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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 5, 1958)
4 Tuesday, August 5, 1938 MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, ORE. MEDFORDtWTBIBUNE "Everyone ia Southern '.regoa Bead Tna Mail inDune Published Daily except Saturday by MEDFORD PRINTING CO S3 North Fir St Ph. SP.2-6141 HERB GREY Advertising Manafel GERALD LATHAM. Business Mgr. ERIC ALLEN. JR Managing Editor EARL H ADAMS, City Editor HARRY CHIPMAN. Teleg Editor RICHARD JEWETT. Sports Editor OLIVE ST ARCHER, Society Editor DALE ERICKSON, Circulation Mgr. An Independent Newspaper Entered as second class matter at Medford Oregon under Act of March 3J89"i SUBSCRIPTION RATES P- Mail in Advance: Copy loe. Daily and Sunday 1 year 11500 Daily and Sunday 6 mos. 8.00 Dailv and Sunday 3 mos. 455 Sunday Onlv One year S4.20 Bv Carrier In Advance Medford Ashland. Central Point. Eagie Point. Jacksonville. Gold mil Phoenix. Shady Cove. Rogue Riv er Talent and on motor routes: Daily and Sunday 1 year $18 00 Dailv and Sunday 1 mo 130 Carrier and Dealers copy 10c All Terms Cash in Advance Official Paper of Clfy of Medford Official Paper of Jackson county United Press Full Leased Wire MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION Advertising Rpores-intative: WEST-HOLIDAY CO.. INC. Of fices in New York, Chicago. De troit. San Francisco. Los Angeles. Seattle. Portland. St Louis. At lanta. Vancouver a c EWSPAPEt PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION NATIONAL EDITORIAL IassochtiQn Flight ro Time Medford and Jackson County History from the files of The Mail Tribune 10, 20. 30 and 40 years ago. 1G YEARS AGO August 5 1948 (Thursday) Gold Rush Jubilee planners in Jacksonville warn male residents they better start growing beards. A lone enlisted man was escorted by' seven officers as the octet, comprising Med ford's 3822nd Quartermaster battalion, organized reserve, departed for summer training at Ft. Lewis, Wash. 20 YEARS AGO August 5. 1938 (Friday) Those planning to attend the Elks band concert in city park tonight warned that blowing auto horns for ap plause is frowned upon by nearby residents. From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudge Pot" column: "The wild blackberries of the Ap plegate are ripening. No finer handiwork of Nature ever adorned a pie or dish, if some body else picks them." 30 YEARS AGO August 5, 1928 (Sunday) Now that the state Ameri can Legion convention is over, all hands are turning to pear picking, with a bumper crop expected. A number of Medford wom en appear in a new refer ence book, '"Woman of the West." 40 YEARS AGO August 5. 1918 (Monday) The pear and packing sea son opened today with many girls and women helping in the orchards. The Case Six, last word in automobiles, has appeared on the streets of Medford. What's Yourl.Q.? Nina or ten correct s superior; seven or eight is excellent; five or six is good. 1. In what city is the Mayo Clinic? 2. Was Winston Churchil Prime Minister of Great Bri tain at the time of the out break of W.W. II? 3. Which weighs more, a gallon of fresh water or a gallon of salt water? 4 The traditional method of determining the rank oi guests at state social functions in Washington, D.C. is called P -1? 5. The planet Mercury is larger or smaller, than the moon? 6. Is Lower California a part of the United States? 7. Which Pope is respon sible for our present-day calendar? 8. The international date line, where each calendar day first begins, is located in which ocean? 9. Long bearded "Father Time," is usually depicted carrying two objects; name them. 10. May the President de clare a national holiday which must be observed in all the States? Answers: 1. Rochester, Minn. 2- No. 3. Salt Water. 4. Protocol. 5. Larger. 6. No. 7. Poge Gregory XIII. 8. Pa cific Ocean. 9. Scythe and hourglass. 10. No. (States leg islate their own holidays.) "Mid-Summer Rash"? One of the most fascinating parts of an edit orial writer's job is to keep track of what other editorial writers are thinking and saying around the state. Some 20-odd daily papers, and several week lies, pass over our desk, and we, spend many hours poring over their editorial pages for edi torial ideas, sometimes, or to see what the "cli mate" of the state is, politically or otherwise. IN RECENT weeks there have been many edi- torials concerned writh, and about, the state system of higher education. It all started some time ago when the board held several meetings in private excluding even the press, which usually is allowed to attend as the "eyes and ears" of the voters and taxpay ers. This practice was hit and hard by several papers, notably the Oregonian and the Eugene Register-Guard, which claimed that by so doing the board was opening itself to charges of con ducting the business of the public in private. It heated up even more when the board, more or less simultaneously, announced that the "exec utive