4 Monday, April 13, 1959
MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, ORE.
MEDFORDtTBIBUIfE
"Everyone in Southern Oregon
Reads The Mail Tribune"
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ROBERT W RUHL, Editor
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ERIC W ALLEN JR
Managing Editor
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RICHARD JEWETT Sports Editor
OLIVE STARCHER Women's Editor
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Entered as second class matter at
Medford Oregon under Act of
March 3. 1897
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Flight 'o Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30, 40
and 50 years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
April 13, 1949 (Wednesday)
Medford city councilmea
debate, but fail to decide,
whether residents should be
asked to help finance the
Hawthorne park pool project,
Tony Manno is elected new
president of the Medford
YMCA.
20 YEARS AGO
April 13. 1939 (Thursday)
The Holmes brothers de
velop a subdivision at Stew
art ave and Kings highway
just south of town.
From Arthur Perry's "Ye
Smudge Pot" column: "In
answer to the farmers' pray
ers for rain, a smattering fell
Wed. eve on the Baptist
church parking space grass,
and the first straw hat of the
season."
30 YEARS AGO
April 13, 1929 (Saturday)
Vagrant dogs in the city
are to be held three days at
the pound before execution.
Rogue River cannery in
stalls new machinery to in
crease ita output.
40 YEARS AGO
April 13. 1919 (Sunday)
A labor shortage in the val
ley inspires threats that loaf
ers will be ordered to work
or leave.
The campaign started to
finance the P. & E. road will
be junked unless given fi
nancial aid.
50 YEARS AGO
April 13. 1909 (Tuesday)
The Medford Commercial
club considers asking Con
gress for SI million to im
Drove Crater Lake national
park.
The weather bureau flies
flags from atop the Deuel and
Kentner building to warn of
frost.
What's Your I.Q.?
Nine or ten correct is superior;
seven or eight is excellent; five or
six is good. "
1. Jackson Day dinners are
held by the Republican, or
the Democratic party?
2. What famous baby is
named Yasmin?
3. What is another name for
the woodchuck?
4. For what object did Sir
Galahad, in the Arthurian leg
ends, conduct a successful
search?
5. Copra is obtained from
what?
6. On what date does the
fiscal year of the U. S. com
mence? , 7. A female sheep is a ewe;
what is the male?
8. Correct the following:
"Each of the soldiers must
keep their uniforms neat."
9. Do you associate the
name Daguerre with the de
velopment of printing from
moveable type, photography,
or telegraphy?
- 10. Are fresh fruits high in
protein content?
Answers: 1 . Democratic. 2.
Daughter of Rita Hayworlh
and Ali Khan. 3. Groundhog.
4. Holy Grail. 5. Coconuts. 6.
July 1. 7. Ram. 8. " . . . must
keep his uniform neal." 9.
Photography. 10. No.
STOCKBROKER DIES
New York -DPD- William
W. Peabody, 93, a stockbrok
er here for 55 years, died
Saturday. -
What Is Education For?
(Editor's note: The state board of education recently
adopted a "Philosophy of Education," a statement of its
beliefs about the nature of man, the nation's culture,
and the role of the school. Because of its widespread in
terests, the portion of the document dealing with the
role of the school, and its objectives, is presented be
low, slightly condused.)
The school is a major institution through
which our cultural heritage is transmitted and by
means of which the members of society are pre
pared to evaluate changes. The intellectual de
velopment of each member of society, to the de
gree that he is able to
mary responsibility of the public school. .
The school shares with other institutions and
agencies such as the home and the church the re
sponsibility for the physical, social, emotional,
aesthetic, moral and spiritual growth of mdividu
als.
TTHE objectives of education grow out of and re
fleet society's understanding of and beliefs
about the nature of man, the nature of society
itself, and the concept of the role the school plays
in the culture. New insights or understandings
growing out of experience or research in any of
these areas are reflected in the objectives of the
school.
The following specific objectives of education
in Oregon are derived
man and his culture . . . and form the basis lor
the framework of public school education.
CITIZENSHIP:
The good citizen knows his country its
people, its histoiy, its geography, the structure
and function of its government, and its internal
and external problems. He understands the fun
damental principles of American democracy
political, economic, social, moral and spiritual.
