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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 9, 1958)
o 4-Wednesday, July 9, 1938 I ti All TDIDIlkir LA cntABn ABF I MEDFORDt&TBIBUNE "Xveryone in Southern Oregon Rsaria Th Mill T-H ..," Published Dally except Saturday by ' - MEDFORD PRINTING CO ' 33 North Fir St. Ph. SP.2-6141 ROBERT W RUHL, Editor KERB 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 STARCHER. Society Editor DALE ERICKSON. Circulation Mgr. An Independent Newspaper Entered as second class matter at Medlortl Oregon under Act ol March 3, 1891 SUBSCRIPTION RATES Mail In Advancer Copy lOe. Daily- and Sunday 1 year SI5.00 Daily and Sunday 6 mos. 8.00 Daily and Sunday 3 mos. 435 Sunday Only One year $4.20 By Carrier In Advance Med ford - 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. 150 Carrier and Dealers copy 10c Ail Terms Cash in Advance Official Paper of City of Medford Official Paper of Jackson County United Press Full Leased Wire MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION Advertising 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. NEWSPAMt . rUILISHEIS k - "ASSOCIATION NATIONAL EDITORIAL ASSOcfjTlgN g.liilMlg.Wai Flight 'o Time Medford and Jackson County History from the fils of The Mail Tribune 10. 20. 30 and 40 years ago. 10 YEARS AGO July 9. 1948 (Friday) ghMedford Ministerial as sociation w conaucc services in city park ' again this sum' mer at 4:30 pjn. each Sun day. From "Side Glances" "Baby Paul Brainerd and Bar ber Claude Saylor going about the serious business of a first hair cut unmindful of Papa Phil and his camera flashes." 20 YEARS AGO July 9, 1938 (Saturday) More than 300 students at tend daily Red Cross swim ming and life-saving classes in thrsnatatonum. From AHhur Perry's "Ye Smudge Pot" column: "Hail stones as big as hen eggs fell in the back country Thurs. Over in the Eagle Pt. sector, one of Ijpn 9French's pullets laid an egg as big as a hail stone, the same day." 30 YEARS AGO July 9. 1938 londay) What is believed to be the first sock-eye orblue-back sal mon ever caught in the Rogue was discovered at Savage Rap ids danxjwo wajgks ago. From "Local and Pqjsonal" colusan; "During the absence on nis vacation of Sterling Rothermell, organist of the Rialto theater, Miss Alice Ster ling of Los Angeles, who rns been the organist of the Vin ing theater at Ashland, is pre siding a3 the Rialto's organ." 40 YEA29AGO July 9. 1918 (Tuesday) bounty court to install sprinkftr to wet down the Crater Lake road this side of Prospect. 0 From "LfJfcal and Personal" column: "A pial for illegal possession of liquor was con tinued today by Justice Tay lor because all the witnesses on both sides of the case are now out fighting forest fires." Whal's Your I.Q.? Nine or ten correct is superior; seven or eight is excellent;, five or sis is good. 1. Near which large U.S. city is the National Airport? 2. Guy Lombardo, an or chestra leader, is also known for his interest in which sport? - 3. The fur of which animal is a symbol of royalty? , 4. In which group of Pacific islands is Saipan? 5. Which of these is not a game fish: trout, heron, black bass, tarpon? i I 6. Henry L. Stimson former ly occupied which cabinet post? 7. In which month does the $Otumn equinox occur? j 8. In which of our wars did the Battle of Germantown oo ttir? kl Q Tlnoc TrnCTlinh Phan- 1 separate England from eland? ii 10 .What large animals are ifced as draft animals in Cey- V -A. fcn? - . . ii Answers: 1. Washington. J. C. 2. Speedboat racing. 3. ljrmine. 4. The Marianas. 5. Heron. 6. Secretary of War. September. 8. Revolution y War. 9. No (separates Eng faES9xom., France). 10. Ele phants. r Legal Eavesdropping "A microphone is legal, wiretapping-it not," columnist Drew Pearson is saying in . justifying his assistant's association with the "bugging" of a Washington hotel room adjoining a' suite oc cupied by representatives of Bernard Goldfine. And a Washington policeman is quoted as saying no District of Columbia law was violated. Whatever the ethics of the situation, Pearson appears to be right about the law. Congress in 1956 did outlaw eavesdropping on the delibera tions of federal juries. But otherwise little action has been taken, despite a House Judiciary com mittee pledge in that year to draft nevy and com prehensive legislation to govern interception of communications. The U. S. Supreme Court has been strict in ruling out evidence obtained by wiretapping, but it has been lenient about admitting evidence in federal courts gained by other mechanical eaves dropping methods. The High Court has limited Sec. 605 of the Federal Communications