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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 29, 1959)
MAIL TRIBUNE, Metfer, Or. i J I I.. I "Iveryone 1b Southern Oregon Reads The Mail Tribune" MTJ3FCMD PRINTING CO. 33 North fir St. Ph SP 2-6141 ROBfcKr W BCHL. Editor KERB GREY Advertising Manager GERALD LATHAM. Business MgT ERIC W ALLEN JSL, Managing Kditor EARL H ADAMS. City Editor HARRY CHIPMAN, Teleg Editor RICHARD JEWETT Sports Editor OLIVE STARCHEB Women's Editor . DALE E HICK SON Circulation Mgr An Independent Newspaper Entered as second class natter a1 Mediord Oregon under Act of March, 3. 1897 SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mai t In Advance. Copy 10c. Dall- and Sunday 1 year $154)0 Daily and Sunday 9 not. 8.0C Daily and Sunday 3 mos. 4.25 Sundav Onlv One vear $420 By Carrier In Advance Medford, Ashland. Central Point Eagle Point, Jacksonville. Gold Hill. Phoenix. Shady Cove, Rogue Riv er Talent and on motor routes. Dail7 and Sunday 1 year $18.00 Daily and Sunday 1 mo. ISO Carrier and Dealers copy 10c All Terms Cash in Advance Official Paper of City f Medfore Official Paper of Jackson County United Press International Full Leased Wire . MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION Advertising Representative: WEST-HOLIDAY CO- INC. Of fices in New York. Chicago. De troit, San Francisco. Los Angeles, Seattle, Portland St. Louis. At lanta. Vancouver B.C. T7- Utllltll ICS W 1 IIIIIIIUIII -"ASSOCIATION HATIONAL E0ITOIIAI Flight 'o Time Medford and Jaskson County History from the files of The Mail Tribune 10, 20. 30, 40 and 50 years ago. . 10 YEARS AGO July 29. 1949 (Friday) The Jacksonville Gold Rush Jubilee queen contest closes tomorrow and many young hearts are fluttering. Sen. Wayne Morse declares members of Congress areout of touch with the people. 20 YEARS AGO V July 29, 1939 (Saturday) ' Roger Henselman, Medford student, is awarded a full na tional scholarship to Harvard college. From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudge Pot" column: "The past week, as far as the heat is concerned, has been a 'lulu,' which is not what the more virile cussers called it." 30 YEARS AGO July 29. 1929 (Monday) Railroad heads ; and local fruit packers discuss freight rates here. Travel to Crater Lake so far this month has broken all rec ords. 40 YEARS AGO ' July 29, 1919 (Tuesday) Forest . fires in Siskiyou county grow serious. s A big viaduct is to be con structed east of Ashland. 50 YEARS AGO. July 29. 1909 (Thursday) A scheme for "Seeing Med ford" by bus tour is proposed. Suggestions in the Tribune that the state of Siskiyou be formed in southern Oregon and northern California draws strong support. Vhtfs Your I.Q.? Nine er ten correct is tuperisr; seven er eight is excellent; five of us is good. 1. The Grand Army of the Republic was organized by veterans of which war? When is Ground Hog Day observed? 3. Which three of the fol lowing are most closely re- lated-mmng, southpaw, field er, muff, bunt, rookie? 4. Was President Truman's official yacht named Potomac, Williamsburg, or Mayflower? 5. A seismograph measures the velocity of light, intensity of earth tremors, of the length of daylight? 6. Does the term antarctic refer to the North, or South polar region? 7. If you had a Rocky Moun tain Canary, would you feed it bird seed, or hay as a steady diet? - 8. The likeness of which former U. S. President is pic tured on the $2 bill? 9. From the lowest to the highest, how do the suits rank in Contract Bridge? 10. The natives of which State are nicknamed "Tar Heels"?-; ; Answers: 1. Union veterans of the Civil War. 2. February 2. 3. Southpaw, fielder, rook ie. 4. Williamsburg. 5. Inten sity of earth tremors. 6. South Polar region. 7. Hay, it's a mule. 8. Thomas Jefferson. 9. Clubs, diamonds, hearts, spades. 10. North Carolina. OVERZEALOUS Chesterfield, England -CPD Union leaders ordered a new election at Parkhouse Col liery after a somewhat over enthusiastic vote for union officers. The number of bal lots cast exceeded the num ber of eligible voters by 162 votes. 