Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, May 26, 1952, Image 7

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    EIGHT MEDFORD (OREGON)
MedfordiSkTribuni
Everyone In Southern Oregon
Read! Tne Mall Tribune
published Dally Except Saturday by
MEDFORD PRINTING CO.
S7-29 North Fir St. Phone 2-B141
ROBERT W. RUHL. Editor
ERNEST R. GILS TRAP. Manager
HERB GREY. Advertiilng Manager
E C. FERGUSON. Managing Editor
ERIC ALLEN JR.. City Editor
HARRY CHIPMAN, Telegraph Editor
RICHARD J EWETT. Sports Editor
OLIVE STARCHER. Society Editor
GERALD LATHAM. Circulation Mgr
An Independent Newspaper
Entered ai second claw matter at
Medtord. Oregon, under Act of
March 3. 1887
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Mall In Advance: .,.
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Dally and Sunday ix montha 6 50
Dally and Sunday three mos. 3.50
Daily and Sunday one month 1.25
By Carrier In A d v a n c e Medford.
Ashland. Central Point. Eag p Point.
Jacksonville. Gold HI II. Phoenix.
Shady Cove. Rogue River, Talent
and on motor routea:
Dally and Sunday one year 1S 00
Daily and Sunday one month 1.25
All Terms Cash In Advance '
Official Paper of the City of Medford
Official Paper of Jackson County
United Press Full Leased Wire
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siitintlil EDITORIAL
I c7 v-' t
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PUlUISHIIS
ASSOCIATION
Flight o' Time
Medford and Jackson County His.
tare (rem the lllel o the Mall
Tribune 10. 20. 30 and 40 rears
10 YEARS AGO
May 26, 1942
(It was Tuesday)
, Graduation exercises schedul
ed at Medford senior high
ichool; class includes 98 girls
and 96 boys.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: Reports
from rural regions say hailstones
as big as goose eggs fell last
week. Several goose eggs as big
as hailstones also are reported,
along with a few hailstones as
big as hailstones.
20 YEARS AGO
May 26, 1932
(It was Thursday)
: Jackson county casts 1,903
votes for Franklin D. Roosevelt
for Democratic nominee for
president in primary elections;
Alfred E. Smith gets only 22
votes.
Family of three Injured In au
tomobile accident when pet tur
tle in car frightens little boy sit
ting next to driver.
SO YEARS AGO
May 26, 1922
(It was Friday)
Mora than 1,000 chickens kill
ed in ranch fire near Medford;
damages estimated at $1,500.
Full page advertisement for
"The Sheik," moving picture
starring Rudolph Valentino and
Agnes Ayres, appear In The Mull
Tribune.
40 YEARS AGO
May 26. 1912
(It was Sunday)
Chester A. Arthur post, Grand
Army of the Republic, and Spanish-American
war veterans dis
cuss p'ans for large Memorial
day program.
Local resident escapes from
holdtin man on Jacksonville-
Central Point rond when his
team becomes frightened and
runs away.
New BritRin, Conn. (U.R)
Stanley Gworck, a policeman,
doubled in brass as a fireman.
He spotted a pnrked automobile
on fire, dashed Into a nearby
store for a fire extinguisher and
put out the blaze.
NOTED engineer, Karl P, Blllner,
Philadelphia, r veals Stalin
medal for 1951 was awarded Red
engineer for "Inventing" con
Crete processing method Invented
and turned over by Blllner to
Soviets In 1944 under lend
lease. (InUrnatunai Soundphoto)
w
kVSt
MAIL TRIBUNE
Good News for This Region
Announcement that the Medford Veneer and
Plywood corporation has started construction of a
large plywood fabrication plant at the White City in
dustrial site northeast of Medford is good news for
this region. In addition to a generous increase in the
valley's payroll around 150 men will be employed
the installation will bring other benefits of a substan
tial nature.
The fact that this latest business venture has been
organized by Medford men and that the $400,000
plant will be financed almost entirely by local inves
tors, is also good news.
THERE is further cause for satisfaction in the new
company's decision to locate its manufacturing
plant in the White City area. Too much of the valley's
prime agricultural land is now being occupied by lum
bering and other industrial plants which, in many
cases, could function just as well on less desirable
ground.
TTHE White City area, carved out of the former
Camp White reservation, is gradually taking on
the appearance of a really important industrial sec
tion. Installations there now represent in the neighbor
hood of $4,000,000 and there are reports that major
additions may be made in the not distant future.
