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

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rorm MEcroro (orzgoh)
UEEFOfflj&TBIB
UNI
"Xvarybody ta Southern Oregon
Published Daily Except Saturday by
MEDFORD PRINTING CO.
XI-39 North rir St. Phone 3-6141
ROBERT W. RUHU Editor
HERB GREY AdTerttainc Manager
E. C. FERGUSON. Managing Editor
ERIC ALLEN JR, City Editor
HARRY CHIP MAN, Telegraph Editor
RICHARD JEWETT S porta Editor
OLIVE STAR CHER, Society Editor
JACK JACKSON. Sunday Editor
GERALD LATHAM. Circulation Mgr.
An Independent Newrpaper
Entered aa aeeond data matter at
Medford. Oregon, under Act of
aaarca a. imwi
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Sunday Only One year 33fll.
By Carrier In Advance
Ashland. Central M.1pfe,Ff!K:
Jacksonville. Gold
Shady Cove. Rogue River. Talent.
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EDITOIIAL
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MIWSPAMt
ASSOCIATION
Flight o' Time
Hertford and Jackgon County
History from the files ol The
Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30 and
10 yeara ago.
10 YEARS AGO
July 18, 1345 -
at wag Wednesday)
Jackson County Fruit Grow
ers league and Rogue River
Traffic association ask State
Board of Higher Education to
postpone college opening date
to Oct. 7 to maintain adequate
labor supply.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: The forest
fire season is now raging up
state. Everybody is urged to be
careful . and use their heads
while scratching match.
20 YEARS AGO
July IS' 1933
(It was Thursday)
Bell view Grange passes reso
lution condemning two state
Grange officials for signing par
don for convicted slayers and
asks both to resign.
30 YEARS AGO
July 18, 1925
(It was Saturday)
Oregon State Editorial asso
ciation, meeting in Grants Pass,
declines to consider resolutions
favoring or against evolution. .
Ashland Chamber of Com
merce and Civic clubs hold re
ception for Normal school sum
mer students.
40 YEARS AGO
July 18. 1915
(It was Sunday)
Liberty Bell arrives at San
Francisco Exposition after more
than 5,000 Jackson countians
view bell In Medford.
From Local and Personal col
umn: A number of wanderers
who have been bivouadng on
Bear creek were ordered out of
town Friday afternoon by the
police. The police say the outfit
came up town in the evening
and begged enough money on
the streets to keep them in drink
and food the next day. Now and
then they would make a sortie
on a neighboring garden or hen
house.
What's the Answer?
Can You Get 4 of the 7?
Copr. 1955, Editorial Research Report
1. More TLS. motor vehicles
were produced In the first half
of this year than in any other six
months in history: ..right , or
wrong?
2. About half, two-thirds or
three-fourths of U.S. wheat farm
ers voted recently to accept acre
age controls at lower price sup
ports? s . .
3. If the President vetoes a
bill while Congress is in session,
he does or doesn't have to tell it
why? I .
4. Of the 21 U.S. prisoners of
war in Korea who chose to stay
with the Reds, twelve, nine, six,
three or none were of Jewish
background?
5. Melancholia as a mental dis
ease afflicts more older men,
older womerv middle-aged men,
middle-aged women, or young
girls? .
6. The net return on bonds (in
view of current prices) has been
going up or down, or staying un
changed?
7. Vyacheslav Mikhailovitch
Skryabin is better known as Bul
ganin, Tito, Zhukov, Molotov,
Krushchev, or Malenkov?
The Answers: 1. Right, . 2.
About three-fourths. 3. Must tell
it why. 4. None. 5. Middle-aged
women. 6. Going up. 7. Molotov.
I aa-eaj
mail tribune
What Water Means
The election last Friday, in which water-users of
the Medford and Rogue River Valley Irrigation dis
tricts approved the signing of a contract with the
government, may well serve as a landmark for agri
culture in Jackson county.
The vote itself was tiny less than 300 voters out
of almost 1,200 eligible. But the results were decisive.
Only 10 persons in the two districts voted against the
proposal.
TPHE history of the two districts goes back more
than 30 years, and this is the first time that assist
ance has been sought from the government in financ
ing the job of bringing life-giving water to the valley
floor. When completed, the rehabilitation job .will
mean more water, better crops, higher productivity.
