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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 3, 1952)
TEN MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE MEDF0RD5S&TRIBUire Everyone In Southern Orefioo Readi Tile Mail Tribune Published Daily Except Saturday by MEDFORD PRINTING CO. 17-29 North Fir St. Phone 3-S141 ROBERT W. RUHL. Editor ERNEST R. GILSTRAP. Manager HERB GREY, Advertising Manager E C FERGUSON. Managing Editor ERIC ALLEN JR.. City .Editor HARRY CHIPMAN, Telegraph Editor RICHARD JEWETf. Sporta fdUor OLIVE STARCHER. Society Editor GERALD LATHAM. Circulation Mgr An Independent Newspaper Entered as second clam matter at Medford. Oregon, under Act of March 3. 1897 SUBSCRIPTION BATES By Mail-In Advance: Dally ana aunaay uit- .u. 3 w Dally and Sunday six months 6 50 Daily and Sunday three mm. j Dally and Sunday one month l- By Carrier In A d v a n c e Medford. Ashland. Central Point, Eagle Point. Jacksonville. Gold Hi 11. Phn'x Shady Cove. Rogue River, Talenl and on motor routes: Dally and Sunday one year ' IIS 00 Daily and Sunday one month i.2o All Terms Cash Id Advance Official Paper of the City ol Medford Official raper pi - ' United Press FuU Leased Wire MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION Advertising Representative: WEST-HOLL1DAY COMPANY. INC Offices In New York, Chicago, pe. troit, San Francisco, Los Angeles. Seattle, Portland. St Louis, Atlanta Vancouver. B.C. NATION At IDITORIAl , XL AS3cjTN NfWf PAPEI PUkUSHItt ASSOCIATION Flight o' Time Madfer. and Jackson County His tory from the riles or the Mail Tribune 10. 20. 30 mi 40 run 10 YEARS AGO June 3. 1942 (It was Wednesday) State civil defense head warns Japanese air raid on Dutch Har bor, Alaska, indicated Oregon elvil defense workers must be on a 24-hour alert. From Arthur Perry's Ye Smudge Pot column: The gas ra tioning will become more string ent next winter, reports tell. This will stop indlgant citizens from marching to state legislatures in limousines. 20 YEARS AGO June 3. 1952 fit urn Friday) Plans discussed to discontinue Oregon state fair "In the inter ests of economy." Logging halted in Rogue val ' ley by heavy rains and wet for est conditions. tO YEARS AGO June 3. 1922 (It was Saturday) Plan annouhced for three new pear packing plants to be erected in Medford 1922 crops expected to , be slightly below normal. From Local and Personal col umn: Pickwick stages from San Diego to Portland have com menced operation on a regular schedule, and Tom Mcrriman, local blacksmith, has contracted with the company for the repair of all broken springs and simi lar work. 40 YEARS AGO June 3. 1912 (It was Mondav Medford baseball team defeats Grants Pass, 20 to IS, and for second time in month players have to walk most of way home when bus repeatedly breaks down and tires blow out. Backers of Theodore Roose velt walk out of Arizona GOP convention dominated by sup porters of William Howard Taft and name their own slate of delegates. SALE SUCCESSFUL The recent Boy, scout rum mage sale was a big success, ac cording to Mrs. Orrin Brown, chairman, who said today the scouts wish to thank all the par ents and other people who help ed . POTATO SHORTAGE HITS Grand Rapids, Mich. (U.R) The potato shortage is hitting this western Michiglan cily. A sign in the window of a closed restaurant Tuesday said: "Gone up north to plant potatoes for three days." Court Records m irn rni'RT Jinim Hubert Cummlngi. failure to Inn ml inn ilen. S3. Martin Keith Sindbtg. violation of basic rule, H0. K C. Arnold, motor vehicle license expired, SY Clifford Nlcklous Fuchi. failure to top at ftop ilun, 13. Don I.ePoy Williams, reckleu driv- In I2V Joseph Aiirttinn Herbert, failure to stop at red ngni. a. Howard Ervin Wharton, failure to stop at Mop lign. $5. Earl Rodney Fuller, failure to stop at slop stun, S3. IIIMTRICT COURT Chester Ed. Carter. overhe.Bht. $. Ray V. Ueutachman, Jr., overload, $39. Chester Edward Carter, overhelfht, 110. Delbert W. Whtteley. overhelfht. $10. Patricia Ann Bowles, no operator's license, $0. Manner iL HuU, overwidth. $&. Editorial Correspondence San Francisco, June 1 Have lege rowing, having rowed bow Lake, N.H., many years ago. So decided to take in the Stanford over on the Oakland sports writers suggested there might (for the first time in a hundred years) beat the champion Bears. There was another reason. school year at Berkeley (next door been an ardent STANFORD fan! established preference in our house for the color "red" over "blue" even though the former may be "cardinal" and the latter joined up with "gold." (We have an Idea A.C. wilt get it, if no one else does.) And reason No. 3: Stanford revived rowing after a few students there liked to row. - It showed a fine and