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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 29, 1960)
0 0 4 - A MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, ORE. WEDNESDAY. JUNE 29, 1960 "Everyone In Southern Oregon Rcnda The Mall Tribune" Published Daily except Saturday by r33 North Fir St.. Ph SP 2-6141 ROBERT W RUHt. Editor HERB GREY AdvcrUilng Managr litnrttu i laiiiam uut Mar ERIC W ALLEN JR.. Mng Editor eaki. H adams, city Editor HARRY CHIPMAN Teles Editor RICHARD JEWETT Snorta Editor OLIVE STARCHER. Women' Editor PALE ER1CKSON, Circulation Mgr An Indenendent Newinsoer Entered as second clans matter at Meaiord. Oregon, under Act of March 3. JBf)7 SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mail In Advance. Copy 10c jjauy ana ounaay i year ejiauo Daily and Sunday 6 mos. 8 00 Daily and Sunday 3 mos 4.28 Sundav Ontv One vear $4.20 Bv Carrier In Advance Med ford Ashland. Central Point Eagle Point, Jacksonville, Gold Hill Phoenix. Shadv Cove. Rogue Riv- 1 er. Talent and on motor routes, Dally and Sunday 1 year 818 00 Da'Iy and Sunday 1 mo 1.S0 Carrier and Dealers copy 10c All Terms Cosh In Ad va no """Official Paper" of City of MrdfnrJ Official Papr of Jackson County United Prrss International Full Leased Wire U.P.I. Tciephoto News picture! MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU- OF CIRCULATIONS Advertising Representative: WEST HOLIDAY CO. INC Of fires In New York. Chicago De trnit. San Francisco. Los Angeles. Seattle. Portland St. Louis. At lanta. Vancouver. BO. NEWSPAPER- BLISHERS SOCIATION NATION Al EDITORIAI C&T r. Flight o' Time Medford and Jackson County Hislory from the filei of The Mail Tribune 10. 20, 30, 40 and 50 years ago. 10 YEARS AGO June 29. 1950 (Thunday) Cily police yesterday repri mnnded five juveniles for vio lating the city's ordinance pro hibiting the use of firecrack ers inside the city limits. A total of 71 southern Ore gon and northwest California Boy Scouts are attending the scout jamboree at Valley Forge, Pa., this week. 20 YEARS AGO June 29. 1940 (Saturday) Vandals stoned a Grey hound bus in Gold Hill yes terday injuring five passen gers and a driver with flying glass. From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudge Pot" column: "East side residents report Bear creek is full of bull frogs, that start vocalizing around sundown every night. People marvel at the way they hit the lowdown bass notes." 30 YEARS AGO June 29, 1930 (Sunday) The census figures show there are 714 jobless in Jack son county, 214 of which arc in Medford. Improved rural mail serv ice has been promised for Prospect and Eagle Point. 40 YEARS AGO June 29, 1920 (Tueiday) The Winged-O-Five jazz or chestra direct from San Fran cisco made its Medford debut last night at the Natatorium. A chamber of commerce sponsored contest to get a song written about Medford lias been extended for anoth er month due to the lack of entries. 50 YEARS AGO June 29, 1910 (Wednesday) P. J. O'Gura estimates that li record 1,000 carloads ol fruit will be shipped from the Jiogue valley this year. Dr. Andrew C. Smith, Port land, Oregon s probable next governor and a true friend of southern Oregon, is in Med ford today attending the Southern Oregon Medical so ciety convention. What's Your I.Q.7 Nine er ten correct it superior, even er eight fa eicellent; five er 9ii il good. 1. Does the electron, when detached from the atom, be come an electric charge? 2. Junior and senior class college students arc known as what kind of "men"? 3. How does a deciduous tree chiefly differ from an evergreen? i. is ine caliber or a gun barrel its exterior or interior diameter? 5. Did Italy as well as Ger many declare war on the U.S lifter Pearl Harbor? 6. In what season of the year is the Jewish Feast of the Passover observed? 7. Is hydrogen the lightest known gas element? 8. Are pollen, the tiny fer tilizing grain, generally held to be mule or female? 9. Did the ancient Aztecs practice cannibalisms? 10. Was Bathsheba the wife of Solomon or David? Answers: 1. Yes. 2. "Upper classmen." 3. It sheds its leaves. 4. Interior. 5. Yes. 6, Spring. 7. Yes. I. Ml 9. Yes. 10. David. Optimist and Pessimist There's a wry little story going the rounds about the difference between an optimist and a pessimist. An optimist, it says, learns to speak Russian. A pessimist, it adds, learns to speak Chinese. This not-very-funny remark reflects the opin ion of a growing number of people that, while Russia is our No. 1 national foe today, Red China will be tomorrow and will constitute a far worse danger to western civilization than Russia. VklE ALSO know a man who is convinced that within the next few years Russia and the United States once again will be allies forced into it by the increasing threat of a strong, grow ing, amoral Red China, imbued with the idea that war is the only method whereby communism can