Capital AJournal AN INDIPINDENT NIWSrAPH-ISTAIllSHID IN llll Bernard Mainwsring (1 897-1 957) Editor and Publisher 1 953-1 957 E. A. Brown, Publisher ' Glenn Cushman, Managing Editor George Putnam, Editor Emeritus Pulliihed tvtry evening except Sunday by the Capital Journal Co., Mre. Jennie t. Mainwaring Full leaied Wiio Strvlci of The Auoclalad Praia and The United Preii. The Allocated Preil It exclusively to the uie for publication of ell newi ditpatchei credited to it or otherwise credited in thii paper and el: puonineo tnertin. SUBSCRIPTION KATES ly Carried Monthly, $1.50; Six Monthi, $9.00; One Yeer, $11.00. ly Mall In Oregon: Monthly, $IJ0; Sli Montha, .S0 One Year $11.00. ly Mail Oulilde Orogom Monthly, $1.50; Six Mentha, $9.00; One Year, $11.00 entitled to newl Oil City Slowly Sinking A first seller futurist novel about the turn of the century, bearing the title of "2000 A.D.," written by an army officer whose name is forgotten in the mists of time, fan cifully pictured this country as it would be a century hence. One feature noted was the subsidence of a large portion of the land in the east central area ot the nation that yields petroleum and natural gas, and the conse quent destruction of a large portion of which are its cities and the gradual creation of great fresh water lakes.' While over half the time limit has elapsed, there has been no sign of collapse ot the earth's crust in this region, but our subter ranean oil and gas supplies far under our crust have not yet been exhausted. Some of our near surface coal fields have been and minor level top surface collapses have result ed prinicpally in anthracite regions. But that there is some basis for the theory of vacuum collapse of the earth's crust is proven by the present subsidence at Long ,, Beach, California, an oil center on the Pacific coast, where "every barrel of oil pumped ,u J ii. iL. ., . iiuin iiiu uupins sums uic ciiy into a deeper 'depression." More than three square miles of highly developed industrial land in the city and its coastal harbor area have sunk below high tide level in the past 20 years, ' and the settling goes on at the rate of a foot and a half a year, it is reported. An account by a staff correspondent of the Wall Street Journal of the Long Beach phenomenon stales: "Picture the sinking area as a bowl with sides and bottom. In the bottom area, there's mostly a 'flat sinking,' so that structures there are not in danger of crumbling. But on the sides of the bowl, where the speed of sinking varies, facilities have developed serious structural problems. "Sinking slowly but surely are factories, ware houses, docks and shipyards along with a forest of 2,400 oil well derricks and pumps. At the pit of the oval-shaped sinking basin, Southern Cali fornia Edison Co. operates a $22 million steam plant which sits 15 feet below high tido. Land level at the plant site has sunk 23 feet in two decades. A mile away. Ford Motor Co. s assem bly plant lies below sea level most of the time, .'according to C. E. Davis, Ford official." ;. Oil men report similar depressions in wide My scattered oil fields In the San Joaquin : valley, and other California areas as well as Lake Maracaibo, Venezuela, but at Long Beach they have the Pacific Ocean, inunda tion threat. - At Long Beach the subsidence cause re-. suited from pumping out 750 million barrels of oil, 600 billion cubic feet of gas and 10.5 " billion gallons of salt water. A costly diking system has been constructed to check the "..onrush of the Pacific, costing over 50 rrtll ."lion and a similar amount' must be spent' In the next few years for dikes, land filling, etc. All nntU nnD,,,.n lt AVnwliln-A . U.nu : plans under consideration to check the sub ' sistence are keeping engineers busy but they ' are confident of a solution. G. P. is an increase of over 100 per cent in six years. Credit is, as everyone knows, extended for such things as purchases of automobiles, fur niture, repairs and modernization of homes, and for medical service. . Maybe the installment purchaser doesn't gauge his own economic condition as his forebears did by his bank balance and his holdings of debt-free property but he's do ing all right for himself, and the economists report that he is keeping up his payments and, generally speaking, avoiding the hazards of an OD slip from the bank or a "slow" label on his account from some creditor. As long as this is the situation, by present standards anyway, the country is all right. cm Collapse of Tyranny Typical