Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, October 31, 1955, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    rOUQ DtOD (0t5t)HfL wtuftt
Mi
"Everybody Southern Or
ataca inp mail inpuct
Published Daily xcept Saturdge b
7-29 North Fir St Pfaoi 141
ROBERT W RUHL. Editor
HyR GRY 4Mvertiing Vrf
E C. FERGUSON Managing Eaiwr
(?RIC ALLEN JR.. City Editor
HAJStt CHIP MAN. Teiegragh lit
RICHARD JEWETT Sport ditor
Uil STARCHER. Society Editor
0C JACKSON Sunday Editor
63Ai-D LATHAM. Circulation y.
3ijn Independent NewsrHcar
...
Jnteil as second class matter t
(jHeiford. Oregon, under Act ol
March 3. 1897
SUBSCRIPTION BATS
By Mail In Advance: Per copy 10c.
Daily and Sunday One year $12.0a
Daily and Sunday Six months 6.3
Daily and Sunday Three moa. 3J0
KnnHav ftnlv Ona vear S3.50.
By Carrier In Advance Medfqjd.
Asniana. central roini. ucic
Jackaonvtlleo Gold Hill. Phoenix.
Shady CoveT Rogue River. Talent
and on motor routes:
Daily and Sunday One year S15 .00
Daily and Sunday One montfc lis
CarSer and Dealers 5c peropy.
All Terms Cash in Aavance
Official .Paper ot the City of Medford
Officii?! Paper of Jackson County
TTnitori Proa Full Leased Wire
' MEMB7J OF AUDIT BUREAU
WEST-HOLLIDAY COMPANY INC.
Offices in New York. Chicago De
. troi. San Francisco. Los An81?
Seattle. Portland. St. Louis Atlanta.
Vancouver B.C.
NATIONAL EDITORIAL
ASSOCHTIIO.N
J
fc"iB"'H'IU"
newspaper
PUBLISHERS
ASSOCIATION
Flinlif o' Time
Medford and Jackson, County!
t u r9 ThA I
nisiory irom
Mail Tribune 10, 20. 30 and
40 years ago.
10 YE,ARS AGO
Oct. 31, 1945
(It wafc Wednesday)
Southern Oregon educational
conference for Jackson and
Josephine county teachers starts
at Ashland. O
Frflh Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: Smoke
cloiujls rising over the waters of
Crater Lake give rise to theories
a new volcano is in the making.
Thelouds are composed of gas
and steam. Nothing definite is
known relative to the source of
the hot air, except that it is not
emanating from a politician.
20 YEARS AGO
Oct. 31, 1935
. p (It was Thursday)
' Senotor Charles L. McNary of
Salem, Fred Scheffel, city super
intendent, and A. H. Banwell.
manager of Chamber of Comn
merce, inspect Medford airport.
' Snov continues to fall in
Rogue Valley 14 inches over
Crater Lake.
30 YEARS AGO
Oct. 31, 1925
(It was Saturday)
People warned not to eat
ducks afflicted with disease in
Tule lake area.
Medford City council dis
cusses ways of keeping Jackson
ville railroad.
40 YEARS AGO
Oct. 31, 19S5
(It was Sunday)
Jessie Howard elected chair
man of Rebekah convention to
be held in Medford in 1916;
Anna Myer of Ashland elected
vice-chairman at fJEentral Point
meeting.
From Local and Personal col
o umn: Local taxicabs are being
watched closely on account of
numerous reports to the effect
that they are frequently and
sometimes brazenly guilty of ex
ceeding the speed of 16 miles an
hour within the city limits. Chief
Hittson has put a few plain
clothes men on the firing line
with stop watches and the taxi
terrors may be haled into court
any hour.
What's the Answer?
Can You Get 4 of the 7?
Cepr. 1955. Editorial Research Rapart
1. Most of the Saar industrial
area lies between France and W.
Germany, W. and E. Germany,
Belgium and France, or Belgium
and Lukemburg?
2. The 1955 session of Congress
did or didn't vote a big increase
in Congressional salaries?
3. A typical human heart
pumps blood at the rate of about
16, 60, 160 or 600 gallons an
iour?
4. The Negro ra$ is now rep
resented in the U. S. House of
Representatives. Also in the
U. S. Senate?
f 5. Which of these aren't mem
bers of U.N.: Canada, Eire (Ire
land), Italy, Japan, Spain, Swit
zerland? 6. About one-third, one-half or
two-thirds of all U. S. cars made
in the last three years had auto
matic transmission?