session" practice would cease, and that Portland State college had been granted status as a four-year, degree-granting institution. THE Register-Guard, located in the home town ' of the University of Oregon, picked the latter announcement up, declaring that the floodgates had been opened for duplication,' overlapping and for high-cost education at a low level an alle gation echoed by the Capital Journal in Salem and the Gazette-Times in Corvallis, the latter the home of Oregon State college. Then the Pendleton East Oregonian, edited by J. W. (Bud) Forrester Jr., himself a member of the state board of higher education, chided these papers for being "shocked" at a decision which he said was inevitable, almost a foregone conclusion, that PSC, located in populous Port land, could not long deny the many students in the metropolitan area the advantages enjoyed by less-populous parts of the state. i BOUT this time a side The Camtal Journal the state capital and on educationally "neutral" territory, be made the headquarters of the state system. (The chancellor's office is now on the U of O campus in Eugene.) The Corvajlis paper, miffed at the chancellor for what it felt was a double-cross concerning OSC's hopes for a liberal arts-program at the col lege, seconded the motion. An editorial in the Albany Democrat-Herald chimed in to say that, yes indeed, the chancellor's office should be on neutral ground, but that the logical place for it was Albany a claim which the Bend Bulletin disputed, pointing out that Al bany is too close to Corvallis to be neutral, and stating that Bend would be a good location. ALL THIS motivated tVi Cnlnw, Otnfn governor, no newcomer to internecine strife) to observe, quietly: ' - , "After all this kicking around we may be certain that the offices will remain as they are: business office at Corvallis, chancellor's office at Eugene." He goes on to point out that "the youngsters who are writing editorials these days" (Mr. Sprague last November celebrated his 70th birth day) "don't know that Salem was once the city of the central office of the board of higher educa tion." . And he concludes: ' ". . . We rate the present agitation as mid-summer rash, a welcome innovation from the tales of the sum mer sea serpent. None of the guns in the present higher education controversy is loaded." , DERHAPS, as Governor Sprague asserts, the guns aren't loaded. But they're noisy. And as we see it, there is a legitimate basis for argument about the status of Portland State. The board of higher education, composed of high-caliber, capable and integrious people, is doing the best job it can to provide higher educa tion for Oregon equal to the demand. It is, in some ways, an impossible job. How can it best be done? By a-wider use of "community" colleges throughout the state? By concentrating on the U of O and OSC as the major institutions, and using PSC and the three smaller colleges (at Ash land, Monmouth and LaGrande) as supplement ary institutions, largely for teacher training? Or by going all-out, developing the whole system to best serve Oregon's needs at, far from inci dentally, a "staggering cost? TTHAT, at least, is a valid subject for debate and A for some pretty serious soul-searching. The board, despite its general excellence, probably could use some informed thinking on the subject, and before long, too, for the "war baby" group is nearer college every day that passes. It has been suggested that a sweeping study of the matter be undertaken by the legislature, and it is a good suggestion provided only that it isn't too late. No matter what happens, Oregonians had bet ter get ready to pay. for more and more, and better and better, higher education. Either that or throw in the sponge, admit that a high standard of edu cation, for as many as are equipped to take ad vantage of it, is "too expensive," and thus limit the opportunities of one-third of a generation. The Oregonian's answer to the question, "Can we ? ", is,. "We must." E. A. - issue developed. sup-p-esterl that Salem. Charles Sprague, editor . J Dennis the 'Don't take rr off! i tol' joey Washington Report By William S. White THE DIPLOMATS Washington Massachusetts Avenue in Washington is a way of life within itself This is the street on which stand most of the world's em bassies to the United States.' A few are quartered else where the Russians, for ex ample, in a gloomy, closed-up. looking stone mansion on Sixteenth Street. Massachusetts Avenue, at all events, is the hub of all this diplomacy, the center for the practice of an ancient art that has two main functions. The first of these is to rep resent here the interests of the visiting diplomat's country. The second is, less directly, to explain this country ,to the diplomat's own country. Basically, it the operation, in a polite way, of an intelligence system. This is a long, winding, tree-lined street full of im pressive houses. They run in