If plans of the Medford Veneer and Plywood cor
poration are carried out that plant alone will ulti
mately require large additions for production of hard
wood veneer plywood and plywood utilizing impreg
nated plastic faces and other newly developed meth
ods of using lower grades of veneer.
e e e
IT HAS long been realized that every effort possible
should be made to secure more lumber manufactur
ing plants, particularly remanuf acturing, in order that
greater and more diversified use may be made of our
principal raw product timber and it is encourag
ing to see local interests backine such development
with their money. E.C.F.
G.P. Has Plans Also
While we're on the subject of industrial expan
sion, it might be interesting to note that this portion
of the Rogue valley is not alone in enjoyment of such
progress.
PROMOTERS of Rogue Hardboard, Inc., a Grants
Pass corporation, are planning to raise the capi
talization of that concern from the present $5,000 to
$1,000,000 preparatory to building a plant there
which would utilize waste products from mills in the
vicinity.
Construction of the new mill, on the site of the
old golf course east of Grants Pass, is expected to start
as soon as half of the million dollar capitalization has
been raised.
. A special meeting of the stockholders has been
called for next Wednesday to pass on the proposal.
E.C.F.
Viewpoints Differ. .
One of the interesting phases of the recent-election
was the conflicting size-up of candidates as given
in the editorial columns of the various newspapers of
the state.
For instance, anyone perusing the dailies which
came to The Mail Tribune's "exchange" desk during
the campaign learned from the Bend Bulletin that:
"A good many central Oregonians saw and heard Estes
Kefauver yesterday. They found him a man of somewhat
austere appearance and with none of the magnetism that
does so much for a candidate. ... he seemed a bit awkward
and confused in conversation following his short talks. There
was no life, no vivacity."
TO KLAMATH FALLS
V. till Iv J.aUIII A v. an I v,S- wjjijvi.. v -
ent person entirely. As reported by the Herald and
News :
"Some who went to see Kefauver when he was here
. . . said that he is just like his fellow senator, Wayne
Morse . . . (with) charming manner and remarkable stage
presence."
E.C.F.
When Mule
.Tnoksnn enuntv has a
sent something of a problem for election returns
gatherers, but for real isolation me utue muie ween
community in Curry county is probably unique in
the whole nation.
To get the Mule Creek ballots all 15 of them
after the recent primary election, Sheriff Glenit
R. Sabin and his deputy, W. W. Smith had to travel
from Brookings, the county seat, south on the Coast
highway to Crescent City, Calif., thence east over
the Redwood highway to Grants Pass and then down
the Rogue river to Marial.
The officers learned that on May 6, the residents
of the Mule Creek region received the first delivery
of second class mail since December 24. First class
mail deliveries had been somewhat more frequent,
the letters having been hiked in afoot twice, a month
throughout the winter. E.C.F.
Trail Boy Fourth Place
Portland Bennie Walls, Trail,
was fourth place winner In the
"B" classification of the state
marble tournament held here
Saturday.
He was the only Rogue valley
boy to place In the state finals.
Walls was winner of the Upper
Rogue Marble tournament, spon
sored by Steelhead post, Veter
Monday. Mar 2. 152
people, however, the demo-
Creek Votes
few far corners which vie-
Marble Winner
ans of Foreign Wars, at Shady
Cove.
State champion of the contest,
sponsored Jointly by the VFW
and Young Oregonians, was Son
ny Myrlck, 13, Molalla, who will
go to Durham, N.C., for the na
tional tournament.
Dead line Sunday Classifieds la at
noon Saturdays.
Crosstown
' i3 UfJ Jl
"The price Is right, but we'd better give it some more
thought. The farmer says he's discouraged wants to
sell and go back to the city."
Matter of Fact
THOSE THINGS
LEFT UNDONE
Washington Secretary of
State Dean G. Acheson has just
flown to Europe, to put the semi
final touches to a grand design.
The new status of Germany; the
German contribution to western
defense; the European army
which so hopefully foreshadows
a larger European union these
are great achievements. Or rath
er, they will be great achieve
ments if the signed agreements
are ratified by the French and
German Parliaments.