- 7. Petite Marmite is a French
dish: soup, quaU on toast, small
cake, snail, or half-portion for
a child?
The Answers: 1. France and
West Germany; 2. Did; 3. About
160; 4. No; 5. All except Can
ada aren't; 6. About half; 7.
Soup. - .
Porcupines...
Wt vitw 4fct porcupint with mixed feelings.
Whilt it is trut that w have always had a sneak
ing tfftction lor tht slow, stupid, ambling rodents,
we're, confronted by the fact that they are a major
dange? to young, growing trees. And trees are vastly
important to tht teonomy of Oregon. That's the spot
we'rt on.
i
N tarlif ye, woods propaganda was all pro-por-
rnnine. "Don't kill norcuDines." we were told, be
cause they are so slow and so stupid tht they are easy
to kill, and thus form a major potential supply of food
for those lost in the woods.
But Btimes change. Porcupines are no longer re
garded as emergency four-footed larders for lost peo
ple. They are considered as economic menaces. And
we are sorry this is so.
"Kill porcupines," is the wprd now. One youngster
we read about had a huge collection of salted porcu
pine noses to brag about. And it has gone so far that
the information service of the Western Pine associa
tion has put out a bulletin saying that porcupine
recipes are being compiled in order to stimulate ap
petites as a means of hastening the demise of our
prickly friends.
'J'HE Pine Association bulletin says:
It has reached a point where porcupine damage must be
rated right along with forest devastation caused by insects,
diseases and forest, fires. Forest agencies this year, among
their attempts to control the pest, called upon hunters to
shoot porcupines whenever they ran on to them in the
woods. But it is felt if the porkies could be fileted, broiled,
barbecued or roasted to make them attractively edible, the
incentive to search them out would be greatly increased.
Pretty sneaky, if you ask us.
MO ONE has asked us. But we might point out that
porcupines, while they're not asking for recipes
featuring humans, do have wide and varied dietary
habits. A recent mailing from the National Geograph
is Society reports that a porcupine will not only eat
the inner bark of trees, thus destroying or damaging
up to 100 trees in a winter they also are inordinately
fond of salt-flavored articles. .
They chew ax handles, golf clubs, canoe paddles
and other items which have absorbed human perspir
ation. So the porcupine, whose spines are purely for de
fense, and who asks nothing but to be left alone, is
becoming the victim of his own appetite, and has in
curred the wrath of foresters and loggers who can't
be blamed, either.
We still think it's kind of too bad. E.A.
...And Kangaroos...
Another animal has earned the enmity of man, on
the other side of the world. Sheepmen and farmers in
Australia complain that kangaroos are settling down
on lush pastures, and doing an immense amount of
damage to fences and crops.
The Australian Agricultural Newsletter informs
us that open seasons have been declared in a number
of districts. One grazier killed more than 400 kang
aroos on his property in four week ends, with a total
of more than 2,000 killed in two years. The pouched
marsupials are still present in great numbers despite
these killings.
V
"THE Aussies blame a succession of good seasons and
" improved fodder pastures for the fact that the
kangaroos Rave abandoned migratory habits. The
Newsletter says:
Farmers also report that the abundance of feed seems
to have made them lazy. Rather than bound over a fence
which they could clear easily, they jump against it, crushing
it to the ground and allowing stock and other pests access to J
growing crops. The damage cone in this way is very serious
and is one of the main jeasons why permits for open sea
sons have been granted over such wide areas.
E.A.
...And Rabbits
" m '
-All this recalls the fact that Australia has had its
troubles before with animal pests. Rabbits were in
troduced there in the last century and, encountering
no natural enemies, multiplied so fast that they soon
became a majornenace.
Australians were desperate to stop the hordes of
rabbits, grown into the millions, which were overrun-
ing the land. They organized drives, built high fences
for thousands of miles, tried poisoning, shooting,
clubbing. Nothing seemed to help.
DUT within the past few years, a disease which is
particularly rough on rabbits, but which skips
most other animals, was deliberately introduced into
the rabbit population, and today they are almost gone.
The moral, if any, seems to be for animals to do
nothing to irritate mankind. It's usually fatal. E.A.
Lakeview Uranium
Lakeview (U.R) Dr. Garth
W. Thornburg, a Colorado min
ing company official, Saturday
said carloads of uranium ore
shipped from the Lakeview area
were running between .30 and
.50 per cent uranium.
