Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, May 06, 1957, Image 4

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    FOUR MEDFORD (OREGON)
UNI
"Everyone In Southern Orefon
Heads The Mail Tribune"
Puoushea Dally Except Saturday by
MEDFORD PRINTING CO
27 -28 North Tit St. Phone 2-8141
ROBERT W EUHU Editor
HERB GREY Advertising Manaer
GERALD LATHAM Buaineaa Mauler
ERIC ALLEN JR. Managing Editor
EARL H ADAMS City Editor
HARRY CHIP MAN Telegraph Editor
RICHARD JEWETT Sooru Editor
OIJVE SI ARCHER Society Editor
DALE ER1CKSON. Circulation Mgr.
An Independent Newspaper
Entered w second class matter at
Medford Oregon under Act of
March 3. 1897
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
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Official Paper f the City of Medford
Official Paper of Jackson County
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NATIONAL EDITOIlAi
got I U I
Flight o' Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30 and
40 years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
Mar 6, 1947 (Tuesday)
Return of seven men to duty
at the local telephone office
leaves only women personnel
left in carrying on the strike at
this point.
From Arthur Parry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: "FOR
SALE 125 year old hens.
Cheap If taken at once." (Ex
change) They came west before
the '49ers.
20 YEARS AGO .
May 6. 1937 (Thursday)
Standing Committees of Jack
son County Chamber of Com
merce for coming year an
nounced by Olen Arnspiger,
president.
Medford CCC district will lose
two companies in routine sum
mer shifts, according to Major
George R. Owens, district com
mander.
30 YEARS AGO
Mav R. 1927 (Friday)
Snecial sale of sprinz wear
launched at Adrienne Steward's
shop on North Central ave. . .
From Local and Personal col
umn: Mrs. Leo Scott of Gold
Hill is at Community hospital
for medical treatment. ,.
40 YEARS AGO
May 6, 1917 (Sunday)
About 2,500 valley residents
attend community field day and
school meet at Eagle Point.
. From Local and Personal col
umn: C. P. Van. Houte, district
superintendent of Pacific Tele
phone company, is in Medford
on business.
What's Your I.Q.?
Nine or ten correct Is superior; sev
en or eight is excellent: five er
six Is good.
1. Was the first cotton-sewing
thread in the U. S. manufactur
ed in Pawtucket, R.I., or Char
lotte, N. C?
2. What is ANETA?
3. Bible: To whom was Pilate
supposed to have pointed when
he said "Behold the man!"?
4. What lake and state bound
'Pennsylvania on the north?
5. In a debate, two kinds of
proof may be presented; direct
and .
S. From what physical disab
ility did Lord Byron, English
poet, suffer.
7. Which State of the Union
produces nearly half of the steel
output of the U.S.?
8. Which city in Pennsylvan
ia is the greatest hard coal cen
ter of the country?
9. "Reverent" means feeling
or showing reverence. Is it prop
er to use it as a prefix, as in
Reverend?
10. "Where ignorance is bliss,
'Tis folly to be" what?
Answers: 1. Pawtucket. R.I.
(1794). 2. Dutch News agency. 3.
Jesus. 4. Lake Erie and New
York State. 5. Indirect. 6. Lame
ness. 7. Pennsylvania. 8. Scran
ton. 9. No. 10. "wise." Thom
as Gray.
Hoagy Carmichael Due
On Campus at Eugene
Eugene U.R) Composer
Hoagy Carmichael will be on the
University of Oregon campus
May 17 as a guest master of
ceremonies for the annual canoe
fete. Carmichael's son is ' an
Oregon student.
Gen. Winfield Scott, U. S. com
mander in the war with Mexico,
was known as "old Fuss and
Feathers" because of his insist
ence on military etiquette and
discipline.
-.1 1
mimiH'HMHi
t l--ASSOCIATION
MAIL TRIBUNE
School Budgets Up
The next few weeks will be crucial ones in the
schools of Jackson county.
On Wednesday, May 8, voters of School District
6C, which includes the large area around Central
Point, Gold Hill and Sams Valley, will be asked to
pass on the budget for the year 1957-58.
On Monday, May 20, patrons of the Jackson
county rural school district, which covers most of the
county outside of first class districts, will be asked to
pass on the rural school budget.