rare encouragement from the university had to buy their own boat, hire their own coach, pay their own car or bus fare. But that did not deter them. Meanwhile their traditional rival had never stopped rowing, had won six or seven national championships and two or three Olympic or world championships, and were so out in front they couldn't be seen even with the latest Mt, Wilson telescope. Well the sports experts were wrong as usual. The Stanford boys showed the proper AMATEUR spirit, but as always or almost always happens, when amateurs meet pro fessionals the latter won (except in one of the races) and very easily. ' However that one race was SOMETHING to write the "Friendly SP" about! There is an "Information Bureau" in this hotel, but we have yet to ask information about anything that could be obtained. Yesterday proved no exception. 'How does one get to the Oakland Estuary?" we asked. 'The Oakland Estuary? Let's minute wait.) "Hello, hello could you tell "The Oakland Estuary, that races are to be held today and we 'Yes, yes, of course, of course. Just hold the line please. (Another 2 minute wait.) 'Hello, hello, are you there? races in Oakland today? Of coursel the tram terminal is?" "Yes." "Take a taxi to the tram terminal, ask Information there BE FORE you buy your ticket (NOT tell you how to get just where THANK you!" It was just as clear as 99 Information or lack of it. At the "Tram" terminal (tram is the Bureau's favorite term for street car) the Bureau of Information was closed it being Saturday so ticket window for a ticket to the "The WHAT?" asked the girl. "The Oakland Estuary where the boat races are held today." "Boat races? you mean sail-boat races? They were held yes terday." 'No, 8-oar races, between Cal morning papers." "Oh Bill," the ticket girl called shrilly to somone Invisible, how do you get to the boat races today?" "Take a D car to Golden Gate Park," was the answer from invisible William. 'Not .the MOTOR races the someWHERES." "Never heard of them," said At this point the ticket girl ray of light since the search In Don t know about boat races," ary is reached by Key Route Car then you can find out from the bus ment and to your right, Mister." The Key System bus driver there let us off. but had never heard of the Oakland Estuary or any boat races, thought we better take the bus going to Alameda in stead of Berkeley, however. After a second transfer, we boy with a cane and a pair of very ently was as dotty as your correspondent for he was going to the boat races also, and in sharp contrast knew exactly how to get there. So we arrived after traveling ering around 30 or 40 miles! Under the circumstances was finish line, only a raw-boned young man with a blue flag under his arm, sitting on a railroad bridge abutment and chewing a sandwich. A few minutes later he End" kids with a large black dog (suggesting a cross between an Eagle Point shepherd and a Baltimore retriever) and finally a boy and girl the former with a cardinal Stanford windDreaner on and a bog of peanuts frorh which they were both securing suste nance from time to time, and clearly enjoying eacn otner s com pany TREMENDOUSLY. Thnt wan the audience that vale railroad bridge) to witness the first race in the annual camor nia-Stanford regatta of 1952! (Not surprising perhaps that the In formation Bureau of far-off San Francisco had never heard of It!) That first race DID take us any member of that crew NOT everv contest, cot a prize. This was called the "Reserve" and while the blue-oared boys won ship that did it. The Stanford "sub" Freshmen were merely worse. The next race was the big reminded us of the Yale-Harvard years ago, with the neck-and-neck the Inst, and the photo-finish. Bv the time the boats came In small iirouo had been doubled. might upset the dope had got around for they were all Stanford students In fact didn't see a blue-and-goid rooter an aay. tr-er-hiips the Berkeley boys didn't think It wjjrlh the gas to see another aquntlc massacre.) The only way the boats could be identified at that distance was by Ihc colors of the oar blades blue and red as they flashed in the sun. (In the three hours there was wind, fog, cold, however, and precious little sun.) Through field glasses It was clear Stanford was leading by a few feet, and when the peanut couple were so informed there was quite a celebration. "Com ON Stanford! Come ON Stanford!" they yelled, and never quit until the finish Stanford won officially by 7 feet! ' So we did see the lads from Berkeley on the RIVER at last and as that was what we made the trip for, we had no great complaint even though to lose the Varsity "JV" and Freshman could not be rcgardcd.as much of a liver triumph! ah i m .it- - .-ct in f 1 1 HI HM, a V V 1 1 It - w ..