Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, July 01, 1958, Image 4

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    C5
4 TutiJay, July 1, 1938
MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, ORE.
MedfordsTbibuke
"Everyone- in Southern Oregon
Published Daily except Saturday by
MEDFORD PRINTING CO
33 North Fir St. Ph. BP3-gl41
ROBERT W RUHL. Editor
HERB GREY Advertising Manager
GERALD LATHAM. Business Mgr
BRIC ALLEN, JR. Managing Editor
EARL H ADAMS. City Editor
HARRY CHIPMAN, Teleg Editor
RICHARD JEWETT. Sports Editor
OLIVE STARCHER. Societv Editor
DALE ERICKSON, Circulation Mgr.
An Independent Newsnaner
Entered as second class matter at
Mediord Oregon under Act of
March 3. 1897
SUBSCRIPTION RATES '
Mail In Advance: Copy 10c.
Daily and Sunday 1 year $13.00
Daily and Sunday 8 mos. 8.00
Daily and Sunday 3 mos. 4.25
Sunday Only One year S4.20
By Carrier In Advance Medford
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Official Paper of City of Medford
urnciai Fa per or Jacmon county
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octQn
ASS
Flight 'o Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30 and
40 years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
July 1. 1948 (Thursday)
A Jackson County delega
tion has appeared before the
state highway commission re
questing that Highway 99 be
tween Ashland and Central
Point be widened to four
lanes to relieve traffic con
gestion.
The Federal Communica
tions Commission has re
affirmed its decision that if
Mrs. W. J. Virgin sells radio
station KMED and her con
struction permit for a new FM
station, she must sell to the
Medford Radio Corporation
of Medford, not to Gibson
Broadcasting of Vallejo, Calif.
20 YEARS AGO
July 1, 1338 (Friday)
Prominent Medford citizens
will perform Sunday in
"Death Takes the Steering
Wheel," a temperance play
' sponsored by the Anti-Liquor
league of Oregon.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: "Cities
throughout the state celebrat
ing the Fourth of July have
served notice the seats along
the parade line of march are
for tiie old folks if they can
beat the kids to them."
30 YEARS AGO
July 1, 1928 (Sunday)
Crater Lake's official sum
mer season opens today, with
stages of the Crater National
Park company meeting the
trains at Medford and Klam
ath Falls.
Pears look better this year
than ever before, with indica
tions for a record crop, ac
cording to Elmer Oatman,
fruit inspector.
40 YEARS AGO
July 1. 1918 (Monday)
Smoke from local forest
fires settled over the breeze
less valley in a thick haze to
day. What's Your I.Q.?
Nine or ten correct is superior;
seven or eight is excellent; five er
six is good.
1. The ports of Colombo
and Trincomalee are on which
island in the Indian Ocean?
2. Complete the proverb,
"Beware the fury of a ....
man."
3. Does the phrase "bib
and tucker" refer to the rig
ging of a yacht, a species of
fish, clothing, or a kind of
mental conditions?
4. Which scientific bureau
of the Federal Government
announced that diamonds are
a better measure of radio
activity than any man-made
counter?
5. How many legs do house
centipedes have?
6. From where did the
Moors emigrate to Spain?
7. Paganini was a composer
of opera, a famous violinist, or
an orchestra conductor?
8. Which of these does not
grow on a bush or tree: wal
nut, butternut, doughnut,
hazelnut?
9. The Armed Forces have
dental charts of every person
in the services; true or false?
10. In which field of art
was Mrs. Harry Payne Whit
ney notable? '
Answers: 1. Ceylon. 2. Pa
tient. 3. Clothing. 4. National
Bureau of Standards. 5. IS
pair. 6. North Africa. 7. Vio
linist. 8. Doughnut. 9. True.
10. Sculptue.
-1
Toward Uniform Driving Code
A new "rules of the road" law part of a
nationwide effort to make traffic regulations uni
form goes into effect in New York State today.
New York's new "rules of the road" law, en
acted by the state legislature last year, is based on
Chapter 11 of the Uniform Vehicle Code. This is
a model traffic law for the states, orginally draft
ed in 1926 by a committee appointed by the first
national highway safety conference. It is revised
from time to time by the National Committee on
Uniform Traffic Laws and Ordinances, an arm
of the White House Conference on Highway Safe
ty. As its name implies, the new law sets up stan
dards of highway conduct. For example, it lists
as violations opening the door of a parked car on
the side paralleling oncoming traffic, or "riding"
the bumper of the car in front of you.