of the Republics of South America, the people of Colombia have, with the aid of the army and the church staged a brief rev olution and ousted President Gustavc Royas Pinilla, who essayed the role of bloody tyrant for four years. After fatal rioting, a new five-man military Junta forced the resignation of the dictator who is reported to have fled into exile. The junta is pledged to bring order into 'the country, restore political and press free dom, resign next year In favor of a freely elected civilian government. Colombians are staging a wild freedom celebration in Bogota, , the capital. Leaders of the Liberals and Conservatives, the country's two political parlies who united to bolster the strikers jiid demonstrations that brought Rojes' downfall havo agreed to support the interim rule by the junta and appealed by radio for a return to normalcy. Press censorship has been lifted. The num ber of those killed in the past week announc ed at 141. Lt. Gen. Rojas has shown himself in the past four years to be one of the worst dicta- . tors in the long list of Latin America and his persecutions tinltod the whole nation against him. The agitation was led by students from the six universities he had closed. Rojas , had also antagonized the Roman Catholic church, a power in the nation. Rojas had for years exercised a censor ship of press, speech and politics and closed many newspapers, lie used his big police force to beat up opponents, and throw tear gas bombs Into churches. His troops had all the tanks, machine guns and weapons, so their desertion ended the tyrant's regime. Power seems to go the heads of Latin American politicians, even in such advanced and cultured nations as Argentina, Peru and Colombia, but sooner or later the dictators' criminal regimes collapse. (5. P. RAY TUCKER Uncle Sam's Needs Were Few in 1913 WASHINGTON In view of the popular revolt against the huge budget and terrifically high taxes, G. A., of Wcehawkcn, N. J., asks an extremely timely and pertinent question. He says that he has consulted many sources, but cannot find out how the Federal government obtained revenue before enactment of the Sixteenth Amendment1 (income tax) in 1913. Answer: The answer is simple and easy to obtain. 1 consulted both the Treasury ana internal Revenue, and the data for the government's financial affairs from Its! lounaing are on me tnere. nAY tuckkb The main fact is that Uncle Sam's needs were extremely small in those happy and prosaic years before World War I. The Federal budget for 1914, when the new in come tax began to operate, was only $735, 000,000, as against today's figure of $71.8 billion. We had our first billion dollar bud get when, belatedly, we began to fear that the United Slates might become involved in that conflict. 1914 REVENUE SOURCES The sources of the 1914 revenue were such that they did not affect the average Ameri can, or they touched him only so obliquely that he did not feel it. Here is how Uncle Sam collected his money in 1914; with the figures given In millions: Customs tariffs, $292; distilled spifits, $153; fermented liquors (beer and wine) $08; to bacco,. $79; corporation excise taxes' paid by them, $10.5; corporation income tax, $32.2; individual income tax, $28. The total amount ed to $500.7 million. POST OFFICE SURPLUS The balance of Federal receipts, came from functions or activities which the average American citizen never heard of or partici pated in. They included such things as rev enues from land sales, consular fees, coin age profits, immigration and naturalization charges, taxes on bank notes, court fees and penalties, the cost of issuing patents, and postal profits.' Believe il or ngt, the P, O. had a $3,500,000 surplus in 1914. As is obvious, hardly any tax fell upon (he individual citizen. Indeed, almost the only contact the ordinary person had with the Federal government in those dreamy days was when he bought a postage stamp. And few people wrote letters in those days been uso tho population was relatively static. Nobody moved away or traveled extensively because Henry Ford had not begun to revo lutionize our way of life. "Was Herbert Hoover ever a Democrat?" inquires Mrs. E. W., of Los Angeles, Calif. "This is to settle 'an argument and must be in writing." Answer: Mr. Hoover was accused of being a Democrat because he served under Wood row Wilson during World War I, and because he was discussed as a possible Democratic Presidential nominee, in 1920. In fact, he got a few votes at the 1920 convention. NEVER