Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, December 17, 1956, Image 4

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TOUR-SrftDFORD (OREGON)
' MEDFORDgTRIBUNE
o.
Everyone in Soutiiern Oregon
(ffeada The Mail TriDune"
PubHahcl Dally ExrrDt Saturday by
BEDFORD PRINTING CO
21 It Noi Uif ir St Phone 2-6141
3 ROBERT W RL'HL. Editor
pRfl GREY Advrrtuins Manager
Q:R9-D LATHAM Business Manager
IRIC ALXEN JR Mar,K:n Ed)-jr
EARL H ADAMS Citv Editor
HARRY CHIPMAN Telegraph Editor
RICHARD JEWETT Snorts Editor
Ol.IVEPSTAJCHER Societv Editor
OCHLE ERIiSCSON. Circulation MKT.
An incependenl newspaper
O q inured as second claw matter at
'-'Medford Oregon under Act of
March 3. 18'J7
3 'escr;ition rates'
By Mail In Advance Per Copy 10c
Daiiv and Sunday One year $15T)0
Dall and bunday Six months 8 00
Pally and Sunday-g-Three moa 4.25
Vmdav Only One var s-4.20
By Carrier In Advance Medfvd
Ashland Central Poinfc Eae Point.
O Jacksonville fiold Hill Phoenix.
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andoon motor routes 0
Lai. and sundav One year $18 00
n Dally and Sunday One month 150
2 Carnerand Dealers 10c per copy
AU Terms Cash In Advance
Cwal Paper of the City of Medford
Official Paper of Jackson County
m United Prya Full Leased Wire
ilUMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU
o OF CIRCULATION
Jadyr-tlslng Representative:
o W5T-HOLJDAY COatPANY tNC
Offices tn New York Chicago, de
0 troit San Francisco. Los Angeles
r eattle Portland St Louis Atlanta
"Vancouver B C
riATIQN A I 1DITORIAI
ASSOCt-AT
ION
r "krTTJTTTTr
g'.T.tna
Medford and Jackson County
History from th files of The
Mail Tribune 10. 20, 30, 40
and 3 years ago.
jO YEARS AGO
Dec. 17. 1946 (Tuesday)
Mayor C. A. Meeker calls at
tention coast-wide campaign
fcQ reduce traffic accidents dur-
Ins Ciirirfmas holidays.
O o o
From Arthurs Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: The Yule
t flares high to the south.
AVj PUBLISHERS
)PA-SOCIATION
o s 1
Flight o'Jime
I
' q cijtistmas trees arff selling at
L50 per foot.
tO YEAR AGO
17. 1936 (Thursday,? .
Jackson County Chamber of
OCoarisieriftjiirgeS entrants in the
ChristrrJuelectrical decoration
eontSt to register. "
MoQ than 50 familfes are now
on the Salvation3 Army's Christ
mas basket listp according to
Catt. Durham, commanding of-
csT-
10 YEARS AGO 0
'Dc..-i7. 1926 (Friday)
Southern Oregon residents re
minittd by forest officials to
avoid cutting Christmas trees on
public "or private land without
first obtaining permission.
-O Anifisal banquet of the '"40 et
8 societv seecjuled tonight at
O JIolland hots-1.
Pac 17. 1916 (Sunday)
Co Irrigation may be profitably
ised anctresult in great crop in-
C-croe on corn as on fruit or al
talffc according to Victor Bur
ell. Central Point wchardist.
i Itedford0boys' band will pa-
Q-j ra'de for the first time Tnesday.
60 YEASS-AGO " .
c-, Dec. 17. 1906 (Monday)
SeSator Clark admits nroba-
bilityof the extension of his rail
way sfci to the Oregon coast,
o
O dnelish nress discusses nossi-
Obilit8f a conflict between the
United States and Japan.
i What's Your I.Q.?
Nine or ten correVt Is superior: sev
en or eisht is excellent; live or
siOts eood.
1. Bastidas discovered Colum-
fca. South America; true or
00 falser c?
u 2. Did President Theodone
O Roosevelt omarry more than
O Bnce?
3. Are the ancient sources and
meanings of Bible names, for the
most part, knownr
4. is Chicago Harbor in Attu
O
or some other Aleutian island?
5. Is it better to exercise the
Qb?dy after or before meal?
6. Wh,at insyument of war is
r equipped with a retractable
landing gear?