Some other violations, calling for fines of up
to $50 and 15 days in jail: leaving keys in the
ignition of parked cars, hanging boxing gloves,
baby booties, or other paraphernalia over rear
view mirrors, tossing waste paper and refuse
from cars.
-
"THE New York law accepts the recommenda-
tions of the Uniform Code "almost in their en
tirety and almost in verbatim," according to the
national committee on uniform laws. So do a Nev
ada law adopted last year and, with certain ex
ceptions, a recent Wisconsin law. ,
Most states have adopted a large part of the
"rales of the road" recommendations of the Uni
form Code. Listed as notable exceptions are Ken
tucky, Louisiana, Maine, Massachusetts, Neb
raska, New Hampshire, North Carolina, South
Dakota, Vermont, Virginia.
The "rales of the road" section, of course, rep
resents only one of many (19) chapters of the
Uniform Code. Others cover proposals for inde
pendent state motor vehicles departments, uni
form treatment of accidents and accident reports
and the like. The American Automobile Associa
tion has long advocated uniform traffic laws, as
have the National Safety Council, the Governors
Conference Committee on Highway Safety,, and
official or quasi-official bodies such as the Am
erican Association of Motor Vehicle Administra
tors and the International Association of Chiefs
of Police.
P0R the first time in recent years, the traffic toll
in 1957 decreased. Auto-accident deaths to
taled 38,500 1,128, or 3 per cent, fewer than in
1956, when the loss was the heaviest in history.'
Traffic deaths had declined steadily for more
than a year until the recent Memorial Day holo
caust. A record 371 persons for a three -day
week end were killed. The National Safety
Council attributed the reversal of trend to "im
patience, intemperance,
Significantly, toll roads and pay turnpikes
across the northeast section of the country, from
New England to Chicago, recorded not a single
Memorial Day fatality.
for each 100 million vehicle miles has been drop
ping steadily from 16.7 in 1934 to 5.9 in 1957,
turnpikes have -shown even better progress. The
national pike rate for 1957, as noted in a special
New York Times report was only 2.6 deaths per
100 million vehicle miles.
The new 41,000-mile
system, now building, will be toll free. But the
construction standards and safety factors will be
substantially identical with those of turnpikes. If
the new high-speed roads are policed as ade
quately as the toll roads, the fatality rate 5.2
per 100 million miles so far this year ought to
continue downward. E.R.R.
For Safer Pleasure Boating
Now it's National Safe Boating Week, this
first week of July. Pleasure boats have prolifer
ated in recent years in the United States much
as automobiles did some 30 years ago.
That's largely because outboard motors have
become more easily available to moderate-income
families, and more dependable. It wasn't too long
ago that your average boat-owner thought it par
for the course if he managed to get the blankety
blank thing into operation over one day of a two-
day week end. No fewer than 28 million Ameri
cans, it is estimated, will be put-putting around in
7 million boats this year.
AS THE highways become dangerous when
iiitnmnliilos Korron n rrof fVnflr f Vt a nofinn'o
waters are now becoming full of danger from the
plethora of boats. And, again as in the early days
of automg, regulations are scanty.
Outboard-motor boats under 16 feet in length
don't have to be registered at present, except in
a few localities. No license, not even an age quali
fication, is required of their operators or even, in
most cases, of operators of the larger registered
boats. v
The 1940 federal motor boat act, the latest
on pleasure boating, does carry penalties for reck
less or other illegal operation, but they are sel
dom imposed. Now a House committee has report
ed favorably the Bonner bill (HR 11078) to con
trol boats of over VA horsepower (originally 5V)
and their operators. If the House and then the
Senate pass the bill, its advocates predict that
fewer accidents will mark pleasure boating on
America's lakes, bays, rivers and off - shore
waters. E.R.R.
and indifference."
While the fatality rate
federal-state highway
Dennis the Menace
S0T ANY" MORS BREAD CRUMBS? '
Matter of Fact
TROUBLE AT THE
WHITE HOUSE
Washington It is hard to
see how an explosion can be
avoided at this week's meet-
i n g between
the President
and the Repub
lican Congres
sional leaders.
