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4 Tuesday, August 12, 1958 MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, ORE. MEDF0RDr?5TRIBUNE "Everyone in Southern 'Oregon Reads The Max Tribune" Published Daily except Saturday by MUDFORD PRINTING CO 33 North Fir St Ph. SP.2-6141 ROBERT W RUHL, Editor HERB GREY Advertising Manager GERALD LATHAM. Business Mgr IRIC ALLEN. JR Managing Editor EARL H ADAMS. City Editor HARRY CHIPMAN. Teleg Editor RICHARD JEWETT. Sports Editor OLIVE STARCHER. Society Editor DALE ERICXSON. Circulation Mgr. An Independent Newspaper Entered as second class matter at Medford Oregon under Act ot March 3. 189". SUBSCRIPTION RATES 9? Mail In Advance: Copy 10c Daily and Sunday 1 year $15 00 Daily and Sunday e mos. 8.00 Daily and Sunday 3 mos. 4.25 Sunday Only One year S4.20 By Carrier In Advance Medford Ashland. Central Point. Eagle foint. Jacksonville, ooid Mill Phoenix. Shady Cove. Rogue Riv er laier.t. and on motor routes Daily and Sunday 1 year $13 CO Daily and Sunday 1 mo 150 Carrier and Dealers copy 10c All Terms Cash In Advance Official Paper of Clt of Medford Official Paper of J ackson 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. 3 C. EWSPAPEI PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION NATIONAL EDITORIAL ,c3T8N ASSO 7 tamiinig'.n.'i.if Flight fo Time Medford and Jackson County History from the files of The Mail Tribune 10, 20. 30 and 40 years ago. 10 YEARS AGO Aug. 12. 1948 (Thursday) Medford parking meters average a revenue of $7.37 per month eachN Greta Hansen, "Miss Med ford of 1948," will appear in tomorrow's parade open in the Gladioli Festival in Grants Pass. 20 YEARS AGO Aug. 12. 1938 (Friday) The Medford Gun club has Invited the public to its semi-monthly practice shoot. From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudge Pot" column: "An upstate politician was here the first of the week. He de clared he was 'full of the flaming truth. It is not known whether lightning or a carelessly tossed cigarette set him afire." 30 YEARS AGO Aug. 12, 1928 (Sunday) Two moonshiners from Los Angeles were arrested here last night for illegal posses sion. Rumors are circulating that a 10-story office building will soon be erected to boost Med ford's skyline. 40 YEARS AGO Aug. 12. 1918 (Monday) More draftees, 500 in all, will head north this week for active duty. A request has been receiv ed here for victrolas and mu sical instruments to be sent to servicemen in California. What's Your I.Q.? Miha or ten correct is sunerior seven or eight is excellent; five or six is good. 1. Spiders have four, six, or eight legs? 2. Name the west coast re public in South America, astride the equator and bound ed on the north, east, south, and west, respectively by Co lombia, Peru and Pacific Ocean. 3. What is the zodiacal sign for persons born between July 23 and August 23? 4. Which State is nick named "Cornhusker State"? 5. Which Federal agency is abbreviated I.C.C.? 6. Are bats blind? 7. Was the Lend Lease Act enacted by Congress before, or after, the United States entered W. W. II? 8. When is Bastille day celebrated in France? 9. Slitting a crow's tongue improves its ability to talk; true or false? 10. A drowning person al ways rises to the surface three times before sinking; true or false? Answers: 1. Eight legs. 2. Ecuador. 3. Leo the Lion. 4. Nebraska 5. Interstate Com merce Commission. 6. No. 7. Before (March 11. 1941). 8. July 14. 9. False. 10. False. , An Elizabethan Quibble It was nice that Henry Hewes, distinguished drama critic for "The Saturday Review," visited Ashland to view a couple of the plays during the current season of the Shakespearean festival. And it was a fine thing that he was given a warm welcome, with a large attendance at his informal discussion of things theatrical in general and Shakespearean in particular. Wis report in the magazine, which has an in ternational circulation among influential people, vwii, ii iavoraoie, De 01 aeiimte beneiit to the Festival, both in prestige and in future attend ance. A DRAMA critic's views, however sound, and well-informed, are, after all, only the views of one man. And as such, one can differ with them. With all respect to the expert, we do differ with one of the opinions he offered that in which he criticized the festival's near-literal re creation of an Elizabethan stage for the plays. Our reporter described his vieAvpoint this way: "He said (the Ashland theater) was the only reproduc tion this literal in the United States, that it was nice to have one such example but that he preferred a more im aginative setting. He described the effectiveness of a stage which would appear starkly Elizabethan at the out set, then gradually depart from it through elaboration or shifting of the set as the play progressed." 