architecture from colonial to turreted semi-horrors from which it is possible to imagine groans and the sounds of clanking chains emerging late in the night. THE diplomatic community is one of the largest self contained industries here. Its personnel number uncounted thousands. Each official or foreign worker in an embassy is, for official purposes, in his own country. The British Embassy, for example, is leg ally a bit of England, as is the French Embassy of France. Sir Harold Caccia, the Brit ish 'ambassador, may, if he wishes,, regard himself as sit ting solidly on British ground and tenanting one of the many houses of the Queen. Embassy people are not subject to arrest, except on grave charges and through special countfy-to-country ar rangements. Their automo biles bear plates on which the letters "DPL" signify that it is no use putting parking tickets on them. The local people, sometimes have no lively appreciation of these special privileges, which do not apply to a Senator or a Supreme Court justice. The functions of embassies, and their whole tone, vary enormously according to the size of the countries they rep resent and the work they do. "nOR the biggest is the Brit- ish establishment. It is a red - brick, ramblin'g and sprawling structure with a touch of the old manor about it. Nearby are the embassies of some of the British Com monwealth. Australia and New Zealand are back of the British Embassy on the same side of the street. They are very close in every sense to what could be called the home house of the Commonwealth. Across the street and in finitely farther away than the short physical distance would indicate is the Embassy of the Union of South Africa. South Africa, under its pres ent Dutch-descended Boer and Nationalist leadership, is a somewhat reluctant jewel in the British crown. It likes to be aggressively independent of London. Its embassy is rather like the house provided on the ranch by the old folks for a son-in-law who would just as soon ' live somewhere else. , Embassy life here is like international political life everywhere in the present state of the cold war. The Western diplomats draw to gether even more than com monly they would. The Rus sians, their satellites and quasi-friends tpnd to get into the other social and profes sional camp. THERE is, of course, still a social interchange between West and East, but not on a very clubby, basis. Both em Menace you had a HAifcy chest r bassy sets West, and East have a good deal to do with local people. The Westerners' dinners are much more fun; the Russian's dinners are much more grand. The presence of two sets of world groupings the Western alliance in which the United States is chairman of the board and the Eastern mono lith in which the Soviet. Un ion is simply the boss has simplifed the practce of di-' plomacy. More aifd more the ambas sador's home office makes the real decisions. More and more it is his job mainly to carry out these decisions in this country. ' This is not the era of the application of persua sion; it is more nearly the era of the application of force. (Copyright, 1958, by. United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) In the Day's News By FRANK Last week this writer was moved to write a piece point ing out that AS OF NOW tourist dollars aren't hay in the economy o f Southern Oregon and Far Northern California and suggesting that if we all tackled the job in earnest we could bring about an IMMENSE increase in tourist expenditures in our area. The way to do it, we opined, is for all of us to become so familiar .with our glamourous and beautiful area that when we encounter- a tourist at a filling station, at a motel or hotel, at a restarant, any where we happen to meet him just won't be able to re strain ourselves from telling him ALL ABOUT IT in wing ed words that will carry con viction. ' If we all did that, we con tended, tens of thousands of tourists could be influenced to spend DAYS AND DAYS in our imaginary State of Jef ferson instead of whishing on through at high speed in or der to get somewhere else. If that could be brought about, MILLIONS of dollars of outside money would be left here instead of the mere hundreds of thousands that are presently left. This new money would spread itself out among ALL OF US. WE got a raise. The raise came from Elizabeth Loosely of Ft. Klamath, who sent us a little pamphlet is sued some time ago by the people of historic Ft. Klam ath and the lovely Wood Riv er valley. The, pamphlet is a gem and, knowing Mrs. Loosley, Ave have a notion she had a finger in the prep aration of it. It brings in the Hudson Bay trappers who roamed our country a Century and a quar ter ago an4 the wiskered min ers who discovered Crater Lake more than a century ago. It touches upon John C. Fremont, that strange, mete oric character who flashed across our skies in the preg nant years of the nineteenth century when the Golden West was being