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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 16, 1956)
roxnt MTOrORD (OREGON) "Ererybody in Southern Oregon Reada The Mail Tribune" Published Daily Except Saturday by MEDFORD PRINTING CO. VI-19 North Fir St. Phone 2-6141 ROBERT W. RUHU Editor HERB GREY, Advertising Manager GERALD LATHAM, Business Manager ERIC ALLEN JR., Managing Editor EARL H. ADAMS. City Editor HARRY CHIP MAN, Telegraph Editor EICHAHD JEWETT. Sports Editor OLIVE STARCHER. Society Editor PALE ERICKSON. Circulation Mgr. An Independent Newspaper "Sntered as second class matter at Medford, Oregon, under Act of March 3, 187 SUBSCRIPTION RATES Daily and Sunday One year $12.00 Paily and Sunday Six months 6.30 ''Daily and Sunday Three mos. 3.50 Sunday Only One year 13.50. m mjici i, iiu utii.v.. . A,hinH rontrnl Pnlnt Eaffle Point. Jacksonville. Gold Hill, Phoenix, Shady Cove, Rogue , River, Talent, and on motor routes: paily and Sunday One year $15.00 TJallv and Sunday One month 1.25 Carrier and Dealers 5e per copy. All Terms Cash in Advance fcfrlelal Paper of the City of Medford Official Paper of Jackson Connty United Press Full Leased Wire ' MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU Advertising Representative : wnrCTum T rnAV rAMPAN? INC. Offices in New York. Chicago, De troit, ban Francisco, lajs wibw. Seattle, Portland, St. ixmia, nuauw Vancouver. B.C. RATION A L EDITORIAL ASSOOATLQN NEWSPAPER. PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION Flight or Time Medford and Jackson County History from the files of The Mail Tribune 10. 20, 30 and 40 years ago. 10 YEARS AGO Feb. 16, 1948 (It was Saturday) : Harry Chipman, sports editor of the Mail Tribune, presented First. Junior Citizenship Award for outstanding work in. Med ford and Jackson county during 1945. From Arthur Perry's Ye Smudge Pot column: Parking slot machines are installed all over the biz district. People look at them as if they were a Jap general, and regard them as a sales tax on an iron post. 20 YEARS AGO Feb. 16, 1936 at was Sunday) Dr. A. N. Johnson, county health officer, to conduct im munization of Medford school children against diphtheria. Search for William Reed, 80-year-old miner missing in Car berry district, called off after three days. 30 YEARS AGO Feb. 16, 1926 (It was Tuesday) George W. Dunn of Ashland announces to seek Republican nomination for state senator. Two Medford high school boys sentenced to jail .terms for wrecking teacher's car after joy ride. 40 YEARS AGO Feb. 16, 1916 . (It was Wednesday) C. F. Carpenter says pigeon business in Jackson county could be profitable. Southern Oregon Poultry as sociation to appoint committee to consider county's : participa tion in state poultry show. WhaS's the Answer? Can You Get 4 of the 7? Copr. 1955. Editorial Research Report ; 1. Of all factory Workers in large U.S. cities, less than a third, about half, or more than two-thirds are union members? 2. Democratic Senators were mostly for or against the bill to end federal control over natural gas prices, or were badly split on it? 3. Former President Truman's ancestors were kinsmen of which pre-Civil War President? 4. Fleet Street in London is a famous center . for art dealers, newspapers, theatres, restau rants, or second-hand dealers? 5. Which of these had the long est run on Broadway: Tobacco Road, South Pacific, Oklahoma, Life of Father, Abie's Irish Rose? ,. 6. Ether has been used for over 100 years as an anesthetic in surgery; right or wrong? 7. The Ten Commandments are laid down in Genesis, Exo dus, Leviticus, the Psalms,' the Proverbs, or Isaiah? The Answers: : 1. More than two-ihirds. 2. Badly split. 3. Ty ler. 4. Newspapers. 5. Life of Father. 6. Right. 7. Exodus. Boy Scouts troop 8 - : ; New officers were elected at a meeting of Trocp 8. They are senior patroL leader, Mike Philr lips; assistant senior patrol lead er, Richard Connolly; scribe, Gene Harvey; quarter master, Kim Griffin; and bugler, Bruca Hanson. The meeting was opened by and closed by Bruce Hanson,, mail tribune Foolish Partisanship Some of the Republican papers in Oregon who "like Ike" find it hard to DlSlike Adlai. .The Salem Capital Journal is one of them. Why try? In a recent editorial in fact this staunchly conserv ative Republican paper started out with what sound ed like genuine praise for the leading Democratic candidate. We quote: "We've found ourselves thinking better of Adlai Stevenson of late. Why? Well the comparison was with opponents like Averell Harriman, Estes Kefauver and Harry Truman." IN OTHER WORDS, of the three leading Democra- tic aspirants, the Journal preferred Mr. Stevenson, declared him to be an "intelligent man," which in the Union League and Arlington clubs would add up to something akin to political treason. DUT THE SPIRIT of the compassionate conf ession- al did not last long. The