Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, October 01, 1956, Image 4

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    FOUR MEDFORD (OREGON)
MEDFTODTRIBUJfE
"Everyone in Southern Oregon
Read tec aiaa i n pun e
Pubhahed Daily Except Saturday by
MEDFORD PRINTING CO.
27-29 North Fir St. Phone
ROBERT W RUHL. Editor
HERB GREV Advertising Manager
GERALD LATHAM. Business Manager
ZRIC ALLEN JR.. Managing Editor
EARL H. ADAMS. Citv Editor
HARRY CHIPMAN. Telegraph Editor
RICHARD JEWETT Sport Editor
OLIVE STARCHER. Society Editor
DALE ERICKSON. Circulation Mgr.
An Independent Newspaper
Entered u second class matter at
Medford Oregon, under Act Of
March 3. 1837
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Daily and Sunday Six months 8 00
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Sunday Only One year $4.20.
By Carrier In Advance Medford,
Aahland. Central Point. Eagle Point.
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All Terms Cash in Advance
Official Paper of the City of Medford
Official Paper of Jackson County
United Press Full Leased Wire
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troit. San Francisco. Los Angeles,
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NATIONAL EDITORIAL
I ASSOCll-ATLC
'I 1 1 U
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PUBLISHERS
ASSOCIATION
Flight or Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30, 40
and 50 years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
Oct 1, 1946 (Tuesday)
October term of district fed
eral court opens in Medford
with Judge Claude McCulloch,
Portland, presiding.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: The valley
autoists are improving. Quite a
few no longer drive through the
"stop" signs like they were from
California.
20 YEARS AGO
Oct. 1, 133S (Thursday)
The executive board of the
Community Chest holds first
meeting at First National bank.
Several Jackson county voters
registered yesterday at the coun
ty clerk's office in the court
house for the Nov. 3 general
elections.
30 YEARS AGO
Oct. 1. 1926 (Friday)
J. D. Russell returns from
Corvallis where he has been st
tending a committee meeting of
the Oregon Retail Merchant's
association.
The Greater Medford club
will hold a rummage sale for
the benefit of the proposed Com
munity house next Thursday.
40 YEARS AGO
Oct. 1, 1916 (Sunday)
Contributions to the Woodrow
Wilson campaign fund continue
to come in, total $397.85.
Citv Engineer Arnspiger states
that following advice of state
health officer he has instructed
the Rogue River Canal company
to drain Fish lake as quickly as
possible.
SO YEARS AGO
Oct. 1. 1908 (Monday)
An auction sale will be held
Oct. 3, and the entire Hotel Med
ford equipment will b! offered
J. D. Heard, general manager
of the Sterling Mining company,
of Jackson county, in Medford
today.
What's the Answer?
Can You Get 4 of the 7?
Copr. 1955 editorial Reiearcb
Report
1. States electing Democratic
governors in 1954-55 have many
more or fewer electoral votes
than states electing Republican
ones, or about the same number?
2. Average mileage on cars
and trucks being scrapped to
day is about 50.000. 75.000, 100,
000 or well over 100.000?
3. Jews were elected to the
U. S. Senate from the South be
fore the Civil War; right or
wrong?
4. Macedonia is or isn't a sep
arate state in the Balkans?
5. A "horse mackerel" is a
sailfish. blue marlin, tarpon, cod,
muskellunge, tuna or white
whale?
6. Pres. Roosevelt died on Apr
12, 1945 at Warm Springs. Hyde
Park, Key West, the White House
or elsewhere in Washington.
-7. Norman Thomas is or isn't
running for President this year
on the Socialist ticket?
The answers: 1. Democratic
governor states have many more
electoral votes. 2. Well over 100.-
000 miles on the average. 3.
Right (Florida and Louisiana). 4,
Isn't (it's a region divided among
several states. 5. Tuna. 6. Warm
Springs. 7. Isn't.
Read and Use Classified Ads
MAIL TRIBUNE
Simple
If you aren't registered to vote, you can't vote.
The last day you can register is next Saturday.
If you don't vote, you have no right to complain
about the outcome of the election.
It's as simple as that. E.A.
Don't Kill the Brat
"I'll kill the little brat!!"
