FOUR MEDFORD (OREGON)
MedfobdTribune
"Everyone m Southern Orecoo
Read The Mail In b une
Pubiuntft Dally ExceDt Saturday by
MZD ORD PRINTING CO
17-24 Sort! fir St Phone 2-8141
ROBERT W RL'HL Editor
HXRB GRY Advertising Manager
GERALD LATHAM Business Manager
ERIC AIXEN IP. Manalim Editor
IARL H ADAMS City Editor
HARRY CHIPMA.N Teraon Editor
RICHARD ;EWETT SDortl E-lltor
OUVE S7 ARCHER Society Editor
DALE ERICKSO.N Circulation Mct
An Independent Newipaoer
Entered aj second class matter at
Mediord Oregon uner Act of
March 3 1S'7
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
8y Mall In Advance Per Copy 10c
Daily and Sunrtay One year $15 00
Daily and Sunday S:i monlhi 8 00
Dailv and Sundav Three moa 4-23
Sunday Only One year $420
By Carrier In Aceance Medtord
Ashland Central Point Eagle Point
Jacksonville Cold Hill Phoenix
Shadv Cove Komje R.ver Talent
and on motor routes
Dallv and Sjndav One year 118 10
Dally and Sundav One month 1 50
Carrier and Dealers 10c oer copy
AllTerm Onh in Advance
Official' Paprr oVthe City of Medford
Ortplal Paper of Jackson County
t:nltedPre.i3Furi leased Wire
MEMBER OP A L'DIT BUREAU
Of CIRCULATKJN
Advertising Representative
WEST-HOLIDAY COMPANY OfC
Offices In New York Chicago de
trolt San Francuiro Los Angelea
Seattle Portland St Louis Atlanta
Vancouver RC
'
-aW
NATION' t 0 I T O I I A t
flight o' Time
Melfnrd and Jackson County
Hiitorv from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30 and
40 years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
June 10. 1947 (Tuesday)
Frank Hull, manager of the
Jackson county chamber of com
jrerre fir the past seven years.
rrs:grs. and Don Lane is named
to Sicceed him.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: Friday is
the 13 th.' Don't walk under Rus
sia or any black cats.
SO YEARS AGO
June 10. 1937 (Thursday)
In motorcar and house-trailer
painted to attract attention to
the Rogue river valley, Edward
, J.-Taylor, a tailor, begins tour
across country.
Eve Eenson dance studio to
give recital at Craterian theatre.
30 YEARS ACO
June II, 1317 (Friday)
Medtord armory is rented as
temporary courthouse.
Alfred Norris purchases two-
birv brick building at corner of
California and Third sts., the
lower floor of which is occupied
by the Jacksonville bank.
40 YEARS AGO
Juae 10. 1917 (Sunday
Jackson county Red Cross is
asked to raise $13,000 as part of
8100.000.000 to be raised by Na
tional Red Cros for its war
fund, requested by President
"Wilson
Combined choral societies of
Ashland and Medford. totaling
150 gingers, give concert at Page
theater.
tifkal's Your I.Q.?
Von Or tea earraet ts superior;
anas) or allot la axcalleat; lva or
i is food
1. la Oskar Pegchil one of the
fathers of modern geography,
chemistry, or medicine?
2. Is it harmful to sleep on
the left side?
3. Bible: Did any Hebrew king
create a cavalry?
4. Clark Griffith was tha own
er of which American League
baseball club?
5. For what branch of the
Army do the initials WAC
stand?
6. In what city does the news
paper Izvestia have its principal
offices"
7. The Japanese sneak attack
on Pearl Harbor occurred De
cember 7 rf what year?
8. In her campaign against
Qaloons many years ago. what
weapon ririi Carrie Nation use?
9. "Smart" is a sense of fash
ionable or clever is a collo
quialism. Is the expression "a
right smart" (i.e.. a large
amount) a colloquialism, provin
cialism, or an ambiguity?
10. "A fly and a flea in a flue
Were imprisoned, so what could
they do" Said the fly. Met us
flee" "Let us fly!" said the flea,
So they flew thru a flaw in
the" what?
Answers: 1. Geography: 2. No:
3. Yes. Solomon. "Twelve thous
and horsemen": 4. Washington
(D.C.) Senators: 5. Women's
Army Corps; S. Moscow; 7.