A DEMOCRAT But he was never a Democrat. Long be fore the public ever heard of him as Belgium Relief Administrator, he had been a dues paying member of the National Republican Club of New York City. He did issue a state ment urging the nation to back Woodrow Wilson, but this referred, to the President as lender o( the war effort, not as a politician. The fact is that, due to his long residence and many trips abroad as a mining engineer and consultant. Mr. Hoover had no Interest in connection with politics of any kind until he beinnio Secretary of Comriiercc in 1921. And he was not too interested in Party af fairs even after he became President. As Never Before People who arc known as "users of con sumer Installment credit" are a very large segment of the population. Whether for good or bad, as a long-pull consideration, they arc very Important in the economic scheme of the country. Anyway they are a much desired element in commerce and industry, and the business world puts a lot of dependence on them. Federal Reserve Board economists report that Americans are using consumer install ment credit as never before. No one is un happy about it for they arc said to he repay ing their debts at a reasonable rate. A $5.5 billion surc in credit use in 11)55 brought a special report from the economists which contains some interesting figure They note that while this credit debt increased by only $2.5 btflt it 1956 the total consumer Installment credit debt at the start of 1957 uas at an all-time high of 11.5 billion. This A Smile or Tiro A railroad executive, after attending a luncheon, dropped dead of a heart attack while on his way back to the office. His affairs were in a terrible slate as the result of his untimely passing. Among other things there was an important business let ter which he had dictated Just that morning, but which hadn't been mailed. His secretary, In handling the business that had been left undone, came across tho letter. She decided to mail it, first adding a postcripl: "1 died since I wrote the above." Tracks. A couple of boys walked boldly up to the dentist and one of them said. "Doc. 1 want a tooth took out and 1 don't want any gas 'cause) Tin in a hurry'' "My." said the doctor. "I must say you'i a brave hoy. Which tool is it?" The little boy turned to 't ttt& and said, "Show him your ttft. lejtft'." Irish Digest, Dublin. JAMES MARLOW Mother's Letter few dm Budget Fight Ending Still Not in Sight WASHINGTON t President Eisenhower's budget and his for eign aid program will still be big news for weeks to come. He had offered a record peacetime budg et of almost 72 billion dollars, in cluding $4,400,-f!!?3! uuu.uw in lorcign aid. Nothing in Ei senhower's four White House years has ex ceeded the con fusion over his budget. The end is not in sight. ktscn h o w e r had insisted his budget was as jambs marlow tight as he could make it. When the reaction set in demands in and out of Congress for cuts he had second thoughts and began talking of ways reduc tions could be made. BOOKKEEPING REDUCTIONS Most of them were bookkeeping reductions. Money he suggested be skipped this year would have to be voted in another year. So the reductions were postponements. Four months of this session of Congress have passed and he still hasn't explained to the lawmak ers in detail why he wants the foreign aid money or what ehe II do with it. He'll do his explaining in a special message to Congress next week. Meanwhile, aflcr watching de mands for budget cuts mount, Ei senhower has decided to make two broadcasts, appealing to the public to put pressure on Congress to case up on its zeal for axing the budget. MEETING OF LEADERS Yesterday, in preparation for the message he sends to Congress next week, Eisenhower called congressional leaders tc the White House. He suggested, as he had previously, that as much as 500 million might be chopped off for eign aid. Later this writer asked two of those leaders for an explanation in some detail of what Eisenhow er had in mind. One was so vague he said all he knew was that a 500 million reduction was suggest ed. The other said he was so puz zled he wasn't sure what the ad ministration had in mind. Bui even the 5(H) million cut talked of hy Eisenhower may be t by ,, blJ merit, for this reason: ISP. A EVERVBODTHE 1M 'MrJk V MOW IMPORTANT WY CTtfi 1 UTTER IN THE V ( IMPORTANT . (LM DAVID LA WRETSCE 'Curl Your Hair' Remarks of Humphrey in January Were Misquoted, Misunderstood WASHINGTON Secretary of the Treasury George Humphrey