Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, March 25, 1957, Image 4

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

    o
F0U1 MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE
Morula?. March 25, 1957
MEDfWffl&TRIBUNE
"Everyone m
Read The
ftoutbern Orefoo
tlall Tribuna"
Published OatlT Except Saturday br
MEDFORD PRINTING CO
21-29 North fir St Phone I-SI41
ROBERT W RUHL Editor
ITER B GREY Advertising Manager
GERALD LATHAM Business Mnaer
ERIC ALLEN JR. Managing Editor
EARL H ADAMS Cltj Editor
HARRY CHIPMAN Telegraph Editor
RICHARD JEWETT Soorte Editor
OLIVE ST ARCHER SocletT Editor
PALE ERICKSON Circulation Mgr.
An Ind e pendent Newspaper
Entered aj second claas matter at
Medford Oregon under Act of
March
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Mall In Advanca Per Coot 10c.
Dally and Sunday One year f 15 00
Daily and Sunday Six monthi 8 00
Dally and Sunday Three moa 4.25
Sunday Only One rear 1450
By Carrier In Advanca Medford
Ashland Centra) Point Eagle Point
Jacksonville Gold Mil Phoenix.
Shady Cove Rome River Talent
and oa motor routes
Dally and Sunday One year S18 0O
Dally and Sunday One month 1-30
Carrier and Dealer 10c per copy
All Terms Cash In Advanca
Official Paper of the City of Medford
Official Paper of Jackson County
United Press Full Leased Wire
MEMBER Or AUDIT BUREAU
OF CIRCULATION
Advertising Representative:
WXJT-HOLIDAY COMPANY tNC
Offices In New York Chicago, de
trolt San Francisco. Los Angeles
Seattle Portland tit Loula Atlanta
Vancouver B C
N A T I Ots A '. 101
A L O CI A
w w. - ' - , ..... i jiii nil
TOIlAi
ICN
L1
NEWSPAPER
pubiishers
association
Flight o' Time
Medford and Jackson County
Historv from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10. 20, 30 and
40 years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
March 25. 1947 (Tuesday)
Fir flight of the Southwest
Airways between Los Angeles
and Medford will be made April
1, according to Postmaster Frank
DeSouza.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: K. Jona
than, the Ed Watson boy, is busy
installing his first set of teeth.
While the work is going on, he
is not full of raptures.
20 YEARS AGO
March 25. 1937 (Thurdiay)
Mayor Joseph K. Carson of
Portland will speak at next
week's Rotary club meeting.
Dwight L. Houghton elected
president of the Southern Ore
gon banker's association.
30 YEARS AGO
March 25. 1927 (Friday)
A shipment of fir trees foi
reforestation in the Imnaha .dis
trict of Crater Lake national
park arrives from government
nursery at Wind River, wasn.
University of Oregon sym
phony performs at Hunt's Cra-
terian theater.
40 YEARS AGO
March 25. 1917 (Sunday)
Reduction of freight rate
fram San Francisco to Klamath
Falls and other southern Ore
gon points is delayed due to re
straining order issued by Fed
eral Judge Frank Ruskin of San
Francisco.
Movement is started in city
schools by Mrs. Alan Brackin
reed to forn clubs to work with
local branch of American So
ciety for Relief of French War
"-Orphans.
What's Ywr I.Q.?
Nina or ten correct la superior) Sev
an r.t elrht Is excellent: five as
six ta good.
1. Martini cocktails are made
with bourbon whiskey, ry
whiskey, or gin?
2. The British pound sterling
contains 20, 25 or 30 shillings
3. Bible: Which people "built
for Pharaoh treasure cities. Fit
hom and Raamses T
4. The total number of bones
in the human foot is 16, 26 or
36?
5. Name the smallest British
colony.
6. Was "Uneas" the "last of
the Mohicans" or "the Pathfind
er"?
7. The frock coat was given
what name in honor of the
prince consort of Queen Vic
toria?
8. The movement of Mexican
Jumping beans is a characteristic
of the bean itself, or due to the
movement of a larva within the
pod?
9. Who wrote "Abandon hope
all ye who enter here"?
Answers: 1. Gin; 2. Twenty
The Israelites, ("Children of Is
rael"); 4. Twanty-iix: 5. Gibral
tar (2 sq. miles); 6. Last of th
Mohicans"; 7. Prince Albert; 8,
Movement of larva within tha
pod; 9. Dante.
