FOUR MEDFORD (OREGON)
"Everybody in Southern Oregon
Reads The Mail Tribune"
Published Daily Except Saturday by
MEDFORD PRINTING CO.
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RICHARD JEWETT. Sport Editor
OLIVE STARCHER. Society Editor
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Entered as second class matter at
Medford. Oregon, under Act of
March 3. 1897
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NATIONAL EDITORIAL
I assocIiatJon
Flight o' Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10. 20, 30 and
40 years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
March 21, 1945
(It was Wednesday)
Mr. and Mrs. H. O. Purucker,
announce that their firm, known
for 15 years as Purucker's Piano
Shoppe, will reopen at new loca
tion on North Central ave. as
Purucker's Piano House.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: The almond
trees are in bloom for the first
day of Spring. For a while, it
Is in time to be killed, as usual,
looked like they woull not make
by the first frost.
20 YEARS AGO
March 21, 1935
(It was Thursday)
Roy Pruitt leads individual
bowlers in Elks club tournament
with average score of 192 for 21
games.
Foot of new snow falls on
Jacksonville hill on first day of
Spring.
30 YEARS AGO
March 21, 1925
(It was Saturday)
Mildred Carlton elected presi
dent of Jackson County Health
association.
Medford churches plan me
moral services for Fanny Crosby
famous hymn writer.
40 YEARS AGO
March 21, 1915
(It was Sunday)
Irrigation district, including
1,000 acres of land, to be formed
south of Medford.
From the Local and Personal
column: Willie Painter, three-year-old
boy of Central Point,
unbeknownst to anybody, board
ed passenger train No. 13 Sat
urday and came to Medford to
see the circus. Agent A. S. Ros
enbaum took charge of the tot
and turned him over to his dis
tracted paren's after a search
had been launched.
What's the Answer?
(Can You Gel 4 of the 7?)
Copr. 1955, Editorial Research Report
1. St. Patrick was born in
England, Wales, Ireland, Scot
land, France or Italy?
2. The F.B.I, is specifically
empowered by federal law to
tap wires; right or wrong?
3. Minimum instalment credit
terms are now fixed by a Gov
ernment agency; right cr wrong?
4. Federal tax on transporta
tion tickets is now five, ten, 15
or 20 per cent?
5. About one, four, seven, ten
or 13 per cent of all active U.S.
physicians work for the federal
government?
6. President Eisenhover wants
rises in postal rates or in pay
for postal employees or in both
or in neither?
7. C.I.O. President Walter
Reuther started out as a plumb
er, garment worker, bricklayer,
truck driver, a tool and die
maker?
The Answers: I. England,
probably. 2. Wrong. 3. Wrong. 4.
Ten per cent. 5. About 10 per
cent. 6. In both. 7. Tool and die
maker in steal.
Neuberger To Open
Office in Portland
Portland (U.R) Sen. Rich
ard L. Neuberger (D-Ore.) will
open an office in Portland to
morrow. He said in an announcement
released here today that he
would use the office as his head
quarters when he is in the state.
Elizabeth C. Ducey will be in
charge of the office.
GEttSiEEJ J
VVSaIsociatiom
MAIL TRIBUNE
Meat
Last week in Salem, there was a hearing on a bill
which would provide compulsory meat inspection
throughout the state.
It comes as a surprise to many people to note that
statewide meat inspection is not now required. But it
isn't. Some meat is inspected through the federal
agencies, but only that which moves in interstate com
merce, and some is inspected by city inspection ar
rangements, such as were recently completed here.
DUT a great deal of meat, which is a staple which
almost every family enjoys, Is not inspected for
possible health hazards
Tracy Crum pointed out
meat inspection at the
"measly" meat has come
it could not be sold under
laws.
Another advocate of
governor of Oregon, Charles A. Sprague, who publish
es the Oregon Statesman at Salem. He says :
Oregon is sadly delinquent in providing proper inspec
tion of meat. Of the 155 licensed slaughterhouses in the
state only 30 have either federal or city inspection. The re
maining 125 do not have it. The state has been very prog
ressive as regards milk inspection. Strict standards are en
forced as to herds, milkhouses, handling from farm to door
step. It has been laggard on inspection of meat.