He is loyal to American ideals, is proud of his
heritage, respects constituted authority, has con
cern for the welfare of his country and of his fel
low men at home and abroad, and seeks ways to
increase world cooperation toward a just peace.
He participates in the life of his community,
state and nation by exercising his rights and as
suming his responsibilities as a member of a free
and self-governing society, and he strives to im
prove it.
D ASIC Skills of Communication: . . .
The effective citizen has, to the extent of his
ability, achieved proficiency in use of the basic
tools of learning. He recognizes that communica
tion is fundamental to intellectual development
and has acquired skill in receiving ideas through
reading, listening, and observing, and in express
ing them through writing and speaking. He under
stands the use of symbols from other fields such
as - mathematics, science, music and the visual
arts, and may have extended his range of com
munication by mastering other languages.
He recognizes that learning is continuous
throughout life.
He employs the basic skills efficiently to gath
er, organize, and disseminate information, to
think critically, to solve problems, and to gain en
joyment. LIEALTH:
The educated person knows the structure and
functions of his body, is aware of hazards to his
own and his community's well-being, and knows
desirable mental and physical health practices
. . . based upon factual information.
FAMILY Life :
The effective family member has knowledge
and skills which result in the wise use of money,
time and energy; the provision of adequate food,
clothing and shelter; the care, training and guid
ance of children; and the interrelationships
among members of the family and with the com
munity. He recognizes the family as the basic insti
tution of. our society, and also its changing role
... He has an appreciation, respect, loyalty, and
a sense of responsibility for his own home . . .
CCONOMICLife:
"Ll The educated person has a knowlege of our
natural and human resources and of the necessity
for their wise use and conservation. He under
stands the workings of the economic system in
our society and he has some comprehension of
other systems ...
He appreciates the
satisfaction m doing any task well.
He earns his way in the world . . .
jyjORAL and Spiritual Values:
ill ecucate(j person nas gained an insight
into moral and spiritual values. He knows the
main facts of the history of religions . . . and the
role of our national ideals. He is familiar with
the significant contributions of literature, art,
rrlusic, science and other fields of learning to
moral and spiritual growth.
He seeks support in a
virtues of goodness and morality and which ex
plains and reconciles his relationship to fellow
men and the universe. He regards devotion to
truth and services to fellow men as a high goal . . .
He places human values above material things.
tie is numane and considerate . . . has sym
pathetic understanding of differences and devi
ations ... He opposes all forms of tvrannv over
the human mind
AESTHETIC Values:
ity to aesthetic values. He
He observes, appreciates, and wants to pre
serve the things of beauty
produced by man . . s
profit thereby, is the pri
from (our) beliefs about
value of labor and feels
faith that upholds the
can discriminate . . .
provided by nature or
. f
Dennis the
Mr
'Dennis points a bold, jamsnative , commw
UNINHIBITED PlCTURB. WHICH fiGUReS.'
Washington Report
By WILLIAM
FACING THE FACTS
Washington A great men
tal expert once testified in
a murder case that drunk-
enness was
"the tempor
ary loss of the
power of self
criticism." On that
m agnificently
deadpan but
very sound
definition the
R e d u h linan
William S. ' . .
White party is as so
ber as a dozen judges, as tee
total as any charter member
of the Women's Christian
Temperance Union.
Self-criticism is going o n
within the national GOP or
ganization with an almost
desperate candor. This was
the real, the true, atmosphere
as the Republican National
Committee met over the week
end to transact the traditional
business of preparing for the
party's 1960 national conven
tion.
Beyond a doubt, realism
has raised its jjray, but never
theless absolute necessary,
head within the Republican
party. This is extraordinary
news in a quiet way. The
GOP for the better part of
20 years at least has tended
to be quite long on a hearty
rah-rah optimism often hav
ing little relationship to the
hard facts.
TTNTIL lately a bleak ob--
jective was, in private at
any rate, . a fairly common
characteristic only of the
D e m o c r atic professionals
Now, the roles have been all
but reversed. If an unseem'
ly political intoxication ex
ists, it is among the Demo
crats. The Republicans are so
aggressively determined to
cast Pollyanna out of their
lives that they are making a
positive virtue of emotional
austerity.
