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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (March 17, 1959)
4 Tuesday, March 17. 1959 MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, ORE. MroF0RDt2TRTBUNE "Everyone in Southern Oregon Reads The Mail rriDune Published Daily except Saturday by MJJJFORD PRINTING CO 33 North Fit St. Ph. SP 2-6141 ROBEP.T W RUHL, Editor KERB GREY Advertising Manage GERALD LATHAM, Business UtfT ERIC W ALLEN JR Managing F.ditor EARL H ADAMS. City Editor HARRY CHIPMAN. Teleg Editor RICHARD JEWETT Sports Editor LIVE ST ARCHER Women's Editor DALE ERICKSON. Circulation Mgr An Independent Newspaper Entered as second class matter at Mediord Oregon under Act ol March 3. 1897 SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mai 1 In Advance. Copy 10c. Dail- and Sunday 1 year $15 00 Dailv and Sunday 6 mos. 8.00 Dailv and Sunday 3 mos. 4.23 Sunday Only One year S4.20 By Carrier In Advance Medford. Ashland, Central Point. Eagle Point. Jacksonville. Gold Hill. Phoenix Shady Cove Rogue Riv er Talent and on motor routes. Daily and Sunday 1 year $18.00 Dailv and Sun J .rv 1 mo. iau Carrier and Dealers c o p y 10c All Terms Cash in Advance Official Paper of City at Med for Official Papei of JacKson county United Press International Full Leased Wire MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION Advertising Representative: WEST -HOLIDAY CO.. INC. Of fices in New York. Chicago. De troit. San Francisco. Los Angeles. Seattle. Portland St. Louis. At lanta. Vancouver B.C. NEWSPAPER BLISHERS ASSOCIATION NATIONAL EDITORIAL AS(sbcfATl(o J Flight 'o Time Medford and Jackson County History from the files of The Mail Tribune 10. 20, 30, 40 and 50 years ago. 10 YEARS AGO March 17. 1949 (Thursday) Ashland voters flock to the polls in an election for the recall of three city council men. A medium intensity run way lighting system is to be installed at Medford airport. 20 YEARS AGO March 17, 1939 (Friday) Medford Corporation plans to resume logging and rail road operations Monday with the mill work to follow Thurs day. From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudge Pot" column: "A number of citizens have been noted mowing their lawns when they could be playing golf. They are trying to get out of assisting with the spring housecleaning, and not fooling anybody, least of all the little woman at their house." 30 YEARS AGO March 17. 1929 (Sunday) The labor shortage for all kinds of work in the valley persists. St. Patrick's day is ob served in the city. 40 YEARS AGO March 17. 1919 (Monday) An effort is launched to have the federal labor office here kept open for the next two months. The near-beer problem is put up to the court for a rul ing. 50 YEARS AGO March 17. 1909 (Wednesday) West Seventh st. property owners consider paying for paving intersections as the city lacks funds. Desert Oil company's well northeast of town is down to 100 feet. What's Your !.Q.? Nina or ten correct is superior; seven or eight is excellent; five or six is good. 1. Is pure lead a relatively hard, or soft, metal? 2. Does the month of Feb ruary ever have five Sun days? 3. Does tactile sense refer to the sense of taste, sight, touch, hearing, or smell? 4. Correct the following, "If he would have come ear lier, he would have been in time." 5. What does the name Nova Scotia mean? 6. Who said, "There never was a good war or a bad peace"? , - - - 7. In describing members of the seal family, what is a male, a female, and a baby seal called, respectively? 8. On what island did Chiang Kai-shek take refuge when the Nationalist troops were defeated by the Com' munists on the China main land? 9. What have the following in common: John Singleton Copley, Benjamin West, Gil bert Stewart? 10 What is the name for a field in which rice is grown? Answers: 1. Soft. 2. Yes 3. Touch. 4. "If he had come earlier." 5. New Scotland. 6 Beniamin Franklin. 7. Bull. cow, and pup. 8. Formosa. 9 American painters. 10. Pad KQPI I Bad Precedent The legislature is trying to decide whether to approve a bond issue of $60 million to pay for a new bridge across the Columbia at Astoria, and for improvement of Highway 42, from Roseburg to Coquille. Proponents of these two projects point out that they are badly needed. And they are. But we object to the legislature constiuting itself into a sort of gigantic highway commission, and deciding on its own, hastily and while under political pressure, which routes should be im proved. OUR objections would be less if they approved a bond issue for highway construction and then turned.it over to the highway commission to spend. Otherwise, why have a highway commis sion? Oregon's highway department is one of the best in the nation. It has done winders with amounts of money far less in proportion than that available to some other states. It has