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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 18, 1960)
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, ORE. THURSDAY. AUGUST H. IM .'Everyone In Southern Oregon Heads ine Man rriDune" published Dally except Saturday by 33 North Fir St., Ph SP 8-8141 ROBERT W RUHL. Editor HERB GREY Advertising Manager GERALD T LATHAM Bua. Mgr ERIC W ALLEN JR.. Mng Editor ' EARL H ADAMS, City Editor HARRY CHIPMAN. Teleg Editor RICHARD JEWETT. Sporta Editor OLIVE STARCHER. Women'a Editor DALE ERICKSON. Circulation Mgr An Independent Newspaper Entered as second class matter at Medford. Oregon, under Act ot March 3. 1807 ' SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mall In Advance. Copy 10c Dally and Sunday 1 year $15 00 Daily and Sunday 6 mos. 8.00 Daily and Sunday 3 mos. 4.28 Sunday Only One vear $4.20 By Carrier In Advance Medford Ashland. Central Point Eagle Point. Jacksonville. Gold Hill Phoenix. Shady Cove, Rogue Rlv. . er. Talent and on notor routes Dally and Sunday 1 year 818 00 . DaMv and Sunday 1 mo 1. 80 - Carrier and Dealers copy 10c All Terma Cash In Advance Official Paper of City of Medford Official Paper of Jackson County United Press International Full Leased Wire U.P.I. Telephoto NewBptetures "MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS Advertising Representative: , WEST HOLIDAY CO., INC. OiV flees in New York, Chicago, De. troit. San Francisco. Los Angeles. Seattle. Portland St. Louis. At lanta, ,VancouverLJM2. NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION NATIONAL EDITORIAI s(pctjai(3)N tin Flight o' Time Medford and Jackson County History from the files ot The Mall Tribune 10. 20, 30, 40 and 50 years ago. 10 YEARS AGO Aug. 18. 1950 (Friday) The Southern Pacific rail road has applied for permis sion to construct a spur line from Tolo to White City. Jackson County district at torney opposes parole of Hugh DeAutremont, youngest of three brothers convicted in 1927 for a train robbery and murder near Ashland, 20 YEARS AGO Aug. 18, 1940 (Sunday) John W. Aiken, the Social ist Labor party candidate for president of the U.S., com plained .that a noise parade in Klamath Falls nearly disrupt ed a meeting he was Holding there yesterday. From Arthur Perry's "Ye SmnriCB Pot" column: "The British and German claims of losses of planes in tne aeruu warfare over the British isles still fail to Jibe with each oth er, or the figures added up by the City Park Field Marsh als." 30 YEARS AGO Aug. 18, 1930 (Monday) The Red Cross has establish- ed a wood pile where tran sients can work for food and lodging. It is not very busy. ' The federal population count gives the city of Med ford a total populace of 11, 085. 40 YEARS AGO Aug. 18, 1920 (Wednesday) Franklin D. Roosevelt, Democratic candidate for vice president, will make a brief 'talk at the local train depot fiundav. ' An "enormous" run of sal- 1 mon is now on at the, mouth of the Rogue river. 50 YEARS AGO Aug. 18, 1910 (Thursday) The forestry bureau has 1s ' sued a call for troops to help combat a fire which has burn ed over 300 acres of trees at the base of Mt. McLoughlln. The fire poses a great threat to Medford's water supply as it is burning in the Little Butte creek watershed. By the time the Clark and Henry Paving company leaves Medford in October, it will have paved more than 120,000 square yards of city streets. What's Your 10.? Nine or ler. correct il superior; seven or eight is excellent; five or lis Is good. 1. On the map, does the toe or the heel In the "boot" of Italy nearly touch Sicily? 2. Is the hollyhock plant an annual or perennial flowering plant? 3. What is the first signa ture on the Declaration of In dependence? 4. "Half nelson" is a term used In which sport? 5. A fool and his money are soon " what? 6. What mammals are pro tected, insofar as their breed ing grounds, on the Pribilof Islands? 7. During which war was "John Brown's Body" a fa mous song? 8. A shallow body of water near a sea is called a 1 n? 0. Kennedy and Lodge are from what State? 10. Which noted American invented the lightning rod? Answers: 1. Toe. 2. Peren nial, 3, John Hancock. 4, Wrestling. 5. ". . . parted.". 6. Seals. 7. War Between the Slates. 8. Lagoon. 9. Massa chusetts. 