Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, August 06, 1945, Page 4, Image 4

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    FOUR MEDFORD MAIL THIBUNB Mondar. Aug. 8. 1945
MEDFORDilWrEIBUNE
eleada lh MaU Tribune"
Dally Except Saturday
published by
MinFOBD PRINTING CO.
.. u nih Fir St Phone 1141
1 ... ....... Y4ltnr
""iS'.Vli1; iua c miiAt inn Mar.
GF-HAUU i-.v
Ao Independent Nawipaper.
Entered u lecond cla matter
Mediord. Oregon, under Act of
March 3, lA;
SUBSCRIPTION BATES
end. Sunday-on. ',;.'
Daily ana suniwy - j ,i
Dally .nd Sunday-thre. moe. S.10
,M"?.rYler-i "AnneMcdford
Aahland, Central Point. ;cn:
villa. Gold Hill, Phoenix. Talent, and
on motor rouien; n
Daily and Sunday on year .9 00
All terrna caan i
Official Paper of the City of Medford
a.u-.-i n . .1 J..b.nn f!nlintV
UlJICiai .
United Praia Full Leaied wire
MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU
OF CIRCULATIONS
Advertiilns Repreaentatlve,
Office In Now York Chicago, Do.
troll. Ban rrmcuto, w Vs...' .
attle. Portland, St. Louli, Atlanta
Vancouver, B. C.
Ore g1oOi dvC spp e
Publishers 'fl4s5c)i a t i o b
Ye Smudge Pot
Br Arthur Parry
A portion of the upstate press
is heatedly scolding the British
voters for ousting W. Churchill
as premier. This excels the clut
tering up of white paper with
words, by the Josepine county
weekly, that for years demanded
the repudiation of Rep. Ham
Fish, (R., N. Y.)
Managers of the two valley
phone lines met face-to-face Sat
urday to talk business, and part
ed with a pledge to call each
other up.
The Klamath Navy nine de
feated the Craters 21 to 3 Satur
day evening. They must have
thought they were playing the
University of Japan.
'FEET AT FOOT OF G.I.
TROUBLE." (Headline Oregon
ian) Sounds plausible.
The fair sex continue to run
around with exposed midriffs,
and offering proof they are not
spineless.
"Honesty is the best policy."
Finland, the land that always
pays its debts, is broke, hungry,
crippled, houseless, and cold, but
still honest.
a
LOI THE POOR INDIAN!
(The Dalles Chronicle)
The Shoshones about Elko
are turning their attention
from scalps to poker, and are
being handsomely cleaned out
by their high-toned brethren,
the Piutes, who will gamble
all the clothes olf them."
(78 Yrs. Ago Col.)
a
Some of the week-end driving
was diabolical and enough to
make a California tourist in a
hurry, flinch.
It now appears Dictator
Franco of Spain, is trying to be
the leading European paln-in-the-neck,
by his defiance of the
Potsdam terms. He Is taking the
proper steps to have It snapped
and popped by Chiropractor
Josef Stalin of Russia, an expert
at adjusting bumptious and
moth-eaten nations. Franco is the
type, who would hide Hcrr Hit
ler, either in his own domain,
or Argentina.
The food supply of the nation
has improved "remarkably" the
past month. This Is explained as
due to a more equitable distri
bution. A primary election next
spring, and the voters being al
lergic to having their diet reg
ulated by Washington, D. C,
bureaucrats whose knowledge of
food consisted only of knowing
how to operulc a knifo and fork,
also helped Improve the situa
tion. a
From all over the stale, a lark
of rooms for school teachers Is
reported. Unlike their pupils, In
the back-seat of an ancient go
cart, 17 of them can't be packed
In a room built for one.
a
Great Britain Is now headed
for a New Deal, with a touch
of socialism. The fur will fly,
when the college professors, with
their senior classes, start "re
making the Empire." It will also
be an Inspiring sight to see the
English, spending themselves
rich, and eating themselves out
of debt. The leaders already in
dicate they will resist common
sense In government, to the last
ditch..
LIAR'S CONTEST ENTRY
"Just like a man, we blame
the girls for contributing to the
shortage of men's shirts. They've
begun to wear 'em, but one thing
about it given a pair of dad's
overall.) and one of his shirts
the young daughter Is Just as
glamorous as when clothed in
tha conventional garb." Lake
view Examiner)
Hi Mail Tribuoa Want Ada.