has been bearing the brunt of a good deal of criticism lately throughout the country. Some accuse mm 01 "attacking the president's bud get." Others say he predicted a depression thatf:, "will curl ynurg' hair unless the 1938 budget rec ommended b y the President is CONGRESS RUSHES IN While telling Congress it can chop 500 millions off his $4,400, 000,000 foreign aid figure, Eisen hower may propose that lt reap- propriatc 500 millions which was previously voted for this year but hasn't been obligated. Unless rc- votcd, it can't be spent Eisenhower s love of old plati tudes which he manages to state with such earnestness that some times they sound almost like new platitudes helped open the door for Congress to rush in with its budget-cutting ax and a budget- cutting desire. But in this the President had a major assist from Secretary o the Treasury Humphrey. A time table of what the two men said will show the origin of some of the confusion. On Jan. 16, the dny Eisenhower sent his budget to Congress, Hum phrey said: (I) it was as tight a budget as the administration could produce but 2 "I think there are a lot of places in this budget that can be cut." At his Jan. 23 news eonterence Eisenhower echoed Humphrey. He said it was the best budget that could he offered at this time. Then he stated his platitude: If Congress can cut the budget, it's Congress' duty to do so. OUGHT TO BE CUT Congress didn't have to be told that. Under the Constitution it's Congress' job to comply. Mean while budget-cutting talk snow balled around the country. At his March 13 news confer ence Eisenhower said ne naan 1 asked Congress to do a hatchet job on his budget. All he meant to say. he said, was that if Con gress could find a place to cut it ought to cut. lit was the day before that March 12 that the Democrats in Congress threw the ball back to Eisenhower and asked him if he had any idea how savings could be made.) On April 3 he told a news con ference ho saw no place where cuts of as much as two billion dollars could be made. And he 1Ja lions of dollars. Parti sans on Capitol Hill have been twitting the, a d m inistration and seeking tol exploit the al- d. Lawrence lceed contradictions. But. if ever a man In public life was misquoted or quoted out of context, misunderstood and mis represented, it is the present sec retary of the treasury in relation to his comments at a press con fcrcncc of January 16 last. Fortunately, a stenographic rec ord was kept and was issued to the press that same day. REPORTS WERE WRONG This correspondent has just com plctcd a study of what was dis tributed by the various wire serv ices and what was printed lr most of the newspapers immcdi atcly after the press conference of January 16. The only conclu sion that can be reached is that the text of what the secretary really said and the impression conveyed by some of the wire services is considerably differ ent. Here Is the exact text of the question that drew the re sponse about "hair curling": "Mr. Secretary, isn't nearly all the talk here today about cutting spending and cutting taxes large ly academic, as long as the world situation remains what it is? Looking nt this budget. 1 find that the lion's share of the increased expenditures is for mutual secur ity and defense. Is there any hope anywhere in the world situ ation that you can do any cut ting in defense spending in the next few years? EXACT TEXT TOLD It is to be noted that the ques tioner inquired about "any hope anywhere in the world situation" and referred specifically to the "increased expenditures for mu tual security and defense." Here is the exact text of Mr. Hum phrey's answer: "I think there is. yes I do. 1 think there is sonic hope you can reduce expenditures all along the line. I would certainly deplore the with the President. Yet in the text of the transcript occurs the following comment by the secre tary: DRAWN WITH CARE t think this budget as now drawn has been prepared with the very greatest care, and I think it is the best that we can possibly do right now. Now, my whole point is this: that it is 18 months before we get through living under this budget, and I think there are' a lot of economies and a lot of sav ings that we ought to be able to make if we pay strict attention to our business and work at them hard enough during the next 18 months. I don't think there Is anything In sight at the moment that can be done better than is now proposed in this budget, but I think we ought to improve it as time goes on Asked whether