achieve its objectives. Our friend mav be rijrht. And it is with this in mind that recent dis patches from Bucharest, tellinc of the widening guit between MiKita Knrushchev and the Red Chinese over K s insistence on following his "co existence" plans, have a special significance. significance. THIS dispute, which Tfromlin ifaolr mow Or it may, in fact, tne end or tne alliance Russia and Red China. At any rate, it is evidence of the fact that the monolithic solidarity of A 1 - i-1 J . not as inuiiuiiuiiu ana sotia as we nave Deen lea to believe by Red propaganda. Phil Newsom, foreign editor of the United Press International, commented on this subject tne otner aay as ronows : "London observers predict the Ideological struggle between Moscow and Peiplng will get worse before it gets better. Red China's Mao Tse-Tung is not ready to bow to Nikita Khrushchev's dictate that Moscow will be the sole interpreter of Marx and Lenin, and will look to the die-hards in the Kremlin and East Europe for support of the old Idea that war between Socialism and Capitalism is inevitable. However, both sides will try to avoid a formal rift which would be In the in terest of neither Moscow nor Peiping. The deep-seated rift may account for some wild swings in Communist policy during the coming months." . . . -i - . . I7ROM our standpoint, the development and further widening of aitnough it would also be fraught with dangers. A real, honest-to-goodness break-up between the giants of international Communism certainly wouia increase world tensions, and probably would increase the chances of war. Khrushchev's motives are inscrutable, and we have eveiy right every duty to be deeply sus picious of them. But it is at least possible that he finds him self supporting "peaceful co-existence" with the west simply because of his fear of Red China's growing power and growing intransigence. D USSIA, for so long a harip Iflnri hafl mnrlo decades in education, in science, in industry, and, perhaps most significant of all, in the growth of a "middle class" of scientists, teachers, ad ' - , ..mm "".-.V ministrators, ana proiessionai people. Living standards are rising. So is the Soviet's economic power. It can be last tning Kussia wants today, and that it views askance Red China's neanderthalic drum-beating. Caught in this dilemma with a hostile and fearful, but still potent, west on one side, and a rising tide of raw power on the other Khrush chev may indeed be seeking a left-handed ac commodation with the west. But if he is. it will agonizing and tortuous progress, for he will find violent opposition both at home and abroad. And such a route would, indeed, account for "some wild swings in Communist policy during the coming months." E.A. What Course for Us? So, if the above speculation turns out to have some basis to it and even if it doesn't what must the U.S. do? We must: 1. Remain strong militarily, until a firm and enforceable disarmament Kea tnina, can De worked out. 2. Retain and strengthen our alliances. 3. Use every means sions and encourage international amity. fNE of the most important of these means, it "wiiio uo, ia bu m.it:aot; tiic etioc ami illicitly oi communication between the world s power blocs. There is an outside chance you can reach an understanding with an enemy if you're talk ing to him. There isn't ANY chance if you aren't. And we should use the United Nations. Despite all its failings, all its faults, all its weaknesses, the U.N. is the one available inter national forum today. By bypassing it, as we have increasingly in the last few years, we have passed up one of the most effective means of getting our point of view across to friend, enemy and neutral alike. "NE other potent way to work for a peaceful world is to assist and encourage the develop ment of the new nations of Africa and Asia. Imaginative and thoughtful employment of foreign aid and technical assistance offered in a genuine spirit of helpfulness; not in a crass spirit of "buying friends" will do more for ultimate peace than most people can imagine. None of this will be easy, nor will it be cheap. But the United States, ucu.taicu icoucib ujj, iiiuca um.MC uuwn IU these hard tasks. Th alternative is horror. E.A. is a live one within the rfit4nn - l n rf Vi i m - portend the bednniner of or convenience between the Communist camp is 1 1 1 , 1 1 this rift would be fine semi-literate, semi-bar- rrianf efiMrlne In i-ananf recent. giwiiv 1. 