act to the tapping of telephone lines. This is the provision that: "No person not be ing authorized by the sender shall intercept any communication and divulge or publish the exis tence, contents, substance, purport, effect or meaning of such communcation to any person . . . " The Supreme Court has repeatedly ruled that the use of wiretap information as evidence in federal court constitutes "divulgence" and hence is prohibited. THE Supreme Court rA A n-rk rr r4-o iv rA wiretaps even if the taps are authorized by state law is not admissible in federal courts. This op inionin the vase of Benanti v. New York cast so. much doubt on the legality of wiretaps by the states that Sen. John L. McClellan (D-Ark.), and several colleagues introduced a bill to exempt state wiretaps from the That measure is still ate Interstate and Foreign Commerce committee. Meantime, a House Judiciary Subcommittee on May 14 approved a bill to permit the use of wire tap evidence in federal court cases involving es pionage, treason, subversion, or kidnaping. The measure, sponsored by Chairman Emanuel Cel ler (D-N.Y.), of the full Judiciary committee, would require federal officials to obtain a court order to tap wires in such cases. The Senate Judiciary committee has a similar bill requiring the permission of the Attorney Gen eral rather than a court order. Action on these measures this late in the session would appear unlikely unless the latest disclosures in the, Gold-fine-Pearson affair focus new attention on the whole matter of intercepting communcations. f OV. Averell Harriman of New York on April 14 signed two bills that make "bugging" harder for law enforcement officials in that state. One requires a court order for electronic eaves dropping. The other waives the court order re quirement for the first 24 hours of "hot pursuit" of a suspect. As for wiretapping, FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover on May 18 disclosed that the Bureau was operating 90 wiretaps around the country. In April 1955, Hoover told the House Judiciary sub committee the FBI had never tapped more than 200 telephone lines at any one time. E.R.R. New Passport Control Bill Congress didn't say you could act on passports as you thought Congress said you could, is in ef fect what the Supreme Court, by 5 to 4, told the State Department on June 16 last. So the Senate Foreign Relations committee opened hearings Monday on bills to spell out, now, just why and how the department is to withhold them. Congress did prescribe in the past, the Court majority agreed, that passports should or could be denied on such grounds as Communist party membership, intent to further Communism at home or abroad or otherwise injure the United States. But this prescription was limited to time of war or a national emergency now officially at an end. -v ONGRESS intended no such limitation, insist- ed the minority Clark, Burton, Harlan, Whittaker, JJ. All the same, the minority did agree with the majority that freedom of travel is a "part of our heritage," going back to Magna Carta. " - ,;" For. that matter, the government also,-went along with that. Majority, minority, and govern ment agreed too, that due process of law' must be observed, in both form and substance, in with holding passports. In disagreeing on what the laws meant, both majority and minority pointed ly bypassed the larger issue of how far and under what circumstances the inherent right to a pass port could be restricted constitutionally. An aroused Congress will enact either his bill (HR 12989) or some other on passport restric tion, predicts chairman Francis E. Walter (D-Pa.) of the House Un-American Activities committee. Any such bill enacted, implies the June 16 decis ion, will have to run a stiff constitutional gantlet. E.R.R. , last December held that Kir ofofo n-f"fi noro fVi vrmnrVi federal prohibition. pending before the Sen Dennis the Menace 7J- SE? THE DONTiflK? TOE HORSE THAT I CANT pIDB Big Game Political Hunt by Lonq Resembles Adams Case By LYLE C. WILSON United Press International Washington (UPI) To match the big game political hunt in which presidential assistant Sherman Adams is the unhappy quarry, it is necessary to go back near ly 25 years to the era f the Kingfish, the late Sen. Huey Pierce Long. The year was 1935 -and Lyie c. wiison the, man for whom the Kingfish went hunting was James A. Farley, chairman of the Democratic National committee and post master general in Franklin D. Roosevelt's cabinet. The similarity between the Adams and Farley hunts is limited strictly to the fact that each of the hunted was so big in the administration in which