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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 17, 1959)
MAIL TRIBUNE, Matter, r. Wednesday. June 17. 19U "Iveryone la Southern Oregea Rad Th Rljul Tribune Published Dully except Saturday kr MJJ)FORD PRINTING CO 33 Narth tlx St. Ph. SP 2-9141 HERB GREV Advertising Manaear GET-ALD LATHAM, Buaineaa Mr ERIC W ALLEN JR Managing fcditor CARL H ADAMS, City Editor BARRY CHIPMAN, Teleg Editar RICHARD JEWETT SporU Editar OLIVE ST ARCHER Women'i Editar PALE ERICKSON Circulation May An Independent Newspaper " Xntered a second class mattar a Medforrt Oregon under Aot ef March 3. 1897 SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mai 1 In Advance, Copy 10c. nail and Sunday I rear S15.M Daily and Sunday 9 mot. tAL Daily and Sunday 3 moa. 2& Sunday Only One year $450 By Carrier In Advance Medford. Ashland. Central Point. Eagle Point. Jacksonville. Gold Hill, Phoenix Shady Cove Rogue Riv er, Talent and on motor routes. Dail7 and Sunday 1 year f 18.00 Daily and Sunday 1 mo. 1JS Carrier and Dealers copy lac All Terms Casn in Advance Official PP of City mt Medford United Press International Full Leased Wire MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION Advertising Representative: WEST-HOLIDAY CO, INC Of fices in New York. Chicago. De troit. San Francisco. Los Anceles. Seattle. Portland St. Louis. At lanta. Vancouver B.C. 47 NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS B-'A$SOCIATIOM HATIONAt EDITOIIAl Flight 'o Time Medford and Jackson County History from the files of Tht tail TribMne 10. 20, 30, 40 and 50 years ago. 10 TEARS AGO t.. it iftia fFridavl Thm TlforttVirrl cltT council calls a special meeting to con- . . - mt ider a neighbornooa peuuon that the triangle at East Jack- son. Third ana Appie its. dc nmiiul ViarV in a rjark area. The Beauty Association of Southern Oregon plans a style show. 20 YEARS AGO -Tn IV 1 00. fSafurdaY) 'Queen Elizabeth o the Shakespearean festival in ash- J -t.m W first of. WU wu ficial appearance at Twin Plunges in royal raiment. From Arthur Perry's "Ye - Smudge Pot" column: "The first local mower nas Dcgun counting the days until school starts in me iaii. 0 YEARS AGO June 17, 1929 (Monday) The outside demand for local eggs exceeds the supply. The road to Crater Lake's rim will be opened by next Saturday. 40 YEARS AGO June 17, 1919 (Tuesday) Police here close up a room ing house and arrest, three for a drunken row. Army planes land at Ash land, attracting hundreds of valley residents. 50 YEARS AGO June 17, 1909 (Thursday) r1 A real estate knocker, as Hiring Medford visitors that the nastures are greener along the Willamette, is promised a tar and feather job by local realtors. Work on the gravity water line for Medford is halted at the Hanley ranch pending court action. Vhal's Your I.Q.? Mine er fen correct ra eBrier; aeven er efcjht ia excellent; fire er lis ic gaed. 1. Is the new Court of Mili tary Appeals composed of civ ilians, or military personnel? 2. Who won the Masters Golf Tournament at Augusta, Ga this spring? 3. Is antimony classed in the animal, vegetable, or min eral kingdom? 4. Flax is used in what Northern Ireland industry? 5. In what city is "The Lit tle Church Around the Cor ner"? ' 6. In what war did Lee and Grant fight on the same side? 7. Is thex.e any life in the deepest parts of the oceans? 8. What colony did Roger Williams found in America? 9. In which Texas city is the Cotton Bowl? 10. From what poem, by what poet, are these lines: "I think that I shall never see a poem ldvely as a tree"? Answers: I. Civilians. 2. Art WalL 3. Mineral. Linen in dustry. 5. New York City. 6 Mexican. 7. Yes. 8. Rhode Island. 9. Dallas. 10. "Trees.' - by Joyce Kilmer. Car Thefts Bring Tina PrnfinfiAi Straford on Avon, England -fllPD-Frederick J. Moss, 17, was fined $140 today and placed on three years proba- X10H -LUJ. OH-lUCLU 1 S A1 i 250 cars aurwg we past year, A Friend Wp Tiuvp nil riparrl lnnor-fimp MeHfnrr! resident, who. for vears. had been reading about Crater lake, but never quite managed to get up tnere to see it. One summer, however, out-of-town guests eame to visit, and the Medford man finally de cided to go to the lake, to show it to them. When he arrived, he looked at tnac magnui- cant scene, whistled, and said : "My Gosh, it really IS beautiful! Why didn't someone tell me about this?" . - PUS is human nature the tendency to read nTl-iir.fr Tmrvar ahn.it. it in theory. and yet not really know, or care, about it until faced with a persona! experience. We. all do it It happens in many fields. We've seen people who have read about the Oregon Shakespearean . a 11 1 1 Y Festival for years, and who imaiiy. are laiKea into attending a performance. They are amazed. "I never knew it was ANYTHING like this," they exclaim. ' ' And the other day we received a copy of a letter written by a man