10. Benjamin Frank lin. . Some Premise The Republican candidate for Congress from this district, Dr.' Durno of Medford, said again this week he favors health care for the aged on some kind of insurance set up. But in outlining nis proposal he made it any brand that will work. Being against a medical care plan for the aged in this dav and age is political suicide. So those who disfavor it are reduced to making red herring proposals of ineffective methods. One is forced to the conclusion such is Durno's tactic. He looks with alarm wherein working people would pay for their health insurance after they retired through de ductions frpm their pay checks. This is the way they pay for their Social Security pensions today. Durno feels anything so "compulsory" would be un-American, or something. If he's right, then we'd better get rid of the Social Security system altogether, for it is found ed on the same premise as the Forand Bill. Coos Bay World. : French Are Shocked Robert Kostka, the art film authority puts into perspective our peculiar American attitude to ward "decency." He pointed out, in an interview with Marvin Tims of this newspaper, that many American films are rejected by Europeans as be ing too morbid, too brutal, too suggestive. But by "suggestive' he means not suggestive of sex, but suggestive of murder, arson, mayhem, burglary and other activities of that type. This stuff is just too strong tolerant ot the female iorm but intolerant of stab- bings and torture. Mr. Kostka's observation bears' out what was written in these columns a couple of months ago. We have in America a curious double standard. We cret terribly upset about "racy" books and movies, even when they But we tolerate detailed both in literature and on PARTLY because of time and partly because of r taste, we don't spend a great many . hours-in Iront ot the magic zl-inch screen. J3ut we have yet to. see on television a show that could be called racy. But many have been the shows, ot the Mike Hammer type, which seem to be pitched toward the perverted tastes of those who get their kicks from bloodshed and violence. .. . We still contend that the self-appointed cen sors, book burners and country are going alter the wrong kind of stun. They forget that there were 10 commandments, not just one. Eugene Register-Guard. The Common Enemy There's one problem the leaders of the Demo cratic Party are 'not likely to have this year. It is not likely they will require a loyalty oath of any prominent Democrat. They won't have to ask 'em to swear that they will not vote for the Re publican candidate, Kichard Nixon. They may disagree on some points, but on one all prominent Democrats will be united. To a man, they thoroughly dislike Mr. Nixon. Some Republicans will argue that Mr. Nixon did not say all the harsh things that he is alleged to have said about some prominent Democrats and the Democratic Party. But their protests will shatter on deaf ears. The Democrats are con vinced that Mr. Nixon did make some rough statements about their party and some members of their party and they are not going to forgive and forget. THEY are sure that he questioned the patriotism of Harry S. Truman, Dean Acheson and Adlai Stevenson, among others, and the Democratic party. the Speaker of the House, Mr. Sam Rayburn, has said he never will forgive Nixon. When Mr. Sam speaks it is not idle chatter. He means it, and no Democrat knows better how to take care of an enemy. Democrats with long memories have not for gotten how Mr. Nixon got a big push up the lad der to the political big time. He got there by de feating Helen Gahagen (Mrs. Melvyn Douglas) in a California contest, the record of which shows Nixon repeatedly questioned the patriotism of Mrs. Douglas. I7E WILL find out this year how well Mr. " Nixon can "take it." He has shown he is a pretty fair hand in a rough and tumble political fight. But what he's been through will seem, be fore this campaign is out, to have been no more rigorous than a tiddly-winks contest. Democrats will give him the works and they will thoroughly relish every minute of it. He is the common enemy. It will not be necessary to enlist volunteers to lead the charge against him. Pendleton East Oregonian. Eisenhower Visits Grandchild in Hospital Washington (UP1) President Eisenhower drove to Walter Reed Army Medical Center Wednesday to visit his grand daughter, Susan, who under went an operation foj- re moval of her tonsils and adenoids. Susan, 1, is one of four chil dren of Lt. Col. John Eisen hower and his wife, Barbara. The president drove to the hospital with his son. pretty clear ne isn t ior upon the Forand Bill for the French, who are are not really very racy. depictions of brutality, him. movie closers around the Oregon Veteran Loan Earnings Disclosed Salem - IUP1I - Earnings of the Oregon veteran farm and home loan program were $1, 228,281 during the past fiscal year, according to H. C. Saal feld, director of the Depart ment of Veterans Affairs. He said the earnings were the highest in the history of the department. Last year also saw a record 4,345 loans granted amount ing to $44,783,150. Dennis the 'Y(Xl'B THE ONLY PCOPLB TH4T AttftaARET GAve m. Evefweooy Today fir Tomorrow By Walter Co-existence and the Congo The task of the U. N. in the Congo is entirely without precedent and it is