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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 6, 1956)
FOUR MEDFORD (OREGON) MEDFORDtlilTKIBUJiE "Everybody In Southern Oregon Reads The Mall Tribune" Published Daily Except Saturday by MEDFORD PRINTING CO. S7-29 North Fir St. Phone 2-6141 ROBERT W. RUHL. Editor , EERB GREY. Advertising Manager GERALD LATHAM. Business Manager ERIC ALLEN JR.. Managing Editor XARL H. ADAMS. City Editor HARRY CHIP MAN, Telegraph Editor RICHARD JEWETT. Sports Editor OLIVE STARCHER. Society Editor pALE ERICKSON. Circulation Mgr. An IndeDendent Newspaper Entered as second class matter at Mediord, Oregon, under Act of March 3. 1897 SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mail In Advance: Per Copy 10c. Daily and Sunday One year 12.00 Daily and Sunday Six months 60 Daily and Sunday Three mos. 3.50 Sunday Only One year $3-50. Ashland. Central Point. Eagle Point, Jacksonville, rOia nui, "1' Shady Cove. Rogue River, Talent, DaUy and Sunday One year 515.00 Daily and unoay une muuu Carrier and Dealers 5c per copy. All Terms Cash in Advance Official Paper of the City of Meafora Official Paper of Jackson County llnitpd Press Full Leased Wire MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULAR iuji . Advertising nepic3cuiiv..-. WEST-HOLLIDAY COMPANY INC. Offices in New iorK. uuk5. troit, San Francisco. Los Angeles " Seattle. Portland. St. Louis. Atlanta Vancouver.. B.C. NATIONAL EDITORIAL lASSOCfATLQN 7 W NEWSPAPER. PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION 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 Feb. 6. 1946 at was Wednesday) Installation of parking meters In Medford starts tomorrow. From Arthur Perry's Ye Smudge Pot column: Weather prediction for rain, finally got around to holding water. 20 YEARS AGO Feb. 6. 1936 (It was Thursday) Bay J. Schumacher, Talent grocer, announces candidacy for Democratic candidate for nom ination as county treasurer. - Cold wave from north expect ed to drop temperatures in Rogue Valley to between 15 and 20 degrees. 80 YEARS AGO Feb. 6, 1926 (It was Saturday) Pacific Highway designated Highway 99 throughout state by metal signs.. From Rogue River news: The Rebekahs made merry after lodge Thursday evening by holding an other one of their birthday socials. The evening was spent with cards and in dancing. 40 YEARS AGO Feb. 6. 1916 (It was Sunday) F. B. Keeney, prominent and popular poultry judge, to judge at local chicken show. Members of Dead Indian Cat tle and Horse Raisers' associa tion discuss grazing problems at public library meeting. What's the Answer? Can You Get 4 of the 7? Copr. 1955, Editorial Research Report Can You Get 4 of the 7? 1. An anti-segregation amend ment to the bill for federal aid to schools is favored or opposed by the National Education As sociation? 2. The 1956 winter Olympics were held at Cortina d'Ampezzo, which is in the mountains of Switzerland. Yugoslavia, Aus tria, Italy or France? 3. You must have paid a poll tax in order to vote in most Southern states; right or wrong? 4. Queen Elizabeth is on an official visit to British territory in Africa; Union of South Africa, Kenya, Nigeria, or Rho desia? 1 5. Hawaii and Puerto Rico do or don't have delegates to the Republican and Democratic na tional conventions? 6. To be classed as a hurricane a tropical storm must have a wind velocity of at least (a) 50, (b) 75,' (c) 100 or (d) 125 miles per hour? . 7. A man named Duryea helped in the development of autos, surgery under anesthetics, TV, atomic fission or jet planes? The Answers: 1. Opposed; 2. Italy; 3. Wrong (in some, not most); 4. Nigeria; 5. Do; 6. At least 75; 7. Autos. ARRESTS HIS FATHER Manila, PJ.-OJ.P.) Police Of ficer Aguedo Atasan has made good his long standing boast that he would arrest any drunk he found on his beat in Mambajao, Camiguin island. He arrested his father, Tomas Atasan,' Saturday night, and jailed him for being a Dublic nuisance. r " " " nri Hn SiiTiiiav Classified Is at Monday: other days 5:30 previous day. noon Saturday. 10 aja. Monday for MAIL TRIBUNE Pure Speculation The untimely death of Gov! Paul Patterson last week has made the 1956 election race in Oregon the most "wide open" on in the memory of most political observers. Not only has it revised all estimates of the sen atorial election, but it has created the necessity for another major contest, that for governor. HTWO men who have already announced their can didacy for lesser offices were known to have been eyeing the senate race against Sen. Wayne Morse until it became obvious" Governor Patterson would decide to run. . - . . These are ' State Sen. John Merrifield, Portland insurance man who said recently he would seek re election, and State Sen. Mark Hatfield, personable young college professor, an announced