Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, August 26, 1958, Image 4

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    4 Tuesday, August 25, 1938
MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, ORE.
MEDFORDtcTBIBUNE
"Everyone in Southern Oregon
Reads The Mail Tribune'-
Published Daily except Saturday by
MEDFORD PRINTING CO.
33 North Fir St. Ph. SP 2-6141
ROBERT W. RUHL. Editor
HERB GREY. Advertising Manager
GERALD LATHAM. Business Mgr.
ZRIC W. ALLEN JR,
Managing Editor
ZARL H. ADAMS. Citv Editor
HARRY CHIPMAN. Te!eg. Editor
RICHARD JEWETT. Sports Editor
OLIVE STARCHER. Women's Editor
DALE ERICKSON. Circulation Mgr.
An Independent Newspaper
Entered as second class matter at
Medford Oregon under Act of
March 3. 1897
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Flight 'o Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30 and
40 years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
Aug. 26, 1948 (Thursday)
Those cloth sacks attached
to rat traps the Chamber of
Commerce was worried about
yesterday? They are used for
rural mail delivery in moun
tain areas, as many callers
have since informed the
Chamber.
Eric Allen, Jr., secretary to
Gov. John H. Hall, will ar
rive early in September to be
come city editor of the Mail
Tribune.
20 YEARS AGO
Aug. 26. 1938 (Friday)
Bird-shooters prepare to
flock to the Medford Gun club
to practice wing-shots on clay
pigeons in anticipation of the
season on upland feathered
fowl.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot" column: "There
are many signs of autumn,
such as the shortening days,
and pleasant blondes cashing
bum checks and disappear
ing." 30 YEARS AGO
Aug. 26, 1923 (Sunday)
The new ' Valley school
building at the end of Grove
land ave. in Siskiyou heights
will be open for inspection
this week.
A Medford fireman re
ceived a wedding shower two
nights ago, which got under
way with a shower bath for
the prospective bridegroom.
40 YEARS AGO
Aug. 26, 1918 (Monday)
Bartlett pear -picking
is
nearly completed.
The pear blight disinfectant
demonstration is being held
today at the experiment sta
tion. What's Your I.Q.?
Nine er ten correct is superior;
seven or eight is excellent; five or
six is good.
1. What people fought three
wars with the Samnites?
2. Is the earth the second,
third, or fourth, planet in
distance from the sun?
3. Is copra a mineral, metal,
or vegetable product?
4. A buffoon is .a kind of
sideboard; true or false?
5. Are leopards striped or
spotted?
6. With what widespread
industry do you associate the
family name Weyerhaeuser?
7. Periods of play in polo
are designated as c s?
8. New York City does, or
does not, have a system of
City manager government?
9. What is a cyclotron?
10. Are U. S. Senators
elected to serve terms of two,
four, or six years?
Answers: 1. The Romans.
2. Third. 3. Vegetable. (Dried
Cocoanut meat.) 4. False.
5. Spotted. 6. Lumber. 7.
Chukkers. 8. Does not. 9. An
atom-smashing machine. 10.
Six years.
MISSILE EXPERT HURT
Amsterdam -(LTD Dr. Wern
her Von Braum, the U. S.
Army's missle expert and the
man behind the Explorer sat
ellites, was bedridden today
with a suspected slipped disc
suffered when he bent over
to pick up an object at the In
ternational Astronautical Con
gress here. .--
A
menca s
We bow to no man in our admiration of fem
inine pulchritude.
For this reason if for no other we are
always pleased to observe "MissThis or That,"
or the "Queen of This or That."
Almost universally, they are nice young wom
en, sincerely attempting to do their very best in
a rather exciting situation, and under consider
able pressure.
The demands upon them upon their time,
their good nature, their abilities, and their ner
vous systems are terrific.
A ND while we can see no objection to a hand-
4- u:. -4.: l 1 a 4.u:
feume vuuxig wumaii &uujei.uiig neibeu iu una
soil of thing if it is what she wants, we do have
the feeling it would make us happy if a daughter
of ours began having such ambitions.
Thoughts of this sort vere wandering through
our mind the other day during a conservation we
were fortunate enough to have with Miss Marilyn
Van Derbur, a 21-year-old blonde college student
from Denver, Colo., who is the reigning Miss
America until her successor is named soon.