Ever feel that way about some child? Probably
but the chances are that the exclamation was just an
angry reaction and wasn't meant seriously.
'Actually, anyone in his right mind would be appall
ed if it were suggested, other than in jest.
But the fact remains that it is much too easy to do
so with the 20th century's second most deadly weapon
the automobile.
IT IS to combat this threat that the Medford police
department and the city schools have entered into
a significant program of training to teach school-age
children some of the life-and-death facts of the dan
gers that face them.
These dangers all take human form.
One is the danger of recklessly operated bicycles.
Here the human factor involved is the student himself.
Another is the danger of automobiles. The human
equation is double, here, including both the student
and the driver.
The third major danger is from the individual
whose preverted impulses and desires are always
dangerous, and the most so in the case of a defense
less child.
'THE program, which we endorse heartily, is another
sign of changing times. At one time safety instruc
tion for youngsters was the responsibility of the home
"and family. To an extent it still is. But our civilization
is changing, growng more complex, and in some ways
more dangerous.
So, as in other ways, society (as represented in this
case by the police and the schools) stepped in to fill
the gap.
No one can count the number of lives which have
been saved by the program, for one can't cout a death
that didn't happen. But it must be considerable.
Perhaps, if drivers could receive similar training, in
similar groups, our overall accident record would not
be the shameful thing it is. E.A. ,
Do We WANT Safety?
In this same vein, "Track Facts," the twice-a-month
publication of the trucking industry, asks:
"Does the public want traffic safety?"
Maybe not. There is evidence to show it doesn't.
States which remove driving privileges from driver
have better accident prevention records than those
which merely warn of ,the dangers, or which fine or
jail serious violators.
Oregon is slowly getting around to this, and in Au
gust alone a total of 781 Oregon drivers had their lic
ences suspended. Six lost their driving rights because
of involvement in fatal crashes; 317 because of driv
ing while intoxicated; 66 for reckless driving; 51 for
violation of the basic rule (speeding) ; 4 for hit-and-run
violations; 83 for failure to report an accident; 44
for a spotty driving record, and 11 for failure to pass a
driving test.
"TRUCK FACTS" recommends much tougher driv
ing laws in Oregon. It recommends abolition of
the law which itself abolished the old-time "speed
trap," which the publication says was eliminated for
the protection of the speeder.
'The basic idea . . . was that catching a speed de
mon was a sporting matter . . ." it says, but points
out that speed is no longer a sporting proposition it
is an invitation to injury and death.
The truckers' paper also advises that the depart
ment of motor vehicles be given greater authority in
its handling of "accident repeaters," so they could be
called in, examined, and if necessary, be prevented
from further driving.
THIS suggestion gains greater stature each time
one observes any of the fool tricks that some drivers
perform. One such was described to us recently, about
as follows :
Two loaded log trucks were zooming toward Medford
on the Crater Lake highway just this side of Eagle Point.
They were so close it looked as though one was towing the
other. The second one kept trying to pass the first one, but -each
time had to pull back beeause of heavy oncoming
traffic (and effectively blocking anyone behind that wanted
to pass). Finally, the second one roared out and managed to
pass the first, which in turn started trying to pass. This
game of "highway tag" continued for some distance.
Log truck drivers, to their credit, usually are ex
tremely careful. Not only their lives but their liveli
hoods ride on those big loads. It is the monkeyshines
of the others, such as those described, which should
be ended by putting them off the highway perman
ently. E.A.
Ten Defendants Take
Poznan, Poland (U.R) Ten
more defendants went on trial
today in the Poznan riot trials
that have led to the dismissal of
two high Polish officials for
their part in the June 28 upris
ing. The initial trials of 12 defend
ants in the rioting that caused
the death of 53 persons already
have aired charges of police bru
tality in the riot investigations.
Sunday, Premier Josef Cryan
kiewicz announced the removal
of Roman Fidelski, deputy min
ister of basic industry, and Ed
Monday. October 1, 1956
Stand in Poznan Trial
ward Dyndowski, deputy minis
ter of foreign commerce.
The announcement gave no
reason for their dismissal, but
officials said it was because they
failed to take adequate consider
ation of workers complaints that
preceded the riots.
