e
4 Tifhy, May 20, 19SI
MAIE TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, ORE.
MEDFORDs&WTRIBUNE
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Flight 'o Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30 and
40 years ago.
if YEARS AGO
Way 20. 1&48 Thursday)
About a 60 per cent vote
for the primary election in
ackson county tomorrow pre
dicted by County Judge J. B.
Coleman.
O. H. Bengtson and William
H. Fluhrer, candidates for
state senator, queried by Med
ford League of Women Vot
ers concerning views on cer
tein issues.
TEARS AGO
JBay 20, 1938 (Friday)
An aged Jacksonville pros
jMctor, despondent and griev
ing over the death of bis wife,
g being sought today.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Jmudge Pot column: "The
people around here have start
yl to turn sour on long wind
al talks about Bonneville
jpswer."
m TEARS AGO
Jgay 20, 1928 (Sunday)
The meeting of the state
editorial association will be
leld in Medford and at Crater
.ake on June 29 and June 30.
From local and personal
jblumn: "Petitions against the
proposed change of the Pa
cific highway which would
route the tourist traffic into
Medford over Main st. are
gaining in strength."
41 YEARS AGO ,
Pay 20. 1918 (Monday)
Residents and businessmen
ere surprised this morning
to find large red crosses paint
ed on the windows of every
business place with the word
'Give" in white letters under
neath. From local and personal
column: "The Southern Pa
cific company has adopted
the plan of making up the
salary checks of employees
of the Portland division from
Portland to Ashland."
What's Your I.Q.?
Mine or ten correct is superior;
seven or eight is excellent; five or
ski is good.
1. All mammals have hair;
true or false?
2. What substance required
in the manufacture of explo
sives is extracted from scrap
greases, fats and oils?
3. Venison is the meat of
what animal?
4. How many guns com
prise a presidential salute?
5. What nationality was the
designer of the Statue of Lib-
. erty?
6. The Panama Canal has
been opened to traffic since
1904, 1914, or 1924?
7. "Eureka" is the motto
of which western State?,
8. Cleopatra died as the
result of a knife wound, a
poisoned drink, or the bite of
an asp? - f
9. Painters are the experts
in the culinary art; true or
false?
10. Which holiday is cele
brated in France on July 14?
Answers: 1. True. 2. Gly
cerine. 3. Deer. 4. Twenty-one.
. French. 6. 1914 (Aug. 15).
f. California. 8. The bite of an
asp. 9. False. 10. Bastille Day.
eN VACATION
New Delhi - HP! Prime
Minister Jewaharlal Nehru
flew today to the Kulu Val
ley in the Punjab for a 10-day
vacation. He was accompanied
by two personal servants, a
security officer, his secretary
and bis daughter Indira.
The Wrong Man
Voters of Jackson county cast a majority of
their ballots for a man for district judge who had
announced his withdrawal from the race and
moved from the county.
The fact had been publicized, repeatedly, on
the front pages of the county's newspapers, over
the air, and elsewhere. But, apparently, this
didn't sink in.
When they went to the polls and received
their non-partisan ballots, voters were faced with
two supreme court and two circuit court races
all of them widely publicized and discussed. At
the bottom, however, were two names as candi
dates for district judge.
Beside the fact of one of the candidates'
withdrawal, the race had received relatively little
publicity, since there was no controversy.
SO THE voters proceeded to elect the wrong
man. Why? .
Lack of proper, information, obviously, was
one cause. But we have 'a hunch something else
entered into it.
And we believe that something else was the
fact that Roy Bashaw, the able city attorney for
Medford who was the active candidate, decided
not to use the "ballot slogan" which Oregon law
allows all candidates. Robert Danielson, the for
mer Ashland attorney, designed a high-sounding
slogan to go beside his name. The ballots were
printed before Danielson announced his with
drawal from the race.
, So the voter, alone in the voting booth, was
faced with two names. Presumably he was not
more' than fleetingly familiar with either. He
could either take the slogan at face value, or as
sume, because Bashaw had no slogan, that he was
the one who had withdrawn.
In either case he would be apt to vote for
Danielson. And a majority of voters did so.
I7E DO not consider, the results as a repudijf
tion of Roy Bashaw, who is both competent
and personable. Using hindsight, it is easy to
say he should have campaigned, a bit more than
he did. But without opposition, who would have
thought he'd have to?
