Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 3, 1958)
o o o o 0 0 4 Thursday, July A 1958 MAIL TRIBUNE, MTDFORD, ORE. MEDFORDt&,TRIBUNE "Everyone in Southern 'Oregon Readi The MaJ Tribune" Published Daily except Saturday by MED FORD PRINTING CO 33 North Fir St Ph. SP.2-6141 ROBERT W RUHL. Editor HERB GREY Advertising ManaaS f T. Tl I I r f A T T T . n - ' Vl, Businessr2and Laughlin, fourth largest producer, says "it J? Managing Editor1 & , tt oroi..i j' f a kriu Ai,i,f,., jh aianaeine EARL H ADAMS. Cicv Editor HARRY CHIPMAN. Teleg iitd OLIVE STARCHER, fietv E.or DALE ERICKSON, Circulation Mgr. An Indeiendent Newsitjber Entered as second class matter at Medford Oregon under Act of March 3189 SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mail In Advance: Copy 10c. Daily and Sunday 1 year J 15.00 Ttailv rtH 'Amrl a R rryrym ft nfl Daily and Sunday 3 mos. 4.2 Sunday Only One year S4JM By Carrier In Advance Meaford Ashland, Central Point. Eagle Point. Jacksonville. Gold Hill. Phoenix. Shady Cove, Rogue Riv er Talent, and on motor routes; Daily and Sunday 1 year $18 00 Daily and Sunday 1 mo Carrier and Dealers c& 10c All Terms Cash in Advance Official Paper of City of Medford Official Paper of Jackson County JfJnited Press Full Leased Wire MEMBER OK AUDIT !fltJREAU OF CIRCULATION AdvertLsing Representative: WEST-HOLIDAY CO.. INC, Of fices in New York. Chicago. De troit. San Francisco. Los Angeles. Seattle. Portland St Louis. At lanta. Vancouver B C. NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION NATIONAL EDITORIAL i ASOCIITQN Flight 'o Tirae0 Medford and Jackson County History from the files of The Mail Tribune 10. 2,U, 30 and 40 years ago. 0 10 YEARS AGO JuJS3. 1948 (Saturday) 0) A S- M. Cleven and Walt Sur Eer have purchased the shoe: shop at 17 North Fir st. The under-privileged f3H drens' summer camp at Lak$ of the Woods is Mitred of "Suf ficient funds for this yflr, acJ coming io i ne odjrciuug. Army, which Operates it 20 YEARS AGO u July 3. 1938 (Sund) From Arthur Perry! Tf Smudge Pot" column: 'Tioast ing ears look promising in the rural are; but the farmers will have to get on their kges to pick them, as the corn is not growing like a weed 30 YEARS GO q July 3, 1928 (Tuesd) Andrew Welch of SaFran cisco has purchased two mils of Rogue river frontage near the Dodge Bridge from Sur dette L. Dodge for a fishing lodge. From Local and Pwsonal column: "The month of June, as usual, was a banner one in th takinsr ouQf marriaae li censes in the couir clerk1 office, for 81 such licenses were issued heraJast month, P Ot Ul Willtll WC1C IORCU uiv by couples from the state of California." 40 YEARS AGO July 3. 1218 (Wednesday) Beginning JulyJ, Asliland barbers raised the shaving price to 20 cents, adding five cents for thO"suPerflu0US ' neckshave. q From Local Qnd Personal columnP'Claude Metz arrived here last night from Silver Lake, Ore., for a visit until Sunday with relatives and friends and the fish in Rogue River." What's Yonr I.Q4 Mine or. ten correct is superior; seven or eight is excellent; five or six is good. 1. Which noted American said "I wil'oreturn"? 2. Is it a King or a Queen who has reigned longer in England? 3. A group of lions is called a p-i-e? 4. Which deceased New York governor was frequently called "the happy warrior"? 5. Name the motion picture actress who had the leading role in the movie, "Mother Wore Tights." - q 6. Jade is always .green; true Or false? 7. Is the State of Massachu- setts, Wisconsin, or Newlities up 11 per cent). By T.-i-rt.. tk tJmo. ctoto inrl 1- . i1 j.1 Jersey the leading state 8. The zodiacal sign for those persons born between October 23 and November 23 is Sagittarius or Scorpio? 9. Bruno Hauptman was,j executed 1933 lor tne Kid napping of whose baby? 10. The noted painter, Rem brandt Van Rijn, was of Dutch, Swedish, or Norwe gian nationality? Answers: 1. Douglas Arthur. 2.. A QueeM (Victoria 1837 to901). 3. Pride. 4. Alfred E. Smith. 5. Betty XSrable. 6. False. 7. Massachu setts. 8. Scorpio. 9. Charle! A. Lindbergh's baby. 10 I. J Dutch. 