he served that disgrace might well ruin a President and disrupt a party. The ruin of FDR and suffo cation of the New Deal party, then a-borning, was precisely what Huey had in mind. He was planning soon to run for President himself, and need ed to cut FDR and the New Deal down to size. The Biggest Rooster Long's own account of the inspiration of his campaign was in mucn - simpler lan guage. After his baseless charges had been refuted and rejected by the Senate, Long remarked: "Jim was the biggest roost er in the yard, and I thought if I could break his legs, the rest would be easy." Easy it might have been, too, m those days of bleak depression for Long to have parlayed his every-man- a- king share-the-wealth bally hoo into a position for him self of great political power. He already possessed millions of followers including much of the lunatic fringe. The Kingfish's strategy failed because there were no strikes on Farley, neither questionable gifts nor free lodgings, nor anything else. The Senate cleared Farley after committee consideration of the charges and a written response by Farley to every question Long had raised. Good Political Theory But, if Long's strategy failed, his political thinking was pretty good. If he had brought Farley down on charges- of corruption, or even of gross imprudence, much of . the prestige of the Roosevelt administration and of the President himself might well have gone down with the postmaster general and party chairman. Farley fry and -By BENNETT CERF- IN THEIR BOOK, Rascals in Paradise, James Michener and Grove Day tell about a learned gentleman in the '30s who clearly foresaw that a great war was about to engulf the world, After consultation with sev eral top military men, he decided his only secure re fuge from the world's in sanity lay on some tropical isle, far from civilization. So in 1939, one week be fore Germany invaded Po land, this wise man fled to his chosen, almost unknown South Pacific refuge. It was an island called Guadal-' canal. - "What was the rank of that Navy man you were dancing with all eveninsr at the coun try club?" demanded an anxious mother. Tm not sure," answered i the daughter coyly, "but judging by his actions, I'd say he was a , Chief Petting Officer.". (Sounds like a. wolf in. ship's clothing!) , . q 1958, by Jennett Cerf. Distributed by King features Syndicate, , was, no doubt of it, the big gest rooster in the yard, ex cepting only FDR himself. There is no doubt, either, that' Adams is the biggest rooster in the Eisenhower ad ministration, next, of course, to DDE. If Farley's disgrace would have shorn FDR and his administration of its pres tige, so Adams' disgrace would shear the Eisenhower administration. The necessities of politics vary, of course, with time and the cast of characters. Noth ing short of driving Farley from the cabinet as unfit would have served Long's self-serving purpose, Long was a Democrat crusading In. the Day's News By FRANK Western Hemisphere note: Our neighbor across the Rio Grande held a presidential election Sunday. There were four candidates. The generally anticipated winner (no elec tion returns are available as this is written) is Adolfo Lo pez Mateos. He is the candi date of Mexico's dominant party, which hasn't lost an election in 40 years. He is an attorney who work ed up through a succession of congressional and diplomatic posts to become minister of labor under President Cortin es, the incumbent who is re tiring. "lYflATEOS' principal oppon ent is Luis Alvarez, who is the candidate of Mexico's principal opposition party. He is a successful textile indus trialist from the border state of Chiauhau. He was born in Juarez, went to high school in El Paso and attended the University of Texas. He is expected to come in second iri the running, but isn't given much chance of election. CANDIDATE No. 3 is Miguel Mendoza Lopez, who is running on the communist ticket. The commies were un able to muster enough signa tures to get his name on the ballot, so he is running as a write-in candidate. He concedes he hasn't much chance, and explains is this way: "I would make a better showing in the election if more of my followers knew how to write." rpHE list is completed by Leo-- nardo Garcia Perez, who won the nomination of the mi nority DNA party. The No. 1 plank in his platform is a promise to cure the nation's economic ills and boost the value of the peso from eight cents to a dollar. Before getting into politics he was a miracle healer. He Stop Me 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 4C0 words. The letters printed in this column do not necessarily represent the