who just had had his first nersonal brush with what has come to be known as juvenile delinquency. He was shocked. Me was outraged, ne wamea constituted authority to do something, immediate ly. And, because of that normal human trait, his reaction was not unusual, despite the fact that he has been reading and hearing about juvenile delinquency for years. But it apparently had never touched him personally before. TTHE first temptation is to ask this entirely sin-- cere and concerned man some questions. Such as: Don't you read the papers? Don't you know that worries over that minority of young people who are "delinquent" have been mounting for years? ' Have you attended any meetings of the Ju venile Court Advisory Council? Have you visited the detention home? Have you discussed with the juvenile judge, the juvenile officer or the juvenile counselors the problems they face? Have you talked to the police to get their views of the prob lem? ' Have you, for that matter, talked to any of the school administrators and teachers to get their view? And are you aware of the efforts of the churches, the schools, the Boy and Girl Scouts and other, youth activities to combat this evil which seems to be growing? atf SECOND thought, it is probably unfair to direct these questions at one individual with out also directmp- them to the entire community. How many of us, indeed, have troubled to look into, the matter, try to assess its dimensions, and come to any conclusion as to what we, per sonally and as individuals, can do about it? Not many. Most of 11s are fartoo nrone to let the nolice and the iuvenile authorities do our worrying: for us beyond a disapproving "Tsk, tsk" when we run across a situation which we uepuue. , . IUVENILE delinquency u it is an lems. Tt will not be eliminated overnifirht bv any thing that constituted authority can do. No law or city ordinance is going iu put an enu tu it. Juvenile delinquency (and once again it should be pointed out that only "a small minority of our young people are involved; is a renection of the condition of the" entire community. As long as there are some parents who refuse to accept their responsibilities as parents; as long as there are unbalanced and maladjusted and un happy kids ; as long as there is a lack of training and discipline for the young people needing them just so long will "delinquency" continue to oe a social problem. Anything which tends to improve the moral tenor of the community is a step forward. . In any event, we welcome our newiy-awak-ened friend to the group which worries about such things. E.A American Mosaic King Baudouin of the Belgians made a quick visit to the United States recently, and, while here, mad these perceptive remarks : "I come to a country which for centuries God kept hidden behind a veil until its appointed t i . i i i j - il nour, wnen it tooK into of the Old World. . "America has been called a melting pot, but it seems better to call it a mosaic, for in it each nation, people and race t i i 'i snores has oeen privileged to Keep its individual ity, contributing at the same time its share of the unified pattern of a new nation." . He's right, of course. America is both belting pot" and "mosaic." Some elements have blended uito the whole; some have retained their na tional characteristics. All changing and turbulent, picture which is Amerca. h.A. Wrongfully Held Prisoner Freed San Quentin, Califl-tUPC-A San Francisco man was re leased Tuesday from . San Quentin Prison, where - he served six months for anoth er's man's crime. John Fry, 52, was sentenced to prison on Dec. 10, 1958, for manslaughter in the slaying of his common-law-wife, Mrs. El vira Hay. He said he was too Awakens trie nIH storv about the is not a single problem; separate, individual prob- its young arms me peupie which has come to its i x t i ; i i have contributed to the but vital and exciting, drunk to remember what hap pened -, the night, she was strangled, but admitted that he "could" have kiUed her. ' However, a resident of the hotel where Mrs. Hay was slain admitted last week that he was responsible. Richard T. Cooper, 32, a friend of Fry, confessed killing two women -including Mrs. Hay. Dennis the "foMORROrV is buff's &mw. MAWN' SOME PLANS? Today fir Tomorrow By Walter FRANCO-AMERICAN RELATIONS In our relations with France we are entering what may, un happily, be a rough and diffi cult time. Im mediately and s p e c i f ically, this is because Gen. de Gaulle has raised a number of large and highly contro versial issues. But before we look at them, it will be useful to under stand, if we can, the histori cal situation in which the is sues have been posed. Since the war which ended 15 years ago Franco-American relations have been based on a premise which was never only avowed but has always been assumed both in Paris and in Washington. The pre mise has been , that France, though it is counted among the victors, was in fact defeat ed, and that her colonial em pire is in the process of disso lution, and that she is no longer a first class power. The chronic instability of the post war governments, in France, the budgetary and monetary disorders, supported this view. Our government acquired a habit of not consulting France regularly and genuinely, and indeed of treating her with less intimacy and confidence not only than Great Britain but even Western Germany. Un two recent occasions which might have led to a war involving France the landing in Lebanon and the affair at Quemoy there was no full consultation with Paris. The advent to power of Gen. de Gaulle was bound to mean, as it has meant, that France would not accept the lower position which she has occupied. She has been re garded not only as not so great a power as the U.S.S.R. and the U.S.A., but not even as being in the second rank with Great Britain or even with Adenauer's Germany. We a " f i xt a. n must never icrgei xnai . jren. de Gaulle, to his everlasting honor, is the Frenchman who never surrendered and who never accepted defeat, and it is a kind of historic justice that he should be the man who now insists that France must not be treated as a de feated and inferior power. rl this context we may look at the issues. They were raised diplomatically last sum mer and then in a note ad dressed "to President Eisen hower and Prime Minister Macmillan on Sept. 24, 1958. This note has never been pub lished. But it is said to set up three French objectives. One is that NATO, which is now a regional pact, shall be come a global alliance in which France, Britain, and America have the same policy and the same strategy in Eu rope, in Africa, and in Asia. The second is that these three powers shall control col lectively the use of nuclear weapons anywhere in the world-in the Far East quite as much as in Europe. The third is that France shall have access to our nu clear secrets. This would mean that we undertook to enable France to become a nuclear power without the long and enormously expensive experi mentation which Great Britain has gone through. The basic French argument here is that in the world today a first class power is by definition one with nuclear weapons, and that France must be treat ed in fact, not merely in form, as a first class power. rr is not' quite clear to me whether these "objectives" should also be called "de mands." But there is no doubt at all that the French govern Walter Lippmann Menace HaonV we eentR start Lippmann ment is serious, and this will entail serious discussion and negotiation. The French gov ernment is backing up its pol icy by drawing away from the integration of military forces under Gen. Norstad and the NATO treaty organization There is no question of French allegiance to the Atlantic pact as a military alliance. But it is not improbable that Gen. de Gaulle has a poor opinion, both politically and militarily, of the NATO establishment with its headquarters near Paris. Thus, it is likely that the existing NATO establish ment would have to pay for a failure to satisfy Gen. de Gaulle. Can we satisfy" him? We must put the question this way because in fact only the United States could -. satisfy him. It is obvious that we can not satisfy him entirely.' This Congress surely will not amend the law about com municating nuclear secrets Nor is it possible for the Presi dent to make an unqualified commitment that we will in all circumstances support France in Algeria. There is today every disposition to sup port Gen,, de Gaulle in Al geria. But no one can say in advance what we shall do if Gen. de Gaulle is overpower ed by the extremists. IIHERE we can do some- thing useful and import ant is to come to a solemn un derstanding with France, and of course with Great Britain also, about the use of nuclear weapons anywhere in the world. Such an understanding would have to have as its cor ollary a much higher degree of consultation about global policy than exists today. To bring this about there should be an understanding carefully negotiated by the Secretary of State, who is especially well qualified to do that. This understanding might well be ratified by a personal meeting between the President and Gen. de Gaulle. It would be well worth a spe cial trip to Paris; (c) 1959 New York . Herald Tribune Inc. In the Day's Hews By FRANK JENKINS Politics: Senator Mansfield of Mon tana (who is assuming increas ing stature in the Democratic party) advises against count ing Adlai Stevenson and Lyn don Johnson out of the race for the Democratic nomina tion for President. WATCH it. If the cat should jump toward Stevenson or Johnson, it would mean that thoughtful Democrats are coming around to the belief that ultra-"liber-alism"-especially in the sense of being ultra-liberal with the taxpayers' money