candidate for secretary of state. It is entirely possible either or both could withdraw from these races and go after the "big one." State Rep. Elmer Deetz, Canby dairyman, is already in. the contest, although few take his can didacy seriously. . OTHER than these logical possibilities, there are Congressman Walter Norblad, of the First Con gressional district, who long has thought it would be nice to be a senator; Dorothy McCullough Lee, for mer Portland mayor now a member of the federal prison board; former State Sen. William Walsh, Coos Bay; Eugene Marsh,. McMinnville attorney who has served in both the state house and senate as speaker and president, and others. Secretary of the Interior Douglas McKay has stated repeatedly he will not again run for public of fice, and plans to retire to his home in Salem at the end of this year., But because of his stature, he will undoubtedly be under heavy pressure- to run against Morse, for whom he has a cordial dislike. Some GOP politicos believe he is the only Oregonian who would have a chance against Morse. Senator Morse, of course, is virtually conceded the Democratic nomination. ' AS FOR the governorship, a race no one had antici noforl (lrT TTlmn Smith nvnViJlVilv rifles fl.n aHvan- UUT. XJAAAAV UUlUU JJi VJML tage if he wishes to run for election to succeed him self. Earl Newbry, secretary of state, cannot constitu tionally succeed himself in that office, and may again try for governor. He was defeated by. Patter son in. the primary election two. years ago. One. or more of the Republican potential aspirants for the senate could decide to be a candidate for the GOP nomination for governor. Tom Lawson McCall, Port land radio man and defeated congressional candi date, is another possibility. , The Democratic side of the picture is less clear, since the senate race is . a . it trie vacancy m tne governorship was not expecteu. Some possibilities include Monroe Sweetland, state senator, national committeeman, and announced can didate for secretary of state; Howard Morgan, former representative and now state party chairman; Robert Holmes, state senator ana Astoria raaioman; josepn Carson, who was defeated in 1951 by Patterson, , and possibly Lew Wallace, perennial office-seeker and former legislator, who has indicated he plans to run for some office but has not yet announced what one. THERE are a few other possibilities, including for mer State Sen. Phil Hitchcock, who once toyed with the idea of running for the U.S. senate; William Healy, announced candidate for secretary of state, who is thought to be ultimately ambitious for even higher office; former State Treasurer Walter Pear son, and Attorney General Robert Y. Thornton, who, although an announced candidate to succeed himself, may now decide to run for a higher post. The first two are Republicans; the latter two, Democrats. There is one other strong "dark horse'-7 possibility in the Democratic party Terry Sphrunk, now sheriff of Multnomah county. Personable and well thought of, he was at first believed to be planning to run for secretary of state until Sweetland announced for the office. Since, he has been discussed as a possible can didate for mayor of Portland. But he, too, could now easily decide to seek statewide office. - ' . - ; --.. "THE LINES will be drawn by the filing deadline March 9, but in the meantime, there will be much talk and jockeying for position m both parties. Combine all this with the races for attorney gen eral, state treasurer and four congressional seats, as well as the unpredictable Presidential election, and we can foresee a full and interesting -campaign year in Oregon. E.A. , Police Should police cars be readily identifiable? Or should they be plain and unrecognizable as such? According to the Oregon State Motor Association, about 90.5 per cent of Oregon drivers think they should be clearly marked. The OSMA said the most frequent remark from those queried. was: "If I am being stopped, I am en titled to know that it is by authority of the law." - "11713 ARE inclined to . agree with this majority " with reservations. . There are occasions in police work, particularly in criminal investigations, where the use of a marked car could easily make a successful job impossible. (; Those opposing marking police cars said drivers are more likely to obey traffic laws if they don't know wjiether the next' car might contain an officer. In actual practice, most police departments these days use both kinds of cars, the marked ones for traf fic enforcement and routine patrol work, unmarked cars for detective investigation. It seems to work out r-Nvpf fv -rppll F! A iJlcl'V cu. la. A. Monday, February 6, 1956 one-man proposition, and V V 1 i Jl Cars Crisis in French North Declared Entering New ; By CHARLES M. McCANN United