Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, August 07, 1959, Image 4

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    MAIL TRIBUNE, MatfferJ, Or.
Friday, Amtwt 7, 15
Beads Th Man Trthm.'
Published Dily except Saturday by
MU3rOHD PRINTING CO
33 North riT St. Ph. SP 2-3141
ROBERT W BUHL, Editor
HERB GREY Advertlrin Manager
GERALD LATHAM. Business Ugt
ERIC W ALLEN JR, ,
Managing Kditor
EARL H ADAMS. City Editor
HARRY CHIPMAN Teleg Editor
RICHARD JgWETT Sports Editor
LIVE ST ARCHER Women' Editor
DALE ERICKSON Circulation MT
Ad Independent Newspaper
Entered as second class matter at
MedforH Oregon under Act of
March 3. 1897
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Mai 1 to Advance. Copy 10c.
Dall- and Sunday 1 year $13.00
Daily and Sunday 6 moa. 8i)t
Daily and Sunday 3 moa. 4.23
Sunday Only One year $4.20
By Carrier In Adyance Medford.
Ashland. Central Point, Earl
Point. Jacksonville Gold Hill.
Phoenta Shady Cova Rogua Riv
er. Talent and on motor routes
Dail7 and Sunday 1 year $18.00
Daily and Sunday 1 mo. 1.50
Carrier and Dealers copy 10c
All Terms Cash In Advance)
Official Paper of City f Medford
Official Paper of Jsefcson County
United Press International
full Leased Wire
MZMBZR 0? AUDIT BUHEAU
OF CIRCULATION
Advertising Representative:
WIST HOLIDAY CO, INC. Of
fices In New York, Chicago. De
troit. San Francisco, Los Angeles,
Seattle, Portland St. Louis. At
lanta. Vancouver B.C.
sir UEUfCIABIB
mm i
aiicusae
''ASSOCIATION
MAT. ON A I f OITOtrAl
Flight 'o Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of Tht
Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30, 40
and 50 years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
Aug. 7, 1949 (Sunday)
Fire destroys a ichoolhouse
and other buildings in Tolo
and blackens Blackwell hill.
Boy Scouts hand out warn
ing leaflets -as a prelude to
police enforcement of Med
ford's jay-walking prohibi
tion. 20 YEARS AGO
Aug. 7, 1939 (Monday)
From "Side Glances": "John
Day carrying around a ther
mometer In his shirt pocket
just to prove how hot or cold
he could get during the day."
From Arthur Perry's "Ye
Smudge Pot" column: "Rain
is badly needed throughout
the ; state, with no county
fairs to cause it, until the
first week of September."
30 YEARS AGO
Aug. 7, 1929 (Wednesday)
The Medford city council
approves the extension of
South Central ave. to the Pa
cific highway.
'Jack salmon are reported
plentiful in the Rogue river
near Gold Hill.
40 YEARS AGO
Aug. 7. 1919 (Thursday)
A band concert is planned
in Medford's city park to
night. A coal vein is found on
Iy Ann butte, and is to be
developed by local men.
SO YEARS AGO
Aug. 7. 1909 (Saturday)
Feeling is reported intense
among Medford citizens
against the water line injunc
tion obtained by M. F. Han
ley. Medford's new, crankless
telephone system goes into
service tonight.
Vhsl's Yor I.Q.?
Nino or tea correct is tuperier;
avail or eisjhf is xcelknt; five t
six is food.
1. Which of the twelve
apostles do Roman Catholics
regard as the founder of the
papal line?
2. Name the Roman god of
war for whom the month of
March is named.
3. Is the distance between
pegs on a regulation horse
shoe pitching court for men
30, 40, or 50 feet?
4. The U. S. Constitution
prohibits increasing the Presi
dent's salary after his term
has begun; true or false?
5. Lincoln is the capital,
and "cornhusker" is the nick
name of which state?
6. A millennium is a span
of 100, 1000, or 1,000,000
years?
7. What is the identical five-
lettered word , that denotes a
boy's nickname, a policeman's
club, and a male goat?
8. On the Fahrenheit ther-
.mometer scale, would you
think that 44 or 98 degrees
'represents body heat?
9. Does a buns en burner use
coal, electricity, or gas, for
fuel?
