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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 6, 1956)
fOXm MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE UNI "Zveryboay in 5ubtrn Oregon Reads The Mail frlbune" Published Daily Except Saturday D7 WEDrORD POINTING CO. 7.23 .North Fir St Phone 2-tll ROBERT W RUHL. Editor KERB GREY Advertising Manager GERAU) LATHAM Buslncsa Manager ERIC a i i .km JR. Managing Editor EARL U ADAMS. City Editor BARRY CH1PMAN Telegraph Editor RICHARD JKWETT SporU Editor DUVE ST ARCHER Society Editor DALE ERICKSON Circulauon Mgr. An Independent Newspaper r Entered as "second class matter at . Medford Oregon under Act or SUBSCRIPTION RATES Dally and Sunday One veai 12 00 Daily ana auooaj niw - -Daily arid Sunday Three rata Sunday Only One veai 13.30 By Carrier In Advance - Medtord. Ashland Central Point Eagle Point. Jacksonville Gold - Hill. Phoenix. Shady Cove Rogue River. . Talent, and on motoi routes. Daily and Sunday One year S15 0O Dailv and Sunday One month 1.ZO Carrier and Dealers 5c per copy &ii r.rm rli in Advance Official Paper of the City of Medforo OIi:clal raper w " United Press Euii Leased Wire """MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU Or -imiiLAim'i Offices in 'New York Chicago De troit San Francisco i-uf Seattle Portland St Louis Atlanta Vancouver B C NATIONAL EDITORIAL j ASSOCt-A TLN armamiM'j NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION Flight o' Time Medford and Jackson County Fistorv from the tiles of The Mail tribune 10. 20. 30 and 0 vear ago. 10 YEARS AGO Aug. 6. 1946 (It was Tuesday) Shortage of railway cars is worst problem facing lumber in dustry in state, according to Oregon lumber leaders. From Arthur Perry's, Ye Smudge Pot column: In the up and coming burgs of this com monwealth, a Beauty Shoppe is called a Beauty Bar. Modernity has not yet got around to spell ing bar. barre. SO YEARS AGO Aug. 6. 1936 (It was Thursday) An offer is reported today for cannery Bartletts, ungraded, two and three-eighths sizes and larger of $25 per ton at car. The sheriff's office urges own ers of stock on the open range to brand the animals and record brands with county clerk. 80 YEARS AGO Aug. 6. 1926 (It was Friday) July is record breaking month in attendance at Crater Lake National park with about 48,364 visitors. The Model Clothing company launches annual mid -summer gale. 40 YEARS AGO Aug. 6. 1916 (It was Sunday) About 115 delegates attend Oregon State Editorial associa. tion convention in Medford. From Local and Personal col umn: Frederick Pelouze and son. Robert, spend Sunday in Weed attending the ball game. What's Answer? Can You Get 4 of ihs 7? Copr 1955 Editorial Renrarrb Report 1. The Democratic party has never renominated for Vice President a candidate previously beaten for that office; right or wrong? 2. Storas'e costs on govern ment-owned crop surpluses are now about SI million a year, a month, a week or a day. 3. Do the Communist or the free-world nations as a whole cont?:n more people, or is it about 50-50? 4. The Model T Ford was re placed with the Model A, which had four, six or eight cylinders? 5 It is longer or shorter in baseball from home plate to first base than from home plate to the pitcher's box or the same 6. West Virginia was once part of Virginia: right or wrong 7. An amanuensis is a corner of a church, a secretary, purp lish pink flower, nurse in the Orient or valuable mineral 1. Wrong; T. A. Hendricks was beaten in 1376. won in 1884. 2. About SI million a day. 3. Communist nations together have more. 4. Tour. 5. Longer. 6. Right. 7. Secretary. NICE TURNOVER Buffalo. N.Y. (U.R! A "junk yard" proved to be a gold mine for the two Golonka brothers. JoseDh L. and Sigmund Golonka sold their 55.5-acre tract in sub urban Buffalo for S170.000 to the Kennecott Copper Corp. When they purchased the property a year ago for S26.250 the brothers had planned to rent it to junk New Rules on Trio now rem ilaMnns of YiovHh !itiH nreirlent insurance advertising. if adequately enforced andor complied with, should . 