the secretary and the President differed about the budget, Mr. Humphrey said ir that same press conference: "There is no division or diffl culty in the administration at all that we all are in accord on. This budget was made up, as I say, with the very greatest care and a great deal of time spent on it, and this is apparently the best we can do at the present time. But I just believe that over 18 . months we ought to keep doing better." IMPROVEMENT STARTED The improvement process has already been begun. Ihe agna tion has. therefore, in some re spects been salutary, but some of the talk and criticism is going to extremes and could harm the ef fectiveness of America's interna tional influence in a critical period in history if appropriations for necessary programs are curtailed or abandoned through mistaken acts of congress. , Partisans have been able to dis tort and twist what Mr. Hum phrey did say. A complicated sub ject, such as the budget really is, has been made a football ot poii tics. Unless corrected by an in formed public opinion, the mo mentum of the entire economy can be slowed down and a reccs- on this subject. This is a thing sion precipitated. DR. WILLIAM BRADY. Natural Breathing, Forward Rolls Health Prescription , still stuck, he said, to his basic dav lni)t we thought' we couldn't ewn aid. . terrific amount. Ihe terrific Inx Then on April 18 he suggested 1 . k ar0 tnkjn!, out 0r this to Congress where n reduction of almost $1.800.0110.000 might be made. This was tho bookkeeping cut previously mentioned - wnni; m , haj hecm,s( wc nrc 500 million of it coming out of,:. ', .,.;! , ,i, t country. If we don t over a long period of time. 1 will predict that vou will have a depression that foreign aid. They'll Do Okay Seattle Times We're not going to feel loo sorry for those British sailors who will be limited to'Sl a day shore leave spending money when they visit Norfolk early next month. American sailors have the most extraordinary ability to make the best of things. And from all we'vo seen and read. British tars have much the same resourceful ness. Maybe the men off the Ark Royai and others of Her Majes ty's ships won't eat many high priced steaks ashore. But they'll do alt right, call it sailor's luck, muddling through, or what you will. 8ATB AND SNPKS I It doesn't take, much study of i(it'l.v to r'uf that people of , uej h.itc their superiors and sneer at their inferiors. Sherman Count) Journal. iust lakine too much money out of this economy that, we need to make the jobs that you have to have as time goes on." l'EIIIOn OF TIME Mr. Humphrey spoke not of this year's budget but of what has to bo done "over a long period of time." He was talking directly about reducing expenses for arm ament So are Prime Minister Mac.Millan and Premier Mollct and Chancellor Adenauer. All over the world statesmen are talking of the backbreaking burdens of armament. None of the dispatches written on January 16 that this correspon dent saw emphasized sufficiently ithe difference between Mr. Hum Iphrey's comments on the long ranee prospects due to the arma ment burden arising out ot ihe i world situation and the particular budget submitted that wet-is by the Prescient. The public didn't get the impres '. sion at all that Mr. Humphrey i really supporting the existing I budget Jut that he was differing Having studied health exclusive ly for more than half of my life time, I believe 1 qualify as an expert on health I do not impls that when it comes to a qucs tion of health ( r hygiene they're all out of step but me. In my long career as a P.ll.D. (Doctor of Personal? Health 1, a de gree 1 invented v. uit.u for myself, I have devised several remedies, techniques, or routines which when followed faithfully year after year, prevent, retard, arrest, or reverse Ihe degenera tion process commonly known as chronic disease. REMEDIES TESTED Among these remedies are the following: 1. Daily somersaults (forward rolls). 2. The iodin ration. 3. Natural (belly! breathing. 4. The regeneration regimen (corrective protective diet). 5. Daily calcium and D supple ment (or the ordinary diet. BEN MAXWELL News From an Earlier Day Mav 11. 1927 Mi Lucille Hubbard, a Falls City girl, had won the distinction of being first to swim the four miles between Yaquina ana new port. She accomplished her swim with an ebb tide in one and a half hours. She was awarded a gold medal for the feat. Frtcay, May 13. 