o
.O
o
o
o
o
O
O
TOUR MEDFORD (OREGOY)
MedfordTribune
"I very one In Southern Ores on
Readi The Mail Tribune"
Published Daily Except Saturday by
MEDFORD PRINTING CO
37-29 North Fir St Phone 2-141
ROBERT W RUHL. Editor
HERB GREY Advcrtuuig Manager
GERALD LATHAM Businen Manager
TRIC ALLEN JR ManaRinf Editor
EARL H ADAMS City Editor
HARRY CHIP MAN, Telejrrapb Editor
RICHARD JEWETT Soorta Editor
OLIVE STARCHEFP Societv Editor
DALE ERICKSON Circular on Mgr.
An Independent Newspaper
Entered aa second clan matter at
Medford Oregon under Act V
arch 3, 1837 .
SUBSCRIPTION
RATES
Br Mail In Advance Per Copy It
Sily and Sunday One year $15 0
tiv and Sunday Six month 8 00
Da and Sunday Thre mot 0MS
Sunday Only One year
By Carrier In Advance dfor
Ashland Centra) Point Fgle Point
Jacksonville. Cold Hift Phoenix.
Shady Cov Rogue Rlvr. Talaat
and on mow routes-
Daily and Sunday One year SIS 00
uauy ana sunaav one montn uu
Carrier and Dealers 10c per copy
All Terma Cash In Advance
OfftrUj piper of the City of Medford
Official Paper of Jackson County
United Presa Full Leased Wire
MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU
Of CIRCULATION
AdrrtiainsOfteoresentative:
H WKST-HOLIDAY COMPANY WC
w Offices In New York Chicago, de
troit. San Francisco Los Angel ea
Seattle Portland St Louis Atlanta
Vancouver. B.C.
NATION A I. EDITORIAt,
ASSOCllAMON
9 . ) I
NEWSPAPER
PUBLISHERS
ASSOCIATION
Flight o' Time
Mediord and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10. 20. 30. 40
and 50 years ago.
iO YE&RS AGO
FSb. 11, 147 (Tuesday)
Rogue River Orchards of
Mdford files application with
civilian production administra
tion for permission to build $59,
000 addition to its plant.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: The latest
popular song, "Open the Door,
Richard!" is now being exten
O sively executed locally.
20 YEARS AGO
Feb. 11, 1937 (Thursday)
Tax rolls for current taxes,
amounting to $1,317,257.34, will
be turned over by the assessor's
office to the tax collection de
parjjnent Saturday.
ifiajor Improvements to build
ing at northeast corner of Main
st. nd Central ave. will start
soon by U.S. National Bank of
Portland, according to George
Frey, Medford manager.
30 YEARS AGO
0 Mayor O. O. Alenderfer re
turns today from Salem praising
Jackson county delegation at
the legislature.
WilGam J. Warner, Medford
postmaster, elected president of
Federal Business association of
soutnern uregon.
40YEARS AGO
Feb. 11, 1917 (Sunday)
Short story by Edison Mar
shall, of Medford, receives place
among 190 best short stories
written in United States in
1916.
G. L. Schermerhorn and L.
Niedermeyer organize a Farm
ers committee to oppose a local
irrigation district.
What's Your I.Q.?
Nine or ten correct It superior: s
a or eight U excellent; five er
tlx If rood.
1. In 1809 there were 180
paper mfl in the U. S. Prior to
thai year, were rags imported
tof the manufacture of paper?
2. The supreme self-exisitent
god of ie Hindus, Brahma, is
usually represented as having
foig- heads and how many
arms? n
O o o
3. Bible: "The voice is Jacob's
voice, but the hands are the
hands mC who?
4. In which country is Harbin?
, Samuel L. Smith wrote
the words for which U.S. nation
al hvgi?
6. "God Save the Queen" and
which U.S. hymn have the same
musical score?
7. Is red alder a bard or soft
wood tree?.
8. Is the Stone Mountain in
Georgia ?r West Virginia?
9. Is the word "above" ever
accigtable as a noun?
10 'JJwo heads are better
(gan" -what?
Answers: I. No. 2. Four. 3
Esaii. 4. China. 5. "My Coun
tryTis of Thee." 6. My Coun
ty 'Tis of Thee." 7. Hard- 8
Georgia. 9. Yes. in a business
letter. 10ne.