Hiram
The wnrlfl Tpfr. Hiram .Tnhnsnn Vipfnvo Hiram John-
son left the world, which
very tragic thing.
As a result his last years were very sad, and not
'very useful ones.
Too bad!
Senator Johnson had been a great man, a wonder
ful, fonrlpsa anrl a nrneressive leader, and had he
possessed more wisdom than vanity, instead of the
other way around, ne wouia nave reurea irom me
Senate and from public life a decade or more ago.
DUT he couldn't bear to give up.
Nor could he bear to forget his pique and pride,
when former Chief Justice Hughes failed to call on
him in California, when the latter ran for the pres
idency against Woodrow Wilson.
That action defeated liugnes and Kept Hiram jonn-
son from a very high place in the government, per
haps eventually the White House.
DUT even more obviously disastrous to Senator
Johnson's career and his one never-ending per
sonal ambition, was his refusal to play second-fiddle
to his senate contemporary, Warren Harding, and
take the Vice Presidential place on the winning Re
publican ticket in 1920, when it was offered him.
Had he done so. Hiram Johnson of California, in
stead of Calvin Coolidge of
been the 30th president of
BUT, all that is water over the dam now and might
Vinttov Vio fWornrfen Mnrenver. we believe the
death of the senior Senator from California will once
more demonstrate the falsity of that statement attri
buted to Brutus :
"The evil that men do lives after them,
The good is oft' interred with their bones."
It will be the GOOD, not the evil we feel sure, that
will live after Hiram Johnson ! R.W.R.
Just a Get-
Perhaps one explanation
was the radical change in
Death nad removed President Roosevelt, the pre
siding head of the triumvirate. Mr. Churchill was not
eliminated until after the conference had assembled,
but his tenure was so uncertain that, there was a dis
position, no doubt, to await
election before taking on new or controversial matters.
As a result of the British election Generalissimo
Stalin became the only original member of the Big
Three remaining. He had never met President Tru
man; President Truman, had never met him; and
neither of them knew Premier Attlee.
So it is not unlikely the gathering was in a large
measure, a get-together, a get-acquainted meeting;
dealing chiefly with matters that had actually been
decided by the original trio, rather than exploring
new and unchartered seas.
THERE is another noticeable feature of the confer
ence to sustain this assumption. An examination
of the text reveals a surprising absence of all issues
where the interests of Big Three, and particularly
Great Britain and Russia might conflict.
Nothing, for example, is said about Turkey and
control of Constantinople; nothing about Iran and the
Near East; nothing about Greece- and little regarding
the Balkans; nothing about the Rhine and Ruhr.
Yet, all these issues must be decided before final
peace terms can be drawn up.
a
CO, there is reason to believe the disappointing
feeble character of the official Potsdam report,
was due more to the startling and unexpected trans
formation in executive control, than to any other
factor. R.W.R.
Breakers Ahead
A very interesting thing to watch in subsequent
Big Three meetings will be Premier Attlee's attitude ;
toward the historic and challenging declaration of his
predecessor:
"I did not become the King's first minister to preside over
the dissolution of the British empire."
How about Mr. Attlee and the British Labor party?
Did they take office to perform any such sad and
traeic task?
The time will soon come when a decision must be
made.
COR if the British Empire is to be preserved intact,
sooner or later the critical time will come when
Soviet Russia will have to be opposed.
There is, as we see it, no other way.
No doubt the Attlee government is and will con
tinue to be far more sympathetic to and cooperative
with Soviet Russia, than the Churchill government
ever was.
But, there is a limit to this good neighbor anil ap
peasement business if the security of the British em
pire and its prestige are to be maintained.
a a a
A ND that limit will be reached when the final fate
of India- Constantinople and the eastern Mediter
ranean, the Near East, Burma; yes, and even British
interests in China, come up for decision.
And just to make the problem a little more diffi
cult for the Labor government to solve, how about
Britain's traditional policy of always opposing the
strongest power on the continent of Europe?
We predict that difficult as the Labor government's
task of changing the internal economy of England
may prove to be; it will be nothing compared to the
difficulties surrounding the party in its adminislra-;
lion of foreign affairs. R.W.R.
Johnson
for a man in public life is a
Massachusetts would have
the United States!