There were reports today
some disciplinary action would
be taken against the deputy min
isters, but official sources denied
reports they had been arrested.
Dead line Sunday Classified Is at
noon Saturday: 10 a.m Monday for
Monday; otnex days 5:30 previous day.
German Chancellor Blames U.S.
For Hitch in Rearmament Plan
By CHARLES M. McCANN
United Press Correspondent
Chancellor Konrad Adenauer
has put the blame on the United
States for a serious setback in
his plan to re
arm Western
Germany.
After a long
fight against
opposition par
ties and some
members of his
own party,
Adenauer has
been compelled
to reduce the
Charles M. McCann
draft term for the infant West
German armed forces, from 18
months to one year.
In doing so, he let it be known
that he could not hope to get
parliamentary approval for the
Today and
By Walter
THE NEW GENERATION
As compared with early
August, before the two national
conventions, there is something
quite different
and new in
the political
situation.
Then, it would
have been a
surprise to
find a season
ed correspond
ent or a pro
fessional poli
tician in either
Waiter LLdsj
party who did not think that
Eisenhower was, unless another
illness overtook him, unbeat
able. Now, there are few who
doubt that the election is a con
test in which the Democrats
stand to make important gains
in Congress, and have a fighting
chance for the Presidency.
The main cause of this change
of mood is, I believe, the in
creasing evidence that the Demo
cratic Party is unexpectedly
strong that it is in one of its
periods of revival, as in the
early days of Wilson and again
of Roosevelt. The Democratic
victories in the mid-term elec
tion of 1954 registered the be
ginning of that rvival. They
showed that the Democrats who
had voted for Eisenhower in
1952 were still Democrats; they
showed also that in the new
political generation which is
taking over, the Democrats have
by far the best of it. At the Chi
cago convention last month, the
control of the Democratic party
passed, after Truman's rear
guard action, into the hands of
Stevenson and the new political
generation. It is this rejuven
ated party which is showing so
much bounce and buoyancy.
''THE arrival of the new genera
tion accounts also, I believe,
for the subsiding of the great
factional quarrels of the post
war years under Truman. The
quarrels over civil rights and
over labor's rights and privileges
have died down. It is not be
cause they have been settled.
It is not because they have been
smartly evaded. It is because
there is a new generation in the
North and the South, in the
corporations "and In the labor
unions, which does not respond
1 ''sK
Ike's Campaign Again
Stepped Up; Visit
To Portland Slated
By LYLE C. WILSON
United Press Correspondent
Washington (U.R) It was
just four days ago that President
Eisenhower was telling his news
conference that
he was not lis
tening to a lot
of people who
wanted him to
make a more
active cam
paign. He put
it this way:
"I'm not do
ing one - tenth
of what a lot
1.7 ie C Wilson
of people want me to do."
But Sunday night the White
House revealed that Mr. Eisen
hower had decided to campaign
more actively. Specifically, Press
Secretary James C. Hagerty an
nounced that the President
would make an airplane-automobile
campaign through hot
spots in the Northwest and Mid
west. There may be further such
announcements as the campaign
develops.
Trouble- shooter Eisenhower
will leave Washington by air
plane at 9 a.m. (EDT) Oct. 17
and arrive in Minneapolis at 1
p.m. (EDT). During the next 135
minutes, Mr. Eisenhower wiU
speak before the city halls of
both St. Paul and Minneapolis,
departing thereafter for Seattle,
Wash.
Trouble In Minnesota
The President is going to Min
nesota because he and the Re
publican party are in trouble
there. Part of their trouble is the
fact that , Minnesota farmers
think mighty well of Sen. Estes
Kefauver, the Democratic vice
presidential nominee.
Mr. Eisenhower will spend the
rr 1
18-month term because the Unit
ed States planned a cutback in
its own military strength.
Adenauer's action must be
taken together with the confer
ence in Paris last week between
British Prime Minister Anthony
Eden and French Premier Guy
Mollet.
Eden and Mollet spent two
days planning the coordination
of their foreign policy in the
Suez dispute and also in the en
tire Middle East.
Working Independently ,
This means that Britain and
France, the two chief allies of
the United States, have taken a
step toward working indepen
dently when necessary to pro
tect their interests.