MAIL TRIBUNE
Only The Beginning
Roger Babson, writing on this page last Friday, is
excited over the vast potential of the human brain.
Well he may be, for it is believed by some psycholo
gists that most of us use our brains to only 3 per cent
of their capacity.
Most of his message to the effect that increased
attention in schools to the development of brainpower
will pay off we can go along with.
But with one of his passing references we must dis
agree. He said :
"I am convinced that these children (today) do not get
the training that I had 50 years ago. Moreover, every em
ployer will say that the product of our schools is not as good
as it formerly was ..."
. .
lR. Babson, you've fallen for surface appearances,
and haven't thought this through.
Consider:
Fifty years ago there were no compulsory atten
dance laws. Only the wealthy or well-to-do could af
ford to keep their youngsters in school. These favored
youngsters had eveiy chance to succeed. But the vast
majority of children could not, or did not, attend even
high school. Yet it is the graduates, the "cream of the
crop," to whom Mr. Babson refers.
Nowadays, with few exceptions, every youngster
attends high school the wealthy and the poor, the
talented and the dull, the ambitious and the lazy.
I JNDER these circumstances the AVERAGE high
school student of today may not stack up with the
AVERAGE student of 50 years ago. But if Mr. Babson
were to make a more valid comparison that of the
best students of today against the best students of his
youth he'd arrive at far different conclusions.
And we are sure he would find that the best stu
dents of today are far better prepared to face up to the
vicissitudes of life than the best students of 50 years
ago. And what's more,- today's top students come from
every segment of society. Their worth is measured in
what they can do not in who their ancestors were or
how much money their father has.
If, as has been claimed, "Johnny can't read," this
does not apply to a generation of students, but to part
of them. The best can read, do read,,and understand
what they read.
NO, Mr. Babson, don't fall
The top students of today can out-spell, out-read
and out-think the top students of your generation.
And, what's more, there are more of them, both per
centagewise and in total numbers.
The schools of today, and their products, are part
of a social and educational revolution which is still in
mid-stride. They are, perhaps, the -'truest social ex
ponents of our democratic tradition. They have open
ed their doors to all, and do their best, under amazing
handicaps, to permit each student to rise to his own
full potential, no matter what his interests or talents
may be.
It is too easy to look at the defeats and the failures.
What is too often obscured is the high degree of suc
cess they have attained in bringing the level of educa
tion in America to the highest point ever attained.
And this, we believe, is only the beginning. E.A.
Debunking The Debunkers
"Old wives' tales," we were told long ago, are the
bunk.
As the "age of science" burst upon an unsuspect
ing populace about 100 years ago, the scientific fra
ternity set out to "debunk" a host of tales, legends,
customs and habits which had not had the aura of
"scientific investigation" to support them.
Now that the scientific age is a bit more mature,
however, it is being found that more and more of these
folkways really had something to them.
QNCE upon a time, when a man suffered from cer-
tain types of chest pains, the old wives cooked up
a batch of foxglove for him. Silly? Well, foxglove is
a source of digitalis, which the medical fraternity now
use in many heart cases.
Other herbs and nostrums of old, on analysis,
have proven to have real healing powers.
We also remember being told that the adage, "An
elephant never forgets," was silly and not true.
Well, it IS tine or almost, anyway.
.
A GROUP of scientists working at a zoo in Ger-
many tested a young Indian elephant over a pe
riod of time, and found that her general intelligence
level was much higher than that of most animals.
They taught her to recognize a whole series of
different symbols printed on cards, and to discrimi
nate among them.
After a full year had passed, the symbols were
presented to her again 26 of them. In a total of 520
trials, she scored between 73 and 100 per cent right
in remembering each of them. The scientists wonder
if a human being could do as well.
MOT only that, they found elephants can do quite a
bit of thinking on their own. They'll use a branch
to switch away flies, and will pick up a stick to scratch
themselves in places they can't reach with their trunks.
And there are well documented stories of ele
phants stuffing mud into the bells hung on their necks
to muffle the sound before they go out at night to
steal bananas.
So much for the debunking of old wives' tales.
Maybe spunkwater at midnight will cure warts after
all. E.A.