4 Unwanted Telephone calls which seek to sell something unwanted, or which are of the phoney "quiz variety, or are of several calls, are real nuisances. People have every right to be disgusted, irate or upset by such calls. plain. And we fully understand the sentiments of the city council when two weeks ago making Nonetheless, . Mayor when he vetoed the measure. AS WRITTEN it was (1)--of doubtful consti-TiivrioliT-iT (e nnoirnr) in onriliaf inn rxrr VUlyAUXAClAXvJ' y aW J UMV (3) unenforceable. The city's jurisdiction extends only to the cijty limits. There would be nothing to prohibit such telephone solicitors from moving to Central Point or Ashland or Jacksonville, and continuing their nuisance calls without interruption or threat of punishment, or even extra expense. And there's nothing the city could do The vetoed ordinance also sought to exempt some people thus bringing it into the class legislation" category. THE ordinance had for its purpose the protec- and nuisance type calls. ineffective and questionable legislation. The answer to the has yet to be found. We know how they practically overnight. That is if everyone would agree, tacitly or in an organized way, to refuse to patronize anyone who used the telephone as sales device. If that economics would quickly .But as long as a certain percentage of people respond to such calls, made. No ordinance will stop them. E.A. Oregon's Police Defaults There is no such thing as a "perfect" police department. But there are varying degrees of excellence. They range from departments which are police agencies in name only, to with adequate personnel, Most of those m Oregon range somewhere m between the two extremes. Lt.. Bard Purcell of the Portland Police department recently con ducted survey of the 36 sheriff's offices in the state, and 39 city police indicated that the bulk . 1I7E ARE indebted to the Salem Capital Jour ' nal for a partial list of Lt. Purcell's findings We reproduce it here, note how the Medford In 52 of the 75 surveyed departments sal aries averaged less than Medford, police salaries with the average somewhat less than $380.) Departments generally hire officers with out sufficiently investigating their backgrounds (In Medford each applicant is screened for a prior criminal record and for character.) Most; departments give no regular or pe nodic pay raises. (Medford policemen receive merit pay raises on a regular basis.) ' MO DEPARTMENTS use psychiatric or psycho logical screening devices in weeding out un suitable applicants. (We Lt. Purcell -means by this, but applicants here receive IQ tests, and a special emotional stability test, administered by the Most departments priate college training as being a consideration in hiring or promotion. ( Such qualifications are taken into consideration in Medford.) . Fifty-nine departments fail to maintain acceptable training (Here again "acceptable" Medford. rookie policeman undergoes training.) - - JUJANY departments are so-short of manpower that no night'patrols are maintained. (Not true nere.) m Nineteen departments don't even require a high school education for patrolmen. (Medford requires either a high school diploma or a certifi cate of equivalency.) Only three of the 75 departments have a regular training program beyond the recruit level. (Medford has four types of training for experi enced men: regular in-service training conducted by the lieutenants; regular firearms training; special training for selected patrolmen at schools and academies as available: and the regional advanced schools, conducted cooperatively by law enforcement associations.) THIS review, though far rates among the three or four best in Oregon. Yet the Capital Journal's points in reviewing these data are still valid. It says: "Oregonians are too tight to pay for vigorous and enlightened departments. "Chiefs and sheriffs generally are too fond of their security to fight for what they must knowgis the right course. "City councils are too afraid of the controversy change brings to risk hiring youthful -and progressive police executives ... ' "How can anyone wonder that crime increases when so little value is put on its prevention and appre-' -hension?" Perhaps it is only local pride to believe as we do that the most severe of these criticisms do not apply to Medford and Jackson conntv. T5nr. the fact remains that Oregonians in general are unwilling to pay for the best in police services, and are suffering from an increasing crime toll as a result. E.A. ..- Phone Calls other types of unwanted - They have a right to com it passed an ordinance such calls illegal. John Snider was right V VAX AAA . ULfiACUVlVlli U11U about it. ' But it would have been nuisance telephone call could be ended, however, happened, the laws 01 end this practice. they will continue to be well-organized agencies training and equipment. departments. His survey of them rank rather low. and in parentheses' we Police department rates: $380 per month. (In range from $330 to $410, don't quite know what Medford school office.) don't recognize appro programs for recruits. is not defined, but each from complete, would Dennis the Menace I 7-29 -.s , I WAS GONNA Ifcll HER IT WASN'T A MAL SHRUNKEN HEAD-ONLY I DIDN'T HAVE TIME' . Newsom Finds U.S.