The bill would require slaughterhouses to meet uniform
standards of construction and sanitation. It would require
inspection by personnel from the State Department of Agri
culture of all cattle, sheep, goats and swine, before and aft
er slaughter, to be offered for human consumption, except in
plants which are under federal inspection. Farmers may
slaughter for their own consumption but if their meat is to
be sold, it must be submitted for inspection.
Having supported this legislation for many years I want
to renew my endorsement in connection with HB 99. Where
there is no meat inspection the public just doesn't know
what it is getting. There is nothing to prevent sale of meat
from animals that have died from unknown causes, or the
butchering of fresh-born calves. Uninspected meat may car
ry disease, or it may be quite unwholesome for human con
sumption. The only way to provide the protection which
consumers should have is through impartial inspection such
as would be furnished through state or federal inspectors.
The cost is a justifiable charge against the general treas
ury, in the interest of public health; or it could be borne or
shared by consumers through levy of a charge per animal
for the inspection service.
In previous years efforts have been made to get such
legislation but each time it has been pushed aside. The time
for action surely has arrived. The League of Women Voters
is pressing for passage of this bill and they represent house
wives who are concerned about health of their families. I no
tice in the Medford paper an ad of the Southern Oregon
Meat Packers association with 14 members urging enact- .
ment of HB 99. This is a sample of the support the bill is
getting. The consuming public can pretty well insure the
bill's-passage by appealing to their legislators to give it
to their support.
fXN THE basis of what
would appear that the
to enact.
In passing, it might be
other ,jof- a large number or measures wnicn would
benefit the people at large, but whicfi the legislature
is slow to adopt because of the money it would cost.
The legislators, findine the state in a financial bind,
will need support for tax
they will consider many proposals wnicn, wnne mer
itorious, cost money. E.A.
Ah, Spring!
Today is the first day of spring, 1955.
Yesterday was a beautiful day. Two daffodils are
in bloom. We worked in the yard.
Boy, are we out of condition ! E.A.
Frenchmen Agree St. Cyr
School Should Be Rebuilt
Paris (U.R) France's re
tired generals are fighting a
pitched battle among themselves
over St. Cyr, a name that sym
bolizes all that is best in the
French military tradition.
St. Cyr Military academy to
day is nothing but a pile of rub
ble near the famed Palace of
Versailles. The school was bomb
ed out of existance in 1944 and
is virtually forgotten by aU but
sentimental graduates who come
back to look at the old walls set
up by order of Louis XTV and
Madame de Maintenon to house
a girl's school. Its military tradi
tion dates to 1808 when Napol
eon installed the French Mili
tary academy in the building.
France's officers now are be
ing trained at Coetquidam in
Brittany, where the student-officers
were installed "temporar
ily" in 1946. So far, the govern
ment has made no effort either
to rebuild on the ruins or to give
the academy a permanent home
somewhere else.
Almost every Frenchman
agrees the old school should
have a new home in keeping
with its finest traditions, but
changing times have made it
questionable the wisdom of re
building at St. Cyr, at its old
site. At least three towns Com
piegne, Chartres and Fontaine
bleau would like to have the
academy.
Coetquidam, almost all are
agreed, is not a desirable loca
tion, since it is so far from Paris.
They stress that the school's
1500 pupils, taught by 180 of
ficers and 310 non-coms, need
to have the benefits of location
near the capital.
But the school has an increas
ing amount of modern weapons,
and for that reason many offic
ers feel it would, be unwise to
rebuild St. Cyr at St. Cyr. The
location is in a thickly populat
ed area, and it would be diffi
cult to get enough land nearby
for weapons practice.
Monday, March 21, 1955
Inspection
at all. Medford Attorney
southern Oregon's stake in
hearing, saying that some
into southern Oregon when
California's meat inspection
meat inspection is a former
Governor Sprague says, it
bill would be a good one
noted that this is just an
- increase measures before
On the other hand, the ruins
already have been classified by
the government as a national
monument, and the building
must be rebuilt whether the
school moves back or not. There
is also the complication that
monuments authorities would re
quire that the exterior be rebuilt
just as it was, even though, for
many military reasons, it would
be advisable to change the struc
ture. Compiegne, a town filled with
military memories, has not hid
den its desire to welcome St.
Cyr. A former parade ground
would provide the 370 acres the
school would need. There are
larger areas nearby for tank and
truck manuevers. However, this
is rich farm land that would be
costly to buy as well as being
lost to the country's agricultural
needs.
