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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 12, 1960)
TUESDAY, JULY 12, 1910 MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, ORE. 4 rA "Everyone In Southern Ore con Reada The Mall Tribune" tubliihcd Dally except Saturday by H North fir St., Ph 8P a-6Ul. 1 nrifilnT W BUHL. "Editor HERB GREY Adverlllln Mnnnjw GERAJjD T LATHAM. Bus Mr. ERIC W. ALLEN JR.. Mng Editor EARL H ADAMS. City Editor HARRY CHIPMAN, Tcleg. Editor Binumn ivil'rlt Cnnia rHItnr ' OLIVE STARCHER. women's Ed.tor DALE ericksum, circulation mgr An indenendent Newionbor Entered aa lecond claaa matter at Medfora, ureion. unaer aci as March 3, 1897 SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mall In Advance. Copy 10c Dally and Sunday 1 year 113 00 Dally and Sunday moa. 8.00 Dallv and Sunday 3 moa. OS Sunday Only One year $.20 fin ParHMwln Advance MedfORl Aahland, Central Point Eagle point, jacKsonvine, uoia nui Phoenix. Shady Cove. Rogue Riv. er. Talent and on motor routet. Daily and Sunday 1 year 818 00 Dally and Sunday 1 mo I JO Carrier and Dealara copy 10c All Terma cain in Aovanca "Official Paper of City of Medforl Official Paper of Jcknn County United Preas International Pull Leased Wire TJ.P.1. Telepholo Newaplctutt "MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU Or CIRCULATlUHa WEST HOLIDAY CO., INC Of fice! in New York Chtcano De irnlt. Sin Franelvco. Lot Anseles, Seittl. Portland St Louis. At- uruu Vancouver. p.l. NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION EDITORIAI 1 fv Flight or Time Medford and Jackson County History from the files of The Mall Tribune 10. 20, 30. 40 and 50 years age. 10 YEARS AGO July 12. 1950 (Wednesday) Construction of a multi storied apartment house at Oakdale ave., and West Tenth st, which does not conform to the city's setback regula tions, was approved by the city council last night by a 4-3 vote. New automobiles have be come scarce in Medford due to the Korean war and many local dealers have stopped taking orders. 20 YEARS AGO July 12. 1940 (Friday) The population of Jackson county increased by 2,925 during the past 10 years to a 1940 total of 35,843, ac cording to the census. From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudge Pot" Column: "Mr, Roosevelt is not going to like a third term, because he is never going to have one. He can get away with moving back Thanksgiving day a week, but not moving ahead his stay in the White House four years." 30 YEARS AGO July 12, 1930 (Saturday) Citizens of Oregon will vote on an anti-cigarette bill in November" A forest fire is burning in the Hiatt Prairie section. 40 YEARS AGO July 12. 1920 (Monday) The Medford Chamber of Commerce has hired a com pany to make a special census of the city in an effort to prove the federal census tak- ' ers wrong. Rain threatens valley and tourist reservations at Crater Lake have been cancelled. 60 YEARS AGO JuIt 12, 1910 (Tuesday) Rogue River valley grow ers have filed a request with the Spokane National Apple Show to place winesap ap ples in the same category as newton and golden apples for judging purposes. A block signal system is being installed by Southern Pacific on its tracks between Gold Hill and Tolo. What's Your I.Q.7 Nine er tan cornet i tuptrlen even ei eight It eneellenn five ei Hi ia feed. 1. Is Sholem Asch, author of "Our Destiny," a Jewish or White Russian writer? , 2. Was Boris II the king of ' Rumania or Bulgaria at the outbreak of W. W. II? 3. What is the naval rank of students at the Annapolis Naval Academy? 4. Though "grand" means magnificent, Is it a colloquial ism when used in the sense of "excellent"? S. Should a U. S. Flag be flown night and day over a State capltol? 6. Do rose growers ever plant rose bushes in the fall? 7. Which U. S. President killed a man in a duel? 8. Who was the detective character in the novel "Study In Scarlet?" 9. Is a cretin a kind of caltca, Idiot, or drape? 10. "Men's minds are too ready to excuse guilt in , . ." -whom? ' Aniwern 1. Jewish. 2. Bul garia. 3. Mldihipman. 4. Ye. 8. No. Day only, 6. Ye. 7. Andrew Jackion. 8. Sherlock Holme. 9. Kind of idiot. 