Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, April 18, 1955, Image 4

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    FOUR MEDFORD (OREGON)
MedfordwTribui
"iveryooay ui souuiern Oregon
Reads The Mail Tribune"
Published Daily Except Saturday by
MEDFORD PRINTING CO.
27-29 North Fir St. Phone 2-6141
ROBERT W. RUHL. Editor
KERB GREY. Advertising Manager
E. C. FERGUSON. Manasring Editor
ERIC ALLEN JR.. City Ediior
HARRY CHIPMAN. Telegraph Editor
RICHARD JEWETT Sports Editor
OLIVE STARCHER Society Editor
JACK JACKSON. Sunday Editor
GERALD LATHAM. Circulation Mgr.
An Independent Newspaper
Entered as second class matter at
Medford. Oregon, under Act oi
March 3. 1897
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Official Paper of the City of Medford
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NATIONAL EDITOtlAl
ASTbch-ATllON
O
fcjzznnzs
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
April 18. 1945
(It was Wednesday)
Mayor Clarence A. Meeker
will discuss post-war develop
ments with the city planning
commission tonight.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: Some con
cern is expressed over "the post
war place of the OPA!" Among
the majority of housewives, out
of red stamps, it is figured the
place has not yet been. dug.
20 YEARS AGO
April 18, 1935
(It was Thursday)
Howard Hobson, head coach
and physical director at South
ern Oregon Normal school at
Ashland, has been appointed
head basketball and baseball
coach at the University of Ore
gon.
The city council Tuesday night
authorized public dances in Med
ford to remain open until 2 a.m.
30 YEARS AGO
April 18, 1925 .
(It was Saturday)
Construction plans for a 40
bed general hospital costing
about $25,000 has been authoriz
ed by the interior department
for the Klamath reservation.
Jackson county got its first
conviction under a new law per
taining to driving a car while
intoxicated.
40 YEARS AGO
April 18, 1915
(It was Sunday)
From the Local and Personal
column: There was a general
exodus of Medford people to the
hills and country under the lure
of the bright sunshine and 85
degree temperatures.
The Southern Pacific railroad
installed electric signals at the
Jackson 11th st. crossings today.
What's the Answer?
(Can You Get 4 of the 7?)
Copr. 1955, Editorial Research Report
1. The U.S. is generally be
lieved to be behind Great Brit
ain in developing atomic power
for peace time industry?
2. Gen. Eisenhower said in
1948 he was willing or unwill
ing to run for president then,
or was silent on the subject?
3. Federal antitrust laws to
day apply in general to both la
bor and farm groups, to labor
but not farm ones, to farm but
not labor ones, or to neither?
4. Most geologists put the age
of the earth at about 4 million,
400 million or 4 billion years?
5. Average production cost of
electric power in the U. S. is
somewhat more or less than lc
per kilowatt hour, or about lc?
6. The Bundesrat is the upper
or lower house of the West Ger
man parliament?
7. Betty June Thorneburg is
the real name of which screen
star?
The Answers: 1. Behind. 2.
Said he was unwilling. 3. In gen
eral to neither. 4. About 4 bil
lion. 5. Somewhat less, on the
average. 6. Upper (lower is the
Bundestag). 7. Betty Hutton.
NO SECRET
Denver U.R) Retired police
man Carl W. Baker celebrated
his 9Sth birthday Sunday. His
secret for a long life: "Just keep
breathing."
Dead line for Sunday Classified is
at coon Saturday.
rffft" XNIWSPAPEI
MAIL TRIBUNE
The Polio Victory
A week from today, if all goes well, second and
third graders in Jackson county will begin the process
of having needles shoved
m a vast majority of cases, from the ravages of mf an
tile paralysis.
We are on the threshhold of an era when polio
myelitis will join smallpox
mankind as virtually extinct dangers.
THIS is a cause for rejoicing.
It may also be a time to consider that since
polio, the once-mysterious crippler, is on the verge
of being conquered, there
medical science cannot go on to greater discoveries.
Still ahead lies victory over cancer, over cardio
vascular disease, over mental illnesses, over the de
generative diseases. If Americans, through their con
tributions of money and through the genius and work
of their scientists, can wipe out polio, there is no rea
son to believe the same miracle cannot be wrought
for other killers."
