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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 26, 1960)
1 MAIL TRIBUNI, Mtdford, Or. A Friday, Feb. 26, i960 lUHB "Everyone In Southern Oregon Heads xne Man rriDurie" pnbllshed Dally except Saturday by 33 North Fir St.. Ph SP 2-6141 ROBERT W. RUHL. Editor HERB GREY Advertising Manager GERALD T LATHAM. Bus. Mgr. ERIC W. ALLEN JR.. Mng. Editor EARL H. ADAMS. City Editor HARRY CHIPMAN. Tele. Editor RICHARD JEWETT. Sports Editor OLIVE STARCHER. Women's Editor DALE ERICKSON. Circulation Mgr An Independent Newspaper Xntered as second class matter at Med ford. Oregon, under act ox March 3. 1897 STTBSCRIPTION RATES By Mail In Advance, Copy 10c Daily and Sunday 1 year $15.00 Daily and Sunday 6 mos. 8.00 Daily and Sunday 3 mos. 4.25 Sunday Onlv One year S420 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 Sunday 1 mo. 1.50 Carrier and Dealers copy 10c All Terms Cash in Advance Official Paper of City of Medford' Official Paper of Jacfcsoa Connty United Press International Full Leased Wire TJJPA Telephoto Newspicturea "MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS Advertising Reoresentative: WEST HOLIDAY CO.. INC. Of fices in New York. Chicago. De- Ml fian SVanflCA T.na AnffelM Seattle. Portland. St. Louis. At lanta. Vancouver. B.C. NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION EDITORIAl A5cQt-Qi Flight or Time Medford and Jackson County History from the file of The Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50 years ago. NATIONAL 10 YEARS AGO Feb. 26, 1950 (Sunday) More than 25 felonies In past three weeks have kept Jackson county sheriff s depu ties working overtime and kept county jail filled to ca pacity. Medford's Black Tornado defeated Eagle Point 60 to 23 In Southern Oregon confer ence basketball action yester day. 20 YEARS AGO Fab. 26. 1940 (Monday) - Finns surrender strategic islands to Russians in latters drive to 'capture Finnish city of Vlipuri. From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudge Pot" column: "It is getting along towards the sea con of the year when Good Samaritans of the highways pick up footsore hitchhikers, and the soreness will be out . of their heads in about three weeks." 30 YEARS AGO Fab. 26. 1930 (Wednesday) Death is near for ex-President William Howard Taft, doctors say. Oregonian sports writer lists Dr. Edwin Durno as greatest basketball shot in Pacific Coast records. 40 YEARS AGO Fab. 26. 1920 (Friday) Medford citizens told "it is a patriotic duty to join the Chamber of Commerce. High cost of living dealt a hard blow by Congressional decree for dissolution of "beef trust." SO YEARS AGO Fab. 26. 1910 (Saturday) A modern three-story brick Affice building will be con structed at corner of Central ave, and Eighth st., soon, at cost of $40,000. The Hargadine tract west hi Ashland has been sold for $250,000 to New York firm who will reportedly subdi vide and cultivate. Vhafs Your I.Q.? M!m ar ten correct is superior; even or eight is excellent; five or Mm m good. 1. In a period of deflation, does the purchasing power of mohey increase, or decrease? 2. Was the novelist George Elidt a man, or a woman? 3. Who played the movie role of "Babe Ruth" in "The Babe Ruth Story"? . Correct the following: "A basket of flowers were presented to the patient." 5. Of what State is Lansing the capital? f. What land was ruled by the House of Orange? . Does the male mosquito bite or sting? S. Was Niccolo Machiavelli k writer, painter, or musician? . What do these men have th common: John Jay, Salmon P. Chase, William H. Taft, Charles E. Hughes? 10. Is there a limit to the number of pennies that can be used in paying a debt? Answers: 1. Increases. 2 Woman. 3. William Bendix. . A basket of flowen was t . ." 5. Michigan. 6. The rTeiherlands. 7. No. 8. Writer. . All Cfifef JuStrc f U. ft. llv Uk For Property Protection Some of the stoutest resistance to planning and zoning in Jackson county has come from the Rogue River area. It therefore is with considerable interest that we note (1) that some 70 persons showed up at a meeting to discuss location of a cement plant in the city of Rogue River, and that a majority protested such a plan, and (2) that the city of Rogue River has established a planning com mission. These separate incidents, in the same area, constitute added . evidence that people are be coming more conscious, as population increases, of the need for a democratic, orderly means of channeling and regulating growth. . WE are not saying that a cement plant should not be located within the city limits of Rogue River. That's none of our business. But it IS the business of those who have es tablish erl rinmes nearbv. and whose investments could be damaged by an neighborhood. Those who decry planning and zoning call it "dictatorship," and other