Both Britain and France feel
strongly that the United States
Tomorrow
Lippmann
to the old war cries. Stevenson,
who himself belongs to this new
generation, speaks for it. That
is why he can go into a South
ern state, can take an unequivo
cal stand on the school prob
lem, and yet not precipitate an
irreconcileable quarrel. '
The vigor and unity of the
Democratic party come f rom
the influx of young and vigorous
men who have been working in
their communities on the prob
lems of the present and the fu
ture. They do "not know and
they do not care about the quar
rels between Truman and his
enemies.
THHERE is little evidence of a
corresponding revival, due to
the rise of a new generation,
within the Republican party.
That is the real reason I believe
for the curious listlessness of
the Republican party. In his ac
ceptance speech at the San Fran
cisco convention, the President
spoke Sincerely and eloquently
in the hope that he might be
the leader of such a revival. He
called upon the new generation
to form behind him in making
over the party. There is no evi
dence of such a rally. If his
hope was being realized, it is
evident that the prime exponent
of the new Republicanism would
be Nixon, who is a young man
and Eisenhower s heir apparent.
But nobody supposes that Nixon
would or could or that he wished
to remake the old Republican
party into Eisenhower's new Re
publican party.
The Republican party lacks
vigor because the new political
generation has not yet obtained
control of the party. The party
is in the control of men who are
not vigorous. '
The President's Insight here,
as in so many elemental issues,
was sound when he offered to
lead the new generation in the
remaking of the party. But the
reality of the matter may well
be that as he himself does not
belong to the new generation,
he can advise it, he can inspire
it, but he cannot lead it.
, Almost surely that will have
to be done by men who them
selves belong to the new genera
tion. Copyright 1956 New York
Herald Tribune Inc.
night in Seattle, joining at 9
p.m. October 17 in a statewide
radio and television appearance
with Gov.. Arthur Langlie. Lang-
lie has one of the tougher polit
ical assignments this year to
lick Democratic Sen. Warren R.
Magnuson, who seeks reelection.
The president will proceed on
Oct. 18 by automobile to Tacoma,
Wash., to visit his lawyer-bro
ther, Edgar. He's booked for a
lunch speech there. Thence by
car to McCord Air Base to en
plane for Portland. Ore., where
there is more trouble.
McKay vs Morse
Former Secretary of Interior
Douglas McKay in Oregon op
poses Sen. Wayne Morse's re
election effort. Morse was a Re
publican and an Ike-man until
he bolted the Eisenhower-Nixon
ticket mid-way in the 1952 pres
idential campaign. Next to Dem
ocratic presidential nominee Ad
dlai E. Stevenson, Mr. Eisenhow
er probably would prefer the
defeat of Morse above all others.
The President will attend a
Portland Republican reception in
the afternoon and speak on the
evening of Oct. 18 at the Civic
auditorium
He will be due back
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has failed to give them proper
support in the Suez canal dis
pute.
Adenauers attitude on his
draft defeat implies plainly that
he feels the United States has
let him down on rearmament
There is evidence that as
things are working out, Britain,
France and West Germany- are
likely to cooperate more closely
with each other in months to
come at the expense of close
unity with the United States.
There are hints that Eden and
Mollet think of reviving the
British - French "entente cordi
ale" of 50 years ago.
This entente or agreement,
strangely enough, started out as
an understanding on Egypt and
Morocco.
The new Anglo-French coop
eration also is chiefly concerned
with the interest of the two
countries in the Suez canal dis
pute and France's interests in
northwest Africa. .
European Federation Proposed
Adenauer, m a speech that he
made during a visit to Belgium
last week, proposed the creation
of a European federation which
would be open to aU European
countries and to Great Britain.
The federation would be built
up from existing European co
operative organizations the
Schuman coal and steel plan, the
Council of Europe, the West
European Union and the Euro
pean plan for cooperation in
peaceful use of atomic energy.
Britain has been hesitant to
join plans like this. It thinks a
lot of that 22-mile Dover strait
which separates it from the Eu
ropean continent and it does
not want to be thought of as
European power.
Serious Thoughts
But there are indications that
Britain is thinking seriously of
closer coopeartion with France
and Western Germany, especial
ly whether in a European fede
ration or not.