Press Correspondent France's chronic crisis in North Africa has entered a new phase. Socialist Premier Guy WWmn$?3 Mollet, con- j3 firmed by the n a t i onal As sembly only last. Wednes day, is flying to Algeria to look at things there. Habib Bour guiba, nation alist leader in Charles McCamr . runisia, reacn ed agreement in principle with Mollet in Paris Friday on a pro gram of home rule in that pro tectorate. Sultan Sidi Mohammed Ben Youssef is going to Paris Feb. 14 to negotiate with Mollet on Morocco. Mollet and his coalition Cab inet have given French North Africa No. 1 priority on the long list of their problems. Algeria comes first in importance among the three North African units. It is evident that, in an at tempt to keep North Africa from going the way of Indochina, Mol let is prepared to make big con cessions to burning nationalist spirit. Desperate Situation It is an almost desperate situ ation. Unless France can .' hold North Africa, its empire now more politely called the French Union will be virtually Wreck ed. And France's status as a great world power will be en dangered. Whether Mollet and his shaky government can retrieve he situation nobody knows. For one thing, the more con cessions the nationalists- get in Communications Letters to the Editor must bear the name and address of the writer although under certain circum stances the use of a pen name or initial for publication is permis lible. The Mail Tribune reserves the right to edit all letters with an eye to clarification and condensa tion Letters submitted for publica tion must not exceed 400 words. About Mexico . To the Editor: This is a letter of comment ; concerning .-. an article which appeared in the Medford Mail Tribune, Sunday, Jan. 29. The article dealt with a recent motor tour of Mexico made by Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Gregg of Central Point, and pur ported, I assume, to enlighten your readers as to travel, liv ing and general conditions to be found south of the border. If such an enlightenment was the purpose, the article failed. As a recent returnee from Mexico myself I feel it my duty to cor rect many of the misstatements made. Mr. Gregg leads off by stating that the Mexican side of the Nogales, Ariz., border fence is, in effect, a "black hole of Cal cutta." He says that a foul stench permeates the area, filth runs rampant in the gutters, nak ed children parade the streets, and further south in the coun try, countless half-starved ani mals roam the highways. This is not merely an indictment of this area alone but, after read ing the article, one gets the im pression that such conditions must exist elsewhere through out the entire country. They do not exist in Sonora nor do they exist elsewhere in Mexico'. Referring to the western section Of the country in particular, Mr. Gregg, described pollution, but it is, in fact, a series, of pictur esque, peaceful villages, made fragrant by a combination des ert-sea breeze with a cool, clean waft that one never forgets. For -some 23 years I have been an active participant in further ing the welfare of all animals Nowhere could one find a hap pier group of beasts than those living in Mexico. I state this categorically, . without any res ervation whatsoever, and I might add, from personal experience and inspection. They eat as well as possible under, in some in stances, adverse conditions, and often the animals eat when the peon-owner does not. .In thous ands of cases, the peon is entire, ly dependent on his animalf and the treatment they . receive is necessarily .. excellent. This, in many instances, goes as far as feeding and bedding the beast in the house. I conclude this par agraph not only by refuting the half-starved, "beat-up," descrip tion, but with a well deserved pat on the back for the average Mexicano in his treatment of an imals. I might add that my ob servations on this subject were concluded after a much broad er, longer and more extensive view of Mexico and its condi tions than that experienced by Mr. and Mrs. Gregg. I do agree on one point. It is always good to get back to the best Republic of them all and, in particular, the beautiful Rogue River val ley. I do not however have much patience with those who are prone to criticize - a country which, unfortunately, is not as fortunate as our own. Mrs. Sidney W. Richardson, Sp. Ore. Humane Society, Table Rock rd., Medford, Ore. ir ' Algeria, Tunis and Morocco, the more they are likely to want. For another, the North Afri can leaders, with whom Mollet will do business are opposed themselves by nationalist ex tremists who are still waging a war of violence. There also is a third 'factor. The French colonists in North Africa are fiercely and some times, violently opposed to any real concessions to the nation alists. These