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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 21, 1953)
roua-ussresB (oxzoom "veryaae la Southern Ongoa faUiaUa bmiiy tmxpt aWAay ay auoroaf vmnntRo ca S-41 Eft-ST W. PgL, MiW mm b. 01 X. c. rutaosoN. MnSS Kfaar JACK JACKSON, cttr Minor HAtlT CHTPMAW, Tttomph Bdi bichasd Jiwrrr. sporia Itator OLIVE 8TAKCHIR. Sociaty editor C-IHALD LATHAM. CircnUrtton An Iadpand fiadlord. Orosoa. nd Act ef Marcn iiw lUBScAiHiAtnxnr By Mail la Advaaee: Duly and Sunday ona year q.00 Dally and Sunday H montha I JO Dally and Sunday thrae noa, M Daily aad Sunday one noatt ija Cantor In Advaaea Hadtord. Aahland. Caatral Point Bagla Mat JackaooTUla. Gold Hill, boasts. Shady Cora. Bogao Btvar. Til t. Dally and Sunday' ona Dally and Sunday Ona IJta AH Tarma Caah la dfflclal aaor of llaJfarJ Official Payer of Jaehaoa Coaaty LPnltaa Praaa-TuH Laaaoi WCrT" wzusn or aunt swrnr OF CTHCULATIOtf Advertising Rasraaaatatlva; WSST-HOtXIDAY COUP ANT. INC. Offlcaa la Naw York. ChlcafO. De troit. San rrandaeo. Los Anaelca. Seattle. Portland. St Louis. Atlanta, anBsassssHESSB NEWSAMt aSKa PUtlKHIIS "ASSOCIATION Flight or Time Med ford and Jackson County History from the files of The Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30 and 40 years ago. 10 YEARS AGO Sept. 21. 1943 at was Tuesday) Eagles hall on North Front st said robbed before fire; blaze damages business firms. From Arthur Perry's Ye Smudge Pot column: There will be no scrap metal salvage drive in. Oregon and Washington this fall, due to delay in gathering p piles collected in first one. When shipping same avidly to Japan, no such delays were en countered, and its closer to Pittsburgh than Osaka. 20 TEARS AGO Sept. 21. 1S33 at was Thursday) County charity to be available only on Red Cross approval. Crater lake highway surfacing to start soon. 30 TEARS AGO Sept. 21. 1923 at was Fridav) Restraininb order issued to prevent using Jackson school as Junior high school. . Horses at large in Table'Roek area do considerable damage. 40 TEARS ATO Sept 21. 1913 at was Sundavl Rails distributed along Main i. ior xrouey line. F. C." Elliott sole owner of -auiorium uye works. Poftluck y M-T Staff aatf An old relic may be seen on the sidewalk near the City Fire nan on i nird near Front street An old fire alarm bell with inscription one side, "C. S. Bell Co., Hillsboro, O.," and the num ber 536, with "Steel alloy Alarm ocu, on reverse side. Perhaps it is the aama nM Kail referred to, in Potluck column ana described as hanging in the alley near Main and Front streets, about 37 years ago. We not only mention these old items of interest to a later gen eration, but in retrospect as a pleasure. And also, Infinitely fast is the flight of space, as we who look back may see. Bert Kissinger. The Rev. L. G. Weaver provid ed' the recipe and the Rev. Hardwick Harshman did the baking Sunday at services of First Methodist church. Mr. Weaver spoke on "Micah's Re cipe for Living." Mr. Harsh man's topic was "How Many Loaves Have You?" Complicated Altffiod Reveals Person's Age Adelaide, Australia UJ9 In every club and pub around Adelaide these days they've got a new way to work out your age on the basis of your shoe size. Write down your shoe size to the nearest full number. Say your size is 9V4; you set down . 9. double it to get 18. The form ula then is: (1) Add 39 -you get 37. (2) Multiply by 5 you get 283. (3) Add figure 3 to last answer .. you get 2833. (4) Subtract year you were born from 1833. Say it was 1927 you get 928. That's the answer. Size nine shoe, 28 years old. NATIONAL E0ITOIIAL tun. rasum Allen and Gorman Newsmen Sight-Seeing In Washington By ERIC ALLEN JR. Washington, D.C. The nation's capital is one of the most beau tiful cities in the world not only because of its stately monuments and government buildings (some of which are actually ugly) but also because of the spacious way in which it is laid out The many, many trees, and wide expanses of green grass. The pace here (per haps because Congress is not in session) is easier than in New York, and people seem somewhat friendlier. It is distinctly a southern city, and we were reminded of this as we arrived, for it was hot and humid, and a swarm of little colored boys attempted to wrest our baggage from us in the hope of a small tip. ooooo ' After a light dinner, we again split up, the Germans visiting a center for exchange students, where they danced and met with young people from many countries, as I visited friends. Late in the evening, returning to the YMCA where we stayed, I walked past and around the White House. It is a lovely building, and I think is best seen at night, when the lights on the stately columns and white walls show it off to its best advantage. I must admit that the sight was very moving to me, as an American a sentiment that was repeated over and over again