No doubt the
p r o g r e ssive
collapse of the
Western posi
tion in the Mid
dle East and
Jos-pb Alsop o"ier m i u a i
matters can be dealt with ami
ably enough, or simply passed
over as undeserving of much
notice. But there is still the
case of Sherman Adams; and
this all-important matter is
plainly moving toward the
explosion point.
On the one hand, the Presi
dent is bitterly, unforgivingly
angry with the Republican
senators and representatives
who have called for Sherman
Adams' resignation or dismis
sal. According to those who
ought to know, Eisenhower
has taken the "Adams-must-go"
statements as so., many
personal affronts. In the hey
day of Sen. Joseph R. Mc
Carthy, one was always being
told how "McCarthy made the
President see red." But if he
saw red then, he is reported to
see crimson, scarlet and ma
roon now.
On the other hand, the
most prominent member of
the "Adams-must-go" school
of Republican thought, Senate
minority leader William S.
Knowland of California, will
be on hand at the White
House leaders' meeting, unless
he is prevented from attend
ing by some unforeseen de
velopment. Furthermore, Sen.
Knowland has now gone an
important step furthsr in his
position on the Adams case.
ABOUT 10 days ago, he
made a rather careful
statement, merely suggesting
that both the President ana
Gov. Adams ought to consid
er whether Adams' usefulness
tin the" White House had not
been too badly impaired. On
last Thursday, however,
Knowland went the whole
hog, forthrightly calling oh
Adams to resign for the Presi
dent's sake and the party's
sake.
At last week's White House
leaders' meeting, Knowland's
previous statement on the
Adams case was of course in
every mind. Adams himself at
tended, sitting by the Presi
dent's chair as is his custom.
But no word passed between
Adams and the leaders of
Congress, and the case of
Adams was never mentipned.
It must have been like one of
those ghastly parties at which
everyone desperately avoids
the only really interesting
subject, because discussing the
only interesting subject would
be impossibly tactless.
The coming meeting will
convene with Knowland's sec
ond, stronger statement again
in every mind. Any other
President, in these circum
stances, would feel called
upon to have the matter out
with his Congressional chief
tains. This particular Presi
dent, -to be sure, has always
dealt rather cavalierly with
his second role as leader of his
party. But even if the Presi
dent continues to treat the
Adams case as a strictly per
sonal and private matter,
there is still a rather strong
possibility that Sen. Know
land will bring the matter up
on his own initiative.
Altogether, this confronta
tion between Eisenhower and
his Congressional grandees
ought to be an interesting
fathering. Furthermore, if the
issue of Adams is not thrashed
out this week, th?re will still
be next week, and the week
after that, and maybe the
week after that.
SOONER or later, in truth,
the President can hardly
avoid discussing this unhappy
By Joseph Alsop
case that has already inflict
ed such deep wounds on the
Republican Party with the
other men who share the re
sponsibility of party leader
ship. Thus far, he hag not done
so. The 'Adams case has been
handled in the White House,
by the White House, for the
White House.
Meanwhile the Republicans
who must go before the vot
ers this fall are unanimously
clamoring for Adams' resigna
tion. "Adams-must-go" cries
have been heard from Barry
Goldwarer of New Mexico on
the extreme right, Robert
Kean of New Jersey in the
party's liberal wing, and from
men in the middle like
Knowland and Charles Potter
of Michigan, Behind these
cries, there is the soreness
that comes from a feeling of
having been badly let down.
Meanwhile, too, the Adams
case continues to unfold.
Above all, the celebrated Ber
nard Goldfine, that friend, of
all the world, has yet to be
heard from. He has yet to be
'asked a whole series of ques
tions, and especially the cen
tral question, whether he took
income tax deductions for
Gov.; Adams' hotel bills and
vicuna coat and Persian car
pet. So it will be a long time
before the Adams case can be
marked "Closed," and in such
cases, unfortunately, party
spirit makes time more of an
inf lamer than a healer,
(c) 1958. New York Herald
Tribune, Inc.