born. It does n't omit the cattle rustlers who plagued us in our early days. TT IS a masterly job. It suggests this thought: Suppose every region of our mythical State of Jefferson which never existed as a po litical entity and never will, but which has lived as an imaginative concept in men's minds for more than a cen tury should issue a similar pamphlet, all of them touched by the finger of genius that lends charm to the Crater Lake -Wood River valley-Fort Klamath pamphlet here described. Matter of Fact LETTER TO ENGINE CHARILE Washington. Dear Mr. Wilson: Maybe there are more im portant things to write about, but your recent remarks about Jim Gavin positively demand this letter of thanks. Gen. Gavin has been doubly fW"" l.wwl! i m p e r t ient. Rather than lie to the Con gress about the results of defense poli cies, he has preferred re signing from from the serv ice that he josDh aisod iovea ana gave his life to. And now he has dared to publish a book, suggesting that your defense policies have led this country into mortal danger. This kind of impertinence of course de serves the rebuke you so characteristically meted out: ."I know Gavin," you are reported as saying. "And he is just another over - inflated Army officer with an exag gerated regard of his ability. He's just trying to sell his book." . was so wonderful V was your simultaneous denial that Gavin could real ly know you, since you had only seen him "on rare . oc casions'." You know Gavin, in other words, as you . knew about the defense of the Unit ed States by interpreting the messages of your own peculiar mental telephathy in the powerful light of your own prejudices. Or one might say, you know Gavin as you knew about the danger to this country' from the rapid growth of Soviet power by ignoring all the unpleasant facts reported by the intel ligence services, and faith fully following your own na tural instincts (with some help from the budgetary poli cies of your friend, George Humphrey). There are certain facts about Jim Gavin, to be sure, that lesser men than you still have a tendency not to ignore. I There is the simple ' fact of JENKINS Suppose all of these could be pooled, so that ALL OF US COULD HAVE A COPY of each pamphlet and thus could be prepared to indoctrinate every tourist who enters our area with the fascinating charm of this Southern Ore gon - Far Northern California country of ours. TF THAT could be done, it wouldn't merely double the number of tourists who stop with us (and spend money while stopping) instead of rushing on to s e.e SOME THING ELSE. It wouldn't merely quadruple the number It would multiply it at least by ten. That would mean a lot of new dollars to be dis tributed among us. (XUR material is so RICH. v There is Old Jacksonville, and its days of old, the days of gold. There is Port Orford, once a teeming city of 10,000 that existed to supply the gold camps o f Southern Oregon and Far Northern California. There is old Scotteburg, at the head of navigation on the Umpqua, where gold supply ships came when Port Orford burned : and once' came' within two votes of becoming the capital of Oregon. There are the lost mines from Rose- burg south. There is Thompson's mule, that nibbled at a bunch of grass and so discovered the rich gold deposit that strated Yreka. There are the Indian battles along the gold trail that swung up through the Klamath country and then turned southward to Yreka. Scenery? There are the matchless Trinity Alps and the fabulous beauty of the Mount Shasta area. And the wide reaches of the purple sage stretching on and on into Miller & Lux land of cattle tradition. We have plenty to talk about. Jerry Flakus Gets Vocal Scholarship Jerry Flakus, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Flakus, 612 J st., Medford, has been awarded a vocal scholarship to Southern Oregon college, the first of its kind awarded by the school, according to the youth's parents. Flakus, a graduate of St. Mary's academy, .has studied under the direction of Sister Miriam Joseph, and this sum mer attended Southern Ore gon college. CANAL DEEPENED Port Said. U.A.R. (UPD The Suez Canal Authority said today 35-foot draft ships will be abla to transit the waterway beginning Aug. 31. The maximum draft of ves sels now using the canal is 34 feet. . .... . ... . . ..; . By Joseph Alsop the man himself the brilliant intellectual who is also a great fighting man, the adored lead er of the best division in the U.S. Army, the combat gen eral with the cool courage that goes with knowledge, the shining soldier with the hu man style that all men envied and the best men tried to imitate. ONE does not forget, either, the parachute landing that Gavin made in Sicily, and the long cruel battle at Salerno, and the drop at dawn into the inferno at Nijmegen and des perate attack that turned the balance in the desperate Bat tle of the Bulge. All these further facts still arouse strong emotions and call