in Washington where evidences of our nation's beginnings are seen on every side, a a a In the morning, a Sunday, we took a "conducted tour" of the city. But we were fortunate1 in our choice of tours. I had planned the regular sightseeing-bus-type of visit, but was talked into a limousine trip (at the same cost) by the persuasive agent of the "Blue and Green Line," a small company operated by two men. One of them, John Wall, was our driver, and he became interested In our group; going far out of his way to give us a full tour of the Capitol district and "throwing in" Arlington cemetery and the Pentagon for the same price. During the early part of the trip he gave his regular, informa tive "spiel," and later arranged things so we could see the chang ing of the' guard at the tomb of the Unknown Soldier (the only formal guard mount conducted by the U.S. Army) and took us to the Pentagon's unbelievable concourse, which is one of many self contained "cities" within this huge office structure. There we vis ited the Army's and Air Force's "ham" radio station, where the German boys were able to send messages of greetings to friends cr relatives in their homes. These were relayed to amateurs in Germany who phoned the messages to the recipients. o a a a Of all the places we visited, I shall remember the longest the Lincoln Memorial. This is a great and beautiful monument to a great man and I fail to see how it could have been better con ceived or executed. It is a Grecian style of building, and is almost stark in its simplicity. But despite its massiveness, and its white, fluted columns, it retains a sense of humility, of homely dignity, of common humanity which characterized the man who was, per haps, our greatest, president. The message carved on the podium of the huge statue, too, is simple and moving. If memory serves, it says: , "In this temple, as in the hearts of the people for whom he saved the nation, the memory of Abraham Lincoln is enshrined forever." Facing east from the Lincoln memorial, one can look down the sweep of the Mall, the 28-block parkway which is the center of Washington, and which starting at shrine, contains the Washington CapitoL We squandered the 10 cents the 500-odd feet Washington spire, but, after gazing down on the green and lovely city, with the White House at our feet, made the mistake of going down the stairs an exploit which left our knees like rubber. In the afternoon we againtseparated, some to visit the National Gallery of Art (the Mellon collection) and some to see the National Archievs, where are housed all of the nation's important docu ments. Enshrined here, and stoutly protected by massive glass cases, are the original copies of the Constitution and the Declara tion of Independence. These, I think, were more interesting to me than to my German friends. But I found that seeing the actual original signatures of such men as George Washington, Benjamin Franklin and Thomas Jefferson was thrilling. The Germans, natur ally, perhaps, appeased more interested in the World War U sur render documents, and in the "marriage certificates" of Adolf Hitler and Eva Braun. prepared bomb shelter was blasted. They repelled by the paper, with its message. That evening, each of us "chipped in" a few dollars more than our meal allowance, and dined at the Shoreham hotel, one of Washington's finest where we had as our guest Miss Alene Phil lips, now executive assistant to Secretary of the Interior Douglas McKay. She has visited Medford frequently, and was McKay's sec retary when he was governor. ' In the morning we called to pay our . respects at 'the German embassy, wheiwagain the conversation was in rapid German, and where again I could only guess at the subjects discussed as I picked out a word or two. We then went to the Interior Department and wandered through the natural resources museum there, giving bur visitors the first glimpse of many things that they will see in the west during their six months' visit For .lunch, we were the guests of Secretary McKay in the secretary'! private dining room, construct ed, with the rest of the building, during the incumbency of Harold Iekes. The governor (as I still think of him) was exceedingly friend ly and cordial, giving us more time than we had any right to ex pect Later he showed us around his suite of offices before bidding us a friendly farewell.' We checked out of the "Y" and took our luggage to the station, which is only a few blocks from the Capitol, where we visited Senator Guy Cordon's office so the Germans could see how a sena tor works. None of Oregon's senators nor congressmen was in town, but we were cordially greeted by Miss Grace Town send, Senator Cordon's secretary, and were given a quick conducted tour of the Capitol by Miss Doris Underwood, secretary to Congress men Scrivner of Kansas, who was also our hostess at an informal