Miss Van Derbur is no raving beauty. As she
is quick to point out, Miss America is no longer
just a beauty contest, but a gruelling competition
with judging points based on talent, poise and
personality as well as beauty.
CHE is, in fact, a pretty, pleasant, courteous girl;
clean and wholesome, who has all the con
ventional American ideals about what is good
and "what isn't, and who is sincerely and deeply
convinced that she has a mission during her one
year reign a mission to convince an entire gen
eration of potential Miss Americas that they, too,
can carry high the banner of righteousness, even
if they can never be crowned at Atlantic City.
If this sounds condescending, we don't meant
it to. Miss America is honestly convinced that she
is doing good. And she probably is, too. Her
idealism is admirable and we respect it highly.
She is also very pretty.
She plans to continue her college career, ma
joring in music ; she says
mother is the best career a
too many activities can have an unfortunate ef
fect on college studies, and that she is determined
to make "straight A's" during her junior and sen
ior years.
,
CHE also talked of the
erica.
Of the hundreds of thousands of miles she has
traveled, living out of a suitcase; of being put on
the stageih front of thousands of people on short
notice, and having to appear poised and radiant
under all circumstances ; of living in a hotel suite
in New York for a full year, and only daring to
venture out after dark for fear of swarms of auto
graph-hunters.
She spoke of being a
ies, and of feeling she had to "live up to the ex
pectations" of her sorority sisters, of the thous
ands of letters she has received, many of them
touching or inspiring, and of the obligation to
reply to them all.
1YJISS Van Derbur, we concluded, is a sincere,
conscientious girl with high standards of
personal conduct.
She is a bit inclined to look down her nose
at some of the "Miss This" and "Miss That" con
tests which are based solely on the bathing suit
sort of thing.
And she is convinced that within a few years
the Miss America of that period, whoever she may
be, will be welcomed at the White House, as well
as on the runway at Atlantic City, as a living ex
ample of all that is good in American - young
womanhood.
Maybe this is tine.
But it occurs to us that it must take a remark
ably well-adjusted girl to be able to hold to those
ideals, right down the line, after the tinsel and
the glamour vanish ; when the adulation and
the autograph-hunters are. gone ; . when she no
longer is deferred to and given the key to the
city.
COME former Miss Americas have made that
adjustment, and have become useful citizens.
Others have not.
We believe Miss Van Derbur, a high-spirited
and thoughtful young woman, with a fine, closely-knit
family, will make the grade.
But we wonder about the artificiality of the
life, the set of values implicit in this and similar
contests. Are surface poise, a pleasant personality
and physical beauty really important and lasting
criteria of worth? How about the unreal life
lived for the week, or the month, or the year, in
volved? Are these fit bases for a future existence
of peace with oneself and one's loved ones, and
for a worthwhile contribution to the community?
Or, put another way, is being "Miss This or
That" worth being "Ex-Miss This or That"? -
We wonder. For all the "Misses' " sake, we
hope it is. E.A. - - -
99
that being a wife and
woman can have ; that
rigors of being Miss Am-
year behind in her stud
"Missei
Dennis the Menace
'MOmZ, I'M GOING TO 3ABY SIT FOR THE MITCHELLS.
WOULD yOU LOAN N& ONE Or
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 400 words. The letters
printed in this cojumn do not necessarily represent the views of the
oaper; in fact the contrary is often the case.
Klamath Bill Victory
To the Editor: As you un
doubtedly know, we have
sent to the President for his
signature a strong and ef
fective bill providing for so
lution of the Klamath Indian
Reservation Purchase prob
lem. This bill has resulted
from a Senate-House confer
ence on the issue.
"First and foremost, we are
assured by high officials of
the Forest Service that the
great Klamath pine forest
will be adequately protected
under the compromise lan
guage adopted in conference.
Whereas the "continuqus sup
ply" language was retained,
the words, "according to sus
tained yield procedures"
were added to assure full pro
tection against any damaging
policies which might call for
the harvest of trees too quick
ly or too recklessly.
Secondly, the $90 million
authorization is retained to
add the timber to the Nation
al Forests, should that be nec
essary, and to pay the with
drawing Indians. This is a
generous sum.