looked at the state as a whole, balancing the needs of one area against the needs of the rest of the state. And it has come up with a remarkably good, well-rounded and fair distribution of highway construction according to the needs of the state as a whole. This pattern will be upset if the legislature tells the highway department wrhat routes to build. WE KNOW for a fact that the commission is aware of the call for the Columbia river I bridge, and for the improvement of Highway 42. r-i- i i i. -i n . i it it tili. j" 1 15UI it nas looKea at mem in uie ngut ui equai ui more serious needs in other parts of the state. First things first has been its operating policy. Precedent for bonding action for one segment of highway was set two years ago, when some $12 million was allocated to rebuild Highway 101 in Coos and Curry counties a badly needed pro ject. But that was "sold" to the legislature as a one-time-only proposition. If the policy is again abrogated, the highway commission's orderly plan of development is apt to go by the boards. The commission has made its mistakes, all right. But it is right in opposing this infringement on its authority and its duty to plan Oregons highways for orderly development for the benefit of the whole state, not just part of it. E. A. Wages of Thoughtlessness We hope a lot of youngsters read Mary Kelly's article in yesterday's Mail Tribune about Hugh D'Autremont. It is an almost rerf ensue from one unthinking misdeed in early life. Tt is the kind of nost scrint which could follow anv voune- man who iust he's getting into in trying to get by the "easy way." Hurii D'Autremont. so clearly, was raised a decent boy, liked by many people, respepted by his fellow-students and tea chers, successful at school. But one incident, where he was led on by two older brothers, virtually destroyed his life. From then on it was 61 years ot prison. And the irony of his serious illness, just as he was getting his first "break" in all that time, only serves to emphasize the whole thing. THERE are in Jackson county a lot of basically Aaftant trrvnnrr Timrc vVir ova flirtinor wifh inst. that kind of future. They don't mean to do anything "really wrong," but they are putting themselves, day after day, in a position which could turn into heartbreak and repentance for the rest of their lives. A small burglary can turn, too easily, into a shooting scrape with police ; a few drinks before driving can result in death or injury, either for themselves or for others who are innocent; a fought-out "beef" can turn into a prison record. Hugh D'Autremont, as a youngster, wasn't really bad. He was thoughtless, and perhaps too easily led. And he's been paying for it ever since. E.A. Big A little story in our favorite newspaper the other day pointed out that Oregon has nearly 170 state parks more than any other state in the nation. Most of them are relatively small, such as those in Jackson county TouVelle, Casey, Tubb Springs, McLeod, Ben Hur Lampman, Laurel hurst. And none can begin to compare with Adiron dack State Park in New York. This park contains 5,177 square miles of lake and forest. It is slightly larger than Connecticut, and is the largest state park in the nation. IT IS also unique in that the state owns only about half of it, and the rest of the area, which is dedicated as park and forest preserve, is owned by pulp or lumber companies, or by other agencies or owners who have dedicated their ownership for park purposes. Despite the vast areas in the west, probably Adirondack park will remain the only state park of that size, for it wras developed in large part before the forest service entered the picture. The function of Adirondack park is served, to an ex tent at least, in the west by the National Forests. E.A. ect example of what can "doesn't realize" what as Marv's article shows Park Dennis the YOU 6ETTERGD CWAOIFT.mD! Yorffte SWRTIN'TO FEEL SQUQOSWl' Drummond Reports (Walter Lippman is again traveling in Europe. Roscoe Drummond reports from Washington in his absence.) MR. ROCKEFELLER DOES IT Washington If Nelson Rockefeller wants to be the Republican Presidential nomi nee next year and I know of no one who says he doesn't he is going about it the right way. The best possible way for Mr. Rockefeller to get ahead in .national politics is not to try to get ahead in national politics but to prove, by his works, that he is a courageous and skillful Governor of New York State. On the record of his first 2Vi months he is making a good beginning toward remov ing one of the persistent ques tion marks which overhang his future. Sure, everyone said, he is a charming candidate and an ingratiating vote-getter. So what? Doesn't that mean that when the hard tests of public office come, he will prove to be only a charming and in gratiating Governor,? issuing Rockefeller