IUDGED on the basis of
sis has loomed larger in the rogue's gallery of dis
ease than statistics would indicate, for it has never
been one of the most numerous diseases, nor even the
most frequently fatal.
But the tragic after-effects of the paralysis on
children, and the fact that Franklin D. Roosevelt was
a sufferer and founder of the National Foundation of
Infantile Paralysis, furnished the motivation for the
campaign which is now reaching success.
.,
TN the physical sciences,
A possible. For today a million things are accom
plished facts which only a few years ago would have
been unimaginable. Pneumonia, tuberculosis, scarlet
fever, malaria, bubonic plague all of these have
been conquered to a greater or lesser degree.
The marvels of the cures from penicillin began
within the memory of every adult.
The flight of man through the air is only a half-
century old, and already
and the stars.
XN the basis of the evidence at hand, man can con
w quer threats to man from everything except man
himself. His science has now reached a point where
mankind's greatest and most urgent danger comes
from his inability to get along with others of his own
breed.
If the type of genius, the amounts of money, and
the vast concentration of effort which have gone to
ward conquering disease, perfecting flight, making
communications instantaneous, arid developing all the
other appurtenances of
sources were devoted to eliminating the basic causes
of human unrest and war,
be achieved?
MEANWHILE we can be
the way out.
It is evidence that what
can be done. Maybe there
sooner or later, he will set
greatest problem his own
The Freeway Proposals
We have heard a lot of discussion about the route
which the proposed new freeway through or around
Medford should take. Most of the discussion has
been a bit previous, because
mission is now surveying
will survey another bet ore
The two routes which have been proposed thus
far are (1) an elevated highway down the east bank
of Bear creek, and (2) a by-pass route to the east of
the city.
MOT long ago E. M. Tucker proposed a variant of
Plan 1, which made sense to a lot of "people. This
would have put the highway down the bed of Bear
creek, with the creek itself confined to a concrete
channel under the highway.
This, he suggests, would eliminate some 'of the
criticism of the route from those. who are afraid (with
some justification, it must be pointed out) that an
elevated route there would destroy much of the at-
ractiveness and utility of Hawthorne park.
Perhaps his suggestion should get a more thorough
going-over by engineers to determine its f easibilty.
JUST recently, we've heard still another suggestion
which at first sight sounds logical. This proposal
would put the route right through town (as many mer
chants desire), but would do little to detract from any
esthetic qualities, and wouldn't touch Hawthorne
park.
This idea is to make the four-lane throughway an
elevated highway placed precisely over the Southern
Pacific tracks as they go through Medford.
It certainly wouldn't cause any more howls than
would the Bear creek route. E.A.
April Showers Sprinkle
By UNITED PRESS
April sprinkled its traditional
showers today over a large part
of the nation.
Showers were forecast for
most of the Pacific Northwest,
the Northern Rockies and from
the Dakotas to the Great Lakes
and lower Missouri Valley.
Temperatures meanwhile had
warmed up from Texas to the
Canadian border, pushing the
mercury into the 70s early today
as far north as Kansas and Mis
souri. In the eastern Great Lakes and
Far West temperatures dropped
Monday, April 18, 1955
into them, to protect them
and a host of other ills of
is no reason to believe that
cold logic, infantile paraly
nothing seems entirely im-
he is looking to the planets
civilization if these re
what miracles might then
thankful that polio is on
man sets himself to do,
is reason to hope that,
himself -to solve his
survival. E.A.
the State Highway Com
one route, and probably
a decision is made.
Nation
slightly, but they remained
steady elsewhere.
Motorist Liability
Law Up To Governor
Salem (U.R) A bill designed
to get approximately; 95 per
cent of Oregon drivers under
liability insurance was before
Gov. Patterson today. The mea
sure was passed by the House
Saturday. At present, about 80
per cent of the state's motorists
are covered by liability insurance.
Matter of Fact
AS PEIPING SEES US .
Taipeh, Formosa In order
to understand the Formosa cris
is, we must try to see ourselves
as others see
us. And if we
make this al
ways depress
in g attempt,
the sad truth
comes out that
the Chinese
Comm u n i s t
leaders almost
certainly be
lieve that
America really
is a "paper ti
Joseph Alao
ger."