1941: 8. A hatchet; 9. Provincial
ism: 10. "flue."
RELATIVELY SPEAKING
Deep River. N Y. tf Nancy
Jo Moody must have as many
ancestors as anyone in the state:
probably more. Nancy Jo, born
May 5. has four grandparents,
four great grandparents, one
great-great-grandfather and one
great - great - frcat-erandmother
E2-year-old Mrs. Etta Scott of
Watertown. N.Y.
Minnesota has 508 tree farms
Covering 439.799 acres.
Jj" XmwPAPi I
? KV PUBIISHU
j ASSOCIATION
I 1
MAIL TRIBUNE
Killing By Amendment
The House attempt to write into the Civil Rights bill
a guaranty of trial by jury may be sincerely aimed at
protecting the individual or it may be an attempt to
take the teeth out of the measure. The same could not
be said for the attempt to throw into the bill in the
House as well as in the Senate a "rider" amendment
providing a national "right to work" law. -
This would outlaw labor contracts which require
employees to join labor unions. Sen. John L. McClel
lan (D-Ark.) on May 7, in announcing that he would
continue his attempt to include a right - to - work
amendment in the civil rights bill, admitted that "it
w ould be a service to the country if it killed the bill."
AcCLELLAN'S strategy is reminiscent of a famous
case of the death-by-amendment technique wit
nessed in the Senate in 1954. By a vote of 46 to 43 the
Senate agreed to tie statehood for Alaska to statehood
for Hawaii, which had already been approved by the
House. The single-packaged bill was then passed, by a
57 to 28 vote. But when unanimous consent was asked
in the House to send the bill to conference, where
Alaskan statehood could be dropped by the G.O.P.
majority on the conference committee, Democratic
Leader Sam Rayburn entered an objection.
That means that the only other way to get the bill
to conference was by House adoption of a resolution
to that end. Such a resolution was duly offered, but it
then was bottled up in the House Rules Committee
until the session ended, It's interesting to note that
19 Senators two Republicans and 17 Democrats
who had voted to combine statehood for the territories
turned around three weeks later to vote against the
single package bill.
"THAT support of a juiy trail guaranty was building
up even among liberals was evidenced by the vote
by which such a civil rights amendment was approv
ed June 3 by the Senate Judiciary Committee. Voting
for the amendment were Sen. Joseph C. O'Mahoney
(D-Wyo.) and Sen. Estes Kefauver (D-Tenn.), usual
ly in the front rank of Senate "liberals."
For crippling amendments, look at the record on
anti-segregation votes. Sen. William Langer (R-N.D.)
in 1943 offered a racial segregation ban amendment
to a federal aid-to-education bill. It was accepted, 49
to 37, resulting in recommital of the bill.
- The House in 1948 turned down amendments by
Rep. Adam Clayton Powell (D-N.Y.) barring segre
gation in the Army and the Navy (63 to 12), and in
the Air Force (103 to 14); also, rejected a Powell
amendment to withhold Foreign Economic Coopera
tion contracts from firms refusing employment be
cause of color or race.
THE Senate in 1948 tabled, 67 to 7, Langer's anti
segregation amendment to the draft bill. And in
the following year, Northern liberals joined the
Southern Democrats to vote down anti-segregation
amendments to an aid-to-education bill, 65 to 16, and
a long-range housing bill, 49 to 31. Said Sen. Hubert
Humphrey (D-Minn.), "As much as I detest segrega
tion, I love education more."
President Eisenhower has opposed Powell anti
segregation amendments to school construction (1955
and 1956) and military reserves bills (1955) as "ex
traneous" and "unnecessary." In his State of the Un
ion Message this year he insisted that federal school
aid should be provided "on its own merits, uncompli
cated by provisions dealing with the complex prob
lems of integration." E.R.R.
Profitable Investment
Some of Oregon's newspapers, calling attention
to the need for recreational development in the areas
they serve, are pointing to Douglas county s proposed
park fund appropriation of $111,790, in the tentative
budget and are comparing it with lack of appropria
tions in their own counties or with much smaller allot
ments. . . .
The information previously has been reported, but
will bear repeating, that $65,000 of the amount in the
budget is proposed as a loan for the purpose of mak
ing further improvements at Salmon Harbor, and will
supplement one of the county's best investments.