10. Cream is lighter Jhan
milk; would a pound of cream
weigh more or less than a
sound of milk?
Answers: 1. St. Peter; 2.
Mars; 3. 40 feet; 4 True; 5.
Nebraska; 6. 1000; 7. Billy;
t. 98 degrees 9. Gas; 10. The
same.
Editorial in Very Few Words
b sasi
77ne 7o Protect Ourselves
There is a 20-acre hole in the ground just
east of Central Point, where the contractor on
the freeway construction dug up fill material.
The hole is carved out of rich topsoil to a
depth of 10 or 12 feet.
It is reliably reported that another area of
agricultural land, some
general area, has also been sold to the contractor
jfor a similar purpose.
TTHIS is the situation which motivated the
county court to ask the planning commission
to work out an interim zoning ordinance to pre
vent such -indiscriminate gouging out of the
valley's limited and valuable topsoil.
It was largely on .'the premise it would do the
least amount of damage
so-called "Bear Creek
was selected.
i -
But much of this route, running through Med
ford, will be on an elevated grade. And an ele
vated grade takes a lot of fill material. And
contractors will obtain
they can, and as close to the job as they can, to
save money. And there will always be someone
willing to sell to them to make a few quick dollars.
IT IS a real threat to
What to do about it? .
The hiehway commission, under the laws srov-
erning its operation, cannot specify where con
I tractors will obtain their materials. Contractors,
in turn, are reluctant to
contractually or by verbal agreement, to abstain
from any particular practice in obtaining such
1 1 ;
maienais.
And, alas, there is no zoing ordinance in
Jackson county to prevent them from taking soil
wherever they can find it and buy it.
Therefore, to forestall this danger, the county
court requested the zoning ordinance.
TTHE idea came from Lane county, which has
had the benefits of a planning commission and
a zoning ordinance with some teeth in it for sev
eral years now.
The same situation arose in Lane county dur
ing construction of the freeway there, and the
zoning provisions stopped it.
The ordinance, as it applies to the taking of
fill material, is now under challenge in the courts
in Lane county, with a decision expected in about
three weeks. Observers there are hoping for a
decision upholding the zoning restriction.
-. If it is upheld, Jackson county will be able
to do something to protect its valuable topsoil.
If not, we're in trouble.
TTHE thought of a series of 20 or 25 acre holes
x in ' the ground in topsoil land all along the
freeway and Bear creek, from Central Point to
the other side of Ashland, is enough to give one
the willies.
There is real urgency in doing something to
forestall such an eventuality.
And, more, the entire situation adds compel
ling evidence to the need for county-wide zoning
legislation, adaptable to a variety of unforeseen
situations as they arise.
Jackson county twice voted down zoning ordi
nances. We were convinced at the time, and still
are, that the defeats were due to an imperfect
understanding of zoning, and what it is designed
to accomplish.
LJOW many more lessons do we need?
A Must we wait until we are surrounded by
rural slums, by 20-acre holes in the ground, by
iunk . yards in residential areas, by slaughter
houses next to schools? .
Isnt it about time
J facts and acted to protect ourselves? E. A."
r-: :
I 'aj
I T
15 (f
prc::3iteo
20 or 25 acres in the same
to agriculture that the
Route" for the freeway
this fill'matenal where
the valley's agricultural
bind themselves, either
we woke up to the cold
I 1
It - ".rrivVr
, " , r
R.V.
Dennis the Menace
Rockefeller Kicking
Into Civil
By WILLIAM THEIS
Washington -(OPD- Gov. Nel
son A. Rockefeller could miss
the presidency by an inch or
a mile, and still make his
place in the history books as
the official who finally kick
ed some life into civil defense.
He moved a step in that di
rection by getting his fellow
governors at Puerto Rico to
endorse his ideas for stronger
civil defense action.
The Republican's behavior!
at the annual governor's con
ference left little doubt in
many minds that he's prepar
ing to challenge Vice Presi
dent Richard M. Nixon for the
GOP presidential nomination.
And one of his intervening
state problems is that of doing
something meaningful about
the apathy -ridden, faltering
program of defense against
neuclear blast and fallout.
Rockefeller's own New
York state committee has rec
ommended that he endorse a
program of compulsory shel
ter construction. That is a lot
stronger medicine than most
elected officials want to pre
scribe for their constituents.