O f. Under what social system
(-as a tehant called a vassal?
n o, 8. Nsme Hitier's collaborator
theboc "Mein Kampf."
r 9. (The Anio-Saxon "ac" Cbak)
0 0OInd -corn" (grain) is the origin
0(Jor the word?
10. "We are Republicans and
O dgp't propose t leave Pur party
and identify ourselves with Rum,
Romanism, and Rebellion." Was
0 Jhis sliir againm Catholicism or
O O Ttalians?
Answers: 1. False. Panama, z.
Yft3 Twice. 03. No. 4. Attu. S.
T3 t e &lrn'ana 7 Feudal
O Ojyitem. 8. RSdolph Hess. 9.
Acorn. 10. Catholicism.
MAIL TRIBUNE
Growing
In the course of preparing a statement supporting
the need for air service from Klamath Falls to Reno
and Boise., the Jackson County Chamber of Commerce
has compiled statistics on the growth of southern
Oregon, both in population and wealth.
Just about everyone knows about this growth, but
the cold facts and figures dug up by the chamber put
it in a focus that is startling. Because the change has
taken place over a period of years, one gets used to
it as it happens, and is only dimly aware of its size.
IN1 THE years from 1940 to l956, the population of
f Jackson county has nearly doubled from 36,213
to an estimated 66,420. Josephine county has gone
from 16,301 to 33,650, more than double.
From 1940 to 1955, the number of vehicles regis
tered in the two counties climbed from 22,430 to 52,
909, more than doubling. In Jackson county the fig
ures are 16,069 to 36,448, and in Josephine they are
6,361 to 16,461.
The most amazing figures were those showing the
growth of payrolls. In 1940 the two-county area had
total payrolls of $7,109,809. In 1955 the total was
$64,616,391. This is more than a ninefold increase. In
Jackson county the increase was from $5,936,366 to
$46,973,244, and in Josephine county it was from
$1,173,443 to $17,643,147.
, pOSTAL RECEIPTS nearly tripled, from $177,583
to $762,264. The Jackson county climb was from
$124,934 to $574,060, and in Josephine it was from
$52,649 to $188,204.
Assessed valuations more than doubled in the
same 15-year period, from a combined total of $43,
088,724 to $103,099,768.
Retail sales in the two counties more than tripled
in a shorter period the ten-year interval from 1946
to 1955 (earlier figures were unavailable). The total
went from S-38,447,000 to $120,813,000.
In the seven years from
of passengers boarding or
airport grew from 36,900 to 80,473.
In the six years 1949 to 1955, bank deposits nearly
doubled, from $38,788,217 to $74,197,961.
"THESE FIGURES are amazing,''and bring home the
partly-realized impact that economic change has
wrought here in recent years.
And the end is not yet. The chamber's brief has a
paragraph which starts out, "Prospects for the future
are bright." It continues : x
"Approximately $15,000,000 in new construction can be
. anticipated during the next 18 months in Jackson county
alone. A few of these projects include: a construction start
amounting to $2,400,000 on the $22,000,000 Talent Irriga
tion Project to supply adequate irrigation for 19,000 acres;
a $350,000 armory, construction started; a new $2,500,000
hospital, under construction; $850,000 now under way in
new facilities at Southern Oregon college In Ashland
$500,000 anticipated early in 1957 and $1,000,000 possibly
in the fall of 1937; new $5,000,000 Rogue Valley Manor,
construction may start late In 1957. We have no reason to
believe that the economic trends . . . will be altered within
the next 15 to 20 years, barring of course a nationwide
catastrophe."
The brief adds up to an impressive document of
development. It also gives a background of under
standing for the growing pains which the area has
been suffering. E.A.
Complications in the Air
Growth brings its complications, and not only in
the field of economics.
A couple of veteran
were discussing the difference between trying irom
Medford to Portland a few years ago and today.
Then, one climbed into a plane, flew to Portland,
and landed, with a minimum of fuss, bother and for
mality. Now, there are intricate "rules of the road
in the air, with required
number of different points, specified altitudes to ob
serve, and complex landing procedures, particularly
when the Portland airport
TTHEY showed a document container about the size
of a lar?e suitcase which was full of maps, charts,
tables, and lists of regulations, instructions and re
quirements. It is kept up to date by weekly mailings
to be inserted in loose-leaf binders. And woe betide
the pilot who is not up on the latest orders some
times issued without advance warning.