1 . . i i. u ml i. (. provide real safeguards lor with the general rule : It is an rjifair trade practice lor an insurer to use or cause to be used any advertisement which has the capacity and tendency or effsct of misleading or deceiving purchas ers or prospective purchasers. : Then tnpv o-er. snecific. For example, the rules say it's an unfair trade practice such as "all, full, complete, - -. .... ... ed, "This policy will replace your income, uniess rnvprprl losses are not "subiect to exceptions, reduc tions, or limitations" properly disclosed in the adver tisements. And there is an anti-fine print rule. Although couched in legal language, Rule No. 5 says in effect that unless limitations and exceptions are printed in an ad "conspicuously and prominently," and "in suf ficiently close conjunction" with the benefits claimed, that's an unfair trade practice too. ymS entrance of the FTC into the field of regulat- ing insurance advertising is the result of an 18 month investigation, triggered by newspaper cam paigns against phoney ads. Five firms accepted con sent orders to halt types of advertising the FTC dis approved. But .36 companies said the FTC lacked jurisdiction. . :The 36 companies are still objecting to the FTC jurisdiction. A test case is pending in the federal cir cuit court in New Orleans, probably to be decided in the fall. MEANTIME, the insurers have been taking some steps toward self-policing. With company and federal government assistance and advice, a commit tee of the National Association of Insurance Commis sioners, a group of state insurance commissioners, drew up late last year a strict "advertising code" to take the gimmicks out of ads. The committee had the aid, also, of the seven largest insurance company as sociations, as well as help from the country's largest non-profit health insurance Blue Shield. The code was adopted ions are comprehensive. They cover not only advertis ing in newspapers, in magazines, on radio and TV, but display advertising, prepared sales talks and representations made -;by agents. For instance, an insurance salesman would have to forewarn the prospective policyholder that the company could cancel the Steel 20 Years Later Twenty years can be a ducers defended their offer to the union as afford ing 550,000 union steelworkers an average increase of $4,200 each on a full-time basis over the next five years. Just 20 years ago, on June 28, 1936, these same companies were saying: The steel industry will oppose any attempt to compel its employees to join a union or to pay tribute for the right to work. . . . Advancement depends on individual merit and effort. These are fundamental American principles to which . the industry will steadfastly adhere. The trade union people industry in the middle of the Depression had a bitter precedent'to face. They could remember of the Home stead Massacre of 1892, also the strike of September 1919- which affected every steel-producing center and ob7,000 steel workers. Much of the protest m 1919 was against the seven-day With ranks divided and strikers stayed out less than ly after the strike, labor gained important concessions in the steel industry, but these were not the result of collective bargaining. Indeed, the failure of the strike kicked off a nation-wide. "open shop" movement and postponed organization in least lo years. CECTION 7A of the National Recovery Act of 1933 with its guarantee of sequently reenacted in the was the birth certificate of rial Organization, the original name for the CIO. John L.; Lewis was the original president of the United Mine Workers of America he could put on the line half a paign to organize the steel The AFL's Executive Lewis offer by the Amalgamated Association accept ed and virtually turned over to Lewis s Steel Workers Organizing committee, Philip Murray, then the placed in charge of the drive. QDDLY enough, U.S.. Steel "Big Steel" was the first producer to capitulate. Negotiations between Lfewis and Myron (J. laylor, U.S. Steel board chair man, paid off in a. contract signed in March 1937 with a Big Steel subsidiary and subsequently extend ed to the rest of the system. But "Little Steel," fond unions, refused to go along. Jones and Laughlin yielded to a National Labor Relations Board election in May of that year, after a 36-hour strike. Violence broke out in a seven-state hem, Kepubhc, inland, and Tube plants in Illinois, igan, New York, Ohio, and At least 15 strikers lost their lives in that futile effort. But union recognition in Little Steel was ac complished in 1941, after upheld JNLKB charges of Monday. August 8. 1956 Health Ads the Federal Trade Com- poncynoiaers. mey&utu. to use words or phrases comprehensive, unlimit- !( 1 groups, clue Cross and in December. Its provis descriptive literature, and policy if it chose. E.K.K long time. The steel pro who organized the teel week and the 12-hour shift. resources exhausted, the four months. Immediate this basic industry for at , . ' . collective bargaining sub Wagner Act of 1936 the Committee for Indust head of the. CIO, and as million dollars for a cam industry. Council turned down the the organization campaign trusted aide of Lewis, was of their existing company strike enveloping Bethle and the Youngstown Sheet Indiana, Maryland, Mich Pennsylvania. the U.S. Supreme Court had unfair labor practices. E.R.R Battle Lines Convention By LYLE C. WILSON United Press Correspondent Democratic Convention Head quarters, Chicago (U.R) The Democratic national convention which is a week away, sizes up today like this: Ad lai E. Steven son of Illinois has the most d e 1 egates, al most endiigh for a first bal lot nomina tion. Gov. Av- Lyu C Wilson erell Harriman, of New York, has the hottest issues, perhaps hot enough to stop Stevenson. Former President Harry S. Truman will become the indi vidual with the most influence here if the Stevenson bandwagon fails to roll as expected. Democratic National Chairman Paul M. Butler opened conven tion headquarters today, scarce ly concealing his enthusiasm for: 1. Stevenson's nomination for president. 