On this highly significant
point, all the on-the-spot ex
perts encountered by this re
porter have been unanimous.
The expert opinion is not sur
prising, either. For the Chinese
theory that America is a paper
tiger is rather squarely founded
on the facts of the recent rec
ord. In the period since the Eisen
hower administration took of
fice, there Have been two tests
of will and purpose between Pei
ping and Washington. The first
test, whose outcome was the
source of all the bristling cur
rent dangers in Asia, was the
test in Korea.
In January, 1953, America
was tired of the Korean war,
but China was utterly , exhaust
ed by it. Since August of the year
before,, half the Cabinet of the
Chinese Communist government
had been in Moscow, to plead
for more generous aid which was
not forthcoming. In December,
the Chinese had even made an
independent peace bid through
the Indians, only to be slapped
down hard by the old tyrant
Stalin.
In the winter of 1953, in short,
the Chinese were visibly hang
ing on the ropes. Whatever er
rors may have gone before
and this reporter thinks there
were many such the winter
when President Eisenhower took
office was the ideal moment to
mobilize America's resources and
go in to win in Korea.
A real victory in Korea would
have given the free world at
least ten years breathing space in
the Far East. But instead, after
long hesitations, the Administra
tion gave the Chinese Commu
nists a truce which both ended
the Korean strain on their re
gime, and left Communist China
as the unchallenged and pre
dominant military power in
Asia.
rpHE Korean truce led directly,
- inpvitflhlv and naturallv to
the next year's crisis in Indo
china. As though astonished by
this perfectly foreseeable con
sequence of their own decision
about Korea, the Washington
policy makers at first resolved
that a surrender in Indochina
"could not be permitted." This
decision of the National Securi
ty Council was freely publicized,
The Vice-President himself in
formed the nation's newspaper
editors that American divisions
might have to be sent to Tonkin,
and there was much other big,
bold talk by those high in author
ity. But in the outcome, the big,
bold talk turned out to be mean
ingless. Protesting only feebly,
the American administration as
sented to the Far Eastern Mu
nich at Geneva. Chou En-lai en
joyed a grandiose international
triumph, and the fate of Indo
china was sealed.
The Geneva Munich, in turn,
led directly, inevitably and nat
urally to this year's crisis in the
Formosa Strait. Once again, the
Washington policy makers were
visibly taken by surprise by. the
perfectly foreseeable consequen
ces of their own act. Once again,
the first reaction was big, bold
talk in Washington. And now we
are again entering the period
when the big, bold talk is to be
put to the test.
The Chinese Communist lead
ers might be less confident of the
result, if the evidence of the two
previous tests of will were not
confirmed by the evidence of re
cent American defense policy.
Unfortunately, however, Secre
tary of Defense Charles Wilson's
alleged defense economies have
left. the United States with less
strength in the Pacific than at
any time since Pearl Harbor.
Secretary of State John Foster
Dulles could say . at Bangkok
that we had more strength in the
Pacific than in the moment of
victory over Japan, only be
cause we have stocks of atomic
and hydrogen bombs that we did
not have in 1945. But in simple
terms of men, guns, planes and
ships, the power we can bring
to bear in the Far East has now
reached its postwar nadir, being
weaker by far than on the dark
day when the Korean war broke
out.
THIS state of affairs is given
rather lurid importance,
moreover, by one of the few
wisps of fairly hard informa
tion about the Khrushchev-Bul-ganin-Mikoyan
visit to Peiping
last October. During this visit,
when .China's Formosa plan was
coordinated with the present
leaders of Russia, the Russians
are reported to have assured the
Chinese that they need not worry
about America using atomic
weapons in a Far Eastern war.
There were, .obviously, two
By Joseph Alsop
strong arguments behind this re
ported Russian assurance. On the
one hand, we did not use atomic
weapons in Korea, but instead
patiently suffered the Chinese
intervention there.
On the other hand, our pres
ent defense design depends very
heavily on the overseas air
bases of the Strategic Air Com
mand. For all out atomic war,
we need those bases. No one
can be sure that the use of ato
mic bombs in the Formosa Strait
will not lead to all out war. Our
Allies who control our over
seas bases will not join a war
starting in the Formosa Strait.
