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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (March 25, 1959)
4 W.dntsdjy, March 25, 1939 MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORO, ORE. MEDFORDtSTRIBUNB "Everyone ie Southern Oregon Reads The Mail Tribune" Published Daily exceot Saturday by MJ.DFORD PRINTING CO 33 .North Fh St Ph SP 2-6141 ROBLP.T W RUHL, Editor KERB GREV Advertising Manager GERALD LATHAM. Business MgT ERIC W ALLEN JR. Managing F.ditor EARL H ADAMS. Citv Editor HARRY CH1PMAN Teleg Editor RICHARD JEWETT Sports Editor OLIVE STARCHER Women Editor DALE ER1CKSON. Circulation Mgi Kn independent Newspaper Entered as. second class matter at Medford Oregon under Act oi March 3. 1897 SUBSCRIPTION RATES By M a J i In Advance. Copy 10c. Dail- and Sunday 1 year $15.00 Daily and Sunday 6 mos. 8.00 Daily 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 Daily and Sunucy 1 mo 1.50 Carrier and Dealers c o p y 10c All Terms Cash in Advance Official Paper of City of Med f oFd Official Papet of Jackson County United Press International Full Leased Wire MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION . Advertising Representative: WEST-HOLIDAY CO.. TNC 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 AsgcjkTlgN Flight ro 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 25, 1949 (Friday) Ashland's mayor and its sur viving councilmen plan to meet and decide who will oc cupy the three recently-vacated council seats. Col. Ben Stafford is elected chairman of the mayor's air port advisory committee. 20 YEARS AGO March 25, 1939 (Saturday) The Central Point and Roxy Anne Granges plan to present one-act plays. From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudge Pot" column: "Farm ers are all working so hard their reports on how hard they are working, leaves list eners tuckered out." 30 YEARS AGO March 25, 1929 (Monday) Federal aides rate Medford an ideal spot for an airport center. Hundreds of vauey resi dents adjourn to the fields and hillsides to pick wild poseys. 40 YEARS AGO March 25, 1919 (Tuesday) Pears are blooming on schedule but peaches are re ported late. Mike Womack organizes a company tp drill for oil in the Table Rock area. 50 YEARS AGO March 25, 1909 (Thursday) Not enough merchants have signed up for his services this year, so the water wagon man who sprinkles the dust on downtown streets may seek business in Portland. Ball suits for Medford's team arrive and are on dis play in a downtown store win dow. What's Your I.Q.? Nine or ten correct is superior; seven or eight is excellent; five or six is good. 1. Is the word data singular or plural? 2. Name a word in the Eng lish language that rhymes with the word orange. 3. Who was the President of the United States in 1930? 4. How many cubic feet are in a cord of wood? 5. Is a vicuna a bear, musk rat, llama, or fox? 6. The color in wine is de rived from a pigment of the grapes; is the pigment in the skin, or the meat, of the grapes? 7. In what country is Te heran? 8. What was Abraham Lin coln's profession before he was elected President? 9. What two other condi tions are found, in combina tion with a violent storm or wind, to make a blizzard? 10. What was the name of the French luxury liner that burned and capsized at her Hoboken pier in 1932? Answers: 1. Plural. 2. None does. 3. Herbert Hoover. 4. 128. 5. Llama. 6. The skin. 7. Iran. 8. Lawyer. 9. Dry, driv ing snow and intense cold. 10. "Normandie." Sameness of the News Charles A. Sprague, who besides being editor and publisher of the Oregon Statesman in Salem is also a former governor, one of the state's most distinguished citizens, and an acute and thought ful observer of the passing scene, recently return ed to his office after an absence of three weeks. (He had been on assignment to a couple of his multitudinous public-service chores, and also sandwiched in a short cruise around the Carib bean). He found it necessary to "set about picking up the thread of events" that happened while he was gone, and he finds "the script about the same." gPRAGUE explains: "Khrushchev and Eisenhower are exchanging pro nouncements, batting the ball labeled Berlin back and forth across the net. Eisenhower and the Democrats ' in Congress are trading verbals blows over appropria tions, inflation and the balanced budget. Joe Alsop is still warning about the missile gap, and Senator Sy mington continues his battle for bigger and better arm ament. "President Nasser is still throwing insults, this time against Kassem of Iraq whom he hailed so cordially eight months ago. Fidel Castro's outfit is still lining up old Batistans in front of firing squads. The stock market is still in orbit', shares receiving