inordi nately diffi- c u It. Indeed, the problems are insoluble unless the g o vernments which make up the U. N. can rise above their normal behavior to a much higher level of reason and good will. The diplomatic leadership of I Mr. Hammarskjoid, which fZtlSSSLi'p has bot- prin- ciple that if you expect a lot, men will try to live up to it. The indispensable condition of success is that the great powers should realize that each of them has a vital in terest in the mission of the U. N. This is a case where the principle of unanimity, which is imbedded in the Charter, is necessary. The great powers must do more than acquiesce. They must ac tively support the mission, us ing their Influence where it counts. Great Britain and the United States have used their influence with their Bel gian friend and ally. The Bel gian government will no doubt use its influence in Katanga. There is every reason why the Soviet government should use its influence with Premier Lumumba on behalf of mod eration. nnHE powers have a common -- interest In the Congo, It is to prevent a civil war and many tribal wars from tempt ing, inviting, and even com pelling the . great powers to intervene. It is impossible that any one great power should intervene in the Congo with out the others intervening also. We do not think of inter vening. We know quite well that the Soviets would inter vene if we did. Moscow can be quite sure that if it inter venes, we shall also intervene. The primary aim of the U. N. is to preserve the peace of the world. In specific terms that means in this case neu tralizing and sterilizing the Congo so that it does not be come a stake in the cold war. This can be done only if the great powers want it to be done. IF PREMIER Lumumba can be persuaded by wise council from his African neighbors and from Moscow to forego the idea of conquer ing Katanga, If Mr. Tshombe can be persuaded to look for a constitutional solution un- dor U. N. auspices, civil war may be avoided. This will give the members of the Unit ed Nations time to study the enormous problem of making a Congolese federation a go ing concern The tragedy of the Congo, as all the world now realizes, is that the Congolese them selves have so very few train ed leaders, administrators and technicians. Belgium granted them independence without having prepared them for it, And the problem of the Congo -asuming that great power intervention and civil war are both avoided - is how to fill this vacuum, I have heard it estimated that to provide officers for the army and the police, ad' ministrators, and technicians for the central and provincial governments and for the utili ties and industries, about 30, 000 trained people are needed These trained people exist. They are the Belgians who have run the Congo, and it is fair to say that they are for the present irreplaceable. Un til the Congolese can be ed ucated and trained, there are it Walter Lineman!! Menace OONT LIKE THIS HAIRCUT ' use thinks Lippmann not 30,000 French - speaking civil servants and technicians and doctors available in the world to go to the Congo. THIS will mean that an ex tremely delicate problem lies ahead. How, without the restoration of Belgian politi cal or military power in the Congo, can the trained Bel gians be persuaded to stay, or if they have left, to return? How can the other African nations and the Soviet and Chinese governments be in duced to agree to the use of the virtually irreplaceable Belgians? These are not questions that the State Department can or should try to answer in the form of public pronounce ment. The problem is in the United Nations and for once our role is, thanks be, not that of the leader who must fix it all but of the loyal sup porters. THE difficulties of the Con go problem are increased by the fact that communica tion has broken down be tween Moscow and Washing ton. If it were possible to talk with Mr. K., instead of trad ing Insults with him, it would be useful to be able to say to him that what the U. N. is doing in the Congo is a dramatic example of how co existence can be made to work. The example might be applied elsewhere. ((c) 160, New York Herald Tribune, Inc.) Final Preparations Made for 'Duchess' Ashland Final prepara tions have been completed for the Monday, Aug. 22, opening of John Webster's "The Duch ess of Malfi." Having now performed all of Shakespeare's works at least once, the Ashland theater launches Monday a new pro duction series devoted to the works of Shakespeare's con temporaries. Festival veteran James San doe is directing the play, the fifth show in the organiza tion's 1960 schedule. The regu lar season o f f e r i n g "The Taming of the Shrew," "Julius Caesar," "The Tempest," and "Richard II," opened July 25. The four have been rotating nightly and will now be joined by two showings of "The Duchess" on Aug. 22 and 31. The theater's 41-night run ends Sept. 3 in Ashland. rop Duster Has ew Busy Minutes Wynne, Ark.