There are sound reasons
And these reasons are being
even more fully and starkly
outlined by the Republican
National Committee staff peo
ple than by their Democratic
opposite numbers.
The Republican Congress
ional defeat last year, coming
atop two others in 1954 and
1958, has long-term implica
tions that become the more
chilling the more closely they
are inspected. In sum, umm-
peachably Republican re
search studies now, plainly in
dicate that a Republican Con
gressional victory in 1960 is
highly unlikely in any event
and that a Republican Presi
dential victory cannot ration
ally be expected short of
these pre-conditions:
1. A bitter and destructive
North-South row among the
Democrats that would leave
the party altogether and not
merely partly broken along
Mason and Dixon's line.
2. The nomination by the
Democrats of a Presidential
candidate who was more the
choice of a hopelessly dead
locked national convention
than of a convention willing
to draw reasonably together
for party victory.
3. A marked success by
the Republican nominee,
whether he is Vice-President
Richard M. Nixon or Gover
nor Nelson Rockefeller of
New York, i n convincing
great masses of voters that
he would be far safer choice
in a troubled world than his
Democratic antagonist.
ALL objective data gathered
by the GOP National Com
mittee itself suggest that the
Republicans at best will have
to fight uphill all the way.
These surveys, based on last
year's Congressional elections
and the lessons drawn from !
them, . show that . while the J
Menace
S. WHITE
GOP Congressional vote stay
ed almost constant from 1950
to 1958, the Democratic vote
rose by 5,500,000.
They show, too, a heavy
decline in urban Republican
voting right alongside a sig
nificant, if lesser, decline in
rural Republican voting.
Worst of all, from the GOP
viewpoint, Democratic net
gains are progressively ris
ing in the part of the country
that is growing the fastest,
the area west of the Missis:
sippi River.
And this is not all. Census
forecasts for 1960 indicate
that old line Republican states
like Ohio, and more-or-less
Republican states like Penn
sylvania, are falling far be
hind in the population race.
But traditionally Democratic
states like Texas, and present
ly Democratic states like Cal
ifornia, are burgeoning be
yond all previous estimates.
Texas will vault into fifth
place among the states, ahead
of Ohio. California will pass
Pennsylvania for second
place. And so on.
The new mood of self-examination
within the GOP
has not arrived a moment too
soon. The party can thank
its professionals for resolutely
taking the facts straight.
(Copyright, 1959, by United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.)
Communications
Letters to the Editor must
bear the name and address of
the writer although nder cer
tain circumstances the use of a
pen name or initial for publica
tion is permissible. The Mail
Tribune reserves the right to
edit all letters with an eye to
clarification and condensation.
Letters submitted for publica
tion must not exceed 400 words
Liked Parade
To the Editor: I wish to
congratulate the people of the
Rogue valley who actively
participated in the Pear Blos
som Festival parade Saturday
I am sure all who watched it
felt as I did that it was one
of the finest Medford has
ever seen.
The parade was obviously
well planned in advance
down to the. last detail. All
the floats were painstakingly
arranged, even the marching
bands were dressed according
to the "vogue of the day."
All participants showed the
originality and ingenuity I
am sure our forefathers must
have had.
Mrs. L. Eisenstein
1110 West Ninth st.
Medford
A Last Warning
To the Editor: Just one last
warning before the Bear
Creek overpass freeway be
comes a reality. Word from
Southern California tells of
real danger troubles along the
modern free-ways, heavy trav
eled streets and parking lots.
The deadly carbon monoxide
gas, from car and truck, blank
ets the ground in all directions
near such locations. (It's the
same gas that from a small
engine is used to snuff out
the lives of unwanted dogs,
cats, etc.). It has long been
known that houses breathe,
heated air during the day be
ing expelled and as it cools at
night, is sucked back in, and
with it, the lethal carbon mon
oxide gas from gas-burning
vehicles.
New home - seekers from
down California way tell of
the problem it imposes on
health authorities there. Re
strictions in the past have
been placed on the height of
buildings because of earth
quake risk. But the health risk
of this exhaust gas is of even
more immediate concern. So,
plans are said to be afoot to
encourage people to build two
or even three story houses so
people can sleep in the more
gas-free upper floor levels,
even if such type of house
Kennedy, Humphrey Making
Political Hay as Election Year
By LYLE C. WILSON
Washington-(UPD-Two of the
Democratic senators who are
most actively seeking their
party's 19 6 0
p r e s idential
n o m i n ation
are making
some early
springtime po
litical hay.