-Russian Relationships on Two . By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign Editor On the lower level, the U.S. exhibition in Moscow ap parently is a success. On the upper level it has served primarily thus far to point up at least two pri mary difficul ties in United States and So viet Russian attempts to reach any kind of an un derstanding. On the low- Phil Newsom ) er level, we have the ordinary Russian housewife showering courte sies upon Mrs. Richard Nixon when she visits the big Mos cow department store, GUM. They greet her as an out sider with whom they would like to be friendly. Experience Typical . Friendliness , is a basic com modity of the Russian people. And so it has been exhib ited at the U.S. Exhibition. - One not usually taken into consideration is the Russian language itself. A Rich Language It is a rich language, many of whose words have no exact translation into- a single Eng lish language synonym. This correspondent has lis tened many times while a Russian translator searched in vain for the English counter part to a word or phrase- in a Russian speech. The second misunderstand ing, if so it can be called, Russians pore over the Sears Roebuck catalogue. They ar gue the merits of white versus colored tiles in the home. American 'automobiles fascin ate them. They seize upon the opportunity to talk ' with bi lingual guides. - But the differences also are basic. - arises from a total lack of trust on both sides. The Unit ed States recalls with justi fied bitterness the failure of past understandings with the Soviets where the Reds have Search Starts for California Arsonist Northridge, Calif. -(UPD-'Ar-s o n investigators reported Tuesday the small fire Sunday night in .boxing promoter Jackie Leonard's home was deliberately set. The $1,000 bedroom blaze was probably set by a match, said investigators. Fire de stroyed drapes, furniture and scorched walls and ceiling be fore it was put out. A search was underway for the arsonist. Try and Stop Me -By BENNETT CERF- IN 1904, after a fruitless attempt to find a job in every news paper office in metropolitan New York, the late Irvin Cobb sent this letter, special delivery, to all editors: "Sir: I am the best writer, and the ablest editor that has ever come to New York, and yet nobody has jumped at the unparal leled opportunity of hiring, me. This is your last chance. I'm weary of waiting in your anteroom and a modest appreciation of my own worth forbids my doing business, with your head of fice boy any longer. Unless you grab me right away, I will leave your paper flat on its back in the middle of a hard summer and your whole life hereafter will be one vast, surging regret' This must have been a novel approach in 1904, because Cobb notes that his letter produced five offers of jobs! . "If you're unable to get away for a vacation," counsels Ray Black man, "you can get the same feeling by tipping every third person you meet" 1859, by Bennett Cert Distributed by Kiss Festarss Syndicate. used every legalistic loophole for their own advantage. Explains Geneva Conference It is this which is one of the current sources of disa greement between the United States and Britain. Britain, anxious for a summit confer Communications Letters to the Editor must bear the name and address of the writer, altho.ugh under certain circumstances the use of a pen name or initial for publication is permissible.' The Mail Tribune reserves the right tc edit all letters with a view to clarification and condensation. Letters submitted for publication must not exceed 400 words. The letters printed in this column do not necessarily represent the views of the paper; in fact the contrary is often the eae. "Black Powder Days" To the Editor: The Mult nomah Muzzle Loading Rifle club is looking for the best muzzle loading gun experts, collectors and shots in the West to jsin them in the big "Black Powder Days" Cen tennial event, to be held in Banks, in Washington county, on the first two week ends in August, and extends a cor dial invitation to anyone in terested in the old guns to at tend this celebration. On Aug. 1 and 2, shooting matches will be open" to the public to give as many par ticipants as possible an oppor tunity to handle and actually shoot the old rifles and guns used by the early settlers who opened the West and brought Oregon into the Union in 1859. The club plans to have 20 matches a day for the two days of the public shoot, and prizes of merchandise will be awarded the winners. The West Coast. Trophy matches, to find the best shots in three Western states, will be held Aug. 8 and 9. This shoot is open to all who wish to compete, with the con dition that participants must provide their own black powder firearms. These may include muzzle loading pis tols, flint locks and military rifles. Medals will be given for the top three scorers in 10 events, and an aggregate score is eligible for an