And it did not show up in the
report RockefeUer's civil de
fense committee made to the
governors at San Juan.
The Rockefeller program
called instead for education
on fallout danger, action by
responsible government offi
cials to get people to prepare
their defense by building shel
ters and obtaining survivial
kits, and an inventory of state
facilities that could be used
as shelters.
Basic Danger Unchanged
But the New Yorker's rec
ommendations appear signifi
cant because:
-They are applying pres
sure at the level where it is
needed if local action is to be
generated. .
-They underscore the "long
look" on U.S. defense plan
ning that the Eisenhower
Khrushchev visits, the Nixon
tour and other manifestations
of more friendly relations
with Russia do not modify the
nuclear threat.
They may 'help to convince
the Kremlin leaders, if prop
erly implemented, that this
country is not "fat and hap
py" and diplomatically gulli
ble. Rockefeller, like any well
advised political aspirant,
seems to be getting his tough
tasks out of the way before
the. presidential year arrives.
Congress, with its big batch
of presidential contenders, is
doing exacUy the safe thing.
: The New York governor is
said to feel his political stock
has swung upward again after
dropping with his unpopular
early 1959 tax boost program.
His handling of the whole
civil defense question in
densely populated New York
could be made easier if the
rest of the country was mov
ing with him.
Opposition To CD
Some of the open disre
spect for the current civil de
fense effort is reflected in re
cent Senate speeches by
Stephen M. Young GMDhio).
Young has charged that the
program is "obsolete" and
full of waste. He says the pro
gram should be cut back
rather than expanded, be
cause the military would take
over in event of a nuclear at
tack on this country.
Young was a World War H
colonel and military gover
nor. He -also is a 'eshman
senator who first attracted
attention in that body by re
fusing to walk down the aisle
with his Democratic col
league, Sen. Frank J. Lausche.
This year's congressional
testimony on nuclear fallout
danger and the scope of its
increase in an era of contin
uing nuclear tests has 'helped
to put civil defense back in
tht minds of public men.
Ik "
"Stick AfVUN'.iM man' a fresh" 6Azu.
OOH AS TarHMy TURNS ON "B WSBR
Defense Program
Coupled with "this has been
the development of the Inter
continental Ballistic Missile
with Russia admittedly ahead
of the U.S. in getting them op
erational. Several years ago
only the West European
NATO countries were sitting
on the edge of nuclear doom,
within minutes of Soviet jet
plane and short-range missile
bases..
U.S. observers, including
In the Day's News
By FRANK
More about the sentries at
the Buckingham Palace gate
and" the rigid discipline that
governs them while they are
Communications
- Letters to the Editor must
bear the name and address of
the writer although under cer
tain circumstances the use of a
pen name or initial for publica
tion is permissible. The Mail
Tribune reserves the right to
edit all letters with an eye to
clarification and condensation.
Letters submitted for publica
tion must not exceed 400 words
Witnesses Sought
To The Editor: At 2:50 p.m.
on U. S. Highway 30 near
milepost 260, about 28 miles
southeast of. Pendleton, Ore
gon, and west of Meacham,
Oregon, my husband, Warren
Kiltz, age 27, was involved in
a motor vehicle accident. He
was traveling east, alone on a
motorcycle, when an automo
bile also going east collided
with him. As a result of this
accident, he lost his right leg
and received other very grave
injuries. He has been in a
coma much of the time since
the accident.
There were several cars
following the automobile
which collided with my hus
band. The occupants of these
cars aU stopped and rendered
valuable assistance. Because
of his critical condition and
the necessity of rushing him
from the scene of the accident,
it was not possible for anyone
to obtain the names or ad
dresses of these witnesses.
They may reside anywhere,
since one car had an Oregon
license and at least one car
had an out-of-state license.
Their statements pf the -facts
are desperately needed.
I know that witnesses to any
kind of highway accident or
other- tragedies are reluctant
to involve themselves. It is
my hope however, that per
sons who witnessed this ac
cident will read this letter
and, now that they know their
accounts of this accident ate
so greatly needed, will come
forward to help us. My hus
band is a twice - decorated
combat veteran' of the Korean
War; he rescued seven wound
ed men under fire.