Unfortunately these European
successes cannot offset the fail
ures of our policy in other re
gions. In the Middle East and
Southeast Asia, there are no ur
gent crises at the moment, to
occupy the headlines and force
the policy makers to reach de
cisions. But in both areas, there
is the same pattern of dreary
deterioration, with much the
same causes, and with the same
threat of catastrophe ahead.
As any newspaper reader will
remember, the trouble in the
Middle East began with the oil
crisis in Iran; spread thence to
Egypt and has now transferred
itself to French North Africa. A
decisive effort might have
stopped the Iranian oil crisis at
the outset. There was no such
effort, since Britain and Amer
ica were divided as to what
should be done.
TlODAY, the picture in each of
the three trouble centers is
decidedly ugly. In Iran, the re
gime of the aged Prime Minister
Mohammed Mossadegh has
bankrupted the country. There
is no cash left to pay the army
or maintian the pensions of the
tens of thousands of unemployed
oil workers. Hence Mossadegh
may fall. Yet there is little rea
son to believe that the fall of
Mossadegh will be the prelude
to an oil settlement. And noth
ing but an oil settlement which
will replenish the depleted treas
ury with oil revenues can save
Iran from some sort of final
crack-up.
Equally, the British and
Egyptians have now broken off
their talks about control of the
Sudan and the presence of the
British garrison at Suez. These
two issues have already caused
the whole center of Cairo to be
burned by the mobs. A failure
to settle them is like a failure
to de-fuse a bomb.
Finally, the French are now
engaged In a violent struggle
with native nationalism in Tu
nisia, and the unrest is spread
ing to Morocco. The situation in
French North Africa might be
come more manageable, if the
sources of Infection were re
moved by settlements in Egypt
and Iran. As matters stand,
things are likely to go from bad
to worse in this area which now
contains our most important
overseas air bases.
In Southeast Asia, the outlook
Is still more ominous. In Burma,
the Communists have united,
are making alliances with the
dissident tribesmen and are di
rectly threatening the feeble and
distracted central government.
In Malaya, the British have yet
to make any solid progress in
their costly, bloody struggle
against the Communist guerril
las. And in Indo-Chlna, the war
against the Communist armies of
the Vlet-Minh continues without
Interruption, and exhausting the
resources that France needs for
Europe,
e a a
IN ALMOST any one of all
these countries, a quite cas
ual accident will be enough to
produce a full-scale catastrophe.
In the case of Indo-China, for
example, the French people are
increasingly hostile to the war
there, and increasingly worried
about having to keep the bulk of
their armed forces in the Tong
klng delta while Germany re
arms across the Rhine. At any
moment, another reshuffle of
the French Cabinet can produce
a government unwilling to carry
on the Indo-China war. And then
the choice will lie between fill
ing the vacuum ourselves, or
seeing all of Southeast Asia go
the way of China.
By Roland Cot
By Joseph anal
Stewart Altop
Meanwhile the American pol
icy makers, while deeply wor
ried and spasmodically active,
have never seriously attempted
to take the one absolutely essen
tial step. This step is, simply,
to forge a working unity of pol
icy and action in both the Middle
East and Southeast Asia among
this country, Britain and France.
The present haphazard approach
is bound, eventually, to lead to
catastrophe somewhere. But ca
tastrophe may still be warded
off by the united and deter
mined efforts of the three great
Western powers with interest
and influence in these troubled
regions.
There are all sorts of reasons
for the present disunity. Both
the British and French have
sometimes been remarkably
short-sighted. The Americans
have been naturally reluctant to
extend this country's already
over-vast commitments. Every
one has made bad mistakes.
Equally, there are all sorts of
shadings.' In Southeast Asia,
there is something approaching
day-to-day unity by consulta
tions, but there is no agreement
on a common plan to bring the
troubles there within bounds. In
the Middle East, there is no un
ity at all.
Achieving unity will of course
place additional burdens on this
country, since every increase of
responsibility carries an increase
of burden. But when this coun
try again possesses an adminis
tration capable of creative and
dicisive action, the effort will
have to be made and the burden
will have to be shouldered. A
foreign policy that solves only
European problems is not good
enough, in a world in which all
problems are inexcusably inter
twined. (Copyright, 1952, New York
Herald Tribune Inc.)
4 Car Accidents
Listed in County
Over Week-End
Four automobile accidents oc
curred in the county over the
week-end, according to state
police.
Three occupants of a car
which hit the rear of a grader
one mile north of Central Point
Saturday afternoon were treat
ed for slight cuts, according to
Community hospital attendants.