I am particularly grateful
to my- Senate colleagues
Senators Anderson, Watkins
and Church who battled
manfully beside me in the
long conference discussion for
a fair bill which would pre
serve the sustained-yield poli
cies of the Senate version.
Also my debt is great to Sen
ator Murray, the chairman of
the Senate Interior and Insu
lar Affairs committee, who
has never let supporters of
this legislation down on any
issue pertaining to the Klam
ath situation.
I also want to thank Repre
sentative Albert C. Ullman
for his fine cooperation. He
deserves a great deal of cred
it. In addition, Governor
Holmes and the Oregon State
Legislative Interim commit
tee were more than helpful.
They gave much valuable
testimony throughout the
long struggle.
I particularly want to thank
you for your encouragement.
I always have had the feeling
that the. people of Oregon
were behind me in this urgent
cause, despite certain snide
attacks from a few elements
like the National ' Lumber
M a n u facturers association.
After all, we had three great
aims: (1) To do justice to the
Indians themselves, (2) to
keep the Oregon lumber mar
ket from being broken wide
open by a bargain-basement
sale of 4 billion feet of pine
timber, and (3) to save the
Klamath timber, watershed
and wildlife marsh for future
generations.
Thank you for helping us
to achieve "these goals.
Richard L. Neuberger,
United States Senator.
For Lark Lovers
To the Editor: The Society
for the Propagation of the
T,ark has recently been or
ganized by a group of bird
and nature lovers in South
Bend, Ind. Our first goal is
to take a census survey of
this unusual bird, prelimi
narv to further planning
which aims to preserve and
propagate all species of this
remarkable songsier. 10 ac
rnmnlish this, we would like
to enlist the aid of bird lovers
throughout the nation.
Anvone who is interested,
be they young or old, Boy
Scout or Girl Scout, can neip
ns bv sendins a post card or
letter to our headquarters
with any pertinent informa
tion, such as what kinds of
larks do we have in the va
rious states? Are they increas
ing or decreasing in numbers?
TRANQUILIZERS?
And what can be done to pre
serve and propagate them?
Joseph Barnes, Secretary,
The Society for the Propa
gation of the Lark,
P. O. Box 51,
South Bend 24, Ind.
More Than 100 Years
To the Editor: Although
next year is focal for a plan
ned Centennial for Oregon,
the state, I submit that Ore
gon, the commonwealth, held
forth years before the event
this proposed centennial cele
brates. For my maternal an
ceStors, even, it began in
1853. They arrived in Linn
county by covered wagon in
that year to find a real pi
oneer settlement awaiting
them.
Back, back much farther
the record runs, at least to
the first settlements in Ore
gon. I think that it is unfair
to suggest that it took politi
cal unification in Oregon to
mark a true beginning in the
field of law, order and gov
ernment in the local field,
duplicated in many places.
The 1958 centennial will, at
best, merely mark Oregon's
place in the Union with defi
niteness. So it is, that while we cele
brate 1958 with pride for
Oregon's contribution to po
litical union in the United
States, we should not forget
to view the great, although
sometimes shadowy back
ground of pioneer history
that includes much more of
time and effort than are to
be found in only 100 years.
It is in this background, if
anything, I should say, that
we will find the true spirit of
the pioneer and Oregon's ac
tual place in history. Al
though, of course, we cannot
but be inspired by the plan
ning for the forthcoming cel
ebration. Fee C. Esteb,
325 South Riverside ave.,
Medford.
Editorial Comment
THE EASTLAND TIRADE
" It is a serious matter when
the chairman of the Senate
Judiciary Committee, even
though he happens to be
James O. Eastland of Missis
sippi, attacks the personnel
of the Supreme Court in
terms of so-called "pro-Communist"
decisions. To his cred
it Senator Morse of Oregon
promptly administered a re
buke from the Senate floor
but the Eastland tirade has
not had the widespread re
pudiation that is called for.
What Senator Eastland -iid
was to take a group of the
most important decisions of
the Supreme Court over the
last 15 years decisions aris
ing because citzens had sum
moned the protection of -the
American Bill of Rights and
scale the Justices according
to what he called "the ap
parent fondness of the Su
preme Court majority for the
Communist cause."