2. Adoption of a moderate harmony platform which will satisfy right and left wing Demo crats on the issue of race rela tions. A Truman Disciple That's Harriman's. issue. He's the 100 per cent New Deal-Fair Deal candidate in this Demo- Kennedy Is For Vice Presidency In Democratic Party Washington Massachusetts, which has not furnished a can didate for national office since Calvin Coolidge ran in 1924, has high hopes of landing Sen. John F. Kennedy in the second spot on this year's Democratic ticket. If he makes it, Kennedy will be the first Catholic since Al fred E. Smith to win a place on the Presidential ticket. Private polls have convinced some influential Democratic leaders a Catholic's candidacy in 1956 would produce very litUe of the bitterness stirred by Smith's unsuccessful 1928 bid for the Presidency. Improve Chances Moreover, the polls contend a Catholic on the ticket would improve Democratic chances of carrying such vote-heavy in dustrial states as Ohio, Pennsyl vania, Illinois and New York, aU won by President Eisenhower in 1952. Thus the speculation has turn ed to Kennedy, New York City Mayor Robert F. Wagner and Sen. Mike Mansfield (Mont.) as possible Vice Presidential choic es. To slatemakers canvassing this field, the boyish-looking 39-year-old Kennedy merits special attention. He is a decor ated World War II veteran with demonstrated immunity to the Eisenhower political magic In 1952 the President won Massachusetts by 203,000 votes and a Republican governor was elected. But Kennedy gave Mr. Eisenhower's number one sup porter, then Sen. Henry Cabot Lodge, a 69,000-vote drubbing in the Senate contest. " Thanks to his best- selling book, "Profiles in Courage," and frequent television appear ances, Kennedy is something of a national celebrity. He has a beautiful young wife, a disting uished father, and six brothers and sisters, all experienced ; at pumping hands or pouring tea for the Democratic cause. Unannounced Bid His open but unannounced bid for the nomination has drawn thu backing of two New Eng land governors, Abraham-Ribi- coff of Connecticut and Dennis J. Roberts of Rhode Island, and such Senatorial colleagues as George A. Smathers (Fla.) and Albert A. Gore (Tenn.), also mentioned as a possible Vice Presidential nominee. e A supporter of Adlai E. Stev enson for the Presidency, Ken nedy could balance a ticket headed by Stevenson or any one of the two border state possi bilities. Sen. Stuart Symington (Mo.) or Gov. A. B. (Happy) Chandler (Ky.). The son of Joseph P. Kennedy a successful businessman who was United States ambassador in London before World War n, the Senator came to his pres ent prominence by way of Har vard, the Navy and three terms in the House. Congressional Career In his Congressional careen, Kennedy has given his name to no single major piece of legis lation. But he has managed to take some notably independent stands without incurring a rep utation as a maverick or the dis like, of party leaders. In 1947, for instance, Ken nedy was the only Democrat in Massachusetts' Congressional delegation who refused to sign a petition asking executive clemency for ex-Rep. James M. Curley (D.-Mass.) then in prison for mail fraud. In 1954. he became the first Massachusetts Congressman in Forming for Demo Starting Next Week cratic national convention, more a disciple of Mr. Truman than of FDR. Stevenson stands for moderation. Sen. Estes Kefauver, of Tennessee, stands aside. Kefauver packs a double-barrelled rifle at this party hassle. He stepped out of the presiden tial contest with a sturdy en dorsement of Stevenson. But the senator has his eye on the vice presidential spot. That is barrel No. 1. Barrel No. 2 is loaded for Harry S. Truman of Independ ence, Mo., the man who down rated Kefauver as a presiden tial aspirant and the man whom the senator licked badly back there in 1952 in the New Hamp shire's kick-off presidential pri mary. They've been a-feudin' ever since. May Have Upset Strategy Kefauver's withdrawal last week and the shunt of his dele gates toward Stevenson may have confounded the strategy Mr. Truman apparenUy is con sidering. That is to bring about a convention deadlock to