Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, August 14, 1958, Image 4

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    4 Thursday, August 14, 1958
MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, ORE.
Medford-STkibune
"Everyone in Southern weeon
Published Daily except Saturday by
MEDFORD PRINTING CO
33 North Fir St Ph. SP.3-6141
ROBERT W RUHL, Editor
HERB 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 ST ARCHER. Society Editor
DALE ERICKSON. Circulation Mgr.
An Independent Newspaper
Entered as second class matter at
Medford . Oregon under Act of
March 3 189"i
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Mail In Advance: Copy lOe.
Daily and Sunday 1 year 115.00
Daily and Sunday 8 moa. 8.00
Daily and Sunday 3 moa. 4.33
Sunday Only One year $450
By Carrier In Advance Medford
Ashland. Central Point. Eagle
Point. Jacksonville. Gold HiU.
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er Talent and on motor routes:
Daily and Sunday 1 year f 18.00
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Carrier and Dealers copy 10c
All Terms Cash In Advance
Official Paper of City of Medfar4
Official Paper of Jackson Connty
United Press Full Leased Wire
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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
NEWSPAPER
. PUBLISHERS
"ASSOCIATION
NATIONAL EDITORIAL
assocPatiQn
Flight 'o Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the file of The
Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30 and
40 years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
: Aug. 14, 1948 (Sartuuay)
The Medford Safety Coun
' cil will sponsor a "Child
Safety" campaign need month.
The city park swimming
pool will be completed by
Sept. 15, officials hope.
1 20 YEARS AGO
; Aug. 14, 1938 (Sunday)
The fourth annual Ashland
Shakespeare Festival has set
. a new record for attendance
and quality of productions.
From Arthur Perry's "Ye
Smudge Pot" column: "A
number of local democrats
attended a picnic in K. Falls
today, where speakers stress
ed the importance of continu-
ing the present democratic
, picnic." "
30 YEARS AGO
Aug. 14, 1928 (Tuesday)
Rogue River valley spokes
men are boosting the idea of
a cross-state railroad to help
market local produce and
products.
The Ashland Summer Art
school is to continue opera
Ttions next year.
40 YEARS AGO
Aug. 14, 1918 (Wednesday)
Fred C o w 1 e s, returning
from Crater Lake with a car
load of guests, discovered that
surgeons tape from a first aid
'. kit could be used to patch a
punctured tire for a few
miles at a time.
A ball of fire dropped from
the sky at Central Point Mon
day night, and one woman
claimed it was an aeroplane
and that she saw it drop a
bomb.
Yhai's Your I.Q.?
Nina or ten correct is superior;
seven or eight is excellent; five or
she is good.
1. Which veterans organi
zation is abbreviated G.A.R.?
2. Coral belongs to the ani
mal or vegetable kingdom?
3. Four of the States of the
Union have names which end
with "e", how many of them
can you name?
4. Did Queen Wilhelmina of
the Netherlands reign 25, 35
or 50 years?
5. In which Western State
Is the Sequoia National Park,
containing the majestic, tow
ering giant redwoods?
6. Name the composer of
our National Anthem. - x
7. a young hare is known
as a cub, kit, leveret, or
- chick?
8. If afflicted with ergo
phobia, would you dread
work, self-praise, or poison
ivy? 9. There are four standard
: time zones in the continental
. U.S., of .which two are East-
ern and Pacific; name the
: other two.
10. A part of Pennsylvania
: is bounded by Lake Erie; true
: or false?
' Answers: 1. Grand Army of
the Republic. 2. Animal Iting
; dom. 3. Delaware, Maine, New
r Hampshire. Tennessee. 4. 50.
5. California. 6. Francis Scotl
Key. 7. Leveret. 8. Work. 9.
, central and Mountain. 10.
True.
Debating Society vs. War
The United Nations is anathema to some.
The national convention of the Daughters of
the American Revolution, for instance, thinks the
whole idea of a responsible international organi
zation is subversive.
Others also believe that the United Nations
threatens the national soveriegnty of the U. S.
And even the clearest-headed, broadest-minded
people occasionally have qualms about plac
ing the interests of this nation before an interna
tional forum.
THE biggest single idea behind the U.N. is the
x prevention of war.