award. A carnival and fair, featur ing displays of historic Ore gon, will be neld simultan eously with the shooting matches. A buffalo, donated by John Day, Central Point rancher, and a member of the Oregon Historical society board, will be pit roasted and served on Sunday. A thresh ing exhibition, with an old- time steam thresher; a water fight between rival fire com panies, a pig and Ford race from Tillamook county, a parade and the coronation of the' Sunset Mother, and square dancing also are on the program. We hope your county will Eisenhower Reverses Position .on Third Term Amendment; Personal Reason Seen By LYLE WILSON Washington (DPD If the Eisenhower administration has switched positions on repeal of the 22nd Amendment to the U. S. Con stitution, per haps there is a good per sonal reason The 22nd Amendment was proposed by the 80th Congress in yle C. Wilson 1947 and ratified by sufficient states in 1951. The amend ment was an expression of ill- will toward Franklin D Roosevelt. It forbids a President to serve more than two wnue House terms. This prohibition was a KepuDiican project which seems to have back fired. The prohibition is the law of the land and chances are it will remam so long enough, at the least, to pre vent - the Republican party Levels ence, would accept Kussian verbal promises that there will be no intereference with Western rights in Berlin so long as the subject' is under conversation. The United States says, put it in writing. be represented by its best muzzle loaning snots, and we are looking for the county sending the greatest number of experts to enter the shoots. If there are entrants from your county, we would appre ciate them listing their names with our co-sponsor, the Ore gon Historical Society, Port land, Oregon. We are looking forward to greeting . you in Banks on Aug. 1 and 2, and on Aug. 8 and 9. John W. Klinker, President Multnomah ' Muzzle Loading Rifle Club co Oregon Historical Society 235 S.sW. Market st. Portland 1, Ore. Alaskans and Pride To the Editor: Mr. Arthur E. Tropple, in your Communi cations column, would leave one with the impression that I am not proud to be an American. Nothing could be farther from the truth, Mr. Tropple. I was proud enough to have served 5Vz years in World War I and 2 years, 4 months in World War II, en listing at the age of 47 years. There are many people in Alaska, Mr. Tropple, who be lieve as I do, that Alaska was not ready for statehood. An other five years, with the privilege of electing our own governor and with voting rep resentives in both houses of Congress, would have better prepared us for statehood status. It could be, Mr. Tropple, that I am too proud to knuckle down to a . vodka drinking, cotton picking goof like Khrushchev ? )..'('! And other things. Thank you Mr. Tropple. . "Malemute Slim" Owen C. Gearhart Sr., Camp White, Ore. Who's Crazy? To the Editor: Here is an other reader who would ap preciate a new record put on for a change. The editor made his big mistake when the first letter was put in print. What puzzles me now is, who is crazy? Me for reading this stuff, he for writing it, or the editor for printing it? There is an old saying, "Great minds run in the same channels." If that is true, it is quite possible that minds of monkeys do too. Who knows? Bill Breuster, Box 100, Trail, Ore. Three Counties Adopt New United Effort Portland -(UPI) The name of the United Fund is bemg changed to United Good Neighbors i n Multnomah, Clackamas and Washington counties. The United Funds of the three counties adopted the name change here Tuesday and agreed to consolidate campaigning and budgeting. Officials said this was the first step toward possible merger of the three organizations. from nominating for President next year its most popular public figure. This popular figure is, of course President Eisenhower. Ike Now Opposes Repeal Attorney General William P. Rogers has informed Con gress by letter that the ad ministration opposes repeal of the ban on third terms. Chair man Estes Kefauver (D-Tenn.), of the Senate Constitutional Amendments Subcommittee remarked that the administra tion had reversed its position on this matter. In the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS From Leningrad (Russia): U.S. Vice-President Nixon said he and Premier Nikita Khrushchev agreed during their talks (in Moscow) that "differences between nations must be settled AT THE CON FERENCE TABLE AND NOT ON THE BATTLEFIED." . So He added: "My message to the people of Leningrad, from the peo ple of the United States, is PEACE FOR ALL THE WORLD". M R. AND Mrs. Nixon and (Kozlov is the Soviet vice premier who recently made a tour of the United States) flew from Moscow to Lenin grad in a Russian TU-104 jet airliner. They