6' Big Steel" 'Had Steel Prices S&el labor costs -ft-ere to go up an estimated 20c an huf en Tuesday July 1) . oU. & Steel "Big Steel" to the industry will probably continue this year to play its tradi tional role of price bellveth-jr of the trade. Jones won t raise prices unless u. o. aieei uues. a price bikfe nnunced by small AJan Wood Steel for Jjil 7 is generally viewed as only a trial bal loon On the ve of the July 1 rise in steel wages, autojnc uidtf the three-year labor-management contrtct signed after the.1956 strike, the big qustpns appealed to be, when would a price rise coJfte and how much would it be? In general, steal price increases follow steel wage increases lifce the n&ht the day. As recently as a few weeks fego, it liad been generally conceded that .this ycji s wn au'Ji jjuce iascs wuuiu vuiiie annuel simultaneously. ATTENDING. the mid-May general meeting of the American Iron and Steel institute in New Yoii:, major producers had been almost unani mous. Arthur B. Homer, president of Bethlehem Steel, said: "If wages go up, prices must go up." Charges M. White, Republican Steel chairman, declared: "The price increase should.be about $11 a ton, because that's what the cost increase wgl be." A very. C, Adams, president of Jones and Laughlin, als'o looked for higher prices. He noted that "some companies operated in red ink during the first quarter and many others failed to cover heir dividend." Only Roger M. Blough, chairman of pace-setting U. S. Steel, was more cautious: "The customer problem and the competitive prob lem are weighing veiy heavily in the situation at the present time." rIEN the roof caved in. U. S. Steel on June 19 said cryptically; "The only point we have rgacgied to date is not to attempt to change our prices until the situation clarifies itself." And it wired Sen. Estes Kefauver (D-Tenn.) on June 26 it could "forecast" the "timing" of the clarification. The usually reliable Iron Age has predicted no price rise now. The increase would come, but a little iater-r-before September "unless steel IfthiGr decides to pass up what it has coming." Steel labor already was on record. President D&tid J. McDonald of the United Steelwovkers d J&jneriea at a news conference on May 14 had rrjfcted. outright any suggestion of foregoing automatic July 1 wage increases. And labor, man ajfemejit, and government had cold-shouldered proposals that a wage-price moratorium be work ed out at ft. White House conference. aNE jadustry rule-of -thumb is that each penny Boost, in homlv waccs calla for a 20e-rr-tnn price iiicrtase. Oa that basis a price increase now of something jftor than $4 a ton subject to cost oiving -wage adjustments would appear ade quate. But tht producers say they've already been fil-beajmg. Ifce rise announced by Alan" Wood ddmjsjany, vas 1 6 a ton, average. "E.R.R. Stock Market and Recovery The Stock Market, until its drop on Thursday Jure 19, hd exuded optitiism. The market at any particular time is supposed to reflect not so much the economig situation at that time as the outlook some months ahead. J that supposition is correct, stocks are antici pating an end to the recession before the end of the year. And there are those who maintain that hard-headed, nose-on-the-frail buyers and sellers of securities have better first-hand "lowdown" on what lies ahead than do the economists with their index nunfbers, graphs and charts of what was what several weeks ago. f OING back onfy to World War II, stpeke ac tually weat up during the first post-war re cession in 1945. Everybody knew that the let down was only the inevitable breathing spell for readjusting from a war to a peace economy. During the recession of 1948-49, stock aver ages stayed almost unchanged. Everybody expect ed the slow-down to be short-lived, and the Mar ket started up three months before business activ ity did. But in the 1953"recessiorr stocks began to drop some months before industrial production began to drop, in turn beginning to rise almost a year before production really began to rise. In the present recession stocks started to slide late in July, 1957, several months before the in dustrial production index turned down, and be gan their present rise in mid-April. By rrrid-June the Dow-Jones average of 65 stocks was, only 8 percent lower than on July 18, 1957 (industrials do-n also 8 per cent, rails down 22 per cent, util- aiiuw iiuw accurately uie. iiamet loaay was re flecting the outlook some months ahead. E.R.R. PPUsb ttorgiaTo Portland (UPI) Pacific Power igjyk Lifht company, today requested Public Utfl ity Commissioner HowtftI Morgan to subpoena the rules, regulations and established rates records of the Spring field Municipal Electric board for a PUt heftrins 6h .com pany competition in Spring field. ' Thjtee officials of th mun icipal system were naiftd in the request for subpoena to appear wit Ji, the records, thty Labor Day we should -yr 1 J 1 Subpoena Records ako were tsked to bring me ter boois, billing nd corres pondence involving 112 com mercial, industrial and a few residential customers within the city. Morftn was acted to direct