Monday, February 11. 1957
for the easy catch-words
Today and
By Walter
PEACE MAKING
The United States is with
good reason opposing the move
ment to have the United Nations
intervene 1 n
the Algerian
disorders. The
good reason,
which is, I
hasten to say,
not the avow
ed official rea
son, is that
the situation
in the General
Assembly i s
Walter Lippmann
such that public peace making
by means of open resolutions is
for all practical purposes im
possible. The alignment of the
blocs in the Assembly does not
now permit the United Nations
to exert an even-handed pres
sure where there is an issue be
twen West and East.
If, therefore, the General As
sembly were to take over the
Algerian problem, the net ef
fect would almost certainly be
to encourage the Algerian Arabs
to be irreconcilable and to re
fuse those compromises which
will be necessary if there is to
be a peaceful settlement. Far
from promoting peace, the
United Nations would almost
certainly find itself promoting
disorder.
...
IN my recent article, I cited
the voting strength of the
various blocs among whom com
binations must be made to pro
duce the two - thirds majority
which is needed for an import
ant resolution. The basic situa
tion may be summarized in this
fashion: that it takes 52 votes
to pass a resolution, that it takes
27 votes to veto a resolution,
and that while neither the East
erners nor the Westerners com
mand a majority, each has a
veto.
Thus when there is a major
issue, be it over Hungary, Suez,
Gaza, Aqaba, Kashmir or, for
that matter Algeria, the two
vetoes are enough to stop the
General Assembly from acting
at all. This deadlock can be
broken only if certain of the
great powers on the Western
side the United States, on the
Eastern side the Soviet Union
or India, switch sides.
THIS is what happened in the
Egyptian affair when the
United States voted on the same
side as did the Soviet Union and
India. There was no stalemate
and the U.N. took effective ac
tion to compel the withdrawal
of Britain, France and Israel
from Egypt. But there has been
no corresponding switching of
sides, as there needed to be, to
Communications
Letters to the Editor must bear
the name and address of the writer
although under certain circum
stances the use of a pen name or
initial for publication is permis
sible. The Mail Tribune reserves
the riRht to edit all letters with
an eye to clarification and conden
sation. Letters submitted for pub
lication must not exceed 400 words
Put It To A Vote
To the Editor: To the residents
of Medford who do not want
our little city cut in two by the
freeway a remedy may be to
put it to a vote of the people.
Call your city couniclman and
request such a procedure. Save
our park and our homes too.
Mrs. Mary Morgan
618 East Ninth st.
' Medford, Ore.
Praise From USO
To the Editor: As president of
the United Medford Crusade, it
was my pleasure recently to
receive a letter from Admiral
John L. Hall, U.S. Navy, Ret.,
Campaign Chairman of the
United Service Organizations.
As this letter from Admiral
Han was written primarily to
thank the contributors of this
community to the USO, I would
like to quote from it is follows:
"Your community was one of
those which gave thought to the
nearly three million young peo
ple serving their country by in
cluding the USO in your United
Community Campaign last fall.
"USO is deeply grateful for
your part in making it possible
for us to take a measure of
home to service men and women
around the world.
"Many of these young men
are stationed overseas where
world tensions are acute, and
where the American service-man
finds little friendliness in his
foreign community. For them
the secure familiarity of the
USO is more than desirable it
is essential.
"I tender my deep apprecia
tion to all the conscientious
citizens of your community who
took part in the campaign. Such
demonstrations of good will to
wards others renew our faith
in the American way of life."
The United Medford Crusade
included, for the USO, $2,018 in
its 1956-57 Campaign and,
thanks to the generosity of the
Medford people, this amount
will be paid in full.
I feel sure that our United
Medford Crusade contributors
will be glad to know that their
gifts are contributing to the wel
fare of the more than one thou
sand young people in the armed
forces from Jackson county.
William H. Prentice
President
United Medford Crusade
Tomorrow
Lippmann
apply equal pressure to Egypt.
There has, of course, been no
equal pressure about Hungary
and none about Kashmir. If
Algeria were taken up by the
U.N., the whole pressure would
be on France, and none on the
Arab Nationalists.
The fact of the matter is that
the veto is always applied one
way and it is not always ap
plied the other way. For that
reason the General Assembly is
proving itself to be incapable
of carrying out the prime pur
pose of the United Nations,
which is to promote the peace
able settlement of conflicts.
... i
THIS situation is so bad, so
provocative of disorder and
so dangerous to the peace that
it would be intolerable were
nothing being done about it.