And it is easy to say the U.N. has done nothing
to prevent war. But to say so would be to tell an
untruth. The U.N. has done a great deal to miti
gate international tensions.
And it is entirely within the realm of possi
bility, even probability, judging by some of the
situations of the past decade, that only the United
Nations has made it possible to avoid all-out war.
This,'of course, cannot be proved. One cannot
prove that something which didn't happen would
have happened if such-and-such had not been
done.
DUT as a moral force, as an "international de
1J bating society," if you will, as a forum of
world opinion, as a place to take grievances, the
United Nations has functioned to take much of
the steani out of nationalistic disputes.
In doing so it may have prevented a major
war. We'll never know, and we'd better be darn
glad we-won't.
But even at its weakest and least effective, the
United Nations stands as a bright spot in a trou
bled world, a hopeful sign that perhaps, someday,
man will learn to get along without the ultimate
stupidity of nuclear war.
ine western democracies learned, long ago,
that as far as internal government is concerned,
legislatures and courts (debating societies!) are
far better solutions than battlefields.
Why not in international affairs, too? E.A.
Freedom to Spell
Newspapers and wire services, which usually
put considerable emphasis on correct spelling,
have had a tough time of it since the focus of
international news has been the Middle East.
The Arabic tongues do not lend themselves
well to transliteration, and it apparently depends
largely upon the preference of the translator as to
how names, particularly, should be spelled.
bnould it be Shehab
sal, Feyesel or Feisel? Bagdr.d or Baghdad?
All, apparently, are correct.
LIARRY Ferguson, executive editor of United
Press International, discusses this problem in
a letter to UPI subscribers, and comes to the con
clusion that "the trick is to pick out one spelling
and stay with it."
He also pointed out that T. E. Lawrence (the
fabled "Lawrence of Arabia") in his book, "Sev
en Pillars of Wisdom," spelled names different
ways in different places, and that the publisher,
after the proofs were completed, wrote to Law
rence asking about it.
A selection from their correspondence, quoted
by Ferguson, goes like this :
Q. I attach a list of queries raised by F. who is read
ing the proofs. He finds these very lean, but full of
inconsistencies in the spelling of proper names, a point
which reviewers often take up. Will you annotate it in
the margin, so that I can get the proofs straightened?
A. Annotated: not very helpfully perhaps. Arabic
names won't go into English, exactly, for their conson
ants are not the same as ours, and their vowels, like -ours,
vary from district to district. There are some
'scientific systems' of transliteration, helpful to the
people who know enough Arabic not to need helping,
but a wash-out for the world. I spell my names any
how, to show what rot the systems are.
Q. Jeddah and Jidda used impartially throughout.
Intentional? ;
A. Rather! -
Q. Bir Wadeida, was Bir Wadeidi.
' A. Why not? All one place. '
Q. Nuri, Emir of the Ruwalla, belongs to the "chief
family of the Ruana.tf On slip 23 "Rualla horse," and
slip 38, "killed one Rueli." In aU later slips "Rualla."
A. Should have also used Ruwala and Ruala.
Q. The Bisaita is also spelled Biseita.
A. Good.
Q. Jedha, the she-camel, was Jedhah on Slip 40.
A. She was a splendid beast.
Q. "Meleager, the immoral poet." I have put "Im
mortal" poet, but the author may mean immoral after
aU.
A. Immorality I know. Immortality I cannot judge.
As you please: Meleager will not sue us for libel.
THE publisher gave up and the book went to
press with this assortment of spellings. A
We cannot escape a grudging admiration for
this casual approach to spelling, a discipline
which has always been one of our stumbling
blocks. The good Lord knows that English spell
ing is irrational enough as it is, but the rules stick
with us time-consuming, illogical, finicky, and
apparently permanent. E;A.
Contrast
There we were, sitting in the Shakespearean
Festival theater last night, enjoying "Much Ado
About Nothing."
On the stage was the happy, complicated com
edy, the gay costumes, the amusing dialogue.
At one point we glanced up at the stars.
There, brightening and fading, was the rocket
of Sputnik II moving silently across the sky.
