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' OTJJt MEDFOHD JOXtOOKJ
"Xver-yone 1m 8cohertl0Oreson
w KtQThe Mali Tribune"
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NATIONAL EDITORIAL
o-rm i . .-rv .rr. .n..
y J o
jJHHJWHTTTal
flight o' Time
Medford and Jackson County
HxiMKy from the files of The
HUl Tribune 10. 20, 30, 40
and 50 years ago.
io'years ago
Dec 19, I94S (Tuesday)
Children of Jackson county
will have a chance to call Santa
Claus thii year, according to
CLloyS Evans, chairman of the
Jaycee,. "Hello, Santa Claus"
c-- :
ftAHTjA PUBLISHERS
O VEjp'A'SSCCIATION
n ' -
Ul - 1
eSrfipaign.
I'rom Arthur Parry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: Harry
)q Ciipman, sports ed. of this sheet
jjasseM the Havanas today. New
gfrl at his hofcse. ,
o -i
20 YEARS AGO
JJec. 1. 193S (Thursday)
AgSlregat value of Jackson
county ffm and orchard crops
year placed at $9,160,000 by
County Agent R. G. Fowler.
Operation of Ruby geld mine
Turtsscinder a new -set-up fol
lowing completion of litigation
Qo establish title, according to
George S. Barton, co-owner.
30 -ftARS AGO
I Dec. 10, 192S (Friday)
Dr.Arnold Bennett Hall, pres-"
Ident of the University of Ore
g6h, is guest tf honor at Jack
son County Cfiamfier of Com
merce luncheon at Medford
hotel. 0 '
Rchinery ir the Mail Trib-
Oune-Virgin radio Broadcasting
station arrives; will be set up
fog preliminary tests tonight.
40 YEARS AGO
Decs 10. 1916 (Sunday)
-j Consignment of Newtown ap
ples are sunk w;ith cargo of a
steamer off the cost of England
by a German submarine.
0 Coart ogiven last night by
Medford High school orchestra
isP success.
5b YEARS 'AGO .
CDec. 10. 1908 (Monday)
Interstate Commerce commis
sion uianning an investigation of
restraints on railroads, it was
annotinced.
0c) From Local and Personal col
umn:0 County Recorder Burnett
is in from Jacksonville today.
5 o WhaJ's Your I.Q.?
Nine or ten correct if tfiperior: tev
n Oor vht it excellent; five or
1. Did Columbus make 2, 4, or
5 voylKes to the New World?
0 2. The bAncri of which tree
is held to be the symbol of
p 3. Were the descendants of
Lamech (of the line of Cain) or
thase of Japheth, grandson -.of
Lamech (defendant of Seth)
wiped aw;- ciy the Fiood?
4 pThe nickname of Nebraska
is'iwnhusker?
5. Ias Woa.-'dftw Wilson the
first President to speak over the
q radio whife in office?
6. The Alcan hiway got its
r-ne inQwhich manner?
7. A plant cannot feel pain,
"ly? O
8?Are snakes generallv her
bivorous0flr earnivorous?
O 9. Is a "kite" a falcon, a fish,
q r a smallosail?
10. "The world's a stage on
wtSchtfll parts are" what?
nsv: . Four. 2. Olive. 3.
Lamech (of ? lin of Cain). 4.
,CornJJsker. 5. No. 6. Abbravla-
lion
oi Alaska-Canadian. 7. It
p. has no brain or nervous system.
U 8. Carnivorous. 9 All. It also
hasv fouV oter meanings.
Okayed." aBhakespeare.
10.
MAIL THIBUaf
Buses and Parking, Con 't.
Pencjleton is another Oregon city which is having
difficulty finding enough parking space. The "Letters
to the Editor," column of the Pendleton East-Oregon-Ian
has almost as many letters on the subject a3 does
that of the M-T.
One writer cites the fact that Pendleton does not
have any bus service at all. (Medford's service is now
so limited, due to lack of patronage, that it serves few
indeed except students.) She said:
"Perhaps if a poll was taken in the business places, ask
' in g if the employee would ride a bus if available, you could
get an idea if it would pay to have a bus line now ... I
wrote .to the Chamber of Commerce about this once, and
' was informed that it didn't pay and that almost everyone
had a car and enjoyed the independence of coming and go
ing as they wished. I do too. But I'm as tired as everyone
else of driving around and around the block waiting for
some one to puU out so I can get a parking space. Most of
us plan our time so a bus schedule wouldn't be too hard to
conform to. I wonder if anyone else feels the way I do?"