Dr. Thornburg of Thornburg
Bros., Mining Comgany of
Grand Junction, Colo., said the
percentage was indicative of a
"good commercial ore." Vitro
Uranium Company of Salt Lake
City, which purchased the ore,
had three carloads tested at a
sampling plant at Murray, Utah.
The Thornburgs have formed
the Lakeview Mining Company
here, which was operating core
Voslay, Oeloker 31, 1155
Ore Tests 'Good'
drilling rigs at the White King
and Lucky Lass mines, which
were under lease.
Dr. Thornburg said drillings
thus far "are more than satis
factory." The domestic turkey in the
United States is a descendant of
the Mexican turkey which was
taken to Europe by the Spanish
in the 16th century. From Spain
the turkeys went to England and
then to the United States.
The' first cargo of iron ore
passed through the Sault Ste.
Marie canal from Lake Super
ior in 1855. .. .. :
Washington
DELAYED JUSTICE
IS INJUSTICE
Washington Most Americans
feel and rightly, I think that
justice under the law is part of
the heart and center or the demo
cratic process. If it is widely
denied, democracy itself is in
peril.
There is reason for genuine
concern today. Not that the
judicial process is inequitable,
not that it is unfair. But when
justice is grievously delayed,
justice is in reality being denied.
Throught the United States
courts, justice is today being
grievously delayed. The delays
are getting worse, not better.
Nothing that Congress and the
Justice Department have done
thus far is equal to the problem.
The logjam in the courts is
mounting. More cases are long
er delayed than ever before.
This is why Chief Justice War
ren has been pressing for a whole
series of reforms in the Federal
courts.
This is why Deputy Attorney
General William P. Rogers has
desscribed the logjam in the
metropolitan districts as "de
plorable" and is by way of be
coming "a disgrace to the na
tion." This is why Henry P. Chand
ler, Director of the Administra
tive office of the U. S. Courts,
has called the increasing con
gestion and delay in cjviT cases
"a serious evil" desperately need
ing correction.
This is why President Eisen
hower authorized Attorney Gen
eral Herbert BOrownell to put
the Administration behind new
legislation at the coming session
of Congress.
TN 1954 Congress created thirty
A new judgeships.-
A year later the backlog of
.civil cases in the United States
District Courts totaled 68,832
as against 68,431 in 1954. Civil
case's terminated in 1955 increas
ed from 57,903 in the previous
year to 58,974. Though more
cases were completed, the back
log grew.
The criminal case backlog
lightened slightly but only be
cause the courts gave priority to
criminal cases at the expense of
civil litigation.
Deputy Attorney General Rog
ers frankly says that we -have
now reached a point Wherein
j justice is so delayed that it means
On The Side
(Distributed by King
How many things can you
name of which the price hasn't
been raised in 50 years? Off
hand I can think of only one.
That is the fare on the Staten
Island ferry which is still 5 cents.
That is the country's greatest
travel bargain. Five and a 'half
miles for a nickel. A beautiful
ride too. Furthermore, you al
ways get a seat. The Staten Is
land commuters are among the
few people in this country who
find their journey to and from
work a pleashre.
Says She
"Your constant references to
successful persons born under
Leo is becoming boring and irri
tating," writes a feminine sub
scriber. "You neglect to men
tion some Leos whose careers
and personalities were far from
attractive. For example, Musso
lini, was a Leo. Men born nnder
Leo are conceited, overbearing,
critical and exacting. They do a
lot of sulking and whining and
being very moody are' much
given to singing the blues. They
are also terrible flirts. My first
husband was a Leo and when I
think of my life with him it
makes me shudder. Leo women
are no bargains either. ' Their
husbands are usually poor hen
pecked wretches."
Passing By
Dick Maney. Distinguished
Broadwayite. A character mem
ber of the Circle to the Square
Association of Bathtub Singers.
Recent additions to his program
of matutinal music are that
touching ballad titled "Only a
Rose With a Broken Stem" and
the lively ditty called "Clancy's
Wooden Wedding." Mr. Maney
is a whispering baritone.
Receptionists
Young women possessed of
what it takes to be a good re
cap tionist are much in demand
in New York. Average salary for
this type of office queen is $60
a week. Speaking of the help
wanted situation in Manhattan,
I note office boys are being of
fered $50 a week! When I was
an office boy in downtown Man
hattan my salary was $4 a week.