were welcomed by a crowd of some 1,000 persons, who gave the Nixons and the Kozlovs a CORDIAL greeting. The Nixons were officially welcomed at the airport by Chairman I. V. Spiridinov of the Leningrad committee of the Communist party, who said to them: "Our people want to live in peace and friendship with all peoples ESPECIALLY AMERICANS. I hope your visit will serve for a better understanding between Russia and the American people, which we all ardently desire From the bottom of my heart, WELCOME.'' ' TTMMMMMMMM, " It sounds (on the surface. at least) like the celebrated Nixon-Khrushchev spat might have had some good results 17ROM Havana: Fidel Castro, swept back in to the Cuban premiership, as expected, by an enormous pop ular demonstration, served notice Sunday night that he will be friends with the United States ONLY IF THE UNITED STATES DOESN'T GET IN HIS WAY. Well .... We'll stay out of Castro'i way IF HE'LL KEEP THE COMMUNISTS OUT OF CUBA. A S ANOTHER Simon Boli- --var, or another Benito Juarez, we will WELCOME Castro. As ANOTHER . COMMU NIST such as Ulbrecht in East Germany we'll have to be against him. We can't toler ate communism in the West ern Hemisphere. That's about the long and short of it. Corps Says Fish Can Pass New Dam Portland - (UPD - The 100 foot head of Washington's Ice Harbor dam is the steepest of any other dam on the Co lumbia river but the Army Corps of Engineers feels mi grating salmon should pass over it with the greatest of ease. The corps made the predic tion on the basis of steep lad der tests during the last three years conducted at the Bonne ville dam laboratory by the U. S. Fish and Wildlife Serv ice. The fish in the tests showed a minimum of fatigue in climbing the steeper fishway. On the north side of Ice Harbor's 100-foot head, the fishway will ascend one foot for every 10 feet of length as compared with the normal ratio of one for 16. Because the new fish ladder is steeper, it aiso is snorxer and will save the' corps at least $500,000 in construction costs. At other Columbia river dams, migrant fish climb 66 feet at Boneville, 88 feet at The Dalles and when John Day dam is finished, the climb will be 95 feet, still five feet short of the uphill pull at Ice Harbor. The Ice Harbor ladder ex periment is the first of its kind, the corps said. The dam is due for completion in 1962. Don't NtgLct Slipping FALSE TEETH Do Islss teeth drop, slip or wobbls hen you talk, t, lsugh or sneeatT Don t be annoyed and embarrassed S such handicaps. FASTEETH, aa italine (non-acid) powder to sprin kle on your plates, keeps false teeth more firmly set. Glres confident feel, lng of security and added en-rfors. No gummy, eooey. nast7 taste r- reel ing. Get ?ASTHTH today at mom If so, Eisenhower may have ordered the reversal because he had been struck by a terri fying idea: If the amendment were repealed quickly he, Ei senhower, might be eligible for renomination when the KepuDiican national conven tion meets next year. Such speed would be unlikely, but it would not be impossible. So, maybe Ike is taking pre cautions against a draft. It is astonishing but not unreason able to suggest that a man of Eisenhower's age and medical history might be summoned to a third presidential term. It is astonishing because it does not make any sense. Third Term Precedent But it is not unreasonable because politics more often than not do not make any sense either and, besides, the precedent would be for Re publican strategists to run Ike again if they could. He would enter the White House for a third term in his 71st year. It might kill him? Perhaps it would. That is the way it happened to Roosevelt back there in 1944-45. It is the phy sicians against the politicians in the dispute whether insid ers knew FDR was dying when he sought and won a fourth term. Washington Report' By WILLIAM MUSCLE IN DANGER Washington-Though it may sound like a stuck needle on a dull phonograph record, it is necessary to report it again: The guts of Ameri c a n foreign policy, the one true source o f American and Allied s t r e ngth in this world, is in neril of wwS wasting away. This is what is commonly called the foreign aid pro gram; more exactly, it is the Mutual Security Program by which alone the West has been kept in some kind of collec tive economic and military health. Most of the West, and in a way the United States most of all, seems determined to cling frantically to the. pleasant fic tion that talking will bring us safely through with the Rus sians. Talkingthat is, in mis sions to and from - Moscow, and in endless foreign minis ters' conferences. THIS kind of talking would surely be sound if it were backed up by rising -Western power. But in the present re alities, it is largely conversa