State police said that the car,
driven by Oneal Ross, Rogue
River, was traveling south on
Highway 99 and ran into the
back of a parked grader with
damage resulting to the grill and
windshield of the car and none
to the grader. The two passen
gers in the car were Lorena
Lewis nnd Corinne Ross, accord
ing to the police.
The occupants were taken to
the hospital by Conger-Morris
ambulance.
Cars Collide
Early Saturday, g car driven
by Ned Barraclough, 829 Beek
man street, Medford, and a pick
up driven by Vernon V. Rasmus
sen, 308 Garfield street, Med
ford, collided on Highway 99
near the county hospital south
of Phoenix, police records show
ed. Both vehicles sustained mi
nor damage, but no one was
hurt, the report Indicated.
Another Saturday accident oc
curred near Talent, involving
cars driven by Richard Hunt and
Ilia M. LeBrun, both Ashland,
police said. Minor damage to the
cars was listed.
Sunday afternoon a car driven
by V. B. Blickenstaff, Crescent
City, went out of control on
Highway 99 near Blrdseye creek
south of Rogue River, injuring
the driver and a passenger, Phil
ip Evanow, also Crescent City,
police reported. They were tak
en to Josephine General hospi
tal, police said. Blickenstaff was
thought to have suffered a brok
en shoulder, and the passenger
cuts on the leg.
Vat Mail Tribune Want Ads
In the Day's News
, By FRANK JENKINS
As these words are written,
there appears to be nowhere in
the world any news that goes
BANG! I'm inclined to regard
that as a good sign. I wish we
could have about 50 years more
of such days.
IN ENGLAND yesterday,
Prime Minister Churchill's
Conservatives won the first tests
of their election pledge to undo1
parts of the previous Labor gov
ernment's nationalization pro
gram. They defeated by a 24
vote margin a Labor party reso
lution attacking DE-nationaliza-tion
as a "return to wasteful
competition."
The house of commons then
adopted a government motion to
return to private ownership the
nationalized long-distance truck
ing industry.
'THAT means that in England
(for the moment, at least)
they are TURNING AWAY from
socialism. In this county, we're
STILL MOVING TOWARD so
cialism. ()UR MOST decisive move to
" ward socialism was Presi
dent Truman's seizure of the
steel Industry when it refused
to accept his government-ordered
increase in wages without an
offsetting increase in prices. If
that had gone through, its ulti
mate result would have been re
fusal on the part of individuals
to invest any more money in
steel stocks. If private investors
won't buy steel securities there
can be no more expansion in the
steel industry.
We have to have steel, so the
next move would have been NA
TIONALIZATION, with the gov
ernment providing the money
for expansion and moderniza
tion. That is socialism.
'FHE STEEL mess is now in the
courts. But what the courts
do won't in itself stop our pres
ent trend. That can. be stopped
only by electing a President and
a congress who are AGAINST
socialism and will pass and EN
FORCE laws that will STOP it.
We'll know more about so
cialism in America after the
fourth day of next November.
rpHERE'S an intriguing tale on
- the wires today about a $42-a-week
messenger-handyman in
Chicago who was big-hearted
with money. He liked to GIVE
IT AWAY to people.
He gave $10,000 to a saloon
keeper whose house wasn't as
good as it might have been.
"Your kids will like their home
better," he said to the bar boss,
"if you'll fix it up."
To another friend, he shelled
out $9,650 one day as a friendly
gesture. "You aren't well en
ough dressed," he said to the
guy. "Go out and get yourself
some good clothes."
To another friends he gave
$5,000 to pay off the mortgage
on his home and to pay for an
operation he needed badly.
WONDERFUL? We ought to
" have more people like that?
Well, there's a catch to it.
It seems that he was tapping
the boss's till for the money. It
came out when he was arrested
that the total amount h had tak
en from the till for his philan
thropies came to $34,300.
The boss didn't share his em
ployee's enthusiasm for philan
thropy and appears to have
squealed like a stuck pig when
he found out what had been go
ing on.
T'D LIKE to add a word here
' about this boss and his de
part ed $34,300. Anybody as
careless as that with the firm's
money not only deserves to lose
but ought to be hauled before a
morals court and given a stiff
sentence for CORRUPTING HIS
EMPLOYEES by putting temp
tation in their way.
WORD more!