reports and shak ing hands very gracefully? Mr. Rockefeller proved that he was the kind of Republican who could create a political landslide in New York State in the face of a Democratic landslide in the nation. The test of the election was: Could he become Governor? He could. The test of the post election is: Could he govern? : OBVIOUSLY what has hap pened during the first 2Vz months is not a final answer, but the evidence thus far is on the side: That Gov. Rockefeller is a decision-maker, not a. report maker. That he is a determined and effective political leader cap able of uniting his party be hind a politically ' unpopular program increased taxes to pay for increased public serv ices. That Gov. Rockefeller can govern. It is certainly an arguable point whether the stand which he has taken in Albany to maintain and at points to up spending for public services hospitals, schools, roads, and other community facilities and for higher taxes, will help him or hurt him in respect to the 1960 Republican Presi dential nomination. My in stinct is to feel that it would help more than hurt. What it does is: Show that Mr. Rockefeller is a conservative party leader who does not intend to neglect the public and social-welfare services of the government. Prove that Mr. Rockefeller stands for fiscal responsibility and for a pay-as-you-go, not a borrow-as-yougo, policy. It is a stand for solvency which neither Governor Harriman nor Harriman's Republican controlled legislature would take. In a word he has demon strated that his leadership means using conservative prin ciples to deal with public problems, not to brush them under the rug. "OUT the larger significance of what happened in Al bany last week when both houses of the legislature pas sed his budget and tax pro gram with nearly every Re publican voting with him and every Democrat voting against him is that it revealed Mr. Rockefeller's mastery - at least in this critical instance of the art of political party leadership. He took the politically un popular course raising taxes in order to keep the state solvent. He was absolutely firm in keeping to the sub stance of his program. He was sufficiently yielding to his party's legislative leaders in making changes in some de tails. It seems to me that this ex hibition of successful leader ship goes to the heart of the Menace question which remained un answered by Mr. Rockefeller's landslide election. Yes, he was an effective candidate, but would he be an effective Gov ernor? In this signal test and a very exacting test at that Mr. Rockefeller, with the op position Democrats lined up unanimously against him, proved to be an effective Gov ernor. Obviously this isn't the ver dict of history, but it is the verdict of an important first segment of the Rockefeller record. If there are more of these accomplishments, Gov. Rocke feller will not have to seek the national spotlight. The na tional spotlight will seek him. (c) 1959 New York Herald Tribune Inc. Communications Letters to the Editor must bear the name and addresa of the writer although under cer tain circumitances the use of a pen name or initial for publica tion is permissible. The Mail Tribune reserves the right to edit all letter with an eye to clarification and condensation. Letters submitted for publica tion must not exceed 400 words Notes on the Demise Of True Poetry, and. Incidentally, Bear Creek Fish To the Editor: Little fishie in Bear Creek Yea, the one with rosy cheek. Why for ails thee little chap? Didst thou bite a blasting cap, - Or did Rode, poet supreme, Rotenone your little stream? (Note to Editor: Rode is not poet supreme, this is poetic license.) J. A. McCalvy, 315 Fluhrer Bldg. Medford. Notes, Etc.. No. 2 To the Editor: Would-be poets on the shore Trouble not your brains no more What you thought mass fishicide Was nothing but insecticide. Dean McCalvy (6th Grade Student) 559 Hazel st. Central Point, Ore. Universal Language To the Editor: Are you one of the million and a half Americans who this year will journey abroad? Nothing will add more pleasure to your trip than a knowledge of Es peranto, the international language, which you can mas ter in a few months. As a member of the Univer sal Esperanto Association, you will wear the green star which identifies you to other Esperantists the world over. The Yearbook will give you the address of delegates in all principal cities whom you may call on for assistance with lodging or itinerary. You will not be restricted to the tourist districts1 nor have to follow an English speaking guide, but can min gle with people in all walks of life and talk with them easily in your mutual second language. The Esperanto League, Meadville, Pa., can furnish titles of teach-yourself text books. Investigate the uses of Esperanto in your business or profession, hobby or cultural