Ballot slogans are of questionable value any
way, and in this situation we believe them to
havejbeen responsible for a miscarriage of proper
election procedure. The qualified man who want
ed the job was defeated; the man who didn't
want the job, and who had moved from the
county, won.
It all adds up to just one more argument in
favor of appointing judges, rather than letting
them scramble for jobs in a confusing political
campaign. E. A.
Charles DeGaulle
An implacable foe and an extremely diffi
cult friend: these are the potentials of Charles
Andre Joseph Marie de Gaulle. He was a hard
ally to deal with in World War II, and since then
his avowed friendship for the United States has
been almost that of an aloof, self - contained
cousin.
The first U. S. gesture in World War II. to
ward the De Gaulle Free French movement was
the opening of lend-lease facilities by order of
President Roosevelt on Nov. 11, 1941. But the
State Department, still trying to maintain rela
tions with the Vichy government, was painfully
embarrassed when the Free French forces on the
following Dec. 24 unexpectedly occupied the is
lands of St. Pierre and Miquelon, off Newfound
land, ousting the Vfchy regimes.
' De Gaulle in turn was by-passed when the
Allies invaded North Africa in November 1942.
He protested vigorously when Gen. Eisenhower
established Admiral Darlan, former Vichy pre
mier, as "responsible for French interests in
Africa."
"THESE frictions continued throughout the war
and after it. De Gaulle suspected that the
United States might attempt to retain certain
French African territory for postwar air and
naval bases. There were difficulties over military
currency. Above all was what Gen. Eisenhower
described as De Gaulle's desire "to be clearly and
definitely recognized by both the Allied govern
ments as the ruler of France" recognition which
both Churchill and Roosevelt refused to extend.
Even before the war ended and he was made
head of the provisional government, De Gaulle
envisioned a permanent alliance with "dear and
powerful Russia." For postwar France he pro
posed "socialization of economic, financial, and
commercial enterprises essential to the life of the
nation."
But in October 1947 he observed that only
U. S. power could restrain Soviet ambitions.
"There is not one free man in the world," he said,
"who does not hold as salutory this American
will."
MEVERTHELESS, he opposed the European
A Defense Community plan in 1954, arguing
that France should regain freedom from U. S.
"interference" to foster co-existence between
Russia and the United States.
This stiff, uncompromising man has twice
admitted planning a coup d'etat. Perhaps he has
best described his own type in his book "The
Army of the Future," (1934) :
"The depth, the singularity, the self-sufficiency
of a man made for great deeds is not popu
lar except at critical times. He is seldom liked.
Moreover, his faculties, shaped for heroic feats,
despise the pliability, the intrigue, and the par
ades through .which most brilliant careers are
achieved in peacetime." E.R.R.
Dennis the
WO ! Not even ifxmi use your own PAm' .
Russia Obtains New Allegiance
prom Nasser in Mid-East Step
By CHARLES M. McCANN
United Press Correspondent
Soviet Russia has taken a
big new step in its program
of interference in Middle East
ern affairs.
Premier Niki
ta S. Khrush
chev has prom
ised President
Gamal Abdel
Nasser of the
United Arab
R e p u blic all
the help he
needs in try
ing to make
himself the dominant leader
of the entire Arab world from
the Red Sea to the Atlantic
Ocean.
Khrushchev and Soviet
President Klimenti Y. Voro
shilov have accepted an invi
tation by Nasser to visit Egypt
at a date to be named."
Nasser, in turn, has an
nounced his acceptance of
Russia's foreign policy includ
ing immediate suspension of
nuclear weapons tests, opposi
tion to U.S. military bases
Charles M.
McCann
Washington Report
By William S. Whit
Washington The Mutual
Security Program, for a de
cade the strong understruc
ture of this country's foreign
Dolicv. once faced the danger
of a determined and dedicated
opposition.
"""3 Tt.
f fronts a softer
; and more dis-
tant, but pos
sibly greater,
peril: a creep-
4t f1 $ ing and en
) veloping bore
dom.
In years
past oppo-
uMiim a uhit. nents nave
been unable to hack it down
something not even at
tempted anv more except
half-heartedly for the record.