isn't the string to harp on. It would indicate their judgment that the public is turning away from the doc trine that we can spend our selves rich, that we can lift ourselves by our own boot straps and that all that is needed to create a perfect world is to pass a law. SENATOR Mansfield has an interesting background. At the age of 14, in World War I, he enlisted in the U.S. Navy. He subsequently enlist ed in the U.S. Army. Still later, he enlisted in the U.S. Marines. He worked as a miner and a mining engineer in Butte from 1922 to 1930. He attend ed Montana School of Mines and Montana State University and received B.A. and MA degrees from the later in 1933 and 1934. He was professor of Latin American and Far Eastern history at Montana Communist Indian State Poses For Nehru; Opposition Said Mounting By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign Editor In Trivandrum, capital of Kerala state in southernmost India, a few days ago a wom an in a cotton sari lay face down in the dust across the roadway 3 leading to a v tax collector's office. Around her, '-j&Atv. In rt a nt i S1UU''.U1 PhU ! sZwuZm Congress and Socialist party flags shouted slogans demanding that the Communist party get out. Since it would have been a violation of Indian custom for police to have touched- a woman, she stayed there for two hours until policewomen arrived to lead her peacefully away. It was not an isolated inci dent. Throughout Kerala op ponents of the Communist re- Editorial Comment PEST-FREE TREES Some might say that this is a case of "the less said the better," but we don't, think so. We think we've good rea son to crow a bit about how people of the Eugene area have respected the city's new downtown tree plantings. We don't think we'll be giving any of them malicious ideas when we comment that other Oregon cities, Portland and Medford, to mention only two, have had less success with similar downtown decora tions. True, people did pluck sprays of heather out of our planters when they were first set out in the business dis trict. And, later the city parks bureau had to replace gravel toppings in the planters with said because too many pass- ersby were xidly grabbing handsful of rocks to toss hith er and yon as they strolled along. Some smokers are still using the "big concrete tree tubs as butt-cans; too. But, to our knowledge, not a single one of our trees has been van dalized, and the new petunia plantings at the base of the trees seem to be molested less by flower snatchers than were the heathers. Someday, no doubt, a drunk or a disgruntled kid will do damage to one of our attrac tive little street trees. It'U be a sad event when that hap pens, but our experience has already indicated that it'll be an unusual one. This fact, per haps, is more indicative of the real beauty of living here than was even the communi ty spirit which led to the ar boreal adornment of our busi ness district. - Eugene Regis ter-Guard. FOR PUBLIC TIDINESS Fogarty Creek State Park on the beach north of Depoe University from 1933 to 1943 He was elected to the 78th and served through the 82nd congresses. He was elected to the U.S. Senate in 1952 and re-elected in 1958. With that kind of training, ultra-liberalism just doesn't seem to be his dish. THIS changing world: There is another shark killing in California waters this one at Pacific Beach, near La Jolla. It follows rather closely a similar tragedy in the waters of the Golden Gate a few weeks ago. A veteran of 30 years of lifeguard duty, Captain Charles Hardy, says it is the first such incident in San Diego area waters in his ca reer. Marine authorities say sharks of the kind that attack human beings have apparent ly been moving into Califor nia coastal waters in increas ing numbers. They explain that this must be due to warming trends in ocean ar eas, since warmer water at tracts more fish and more sharks. The northward movement of sardines, tuna and even abalone confirms this trend. If the trend continues, it Willi change the recreational pic ture along the California and Southern Oregon beaches ma terially. The warmer water will invite more swimmers and the shark menace will add to the dangers. THE world changes. r There was a time in geo logic history when our myth ical State of Jefferson was an ISLAND thrusting up out of a vast sea. It is known to the geologists as Siskiyou island. It was covered by dense tropi cal forests which were ranged by the hvfee tropical beasts of the remote past. Time marches on, and his tory repeats itself. We may be moving back toward the trop ics. But, if so, it will be a long time coming. Let's not worry about it. gime were organized .in a Ghandi-like campaign of non violence to drive the Commu nists from office. But inevita bly there was violence and for the central government head ed by Prime Minister Jawa harlal Nehru it posed an ach ing