1 mi..; lit argued that war is the have to be a slow and agreement, including available to lesson ten acting through imacina- Dennis the K III mMrnc 'ViV tkw SR0W7 tfA MUSZICMAN'MYAtoM WONT Communications Letters to the Editor must bear writer, although under certain circumstances lhe use of a pen name or initial for publication is permissible. The Mail Tribune reserves the right to edit all letters with a view to clarification and condensation. lication must not exceed 400 words. The letters printed in this column do not necossarily represent the views of the paper; in fact the contrary is No Santa Clous To the Editor: Some of your readers are asking, "What is the difference be tween the two political par ties since both are interested in the general welfare of our citizens?" Wide disagreement occurs in the method of achieving this goal. Democrats want us to trans fer responsibility from our selves to the group. They want everything to bear the label, "Made in Washington." They want power and author ity to center there, they want more and more governmental restrictions, regulations, and interventions. Republicans believe that freedom's greatest privilege is individual responsibility, and that with every step in government assistance there is a corresponding lessening of this individual sense of re sponsibility. it should be plain to see that too much dependence on Washington d 1 s c o u rages thrift, a quality on which prosperity depends. Further more, when you take away a man's initiative and independ ence, you take away what is essential to character build ing. We cannot help our citi zens by having Washington do for them what they could and should do for themselves and at a great saving in costs. The Republicans want to con serve the system of free markets and private initiative as the best means yet discov ered to insure a sound, grow ing economy. What has been the result during the last sev en years? The highest stand ard of living the world has ever known. As soon as Ike took office, big business, with confidence in the soundness of our fu ture economy, made plans to spend billions for expansion. The greatest peace-time pros perity on record resulted and we are all getting our share. Working people have found jobs at record wages without war. Farm land is bringing record prices. Schools, churches, parks, roads, in fact everything shows the fruits of this administration's sound program. Democratic candidates for three decades have been buy ing votes by squandering pub lic money. They seem to have succeeded in making voters believe that they can give mem an tney want and no one will have to pay the bill This approach is neither real istic nor honest, yet it gets votes and that is why you hear it every day during campaign. These self-styled clear that it is the public purse wnn wnicn they are liberal. We must beware lest they sweep away our nation al wealth to the point where there is no longer the abili ty to borrow, maintain nation al defense, or even to keep up our present charity pro gram. The Republicans have lost elections because they have chosen the sound but diffi cult way, rather than tiromise to stoop to Santa Claus meth ods that would harm and im pede this nation for genera tions to come. This is the par ty that deserves the whole hearted support of everyone who loves his country. ' D. D. Jansen Elk River, Minn. Our Senior Citiiens To the Editor: Do you really know? U n counted thousands of elderly people In our country are subsisting on Social Se- curtty or ,mall prlvRte pcn. stons. living with their grown Menace the name and address of the Letters submitted for pub often the case. children in over crowded households, or alone in un sanitary fire traps, eating just what their meagre incomes can afford. Soon they are suffering from malnutrition, some get so weak they even die alone and are found days later. We know that thousands of persons over the age of 65 depend entirely on Old Age Assistance, average gross in come is $99.33 monthly. A recent Housing Authority sur vey in parts of our state re vealed that more than 75 per cent of these elderly persons are living in dwellings that are sub-standard, in violation of one or more codes relating to safety, sanitation, health and decency! Due to inadequate housing, some of these people who are ambulatory but able to take personal care of themselves are taken to nursing homes, which is a drain on small sav ings, their families and public welfare for expensive care. And there are people in re tirement homes who should be in nursing homes. We know it is cheaper for group living. For example, one person with $100 can't afford rent, food, and heat, besides medications, but if a group could get together and pool their $100 monthly in come, eat in a common dining room, each could have his own room and privacy, or join the group in a general lounge, T.V. and recreation room. There is really no need to spend the twilight years alone, underfed, unclean, un loved and unwanted, or with dreadfully ill persons. There are licensed retire ment homes in our locality which are periodically in spected, and qualified to care for older folk in the smaller income bracket. Older folk dread having to leave their homes, which is natural after years of hard work and saving for their re