Editorial
Comment
FLUORIDATION OK'D
Fluoridation was approved
by the United States Public
Health Service in 1951 after
a thorough examination of all
scientific evidence relating to
its safety, effectiveness and
practicability.
Since that time, many com
munities throughout the na
tion have instituted local
fluoridation programs. Care
ful study of their experience
with this measure plus con
tinuing scientific research
have provided additional evi
dence of the dental health
benefits of fluoridation.
Fluoridation causes no bod
ily harm; it is remarkably ef
fective in reducing the inci
dence of tooth decay by two
thirds; and its cost is mini
mal about ten cents per per
son per year.
The Public Health Service,
has therefore, recommended
the adoption of fluoridation
to all communities interested
in progressive health mea
sures. Dr. Leroy E. Burney,
Surgeon General, U. S. Public
Health Service, quoted in Bul
letin of Oregon Department of
Health.
Hoffa Group To
Study Beck Home
Washington (UPI) In
ternational Teamster Presi
dent James R. Hoffa an
nounced Monday he - would
head a committee of three
to . determine the future of
Dave Beck's palatial living
quarters in Seattle.
A decision will be reached
by the three-member group
after they meet with Beck,
former Teamsters president,
to work out a mutually agre
able plan to dispose of the
home. The decision will be
announced at the next meet
ing of the general executive
board of the Teamsters, prob
ably next fall.
Beck's home has been the
subject of much controversy
following the Seiate investi
gating committee's probe into
his financial affairs.
The portly former union
boss sold the home to the
Teamsters for $163,215 in
1955 and has continued to
live there since that time
In the Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
What people want from
government note: 4
A San Francisco citizen has
asked that parking meters in
the city provide a place to
park your foot as a part of the
service they give in return for
the fee they charge for per
mission to' park your car.
He suggests that small plat
form be placed at each meter
for people who want to. tie
their shoelaces.
TT'S an idea.
V And of course, it his
some merit. It is most annoy
ing to have a shoelace come
untied when you're making
your way along a crowded
street such as Market at a
busy hour.
And
It's undignified to lean over
in a crowd and tie your shoe.
Besides unless you've been
going the' bends regularly
every morning to keep your
self limber you may have
have trouble reaching that far
down. If you tried it and
failed, it would be humiliat
ing. Your face would be red.
I think we will all agree
that it is a part of the duty
and the responsibility of gov
ernment to uphold the dignity
of citizens. Human dignity is
a precious thing. It mut be
preserved.
CO-
Maybe this San Francis
can has something. Maybe
government in this case city
government owes" it to its
citizens to provide platforms
on parking meter posts so that
the citizen may lift up his
foot in a dignified manner and
tie his shoelace when it comes
untied.
It all depends on what we
conceive to be the duty of
government.
AT this point, another con
sideration enters the pic
ture.
. Ajax Foundation, Incorpor
ated a private research or
ganization that spends its time
delving into tax problems-
has just come up with an in
teresting figure. ' It reports
that in the U.S.A. there are
some eight million civil work
ers on federal, state and local
levels. That is to say, there
are some eight million civil
ian employees of government
who are paid with tax money
to serve the citizens in one
way or another.
These eight million employ
ees of the taxpayers receive
an annual total stipend of ap
proximately thirty billion
dollars. Tax Foundation says
it takes the total income taxes
of 19 average taxpayers to
pay the salary of one govern
ment worker.
It adds that government
workers now account for one
out of every eight employed
persons. That is another way
of saying that every eight em
ployed workers in our nation
hire a government flunkey to
provide them with govern
mental services ranging all
the way down from protection
of life and property to provid
ing platforms on parking me
ter posts where the citizen
may put up his foot to tie his
shoelaces in a dignified man
ner. SUMMING up:
If we're going to clamor
for more public services, we
are going to have to have
more government employees.
If we are going to have more
government employees, we
will have to pay more taxes.
The dollar government
reaches into our . pocket and
takes for taxes a dollar we
don't have to spend on our
selves. That's the nub of the situa
tion. Polar Bear Found
On Newport Beach
Newport, Ora. (UPI)
Bodies of a polar bear and
her cub washed up on the
beach here Sunday afternoon.
The usually Arctic dwelling
animals were first sighted by
Mrs. Flora Lauritsen, New
port motel owner. The cub
was later swept out to sea
again on a high tide.