up vivid images but only in smaller minds than yours. And of course you are right that, the two Distinguished Service Crosses, and the Sil ver Star and the Purple Heart, all won in the fire of battle, are mere military fripperies that probably had a lot to do with "overly inflat ing" Jim Gavin. No doubt smaller minds are afflicted with these distort ing emotions and are impres sed by these foolish images, simply because they do not understand as well as you do what makes our country great. If you had left West- inghouse Electric to go into uniform, for instance, you might not have got the job with Delco-Remy in 1919. And if you had not got the job with Delco-Remy, you might not have got the job with General Motors, later on. And if that job had been missed, heaven forbid, we might not have had you as Secretary of Defense. pVEN before the great mo ment when you took over the Pentagon, you always in sisted on the right priorities One remembers, for example, your reply to Bob Lovett when- he asked for a loan of one of your junior executives during a very bad moment in the Korean War. The man Lovett wanted did not mind the heavy cut in salary. He only asked Lovett for your as surance that his absence on the nation's service would not hinder his later promotion in the peculiar hierarchy over which you then presided With a thrill of admiration, Lovett still recalls your stern and patriotic answer: "Of course it will be- held against him, if he leaves G.M. the way you want him to.'.' At the Pentagon, too, "how firmly and wisely you always insisted upon the right priori ties! It was a dangerous mo ment when you took over, no doubt about it. Action was de manded on a whole series of ugly reports announcing the early loss to the Soviets of the existing American military lead. There were a lot of peo ple who wanted to "press the panic button" in your immor tal phrase, and make the ef fort to maintain the American lead. ' . T)UT you went right on as suring everyone, in your cool-headed way, that "the Russians were't ten feet high." So the Soviets are now well on their way to gaining al most unchallengeable superi ority in nuclear striking pow er. For .this, we have you to thank. But this letter is meant to offer thanks of a more person al kind. It is intended to thank you for the final revelation of the true grandeur of your viewpoint; and it is especially intended to thank you for showing us all what gratitude is owing, what respect is due, from the comfortable people who have been saved to those men who have uncomfortably risked their lives to save them. Thank you,, and good bye. ' Joseph Alsop Man Called To Aid Fatally Injured Boy Find Own Son Leonia, N.J. (UPD volun teer ambulance squad captain Edward R. Miller answered a call for aid Monday night for an 11-year-old baseball player who had been struck and fa tally injured by a pitched ball. The boy found unconscious and dying was Miller's own son. The victim, Edward Jr., had been struck by a ball just over the heart as he stepped up to bat in a Leonia Midget League game. Although his father and the ambulance crew strove to save him, Edward died of asphyxiation a few moments later. ' Edward was an honor stu dent at Anna C. Scott Elemen tary School and an Altar Boy at St. John's Roman Catholic church. Husbands! Wives! Get Pep,Vim; Feel Younger Thousands of couples are weak, worn out, exhausted just because body lacks iron. For new younger feeling after 40, try Ostrex Tonic Tablets. Contain iron for pep; therapeutic dose Vitamin Bi, to increase vigor, vitality. 8-day "get-acquainted" size costs little. Or get Economy size and save $1.67. At all druggists. 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 Mai) Tribune reserves the right to edit all letters with a view to clarification ante) condensation. Letters submitted for publication must not exceed 400 words. The letters printed in this column do not necessarily represent the views of. the Hushed-Up Affair To the Editor: We the under signed are writing in regard to your editorial of Sunday, the third of August. As you stated, a garbage dump is not a pleasant thing nor is living near one, but this is the reason we didn't go to bat right away. We understood that the land was going to be used for a housing project, not a dump. The first we knew of the- dump was the article in your paper. Why weren't the land own ers notified about the pro posed dump? What's to be come of the people who have years of labor and money in the lands adjoining the dumps? If we had known in time what the land was going to be used for you can bet that there would have been a lot more heck raised. After reading the article about the proposed dump, we went to. the city council meet ing and were advised to hire our own lawyer. After con tact i n g numerous lawyers, Walter Nunley was the only one with enough guts to help us fight this proposition. After such a hushed-up af fair we have come to