bad names. (This, of course, is only an emotional cry of "wolf.' And it's untrue, for zoning regulations are set up under law, with adequate safeguards.) What they don't point out is that without planning and zoning, no one is safe from rob bery (that's what it is actual robbery of prop erty values) by anyone who wants to build a junk yard, or boiler plant, or rendering works right next door. PLANNING, zoning, subdivision ordinances these are the tools a democratic society uses to protect itself from economic damage and stagnation. Laws against murder and assault protect your person. Laws against robbery and burglary protect your personal property. And laws against uninhibited, uncontrolled development and building protect your invest ment in real property. Don't let anyone try ing otherwise-E. A. What On Earth is THAT? Some sav it looks like the burned-out nose cone of an intercontinental ballistic missile. Others declare it looks as though someone had tossed a stick of dynamite in a pot-bellied stove. Some are nuzzled. Some are f aintly angered. Some are amused. The nhiept. in nuestion is in the window of Barker's Men's store, at part of a display of contemporary art. W NOW these varied and not-always-appreciative rpaft.inns are nleasinp to the ladv who arranged for the display happen to know ner quite wen, ana sne toia us so.) The reactions please her because they ARE reactions, and not just so-what type "shrugs. This is "modern" or "contemporary" art. And few people who bother about it are neutral on the subject. Likes and dislikes are apt to be strong. And so much the better, says she. ir HE "thing" is a piece the Northwest's most Zach, of the University of Oregon. It is entitled T rpl. -rAnl,-.. vP if n-rt "Porto 19 today.) It makes no pretense whatever Of looking "just like leaves" which is what baffles and irritates some people. What it ddes attempt is to suggest leaf forms, to give the "feel" of leaves within a framework of space. And, you know what? It succeeds in this, if given a chance by a sympathetic viewer. ARTISTS in the contemporary field make little pffnrr. tn renrndiioe views of nature. This they leave to the photographer, or to the more A 3 1 L-Z L T Vic. nnKnfnnt-inn l'tl emnlovinsr his skills td as he sees them. Within the various schools of artistic expres sion there is room for a wide ranee, not only of styles and approaches, in the same window witn rroiessor zaens sculpture is a casein painting by Charles Voor hies whn is well-known here), which uresents in readily-recognizable but into which the artist has projected mucn of his own Dersonalitv and "feeling" for the scene; and another painting by Willard Martin of Portland, in an unusual employment 01 waier colors, which gives "frosty Morning." THERE is nothing in vou have to like "art," Kind oi arc 1 L Some n"or some dont. Some like renresen tational paintings; some like the far-out stuff like the exploded pot-bellied stove which, if studied, conveys images of leaf forms. But whatever one's views, one must grant that the artists of today whatever their approach and whatever their medium, are making experi ments, seekitig flew means and forms of expres sion, throwing off the shackles of tradition and striking out on their own. ' jft Watc&n theft do it E. X. industrial plant in their to scare you into oeiiev- Main and Central, as IT W of the "thing." (We ir it of sculpture by one of eminent sculptors, Jan present natural scenes but also of materials. form a landscape scene, his interpretation 01 a any rule book that says or even any particular Dennis the V0U W0ST KNOW WHAT FUN S UNTIL U Gkow &g enough Communications Letters to the Editor must bear the name and address of the writer, although under certain circumstances the use of a pen name or initfal for publication is permissible. The Mail Tribune reserves the right to edit all letters with a view to clarification and condensation. Letters submitted for publication must not exceed 400 words. The letters printed in this column do not necessarily represent the views of the paper; in fact the contrary is often the case. Editor's note: To the letter-writer who questions the "gumption" of the Mail Tribune to print bis letter: Please read th note just above this column.' If you will reduce your letter to 400 words, sign your name, and provide us with your address, well print it. A Pensive Farewell To the Editor: Here 1 am again with a letter. Do you suppose the women will bear with me If I write something for my fellow men? It came about in this way. Some of iriy more blunt and candid friends had said, "H. R. B,. your hair is getting thin, especially on top." Then after a "while another one said it, and after another while still another had the same remark to make. Then after a while my wife-faith ful nelpmeet she is-s a i