As the speed and number of planes have increas
ed, so have the complexity and quantity of radio
equipment required to be aboard. One local pilot has
a pfene for which he paid some $7,000 a year or two
ago, and only last week
stalling all trie necessary
more than $3,000 nearly
lIORE and more radio
iT1 quired, each adding
of equipment. They told about one multi-thousand
dollar radio installation that was "obsolete" the day
it was installed.
- Where two or three
anv pilot needed to assist
munication, it is now necessary for a well-equipped
plane to have somewhere between 30 and 60 and
the number is. going up all the time.
The pilots told of taking off from the Portland
airport recently, and having to use four separate ra
dio channels from the time they climbed into the
plane until it was airborne.
We presume the complex regulations and equip
ment are necessary to provide safety in the increasingly-crowded
air but private aviation is paying
the price of added cost, added regulation, and fan
tastically complicated procedures, just to stay in the
air. E.A.
Monday, December 17. 1356
Pains
1948 to 1955, the number
deplaning at the Medford
private pilots the other day
report - in calls via radio at a
is busy.
he completed the job of in
radio equipment at a cost ot
half the cost of the plane.
channels are becoming re
to the complexity and cost
radio channels were once all
him in navigation and com
Chou En-Iai
Closely as
By CHARLES M. McCANN
United Press Correspondent
Chinese Communist Premier
Chou En-lai will be watching
the news from the United States
closely this
week. Chou's
Eriend Prime
Minister Jawa
harlal Nehru
of India is con
ferring with
President Eis
enhower in
G e 1 1 y s burg.
Pa., today.
Charles Mrl inn lenru will
be in Washington Tuesday and
Wednesday.
It is known that Nehru hopes
to persuade President Eisenhow
er that the time has come to re
view American policy toward
Red China.
There are persistent rumors
that Chou, to help things along,
may announce at any time that
his government is ready to re
lease 10 Americans imprisoned
in China.
Chou himself is in Burma at
the moment. He is on a big tour
of East Asian countries, build
ing up the prestige of the Pei
ping regime with the East Asian
"neutralists" of whom Nehru is
the leader.
There is no doubt also that
Chou is trying to insure that his
country, instead of Soviet Rus
sia, will be the leading influ
Matter of Fact
"SOVIET TWO-MINDEDNESS"
Washington There is no
longer any doubt about it, in
the minds of those best able to
judge. There has been at least
a partial breakdown of the iron
authority of the Soviet regime,
not only in the foreign Commu
nist parties and in the satellites,
but within the center of power,
the Soviet Union itself.
Some evidence to this effect
has already been cited in this
space. But, since the Hungarian
revolt, there has been more.
Here is the sort of thing that
has puzzled fascinated, and im
pressed the Soviet experts.
Mme. Furtseva, c a n d idate
member of the all-powerful
Praesidium, and the most im
portant woman in the Soviet
Union, recently addressed a
meeting of workers at the Kaga-
novitch ball-bearing plant. It was
at this plant that a strike
something hitherto unheard of
in the Soviet Union occurred
in the first period of the Hun
garian revolt.
Mme. Furtseva addressed the
assembled workers on the need
for discipline and production. A
voice in the back of the hall
shouted "and how much money
do you make?" Thereafter she
was hissed, booed, and laughed
at, and she left the platform pale
and shaken.
A RUSSIAN-SPEAKING Brit
ish riti7pn rravlinir in
Southern Russia, went to the
opera and took the last seat in
a box. The other occupants of
the box began chatting with him,
and after the opera all concerned
went to the house of one of them
(this in itself is extraordinary
a foreigner is almost never asked
to the house of a Soviet citizen).
There followed a kind of private,
spontaneous protest meeting, in
which all those present poured
fourth their bitterness against
the regime this to an unknown
foreigner.
The most extraordinary inci
dent of all has been reported in
the London Sunday Times by
Alexandre Metaxas, a reliable
Russian-speaking journalist, who
has just returned from several
months in the Soviet Union. Ac
cording to Metaxas, Communist
boss Nikita Khrushchev recent
ly tried to address a youth meet
ing. Instead of booing him, the
assembled youth applauded him
so long and loud that he was not
able to speak at all. Khrushchev
Editorial Comment
FREE BLOOD
(The Red Cross Bloodmobile
will be in Medford tomorrow,
and in Ashland on Wednesday.
The following is reprinted from
the Philadelphia Bulletin.)