But Mutual Security likely
will be smothered one day
simplv by fatigue and routine
and lack of interest.
The unpleasant truth is that
no issue one-fifth so import
ant is one-tenth so dull, to con
gress and to the country, as is
"foreign aid."
It coes on like the Mississip
pi, an object of nature toward
which there is not a great
Heal of hostility but not
an unalterable fact of life. It
is, after all, only a political
creation.
-.-
The comparative few who
retain a deep interest in
the program are aware of all
this. They are aware, too, that
the real struggle and debate is
turning from foreign aid to
world trade policy.
It is in this country's ulti
mate attitude toward world
trade specifically toward
the reciprocal tariff bill now
at issue in Congress that
an ultimate American inter,
nationalism o r nationalism
probably will be largely de
termined. In other words, if
tariffs are kept low or fur
ther reduced, this policy will
be the real "foreign aid" of
the future.
For the present scheme of
foreign aid is most surely on
the way out. Given other fa
vorable circumstances, some
fresh and compelling restate
ment of its reason for exist
ence conceivably could save it.
Far more likely, however,
is that its purpose will be
preserved, in some less-organized
form to improve and con
tinuously to foster the inter
nation exchange of goods and
ideas.
..'
rprue, the house of represent
tatives recently voted a
new aid authorization of $2.9
billion. But this is only a dec
ir""",,v"rmuj,"w
L-A LS e& V
mn la
Menace
'' '' U
in foreign countries and ad
mission' of Communist China
to the United Nations.
These developments came
about during Nasser's visit to
Russia, which 1 ended last
week.
Rebellion in Lebanon
Since then, Russia has start
ed making threats that the
United States had better not
go too far toward interven
tion in the affairs of Lebanon,
where pro - Nasser elements
started a serious rebellion
against the pro-Western gov
ernment. A statement issued through
the official news agency Tass
has denounced the Eisenhow
er Doctrine as "an open pro
gram of colonial plunder."
This , statement mentioned
the activities of the U.S. 6th
Fleet in the Mediterranean
as an example of pressure and
intimidation of the Arab
people.
"Any attempt to use' in
ternal developments . in Leba
non for interference from out,
side creates a dangerous situa-
laration of policy. The real
fight the fight for the ac
tual money is ahead. And
both bills, one for the authori
zation as approved by , the
House and another for the ap-.
propriation,. must yet get. by
the Senate.
Moreover, all that has been
and will be done has proceed
ed and will proceed without
opposition or support.
The generation of political
leaders who felt passionately
on the subject pro or con
is passing fast. Foreign aid's
oldest friends are growing
progressively more tired of it,
more -disenchanted with it.
Discussion, in the Admini
stration as well as in Con
gress, has long been like a
stuck needle on a worn phono
graph record. It would be
wrong to say that nobody
cares any more. But it would
be fair to say that not very
much.
Foreign aid, like it or de
test it, at least began as a de
sign of grandeur. Enormously,
important though it remains,
it is rather like an annual bill
to maintain the Fish and Wild
Life Division.
Tt has suffered markedly
in the Eisenhower Admini
stration and a bit less so in
the Truman Administration
from bureaucratic lack of
imagination. Yet its concep
tion was one of the boldest
acts of- world statesmanship
in history.
But' the.-tale has been told
too often, sometimes too pom
pously, and always with too
much fine print. What Mutual
Security needs first is to be
called mutual security.-which
it is, and not foreign aid. Then
it needs a new story one
with a bite and challange in
it. '
The total absence of bite
and challenge is perhaps ill
ustrated by. this fact: To make
foreign aid a major issue in
the average Congressional dis
trict today would be as stir
ring as to campaign for or
against the Department . of
Commerce.
The old days of the great in
ternationalist-isolationist de
bates are long gone. But it
may be that, the internation
alists, having won the battles,
are quietly about to lose the
war.
This country's military ob
ligations wilL;not in any way
be let down. But there is much
to suggest that its economic
obligations "bear far more
lightly . on the national con
science than they used to.
(Copyright. 1958. by United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.
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 400 words. The letters
printed in this column do not necessarily represent the views of the
paper; in fact the contrary is often the case. ,
Heretical Benefactors
To the Editor: Now since
you have returned to normal
cy, I presume you will not
mind to print this last letter
of mine concerning the sub
ject involved. 4-
Referring to Mr. Beverly's
comments, will say that ac
cording to my observation you
will never be at a loss to find
some biblical phrase or verse
that can be made applicable.