1X7E HAVE seen (and, to a limited extent, par ticipated in) Shakespearean drama in a number of different settings. Our conclusion, one that is shared by people far more experienced than we in the world of the theater, is that the Elizabethan stage mostly bare, with a minimum of "scenery" and background, yet possessing a tremendous versatility which permits a rapid flow from one scene into another is ideal for Shake spearean productions, and that any compromise wuuiu uebuoy me enecuveness ot the plays to the degree of compromise. The Elizabethan stage is indeed stark. It was stark originally out of necessity, but the gen ius of the playwright made of it a virtue. For one thing, it allows the imagination to etch in the background for each scene, so each viewer sees the scene within the context of his own mind's eye. , I7QUALLY important, it makes the changing of scene less disturbing, more natural, and far faster than the mechanical shifting of flats and drops, of furniture and other stage properties. m In addition, particularly in an outdoor setting, it is subtly disconcerting to. see reproduced the trappings .of an interior scene, and this detracts from the concentration and satisfaction of the viewer. Finally, from a purely technical, production aspect, the Tudor stage is far more facile, far more amenable to directorial . whims, and far simpler to manage than the vastly complicated "traditional" stage. LJEWES should return to Ashland once or twice to see whether or not his objectives are not being attained through more effective means than those he prescribes. It aDDears to us thai, minnr tJioarvinol molQc A A have been achieved by r esuvai, principally through the use of lighting, un une nana, ana costuming, on the other to say nothing of the achievement of the directors and actors in creating an image. i he festival m Ashland, in producing Shake speare, does on stage a little what a "modern" painter does on canvas. A play is an abstraction of life to begin with, and the production gives it me snape ana color ana lite to get across the em otional or intellectual point of a play. As a painter starts with a blank canvas, or a sculptor with a blob of clay or a virgin rock, so the Festival company starts with a stark stage, and concludes with a dramatic triumph. We do not believe that snlittino- hairs atinnt. the lack of an intermission, or the fact that it is i . . nice to have an example" of an Elizabethan stage, alters the fact that Shakespearean drama, presented as written, on the kind of stage for which it was written, with the addition of the latter-day help of modem lighting, produces an over-all effect which is unique and wonderful. ; E.A. Interesting Times Once: long ago, at was a "crisis" in student long series, about which worked up. During its height, the student body president was presented a plaque which said : "No matter what else mav be said about the times in which we live, aren t interesting. How time that was. in a larger sense, it is today ! A SUBMARINE cruises beneath the polar ice- cap, bringing a hint of a future commercial route thousands of miles shorter than the ones usable today. A long tube of metal goes tumbling through the night skies, visible to all who watch closely for it at the proper time, reflecting sunlight. Man prepares his first probe toward the moon. Scientists use giant magnets in attempts to bottle up the forces of fusing hydrogen for usable power. The times, if a little frightening, ARE inter esting. E.A. -""A vx.vuvi AVCii illll aJLCO the technical staff of the an Oresron collep-e. there government one of a the student body got all NO ONE can say they and how much more true Dennis the Menace ALWAYS TALKIN' ABOUT TUB'GOCO OC WfS WHEtf I WASN'T HERg. WELL. JOY ' YOURSELVES Matter of Fact bv ph aisop TROUBLE FOR MR. K.? Washington The Krem- linologists the practitioners of the strange art of reading the s i 2 n s in I the Kremlin are currently excited by two signs that seem to indi cate some sort of trouble for Nikita Khrush chev. One of these Jos-Dh Alsop signs is quite simple. In the last two days, Khrushchev's fallen enemy, Viacheslav Molotov, has been seen in Moscow by Western newspapermen. The return of Molotov from his exile in Ulan Bator is something of an event in itself. If it were not for still another sign, the Kremlinolo gists would still be inclined to argue that the Soviet Un ion's Ambassador to Outer Mongolia was only back in the capital on normal leave from his diplomatic post. But there is also a second import ant sign that has to be ac counted for. THIS second sign is simply a story sent from Moscow two days ago by the able As sociated Press correspondent, Roy Essoyan. The story des cribed the move to put the Middle East crisis into the U.N. General Assembly as Khrushchev's "first serious diplomatic and public set back." It further noted that Western diplomatic observers