editor, perhaps shocked as he read over this example of GOP deviation proceeded to blame it on the fact that "distance lends enchantment" and that a resurvey of the former Illinois Governor as he ad dressed the Democrats in Portland at closer range led to disenchantment and the following indictment, comprising the rest of the editorial. No. 1: Mr. Stevenson in this Portland speech had the temerity to support Senator Morse for re-election. What did the Salem paper expect? Did it expect the leading candidate of the -Democratic party to mark his entry into the home state of one of the lead ing senatorial candidates of his party, by opposing: his reelection? Even "Ike" didn't oppose the reelection of Jenner in Indiana or McCarthy in Wisconsin when he was running for office. Why should Adlai pick on Morse? MO. 2: The Democratic candidate came out for ' ' 90 per cent parity farm prices. Well, so did Presi dent Eisenhower not so very long ago. But unlike a certain group of Republican farm-belt senators Adlai denied this would be a "cure-all" for the farmer's ills. He merely said he thought it would help. Isn't he en titled to his opinion? it is shared by many voters in both parties. MO. 3: in this citation of Stevenson delinquencies is the Al Sareria case, which Mr. Stevenson deplor ed as a policy which, if carried to its logical con clusion, would impair, if not ruin the long established policy of national forest control and: conservation. Did the Journal expect Adlai's support for those who favor the giving-away of government timber for free, to anyone who can get a patent to mineral land for a song? There is nothing in the Stevenson record to indicate his advocacy of such a procedure. THEN COMES Hells Canyon.- ' It seems Adlai along with thousands of other citizens favors federal to private power development on the Snake river and. in the Columbia -basm in other words he favors more and cheaper power to less and more expensive power. What is so wicked about that? The private power interests oppose it of course, but even before the Tennessee Valley Administration development, many perfectly respectable members of both major parties, favored public power in multiple river projects, and still do. Many oppose this view, but it is no crime to hold it. Even the Republicans now favor public power in Egypt at United States' expense. - ..- "THE FINAL "count" concerns mob violence in Ala bama. It is admitted Mr. Stevenson was and is against it.- But it is also claimed he didn't WANT to be. Why then did he? Left wing Democrats, particu larly the negro groups "have been needling him," so the Journal concludes he succumbed to this pressure. Had he resisted, would he haVe favored mob vio lence? OO W SILLY can we get? If the "Salem Capital Journal found itself liking Mr. Stevenson when he was in Los Angeles there was no reason for DISliking him in Portland. The implica tion that in traveling a thousand miles nearer Salem Adlai had changed either his views of his" character is the most childish nonsense. . ; . In fact, this sort of blind partisanship is also non sense. The plain truth is the leaders of the two major parties are botrugood men, and likeable ones. If they were not in active politics and happened to go on a duck hunting expedition together they, would prob ably agree on practically all political issues concern ing this country and the world, if and when such is sues were discussed. There would be only one excep tion they would NOT agree on the part Big Business should play in a democracy, and its relation to the public welfare in general but that topic might never come up! R.W R. Princess Margaret May London (U.R) Published rumors that Princess Margaret may become a convert to Ro man Catholicism spread today despite attempts by palace sources to knock down the re ports. The published versions of the reports have been centered al most entirely in newspapers out side of Great Britain. The West Berlin newspaper Nachtdepesche said in this after noon's edition that Margaret probabiy would become a Cath olic "soon." Nachtdepesche said her de cision , was not connected with her unfulfilled, love for Peter Townsend. But it said; Without giving a soitfGS, thai the Catho Thursday, February 18, 1958 Be Catholic lic Duke of Norfolk was reported to have discussed her problem last week with Pope Pius XII. Father, Son Killed When Train Hits Log Truck Salem (U.R) A father and son were killed near Marion, 17 miles southeast of Salem yester day evening when their unload ed logging truck collided with a southbound Southern Pacific freight train. Dead in the crash were Ed ward H. Carbon, 48, and his son, William, 25. Both were resi dents of the Aumsville area. The accident occurred about 5 pjaa. at. a grade crossing. ... Khrushchev Different Type of Man Than Stalin, Writer Says By CHARLES M. McCANN United Press Correspondent Nikita S. Khrushchev