At the same time, the news that the $150,000
voted for the Talent project can be used to prepare
plans and specifications for bid, rather than for plan
ning which is virtually complete already, means that
major construction on the bigger project is that much
nearer. ; : '.
." There is. indeed, a strone possibility that work
will get under way just as
the $500,000 appropriation requested, liov. ram ratter-son
has told local supporters of the project that
plans are being made to make a supplemental request
for funds to Congress next January, and if it is ap
proved, work can be started next spring.
TPHE importance of the Talent project to the Rogue
River valley has been discussed time and again,
but it does not grow less through discussion. The
S22.000.000 it is estimated the job will cost will,
much of it, be spent locally, and will furnish a "shot
in the arm" to our valley economy. '
But far more significant
added irrigation water to our "semi-arid" lands which
need only water to make them bloom.
TpHE Rogue valley, first opened up by gold miners
about a century ago, quickly became an agricult
ural community. Later, the demand for timber con
verted it into a dual economy.
As timber crows short,
agricultural lands are developed, we can look forward
to a third change to a processing economy, based on
a wide variety of agncultural and lumber products.
The fantastic growth of
cessing concerns, particularly in the White City area,
in the past year or two, is a sample of rwhat we can
expect, witn new crops added to tne productivity oi
the land, a comparable growth in food-processing
and distributing facilities can be expected.
PMBER is getting scarcer, but a majority of what
there is now is under either private or government
al plans for harvesting it, as a. crop, and renewing the
growth for future years.
This, with an expanded agriculture, off ers the
possibility for a stable, long-range economy.
Jackson county will probably never De a metro
politan center, in the usual sense. But in time it will
come to be a major processing and distribution area
for a vast section of Oregon
Steady, solid, well-based
"boom" economy.
With thought and patience and hard work, that
is what we can achieve.
Is There a Limit?
Science-fiction afficionados may well disagree
with frank Jenkins, who in a recent "Days News"
column in the Mail Tribune, in discussing man's pro
gress in the air, said: ' v
"The third step will follow when we can operate
outside the gravity field of the earth. Let's leave it
there. That's far enough for man to go."
should it be? Even today, rocket scientists
tell us that we have the technical know-how to
build a rocket ship which could reach the moon. All
we need is the few billion dollars it would cost to
build and send one. This could well come about be
fore file turn of the century. We hope we're around
toseeit. ' . - .
The first leap upward from the earth will be the
big one, and will furnish the lessons needed to put
space ships into the void of the solar system.
'THE distances in space are almost impossible for
. most of us to comprehend, so vast are they The
sun, which is some 93,000,000 miles away, is only a
hop, skip and jump as these distances go.
c The sun's nearest star-neighbor (for the sun itself
is a star a small one) is about 40 light years away.
(A light year is a measure of distance, not time; it is
the distance that light rays travel in one year at a
speed of 186,300 miles per second. For the distance
to the nearest star, multiply .186,300 limes the number
of seconds in a year, then multiply by 40. If our rusty
arithmetic serves, the answer is more than 235,000,
000,000,000 miles). ; J J
Two hundred and thirty-five trillion miles is a
long way. ' '
DUT why put a limit on the distance man can go?
The secrets of nature already unlocked, and in a
relatively short space of time, are : immense. This
technological progress is speeding up, rather than
slowing down.
. Only 150 years ago, three short lifetimes; a man's
fastest means of transportation was by horse, or sail
ing vessel. Today he has outstripped the speed of
sound. ; "ys 't :u.y':,: V. -
No one knows what's ahead,' but watching it come
is going to be f aschiating.--E.A. ;
.Monday. July XI. IMS
soon as it would have with
will be the benefits from
and as additional irrigated
remanufactunng and pro
and northern California.
growth is healthier than a
E.A.
Matter of
THE TRUE AIR BALANCE
Washington Despite the
strickly phoney talk in Wash
ington, the Soviet delegation
will go to the
summit meet
ing at Geneva
with more
military
strength be
hind them
than the So
viet Union has
ever before
possessed.
That, no
doubt, was the
Joseph Asset real fact be
hind Nikita Khrushchev's warn
ing at the July 4 party in Mos
cow, that the Soviets were not
going to Geneva to, ' negotiate
from weakness.
From the straight military
viewpoint,: in truth, the .Ameri
can negotiators are the ones
who should feel a bit nervous.