Senator. Eastland is free to
disagree with Supreme Court
decisions whenever it suits
his fancy. Indeed he may do
it all the time if he likes. But
when he takes nine members
of the bar of as many dif
ferent states elevated to our
highest bench by three Presi
dents over a period of more
than 20 years, and tags them
as "pro - Communist'! and
"anti-Communist" he maligns
not only the Supreme Court
but the Senate in which he
sits. For the Senate has con
firmed every one of these
Justices.
Nothing could be more
France, Germany, Italy Seek Agreement
In Assessment of Middle East Situation
By WELLINGTON LONG
UPI Correspondent
Bonn, Germany -OJPD-Chan-cellor
Konrad Adenauer, In
meetings with the premiers
of Italy and France during
the next four weeks, will at
tempt to reach an agreed as
sessment of the Middle East
situation.
Adenauer, his advisors say,
feels any attempt to prepare
a Western plan for future
treatment of the Arab world
is fruitless unless there first
Matter of Fact
THE COURT. THE SOUTH
AND LYNDON'S MAGIC
Washington The story
really began that day in May,
1954, when the Supreme
Court handed down its his
toric d e cree
holding that
segregation in
the public
schools was
u n c o n stitu
tional. It ended, or
at least a vi
tal c h a pter
ended, in a
dramatic rli-
Rov.iand Evans
Jr.
max late on a recent night in
the Senate. A remarkahlp
display of legislative black-
magic, a strange and occult
art for which Senator John
son is justly famous, swept
from the Senate floor the
Smith Bill, the potent weapon
of rebuke that the anti-court
coalition had wheeled up
against the Supreme Court.
This bill, already approved
in the House, would not di
rectly have touched the school
decision. But as a symbol it
was a supreme test for both
sides. In a word, its approval
would have established the
court's vulnerability. Who
could then be certain" that
new, more daring attacks
would fail? Having been
taken to the Congressional
woodshed 'once, the high court
might easier be taken there
again.
THE Smith ' Bill, in short,
had to be sent back to
committee and by a combina
tion of ingenious plays it fi
nally was. Oddly enough, the
fortunes of Vice President
T?irhard M. Nixon were
brandished ' by both Demo
cratic and Republican lead
ers wooing support for their
fight against the anti-court
coalition. Viewing the pros
pect from opposite sides, they
inrprl im the effect of a
tie vote on the political fu
ture of Mr. Nixon. A lew re
publican fence-sitters were
ificallv advised that if
they did not cast their own
votes against tne anti-court
bills, the Senate promised to
end in a tie vote. That would
surely require Vice President
Nixon to break the tie and
ha Wfll ild hp harrassed and
abused no matter how he
voted.
The same precise strategy,
aiiirnprl 180 deerees. was
conducted by the Democratic
leaders. Several .Democrats,
inrlined to suDDOrt the anti-
court coalition, were private
ly warned that Johnson naa
lined up the required votes to
defeat the court-curbs if they
would only withhold their
specious than the theory that
a decision is "pro-Communist"
because it protected the rights
of an American citizen who
is also a Communist. The
great Justice Holmes said it
well in an opinion which Sen
ator Eastland apparently has
never read: "If there is any
principle of the Constitution
that more imperatively calls
for attachment than any other
it is the principle of free
thought-not free thought for
those who agree with us but
freedom for the thought that
we hate." St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
TO PRESERVE
NATURAL BEAUTY .
Approved by Congress and
waiting the signature of Pres
ident Eisenhower is a bill of
considerable interest to resi
dents of Josephine and Curry
counties. The bill extends
boundaries of the Siskiyou
National Forest through a 20
mile corridor of the lower
Rogue river, regarded as one
of the most scenic areas in the
United States.
Rep. Charles Porter of the
4th district piloted it through
the house and Dick Neuberg
er was successful in obtaining
senate approval. Signature
by the president is regarded
as a matter of course.
The bill will enable the
U.S. Forest Service to ex
change timber tracts away
from the Rogue for privately
owned timber along the river,
and thus preserve the natural
beauty of this famed stream.
If one would like . an. exam-
is agreement on the present
situation there;
There remains basic dis
agreement on this point of
departure. It remains despite
U. S. Secretary of State John
Foster Dulles' and Italian
Premier Amintore Fanfani's
blitz visits to see Adenauer
late in July and early in Aug
ust. To Meet Fanfani
The West German chancel
lor will receive Fanfani for
a second meeting at the form
er's vacation residence on the
By Rowland Evans Jr.
own votes. If they voted,
they were told, they risked
locking the Senate in a tie.