The cathedral city of Chartres
also has put in its bid. Land is
available there in the form of
an aviation field that is no long
er used. Arrayed against Char
tres is its distance from Paris,
the need to destroy the former
aviation installations and the
flatness of the topography.
Fountainebleau, in many ways
seems to have the most advan
tages. It is near Paris, although
not as close as the old St. Cyr,
and it has the land available. It
also is rich in military tradi
tions. The main argument against it
probably would be made by
friends of the famous forest of
Fontainebleau, who would be
apt to protest an invasion by
the military.
Other sites suggested include
Clermont-Ferrand, in the very
heart of France.
Whatever the solution, the
St. Cyriens who call their
school affectionately "The Old
Trunk" (Le Vieux Bahut) are
determined that St. Cyr will be
rebuilt bigger and better than
ever before. ,
Churchill Resignation
Would End Political
Era in Great Britain
By CHARLES M. McCANN
United Press Foreign Analyst
If Sir Winston Churchill real
ly does resign next month, Brit
ain will have reached the end
of a political
era.
The Grand
Old Man of
the Conserva
tive Party has
served in the
House of Com
mons in the
reign of six
kings and
queens.
He announced
Charles McCann tnis month
that he has ordered the British
manufacture of the H-bomb.
As he spoke, he may have
remembered that 57 years ago
he took part in the last great
cavalry charge in history.
Well Informed Sources
The week end reports that
Churchill has decided to quit in
favor of Anthony Eden may
prove to be erroneous, as have
so many such reports in the last
few years. At least, this time
the reports come from very well
informed sources and at a time
when a turnover in the Prime
Ministry would be logical.
The Labor Party is split be-
Matter of Fact
NOT 1929
Washington Despite the re
cent sharp break in the stock
market, President Eisenhower
continues to
get reasonably
cheerful esti
mates of the
future of the
national econ
omy. Since his
elect ion, the
President has
become in-
creasingly in
terested in eco
and increasing
Stewart Alsop
nomic matters,
ly knowledgeable about them.
Early in 1953, he thought seri
ously of abolishing entirely the
Council of Economic Advisors.
Now the Council's chairman, Dr.
Arthur Burns, is one of the
most influential men in the Ad
ministration. Burns briefs the President
once a week on the state of the
economy, and he also sits in. on
Eisenhower's invitation, at most
Cabinet and National Security
Council meetings. The President
also often calls in Dr. Gabriel
Hauge, a presidential assistant
specializing in economic mat
ters, for advice on particular
eonomic problems.
The sort of thing the Presi
dent is hearing as a result of
all this consultation is, for the
most part, distinctly reassuring.
Neither Burns, nor Hauge, nor
any of the other Administration
economic specialists claim that
the economic sky is all blue,
There are a number of clouds
the drop in farm income, for
example, and the doldrums in
the textile industry and espec
ially in the coal industry.
But there is plenty of blue
sky too. For example, according
to the economic advers' most re
cent unpublished estimate, the
gross national products (the
basic yardstick for the economy)
is today only a shade below the
aU-time high of 1953. Most other
basic indices also show a healthy
upward trend.
As for the stock market, there
were a good many quiet sighs of
relief in the Administration
when the vertiginous rise in
stock prices was checked a few
days ago. Before the market set
back, serious consideration was
being given to increasing mar
gin requirements from 60 per
cent to 75 per cent, and even
sterner measures were not ruled
out. Now it is felt that such
measures will probably not be
required. And the majority of
ficial view is that stocks are not
badly over-priced for the long
haul.
THUS the Eisenhower admin
istration's economic weather
forecast is "Fair and Warmer."
By contrast , the semi-official
Democratic forecast is for in
creasing cloudiness.
The chief spokesmen on eco
nomic matters, for the northern-
wing at least, of the Democratic
party are Sen. Paul Douglas of
Illinois, the Senate's only train
ed economist, and Leon Keyser-
ling, Dr. Burns's predecessor as
chairman of the Economic Ad
visers. Both take a much gloom
ier view of the economic future
than the president's advisers.
As he write in the Congres
sional Joint Economic Report,
Douglas is critical of the Presi
dent's advisers for failure to
'analyze all considerations, un
favorable as well as favorable."