Together?
of the Potsdam "washout"
the higher-up personnel.
the result of the British
News Behind
The News
By Paul Mallon
Washington, Aug. 6 The off
stage cue music for the Potsdam
conference was far less melo-
d 1 o u s and
more subtle
than Mr. Tru
man offered at
the piano. Our
score was writ
ten with the
dollar sign
clef.
The pitch was
s t r 1 c 1 1 y the
harm o n I o u s
rattling of gold
Paul Hanon dollars. As
soon as Mr.
Truman arrived at the meeting,
the senate here was hastily put
to fiddling up:
$3,925,000,000 which Is our
part in the Bretton Woods bank
and currency program of $13,
000,000,000 to guarantee inter
national loans and peg waver
ing monies.
$4,375,000,000 for lend-lease
for the current fiscal year (Rus
sia said she would like to have
$700,000,000 to start, and Brit
ain has indicated unofficially
she will need $3,000,000,000
from some place to get settled
financially.)
$3,500,000,000 for the export
Import bank, of which $2,800,
000,000 is an Increase to'finance
foreign purchases.
$1,000,000,000 for army relief
abroad (estimated need).
$900,000,000 as a total for re
lief and rehabilitation of UNR
RA, of which $700,000,000 has
been put up in cash already to
meet a total authorization of
$1,350,000,000 (senate will grant
no more to this outfit than the
$900,000,000, as the army is al
ready taking over the major re
lief tasks and the Red Cross will
get new ventures instead of
UNRRA's dwindling organiza
tion). a
TOTAL, which no one seems to
have added before, is $15,
700,000,000 for the greatest for
eign "spend-lend" program ever
conceived in the mind of man.
After the last war, we poured
out a billion a year in foreign
loans. That was a drip from
the private bucket, practically
none of which was restored.
This program will faucet at
least 15 times as much into Eu
rope from the public purse.
It was Mr. Roosevelt s finance
agents who figured it would
be an Improvement this time
to take the money from the
treasury, although any losses
will fall on the average strug
gling or poor and rich taxpay
ers, whereas before it fell upon
those citizens with enough spare
money to buy foreign bonds as
an investment. Mr. Roosevelt's
agents also were responsible for
the decision to handle the foreign
spend-lend program, separately
from the political negotiations
for peace, and not even to add
them up into one program or use
them publicly to get our way in
International affairs.
Judging from the timing of
the rush imposed upon the con
gressional appropr i a t o r s, my
guess is Mr. Truman will be
less inclined to keep the money
accounts separate from the po
litical accounts, as money is
about the only persuasive power
we seem able to wield in Eu
rope. Our checkbook is the only
card we hold. There may be oth
er changes.
a
INDEED, the United States
may have to reconsider its fi
nancial arrangements with Brit
ain. (One senator tells me con
gress would never have passed
Bretton Woods, had it known It
would be faced with money soc
ialization in Britain of an un
known quantity.) Attlee has in
dicated he intends to pay for
the coal mines in bonds, for
instance, which will certainly
add to Britain's financial pre
dicament, already deficient, and
the United States hardly intends
to be placed in the position of
furnishing the labor government
the money to finance such un
dertakings. We would not do It
for ourselves.
A less emotional and more
accountable policy toward
money-to- Br 1 1 a i n, therefore,
must surely follow as a matter
of course. With the excellent
prospects of a communist vic
tory in the promised fall French
elections, changes in govern
ments of Greece and Spain urg
ed by Britain and Russia, etc.,
the matter of using our money
sensibly to protect our ideals, if
not the money, becomes visible,
to say the least.
This American money cue for
rotsdam was heightened up
harmoniously when Mr. Truman
unexpectedly called In Adm.
Land, who has charge of our
ships (and we have many times
more ships than anyone In the
world), and when Mr. Truman
announced: "America seeks no
territorial expansion." but as far
as the reports showed, Russia
said nothing and Britain said
nothing.
Tha Russian music was a lit
tle less clear in tone, and at
times reminiscent of the Herat
wessel. Pravda, which functions
on strings, claimed the Jews had
attacked Russian citizens in
Palestine, which was rienie X by
Palestine. A few days later the
USJM over the
.-AaVlili.-J
(Acmt Rodio-Telephoto)
WAC Egt. Kanella Koulouv&rls,
Brooklyn, N. Y., who entered con
fused state of matrimony with Cspt.