I was robbed.
Wise Decision
The decision of Nashua's own
er to pass up California and race
his noble animal in Florida is a
wise one. It will avoid another
meeting with Swaps. Must also
be considered that many great
eastern horses of the past -have
failed sadly in the Santa Anita
Handicap, which is the toughest
of all great stake races to win.
Such great eastern thorough
breds as Equipoise, Twenty
Grand, Discovery and Armed
were "also rans" in the Santa
Anita "Hundred Grander." Ci
tation did a little better. He
finished second.
Asking
Queries from clients. Q. Was
Lucrezia Borgia a blonde or a
brunette? -A. Se was a natural
Roseoe Drummond
"justice denied." Describing the
time-lag in the courts, one expert
points to these facts:
"The medium time for dispos
ition of civil cases which were
terminated by trial in District
Courts, with or withort jury, in
creased from 13.5 months to
1954 to 14.6 months in. 1955.
"The time lag for cases tried
by a judge without jury was 16.7
months in 1955. Litigants wait
ed 12.6 months for cases tried
by a jury.".
But these figures put the best
face on the problem. Look at
what happens in the most con
gested courts. There the med
ian time lags in 1955 were:
Southern New York, 45.9 months
between the filing and the term
ination of a case; Eastern New
York, 45.1; Northern Ohio, 33.2;
Western Pennsylvania, 31.6; Col
orado, 29.5 months.
Eight years ago the median
time on civil cases was nine
months.
BECAUSE of the long tenure
of. the Roosevelt and Tru
man administrations, the J. lance
of the Federal judiciary is large
ly Democratic. There is, of
course, no reason to assume that
Democratic-appointed judges are
responsible for creating this
time-lag any more than there is
reason to assume that the Republican-appointed
judges have
made it worse; but the uneven
level of judges is reflected in an
uneven work load. Better judges
are needed as well as more
judges. "The Congressional
Quarterly" makes this interest
ing report on the current mem
bership of the Federal courts:
Court Dem. Rep. Vac.
Supreme 6 3 0
Circuit 44 22 2
District 159 85 5
Claims 4 10
Customs & Pat
ent Appeals... 3.1 1
Customs 4 5 0
Total 220
117
The problem of delayed justice
which -means something near
to denied justice is not part
isan, and at the next session of
Congress there ought to be a bi
partisan willingness to equip the
third coordinate branch of the
government with the qualified
manpower to do its job.
Licking this grievous time-lag
is urgent business.
Copyright 1955,
New York Herald Tribune, Inc.
by e. v. Durimg
Faaturaa Syndicate. Inc.)
brunette but featured dyed
blonde hair ... Q. Is it possible
for a girl five feet one to get a
position as a dress model in New
York City? I mean is it a fact
that only tall giantess type fe
males can get such positions? A.
There are openings in New York
for petite type models who meas
ure from five feet four to five
feet six with heels. So, using
three-inch heels, a girl five feet
one would be eligible.
Please Note
"Physiognomical Haircutting."
That's what a midtown Manhat
tan tonsorial parlor announces it
features. I may drop in there
for a physiognomical haircut
shortly and will report the re
sults. I am always willing to
try anything once. Well, nearly
anything.
Brooklyn Again '
Brooklyn is in again with
something for Texas, California
or even Baltimore to try to top.
The Jewish Hospital in Brook
lyn is claimed to be the locale
of more births annually than any
other hospital in the country.
More than 5,000 infants annual
ly first see the light of day in
that hospital. ,
Briefly
' When a thoroughbred is said
to have won "by three lengths,"
how far ahead was he in feet and
inces? Not one turf fan in a hun
dred can tell you what the aver
age length of a thoroughbred
is . . . Am asked why Navy men
are caUed "Gobs." All I know
about it is that "gob" is the
Chinese word for sailor.
Local Products
The skill of London's famous
Savile Row iailcrs cannot be
questioned. Yet some distin
guished residents of London
have their clothes made by a
tailor on East Fifty-ninth street,
Manhattan. The workmanship
of the British bootmakers is un
questionably superb but there
are equally skilful makers of
made to order shoes in New
York. Speaking of local products
as compared to imports there
is a shop in the East Sixties in
Manhattan which regularly sends
eight pound fruit cakes to the
King of Norway. They are His
Majesty's favorite fruit cakes.
