attending
Republican National Conven
tions in 1936 and by 1940 had
reached the heights of conven
tion keynote speaker. At the
next two he was a candidate
JAMMING STATIONS
Berlin (IP) The Soviet
Union has told its European
satellites to establish more
jamming transmitters along
the Iron Curtain to disrupt
radio broadcasts from west
ern Europe, it was reported
today. Information Bureau
West, a West Berlin private
intelligence agency, said a de
cision to this effect was made
at a meeting of radio experts
from Poland, Russia, Czecho
slovakia and East Germany
last week.
WELL-CHECKED
Syracuse. N.Y. (IP) Police
man David Seib and Robert
McCabe. sent to investigate re
ports of prowlers at the home
of vacationing Mayor-elect
Anthony A. Hemninger, found
the Drowlers detectives
checking the house.
Stop Me
SMITH
at Gen esse
be whipped . . .
. . . but we're nice.
ial nomination, but in 1956
after transferring his voting
residence to Pennsylvania,
Stassen was not even a con
vention delegate.
Considering his age and re
cord, it seems obvious enough
that Stassen is hoping to be
elected governor of Penn
sylvania with the White
House in mind. Pennsylvania
Communications
Letters to the Editor must bear the name and address of the writer,
although under certain circumstances the use of a pen name or initial
for publication is permissible. The Mail Tribune reserves the right to
edit all letters with a view to clarification and condensation. Letters
submitted for publication must not exceed 00 words.
Interesting Hobby
To the Editor: An interest
ing hobby is to clip and date
all information coming from
the City Hall to compare with
future statements they make.
I am curious as to who has
stirred the embers that
brought out the long article in
your paper of Feb. 2, with Mr.
Duff trying to explain why we
had no insurance re-rating
since 1933.
The whole purpose of the
Fire department bond issue
and continuing levy vote
(which has cost several hun
dred thousand dollars to date)
was to secure a re-rating for
the city which would have
been a saving of many dollars
to the property owners in
lower insurance rates.
The people voted the money
which should have been used
at once to carry out the prom
ises made to the people and
which were the recommenda
tions of the consultant and
fire rating bureau. Instead it
was a year before the first
station was built and over
four years before they rented
a house to house the second
station although they had the
money to build one.
In another talk before a lo
cal group Mr. Duff explained
how by installing the discard
ed telephone boxes for a, fire
alarm system (instead of the
system recommended) that
they had saved the taxpayers
a lot of money. Mr. Duff
knew, although he did not
tell, that by saving this money
we had lost the benefit of the
credit that the Tecommended
alarm would have given.
Mr. Duff admitted in Sun
day's paper that it is custo
mary for a city to request a
re-rating following improve
ments in the city fire depart
ment. If the consultants' plans had
been carried out as soon as the
money was voted, and the re
rating requested at that time,
we would have the lower rate
because it was much later be
fore the grand annexation be
gan.
Mrs. Edward Canoose
55 Ross Court
Medford
Cheers For The TeamI
To the Editor: Prospect and
St. Mary's were playing
basketball Saturday evening,
Feb. 1. The first game we
won, the second we lost 43 to
48. But what a game that was!
I'll say Prospect has a great
bunch of boys and J think
we should stand behind these
boys and support our basket
ball team. Take Lee Gitchel,
who seemed to be on the floor
more than on his feet, there
he was panting and sweating,
determined to win. We have
to give him credit. Then there
is Craig Gardner little but
mighty, and his brother Dave,
tall and quick who made quite
a few baskets for the team.
What an evening for clean and
exciting fun. Then there are
the cheer leaders who do a
wonderful job to keep the
boys' spirits up. Then the pep
band. How proud the moth
ers of these boys should be
to sit and watch these boys
put every bit of strength that
they have to win! Take our
coach, who is so patient with
the boys, always patting them
on the back and saying a few
kind words. Though these
boys will never get a medal or
award, I think they played a
wonderful game Saturday
night. More power to you,
Prospect basketball team and
let's show them we can win!
Dorothy Jewell
Prospect, Ore.
THE HAND
OF HELP
In the hour of need . .
is extended here o all
who grieve, regardless
of race, social position
or financial standing.
C. M. Litwiller
For over 23 years, Mr. and
to make the final tribute one
well as one of real solace
behind. "Night or day" -
LITWIU-ER
runerai
Home
Mountain View Chapel
Hwy. 66 at Normal
Office 88 N. Main
ASHLAND
We Never Close
Surprising
5..l.i:
for the Republican president.
is better situated in all re
spects than Minnesota as a
base for a campaign for the
Republican presidential nom
ination. . He would need the best
possible base because Stassen
could expect no more than
the back of their hands from
the old line party regulars.
E. A." Editorial Commended
To the Editor: Your editor
ial of Jan. 27, headed, "A :
Matter of Caring," and over K
the initials "EA." makes a
point which our experience as
a citizen support movement in
behalf of traffic safety fully
confirms.
You say, "The most import
ant, and the hardest to get at,
is the education,' or indoctri
nation of the individual dri
ver. For his attitude is the
biggest single factor in traf
fic safety."
Regardless of the whole
range of causes all of which
sum up as human error or vio
lation of the Golden Rule
the most important factor in
traffic safety is the attitude of
the individual. We have found
roundly that at least 85 per
cent of drivers want to drive
safely and do not want to
violate law and regulation.
The other 15 per cent we call
the "unreachables."
This is not to say that all of
these drivers do invite acci
dents, but the way they drive
does just that. And the 15 per
cent change accidents into the
process of cause and effect.
An accident, the dictionary
says, is "something that hap
pens unexpectedly 'or is done
unintentially." Thereare peo
ple who from themoment
they put their hands on a
wheel are asking for death
either for themselves or, for
someone else. The only way
we know to reach this smaller
group is by rigid enforce
ment and by citizen support
of such enforcement. ' .
Generally speaking, educa
tion, safety engineering and
routine enforcement will
serve to keep the precept of
safety in the minds of the ma
jority of drivers. '
If you can add to your ex
cellent editorial a practical
suggestion how to reach the
"unreachables" you will con-'
fer a boon upon the entire
traffic safety movement.
Marshall N. Dana, Secretary
Highway Lif esavers Com
mittee of Oregon Citizens,
Inc.
607 U.S. National Bank
Bldg.
Portland 4, Ore.
OUR HEATING OIL
WILL KEEP VDU WARM
REGARDLESS OF V
THE RAGING STORM
Let it snow, let it blow
. . . you're set for com
plete comfort all winter
long when you have our
quality Fuel Oil to keep
your home warm.
KENNEDY FUCLOIL
SP3-58964flm FRONT!
Mrs. Litwiller
Mrs. Litwiller have sought
of beauty and dignity, as
and comfort to those left
dial MU 5-4541 Ashland
mi vm-jt i "w??
"32
jab.
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'It is better to know us and not need us,
than tto need us and not know us."