Hence the risk of using atomic
bombs to defend Quemoy and the
Matsus is far greater than was
the risk in Korea, when we did
not use them. This reasoning is
all too persuasive. Furthermore.
if the Chinese believe we shall
not use atomic bombs, they must
consequently believe they can at
tack Quemoy and the Matsu Is
lands with impunity. Even if we
fight back, our greatly depleted
conventional military power in
the Pacific is almost surely in
sufficient to hold the virtually
indefensible rocks in the For
mosa Strait against a determined
Chinese assault.
, Such is the practical position
as it most probably appears in
Peiping's eyes. Hence the tactic
of "keeping them guessing" is
about the worst we could adopt
for the Chinese are most likely
to guess that we shall back down
as we did before.
It must be added that if we
do back down again as we did
before, the Chinese Communist
leaders will inevitably regard
America, not just as a paper ti
ger, but as a paper rabbit. And
therefore next year's ugly choice
will be as much worse than this
year's, as this year's is worse
than last year's, and last year's
was worse tnan tne cnoice m
Korea.
(Copyright. 1955, New
York Herald Tribune Inc.)
In the Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
After ten years of wrangling
and stalling, the terms of an
Austrian peace treaty have been
agreed upon by Russia and Aus
tria. Before the Austrian peace
treaty can become effective, it
must be agreed to not only by
Russia and Austria but also by
the Big Three of the Western
powers The United States
Britain and France.
TN THE draft that ; has been
OK'd by. Russia's Mplotov and
Austria's Raab, Russia agrees to
pull its occupation troops out of
Austria by the end of this year.
Russia' also agrees to release all
Austrian prisoners of war and
civilians now held in the Soviet
Union. In . return for $150,000,-
000 in the form of Austrian
goods, Russia agrees to hand
back Austrian shipping and oil
facilities and to end its drastic
restrictions on the Austrian
economy.
Austria promises that she will
not join ANY future military
alliances and will not permit
establishment of ANY foreign
military bases on Austrian soil.
She promises also (and the agree
ment is conditional upon this
promise) that she will NEVER
AGAIN merge with Germany, as
she did under pressure from Hit
ler in 1938.
W
HY are WE interested in all
this?
Why take up space with stuff
so far away?
I
T'S LIKE this:
One the face of it, this pro
posal by Russia looks better than
anything yet. What we are look
ing for is some SIGN deeds,
not words on the part of Rus
sia that , she might be willing to
try genuine coexistence that is
to say, LIVING WITH THE
FREE PART OF THE WORLD.
This Austrian treaty has been
looked upon as something that
might provide such a sign.
rpHIS, I think, is the biggest
A nroblem of our time:
CAN COMMUNISM. AND
FREEDOM LIVE TOGETHER
IN THE SAME WORLD?
If they can't
Well, in that event, a fight to
the finish is inevitable. In these
days of atomic warfare, a finish
fight is a horrible thing to con
template. If it is INEVITABLE,
we'll have to face it. But before
coming to the conclusion that it
IS inevitable we should be very
sure indeed that it will never be
possible for communism and
freedom to live together in the
same world.
OUR state department people
in Washington, while admit
ting that the Russian-Austrian
agreement is encouraging, think
it has catches in it.
Of course it has catches in it.
In any proposal advanced by
communists there would be
catches. But what we need to
know and we must find it out
by putting two and two together,
for the commies won't tell us
what they have in mind and we
wouldn't believe them if they
did is whether Russia wants
to TRY coexistence.
We must find that out of the
processes of - deduction and
this Russian-Austrian treaty of-
Customs Officials Conduct Hunf
For Narcotics on Incoming Ships
Editor's - note
The U.S. Customs
Service is the
nation's vatrhrinr
against illegal imoort of narcotics.
This involves a search of every vessel,
large or small, which puts in to an
American port. A United Prwis cor
respondent accompanied Customs in
spectors on such an inspection of a
well-known cruise ship.
By RICHARD JORDAN
United Press Correspandent
San Francisco (U.R) When
the liner S.S. Cleveland steamed
through the Golden Gate and
past the San Francisco skyline,
pasoengers saw a Coast Guard
cutter pull alongside and a
swarm of uniformed men clam
ber aboard. They disappeared
below decks. The men were a
detail of U. S. Customs inspec
tors assigned to search the ship
from the topmost regions' of the
bridge to the depths of the
bilge. The quest narcotics, es
pecially heroin which sells for
$50 a pound in Hong Kong and
brings as much as $30,000 a
pound retail on the illicit drug
market in tne United States.