tirement years, only to be crowded in with sick or in compatible companions and forgotten by the outside world. We need our senior citizens, as much as they need us. As long as medical science is pro longing life for our older peo ple and industry refuses to hire new workers after they reach the ripe old age of 45, there just must be provision made for their care. Compare the many who cannot with the few who can afford to buy into the magnificient manors being built for the wealthy. What are we going to do about the many? In our civili zation are they to live their twilight years in squalor? Pearl E. Copley, ' Board Director, Oregon Association of Licensed Homes for the Aged, Inc. Southern Oregon District, 1117 S.W. "G" st. Grants Pass, Ore. Impossible To the Editor: Let us mark the day,- the first one of sum mer this year, as one when the impossible happened! It wasn't possible, we knew quite well before it happened. Now, 1 am sure it didn't, actu ally. It only appears to have taken place. It hasn't! It's im possible! The Eisenhower "adminis tration" announced (through Secretary of State Herter) that it had abandoned "top level" diplomacics-that it had returned to the traditional modus operandi of interna tional principles in all foreign affairs. (Note: It is to be ob served that Mr. Elsenhower (for once) didn't do any talk- Anti-U.S. Decreasing, But Capital Needs By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign Editor Caracas -IUP&- A prominent Venezuelan politican exploded with anger recently at a JWW query from a visiting Amer ican newsman. "We don't need the Yan k e e dollar," he said. "We have nothing to be grateful for to the Yankee d o 1- j'hil NKwsoM lar." It was an extreme expres sion of an attitude which has proven practical for politic ians who would shift responsi- Whither English? West Asks In New Lingual Bewilderment By DICK WEST Washington - (UPD - If you overheard a couple of grown men talking about a "nixie r5."S 1 i g h t," the s. v i c n a n ces are V m you would get sick right on the sidewalk But if some one explained that they were merely talking in ma chine Ian- Diik vveit g u age, omer- wise known as "computer- ese," you likely would have a different reaction. Then you might step back a few paces, genuflect in the di rection of the nearest una bridged dictionary and join me in asking "whither Eng lish?" ing. It was Mr. Herter who took the 'bull by the horns' and "told all.") Now, mind you, all of this has happened after eight years - after the investment of several billions of dollars of money - and without re ducing the $285 billion na tional debt by as much as one American penny. (NB. I man aged to clear up all my own personal debts this year. Did you? If so, you lucky fellow, you. With myself!) As if everybody didn't know that there was an in ternational medium for the, settlement of affairs among nations - backed by interna tional laws and principles conceived over hundreds of years, or the life of European, Asiatic and American govern ments - which Mr. Eisenhow er conceived should be scrapped - and his own domi nant personality extended to all the world for the settle ment of all problems, nation al or international. Now, at long last, out of the other cheek, all of this is abandoned and the ancient modus oper andi shall be returned to its own! Hallelujah! Still, I am wondering if we should believe this! Maybe it is just anotner fairy story. Let us wait around and see. Fee Clifford Esteb Box 1022, Medford All's Well . . . Etc. To the Editor: The U. S. has set a new record, accord ing to CBS commentator Paul Harvey; the U. S. ' has the greatest number of jail in mates per thousand inhabi tants of all modern world countries, which Is 176 for every one hundred thousand population. An old adage back in the "good old days" of the 1890s read like this: "Why get into prison when there is more room on the outside?" Yes we are living in a speeded up and planned econ omy of many facets and com binations. In the day of rug ged individualism, there were but few civil laws, like in the old West each man was more or less his own law and most infractions of the law were settled without much com ment, delay of justice or fan fare. It is a fact the world is a much better place to live in today, regardless of all its short-comings and blundcr ings. The upward process of evolution is slow but progress seems to transcend all things, justifying "All's well that ends well." Bert Kissinger 520 Boardman st. Medford View on Loans To the Editor: I certainly did enjoy Iris Huff's letter. I wish you would print more letters with food for thought in them, instead of so many bickering letters. As for in stance, the ones on ADC and the ones on dogs. I will answer just one of Iris' questions giving my per sonal opinion. Not everyone could live and operate with out credit and loans: but the big