From the drama of the Elizabethan play
wright to the drama of today's cold war and
scientific race,, all in the blink of an eye. It gave
us the shivers. E.A.
or Chehab? Feisal, Fai
Dennis the Menace
TM GONNA TRY TO CATCH A
Today & Tomorrow
By Walter Lippmann
THE ANATOMY
OF DISCONTENT
Last week, speaking as a
man who is deeply concerned,
Sen. Fulbright brought into
open the dis
may and anxi
ety about our
foreign policy
which a r e so
widespread in
this country
today. ,
There is, to
be sure, no
massive popu
Walter
Lippmann
lar discontent
such as there was, for ex
ample, when the Korean war
had degenerated into a bloody
stalemate. But among the
leading minds and spirits of
the country there exists a
sense of foreboding that much
of the post-war structure of
our policy is undermined and
that we are in grave danger
of losing control Over our
affairs.
It might not take more than
one more spectacular, en
tanglement and embarrass
ment, like the present one in
Lebanon and Jordan, to pro
voke so serious a public reac
tion that it might be impos
sible to correct our errors and
agree upon a coherent and ra
tional policy. We must, there
fore, take a close look at the
discontent with our policy in
the hope that it will throw
light" on the problem.
A MONG the discontented
critics of the Eisenhower
Dulles conduct of foreign
policy, there are two princi
pal schools of thought.
The one holds that we could
and' should be powerful
enough to contain, and some
would say to reverse, the revo
lutionary movements which
have their centers in Mos
cow, Peiping, and Cairo. The
complaint of these critics
against the Administration is
that it has starved our mili
tary establishment, and that
it lacks the courage and reso
lution to intervene forcibly
when, as for example in Iraq,
a former ally of the West is
submerged by the revolution
ary tide.
"
THE other school holds that
our foreign policy in the
post - war era, though often
constructive as in the Marshall
Plan and NATO, has been in
many ways vitiated by a very
unsound estimate of the pow
er available to the United
States and of the forces at
work in the contemporary
world. Those of us who take
this view believe that, while
the United States must work
to keep even in the race of
armaments, it can never be
powerful enough to contain,
Try and
By BENNETT CERF-
DRESSED TO THE TEETH, a woman in a rather repulsive
chemise model came through Chicago the other day, and
was confused about a connection she was supposed to make.
She tapped the conductor on
the shoulder and inquired
anxiously, "Do you suppose
I should change here?" He
took one look at her costume
and replied, "If you don't,
lady, I predict they'll mob
you in Milwaukee."
The parlor-game set, by the
way, has revived the pastime
of fitting odd words into sent
ences.' Classic examples: One:
Machiavelli. "My old manH
Machiavelli good pair of pants
for twenty dollars." . Two:
Meretricious. "1 wish yez a ,
Meretricious and a Happy New Year."
'
There's a huge truck parked on a New York side street every
morning (and undoubtedly owned by a Democrat) that bears this
sign in red lettering on the back: "We are" delivering golf balls
for Ike." '..
O 1958. by Bennett Cert Distributed by Kins; Features Syndicate.
FALUN STAR
or to push back, by military
force the enormous revolution
ary movement of the post-war
era. We believe,- moreover,
that the attempt to contain the
revolutions by military force
has led us to make a series of
commitments .which cannot
be fulfilled without inordi
nate and incalculable risk.
Our commitments about the
off-shore islands, Quemoy and
Matsu, on the China coast is,
so we have been told, delib
erately uncertain. But that
does not improve it very
much. An American defense
of these islands is a strategic
absurdity, and it does not en
hance our prestige in the
world to say that we may,
though we may not, go to
war about these, islands. An
other such commitment was
the promise to President Cha
moun of the Lebanon that we
would land Marines if he
asked for them. As for ' the
recent London meeting of the
remaining Baghdad Pact
countries, we are m the sorry
position of not knowing what
Mr. Dulles has promised to
do in a part of the world
which is strategically at the
end of our reach.
,
WHERE .are, in brief, those
who think that our troubles
can be cured if we arm more
heavily and intervene more
readily. And there are those
who think that the United
States .has Decome overex
tended, that it has promised
to do more things than it can
do, and that the way out of
our difficulties is to reduce
our military commitments in
the Far East and in the Mid
dle East, and to seek a'ccohi-.
modations with the revolu
tionary movements. , .
This is, like deciding to diet
nr to live not on credit but on
income, a painful thing to do.'