gathering the evening before. aa The Capitol, despite its impressive appearance from the out side, suffers in the interior by comparison with other public build ings. After a ride on the senators' little "subway car" from the senate office building to the Capitol, we toured the small corridors of the building, and looked in on the house and senate, which are the two best parts of the' CapitoL They are done in the colonial manner, have recently been redecorated, and really are lovely chambers and probably sufficient for a legislative body which does most of its actual work In committees. Our last view of downtown Washington was from the balcony of the Capitol down the Mall, an expansive and beautiful sweep of green grass and trees toward the west Hunt Called Off For Mrs. Maclean Londan A fmvle-n nf. fice spokesman indicated today the search for Mra. Mlinria Ms Lean, wife of a missing British diplomat has been called off for the time being. The 37-year-old woman and her three young children were last seen 11 days. ago on a train from Lausanne, Switzerland, with tickets for Austria. Reports Investigated Austrian police investigated a number of reports over the week end on Mrs. MacLean's alleged movements through Austria but all proved false. Austrian police yesterday ex pressed the opinion that Mrs. MacLean probably already has passed behind the Iron Curtain Possibly to Join her husband. MacLean and Guy Burgess, both key employees of the British r orel en Off if im,i) 25, 1951. ' 31. lttt the Potomac behind the Lincoln monument and 'ends at the for the elevator ride to the top ox four days before Hitler's Berlin were, I think, both fascinated and scrawled signatures and strange Innocents To Die Along With Guilty Kent O. (U.R) Tree-killers from the webworm gang will be sentenced to burn this fall, but many innocent trees will get the hot seat along with them. For years, burning the nests of webworms has . been a fall pastime of many property own-, ers. But fire may be as harmful to the trees as to the webworms, ii-vunung 10 nooper, JLJavey iree expert Bark, branches and trunk all scorch easily, and in some cases permanent damage may result Best solution to the webworm problem is to spray infested areas with arsenate .of lead or DDT as soon as the larvae ap pear in late summejt MOSSADEGH BACKERS Tehran, Iran (UJ0 Ten persons demonstrating im port of former Premier Moham- mea Mossadegh were beaten by a Crowd Of Civilian anil than arrested bv Iranian tronna vm. terday. ' Monday, Crocstovn 1 don't suppose I could get a shampoo and wave for a nlckaL eould It" Matter of Fact WILL THE FIGHTING START AGAIN? Washington The lound dis putes and recriminations- about the Korean peace conference have startedvp again, and will no doubt con tinue for some time. Yet the fact is that not even those who are shouting the loudest really believe that anything at all is likely to come out of the conference. Stewart AJsop In this sense the rows in the United Nations about India's in clusion in the conference, and so on, are a mere teapot tempest Secretary of State John Foster Dulles is reliably reported to be lieve that there is about one chance in four of reaching an agreed settlement leading to Ko rean unification. But even in this very moderate optimism, Dulles is a minority of one among the experts. A formula for an agreed set tlement, in which the Commu nists would be offered Korean neutralization and the withdraw al of all foreign troops, in return for free elections and peaceful Korean unification, is being ser iously considered in the State Department Proponents of this formula argue that the Com munists might agree to a non Communist Korean buffer state, provided American troops were withdrawn from the Asian con tinent As for our side, a unified non-Communist Korea and the withdrawal of American troops from Korea are both, it is ar gued, desirable objectives. But South Korean President Syngman Rhee has already made it clear that he will fight to the death against any formula for a neutralized Korea. This country', moreover, has already offered Rhee a military alliance, which would, have to- be canceled if Korea were to be neutralized. And as for the Communists, they seem likely to demand a much higher price for a unified Korea, f OST of the experts believe 11 that the Communists' mini mum price if, indeed, they will agree to a unified non-Commu nist Korea on any terms will be. admission of Communist China into the United Nations and an end to the economic blockade, which is undoubtedly hurting China badly. . There is no disposition whatsoever in Washington to pay such a price. Aside from the obvious domes tic political implications, policy makers like Assistant Secretary of State Walter Robertson are sincerely convinced that to pay this price would be the prelude to a Communist takeover throughout Southeast Asia. If