seems to be going out of his way to dis courage talk that he wants to be a new Josef Stalin. . He put great emphasis, in his speech to the Commu nist Party Con gress in Mos cow Tuesday, on the official line that So- Charles McCann Viet KUSSia IS now under collective leadership. Some .experts have become convinced that Khrushchev has dictatorial ambitions, and that he is not far from his goal. Others insists that leadership really is collective, and lies in Communications Letters to the Editor must bear the name and address ot the writer although under certain circum stances the use of a Den name or initial for publication ia permis sible The Mail Tribune reserves the right to edit all letters with an eye to clarification and condensa tion Letters submitted for publica tion must not exceed 400 words. Camouflage To the Editor: Winter's open ing recalls one in Manchuria. Writer then was exploring near the Siberian border. He was sur prised at the southbound tiger pelts trade. His experience with these magnificent cats, while alive, had been in the torrid Java, also Hindustan- jungles. These great striped beasts, how ever, are equally at home in Si berian shows. ."" The striping of their pelts fas cinates a student of camouflage. It parallels that .of- the zebra. Biologists continually marvel at ever-new ; discoveries of Mother Nature's devices for SURVIVAL. One is above camouflage. One American nature-student, pas sionately idealistic, felt the urge to use Nature-lore to save sol diers'' lives. Based on the mathe matics of concealing coloration, he invented - Uniforms' camou flage ... Into, its very, name is crystallized the tragedy of his months of disappointment. He tried to interest U.S.A., then Britain. Both unfavorable deci sions were made by BIOLOGIC ALLY ILLITERATE high offic ials. Thoroughly disheartened, he took his data to France. The quick Gallic imagination saw that it was worth whole divisions to their decimated army. THAT IS WHY OUR WORD IS FRENCH, NOT ENGLISH. It is ah example of the cost of BIO LOGICAL ILLITERACY. ' re public opinion is a force, even in South Java sultanates. Hence, to impress his illiterate subjects with his power, a Sultan would have a corps of tiger trappers. Once, when writer was at . the court of one such Sultan, he saw a caged tiger caught only three hours before. It was an impres sive example of feline strength. CM. Goethe Seventh and J Sts. ' ' ' . Sacramento 14, Calif. Sees Injustice ' . ; To the Editor: We would like to ask . the Saturday-evening radio ' wisdom dispenser if he knows the meaning of "All men are created equal with God given inalienable rights"? The very foundation of our constitution. Does he consider Sir Robin Hood a robber, or merely a New Dealer trying to discourage Big Busi ness, and help out the little fel low? If the recipients voted for it would that make it legal? . If my income is three times yours, and I pay three times as much taxes, is that not full jus tice? If more is taken, whether by gun or unjust tax, are they equal, robbery? In case of war, and justice is blind of course, then you should pay according to what you have to, defend. Has the government any right to take my money and give it to another, or use my tax money to build up unfair competition to my business with a cheaper power rate, because of not pay ing taxes? Or use tax money from one state to build up a cheaper power fate in another state that robs them of industry and population, as TVA did .to some eastern states? Is not fair competition our safeguard for monopoly, and equal opportun ity the foundation of justice? ' Now read over the new deal tax rates, and class legislation laws. To be just there should be only one tax rate and no special privilege laws. Why should join ing a labor union exempt one from the criminal laws which ap ply to the rest of us, any more than joining a church? Conspir acy, coercion and monopoly when uniform justice leaves a government, - it is doomed. Un controlled power is the greatest danger on earth. That applies to our greatest blessings, fire and water, also to labor unions. Their consolidated power means no good. No business man, editor or pol itician would dare say this. I can because I have, nothing to lose. Life would be no loss. All sub versives are now voting one ticket, to destroy our greatest hope, the President. It is their first plan. Ira C. Jones, Stewart Ave., Meagre, Ore. the 11-man Presidium of the Communist party. ," Has Great Power Certainly Khrushchev Is in a position of great power. He is the First Secretary of the Communist-Party. In that capacity he controls the party machinery. It was as Secretary General of the party the same thing that Stalin made himself supreme. But there is a lot of difference between the atmosphere in Mos cow now and that which existed for so many years when Stalin ruled. -'."" ' ' Stalin was a man