It is our equivalent in fact of
what Britain and France have
been going through in accom
modating themselves to the
fact that they are no longer
the great powers in the world
that they were -in the. 19th
century. We are no longer so
great a power in the world as
we seemed to be in 1945 when
Russia had been devastated
by the war, China was in the
throes of a civil war,, the
Middle East had not yet risen
in revolt, whereas we were
intact, wealthy, and invin
cible. ,
The period of American su
premacy was, as we can now
see, a passing phase in human
affairs, , and our failure "to
learn to live with this great
fact of life, the persistence of
the illusion among us of our
own supremacy, is almost cer
tainly the oot of our miscal-
Stop Me
Indonesia,
y Troubles, But Shows Determination
By ROBERT MONAHAN
UPI Correspondent
Jakarta UPD Indonesia
marks its 13th birthday as an
independent Republic Sunday
and moves into a new period
which its leaders hope will
bring peace and prosperity to
Southeast Asia's biggest na
tion. On Aug. 17, 1945, two ded
icated nationalists stood at at
tention outside a private
home in Ja"karta and watched
Matter of Fact
THE SIXTY-FOUR BILLION
DOLLAR QUESTION
Washington Before very
long, the British and Amer
ican governments are likely
to have to an
swer the final
ugly . question
raised by the
catastrophe in
the M i d d 1 e
East. And to
answer this
question is a
far more ur
g e n t and
Jos-ph Alsop wcisuvjr Jiuu-
lem than any problem in
volved in the bizarre debate
at the United Nations.
For the British government,
this all-important question
will take the following form:
"Are you going to risk an
open military occupation of
Kuwait and the other little
oil sheikdoms in the Persian
Gulf, in order to keep at least
enough Middle Eastern oil un
der your own control to meet
your national oil needs?" For
the American government,
the question will be whether
to support such a British op
eration, which Britain dare
not carry out alone.
AS REVEALED in the last
report in this space, the
rot in the Middle East has
gone so far that Gamal Abdel
Nasser's hand is already
threatening to close on the
British-protected oil skeik-
doms. Through various friend
ly embassies in Cario, the
British have forwarded mes
sages to. Nasser that they will
resort to force rather than let
these vital positions in the
Persian Gulf fall under his
control. Nasser has reportedly
replied to these messages
with arrogant defiance.
Meanwhile, the American
government support for a
British military occupation of
the Persian Gulf shiekdoms
has already been condition
ally asked for. A half-pf omise
of such support has even been
given to Foreign Secretary
Selwyn Lloyd ' by' Secretary
of State John- Foster Dulles
All in all, there may not be
much time left before the
final choice has to be made
in London and in Washington.
From the American stand
point, the main factor in this'
choice is quite simple. We
cannot simply withdraw the
hem of our garment, and say
to the British, "No, we will
not support you in this mat
ter of Kuwait and the oil
sheikhdoms." i
TO begin where the trouble
started, President Eisen
hower incurred a clear moral
responsibility by his interven
tion in the Suez crisis. He
prevented' our aUies from pro
tecting their vital interests in
the Middle East in the way
that they thought best. His
own plan for protecting those
same vital interests has now
failed catastrophically. The
President cannot, in these cir
culations in foreign policy.
. : ......
r' IS the . reason why Mr.
Dulles has gone around the
world promising every nation
that would accept" the prom
ise an American, military
guarantee. In this, Mr. Dulles
has shown himself to be not a
prudent and calculating dip
lomat but a gambler who is
more lavish than any otner
Secretary of State has ever
dreamed of being with prom
issory notes engaging the
blood, the treasure, and the
honor of this country. The
President who endorses all
these promissory notes, is the
man who, when they threaten
to be cashed m, shrinks from
the consequences and pulls
back the country and Mr.
Dulles from the brink.
It all adds up to the kind
of policy which Theodore
Roosevelt used to denounce
as "forcible - feeble." It is
forcible in its promises and it
is feeble in its deeds. That
will not for long satisfy a na
tion which respects itself and
means to be respected aboard.
(c) 1958 New York
Herald Tribune Inc.
"Puts Mosquitoes
. Into A Tailspin"
" nr IT4 A04 a Science 2nd
greatest contribution to Miners. Just as
enecovc ioay.
Be Sure
You Gef
BUIIACH
Sofa ly To Us tcoitomlcol
on 13th Birthday, Plagued
while the Republic's red and
white flag was hoisted cere
moniously for the first time.