stop Stevenson and, thereafter win the favored son and uncom mitted delegations to the nom ination of Harriman for presi dent of the United States. The icy word from Kefauver headquarters after the senator quit was this: "Truman will have a .... of Prospect history to support the St. Law rence Seaway bill. That same year, he conspicuously avoided campaigning for Democratic senatorial candidate Foster Fur- colo. Furcolo's defeat by Sen. Leverett Saltonstall (R.) was at tributed by many o Kennedy's hands-off attitude. Kennedy's gamble paid off in control of the state organization last spring when his candidate for state Democratic chairman, John M. Lynch, defeated in cumbent William H. Burke Jr., backed by House Majority lead er John W. McCormack (D.- Mass.). Along With Leadership Kennedy has gone along with the Democratic leadership on taxes, immigration, welfare pro grams and labor legislation. This year he voted for government development of the Niagara and Hell's Canyon power sites but against the Upper Colorado rec lamation project. Kennedy voted against the na tural gas bill and against return of off-shore oil lands to the states. He has endorsed the Su preme court desegregation deci sion,- says gradual enforcement of the ruling should be left to the courts. He has backed foreign aid programs and generally favors a higher level of defense spend ing than the Eisenhower admin istration has proposed. Congressional Quarterly's fig ures for . the. past three years show Kennedy supported the Democratic position on about two-thirds of the record votes in which Republican and Demo cratic majorities took opposite sides just about average- for a uemocrauc senator.- - - Kennedy's most notable devia tion is in the field of farm nol. icy. He has consistently voted for the GOP administration's flexible farm price support Dlan and against the rigid, 90 per cent props backed by .most Demo crats. He was the only Senate Dem ocrat who voted for the Presi dent s highway program in 1955. Previously he had joined his party's minority to vote against a public preference ' clause in atomic energy contracts and for a cut m TV A funds. Appraising Chances In appraising his own chances of nomination, Kennedy July 1 said his religion, his youth, -the section of the country he repre sents and. his stand on price sup ports all might be considered drawbacks, i He was out of action for eight months in 1954-55 following sur gery for a wartime back injury but the condition is now report ed to be cured. The' hospitaliza tion could become a factor In a campaign where health seems certain to be a major issue. Democrats who favor the vice presidential bids of other hope ful say there are too many risks in nominating Kennedy. But those who support the person able young senator like to quote these lines from "Profiles j Courage" in Kennedy's behalf: ' "It would be much easier if we could all continue to think in traditional political patterns. . . . But today this nation cannot tolerate the luxury of such lazy political habits. Only strength and progress and peaceful change that come from inde pendent judgment and individ ual ideas . . . can enable us to surpass that foreign ideology that fears free thought more than It fears hydrogen bombs.' (Copyright 1956. Congressional Quarterly) a time being a king-maker now." Kefauvers handlers figured Kefauver's withdrawal had bag ged the nomination for Steven son and, maybe, that a grateful presidential nominee might give their man a nod for second place. That sounds fairly reasonable. It would be sour milk for Mr. Truman's breakfast cereal be cause, if he doesn't like Kefau ver, he doesn't like Stevenson much, either. As a presidential candidate, that is. Mr. Truman said as much in his memoirs recently published. They wouldn t be fishing or poker buddies, either, Steven son and Mr. Truman, because after Stevenson was nominated four years ago he seemed to consider Mr. Truman a campaign liability, which, maybe, he was. McCANN ON VACATION Charles M. McCann is on va cation. His weekly news outlook and daily foreign news com mentary columns will be re sumed upon his return. In the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS As this is written, a court martial board has just sentenced Sergeant Matthew McKeon to be discharged from the Marine Corps, reduced in rank to pri vate and confined at hard labor for nine months. He had previously been found guilty of negligent homicide in the drowning of six recruits in night march under his com mand and of drinking on duty. HPHE Marine Corps has rigid - training standards. In time of peace, these standards seem rugged to the point of cruelty. But in TIME OF WAR men who have graduated from this rough and tough school STAY ALIVE through experiences that