10. " e a e xhemtelvts." NATIONAL We ALL Own the Forests In common with about 50 million or more other American citizens, we find that tossing a tent, some food, and sleeping bags and air mat tresses in the car, and taking off for a night or two in the woods, is just about the pleasantest way there is to relax. v ' This we did last week end, journeying to one of our favorite spots, a small forest service camp ground some SO miles trom home. The tall trees, the chuckle of the nearby stream, the smell of the hot sun on the forest duff, the warmth of the campfire and the gleam of the stars through the trees at night these are a benison beyond compare. T'HE week end wasn't spoiled, but it was badly marred, by two factors previous "campers" who were at best litterbugs and at worst menaces, and timber cutting along the forest road right of way and along the stream. At the camping site we chose, we found four or five beer bottles and cans tossed carelessly around, innumerable bits and pieces of paper, bottle caps, and burned-out sparklers, and, uist across the creek under the stately trees and in forest duff, five or six spots where fires had been lighted against all rules of safety and common sense. As we strolled around the rest of the camp, we saw where someone had dumped a box-full of old magazines, which had been strewn by wind and water down a tributary creek; more beer bottles, (some of them smashed into jagged frag ments), and cans, more unsafe campfire spots, and several places where living trees had been hacked, by axes either for firewood, or for no reason at all. THIS kind of moronic litterbugging and worse is, we suppose, inevitable in a day when any one with a car and a case of beer can get out into the woods. The logging too (which we subsequently learned was "salvage" timber cutting to weed out dead trees and snags but which left an al mighty and unsightly mess) is, according to some lights, necessary. The forest service makes much of its excellent watchwords "multiple good for the greatest number in the long run. But it still needs to be reminded, sometimes, that, by jingo, the Americans ALL Americans -K)vn the forests. How long will the great bulk of them tolerate dirty, unpoliced camps, and indis criminate, poorly planned timber cutting? E. A. Americanus Moronicus Bill Jenkins, over in Klamath Falls, is sim ilarly irritated. Last week his wrath was di rected at the Great American Litterbug, too. In part, his Herald & News column said : "There is a great to-do every so often about ail the . land we are losing to erosion, to bad land practices, to ill advised industrial projects. But little is said about all the land that is being lost due to simple littering. "If anyone is interested I can point out miles and miles of roads that would be pretty, some beautiful, were it not for the shameful litter that has accu mulated ... "Many people, misguided of course, can look with enthusiasm at the prospect of a 20 per cent gain in population. But will these same people be equally enthusiastic over a 20 per cent jump in the amount of trash that is unloaded along the public highways, in private driveways, in our parks and monuments, dumped into our rivers and trout streams? "I doubt it." HERE'S one more thing about litterbugs. They cost you money. The state highway commission spends thou sands of dollars every year cleaning up their roadsides money which could be saved, and put to better use, if it weren't for the thoughtless, the careless, the deliberately sloppy Americanus Moronicus the litterbug. E. A. East-West Highway Transportation is society's life-blood. That is the reason for all the fuss over the so-called "Winnemucca-to-the-Sea" route. California is making its pitch to become the western end of this route, by digging a tunnel under Oregon mountain on the Redwood high way, and otherwise improving that road. QRANTS PASS and Medford are both under standably enthusiastic about an improved east-west highway through their environs. Another major link, which, if all goes well, will be completed in less than two years, is the new all-weather trans-Cascade highway going past Lake of the Woods, to connect to the paved highway to Klamath Falls. " From Klamath Falls east to Adel, the route is a paved, good-standard highway. A ND progress is being made east of there, too. "Nevada is working on the road from Win nemucca northwest to the state line. Lake county has finished the next 17 miles to 80 Der cent of grade, having done most Ll 1. . 