FOUR MEDFORD (OREGON)
MedfordkTribune
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RICHARD JEWETT Sports Editor
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Flight o' Time
Medlord and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30, 40
and 50 years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
Oct. 8. 1946 (Tuesday)
F. S. Long, orchestra director,
announces that there are open
ings in his junior orchestra for
young musicians.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: A hill
resident reports a deer hunter
saw horns on his milk shed last
week, and shot the milk pail out
of his hands.
20 YEARS AGO
Oct. 8. 1938 (Thursday)
The retail merchants commit
tee of the Jackson County Cham
ber of Commerce decide to con
duct a Dollar Day sale Friday
and Saturday. '
Edward F. Hayes, former na
tional commander of the Ameri
can Legion, arrives in Medford
today to speak at the high
school. '
30 YEARS AGO
Oct. 8, 1926 (Friday)
Through efforts of the Med
ford and Ashland chambers of
commerce, an air mail landing
field is located one mile south
of Ashland, high above low
hanging valley fog.
Mann's Department store held
a birthday party last night to
1,500 people, who came to con
gratulate its manager and found
er, John C Mann.
40 YEARS AGO
Oct. 8. 1916 (Sunday)
County Commissioner Frank
H. Madden returns from Seattle
where he wound up the business
for the Hanley-Madden can
neries for the season.
50 YEARS AGO
Oct. 8. 1906 (Monday)
The county board of equaliza
tion, in session during the past
week, will finish its labors ana
adjourn tonight.
From Local and Personal col
umn: Henry Callahan, manager
ot the St. Albans mine, arrived
in Medford yesterday and will
remain here a few days.
What's Ihe Answer?
Can Tou Get 4 of the IT
Copr. 1955 Editorial Research
Report
1. General Eisenhower served
in Europe in both World Wars,
neither, or World War II and
not World War I?
2. Oil imports have been for
some time restricted by the gov
ernment, voluntarily by oil com
panies, or not at all?
3. The food stamp plan in use
for the needy a dozen years ago
used up very much, a fair am
ount, or relatively little of crop
surpluses then?
4. More cigars are sold today
in tobacco stores or drug stores,
or is it about 50-50?
5. Babe Ruth averaged more or
less than one home run in each
of the ten World Series in which
he played, or exactly one to a
series?
6. A zloty in Poland is a large
farm, a member of the nobility,
coin, night club, or anti-Communist
agitator?
7. Which movie actress was
called "America's Sweetheart?"
The answers: 1 World War II
and not World War I. 2. Volun
tarily by oil companies. 3. Rel
atively little. 4. Mora in drug
stores. 5. Mora than on (15 in
10). 6. Coin. 7. Mary Pickford.
MAIL TRIBUNE
City Election Important
The election on Nov. 6 will be one of the most im
portant in many years for Medford voters. What they
do on that day may well set the pattern of city devel
opment for many years to come.
This importance is entirely aside from county,
state or national election races, which have their own
significance.
The city must decide on six measures, four of them
comprising a major capital development program for
traffic, drainage and sanitary sewers.
One of the others is a proposal to add fluorides to
the municipal water supply as a dental health measure
to combat decay in children's teeth (which the Mail
Tribune is on record as favoring). The sixth is a minor
annexation decision, involving a few blocks on the
east side, now entirely surrounded by the city but not
part of it. This the Mail Tribune also approves.
WE consider the four capital improvement propOS
ala tn Vio nf nncirlpra hlv mnre imnnrranpe than
the other two.
Starting yesterday, the Mail Tribune is publish
ing a series of four feature articles, one each week
during October, describing the four improvement
measures in some detail. Sunday's story outlined the
plan for a $1,656,100 arterial street program. Subse
quent articles will deal with the storm sewer, sanitary
sewer and off-street parking proposals.
It is our hope that voters of the city will read them
and make their decisions, for or against, in advance
of the election. An uninformed vote does no one cred
it. If questions concerning the proposals arise which
are not answered in the articles, the newspaper will
make every effort to find the correct answers and
publish them. E.A.
Arterial Street Program
The arterial street program, as outlined in a de
tailed report prepared by Public Works Director Vera
Thorpe, would cost the city about $1,656,1000 stretch
ed over a 20-year period. The cost is more than half
of the entire proposed improvement program, and the
street proposal probably is the most significant of the
four.