George Schultz In Berlin civil ser
vice. Plans for church wedding were
halted as Schultz' wife, Mrs. Ruth
Schultz, Chicago, and mother of his
two children, claims the groom.
Schultz claimed he believed his first
wife killed In accident.
Swiss denied they had abused
Russian citizens as charged from
Moscow.
Then there was some charge
in Pravda about Sweden not
treating the Russians right. No
one here seemed to know what
this cue music meant. The only
thing familiar about it was that
every time Hitler wanted to
seize a country he always claim
ed his people there were being
abused. No one thought Russia
was using this established tech
nique for the same purppse, but
they did not know what purpose.
COMMUNICATIONS
Lettere to the Editor mult beat
the name and address ot the writer,
although the use of a pen-name or
Initials for publication Is permis
sible, rhe Mall Tribune reserves
the rltht to edit all letters with a
view to elarlty and cnndeniaUoo
Did Poles Plead Guilty?
To the editor, In Mail Tri
bune, Aug- 5, 1945, Babson
writes: Quote, "Cooperation and
coalition rest solidly only upon
mutual acquaintance. Only un
derstanding of the other fellow
helps you to understand your
self." You, Mr. Editor, attended the
San Francisco conference, you
saw dandruff on Molotov's coat
collar, that was closeup- inspec
tion, and, no doubt you heard
the talk about Russia's astound
ing and infamous action in ar
resting 16 Polish envoys, also
heard the "pompous questions"
put to Russia's representatives
relative to the arrest of the
Polish envoys, and it is now re
ported that these envoys, accord
ing to the press, were givti a
trial to which Russia invited
representatives and Allied en
voys; and, pressmen were ex
pressly invited to attend.
At the trial 15 of the 16 de
fendants pleaded guilty. Is this
press report true? If so, what
sentence was given the guilty?
Should you care to answer?
W. W. TRUAX.
(Ed. note: This is news of
greatest importance if true, but
we have no confirmation of
same).
IN ROGUE AREA
Rain which fell over portions
of the valley early today, did
no particular harm or good, ex
cept to clear the air of smoke
from the Tillamook county for
est fire and delay small stream
fall in some sections, Watcrmas
ter Clinton Smith reported. As
sistant County Agent Cliffors B.
Cordy said he had received no
word of any hail falling. The
rain was the first since June 5.
Scattered showers are predict
ed for tonight and Tuesday with
cooler temperature.
MEDF0RD MARINES ON
LIST OF NAVY WOUNDED
Listed on the war department
casualty report as navy wounded
are Pfc. Thomas Chester Deivert,
marine corps, son of Mrs. Susie
Deivert, 305 S. Oakdale avenue,
and Pvt. Alva John Holmes, ma
rine corps, son of Mrs. Elizabeth
T. Holmes, 210 Elm street.
County and city directories of
fer no further Information con
cerning the men or their fami
lies. Court House News
r Divorca Complaints
Jcanette Spracklen vs. George
Spracklen-
Samuel C. Miller vs. Lucille
B. Miller.
Divorca Decrees
Vivian Leighton v. Russell E.
Lcighton.
The War Production Board has
called for production of farm
machinery in the coming year 30
per cent above the levels sched
uled for the year beginning Aug.
1, 1944.
Our Men and
Nation's
CPL ROMINGER
PROUD OF PART
PLAYED IN WAR
Fifth Air Force, Philippines
Cpl. Raleigh W. Rominger, of
Medford. had good reason to be
proud recently. The big bomber
named Toddy, that ne assisiea
in crew for many months now
recently flew her 100th combat
mission, a figure to be boasted
of in this area. Circling in for
landing after a raid on the China
coast where Jap installations
took a pasting, Toddy was in tip
top shape after her century run.
Cpl. Rominger entered the
service in March 1942. He at
tended airplane mechanics
school at Sheppard Field, Texas,
and then went to Douglas Air
craft at Long Beach, Calif., for
specialists training in B-24 bomb
er maintenance. He was assigned
to the 380th Bomb Group Flying
Circus in the fall of the same
year, which unit he has been a
member of since that time.
Having now been overseas 26
months, Cpl. Rominger wears
four stars on his Asiatic-Pacific
theatre of war ribbon, for unit
participation in the campaigns
of New Guinea, Bismarck Archi
pelago, and two Philippine in
vasions. For active service in
the Philippines, there is also a
Philippine liberation ribbon.