On Tuesday, June 4, voters of the Medford dis
trict will have up for approval the budget of the ex
panded and consolidated Medford school district,
which now includes what were the Oak Grove, West'
Side, Dewey and Kenwood districts.
IT SHOULD surprise no one that each of the budgets
is larger than for the current year.
The schools are expanding because there are more
children to educate. This costs money for buildings,
for teachers, for buses, for equipment.
Inflation has hit the schools, just as it has hit
everyone else. A dollar today won't buy as much as a
dollar would a few years ago. This applies to teachers'
salaries, and textbooks, and erasers, and building
materials for the schools, just as much as it does to
the family groceries.
There is one other factor which is not inconsid-
the standards of education.
TTHE schools, by and large, ARE doing a better job
of education today than they did a half-century
ago. And educators who are worth their salt are doing
all they can, constantly, to improve even further the
kind of education our children receive. This is re
flected in higher educational standards for the teach
ers themselves, for one thing, and in both the breadth
and depth of the curricula offered the youngsters.
There is one other factor which is' not inconsid
erable. 1 '. -:
That is the fact that, year after year and all
through the year, teachers and school administrators
are under constant pressure to offer MORE to the stu
dents, rather than less. And, since the schools are a re
flection of the needs and demands of the community,
the curricula have grown in response to this commu
nity pressure.
THE democratic form of government is based, and
1 is wholly dependent, on a generally high level of
education.
This presupposition is implicit throughout all our
great documents of liberty.
is in to govern itself. Without education a good,
basic education the electorate cannot be enlight
ened, and democracy, both as a whole and in its parts,
will suffer.
, This is the reason we hope, and hope strongly, that
the voters of the county, who are being asked to pass
judgment on the schools and the job they are doing
with the great majority of young people, will study the
Duagets presented to them.
A NYONE who complains
tion" about the schools has only one person
himself to blame. The schools, generally speaking
and with a few exceptions, have done their level best,
against almost overwhelming apathy, to inform par
ents, voters and taxpayers about their problems.
We have seen teachers almost incredulously grate
ful when a parent takes the time to express a sympa
thetic interest in what the schools are trying to do.
The budgets, as published, cover a great deal of
activity in necessarily brief form. It is a sort of
"shorthand" designed to give a general idea of how
the taxpayers' money is to be spent during the coming
year. Anyone who is interested in finding out just why
they need the sums they are asking would find answers
forthcoming cheerfully if they took the trouble to ask.
.
A SIDE from the needs of democratic government,
there is one further great need for good schools.
It was voiced in a speech recently by the President
of the United States, who said :
"Our schools are strong points in our .national defense.
Our schools, are more important than our Nike batteries, "
more necessary than our radar warning nets, and more .
powerful than the energy of the atom.
"This is true, if for no other reason that' modern weap
ons must be manned by highly educated personnel if they
are to be effective, and the energy of the atom can only be
understood and developed by the most highly trained minds
in the country."
This is something we should all be able to under
stand. This is something we can all do something
about, through adequate support for the schools.
The President also said:
"The hope of the world is that wisdom can arrest con
flict between brothers. I believe that war is the deadly har
vest of arrogant and unreasoning minds."
What better argument is there for strong, active,
adequately-supported schools for America? E.A.
Sun Again Shines On Battered Texas
Dallas, Tex. (U.PJ Flood
waters receded today from riv
ers in the Texas flood belt and
the sun blazed again. It was the
second day of relief for the state
after a' 19-day spell of violent
weather.
Slight danger remained along
the Sabine river in parts of
western Louisiana, but the
floods that wreaked millions of
dollars of damage in nearly
every part of Texas appeared
gone.
Water still covered lowlands
along many rivers, however.
Flood crests along the Trinity
and Brazos were surging toward
the Gulf of Mexico, and during
the two weeks it is expected to
Monday, May 6, 1957
An enlightened electorate
about a "lack of informa
take them to reach the coast
they will cause more lowland
flooding.
One million dollars has been
authorized to the flood-stricken
areas by President Eisenhower,
and Gov. Price Daniel estimated
the damage to public facilities
alone at more than five million
dollars.