th sppearanoe $f Don Itf. Pejlow, chairman ef the city utility board; Frank M. Brown, superintendent of the ytem and board secretary; no John McCarron, office manager, to apoesr with the record. - Dennis the Menace Today & Tomorrow By Walter Lippmann Affeinit Inttrvenlion . . There is a certain vague ness, perhaps deliberate, in what President Chamoun of the Lebanon has been allswed to let hhnaelf think about Amerioan mil itary commit ments. He is said to think that if he asks for British Americ a.n armed inter vention, hav- WaUr Lippmmaa ing faile(j tQ get U.N. armed intervention, we are in honor bound to send in the Marines and the para troopers. It is very hard to believe that London and Washington have really put themselves in a position where Mr. Chamoun can de cide to make us take part in the Lebanese fighting. Such a delegation of authority to a foreign politician, who is not even sure of the loyalty of his own army, would be so im prudent that one cannot im agine President Eisenhower and Secretary Dulles, making it. . If we had made such a promise, it would be beyond anything ever contemplated in any of eur many pacts, doc trines, and declarations. For in this case we would nna ourselves committed to much more than the defense of a country which is the victim of external aggression. We would be committed to a particular individual in the internal af fairs of that country. ' The Lebanese civil war broke , out when President Chamoun started to amend the constitution in order to give himself another term of office. While the rebellion has undoubtedly teen encour aged and helped from Syria and Egypt, the basic fact fs that if the Lebanese army had been willing to act for Cha moun, it could have sup pressed the rebellion. Inas much as President Chamoun cannot use effectively his own army, there is on the face of it reason to believe that the conflict is, as the U.N. observ ers have indicated, primarily an internal affair. . HAD we promised Chamoun to intervene if he called upon us, we would have com mitted ourselves to the per sonal fortunes of one Leban ese politician. There is no public evidence that we have actually done this, though it is true that in his recent press conference, Mr. Dulles did say that we might intervene. As against this, we mast Try and Stop Mo - By BENNETT CEIF SIR ARTHUR CONAN DOYXE arrived in Paris one Sunday evening, and ordered a taxi driver to deposit him at the Ritz hotel. "Delighted to oblige you, Monsieur Doyla," saieV the driver whQ could speak . fair English. SjyivWv "Amazing:,;' declare a Dgyle, "How did you know V identity?" "Elementary," countered the driver. "I read that you were arriving from the Riv iera. Obviously you are an Englishman. Also, jnly a barber on the Riviera would give a man such a haircut." "Incredible!," applauded Doyle. "And you had noth ing else to go on?" "One small additional fact," admitted the driver. "Your namt Is projwnttly Mas tered on every vone of your seven suitcases." i A, those tactless teen-agers! Mrs. Aaare Bhuaaathal, of Vor walk.'conn., overhead her young son tU a girl in the back aeat of the family car, "I'm certainly glafl you can go to the club daace with mtf-tojiight. I wag up about sevem others awf tey we aU Busy." 198, by Jeiaftt Crt iatrite4 y TuUgrtj tpS!; assume that in supporting Mr. Hammarskj old's efforts, we are acting in good faith, not merely trying to take back a promise that we' wish we had never given. Now the U.N. action looks towards a nego tiated settlement of the civil war, and any settlement would, in the nature o the issues, involve the departure of Mr. Chamoun. We cannot, therefore; be pledged to Mr. Chamoun personaUy. NO ONE; I submit, lias any reason to be tmbaiTassed and to becom apologeuc if be opposes an Anglo-American intervention in the Lttoen ese civil war. It is said that if Chamoun'a administration ia overthrown and ii replaced by one which is no longer pro-Western but is pro-Nasser, there will fol low the collapse of the West ern position in the rest of the Arab, perhapa even the rest of the Moslem, world. Since this will happen if we 'do not inter vene to save Chamoun, we must act or we must lose everything in the Middle East and beyond. The trouble with this argu ment is that if intervention is attempted, as at Suez in H5, and if the intervention fails, the Western position in the Middle East and beyond will be much worse than if, in t negotiated settlement, Cha moun gives up the three re maining months of his consti tutional term of office- Now, there is no certainty that in tervention would be success