TOR some months now we have been receiving pub
lications presumably put out by an organization of
transit companies, which with considerable logic
pound home the fact that there is just so much space
for parking in downtown areas, that it is pretty well
filled in most places, and that rather than trying to
attract more CARS into an already congested area,
the thing to do was to attract more PEOPLE.
Only a bus line can do this at least until heli
copters take over.
Some of the larger cities have already started
limiting parking on many streets (to improve traffic
flow a measure which will come to Medford as
soon as the arterial street program progresses) and
some are even considering a flat ban on private au
tos in downtown areas. This, coupled with special
lanes for buses, frequent schedules, and so on, is seen
as the salvation of overcrowded downtown streets.
TE understand that a group of Medford business
T people a few months ago considered an attempt
to acquire Evergreen Bus lines, and operate it for the
reasons cited above. This project apparently was ab
andoned, possibly awaiting the outcome of the Nov.
6 election on off-streeet parking.
It might be a time now that Christmas shoppers
are crowding downtown, despite the nasty weather
of recent weeks to reconsider the plan.
We have long thought that a thoroughly good bus
service, with adequate schedules which, were well
publicized, and a consistent program of letting people
know about it, just might be the thing which could
rescue bus service from the slump which Jhas hit it
both here and in many other places.
Up to this point, a car certainly has been a more
convenient way of going downtown. But with parking
the way it is, a good bus service might turn out to be
more convenient still.
""THERE are a lot of aspects to this parking problem
business. We can't get over an uneasy feeling that
motorists are going to be sorry the tax-free off-street
parking program wasn't passed at the election. But
that is water over the dam, and the immediate need
is to find temporary expedients until a more perman
ent solution can be found.
One of these was the city's order to the police de
partment to enforce the old ordinance banning "meter-feeding"
in an attempt to prevent people from
monopolizing parking spaces too long.
Since the ordinance has been neglected for so
long, rather sudden enforcement of it took people by
surprise, and there was resentment, particularly
among those who cannot complete their shopping
within the allotted hour, and who find it difficult, in
convenient and irritating to move their car each hour.
This is ? matter which the council should recon
sider, either reaffirming the desirability of the ordin
ance, or repealing it. E.A.
Writing Machine
In offices of every variety and description, and
increasingly in homes, the typewriter is a necessity.
Among those of us who earn our livings by using
such a machine, it is so familiar and taken-for-grant-ed
that it is just a part of the landscape. Chiefly, it is
criticised because it cannot, unassisted, spell very well,
but generally it is accepted even when it is cranky.
THE typewriter, then, is so much a part of the cur
rent scene that it is odd to realize that it is only
100 years old this year. The December issue of the
Scientific American, in its 100-years ago column,
describes the event as follows :
"A most remarkable invention, which we have re
cently examined, is a srr.aU and neat hand-machine for
printing. Its object is to print letter after letter, as a substi
tute for writing with pen and ink. The devices combined
to execute the printing continuously In lines are ingenious.
The letters of the alphabet, numbers, punctuation marks
and spaces are so arranged that when a lever is pressed
down, the letter is forced upwards and impressed on a sheet
of paper. The paper is fed into the machine on a roller.
When one line is printed, the roller is turned forward one
notch, then pushed back to its starting position, and the
machine is ready to print another continuous line. A band
of paper of any length may be used in the machine, and the
printed portion Can be read as it is fed out.
"This machine is well adapted to meet the wants of the
community for various purposes. It can be brought into
service in villages, in getting out handbills, notices or labels
of ny'kind," and it forms a very instructive mode of teach
ing young persons to spell, punctuate, compose, &c, because
they can reproduce at pleasure, in printed form, essays in
prose or verse."
TN THE intervening years, of course, the machine
A has become so universally accepted that the pre
diction that it would be
bills, notices or labels" is
Shycks, we know a few people who write letters,
and whose letters couldn t
handy machines. E.A.
Monday. Dctmir 10, 1958
handy for printing "hand
amusing in retrospect.
be read if it weren't for the
New Lease of Life Seen Likely
For Western Defense Alliance
By CHARLES M. McCANN
United Prest Correspondent
The Western alliance against
Russian aggression is likely to
take on a new lease of life this
Vrgmm, week.