men less rigidly trained could not have survived. It pays off in lives saved and victories won. WHAT of Sergeant McKeon? ' " Let's Tint it this wav? To be an officer in an organi zation such as the Marine Corps involves GREAT responsibility. Men who hold the lives of other men in their hands must be ALL MAN. Otherwise they can not measure up to the heavy re sponsibilities that rest upon their shoulders. Reading carefully all the testi mony-in this long drawn out court martial trial that has stir red the American people so deeply, it has seemed to me that Sergeant McKeon did not measure up fully to the high standards that must be required of an officer in the U. S. Marine Corps. OPEAKING of men, what of " Secretary of State Dulles ana his Friday night speech that was regarded as so important that it was broadcast and rebroad- cast by radio and television aU over our country? In his handling so far of our part in the Suez canal crisis that was precipitated by Nasser's sudden and rather peevish seiz ure of fhe great international waterway that links the Medi terranean and the Red seas, did he measure up to the great re sponsibilities that rest upon the shoulders of the foreign minis ter of the United States in crises such as .this? TT SEEMS to me he did. When he entered the situa tion, Britain was calling up lim ited' numbers of her reserves. She was putting her ships in fighting trim. She was assemb ling troops and military equip ment at her Mediterranean bases, from which they could be rushed quickly to the Suez area. France was making mili tary gestures. The situation was such that shooting could have started at any moment. Anyone who has read ,- history even sketchily k..oWs that once shooting starts it is frightfully difficult to get it stopped. IN HIS Friday night speech, Secretary Dulles told us that he doesn't believe armed force will be necessary to resolve the Suez crisis. With President Eisenhower sitting by during the broadcast, Dulles said the U. S. has given no commitments to use military forces. I He added that any plan for i international operation of the waterway should protect the legitimate interests of Egypt and assure her a fair income from the use of the canaL These statements seem to in dicate that calm reasoning, in stead of hot anger, is presently dominating the handling of the Suez crisis. At least, it appears that an effort will be made to settle the Suez quarrel at an in ternational conference rather than by immediate shooting. rpHAT, in a world where no one knows when a little war will grow into a big war, is something. If the head of our de partment of state had a hand in bringing this situation about, he deserves .credit. AlCff f er Of FaCt By STEWART ALSOP THE MYSTERIOUS VOTER Moline, 111. The American voter is a remarkably hospitable and unsuspicious fellow, who is very likely to ask the inquisi t i v e stranger right, into his living room. But he is also a m y s terious fellow. Is it possible to tell, from the way people talk to a stranger, how they really feel about politics and how they are going to vote? And why do they feel as they do? What is it that determines their, reactions to issues, their mental image ot a candidate? These questions are prompted by a just-completed pulse-feel ing expedition with the able public opinion expert, "Louis Harris, through two . hard-hit Iowa farm counties, ending up in this Illinois industrial town. Throughout the expedition, the connection between politics and the pocketbook has been evident. Many farmers are in real trouble. Because they are in trouble, they are not buying the agricultural machinery which is Moline s chief product, and there is serious unemployment here so serious that, on the main side streets of Moline, talking to men with worried faces, you some times get a sudden, acrid whiff of evil days gone by. TOTH among the worried farm- pre ann th ' wnrriprf ltv workers, there has been a real erosion of President Eisenhow er's popularity. But the pocket- book Is clearly not the main reason why people feel as they do, not by a long chalk. Take, for example, the richest farmer we interviewed. He owns 860 fertile acres, and he has made enough money to tear down the old farm house and build a hideous but comfort able suburban - type "ranch house." He is still, he said, do ing very well by himself. By all the rules, he should be the solidest of Republicans. But he is not. He sat with his bare feet on an overstuffed hassock, and said that he had voted for Eisenhower in 1952, but was go ing to vote Democratic this time. The President was a sick man, he said, and he didn't understand farm problems. Down the road a spell there was a ragged tenant farmer on eighty acres, who ascribed all his ' numerous troubles to the unions, and was