of unbridled ambition. He trampled his way to the front over the bodies of men who had been his friends and colleagues. He trusted no body. Bitterly vindictive, he never forgave a real or a fancied wrong. No Russian leader, how ever loyal, could feel safe as long as Stalin was the one-man Rus sian authority. Different Type Unless aU surface . indications Mat t er of Fact by oe and "HE COULD STEP IN" Washington If President Eisenhower withdraws, Gover nor Christian A.' Herter of Mass achusetts, will become a most serious candi date for the nomina tion. ' , . Herter will have profes sional organi- stewart Aisop zauon ana im portant political and financial backing. And most of the Re publican' professionals believe that, he will have at the least a sporting chance of winning the nomination from such oth er more obvious candidates as Vice-President Richard Nixon and Senator William Knowland. Indeed, the Herter talk among Republicans is beginning to be a meaningful political phenom enon, rather like the talk about Adlai E. Stevenson among Demo crats .in the very early days when Stevenson was also ' little known nation ally.:: Joseph Alsop There are several T . reasons why Herter is being taken more and more seriously as a possible substitute candidate. He has important qualifications, having served ably in both the domestic and foreign policy fields. He is a proven vote-getter. He has, as on admirer put it, "a sort of presidential smell.' ' TJE HAS also been an all-out Eisenhower man from' : the very first, and finally,, he is the only presently visible alterna tive candidate on whom the am orphous but powerful group of men who were largely .respon sible for President Eisenhower's nomination could agree. ( Vice-President Nixon is not such a man. If President Eisen hower withdraws and firmly en dorses Nixon as his successor there will be, of course, no real ly serious opposition to Nixon from the Eisenhower men. Oth erwise, there certainly will be. v. Indeed there is. already con siderable underground opposi tion to Nixon for the second place. This opposition is partly on personal grounds. It also de rives partly from the conviction that Nixon, who has acted as a sort of political lightning rod for the Administration, would be a drag on the ticket. ALREADY President Eisen hower has beerl strongly urged to drop Nixon and replace him with Herter if the President runs again. One urger was Cliff Roberts, banker and golf-playing friend of - the President's. Roberts is (or was until a very recent mild heart attack) a part time member of the so-called "Commodore Regency" of Eisen hower political strategists. Roberts had a lengthy report on Herter 's qualifications pre pared, undoubtedly with the knowledge of other members of the regency. On the basis of this report Roberts tried to persuade the President that Herter was better qualified for second place than Nixon. The President was non-committal. But fof about a week, according to those who should know, he thought about the matter seriously. '-" Again according to those who should know, the idea of replac ing" Nixon with Herter has been rather-firmly dismissed although of course,, it might be revived again: if the President decides to run. The idea was dismissed partly because the President genuinely admires the Vice-Pres-identj and partly because, of the damaging political implications. But a major argument was also used effectively by " Nixon's friends against Herter that fact that Herter was born in Paris. - TTERTER'S Paris birth is, in- -"-deed, the greatest single ob stacle to a Herter candidacy. Since he was registered at the are wrong, Khrushchev is a man of another stamp. He seems to want to be liked. Where Stalin was secretive, Khrushchev is a mixer. He seems to enjoy him self thoroughly in public His sociability seems to have helped him a lot on his way up. . Khrushchev seemed to be speaking of Stalin when he said Tuesday: "The Central Committee of the Communist Party decisively opposes the spirit of the person ality cult, which is alien to Marx ism and Leninism, which turns this or that leader into a heroic miracle performer . i . neither God nor Czar nor Caesar wiU de liver us. We will achieve free dom by our own hands." But whether Khrushchev is or is not the dictator type, whether or not he aspires to sole leader ship, whether or not he is per sonally likeable, does not alter one most important fact. He is a Communist and hates every thing the free world stands for. Stewart Alsop American consulate, most law yers agree that Herter is "natur al born" as the Constitution re quires. But as long as the mat ter remains unsettled, a cloud of doubt will hang over the Herter candidacy. The doubt can only be finally dissipated by the Supreme Court. fAll sorts of ways of getting the Supreme Court to make a ruling well before the Republi can convention have been con