Portland Dry Cleaners
Schedule Price Boost
Portland (U.R) A majority
of Portland area dry cleaners
will raise their prices Nov. 1,
according to Thomas T. George,
Jr., industry spokesman.
Georges said the price in
creases will range from 5 to 10
cents for skirts and pants and
other half garments, and 10 to 15
cents for dresses and suits.
The increases were recom
mended by a survey of the area
by the National Institute of Dry
Cleaning which showed higher
labor and supply costs.
Read and Use Classified Ada. . . ,
The Community' Biggest Jdaxketplace
Time in for an Outdoor Quiz.
A score of 60 is fair to middling;
75 is good; 90 is excellent mak
ing you an Outdoor Expert. An
swers follow questions.
1. What are the right ani
mals for the following five state
ments (10 points each):
1. This great animal gives
birth to a tiny one-pound baby
during its long twilight sleep.
2. What animal made many
of the trafls over hills and plains
of North America routes so
well "engineered" that many of
our highways and railways have
been built upon them?
3 . Several ocean - dwelling
animals nurse their young.
Which is the largest?
4. Severaf North American
game animals are expert jump
ers. Of these, which is the long
est broad jumper?
5. Name the two most com
mon animals which carry their
young in skin pouches?
II. Of man's modern inven
tions, nature perfected many
first. Match the animal with the
invention it utilizes: 1. Aba
lone, 2. bat, 3. flying squirrel, 4.
scorpion, 5. snake w.ith these:
radar, hypodermic needle, anes
thetic, parachute, suction cup.
(Score 10 points for each right
answer.)
Answers: 1. The right animals
are: 1, bear, 2. bison, 3. whale,
4. deer the white tail or Vir
ginia deer has been measured
10-51 Hv
by a running broad jump of 40
feet, 2 inches;! 5. kangaroo and
opossum.
II. 1. Today's popular suction
cups have been used for eons
by sea snails of which the Cali
fornia abalone is one. 2. The bat
used radar long before man. As
it flies, it emits a series of sup
ersonic cries unheard by hu
mans but audible to the bat it
self. As the cries bounce off
various objects, they warn the
bat of its approach to obstruc
tions. , '3. The flying squirrel spreads
forelegs and hindlegs outward
so that the skin along its sides
forms a parachute as it glides
from tree to tree.
.4. The scorpion's tail which
he uses for his poisonous injec
tions is a perfect hypodermic
needle. " i
5. In biting, the snake applies
an 'anesthetic. It paralyzes and
desensjtizes its' prey before eat
ing it.
(Released by
McClure 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
true-life nature adventure, the
best nature observation, or the
best question on nature and wild
life, a complete 30-volume set of
this world - famous reference
work in a handsome Sealcraft
binding. Each week, new sub
missions wiU be considered.
Sorry, I simply can't answer your
many friendly letters. Please
address your letter to: IS THAT
SO! care Medford Mail-Tribune,
Box 575, Sausalito, Calif.
Polio 'Shots' '
Planned at Nyssa
Nyssa U.R) A mass inocula
tion program for certain resi
dents of the Nyssa area to com
bat a polio epidemic will be
started tomorrow. .
- Dr. Samuel Osgood, epidemi
ologist for the State Board of
Health, said gamma' globulin
shots will be offered to all preg
nant women and to all other per
sons under 25 years of age living
in the Nyssa school district.
He said the shots would be
given on a strictly voluntary ba
sis but he expected about 3000
persons to receive the gamma
globulin.
The clinic will open Tuesday
and probably continue through
the rest of the week, Dr. Os
good said.
He said the State Board of
Health would supervise the clin
ic and services of doctors, nurses
and public health officials in the
area were being donated. The
gamma globulin will be fur
nished free of charge by the Na
tional Foundation for Infantile
Paralysis.
Dr. Osgood said at last count
.wise V; -S
Confusion in French
Morocco May Result
In Eventual Peace
By CHARLES M. McCANrf
United Press Correspondent
French Morocco resembles, at
the moment, a sort of political
merry-go-round.
The Moroccan Nationalists are
taking France
for a ride on
it. . o
S t r a ngely
enough, how
ever, there
seems 1 to be
reason for
hope that
when-the ride
is over, peace
may be re
stored. rr. .
c nar les Met aim i w o years
ago, France forced pro-Nationalist
Sultan Sidi Mohammed Ben
Youssef from the throne and
exiled him to the island of Mad
agascar off the East African
CcSst.