It has two purposes :
1. To get Medford "caught up" in street develop
ment, which has, frankly, been neglected to a point
where the present streets cannot serve the present
population adequately and conveniently.
2. To get it ready for the continuing expected in
crease in population and traffic. When completed in
1966, it is hoped the arterial street development will
be capable of handling the traffic volumes estimated
for 1970.
THERE is nothing new or startling about the con
cept of a system of arterial, or "through" streets.
We have one now but it isn't good enough. As traf
fice continues to increase, the job of getting from one
part of town to another will continue to get more and
more difficult.
There's more to it than simple convenience, too;
there's the matter of economics. The extra gas, oil
and wear-and-tear on a vehicle making a difficult
transit across town, while they amount to little on any
single instance, mount up over the years and in
the case of such vehicles as delivery trucks, would
total a considerable amount. .
The chief advantage remains convenience, prob
ably, but that has its economic aspects too, particular
ly to downtown merchants who lose business if it is
too difficult to get down town.
THE original plan was set up by the state high-
way commission, as a result of a thorough study
of Medford traffic problems. It made its suggestions
in a large and detailed report. It proposed 25 specific
projects, assigning priorities to them.
Overall cost was estimated at nearly $11 million,
with the city to pay more than $4 million of that.
This looked a bit too ambitious to the city fathers
although they recognized that the plan was a good
one, and would be a credit to the city.
As a result, Director Thorpe took the highway
commission's plan and changed it to a more economi
cal program.
LIE did so by cutting cost-corners here and there, by
eliminating one or two of the most costly items
proposed and substituting less expensive projects, and
by suggesting that in several instances rush-hour park
ing be eliminated, rather than having the streets them
selves widened.
The result looks sound to us.
It will cost money, but stretched out over a period
of years (it is planned to do about one-tenth of the
work each year for 10 years, and to finance it over an
even longer period) it would not make too great an
impact on Medford's taxes, even when coupled with
the other major improvements proposed.
a
THE costs of not doing the job could be greater in
the long run than those of doing it. This is some
thing which cannot be measured, and must include
considerations which do not lend themselves to dol-lors-and-cents
figuring.
Who can measure the intangibles that make a city
pleasant and attractive and a "good place in which
to live"?
Surely they include wide, pleasant and uncongest
ed streets, as well as the other things that make up a
city of which we can all be proud.
We recommend a "yes" vote for the street pro
gram. E.A.
Monday. Oclobar 8, 19SS
Increasingly Rough Political
Road Faced
By CHARLES M. McCANN
United Press Correspondent
Prime Minister Anthony Eden
is going to face a rough political
road from now on.
O p position
to' him is
g r o wing in
side his own
C o nservative
party. Right
wing mem
bers accuse
him of lack
in g forcef ill
ness. n-i - 1 t :
Chile McCann a" eiecuuu
of anti-American rebel Aneurin
Bevan to the post of treasurer
of the Labor Party means much
more vigorous criticism by the
opposition during the session of
Mattet Of FaCt By Joe one! Stewart Alsop
THE SATELLITE FERMENT
Washington At least one
thing is reasonably sure about
the mysterious journeys of
K. n r u s ncnev
to B e 1 g rade
and Marshal
Tito to Valta.
The prime
cause of this
commotion in
the Soviet bloc
lies in Poland
rather than in
Yugoslavia.
Here in
Joseph Aisop
Washington, the Polish situation
is regarded as so significant that
it has now become the subject
of a really major behind-the-scenes
policy dispute. At bottom,
the point at issue is whether the
Eisenhower administration real
ly meant anything at all by the
talk of "liberation" that sound
ed so brave in the last election.
By all the signs, the Poles are
now tending to
claim a real
measure of in
dependence of
the Kremlin.
Two points are
in debate here.
First, is it
wise to try to
encourage this
tendency and
how best can
And second, if
Stewart AUop
this . be done?
encouragement is in fact wise,
how can it be given without
angering Sen. William Know-
land's wing of the Republican
party, whose members would
even like to see an American
break with Yugoslavia itself?
Meanwhile, the Polish situa
tion is no less interesting be
cause the Washington policy
makers cannot make up their
minds about what, if anything,
to do about it.
a a a
SECRETARY of State John
Foster Dulles and a great
many other wise persons of
course pointed out long ago that
the Kremlin's downgrading of
Stalin and reunion with Tito was
provoking a ferment in the
satellites. The sign of this fer
ment were of course clear, even
before the famous Poznan riots
blew the lid off in Poland. But
it is not generally realized that
from the Kremlin's standpoint,
the post - Poznan developments
have been even more serious
than the riots themselves.