1 won wui-k; anu is now pioneering anocner bJ2 miles, which will later be constructed by the state. The state has undertaken resnonsibilitv for the remaining 15 ';. miles, through Blizzard Gap, down Greaser canyon (the worst section), and across the Warner valley to Adel. By 1963, it should be possible to go from Crescent City to Wihnemucca (and on east to Salt Lake City) on good use," and "the greatest of the heavy construc- , n i road all the way. E. A. Dennis the HftaM ! II - j -1 ' ST 'I THINK ITS PART 6UBOB SUM Communications Letter io the Editor muil bear the nam and addren oi the writer, although under certain circumstance the use of a pen nam or initial for publication is permissible. The Mail Tribune reserve the right to edit all letter with a view to clarification and condenialion. Letter lubmlttad for pub lication muil not exceed 400 word. The letter printed in this column do not necotiarlly represent the view oi th paper: in fact the contrary i often the case. Why? To the Editor: Why do you not print the news about Mexico? We hear on the radio about Mexico joining In sup port of Castro. For two or three days we have heard on the air about speeches in the Mexican congress in favor of Castro and against the United States. But I have searched your paper in vain for one little item about this issue. Why? Carroll Powell, Box 621. Central Point, Ore. Editor's note: The story to which Mr. Powell refers con cerned a leading member of the Mexican congress making a speech sympathetic to Cas tro. The AP apparently thought the story more im portant than the UPI did, and some papers thought it more important than others. In the squeeze of reporting political developments, rioting in the Congo, U.S. response to Cuba's allegations and vice versa, Khrushchev's insults, plus local news, the few para graphs we received on the matter were omitted. the Hard Way To the Editor: When I read articles written by maladjust ed non-conformists such as Mr. Walter Reece I am re minded of a family that lived in our neighborhood just prior to the first World War. The father was a natural ized German American who antagonized everyone with his criticisms of his adopted coun try, and never lost an oppor tunity to show that his sym pathies lay with his Father land. The first thing every morn ing the entire family was marched into the front room to salute a large framed pic ture of the Kaiser. His entire family was forced to pay for his disloyal actions because there was such strong resentment by every one. Years passed. The children grew old enough to shift for themselves and he gained his life's ambition-he had saved enough to go back to Germany for an extended visit. When he got there things were not the same as he thought they were and he soon returned. In the meantime his wife had packed up and left. Her sons had helped her start a rooming house. He came home to an empty house, a few sticks of furni ture and the large picture of the Kaiser. He spent the rest of his days a friendless, lonely, disillu sioned old man. Times have not changed in some respects. Some people have to learn the hard way. Here is a suggestion - the thing that hurts an egocentric more than anything else is to be Ignored. Leila A. Morrow 531 North Bartlctt St. Medford. Senator Morse Helped To the Editor: As a regular reader of your newspaper, I have reached the definite con clusion that you strive at all times to be fair. Therefore, I feel that you would not hesi tate to give Senator Wayne Mores a boost, whenever he does something praiseworthy. The Senator's interest in the welfare of the veterans stay ing at this domiciliary has re sulted in the projected en largement of our coffee shop. This work, as evidenced by the following letter, has been Menace AN' PART MOO PI6.' moved up three years, and is now under way. David Frisch P. O. Box 292 White City, Ore. April 27, 1980 Dear Senator Morse: We have considered Mr. David Frisch's complaint that the available space and canteen service are inadequate at the Veterans Administration Dom iciliary. White City. Ore. We investigated a similar com plaint made by Mr. Frisch last November but could not sup port his principal allegations except for the inadequacy of space. A project is scheduled for 1963 which should correct the space problem. We are sending a copy of this letter to the Veterans Can teen Service Field Director, San Francisco, Calif., with the request that during hi next visit to this station he and the manager consider talking with Mr. Frisch to see if a better understanding can be reached. William S. Middleton, M. D., Chief Medical Director, VA Domiciliary, White City, Ore. Model A To the Editor: There are those who view with an atti tude approaching dismay my dislike of the so-called mod ern automobiles and trucks and my enthusiasm of the old Model A Ford cars and trucks. My reason for such is sim plicity, folks, simplicity. No vehicle ever made in these decadent (?) United States was so simple andor easy to keep in repair. I'd make a rough guess that my Ford AA truck is in as safe an operating con dition as any vehicle on the road more than one year old, and perhaps safer than some of those less than one year old. I've thought about contact ing Mr. Khrushchev of