problem which had no place in Nehru's avowed pol icy of peaceful co-existence with the Reds. Stale Created in 1956 Kerala came into existence as a state in the fall of 1956, emerging from its previous status as merely a linguistic area within the borders of Travancore-Cochin State and Madras. Its 92,000 square mile area makes it a little larger than the state of Kansas but its huge population gives it a density of 800 persons to the square mile. For 20 years the area has been a stronghold of commu nism which gained strength through years of crop disas ter and unending hunger. In March, 1957, Kerala be Hoover Offers Advice on What Citizens Can Do To Fight Reds By LYLE C. WILSON Washington-UPD-Typical of what has come in every mail this month is this from Mar ian Tisdale of Ames, Iowa. She wrote: "I just want to say that I am not com placent or apathetic about Com munist activ ity in the United States. Lyle C. Wilson But I any. bewildered and pained by the fact that I don't know what we can do about it." From almost every state in the union during the past fortnight have come letters like Miss Tisdale's. They were in response to an article distributed on June 1 which contended that American cit izens were dangerously com- Bay is one of the most beau tiful stretches of Oregon coast - 6V4 days a week. On Mon day morning it looks terrible. The curling waves stiU bat ter themselves into foam at the foot of Indian Head Rock. Fogarty Creek still picks its fickle way through the sand to the sea. But the beauty is overshadowed by banana peels, empty beer cans, old newspapers - the spoor of hu man beings on the trail of a good time. The high tide heals the wounds of the weekend as far as it extends up the sands, but the debris from that point to the road waits for the main tenance crew on Monday morning. Fogarty Creek Park, of course, is no better or worse than countless other public places where people gather for recreational purposes on summer weekends. Like most of the rest, it has signs urging the public to put debris in gar bage cans. The public obeys or disobeys as their con sciences and expediency of the moment permit. An article in a national magazine recently spoke up in defense of litter in public places. The author rhapso dized on the blinking lights of beer cans along the highways as they are caught in the glare of headlights as symbols of our opulence. We have so much we can afford to throw it away. The maharajahs of old displayed their wealth in the size of their harems. The old nabobs of industry lit their cigars with hundred-dollar bills at Delmonicos and the affluent-multitudes now strew the countryside with the gau dy tinsel of our new store houses of wealth the super markets. Oregon's New England her itage should prompt us to keep public places looking neat. Even if we were to agree with the social theorist about litter as a sign of wealth, this is no year to begin putting the theory into practice. Centennial officials esti mate we will be host to over 8,000,000 visitors this sum mer, straining our park fa cilities to the bursting point. If we are to add their litter to our own we will be del uged by debris before the summer is over. In self defense, if for no oth er reason, we had better set a good example of public tidi ness in our parks. - Oregon Statesman, Salem. MAYOR'S FATHER DIES Chicago-flJPD-Michael J. Da ley, father of Mayor Richard J. Daley, died Tuesday in his sleep in Columbus hospital. Daley, a retired, widowed sheet metal worker, had suf fered a heart attack a week ago. o came tne first communist state within the British com-, monwealth. In free elections", the Com munists won simply by telling the people that food and cloth ing could be had by toppling Nehru's Congress party "re actionaries and stooges of America and Britain" from power. The Kerala Communists op erated within the limits of their paradoxical situation. Operated Within Law They held the office, but the central government under Nehru controlled the money and the armed forces. There fore, they operated within the law. Within the law, a system atic campaign was undertak en against employers, includ ing a denial of police protec tion in times of Communist genprated 'strikes and vio lence Violence against anti Communists became a way of life. The Communists also took placent about the menace of Communist espionage in the United States and Commu nist infiltration of the Amer ican economic and social fab ric. The burden of the letters was this: What can the aver age citizen do. That is a good question. It promptly was put to Director J. Edgar Hoover of the Fed eral Bureau of Investigation. Hoover replied in full agree ment that: 'Complacency about com- Communications Letten to the Editor must bear the name and address of the writer although t'nder cer tain circumstances tne 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 