There seems
to be good rea
son to believe
that the North
Atlantic Treaty
o r g a n i z a
tion will be
material-
Charles Mrcann ly.
Especially, there is hope that
relations between the United
States and its closest allies Great
Britain and France, will be re
cemented. Secretary of State John Fos
ter Dulles, French Foreign Min
ister Christian Pineau and Brit
ish Foreign Secretary Selwyn
Lloyd are meeting in Paris to
day. Tuesday they will be joined
in a formal conference by the
foreign ministers of the other
12 members of the North Atlan
tic countries.
If all goes well, it is quite
possible that President Eisen
hower may invite British Prime
Minister Anthony Eden and
French Premier Guy Mollet to
visit him in Washington next
month.
Weakened Steadily
That would be the final evi
dence that a long and danger
Matter of Fact
TROUBLE FOR DULLES
AND WI -SON
Washington It is rather safe
to predict that both' Secretary
of State Dulles and Secretary of
Defense Wil
son or their
sue cessors
are going to
have a much
rougher time
with the 85th
- if i congress man
'K x-s5J they did with
the 84th. In
Senate espe
cially, the
lueub Alsou
Democrats are for the first time
really in a mood to take out aft
er the Eisenhower administra
tion, on both the defense and
foreign policy fronts.
Secretary Wilson particularly
is likely to have an unhappy
time on Capitol Hill, if he stavs
on. Last sum
mer Sen. Stu
at Symington
of Missouri
con ducted an
inquiry into
relative Amer
ican and Soviet
air power. He
took testimony
both from the
civilian offici-
Stewart Alsop
als like Wilson and Secretary of
the Air Force Donald Quarles,
and from the men with opera
tional responsibility, like Gen
erals Nathan Twining and Cur
tis Lemay.
Although the civilians tried to
put the best face possible on mat
ters, the net effect of the testi
mony was downright devastat
ing. It was based on the nation
al intelligence estimates accept
ed by the Administration itself.
And it showed beyond question
that the Administration policy
of cutting back on air force ap
propriations had permitted the
Soviets to forge ahead in four
of the five main categories of
air power, including strategic
air power.
a a a
lOR reasons which remain
mysterious, Adlai Stevenson
never really used the devastat
ing facts unearthed by the Sym
ington Committee in the cam
paign. Indeed, he killed the Issue
for campaign purposes by his
stand on the draft and the hydro
gen bomb tests. But the issue is
not dead all the same.
. Symington and his staff are
now hard at work on a report
summing up the facts and their
meaning. The report will be Is
sued to coincide with the Presi
dent's State of the Union and
budget messages. And it will
thereafter serve as the basis for
questioning Wilson, Ojuarles and
company in hearings before the
Armed Services Committee.
Sen. Richard Russell, chair
man of the committee, is expect
ed for the first time to permit
publication of the hearings, sub
ject to censorship. And Wilson
Quarles and company will thus
be forced either publicly to re
pudiate the testimony of men
like Twining and Lemay, or to
defend a policy which permits
the Soviet Union to attain rela
tive air superiority over this
country. This is surely an un
happy prospect for the Defense
Department officials.
a
pHE prospect facing Secretary
- Dulles is almost equally un
happy. In the last session of
Congress, the prestige of Sen.
Walter George, then Chairman
of the Foreign Relations Com
mittee, served as a shield for
Secretary Dulles. It was only
necessary to persuade George to
support the Administration po
sition, and all criticism was
stilled.
ft ---$4
i J
(,,- . s j .
ous slump in Allied relations
had ended.
The North Atlantic alliance,
formed in 1949 when the threat
of a third world war was great,
has been weakening steadily
since the death of Josef Stalin
brought a temporary new look
to Russian policy.
Relations of the United States
with Britain and France were
strained severely by the ' British-French
invasion of the Suez
canal zone.
Now the Russian mask is off.
Russia's belligerent attitude in
the Middle East, and its shock
ing brutality in Hungary, have
made it clear that the cold war
is on again.
Both the British and French
governments are in trouble still
because of the Suez situation.
Neither Eden nor Mollet can be
sure that he will keep his job
for very long.