views of the Neuberger Answered To the Editor: Again, it is my pleasure to clarify" a few of the facts relative to recip rocal trade and Japanese ply wood imports. I do so in view of Sen. Neuberger's recent let ter published in Portland and several 4th Congressional Dis trict newspapers in which he implied that the placing of sufficient quotas on foreign plywood imports to permit our industry to survive and to maintain our wage structure, as I have suggested, is not in accordance with the princi ples of reciprocal trade. Presentation of only one as pect of any problem, as Sen. Neuberger has done, gives a most distorted picture of it, even though the part pre sented may essentially be cor rect. As the Senator suggests, against another Democrat and he needed an official "kill" to score at all. It is a Democratic commit tee of a Democratic House of Representatives which ha rasses Adams. The Democrat ic majority need not be com mitted to driving Adams from his White House office. With a campaign coming up, presi dential assistant Adams in the White House could be more valuable to the Democrats than private citizen Adams way up there in New Hamp shire. Anyway, that is the way a lot of Republicans figure it, especially those who will be appealing this year for votes. JENKINS used a magic potion to treat polio, cancer and various oth er afflictions. His miracles weren't numerous enough, and ; the Mexican health de partment made him shut up shop. Like many another of his kind the world over, he turned to politics. INTERESTING sidelight: The Mexican government went all out this year to en force the DEPISTOLIZATION laws. At yesterday's election, anyone caught carrying a pis tol or a knife to the polls was promptly qlapped into the cal abozo. , w HY this dissertation on a Mexican election? It's like this: Mexico is the most hopeful nation of Latin America. By all the rules of history, she has every reason to HATE us with an enduring hatred. We forced upon her a WAR OF CONQUEST. We took from her vast areas of territory. We took this territory by FORCE OF ARMS. . : Somewhat more than a half century later, we took advan tage of a bandit foray across the Rio Grande (by a brutal character named Pancho Vil la) and sent a punitive mili tary expedition clear to Vera Cruz. A similar foray by the French a century and a. quar ter ago created the situation that is causing France's pres ent troubles in Algeria. r WHY are our present rela tions with . Mexico good and getting better? One reason is that Ameri cans in increasing numbers are flowing into Mexico, as tourists. These tourists . are REAL Americans. They aren't, too snooty. They don't - sneer at Mexicans. They are gen uinely interested in them especially in the younger gen eration Mexicans who are coming up through Mexico's schools. These kids' are smart as tacks and Americans tend to adore them. We haven't ' poured too much FOREIGN AID onto Mexico. We've TRADED with her instead of shelling, out alms and playing Lady Boun tiful. As a result, our rela tions with Mexico and Mexi cans are ; improving steadily. If we could apply the same wise policies to the rest of Latin America, the Western Hemisphere could be built into the happiest and most prosperous area in the world, t L TveVUoje DAIRY-SMITH East Main St. Nowhere in this wide, wide wonderful world will you find Better Butter, not even in Oosterhout, Netherlands! I 1 I some cZ the purposes of the reciprocal trade law are to en courage foreign trade; to min imize quotas; and to grant im port concessions to foreign na tions. However, he completely overlooks and neglects to tell you of another important pro vision of the law, which, as he says, is supported "by a bi partisan group of eminent Americans including President Eisenhower, ex-president Tru man and Adlai e; Stevenson." It is a part of the recipocal trade program, which the Sen ator recently and wisely voted to continue in force. I refer to that part of the law which provides protection for Amer ican industry in situations like the excessive imports of Japanese plywood. Specifically, Sec. 1364 "of Title 19," U. S. Code Annotat ed, provides for an investiga tion and hearing , to be con ducted by the Tariff Commis sion upon the request of either House or Congress or of either of two congressional commit tees or of other designated persons, when it appears that excessive imports of any com modity are adversely affecting our own industries. The law then provides, and I quote: "Should the Tariff Commis sion find, as a result of its in vestigation and hearings, that a product. . .is being imported in such increased quantities. . . as