For the one great trump this
country has always held since
the end of the last war a
wide air-atomic lead over the
Soviet Union is now being
snatched away by a massive
Russian effort..
On the one hand, the superior
American, stocks of atomic and
hydrogen weapons are ceasing
to matter very much because the
Soviets are now accumulating
sufficient stocks of their own
to wreak total destruction on the
United States.
On the other hand, the So
viets are now beginning to lead
the United States in quality as
well as quantity of aircraft pro
duction.
The change in the bomb bal
ance has been going on for a
long time. The truly revolution
ary development of the last 12
months has been the change in
the air balance. A series of re
ports in this space in the last
week have touched on some as
pects of that change. Over-all,
it can be summarized as follows:
The Soviet air program first
began to catch up with the
American air program ' in the
field of fighter production. Here
the United States has been all
together outclassed.
'The Soviets have produced
about 4,000 supersonic Mig-1 7s,
while we have produced, a few
scores of the F-100 fighter which
is comparable to the Mig-17 in
all ways except in its inferior
altitude characteristics. The So
viets have 'already gone into full
production with their still new
er, stffl faster "Farmer" fight
er, whereas we have produced
two ' prototypes of the compar
able F-104. The Soviets are now
starting production, of a first-
class,- Jet-powered all-weather
fighter," while- we have' nothing
comparable: that is -anywhere
near real quantity porduction.
QECOND, as far as current out-
- put is concerned, the Soviets
have now passed the United
States in the field of long-range
jet bombers. They are now pro
ducing their. T-37 bomber at a
considerably higher rate than
we are producing the compar
able B-52 in this country; and
their monthly output will still
be four or five bombers per
month higher than , ours , when
the recently ordered increase in
B-52 production finally takes
effect. . . ;
They are also producing their
T-39 bomber, comparable, to our
B-47, at a rate of 20 to 30 per
month, and this rate , is expect
ed to rise. And whereas the out
put of fast 'tankers suitable to
air refuel the B-47 is extremely
unsatisfactory, the Soviets have
in quantity production a four
engine turbo-aircraft weU suited
for air-refueling the T-39. j
. Third, the Soviet's have
achieved ' certain technical suc
cesses of a distinctly alarming
character. The new Russian air
engine, with 18,000 to 20,000
pounds thrust, which powers the
T-37 and T-39, was ready for
use at least two years before the
comparable American jet en
gine, the J-75, which is just
emerging from the experimental
stage.-? -
: And Soviet air-lead time the
time, from the conception of an
aircraft until the beginning of
quantity production now ap
pears to be only one-half of
American air-lead time.
Fourth, because of the Soviet
air gains already achieved, our
one existing advantage is being
quite largely neutralized. This
advantage is the Strategic Air
Command's large force-in-being
of B-47 bombers. But the B-47,
being a short-range aircraft, de
pends on overseas bases to
reach Russian targets And the
Allies who control these over
seas are more and more reluc-
ant to -allow" the bases to be
used when the chips are down,
because they are being more
and more intimidated . by the
combination of growing Soviet
air power and growing Soviet
stocks of H-bombs.
CQFTH and finally, their are
also excellent reasons to be
lieve that the Soviet effort to
produce the true' ultimate .wea
pon, the high-speed guided mis
sile of intercontinental range,., is
well ahead of the American
long-range missile effort, which
is on a strictly business-as-usual
basis. '
That is the true balance sheet
Maybe President Eisenhower
and Premier Bulganm will
make real progress in the dis
armament talks -In Geneva. But
Fact By Joseph Atop ,
until disarmament ia a anlld
reality, this kind of air-balance
sheet is a national scandal, made
all the more shocking by the tre
mendous cover-up that is going
on at the Pentagon.
While the cold war continues,
this Soviet carrture of the tradi
tional American lead in the air
constitutes a national emergency.
It should be treated as sucn, in
stead of being hidden behind
huckstering phrases.
copyright, 1885, Hew York
Herald Tribune Inc.)
In the Day's Hews
By FRANK JENKINS
President- Eisenhower is in
Geneva where the Big Four con
ference opened today.
BEFORE he left, our President
gave to the Congress an out
line of his views and hopes
about the Geneva conference.
He says he hopes: v
: 1. To identify the outstanding
issues in dispute in the world.
2. To develop methods to try
to solve them.
THAT is an orderly approach.