colonials have powr erful support in the French Parliament. Liberation Army A small but. well-organized "army of national liberation" is pinning down nearly 200,000 In The Day's News By FRANK JENKINS ' Disneyland. If you've never seen it, you haven't missed much. On the other hand, if you do see.it you'll come away say ing you wouldn't have missed it for anything; . IT'S the honky-tonk to end all honky-tonks. It's the county fair, the state fair, and old-fashioned public sale in a corn belt neighborhood, Coney Island, the Boardwalk at Atlantic City and the last World Fair all. rolled into one. It's built on the sound theory that if you can get a big enough crowd together and provide enough places to spend money in small sums for things you wouldn't think of spending mon ey for under any other circum stances you'U take in a whale of a lot of dough. I'd guess that in the quarter Effort To Contact Lost Plane Fails Aboard Flagship Arneb, Ant arctica " U,R) A veteran Navy radio operator used all the knowhow of 35 years of service today in a vain effort to contact aNavy Otter plane miss ing since Friday, in the Ant arctic wastes with seven men aboard. ., . . Distress signals were heard Friday and Saturday from an emergency radio b e 1 i e v e d carried by the missing plane but efforts by radio oldtimer Amory H. Waite to reach them again failed. " L.- He sent out a constant. stream of messages to ' encourage any possible survivors by suggesting protective methods ' against the freezing cold. ' No Trace Found Two land search parties failed to find any trace of the plane which, was'headed from an ad vance base 200 miles from the South Pole to Little , America when it was last heard from: Little America is 400 miles from the advance base. -. The crew members aboard the plane and their next of kin in cluded: V Pilot, Lt. Cmdr. Glenn H. Lathrop Jr., wife Nellie May, Costa Mesa, Calif. Co-pilot, Lt. Paul A. Streich, wife Jo Ann, California, Md. John A. Floyd- Jr., parents Mr. and Mrs. John H. Floyd Sr., Detroit. George Moss, wife, Eunice Mae, Beverly, Mass. Alva G. Edwards, parents, Mr. and Mrs. Oron L. Edwards, Lake Bay, Wash. ; Chester M. . Stevens Jr., mother, Mrs. Virginia Grugan, Salonal, Pa. .Want to be a better bowler? The Medford Public Library has books which give practical tips that can mean the difference be tween good bowling and average bowling. , The Fakir's Trick To the Editor: How many old timers recollect the strange dark fakir who pretended ' to be an "Indian herb medicine ? man," dressed in fringed buckskin coat and pants? He usually had an accomplice driving two broncs to a spring wagon or buckboard. He began his spiel on a promi nent street corner by demon strating his stock in trade, that would heal anyone from cradle to grave. Then he'd start asking - for someone to give him a dollar to see what he did with it. After praising the first patron's gener osity who was 'curious to take a chance and plunk down a buck in a hat, the fakir dug down and gave another - dollar making two in return, afterward asking for more dollars. The crowd shelled out. Around 21 silver doUars was the limit. Get ting restless, the "medicine man" asked the public if they gave him the cash with a free -wUl offering to see what he would do with it, no one dissented, so the long haired fakir spoke up and said he would put the cash down the pockets of his leather britches, thanked the crowd for their generosity, ordered " his hostler to hook up the loose traces, and away he sped, wav ing a salute to a disillusioned crowd of spectators., Bert Kissinger, 520 Boardman St., Medford, Ore. Africa Phase French troops in Algeria. In Tunisia, " Nationalist Leader Bourguiba is opposed by Super Nationalist .Salah Ben Youss:; who has gone underground to wage revolt. In Morocco,-Sultan Mohammed cannot control the tribesmen who are fighting ferociously against French troops in the mountains. - Algeria is the great problem to Mollet. Tunisia and Morocco are protectorates. Algeria politi cally is part of France. It is rep resented in , the French. Parlia ment. If Mollet can . bring peace to Algeria, it will be a momen tous victory for him. Few prob- rably, would be bold enough to bet heavily on his success. section or such a matter' . of Southern California soil that comprises Disneyland there are at least ' 8,000 places to 'Spend money in sums, ranging from a dime to half a dollar. After you've been there for a few minutes, diving into your pock et for another coin to buy an other ticket to go through an other gate or another door be comes as automatic as reaching for a cigarette. 