Subtracting the $65,000 loan from the amount
tentatively budgeted for the county parks department
leaves a nominal budget, certainly not too large for
the important work being achieved.
QOUGLAS County's Park department, first of its
kind to be organized in the Pacific Northwest, if
not in the United States, is no longer unique. Other
counties have followed the pattern. More are being
added each year. Douglas county, however, still
stands out as the example. Counties without similar
programs are envious, judging from expressions in
their newspapers. . . .
My provincial pride swells when I think of how we
have expanded our recreational resource in such a
short space of time. I hope each of you who reads this
also takes pride in this achievement. I hope you rea
lize, too, that we have just barely scratched the sur
face and that there is more much more to be done
before we begin to reach
dous recreational resource.
Charles V. Stanton, in the Roseburg News-Review
U.S. Rubber Workers
Indianapolis w About 1.200
workers are on strike against
the United States Rubber com
pany here.
The walkout began last night
in a dispute over working condi
tions for production and mainte
nance employees. The walkout
broke down.
Local 110 of the United Rub
Monday, June 10, 1957
the potential of our tremen
Quit al Indianapolis
ber Workers said the issues in
elude seniority rights and inequi
ties in wage rates on certain
jobs.
The strike does not involve
other plants of the firm.
North Dakota has 451.000
acres of commercial forest land
within its boundaries.
I rif I -
i pffr
'A'ifK GOr0ZSMORB GRAY HAIRS THAN YOU, BUT
YOii CONTHBAR HEf? BlMVH'MB FOR 'BA '
Matter of Fact
THE FLOUNDERING
DEMOCRATS
Those two able Texans, Sen
ate Majority Leader Lyndon
Johnson and House Speaker
Sam Rayburn,
Tmz'&gri fre, beE,in"i"K
lhe commana-
$ - -it ers of a large.
well - disci
plined Army
which has no
where to go
and no-one to
fight.
Johnson and
Stewait Alson R3 y D u ill, III
their leadership of the Demo
crats, have made two assump
tions. First, the conservative Re
publicans who are in revolt
against the Eisenhower budget
are not to be allowed to monopo
lize the economy issue. Second,
it is more important to hold
the Democratic party in a sem
blance of tuiity than to stir up
trouble or make issues against
the Eisenhower administration.
These two assumptions have
been largely accepted by the
bulk" of the Democrats in both
Housese. Moreover, they are, on
the face of them, logical assump
tions. Yet they involve certain
risks which may be a lot graver
than they appear on the surface.
IN THE first place, the only
area in which to make a po
litically palatable record for
"economy" is the area of nation
al security defense, and, to a
lesser extent, foreign aid. Hence
the party-line vote by the House
Democrats, engineered by
Speaker Rayburn, cutting the
President's defense budget by
$2.5 billion.
Part of the cut may be restor
ed in the Senate. But the present
best guess is that the increase
will be relatively minor per
haps as little as a tenth of the
total cut. Now consider the price
the Democrats are likely to pay
for making their economy rec
ord.
In the first place, it has auto
matically transformed President
Eisenhower into the last-ditch
defender of the security inter
ests of the United States. This
is a position to which the Presi
dent's personal history uniquely
suits him, and it is in any case
always a strong position for any
President.
YET the Democrats themselves
principally Sen. Stuart
Symington in his air power in
vestigation last year have con
clusively demonstrated that the
American security position rela
tive to the Soviets has rapidly
determined under the Eisen
hower presidency. It is true that,
in the present national mood of
complacency, nobody (except
Arthur Godfrey) seems to care
very much. Even Symington
himself has been talking a lot
more about cutting taxes and
the budget than about the need
to match the Soviet defense
advances.
But the national mood might
very well change, since the
world situation has a way of
changing suddenly and in such
a way as to drive home the reali
ties in a most painful way. In
that case, the Democrats will
have kicked the defense issue
which was always potential
ly their strongest issue right
down the drain. What is more,
the Republicans need only cite
the roll call vote in the House
to shift the whole burden of
blame onto the Democrats.
And where else are the Demo
crats to turn for an issue? The
rchool construction bill is dead
as a mackerel for this session,
and so, in any effective form at
least, is civil rights legislation.
Both are politically important
for Northern Democrats, and
yet the Republicans will be able
to claim, with some reason, that
both bills were killed by the
Democrats.