Suppose you and your -neighbors:,
have been engaged . for
years in a continuing COSTLY
ruckus that darkens the future
of EVERYBODY living in the
neighborhood. Suppose that you
agree to get together to try to
do something to bring .the ruck
us to an end.
If you are to get anywhere,
your FIRST job will be to agree
on just what you've been quar
reling about. Your NEXT job
will be to see : if you can do
something sensible and construc
tive about it.
It seems to me
OUR part in the Geneva con
ference is off to a good start.
SPEAKING further of the Ge
neva conference.
It is officially estimated that
at least 1500 press, radio and
TV reporters, and photographers
will be on hand to cover it.
BURNING question:;
, Is that TOO MANY?
'SCL is an attempted' answer:
It won't be IF THEY'RE
ALL GOOD ENOUGH.
YOU may say: , "What do you
mean by GOOD ENOUGH?"
Let's put it this way: .
If ALL of these 1900 reporters
and . photographers are INTEL
LIGENT EXPLAINERS
If they understand all of the
backgrounds of this fateful affair-
.. If their sole purpose is to teU
the people in simple,, under
standable language just what is
going, on and why :
. Well, in that event, they wiU
be good enough and there won't
be too many of them.
rpHE BIG job of the press
J- which includes newspapers,
magazines, radio, and television
is to tell the people in simple,
understandable language J u s t
what is. happening. The next
most important job of the press
is to explain without bias or
prejudice just WHY what: is
happening is happening.
Too many of us of the press,
1 hate to say, fall into the dan
gerous idea that we must carp
and criticize in order to make it
appear that we know more than
anybody else. .
That is a .dangerous habit.
Atomic Weapons -Speedup
Said Needed
Washington (UB Sen.
Henry M. Jackson asserted Satur
day, that production , of U. S.
atomic weapons and planes must
be stepped -up to nullify the
threat f Russian air-atomic dom
ination by 1980.
Even 'more important, he said,
is development of 'superior "de
livery systems " including both
planes and inter-continental mis
siles. The Washington Democrat is
chairman of the military appli
cations - subcommittee of the
joint atomic energy, committee.
He said the subcommittee's cur
rent ' review of the military's
atomic requirements, "clearly in
dicates" atomic weapons produc
tion will have to be increased.
"By I960," Jackson said in
an interview, "Russia may weU
have air-atomic domination, with
a more effective delivery system,
unless something far more dras
tic is undertaken by the United
States in the way of atomic pro
duction." ; . ;
' "Our . present .air-atomic lead
is being shortened every day,"
he warned. '. -:i -.
SUMMIT AT GENEVA
Geneva UJ0 Here it i note
for lovers dt statistics: The alti
tude of the "summit' is 1,237
feet
LINEMAN KILLED ; .
Seattle U.R) Roy A. Mor
row, 58, Seattle, was killed yes
terday when he fen from the 40
foot utility pole on which he
was working as a City Light
lineman..
Ol the 7,083 islandTfiut com
prise the Philippines, only 412
of them are more than''
square mile In' area.
Did you know that . . . Owls
like other birds have good color
vision except in the blue bands.
Deer on the contrary, like other
northern woods' animals, see
only in black and white. Dogs,
too. are color blind.
Between our wild long-legged,
lean turkey and our short-legged,
plump turkey there is a vast
gulf. Just about as great a dif
ference as between a draft horse
and a racing thoroughbred.
Adult - brown bears climb
trees; adult grizzlies can't
couldn't even if they wanted to.
That's because the grizzly has
nearly straight claws while the
brown has long, curved fore
claws, ideal tools for climbing.
Hunts in Daytime
The beautiful snowy owl of
our, northland, which comes
down into the states during times
of food scarcity, does most of
its hunting during the daytime.
Also unlike other owls," it flies
in wide easy circles, swooping
on its. prey much like a hawk.
The- largest land bird in Eur
ope the male weighing up to
32 pounds, is the bustard, which
is . found in Spain today. A
century ago it was found in Eng
land. .
The sambar deer of southern
Asia shed their antlers every
three or four years, while other
deer shed them annually. Also,
unlike bur deer, the adults have
manednecks.
Alone among grouse, the
sage grouse has no gizzard. That
means it does not swallow grav
el as many other birds do to
help mill its food.