Four officials of the Soviet
Red Cross and Red Crescent so
cieties are in this country as
guests of the Red Cross, and
their first day in New York City
brought them a puzzling experi
ence. In the blood donor division of
the New York Red Cross chapter
they found some 40 men and
women, including white and
Negro soldiers. They asked what
these donors were being paid,
and found it hard to believe that
they were all volunteers, here
of their own free will, giving
their blood with no payment at
aU.
In Russia, the visitors said,
the donors are handsomely paid,
get the day off, a good meal and
an extra day on their vacations.
Even so, it was hard to recruit
them. Why should Americans
come voluntarily, to give blood
for nothing?
Their hosts explained that the
donors came for "purely human
itarian" reasons, to give blood
for people they would never
know. The Russians, after long
discussions, accepted this ex
planation, but piainly did not
understand it.
iM Fl
Watching
Asian Changes Due
ence in East Asia.
Nehru's visit to the United
States comes at a most impor
tant time for the Chinese Reds.
Japan has signed a peace
agreement with Russia, and is
almost sure to be elected to
membership in the United Na
tions this week.
This will be the final step in
restoring Japan to full status as
a world power, and as the result
there will be a new situation in
Far Eastern relations.
Further, Japan is undergoing
a change in its leadership. Pre
mier Ichiro Hatoyama has an
nounced that he will resign
Wednesday. The ruling Liberal
democratic coalition party has
picked Tanzan Ishibashi as his
successor.
Ishibashi strongly favors clos
er Japanese relations with Red
China, and especially closer
trade relations.
Ishibashi also is regarded as
being much less friendly to the
United States than Hatoyama is.
Thus Chou is likely soon to
try to build up Japanese-Chinese
relations.
Japan More Independent
This buildup, like that else
where in East Asia, will be at
least in part at Russia's ex
pense. Japan probably will maintain
good relations with the United
States. But it will be much more
independent in its policy, Also,
y
Joe and Stewart Alsop
was perfectly aware of the
derisive intent,- but he could do
nothing about it.
Metaxas, in his remarkable
series of articles, has reported
that Hungary spelled the death
knell, not only of Khrushchev
and Bulganin, but of the Soviet
system itself, as it has operated
in the last decade and a half.
The system, he wrote, is visibly
disintegrating.
INHERE is no recognized au-
-- thorny on the Soviet Union
in Washington at least, who is
prepared to go nearly so far as
Metaxas except possibly Secre
tary of State John Foster Dulles,
who strongly implied in his
speech to the NATO meeting
that the Soviet system was
"cracking up." But the experts
do agree that there has been a
serious weakening of discipline,
and that the Russian rulers are
scared, and in doubt what to do.
Most experts further agree
that it would be very difficult-
perhaps impossible for the So
viet bosses to reimpose the old
iron discipline by a return to
the methods of Stalin and Beria.
No one believes there is much
likelihood of a Hungarian-style
revolt in the Soviet Union itself
under present conditions. But
there are those who believe an
attempt to "re-Stalinize" might
actually stimulate mass upris
ings, especially in the non-Rus
sian territories which compose
more than half the Soviet Union.
The experts, of course, could
all be wrong no so-called ex
pert believed that any satellite
population could do what the
Hungarians have done. One of
these reporters spent a month
in the Soviet Union last year,
and reported what all the West
ern experts there believed
that the mass of the people solid
ly if passively supported both
the regime and the Communist
doctrine. All the evidence avail
able clearly suggested this con
clusion. a
THEREAFTER a letter arrived
from a Soviet Colonel recent
ly defected from the Soviet
Union. The Colonel wrote that
the reporter, like all foreigners
in Russia, had been deceived by
what he called Soviet two-mind
edness." A Soviet citizen, he ex
plained, developed two separate
minds. In one mind, which he dis
played to all foreigners and most
of his fellow citizens, he was a
convinced Communist, passion
ately dedicated to the regime. In
the other mind, which was his
real mind, he hated Communism
and all its works.
At the time, this seemed the
mere wishful thinking to which
all refugees are subject. But
perhaps the Colonel was right
at that. Perhaps "Soviet two
mindedness" is a phenomenon
which will deeply affect the fu
ture course of world events.
Copyright 1956 New York
Herald Tribunelnc.
wIpP from
America
Japan is essentially an Asiatic
country. Establishment of trade
and diplomatic relations with
Communist China would open
up a vast natural market for
Japanse goods, and would alter
the present political alignment
in the Far East materially.
Nehru no doubt will point out
all this to President Eisenhower
as among the reasons why it
would be advisable for the Unit
ed States to start thinking about
changing its own China policy.