fresh propul sion from rocket issues. "The Oregon legislature is still wrestling with prob lems of appropriations and taxes. New is "the filip over daylight saying time, which has sparked more of a response than the previous gripes over taxes. Govern or Hatfield and President of the Senate Pearson still are busy with press handouts in the running battle be tween Republicans and Democrats. "So, you might say, the news is just 'more of the same.' Perhaps, but in the intervals of quiet, storms may be building up. The Oregon legislature will em erge from its mid-session doldrums. Congress will con tinue to upset the precarious balance of the President's budget. And the west is reaching the time of decision for its confrontation with the Soviet Union over prob lems of Berlin and Germany." THE news, indeed, is always the same and al- ways different. There is always strife, controversy, dissention the working out of human problems in the arena of public life. , One -wonders sometimes, however, whether Harry Golden isn't right when he says that the truly significant news of our generation is to be found on the back of old clippings. By this he means, of course, the process of so cial, as opposed to political, change; the differ ence in the human condition between generations, as opposed to the day to day fluctuations of public events, which seem important and exciting at the time, but which fade into insignificance as the years roll by. E.A. Vernal Vernal urges are coursing through the nerve endings of young people there days. One might say the sap is rising. At the moment it is being chiefly manifested by college students seeing how many can squeeze into a telephoiie booth. On other occasions it was swallowing goldfish, or going on "parity raids," or moving outhouses into the center of campus lawns. IWfOSTLY, such activities do no . lasting harm. Some of them, indeed, are tinged with a cer tain antic genius. An article in the Oregonian recalls the "ghost" of Hoover tower at Stanford where, one' morn ing, huge black footprints were seen tracking a course up the 218-foot tower. A year later the footprints reappeared, this time walking down the tower. Filmy undergarments have suddenly appear ed upon bronze statues of staid college founders. Small cars have been found in tree-tops, or on the second floors of administration buildings. . TTHESE, and similar hi-jinks, hurt no one much, and serve as an outlet for youthful high spirits in the spring) as the long road to final exams looms ahead. Insofar as they are truly clever and imagina tive, they are positively beneficial to the disturbed souls of earth-bound and crisis-weary humans. But there is a line beyond which they are no longer funny; when people are hurt, or property is damaged. Most youngsters are essentially sensible, and can distinguish that fine line which separates harmless fun from harmful vandalism or worse. E.A. Haw, Our two new states Alaska and Hawaii pose something of a minor problem to letter-writers addressing envelopes to friends in the new states. How should they be abbreviated? "Ala." is preempted by Alabama. "Alas." is hardly an acceptable abbreviation. Likewise "Alak." And "Al." is both confusing and overly informal. "Aa." is meaningless, and also brings connotations of alcoholism, which no state would appreciate. "Alask." is only one letter short of the' full name. Solution : Don't abbreviate Alaska. SIMILAR situation "Ha." isn't fitting; may be a short and graphic substitute for "Alo ha," but leaves something to be desired. . Just plain "H." could be used, of course, but as the St. Louis Post-Dispatch points out, "nobody, not even a lei-bedecked tourist, wants to go to H." Solution: Don't abbreviate Hawaii, either. E.A. Urges Alas occurs with Hawaii. neither is "Haw." "Hi." Dennis the Se says rrs A PICK w subbib. vftwmBR 7355CTIS' Congressmen Debate Of Special By FRANK ELEAZER Washington - (UPD - There were these three psycholo gists, see, and they spent three months overseas look- ing into the J way our mili jgt tary aid pro- gram was working. il What they I r i J J 1UUI1U oul was jT J I I f 1 VMf1 1IT Til be mentioned Frank Eleazer in public but the. big brass at the Pentagon pretty soon decided to start sending our foreign aid ex perts to school. The research people that furnished the three psycholo gists, at a cost to the govern ment of $45,000, got a con tract to set up th.e school, at a price of $607,251. Then they hired for their staff a bunch of retired mili tary officers. Included was a brigadier general who, as a $50 per day consultant to the Defense Department, helped make the decision to give 'em the contract. Adds Up Salaries And that's where Chairman James