Mr. Bailey is cpnvinced that
events are now rapidly shap
ing up for the final consuma
tion, within the next five
years. Well, my allotted time
is supposed to be almost up. I
hope I'll be here that long to
see how things .turn out. How
ever, I venture to predict that
even should Israel and the hu
man race through its ignor-
tion in the Middle East and
can cause serious conse
quences not only for the fate
of the Lebanese state and its
independence but also for the
state of peace in the Middle
East," the statement said.
Thinly-Veiled Threat
Pravda, official organ of the
Russian Communist Party,
)fas said that the Soviet Un
on "could not remain indif
ferent" if the United States
used the Eisenhower Doctrine
to intervene in Labanon.
"Soviet public opinion can
not ignore the plans for new
imperialist adventures in the
Near and Middle East, in di
rect proximity to the Soviet
Union's southern - borders,"
Tass said.
These developments seem
to indicate that; whatever the
chance of any improvement
in relations with the United
States, Nasser has tied him
self: closer politically as well
as economically to Russia.
Matter of Focf by
'BUY NOW? HELL1'
Chicago '.'Buy now? Hell,
I'm not spendin' a dime, be
cause I don't know how long
it'll be before
we have 1 to
dig into our
savings to pay
for the grocer
ies." The speaker
was the brisk,
grey - haired
wife of the
owner of a
small jo fa-
Joipb Alsop
printing plant, whose comfort
able little house and admira
ble garden might have served
as models for ideal way of life
of the American lower-middle-income
group. Moreover
all of it, including the well
kept 1957 model car, was paid
for in full except the house
itself. ...
"I need a car so bad it
hurts, and the wife needs ev
ery kind of appliance, too. But
with no more overtime work
and prices the way they are,
how am I going to buy? I
ain't, and that's that"
The speaker was a skilled
mechanic' He did not seem to
realize it, but he had already
perfprmed a notable feat of
capital - accumulation, part
buying a fairly big house for
himself and- his family. He
had been "driven to it" vhen
rent controls went off in 1951.
He iiowowed only $2,000 on
a house that must have been
worth 'at least $17,000. But
the "remaining house pay
ments, the grocer and the
children's shoes took all the
money he could earn.
WHY, I don't see why you
even ask. Everyone has
everything they need now. All
my friends are just like us
theylve got cars, washer-dryers
and all like that for the
house, just everything that's
important. A couple of years
ago they; didn't even have
bank accounts, but now a lot
of them are saving money. Of
course, I'd like , some more
furniture. We're thinkin' "of
gettin' . a livin' room couch
this autumn, if there's plenty
of work until then."
The speaker was the pretty
young wife of a construction
worker, who added that they
"had the saving habit, be
cause in construction work
you never know what the win
ters'll be like." She remarked
that their car "was kind of
beat up, because my husband's
hard on a car, but we think
we can keep it rollin' another
two years anyway." .
The point about these three
citizens was that they covered
virtually the entire range of
economic attitudes discovered
by this reporter in a couple of
days of intensive doorbell
ringing . here-abduts. " There
were, indeed, only two yari
ents in 65 persons polled.
ance and folly be destroyed,
this old ball of dirt will still
continue to whirl through
space for millions of years to
come.
Now as to Mr. . Beverly's
question: Why did the world
lie dormant for hundreds of
years, then make such gains
in knowledge in such short
time? Well, that certainly is
not difficult to answer. It was
orthodox religion, the very
religion you and many others
are still propagating today in
face of all the facts of science
to the contrary, that held
mankind in bondage. During
the dark days of Christianity,
nothing was invented, nothing
discovered, calculated to in
crease the well-being of man
kind. Superstition was uni
versal. The church was trium
phant. But in spite of all, a
few men began to think, they
were not satisfied with the
assertion of the church. The
first great step in the emanci
pation . of the people came
about when Galileo put a
crude telescope to the sky and
removed our earth from the
center of the universe, as it
was supposed to be, to the
tihy insignificant speck in a
mighty realm of space that it
actually is. If you impartially
study the history of the last
400 years, you will find that
it was not the Bible, but the
heretics and infidels who
were the great benefactors of
mankind at the cost of their
lives. It is to them that I owe
this expression of freedom
without having to face the
fate of a Bruno or Servetus
William Krauss, .