-IIIPD-Jack Gil let is so disgusted he may give up crop dusting. Gillett was gassing up his plane Wednesday as the en gine idled. The engine suddenly caught fire. Gillett ran to the cockpit door and pulled back the throttle, hoping wind from the propeller would put out the flames. Instead the plane began to move, and before he could leap Inside to stop it, it was racing all over the field. Afraid it would crash into a house or run onto a nearby highway Gillett Jumped Into a pickup truck and tried to ram the plane with it. He jammed the pickup's throttle down, aimed it at the plane and jumped. The truck missed, crashed into a nearby storage building and demolish ed it. At the same time the plane nosed over and burned. In the Days News By FRANK JENKINS From Vientiane Laos (you'll probably have to look that one up on your map, and may have a hard time finding it): 1 Prince ' Souvana Phouma formed a new government to day dedicated to ending, the civil conflict with the com munist guerrillas. He was brought to power by Laos army rebels, who deposed the previously pro-American . re gime whiph had aligned Laos with the United States. The new head of the gov ernment announces that un der his administration Laos will follow a NEUTRALIST policy. Repercussions were feared from the U. S., which has been PAYING MOST OF THE KINGDOM'S BILLS and training its 30,000-man royal army in jungle tactics to fight the communists. AH, ME. I sometimes won der why we Americans don't go neutral and chant melodiously with the poet: "Let me live in my house by the side of the road and be a friend of man." It would be WONDERFUL -until the communists came along and gobbled us up along with all the other "neutral ists." FROM Alamogordo, N. M.: Capt. Joseph Kittinger set a world record today for manned balloon flight and a new parachute jumping mark by leaping from an open gon dola 102,000 feet (a shade un der 20 miles) above the earth. He got so far up that it took him 13 minutes and eight sec onds to get back. HMMMMMMMM. Everybody seems intent these days on getting as far away from the surface of this earth as possible. Everything considered, that is perhaps understandable. FROM Washington: FBI Director Hoover re ports today there was a STAR TLING nine per cent increase in the national crime rate dur ing the first six months of this year. He said the upswing in crime was spread through out the United States, but was highest in the West, where crimes of violence rose 19 per cent and property crimes went up 15 per cent. Police, Director Hoover said, reported a total of 462, 396 offenses against property, an increase of more than 40, 000 over the same period last year. THERE'S trouble every where. For example: In London, Antony Armstrong-Jones (husband of Prin cess Margaret) has lost his butler and appears to be on the edge of losing his footman valet! Rugged, isn't it? The news today sounds like the incan tation of the witches in Mac beth: "Double, double, toil and trouble; "Fire burn and cauldron bubble." I KNOW this piece sounds terribly cynical . . . and, in general, I'm inclined to cast a doubting eye on cynics. But, at this moment in his tory, what with politics, and rising dissatisfaction with ev erything that is, and a grow ing yen for the quick buck, I'm not too sure but what there may be an opening in our country for CONSTRUC TIVE cynicism. Railroads To Ask Grain Rate Slash Portland-IUPU-Major Pacific northwest railroads have an nounced plans to file a re quest with the Interstate Com merce Commission in Wash ington, D.C., Monday asking for rate reductions on grain moving to west coast ports. Harold J. Turner, manager of the Oregon Railroad Asso ciation, said the rate reduc tions were being requested in an effort to meet truck and barge competition. Turner said the new rates would cut an estimated $7 million from freight costs for growers. If there is no opposition to the requested rate reduction, the new rates are expected to become effective Sept. 30. Representatives of the rail roads also said they planned to seek rate reductions for shipment of grain from the Pacific northwest to Cali fornia. Railroads involved are Un ion Pacific, Northern Pacific, Great Northern, Milwaukie Road, and Spokane, Portland & Seattle and subsidiaries. Clock-Watching Cops Leave Accident Scene New Haven, Conn. - Two clock - watching patrolmen were suspended for three days after they stopped their in vestigation of a collision promptly when their tour end ed at 3:10 p.m., leaving a traffic jam behind them. Adenauer to Face Brandt In West German 1961 Election By WELLINGTON LONG Bonn, Germany - IUPD - The inevitable contest between