C. Davis (D-Ga.), and his House subcommittee on manpower waste got into the picture. The Defense Depart ment man, the research boss, and the general said the whole thing made sense and saved money. The subcommittee, at the end of two days of hear ings, still wasn't sure. Davis said he had added up the salaries paid all the school's staffers, and the re tirement pay they continued to draw, and had discovered they all could have been call ed back to active duty, for --TV I, V. . . Intelligence Expert Believes Russia Not Readv for War Yet Washington - (UPD - Robert Amory Jr. probably is the second-best or third-best inform ed A m e rican on what the Russian Com m u n i sts are doing, t h ink ing and plan ning. Amory is Deputy Chief for I n t e 1 1 i gence of t h e Lyie C- Wilson central intel ligence agency (CIA). CIA is the United States spy appara tus or, in more polite lan guage, it is a counter intelli gence organization. This well informed Ameri can was making a speech the other day in Columbia, S.C. Amory's speech- did not get the publicity it deserved de spite .the fact that what he had to say was pretty good news for U.S. citizens. His story was that the So viet Union is neither ready nor preparing for a war; that the Kremlin does not want a war although Communist Rus sia' would fight if it must. Amory said the Russian lead ers decided 18 months ago that their Communist econ omy had to have 15 years of peace to achieve their inter nal development plans. Not Mobilized Now "Their economy is by no means mobilized for war or prepairng for war," Amory said. "They strike a balance between military and other expenditures just as we do." He believes that the Soviet Union is not ready to risk a nuclear war over Berlin. Niki ta Khruschev, instead, thinks he can force the West to "chicken out." "If the West is resofute," Amory said, "then I believe that the Soviet Union will be the ones to back down." Menace Foreign Aid School school teaching purposes, at a saving of S33.288 yearly. Rep. Robert J. Corbett (R Pa.), said a school staff of 39, teaching a class of 89, looked sort of padded to him. John L. Holcombe, the Defense De partment man, said the usual ining in military schools is one staffer to every two pupils. Corbett Flabbergasted "That flabbergasts me little," said Corbett. Dr. Dale Alford (D-Ark.), a physician, said what he couldn't see was what special competence psychologists had to go rouncj the world making judgments on military mat ters in the first place. Dr. John Flanagan, presi dent of the American Institute for Research, which hired the psychologists and is running the school in a big apartment house near the Pentagon, was afraid security precluded an answer. . Holcombe took a chance and lifted one corner of the security curtain. He said for instance it wouldn't make sense to give somebody a de stroyer if their sailors weren't able to run it. He said psy chologists might make de cisions on the sailors' ability to learn. Hire Outsiders Alford said even so, th Army, Navy and Air Force have thousands of their own psychologists, and why was it necessary to hire three out siders through Flanagan? Hol combe said Uncle Sam's peo ple were busy. Rep. H. R. Gross (R-Iowa), probably made the unkindest remark of all. He said it looked to him that Brig. Gen. During the 15 years of peace which Amory is con vinced the Soviet Union must have and urgently wants, the CIA expects the Kremlin to follow this general pattern: Red Pattern -Play its Sputnik diploma cy to the limit. -Stand pat against all pres sure in the areas now domi nated by Communism. -Insist either upon two-nation talks between the Soviet Union and the United States or demand that satellite pow ers sit beside Societ conferees in numbers equal to the num ber of allies sitting beside the Americans. -Maintain at high pitch the work of trouble -making among the peoples of non Communist nations. But softening this fifth col umn activity with some show of willingness to cooperate with governments over which the Kremlin exercises no con trol. -Continue an effective for eign policy of "no strings" foreign aid towards nations which neither are Communist allies nor expected to become allies. Amory evidently believes events of the next 15 years largely will shape the long haul pattern of the future, war or peace or whatever. "We face a race for leader ship in the world against mili tant Communists with fervent faith," he said. "We must never tempt them into a ma jor path while letting down our strength although they' haven't got what it take ra tionally to challenge us this spring." Amory said the Russian leaders had no doubts ori the future In a comparatively short time they are confident