Mass achu
s e 1 1 s' Sen.
John F. Ken
nedy left
le c. wiisoo w a s n i ngton
last Thursday on a nine-speech
swing through Wisconsin and
m
Matter of Fact
THE DARK AND BLOODY
GROUND
Madison, Wisconsin Bar
ring unforeseen develop
ments, Wisconsin is due to be
the dark and
bloody ground
of the Demo
crats in 1960.
Here the bat
tle of the can
didates will
first be join
ed, long be
fore the Dem
ocratic nomi
n a t i n g con
vention. Joseph Alsop
After a Siberian winter,
this little state capital looks
weather-worn but outwardly
tranquil. Yet here in Madison,
as elsewhere in the state, you
can already hear the advance
rumblings of the conflict that
lies ahead. For instance, the
astute young Democratic
governor, Gaylord Nelson, is
already rather nervously pro
claiming that his party's Wis
consin primary has got to be
a free and fair fight, with all
holds barred, and no unkind
ly feelings about the outcome.
Nelson has good reason to
start talking early, too. The
front-runner for the Demo
cratic presidential nomina
tion, Jen. John F. Kennedy of
Massachusetts, stormed into
Milwaukee on Thursday, and
he has been attracting capa
city crowds ever since. The
other active Democratic can
didate, Sen. Hubert Humph
rey of Minnesota, is coming
very soon.
THE
PRINCIPAL contest
ants look eager for the
fray, but they are not. Sen
ator Humphrey did not want
to fight for Wisconsin be
cause of the fairly strong pos
sibility of defeat. Hence
Humphrey's political partner.
Gov. Orville Freeman of Min
nesota, tried to wrap up Wis
consin by the favorite -son
device, with the help of his
friend, Governor Nelson
That did not work, and now
Humphrey has made up his
mind to fight. But Senator
Kennedy is now having his
second thoughts. Kennedy
wonders whether he needs to
risk his massive support in
other states in a messy
chancy Wisconsin primary,
All the same, the logic of
the situations of the two ac
t i v e Democratic candidates
makes them the fore-ordained
victims of one another. The
inactive candidates may re
main inactive, but Humphrey
and Kennedy are all but
forced to fight it out.
Outside his home territory,
Humphrey has almost no
solid support anywhere. Fur
thermore, his nomination will
drive large numbers of South
erners out of the party. Hence
he must decisively prove his
maenetism bv defeating the
structure is more liable to
earthquake damage.
It is beyond understanding
to this writer and many oth
ers as well that the most val
uable land in the valley can
be had to bury in it those who
are all finished with life, in
cluding the hideous honey
combed type receptacles, but
none can be had to route the
new freeway via the open hill
country around the still pret
ty and healthful city of Med
ford, whose people, still liv
ing, should have as much con
sideration as the dead.
As was so pertinently stat
ed in a recent M-T editorial
of the wishy-washy side-stepping
legislature in the capitol
in Salem, it seems to this
writer there is much of the
same going on in Medford.
F. J. Clifford,
Route 2, Box 200F
Central Point
Ladies Fair
To the Editor:
In all the valleys of our
land, no girls are half as fair,
As they who live along the
Rogue when smudge gets in
their hair.
(Name on File)
Medford
3 Day Relief No Messy Salves
New. easy-to-take tablets work from within
to gin you relief from the agonizing pain of
simple piles. Swelling reduces, pain goes!
Mail $1.00 for 3-weeks supply to BELL-ETS.
Orangeburg, N. Y. Satisfaction guaranteed by
the inkers of Bill-ans for indigestion. .
Indiana. He spoke first on Fri
day at the University of Wis
consin in Madison, and has
continued to speak thereafter
on just about all occasions.
The swing is scheduled to end
with a speech before Demo
cratic diners today at Decatur,
Ind.
Kennedy was down for a
speech Saturday at Appleton,
Wis., hometown of the late
Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy. Mrs.