Something has to be done about
it, and what is being done is to
try to work out in private under
standings what could never be
avowed or put to a vote in the
General Assembly. This is il
lustrated by the Israeli-Egyptian
deadlock over whether Israel
shall or shall not right the
wrongs she has committed with
out assurances that Egypt will
right the wrongs that she has
committed.
The pressure on Israel to with
draw without any public assur
ances would make no sense,
would indeed be grossly unjust
were it not accompanied by pri
vate assurances that Egypt will
not in fact again blockade the
Gulf of Aqaba and will not
again use Gaza as a base for
guerrilla war. If there were no
good reason to believe that
Egypt will in fact concede what
she will not in principle con
cede, the President, Mr. Dulles,
and Mr. Hammarskjold would
in morals and in equity be in
no position to apply pressure to
Israel.
...
IT IS sometimes said that the
action of the U.N. in Egypt is
in fact directed to the restora
tion of the status quo ante, and
that that was so bad that it must
not be restored. That is not, as I
understand it, a correct descrip
tion of what is going on in New
York.
What the Secretary General is
trying to do is to restore not the
status quo ante in fact. For both
sides violated the armistice end
Matter of Fact
SOVIET BOOMTOWN
In deep snow, with the glory
of the city's broad sweep of the
Volga frozen and snowcovered
into semi-invisibility,
Kui
byshev is sing
ularly lacking
in outward
charm.
The people
hurrying pur
p o s e fully
through the
streets are re-
Joseph Aisop duced to mere
dark bundles by their waddings
against the cold. The new build
dings on the outskirts are stol
idly utilitarian. The old build
ings at the center display an
occasional fantasy, but all are
marred by cracking plaster and
peeling paint.
- The goods in the shops are
mostly shoddy. The theater and
the opera, the movie houses, the
two rather jolly but expensive
restaurants, the bleak, cheap
"dining halls" and above all the
warrens that pass for human
living space are- uniformly over
crowded to the bursting point.
Yet this almost totally grace
less city is still an absorbing
experience mainly because it is
a roaring boomtown, and
boomtowns, with their vitality
and dynamism, are always ex
citing in one way or another.
OTOE .statistics tell the story.
- When Kuibyshev was still
Samara and young Lenin hung
out his lawyer's shingle here,
this was an easy-going little
mercantile center with a pop
ulation of 130,000. Today, Kui
byshev is a big industrial city
of 760,000; and the Kuibyshev
booms continues unabated.
The first part of the secret
of Kuibyshev's boom is of course
the Soviet government's stern
enforcement of an unchallenge
able first priority, an absolute
first call on all resources for
the expansion of this country's
industrial base.
Yet I think, perhaps too bold
ly, that I have found two oth
er important parts of the secret
here.
One of these I began to dis
cover when I visited a "techni
cian." The boys and girls look
ed bright and alert, but their
school had none of the glossy
finish and little of the elabor
ate equipment that you would
find in a technical high school
in a big American city. Only
the most brilliant 5 per cent
were expected to go on to col
lege. The friendly, sensible
principal, Efim Yepifanov, made
no bones about it:
"The state needs at least three
qualified technicians for every
graduate engineer," he said.
"And the chief job of every
"technicum" is to train skilled
workers technicians."
H
E was training new recruits
from the construction in
United Press Correspondents
Predict Headlines of Future
United Press correspondents
around the world look ahead
at the news thai will make the
headlines.
Heat's On
The administration is turning
the heat on plans to give eco
nomic aid to independent Com
munist Poland. The reason: To
offset the collapse of arrange
ments for a visit by Yugoslav
President Tito. Polish-American
talks start in Washington this
week. The administration wants
to show countries of Commun
ist East Europe that they can
get American aid if they show
some independence of Moscow
domination. Tito's visit, stopped
by domestic opposition, was in
tended to emphasize that.
Much Smoke; No Fire
Look for the national furor
over oil price increases to sim
mer down slowly and finally
peter out. Even if indictments
are returned charging the big
international companies with
price-fixing collusion, there will
be long delays in any trials. For
example, a criminal anti-trust
action was filed against five com
panies, charging conspiracy to
control prices, under the Tru
man administration. Atty. Gen.