d, "Husband, your hair is getting thin." She emphasized the "is" and punctuated it by rubbing her warm fingers over that really thin place. With my other friends, and my wife all saying the same thing, I thought, "These re marks about my thinning hair are getting thick, maybe I d better look into it" I mean the mirror-so I got a hand mirror and stood my back to a hanging one, and sure enough there it was-I mean there it wasn't. I sat rather dejectedly down, and wrote these words, (and as the boy said to the doctor who was dressing his hurt hand, "The tears nearly hatched out."). There, I've spilled the beans again, for some say I have "no personal pride." H.R.B. and His Hair: Farewell Good bye, old hair, you're going fast; I could hardly hope you'd always last: For quite some time you've crowned my pate, But you to save it seems too late. I itch and scratch, the dan druff snows; The hair falls too; and so it goes. The barbers say, "Why here's a cure For all hair ills, it's safe and sure." I glimpse his head, his hair is out, I And so I pause, and have a doubt. I still have some I'd better prize, And cease at once my fears and sighs. Pensively yours, with my hairy halo too fast receding. H. R. Bulman, Route 4, Box 316A, Medford. On Women's Qualifications To the Editor: Poor, poor Jerry, before many years he will have to take back those awful words written about women drivers, and women should stay home where they belong. The very idea! I must say, he is a brave lad at that. When he marries, he'll be tickled pink to have the wife doing all the odd er rands that he never has time to do. He surely won't expect her to walk. I wonder how many times his little hose or bottom was saved from a bump or worse by a woman. Of course his mother is probably be of those exceptions he speaks of. Then too, he has to live with her. I wonder if they still speak? A woman, especially a rhbther, has eyes in th back of her head. This is a great help, in driving. Her reflexes are fast, else how could she Jrab that littl ftofe wfafeft Menace to open woksj' tumbles, or catch an arm to put into a sleeve when dress ing him? Surely she is able to drive a car straight when she can hit a little mouth with a spoon at feeding time. Mothers are wonderful driv ers and I think they are here to stay. I've driven for more than 20 years. Yes, my husband taught me, too. I drive only when absolutely necessary I love to walk, besides I'm a "scarty cat." Those male drivers, who concentrate on a female figure two blocks down and two blocks back over their shoulder after they pass, have me bugged. Read the Mall Tribune for news of my demise. I've got three male drivers in my fam ily! Mrs. Paul Elgin, 1221 Withington, Medford. "Yes" on Shoe Labeling To the Editor: If the people of the Fourth district of Ore gon would like to know how the answers to Congressman Porter's questionnaires are being taken, as to question No. 6, "Do you approve put ting labels on shoes, listing the materials used?" the fol lowing report in the Feb. 20, 1960 "Leather and Shoes" will show the trend. It is by Joseph B. Huttlin ger, Washington editor: "Congressman Charles O. Porter (D.-Ore.) is sounding out 130,000 of his constituents as to their views on the shoe labeling bill. Asking views of that many persons in his dis trict, Porter included this as question six: '"Do you approve putting labels on shoes listing the ma terials used?' 'The questionnaires went but in relays over a period of more than a week, and all were dropped in the mail by Feb. 9. "Porter says he has had about 4,000 to 5,000 replies already, and that most of them say "yes!' "If the answers show over whelming support Of the la beling bill of Porter, it will add that much to Porter's ef forts to get hearings on his bill, H.R. 1320." Having spent almost three years in my efforts to get shoes labeled for informed buying by the consumer, I hope the people in the fourth district of Oregon will back me up and send their cards back with a "yes" to question N6. 6. Recent requests from 18 states ask for petitions on shoe labeling, and in a period of 40 days over 5,000 people signed the petitions, bringing the total signatures to 30,000. Add this to the endorsement in national conventions by the National Grange (800,000 con sumers), and the American National Cattlemen's Associ ation (over 200,000 consum ers), makes the total consum er support well over one mil lion people. So, I hope you will continue to help by send ing your questionnaire back with question No. 6, yes. Thanking all the nice peo ple of southern Oregon for their support in the past on this issue. Wilbur L. Gardner, (The Man with A SOLE) 612 East Main st., Medford. Re: Housekeeping To the Editor: I agree with Mr.