sidered. The most hopeful prec edent cited is, oddly enough, that of the Progressive Party, which got a Supreme Court rul ing in. 1948 on Hemy Wallace's eligibility to go on the Illinois ballot within three weeks of re questing the decision. The fact that the Paris birth problem is already being consid ered so carefully, suggests how serious the Herter candidacy is or how serious it could be come, if the President . with draws. His supporters have been promised powerful financial and organizational backing in New York, Massachusetts, and else where. Herter has announced that he will hot run again for Governor, which removes one complication. And he has a sig nificantly full speaking sched ule the invitation to his forth coming speech at Washington's National Press Club bore the interesting heading"If Ike Steps Out, He Could Step In." Even "If Ike steps out," Her ter has, of course, a long - way to go. He is little known na tionally, and Massachusetts is no longer the convenient jumping off place for the Presidency 'it once was. Yet, conditional arid hedged about with obstacles as it is, the Herter candidacy is interesting, just because it is so hard to think of anyone else on whom the Eisenhower forces could agree. . (C), 1956, New York Herald Tribune Inc. Editorial Comment NOT DESIGNED FOR ECONOMY The Central Oregoniaris who are proud of their big, new; shiny Viber Eight (or some other 1956 model American car) may smile as they see the little bug-like foreign cars on the road. That big eight will go around some of the foreign cars on a hill. It will beat them away from a stop light. But when the big car owner counts up the money he has spent for gasoline at the end of the month, his smile may dis appear. For the sad truth is that Amer ican cars are not designed for ecOhOmy of operation. One big oil company says that the "aver age American car driven today only gives its owner 14.5 miles of travel for each gallon of gas oline burned. - This company (Mobilgas) spon sors an "economy run" each year, in which expert drivers pilot American cars over a rug ged route and get an average of 21.5 miles per gallon". The win ner was a Studebaker with a mileage figure of 27.44. (Note that this is neariy dou ble the figure for the average American automobile. The dif ference is in a lighter car, more finely "tuned" and an expert driver.) Now , the same company has run similar tests in other coun tries. And look at the difference in figures. ' - - 1 (All figures have been changed to reflect the same si2ed gallon. Most other countries use the PICTURE TUBES REJUVENATED Is your picture tube dull and weak? Most picture tubes can be restored to . original brightness at only ' a fraction of the cost of replacement For further information CALL Electronic Service 18 N. GRAPE PH. 3-1971 Today and By Walter INTEGRATION IN POLITICS There is mounting evidence of grave trouble ahead over inte gration in the public schools of the Southern states. For in recent weeks we have come nearer to the question which can divide the country dan gerously. Is the decision of the Supreme Court Walter Lippmann to be put into effect gradually and with the eventual consent of the leaders of Southern opinion, or is the Federal government to be called upon to enforce integration against the resistance . of the South? ' ' This question poses as fateful a dilemma as any internal Amer ican question that has arisen for several generations. It arouses great human passions which cannot be reconciled, which carl only be assuaged and accomo dated in this generation! They are passions which boil up quickly into violence, and they can be. kept within bounds only when and only while there is great wisdom and resolution in the leaders of the country. The temptation to play poli tics with these passions is al most overpowering. And it is the approach of . the national eleo tion, the struggle between the two parties and also the struggle within the parties, particularly within the Democratic party, which have brought the dilemma to the surface. IT IS significant that the closer a public man is to the presi dency, the more will he shrink from the idea of Federal enforce ment, as distinguished from per suasion and accomodation. Gov ernor Stevenson has been nota bly firm and decisive and the President, though his words were a bit cloudy, is certainly not considering intervention by the Federal executive power. It is the politicians, the men who have little Or , ho prospect of themselves being in the White House and bearing the Presi dent's responsibility, who are heating up the issue. There is no likelihood that the Republicans in Congress will agree to take the issue out of politics. For it is a most damag ing issue to raise among the Democrats. Nor is there much likelihood that Governor Steven son's rivals for the nomination will forbear to raise it. It is such an easy way to