that the Soviet Union will be tops-world-wide. Lebanon Slowly Feeling Its Way Back To Normality, Six Months After Revolt By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign News Editor Beirut -(LTD- Almost exactly six months after the last U.S. troops left Lebanon, this lit tle nation still is felling its way back to ward normal ity. Instead of the American landing craft plying be- t w e e n the beaches and the warships outside, Beir ut's beautiful Phil Neusom harbor is almost deserted now. Smoke drifts idly from the single stack of a small steam er lying about halfway out between Beirut's sandy shore line and the mountains on the other side. Beirut has had an unusual ly severe winter which caused suffering to many in this na tion neither used to nor equip- Propriety Henry C. Newton, hired as school director at $14,500 while drawing $6,027 retired pay from the Army, had sort of set himself up for the job. Newton didn't get a chance to answer that for the record but he said afterwards this wasn't so and he was sure his testimony will clear up re maining confusion. Davis said he hopes so, but that this will have to wait. The subcommittee won't meet again until after a 10-day re cess for Easter. ommunications Letters to the Editor must bear the name and address of the writer, although under certain circumstances the use of a pen name or initia! for publication is permissible. The Mail Tribune reserves the right tc edit all letters with a view to clarification and condensation. Letters submitted for publication must not exceed 400 words. The letters printed in this column do not necessarily represent the views of the paper; in fact the contrary is often the case. Old Folks and Taxes To the Editor: It is hard to understand why Oregon, after 100 years as a state, would enact a law requiring the old people, who have struggled and saved enough to buy and own their own home, to have their home confiscated by le - gislation. It is difficult as it is to squeeze out an existence until their time comes to be laid under the sod. How about the old . folks that have no home of their own and have no property tax es, but have to pay rent? Seems to me the whole thing is bunk, and is only an excuse by the state legislature for passing out bills to tax old people of this state. How mu?h taxes do you want the people of this state to pay, anyway? We already have taxes on every imagin able thing except the air we breathe. Give us a sales tax to support the schools, and fix it so it goes to school support and nothing else for 99 years - not this thing of voting tax es for one thing and have the money gobbled up for every conceivable thing under the sky. Well, we are not voting a sales tax before we are sure we know where the money is going. This is the first time I have expressed my views on any subject, taxes, old age, or anything else. But I am get ting to be old, and am growing older all the time. Where an old person is required to put a lien on his property in order to pay his taxes or to be able to exist, isn't very desirable. I will admit that we are get ting a lot of things through the legislature. That is all right, but we also are getting a lot that we don't really need. ' G. S. Elder 3579 Table Rock rd. Medford. Must Find Other Means To the Editor: People go their merry way with, seem ingly, little recognition of the fact that we are living in what many thinkers believe to be the most dangerous time in all human history. It is dangerous, of course, because we have learned to control great natural forces before we have learned to control ourselves. Or, at least, before we have effectively demon strated the ability to control ourselves. In these days of germ warfare, fear gas and fallout (to say nothing of those ever bigger bangs) the possibilities for destruction are practically unlimited. During World War II the military men on our side were often criticized for be ing "behind the times." They were charged with being "al ways ready to fight the prev ious war." Will our "preparedness" prove to be as badly outmod ed again? Is our thinking so fixed in the past, when it was ped for cold. But you'd never know it now. Snow still caps the mountains but swimmers are on the beach and umbrellas are up against the blazing sun on the terrace of the Saint George Hotel. Notes Some Tension Nothing could look more placid nor more normal. But there is an undercur rent of tension which rises partly from the still-unforgot-ten revolt against the regime of former President Camille Chamoun and partly from the tensions gripping Leban on's neighbors. Part of the tension here is the result of an early lack of confidence in the new regime of President Fuad Chehab. Confidence