Hopes that were entertained
until recently in some Demo
cratic breasts, that "tight
money" could be made the big
stick with which to beat the
Administration, are flickering
out. The issue is complex any
way, and difficult to exploit ef
fectively. B
UT the Secretary of the
Treasury George Humphrey,
By Stewart Alsop
who had been cast in the role
of personal devil by the anti
ti"ht money Democrats, leaving
the government, the issue will
be almost impossible to exploit
There is obviously no political
profit to be made from belabor
ing the departing Humphrey,
and his successor, Secretary
Designate Robert Anderson, is
close to the powerful Johnson.
The Democrats, in short, are
brilliantly led but have nowhere
to go. The semblance of party
unity, to be sure, has been main
tained, and that has been no
easy task. But the Democrats
are not going to get a lot of
votes by claiming that they have
kept their party together. And
it seems unlikely that they are
really going to make much po
litical hay by trying to out-shout
the conservative Republicans on
the economy issue.
Perhaps the Democrats, half-
paralyzed oy their internal divi
sions and with their favorite
domestic issues shrewdly under
cut by the Administration, never
did have anywhere to go any
way, in such times as these. For
the Democrats have, after all,
generally been identified in the
voters' minds as the Liberal
party, devoted to experiment
and change. And if, as the evi
dence suggests, this is now a
smugly conservative country,
which has had enough of experi
ment and change, where are
the Democrats to go?
Copyright 1957.
New York Herald Tribune Inc
Pulp, Paper Mills
Reach Agreement
Portland flfl A contract
agreement, subject to local ref
erendum, was reached here Fri
day between labor representa
tives and 45 Oregon, Washing
ton and California pulp and pap
er mills.
The unions and manufacturers,
in a joint announcement, said
the terms of the contract re
newal would be submitted to 55
union locals for approval and
that results would be announced
June 24. Terms were not reveal
ed. Settlement climaxed a five-day
wage conference between the In
ternational Brotherhood of Pulp
Sulphite and Paper Mill work
ers, the United Papermakers and
the Pacific Coast Association of
Pulp and Paper manufacturers.
Some 20,000 employees are af
fected. Natural Gas Bill
Receives New Chance
Washington (IP President
Eisenhower has given the natural
gas bill a aew chance in Con
gress. The legislation had been con
sidered out, for this year at
least, but the President inform
ed Chairman Oren Harris of the
House Commerce committee
that he would drop his insistence
on two road-blocking amend
ments. Eisenhower emphasized the
importance of enacting natural
gas legislation at this session of
Congress, with or without the
controversial amendments.
The bill is designed to ease the
price-fixing controls of the Fed
eral Power Commission over gas
sold by independent producers
to gas pipeline companies.
Most persons can read unin
terruptedly for six hours with
out suffering ee strain or fatigue.
His Wealth But A Rainbow
GEO. N. TAYLOR
He paid cash and the merchants loved him.
He kept the law of God and the good
folks loved him. On a day. he met Christ
and asked Him what more he could do.
"Give your wealth to the poor and you
will have treasure in heaven." said Christ.
At that the fellow walked away in sorrow,
for he had great wealth and that he wor
shiped. And what is the Bible Message for us of
this dav? Christ was of the God head and
being God, here among men. He died to
dear you. 'The blood of Jesus Christ,
1 1 id's Son, cleanses us from all sin. BIBLE.
Give God your heart and by daily Bible
reading and prayer, grow up.
Who To Believe in Controversy
Over H -Tests? Views Are Aired
By UNITED PRESS atomic testing controversy.
No one could blame any Amer- For days, he's been bombard
ican who's dewildered over the ed with claims and counter-
Test of Eisenhower
Republicanism Seen
In Wisconsin Meeting
By RICHARD SPONG
Washington, D C. President
Eisenhower's Modern Republi
canism is involved, perhaps indi
rectly, in the jockeying for the
Wisconsin G.O.P. nomination for
the Senate seat left vacant by
the death of Sen. Joseph R. Mc
Carthy. If the G.O.P. convention
last week end had endorsed a
senatorial candidate, its choice
would have given an indication
of the present attitude of the
party organization, though not
necessarily of the Wisconsin vo
ters.
One of the candidates is for
mer Rep. Glenn R. Davis. As as
sessed by "Congressional Quar
terly," Davis established a rec
ord of support for the Eisenhow
er program in the 83rd Congress
higher than the average of G.O.