SENTENCED
Portland 0J.PJ Thomas
Rishworth. 50, former television
official here. Saturday was sent
enced to three years in federal
prison for sending obscene let
ters through the man.
What Is "Delinquency ?
The report given by Police Chief Charles Champ
lin last week to the effect that nearly half of all ma
jor crimes committed in Medford are by juveniles
is a shocking one.
But we'd better keep it in perspective.
The fact is that this series of robberies, burglar
ies, rapes, thefts, and so on, is done by a TINY MIN
ORITY of our young people.
The "problem of juvenile delinquency" is a real
one, all right, but it is a problem involving only a frac
tion of the young people of the community.
TIHEN we recognize this, and the related fact that
" the majority of young people are decent, re
spectable and well behaved, then we can come face to
face with the unsavoiy conclusion that, percentage
wise, more crimes are committed by young people than
by those in any other age group.
Why?
We doubt that there is any single answer. There
are, rather, a number of contributing factors.
Urban living, in our increasingly communal lives,
throws groups of young people into closer contact than
ever before in histoiy. This can lead to the develop
ment of "gangs" or a sort of "mob spirit," which if not
directed in proper channels can mean trouble.
e
HTHE automobile is another factor, and a big one.
They are almost universal, now, and permit a mo
bility unprecedented in histoiy.
The overall tenor of society has changed in the
last 40 years. Partly this is the result of two world
wars, a great depression, an economic "boom," and
an unsettling "cold war," which changed patterns of
living and thinking; changed habits of behavior;
changed the future outlook both for individuals and
for nations.
Time magazine's "new normalcy" notwithstand
ing, it is not a set and stable society in which we live
these days. It is a society in flux ; a civilization grow
ing and changing from day to day. Whether this is
good or bad we don't know, but we do know that it
has an unsettling effect on everyone and perhaps
most of all on young people who find no unchanging
patterns into which they can fit easily and securely.
THROUGHOUT histoiy young people have been
wig occivciOf me uirjaiucio, tile lucciiiais auu lug
rebels. No generation has been without qualms about
its own younger generation." Ours is no exception
Older people have made their adjustments, have
adapted to the world as it is. The youngsters are still
m the process. Most of them do so successfully. It is
those who have not, or cannot, make the adjustment
that cause the trouble.
And, as in everything else, external factors make
it more difficult for some than for others. Things like
broken homes; lack of parental interest, care or af-
ection ; lack of constructive suggestions in answer to
the age-old complaint "I don't have anything to DO"
these are contributors to lack of security. And so,
by golly, is a lack of discipline.
By discipline we mean not only a parent s con
trol, but a youngster's control over himself.
THESE are some of the factors involved. Who's to
no one, which isn t quite true, or by saying "every
one, which isn t quite true either.
(Have you sat in a movie theater recently when a lot of
young people are attending? We did last week, and were
astounded at the lack of courtesy and consideration, and the
downright thoughtlessness and rudeness exhibited by many
of the kids.We wondered if their parents were aware of the
disgraceful way their sons and daughters act when free from
control. And we wondered how many know the theater
management has been forced to hire an off-duty police of
ficer to patrol the aisles just to keep order.)
The situation with which we are confronted, wre
are convinced, is not one where the "younger gener
ation is going to the dogs. But it is a serious reflection
on a rather large too large percentage of families,
and of the youngsters themselves. It may even be, as
Uuet Lhampnn rather gloomily remarked, that there
is a breakdown in the American home." and tha
many parents expect teachers, police officers and
ministers to rear their children. .
Those that care about this problem care deeply,
But it is among those that couldn't care less that the
problem itself lies. E.A.
More Involved in Cutting Budget
Than Chopping Appropriations
By RAYMOND LAHR
United Press Correspondent
Washington (U.PJ While
Congress flails away at Presi
dent Eisenhower's budget, the
treasury will wait until mid
summer of 1957 to estimate
and until July of 1958 to report
what was accomplished.
To achieve real budget cuts,
much more is involved than con
gressional votes reducing appro
priation bills below administra
tion requests.
When Mr. Eisenhower submit
ted his budget in January the
$71.8 billion total was only an
estimate of what the government
will spend in the fiscal year
starting next July 1'. At the
same time he asked Congress to
vote $73.3 billion in actual new
appropriations.
Carryover Money
Congressional attention is io-
cused on the new appropriations
HUMPHREY TRIUMPHANT
Washington Secretary of the
Treasury George M. Humphrey
seems likely to have his way in
the end, as is
his custom. In
other words,
the national
prog ram to
emerge from
the current
session of Con-
cTroce Will
"Ti'i nrnhahlv he
iMIa -faiJ much more a
stewait aisop Humphrey
program than an Eisenhower
program.