tional moonshine. For palav ering with a ruthless antago nist has rarely been wise or safe, unless the peace-lover had an oiled and loaded shot gun behind his door. Our shotgun is the foreign aid program. It is not yet an empty and rusted weapon. But there is great danger that it soon may become just that, Congress has now made an authorization of up to $6.5 billions to carry foreign aid forward for another year. It is not a Rood bill. This the foreign policy leaders of both narties-and. indeed, the Eisen hower State Department-weii know. It is. at best, a tolerable bill-and at best tolerable only for the short run. Inadequate as it is, it yet must race another obstacle course: The Congressional Ap propriations Committees in due time . will bring out an entirely separate measure to provide whatever actual mon ey is to be provided. . - THE story of action thus far on this matter - and "this matter" is nothing less than the muscle rather than the endlessly talking voice of the West-is a sad one. It is sad to all who believe that while balanced budgets are fine, col lective security is even better. It is sad to all who are aware that not a dozen summits can keep in the field the military forces of freedom, whose strength lies in the economic SERVING ALL WHO CALL Recognized as a leader in the funeral profes- C M. Llrwiller sion, Litwiller's hat served Constantly striving to bring and ambulance service at LITWILLER Funeral Home Mountain View Chapel Hwy. 66 at Normal Office 88 N. -Main . ASHLAND We Never Close The files . relate that just before the 1944 elections, Vice Adm. Ross T. Mclntire said FDR was in good health and without "organic difficulties at all" although underweight. James A. Farley and others are on public record that it was widely known among po litical leaders that Roosevelt was a dying man when he was renominated in 1944. Aide Says FDR Was Dying Jonathan Daniels, a White House secretary, wrote that FDR was dying in 1944 and that some of his associates knew it. Henry A. Wallace was deposed from second place and Harry S. Truman subbed with the warning word that the 1944 convention was not nominating a vice president but a President of the United States. Edward J. Flynn's Inside memoirs remarked in 1947 that FDR had slipped mental ly and physically but that the group surrounding him were pressing him to make another 1944 campaign." The Democratic politicians wanted to win. ' Republicans are not much different. And, it is a fact that Republican Party political prestige is fad ing whereas Ike seems to re main the U. S. favorite son. S. WHITE and political power of the free countries. For foreign aid's bipartisan friends in Congress-and fortu nately there has been no two- bit partisanship in this-have again been unable to make foreign aid a rational, busi nesslike and long-run enter prise. For this failure, Presi dent Eisenhower himself is most of all to blame. He with drew from the program's oth er sponsors his own backing for the kind of long-term leg islation he himself first pro posed two years ago. He di dthis at the insistence of his budget advisers, to "hold the line" against spend ing and inflation. Now, iron ically, the President'! own special Foreign Aid Advisory Commission has again recom mended to him just the kind of long-range financing he has refused to support. . - BUT there have been other failures, too. The Foreign Aid Administration has refus ed in the past to face up to plain facts. These are that the program has been far from perfectly run, that there is waste in it, and that It will do nobody any good to go on denying it and refusing to help clean up the situation. The Comptroller General of the United States, Joseph Campbell, is surely not anti foreign aid, and he is surely not anti -Eisenhower. But Campbell has officially stated that a "pattern of loose, lax administration runs through the entire complex" of the program. The new head of foreign aid, James Riddleberger, is in no way to blame for past un tidiness. But he will need to act fast and candidly, and bru tally if necessary, to end it. The best friends foreign aid ever nad in (Congress are themselves not blameless. The disillusion of men like Sena tor J. W. Fulbright of Arkan sas has led them to play a rather slack, dispirited game. They need to pull up their socks, for though it is late, the great contest is not yet wholly lost. (Copyright, 1959, by United Features Syndicate, Inc.) Need vacation money? oom Pacific Industrial prompt, couftaom pftontl loan end rew or vso car tlnmnclng 16 S. Central SP 3-5308 Bob Griffith, Manager Mrs. Utwiller Jackson Co. tine 1935. you that better funeral the lowest possible cost. Tgf 4f 'It is better to know us and not need us than to need us and not know us."