Immediately after the riots,
Marshal Bulganin was sent post
haste to Warsaw to read the Pol
ish comrades a lecture. Poland
must not go too far and too fast,
Bulganin warned, with the pro
cess that passes for "liberaliza
tion" in the Soviet sphere. Bul
ganin's aim, beyond doubt, was
to strengthen the Polish Commu
nist faction centering around the
Russo-Polish Marshal Rokos
sovsky the faction that fol
lows the old line of unquestion
ing obedience to the Kremlin.
Bulganin was none the less
unable to shake the majority
support of Premier Cyrankie
wicz. The Kremlin therefore
tried the highly novel expedient
of appeasing its Polish satellites.
A moratorium was granted on
Poland's outstanding debt to the
Soviets. In itself, this was no
small gesture, for the official
total of the debt was 800 million
rubles. But in addition, a new
credit of 100 million rubles in
gold and raw materials was also
granted.
a a a
VET the Polish ferment con
tinued unabated. An extra
ordinary freedom of discussion
was permitted in the press; and
Warsaw newspapers are now ad
vocating a complete end of press
censorship, except with respect
to military subjects. A drive for
something almost like partly
free elections to the Polish Par
liament, the Sejm, was launched
with impunity and still con
tinues. The original Moscow pro
paganda line, that the Poznan
riots were the work of foreign
agitators, was flatly and openly
rejected; and at this moment the
rioters are being given conspicu
ously respectable trials.
Worst of all, there were and
are increasing Polish-Western
contacts. In a very quiet but
meaningful way, carefully vague
hints have even been dropped
that a day may come when there
will be need for Western sym
pathy and support for Polish in
dependence independence on
the Tito pattern, to be sure, but
still the kind of independence
that would sharply alter the
monolithic character of the
Soviet bloc. It can be seen why
by Prime Minister
Parliament which starts Oct. 23.
May Feature Congress
Criticism of Eden by mem
bers of his own team is likely
to be a big feature of the Con
servative party annual Congress
which opens Thursday.
This criticism will be more
marked because of a feeling
among British political experts
that if a general parliamentary
election were held right now,
Labor would win it.
Normally, the Conservatives
are in office for a five-year term
which does not end until May,
1960.
But under the British political
system Eden could be compelled
to resign, and caU for an elec
tion, if he were defeated on an
important issue in the House
there is a debate here in Wash
ington. a a a
IT CAN be seen also why the
Kremlin has reacted rather
sharply to these trends in the
satellites. The symptoms of fer
ment are not limited to Poland.
They have also appeared, in les
ser degree, in Hungary and Ro
mania. As a stern warning, therefore,
the more conservative group in
the Kremlin leadership circu
lated to the satellites the now
celebrated m e m o r a n dum on
Yugoslavia (and by implication
on all other satellites hankering
to imitate the Yugoslavs). In
this paper, the Yugoslavs were
condemned as not being true
"Leninists," and Marshal Bul
ganin was even denounced by
name for having said the oppos
ite. The meetings with Tito were
a necessary sequel.
Such is the background. It is
a hopeful background, revealing
serious weaknesses in the Soviet
bloc. The trouble is, however,
that the Kremlin always seems
to find an easy way to exploit
the West's weaknesses, where
as exploiting Soviet weaknesses
appears to be a much more diffi
cult proposition.
Copyright 1956 New York
Herald Tribune Inc.
In the Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
How about devoting this piece
today to what people are saying
for publicaton.
It might be interesting.
What people say for publica
tion is one thing. What they say
privately is apt to be something
quite different. When they speak
for publication, they may be
seeking to influence the opin
ions of others toward a desired
end. Or they may be merely
seeking notoriety.
When they speak privately, in
a small group of friends, they
are more apt to be themselves,
to speak sincerely, to express
their REAL opinions and con
victions. T ETS start with Ike.
- He tells his news confer
ence this morning that he is un
able to say that early tax relief
is possible. He explained that tax
relief comes from the elimina
tion of needless costs and the
dropping of unnecessary ex
penses. He has repeatedly said for
publication that he thinks the
farm problem must be solved
by bringing production and con
sumption back into balance. He
says that production and con
sumption can't be brought into
balance by paying high subsi
dized prices that promote over
production. And so on.