peaceful unification of Ko rea cannot be negotiated, there is another theoretical way out mutual withdrawal of Chinese and United Nations troops, leav ing the Koreans themselves to fight it out. This, oddly enough, is what both Rhee and such Com munist spokesmen as China's Chou En Lai are in effect de manding. From Rhee's point of view and ours there is osten sibly something to be said for such .a proposition. South Korea now has a popu lation of some 24,000,000, while the North Korean population has been reduced below 8,000,000. Rhee's 16-division army is the strongest in Asia, while the North Korean army has been pulverized. Thus it seems on the surface odd that the Communists should still be talking about withdrawal of foreign troops. ' It is rlftt really so odd. The Communists are rebuilding the airfields in North -Korea, and they are re-equipping the shat tered North Korean army with all possible haste. What is more, they are known to be organizing an entirely new army, consisting of about a quarter of, a million troops of Korean descent north of the Yaln. The Communists ob viously believe that once Amer ican troops are withdrawn across the water, they can, in time, take all Korea. For this and other rea sons, an agreement simply to let Cy Roland Co Stwart AIns) the Koreans fight it out seems highly unlikely. a ' 'THUS a failure to reach agree- ment at the Korean confer ence no matter who attends it is considered Just short of cer tain. This poses the question: if the conference fails, will the fighting start again? The answer .seems to be a tentative but fairly confident "No." If the Communists cross the demilitarized zone, It will be a clear case of aggression. In this case, we are pledged in effect to go to war with China, and our allies are, for the first time, pledged to support us in this war. Therefore renewed overt Com munist aggression is considered unlikely unless Moscow and Peking are ready for world war. Bar an entirely new situation, like Chinese aggression in Indo China, the United States is not going to start the fighting again. This leaves Syngman Rhee. Rhee is certainly a most unpredictable old man. But those best able to judge are fairly confident that Rhee is no longer In a position. logistically or politically, to start the flghturg again, and that he will be less so as time goes by, For all these reasons, the Korea truce "seems almost certainly, a de facto settlement of the Korean war. Thus as a practical matter the loud disputants In the United Nations might as well save their breath. . . , (Copysigt, 1913. New York Herald Tribune, IncJ Ccngressicnsl Quiz QaeMons aad Aaawata aa What Goes ob at tha Capital rnraUhed by Concrcsalooal qaartarlr: Nawa Faataraa. Q Which Senate delegations agreed or disagreed-most oitWZ during the first session? - A Republicans Wallace- F. Bennett and Arthur W. Watkins of Utah scored highest, agreeing on. 95 per cent of the roll-call issues on which they both took stands. Arizona's Republican Barry M. Goldwater and Demo crat CarlHayden agreed only 24 per cent of the time low mark in the Senate. O What is the current rate of U.S. deliveries of military aid to our -allies? A During the first hail of 1953, deliveries totaled $2,363,- 000,000 in value, according to Harold E. Stassen, Director of the Foreign Operations Adminis tration. Deliveries reached $1,- 447,000,000 during the second six months of 1952 and $880 mil lion during the first half of 1952. Q When he announced the $2 billion cut in estimated fed- oral expenditures during fiscal 1954, did Secretary of the Treas ury George M. Humphrey pre dict a balanced budget? A No. He estimated that the fiscal 1954 deficit will be $3.8 billion. Humphrey said,' how ever that the . Administration will be "well under way" to ward balancing the cash budget before next June 30, barring "unexpected" developments. Q Which three matters .do members of Congress consider the key issues of the second ses sion, which wOl convene la Jan uary, and of the 1984 election campaign? A A large majority of the 223 members who voted in a Congressional Quarterly poll tabulated Sept. 4 called Korea the top issue, followed in order by tax reduction and economy in government Q How much legislation was introduced during the first ses sion of the 83rd Congress? A Senators and Representa tives Introduced 10,695 meas ures, of which 9,900 were bills (public and private) and joint resolutions, which have the force of law when passed by both houses and signed by the President Five hundred and fif teen became law. . The all-time record for introduction of legis lation was set during the two years of the 61st Congress (1909-11) when 4463 measures In Ihs Day's l!sv5 By FRANK JEN BUMS .Mrs. Katharine Howard, fed eral deputy civil defense admin istrator, : speaking at Bretton Woods. New Hampshire: "An even 100 modern , bomb ers can carry