- r - --o A railroad bridge also figures there. But instead of the victors be ing greeted by perhaps SO shivering and very nondescript specta tors perthed on it, a few scattering cheers and ONE DOG, there is n roar from two or three observation trains, ear-splitting whistles t i i i ...Aki. .ml (.miuHi alnnff the shore on both sides doing Indian dances the winners that Is with fire crackers irum iiuiiui-ua ui ibviim, v.v" mixed in and champagne-corns SED PLANT BURNS Tacoma (U.R) Damage may reach $350,000 as a result of a fire that swept through Lil ly's seed company factory Mon day night. Tuesday, June 1, 1852 always been interested in col - oar on a house-crew at Squam boat - races between California and estuary, particularly as the SF might be an upset and Stanford Ever since the family spent a to a fraternity house) we have Also there has been a long- World War II, simply because amateur spirit. The lads got no worth the trip and the trip was see. Hold the line please." (A 2 me what it is you wish? is where the Cal-Stanford boat would like to see them." You wish to see the college boat Well, sir, do you know where after?) and I am sure they will you wish to go. Is that clear? of all the Information Bureau's we asked the girl at the first Oakland Estuary. and Stanford it s all in the BOAT races over In Oakland Bill. next door joined In with the first Darkest San Francisco started. said she, "but the uaKiana estu "K," change at High street, and driver there. Down to the base knew where High street was and found a fellow passenger, an old ancient binoculars, who appar for an hour and a half and cov not surprised to find lew at tne was joined by a group of "Dead- sat on the finish line (the Fruit- back to Squam Lake, N.H., where "catching a crab" at least once in or second-rresnman contest handily, it wasn't good oarsman event tor oianiora at least ana varsity race at New London two struggle from the first gun to sight about a mile upstream, our Apparently tne tip mat oianiora Palo Alto beat the lads from nl1tf r-ivr ra-ffattA In the Fast! - . r- oi coura. WEATHER Br United Press California: Fair Tuesday and Wednesday except fog on the coast Crosstown Can't you kids ever take Matter of Fact JOHN E. AND CO. New Orleans Sen. Robert A. Taft s man in this state as Nat'onal Committeeman is John E. Jackson portly, sauve and prosperous lawyer who ha. rtilpri what y ": -ifl passes for the m;rn Louisiana I I NkL? R e p u b 1 i - I can Party or I x:4fr" ust short of I 20 years. A aaseseaeaasV aaaaaal visit to John Joseph Alsop e. anrj a short look at John E.'s record, are highly instructive experiences. At the moment. National Com mitteeman Jackson is a bit prick ly and de-defensive. On his of fice walls, portraits of such Re publican statesmen as Senator Bricker and John D. M. Hamil ton smile reassurance to him. All, they seem to say to him, will be well at Chicago. But all has not been well in Louisiana. In brief, John Minor Wisdom, another New Orleans lawyer with important connections, a comfortable fortune and an ec centric passion for a genuine two-party system in the South, went to work in the Louisiana Republican party some years ago. About 12 months ago, the magic of the name of Gen, Dwight D. Eisenhower brought Wisdom a sudden influx of sup porters and co-workers. With John E. Jackson fight ing a bitter rear guard action all the way, Wisdom captured the New Orleans organization in a legal primary In January. Then, having got himself this New Or leans toehold, Wisdom impert inently intervened this spring in the selection of delegates to the Republican National Convent ion. Worse still, the Wisdomites voted down the Jacksonites by heavy majorities in six of the eight Louisiana congressional districts. That gave Gen. Eisen hower nine of Louisiana's 11 district delegates. It promised to give Eisenhower the four dele gates at large to be named by the state convention. It was a challenge to John E. Jackson. JACKSON responded like the " brave fellow he is. He used his remaining control of the state Republican committee In the Texas manner. He ignored the ballots of the pro-Eisenhower Wisdomites. He nullified their undoubted legal victories. And he rinsed the state convention, by seating his own minority in stead of the Wisdomite major ity, to send a solid pro-Taft dele gation to Chicago. No Impartial observer here doubts that this pro-Taft Louisiana delegation is a simple product of John E. Jack son's force or character. Even John E. himself does not really bother to argue that he had the majority of Republican voters on his side. "There are all kinds of major ities, he explains rather port entously, "There are force ma jorities, which attempt to force action