"We're the only agency which
can try to -stop this -flow- of
drugs," Chester R. MacPhee ex
plained aboard the Cleveland.
He is Collector of Customs for
San iTancisco.
Unique Know-How
His men check every ship &v
riving here and each member of
its crew, regardless of its flag
or port of origin. Because man
power is short in the Customs
Service, the inspectors employ
some unique know-how in
Is That So?
By Eugene Burnt
Ranger-Naturalist
Another quiz coming up. Score
five and you are an outdoors ex
pert; four is excellent; three
mighty good; two only fair to
middling. Answers follow ques
tions. Help yourself.
1. Give the names of the males,
female, and young of the duck,
goose and swan.
2. Which tree dwelling para
site is used as a Christmas decor
ation.
-6. Most animals are now
through with the long winter
sleep. According to the length of
their snooze, in which order
would - you place these: bears,
ground squirrels, badgers, chip
munks? .
4. Does the feeding of wild
birds in . winter . tend to make
them less self-reliant and thus
subject them to starvation when
human feeding ceases?
, 5. The pulse of animals
varies tremendously, . but how
much? Within 50 heartbeats a
second, estimate the pulse of a
mouse, cat, horse or cow, ele-
4.18
phant, whale, jackrabbit and
dog and list them in the right
order.
ANSWERS: 1. Duck: drake,
duck and duckling (other terms
for the young duck are flapper
and ducklet); Swan: cob, pen,
cygnel; goose: Gander, goose and
gosling.
2. Mistletoe.
3. The chipmunk is the light
est sleeper; the bear sleeps mod
erately light and is not a true
hibernator; the badger is quite
a heavy sleeper; and the all-time
record holder is the ground
squirrel. Some have been known
to sleep eight months out of a
year, or more accurately, 33
weeks out of 52. '
4. The greatest service you
can perform for a wild bird is to
feed him properly during the
winter months. Never fear,
they'll not become spoiled a
wild bird will always be able to
take care of itself when natural
food becomes available outdoors.
5. Approximately, the heart
beat of a mose at rest is 700 per
minute; of a jackrabbit, 205; a
cat, 120; a dog, 85-125; a horse
or cow, 35-45; an elephant, 25
or so; a small whale around 15
times a minute.
(Released by McClure
Newspaper Syndicate)
Free: By special arrangement
with the editors of the Encylo
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 be considered.
Sorry, I simply can't answer
your many friendly letters.
Please address your questions to:
IS THAT SO! care Medford Mail
Tribune, Box 575, Sausalito,
Calif.
f ers us a good opportunity to
WATCH the Russians in action
again and draw our own conclu
sions as to whether or not they
think it might be worth their
while to try to live in the same
world with the free nations.
111
1 cearrhinff a cViir
I r'
Joseph L, Rasso, 48, and Lee
Lawson, 36. led us through a
section of the liner's crew quart
ers known as "heroin alley.'
This is the washrooms and lav
atories. "More than half the
stuff is hidden in this part of
the ship," Rasso said. '
He and Lawson whipped out
flashlights . and . mirrors . and
poked into every likely hiding
place in the companionways
and compartments. The mirrors
are used to see into areas ordin
arily not visible.
"The most popular hiding
places are the ones least likely
to occur to the average person.
So those are the places we hit
first," Rasso said. "We've found
the stuff in fire hoses and show
er nozzles, for instance."
Eight teams of inspectors
roved the Cleveland. Their
search even including sampling
of sugar in the galley. Finally
they agreed that the liner ap
peared to be "clean."
Eden's Decision To
Call Election May 26
Seen as Smart Move
By CHARLES M. McCANN
United Press Foreign Analyst
British Prime Minister An
thony Eden seems to have made
a smart move by calling a gen
eral parliamentary election for
May 26.
Lord Woolton, who runs the
Conservative Party machinery,
says Eden not only will win
but w i 1 1 in
c r e ase the
House of Com
mons majority
which he in
herited from
Winston
Churchill.