regarded Khrushchev's aband onment of his scheme for a summit meeting within the U. N. as " major retreat." Essoyan added that this re treat might be "a blow to the personal fortunes of the dyna mic Soviet leader." Two attempts were made, and eight hours passed, before the Soviet censorship permit ted Essoyan to send out the full text of this report. This was therefore not a report smuggled past the Soviet cen sorship; and it is precisely this aspect of the story which has so sxcited the Kremlin ologists. Since Stalin's acces sion to full power in the twen ties, the Soviet censors have never permitted any foreign correspondent to send out speculation about the declin ing fortunes of any Soviet po litical leader, unless the lead er's decline of fortune was already a solid, accomplished fact. T OGICALLY, this suggests -"that the decline in Khrusch chev's glittering fortunes real ly is an accomplished fact. And this hint of trouble for Khrushchev is virtually being linked with the wholly un forseen return to Moscow of Khrushchev's bitter enemy, Viacheslav Molotov, whom Khrushchev - so resoundinly defeated on his way to the top. For these reasons, then, questions are being asked about the nature of Khrush chev's present position. There are no outward indications that a major political convul sion is going on in Moscow, but at least a certain cloud of doubt has been cast on the formerly undoubted suprema cy of Khrushchev, who so rec ently seemed to have eliminat ed every possible rival. Whatever has happened (if anything at all has happened) is plainly connected with the Peking meeting between Khrushchev and Mao Tse tung, after which Khrushchev renounced the scheme for a summit meeting within the U. N. Security Council. It is also thought to be significant that Khrushchev went to the meeting in Peking with no politically important compan ion except the Soviet Defense Minister, Marshal Rodion Malinovsky. CONCERNING Malinovsky, two points are well estab lished. First, he was the bene- ficiary, and he was probably one of the instruments, of Khrushchev's rapid maneuver to destroy his former ally and backer, Marshal Georgyi Zhu- kov. Second, Molotov, Malen- kov and the other members of the "anti-party group" are known to have looked to this same Marshal Malinovsky to give them Army support at the the time of the famous June plenum. They were then disappointed in this hope, and Khrushcev triumphed with Zhukov's active aid at this crucial meeting of the Com munist Party Central Com mittee in June, 1956. There used to be a link, thefore, between Molotov and Malinovsky. Cons equently, the Kremlinologists are ask ing where Malinovsky, having served Khrushchev in the de motion of his rival Zhukov, may not now have joined with Molotov to clip Khrushchev's wings. Speculation centers upon Malinovsky for a rather simp le reason. In all the great con vulsions at the Kremlin since the death of Josef Stalin, only three organs have played a primary role the Presidium, the Army and the secret po lice. After the fall of Lavrenti Beria, the secret police have not seemed to figure greatly. Since then, the primary roles have been played by the Pres idium and the Army with the Central Committee of the Communist party of course called in when there was dis agreement within the Presi dium, or between the Army and the Presidium, as in June, 1956. IN THE game of "nine little Indians hanging on the wall" that Khrushchev played with such success, almost all those with the stature to argue with him have been eliminat ed from the Presidium. The Communist theorist, Mikhail Suslov, and the durable old Anastas Mikoyan have been the only major figures left since Khrushchev took over the Soviet Premiership from the unhappy Marshal Bulgan in. But that still left the Army, headed by Malinovsky, as an independent center of power. In addition, since Krushchev did not imitate Stalin's de cisive tactic of shooting his former rivals, the Soviet Un ion contained "too damned many people who have been left un-murdered," in the words of the greatest of the Kremlinologists, George P. Kennan. And the "un-murder-ered" rather conspicuously in cluded Molotov. All the foregoing is typical Kremlinology, of course, and there is nothing, solid in it anywhere except the two signs the re-appearance of Molotov, and the censor's per mission to Essoyan to pass a story that must surely have considerable ignificance. May be these odd signs will short ly be explained. Futhermore, Khrushchev has used the method of mobilizing his own supporters by giving .indica tions that he was in danger in Kremlin dramas of the past. No one but a fool would write off Khruschev on the evidence yet available. But until some other explanation of the signs is forthcoming it has to be presumed that they mean what they seem to mean some sort of trouble, big or little, temporary or endur ing, for Nikita Khrushchev, (c) 1958 New York Herald Tribune Inc. 