the con clusion that garbage is not the only thing that smells. Thurl W. More, Ellnora T. Moore, James W. Moore, P. O. Box 332, Jacksonville. "Cat Dumpers" To the Editor: I'm Just ready to "poke somebody in the nose. My little boys have ring worms because a man and his boy dumped their kittens at . our place . on Sterling Creek rd. We don't want your pets, we, have our own. Why, if you don't -want them, don't you take them to the Humane society? If you could hear my babies (two and four years old) cry and plead, "No mom mie, please, no, no, no, please, it hurts," then you would un derstand the reason for this letter. Now if this man in the light grey car should call me (SP 2-7640) and tell me he would like to reward these babies for the pain and hurt his carelessness has caused them, then maybe he would think twice before he dumps anything else. Mrs. H. G. Roether, Route 4, Box 399C, Medford . Need for Socialism To' The Editor: The real bone of contention in the Mid dle East is oil, billions and billions of dollars worth of oil. The stakes, said "Fortune" magazine, October, 1956, are "working c o n tr o 1 of the mightiest single pool of cheap energy on the face of the earth indeed, the largest single treasure, translated in to billions of dollars, still left in the hands of weak, and in many ways medieval na tions." It is not even a question of whether Europe is or is not, to have access to Middle East oil. Capitalist spokesmen who admit that oil is the prize, try to justify the risk of another world war by claiming that 80 per cent of Europe's oil needs come from the Middle East. Their claim is a distor tion of the facts to conceal the truth that it is oil profits, not oil supplies, that are threatened. As the "Fortune" article noted, "... Just grabbing the Counsel With . . Mr. Insurance Fred Brennan Fred Brennan Or Call Mr. Friendly Bill Fish Phone SP 3-743 MEDFORD INSURANCE AGENCY 27 NORTH HOUY ST. oil, as the Iranians found to their dismay, would profit the Middle East countries little. They cannot drink it; they cannot eat it. Oil produces wealth for the Middle East only in the degree that it is used to satisfy the enormous energy demands of the West." Therefore, American troops are in Lebanon to protect the oil profits of the oil capital ists. They were sent there for no other purpose. The strug gle for the .maintenance of oil profits could get us into World War III. The alternatives to this po tential catastrophe, toward which decadent class rule is now taking the world, is a rational peace and human brotherhood based on com mon and collective material interests. The social system that builds greed and in which the actions of governments are dictated by the material interests of ruling classes capitalism must be abolish ed. The Socialist Labor Party proclaims that survival for the human race now decrees the urgent need for a recon struction of society along So cialist lines. Henry R. Korman 2640 Garfield St., Longview, Wash. "Speederosis" ' To The Editor: I would hate to be so deeply in love with the almighty dollar that I'd have to break the law every minute of every working day to earn it. I would also hesi tate to risk the lives of child ren and adults alike in order to continue my deadly, assault on public roads. The log truckers up here have a disease called speeder osis they can't observe our speel limits through our town or by ' our homes. After all what do the lives' of our child ren mean to them? And if our youngsters drive like hellions when they grow up, they will think it's the proper thing to do. Surely the roads belong to the guy who can scare everyone else out of his way! Let them continue their ! treacherous misconduct on our roads, or crack down on them while there is still time. Jean Stanton Medco Camp No. 4 Butte Falls. Bus Service To the Editor: Our bus serv ice is a lousy mess. We only have one bus a day going into Medford, and three going from Medford through Gold Hill. Just why can't we have one of them in the afternoon too? We like to go in town in the afternoon sometimes, and if we catch the 11:30 a.m. bus, Sve have to stay all after noon in town. I know if we had as many buses going to Medford through Gold Hill even in fruit season a lot of people would ride . them. Some, like ourselves, who dorf't have a car to go in, just have to depend on the buses. Coming from Medford to Gold Hill there's one about 6:39 a.m. and about from 10 to 11:30 a.m., and one at about 4 pjn. and 9. So if only we could have just a late afternoon bus through fruit season, say about 3 or 3:30, it would help lots of people I know. There's still lots of us who can't afford a car yet. We have good serv ice with the one bus we 'do have. (Name on file). Gold Hill, Ore. OVER OR . UNDER? UNDER-PAID . . UNDER-WA-TER . . UNDER-WEIGHT all have a different meaning for different people. BUT UNDER-INSURE CAN ONLY MEAN TROUBLE! BE SURE . . . INSURE ADEQUATE LY. Bill Fish