Who could possibly profit
from a tie but Vice President
Nixon, who would get all the
glory?
CK) IT went. One surprised
Democrat, hurrying back
from a trip just in time to
vote in favor of the court
curbs, was whisked into a
cloak-room and, yielding to
his leaders' appeal, sat tight
right there until the vote was
completed.
Consider what Sen. John
son and Sen. Dirksen, Sen
ator Knowland's heir appar
ent as Republican leader,
were up against? Only the
previous night the Senate had
refused, by a generous seven
vote margin, to kill the Smith
Bill by tabling it. Johnson
had carefully balanced the
odds on that impending vote.
Alert lieutenants, buttonhol
ing senators and toting up
practice rollcalls, had assured
him that ample votes were
available.
But both Johnson and his
incomparably able staff had
fatally misjudged the emo
tional impact of Sen. Douglas'
red-flag amendment. Douglas
demanded that the Senate
vote its "full support and ap
proval" of the court's school-
integration decree. Three and
possibly four votes that John
son had counted as secure dis
appeared in the inflammatory
debate that followed the
Douglas amendment. When
that first vote came on the
Smith Bill, Johnson had for
the moment lost control.
BUT there could be no
thought of turning back.
The long, dreary fight to
limit the effect of some of
the Supreme Court's decisions
had the support of all the
orthodox Southern Democrats
and almost all the orthodox
mid-Western Republicans, an
gered not by the school de
cision but by the court's han
dling of subversion and sedi
tion cases. Joining this for
midable team were a few
other Republicans who would
like to damage Chief Justice
Warren's reputation.
. There could be no retreat
by Johnson and Dirksen.
Skillful use of the Nixon
play, and the voluntary "de
lay" in Sen. Frear's official
return from the South,
changed the composition of
Senate forces. So did the de
cision of three Senators to
switch their votes from the
previous night's balloting.
Sen. Lausche, Sen. Bennett
and Sen. Malone, all record
ed as against tabling, now
voted for recommital. Final
ly, two "live" votes available
to be cast against recommital
were persuaded to pair with
absent senators who favored
recommital. The effect of
"pairing" is to wash out both
votes, in effect neutralizing
the "live" vote.
When ' all the black magic
had wrought its wonders, the
vote was 41 to 40. And there
assuredly ended the most de
termined legislative assault
on the Supreme Court since
Reconstruction. Of such frag
ile stuff are great decisions
made.
(c) 1958, New Yord Herald
Tribune Inc.
pie of how logging down to
the water's edge can mar the
gorge, one need only drive to
the area near Galice where
logging has been going on
this year on the north bank.
The appearance is sorry in
deed. This preservation of natur
al beauty against the inroads
of logging is not new. Driv
ing over Highway 97 between
Gilchrist and Bend one will
see many beautiful ponderosa
pine trees beside the high
way. These trees are large
and would make excellent
lumber. They were saved for
edification of the traveling
public because Robert W.
Sawyer, then publisher of the
Bend Bulletinr fought an edi
torial battle to retain a na
tural fringe of timber along
the highway.
Future generations will
continue to enjoy the gran
deur of the lower Rogue river
gorge because members of
this generation were thought
ful enough to preserve its na
tural beauty. Grants Pass
Courier.
shores of Lake Como Aug.
31.
He also will have his first
meeting with French Premier
Charles de Gaulle since the
latter took office in De Gaul
le's Lorraine home on Sept.
14.
Dulles and Fanfani both
have conferred recently with
De Gaulle, the former just
before and the latter just aft
er the Iraqi revolution which
caused the U. S. to land their
troops in Lebanon and the
British to do the same in Jor
dan. ,
The apparent air of com
promise around the , United
Nations headquarters in New
York has somewhat eased the
sense of urgency in diplomat
ic circles in Europe.
Iron Out Details
Fanfani, Italian sources re
port, feels the Middle Eastern
economic development
scheme President Eisenhow
er proposed to the United Na
In the Day's News
By FRANK
The congress as this is writ
ten is struggling to adjourn,
passed a lot of laws. The
congress that will assemble
next January will pass a lot
more laws. Next year is an
odd-numbered year. In odd
numbered years, most of our
legislatures meet. All of these
legislatures will pass laws.