But the Suez dispute also
awakened the United States,
Britain and France alike to the
necessity of keeping their ties
strong.
Their feeling is shared by the
other NATO governments as to
the necessity of maintaining
their alliance.
West German Foreign Minis
ter Henrich Von Brentano is
likely to play a big part in this
week's NATO talks.
Adenauer Worried
With good reason, West Ger
man Chancellor Konrad Aden
auer is seriously worried over
By Joe and Stewart Alsop
Now George is no longer in
the Senate. And Secretary Dulles
will face on the Foreign Rela
tions Committee some of the
sharpest-minded and sharpest
tongued Democrats in the Sen
ate men like the majority whip,
Mike Mansfield of Montana, who
is bitterly critical of the Dulles
foreign policy, and Fulbright of
Arkansas and Humphrey of Min
nesota. Young John Kennedy of
Massachusetts, another sharp
mind, is slated for appointment
to the committee, and the new
chairman, old Theodore Green
of Rhode Island, is no fool.
The disappearance of Sen
George from the scene is of
course not the only reason why
Dulles faces a hard time on
Capitol Hill. In an election year
the Democrats were frightened
of President Eisenhower's pres
tige, and of charges of "playing
politics with foreign policy
These fears have now evaporat
ed, more especially because this
is President Eisenhower's last
term.
a a
rjBVIOUSLY thoughts of 1958
" and 1960 play a part in the
newly aggressive mood of the
Democrats on the foreign policy
and defense fronts. Just because
this is so, there is for the first
time serious discussion in the
Admin istration of appointing
leading Democrats to high de
fense and foreign policy posts.
The name of David Bruce, for
mer Ambassador to France, is
most frequently mentioned in
this connection.
Certainly any serious effort to
restore the old bi-partisanship
will be most useful. But al
though partisan motives obvi
ously play a part, partisanship
is not the basic reason why
Dulles and Wilson face a rough
time on the Hill. The simple
fact is that the Administration's
policy of lucking it through on
the defense and foreign front,
which worked surprisingly well
in the first Eisenhower admin
istration, is no longer working
at all. And this makes it certain
that defense and foreign policy
will be the over-riding issues in
the years ahead.
Copyright 1956,
New York Herald Tribune Inc.
U.P. Correspondents
Eye Future
United Press correspond
ents around the world look
ahead at the news that will
make the headlines.
Showdown
Look for a showdown fight
early next year between Con
gress and the executive branch
of the government over the al
leged misuse of presidential au
thority to withhold information
from congressional investiga
tors. Chiefly at issue is the blan
ket use by departments of Presi
dent Eisenhower's letter of May
17 , 1954, instructing Defense
Secretary Charles E. Wilson to
hold back information on the
fight between Sen. Joseph R.
McCarthy and the Army.
Cyprus
Persistent rumors In London
and other capitals say that Greek
Orthodox Archbishop Makarios
w'iU be freed from exile soon to
join in a new attempt to settle
the dispute over the island of
Cyprus. Britain sent Makerios
to the Seychelles islands in the
Indian ocean, charging that he
was hooked up with the Cypriot
extremists who demand that
Cyprus be handed over to
Greece. A British legal expert
is now completing a proposed
I home rule constitution for the
the position of his country.
The United States, Britain and
France sponsored West German
rearmament and got West Ger
many into NATO.
Adenauer realizes that, in the
event of war with Russia, West
Germany would be in the front
line. He has retuctanUy entered
into diplomatic relations with
Russia. But those relations have
never been good.
And while Adenauer has been
pushing through a reluctant Par
liament a German rearmament
program, he has seen the United
State, Britain and France, lull
ed by Russian pretenses of good
will into planning big reductions
of their NATO troop contribu
tions. Brentano is expected to urge
Dulles, Lloyd and Pineau in the
strongest terms both .to renew
their own ties and to realize the
vital necessity of keeping the
North Atlantic alliance strong.
Two-Price Wheat
Plan Supported
Portland (U.R) A resolu
tion supporting the "two price
plan" for wheat was adopted by
members of the Oregon Wheat
Growers ' league here Saturday
as the group wound up its an
nual three day convention.
Richard K. Baum, executive
vice president of the group, call
ed the proposal a "long-range
solution to the wheat problem
at little cost to the taxpayer."