LETS now take a look at Adlai
Stevenson.
He has said repeatedly for
publication that he is for HIGH
ER farm subsidies.
He has said we should quit
testing nuclear weapons and
abandon the military draft.
A little while back he advo
cated retiring EVERYBODY on
a pension sufficient to maintain
each person ON THE SCALE
OF LIVING TO WHICH HE
HAD BECOME ACCUSTOMED.
And so on.
THAT is to say:
In his public utterances
President Eisenhower has not
hesitated to advocate doing
things the hard way when it
seems to him that the hard way
is the best way.
In his public utterances in
THIS campaign Mr. Stevenson
has rather generally advocated
the EASY way.
Or so it seems to me.
UNFORTUNATELY for good
government, our country has
become so huge that it is utterly
impossible for candidates for
President to meet in small
groups with the people who will
do the voting to chat with
them personally and exchange
private opinions.
But I believe that if it WERE
possible for them to do so we
would find that President Eisen
hower's private personal opin
ions, expressed in conversation
with a small number of people
in a single room, would differ
very slightly from his publicly
expressed convictions and be
liefs. l m reasonably sure in my
of Commons at any time.
Could Be Compelled
He also could be compelled
by his own followers to quit, in
favor of another Conservative.
I his possibility, it is indicated,
is one that can not be ruled out.
Some Conservatives are likelv
to join Laborites in Commons in
criticizing Eden's handling of do
mestic as well as foreign prob
lems. Bevan's election as Labor's
treasurer put him in the third
rankine nost. in thp nartv Tt in
dicated a swing to the left by
me iaoorites.
Today and
By Walter
THE WESTERN ALLIES
The differences about Suez be
tween this country and its al
lies. Great Britain and France,
do not really
stem from such
views as we
may have on
"colon ialism."
They' stem
, f-HSri I lrom a dilter-
N ?J ing practicai
l4 iil judgment as to
how to deal
wisely and ef
fectively with
Walter Lutsmann
Col. Nasser's seizure of the Canal
Company.
There is no diference on the
fundamental point that all the
nations of the world have in-
dubitable rights in the use of the
canal, and that these rights must
be protected by a regime estab
lished under an international
treaty. The question of colonial
ism does not arise. For Egypt
is not a colony and nobody is
claiming that the canal zone is
anyone's colonial property. What
we, together with the British
and the French, are claiming is
that the rights which are pledg
ed by the Treaty of 1888 shall
be made secure.
How substantial are our ac
tual differences it is difficult to
say precisely. For none of the
three governments was prepared
for Nasser's coup. None had a
considered policy. Each reacted
at the outset rather by its re
flexes than by reflection. Since
then, the three Foreign Minis
ters have met twice at big inter
national conferences. But they
have been, it would seem, too
preoccupied and too hurried to
make sure that they understood
one another.
a a a
rUR differences are not clear
or sharp. But they seem to
turn on two points, neither of
which has anything to do with
colonialism. The one point has
to- do with military force. The
other has to do with a policy to
follow in working towards a
solution.
It is not true, as has been sug
gested abroad, that this country
is unconditionally opposed to a
resort to force, or that respon
sible American opinion has been
opposed to the little mobilization
of forces in the eastern Mediter
ranean. We have been troubled
and even frightened at what we
thought we were hearing from
London and Paris about the ob
jectives for which these forces
might be used.
Nobody has opposed, almost
all would approve, having forces
available as a precautionary
measure to prevent anti-West
ern riots such as occurred in
uairo in 1952. Nor would mere
be American opposition to the
use of force, even in spite of a
Soviet veto, if Nasser closed the
canal or violated the rights
which are guaranteed under the
Treaty of 1888. We drew back
from the suggestion, which has
been at least semi-official,' that
these forces might be used to
overthrow Nasser. That, in our
view, would be an illegal and
immoral use of force. We drew
back too from the idea that mili
tary force might be used to im
pose on Nasser the kind of re
gime which the 18 nations have
proposed. In our view, these pro
posals cannot be made into an
ultimatum and should be treated
as negotiable.
own mind that if we could meet
privately with Mr. Stevenson,
in somebody's living room, say,
and chat with him as we chat
with friends in small gatherings,
we would find that his PRI
VATE, PERSONAL beliefs dif
fer sharply from what he has
been advocating in public.