'CANDIDATE Caracas (UPD Rear Adm. Wolfgang Larrazabal, head of Venezuela's junta govern ment, has announced he is available for a draft as a "na tional union" candidate for president in the November election. Hurricanes have taken an average of 119 lives annually in the U. S. over the past 42 years. De Gaulle Ex-Colonies, Constitutional Changes By KINGSBURY SMITH UPI Correspondent Paris (UPD French Pre mier Charles De Gaulle has promised that France's over seas territories!, excluding Al geria, will have the right to vote for "total independence" in the forthcoming referen dum on a new constitution. Paul Reynaud, chairman of the Constitutional Consulta tive Committee, told United Press International in an ex clusive interview today that De Gaulle has made this pro mise to him personally "It was my idea," Reynaud said. "I felt it was of capital importance to France's inter national position that the peo ple of the overseas territories should be allowed to ask for total independence when they vote on the new constitution. I urged Gen. De Gaulle to agree. He will do so. He told me so." , No Other Solution If the inhabitants of French overseas territories are given the opportunity to vote in a national referendum on whe ther they want complete inde pendence, it will mark an his torical milestone in France's relations with her former col onies. Should they vote affirma tively, it is generally agreed in Paris that De Gaulle is the only French political leader who could get away with the granting of independence. If De Gaulle carries out his promise to Reynaud and the people of the overseas terri tories should vote for com plete independence, those who know the general are convinc ed he would grant it. There is no doubt, however, he would do so with bitter disappoint ment. He told the consultative committee last week he con ceived of no other solution for 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 printed in this column do not necessarily represent the views ot the Jacksonville Mayor Speaks To the Editor: In reply to a communication in your pa per Aug. 8, "Clean Up or Shut Up", signed Ima Madden, I can't agree to some of the statements, especially the in formation about the city dump grounds. People have- been dumping garbage along the Sterling creek road for years, and are still using this area which is' a violation of the law. The City of Jacksonville never had a dumping ground for garbage until about five years ago when the county traded the city 40 acres of land to use as a dump. This land is about one quarter of a mile from the road and out of sight of any dwelling, and is out of sight of the road. This dump is now closed. I know we could not cover the dump as it should have been covered, as it takes money to hire a bulldozer to do this work, but this would have defeated our purpose be cause the people would not pay to dump, and would con tinue to throw the cans and junk alongside the road. I hope this answers the ques tion about the garbage dump. In regard to a sewer dis posal, your present city coun cil and mayor made arrange ments with the federal gov ernment for a loan with which to make the survey and have plans drawn, with an esti mated cost of a proposed sew er disposal. A public hearing was held and then put to a vote. This sewer disposal was defeated by the people "of Jacksonville. Ima, did you get on the streets and do your part to persuade your fellow citizens to the need of a sew er disposal? Or Ima, did you stay home and let some one else fight for your interest? I agree, some of the places in Jacksonville do need clean ing up. We have a nuisance ordinance for this purpose. If you will write a letter or ap pear before the council with a complaint, this ordinance will be enforced. We need less of the "pass the buck" atti tude and more direct action in the charges. We welcome constructive criticism, and with this criticism we need the cooperation of our citi zens. John F. Keaveny Mayor City of Jacksonville Veteran's Viewpoint To the Editor: In reference to an editorial of yours, dated July 31, I wish to contribute these few lines in oenau oi the veterans of our nation's wars, and especially of world War One, against whom the implication is mostly made that they are seeking some thing for nothing. The non-service pension seems to be the principal tar get of criticism in the writ Studies Freedom Vote For France and what is still left of its empire than "a form of association-integration or fed eration." He said anything else would mean "secession, with all the consequences that it would bring and with the risks and perils for those who would choose it." Pressed for Changes His promise to Reynaud would indicate he is prepared to allow the natives to risk those perils if