Within the boundaries of Cali
fornia are the highest and low
est points in the U. S. Mount
Whitney rises to an elevation of
14,495 feet while Death Valley
has a point. 282 feet below, sea
level.
Use Mail Tribune Want Ads
The low Cost Way To Sell
I cr-
, Naw tve didn't have any
: . nini :Lltl Akl'lW
Matter of Fact
THE PRESIDENT'S TASK
Washington The task which j
now faces President Eisenhower
is easy to define but exceedingly
d l f f lcult to
perform. Sav
ing the sub
stance of his
threat ened
1 e g i s 1 a tive
program is
only part of
the job, and
the s m a 1 1 er
part is to re-
Stewait Alsop create uie
public image, of himself, which
has faded so rapidly and mys
teriously since his triumph at
the polls, as the unchallenged
leader of his party and the na
tion. This is why the President is
considering a plan to "take his
program to the people." The
plan which is being urged on
him is not for a single broadcast,
but rather a whole series of
radio and. television reports a
weekly "Eisenhower h o u r,"
lasting perhaps three or four
weeks.
The fact is that the Eisen
hower program is in such bad
trouble right down the line that
a single broadcast cannot pos
sibly save it. Competent Capitol
hill observers predict flatly that
it will take some sort of Presi
dential miracle to save the two
most important items on his do
mestic program, the school con
struction and civil rights bills,
both of which seemed almost
certain of passage only a few
weeks ago.
THE CIVIL rights bill prob
ably received its death blow
when the House Republican
leaders made a deal with the
Southerners to delay House con
sideration of the bill until after
the Easter -recess. The quid pro
quo was enough Southern votes
to kill Rep. Wright Patman's
proposed investigation of the ad
ministration's fiscal policies. As
a result of the delay, the Senate,
Southerners, brilliant , parlia
mentarians to a man, should be
able to prevent passage of any
thing but the most meaningless
sort of civil rights legislation.
And the school bill has been
mortaly wounded, if not killed
once and for all, by the furore
about the budget.
On the foreign and defense
front, sharp cuts are consider
ed dead certain in the foreign
aid bill, the foreign information
program, the State Department
budget, and even the defense
budget. On the foreign aid bill,
for example, the question is not
whether the President can save
the biU intact, but rather
whether he can hold the cut to
a billion dollars or less.
Indeed, some of his advisers
are dubious about the whole
plan for "going to the people."
Thev argue that he wiU be mak
ing a futile charge of the Light
Brigade, doomed to inevitaDie
defeat, and thus compromising
his prestige rather than en
hancing it. There is certainly
something to be said for this
view.
Under the best of circum
stances, it is exceedingly dif
ficult to stampede Congress
with appeals to the voters. The
elderly men who really run Con
eress simply bottle up legisla
tion committees unti the impact
of the Presidential eloquence has
worn off. And these are the
worst of circumstances.
THE REPUBLICAN revolt
against the President's pro
gram has passed weU beyond
the muttering stage, and it has
spread from the extreme ngnt-
wingers to the moderates. In the
Republican cloakrooms, -the
phrase "Modem Republicanism'
is spat out with almost as much
disguest as "New Dealism" used
to evoke. And Senate Republi
can Leader William Knowland
has in effect assumed leadership
of the revolt, with his attacks
on the budget, the foreign aid
program, and the school bill.
Congress as a whole, more
over, is in no mood to be stam
peded. A Democrat summed up
the findings of men of both
parties during the Eastern re
cess "The voters want Con
gress to do just three things,
cut the budget, cut taxes, and go
home." The President has his
job cut out for him, if he hopes
P' - ''''
,
fun! Mo wants to sit oh
AT
By Stewart Alsop
to change the voters' minds in
time to save the substance of his
program.
YET, THE proponents of the
plan to go to the people con
tend that it's central purpose is
not only to better the chances
of this or that item of legisla
tion. Another object is to undo
at least some of the harm done
by the President's initially weak
response to his own Secretary of
the Treasury's attack on his own
budget an episode which ap
pears in retrospect a major turn;
ing point in the second Eisen
hower administration. In the
process, it is hoped, the notion
that the President has suddenly
succumbed to wild-eyed New
Dealism can be dispelled, and
the brewing Republican revolt
damped down and controlled.