1927. had been straw hat day in Salem. A street parade was held for the occasion. Despite deter mined opposition by large timber holding interests I proponents were ben maxwell massing forces lor a Hearing Dy the highway commission relative to 'creation of a road district that would achieve an all-weather road between Falls City and the Lin coln county line via Valsetz. The proposed route would follow Rock 6. B-Nutron as a real heart Ionic to replace digitalis. If you still imagine that drugs or medicines new or old prevent retard, arrest, or reverse the de generation process called chron ic disease, I'm sorry for you. I'm pretty sure no reputable physi cian will say that any drug or medicine will do so. For instance, has any of the end less successions of wonder drugs which the trick specialists and "klinick" racketeers feed their paying customers from season to season cured chronic joint disa bility the degeneration I call RHEUMATIZ and the business men of medicine call "arthritis": NOT MEDICINE Unfortunately, these techniques or remedies which I recommend are not medicine at all. Can't ex pect to derive any henelit from them if you try 'cm for a few weeks and then discontinue as you might do with medicine. You must continue taking them for the rest of your life. It seems easier to sell the Yan kee public a carload of tranquil livers or a ton of aspirin or a barrel of barbiturates than it is to persuade 'em to acc-pt an ounce of prevention. Of State Concern Corvallls Gazette-Times All of us here in Oregon have been more or less embarrassed over the corruption, malingering and questionable honesty of the elected officials in the states largest city and most populous county. But until the Multnomah county grand jury presented its scathing attack against Attorney General Robert Thornton last week, we felt somewhat detached from the whole mess. Now the issues have become of vital concern to the people of the entire state. The grand jury has charged Thornton with appalling inability." It goes even further and suggests that he be replaced as ' prosecutor with someone "whose spirit and obligation of a personal, political or public na ture would not be in conflict with such duty." In part the granj jury said: Our past weeks of attention to the circumstances surrounding the corruption of our community lead us to an inescapable con clusion: The criminal acts that have remained heretofore un charged or unprosecuted in the light of the great abundance of evidence establishing such prob able violations appear to be ex plainable only by our attorney general's incompetence or reluct ance to carry out the governor's directives. "The appalling inability of our attorney general to perceive the emergent public need for forceful action on every point upon which legal action can be predicated has been increasingly evident to us. Although he has made nrofes- sions 10 us tavoring a lorcelul and vigorous prosecution, he has been in charge of this matter for l. most one year without being able to snow any conclusive results." When we commented in this column some weeks ago about me poor job being done by muriiiun in orawing nis indict ments and about his failure to prosecute after almost a vear of investigation, he sent us a per- auiiai ieuer on ine suDject but it anskcred none of our charges. Nor has he answered the same important charges made against rum Dy me grand jury becaux its conclusions are unanswcrabl?. State officials evidently have attempted to find some wv h. which Thornton can be removed from his role of state's prosecu tor in this case but they have come up with the conclusion that 11 can 1 be done. The question now remains What can be done? It must be assumea me legislature will con- uiiui; us investigation of our grand jury system and will cx- icna 11s scarcn into a situation which allows a district attorney to remain in office and thus im pede an investigation into hi own affairs, and laws which con tain no provision for removing from a particular investigation an attorney general who has demon strated inability or lack of de sire "to make a forceful and vig orous prosecution" of a situation that needs immediate public at tention. The first step for clearing the air would be a resienation hi- Robert Thornton, but this is prob- a2'i J!?!1CJ)IS expect; and care. They can never take the place of "family Church," where the members of the family from the tiniest tot to the college senior (when home) gather together in Christ's name for a moment of, at least, silent prayer! Creek through Polk county to a road at the boundary of Lincoln county