more destructive power in ONE FLIGHT than the combined British and American air ffeets were able to deliver in World War n." TF OUR ability to get along A with each other could only in crease as fast as our ability to DESTROY EACH OTHER, how wonderful the world could soon be! ,- . AN EAST- GERMAN newspa per in Potsdam (a suburb of Berlin) reports the burning of a communist state food store by East' Germans who were en raged by red seizure of Amer ican food parcels (which are given FREE to hungry East Ger mans). .The big shot commies don't seem to have too much talent for getting along with people either, do they? Thank fortune! r SUPPOSE you've been read ing about the Chicago plumber who is shopping around for a rental submarine in which to deliver a bathtub and accessories to a customer over in St Joe, Michigan. He wants to take" 50 guests along on the delivery trip and thinks a party under the lake would be a highly unusual binge. I expect the customer will think so too when he gets the bilL SOBERER second thought:. The guy probably figures that by combining a party with his delivery trip he can charge it all up to business expense and take it off his income tax. Such things are done, you know. MODERN efficiency note in th Salem Statesman: "Starting today, the lucky winners of overtime parking tickets won't have to drive all the way to the city hall to pay their 50-cent tribute to the law. As an extra-added attraction to downtown parking and a genu ine aid to the citizenry, collec tion boxes have been set up along the busiest streets." The ticket-dispensing patrol men, the Statesman adds, will hereafter leave little self-addressed red envelopes under the windshield, and when the citi zen gets his overtime parking ticket all he'll have to do is to slip four bits in the envelope and drop it In the nearest mail box-- Whether or not the envelopes are postage-paid isn't stated, but I hope so. That would be the final touch of courtesy, thought- fulness and convenience. . SINCE the invention of the narkine meter, overtime parking has become big business, and one of the first principles of successful big business is to make it easy for the customer to pay. MORE on the Spanish Blaze over in western Lake county: - . Mrs. Odell (quoted in this col umn the other day), digging back into her memory, recalls that when C. D. Arthur saw the tree with its Spanish inscription there was an old Spanish saddle near the base of it. He was then a young man, working as a cow boy in that general area. He was busy at his job at the time, and taking the old relic along was in convenient When he went back somewhat later to retrieve it it was gone. Presumably someone else had foundjt and carried it away. That adds another flick oz glamour to - the Spanish Blaze story. 1TJHY get interested in a tale about a trca with an old Spanish inscription carved on it? . If you'll go back a little in your memory, you will recall that for years the San Francisco bay area was similarly interested in a tale about a metal plaque believed to have been mounted on a tree on the shores of Drake a Bay .when Sir Francis Drake landed there in the late 1570's. People hunted and hunted and hunted for it and finally FOUND it It is now a prized historical relic. If our neighbors to the south were interested in finding' physical evidence of the wan derings of an English pirate in their area, there is equally good reason for us of the State of Jefferson to be interested in the wanderings of Spaniards In our area. We too have a romantic and ad venturous background, and there is every reason f or ns to be inter ested in it HASTE WASTE Detroit Midi. OTO Edward McGlinchey ran into a car while racing for a seat in a restaurant near the Chrysler plant He suf fered a bruised leg and was fined $10 for interfering with traffic. But worst of all he tost out in the daOy race by over 100 employees tor seat In the restaurant- bulged the hoppers. Solar, the pace of the 83rd Congress is less than half that of the 61st ' (Copyright 1853. Congressional Quarterly V Vi STILL UNDEVELOPED atomic weapon a Dust Bomb'' some . day may be capable of rendering food supplies of entire nations useless, reports Dr. Wallace Fuller, Arizona university blo-chem-1st, on special Atomic Energy Commission job. (InUnutimuU) On The Side (DMtitd ay Beg Terrific thunderstorm down by the farm the other night That Jersey lightning is really something. The thunderclaps ac companying the . lightning are king size affairs. Still the worst thunderstorm I have ever been in was while in Atlantic, la., on an auto trip. For nine straight hours the thunder and lightning never let up. Houses were -being struck by lightning all around. The fire engines were busy all night. Another place where the lightning is terrific is Arkansas around Hot Springs. Mothers-In-Law How are you getting along with your