Adenauer in proposing his
federation cited as one of his
points the impossibility of Eu
rope living indefinitely on pa
tronage from the United States.
What he meant is that it is time
countries like West Germany,
Britain and France cut them
selves loose from American dip
lomatic apron strings and based
their policies on their interests
as European countries.
Future Headlines
Forecast; Tito's
Russ Trip Mystery
United Press correspondents
around the world look ahead
at the news that will make the
headlines.
Mr. T. and Mr. K.
That Tito - Khrushchev confer
ence is still mysterious. But
some smart European diplo
mats see this as the big devel
opment: Tito ft working active
ly with the Kremlin, as a fellow
Communist, for the first time
since 1948. It doesn't mean that
Yugoslavia will become a satel
lite again. In fact, Tito's prestige
probably will be strengthened.
But as these experts see' it, the
thing to remember is that he's"
always been a Communist. His
feud was with Stalin, not Com
munism. Head We Win. Tails You Lose
The Eisenhower a d m i n i s-
tration feels it has a sure thing
in its decision to invite Russian
and satellite observers to take
a look at the presidential elec
tion. If the Reds say "no thanks"
to the invitation, the United
States wins an inning in the West
and East Drooaeanda game. If
they accept, the observers will
see how a really "free and unfet
tered" election is run a man
ifestation of democracy in action
which the government has been
trying for years to get through
the Iron Curtain.
Grand Alliance '
The Suez Canal dispute has
brought a revival of projects for
a commonwealth-type partner
ship btween Britain and France.
Private advices say a new, more
intimate relationship was the
chief topic for discussion when
Prime Minister Anthony Eden
and Premier Guy Mollet met in
in the White .House early the
following morning.
Right now the President and
Mrs. Eisenhower are campaign
ing Ohio and Kentucky with
presidential speeches booked to
day in Cleveland and Lexington.
All of the foregoing shapes a
campaign pattern which does not
much resemble ' the original
plans.
OK
MARKET
1202 North Kiveraid
OPEN EVERY
NIGHT TIL
MIDNIGHT
r
m
J NIGHT TIL M
MIDNIGHTI
Matter of Fact ey stew0rt ai,p
By Stewart Alsop
THE FARMER'S INNER
STRUGGLE
Davenport Interviewing
farmers in the corn-hog country
near here, you run into the
same s m a 11 ,
strange phen
omenon again
and again. You
ask a farmer
who he voted
for in 1952,
and he replies,
"Eisenhower."
You ask him
w h et h e r he
Stewart Alsop
plans to vote
for Eisenhower or Stevenson
this year, and he replies, "Dem
ocratic." The phenomenon is a sympton
of a striking fact. A surprisingly
high proportion of the farmers
who gave President Eisenhower
his landslide victory here in
1952 intend to switch this year
or so they say. But a great many
of these farmers also still like
and admire the President, and
very few of them express any
genuine enthusiasm Adlai Stev
enson. They do not see them
selves switching from Eisen
hower to Stevenson, but rathar
from the Republican to the Dem
ocratic party.
"Eisenhower is a good honest
man," said one farmer, who
spoke for many others, "but
he's got too many big people
pushing him around. Stevenson
talks too slick, but I guess I'll
vote Democratic anyway."
VOU PUT such a man down
as an Eisenhower-to-Steven-
son switcher. But is he? Will
he really vote for a man he
does not admire, against a man
he does admire? That is one of
the key questions in the cur
rent campaign.
Some of the switchers are
certainly genuine. They can
hardly wait to vote Democratic.
For beneath the smiling, sunlit
surface of this rich and- rolling
land there is a surprising bit
terness, especially among the
younger farmers.
If you used your eyes only,
for example in Keokuk County,
which this reporter has now
twice visited, you would con
clude that it was a prosperous,
conservative, amazingly egali
tarian community. Most of the
farms look very much alike
the plain, clapboard houses, the
shutterless windows, the big
barn near the house, the red
painted farm machinery in the
yard. No one, it seems, is rich
there are none of the big man
sions you find in any European
countryside. But no one is poor
either.
VET, If you use your ears as
as well as your eyes, you get
a very different impression.