IN OTHER words:
I think President Eisenhow
er is sincere in what he is advo
cating in this campaign. I DON'T
think Mr. Stevenson is sincere.
1HAVE great respect for Mr.
Rtpvpnson. I am sure hp thinks
much as I do. I'm quite certain
he is a moderate conservative.
I'm reasonably certain that if
he is elected his administration
will be on the conservative side.
I think he has fallen on the
advice of his associates for the
cynical political theory that
ANY WAY TO GET ELECTED
IS ALL RIGHT that the end
justifies the means.
Personally I prefer a SIN
CERE candidate.
U.P. Correspondents
Eye Future
United Press correspondents
around the world look ahead
at the news that will make the
headlines.
Upset In South Dakota?
Democratic insiders believe
the Senate contest in staunchly
Republican South Dakota may be
a "sleeper." The race has receiv
ed little attention. But it's im
portant. One Senate seat in this
election could make the differ
ence beween a Republican or a
Democratic majority 'in the next
congress. The Democrats think
their man, Kenneth Holum, has
Tomorrow
Lippmann
rpHOSE of us who take this
-- view believe that it rests on
a correct appraisal of the mili
tary and political situation. We
believe that .military interven
tion is almost certain to entangle
Britain and France in a prolong
ed guerrilla war, as in Algeria
and Cyprus, if Egypt has the
backing of the Soviet Union, of
India, and of virtually all of
Asia. We think such a war would
be easy to start and hard to
finish.
From this it follows, so we
believe, that a settlement must
be sought by negotiation, and
that the key to a successful nego
tiation is to work towards an
international regime for the
canal which has the support of
the Soviet Union and of India.
There is little doubt that the
vital interests of India are iden
tical with our own, and that they
call for the free use on reason
able terms of an efficient canal.
As for the Soviet Union, though
it has no such vital interest in
the canal or even perhaps, in
a workable settlement, it is on
record as supporting the Indian
plan.
a a a
YUR view, it is evident, differs
" from the view of those who
believe that the prestige of the
West will collapse in the Middle
East and in Africa if we avoid
a show-down with Nasser, if we
do not overturn him or at least
punish him. Our answer is that
the circumstances are not now
right for a showdown, and that
no showdown should be had un
less and until Nasser has com
mitted a gross and deliberate
violation of international rights.
For the time being, if we can
negotiate a settlement, the prin
ciple will have been vindicated
that the canal is an internation
al waterway, and that it is not
under the unfettered control of
Egypt alone.
Copyright 1956
New York Herald Tribune Inc.
Editorial Comment
PASSENGER SERVICE CUT
Southern Pacific is off on an
other spree of chopping down on
its passenger service. This time
the Cascade line through Klam
ath Falls is the target and the
SP's highly advertised Shasta
Daylight will be put on a three-times-a-week
schedule between
Portland and San Francisco,
starting Oct. 15.
Railroad officials, in announc
ing the reduction in service, de
scribe it as a winter-time move
due to lower traffic, but at the
same time the vice president in
charge of passenger traffic says
the Shasta Daylight has been
short $5,000 a day from meeting
all operating expenses for the
first part of the current year.
Presumably the train operated
at a profit or a near break-even
point during the summer travel
months.
In another economy move a
week ago the railroad took off
Pullman and food service on the
Klamath, which consumes the
better part of 24 hours in travel
ing frnm Portland to the bay
arpa And. as the Rogue river
-joll knows, the railroad
has abandoned all passenger serv
ice in this lucrative territory,
where it annually derives mil
lions in freight revenues.
w. rppail at the time the last
train was taken off the Siskiyou
i;n. that some un-state editors
thought quite a hullabaloo was
being raised down nere. wonaer
how they'll feel now that the
railroad is starting to lower the
axe on their own train service?
With certain SP stations now
selling United Air Lines tickets,
the thought is inescapable that
sp pventuallv Dlans to aoanaon
all passenger service in Oregon
and act as a ticket selling agent
for the air line.
Ashland Tidings.
Jimmy Durante To Wed
35-Year-Od Actress
Phnpniv Ariz. (U.B Comed
ian Jimmy Durante, 63, has an
nounced plans to marry 35-year-nlri"
Hollvwood actress Margie
Little "sometime next year."