pursuits. You'U be glad you did. (Mrs.) Mary J. Gibson P. O. Box 407 Riverdale, Calif. Political Governor To the Editor: "We of the Democratic party have re cently been researching the campaign speeches in which Mark Hatfield promised faith fully how "nonpolitical" and "nonpartisan" he would be as our governor. Is this why Governor Hat- Washington Report By WILLIAM BEDROCK DANGER Washington-The debate be tween President Eisenhower and Congress over our mili tary prepara tions is at last reaching the real point, the true issue. This the Ad ministration's slow, con scious starv ing out of our William S. fC ' J White the Army and Marine Corps. No Congress can usefully challenge a President on the tactical details of his mili tary planning as commander- in-chief. It cannot do so even on such immense details as his deliberate decision to al low the Russians to lead us in one weapon, the intercon tinental missile. This, of course, the Administration is doing in the conviction that In the Day's Hews Br FRANK JENKINS More today about Hawaii. Maybe a little more history will do us no harm. AS RECITED previously in this space, the Hawiian Islands were sighted first by a Spaniard, Juan Gaetano, in 1555. To him, they were mere ly some more volcanic islands in an ocean that was full of islands. So he made a note in his diary and sailed on. This diary note is the sole record of the original discovery. Two and a quarter centur ies passed. Then Captain James Cook came along. He was on his way back to Eng land after proving that there was no Northwest Passage for ships from the Pacific to the Atlantic. He too stumbled on to the islands He stopped. He traded with the natives. He liked them, and they liked him. He re turned a year later, and this time trouble started. His men got in a fight with the island' ers (maybe, seeking the quick buck, which was as much sought after then as now, the White men CHEATED a bit) and in the ruckus Captain Cook was killed. His men built a monument to him and sailed away. rFIME marched on. When Captain Cook made his visit, each island had a king.. The biggest king of the bunch was Chief Kamehame ha, who rulerT the island of Hawaii. He. took the other is land kings into camp and ruled the roost. In 1795, he formed a dynasty (which means a ruling family) and the Kamehameha dynasty lasted through some five gen erations, when it ran out of male heirs and after quite a little fighting a queen ascend ed the Hawaiian throne in 1891. Her name was Liliuokalani, and she was a character. AT THIS point, we'll have to go back a little. The first white man saw the is lands in 1555. The next white man saw them first on Janu ary 18, 1778. From then on, white men were numerous. They saw the islands' possi bilities in the way of sugar and pineapples, and went into tne business in a big way. One of them was Sanford Bal lard Dole, who founded the Dole pineapple dynasty. Queen Liliuokalani ascend ed the throne in 1891, but she didn't hit it off too well with the American business inter ests. She wanted to go back to the old ways, and they wanted to go on with the new. So they started a. revo lution in 1893 and overthrew her and proclaimed a repub lic. They sought to have their field has appointed a Repub lican political partisan as state director of Selective Service, to draft Oregon boys into military service? Is this why Governor Hatfield turn ed down Colonel Francis Ma son for the post, humiliating this outstanding career man who was in line to occupy the position? Is this why Governor Hat field, our "nonpartisan" gov ernor, has installed as his own personal selection a Repub lican state chairman who is also an insurance company lobbyist at the legislature? Is this why Governor Hat field's office has ordered the firing of Cecil Edwards, stew ard of the state racing com mission, because Mr. Edwards backed Bob Holmes for the governorship? Longtime observers of the state scene tells me that Mark Hatfield, who campaigns as a "nonpartisan," is the most partisan and the most politi cal governor whom our state has had in modern times! Dave Epps State Chairman of the Democratic party 429 Governor Bldg. Portland 4, Ore. 3j S. WHITE our mixture of many aircraft and few stationary missile launchers is best for our own purposes. For, right or wrone as he may be, this kind of question Is one for the President alone as commander-in-chief. It amounts to a tactical war plan.