Russia to see about getting one of these trucks new from there, as I understand they arc still made in Russia. I wonder, am I un-American? I doubt it. However, personally, I don't think very much of these au tomatic mixmaster transmis sions, automatic pilot, no brains required, vehicles that are far too fast becoming a common thing on the road. With tongue in cheek I could say that those who arc too lazy to steer an automo bile, roll the windows up or down, shift the gears, turn the lights on or off or dim them, etc., etc., should be taken out and shot (I didn't say where or what with). Floyd R. McCabc, 'Ml. Pitt Star rt. Butte Falls, Ore. What's New and How? To the Editor: "Again What's News?" Your Friday's e dl I o r 1 a 1 asked this vital question. Small minds speak or write about people, mature minds, about events, and great minds teach abstract wisdom. It has been truly slated that "facts" arc neither true or false; just "facts." In addition to the five W's, Ihe news should reveal "the means" used and the "how." United Slates Justice Felix Frankfurter has denounced the press as "the mis-educators" of the people. However, It is a fact that no one man in these United States has "mls educnlcd" the people more than Felix Frankfurter In the Saeco-Vanzctti case of 1020-27. As a young lawyer, and later as a professor at Harvard law school, Mr. Frankfurter with Stop-Kennedy Movement 'Sunday Punch1 Thrown by Mrs. FDRf But Too By LYLE C. WILSON Sports Aram, Los Angeles OTD The stop-Kennedy move ment had a Stiudny punch, HI ('' after nil. It I I Picked a wal lop, tins sun day p u n c h was delivered by, of all por s o n s, a 75 year . o 1 d woman. T h e story of the effoct Die C Wllioej " day punch can bo briefly told: Not too little perhaps, but surely too lno. There probably wus a time some many months ago when Kennedy would hnve suffered rubbber legs and glazed eyes from the kind of blow Mis. R. aimed at him here. But, com- other pseudo liberals, repeat edly "mis-educated" the poo plo by statements that these "two poor immigrants were put to death for the crime of liberal thought." The facts reveal Sacco und Vanzetti were tried for mur der and not for any treason able thoughts or activities. When Sacco was arrested he wus carrying a 32-ciilibre pis tol containing nine bullets, with 23 more bullets in his pocket. Vanzetti when or rested was currying a 38-cal-ibrc revolver, fully loaded, plus four 12-gauge shotgun shells in his pocket. The bullet from Succo' 32 callbre pistol matched the bullet found In watchman Berradelll's dead body, and the shotgun shells In Vanzet tl's pocket was a vital part of the state's evidence, plus pos itive identification, in an cur lier unsuccessful payroll hold up in which a 12-gaugc shot gun had been used. Yet two recent TV shows distorted the facts and "mis educated" many of the un informed viewers regarding Sacco-Vanzetti. Question: Does the press have the moral, if not legal, obligation to expose such dis tortions? What corrections may the press perform? First, withhold the names of persons, organizations or items pertaining to identifica tion, in news articles or pic ture, informing the reader said name, etc., may be found on back page under a number. Second, If a crime, not any minor violation, publish the name, only upon a plea of guilty or upon conviction thereof. Third, inform the reader "by what means" the news event was experienced, where it Is known, or the means used. Fourth, require reporters to use more care in checking the Information alleged from the storehouse which every good newspaper has In their morgue. Stephen E. Glllls, White City, Ore. JSL Washington Report By WILLIAM Los Angeles - The keen eyes watching this Democra tic national convention are TJZ'3Z&T not.,a" Dcmo- crane eyes. Intelligence o p e r a 1 1 ves from the camp of Richard M. Nixon, with their feet in Los Angeles but their Vlnnrlu ln1A. (Villi. d "a w" - Whita ' phones link ing Los Angeles to Washing Ion, are moving about , here to provide the vice president at his capltol office with a running fill-in of Inside .dope. Nixon agenls, if not lurk ing behind every hotel polled palm, arc nevertheless stand ing watch at every strategic spot. The large and able Nix on staff has been broken Into two divisions. One remains with the vice president him self at general headquarters In Washington. The other Is di recting field work here. The Los Angeles division Is Intent on everything the Democrats do or seem about to do. But most of all a picked squad is assigned to keep In tensive surveillance over Ihe Democratic platform commit tee. A GOOD many Democrats " themselves seem not to know II. But Nixon well knows that Ihe nature of tho Democratic platform ultimate ly adoplcd hero Is almost as Important to him, as the pros pective Republican presiden tial nominee, as the identity of the Democratic nominee himself. This correspondent was frankly told as much by Nixon spokesmen back In Washington. Tho vice president for months has based his whole election campaign strategy on lug as it did only a few hours before the Democrats con vened, Kennedy will be saved by the element of time, as some fighters are aaved by the bell. Expresses Doubt Mrs... u, rapped Kennedy hero with an expression of doubt that he could bo elect ed. She hud doubts, Mr. R. explained, because of the Is sue of religion mid whut she regards us the scnulor s weak ness with Negro volers. In it number of ways she said, "Sen Kennedy has an tagonized the muss of Ne groes, and they will not vote for him at tha heud of the ticket." Mrs. Roosevelt probably is tho foremost, best known member of her purly. Her political enmity can be a se vere handicap. For tho young mm) from Massachusetts, Mrs. R has nll-out polltlcnl enmity so far as the senator muy be considered as a presidential nominee. She Is for him for Rocket-Rattling Not New, But Now Is Closer to Home Cuba By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign Editor Nlkltn Khrushchev official ly hns advanced his cold war front to within less than 100 miles of the SS'afcl When he ., LJ spread com- I VJ?t VI munlsm' pro I "ffc Ju-fl tecl've blank-i v'Vtay. el over Cubn. " w" I0181 "K I p r ocliumillon tVJlun',lo,movci I'liiL nkwsom massively on Latin America, with Cubn as both base and showcase. If such were needed, Khru shchev also supplied final evi dence thnt world communism now considers Cuba securely in the communist camp. "T h c Socialist countries will help their brother, the Cubans," Khrushchev said. Khrushchev's declaration followed only by hours a pain ful memorandum penned by former Cuban Premier and Ambassador-designate to the United States Jose Mlro Car dona who last week broke with the Castro government. America's Dooritep Mlro Cardona said he re alized he had been betrayed when Cuban President Osval do Dortlcos told him: "If Cuba wishes, we shall say that we are Communists. So what?" Thus a new Communlst dominutcd stale is formed on America's very doorstep, astride vital U. S. lines for the Caribbenn and the Pan ama canal, at the last an In valuable Soviet base for es pionage and infiltration, at the worst a base for aggres sive Soviet action against the United States. S. WHITE the assumption that Sen. John F. Kennedy would emerge here as the Democratic presi dential choice. The Nixon peo pie still believe Kennedy lo be the favorite. But they have thou Kill it wise to hedge a bit on the chance that Sen. Lyn don B. Johnson might work an upset and lake the nomin ation for himself, or send it to a third and dark horse con tender. Accordingly, llicy ure "cov ering this convention with great cure In two directions; 1. To get the fastest possible direct word to the vice presi dent when the identity of the man who Is lo be the Demo cratic nominee seems clear. 2. To advise Nixon Instantly when tho platform plunks especially that on civil rights - begin lo take reliable form, a HjUIE second assignment Is hardly less critical than the first. For the Nixon as sumption that Kennedy would be the winner had led to well- advanced planning for an all out Nixon effort In the south -an effort In which President Elsenhower personally would he asked lo lake purl by go ing Into Dixie for speeches In behalf of the Nixon ticket. The President, of course, Is a civil rights moderate. Nixon, too, leans more in that direc tion than toward extremism, The estimate of tho Nixon forces has bcon that Kennedy would be weak in the south for two reasons - the fact that he Is a Catholic, and the prob ability he would run on an extreme Democratic civil rights plank likely to be adoplcd here, Nixon, In a word, not only wants the south but concedes he well might need it. He believes, however, that a Johnson cnndldacy would turn the situalion right around fvleo president, however, and this baffles somo of the pollll- cat realists hereabouts. Favor Stevenion The pnrty line on vice presi dents of Into has been that they should not bo chosen by ii grub bag technique but should bo picked to strength en the ticket und on tho basis of their fitness to Inherit the White House If a president should die. Mr. Roosevelt' 1BUU ticket Is Adlnl E. Steven son for president und Ken nedy (or vice president. Sho shunts, In common with Hurry S. Truman