P. Representatives in 1953 and
1954. He maintained a fairly
consistent support record in the
8th Congress on domestic poli-
cy. but voted against the admin-!
istration's foreign policy more j
often than not. Specifically, he
opposed the administration on
foreign aid and extension of the
Reciprocal Trade Act.
Opposed Wiley
More important. Davis was the
candidate of the G.O.P. organiza
tion which in that year repudi
ated Wiley, ranking Republican
member of the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee, largely for
his internationlist stand in favor
of the Eisenhower foreign pol
icy. Davis had the endorsement
of the state convention and the
support of Sen. McCarthy's ad
herents. Wiley took his case to the Wis
consin voters, managing to pick
Courageous Dutch
Facing Paradox of
People vs. Shortage
By UNITED PRESS
The courageous Dutch are up
against one of the worst para
doxes of their history.
They have a shortage of labor
that is keeping them from ex
panding their industry as fast as
they should. Yet at the same
time they have a serious over
population problem.
Foreign News Analyst Leroy
Pope of United Press says the
overpopulation problem is fairly
simple the labor shortage
somewhat baffling.
Holland is tiny and has a high
birthrate and one of the lowest
death rates in the world. So
naturally the population in
creases rapidly. It has jumped
almost 2,000,000 to 11,000,000
since the war.
Army Home
Besides that, the Dutch have
had to bring their army home
from Indonesia and to repatriate
more than 250,000 Dutch and
Dutch-Eurasian civilians from
Indonesia. Before the war, 20,000
young Dutchmen used to emi
grate to Indonesia every year.
Young Dutchmen are emigrat-.
ing in large numbers now. They
are going mainly to Australia,
but also to the United States,
Canada, South Africa and some
other countries. And the govern
ment is encouraging this emi
gration in spite of the labor short
age at home because it con
siders the long-range prospects
for young Dutchmen at home not
too good.
Right now, Dutch industry is
going full blast and everybody
is working, but Finance Minister
Hendrik Hofstra warned the
people recently that things aren't
nearly so rosy as they seem.
Not Producing Enough
Holland is not producing
enoueh nor exporting enough, he
said. The Dutch managed to make
up for the huge exports to Indo
nesia they lost when Indonesia
became independent. They are
selling more to Africa, America
and other European countries.
But the new markets aren't as
profitable as the old colonial
markets and now they seem to
be falling. For the first two
months of this year. Holland had
a 552,000,000 trade deficit
huge for such a small nation.
X". ... a
m
up considerable support from
Democrats, free under state laws
to vote in either primary. He
defeated Davis by about 10,000
votes, and went on to best the
Democratic candidate, Henry W.
Maier. by more than 260,000 vot
es. Wiley won 58.6 per cent of
the popular vote, as against Pres
ident Eisenhower's popular total
of 61.6 per cent. (McCarthy's
percentage in 1952 had been
54.2, as against 61 per cent for
Eisenhower.)
Others in Race
Others seeking the McCarthy
seat include Gov. Walter J. Koh
ler, who had been considering
running against McCarthy in
1958. Kohler is generally labeled
an Eisenhower man, though per
haps only a moderately modern
Republican.
Lieut. Gov. Warren P. Knowl
es has thrown his hat into the
ring. Knowles has wide support
in business and industry.
Another G.O.P. candidate is
Rep. Alvin O'Konski, veteran of
15 years in the House. O'Konski,
a free-wheeling Republican,
crusaded against Communism
with McCarthy. He frequently
has opposed the administration
on domestic issues. He was one
of only 10 House Republicans,
for example, who voted for the
March 12 resolution "respect
fully'' calling upon the President
to "indicate the places and
amounts in his budget where he
thinks substantial reductions
may best be made."
The two top Democratic pro
babilities for candidacy are Rep.
Henry S. Reuss and William F.
Proxmire, who has lost guberna
torial races twice to Kohler and
once to present Gov. Vernon W.
Thomson.
Dutchmen have been selling
many of their valuable foreign
investments in order to pay for
things they must import to keep
their businesses going.
Back in 1950, the government
decided to try to overcome the
situation caused by the loss of
Indonesia by three methods
by encouraging emigration, re
claiming more land from the sea
and by more intensive industriali
zation. All Three Used
All three methods have been
used with some success, but the
Dutch have run into shortages
of both capital and labor in their
attempts to expand industry. So
the government has had to put
some curbs on investment and
buying abroad. This slows down
the industralization and makes
the overpopulation problem more
dangerous.