- Burns of Central Point Some of the police in Medford are getting a little too bit for their britches. . But what can you do il the officer says you ran a red light? You might as well pay. Ytu fcafrt argu wttft tt iaw, Robins, Writer Finds; As Harbingers of Spring; It All By DICK WEST Washington -(UPD- Every year about this time, newspa pers begin getting calls from ami people report- i ing the arri C - "v: V val of the first robin. I hate to dis illusion any one, but as harbingers tf spring robins, are not much more reliable than s n ow birds. It de DJCK west pends on whether you happen to see the right robin. I have been doing some right or wrong. The only thing to do is protest to the proper authorities and see what takes place. Some of the officers seem to forget they are servants of the people, paid to enforce the law, not to take advantage of law abiding people to try to make a big name for them selves. The Chief of Police is the housekeeper of the Police De partment. Let's hope he is a good housekeeper and cleans house before it becomes neces sary to get a new housekeep er. Lee W. Rodgers Route 1, Box 49 Eagle Point, Ore. To the Editor: Checks I tied the pup to clothesline strung Across the yard-he didn't see What hindered his excursions, but He felt the checks with cer tainty. I tied my life by faith to Gbd- An "evidence" I couldn't see. But through the years faith held, and I Have felt God's checks with certainty. Mrs. William T. Jeffery 521 Mayette st., Medford Mr. DeMarrs and the Law To the Editor: Replying to the editor's note to my letter published Feb. 14 in which he suggested that "Mr. DeMarrs make sure of his facts before accusing school officials of il legal actions." - It was stated that we had a new school district, thus, by law, we must make the tax levy according to law; and asked when we were to vote on a new tax base. It is claimed that we do not have a new school district de spite recent consolidations; that it is not mandatory in such cases to vote in a new tax base. Let's get the facts straight. The state attorney general has ruled (UP. Report) "The tax base for an administration school district formed under the school reorganization law is determined by the tax base of the most populous district among the districts that make up the new one."-"When a new district is formed out of various previous school dis tricts . . . the latter are deemed to be 'annexed' by the most populous district" This language says that the Medford district is a new dis trict. The law defines in this matter that the tax levy is controlled by the constitution and the district levy for the first year following consoli dation can be no more than the highest amount levied in the three previous years. Thereafter, a new tax base is to be voted upon. M conclu sions of law are secured from "law abstracts" by the Ore gon Tax commission. . It was presented and adver tised by the school board in seeking the school consolida tion that the Medford School levy would increase about 10 mills; the 1959-60 levy was about 17 mills not 10 mills. This is another reason why the people should establish a new tax base as the way to correct the tax increase; and get the tax base down again to where new construction of school rooms will be had by bond issue instead of causing the tax base from increasing oat of all proportion. When the needed expense of new construction is past we do not want to be saddled with a high tax base. . If my previous letter is re read 1 am sure it will be not ed that I made no statement of illegal actions by the school authorities, but merely stated the tax levy to be an illegal one; and, if I am cor rect on the fact herelft shewn, then my statement of ah ille gal tax is correct; and, if any one person is to be held re sponsible therefore it must be the fault of the state attorney general as the school board acted upon his "opinion." This opinion does not apply to but one district, but to all districts within the state. What are the facts? I be lieve that I have shown them. Ray O. DeMarrs, 798 West Second st., -Medford m 1 robin research at the sugges tion of my boss, who was skeptically eyeing a piece of teletype copy when I stopped by his office. "Here's the first robin story of the year," he said. "Why don't you do a story knocking down that myth? Those ' birds never leave home." Well, sir, in less time than it takes to say "erithacus ru- becula" - which is how you say "robin" in bird language I had the Smithsonian Institu tion on the phone and was Washington Report By WILLIAM DEMOCRATIC STRATEGY Washington - Two circum- stances are handicapping though not halting the Demo crats in their efforts to lay a national de fense lag at the door of their opposi tion. First, all logic would compel them tn irrannlc di- William S. f. t v. wwte rectly with President Eisenhower. But the political realities would make this a perilous and a foolish course. Private