and other big name Democrats, u lost vnuse. That cnuse wu lo stop Kennedy. Kennedy can not bo stopped now. Chairman Paul M. Butler of the Democratic Nntloniil Com mltteo has wnrned that for this convention to reject Kennedy it tho senntor enmo quite close to a nominating majority would be lo Invite election (lay reprisals from Human Catholic voters. Ken- Suld Khrushchev further: "Soviet artillery men, should tho need arise, cun with their rocket firepower support the Cuban people If the aggressive force of the Pentagon dure to begin nn Intervention ugnlnst Cuba . . . l'hut Is. If you like, a warning to those who would like to settle International Issues by force and not reason." Rocket-rattling ha become Salem Youngster Succumbs To Burns Snlcm -WPD- Steven Allen, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ivan J. Allen of Sulem, died in a Salem hospital at 2:45 a.m. today of burns differed Mon day when gasollnr-souked newspapers with which he and his brother were playing caught fire. The brother, Francis, 11. used a gnrden hose to put out tho flumes on Steven, then called firemen, who put out a resultant grnss fire before it hud a chance to sprend. Steven was tnken to the hospital, where It was found he was suffering from first, second and third degree burns. so fur as tho south and border states arc concerned. Tho vice president would not seriously expect lo do much good either In the south or the border states with Johnson at the hcod of the Democratic ticket. WHERE Is - therefore, Ihe possibility, that this con vention muy require Nixon' to make quick and fundamcn-1 tal alterations In his own plans. Once before he has had to do so. Gov. Nelson Rocke feller's abrupt withdrawal last December from conten tion for the Republican nom ination forced the Nixon of fice to junk overnight an elab orate prc-convenlion schedule agulnst Rockefeller. The vice president, one of the mosl careful men In poll tics, wants to have the Instant Information on which lo move instantly If ho must again al ter strategic outlines already provisionally laid down against Kennedy. That Is why there arc some distinctly non Democratic characters on pa trol In Los Angeles. (Copyright. 1960, by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) Counsel With . . . Mr. Insurance Fred Brennan v Fred R. Brennan, C.I.A. PHONE SP 3-7343 MEDFORD INSURANCE AGENCY 27 NORTH HOUY ST. Late nocly Is qullu close- now; poi hup over the top, Youth Political Issue Tho party elder did not wnnl Kennedy, They've got him now. Tho purly cldors knew thai tho Republican would make u big political thing of Kennedy' youth, flu publicum scarcely could ex pect tho old pro Democrat lo help them do that. But on the record I Tru man's lough question to Ken. nvdy: Do you think you aro ready for tho nation and that the tuition Is rendy for youT (ten. Lyndon 11. Johnson of Texu hn been stubbing at Kennedy us a mun lucking ex perience und mature Judge ment. Mrs. Hoosevoll long ago chullonged Kennedy us shy of couruge when the lasuo of ao-culled McCurthylim hud to bo fared. Kennedy appar ently met tho ehnllongo iuc ccssftilly. Tho Democrat' first ludy suggest now, simply, Unit lis enn't win. u rccugnlzcd purl of Khru shchev' cold-war propaganda technique There seems little reaaon to hellrve now that tho Soviet Union would launch World Wur III over Cubn. Caalro Encouraged It u I h o r, that portion ot Khruahchev' pronouncement seemed calculated to encour age Cnitro Into further reck less actions ngiilnat tho Unit ed Slates and U. S. properly remaining In Cuba. Khruahchev' nll-out decla ration for Cadre's Cuba fol lows well established Soviet techniques. In the Middle East, the So viet moved with caution to take ndvimtnge ot nntl-wcst-em sentiments. It inude n barter deal with President Nasser of Egypt, Soviet arms for Egyptian cot ton. It was a first step toward Communist Infiltration of tho Middle East and nn all-out challenge to western Influ ence. It wus followed In 1030 when, as a champion of Egypt, the then-l'remirr Nikolai Bui gnnin wnrned Britain that Russia might use rockets In retaliation for the Invasion of Suez. Thus the words hnve not changed, only tho locality. Mow to Get MORE from your Airline ticket to EUROPE for full details, call or visit George Lewis ROGUE TRAVEL SERVICE We Roiorva and Sell Airline and Sleimihlp Ticket) PHONl SP 2-6779 111 E. 8th Where would you be If fire destroyed your rec ords? Most builnejiei would find thoir collections would shrink up to 70. Give your records the strong lafoguard of o good container. Then give them the Tola protection of Account Re ceivable Insurance. Bill Fish