In the struggle within the Eis
enhower Administration which
preceded the President's budget
message, Humphrey of course
fought and bled to hold down
and cut back the budget. But his
power J . the administration is
not quite what it was, and in
bills. But some of the money
spent in the new fiscal year will
come from funds Congress voted
in previous years; some will
come from the new appropria
tions; and some of the money in
the new appropriation bills will
be spent in later years.
Some of the whittling done by
Congress on the appropriation
bills will save money, some will
not. When the lawmakers add up
the reductions they have voted,
they include some "cuts" which
do not save the treasury a dime.
For example the House has
passed one ' appropriation biU
trimming almost $150 million
from the budget request for vet
erans' pensions and compensa
tion. This is not a budget cut,
but an expression of hope that
the administration overestimat
ed what it will need.
A Flexible Law
How much money is spent for
Matter Of FaCt By Stewart Alsop
7 J2 4&
he
this purpose is fixed by a law
which Congress has shown no
signs of changing. If the admin
istration estimate turns out to
be right, Congress will dutifully
restore whatever is needed in a
"supplemental" appropriation.
Many in Congress agree that
Mr. Eisenhower's budget is too
big. But there is much less
agreement about where and how
much to cut. Some think the
defense budget is too big and
some think it should be bigger.
Others have the same conflict
ing views about reclamation and
power projects.
As of now it seems a sure
thing that a majority in Con
gress will vote to trim the ad
ministration's $4.4 billion for
eign aid program. But Congress
will not know how much its
action will reduce actual spend
ing in the coming fiscal year.
In the Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
Let's talk for a moment today
about SPEED.
This thought is prompted by
the achievement of a navy Sky
Warrior jet bomber that made
the round trip yesterday from
Los Angeles to New York and
back in nine and a half hours.
THAT is to say:
If vnn had a Skv Warrior
jet bomber at your command,
you could leave the Pacific
Coast after a reasonably early
breakfast, have a leisurely lunch
in New York . or Washington
with friends or business asso
cites or prospective customers
and be back home on the Coast
in time to get to bed at least
as early as if you had merely
gone out for dinner and a show.
PRETTY speedy?
Wait!
You haven't heard anything
yet.
CAPTAIN EDDIE RICKEN
BACKER, board chairman of
Eastern Airlines and one of
America's great air heroes, told
the Philadelphia Rotary club
yesterday that as far as jet
travel is concerned continued
engine improvement wiU mean
that eventually transport planes
will fly across America in an
hour and across the AUantic in
two hours.
What that means is that if you
were willing to set the alarm
and get up as early as you would
if you were going duck hunting
you could fly to London and
have lunch at Claridge's or the
Ritz or the Savoy and be back
home and ready for the hay as
early as if you had just gone out
for a night on the town.
this preliminary struggle
suffered a partial defeat.
For example, the requested
fiscal 1958 defense budget was
up somewhat more than $2 bil
lion over the sum requested for
the current year. This is a lot'
less than the $6 billion increase
which Gen. Nathan Twining, Air
Force Chief of Staff, said last
year would be necessary to main
tain current Air Fcrce strength.
Even so, it is certainly more
than Humphrey wanted to spend
for defense.
It is too early to make any
precise predictions about the de
fense budget which will even
tually emerge from Congress.
But for the best guess of the best
guessers is that defense, which
was increased by $900 million by
the Senate last year, will be cut
back this year by between one
and two billion. This is close to
what Humphrey wanted in the
first place.
a
A GAIN, it is no secret that
Humphrey is less than an
enthusiast for foreign aid. He
was no doubt disappointed when
the Fairless committee, which
was largely his creation, failed
to propose cutting the liver and
lights out of the program. But
again, Humphrey seems likely to
have his way ir the end. Current
estimates on Capitol Hill are
that foreign aid will be reduced
by between $1 billion and $1.5
billion.
Or take the Eisenhower-spon
sored program for Federal aid
to schools, with a price tag of
just under a half billion dollars
in the Eisenhower budget. The
school aid bill is probably the
most important item in the Eis
enhower program of "new Re
publicanism.
A few weeks ago, it looked as
though the school bill would pass
rather easily, if the civil rights
hurdle could be overcome. Now,
there is an increasing tendency
in both parties to shy away from
the bill. The present prospect is
that it will pass only if the Pres
ident himself is prepared to
make a real fight for it.