Witnesses estimated the
badly decomposed bear to be
about seven feet long and to
weigh about 600 pounds.
Possible reason for the ap
pearance of the bodies, one
Newport man said, was the
onshore movement of the
Japanese current, now con
sistently about 400 yards off
the Newport beach.
Gomulka Criticizes Tito, But
Disapproves Execution of Nagy
Br CHARLES M. McCANN
UPI Foreign Nsws Analyst
Polish Communist leader
Wladyslaw Gomulka has sav
ed his job by criticising Presi
dent Tito of
Yugoslavia. In
doing so he
also has pre
served at least
some measure
of the inde
pendence from
Russian dicta
tion which he
won as the re
suit " of the
1956 revolt. For months, Go
mulka had resisted demands
that he join Russia, Red China
and the East European satel
lite countries in their savage
attack on Tito as a Commu
ist renegade.
Cbarlet M.
McC&nn
Try and Stop Me
By BENNETT CERF
AT AN AMUSEMENT PARK last summer a college student
who had wangled a vacation job on the scente railway
noticed that one sickly, shaking old gent made no effort to get
out .oi nis iront seat wnen a
ride was completed, but sat
huddled down waiting to go
'round again. Furthermore,
the ticket taker never both
ered to ask him for his fare.
The student approached him
after five rounds and said,
"Pardon me, but do you get
a particular thrill out of this
ride?"
"Thrill?," sneered the old
man. "I hate it! It makes
me acutely sick to my
stomach."
"Then why do you. like
the music, go 'round and 'round?" asked the student.
"The skinflint who owns this concession," explained the old
man, "owes me 10 dollars, and I'm going to take, it out on him
in rides it it kills me!"
!A minor operation," explains Melinda Drake, "is an operation
performed on somebody else."
0 1M, by Bennett Cerf. Distributed by King Features Syndicate.
President's Program
Faces Uphill Road,
CQ Analysis Shows
Washington (CQ) Presi
dent Eisenhower's 1958 leg
islative program faces a stern
uphill battle in Congress this
year.
As of June 12, only 9 per
cent of the President's 221
specific requests had received
final approval, a Congression
al Quarterly analysis shows.
About a fourth of Mr. Eis
enhower's requests have re
ceived no attention at all and
12.7 per cent have already
been rejected.
With Congressional elec
tions facing members this No
vember, both the House and
Senate, controlled by the
Democrats, are taking a hard
look at every request made
by the President and, in
many cases, proceeding with
programs of their own.
Record Low
Last year, the first of the
85th Congress, the Eisenhow
er boxscore fell to a record
low only 36.9 percent of his
206 requests were approved
by Congress. When the Re
publicans controlled Congress
in 1953 and 1954, Mr. Eisen
hower's programs did very
well; 72.7 per cent approval
in 1953 and 64.7 in 1954.
The recession and the re
action to the Russian sputniks
have helped to make this year
unusually busy in Congress;
House Speaker Sam Rayburn
(D-Tex.), has called it the
most active Congress since
the "first 100 days" of the
Roosevelt administration 25
years ago. But the activity in
volves Democratic plans as
much- as those submitted by
the Administration.
Despite the Congressional
coolness to his over-all 221
point program, President Eis
enhower may win some im
pressive victories this year. .
Here is the Eisenhower box
score on his 221 requests as
of June 12: - -
20, requests had been fi
nally - approved by both
houses and either are law or
awaiting the president's sig
nature 9 per cent.
- 10 had passed both hous
es and are in conference
4.5 per cent.
37 had passed one house
but not the other 16.7 per
cent!
- 15 had been reported
from ; committee to the floor
He had made it plain, too,
that he strongly disapproved
the execution of Hungarian
revolt leaders. Imre Nagy and
Pal Maleter. k
It is now disclosed that
Gomulka was told last week
that he must either come out
against Tito or face over
throw. There is one report that
Russia gave him 72 hours to
make up his mind.
Forced To Give In
Gomulka was forced to give
in. Had he refused, not only
would he have been forced
out as Poland's leader but his
country would have been giv
en over to the "Stalinist" ele
ments in his party.
Gomulka has been under
increasingly strong pressure
from Moscow ever since Com-
of either the House or Senate
but had not come up for a
vote 6.8 per cent. .