by others. There are law ful majorities, which are peace able and good. You wouldn t count the heads of a mob when you were about to be attacked. You wouldn t just say, I give up, I surrender' because there were a lot of people In the mob. You wouldn't do that, would you?" John E.'s definition of a mob appears to be any considerable number of Republicans not rul ed by Jackson. In this state, up to 150,000 people vote for the Republican party in national el ections. But the number of reg istered Republicans, which means Republicans with any say in the party affairs, steadily de clined under the astute Jackson stewardship to the ridiculous 11 time low of 1.S00. Anything tending to transform Louisiana's crypto - Republicans into registered Republicans, such as the nomination of Re publican candidates for state of fice, is strongly disapproved by John E. If the crypto - Republi cans registered in large numb By Roland Co just an ordinary snapshot?" by Joseph Alio ers, mobs would start forming all over the place. Wisdom's ef forts have produced mobs al ready. a 0 ONE, of course, speaks 'more highly of the two-party system than John E. Jackson. Although he says nothing can be done about it without "substan tial money and substantial pat ronage." But the fact is, the one party system has made John E. what he is today, nourishing him in a highly satisfactory man ner. His ideal Louisiana Repub lican party is one that can e conveniently assembled in a small back room, for the sole purpose of choosing 15 Republi can delegates each four years. Such a party may not win votes in Louisiana, but it will win rewards in Washington, when and if a Republican presi dent has been nominated with the help of Louisiana's 15. Two further facts complete the John E. Jackson story. A couple of years ago the Republican Na tional Committee, in its won derfully humorous way, named none other than John E. to head a committee to promote a pow erful, popular Republican party in the South. A little Iatef , John E. was replaced in this chair manship by his great friend and mentor, Senator Taft's Southern procounsul, Rep. Brazilla Car roll Reece. The conjunction is symbolic. The worthy Brazilla is the most active of the old guardsmen who want the South ern Republican party organiza tions to go on being rotten bor oughs, producing nothing but phony convention delegates for old guard use. And John E. Jackson holds first place among the Southern leaders who satis fy this old guard craving. In one respect, the Louisiana pattern sharply differs from the Texas pattern. Whereas in Tex as there was a strong popular surge for General Eisenhower, no one could possibly call the movement that defeated John E. Jackson in Louisiana a truly popular movement. Louisianians are just not ready, yet, to regis ter as Republicans in large num bers as the Texans did. Jackson's tens were defeated by Wisdom's hundreds. The whole thing was on a very, very small scale. OUT IN TWO other respects, " the Louisiana pattern resem bles the Texas pattern. First Jackson's pro-Taft delegation was named in arrogant defiance of the true Republican majority here; and however small the ma jority may be, political honesty demands that the majority shall rule. Second, John E. Jackson of Louisiana, like Henry Zwei fel of Texas, typifies the bizarre Southern leadership which the Republicans must throw out, if they want to compensate their last 20 years of losses in the North by the gains in the South that they could so easily make. For these reasons, if for no oth er, the decision on these South ern delegations at Chicago will be among the most serious the Republican party has ever had to make. (Copyright, 1952, New York Herald Tribune, Inc.) "H sayi ht can hardly wait Homogenised Multi-Vitamin, Multi-Mineral Milk! More Solid Apparently For French By PHIL NEWSOM United Press foreign Analyst The French Communists have been handed a bloody nose and there is reason to hope a few more solid punches will be landed in the next few days. The Reds ap pear to have overplayed their hand in the demonstra- tions against the arrival of the new NATO command pr. i an we.aon.. G e n, Matthew B. Ridgway, and to have given the French government precise ly the opportunity it was await ing. France's poker faced right- wing Premier Antoine Pinay has signalled he is ready for the showdown. It is a courageous move on the part of the little tannery owner who has given France its strong est government since the end of the war. Party Boss Jailed He jailed Communist party boss Jacques Duclos who has been described as the most pow erful Red outside Russia, and his security forces swept down on party headquarters through out France to seize tons of secret party documents. It was