All mail concerning this ac
cident should be addressed to
P. O. Box 44, Pendleton, Ore.
My husband and I and our
two little children will be
very grateful for any informa
tion. Jeaneen Kiltz,
904 NE 91st ave.,
Portland 20, Ore.
Aid Appreciated
To The Editor: Mr. and Mrs.
Claude S. Kerns, Klamath
Falls, wish to thank all the
people in Medford who do
nated blood towards heart sur
gery for their son, Danny, and
their prayers for him.
- Mary E. Jones
(Danny's aunt)
711 Sherman st.,
Medford.
Rogue, Not Rouge
To the Editor: Rogue
is
from rogue, not rouge.
I accept your tut, tut. McAr
thur's "Oregon Geographic
Names" must be correct. It's
some solace for me to know
my version goes back at least
55 years.
Charles O. Porter,
Member of Congress
'Barn-Burning Time' in House
Disappearance of Rules Comm
Bv FRAN IT ELEA7ES
Washington -(DPD- This is
the period, sometimes refer
red to locally as barn burning
time, when
House liberals
start manifest
i n g . unaccus
tomed con
cern for the
health, wel
fare, and the
whereabo u t s
I of Hep. How
S lard W. Smith
Frank Eleazcr "
Especially the whereabouts.
Smith is 76. He is a banker
who still thinks a million dol
lars is money, especially
when It's borrowed. He also
has other peculiarities, includ
ing a tendency to drop out of
sight along toward the end of
each congressional session.
It's not so much that the
liberals can't do without How
ard Smith's company. What
gets them is that he is the all
powerful' chairman of the
Life
this reporter, studied civil de
fense facilities and plans of
countries like little Denmark
for examples of self protec
tion. The Danes already had
50-man bomb shelters, backed
up by fire-fighting, first aid
and rescue equipment and
trained manpower.
Now the threat has leaped
the Atlantic. With it may
have come political action.
JENKINS
on duty:
Last year an American girl
who was touring London
paused before the palace gate
and, as tens of thousands of
others . have done, gazed in
awe at the stiff and motion
less guard who stood before
the sentry box. Then, acting
on a sudden impulse, she went
up to him and TWEAKED HIS
NOSE.
The guard moved not a
muscle. His eyes deviated not
so much as a millimeter from
front and center.
HPHE guard, it should be add
led," was living up to the
best traditions of his proud
country and his proud organ
ization. The American tour
ist was living up to the
WORST TRADITIONS of
American tourism.
Tourists of that breed have
won us an immense amount
of ill will throughout the
world.
HERE'S another
out-of-the-
111
beaten path word to add
to serendipity:
MELIORISM..
Can you define it without
going to the dictionary? I
couldn't when it was sprung
on me this morning.
IITEBSTER'S CoUegiate Dic-
tionary defines it as "the
belief or doctrine that the
world tends to become better
and that man has the power
of aiding its betterment." A
meliorist is one who adheres
to that doctrine.
There are times', I think,
when we could use MORE
MFLIORISM in this modern
world.
all this patter about
the gates of Buckingham
Palace and meliorism and
such?
Well, these are the Dog
Days.
This name for sticky, hot,
generally unpleasant weather
started with the ancient
Greeks. They used it to cover
the summer period of about
40 days during which the dog
star Sirius rose in the sky.
There is an old belief that
dogs were apt to "go mad"
with rabies during hot weath
er. As a matter of fact, the
scientists teU us, fewer dogs
go mad in hot weather than
in cold weather.
BUT let's get back to Sirius,
thA rlr2 star. It is the
brightest star in the heavens.
It is one of the stars nearest
to the earth, but it is still so
far away that its light takes
nine years to reach the earth.
That is to say:
If you had a space ship
capable of traveling at the
speed of light (about (16,000
miles per SECOND) it would
We Have
1005 East Maiii'Street
DON STATHOS
Insuror
PHONE SP 3-6658
very powerful House Rules
Committee, and when he dis
appears some" of their favor
ite bills seems always to fade
out of the picture.
Committee Routes Bills
The rules committee's job
is to route bills from other
committees to the House
floor. When it doesn't they
usually die.