The comedian revealed his
wedding plans Saturday at the
opening of the Paradise Valley
Racquet Club. Both Durante
and Miss Little, from Plainfield,
N J wprp amnnff Hnllvwortd
personalities present at the af-
iair.
Headlines
a good chance to upset Sen. Fran
cis Case's bid for reelection. They
say farmer dissatisfaction favors
Holum. And they recall that Ho
lum a farmer himself ran
Sen. Karl E. Mundt, Case's GOP
colleague, a close race in 1952
while President Eisenhower
swept the state.
Uncle Tito
Russia's Nikita S. Khrushchev
may have blundered badly in
staging those dramatic talks with
President Tito of Yugoslavia. Ti
to s prestige is at a new high.
Communist delegations from all
over Europe are preparing to
visit him. London diplomats sug
gest that after knocking down
the "personality cult" of Uncle
Joe Stalin, the Kremlin is set
ting up Uncle Tito in the other
alley.
Danger Spot
Berlin says that Russia Is
speedily arming its "Red mil
itia" in Eastern Germany. Neigh
boring Czechoslovakia is report
ed to have contracted to send in
500,000 rifles by next March. The
reason: To put down any upris
ing , like that of last June in
Poznan, Poland. The militiamen
are called officially "fighting
groups. The are organized in
factories around a nucleus of
picked Communist toughs.
Space Cadet Item
If man breaks through the
space barrier, cold and lifeless
Jupiter, the biggest planet, may
turn out to be a gigantic reser
voir of rocket fuel. It would be
in the form of fragments of chem
ical compounds in Jupiter's at
mosphere, which the icy temper
atures of the planet keep from
combining. Some scientists say
that, warmed in the combustion
chamber of a space rocket, the
fragments would combine and
release tremendous energy. First
problem: To get a rocket crew
through the 367 million-plus
miles of space between here and
Jupiter.
Interest Up
Congress may be asked next
session to raise interest rates on
GI home mortgages. The idea
would be to make them more at
tractive to investors and pep up
the lagging home building in
dustry. Washington insiders say
the pressure for the move lend
ers and builders is terrific.
Rock and Duck
Antony, 21-year-old son of
Britain's Lord Moynihan, is in
trouble. He ducked out to Aus
tralia last week after a wild
"rock and roll" party in London.
He's hardly landed when a ra
diophoto came back showing
playful Tony patting the Tear
section of a showgirl in a night
club. All she wore was a furry
G-string and gloves. Tony's oth
er hand encircled an equally ex
posed female. Pop, former chair
man of the Liberal Party, is rag
ing. And Tony's wife, a one-time
nude model, is awaiting him back
in London also.
Cool Air Makes
Into West Dakotas
By UNITED PRESS
A new mass of cool air moved
southeastward out of Canada
over Montana and the western
Dakotas today.
The cooler air was expected
to reach into the Great Lakes
region and southward through
Nebraska during the day.
Meanwhile, a second mass of
cool air, which had blanketed
the Midwest, extended to the At
lantic' coast and covered the
eastern portion of the nation
from Lake Michigan and south
ward into Texas.
As the fresh Canadian air
moved across the border, a no
ticeable warming occurred in
the area from the eastern Dako
tas to Lake Michigan and south
westward through New Mexico.
The cool air also was pushing
the warmer air southeastward to
cause higher temperatures from
the eastern Great Lakes through
the Ohio valley, Tennessee, Kan
sas "and Oklahoma.
Draw A Knife
GEO. N. TAYLOR
Centuries before Christ, God
told his people to slay the lamb
and put its blood on the altar
and by that to
TJP"5T"1 cover their sins.
Ann would me
blood cover
their sins? This
tested their
faith. And does
Christ's blood
cover your sins?
This tests your
faith. Centuries
pass and. God
sends Christ to
die for their sins. His blood
wiped out their sins so long cov
ered over. And His blood wipes
out your sins this side of the
cross. The blood of Jesus Christ
cleanses from all sin. See 1st
John 1:7 (Over near Revela
tions.) Face About Stand on it that
Christ's blood cleared your page
of all sin forever. When you sin.
tell God that Christ died for that
sin also and get back into step.
Grow Up Find time daily for
Bible and prayer. You grow to
hate sin and Christ gives you
the power to quit.
This Message sponsored by a
Scappoose family. ady.
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