real cloak and dagger stuff. First the swift arrest of the party boss as he sat in his dark ened automobile with blackjack and pistol on the seat beside him. Then the coordinated raids on the headquarters the battle through barricaded steel doors, hand-to-hand fighting in the black corridors by the eerie light of flashlights, the seizure of forged military seals and the printing equipment for making On The Side (Distributed by King Tls true, I never was In love, But now I mean to be; For there's no art Can shield a heart From love's supremacy. Those virtues which, though thinly set, In others are aamirea In you are all together met. Which makes you so desired. Brome. Which is the diamond wed ding anniversary, the sixtieth or the seventy-fifth? That is the subject of a current argument. What difference does it make? They are both ridiculous for a diamond wedding. Of what good are diamonds to an eighty-year-old woman? She should have them when she's young. Do you know what the third anniver sary is? It's the leather wed ding. So if you know some peo ple celebrating their third anni versary give the husband a belt and the bride a handbag. The sixth anniversary is the iron wedding. I am slightly baffled as to gift suggestions for that. Still I guess you could give the husband a set of golf irons and the wife an electric iron. The twelfth Is the nylon wedding. No problem there on what to give the wife, but what can a hus band use in nylon? The thir teenth is the lace wedding. That's easy for the wife angle. Give her some of that attire Gus sie Moran made famous. As for the husband, the lace wedding seems to completely shut out the old boy. Briefly A piano tuner of Manhattan informs me he is working on a book titled, "What I Have Learned About Women While Tuning Pianos." I await its pub lication with interest . . . Balti morean strongly objects to the statement "I was raised in Mary land." Says his old school teach er always said: "You rear chil dren and you raise pigs." Very interesting. How about "brought up?" As in saying: "I was brought up in Brooklyn?" Title Change Titian titled one of his paint ings "Two Women Seated by a Fountain." So titled, it attracted no great attention. The title was then changed to "Sacred and Profane Love." The painting promptly became world famous. J. P. Morgan offered $7,000,000 to get home to Jorgensen'i Punches Slated Commies false documents, and finally the tons of material which may prove a plot against the security of France. Upheaval Threat Eyed By the raids, the Pinay gov ernment hopes to uncover the hidden Reds who have been able to tip off the Kremlin to France's secrets. It hopes also to remove the threat of internal upheaval which only about 500,000 Reds have been able to hold over the heads of 42,000,000 other French men. The French Reds, once com prising the most powerful Com munist party outside the Soviet Union, will not give up without a fight. But it long has been apparent their strength in France is on the wane. Membership has fallen from around 1,000,000 to half that and French workers have shown increasing reluctance to obey political strike orders. Last Strike Flopped The last big Communist move was the "general" strike of Feb ruary 12, and it was a dismal flop. In France, the Reds have fol lowed their usual "boring from within" tactics. They have been strong in the unions and there have been reports that they have infiltrated the civil aviation net work which could be dangerous in time of war. However, they have failed in their attempts to lure the Socialists into a "popu lar front" and their campaign to prevent the unloading of Ameri man military supplies at the ports of Cherbourg, Bordeaux, and La Pallice failed long ago. Pinay s timing in his war against the Reds looks perfect, but it is unlikely at this time that he will attempt to get the party outlawed. Once he has them on the run, he doesn't want to give them a chance to work up public sympathy. by e. v. Durimg Features Syndicate, Inc.) for this painting. That was when the dollar had three times the buying power it has today. The offer was refused. The painting is still in the Borghese Galleries in Rome and is owned by the Italian government. Incidental ly, Titian lived to be 90 years old and up to the end maintain ed an intense interest in blondes. Imagine being that way about blondes at the age of 90. Many young women who believe their hair coloring entitles them to be called "Titian blondes" are in error. The only way to de cide it is to go to the nearest art gallery and take a look at one of Titian's pictures of a blonde. Asides Everybody knows a North American Indian baby is called a papoose, but how many know what the thing the papoose is carried in is