majority of us could live better without MOST of our credits and loans. Viola Rogers Drew Rural Station Tiller, Ore. Attitude in bility for Venezuela's long history of dictatorships and her present economic difficul ties to the United States and to U.S. business in Venezuela. The speaker was Prof. D. Lopez Orihuela, a leader of the Republican Democratic Union party which is one of three in Venezuela's leftist leaning government coalition. Specifically, he was attack ing the U.S. interests which developed Venezuela's rich oil industry. No Wide Hatred His opinion was not neces sarily universal in Venezuela, nor was the "Yanqui go home" sign scrawled on a wall of Central university where a A "nixie light," I have just learned, is a device used on an electronic brain. To me, it is symbolic of the darkness that is falling over the Eng lish language. For a long time, I have had the feeling that our old de mocracy was developing a class system based not on so cial orders but on lingual dis orders that are dividing us into uncommunicative camps. Already we have seen the civil and military branches of our government break away from the central language and move into the suburbs of ba bal. More recently, our teen agers have been staging se mantical street riots designed to overthrow the mother tongue. Now I note that verbal gangrene has begun to infect the business world. I noted this in a booklet just publish ed by the Minneapolis-Honeywell Regulator Co., which seems to be having trouble conversing with some of its customers. In days past, the company explained, instrument lingo was comparatively simple, composed of such terms as "proportional action," "three mode control" and "frequen cy response. Then along came automa tion and it began to run into terms like "transfer func tion," "transient state" and "sinusoidal," which sounds to me like an inflammation of the nasal passages. Automation Dictionary To help get over these road blocks, the company brought out an "automation dictionary" and for awhile everything ran along fine. But lately, it said, it has been getting "a large number of blank stares from our old friends." The lines of communication began getting clogged upon the introduction of electronic brains in the instrument field. Up sprang a new language barrier called "computerese." The company has attempt ed to overcome this obstacle by publishing a booklet con taining a glossary of compu terese" terms. It was here that I ran across the "nixie light," as well as the "trans ducer," the "radix" and the "binary digit." I m sure the company DAY Members Attend Meeting Bend-At the annual three day convention of t h e Dis abled American Veterans here last week end several resolu tions were passed affecting various chapters throughout the state, according to the or ganization. Included was one placing a special assessment upon all the membership in the state. A 10 cent per capita tax will be assessed to augment the hospital work now carried on by the department chairmen at the three Veterans' instal lations at Portland, Roscburg and White City. Attending the meeting from the southern Oregon area were Adjutant and Mrs. George Simmons, Service Of ficer and Mrs. Pat Graham, Medford, and Mr. and Mrs. James Lillie, Coos Bay; Mrs. H a z el Rawls, department DAV auxiliary commander; Mrs. Bertha Neff, outgoing local auxiliary head, and Mrs. Roberta Wolfe, commander-elect of auxiliary 8. Corvallis will be the site of the 1961 convention. Washington-UIPD-Rep. Walt er Norblad has announced that William D. Heathering ton has been selected as act ing postmaster at Corvallis, Ore. WtNtgltctSITpptM FALSE TEETH Do filte trtt ne. Hip or wouble then you talk, ml Uuch or uiFtsrf Don't be tnnof f4 nd embBrTMM br rich hioettapt. IASTSKTH. Ml liallne (nx-ecull rewim to nxU IM on row pletot. kioea ftlae more ftxrra Ml Olrn vesfldeat fert. tag of ttcurlry end Ae4 eomlerk Ko lummT. roor immy. eooty, peitr t"U or leu- ot "'TilMn frT el Wf mi Venezuela Seen seminar was being conducted for the benefit of visiting U.S. newsmen. The next day a Caracas newspaper answered Lopez Orihuela. In a seven-year period, it said, the oil indus try had left about $10 billion in Venezuela, and it added: "Corrupt or inept government used a great deal of it." There are few indications that there will be a repetition now of the violence which ex ploded in Caracas against Vice President Richard Nixon in 1958. There is, instead, an indi cation of an improvement in the Venezuela attitude toward the United States. Communist means well but I doubt the booklet will contribute much toward the preservation of ba sic English. We need to get back to scientific terms that everyone can understand, like "whozits," "dojigger" and "thingamajig." In the Day's News By FRANK From Geneva: Russia and its communist satellites abruptly walked out of the ten-nation disarmament