Douglas points to a number of
unfavoratis factors, with em
phasis on the possibility that
automobile production, which
has sparked the recovery so far,
is likely to slack off towards the
end of the year. But his central
point is that "the reduction in
unemployment is not commen
surate with the recovery in pro
duction.
tween left and right wings. It
iaces a long period of bitter fac
tional fighting.
Labor Party Split
under Churchill's Conserva
tive government, Britain has
prospered. Austerity has all but
disappeared.
If a general election were to
be held within the next few
months, a big Conservative via
tory might be expected.
Hence there seems to be
sense in the reports that before
he leaves for a holiday in Sicily
April 6, Churchill will resign
and Queen Elizabeth will name
Eden his successor.
Eden would be expected to
ask the Queen to approve a gen
era! parliamentary election with
in a few months even within
few weeks, possibly, in view of
the Labor Party split.
The changeover from Church
ill to Eden, whenever it comes
will be a historic one.
In 1897, the year when Eden
was born, Churchill tought in
the first of four wars in which
he has been a combat -officer.
When Churchill was first
elected to the House of Com
mons, Eden was three years old
When Eden entered Commons
in 1923, Churchill already had
held eight separate Cabinet
posts.
By Stewart AIsop
This is Keyserling's theme
also. Keyserling points out that,
with -national production ap
proaching the high point of 1953,
there are today 2,000,000 more
people out of work than in 1953
He compares the present to the
period in the late '20s when
"production power outran con
sumption power" and unemploy
ment gradually increased while
stocks rose.
Certam remarkable and dis
turbing facts cited by the Wall
Street Journal no New Deal
organ tend to support the
Douglas-Keyserhng view that
employment in the industry
actually fell by more than 40V
000. Even more surprising, the
automobile industry is turning
out almost half again as many
cars as in 1954, with only 5 per
cent more workers.
There is an obvious political
bias in the way such facts are
interpreted. Equally obviously,
the economic crystal ball has
been clouded in the past, and
may be again. The Democrats
were certainly too gloomy last
year. But the Administration
economists may be too cheerful
now, especially as regards the
employment problem. Yet there
is one point on which all con
cerned agree including Key
serling. We are not running into
another 1929. The government
has the power to prevent a de
pression, and this power will be
used if needed.
(Copyright, 1955,
New York Herald Tribune Inc.)
Hoover Commission
Abolishment Urged
Washington (U.R) The
National Rural Electric Cooper
ative association urged Con
gress today to abolish the Hoov
er commission on Government
al reorganization. It also bitterly
criticized former President Her
bert Hoover who heads the com
mission. The blast followed a Hoover
commission report to congress
last week which, among other
things, recommended that the
Rural Electrification administra
tion be required to raise its funds
from private sources.
In a letter to the 531 members
of congress today, Clyde T. El
lis, general manager of the as
sociation, accused Mr. Hoover
of "serving the vested interests
against the common people."
Elks Scholarships
Presented To Three
Portland U.R) The Elks
lodge has presented college
scholarships to three outstanding
Oregon high school students.
Dorothy Ann Gamblin of Eu
gene won a four-year scholar
ship of $600 from the Oregon
State Elks association and an
other $400 from the Elks Na
tional Foundation.
William Shive Beehen of
Klamath Falls won a $500 four
year scholarship from the Ore
gon Elks, and Carlene Inman of
Pendleton won a $400 scholar
ship from the national founda
tion. The awards were based on
scholarship, leadership, resource
fulness, need, and extra-curricu
lar activities.
The Navy battleships, which
are given the arbitrary designa
tion BB, are built to defeat the
most powerful vessel that en en
emy can put to 6ea.
ttheB&V
Cei
for
Is That- So?
By Eugene Burnt
Ranger-Naturalist
A nature quiz. Get, all four
right and you are an outdoor ex
pert; three is plenty good, two
fair to middling. Answers fol
low questions.
1. In establishing ages, which
of these statements holds water?
(A) A deer's age can be closely
estimated by the points on its
antlers, that is, the number of
tines. (B.) A rattlesnake's aee
can be estimated by the number
of its rattlers. (C.) A fir tree's
age can be told by the number
of growth rings on its stump
(D.) A salmon s age can be esti
mated by its scales.
2. Of all animals birds, fish
snakes, insects and mammals
which one is the shortest-lived?
Which the longest?