a hard core, un shakable Republican. You find people who consciously intend to vote against what they con sider their own best economic interests. There was the brawny young man in the bean field, who had voted for Stevenson in 1952, but said he would vote for Eisenhower this year. "Eisen hower has taken the farmer into consideration hardly at all, but he's kept the 'world at peace, and that's the big thing." TTTOST people are self-conscious to the point of shyness about their lack of political informa tion. Again and again you hear the same phrase "Weli, I don't know too much about politics" and it is often an understate ment. Yet almost everyone seems to have a definite mental image of the leading candidates (except for Averill Harriman, who is almost totally unknown in these parts). The image of Eisenhower as a good, kind, and strong man is dimmer on the farms than else where', and dim to the vanishing point on the workers' streets in Moline. But it is still there, and remains the Republicans' great central asset. The image of Richard Nixon is strange. There was one bitter, young-old man on the back stoop of a handsome brick house, who is a sort of unconscious Marx ist. He had no use for Eisen hower, Stevenson, or either of the parties "They are run for the capitalists, not for us litUe people." But, he allowed, he "thought a lot of that Nixon." Stewart Alsop FUNERAL SERVICES In Every Price Range Since 1908 PERL Funeral Home Phone 2-6675 By Joe and Stewart Alsop But he was an exception. Mora typical was an elderly man who remarked oddly, "Nixon's a very good man, but I just don't car for him." Yet we found no one who intended to vote against Ei senhower simply because he dis liked Nixon. CASTES KEFAUVER has made a remarkably strong impres sion on the Iowa farmer, as an honest man who understands the farmers' problems. But the most , striking phenomenon is the men tal Image of Adlai Stevenson held on the farms (but not here in Moline, where Stevenson is much admired). On the farms, Stevenson is regarded as the classic city slicker. Again and again, farmers talk with a sneer of Stevenson's "wit ticisms." But one sensed that th Stevensonian jokes were only a symbol of something else, some thing about the man they did not understand, something that made them uncomfortable. What ever the something is, Steven son must at all cost overcome it, if he is to have a ghost of a chance of exploiting the politi cal opportunity which unques tionably exists in the farm belt Such, at least, are some of the impressions which two long days where the taU corn grows have left with this reporter. Per haps they are wrong. But one impression is surely right that the American voters are nice, outspoken people, but very hard indeed to figure out. Copyright 195S, New York Herald Tribune Inc. Congressional Quiz (Copyrlcht. 1951 Congrassloul Quarterly) Q A new age record for Sen ators was established June 18 when a serving Senator passed the age of 88 years, 8 months and 14 days. Can you name the record-holder and his state. A Theodora Francis Green of Rhode Island, a Democrat. Green will be 89 Oct. 2. Q The Representative who will serve as permanent chair man of the 1958 Republican Na tional Convention has served in that post longer than anyone else. Who is he? A Joseph W. Martin Jr. of Massachusetts. He was chair man of the GOP conventions of 1940. 1944, 1948 and 1952. O. What member of the Sen ate has served for over 23 years, but always has been junior Sen ator from his state? A Richard B. Russell. Now third-ranking in the Senate, he will become senior Senator from Georgia when Senator George retires. Wild Man Tamed GEO. N. TAYLOR The wild man of Gadara made the night hideous as he shrieked and yelled among the empty tombs up above the city. Like so many strings, he broke the chains with which they bound him. And what was his strength? He was indwelt by demons and demons ever sought a human body as a dwelling place. Christ cast out these demons and when the disciples returned, they found the man sane and in his right mind and sitting at Jesus feet. Now the man would travel on with Jesus. But the Lord told him to go and tell the home folks and all that district what God had done for him. At his . word the people were dumb founded. With Christ dying for your, sins and scene changes. Now Christ is your Lord and Saviour and belief In Him gives you eternal life as well as power to live to the glory of God. This message sponsored by dairy family. adv. Aj pERl's very fami,y may make funeral ar rangements which art in keeping with its' means. A selection of services In every price range is of fered to satisfy individual preferences a n d to meet all financial circumstances. Convenient Terms? , Certainly! 4 dealers. .... . .-..,..,., -