IN A larger sense, the real ob
ject of the exercise will be to
re-establish the President's fad
ing authority by moving him
front and center on the national
scene "To remind people,"
in the words of one proponent
of the plan, "that Ike is still the
boss man.
(c) 1957 New York Herald
Tribune Inc.
Editorial
Comment
FOR A LADY D.A.
Portland's vice and corruption
problem boils and boils.' Rare is
the reader, we dare say, who can
explain from one day to the
next' just what it's all about.
But one fact stands out. Some
thing's got to be done.
A Portland man writes a
letter to the Oregon "Journal to
make a suggestion that makes
sense down this way. Now that
Portland's looking for a new
district attorney, he says, why
not pick State Senator Jean
Lewis? Mrs. Lewis, certainly
one of the outstanding members
of the last two Legislatures, is
a lawyer, a public servant of ex
cellent reputation and a hard
worker. Also she's a Democrat,
a requirement for the person
appbinted to fill District At
torney Langley's shoes.
The last time Portland got
into a mess it looked to a lady
legislator to clean house. It
found Dorothy McCulough Lee,
an outstanding member of the
Legislature, and elected her
mayor. Portland was never so
clean as it was during Mrs.
Lee's administration.
And way back in Oregon his
tory we find the story of the
time Gov. Os West sent his sec
retary, Fern Hobbs, to clean up
Copperfield, the wickedest town.
on the Snake River. Eugena
Register-Guard.
SOUND SENATE TAX VOTE
The Oregon Senate showed
political courage and good sense
in defeating, 22 to 8, the vari
able ratio property taxation bill.
This measure had a pie-in-the-sky
political appeal. It would
have offered a $2000 exemption
on residences occupied by own
ers. And it would have slugged
double that of other property.
. But these ratios, destroying
present law requiring equal as
sessments among various classes
of property, would have thrown
local taxation into chaos.
One bill which should be con
sidered, however, to relieve
property taxes' on the aged and
needy, has been proposed to the
Legislature by the State Tax
Commission. This is H. B. 220,
which would exempt $7500
from the true cash value of a
homestead owned by a person
65 years of age or over who de
rives less than $2500 total gross
income in a year. Passage of
this bill would provide real re
lief to a large group of eldery
citizens who really need it, with
out throwing the local property
tax structure out of gear Port
land Ortgonian. .
COLUMNIST'S LICENSE?
We are in receipt of an un
usual communication from New
York, signed only "A former
resident who wishes he was
back."
The letter contained a clipping
from the Broadway column
written by.Danton Walker for
Democrats1
Different In, Out of Congress
By RAYMOND LAHR
United PrM Correspondent
Washington U.P.) Demo
cratic leaders outside of Con
gress sound much less concerned
with demands to cut President
Eisenhower's budget than do
Democrats in Congress who have
the hot breaths of the voters on
their necks.
This was one inference to" be
drawn from what was heard at
the week end series of meetings
and conferences attended by
Democrats from throughout the
country. .
There was complete agreement
among Democrats in and out of
Congress that the administra
tion is floundering in its maybe-
lt-is, maybe-it-isn t-too-big atti
tude toward the budget.
Trumaa Speaks Up
When former President Tru
man spoke of the 72 billion dol
lar Eisenhower budget, he in
vited the Democratic majority
in Congress "to tear the thing
to pieces." But he also said:
"Our national economy is
strong enough to support a budg
et of the size recommended by
the President if that is what it
takes to do the job, and all this
talk about it bringing on a de
pression that will curl your hair
is just plain nonsense."
Gov. G. Mennen Williams of
Michigan, a prospective candi
date for the 1960 presidential
nomination, said Democrats
keeping faith with their plat
form will not "cooperate with
Republican reactionaries to
meat-ax the Eisenhower budget."
the New York Daily News. One
item in the column states: "Gin
ger Rogers stands to make mil
lions from her property in Ore
gon, where she has 690 acres,
because of recent community de
velopments." The unidentified Courier cor
respondent asks, apparently with
incredulity: "Is this possible?"
Frankly, we have no inside
knowledge of Miss Rogers' in
vestments in Oregon, aside from
the fact that she reputedly owns
considerable property along the
upper Rogue' river. We can't
imagine her. making "millions
from any development in the
area of her ranch holdings, al
though they admittedly are valu
able. She may have other hold
ings in Oregon of even greater
potential value, of course.