Cpl. Alfred Mercer
With U. S. Supply Forces in
Germany For meritorious serv
ice with the 170th ordnance
bomb disposal squad, Cpl. Alfred
R. Mercer, husband of Mrs.
Lavon E. Mercer, 221 North Riv
erside avenue, Medford, has
been awarded the bronze star
medal, at Continental Advance
Section headquarters in Ger
many. The citation for the award re
cited that Cpl. Mercer's knowl
edge of enemy ammunition, his
courageous action and his skill
facllited the disposal of enemy
bombs that threatened allied in
stallations. Capt. Clare Turner
New Orleans, La. Captain
Clare V. Turner, whose wife,
Mrs. C. V. Turner, lives in
Shady Cove, has been graduated
from the officers department of
the Transportation Corps school,
New Orleans army air base. He
specialized in the transport com
manders course.
Lt. Harry Thurman
Scott Field, 111., Second Lt.
Harry L. Thurman, 23, son of
Mr. and Mrs. L. B. Thurman,
722 W. 14th street, Medford, is
now stationed at this AAF train
ing command radio school. He is
an instructor In the officers' com
munication training school.
The lieutenant's wife, Mrs.
Evelyn L. Thurman, resides at
507 E. C street, Belleville, 111.
Sgt. Glenn Hanscom
The 131st General Hospital,
Blandford Camp, Dorset, Eng
land After treating 7,109 soldier-patients
with only three
deaths, this huge United States
army general hosiptal has com
pleted its mission in England.
Among those who helped op
erate the hospital was Sgt.
Glenn A. Hanscom of Route 3,
Medford, a cook in the hospital's
mess department.
Sgt. Hanscom is the son of
Mrs. Paul Morten of Route 3,
Medford, and Mr. A. R. Hanscom
of Route 2, Medford. He entered
the army in January, 1943.
Sgt. Albart Busby
With the 96th Division on
Okinawa -1 First Sgt. Albert
Busby, husband of Mrs. Betty
L. Busby, 345 N. Bartlett street,
Medford, has been awarded the
bronze star for gallantry in ac
tion on. Okinawa.
SINCE
CONGER -MORRIS
FUNERAL PARLORS
Sixth and West Main
Office of the County Coroner
AMBULANCE SERVICE
Women in the
Service
In making the award, Major
General J. L. Bradley, command
ing the 96th division, cited Sgt.
Busby for disregarding his own
personal safety and leading a
group of lifter squads in making
three trips to evacuate casualties
over a mile long stretch of ter
rain under persistent Jap artil
lery and mortar fire.
Sgt. Busby is the first sergeant
of a medical company In the
division medical battalion and
was a veteran of the Leyte cam
paign.
James H. Doa
Somewhere in the Pacific-
James H. Doe, fireman, first
class, of 146 South Holly, Me
ford, has been advanced to his
present rating aboard a new 45
000-ton battleship which has
been participating in recent car
rier task force strikes against
the Japanese homeland.
Sgt. Jessla Windei
With the Fifth Army, Italy
Sgt. Jessie F. Windes, of Central
Point, Ore., recently was award
ed the bronze star medal for
meritorious services in support
of combat operations in Italy.
A member of the women's
army corps, assigned to the com'
manding general and chief of
staff sections, headquarters Fifth
army, she distinguished herself
by her steadfast devotion to the
many tasks given her as steno
grapher and typist, stated the
citation.
Working long hours, she nev
er failed to complete her assign
ments with accuracy, neatness
and speed. The meticulous care
and attention to detail which
characterize her work have been
a credit to the sections.
Lt. Jack Keaveny
Fort Worth, Tex. First Lt.
Jack F. Keaveny, 22, Medford,
has been assigned to duty at
Fort Worth army air field where
he is serving as an aircraft main
tenance officer.
Originally commissioned In
June, 1943, Lt. Keaveny, son of
Mr. and Mrs. John F. Keaveny,
Medford, was a student before
entering the service.
A combat pilot with the 15th
air force in Italy, Lt. Keaveny
holds the air rnedal with five
oak leaf clusters, the European
theater ribbon with three batUe
stars and the unit citation.