only now is being restored. But in its early months, the Chehab government refused to use the means at its dispos al to crush the bickering that sometimes led to fighting be tween the almost evenly div ided Christians and Moslems. Cites Kidnap-Murder Case Strangely, one of the fac tors leading to an upsurge of confidence has been the gov ernment's vigorous handling of a kidnap-murder case here. No such vigor had been demonstrated in the days dur ing and immediately follow ing the revolt. Now it is expected the gov ernment also may move more vigorously to maintain peace between the Moslem Basta section of Beirut and the Christian sector on the other side of the Place de Canons. There are two strong pro and anti-Nasser feelings, for and against the Egyptian Pres ident's policy of Arab nation alism and positive neutrality. possible for one side to sub due the other by force, that we are unable to recognize the fact that we have entered an age of different condi tions? Will we deliberately choose death? It is foolish to talk of "holding back" our . lethal weapons in the heat of all out war. Unless we can find some other means of resolving our differences, even learn to ac cept humiliation at times, death is what we will get. E. Whealdon, Route 1, Box 2105 Anderson, Calif. What Is an 'Amateur'? To the Editor: Since I was a small child, I have contin ually heard about people "bit ing the hand that feeds them," but it was just a few days ago that I finally saw an instance of lack of appreciation so great I felt the phrase truly fitted it. I refer to the letter from Alvin Reiss published in last Friday's Mail Tribune. Mr. Reiss seems to feel that Wed nesday's review by Olive Starcher of the Footlighters' production "The Tender Trap" was inadequate in some ways. In fact, he went so far as to refer to Mrs. Starcher, "who has been covering plays and social events for the Mail Trib une for many years, as an 'amateur." Mr. Reiss, as a sometimes actor for the Footlighters, is well aware of the fact that these productions are given in an inadequate theater, on an inadequte budget, by actors to whom the word "amateur" can be accurately applied. Said actors include not only Mr. Reiss himself, but his wife, who appeared in the play in question. Mr. Reiss should also be aware of the fact that Mrs. Starcher has always been an enthusiastic supporter of the Footlighters, the Shakespeare an Festival, and all other dra matic efforts in this area. It is largely due to substantial coverage in her articles that the public is aware of such plays at all. The number of times that the Reiss family's names have appeared in such publicity is substantial. The source of Mr. Reiss' dis content is fairly obvious when one reads Mrs. Starcher's re view. Perhaps her efforts to make the play successful give me another living example of a well-known phrase: "If you can't say something nice don't say anything at all." Next time, perhaps we could get Brooks Atkinson or some other "professional" reviewer for the Footlighters. I am sure he would enjoy doing a de tailed critique of Mrs. Reiss' performance, as well as a num ber of other things which Mrs. Starcher apparently felt it better to leave out. Maggie Christensen ' 404.12 North Grape st. Medford. In motion' picture theaters, it expresses itself in boos and hisses from the one side for Nasser but cheers for Gen Charles de Gaulle. Anxiety Over Pro-Red Trend There is also anxiety about the pro-Communist trend of the Iraqi government. But long-time observers here say there is no chance this government will go Com munist. The Lebanese are bus Figures Show GOP Candidates Could Win Race in 1960 By Congressional Quarterly . Washington - (CQ) - A Re publican candidate can be elected President in I960 even if the party as a whole does no better than it did in 1958. He can be elected without carrying a single state of the once-solid South. He can win without carrying one of the Border states. He can also lose Alaska, California, Colorado, Con necticut, Hawaii, Massachu setts, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, and Rhode Island to the Democratic nominee -and still he will win. All he has to do is run be tween 1 and 5 per cent ahead of the Republican Congres sional ticket in the 23 remain ing Northern states, and he will win even if the Con gressional Republicans' in those states do no better than they did in 1958. That is the surprising fact that is demonstrated by an analysis of official 1958 elec tion returns by Congresisonal Quarterly. The analysis makes avail able for the first time a breakdown by Congressional Districts of the official re turns on the 1958 races for Governor, Senator and Repre sentative. - Example