- Congress has no means to make tactical war nlans. Constitutionally and in logic, the missile decision is no dif ferent than a commander-in- chief decision in wartime to commit all our forces on one battlefront at the risk of los ing everything on other fronts. ri the President is buying few missiles, it is his busi ness and his' responsibility and not that of Congress, fateful as it may be; But year after year to reduce the Army and Marine Corps to the point where ultimately they will become irrelevant to warfare is quite another thing. This is far more than an exercise of a President's traditional right to cut up and direct the actual spending of the defense dollar provided by Congress. This is not simply a proper commander-in-chief decision; it is a matter of the hiehest and most urgent political con cerns. It is a case in which military policy is dominating what is constitutionally a far nigner tning, the very grand foreign policy of the United States of America. For to make the ground forces unable to guarantee our interests anvwhere as the President himself has said they are unable to do now in Germany is to paralyze that high foreign policy. And Congress has the most inti mate Constitutional right to have a hand in that kind of policy. When the President says, as he did last week, that we are "certainly not going to fight a ground war in Eur ope," he is foreclosing foreign policy itself. The only possi- Die meaning is that, assum ing no diplomatic settlement of the Berlin crisis can be reached and force must be used, that force will be atomic-hydrogen force. It is periectly obvious that mil. lions of the most earnestly anti-Communist people would shrink in horror from such a terrible alternative. TN short, the progressive decline in the ground forces means a progressive inabilitv to fight limited, non-atomic wars anywhere, for any pur pose. And that means a pro gressive denial to Congress of its gravest power under the Constitution, the power to de clare war. For the only alternative to limited warfare-or appease ment is nuclear warfare. And nobody can suppose that in such a war there would be even a moment to ask Con gress anything at all before pushing the buttons of holo caust. It is upon this great Con stitutional and political is sue, surely, that Congress should make it stand against the President's views. It will do no good to spread the ar gument over those things, new republic annexed by the U. S., but Grover Cleveland, then President, couldn't see it and ordered Oueen Liliuoka lani restored to her throne. The pro-tem government of the republic refused to accept her. SHE didn't take it without a fight. She came to the U. S. and put up a battle that for color and flash and zing was not surpassed by Mad ame Chiang Kai-Shek in more recent years. There was no radio and no TV in those days, but she was lionized by the newspapers for whom she made marvelous copy. She wa3 known popularly as Queen Lil and was a seven day wonder. But she lost her battle. In 1898, the U. S. took formal possession of the islands and in 1900 congress established the Territory of Hawaii and Sanford Ballard Dole became the territory's first American governor. - Whence came the name Hawaii? It grew out of the native word for the largest of the islands. The word was OWY HEE. The white man spelled it HAWAII. Algiers, Algeria -UPD- The French army announced Mon day night that the Algerian rebels lost 830 men in clashes with French troops last week. French losses were set at 45 i men killed. Husbands! Wives! Get Pep, Vim; Feel Younger Thousands of couples are weak, worn-out, exhausted iust because body lacks iron. For new youn zer feeling after 40, try Ortns Tonic Tablets. Contain iron for pep; ther apeutic dote Vitamin Bi. 8-day ' get-acquainted" lize costo little. Or buy Econ omy liae and save $1.67. At all druzziitx. Matter of Fact By Joseph AIscp CANDIDATE HUMPHREY Washington Prematurely, almost explosively, the pat tern of the Democratic presi- dential rari 5s now being re vealed. The latest chapter in the story is the decision of Sen. Hubert Humphrey of M i n nesota to do or die in the key pre- iospb Aisoo convent ion primaries. The decision was really dictated by Sen. Hum phrey s classification in the teeming brood of Democratic hopefuls. Like Sen. John F. Kennedy of Massachusetts, Humphrey is an active candi date. He cannot join the more comfortable class of inactive candidates, which is headed by Sen. Stuart Symington of Missouri, with anyone else you may choose to accuse of presidential ambitions trail ing along behind. The difference between the active and inactive candidates is rather simple. Kennedy and Humphrey, the activists, are ready to run hard for the nomination because they know they have to. Rightly or wrongly, Symington and the other inactivists . hope to be nominated by default, because the two activists have com mitted mutual mayhem, or have produced a deadlock, or have failed to make the grade in some other way. TN THE present phase, there- iore, it is aeepiy interesting to watch President Truman and others quietly peddling Ssymington as the ideal com promise choice of the Democ racy, when the time comes to compromise. It is downright comic to listen to more im probable but