58 had received commit
tee hearing but had not been
reported 26.2 per cent. '
53 had received no ac
tion at all 24 per cent.
. 28 had been rejected,
either by unfavorable floor
action or in committee 12.7
per cent.
(Copyright, 1958, "
Congressional Quarterly Inc.)
Labor Council Backs
Bargaining Plan
Portland (UPI) The
Multnomah . Central Labor
Council Monday night voted
unanimously to endorse a
plan for collective bargaining
for Portland city employees.
The vote followed a report
by Harry E. Williams, presi
dent of the fire fighters un
ion, that there is "definitely
a move to hold down salar
ies" among Portland city em
ployees. x The Council also urged
that organized labor and the
Portland Chamber of Com
merce join in an effort to
keep Bayly Manufacturing
Company from leaving Port
land. Mrs. Jettie Lebor of the
garment workers union re
ported that the firm, will
move, to Yakima, Wash., be
cause of lower labor costs
there.
Counsel With
Mr. Insurance
Fred Brannan
Or Call
Mr. Friendly
Bill Fish
Phone SP 3-7343
MEDFORD
INSURANCE
AGENCY
27 NORTH HOLLY ST.
mumst reversion toward the
harsh rule of the Josef Stalin
era started.
He has resisted as stub
bornly as he could. He refused
to join in the anti-Tito cam
paign. He has tried to stop
the general trend toward Stal
inist policy in the Communist
world.
He has been compelled to
give in bit by bit, and to
tighten up his own liberalized
rule.
Finally came the demand
that he come out against Tito.
The alternative was that
Russia would take every pos
sible means, political and eco
nomic, to overthrow him.
There was no direct threat
of Russian military interven
tion against him. But innr.
ently authentic reports sav
that in recent weeks strong
forces of Russian troops have
been moved close to the East
German and Russian frontiers
of Poland.
The implied threat arjnar-
ently was that Polish "Stal
inists," if necessary, would
engineer an uprising that
would give Russia an excuse
to intervene.
Poland Depends en Russia
Gomulka's problem is that
Poland cannot get along with
out Russia. Its economic situa
tion is difficult. And nearly
all of the raw materials used
in Polish industry come from
Russia. "
Gomulka made his sur
render in a speech last Friday
at the Polish Baltic sea port
of Gdansk.
"The guilt lies squarely on
Yugoslav- shoulders," Gomul
ka said of the dispute be
tween Tito and Soviet Rus
sian leaders.
But he qualified hii criti
cism by saying that Tito sin
cerely desired to strengthen
peace.
In speaking of Nagy, Go
mulka criticised his policies.
But he still refrained from
giving his approval to Nagy's
execution. That, he said, was
an internal Hungarian affair,
and it was not for Poles to
judge on its fairness.
Thus, though Gomulka has
been forced to comply with
Russian demands, it is clear
that he did so grudgingly. The
Russians cannot be too pleas
ed with their victory. Both
Gomulka's resistance, and So
viet pressure on him, undoubt
edly will continue.
WISCONSIN COLLEGES .
Madison, Wis. flPI Wiscon
sin has 80 privately and pub
licly controlled colleges which
enroll a total of 49,698 stu
dents, the state coordinating
committee for higher educa
tion t reported. Publicly con
trolled institutions constitute
nearly two-thirds of the en
rollment. With the state-supported
University of Wiscon
sin accounting for 37 per cent.
The Strait of Belle Isle,
between Newfoundland and
Labrador, is between 10 and
18 miles wide.
Growtli Fund
Series K-2
A Mutual Investment Fund i
composed of securities se-,
lected f or thsir possibili
ties of future GROWTH J
and increased income.
The Keystone Company'
SO Cmi.rt.i Street, Bottoa 9. MM.
PleaM send me prospectus sad deserlp.
live material on the Keystone Growth
Fund.
VS6
' Asm.
Addrtu
City-
.Stats-
Fred Brennan
ARE YOU SUFFICIENTLY
COVERED?
If you think you have
enough fire insurance read '
this. A smokestack built in
1921 for, $8,740 was re-'
cenfly dismantled. The cost,
$13,470. Protect your or
iginal building costs with :
ample fire insurance.
Bill Fish