From FBI Director To the .Editor: I have had the pleasure of reading the editorial, "The FBI' Work," which appeared in the May 29 issue of the Medford Mail Tribune, and I want to let you know how much the kind remarks about this Bureau are appreciated. The confidence you express in the thoroughness of the in vestigation conducted by the FBI in the Mack Charles Par ker case and othgrs is very reassuring, and my associates and I are most grateful. You may be sure we will con stantly strive to merit your contmued approval. J. Edgar Hoover ' " ' Director Federal Bureau of Investigation Washington 25, D. C. Loss to County To the Editor: Miss Helen Webster's resignation as Li brarian will mean a distinct loss to Jackson county's libra ry service. Miss Webster"has worked indefatigably to organize and maintain good service to a rapidly growing community, having high professional stan dards as' her goal. Her achievement in the last four years has been outstanding and is appreciated by many. As a co-worker in the coun ty library field, I regret her going and wish her well in her new work. Cora E. Mason, Librarian Ashland Public Library Trek Stories Appreciated To the Editor: Just a note of thanks for the nice daily coverage of the 4-H wagon trek. It's very interesting, and as a mother of one of the group, it gives us a contact with them that is otherwise lacking. -Their brief notes can't give much detail, and they really don't have much time to write, except on the wagons, and that's kind of hard to read. Mrs. Fred Coffman, Central Point, Ore. QUIET AND DIGNIFIED C M. Litwiller Ample for every need. A setting of simplicity and reverence that will endure in memory throughout the years. Litwiller's Mountain View Chapel ... Weddings and funeral service. LITWILLER Funeral Home Mountain View Chapel Hwy. 66 at Normal Office 88 N. Main ASHLAND We Never Close Pro&fa&i over public education aJ that, along with control (jf in ternal security (the poliqa) force) gave them the two Xt ' ditional weapons the Reds al ways have used to subvert a people. The present strife arisev from a legally recognized Communist attempt to ta over selection of teache for private schools, most of whicf are religious in character. Although the call for reigfe ance said it should bf n(g& violent, the death lj mounting. The Kerala administration has said it soon may cnTll ojfe the central government fd help. If so, it win be a bittaO pill for Nehru who makes no secret of his hatred for com-" munism at home nor his dis like for the Kerala regime. But the New Delhi "states-' man" charted his course when " it said editoriaUy: "The jm munists came to power through the ballot box. They will have to be dismissed the same way." munism is truly one of Amer ica s most serious problems today. The citizen can do much to fight communism. "First of all, he should in form himself about the true meaning of communism. He must realize that communism is an evil, intent on enslav ing the world. It is dictatorial in nature and seeks to de stroy individual liberties." Hoover had special warn- . ing, evidently directed at those intellectuals who be lieve they see something ' good in communism and end up swallowing the whole par ty line, including the hook. It was this: "Never can we compromjge with communism. To regard communism as a 'temporary good or a 'new way to solve problems' is to invite dis ter. The citizens must be con stantly alert. . The Commu nists operate under many guises and fronts. They con-' stantly. are seeking to de ceive and hoodwink the un-' suspecting. At all times they are endeavoring to infiltrate labor - organizations, basic .industries, civic, religious, fraternal and social groups. Their purpose is to . . . cap ture positions which control organizations." Rules of Combat More specifically, Hoover said any citizen can combat communism by following some simple paste-in-your-hat rules; -Report to the FBI all in formation about espionage, sabotage or subversive activi ties. .. -Alert yourself; learn the true nature and tactics of communism. . -Make civic programs for social improvement your business. -Exercise your right to vote; elect representatives of integrity. -Respect human dignity; communism and individual rights cannot exist. -Inform yourself; know your country, its history, tra ditions and heritage. -Combat public apathy to ward communism; indiffer ence can be fatal when na tional survival is at stake. Attack bigotry and preju dice wherever they appear: justice for all is the bulwark of democracy. "What is needed," Hoover said, "are citizens ready to do their share for America." : a Need vacation money? tO' Pacific Industrial prompt, covrlaoo porroa loan mtni otr ar vaeo car fimtiKlttg 16 Central S 3-5301 Jim Elbert, Manager 5 TP Mrs. Litwiller "1 a, 'It is better to know us and not need us than to need us and not know us."