City councils, etc., will add to
the pile.
We have ALREADY on our
statute books so many laws
that only one of these fantas
tic mechanical brain comput
ers could total them all up.
Why so many laws?
This, I think, is the reason:
As a people, we have a pious
relief that when something is
wrong all we need to do is to
PASS A LAW. Having done
that, we assume, everything
will be hunky-dory.
T ISTEN to this:
J Sports Illustrated mag
azine says in a recent article
that the peoples of the world
spend the colossal sum of 23
billion dollars every year oa
accountable forms of public
gambling and an immense ad
ditional amount in private
games which can not be
traced.
Of this amount, the Sports
Illustrated article adds, the
United States alone accounts
for 15 BILLION dollars, with
horse racing, numbers games
and slot machines leading the
list of major betting outlets.
THOUGHT:
In every state of the
Union but Nevada gambling is
forbidden (or at least inhibi
ted) by LAWS.
But gambling goes on.
A LL this sounds like a plea
for free and open gambl
ing. It ISN'T. It is intended
merely to point a moral. The
moral is this:
Merely PASSING A LAW
isn't enough to end an evil.
If- an evil is to be ended by
passing a law, the law must
be ENFORCED.
Laws are enforced only
when they are backed by
public opinion that is so
strong and so uncompromising
that those who fail to enforce
them will be voted out of of
fice at the next election.
That's about the long and the
short of it.
SPEAKING of laws and
those who make them -that
is to say, speaking of
GOVERNMENT-a rather un
usual convention has been in
session in Tokyo during the
past week. The name of it is.
the Pan-Pacific and Southeast
Asia Conference. The dele
gates were all women. The
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.
tions incorporated many of
Fanfani's own thoughts.
But many details remain to
be ironed out, and here is
where both Adenauer and
Fanfani and, presumably, De
Gaulle, believe there first
should be an agreed assess
ment for the Arab problem.
Fanfani, the source say, be
lieves the main aim of West
ern policy should be to pre
vent the Arabs falling under
Communist governments.
On this point, Adenauer is
in complete agreement.
Fanfani believes, however,
a series of non-aggression
pacts among the Arab states
is necessary to preserve the
peace in the area.
Here, Adenauer disagrees,
Adenauer is said to believe
in the inevitability of com
plete Arab union under the
leadership of Egypt's Gamal
Abdel Nasser. The German
believes any Western attempt
to stem this process is futile.
JENKINS
subjects they discussed are in
teresting. For example:
The first woman ambas
sador from the Philippines,
Mrs. Trinidad Legarda, as
serted in a speech to the con
ference that Asian women are
brought up to give preferen
tial treatment to men-to CAT
ER to them, to defer to them,
to give them full authority in
the homes and in the business
of government.
Her statement seems to
have rung the bell. The cor
respondents tell us that the
leader of the woman's move
ment in Western Samoa sum
med up the feeling at the To
kyo conference when she got
up and agreed with Mrs. Le
garda that Asian countries are
MEN'S countries.
TTMMMMMMM.
Asian countries are ad
mittedly the worst governed
countries on earth.
The moral seems to be: GET
MORE WOMEN INTO GOV
ERNMENT. ,
keep all the
income.
Interest from Municipal bonds m
not subject to Federal Income Tax
You don't even report it
Yet, next to government bonds.
Municipals are traditionally the
safest investments.
Good quality, tax-exempt bonds
are now available which yield be
tween 3H and 44, depending
on maturity.
Foster & Marshall, as one of the
principal municipal bond under
writers in the Pacific Northwest,
will be pleased to discuss Municipals
with you at your convenience. Just
call or visit our office.
Foster & Marshall
MEMBERS NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE
formerly
HOGAN-ROWAN & CO.
44 S. Cen. Medford . SP 3-5353
Seattle
Eugene
Portland
Yakima
Spokane
Olympla
HE'S A DIRTY
LITTLE SHRINKER!
It's true every dollar you
have today is shrinking due to
inflation. Increased insurance
can check that shrinkage when
it's time to pay off fire fosses,
car damages or medicaj bills.
DON'T GET CAUGHT WITH
YOUR INSURANCE DOWN.
ACT NOW!
Bill Fish
St