3. A lot of curious things have
sneaked into our folk zoology,
winch of these statements
correct, which in error? (A.) The
moths one sees flying in a room
eat clothes. (B.) Cane sugar is
sweeter than beet, while sugar
from the maple is still sweeter
(C.) Small flies grow into large
tlies. (D.) Dogs do not sweat
When hot, they pant.
4. Can a chameleon change its
colors to match a person's
clothes?
Answers: uniy c and D are
correct. Once a deer passes its
prime, its antlers have fewer
tines, until it may return to the
forked stage. The rattlesnake
may shed its skin several times
a year, each time adding a new
rattle. Also, many of these rat
ties fall off. A fir's age can be
told accurately by its growth
rings. Likewise, a technician can
study the salmon's scales and
by its growth rings tell its age
accurately.
2. The shortest-lived of all
animals is the May fly. Some
live only a few hours. The longest-lived
is the giant tortoise,
Its normal life expectancy ex
ceeds a century. Some experts
believe it may exceed 300 years
3. All are false. It is the moth's
larvae which eats the clothes
not the adult moth. (B.) All su
gars are equally sweet. (C.) Flies
emerge from the chrysalis full-
grown. (D.) Dogs like most other
mammals have sweat glands and
sweat, but moderately.
4. Like a good many other
kinds of lizards, ' a chameleon
can undergo several quick color
changes but the colors don't
necessarily harmonize with the
background, sad to say'. Even on
a fresh green leaf the chamele
on may change to earth-brown;
on a red blossom, to sky-green,
(Released by McClura
Newspaper Syndicate
Free: By special arrangement
with the editors of the Encyclo
pedia Americana, my panel of
judges will award each week to
the reader who sends me the
best question on nature and
wildlife a complete 30-volume
set of this world-famous refer
ence work in a handsome Seal
craft binding.
Each week, new questions will
will be considered. Sorry, I
simply can't answer your many
friendly letters. Please address
your questions to: IS THAT SO!
co Medford Mail Tribune, Box
575, Sausalito, Calif.
Model Admits Charge
On Photo Use Mistake
New York (U.R) Lyn Jones,
buxom model who claimed her
figure was used with the face of
Jane Russell to advertise the
picture "Underwater" has ad
mitted it was all a mistake.
RKO Radio Pictures said yes
terday Miss Jones has with
drawn her idit against RKO
without settlement of any kind
from the studio.
Miss Jones had claimed that
the studio used parts of her fig
ure in the advertising illustra
tions promoting Miss Russell's
picture.
PROPHETIC PREACKIMG
The Last Days of the Church
by
MERLE and GLADYS EDWARDS
Noted Evangelists from Denver, Colorado .
Begins TUESDAY MARCH 22
Continues Nightly 7:45 (except Mondays and Saturdays)
Com for Salvation Healing Holy Ghost Baptism
MEDFORD ASSEMBLY of GOD
1108 WEST MAIN STREET F. WILDON COLBAUGH, Pastor
Ike's Price Support
Program Possibly
Heading for Licking
By LYLE C. WILSON
United Press Correspondent
Washington (U.R) The
administrations agriculture
price support program is in
trouble and may be headed for
a licking in the Democratic 84th
Congress.
The numerous individuals who
hope to see a radical farm-labor
Spring Term Adult
Courses To Open
Here Next Week
Spring term adult evening
courses offered by the general
extension division, Oregon State
System of Higher Education,
open here next week. The classes
will run for ten weeks and fees
are based on the number of credit
hours offered, at the rate of $6
per credit hour. Most courses
may be taken on either a credit
or non-credit basis. The regis
tration fee is payable at the first
or second class meeting, and the
public is invited to attend the
first meeting without charge. All
classes meet in the Medford High
school, 7 to 9:45 p. m.
A total of five classes will be
offered in Medford. Dr. Kenneth
Ferrier will conduct a class on
Mondays, beginning March 28,
for adults interested in a scien
tific study of alcohol as it af
fects individuals in society.
The class is based on the Yale
studies in alcohol in human af
fairs, and carries 3 hours of
graduate or undergraduate
credit.
Two classes in education will
be held on Tuesdays, beginning
March 29. Special Education (Ed
470) will be taugh by Dr. Donald
Wilson, director of the speech
clinic. Southern Oregon college,
and School Supervision (Ed 574)
will be taught by Dr. Alva W.