make things dif ficult for him. The issue will have to be de bated in the open. The funda mental question to be debated is' whether integration is to be promoted by persuasion or by Federal enforcement. These are two different roads, and no one should think he can go down both of them at once. CONSIDER, for example, the Powell Amendment which Imperial gallon, which contains five quarts. Comparisons are made on the basis of a four quart, or American gallon.) In the South African test the winner was an Austin A-30. The mileage was 41.44. In England a Triumph TR-2 won the trophy with an average of 56.8 miles per gallon. - The Australian test was won by a Goliath. Average mileage was 42.7. A test was run in France, too. There a Citroen won with a fan tastic 84.9 miles per gallon. So, when you count out the dollars to pay your gasoline bill at the end of the month, don't laugh too hard at the pictures you see of the little foreign cars. Most likely their owners are counting out a few pennies in stead of the dollars you're try? ing to dig up. Bend (Ore.) Bull .Mil M m Tomorrow Lippmann would withhold Federal aid from states or school districts that do not integrate their schools. Let no one suppose that the Southern states will give in and accept in tegrated, schools because some Federal money is withheld from them.. To suppose that they will give in is to mistake the temper of the South, particularly the . temper of the Deep South. What, tnen, are Rep. Joseph L. Martin and Governor Harri man going to propose next, once they find that withholding money . does not induce the Southern states to yield? If they start on the path of coercion, the author ity of the executive power will be engaged and new measures of coercion will be demanded to uphold that authority. For un less the Federal government li going to confess that it is beaten, it must, keeping the path of Fed eral enforcement become more and more coercive. No one should doubt that the attempt at Federal enforcement will intensify and harden the resistance of the South. Those who are disposed to try to work out integration gradually will resent the Federal government's efforts to coerce them; The prob lem of integration will become progressively more insoluble in the South, the racial passions will become increasingly sharp, the sectional feeling increasingly disruptive. Let us stop and think before we let irresponsible politicians push us into the whirlpooL THE way things are developing is a "reason for asking our selves whether the decision of the Supreme Court does not need to be supplemented. As it stands now, the question of what consti tutes a "prompt and reasonable start towards full compliance" is left to the judgment of the Fed eral courts. Now what would be a prompt and reasonable start, say, in the District of Columbia might well be impossibly hasty in Mississippi. Success in putting into effect the principle of the decision requires a program which must vary with local con ditions. It is, for example, an enormous step forward when universities in the South admit Negro students. And it would be the part of wisdom in a state like Alabama to regard admission to the university as being for pres ent purposes "a prompt and rea sonable start.'',-.. ?, "' The : question is whether through some sort of council of eminent citizens, guiding prin ciples might be agreed upon which would give to American opinion a standard around which it could rallv. - (C) 1956, New York Herald Tribune. Inc. Knowland Entered In Minnesota Race St. Paul, Minn. (U.R) Sen. William F. Knowlarid's name got on the . Minnesota presidential primary ballot at practically the last minute yesterday. John G. Alexander filed Con gressional district petitions bear ing 1500 names just 23 minutes before the deadline for entering candidates In the March 20 Re publican race. President Eisenhower has also been entered hi the primary-. Knowland's backers have said they plan to withdraw the Cali fornia senator's name if Mr. Ei senhower decides to seek a sec ond term before Feb. 25, the last date when a GOP candidate can be scratched. NO MORE MYSTERY Meriden, Conn (U.R) The FBI solved the mystery of the missing fugitive. Eugene E. Golding, .22, of Wallingford walkedout of court while await ing trial for theft of a motor ve hicle. Later, the FBI found him serving a term in state prison at South Windham, Me. where he was sent for stealing an automobile. Go To Church! In time of vxtoh, as well as other troubles, there are none so lost and alone as those who have no faith to hang on to, or a minister to turn to for consolation. . Go to church if only for the selfish reason of building a foundation against troubled times," and to become friendly with a minister. There will come a time when you will need both! CHAPEL MORTUARY ... Across from the Courthouse . Frank Morgan Harold Snodgrass FUNERAL DIRECTORS'