If Miss Rogers is so fortunate
as to cash in on real estate in
vestments, all the more power
to her. As they might say in
Hollywood, "It couldn't happen
to a nicer person." Grants Pass
Courier.
SOME UNSUNG HEROES
Some unsung heroes are doing
some unpleasant jobs this time of
year for their fellow citizens.
They are preparing budgets for
counties, cities and school dis
tricts. They have a task to perform
the results of which cannot
please , everybody. To please
everybody would be impossible.
They could go part way by ac
ceding to all requests from ad
ministrators and department
heads and pressure groups,
which would please them, but
the result would displease the
taxpayer. They could reduce
services to the point that a de
crease in taxation was possible
and that would make many tax
payers happy, but it would bring
shouts of protest from the peo
ple responsible for providing the
services and those who bene
fitted from them.
So, you see, the man on the
budget committee is darned if
he does and darned If he doesn't.
The responsibility of the budg
et committee member is identical
to that of the man who serves
in the legislature at Salem or in
the Congress of the United
States. All must carefully weigh
the demand and requirement for
services. In many cases the value
of the service greatly outweights
its cost in taxes. In other cases
it does not.
People who have served on
budget committees and in legis
lative bodies have learned that if
a governmental service contrib
utes' to the welfare of many
there is likly to be very little
grumbling about "Its cost. So,
while tax millage never can be
overlooked by the people who
are digging into county, city and
school budget figures, the need
and demand for certain services
must first be considered. It is
that need and demand that must
override all other considerations
of budget makers. If the need
and demand are genuine a way
can be found to meet the cost.
. At this budget-making time
we would like to offer the
thought that most citizens of the
U.S.A. receive for the dollars
they pay in taxes far more than
they could get in any other coun
try. They get police and fire pro
tection, school buildings and
teachers, highways and streets,
military protection, institutional
care for the mentally ill, funds
to care for welfare cases, recrea
tional areas and programs, pro
tection of natural resources, re
search programs in many areas,
domestic water supplies, and
much more. The American tax
payer getg a lot for his buck.
The budget maker toils to be
sure that he squeezes every pos
sible service and economy out of
the buck. For that we offer him
abundant thanks. Pendleton
Eut-Oregoniaa.
View of Big Budget
Adlai E. Stevenson, 1952
and 1956 Democratic presiden
tial nominee, . included similar
remarks in his prepared text for
Saturday night's $100-a-plate
dinner' although he did not de
liver them. However he did not
repudiate this statement:
Sees Tax Reduction
"... If the Democratic Party,
which has stood so brilliantly in
our time for the constructive use
Communications
Letters to the Editor must bear
the name and address of 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 eye to clarification and conden
sation. Letters submitted for pub
lication must not exceed 400 words
Nice Words
To the Editor: We have lived
in Medford for the past year
and a half and enjoy your paper
very much. It has been our ob
servation that you give a good
account of the news and events
in Medford and Jackson countv
We also have noted that you arc
not the first to jump on the
wagon when someone or some
group is criticized by someone.
L I refer to the Coos Bay Times
claim that information has been
withheld from the public by the
Coos County school superintend
ent. Having lived in Coos county
for a number . of years I have
noticed that the Coos Bay Times
is quick to cast the first stone.
Would like to add that in the
year and a half we have lived
here our opinion is that the
Medford Police Department is
very polite, conscientious and
honest. They should, like the
rest of us, be considered inno
cent ' of any wrongdoing until
proved otherwise. We have paid
our share of parking tickets too!
Rolf Holmstrom,
1005 North Central ave.
Medford, Ore.
Needs Answers
To the Editor: Under "Com
munications" of May 1, a J. M.
van der Maas writes about Sat
an and religion. I really think
he badly needs answers. .
So I may directly answer him
first of all with two questions.
You pretend to know better
about God and religion and Jes
us Christ than the millions ot
Catholics and ' Protestants alike.