Democratic opinion overwhelmingly agrees with this estimate. Second, there are so many rival Democratic Presidential possibilities - at least four -as to make difficult the de velopment of any all-Demo cratic position. Sen. Stuart Symington of Missouri goes the farthest among the Democratic aspir ants. But in significant places he is left alone along this road. He accuses the Eisen hower "administration" of having misled the country on defense. SEN. HUBERT H. Humphrey of Minnesota adopts much of the Symington argument of weak defenses. But he stops short of the charge of actual deception by the administra tion. Symington himself, hav ing made that charge, does not carry it a step onward and so accuse Mr. Eisenhower per sonally of deceiving the coun try. Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson of Texas speaks in general terms of alarming Russian progress. He does not speak of decep tion, either by the "adminis tration" or by Mr. Eisenhow er. Sen. John F. Kennedy of Massachusetts . audibly fears that we are not in position to negotiate from strength with the Russians. But he, too, says nothing about deception - by anybody. Most detached observers here believe there is a good Democratic talking point on defense. But how the Demo crats are best td exploit that point is actually the livelier present political question. Whatever may be wrong militarily, the man uniquely responsible in our system is President Eisenhower himself. But the President is going out of an office, not trying to get into one. Vice-President Richard Nixon, the designated successor to the G.O.P. Presi dential nomination, is the one man the Democrats need to hit in political terms. THE unavoidable fact, how ever, is that Nixon did not make these military prepara tions, be they good or bad. So if the Democratic guns are turned back upon Mr. Ei senhower himself, what then? Well, apart from the central fact that the President isn't running for anything, there is this: Most people are simply not going to regard the president as mistaken on any military matter. Whether he is actual ly mistaken or not is not, po litically, the point. The ma jority doesn't believe he is. Even fewer are going to be lieve that he (or anybody else with his consent) has con sciously misled the country about defense, and here the great majority is right beyond doubt. The public instinct that no president is knowingly go ing to "put this nation into peril is absolutely sound. Thus when the Democratic political problem is examined this is the true situation: The logical defense target, if there is one, is Dwight Eisenhower. The far more useful target, politically, is Nixon. But the one, Mr. Eisenhower, can't be hit usefully at all; and the other, Nixonv can't be hit use fully just yet. FOR NIXON is not taking any explicit defense re sponsibility; he is not even arguing that the program is necessarily right and adequate in all things. So the Democrats must for now simply blame that large, vague group called "the Re1' publicans." Then they must sooner or later make "the Re Are Unreliable talking with Herbert Deig- nan. Some Robins Tarry Deignan is assistant curator of the division of birds and a font of ornithological infor mation. I regret to report that our conversation didn't turn out exactly the way my boss had in mind. ' I put it to Deignan bluntly. Are our little red-breasted friends the feathered messen gers of spring? Or aren't they? Deignan, who is no man to equivocate where birds are concerned, gave it to me straight. S. WHITE publicans" seem synonymous with Richard Nixon. More specifically, they are cautiously trying to drive Nixon into one pen or anoth er: either fully to endorse the Eisenhower defense policies and so take campaign respon sibility for them; or openly to criticize those policies and so to admit that the old set of "Republicans," at least, didn't do what should have been done. (Copyright, 1960, by United Feature Snydicate, Inc.) Brazil Determined To Industrialize, President In the Days News By FRANK JENKINS Hail Carol Heiss - our new national hero. Or heroine, if you're meticulous about your genders. She saved our bacon at Squaw Valley! We may elect her President some day. Who knows? ... AT ANY RATE, we're ever lastingly grateful to her -as grateful to her as were the Dutch to the small boy wh6 held his finger in the hole in the dike and thus saved his people from a washout. MORE about women in the news: Britain's Princess Anne, Queen Elizabeth's nine-year-old daughter, made her first public speech the other day -at a Girl Scout observance of Thinking Day. The dispatches report that she drew in her breath and said to Lady Baden-Powell, widow of the late Lord Badeh-Powell, founder of the Boy and Girl Scout Guide movement, who was present for the ceremony: "I would ask you