the old bull and the most power ful of his young challengers is shaping up for next year's West German electiori cam paign. t By election time late next summer, Chancellor Konrad Adenauer will be 85 years old. His most likely opponent - West Berlin Lord Mayor Willy Brandt - will then be 48. It will be the fourth time Adenauer has led his Chris tian Democrats in a national election campaign. He has won handily each time, in creasing his majorities in 1953 and 1957. But Brandt, a national fig ure and, by some public opin ion polls, the country's most popular man just now, will be making his first national campaign. Matter of Fact bv joSePh aiSoP The Catholic Voters New York-The drama of the Catholic voters and Sen. John F. Kennedy is likely to be more c o m p licated than most peo p 1 e suppose, and the out come may be less satisfac tory for the D e m o c ratio nominee than most people JOSEPH ALSOP now expect This is the unavoidable con clusion, at any rate, which emerges from the results of a long and intensive round of doorbell-ringing in the Parkchester apartments. These vast, rather pleasing red brick blocks of lower middle income housing are a good hunting ground for any one interested in the voting attitudes of special groups. Something like 12,000 fam ilies inhabit this island in the wilds of the Bronx cre ated by the Metropolitan Life Insurance company. The rule is that each tenant's name is on his door. The name itself will usually in dicate the group that the ten ant belongs to. Thus you can get any sort of sample you want, simply by ringing door bells with the right labels above them. ; As previously reported, the trends among New York state's Jewish voters were tested in the Rosedale devel opment in White Plains, with the able help of Oliver Quayle of Louis Harris Associates. At the Parkchester, therefore, Louis Harris and this report er concentrated on doorbells with what looked like Cath olic labels, with such success that fifty-nine Catholic voters were included in our sample. THIS very large and repre- sentative sample, balanced in its racial origin, was par ticularly interesting for a spe cial reason. It is no help to Senator Kennedy, of course, to win the support of Cath olics who are already loyal Democrats. For Kennedy, and for Vice President Nixon too, the vital question is whether Kennedy can win large num-, bers of Republican-v o t i n g Catholics back into the Demo cratic fold. The great majority of these Parkchester people were in the Republican-voting Cath olic group. Most of them, to be sure, still retain their Democratic registration, and most of them no doubt still vote Democratic in the city elections. Yet a fair number of them had not cast a Democratic vote in a national election since 1940. Still more had been voting Republican since the war. And in 1956, no less than 48 of the 59 had sup ported Dwight D. Eisenhower against only eight who had voted for Adlai E. Stevenson, and three who had not voted that year. In other words, close to five out of six of these fire men and policemen and pharmacists and small sales men and the rest had par ticipated in the great Cath olic migration from the Dem- Labor Expected To Vote Republican Washington-fllPD-Labor Sec tary James P. Mitchell pre dicted today that the rank and file of organized labor will vote Republican in No vember. Mitchell, talking to news men after seeing President Eisenhower, said this was true in 1956 and that union mem bers are now more prosperous than ever before. AFL-CIO leaders are expected to en dorse the Democratic presi dential ticket this year. In the United States, men of Brandt's generation - the generation that fought and was decimated by the last war - already head both major parties. ' Issue Not Decided Here, the issue is not yet decided. The issue in Germany is not the same as that raised in the United States as to wheth er presidential candi dates John F. Kennedy and Richard M. Nixon are too young for such weighty office. In Germany the question is more one of whether a man of Adenauer's advanced years is too old to remain in charge of the country's affairs. More than a simple 37 years separates the two men. Adenauer was born the year Gen. George Custer was de feated at the Little Big Horn ocratic to the Republican par ty, which has been one of the really major episodes of American politics in the last two decades. The. earlier 'mi grants, moreover, are now too strongly rooted in, their new party to succumb to the pull of a Catholic Democratic Presidential nominee. Thus Kennedy quite naturally got the votes of the eight who had chosen Stevenson in 1956, plus two of the three who had not voted last time. But he won the support of only nine of the 48 previous Ei senhower voters, while Nixon got 29 generally enthusiastic