This poor devil will probably
be sent to jail for giving other
people's money away and
we'il all applaud. In our private
affairs, we don't like such
things. .
If he had been a POLITI
CIAN, we'd probably send him
back to,congress or maybe elect
him President for giving other
people's money away.
We the voters are an inconsis
tent lot, aren't we?
COP HAS EAGLE EYE
Gibson City, 111. lU.PJ D. C.
Jacobus of Milwaukee. Wis.,
wrote to local police asking that
they searchxfor a trinket his wife
had lost while on a picnic in a
Gibson City park. The trinket
was a gold pin. Police Officer
Elmer Sawyef found the pin
and mailed it to Jacobus.
San Francisco has a total of
27.031 street lights in opera
tion. Medford Students Win
Several Medford students at
Willamette university, Salem,
were among the 41 who were
awarded scholarships or prizes
at the annual awards assembly
May 22 at the university, accord
ing to a news release from
there.
Keith Mirick received the An
nie M. Barrett Memorial schol
arship and also was tapped for
Enemy Forces Win
Propaganda Battle
Over Koie Incident
By LYLE C. WILSON
Washington U.R) The Com
munists won the propaganda
battle over the Koje island general-snatching.
Military morale was hurt by
the blunders of two brigadier
generals. They were Francis T.
Dodd, who was kidnaped by the
prisoners, and Charles F. Col
son, who made concessions to
free him instead of rescuing by
force. Both have been broken to
colonel, a personal tragedy dif
ficult for a civilian to under
stand. Concessions Disavowed
Gen. Mark W. Clark was com
pelled to disavow the conces
sions made by Colson for Dodd's
release. That was a necessary re
pudiation. But it is difficult to
defend in the propaganda war of
words. The Communists are
making hay with that one.
The Communists consistently
outsmarted the American brass
with a series of deceptive plays
which our side will be a long
time explaining away.
Order Not Executed -
The fact that Gen. Matthew B.
Ridgway's direct and plain or
der for the use of force in free
ing Dodd was not executed ' re
mains still to be explored by the
Army's department of fuller ex
planation. Communist propagandists will
exploit all of this and do it
smartly. Better than a propagan
da triumph for them was the
Congressional Quiz
tfuestlons and Answers on Wha
Goes on at the Capital. Furnisher)
by Congressional Quarterly New
Features.
Q Will I have to sell "brand
name" merchandise in my store
at prices set by manufacturers if
the "fair trade" bill becomes
law? . .
A It depends on your state's
laws. The biU passed May 8 by
the House was designed to re
establish the laws in 45 states
which permit a manufacturer
and retailer to agree on mini
mum prices which would apply
to all retailers, regardless of
whether they signed the agree
ments. The Supreme Court ruled
a year ago that the states lack
ed authority for such laws.
Q What's the "lobby lineup"
on "fair trade" legislation?
A "Fair traders" leading the
fight for legislation binding all
retailers to price agreements on
"brand name" products are the
American Fair Trade Council
and the National Association of
Retail Druggists. "Free traders,"
opposing such legislation, in
clude the Farm Bureau, the Na
tional Grange, the CIO and drug
and department stores in New
York City, Virginia, Washing
ton, D.C., and Florida.
Q Has Congress looked into
whether the International Ma
terials Conference is giving U.S.
manufacturers their fair share
of scarce raw materials?
A Eight Republican House
members headed by Rep. Antonl
N. Sadlak, (Conn.), investigated
IMC and reported May 4 that
the International group which
regulates the flow of materials
throughout the free world was a
"super-cartel" which is "short
changing" the U.S. in copper.
It said unemployment in certain
industries resulted from copper
and .other shortages "largely
traceable" to the IMC.
Q What's the idea of the
"group libel" law?
A Four New York Congress
men Reps. Javits (R), Keogh
(D), Klein (D) and Powell (D
who May 5 introduced bills to
make it illegal to defame mali
ciously any race or religious
class, said the legislation was
aimed at "dishonest purveyors
of defamatory matter" and con
tained "effective protection for
freedom of speech." No one who
could prove his statements true
or that he "honestly believed"
them true on reasonable grounds
could be convicted.
Q Any action 'in the bill lo
enforce mine safety rules?