and shorten the driving distance between Salem and New port by some 25 miles. (This short route to Newport was never im proved. It is now possible to drive to the coast via Valsetz and Camo Sunshine in about three and a half hours. The old road around Chandler mountain, this writer dis covered to his dismay, is almost impassable. Completion of the Salmon river route to the coast, with a summit elevation of only 793 feet, made the proposed Val setz cutoff, with a summit of 2379 near Cold Spring, unattractive). Harry Weiss, proprietor of the Opera House pharmacy at High and Court streets, had sold his business to Clarence and John K. Wiles of Kankakee. III. (Old Sa- lemites will recall when Sally Bush's electric automobile got out of control, jumped the curb and plowed through the entrance of Opera House drug store. Near the end of the store the electric stalled amid a havoc of pills and shatter ed cigars. When did this happen? About 47 years ago. Linfield college student body, by a vote of 146 to 87, had refused to uphold the honor council, a stu dent organization which had voted suspension for two students charg ed with violating the honor, coun cil's edict against smoking. Mrs. G. W. Johnson, a resident of Salem since 1883, had died. G. W. Johnsen, who had entered the men's clothing business here with J. H. Lunn in 1883, had died in 1918. (For many years the Johnson store was located at 141 North Commercial street). Salem school board had voted $3215 for repairs and would reopen old . Washington school. (Thii large, two-story structure stood at 12th and Center streets on the Safeway site until it was razed about six years ago. Many older Salem generations attended school there between 1887 and 1914 when the institution was called East Salem school). If CHRISTIAN 1 I SCIENCE M HEALS KSLM 10:15 A.M. Sunday KL0R KPTV 8:45 A.M. ALL IN THE EAR What you see in this girl's car is Sonotone's new hear ing aid - complete. IT'S WORN ENTIRELY IN THE EAR - no cord, no extra "button." Weighs only half an ounce. Women's hairdos hide if completely.' On men, this amazing hearing aid Is barely noticeable from any angle. COMr IN, PHONf Oft WftlTf. Mil DEMONSTRATION NO OStOATON CAMATAMr 1 W. F. DODGE & ASSOCIATES 200A Liveslcy Bldg. Ph. EM 3-9485 Salem, Ore. REV. GEORGE SWIFT Mother's Guiding Hand Is Most Important to Youth Tomorrow is "Mothers Day." and I This family worship service in in many places Ihe day is also eel- the Church should be followed up ebrated as National Youth Sunday. in the home by some family par Somehow these two days seem to i ticipation in a common recognition go well together. Obviously there I of God. After all, "the Church" is would be no youth, without mothers not primarily a building God's and nc mothers without children. I people gathered together in His A child should never get the im-1 name in or outside any building is pression that religion is something j a unit of the Church. Even "where very important lor children but 1 two or three are gathered together quite unnecessary for adults. in My name," saiu Christ, "there Yet they do get that impression , will I be in the midst." So, in a when they arc "sent" to Sunday sense, a family at prayer is "a School: or "made" to say their Church." And children are- im prayers while mother and dad pressed when they discover that hop into bod without saying their even Dad as well as Mother have prayers. FAMILY WORSHIP The family worship service has Thank God tor the many fine I iX-ome one answer to this problem, youth organizations designed to I'areea.e all over the country arc aid in the character development of floci'.r to the (Hinily services. And our country's youth. But the vari- 1 this it should be. The lannlytous yomn organizations, as good as is nrshippir together at Church 1 they are. earn,-: take fe piare nt as a unit. l,,e Mother's own guiding hand the same God as they do. YOl'TII I.AI DKD ANNOUNCES BROADEST FAMILY PROTECTION IN STATE FARM AUTO INSURANCE HISTORY 'Sim" Samuel New Policy Offers 44 "Star Features' State Farm Mutual' agent here today announced ft new automobile insurance policy containing more than 44 valuable extra-protection features. Designed for modern motorists and their families who travel more miles behind heavier horsepower in today's hazardous ' traffic, the new policy offers broader coverages, new coverages, greater protection. Interested readers may get full details from: 945 S. COMMERCIAL PHONE EM 4-7178 rnttt rmr Mittm a itwfttv ownpew . now ono: ittonitftA. m.