There is no indication from
Washington that the President is
even considering any change at
this time. But China with its liOO
million people cannot be ignored
forever. A change is bound to
come some time.
In the Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
At the Paris meeting of NATO
(North Atlantic Treaty Organi
zation) the other day. West Ger
many's foreign minister propos
ed what he called a "charter of
freedom" for the Eastern Eur
opean nations under Soviet rule.
He urged the NATO council to
write what he called "this dec
laration of independence" in the
final communique of the NATO
meeting as a solemn resolution.
TTE told the meeting (compos
ed of the nations that are
banded together to resist Rus
sian aggression in Western Eur
ope) the freedom charter should
call for peace and FREEDOM for
all countries under foreign dom
ination.
But
He warned that freedom for
the nations under Soviet dom
ination should not be sought by
economic, political or military
pressure or by force.
The pressure, he said, should
be MORAL.
ine uerman proposal won
immediate and full backing by
American Secretary Dulles.
SINCE the proposal came from
HpiTYianv lof'e tftlra a IaaI.
.. . ....... .7 , . t mnc a iuua
at the German situation. Ger
many came out of the war snlir
down her middle. With the ex
ception of the western half of
of the city of Berlin, all of Ger
many east of the Elbe river is
under communist rule.
The Germans are elarmish
people, so it must be assumed
that Germany is eager to get all
her people back together again.
.But oermany is an armed eamn.
Alone the border in West Ger
many are tne NATO armies
including a large number of Am
erican divisions. Alone the east
ern side of the dividing line are
powerful Russian military forc
es. It must be taken for granted
that any MILITARY move on
the part of the West would pre
cipitate all-out shooting war that
would spread swiftly into a
third world war. The realistic
Germans realize that would
mean butcherv and destnirrinn
for their countrymen, the East
oermans.
TN the light of this proposal,
A let's take a look at US AND
HUNGARY.
As the brutal butchery of Hun
garians who are seeking liberty
goes on and on, we get angrier
and angrier. As the days and the
weeks pass, a guilt complex is
beginning to creep upon us. This
guilt complex leads to the
thought:
"What are WE doing sitting
idly by and twiddling our
thumbs and uttering pious plat
itudes while people in Hungary
die by the thousands for free
dom? Is that any way for AM
ERICANS to act? Why don't we
back them up with all our mili
tary might and BLOW THESE
FOUL COMMUNISTS OFF THE
FACE OF THE EARTH?"
T ET'S be realistic as the
Germans apparently are.
Suppose we should back up
the Hungarians with all our mil
itary might.
What would happen?
This is the answer: It would
touch off another world war. The
first thing that would happen
in that event would be the de
struction of Hungary and most
of its people for Hungary
would be the first battlefield.
It is little wonder that Sec
retary Dulles agreed immediate
ly with the German proposal.
Today and
By Walter
TWO QUESTIONS AT NA?0
The news from Paris about
what is going on at tjpe NATO
conference is meager, there be
ing no report-
ers p r e"s e n to
and no avail-
aye transcript
of what is be
ing said. But
tvo interesting
questions h.-e
been raised.
One is the the
oretical que
tion: how far
can a. member be expected to
go ir consulting NATO when
the issue arises outside tV re
gional limits fixed in the NATO
treaty say in the Far East or
in the Middle East?
The other is a (fuestioa of
practical policy, it has been
raised by the German Foreign
Minister, Mr. Von Brentano, by
putting NATO n notic that
there may be an uprising in
Eastern Germany simfiaroto that
in Hungary. , o
T1HE theoretical question poses
one of those problem that
are insoluble in the abstract and
uaii ae suivea oniy Dy common
sense, loyalty and good will. I
theory, the jurisdiction and t e
obligations of NATO have pre
cise geographical limits. They
include,, for' example, most of
Western Europe but not Ireland,
Sweden, Switzerland, or Spaii.
They include Greec and TuriKy
but not Iran or any other Mid
dle Eastern couutry. NATO is, !
juridically speaking, not a gen-
eral alliance at all but a col
lective pact for the military de-,,
fense of a carefully defined
group of territories. Theoretical
ly, what goes on beyond the
geographical limits of NATO is
not the business of NATO- o '
But in fact, the NATO pow-
ers are bound to be concerned
with anything which happrns
elsewhere that bears upon the
effectiveness of NATOp Mr
Dulles, for example, seems to.
have said in Pari that we are
not bound to consult tjith NATO j
in case we feel that we have to ;
go to war over Formosa. Accord- i
ing to the words of 'tne NATO
contract, especially the fine print
in the contract, this is true. But
what' if a war wifti.Red China
drew in China's ally, the Soviet
Union? !s it our theory that
NATO, and along with NA.TO
our bases in NATO territories
could be neutral in such a war?