ful, and I find it ominous that no one who favors interven tion has ever ventured to say what the .Marines and the paratroopers would be told to do when they landed in the Lebanon, and how, once in, they would be able to come out again. PRESUMABLY, the objec tive of the Marines and the paratroopers would be to seal the Syrian border, an opera tion which would require the pacification of the rebel areas behind the border, which are at least one-third ef the coun try. This would amount to the military occupation of the Lebanon. There is no reasoa te suppose that the rebels would lie down and surren der. There is every reason to suppose that they would wage guerrilla . war, and that the United States Marines would find themselves -in the same kind of underground war which the French army has been fighting for several years in Algeria" , Nor is it probable that the Matter of Fccf AQAI'tf, IT'S UP 70 Washington President Eiienhower ia leaving the Ad am cage to be handled by i " " the same man lff! f who has spar ed the Jesi dent the bur defl of handl ing so raany other case namely Sher man Aflexis. On the oae hand, he has Jews Mara ieu Adams xo manage his own defense. This has necessarily meant that his defense has been badly managed, although Adams and his subordinates of the Whit House staff have taken cer tain defensive measures of an important kind. The White House staff, for instance, successfully imposed Roger Robb as the chief legal advisor of that artist in friend ship, Bernard Goldftne. When Goldfine makes his grand ap pearance before the Harris Committee, he will -therefore be guided (to the extent he can be guided) by the man Adm. Louis Strauss chose as chief proscecuter" of Robert Oppenheimer. Again the White House staff has had no difficulty in producing a counter-fire of news stories about government favors asked for constituents b y Democratic members of Cpn gress. BUT there are other things Adams has . not been able to pass his own case in review with the Republican leader ship in Congress and in the country. He has not been able to ask men like Sen. WUliam Knowland to stand by the President, when the issue at stake was the President's wish to stand by Adams himself. It never seems to have oc curred to the President that if he was going to stand by Sherman Adams,, he alone 4 could rally the Republican party's lieutenant generals and major generals in support of their general-in-chief. This, he seems to have felt was just another matter for his taf to take care of. As a .result, Vice President Richard Nixon is just about the only Republi can of an eminence, outside the White House, who hss spoken up for the President. And it is known that Mion did so on his ewn notion. fN THE other hand, the " President has not merely left Sherman Adams, to men age his own defense. He has further asked Adams to sit in judgment on himself, in just the way that Adams sat in judgment on' Hef&lfl Tal bott and all the other officials of the Eisenhower Adminis tiation who have been charg ed with excessive imprudence or actual impropriety. In one aense.it wag inevi table that Dwight D. Eisen hower should leave Sherman British-American forces would be able to wage a self-contained war of pacification up to the Syrian border. Even if the Russians keep quiet, or just concentrate on Poland and .Yugoslavia, the Arab world from Morocco to ttoe Persian Gulf will be at least "as inflamed as it was in H3d during the intervention against Nassar. In fact, it is difficult to im agine how Nasser could fail to make reprisals for this see ond intervention, and as he and the United "Arab Repub lic haTje physical control of the pipelines and of the car nal, we must have no illusions about this being a little local operation. We would be strik ing at Nasser just enough to annoy him, just enough to provoke him, but not enough, as might theoretically have been done at Suez! in 1956, to destroy iim. AFTER the stand we took in the Suez affair,' we are committed by our own acts arid declarations to policy of co-exisxence with Nasser. The policy may not work. But if the alternative is a military intervention against him, we are offered Enormous risks without any serious prospects of success. The true alternatives, so it seems to me, are on the one hand a negotiated settlement of the Lebanese civil war: this J would mean the departure of Chamoun and a Lebanese re nunciation of its adherence to the Eisenhower doctrine. Th other alternative is interven tion to keep Chamoun in pow er. This would mean, so I be lieve and greatly iear, an in definite, indecisive, prolonged entanglement of our forces in, the wretchedness of guerrilla warfare, (c) 1341. Vew York Herald Triaume Ie. Cof brQOcbQs& toacf Pecfs d oJf kinds California's Great Insect Powder 80 Years Old still Best and Safest. 