conference in an obviously re hearsed maneuver which blocked hearing of new West ern proposals and threw the parley into angry turmoil. Chief Soviet delegate Zorin (the same man who broke up the last East-West disarma ment conference in London in 1957) announced that the Western powers had refused to discuss disarmament and therefore Moscow considered Delegate Reports On NARCE Meeting Clarence L. Williams, Ash land, recently reported to the southern Oregon chapter of the National Association of Retired Civil employees on activities of the NARCE sixth biennial convention earlier this month in Washington, D. C. Williams is a retired presi dent of the local chapter and delegate to the convention. He reported that 551 delegates were present to discuss is sues concerning by-law am mendments and election of new officers. The Ashland man was one among four can didates for nation president. He was a former secretary of the national organization. Williams reported that a resolution was proposed to se lect a committee to analyze and revise the entire NARCE structure and place it on a more sound organizational foundation. Missiles Due for Metropolitan Areas Washington -(UPD- The De fense Department has revised its air defense plans in a move that will deploy nuclear-tipped Nike Hercules antiair craft missiles around seven metropolitan areas. The areas are on the East and West Coast and the north central part of the country. The missiles previously had been earmarked to protect seven Strategic Air Command bases and the city of Hanford, Wash., site of an atomic ex plosives plant. Under the new plan, they will be used to help defend Washington-Baltimore, Phila delphia, New York, Detroit, Chicago, San Francisco and Los Angeles against possible bomber attack. Each of the areas already has some Nike-Hercules missiles. We Are Proud . . . Of our new funeral home. 'There is none finer anywhere in Southern Oregon." This com ment is not ours. It comes from outsiders who should know. We hear it constantly. LITWILLER FUNERAL HOME Highway 66 at Normal Ave. Ashland Dial MU 5-4541 Only local member of Oregon & Remain Influences in Caracas news papers and radio and televi sion stations once successfully barred most favorable men tion of the United States. To day, they are not quite so suc cessful. As ofricial Venezuela hat become increasingly disen chanted with the Cuban re gime of Fidel Castro, so has sympathy for the United States increased. Regime Needs Help Despite its enormous oil revenues, the govern m e n t confesses it cannot finance its grandiose plans for the future by itself. Private investment is a necessity, and the United States is the natural supplier. Even Venezuelan Com munists, vocal under the gov ernment's free-swinging con cept of democracy, join in promising protection for for eign investments to work alongside government - owned petro-chemical, steel, oil and power projects. Caracas today suffers from a depression. Oil rigs stand idle in the fields and the po tential loss of the Cuban mar ket to Soviet oil import poses a further danger. JENKINS that this conference could do no more work. Whereupon he and the en tire communist bloc of dele gates rose from their seats at the conference table and stalked from the meeting room. VjrHY the walkout? ' John M. Hightower, one of the AP's top diplomat ic experts, puts it like this: "A major purpose of Zor in's action is clearly to put fresh pressure on the U. S. and its allies to yield to the Soviet views on disarmament and CUT THEIR DEMANDS FOR AN IRONCLAD POLIC ING SYSTEM." Hightower adds: "At the same time, Russia probably hopes, by increasing anxieties on the Western side, to SPLIT THE ALLIES. Bri tain has generally been more willing than the United States and France to meet Soviet de mands with concessions." - QUESTION: Is the walkout bad? Or is it good? T ET'S be realistic. - The grave danger in dis armament is that SOME BODY WILL HIDE OUT A GUN. As long as Russia lays its ears, bares its teeth and flatly refuses to accept a po licing system, we must as sume that RUSSIA IS PLAN NING TO HIDE OUT A GUN. So Until Russia proves her sin cerity by accepting a policing system with powers sufficient to enable it to detect the hid ing out of guns we must re fuse to go along with a dis armament program that fails to include a fool-proof polic ing system. To do otherwise would be to doom ourselves in advance to the probability of destruction. That's about the long and the short of it. 'ff? 93 mm MEED CASH NST? Ton bij chiri itit"Momjlr tcharglng monty li about llh charging anything alM-you borrow H now, pay it back latar. PACIFIC gjriiiic. 16 S. CentTaF'siP 3-5308 Bob Griffith, Manager (All loans made under the Oregon Industrial Loan Act) Open Daily 9 s.m.-S p.m. Monday! Till 8 p.m. Closed Saturdays Mrs. Lirwiller National Funeral Director! Ais'o H C. M. Utwiller Ply 0