A The Senate May 7 passed
by voice vote the bill which
would authorize federal mine In
spectors to require mine owners
to order miners from unsafe
areas. It also would make a
mine owner's refusal to comply
a felony. Before approving the
bill the Senate adopted an
amendment by Everett M. Dirk
sen, (R, 111.), to let mines re
sume operations after correcting
unsafe conditions if federal offi-
Experiments are being con
ducted with California obsidian
for use as high-grade optical
glass.
Willamette Awards
membership in the Sigma Alpha
Chi, sophomore men's service
honorary fraternity. Sally Coon
ey was awarded the Roy H.
Simmons prize; Herbert James
Brower was given the home
scholarship awarded by Associat
ed Women students, and Jean
Arden Kyle was given the sec
ond award of the Paul H. Doney
prize. .
decision just announced by
Clark to build new enclosures to
hold the prisoners in smaller
groups.
There are about 80,000 POW'a
in the big Koje island stockade
now and, at one time, there were
as many as 132,000. United Na
tions officials agreed with pro
testing Red Cross investigators
that the stockade is much too
large. But the more stockades
erected for dispersal of prison
ers, the more soldiers necessary
to guard them. Five United Stat
es and one other battalion were
on guard duty when Dodd was
snatched. Senate investigators
say there are 14,000 U. N. secur
ity forces there now.
These could not easily be spar
ed from combat duty. More bat
talions will have to be with
drawn from the line to police
more stockades.
United States troops displaced
Republic of Korea troops around
the Koje island stockade months
ago because ROK guards were
shooting prisoners who jeered
through the barbed wire. Very
serious consideration is being
given now to putting the ROK
guards back on duty.
If so, American guards would
return to combat. ROK guards
would resume shooting prison
ers. Communist propagandists
would obtain new material
and, perhaps, punish United Na
tions prisoners in their stock-
ades.
cials haven't started an Inspec
tion within five days. v
Q If a dispute develops be
tween my company and the un
ion speaking for my workers,
will the Wage Stabilisation
Board automatically step" in?
A No. WSB can take up dis
putes only by agreement of the
firm and union or upon certifi
cation by the President when he
believes the dispute threatens
national defense. As an after
math of the steel dispute, a
House committee May 6 began
an investigation of WSB and a
Senate Committee May 13 urged
the Board be stripped of author
ity to recommend wage dispute
settlements.
Q How did the Wage Stabilisa
tion Board get into the strike
settling business?
. A As originally set up in
1950 under the Defense Produc
tion Act, WSB's job was to help
develop wage stabilization pol
icy. WSB was re-constituted Ap
ril 21, 1951, and given jurisdic-
tion in labor disputes in defense
industry where collective- bar
gaining or federal mediation
had failed. The Senate Banking
committee recommended May
13 that WSB be revamped again;
without the disputes function. .
Q What's being done to help
people in crowded defense areas
get adequate housing? .
A The Senate Banking and
Currency Committee May 5 be
gan hearings on a bill to increase
by $1.3 billion the government
authority to make advance com
mittments to handle housing
mortgages in the absence of pri
vate capital. The Housing and
Home Finance Agency chief test
ified for the bill, but a Mortgage
Bankers association witness op
posed it, suggesting that interest
on government-insured home
loans be hiked to encourage
handling of loans by private in
vestors. Q Can I get any government
help in obtaining insurance to
protect me in case my farm gets
flooded again?
A President Truman May 6
asked Congress to establish a na
tional system of flood disaster
insurance for homes, businesses ,
and farms. He proposed a maxi
mum of $250,000 insurance for
one person or business. The gov
ernment would issue policies on
ly where private insurance was
unavailable at reasonable rates. '
Copyright 1952 by Congress
ional Quarterly News
Features-
After To -Day
Geo. N. Taylor
This age is to end when God
has completed his roll-call of the
saved. All in a flash, the cur
tain is to drop. The Lord Jesus
is to descend from heaven with
a shout and
the dead in
Christ shall
rise first. Then
His still living
shall be caught
up together
with them and,
says the Bible
"So shall we
eveV be with
the Lord." See
1st Thess. 4:13
17. Npyt with
Geo. N. Taylor
the saved gone, comes the great
tribulation. Awful signs like the
oceans turning putrid like dead
blood. And except those days
had been shortened, no flesh
would be left alive on the earth.
This present day is the day of
salvation. May you believe in
Christ as the Lord and Saviour
who died for your sins. So you
have eternal life. Vast blessings
for you out of God's love. So says
the Oregon family that sponsor!
this space. . dv