About this time last vear
the committee had a roomful
of business, including a cou
ple "of bills which Judge
Smith felt sure would cost
money. One would have let
the Tennessee Vallev Author
ity sell bonds to expand pow
er production.
So one . August day he
didn't answer when the House
clerk called his name on the
roll. ' Neither did he answer
the following day. Rep. Wat-
kins Abbitt . (D-Va.) hinted
helpfully that the judge was
aboard the submarine Nauti
lus which that very day was
beneath the North Pole.
I 'guess that wasn't so, be
cause when Judge Smith re
turned, 10 days later, he wore
a nice tan. Also an enigmatic
smile. He didn't say where he
had been.
Arrives for Last Riles
He got back though just in
time for last. rites to be said
for the TVA bill which the
Congress, only now, one year
later, finally has revived and
enacted.
Coupled with other meas
ures lost in the rush to, ad
journ, Abbitt said happily
that Smith's vacation, what
ever it cost Smith, had saved
he taxpayers $10,000,000,000
The vanishing judge set a
precedent , even more upset
ting to the liberal bloc the
previous year. .
The Judiciary Committee,
under Rep. Emanuel Celler
(D-N.Y.)r had approved a
strong civil rights biU at that
time.
Manny and Judge Smith
have much in common. Both
are members of the House.
But apparently they don't
speak the same language. On
March 2 Manny asked Smith
to clear the civil rights bill.
It was May 2 before Smith
seemed able to hear him.
Bill Sent lo House
He took up the bill May 2
and must have found it inter
esting. On May 17 he was still
taking testimony. Other com
Multnomah County
Fair Notes Opening
Portland - (UPD - The Mult
nomah County Fair opened
Thursday, and brisk opening
day attendance encouraged of
ficials to predict attendance
for the event which will end
Aug. 15 -will equal or better
last year's total attendance of
151,000.
Officials expressed belief
that the fair would enhance
rather than hinder , attendance
at the Oregon Centennial Ex
position, on the theory that
many who come to the Fair
will continue on to Portland
for the Exposition. They look
ed for this to work the other
way around," too, with many
who come to the Exposition
in North Portland, continuing
on afterward to the Multno
mah County Fair at Gresham.
Duane Hennessy, manager
of the county fair, observed:
"There is absolutely no com
petition between the Centen
nial and the county fair be
cause they are so different.
We emphasize livestock, hob
bies, food, needlework, 4-H
and FFA. and horse racing,
which are not Centennial fea
tures."
In the judging ateas, visi
tors to the county fair are
viewing cattle, sheep, nogs
and other livestock exhibits
entered by stockmen and by
members of the 4-H and FFA
(Future Fanners of America)
clubs.
take you nine years to reach
Sirius, the dog star, which
is one of the stars NEAREST
TO THE EARTH.
ONE more word about
Sirius. .
It has a companion star.
This companion is one "of the
most remarkable stars in the
sky because the material of
which it is composed is 50,000
times as heavy as water. A
cubic foot of material from
this star would weigh about
1500 TONS.
That ought to be about
enough Dog Days stuff for
today.
to
mittee members found their
interest lagging though and,
over the judge's protest, fi
nally cleared the bill for a
vote in the House. The House
passed the bill, and sent it to
the Senate. It was amended
and came back to the House
for consideration of the Sen
ate amendments.
This, according to the Rule
book which Smith reveres
third only to the constitution
and the Bible, required a
fresh clearance from the
Rules Committee. It was mid
August, and members were
ready to quit for the year.
Smith himself was so anxious
to leave he couldn't wait for
adjournment. He iust left.
The liberals chaffed a while,
ana iinally went into action
to by-pass the judge.
inis they can do. tirovided
they have plenty of time. Aft
er days of delay they smashed
tne parliamentary roadblocks.
iney convened the Rules
Washington Report
By WILLIAM
' Washington - With perfect
politeness and genteel defer
ence, Gov. Nelson Reckefeller
of New York
is reaching for
Vice-President
Richard Nix
on's jugular
vpin
MIL rl M r T?nrlrP-
feller's d i s -closure
that
he wiU con-
t HIT Iffivnn
White for the Presi
dential nomination only if the
public opinion polls are kind
to him has hit the Nixon
forces hard in their one vul
nerable spot.