to light this candle for us for Brownies everywhere." Fellow Brownies reported later that Anne took no chances. She had memorized the speech and rehearsed it for days. GOOD for her! She had learned early that there is no excellence with out labor. She may go far. . STILL more about women: You may have noted that the Midwest has been having a cold snap - a not unusual occurrence in that area at this season. It was nippy the oth er night in Saginaw, Michi gan, when Mrs. Emma Cox put her children to bed and the sheets were icy-cold. So, harking back to earlier days and adapting modern gadgets to an ancient need, she put an electric frying Pan in the bed to warm it up. It set the bedding afire, and she had to call the fire depart ment. , Fortunately, no one was badly burned and damage was confined to the bedding. ONE WONDERS if anyone in these parts is old enough to remember a marvelously comforting device of an earl ier day. It was known as a bed-warmer, and in the chill ier areas of our country no home was complete without one. It amounted practically to a covered skillet with a long handle and was usually made of ornamental brass. Come bedtime, the bed-warmer was filled with coals - preferably hickory coals - from the fire place and was pushed back and forth between the sheets until they became what was then termed "as warm as toast." Going to bed was thus made a pleasure instead of ah ordeal. In those days, mother Were ; wiser than Mrs. Cox, of Sagi naw. After the bed was warm ed, the warmer was carefully : removed, taken back . to the fireplace and the hot coals ; spilled out. 1 Depends They are and they aren't," he said. Sensing that I was on the trail of something that was bigger than both of us, I urged Deignan to elaborate. He did, to wit: Robins do head South at the onset of winter but a lot of them stop off along the way. Thus they can be found on the Mason side of the Mason-Dixon line all winter. No Sure Way At this time of year, there is no sure way of telling whether a particular robin just flew in from the South- a sign of spring on the wing or whether he had been around since last autumn. While Deignan was ex plaining all of this, I began thinking about that old poem; the one that goes: "The north wind doth blow, and we shall have snow, and what will the robin do then, poor thing? He'll sit in the barn, and keep himself warm, and hide his head under his wing, poor thing." I asked Deignan whether this didn't tend to confirm my boss' theory that robins actu ally stay put during the win ter. Not at all, he replied. The poem, he said, was written about English robins, who aren't as footloose as their American cousins. Declares By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign Editor The man - of - the - week: President Juscelino Kukit schek of Brar.il. The place: Brazil's future capital, Brasilia. The quote: "We simply wish that the United States believes that the resolution of the Brazilian people to industrialize this country, to utilise its natural re sources, to prepare better conditions of life required by our population growth, to reject a lowly and vague destiny, is decisive, definite and irreversible." It was his welcoming ad dress to President Eisenhower and it was delivered in sur- r o u ndings of raw earth, dig ging machines and the heavy equipment of a city still be ing built, a a city which will become Brazil's new capital and K u bitschek'S Phil Newsom own personal monument. His cosing paragraph quot ed above was a thumbnail summaion of the program this physician - turned - politician first instituted four years ago at the beginning of his five year term. He had campaigned on a platform of "food, transporta tion, power." He sought to stabilize prices, to increase food production, to institute a massive indus trialization program, to in crease electricity output, to build roads and to overhaul Brazil's neglected railroads. Three years ago, over strong opposition, he began carving out of the jungle 600 miles from Rio a new capital city to be known as Brasilia and to be ready for occupancy in April, 1960. Arouses Some Criticism It was a bootstrap operation designed to pull Brazil from a history of haphazard growth Into orderly modern develop ment. Kubitschek's headlong rush toward industrialization de spite all laws of economics has aroused criticism in the United States which has a multi-billion dollar stake in Brazil, and some grumbling at home where prices have been doubling or tripling in a matter of months. But, generally, Brazilians are happy with him and un- worried about the future. 'God must be a Brazilian, they say, because he watches out tor Brazil. PRE-HUNG. DOORS Complete $ O50 Includes Mahogany Door Casing Jambs Stanley Hinges Yale Latch Sets LEWIS Wholesale Builders Supply 443 S. Riverside SP 2-71 JS mmsmmA I3