Graham, director of graduate
studies, Southern Oregon college.
Both courses carry 3 hours of
credit.
On Wednesdays, beginning
March 30, George J. Harding,
assistant professor of speech and
dramatics, Oregon College of
Education, will conduct a class
in oral English for teachers, 3
hours credit. On Thursdays, be
ginning March 31, a class in
methods and research materials,
handwriting, will be taught by
Mrs. Kathryn Smith, assistant
professor of education, Southern
Oregon college.
Further information may be
secured from Elliott Becken, as
sistant superintendent of Med
ford schools.
Passengers Appiaud
Pilot of Airliner
Chicago (U.R) Singer Con
nie uosweii iea other pas
sengers in a round of applause
for the pilot who brought down
a crippled American Airlines
DC7 in a non-scheduled, nosed
over landing last night.
Miss Boswell and her hus
band-manager, Harry Leeder,
were among the bo persons
aboard the non-stop Los Angeles
to New York flight when an en
gine went dead just west of
Chicago.
The plane captain, R. A. Pat
terson of Los Angeles, turned
back over Gary, Ind., and
brought the four-engine plane to
a skidding stop in the rain at
Chicago s Midway Field.
The nose wheel collapsed and
the plane nosed over at the end
of the landing, but no one was
hurt.
Roseburg Hospital
Said Needing Repair
Washington (U.R) Two hos
pitals in Oregon and two in
Washington were included on
the list of veterans facilities in
need of "complete renovation
and modernization."
They were at Portland and
Roseburg in Oregon, and Walla
Walla and American Lake in
Washington.
For
party develop as a major factor
in American politics are among
those watching farm support de
velopments with much interest.
A farmer-labor lobby of tacti
cal A-bomb force is giviilg Con
gress the kind of a working over
it seldom gets. The administra
tion side is lobbying, too, but
seems to lack the oomph of the
farmer-labor operators. The
present operation is an example
of logrolling in high gear.
Flexible Plan Rejected
The House Agriculture Com
mittee already has rejected the
administration's program of flex
ible farm price supports. The
committee bill will be a high,
90 per cent guaranteed subsidy.
The heat is being put on con
gressmen from city constituen
cies. Here is how the National
Farmer's Union puts the situa
tion: "Both the AFL and CIO are
buttonholing 'city congressmen
to urge votes for 90 per cent of
parity supports. Two main rea
sons for the strong labor fight
for farm supports are:
"(1) Concern about falling em
ployment in industries depend
ent upon farmers' buying power.
"(2) The hope of reciprocal
support from farm district con
gressmen for increasing the min
imum wage to $1.25 an hour."
A Deadly Technique
That you-vote-for-my-bill and
I'll-vote- for- yours method is
what is called logrolling or
backsratching in the halls of
Congress and it is a deadly tech
nique when really powerful forc
es are using it. Some farm or
ganizations are going along with
the administration. But the left
wings of the organized farm
movement and of organized la
bor are marching hand in hand
against the White House. The
mighty voice of President John
L. Lewis of the United Mine
Workers of America remains to
be heard.
Some lobbyists favoring the
administration's present flexible
support program hopefully talk
of persuading Lewis to speak
loudly for his organized consum
ers against higher farm price
guarantees.
NEW CLASSES
Starting March 28,
7:00 to 10:00 P.M.
Business Math.
Businest English
Spelling and
Vocabulary Building
Robertson School
of Business
40-42 N.
Riverside
Phone 3-4264
Medford
Car Is A 1949
By GEO. N. TAYLOR
"I have a 1949 car and Joe is
my repair man. His eagle eye
sees what is wrong with the car
and he fixes it.
He charges a
plenty but
when I get on
the road I
know the car
will stand up."
So the owner
.told us and
whether
one is wise in
keeping an old
car, is not the
question here.
The real question is just this
Can we ever compare a garage
bill with what God paid to get
that car owner into the glory
land? God paid out the life
blood of Christ, His only beloved
Son, and the blood of Jesus
Christ cleanses from all sin
See 1st John 1:17. The lost meet
their sins at the Judgment and
then gt out into eternal woe.
Receive Christ into your heart
as the Lord and Saviour who
died to clear you with God. Then
being saved, grow up. By Bible
and prayer, grow up. This Mes
sage sponsored by an Oregon
Dairyman and family.
Paid adv.
fit
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