Male Broods Eggs
Of birds, the palm for father
ly devotion surely should go to
the male emu of Australia. -Not
only does he brood the eggs for
60 days but' he also raises the
chicks by himself chasing the
hen away whenever she threat
ens to meddle. ' -
The male : European toad . is
mighty helpful .too. When his
spouse lays a long string of eggs,
he twines them around his body
and carried them wherever he
goes until they hatch.
Ridiculous and monstrous as it
may look to anyone but another
puffin,-that schnozzle makes a
mighty handy creel. In returning
from, its fishing trips, the puffin
encloses the fish within its beak
and thus air-transports it back to
the burrow nest for home con
sumption. ' ;
(Released by McCIure
' Newspaper Syndicate) -
Free: By 'special arrangement
with the editors of the Encyclo
pedia Americana, my. panel; of
judges will award each week to
the readers who sends me the
best true-life . nature adventure,
or the best nature observation,
br the best question on nature
and wildlife a complete 30-vol-ume
set of this world-famous
reference' work in a handsome
Sealcraft binding. Each week,
new submissions will be consid
ered. Sorry, I simply can't an
swer your many friendly let
ters.-Please address your letter
to: IS THAT SO! care of the
Medford MaU Tribune, P.O. Box
575, Sausalito, Calif.
on
Seaside U.B Hazel-eyed 18-
year-old Dorothy Mae Johnson
of Beaverton was named - Miss
Oregon here late yesterday in a
contest slowed down . by the
closeness of the Six finalists.'
The beauteous brownette win
ner was a graduate of Beaver
ton high school. .
: Runner-up in the Oregon
beauty classic was Jan Markstal
ler, Miss Portland - and former
Rose Festival queen. Third place
went i to . Miss Lincoln county,
Patricia L. Kroutwick, 18. of
Toledo, Ore.
.. Thousands of spectators
jammed the resort community to
witness the final judging. Wit
nesses said the judging was so
close" that the announcement of
the winner had to be delayed
beyond the scheduled time of
4 pjn.
. Anne Thompson, Miss Forest
Grove, won fourth place. Donna
Marie - Davenport, Miss Coos
Bay, and Patricia Ann Schu
macher,. Miss Eugene, tied for
fifth.. - ;
Miss Johnson will represent
Oregon in the Miss America
contest to be held at Atlantic
City, N.J.
Niw Town Rising
From Tornado Ruin ,'
UdalL Kan. (UJ9 A new
UdalL in the new format of
modern suburban America, was
rising Saturday from the rubble
where about 80 persons died in
a soring tornado two months
am. -
Twenty new "nouses stood at
the townsite which boasted near
ly 200 less than 80 days ago,
and 25 others were under con
tract. Two service stations and
a bank were In fuU operation.
A grocery Store, hardware store-
lumber yard combination, and
blacksmith shop were back in
a . . - A.1 I
Business, or reaoy io open ucui
doors:. i 1
Named Miss Oreo
Tito Expected To Be
Frequently in Minds
Of Big 4 Conferees
Bt CHARLES McCAXH
United Press Foreign Analyst
President Tito of Yugoslavia
probably will be frequentty in
the minds of the Big Pour lead
ers who met to
day in Geneva.
. Seven years
ago, Tito was
just . the .Com
munist satel
lite ruler' of a
little Balkan
country of 11,
000,000.. . Today, he is
one of. the key
key figures of
c aulas aucaaa burope. .
Tito is being courted by . the
Kremlin, whose "summit" men
made a humiliating pilgrimage to
Belgrade to mend relations with
Protest Drafting
Miami, .Fla.-J(U) A devout
housewife' declaring she intends
to fast "unto death", today en
tered the third full day of her
hunger , strike .protesting the
drafting of her only, chUd.
Slender, dark haired Mrs.
Martha Blumenbach, 52, was re
ported weak but stiU determined
to f ulfUl a "pact between my
self and God" as a result of the
induction of her 26-year-old den
tist son. r
Nothing But Water"
- Her husband. Earl Blumen
bach,' a well-to-do businessman,
said - his wife had; consumed
nothing but a little water since
5:30 p.m. Friday, the day their
son, Dr. Thomas E. Blumenoacn,
was drafted. v
She did not feel strong enough
to attend church Sunday and
snent most of the day resting, he
said, but was in good condition
under the circumstances. She is
member of the Unity church.