no less hopeful aspirants lengthily ruling out every other nominee but themselves, by the familiar reductio ad absurdum method. But the real drama of the present phase centers on the Kennedy-Humphrey contest. Neither Kennedy nor Hum phrey has been at all anxious to give the customers their money's worth, by starting slugging without undue delav Kennedy has the proof of the opinion polls that he is cur rently the Democrats' biggest potential vote-eetter. He has all of . New England. He has the hope of New York, of most of Illinois and of several other large groups of dele gates. Normally, Kennedy might be tempted (and he may yet be tempted) bv the front runner's usual plan of avoid ing needless bloodshed. But Kennedy is a Catholic. More bothersome still, he is thought of as a juvenile. (He is actually 41, but it seems to be dangerous in politics to enter middle age with more hair and less waistline than is customary after 40.) Hence Kennedy has to overcome these handicaps by the sort of commanding lead he can only gain in the primaries. In most primary victories, he will not have a reallv rood chance of being nominated. TTUMPHREY'S Tfhtntanna - " start slugging has been however important, with which Congress has no prop er authority. And it will only do harm to raise in Congress intemperate voices suggest ing that the President is sim ply a willful man who will not properly arm this country for a push-button war. The real, the bedrock, dan ger is far different. It is that military policy is resting far too much, rather than too lit tle, on push-button preoccu pations and thus destroying any field" of maneuver for what ought to be the over riding foreign policy of the United States. (Copyright, 1959. by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) Counsel With . . . Mr. Insurance Fred Brennan Fred Brennan Or Call Mr. Friendly Bill Fish Phone SP 3-7TI43 MEDFORD INSURANCE AGENCV 27 NORTH HC0LVf ST. even greater than Kennedy's. Only a little more than a fort night ago, his rem.- wkably astute partner and jtolitical organizer. Gov. Orville Free man of Minnesota, wus grim ly trying to avert a W isconsin primary. Freeman wa tried the Wisconsin Democrats to back a favorite son slate of dele gates. The reason -was, quite simply, that the Humphrey forces have been deeply im pressed (and not a little de pressed too) by the evidence of Kennedy's poweri ul appeal to the voters. Maybe HumDhns would still be reluctant to. nlunee into the fray, if Freeman's effort to put Wisconsin on ice had been successful. But the Freeman effcjrt- failed. Furthermore, primary victo ries are very much iwore need ed by Humphrey th an by Ken nedy. There is litt'le evidence as yet of Humpl irey's mass appeal. He does n it have anv big bloc of delegEites outside his own bailiwick.. His nomi nation would strongly tend to drive many Southerners to a tnird party tick tt. In short, he is the kind of candidate who can only wade to triumph through a sea of gore. These sanguinary facts have now been faced "hv Humnhrnr -7 himself, by Governor Free man, and by Humphrey's able new campaign .-idviser. Wach- ington Lawyer James Rowe Jr. rtowe proclaims that "We want to fight all the primaries we can get into." The word want" is perhans an era?. geration. But the Humphrey strategy is novr based on the acknowledgement that Hum phrey has simply got to fight at least the two key primaries, Oregon and Wisconsin. Hum phrey s decagon in turn vir tually impogas the same deci sion on Keranedy. "DECAUSE Humphrey is ad mittedljr behind, he has laid out a .grueling plan of campaign. As soon as the pres ent Congressional session ends, he will start running in ail tne states where he has hopes for delegates, and above all in Wisconsin and Oregon. He will run in all as though he were a. Senate-candidate in each. As. the records show, Humphrey is a formidable politician .and a particularly formidable campaigner. Now that he huts adopted this do-or-dia strate.'gy, the Humphrey candidacy must be regarded as transformed. Forroe-riy, his candidacy was a local phenomenon, with fringe wpport from ex-Adlai Steverj,or.ites in states out side Humphrey's home area. But nsTHT the Humphrey can didacy can easily determine the course of the Democratic Conven tion; and this can still be the case, whether Hum phrey wins or Kennedy wins. Copyright 1959, New York Herald Tribune Inc. TO ATTEND THESE SERVICES Finest Gospel Music Strong Bible Messages A Christian Welcome FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST CHURCH 794 Lozier Lane, Medford REVIVAL March 19-29 Services Each Evening, 7:30 Rev. K. G. West, Preacher John Mitchell, Song Leader Cfrne WEARIN' O' THE GREEN Sure now Brennan and O'Fish are wearin' the green today, they are. But be remembering this, We're not GREEN when comes to the INSURANCE BUSINESS. Bill Fish ( 3