votes in this group. Finally, ten of the previous went into the "don't know - column, along with one of the pre vious non-voters. A 19 TO 29 Kennedy-Nixon snlit in a sample that had produced a 48 to eight Eisenhower-Stevenson split looks rather cheering to the Demo crats. But as noted above, the behavior of the former Eisenhower voters is the point of real interest. Thus far, not quite 20 per cent of them have been drawn back into the Democratic column by Kennedy's pull. The same pull must be credited witn put ting an additional 20 per cent in the "don't know" column, and these may perhaps go all the way in the end. i. In fact the ultimate de cisions of these "don't know" voters will determine whether Kennedy's showing in the Catholic voting group is only fair or very good indeed. Furthermore, . it will not be easy for Kennedy to convince these undecided Catholic vot ers, whose Dasic political tendency is deeply conserva tive. , . WE FOUND several of the Parkchester Catholics who had been for Kennedy momentarily, and had then changed their minds because they feared he would "make Adlai Stevenson Secretary of State and give, the country away." The same hostility to the Stevenson-type Democrats appeared in the crucial "don!t know" group. Offsetting this, however, there was the same wide spread, passionate resentment of America's "loss of pres tige" or "loss of respect' abroad, which we also found in Jewish Rosedale. If Ken nedy can just give the im pression that he knows how to deal with Fidel Castro, he will solve all his problems at the .Parkchester apart ments. (Copyright 1960, New York Herald Tribune, Inc.) hafwl MoUaaMf Ae frm th Cewritwic tANK AMMAN - HAS 010 SNODODASS, FUNHAl BMCTOM DAY Oft NIGHT Ask about the OREGON FUNERAL INSURANCE PLAN which we heartily recommend and endorse. and three years after Kaiser Wilhelm's troops occupied Paris and organized a peace that prevailed in Western Europe for the next 40 years. Brandt was born the year before that peace finally col. lapsed in 1914. Century-Old Habits Adenauer is a spare patri. arch whose policies are modern but whose personal habits are those of the 19th century. '- Brandt is a typically breezy, fast-moving man of the mid. twentieth century who pre fers the harsh whiskeys serv ed at a cocktail party to the gentle wines Adenauer sips. On foreign affairs, both men see pretty much eye to eye, to the chagrin of Brandt's fellow Socialists. Both men can' be utterly ruthless, although Adenauer has the cooler head. Communications Letters to the Editor must bear the name and address of the writer although under cer tain circumstances the use of a Sen name or initial for publica on is Dermissible. The Mai Tribu: reserves the right to edit all letters with an eye to clarification and condensation Letters submittea ior publica tion must not exceed 400 words Com Out of the Dark To the Editor: This letter is addressed to those who have been calling me on tha telephone, identifying them, selves only as "Truth CitU zens" for a political candi date. This is NOT to apologize for my earlier letter. My wife and I are the only ones that know what you said on tha telephone. But everybody that reads the paper is going to hear what I have to say about you. You are cowards. You said you were a "weal thy friend" of his, and he had a lot more that would go to any length to defend him. You said the money was all on your side, his, and the law. You know the medical words. You told me about my physical condition, just like many doctors have. You would have my medical status reexamined, and cut my pen sion, or take it all away. You would prosecute me and the editor of the paper. If I believed you, I might pack and leave, but I don't. I know lots of good, doctors here, and they are men with principles. You don't have tha world in a jug and the stop per in your hand, as you try to make me believe. Now, would-be brainwash er, come from behind the brushpile before someone sets it on fire. You talked like a Gestapo. You said you would come over, take me out and give me a flogging. I know what that word means, and if you still have that idea in your head, you'd better just think until' you get it out, before you try that. : " A woman's voice was on, one of the calls. I have al ways tried to respect ladies. But the words you said to me on the telephone, I would not talk to a dog the way you talked to me, with the lan guage you used. I don't sea why the phone company would let you keep one. If you knew how stupid it sounds you would stop it. Now, you that called and said you had not yet seen an apology in the paper, you read this. This is all you gets If you call again I want to talk to you. Come out of the dark. '-" J. W. Kimbrell "f 515 Western av. Medford. THE LIGHT OF SERVICE PHONf SP 24030 THAT SHINES-