Herbert Brownell Jr. substituted
civil for criminal charges. But
the suit is still hanging while
oil company lawyers file thou
sands of documents they say are
pertinent to it.
he does not wish to restore the
violations. What he is trying to
restore is the status quo ante in
law that is to say the rules of
the armistice.
A new agreement to observe
the old armistice would, if it
were respected, solve all the im
nnrlanl nnints nnw at. issue be
tween Egypt and Israel. The old
agreement has the peculiar
merit that every party to the
rnnflift hac alrpartv sienprl it.
The question is whether this
o Vi i f. 1 is fan acraiYl hp nut ATI
the road. The answer to that
question is that this can con
rpivnhlv Via Hnnp eiven a su
preme exercise of private dip
lomacy, not only on the part of
the heavily laden" Mr. Ham
marskjold, but also by the Presi
dent, and not only in Cairo and
Jerusalem and New York but
also, it may be m Moscow.
Copyright 1957 New York
Herald Tribune Inc.
By Joseph Alsop
dustry, the ferrous metallurgi
cal industries and half a dozen
others. Kuibyshev has a consid
erable number of other muni
cipal technicums. In addition,
Kuibyshev Napht, the great
trust that is developing the Kui
byshev oil fields for the Pe
troleum Ministry, has its own
technicum plus an institute of
petroleum engineering. The big
Kuibyshev Ball Bearing plant
also has a technicum, and so do
most other larger factories. I
even learned of the existence of
a banking technicum.
Wondering about the city and
asking questions about people's
schooling, one got an amazing
picture of a highly specialized
school system providing an ex
panding industry with a vast,
continuous . flow of specially,
very economically trained skilled
workers.
As for the other part of Kui
byshev's secret which I think I
discovered, it was intended to
be implied in the portrait at
tempted by an earlier article of
the head of the big Kuibyshev
Ball Bearing plant, Aleksandr
Nikolaievich Vasiliev.
An even bigger payroll meet
er was the dark, sardonic, tough
director of Kuibyshev Napht,
Viktor Ivanovich Muravlenko,
whose great oil fields, with their
15,000 workers and 1,000 oil
geologists and engineers, will
soon be out-producing Baku. Be
sides Muravlenko, there was the
slender, precise, shrewd head of
the Kuibyshev branch of the
State Bank, Vasily Romanovich
Volubuyev, who provides the
city's industries and trading
establishments with almost cap
talistic banking and credit fa
cilities. And besides Volubuyev,
there was the Chairman of the
City Soviet (or Mayor), the solid,
commonsensible Vladimir Ivano
vich Semenov who has been pro
moted from chief power station
engineer and talked so knowl
edgeably about his desperately
urgent municipal problems of
housing, water supply, sewage
disposal, and the like.
I THINK anyone who talked
for hours with these men who
make Kuibyshev's wheels go
round, as I did, would have
agreed that they all appeared im
pressively competent and self
confident. And well they might
be, having come up the hard way
to the highest posts in their city.
It was decidedly striking this
Kuibyshev boomtown combina
tion of a growing army of skilled
workers and a top echelon of
highly qualified managers. But I
wpndered whether this interest
ing human combination would
not eventuaUy demand some
modification of the Soviet order
of priorities, that would make
Kuibyshev outwardly pleasant
as well as inwardly dynamic.
Copyright 1957 New York
Herald Tribune Inc.
Blockbuster
Western diplomats expect the
Russians to drop a blockbuster
proposal at the meeting of the
five-nation disarmament subcom
mittee in London next month.
The Soviet government has al
ready tipped its hand by asking
that the foreign ministers of the
five countries United States,
Canada, Britain, France and
Russia attend the meeting in
person.i That would set the stage
for a big Russian propaganda
proposal.
Fight
Tempers have already flared
in the House of Representatives
sub-committee studying Presi
dent Eisenhower's $1.3 billion
four-year school construction
bill. But the real battle will
come on the floor of the House.
The school segregation issue will
make headlines then. Some Re
publicans will offer an anti-segregation
"rider," providing that
Money Troubles Said
Haunting Eisenhower
At First of
By LYLE C. WILSON
United Press Correspondent
Washington U.R) The sec
ond Eisenhower administration
is three weeks old today and in
more trouble
than might
have been fore
seen when the
President
agreed about a
year ago to run
again.
No. 1 trou
ble is Mr. Eis
enhower's fail
ure to hold the -yl. C. Wilson
line of government spending.