So answer me this silly question,
what was first, the chicken or
the egg? No. 2: What is it, it has
a mother, grandmother and
grandfather but no father? AIsj
Christ was the only man that
foretold of his death and burial
and to rise again' of his own ac
cord. You yourself in all ypur wis
dom will never do that. You
probably never heard of th
Miracle of Lourdes in France or
the Lady of Fatima in Portugal
or St. Nicholas von der Flue in
Switzerland, who had eaten
nothing except the blessed Host
for about 20 years, or the present
Therese Neuman in Bavaria.
She, too, is on the fast already
for many years, no water, no
food, except the daily commun
ion in the local parish church.
True, Satan tries his best to
get the rest of the world under
his claws through irreligion
May God have mercy on you,
for you did not know what you
were saying or writing.
Xavier Widmer,
Route 3, Box 186 '
Medford, Ore.
Schrunk Arraigned in
Circuit Court Friday
Portland U.R) Mayor Terry
D. Schrunk was arraigned Fri
day before Circuit Judge
Charles W. Redding on a charge
of conspiracy to commit the
felony of subornation of per
jury. '
At request of the mayor's at
torney, Edwin Hicks, the court
granted Schrunk until next Fri
day to plead or otherwise move
against the indictment.
Dse Mail Tribune Want Ada
FUNERAL
SERVICES
In Every Price Range
Since 1908
PERL
Funeral
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'Phone SP 2-6675
of government to promote the
general welfare, now tries to
out-Republican the Republicans
on the issue of budget-cutting, it
is going to be hard to take us
seriously again as the party of
the people,"
These comments came after
House Speaker Sam Rayburn
had told a breakfast for visiting
Democrats that Congress would
cut three to five billion dollars
from the administration budget
and clear the way for tax reduc
tion. Rayburn's was the voice of the
Democrats in Congress and it dif
fered from the emphasis given
by such men as Truman, Ste
venson and Williams. The dif
ference suggested that the liberal
wing of the party still wants to
put achievement of its projec
tion of New Deal policies ahead
of a lower budget.
In the Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
World affairs note:
Secretary of State Dulles,
speaking in Bonn, captial of-.
Western Germany, warns the
Nato nations against over-optimism.
He tells the Nato ministers,
who are assembled for a con
ference, not to become "to hope
ful over reaching a disarma
ment agreement with Russia."
THAT MIGHT be accurately
classed as the understate
ment of the year.
Trying to make a disarma
ment agreement with an inter
national racketeer would be a
good deal like - trying to spin
a rope out of beach sand.
LIVENER-UPPER item from
the teletype:
Cupid's arrows have proved
more powerful than diplomas at
Ohio State University at Colum
bus. They've been having a hot
spell back in the Midwest and
university officials had planned
to hand out the sheepskins at
5 o'clock on the evening of June
7, hoping it would be cooler at
that hour.
They got a terrific protest
from the members of the gradu
ating class many of whom
had planned to be MARRIED
that evening and couldn't rear
range their wedding schedules!
OPTIMISTIC thought out here ;
where the tall trees grow:
The more marriages, the more
homes; the more homes, the
more houses; more houses, BET
TER TIMES IN THE LUMBER
INDUSTRY.
B
UT LET'S get closer to home.
I wish everyone in the beauti
ful fisherman's-heaven Rogue
River valley could have xread
Charlie Stanton's piece entitled
"A Fisherman Is Born." It was
more than just a column in a
newspaper. It is GREAT writ
ing. It is a classic in father and
son literature.
CHARLIE is the editor of the
Roseburg News-Review. He
is my business associate and till-death-do-us-part
close personal
friend. We've been working to
gether for nearly 30 years.
Throughout these three decades,
we've been : arguing "until we
rattle the rafters.
And
After every argument
We've cemented more tightly
the bonds of personal friendship
and confidence. -
I WON'T try to brief here his
charming little essay which
most newspapers call and edi
torial and our newspapers call
a personalized opinion column.
I just want to say it is the ten
der and affectionate story of a
boy who worshipped his father
and a father who loved and
trained and TRUSTED his son.
In all the world, there is no
relationship quite like that. If
every boy could grow up in
such an atmosphere, there
would be NO juvenile delin
quency. At PERL'S every family
may make funeral ar
rangements which are in
keeping with its means. A
selection of service for
every price range is of
fered to satisfy individual
preferences end to meet
all financial circumstances.
Convenient Terms?
Certainly!