to cause or threaten erious injury to the domestic indus try producing like or directly competitive products, it shall recommend to the president the. . .establishment of import quotas, to the extent and for the time necessary to prevent or remedy such injury." When needed for the protec tion of our own standards of living and basic industries, quotas are important to the proper operation of reciprocal trade. For example, a limita tion on coffee imports is spe cifically written into the law. Oil imports form another ex ample. A headline in the Ore gonian on July 5, 1958, reads "Ike Changes Oil Quotas." Tfie article then explains the changes in these particular import quotas. As I have previously point ed out, there are quotas by di rect legislation as well as those fixed by the administra tion under the reciprocal trade law. The Senator quotes an administration official to the effect that quotas by direct legislation are not in accord ance with the spirit of recip rocal trade. With this I agree. The Senator fails to point out, however, that the fixing of quotas by the. administration unaer tne law is actually a part of reciprocal trade, and is the preferred method of pro viding protection to our own industries, when needed. ' In fact, the reciprocal trade law contemplates that when ever imports endanger any one of our(own industries, our Senators 'and Congressmen may start the machinery to bring that matter to the at tention of the" administration, so that protective quotas can &e imposed without passing a new law. In view of the fact that some of those who represent us in Congress go to great lengths to justify their stand that the ever increasing Japanese ply wood imports (52 times more in'1957 than in 1951) do not compete with our own Oregon industry, it is not surprising that some administrative of ficials may not now favor quotas. : v - It seems to me that our rep resentatives should heed those who are in a position to know the . facts, "particularly those who are affected by these im-ports--the. various labor "un ions, which; speak- for the affected workmen, and the Douglas Fir Plywood Associ ation, which agrees with those unions and says "the great volume of imported plywood has had a highly detrimental effect on domestic production and employment." Instead of ; opposing at tempts of others in Congress to correct this situation, our , Congressmen either should support them or strongly move under the prpvisions of the existing reciprocal trade law to require the investigation and hearings which will af ford our workmen and indus ty an opportunity to be heard on the matter and determine whether they are right or L at Geneuet I I I Conferences Could Result in Changes For Communists UPI Foreign News Analyst Two current conferences in Eastern Europe may result in some big developments in the Communist world. Soviet Premier Nikita S Khrushchev is visiting East Germany, the most servile of Russia's sat ellites. P r e s ident Tito of Yugo slavia is play ing host to President Ga mel A b d e 1 Nasser of the United Arab TArmVilii nnH Mccaan Foreign Min ister Evangelos Averoff of Greece. wrong. From his failure to do so, I can only conclude that he must favor unlimited ply wood imports, regardless of the effect upon our economy. Paul E. Geddes, Roseburg, Republican -Nominee for Representa tive to Congress, 4th District. Answers Article To the Editor: This is - an answer to the article that ap peared in Mail Tribune a short time back, under the heading "Prophecy and Gen ealogy.". God has demanded that his people test those that profess to be His prophets. (1 John 4:1; 1 Thess. 5:21; Rev. 2.2.) Since false prophets do exist we must prove all things to try those who profess to speak for God. The missionaries of Joseph . Smith compass land and sea to make proselytes. They use every instrument at their means to' propagate to the public the stories that or iginated in the minds of Joe Smith and his associates. It is a challenge to us either to ac cept or denounce what is ad vocated by Mormonism. 