If the bill does not pass it is
exceedingly unlikely that
George Humphrey, who is hard
ly an evangelical "modern Re
publican," will shed tears for it
Nor will he weep very bitterly
if the costly farm program, an
other "modern Republican"
item, is cut back sharply, as al
so seems possible.
Trees
Why do people like trees?
They do even those who don't make much fuss
about it. Almost every residential yard in town has
one or two, to break the bleakness of man-made build
ings, to give shade and color and greenery.
People appreciate parks, where branching trees
add so much, ihey like the tunnel-like arches which
trees provide for a few of our streets, and which at
this time of year are just beginning to come alive.
This may account for the quiet and generally fa
vorable acceptance of the recently-passed city ordi
nance which will encourage the orderly and cooper
ative planting of trees, and which will serve to en
hance the beauty of our city.
a
THE project's most ardent and vocal supporter f ore-
sees the day when long, sweeping vistas of color
will grace the residential parts of town; when fore
sight will make possible a unity and symmetry in
adornment for some streets, and a blending and con
trast for others.
The measure is practical (it provides for pro
tection of mundane but essential facilities), but it is
also idealistic, asking for voluntary cooperation from
homeowners who are going to plant trees to insure
their plans will conform to an over-all grand design
for beauty E.A.
pAPTAIN RICK ENBACKER
went on to tell the Philadel
phia Rotarians that he's predict
ing speedy, large-scale travel
BETWEEN PLANETS within 50
years.
He said these space ships
(powered by atomic energy) will
carry two thousand passengers
at speeds of about 5,000 miles
per hour. They will have un
limited range, he added, and
will be partially self-sustaining
planets in themselves.
1 ! ! ! 1
T ET'S get on with the tale.
J Dr. Walter Dornberger,
German-born expert now living
and doing his experting in the
United States, says in New Or
leans that he can take us to the
moon and back IN TEN YEARS
All he needs, he says,
twenty billion dollars. The 20
billions would cover the cost of
the launching satellite platform
the spaceship, special landing
craft and the cost of designs,
navigational aids, training and
research.
WHERE will the 20 billions
" come from?
I think I know.
They'll come out of the tax
payers' pockets for there's no
where else for that much money
to come from.
rpHAT leads to a chillin
thought:
Will any of us, after paying
his taxes, have enough left to
buy a ticket to go on one of these
J tabuious excursions?
I
N SHORT, something rather
close to the budget Humphrey
warted in the first place seems
likely to emerge. The main reas
on is the pressure on Congress,
the most intense in years, to cut
spending. The man chiefly re
sponsible for generating the
pressure is, of course, George
Humphrey.
Humphrey's famous "curl your
hair" press conference, in which
he attacked the Administration
budget head-on, was the real
kick-off for the cut-spending
campaign. The campaign, push
ed by the Chamber of Com
merce and similar organizations,
has flooded Congressional offices
knee-deep in mail.
While the pressure to cut
much heavier than ever, more
over, the defense of the Presi
dent's budget is dishwater-weak
Ordinarily, an Administration
defends its budget with all the
ferocity of a mother protecting
a favorite child. But this Admin
istration is acting toward its
budget more like a mother who
leaves an unwanted child on
strange doorstep.
a
T is hardly surprising that the
defense of the budget is weak
since the i-resiaent nimseu,
commenting on Humphrey'
statement, seemed to agree with
him. In the circumstances, the
Republicans feel no obligation to
defend, the Eisenhower budget,
and neither, naturally enough.
do the Democrats.
Altogether, it is a queer situa
tion, and a tribute to the power
and pertinacity of George M
Humphrey, a man accustomed
to getting his way. If Hum
phrey's getting his way means
wrecking or watering down the
whole Eisenhower program,
the defense, foreign aid, and do
mestic fields, no one seems to
care very mucfi, not even Presi
dent Eisenhower.
Copyright 1957 New York
Herald Tribune Inc.
From Washington
Nadler Advances
To $128,000 on TV
New York (U.R) Teddy
Nadler, a $70 a week Army stock
clerk, defeated a University of
Illinois professor and brought
is television quiz show win
nings to $128,000 Sunday night
Nadler, who had a mortgage
on his home when he became a
quiz show contestant 10 weeks
ago, won $32,000 by beating Dr.
Austin Ranney on the subject of
the Civil Wur. He also added
$8,000 to $88.000 . in winnings
from previous appearances by
tieing Mrs. Lowell Thomas Jr.,
daughter-m-law oft he news
commentator on the subject of
geography.