they wish. Reynaud also told this cor respondent he is confident the modification which De Gaulle is accepting in the proposed constitution will safeguard democracy in France. The 79-year-old former pre mier,' still remarkably ener getic, is acting as the defender of French parliamentary dem ocracy in his role as chairman of the Constitutional Consult ative committee. The father of a 4-year-old son as well as three other children, Reynaud paced his office in the Chamber of Dep uties with the vigor of a man at least 20 years younger as he told of the changes he had persuaded De Gaulle to ac cept. "The original draft of the constitution contained some provisions which were danger ous. We were .particularly concerned about the famous Clause Fourteen. That would give the president of the re public absolute power in cer tain circumstances. Powers Too Broad "For example, when the re publican institutions, the na tion's independence, its terri torial integrity, or the fulfill ment of its international agreements were threatened in a grave and immediate manner, the president would have the right to take any measures he considered neces sary, after consultation with not exceed 400 words. The letters ings of editors and others who have plenty to live and subsist on. Many of you schol arly opponents of pensions for war veterans have been in service yourselves; doing nice ly financially when you en tered the service and came out to the same nice set-up and have enjoyed the best ever since. Pensions are only for those who need them, and not for those who have plenty any way. It is easy to rear back and say, "You don't see me askmg Uncle bam for any help! I did it because it was my duty, etc.," if you don't need it. I don't pretend to uphold al veterans of World War One, as a class or group, but I do contend that as a class or group, they should not be the forgotten men of the na tion, and should have equal treatment and opportunities with other groups of U.S. citi zens, as well as the citizens of our Foreign Aid benefici ary nations. Many veterans, though dis charged from military serv ice without accredited ser v i c e-incurred physical d i s ability, did come out of serv ice minus a lot of -their for mer ability for a livelihood, and many hidden illnesses have kept them off the pay rolls of the late thirties and the forties, when they would have been in prime of life building up social security for their present age, averaging about 63 years. These veterans, I don't mean those sitting pretty, but the less fortunate ones, now face the probability of retire ment without benefit of maxi mum social security such as the hale and hearty members of our society will enjoy. S. R. Hale P. O. Box 135 Jacksonville 'Ima's' Address Asked To the Editor: The Aug. 8 issue of the Mail Tribune car ried a communication signed by 'Ima Madden' Jacksonville, Oregon. It would be appreciated if 'Ima' would give her complete address and tell just where she lives in Jacksonville. So far no one has been able to locate anyone by that name. If she has lived there for 20 years someone should know her. Mrs. J. W. Grigsby, 707 North California st., Jacksonville BUHACHBesf For Insect Pests Ants, Roaches, Bedbugs or Mosquitoes around the house Fleas on cat or dog Lice on plants or birds. Be Sure You Get BUHACII Safe -Easy To U s Itano itikol the premier and the presi dents of the Senate and the Chamber of Deputies. i "I told Gen. De Gaulle I thought these powers were too broad. I cited, for example, the question of France's scheduled participation in the European economic commun ity, or 'common market' the end of this year. I said: 'Sup pose France's participation was postponed, would that mean that you would assume all powers?' "The general replied: 'Of course not. I intended the as sumption of these powers by the president to apply only when the public institutions could no longer function'." Will Ask Safeguards Reynaud said he told De Gaulle he was going to put those assurances into the form of an amendment that would make a French president's as sumption of absolute power in an emergency dependent upon the approval of a "con stitutional court." This court would determine whether or not the president's proposed actions were in accordance with the constitution Asked whether the original draft of the constitution con tained provisions that would enable a "bad" president to create a dictatorship, Reynaud replied: "Yes. That is just the point. It is not Gen. De Gaulle we are afraid of. He never would, in my opinion, abuse the pow ers granted him. But I have told him we are not making a constitution fpr one man." Reynaud revealed he is go ing to propose to De Gaulle within the next day or so a compromise on the question of the participation of French senators or deputies in the government. The draft con stitution provides a