4a losy V flseWcejieajfeel Adams to iecide: whether he woifld go or stay. In the long mcaths of the President's serious illness, when Eisen hower jvas first entirely in apacitated and then only partly able, to carry the bur-, den of the Presidency, it was Aifxas who boldly and effici etfy took the burden on his ovk shoulders. h If oblifation 3as cregted in those rfonths an obli gation -which th President deeply- and rightly feels? He csnld not ask Adams go hp cause of t h imprudence vhich 4dam has admitted. He ceuld only ask nim to go if 9 showing of impropriety were added to the skowing of imprudence. ut dpie these limita tion en th Presidfcntfcection, he could till kave set in judgment On Adgms higiself. He could have said," in short, that the decision in this case involving) Adams was not up to Adams, byt was up to the President alone. He coujd have told Adams to carry on with his regular business and forget about the Adams case, which he, the President, would take in his sole charge. THIS the President has not done, with, the result that Adams himself has had to ag onize over the key question: whether his usefulness as the President's chief-of-staff has been or has not been fatally impaired. This is primarily a practical question. An auto mobile may be orchidcolored and have gilded door handles, but it is still useless if it will not run. A public officjpl may have acted from the most in nocent motives, but he is still useless if his actions prevent him from doing his allotted job. But this question about a man's continuing usefulness is not a question which the man himself car easily an swer. It is a melancholy picture that one gets the picture of Adams barricaded in his White House office, wording 11 day on his own case and sitting in judgment all day on his own case, with precious little help from anyone ex cept James Hagerty ancj thaj other able Deweyite on tRe staff, Thorites Stephens. 1 Bift it is also g picture tfiaH evokes some concern. Por the sake of the good conduct of the aovernment, on must prty the. case will be disptffed of, one way of another, just s speedily as possible. (Cj 183 Ve Yorg Herald Tribune Inoi o CeffitoyniegKoR Letters to the Bklitor must er the name and addre$ of the. writer although under cer tain circumstances the use of a tan name or initial for tgiblica tion is 'permissible. The Mail Tribune reserves th right to edit all letters with an eyfe clarification and condensation. Letters submitted for publican1 The lejttvs printqd in this :olumn do not necessarily repj$ 3nt the views of the paper, in fact tft contrary is outp the To the Editor: I, o, made the trip to Portland, with other Medford men, to visit Vhe Oregoli United Appeal agencies that are surgported by the. United Medford Cru sade. As a director in the UMC, and igving been active in each campaign ever since it started, I have always been interested in the worlP of these agencies. I was terrif iqally impressed with the functions (-pf these agencies. The . St. Rose Industrial school was particularly im pressive to me. Court commit ted high school girlsre cared for, educated, and given re sponsibilities to trajjn them to support themselves and to be come responsible citizens. We hgd an excellent lunch, entirely prepared and served by the girls. Their living quar- "Put fear out of your heart. This nation will survive, this state will prosper, the orderly business of life will go for ward if only men can speak in whatever way given them to utter what their hearts hold by voice, by posted card, by letter r by pres. Reason never has failed men. Only fcrc and oppression have mac the wrecks in the world' 0 Chapel Mortuary Across from tha Courthouse Frank Morgan - Harold Snodgrass, FUNERAL DIRECTORS ; DAY OR- NIGHT PHONE SP 2-8030 Adenauer's Policy On Two Issues Gets Test in Election By CHARIS M.QfcCANN UPI Foreign News Analyst Chancellor Konrad Aden auer's policy on two big East West issues is being put to the test in a West German election. The issues are the reuni cation of Ger m any and A d e n a uer's decision to arm Wosi Mcatini uermany wun tactical atomic . weapons. The test is to come Sun day, when the voters of North Rhine-Westphalia state, who represent about 25 per cent of We Germany's popula tion, elect a new Parliament. cAdenauer is trying to re gain for his Christian Demo cratic Party control of the