Has Been Set Is it reasonable to suppose that anyone the Republicans nominate in 1960 can run to 5 per cent ahead of the GOP Congressional ticket? This is what the CQ fig ures show: Mr. Eisenhower ran 5.6 per cent ahead of the Republican Congressional ticket in his 1952 victory, and 8.7 per cent ahead in 1956. More to the point, New York Gov. Nelson-A. Rocke feler (R) ran 5.8 per cent ahead of the state's Congres sional ticket in 1958. Four other Republicans - Sen. Barry Goldwater (Ariz.) Gov. Mark Hatfield (Ore.), Sen. J. Glenn Beall (Md.), and Gov. Christopher Del Sesto (R.I.) - ran even farther in front of the GOP ticket in their states in 1958, but none Morse Sees Need For Castro Stand Washington - (DPD - S e n. Wayne Morse (D-Ore.) says now is the time for the State Department "to reach a new firm decision in regard to the Cuban situation and our of ficial relations with Cuban Premier Fidel Castro." Morse noted that the Ameri can Society of Newspaper Editors had invited Castro to address its annual meeting in Washington next month and that Rep. Charles O. Porter, a fellow Oregon Democrat, has asked Castro to attend Oregon's Centennial Celebra tion. Both invitations were is sued without prior State De partment or White House ap proval. In a letter to Roy R. Rubot tom Jr., assistant secretary of state for Latin American af fairs, Morse demanded v"an unequivocal statement of policy ... in regard to this problem." He said the invitations could develop "into a rather delicate situation." THE MEMORIAL SERVICE C. M. Litwiller Will long be remembered as one of dignity, reverence and beauty when conducted by us in Mountain View Chapel. To merit your confidence is our sincere desire. LITWILLER Funeral Home Mountain View Chapel Hwy. 66 at Normal Office 88 N. Main ASHLAND We Never Close inessmen, and they believe their ties are with the West. The American troop land ings are seldom mentioned now. There are too many oth er problems. , American prestige is not particularly high but it is higher than it was. Even the most rabid nationalist admires the United States because it got out of Lebanon when it said it would. of them is considered a Presi dential hopeful. In his last solo race, when he ran for the Senate in Cali fornia in 1950, Vice President Richard M. Nixon ran an even 7 per cent ahead of the R e p u b 1 i can Congressional ticket. But that showing is marred somewhat by the fact that Nixon's 1950 running mate, then governor and now Chief Justice Earl Warren, ran 12.8 per cent ahead of the Congressional ticket and 5.6 per cent ahead of Nixon. Rockefeller, G o 1 d w a ter, Hatfield, Beall and Del Sesto, on the other hand, all topped ine xicKets in tneir own states in 1958. How It Can Be Done Here is exactly how a Re publican Presidential victory could be achieved without any basic improvement in the party strength; In 1958. when the Republi cans took a fearful drubbing in the Congressional races, GOP candidates for the House received a majority of the statewide vote in only six states, with 30 electoral votes. Those states were Nebraska, New Hampshire, North Da kota, Utah, Washington and Wyoming. First, suppose that in 1960, R e p u b 1 i can Congressional candidates do not improve their showing anywhere, and suppose the GOP Presidential nominee runs exactly even with the Congressional ticket. Obviously, he would win only the same six states and 30 electoral votes. Next, suppose he runs 1 per cent ahead of the Congres sional ticket. Immediately dramatic things happen. He wins Arizona, Delaware, Iowa, Kansas, New Jersey, Ohio and Pennsylvania, with an additional 98 electoral votes, bringing his total to 128. If he runs. 2 per cent ahead of the ticket, he gains Idaho, South Dakota, Vermont and the big prize of New York -another 56 electoral votes. By running 3 per cent ahead of the ticket he gains Minnesota's 11 electors, and his total is up to 195. He runs 4 per cent ahead of the ticket and he gains 50 more electoral votes in In diana, Maine, Michigan and Wisconsin. Finally, he runs 5 per cent ahead of the ticket in Illinois, wins its 27 electoral votes and has 272 in all - three more than he needs for elec tion. A numbers game? Perhaps. But remember: Rockefeller ran almost 6 per cent ahead of the ticket in New York. Nixon, with a boost from War ren, ran 7 per cent ahead of the ticket in California. It's enough to give pause to the Democrats. (Copyright 1959 Congressional Quarterly Inc.) for remodeling and construc tion. We are happy to quote prices for steel sash, alumi num sash, and sliding patio doors. SELBY Glcos 303 N. Bartlcrt - SP 3-3613 Mrs. Litwiller GLASS 'It is better to know us and not need us than to need us and not know us."