If that hap
pened it would
be a notable
achievement. -
The Liberals
Charles Mccann increased tneir
Commons representation by two
votes in the general election of
December, 1910. But not since
1868 has a British political
party succeeded in increasing
its parliamentary majority sub
stantially at an election held
while it was in office.
Laborites Unhappy ',:.
The best indication that the.
Conservative election call was a
smart move is that both the
Laborites and the Liberals are
unhappy about it.
Aly Khan To Visit
Child in California
Hollywood U.R) Prince Aly
Kahn said today that he would
spend several days in Southern
California to visit 'his daughter,
Yasmin, and arrange" for her to
visit him under terms of his di
vorce settlement with actress
Rita Hayworth.
The Moslem prince, who ar
rived here Saturday afternoon
by plane from a South American
tour, said he would try to see
Miss Hayworth before departing
for New York and Paris. "I hope
I'll be able to take my beloved
daughter with me, too," he said.
Under the divorce agreement,
the prince has visitation rights
with his 5-year-old daughter for
at least six weeks a year. He
said he would like , to arrange
for Princess Yasmin to visit her
ailing grandfather, the Aga
Khan in Egypt this summer.
SCHOOL FAVORED
Washington (U.R) Rep. Leo
W. O'Brien, a New York Demo
crat who once was a newspaper
man, thinks there ought to be a
school for congressmen. He says
freshmen lawmakers should be
taught how, the procedures of
lawmaking go and "I for one
would be glad to enroll."
Frank Perl
INEXPENSIVE FUNERALS
24-HOUR AMBULANCE SERVICE
r -' $5.00 A CALL-IN CITY :
Seventy-five - blue-coated offi
cers, manwhile, were waiting to
process the liner's 750 passen
gers as they stepped onto the
pier. While the first class pas
sengers passed through a routine
baggage inspection, those in
third class were subjected to
a much more thorough examina
tion, including partial stripping
in many cases. MacPhee was
quick -' to assert that the third '
class passengers weren's being
discriminated against. -
"We can't search everyone," t
he said. "On the last liner we
skipped the third class and hit
the first cabin people. We vary
the procedure all the time."
No drugs were turned up in
the search of the Cleveland or
its passengers,. But such careful
inspection must go on.
"We find enough heroin on
incoming ships each year to
Lring $10,000,000 on the illegal
market. That gives you an idea
of the problem," MacPhee said.
Eden's call found Labor Party
leader Clement R. - Attlee in
Canada and his No. 2 man, Her- ,
bert Morrison, in Germany. It
also found the Labor Party try- ,
ing ' to hold itself together
against the threat of a wide open
split because of its rebellious left
winger Aneurin Bevan.
The Laborites complain that ,
Eden called the elections too
soon after - his assumption of
leadership that the country is ,
being asked to approve . his '
policies before it knows what
they are. They complain that ''
they were not consulted about
the election date and they hint "'
darkly that the conservatives
want an election . now because "
there might be a recession later
in the year.
Budget Later ,
But Eden and his chancellor
of the exchequer, R. A. Butler,'
will be able to point to a pretty ;
sound situation.
Butler will introduce the bud
get for the current fiscal year
in Commons tomorrow. If, as is ,
hinted, he may be able to offer
a little tax reduction it certain-
ly ought not to hurt Eden.
It may be unfair to sue-ppst
that the prospect of a tax reduc--
tion had anything to do with the
Conservative decision to issue
an election call only 10 days,
after Eden assumed the primed
ministry.
God's New Move
Geo. N.Taylor
The Apostle Peter was telling
Capt. Cornelius of Caesar's Army
of the life, death and resurrect
1 1 o n of our
Lord, Jesus
Christ. As Pe
ter was speak
ing, the Cap
tain a n d. his
f r i ends broke
in on Peter.
They began to
speak in the
tongues of
Black Men
and R e d; of
Vhite Men and
Brown. It was
God's command to give the
Good News to all the world.. Not
to the Holy Land only, but to all
the world. Men everywhere must
know the Good News of Christ
dying for our sins and giving us
an open door into eternal life..
God is gathering out a family
for himself; a saved people who
have eternal life. Recefve Christ
as God Son who died for your
sins and God writes your name
in his Book of Life. And when
the day is dark, look to Christ
as your elder brother. And byr
Bible and Prayer .grow up.
adv. :
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