Parliament, which he lost in 1956 to a coalition of Social ists and Free Democrats. The Socialists, the chief op position party, hold that Ad enauer's entire policy on re unification has been a failure and that the reunion of West and EasOGegnany is farther away than it ever was. They assert also that the arming of West Germany with tactical atomic weapons, will mal a general disarmament agreement with Soviet Russia more difficult and will sub ject Germany to the peril of lit L J O ' In the Day's News By FRANK As this is written, the Alas ka statehood bill, after all these" years of stalling and de lay, has passed the U.S. Sen ate bjs the decisive vote of 64 too20. The House of Rep resentatives has already ap proved it, and President Ei senhower is expected to sign it without delay- . The people of Alaska are reported to be wild with joy, dancing in the streets, march ing in parades ancPfilling the sky with fireworks. Only one Alaskan, the teletypes tell us, is looking a bit ruefully at his hole card. He is Gerald Wil liams, thej territory's attorney general. In 9 moment of un guarded enthusiasm a while back, he vowed that if the stttehood bill passed he'would pusi a peanut 120 mles from BigSDelta to Tok Junction. " He's wondering now, as so many of us have in similar sit uations, if hp enthusiasm didn't maybe run away with his judgment. At any rate, he's congratulating himself that he didn't yw toush the peanut wun nis ntse. UTHY all this delay in bring. ing Alaska into the Union? It's a long story with a short title. The title is POLITICS, It has been generally ex pected that when Alaska ters were immaculate, and the atmosphere was friendly and happy in spite of the locked doors. The high-light of the day vfts the exhibition of folk dangjng performed by the cos tumed girls, some of them from Medford. It should never be forgot ten that Medford is extreme ly fortunate to have facilities avlable sucn as tnese which we certainly couldn't afford on a local level to take care of 19 girls from Jackson county who were there last year. Dick House 15 Corning court Medford, Ore. Wflliam Allen o tQ a devastating nuclear weap ons attack if a third world war breaks out. Adenauer's reply is that Russian obstruction alone ( stands in the way of reuni fication. . As for the atomic weapons, he holds that they are essen tial to West German defense and that if war came a nu clear weapons attack would becertain in any event. . Top Candidate Dies Domestic issues have been subordinated in the election campaign and the test .will come almost entirely on the two big ones. In the 1954 North Rhine Westphalia election, the Chris tian Democrats won 95 of the 200 seats in the Landtag, the Parliament. They ran the state, with the support of smaller parties. But in 1956, the Socialists engineered, a coalition with the Free Democrats and took control. Adenauer's position has been made more diificult by the sudden death last Sunday of Karl Arnold, deputy chair man of the Christian Demo cratic Party and former Min ister President or prime min ister of the state. Arnold was Adenauer's can didate for Minister President. His death, due to a heart at tack, leaves the party with out a candidate for the top post. JENKINS elects the two senators to which under the U.S. consti tution it will be entitled when it becomes a state, they will be Democrats. The GOP's, in the past, just haven't been able to bring themselves around to the idea of present ing their political opponents with a couple of senators. Why did they finally coma through? I wouldn't know but it isn't impossible that in the landslide that at the moment seems to be impending they are shrugging- their shoulders and muttering resignedly: "Aw, heck; what's a couple more Democrats!" AN SECOND thought, Alas ka's attorney, general (who has vowed to push the peanut) may not be the only one to greet Alaska's statehood with a lingering shade of sadness. There is Texas. When Alaska comes into the Union, Texas will have to move over. rpHE area of the new State of Ala$ca is 586,400 square miles. , The area of the State of Texas is only . 267,239 square miles. . That will be a hard pill for Texans to take. But They can fall back on the population figures- At the 1950 census, Texas had 7,711,194 persons. At the same census period, Alaska had only 128,643. THE DANMOORE HOTEL 1217 SW Morrison St. PORTLAND, OREGON AH transient guests. AH these who come, return. Rates not high, not low. Free garage, TV's and radios. Reputation for cleanliness. Reservations by' long distance phone refunded on request . upon arrival White