The labor shortage probably
is due to an excessive proportion
of the very old and the very
young in the population. This in
dicates that unless capital can
be found for expansion of in
dustry, the present shortage of
labor may turn into a surplus
when the present crop of
children reaches working age.
EGG PENALTY
Marion. 111. OP Six Mar
ion teen-agers vow they will let
the Easter bunny take care of
egg hunts from now in. Police
made the boys buy, dye and hide
60 dozen eggs after the teen
agers jumped the gun on an egg
hunt sponsored by a civic club.
FUNERAL
SERVICES
In Every Price Range
Since 1908
PERL
Funeral
Home
Phone SP 2-6675
claims on the issue. He's heard
scientists warn that fallout from
nuclear tests has already placed
its mark on generations yet un
born. He's heard other scientists
argue that the fallout danger is
overrated.
On one hand, he's told that
we already have plenty of H
bombs and A-bombs of varying
sizes and types, enough to blow
the world apart, so why test any
more? On the other hand, he's
told that further testing is need
ed for our national security.
Who's Right?
Who's right? Which argument
should you believe?
United Press Washington com
mentator Robert J. Serling has
been carefully following the
testimony in the congressional
hearings on the fallout contro
versy. And he reports that both
sides agree on one thing there's
a certain amount of risk in test
ing atomic weapons. Some say
a great deal of risk, others say
it's going to get very risky if we
keep it up, others say the risk
is comparatively small.
But the third group, represent
ing the opinion of our govern
ment and our Atomic Energy
Commission, add these argu
ments to their admission of a
certain amount of danger.
Risks Compared
The A. E C. believes the risk is
far less than the risk we'd lake
in not testing and perfecting
atomic weapons. For example,
just exploding an H-bomb
doesn't mean you've perfected
one that can be used as a weap
on. Our first H-bomb was set off
in a shack roughly the size of a
corner grocery store which
meant it was too big to deliver
by bomber. Further testing was
needed to get the H-bomb down
to a deliverable size.
The current Nevada tests in
volve smaller atomic weapons,
presumably for use in guided
missiles, small bombers and field
artillery. It's true we have
enough atomic weapons to blow
Russia off the map, but those
weapons must be adaptable to
all situations, useable against
troops in the field as well as
against big cities, deliverable by
missiles and fighter planes as
well as long-range bombers, cap
able of use against attacking
planes. Without an adaptable
atomic arsenal, we could lose a
war.
Risk Conceded
The A.E.C. makes another
point in, its conceding the fall
out risk. Yes, there's risk. Also,
40,000 Americans are killed by
automobiles every year and hun
dreds of thousands injured. A lot
of people expose themselves to
ill heilth by excessive moking.
Smoe nd industrial pollution
are very unhealthy.
Danger in atomic testing?
Sure, smys A.I.C. There's also m,
certain risk of radiation expoW
ure from X-rays, frortP fluoros
copa ejtmations, from acquiring
a sun tan. The most extensive
research project on fallout show
ed tht ve get more radiation
from our own bodies, from the
ever-present cosmic rays, from
visits to the dentist and doctor,
thin we hve from all the atom
ic test put together.
Other scientists have a counter-argument
on this pointQ . . .
they say while all this may be
true, why add the radiation frolh
tests to what we're already ga
ting in normal living? j
Said tot The Issue jj
But the A.TE.C. the amount tit
radiation received from test fatt
out isn't really the issue. It be
lieves the motives of those ob
jecting to nuclear tests are more
politicel and sociological than
scientific. In other words, those
who demand an end to all test
ing are actually objecting ni
every use of nuclear weapons in
war.
UP. writer Serling says the
government feels the way to
keep a nuclear war from hap
pening is to make sure no po
tential enemy has more and bet
ter atomic weapons, and Unit
while fallout risk is always pres
ent in testing, it's infinitely los
than what would bo involved in
a global atomic w;ir.
a4t PERL'S every family
may make funeral ar
rangements which are In
keeping with its means. A
selection of services for
every price range ii of
fered to satisfy individual
. preferences and to meet
all financial circumstances.
Convenient Terms?
Certainlyl
o
6
o