Eleanor Roosevelt has been
gunning for Kennedy on
charges that he is not forth
rightly on record with respect
to the issue she describes as
Bv Joseph AIsop
front-runner Kennedy in one
or more primaries. It he
shirks the test, Humphrey
must finally give up his presi
dential aspirations.
17ENNEDY, by the same
token, has very wide
spread support. But Kennedy
still needs something extra to
overcome his two handicaps,
his Catholicism and his un
naturally youthful appear
ance. The surest way for Ken
nedy to get that something
extra is to show his stuff in
one or more primaries; and
Wisconsin is a tempting place
to begin.
There are other reasons,
too, why Wisconsin is a nat
ural battleground. For one
thing the old state of Joseph
R. McCarthy is now one; of
the new states of the resur
gent Democratic party. Partly
this is because most of the
old LaFollette Progressives,
whom young Bob LaFollette
fruitlessly led into the Re
publican party in 1946; have
now transferred again to the
Democratic ranks. Partly this
is also because the McCarthy
wing of the Republican party
here has put on the best imi
tation of the Gadarene swine
since the day the swine them
selves frothed at the mouth
and ran over the cliff.
Mainly, however, the Dem
ocratic triumph in Wisconsin
has to be credited to able
younger men of the type who
have achieved the party's
post-Truman rebirth in many
other states besides Wiscon
sin. Governor Nelson, Senator
Proxmire, State Chairman
Pat Lucey, and many more,
have worked hard and long,
beginning nowhere. Their re
wards have been the gover
norship, a majority in the
lower house of the state legis
lature, half the Wisconsin
Congressional seats and one
of the Senate seats. Thus
Wisconsin is now a meaning
ful scene for a Democratic
presidential test.
TN
A chi
ADDITION, Wisconsin
should afford a fair test
between Kennedy and Hum
phrey. Superficially, to be
sure, the locale of the duel
would seem to favor Hum
phrey. The Wisconsin pattern,
of a union between the origin
al Democrats and the LaFol
lette Progressives, is closely
similar to the Minnesota pat
tern of a Democratic-Farmer
Labor Alliance, which Hum
phrey helped to bring about.
When both Wisconsin Sena
tors were Republicans, many
local Democrats actually
treated Humphrey of Minne
sota as their own Senator.
Moreover, Humphrey has
powerful support in the labor
groups, in the farm coopera
tives, and in the rural electri
fication associations.
Rather surprisingly, how
ever, Kennedy still quite
clearly has the edge, at least
as of now. A majority of the
Wisconsin politicians are
leaning his way. Even those
who are for Humphrey tell
you, "Yes, Kennedy's ahead
today, but wait and see how
it shapes up after Humphrey
has done some of his old-
fashioned, hard-sell campaign
ing in the state."
Part of Kennedy's edge de
rives from Wisconsin's nign
percentage of Roman Catho
lics. But in the main, accord
ing to the local politicians,
the Kennedy edge has to be
attributed to his remarkable
general appeal to all groups
in the voting rank and file.
If the appeal does not weak
en, that is a pretty useful sort
of edge to have.
(c) 1959 New York Herald
Tribune Inc.
CALL TRANSIT STRIKE
Rome - (LTD - Rome street
car and bus workers nave
called a strike for Wednesday.
They are seeking higher
wages.
FALSE TEETH
That Loosen
Need Not Embarrass
Many wearers of falae teeth have
suffered real embarrassment because
their plate dropped, slipped or wob
bled at Just the wrong time. Do not
live In fear of this hanrjenlne to you.
Just sprinkle a little FASTEETH. the
siKaiine (non-acid) powder, on your
plates. Hold false teeth more firmly, .
so they feel more comfortable. Does i
not sour. Checks "plate odor" (den- i
ture breath). Get FASTEETH at aaj
drug counter.
"McCarthyism." Kennedy was
hospitalized at the time the
McCarthy censure resolution
was voted in the Senate. His
illness had developed from
wartime injuries. Mrs. Roose
velt has indicated that she
would oppose Kennedy for the
1960 presidential nomination
but would accept him as the
vice presidential nominee.
Her Favorite
Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey
(D.-Minn.) looks more like
Mrs. Roosevelt's favorite and
the favorite of the left wing,
in general. He spoke in West
chester County, New York,
and in Boston last week end.