They had not been afraid
of an outright Rockefeller
challenge in the old-fashioned
way a frank attempt to go
out and grab pro-Rockefeller
delegates to next year's GOP
convention. They felt that
such an unhidden Rockefeller
thrust would shatter against
Mr. Nixon's rocklike position
with the regular, organization
Republicans.
npHE Vice - President himself
J- for months has known, and
privately said, that the one
danger from Rockefeller was
by way of an appeal not to
the organization Republicans
but to the large, happy public
by way of a personal popu
larity contest. For the vague
factors of like and dislike
the wav a man smiles or
combs his hair have im
mense effect on the polls. This
everv oolitician knows, none
more keenly than the Vice-
President. The trouble is that
he has, surely, been "contro
versial" - and Rocke teller
has not been.
The Rockefeller people,
therefore, are striking at. Mr.
Nixon in an area where his
powerful position, and even
his historic success in his
Russian mission, will not
necessarily arm him quite
enough.
They are doing this, more
over, in such a way as to skirt
the risk of candidly hitting
Mr. Nixon over the head. They
have left themselves free to
say that Mr Nixon is the fi
nest nossible fellow-and may
be even the ablest, too - but
isn't it too bad that the polls
indicate he "can't win"? They
are going to the public over
the heads of the "politicians,"
just as the Vice-President,
with his bleak realism, al
ways suspected they would.
THIS blandly adroit Rocke
feller strategy is basically
the same strategy by which
from 1940 onward the pro-1
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SEE PAGE 7A FOR
FORD
INSPECTED a RECONDITIONED
Heralds
ittee Head
Committee without him Just
as Smith walked, smiling, in
to the room.
Barn Burns Down
His barn had burned down,
out in Loudon County, Va...
he explained, and it had taken
him 10 days to rebuild it
Now the Judiciary Commit
tee has approved another civ
il rights bill. Smith has said
he will consider a request for
clearance once he gets it in
writing, along with a proper
printed report on the bill.
After that, Smith will need
time to think.
I've heard that the judge's
mowing machine shows signs
of collapsing. I know for a
fact he has a bad tooth, and
no telling how long it might
take if the dentist says it has
to be fixed. His grandchil
dren in Texas are reported
demanding to see him.
The liberals had best hire
a detective if they want to
keep their eye on the judge.
S. WHITE
fessional Republicans have
been overcome at every na
tional convention. The results
have been the repeated selec
tion of Presidential nominees
from among the popular ama
teurs, like WendeU Willkie
and Dwight D. Eisenhower,
and the nomination twice of
the master of that -strategy,
Thomas E. Dewey of New
York. r
Something new, however.
has been added. For the
Rockefeller approach in
which politicians here clearly
see the fine non-Italian hand
of Dewey has one new
strength. It is so prepared
that the try can be made with
out drawing a visible sword
against Nixon. Thus, the
RockefeUer people are trying
to neutralize their greatest
previous obstacle. This was
the disinclination of many
GOP politicians to break with
Nixon, like him or not, lest
theirs seem an act of utter
rebellion punishable if Nixon
should triumph after all.
But you can hardly convict
a man as a revolutionary if
he is not really "opposing"
you - but is only awaiting the
word of "the people" as to
whom ought to be nominated.
That is not ugly revolt; that
is only "objectivity."
NO ONE should now write
off Mr. Nixon; he remains
the favorite by a wide mar
gin. Certainly this is so "as
of now" - a phrase increas
ingly being used.
"As of now" is a hedge
against what those well
known polls may be saying
along in the late fall. The
Rockefeller forces obviously
are going to be doing many
things to influence those polls.
So will the Nixon forces. And
the Nixon people will have
the advantage of operating
with a tough and able nation
al figure - though not yet,
perhaps, a widely loved one.
But their disadvantages, and
the Rockefeller advantages,
will be formidable. The. na
tional convention still is near
ly a year away and Nixon
week by week will have, to
take public positions on na
tional issues. Rockefeller will
still be in the honeymoon per
iod at Albany, simply running
his own state shop and not
required to make many people
angry. The headlines no doubt
will - run higher and blacker
with the name "Nixon." But
they will inevitably run more
amiablv with the name "Rock-
efeller."
(Copyright, 1959. by United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.)
USED CARS
ROAD-TESTED WARRANTED