Route 1, Box 373,.
Gold Hill
From Bereaved Parents
To the Editor: This is prob.
ably somewhat delayed. How
ever, we desire to express our
appreciation for the manner
in which the Mail Tribune
went "all out" to rectify the
misleading first report of the
Joseph Alsop
ONE was a disabled veteran,
whose pension had shrunk
in the price rise to the point
where the family was really
badly off. The other was a
junior industrial executive,
already the owner of a 1955
Cadillac and another, cheaper
car of the same vintage. He
would have been looking for
a new car this year; but I
guess we'll wait until they
slim them, down a bit and get
some chrome off them."
It was an extraordinary and
eye-opening experience to go
down those prettily tree-shaded,
comfortable looking
streets in Harvey, 111., and
Gary,- Ind. They were not
poor people in these streets.
They were workers in the
more highly skilled and bet
ter paid specialties, with a
sprinkling of small business
men and retired people. None
of them, who wanted a . job
was actually unemployed, al
though the incomes of many
liad been cut by shorter hours,
and a fair number had rela
tives who were jobless.
A year ago, two years ago,
indeed at any time since the
end of the last war, a doorbell
ringer in these streets would
have heard about plans to
purchase some major piece of
mechanical equipment in a
very high percentage of the
houses visited. Six of those
polled had in fact bought cars
in the. last 12 months. But
none were planning any re
placement. v
TN FACT and it is an al-
most incredible f act-only
one of the 65 persons polled
was planning to purchase, or
even seemed to desire to pur
chase, a single item in the
consumer-durable goods cate
gory. The exception was a
hard-working plumber who
was "figuring to buy a new
house because it don't cost
any more than my rent, so
naturally I'll need some ap
pliances." '
They had what they needed
already. Or they wanted to
buy but were caught in the
price squeeze. Or they were
able to buy, but were fright
ened by the recession. Or they
were now more interested in
what might be called the icing
on the cake of the lower-middle-income
way of life new
furniture, or a living room
carpet, or a power-mower, or
that "little summer home"
that had tempted an Allis-
Chalmers accountant who for
merly got a new car every
two years.
Since the American econo
my has .been 8d largely gov
erned by the consumers dura
ble goods industries, one has
to hope that the sample was
somehow distorted, although
the people polled looked as
typically American as apple
pie. Otherwise, the famous
accidental death of our son,
Elvice Snow.
The next issue, April 17,
gave a most satisfactory re
port of the accident, which
was followed in the editorial
column of April 20 under
"The Press' Calculated Risk."
May we also express our
gratitude and admiration to
the many friends and even
strangers to us for their much
needed aid and sympathy,
which will ever remain price
less memories to us after our
deepest sorrow.
Hichard and Evice Larson,
Shady Oaks Trailer Court,
Central Point
Council Critised
To the Editor: At the last
council meeting the T.V.H ordi
nance was again considered
by the council.
Dr. Fowler submitted a
thought on behalf of our local
PTA to the effect, that the
council should delay long
enough before enacting the
ordinance to give 'thought to
some regulation of the type
of program to be piped or
cabled to the homes of citi
zens. Whether one should
think at all on the subject
of who is to say what, we
want to see when we pay for
it us of no consequence here;
the thing we are interested in
is the reason that the council
gave no consideration to Dr.
Fowler's request.
Councilman Dunlevy stated
in brushing off the requested
consideration, that "regula
tion" of the proposed T.V.
ordinance was beyond ' the
province of the council; and
the council did then and there
approve the T.V. ordinance.
I would like to point out
that it is not only within the
province of the council ' .to
"regulate" the T.V. ordinance,
but it is their duty to see that
a regulatory provision is con
tained in that ordinance.
In my opinion T.V. is an
amusement.
Chapter 4, of our city char
ter is:. "The City Council Its
Powers and Duties"
' Sec. 25: "The City Council
shall have power and author
ity, within the limits of the
city of Medford, to enact all
ordinances and adopt all regu
lations . . . as shall be need
ed or. requisite to, maintain
and establish the peace, good
order, -health, cleanliness.
prosperity, and general wel
fare of the city."