Asked if a doctor, had been
railed. . he said. "That hasn't
been necessary, yet"
- Mrs. Blumenbach said that she
would try to attend to her usual
duties about' their large home in
an exclusive, residential area of
Coral Gables, Fla., while fulffll
ing her "pact" to starve unto
death."' ' - v " ;
Made Pact in 1840
' She said her father commit
ted suicide in protest against the
entry of his eldest son in mili
tarv service, during World Wt
I and that she made her pact
when the draft law of 1940 was
.enacted. ; ..
. The father and son, both deep
ly religious, indicated they sym
pathize with her motive but tne
elder Blumenbach said , "The
whole thing is very upsetting
rd rather not talk, about it."
Miss United States
Judging Under Way
Long Beach, CalitU At
tention in ' the Miss Universe
pageant shifted from foreign to
domestic beauties today when
judging began in the Miss Unit
ed States contest . ;
Winner of the Miss United
States title wiU be r decided
Wednesday and she will partici
pate in preliminary judging
Which starts Thursday for the
honor of the most beautiful girl
in the world. ; - ,;
Following a'mornfag rehear
sal session, the 75 Miss Universe
entries visited Universal-Inter
national studios where they met
several motion picture stars.
A crowd estimated at more
than 500,000 lined a 15-block
parade route yesterday to 'get a
look at the entries. , The .parade
lasted nearly two hours. '
In Every
Since 1900
PERL
. Funeral
Homo
4 -
Phone 2-6675
0
Mother
FUNERAL
i him.
I He' also is being courted, too,
by "neutralists"
Jawaharlal
Nehru of India
and U Nu of
Burma. ;.
King Paul and Queen Fred-
erika.of Greece are to pay Tito,
a Communist since his youth, a
state visit next month. .
Stale Visit Planned -.
On Tito's list of engagements
for the next few months are state
visits 'to Russia, France, Egypt,
Ethiopia and Lebanon.
It was in July, 1948, that Tito
broke with the Soviet bloc He
refused to subordinate the Inter
ests of his own country to those
of Russia.
- Nothing like that ever had hap
pened before in the Communist
world. It was predicted that Tito
would be overthrown by his own
Reds and executed, or assassi
nated by Kremlin gunmen.
Instead, Tito's men rallied , to
him. Ever since, he has been on .
the upgrade.
In 1948, Tito's relations, with
Greece and Turkey were danger,
ous. - '- " ' v - .
Now he has entered an alii- ,
ance with Greece and Turkey
against Soviet aggression. '
Feud Settlea
. Yugoslavia's feud with Italy
was ended when the Trieste area
was partitioned between the two
countries. - ', ; '
Tito's attitude wtil have to be
considered in all negotiations in
Geneva on a European security
organization. .
Not only has Yugoslavia one of
the best armies in Europe, but its
geographical position is import
ant. Yugoslavia borders . on ; Italy
and Greece, which are members
of the North Atlantic Treaty Or
ganization. It borders on Hun
gary, Romania, Bulgaria end Al
bania, which are members of the
Soviet satellite bloc. It borders
also on neutral Austria., , , z
There is considerable anxiety
in allied capitals lest Russia suc
ceed too weU in its wooing of
Tito. They are .afraid far, one
thing that his alliance - with
Greece and Turkey may be weak- .
ened. - : ;.-;
Tito keeps his. own counsel.
He has assured the allies that he
wiU keep Yugoslavia independ
ent He is pretty proud of his po
sition. ... ,
He said In ia speech in May that
one of Yugoslavia's greatest suc
cesseswhich means one of his
own greatest successes is that
the big powers have to talk to It
"as an equal member .in the.
world community."
Cripple Healed
- GEO. M.. TAYLOR
A cripple sat begging at the
temple gate. In his forty years
of life he had. never walked nor
even stood.
The Apostle
Peter passed
by and told
him, in the
name of Christ,
to rise and
walk. Instant
ly he leaped .
up and went
into the tem
ple walking
and leaping .
ahd praising ' , ,
God. This was done in Christ's
name even though Christ had
ascended back up to glory.
Christ's name is all powerful
with God. "In Christ's name,"
said Peter. Just as a rich man's
name m akes good the check you
present at the bank, so Christ's
name makes good tout prayer
with God.' Hear Christ's word
"Whatsoever yon ask the Father
in my name, he wiU give it -to
you. John 16:23. Receive ChrCt
as your Lord and Saviour who
died for your sins. Then you
can pray in His name ' and re
ceive an answer to your . prayer, i
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