Nadler, from St. Louis, is now
third highest quiz show money
earner. Leonard Ross, 11, Tu-
Junga, Calif., won $164,000 and
31-year-old "ollege instructor,
Charles Van Doren, won $129,-
000.
In another contest, Polish-born
Count Alexander Lukawiecki,
Long Beach, Calif., tied at $4,000
in the "hot reds ' category witn
Mrs. Caroline Hebb, Locust
Valley. N. Y.. the challenger.
Both will return next Sunday
for the $8,000 question.
By Roscoe Drummond
THE STILL EXPLOSIVE
MIDDLE EAST
Washington The candid
judgment in Washington is that
the Middle East crisis is going
to become more explosive, not
less, during the coming weeks.
Most U.S. officials take an in
creasingly gloomy view of
Egyptian President Nasser's un
cooperative, even "provocative,"
attitude since the withdrawal of
Israeli forces.
Thus far President Nasser has
done nothing to improve the
climate for peace since the
United Nations and the United
States rescued him from the
Anglo-French-Israeli invasion.
Cairo has "announced" that
it will continue to deny the
Suez Canal to Israeli shipping,
which means that Egypt asserts
the right to use the restored
canal as an instrument of na
tional politics. That would be a
clear repudiation of the "six
principles" for the operation of
the Suez unanimously approved
by the U.N. Security Council
and accepted by the Egyptian
government.
General Nasser appears to be
persistently .and successfully
elbowing the United Nations
forces out of the Gaza Strip
from which so many harassing
raids were launched against the
Israeli frontier. .
Although the U.N. General
Assembly approved the function
of the U.N. Expeditionary Force
"to help maintain quiet during
and after" the withdrawal of
Israeli troops. General Nasser is
doing everything he can to un
dercut the U.N. either as a
means of helping to administer
Gaza or to guard the border.
Either Nasser will prevail or
the U.N. will prevail and that
is the nufj of it right now.
TT is true that one Israeli
freighter has sailed down the
Gulf of Aqaba to the Red Sea
undisturbed by either Egypt ot
Saudi Arabia in using its "right
of innocent passage" through in
ternational waters.
But it is too soon to consider
even this issue settled. Cairo
continues to talk about barring
Israeli ships from plying the
waters through which they must
pass to reach the Israeli port of
U.P. Correspondents
Forecast Headlines
United Press correspond
ents around the world look
ahead at the news that will
make the headlines.
Feelers
You can expect Soviet Rus
sian feelers at any time for a
'summit" meeting with Presi
dent Eisenhower and Prime Min
ister Harold Macmillan. London
diplomatic sources say Premier
Nikolai A'. Bulganin and Com
munist Party leader Nikita 5.
Khrushchev would like to ar
range one as a follow-up to the
Eisenhower-Macmillan talks in
Bermuda. There's very little
chance the President would
agree unless he knew the Rus
sians really had something to
offer. Mr. B. and Mr. fi. wouia
settle for a Big Four foreign
ministers conference. That one
might come off if the current
London disarmament negotia
tions go well.
Meat-Axe
Some liberal Democrats tear
the economy drive in Congress
will get out of hand. They say
11 migiu iiwuuw
ble" slash in foreign aid and
block school construction and
other welfare projects the ad
ministration seeks. At the same
time, the Democrats are maneu
vering to fix blame on the White
Threat Charged
To Teamster Man
Seattle U.R) Police today
were investigating a complaint
that a Teamsters Union em
nlovee made a threatening tele-
" - C TT
phone call to ine nome ra
ard Sylvester, wno xesuiieu icai
Thursday before the Senate
Rackets committee.
Sylvester, a Seattle real estate
dealer and public relations man,
sairt his wife received an anony
mous call Thursday night alter
he had appeared before the com
mittee. "Never mind who's calling,"
Mrs. Sylvester quoted the caller
as saying. "I just want to tell
Howard he'll be sorry he ever
testified and I'll get even with
him some day."
Mrs. Sylvester contended she
recognized the man's voice.
However, she didn't report the
incident to police until after her
husband returned home Satur
day. Sylvester said he had given
police the name of the suspect
and challenged him to take a lie
detector test.
Sylvester said he had handled
real estate deals for Teamsters
President Dave Beck and Thurs
day told the Senate committee
the teamsters wanted to domi
nate a campaign against a right
to work measure defeated in this
state during the last general
election. He asserted the union
owed him $10,000 for his work
in the campaign.