The administrations 1958 fiscal
year spending program is for a
peacetime record breaker near
ly $72 biUion.
From trouble No. 1 flows trou
ble No. 2: The increasing possi
bility of disastrous money infla
tion in the United States.
No. 2 leads directly, although
not instantly, to trouble No
which could be a block buster,
No. 3 is the certainty that a ma
jor inflationary spiral would be
followed by disastrous depres
sion.
FDR Ouispent Hoover
Fear of an Eisenhower depres
sion probably haunts the Presi
dent. There was a so-called
Hoover depression way back
there before the Roosevelt era.
The citizens still are talking
about it and sometimes voting
against it.
Mr. Eisenhower could but
probably will not get some
comfort from the fact tnat presi
dents before him have talked
big about cutting government
spending without making it
stick. An almost forgotten big
issue of Franklin D. Roosevelt s
first campaign for president was
his ridicule of Hoover adminis-
New Entrance Tests
Alter College Record
San Francisco 4J.R) Almost
nobody is being flunked out by
the University of California,
San Francisco, a school official
says.
Before 1948 about one-third
of every entering class failed to
graduate. Since then the figure
has ranged between zero and
eight per cent.
The change has resulted from
a new entrance examination,
university spokesmen said.
Would-be dentists, for example,
are oivpn siy-hour tests for their
finger dexterity to determine if
they are capable of drilling cavi
ties without accidentally drilling
the patient's tongue.
FUNERAL
SERVICES
In Every Price Range
Since 1908
PERL
Funeral
Home
Phone 2-6675
no funds shall go to segregated
schools. The outcome may hinge
on how much pressure President
Eisenhower puts on the Republi
cans to kill the rider. A similar
rider, tacked onto the bill last
year, helped to defeat it.
H-Bomb Tests
It's a pretty safe bet that the
United States will resume H
bomb tests in the Pacific, but
probably not until next year. It
looked for a while as if reports
about the danger of strontium
90 fall-out would interfere with
future tests. But the latest scien
tific study has confirmed find
ings that fall-out is unlikely to
be dangerous unless the test rate
is multiplied thousands of times.
President Eisenhower said in his
budget message that the United
States would continue efforts to
cut down fall-out from H-bombs
during the fiscal yesjr ending
June 30, 1958. That means more
tests.
New Term
tration spending and FD'
promise to cut government cosjej
by 25 per cent.
That was in the 1932 presiden
tial campaign and before FDR
had heard about the John May-
nard Keynes theory that big
time deficit spending would
haul a nation out of depression.
Mr. Roosevelt adopted thp O
Keynes theory, and the recorW
will show that he outspent the
Hoover administration many
times over any way you figure
it. - O
Eisenhower Inherited Boom
Keynes theory did not work
for FDR, but he stuck with it
until the World War II boom
lifted the United States out of
depression toward present busi
ness levels.
Mr. Eisenhower inherited the
boom-time employment and busi
ness from the Truman adminis
tration. He was distrustful of
their soundness, however, dur
ing his 1952 presidential cam
paign. Mr. Eisenhower ended that
presidential campaign with a list
of 10 pledges to the people of
the United States. One of them
was to throw "the full resources
of our new administration into
the battle against inflation." The
effective method, he already had
indicated, would be by controls
over money and credit.
A paradox is something which
seems opposed to common sense
but which may yet be true in
fact. So, perhaps it is a paradox
that in the field of national eco
nomics, Mr. Eisenhower is a
most as troubled in the midst of
his boom as FDR was in the
midst of unemployment and de
pression and almost as power
less, maybe, to cope with the
problems involved.
The Great Lover
Geo. N. Taylor
God the Eternal One willed
all things and by Christ, He
made them.
them. All
things were
made by Christ
25?
John 1:1-3
BIBLE.
So came our
earth, the sun,
moon, and ev
ery other uni
verse seen out
beyond the
range of the unaided human eye.
When Christ, as our Saviour had
died for our sins. He ascended
back to glory and sent God the
Spirit, so that by your praye
the Spirit convicts the unsaved
of their lost state and by daily
Bible and prayer, He builds the
saved into Christ-likeness. This
Message sponsored by a Scap
pose family. Adv.
4t PERL'S every family
may make funeral ar
rangements which are tn
o
keeping wffh 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!