7"OU can take a trip to the 1 moon and it will be so realistic that when you're about to land you'll wonder, if there will be a good place handy to get lunch when you disembark from your space, ship. Or you can go backwards into the past instead of whizzing for ward into the future and take a leisurely ride on the ol' befo' de wah, reiver steamer the Mark Twain. When you start out, the bell will clang and when you pull into the landing the. whistle will blow. In between, the paddlewheel at the rear wUl propel you slowly through wat er just as muddy as the Missis sippi and you will pass trees that look like cyprus trees and you will see stuff hanging from the ' branches r that looks like Spanish moss. They even have a gang working on the levee, toss ing a shovelful of dirt about every two minutes, and mean while leaning on the handles. On the Mark Twain, you can see all the romantic figures of the Old South except the river boat, gamblers and you can do everything but sip a mint julep" Disneyland is strictly moral. VOU can take a boat trip through the tropical jungles, with, the lions, roaring . in the distance- - 'and ' the ' hippotami co.ughing and the jackals bark ing and the exotic tropical birds making exotic tropical noises: . The sounds will be. so real that shivers will creep up your spine and you can feel the hair on the back of your neck be ginning to stand up, but . when you . peer into the jungle in the hope of seeing the animals in the flesh, they won't be there. Themoises are tape-recorded and the " roars and the grunts and the coughs are coming from loud speakers concealed in the shrub bery. And so on, ad infinitum in cluding a medieval castle with an . honegt-to-John drawbridge over a moat with water in it and in the castle's keep a street fair merry-go-round as , modern as Liberace on TV. There is no limit except the amount of money you brought with you to what you can do in -.Disneyland., And there's no limit to-the amount of fun you can have if you go in the right kind of crowd with everybody in the right mood. , OO FAR I have spoken, with a tinge of cynicism, in adult terms; One "shouldn't speak of Disneyland in adult terms. Dis neyland isn't designed for ad ults "although millions of them go there. Disneyland is for children. Children can still IMAGINE. In' 'their weird hats acquired at a strategically - placed booth at so much per they can soar to the moon. In a Davy Crockett cap, they can walk into the old blockhouse and hear the crack Of the squirrel rifles and the war whoops of the surrounding Indians. "J ' "TVISNEYLAND, I must repeat, L' is for children of ALL AGES from four or , five on up to 70. They haven't lost their il lusions. They haven't yet been touched by sophistication. To them,' life is stUl an ADVEN TURE a wonderful adventure. Something to be ENJOYED." " And they do enjoy it! MY advice to you is to collect a car full of children . your own or somebody else's and head, for Disneyland at the first opportunity. You'U be in for a wonderful day for nothing is more wonderful than seeing children enjoy themselves in their own natural, whole hearted way. . i But . : ,' Be sure to take along a pock etful of what adults refer to as the source of all evil : in coins running from a dime to a half dollar. You'U find a place for all of it. VI Cfffer Of FtlCt "IT IS NECESSARY TO HOPE" Washington In the Eisenhower-Eden "joint declaration" there is a single reference to the "hun dred million people . in what were once ten independent na tions" who are "compelled to work for the glorification of the Soviet Communist stated But the refer ence is purely formal. No one thinks any more that any serious at tempt wUl be Stewart Alsop . niaue to iuuaen the Soviet grip on the satellite states. Even so, it. may be worth des cribing a recent talk with Dr. Arnhost Heidrich,' former Secre tary ' General of the' Czech Foreign Office. One of these reporters first interviewed Dr. Heidrich in the gilded Czernin P a 1 ace, in Prague, in the spring Joseph Aisop ot lasts,- a lew weeks after the Communist seiz ure of Czechoslovakia. The in terview was a memorable one. Dr. Heidrich "was quite aston ishingly frank, warning the re porter that the Soviet appetite would by no means be 'satis fied with Czechoslovakia. Then, towards the end, he turned the interview around. Would there soon be war between the Soviet Union and the United States? The" reporter replied that he thought not a long period of armed tension seemed more likely. - -.. "rriHEN,"' said Dr. Heidrich, "there is nothing left. I must escape." . . . Escape he did. He now lives. with his wife (who escaped also) m a small house in the Washing ton suburbs, where he leads the strange dusty life of a political refugee. Perhaps- once or twice a year, Dr. Heidrich and. the re porter who interviewed him in the Czernin Palace meet again, to chat about the world. It is always a rewarding experience. since Dr. Heidrich has a remark able insight into the world