mother-in-law? Don't answer me. It's none of my bus iness. Have you ever heard of a fellow who owed his success to the advice and aid of his mother-in-law? I know of a man who became a millionaire that .way. That was the celebrated Manhat tan restaurateur of yesteryear, Adolph Lorber. He was a barb er, not doing so well financially, when his mother-in-law, who was a remarkable cook, persuad ed him to go into the restaurant business. Lorber's first place in which his mother-in-law did the cooking was on Grand street Manhattan. He later moved to a location opposite the Metropoli tan Opera house. It was there he graduated into the million dollar class. Lorber's slogan was Good Food at Sensible Prices." Passing By Nella Duckworth, winner of the beauty contest title of Mrs. Mississippi. Nella also compet ed in the Mrs. America contest at Asbury Park, NJ. She was the most generously proportion ed of all contestants. Hef mea surements being height 8 feet 10 inches, weight 145 pounds, waist 28 inches, bust 38 inches and hips 38 inches. Quite a big girl. Still not so much larger than Jane Russell .. . . George White, veteran Broadwaylte, has scored a sensational hit with his floor show production at the Versailles. Was in 1919 that George produced the first of his "Scandals" revues. He was 29 years old at the time. Ann Pen nington was the star of the first "Scandals." She had previously appeared in five successive ed itions of the "Ziegfeld Follies." Sidelights Some married women are called "loaders." A "loader" is a woman . who while secretly planning a divorce buys all she' can- at her - husband's expense . . . Am asked what became of Edith Day, the musical comedy star who created the title role in "Irene" and scored successes in many other pieces. Couldn't say. I haven't-seen Edith in a long time. Last I heard of her she was living in - London . .' . Note that 52 year old man drop ped dead from heart failure while playing handball. No man over 45 should play handball That game is strictly for the young fellows. Working Girls ' The average pay for a good secretary in New York City is Preferred by so Many Reposing Rooms Arrangement Room Selection Room Reception Hall Quiet Chapel Family Room Business Offices Seating Capacity 290 The best costs no more; why accept lest? Mabel Carlos CONGER-MORRIS Funeral Directors- Ambulance Service West Main at Sixth Phone Medford 2-7111 "Hymns of the World" KM ED, Saturday, 9:45 a.m. Member Narteaal Selectee Martiriaai by Invitation t,.A . ..... &r i-: : V f y v. win $75 a week. Beginning steno graphers are getting $55. Pag girls are being paid $40 a week Receptionists are getting $50 and can command a little more if they do some typing. Bookkeep ers rate $85 a week. File clerks, $45. There appears to be quite a demand for dress models with remuneration for same varying widely. Tall girls are still most In demand in the model field. Hattie Carnegie, for example, was recently seeking models she described as "long waisted, five feet nine and a half inches with heels." Please Note Men who want to go Into bus iness for themselves frequently state they are prevented from so doing by lack of capital. I could name a number of highly successful business enterprises that were started with a capital of less than $500. I know of a man who started a shop devoted exclusively to the sale of wo men's stockings with a capital of $100. That man is now a mul timillionaire, owner of a huge chain store system retailing all types of feminine attire. Asking Queries from clients: Q. Real name of Houdini "The Handcuff King" was Weiss. He was the son of a rabbi in Appleton, Wis. Can you tell me how Houdini ac quired' his professional name? A. Was inspired by the name of the great European illusionist, Houdin. I knew Houdini quite welL He told me that the tough est experience in his long career was when while doing a stunt he was under the ice in the North. River off Manhattan. Said he had a very difficult time find ing the hole to be used for his exit Most Awful Day Geo. N. Taylor It Is not when the Reds nail you in a box-car and leave you to starve. It is when you die to go out into a Christless eter nity. Here i n this world, you said the Bible was only man's invention. Heav en and hell were only just make- j believe places so comes your most awful day. It is to be out forever with the Geo. N. Taylor rascais, we mart unbelievers, the people of vile speech. You never rubbed elbows with such before. Now you step out of a cultured circle to be with the riff-raff forever. Most Blessed Day Not that you loved God but that He loved you and gave His bon to cue zor your sins. God's eternal love bids you look utterly to Christ as your Lord and Saviour. Reject Him and you sell your sow aown the river. "Now is the day of salvation 2nd Cor. 6:2. This I space sponsored by the breeder OI nign-ETaae aairy iwa. u I 1 - I