member of the legislative body must resign if he enters the gov ernment. Who Fires Premier? - "I am going to propose," Reynaud said, "that a member of the legislative body who enters the government must take a sort of leave of ab sence from his parliamentary duties. He will not be obliged to resign, but he will not be allowed ta vote while he holds a government post." An important concession which Reynaud feels he has secured from De Gaulle con cerns the question of who shall have the right to get rid of a French premier once he has assumed office. The original constitutional draft would have given the presi dent the right to dismiss the premier under certain circum stances. "I told Gen. De Gaulle that the committee felt that Par liament only and not the pres ident of the republic should have the right to get rid of a Oregon City Youth Arrested in East Washington (UPD Pvt. Frank L. Wakefield, 21, Ore gon City, was convicted in mu nicipal court here today on two firearm charges and then turned him over to Army au thorities who said he was ab sent without leave from his Ft. Bragg post. The Oregon youth was ar rested at a YMCA here when a maid found a loaded pistol under his pillow. Police said Wakefield also had a loaded British sub-machine gun in his possession. He told au thorities he collected guns.' Two one -year sentences were suspended in municipal court when Wakefield was turned over to the military. Counsel With . . ... Mr. Insurance Fred Brennan Fred Brennan Or Call Mr. Friendly Bill Fish Phone SP 3-7343 MEDFORD INSURANCE AGENCY 27 NORTH HOLLY ST. premier. The general agreed. That also is of capital im portance. It is democracy, not dictatorship." Editorial Comment DEATH PENALTY TREND Oregon is not alone this year in its move toward aboli tion of the death penalty. Earlier this year, Delaware became the seventh state to eliminate capital punishment, and there are strong move ments for abolition in New Jersey, Tennessee and Illinois. An impelling force in this trend against the philosophy of "an eye for an eye" the first such widespread reaction since before World War I, when Oregon temporarily out lawed the supreme penalty has been the records of those states that long ago abandon ed capital punishment. There are six: North Dakota, Michi gan, Minnesota, Rhode Island, Wisconsin and Maine. Without exception, they boast homi cide rates decidedly lower than the average of five per 100,000 population. Only one of the noncapital punishment states, Michigan. has a rate higher than Ore-' gon's, which is 2.4 per 100, 000. Michigan's murder rate is 3.9, two full points below that of nearby Illinois. Little wonder that residents of Il linois are little impressed by the argument that capital pun ishment serves as a deterent to homicide. And even less is the wonder that Delaware decided to abandon the killing of con victs. With the death penalty on its books, Delaware's homi cide rate in the last year of available record, 1956, was 10.7, five times this : rate. .in Rhode Island, where life im prisonment is the most severe penalty. Portland Oregonian. FREE ON CONTEMPT CHARGE ' Arthur Miller, ; playright. husband of Marilyn Monroe, was freed from his conviction, for contempt of Congress by the Circuit Court of Appeals in a nine to nothing decision. Miller had been cited for re fusing to name the persons who attended Communist meetings when he was a party member. However, the evi dence showed that when he asked that the question be de ferred, Chairman Walter agreed and the meeting, was adjourned. Miller was never recalled and asked to answer the question. The Appeals court referred to the ruling of the Supreme. Court, that a witness must have it made clear to him that refusal to answer a question endangers him to punishment for con tempt. : The case. against Miller was weak both on legal and faa tual grounds. It was too bad he was exposed to the adverse publicity and cost of defend ing himself, particularly when he had been frank in admitting a brief association with Communists and his vol untary ending such contacts. Thanks to the courts, the Red hunt is being reduced to more rational dimensions. Oregon Statesman, Salem. ARTHRITIS? I have been wonderfully blessed In being restored to active life after being crippled In nearly every joint in my body and with muscular soreness from head to foot. Accord ing to medical diagnosis I had Rheumatoid Arthritis and other forms of Rheumatism. For FREE information on how I obtained this wonderful relief -write: MRS. LELA S WIER J, 2805 Arbor Hills Drive -GS P.O. Box 2695 Jackson, Mississippi Vacation time means you're on the go, but here it something you should know; THE NAME OF YOUR INSURANCE AGENT. Then if misfortune strikes while you're away, here are some names that are easy to say: "MR. INSURANCE'.' or "MEDFORD INSURANCE AGENCY."-' Bill Fish