Some of the farms especially
Medford Firm Gets
Contract for Paving
Salem (U.R) The State
Highway Department Saturday
awarded a $147,050 contract to
F. L. Somers, Medford, for 2.5
miles of grading and paving on
the river bends farm section of
the Rogue River Loop highway
eight miles southeast of Grants
Pass. There were three higher
bids.
Paris last week. Back in 1940
Winston Churchill offered tot
tering France joint citizenship in
a desperate attempt to prevent
its collapse. Now Britain and
France, striving to save what is
left of their empires, see togeth
er on Suez and other world
problems. A partnership between
them would mean less intimate
cooperation with the United
States.
Japanese Premier Ichiro Ha
toyama would like an invitation
from President Eisenhower to
visit the United States on his
way home from Moscow. He's
going to Russia to fix up an
agreement for normal diplomatic
relations. But so far the Ameri
cans have been cool to Hatoy
ama's feelers. He appears to be
on his way out, anyway.
FUNERAL
SERVICES
In Every Price Range
Since 1908
PERL
Funeral
Home
.
Phone 2-6675 '
those of the older farmers are
owned free and clear. These
men grumble, as farmers always
do, but by the large they are
sticking with Eisenhower. It is
the younger men especially, who
have gone into debt up to their
necks to buy expensive machin
ery, who are really desparate.
Why should one group bear
the whole brunt?" one of these
men asked angrily. "It's uncon
stitutional." There are some
damn fools around here who will
still vote Republican." another
said. "They're voting to lose
their farms."
These men are certainly lost
to Eisenhower. But there are
others who say they voted for
Eisenhower in 1952 and are go
ing to vote Democratic this year,
who do not sound quite convinc
ing. They sound a little like a
small boy who threatens to run
away, but does not really mean
it.
These are the men who will
determine whether the farm dis
affection with the Eisenhower
administration which is un
questionably a fact of life in
these parts is to be a really
decisive political phenomenon.
How they will really vote will
depend on a, number of factors
the effectivness of the Steven
son campaign, the price of hogs,
the state of the world.
rpHE BASIC, factor is of course
economic. In this respect, the
Administration - sponsored soil
bank, which is pouring Federal
checks into this area, is sur
prisingly unprofitable poltitical
ly. Many farmers express an
odd sense of guilt about the soil
bank. "It just doesn't seem right
to destroy growing crops," they
say.
But the economic factor is not
the only one. We found only
one farmer in ten who had
heard or read Stevenson's recent,
politically effective, unashamed
ly partisan speech in Iowa. But
the new, hard-hitting Stevenson
line seems to be having a sort
of seed-down effect. At least
two farmers, seemingly uncon
sciously, lifted a phrase from
the Stevenson speech that the
much disliked Ezra Benson v as,
after all, only President Eisen
hower's "hired man."
Estes Kefauver, who is im
mensely popular in these parts,
is unquestionably a major Stev
enson asset. Yet Stevenson can
not possibly hope to equal the
personal popularity of the Presi
dent, who is admired as a man
and as a symbol of peace. Thus
many farmers are being pulled
in one direction by their liking
for the President, and in anoth
er direction by their economic
dissatisfaction. Much will de
pend on the outcome of this
inner struggle.
1958 New York Herald
Tribune Inc.
Man Born Again
GEO. N. TAYLOR
God seems to have kept Old
Rags awake that night for he as
a rule slept through until the
Coffee and And
was announced.
But this night,
Dr. Lewis Sper
ry Chafer was
telling how
God makes him
self rich by giv
ing eternal life
to all who will
have it. At the
close, Old Rags
went to Dr.
fit
V
Chafer with the story of what
the low-down slave will do to
drink one more glass. Dr. Chafer
counselled with the man and out
of it, came faith, hope and new
birth into eternal life with new
days for here and now. Three
months later you see a business
man in a natty suit telling the
men of how he had wife, family
and business back. Yes "If any
man be in Christ he is a new
creation. Old things have passed
away; Behold, all things have
become new." 2nd Cor. 5:17
BIBLE.
Sponsored by a Pac'fie coast
family. adv.
PERL'S every family
may make funeral ar
rangements which are 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!
LU