0 John F. Peterson, a Mor mon, says, "Ouy family tree has become one of the signs of our time." From this sign he goes on in his theory to try to prove that we are liv ing in the last days. He says. "the compiling of family his tories and genealogies, which is in direct fulfillment of Bib lical predictions given by the Saviour and His prophets." He uses Malachi 4:5-6, to support his theory. He goes on to say that Elijah appeared to Joseph amnn in iviruana, umo, on April 3, 1836, in fulfillment of this passage of scripture Mr. Peterson in his zeal to support the divine origin' of Mormonism erred in the ap plication of Malachi 4:5-6. If Elijah appeared to Joe Smith in Kirtland, Ohio, in 1836 he must have been asleep or have forgotten these passages of scripture. "And the disci ples asked him, saying, Why then say the scribes that Elijah must first come? And he an swered and said, Elijah in deed cometh, and shall re store all things: but I say unto you, that Elijah is come al ready, and they knew him not, but did unto him whatso ever they would." (Matt. 17:-10-12). ; In the Gospel of Luke 1:16 17, we find the divine Inter pretation of Malachi 4:5-6. Note, it was John the "Baptist that went, " . . . before his face in Xhe spirit and power of Elijah " Note, the pur pose, of John's mission, to pre pare a people for the Lord, not to run down genealogies to be a good Mormon.- Mor monism is not the only sect that makes a play of the fam ily history, we find that the Jews did it in the time of Christ. I wonder if the Mor mons are trying to find out if they are all related to Brig- ham Young, . I understand he had ' a large number, of chil-. dren. -' . . . ' The Bible does speak to us saying that we are, " . ." . neither to give heed to fables or endless genealogies, which minister questionings , . . " (1 Timothy 1:3). K. G. Arnold, ' '' ' Box 416,- -Phoenix, Ore. - ANEW AMBULANCE 'ft? - . . . has recently been added to our1 auto fleet. It is fully equipped with first aid and .oxygen, to render an even better service C. M. Urwiller than ever before. For over 23 years we have tried to serve you faithfully and promptly, 24 hours of every day. litwiller funeral: : HOME Mountain View Chapel Hwy. 66 at Normal Office 88 N. Main's ASHLAND "t is better to know us and not need us,. ' We Never Close ' "" than to need us and not know us." Khrushchev is trying to tighten discipline in the Sov iet bloc of countries. His talks with Communist leader Walter Ulbricht and other East German leaders may result in further pressure against Polish Communist leader Wladyslaw Gomulka, whom the Kremlin still re gards as too independent minded. Relations Worsen It is pretty certain 'also that Khrushchev will discuss possible mores against Tito, whose relations with Russia are getting steadily worse be cause of his refusal to get back on the Communist Party line. ... , In addition, Khrushchev is trying to build up the prestige " of the puppet East German regime. It is because of this attempt that Russia - insists that the United States deal with the East German regime in negotiating for the release of nine American Army men who made a forced landing in East' Germany when their fog-bound helicopter ran out of gas. Tito appears to be making a strong bid to persuade Nas ser that he is making a big mistake by maintaining close relations with Russia. Tito and Nasser both seem to aim at strengthening their relations with Greece. There is talk of a possible Yugoslav-UAR-Greek bloc pointed to ward mutual cooperation and, " if possible, the alignment of Greece in a mutual coopera tion and, if possible, the align ment of Greece in a mutual "non-committed" or "neutral ist" policy. Affect NATO Ties , Any success along this line Greece's ties with its fellow members of the North Atlan tic Treaty Organization. j The official reason for Khrushchev's visit to East Germany Js his desire to at tend a seven - day congress of the East German Commun ist Party which starts Thurs day at Pankow, near Berlin. Khrushchev evidently re-. garded the visit as necessary. To make it, he had to ask Chancellor Julius Raab of Austria to postpone his visit to Russia, which had been set for mid-July. v Just what Khrushchev and Ulbricht can cook up against Tito is hard to figure out. The Kremlin has vainly tried every means available to bring him in line. But Khrushchev might easily use East Germany as a weapon against Polish Com- munist leader Gomulka. - Not only is Poland depend ant on Russia for the raw ma terials which feed its indust-( ries, but Poland is sandwich ed between Russia and East Germany. Khrushchev's , visit may serve as a reminder that Poland holds a large area of German territory and that if Russia gave the word, Poland would have to give it up. COULDN'T BE TRUSTED Chattanooga, Tenn. (UPI) Trusty Reece Parker has lost the trust of authorities at the county jail here. Officials let him out of his cell to make a phone call, and he hasn't been seen since. 1 NEED A LOAN for that VACATION? Don't let lack of cash spoil your plans for a trip for all your, vacation, fun, get the money you need from A DM5I0N Of PACIFIC PWBWl PACIFIC DUSTRIAir" 16 S. Central Ph. SP 3-5308 JIM ELBERT, Manager ft h' f Mrs. Lirwiller