House for any "meat-axe" cuts.
They will say the President fail
ed to comply with the House
resolution asking him to tell
Congress where the budget
should be trimmed.
Surge
Information in Western Euror
pean capitals indicates a surge
of anti-Semitic feeling in Poland.
It comes not from the govern
ment or the Communist Party
leadership, but from both Red
"Stalinist" elements and Polish
ultra-nationalists out in the grass
roots. Polish Communist leader
Wladyslaw Gomulka is reported
to be worried over it and to be
doing all he can to discourage
it. But it continues, reports say.
Refinement
This year's atomic tests in
Nevada are expected to start in
mid-May and to go on through
the summer. A dozen or more
shots are scheduled all small
compared to the H-bomb. Pur
pose of the new tests is to refine
atomic warheads for field weap
ons, anti-aircraft missiles, and
other tactical uses. Newsmen
and civil defense officials will
be permitted to witness 'some
shots.
Bottling
Don't' look for early House
of Representatives action on
civil rights. True, the House Ju
diciary Committee has approved
a bill much like that the admin
istration requested. But it still
must be cleared to the floor by
the Rules Committee. Chairman
of this committee is Democratic
Rep. Howard W. Smith, a leader
in the southern drive to bottle
up the bill.
Elath. It may soon be more than
talk because Egyptian troops are
now reported to be moving tor
ward Sharm el Sheikh where
installations survey the Gulf of
Aqaba.
President Nasser justifies
these anti-Israel practices with
the assertion that Israel "must
not be rewarded for aggression.'
This is an empty justification.
If the basis for discrimina
tion against Israeli ships in the
use of the Suez and the Gulf of
Aqaba is the recent invasion,
then there was no basis for such
discrimination before the in
vasion. Of course, Israel should not
be "rewarded for aggression,"
but it is not "reward" for Israel
to receive the fair and impartial
treatment which she, in right,
deserved to receive and the
denial of which helped to bring
on the invasion.
The United Nations Assembly
has overwhelmingly condemned
both the Israeli invasion and
Egypt's discriminations against
Israel.
Now that Israel has obeyed
the U.N. resolution, are we to
accept the fantastic Egyptian
"contention that Egypt does not
need to cease its provocations
on the ground that to do so
would "reward" Israel?
ALL of these are the reasons
why the hardest tests in the
Middle East still lie ahead for -
the United Nations and the
United States.
For years the U.N. "resolved
against" but did nothing to stop
the Egyptian provocations
against Israel. Will it act effect
ively if these provocations are,
in fact, resumed?
We shouldn't overlook the fact
that the U.N. did not get Israel
out of Egypt. It was the U.S.
which persuaded Israel to with
draw after we assured Premier
Ben-Gurion that we would act
ively and energetically work to
realize the "assumptions" on
which she was withdrawing;
freedom for Israeli shipping,
freedom from the Gaza raids.
In many ways Israel is today
resting her safety and perhaps
even her survival upon the good
faith and good offices of the
United States. If Mr. Nasser con
tinues in his present course, the
U.S., by itself and through the
U.N. will be called upon to prove
that these "assurances" are
strong, not weak.
The peace and stability of the
entire Middle East will be at
stake.
Copyright 1957 New York
Herald Tribune Ine.
MISS IN MOTOR
Detroit (U.R) With Lois
Winterberg it's a case of the
course before the car. On com
pleting a high school course in
driver mechanics, Miss Winter
berg said: "Now that I know
what makes cars run, I think
I'll learn to drive one."
Top Men Ask Prayer
Cabinet meetings are always
opened with prayer. Since be
coming President, Mr. Eisenhow
er has missed
church attend
ance but few
times. Many
Sen a t o r s at
tend Devotion
al Breakfasts.
"Church mem
bership does
not save you."'
Only Jesus
Christ as Lord
and Saviour counts. Good works
are out so far as being saved has
to do. When you accept Christ
as having died for your sins, the
Holy Spirit quickens you to do
the work that pleases God. Being
saved, then by daily Bible and
Prayer, GROW UP. This Mes
sage sponsored by a Scappoose
family. Adv. .
1L
FUNERAL
SERVICES
In Every Price Range
Since 1908
PERL
Funeral
Home
Phone 2-6675
PERL'S every family
may make funeral ar
rangements which are in
keeping with its means. A
selection of services in
every price range is of
fered to satisfy individual
preferences a n d to meet
all financial circumstances.
Convenient Terms?
Certainly)
! t