The two men were Sukar
no, a Dutch-educated civil en
gineer, and Mohammad Hat
ta, a scholarly economist.
- Sukarno (like many Indon
esians, he has only one name)
has served as the republic's
president for the entire 13
troubled years of independ
ence. Hatta resigned from the
By Joseph Alsop
cumstances, just tell the Brit
ish to go hang.
There is another, more
practical reason, too, why the
President cannot just tell the
British to go hang. .The loss
of all their Middle Eastern
oil sources will menace the
British with early bank
ruptcy. British . bankruptcy
will in turn quite fatally dis
rupt the Western alliance,
and in one way or another,
just about all the vast Ameri
can investments, in Britain as
an ally, in NATO, in Western
defense, wilj go down the
drain if Britain goes bank
rupt.
These are the arguments
for supporting a British mili
tary operation in the Persian
Gulf. The arguments against
supporting such an operation
are also formidable.
In the first place, the West
ern powers have now sus
tained the kind of Middle
Eastern defeat that can hard
ly be remedied by hanging
on to a final toe-hold in the
area, however rich in oil the
toe-hold may be. This is a
time for facing facts and cut
ting losses. The triumph of
Gamal Abdel Nasser is a fact
that has to be faced, however
ugly it may be.
TN THE second place, hang-
ing on to a toe-hold in the
Persian Gulf will be an im
mensely dangerous and dam
aging thing to do. At present,
Gamal Abdel .Nasser is vici
ously anti-Western, but he is
not at all pro-Communist. At
present, again, Gamal Abdel
Nasser is beginning to experi
ence grave difficulties with
the local forces, in Syria and
elsewhere, that tend to divide
his expanding Arab empire,
and normally these difficul
ties will grow greater as time
passes.' But let the British re
sort to force to keep the toe
hold in the Persian Gulf, and
all this will automatically
change, almost over night.
On the one hand, this, kind
of British operation will auto
matically provide Nasser
with precisely the kind of
grievance he needs to hold
his empire closer together,
All the clashes of interest be
tween one region and another
will be forgotten in a hate
B r i t i s h-hate-America cam
paign of unprecedented feroc
ity. Nasser himself will then
be strengthened very greatly.
On the other hand, and
much more important, the
contemplated British opera
tion in the Persian Gulf, will
automatically thrust Nasser
and his new Arab empire into
the waiting arms of the Krem
lin. Nasser will need the
Kremlin's support for all the
measures he will surely take
against the West, such as cut
ting the Suez Canal once
again. He will surely seek the
Kremlin's support. The result
ing danger of general war
will be considerable; and in
any case, the Kremlin's power
in the Middle East will be im
mensely strengthened.
Thus the question arises,
whether there is any way to
escape from the horrible
choice above-outlined. r The
next report in this space will
attempt to answer,
(c) 1958 New York Herald
Tribune Inc.
"I often wonder why people do not make more of the
marvelous power there is in kindness. It is the greatest
lever to move the hearts of men that the world as4 ever
known greater by far than anything that mere inge
nuity can devise or subtlety suggest." f
Andrew Chapman
Chapel Mortuary
Across from the Courthouse
Frank Morgan Harold Snodgrass, FUNERAL DIRECTORS
DAY OR NIGHT
vice-presidency in December,
1956, and has since declined
repeatedly ta rejoin the gov
ernment. He remains, how
ever, with Sukarno, a prin
cipal hero of the independence
movement.
Successfully Quell Rebellion
The last year, without oues-
tion, has been the most cru
cial and trying period "the
young nation has experienced.
A campaign to wrest con
trol of western New Guinea
from the Dutch focused, some
times painfully, the spotlight
of world attention on Indon
esia and brought a fresh wave
of economic problems as well.
The campaign against the
Dutch was followed by a re
bellion in the outer islands
which had chafed for years
over grievances with the cen
tral government.
The untested .Indonesian
armed forces succeeded bril
liantly in militarily crushing
the rebellion. But the main
offensives and , the mopping
up war that continues in the
jungles of - Sumatra and the
Celebes have put a further
strain on the economy.
The Republic s leaders ack
nowledge that the country is
faced with problems that
would tax severely even the
most stable of nations.