Pro-French Sidi Mohammed
Ben Moulay Arafa, his uncle,
was put on the throne. The Na
tionalists always opposed him.
. On Oct. 4 France forced Mau
lay Arafa out and sent him to
neighboring, Tangier.
Moulay Arafa did not formal
ly quit. He announced, in fact,
that he was still sultan.
Council Set Up
President Rene Coty of France
Retiring Highway
Engineer Honored
Salem (U.R) Howard G.
Smith, state highway construc
tion engineer who is retiring
after 36 years with the high
way Department, and Mrs.
Smith T;ere honored by some
400 persons at a banquet here
Friday night.
Smith was first employed in
1919 as resident engineer and
then division engineer at Baker.
He was praised by State High
way Engineer R. H. Baldock for
his boldness in highway design,
his worward look In highway
development and his strict but
fair standards in construction
work.
Highway Dep artment em
ployees presented the Smiths
with a five piece luggage spt
and a merchandise certificate.
Contractors whose work Smith
had supervised presented an
electric clock in a case hand
carved from Oregon Myrtle-
wood, and a watch and chain.
NAMED Russell C. Harring
ton (above), 65-year-old Provi
dence, R. I., accountant and
lifelong Republican, was
named by Treasury Secy.
George M. Humphrey to be
the nation's top tax collector.
He will succeed T. Coleman
Andrews as commissioner of
internal revenue when ap
pointment is approved by
President Eisenhower.
there were 37 cases of nolio re
ported in the Nyssa area of Mal
heur county.
Since 1 908
PERL
Mortuary
Phone
sent him a letter promising that
Youssef never would be restored.
A four-man Throne Council
was set up to act in place of the
sultan and Premier Si Fatmi
Ben Slimane was named pre
mier. ' '
At the same time, France ar
ranged to take Youssef to France
from Madagascar as a gesture
to the Nationalists, who had
made him a symbol of their
fight for independence. ,
Last Wednesday came a start
ling development. El Glaoui, the
powerful pasha or governor of
the Morrakjssh area, announced
that be thought Yousftf ought
to be sultan.
El Glaoui, a lifelong friend of
Moulay Arafa, had helped to
force Youssef from the throne.
Youssef returned to France
from Madagascar today in a spe
cial French plane.
Premier Ben Slimane and th
four members of the Throne
Council flew to France to wel
come Youssef back. '
Now the word from Morocco
is that it seems to be only a
question of time before Youssef
is back on the throne. v
It looks as if Coty might have
to tell Moulay Arafa that he
didn't mean "positively" when
he said Youssef would not be
restored. '
But authoritative advices from
Morocco now report that Moulay
Arafa himself has written Coty
saying that Youssef really ought
to have the job.
Situation Confusing
Another surprise came Friday
when the "Presence Francaise"
organization issued a statement
saying that the throne question
was one for Moroccans alone to
decide.
The "Presence Francaise" is
that anti-Nationalist, anti-independence
organization of French
colonists in Morocco. The col
onists have always detested,
Youssef because of his Nation
alist leanings.- .
Like everything in French
politics right now, the situation
is confusing.'
The fact is, however, that the
Moroccans fervently desire Yous
sef's restoration. Crowds ran
through the streets of Moroccan
cities shrieking in joy when they
heard that Youssef was going to
France.
Another fact is that Youssef is
now prepared to cooperate with
France in a program of limited
home rule.
Hence, when ; the .confusion
ends,;4t may turn out that thei
harried French government has
found at least a temporary solu
tion of the Moroccfe 'crisis de
spite itself. s -
Her Unborn Babe
GEO. N. TAYLOR
Her daughter had been before
the Juvenile Court in Los An
geles and the mother had come
to her pastor
for his advice
Pastor asked
the mother if
she had ever
prayed with
the daughter
'Pastor, that is
the trouble.
We never pray
ed together."
Using that as
a starter, the
pastor told his
audience that mothers should be
gin with pre-natal prayers for
the babe yet to be born. Believ
ers must also give themselves to
prayer, if they are to tell others
of Christ's death for their sins.
George Mueller, a great man of
prayer, prayed often ' for the
conversion of three elderly men:
None was converted but all
came to Chr&t after Mueller's
death. God works when you pray
"Whatsoever you ask the Fa
ther in My name, he will give it
to you." So said Christ John
16:23.
, This Message sponsored by an
Oregon Dairyman. adv.
2 - 6675
V
FINER
FUNERAL0
SERVICES
o
A every price range