Humphrey will address a Jefferson-Jackson
Day dinner in
Minneapolis on April 18 and
thereafter take off on his first
big scale invasion of the West.
Press aides and the retainers
usually in tow of a presiden
tial aspirant will accompany
Humphrey. He will speak in
Russia Asked To
Agree To Ban on
High Explosions
Geneva - (UPD - The United
States today asked Russia to
accept an immediate ban on
atmospheric atomic explosions
and settle the question of un
derground tests later.
The U.S- move to break the
long-standing nuclear confer
ence deadlock was put for
ward by Ambassador James
J Wadsworth as the three
power discussions resumed
here after an Easter recess.
Uy To 30 Miles
The atmospheric ban, which
would reduce the problem of
radiation danger, would cover
explosions up to 30 miles in
altitude.
It thus would not cover the
type of outer-space shots com
pleted last September in the
U. S. Argus Project.
Western sources said after
a short 70-minute conference
opening session that Wads-
worth had indicated if the
Russians accepted the atmos
pheric ban, a further agree
ment on stopping underground
explosions could be worked
outlater.
Major Shift
The U.S. proposal appeared
to signal a major shift in
western nuclear policy work
ed out during the three-week
Easter break.
Both the American and
British delegations have in
sisted in the past that only a
comprehensive ban on all
atomic weapons tests, both
above and below ground,
would be acceptable. .
Graham's Eye
Giving Trouble
Sydney, Australia - (UPD -Evangelist
Billy Graham has
a recurrence of an old eye
complaint but will not restrict
his Sydney crusade, it was re
ported today.
But after Tuesday when he
addresses a special convoca
tion of students at Sydney
university he will not speak
at any additional meetings.
He addressed 100 clergymen
today on evangelism.
Graham has been under
strict medical supervision for
eye trouble since he left
America in January. The ail
ment delayed his Australian
tour of two weeks.
Reasonable Funerals
(Priced for Everyone)
FRIENDLY,
V -
Springtime
Looms
Washington, Oregon, Califor
nia, Utah and Wyoming.
Humphrey should find the
far westerners congenial, at
least, although they may not
yet be ready as a body to climb
aboard his bandwagon. The
left wing is on the up among
western Democrats, however,
and Humphrey should feel
pretty much at home. His prin
ciple political problem lies in
the South.
The problem in the South
seems to be less whether
Humphrey can get or expect
any delegate support from
southern Democrats than it is
a question whether or not a
great many of them would
bolt a presidential ticket if
Humphrey had the top spot
There are Democrats in the
South who do not care for
Humphrey. They are the party
men and women who remem
ber well the Democratic na
tional conventions of 1948
and 1952.
Civil Rights Defender
It was Humphrey in 1948
who rammed the party-splitting
civil rights plank into the
Democratic platform. That led
to a Dixiecrat or state's rights
bolt which chipped some
presidential electors away
from the Democratic ticket.
Harry S. Truman was elected
despite that or-as some un
happy Republicans put it-the
Republican nominee, Thomas
E. Dewey of New York,
snatched defeat from the jaws
of victory.
Humphrey's pulse feeling in
the South has been limited so
far to Florida and to Ten
nessee which, regardless of
geography, are not counted as
politically of the deep South.
Humphrey was well received
in Florida and Tennessee. Mis
sissippi might be different.
Seel Hearl
new, marvelous
"letterhead size"
DUAL SPEED
TAPE RECORDER
With 10 watt Push-PulL
Audio Output
Here is the marvel in compact
ness, portability, power and
fidelity. Included ore such sen
sational features as: measures
6V2" x DV4 x 11 "-weighs
only 18 lbs.. ..tape speeds,
3.75 and 7.5 j.p.s "Balanced
Tone" High Fidelity. ..simpli-'
fied Keyboard Control ex
clusive high speed rewind lever
...two-level recording indicator
...precision index counter.
$193
50
Complete with microphone, 2 reels
(one with tape) and cordt.
PURUCKER
MUSIC HOUSE
111 No. Central
Phone SP 2-5702
Hear your fav
orite hymns on
KMED every
Sunday, 10:35
a.m., sung by
"Tennessee
Ernie" Ford
PERL
Funeral
Home
HOMELIKE ATMOSPHERE
lady attendant