But they are confident that
these problems can be over
come with the same spirit and
determination that gained the
island nation of 82 million
persons its independence from
The Netherlands. .
Period of Survival
President Sukarno- fre
quently speaks of the "period
f .
oi survival any young na
tion must go through. The
next step, he says, is creation
of "a just and prosperous so
ciety."
Economic troubles aside,
Indonesia takes pride in gains
maae since independence in
Editorial Comment
HIGH-HANDED
It was the sort of sugges
tion the loyal residents of
Southern Oregon couldn't
take lying down, and they
didn't. In Portland the Ore
gonian, after saying sweet
things about Ashland's Shake
speare festival, suggested that
the festival be moved to Port
land for a year, just for the
centennial year. It would be
a great attraction, opined the
Portland daily.
It sure would be a great
attraction for Portland. The
Medford Mail Tribune, pub
lished hi the backyard of the
famed Shakespeare festival,
immediately took the Ore
gonian to task. The Medford
paper admitted only boredom
at the practice of Californians
who try to swipe Crater Lake,
but intense irritation at Port-
landers who want Southern
Oregon's big show.
Portland will have to strug
gle along without the Ashland
festival. It was a high-handed
suggestion in the first place.
The centennial year marks
100 yesrrs of statehood for all
of Oregon, not just for Port
land. Object of the celebra
tion is that it be state-wide.
Too ; many accusations that
Portlanders want to steal the
whole show for themselves
have already been made.' Sug
gestions, such as the Oregom-
an's, serve only to make the
rest of us suspicious of Port
land's hoggishness. It should
be made clear that the atti
tude expressed by the Port
land paper is not the attitude
of the committees planning
the centennial. Eugene Rtg-
ister-Guard.
About one-half of the sur
faced highways in the United
States now have painted di
viding strjpes running down
the middle of the roadbed.
o
- . PHONE" SP 2-8030
the fields of health, education
and foreign affairs.
Medical workers, assisted
by international organiza
tions, are waging a continuous
battle against diseases like
malaria and yaws. The ri-
sults have been encouraging.
ine nation can boast that
now well more than half of
its population is literate,
while under Dutch rule only
a Dare nandiul of Indonesians
could read or write in the Lat
in alphabet.
Indonesia is highly conscii
ous of its place in the Afro
Asian family of nations. In
1955 Indonesia sponsored a
historic unprecedented con
ference at Bandung, West
Java, where leaders of these
nations assembled to talk
aljout common problems and
aspirations.
The republic since its incep
tion has hewed to what its
leaders call an "active, inde
pendent policy" steering clear
of alignment with any major
power bloc.
The leaders say. this policy
met its crucial test during the
last year when Indonesia was
thrust into the world spot
light and subjected ' to pres
sures from all sides.
Communications
Red Face
To the Editor: Taking some.
thing for granted can -terminate
in embarrassment. That
very thing happened to-me
Aug. 11, and was my face red,
when a strange but very pleas
ing voice said over the phone,
"You don't know me, but I
did want to tell you there are
others here who read the Graf
ton, North Dakota, paper be
sides you." She went on to say
her paper had arrived and she
had read an article I sent to
the Walsh County Record, stat
ing that I had sent to the
Mail Tribune an account f
the series of stories the Graf
ton newspaper would carry
soon, . titled "Know - Your
North Dakota." Everything
of interest about the state
would be mentioned.
To make sure it would im
press the transplanted North
Dakotans who would read the
Tribune, I copied the Graf
ton editor's article (verbatim),
yes, it wasword for word.
I surmise that it is against
newspaper policy to reprint
from another paper, and there
fore the Tribune didn't print
my letter, and my face is red
because the ex-NJ). people
who read both the Tribune
and Walsh County Record
may consider me a fibber.
I will be forever grateful
to the M. T. if this appears
soon.
Emma Lou Carpenter,
811 Sherman st.,
Medford.
MONEY
At Crater Finance you may
borrow for any worthy
while purpose on your v
FURNITURE - AUTO
SALARY
and repay in monthly In
stallments. You may
choose the terms most suit
able to you up to 24
months. - x
Lean may ba paid in ad
vane or in full at any timt.
Crater Finance
CORPORATION
135 Pine Street
Central Point
Phone NO 4-1273
Frank Wilkinson, Mgr.
Convenient Parking