So it is in the Middle East whete
in theory Britain and France
have" no strict legal obligation
to consult NATQ. But as the
whole of NATO is involved in
the manifold consequences of
what they have just done in the
Middle East, it is impossible to
argue that the Middle East ft
none of NATO's busirfess.
...
rFHE point of all this that what
ever the letter of the contract
may say, its spirit and its sub
stance requires continual con
sultation when the issue is pesace
or war in any part of the world.
This obligation cannot success
fully be defined in some kind
of general formula. If this were
attempted, so many holes would
be picked in the generalization
that it would be useless.
What is needed is not a for
mula of words but a habit, al
most one might say an accepted
routine, in the conduct of for
eign affairs. There should be a
habit of consultation among al
lies so that none is taken by
surprise. And for that consulta
tion it should not be .necessary
to convoke great conferences,
or for the Foreign Ministers to
shuttle back and forth in air
planes. The habit of consultation
should prevail not merely at the
summit but at the wofking levels
of diplomacy.
rpHERE is plenty far NATO to
consult about without consult
ing very much in the attract
about how much it ought to crri-
1 1 iiui.si.ii uiajis
Sti
R alter LipAmaub
FUNERAL
. SERVICES -c
o
o O
In Every Price Range
S i nee 1 9 0 8
PERL
Funeral
o
Home
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Phone 2-6675
Toomor0row
Lippmann Q
o
o
O
o P9 8
suit. The question Raised 8y the ,
German Foreign Min.er of
what is to be NATO policy
view of the danger jn Efct er
any is indubitably NATO busi-
ness. Tte e.ing now fing
on in rarifj will0be a great dis-
appointment if it adjesj-jjs with
out "taking serious notic of &e
East German danger. O
To take sc.ousunotice V.4id
mean, it seems to me, ot mere
ly rS wait and see Whether aiw
expibsion has taken place anrir
then t try to ric0to it, pre
sumably with grancie moral
declarations To tre serious&io
tice of She danger would be to
take th initiative, toct now
rather than to react Jater, to
propose a renewal of negotiations
ith the Soviet Union r the
unification German, for the
thinn'ng down and moving badii '
ard of the armies, and for an
all-European system of seiri1$l
Copyright 1956.
Jew York Herald Tribune ic.
- O
Arjinsas has h'adive consti-tutions-Q836,
1861, 1864, 1868
and 1874. Th? present consti
tution has been attended ' 42
times.
aaaws
ON
'Shopfjjng Days
Til Christinas!
33
May Santal
Asleep at the
Switch?
gon't get caught naming
whileJBig Cyistmas
Bills il? Up! For
CHRISTMAS
CASH
1 ?EE
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PACIFIC
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Dick Hans, Manager
16 S. pentril Ph. 4-5308
JULe
WidoPade Glad t
GEO. N. TAYLOR '
That w;8 the hourwhen th
widow's only son was carriea))
gut for lairialg As the beSeig)
came Rear, e'hrisT stepped up to
stretcher with o ,
"Young man,
f gjy unto thee
ARISE." At
that the c0ad
man sat up and
Christ restored
h i n? to his
mothe?.
n Resftirec
t i o n Day, the
T 1 .9. ill
L,uru will ij-
scendofrom
Heaven with a shot ai$l the dead
in Christ shallCfarise first. Then
we who are alive will be caught
up together wira the. So shall
we ever be wit the Lord. Be
lieve down in your heart that
"The blood of Jesus Christ
cleanses fcpm all h," BIBLE.
CGrist will then lift you up, as
believing His pledge, so often
mle by Him. Believe and be
sved. And $row up. By daily
Biye and prayer. Grow Up.
This Messaae sponsored by a
Scappoose family. adv.
AJ ft RL'S ey
o may mSkeo funeral ar-
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rangementfc which0 are In
l&epng with its means. A
selection oP servicft In
O
very price range is of-
o
iered to satisfy individual
o Q 7 o O
preferences and fo meetcO
all financial circiistance.
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Convenient Terns? Q
o Certainlyl Q
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