Sub. Sec. 35: "To license,
tax and regulate theatrical ex
hibitions and other shows or
public amusements."
In view , of .our city charter
it would appear to me that
when our council and mayor
enact an ordinance that could
be deterimental and injurious
to the welfare of our city and
its citizens and children with
out regulations and in fact
refuse to consider regulations,
they, act wrongly;
This is my own thought on
the matter and it is likely. I
could be wrong: in that event
I . would appreciate a public
showing to that effect. I am
but interested in honest and
economical city government
that serves for the interest of
all the people and its general
welfare.
Ray O. DeMarrs,
139 North Central ave.,
Medford.
God's Word on Clothes
To the Editor: We have no
ticed the articles on the "com
ing out gowns" recently in
your . paper, and feel we
should add our part too. by
telling what God said in His
word about them.
We notice that too many
come out without their gowns.
Just . in their under clothes
without their gowns. When
Peter came in, contact with
the Lord in St. John 21-7, he
was naked, but he girt his
fisher's coat unto him and
cast himself into the sea. Too
bad more of the nudists and
theory , that the ' recession Is
"bottoming but" is going to
operate mighty slowly at best.
(Copyright 1958. New York
Herald Tribune, Inc.)
Counsel With . . .
Mr. Insurance Fred Brennan
LM2
Fred Brennan
Or Call
Mr. Friendly
Bill Fish
Fheiit SP 3-7343
'-'-
MEDFORD
INSURANCE
AGENCY
27 NORTH HOLLY ST.
semi-nudists don't come !n
contact with the Lord and
clothe themselves.
In Leviticus 18-6, God for
bade them to approach to any
that was near of kin to them,
to uncover their nakedness.
Verses 17 to end show it ap
plied to others too. Verses 26
to end called such abomina
ble customs. So God is not
pleased with us looking upon
nakedness.
Paul received his sosDel bv
the revelation of Jesus Christ,
Gal. 1-11-12. Then in 1 Timo
thy 4-9 he (Christ, thru Paul)
said for the women to adorn
themselves in modest aDDarel
and shamefacedness. He did
not say to undress to Indecent
apparel. Titus 2 - 3 - 4 - 5 the
aged women are to teach the
young women to be discreet,
chaste, and good. Verse 7
and to be a pattern of good
works. Under the Law of
Moses it was an abomination
for women to even wear that
which pertained to men, Deu
teronomy 22-5. How much
more of an abomination it is
to wear no clothes. Since that v
was a pattern and example
for us then, God still has
many abominations to look
upon since so many go nude,
or semi-nude or in men's an.
parel. The things that are
nighly esteemed among men
arc an abomination to God.
Luke 16-15. And the flesh is
contrary to Him, Gal. 5-17.
If people will not believe
and obey God he will send
them a strong delusion and
turnjithm over to reprobate
minds, 11 Thess. 2-9-10-11, Ro
mans 1-24 to end. So if they
will not cleanse themselves of
all filthiness (II Cor. 7-1) he
will and has already done so
to them, and will allow them
to believe there is no harm.
When grandparents and par
ents do so, the children will
too. ,
Mrs. G. C. Cunningham,
Box 381,
Central Point
Farm Loan Boost
Set For Slates
Fresno, Galif . OB An in
crease up to 20 per cent in
farm loans in four western
states has received final ap
proval of directors of the
Farm Credit banks at Berke
ley. ' .
Directors took the action
Monday at the opening of
their three-day session here.
The states are California, Ari
zona, Nevada and Utah. ,
Directors said the loans
w.'ll vary with the quality of
the land and farm involved.
How to Get
mm
from your Airline
ticket to
EUROPE
For full details, call or visit
George Lewis
ROGUE
TRAVEL
SERVICE
We Reserve and Sell -Airline
and Steamship Tickets
PHONE SP 2-6779
Lobby Hotel Jacks
BOATS AND SADDLES
Whether your favorite outdoor
recreation is boating or riding
chances are you have consider
able money tied up in equip
ment. BUT do you have those
boats, trailers, saddles or golt
clubs properly insured. Better
check with us and be sure.
Bill Fish
A iW.
LSI