Pvt. Robert Shelby
, Pvt. Robert N. Shelby, son of
J. C. Shelby, Jacksonville Star
Rt. No. 49, Medford, has arrived
at Scott Field, 111., parent radio
school of the AAF training com
mand where he will be assigned
to duty as one of the student
personnel.
James A. Longacre
Awaiting Army Call
Again Before Court
James A. Lorn-acre. 19 hn
sentence Thursday on a guilty
piea to Burglary not. in a dwell
ing was suspended pending his
Induction into the .army,' again
appeared before Circuit Judge
Herbert K. Hanna at Grants
Pass, last Fridav. rharpd with
the taking of two tires belonging
to me uroiette service station
there. The court expressed sur
prise at seeing Loneacre in court
So soon after parole.
Longacre agreed to furnish
$1,500 bond and nrtinn nn hie
trouble was postponed. The court
was aavisea Dy witnesses "the
boy was not such a bad sort."
He still awaits a call to the arm
ed forces for which he has pass
ed final physical examination.
Longacre, according to the au
thorities has never been In
trouble before.
ADMIRAL ITO KILLED
San Francisco, Aug. 6 (U.R)
The Japanese navy ministry dis- j
closed todav that Vice Ari miral
Seiichl Ito, a member of the J
naval general staff, was killed !
while leadlnff a siirfnpA cuii-JH
attack against American ships
on UKinawa last April. I
1888
DISTINCTIVE BUT NOT EXPENSIVE
Flight o Time
Madford and Jackson Co. His
tory from tha files of tha Mail
Tribune 10. 20 and 34 years
ago.
TEN YEARS AGO
August 6, 1935
(It was Tuesday)
Mussolini calls more troops
for African service- Red Cross
ready for action in Ethiopia.
Harold Brown sustains broken
leg in auto accident at Portland.
Coos Bay golfers to play her
in inter-clty meet.
Thousands of tourists journey
to Canada to see Dionne quin- -tuplets-
Owen-Oregon mill due to open
about first of month.
County debt reduced during
first half of year.
TWENTY YEARS AGO
August 6, 1925
(It was Thursday)
New record for travel to
Crater Lake set, with 73,444
tourists registering so far this
summer.
New city water ordinance to
be ready soon.
Continued warm. High 96,
low 55 degrees.
Forest fire situation In state
serious.
Forty-two divorces issued su
far this year In county.
THIRTY-FOUR YEARS AGO
v August 6, 1911
" (It was Sunday)
Bat Nelson batters Tommy
Gaffney at Nat.
Horse and buggy belonging to
Miss Nina Wall stolen by tramp.
Mayor decrees there will be
no more prize fights in Medford.
Japs
Give Chinese
Poisonous "Shots"
Chuneklnir. Anff. A CM Pt
Chinese forces which re-en tprerl
Kanhsien. former Amerirnn nlr.
base city in southern Klangsi
province, iouna more man ou,
000 persons in the district had
been killed or were missing.
More than 1,000 Chinese died
in Ichang, in western Hupeh pro
vince on the Yangtze river, as
the result nf nnisnnnn inlor.
tions, it was reported, which Jap
anese authorities gave for the
prevention of meningitis in the
central China states. It was re
ported that shortly after each
injection, the victim swelled and
died.
LIFER ESCAPES '
Salem. Ore.. Aue. 6 (UP)
Charles Kimzev. 60-vear-nlrl pnn.
vict, was still at large today
after his escane latp Rafurrtnv
from a labor gang at the state
prison farm southeast of Salem.
Prison officials said tnriaw thpv
had no trace of tha fnpittvo urhn
was serving a life term as an ha-
Dituai criminal.
CHICKEN and STEAK
DINNERS
KING'S CAFE
, Owned by OTTO and
WAVE KING
Highway 99 at Talent
Coma Out and Sea tha Bears!
L. G. TAYLOR GO.
pays tha
HIGHEST MARKET PRICES
If you have a CAR or TRUCK
to tell, we advise telling it
now.
Call or Phone
Dodge-Plymouth Dealer
L. G. TAYLOR GO.
Phone 2965
Funeral Costs..
Cost it for you alone to de
cide. Bear three things in
mind when making your
final selection.
1. How will the funeral ex
pense affect the future of
those who remain?
2. Will the memorial select
ed conform to the fam
ily't accustomed stand
ard of living?
3. It the expenditure In
keeping with available
fundi?