Baum told fellow members
that the "two price plan" also
known as the domestic parity
plan would work because it
"puts the farmer back into the
business of selling wheat." ,
Baum explained that under
the plan, farmers would sell
their wheat on the open market,
but would receive parity pay
ments on the approximately 50
per cent that was used for hu
man consumption.
He said that growers who in
creased production would not
qualify for additional parity
payments and that extra wheat
grown would have to be sold
at the lower market price, thus
automatically regulating pro
duction. The league also went on rec
ord as favoring the adoption of
a general retail sales tax in Ore
gon with half of the income
used to relieve property taxes.
Raphael Raymond of Helix
was elected president of the
league.
Communications
Letters to the Editor must bear
the name and address crt the writer
although under certain circum
stances the use ot a pen name or
Initial for publication is permis
sible. The Mail Tribune reserves
the right to edit all letters with an
eve to clarification and condensa
tion Letters submitted for publica
tlou must not exceed 400 words.
Animals in Cold Weather
To the Editor: All animals
need additional feed during cold
weather. Special state laws spe
cifically set forth the care of
stock. Among other things these
laws provide that animals must
be properly sheltered and that
they must not be tethered with
out shelter during cold weather.
Native birds are also apt to
suffer during weather like the
present, and the Humane So
ciety urges residents of the
county to put out scraps, crumbs
and chick feed for them.
Southern Oregon Humane
Society
DURLING ON VACATION
E. V. Durling, whose col
umn "On the Side" appears
regularly in the Mail Trib
une, is on vacation. It will
be resumed on Dec. 17.
Headlines
island. It may be offered to the
Cypriots within a few weks. If
so, Makarios will be needed to
take part in negotiations.
Could Be
Washington insiders are con
vinced that the demonstrations
against "Stalinist" rule that
erupted in Poland and Hungary
will spread eventually to Russia
itself. They say it won't happen
soon. But they are watching
such symptoms as recent student
unrest in Moscow and Leningrad
universities. Washington figures
that in time Russians will find
that relaxations due to revolt
or threatened revolt are giving
the satellite peoples a better way
of life than exists in Russia, and
will want something done about
it.
Pick Up
A lot of superstitious Britons
are saying that things will start
to pick up after Dec. 23. That's
when Big Ben, the famous bell'
in the Parliament tower in London-,
will start chiming again.
Ben went off the air for repairs
July 2. Since then Egypt has
seized the Suez canal, prices
have been rising. Britain's gld
reserves have dwindled and
British-American relations have
been weakened.
Today andoTomrrpw
By Walter
HUNGARY'S HEFUSAl.
Contrary to what the Secre
tary General of the United ac
tions had been lei to believe by
the Kaflar delegate in New
York, tne
dar govern
ment in AuSaC
pest is not now
willing to dis
c u s s arrange
fn e n t s for a
vt s i t on ftec.
16.FoPall prac
tical purposes
that gbvern
m e n t is not
.-ai;ai
WVaULCr LlfJf nialD
only refusing to admit the ob
servers from the U.N., it is re
fusing fo admit the Secretarje
General himself. How can thjs
refusal be reconciled with the
obligations of a membeft Sure
ly there can be no real doutft
about the inherent right ofc th
official agent of the United Nas
tions to discuss with any govern
ment that belongs to the United
Nations any question with which
the United Nations are con
cerned.
In the Effvntian affair nn one.
not Britain, France and Israel,
not Egypt, not the governments
which are hesitating and ab
staining about Hungary. Jias
questioned the right of file Seco
retary General to go0to Cairo
to implement a resolution of the
General Assembly. On what
ground can his right to go to
Budapest be questioned now?
And on what ground could anyQ
member of the U.N. justify its
own failure fo uphold theo au
thority and to defend the rights
of the United Nations?