called? . . . Harry Barris, pianist and composer, who wrote Bing Crosby's great est hit song, "I Surrender, Dear," was the leader of his own orchestra at the age of 17. Not only that, the 17 year old Harry took his band on a tour of the Orient. Some teenager! Asking Queries from clients. Q. Have you a reader in So So, Miss.? Or Dime Box, Texas? Or Plain Dealing, La.? A. Not that I know of. However, I am not do ing so badly for a young fellow. I have a reader in Hell, Mich., and one in Paradise, Calif. Q. On May 29, 1910, Glenn Curtis made an airplane flight from Al bany, N. Y., to New York City. I claim this is the first recorded flight to be made over New York City. My friend says a flight be tween New York and Philadel phia was made before that. A. You win, sir. However, two weeks after the flight you men tion, Charles Hamilton made a round trip flight between Gover nors Island, N.Y., and Philadel phia. But he did not fly over New York City. Get It Right Note it stated Harry Davis CONSTANT HELP IN TIME OF HEED... PERL FUNERAL HOME 44 Years of Friendly Service In the Day's News BY FRANK JENKINS Political squall: National Eisenhower-for-Pres-ident headquarters invites dele gates to the GOP national con vention (all 1206 of them) to VISIT IKE at Abilene, Kansas, New York or Denver. The tale first got out that Re publican national committee funds would be used to pay their expenses which caused Taft backers to howl like wounded wolves. Later, Eisenhower head quarters explained that dele gates could either pay for their own trips or LOCAL (not nation al) Ike funds wonld be used to foot the travel bill. . . Taft's straw boss, David In galls, still yelled "fraud!" A guy named Sullivan, Kefauver's po litical top kick, chimed in with the charge that such a thing would be "gross bribery." EVIDENTLY the other con tenders are afraid of the famed Eisenhower charm and don't want Republican delegates exposed to it. (Ike has announced that he won't attend the con vention). JUST the same, the scheme Is a boner. It's akin, I'd say, to the picking by the Eisenhower organization of a slate of ten "approved" delegate candidates in the Oregon primary. That made all the other candidates as sore as a boil, and so far as I can see did no good. I sometimes wonder if Ike doesn't pray in the secret-hours of the night, when nobody is around to hear him, to be de livered from his POLITICAL friends. He must know that his BIG asset is the FAITH, of mil lions upon millions of common, everyday, non-political people that he is the leader we NEED in this critical hour in our na tion's history. If he is nominated and elected. It will be this personal faith in him that will turij the trick. MEANWHILE, it seems to me, Ike is doing all right on his own. In Paris, while packing to leave for home, he tells reporters he will: 1. Wear his uniform until his official conferences In Washing ton are concluded (which is ex pected to be some time Tuesday.) He will then put on . civilian clothing, as an officer on. inac tive duty. 2. If he is nominated as the Republican candidate for Presi dent, he will resign his commis sion as an army officer. 3. He will not CAMPAIGN for the nomination. (It is pre sumed that by this statement he means he will not make barn storming campaign tours.) THAT, I think, is about what the millions who are pinning their faith to him want him to do. . IT WON'T be easy. The printed page a will bulge and the air waves will vi brate with POISONED questions addressed to him. At the same time, sincere men and women will be putting to him sincere and well meant inquiries. He will need to turn aside the poison, but he will WANT to make sin cere answers to sincere requests for information that people are entitled to have. I imagine he will be able to take care of himself. In World War II, he had to train his men to RECOGNIZE BOOBY TRAPS and to beware of them. The Ger mans were unbelievably crafty in their handling of these de vices of deception. I doubt if Ike's political enemies will be any smarter along that line than the Germans were. After a?, all Ike needs to do is to BE HIMSELF. and John Harris, of Pittsburgh, operated the first film theater in the U.S.A. That's wrong. Thom as A. Talleyjlid. In Los Angeles, in 1902. SejSnd was Harry War ner, In Newcastle, Pa., in 1903. Messrs. Davis and Harris oper ated the first theater called "a nlckleodeon." Opened in Pitts burgh in 1905, Dead line Sunday Classifieds is at 5;30 p.m. for following day: 10 a.m. Monday for Monday; noon Saturday for Sunday a.m. Through the years our experience In giv ing sympathetic counsel and easing the burdens of the grief-stricken has quali fied us to guide you. In your time of need, call upon Perl's for friendly sympathetic service.