situa tion. But it is also, somehow, ratner sad. - Dr. Heidrich, a chunky, stout man witu an odd resemblance to the late W. C. Fields, tends to judge the present by the past, lie otten reverts to the time when he went to Moscow with the Czech delegation which was brusquely warned by . Stalin against joining the MarshaU Plan. As secretary of the dele gation, Dr. Heidrich took notes of the conversation in the Krem lin. He recalls how, in a mo ment of expansiveness. after de livering his ultimatum, Stalin told the cowed Czechs a good deal about his plans -for the world. . "AUR first task," Stalin said to the Czechs, "is to tear down the power positions of the United States both in Europe ana Asia. Once this is done, Eng land and France will be . too weak to resist the pressure." Dr. Heidrich is convinced that the Spyiets have never wavered an inch from their purpose of dominating all Europe and! Asia, however much their methods may have changed. He sees last summer's summit conference at Geneva as just another means to the same end. "Geneva a catastrophe, a disaster," he says, with a sharp, chopping gesture of both arms. "Every year they gain some thing, but now is much worse. Before you had something. They feared your bombs. But now nothing. They know since Geneva you will not use your bombs. They have nothing to fear." ; He pauses a moment, placing his fingers together in a judicial gesture. "Always before, I am won; dering, how can the West win Since PERL Mortuary Phone 2-6675 FINER "FUNERAL 'SERVICES !n every price range By Joe and Stewart Alsop this cold war? So many ad vantages on Soviet, side. Flex ible. They decide they act. No public opinion: If the people must sacrifice, the people sacri- . fice. But at least they were afraid of you, and now no long er. Now I do not see at all how the cold war can be won." HOW about the - "liberation" . policy, for winning the cold war, about which so much was heard in 1952? Dr. Heidrich smiles thinly, and picks his words carefully. "Mr. Dulles has said that the time wUl come when Soviets realize control of satellites is more anxious than advantageous. I am very pessi mistic. Skeptical." But, he adds quickly, the President's Christ-, mas message to the satellite peo ple was good. "People who live, under such conditions are al ways happy to have occasion to hope." . . Yet surely, by now, the more intelligent Czechs must realize that Czechoslovakia wUl not be freed? Dr. Heidrich's short arms f aU heavily into his lap, and for the first time his round, odd ly merry face looks drained and old. He shrugs again. "To live it is necessary to hope," he says. ; Then he gets heavily to his feet, says fareweU with elaborate courtesy, - and starts' off on the "1 long walk to the small , house where his wife bakes delicious little cakes, a n d where hope lives stubbornly and illogicaUy on. ; Copyright 1956, New York 0 Herald Tribune Inc. Editorial Comment ; DRUNKEN DRIVERS JAILED For the first time in traffic court history in New York City, jail terms are -being meted out on first convictions for drunken driving. Seven men with no pre vious traffic offenses werexeach sent to nail for three days in the beginning of an unofficial court policy supporting intensi fied police efforts to cut traffic accidents by prompt and effec tive enforcement. - The drive to rid the streets of potential killers got under way without fanfare. It had been the general policy to impose a mod est fine and issue a warning to first, offenders, after conviction for drunken driving. But court and police officers determined that fines and warnings were not producing results. Jail terms, first only of a few days, are ex pected to cut down drunken driT ing. If not, then heavier terms are in store for the offenders. The experiment will be watched closely, by police and , courts charged with cutting traffic fa talities everywhere. Corvallis Gazette-Times. . More than 500,000 persons visit the Carlsbad caverns each year. 1 Comet Due In. 1980 GEO. N. TAYLOR ' Haley's Comet swept thru the sky in 1910 and is next due in 1980. It returns every 70 years. Comets and all , ! things were made by Christ. See the Bible at John 1:3. Laying aside His Glory, ' "Hi- Christ came down from heaven to dweU , with us as the Carpenter of Nazareth. On a day they bring Him an ox with a sore shoulder. He made a new yoke that let the ox pun. Later He told the throng "My yoke is easy my burden is light." Is worry your burden? Turn it over to Christ. When you took Him as your Lord and Savoiur, God gave you eternal life. But you "are yet a babe in Christ. You yet carry into the new life its cares, worry, profanity, hate, lies, jealousy or sins unspeak able. Now cast your sinful ways on Christ and grow up. - This message sponsored by a Scappoose family. adv. 1908 V