Kadar's delegate is New Yoric,
Mr. Imre Horvath, should be re
fused the right to speaB or toj
vote in the General Assembly
until his government in Buda
pest admits the Secretary Gen
eral. This would be the appro
priate reply to what is an sub
stance a refusal by the Kadar
government to maintain full
diplomatic relationso with o the
United Nations. It does not, oi
course, mean the "expulsion" of
Hungary, which as nation is a
lawful and welcome member of
the United Nations. Nor is it a
withdrawal of the recognition
of the Kadar government, even
though in law it is not the legiti
mate government o,f Hungary.
lhe proper rule for ttje United
Nations is to'deal with de facto
governments. But the refusal to
let Horvath speak or vote in the
General Assembly would be to
suspend in New York the diplo
matic relations "wttich have been
suspended in Budapest.
a a
THE refusal to receive the Sec
retary General is consistent
with the fundamental policy of
the Kadar government, of the
Soviet Union and of its satel
lites. This is to prevent the Unit
ed Nations from dealing with
Hungary. This policy is being
enforced by the paramount
power of lhe Red Arny in Cen
tral Europe. Because of that
military power the resolution
of the U.N. are ignored, its'
agents are kept at a distance.
Hungary is a country uVidSr the
military occupation of the Red
Army and the supreme law in
Hungary is the law laid dwn by
the Red Army.
But this assertion military
force is being rationalized by
the claim which has made a
impression in many capitals,
that the Red Army is acting
lawfully in Hungary and that to
Sharp Earthquake Is
Recorded in Pasadena
Pasadena (U.R) A sharp
earthquake wich could cause
considerable damage if locate
in a populated area was record
ed at 8:19 a.m. (PST) Saturday
by the seismological laboratory
of the California Institute of
Technology.
Dr. Charles Riftiter,0 said the
temblor was about 3,000 miles
away in an unknown direction,
its intensity was 6.5.
I: :S
r Xs" f
FUNERAL
SERVICES
o
In Every Price Rang
Since. 1908
PERL
Funeral .
Home.
Phone 2-667S .
O
filiterift-e with swffatoit is doing
is to violate article z of the
Charter. Thft article ders the
rigjit0of the U.N. "toQintervene
in3matteaswhich are essentially
withiruthe domestic jurisdiction
of any state "
TN CTHIS conction, I would
-- recommeng the study of the
memrandurofirst pubBshedoin
the middle of November by he
International oCommison "Gtf
Jurist which has fts headquar
ters at The Hague. his mftip
randum is calledQ"Hungary af?d o
the Soviet Definition ofoggres
sion." It onjains the clearest
and most succinct account avail
able of Ale Events in Hungary
whicB led up toahe Kadarlisufi
I0would be surprised if any
one who readsit ifh anipen
nrflnd will disagree witfe ijs con-clusions-2-that
Kadaris a usurp
er and 8 pugpet. that his govern
ment is il(fcgitftflate, gnd that by O
th Soviet Unftn's, ow official
definition of "agression," as
pr8posed to the lnited Nations
in 1953, the Soviet Union's ac
tion in Hungary is aggressioa.
, (C) 195;
Negr York etfetftad TriSunetfnc
8niy 12 o
O O Q
o Shoppirfg Days
Til Clyistrrias!
.CHRISTMAS LIST
GETTING LONGER
ANB LONGER?
FOR FUtiDS 0 o
COVERALL YOolaR
CrRISTMAf
NEEDS0.
SEE
0
I PACIFIC
IP!I.liCTnftl-
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16 . CentrS Ph. ft-5308
Tha Glad Day
GSO. tf.oTAYLOR
In iGd s own timoj Christ,
God's Son, cametthis earth as
one of us. He was tipted at,
every o i n t like s we, yet
He earned not.
P Then sinless
.. 1 Ifimself, He
otook epf sins
and died for us.
Q- l
oo jurist Kl us
, a frep nf the
5-i " .
charge of being
sinnersOnd lost
if we only
believe th&t He
d?d for us.
A mother jftf-
fersbirth-pairaWhen she brings
a babe ito the world. So Christ
suffered, wheHe went into the
depths'of hell for us. God saw
atai ftas satisfied t't Christ
paid i all .(Isaiah 53:11 says:
"Travail" but,, we of today say
"birth-pai.") Believe down in
your heart that Chrfct dil for
your sins and God gives you
eternal life. Then by daily Bible
jnd prayer, g3w up.
' This menage sponsored by a
Scapgoose dairy family. adv.
g 6
O O
A
J PERL'S eery family
o
moy'make funeral ar
o o
ranaements which are In
. O
keeping vtfih its meanS? A
o 0
election ofo services cjn
every pyice range
of-
fered to saifcV invidual
treferences and to meet
a
all financial cir-atancei&
Coiyeniit Terrf? 6
Certainly!
Lippmann
O
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