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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (July 18, 1944)
PACE FOUR . HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON MALCOLM EPLEV Managing Bailor ! I-BANK JENKINS a (.mnorarr combination of the Evening Herald and tha A xeropwrj ftfrtirwin ejtcoDt Sunday '5 VKiaMde and I Plna streets. Klamath Fall.. Oregon, by the H.Sd ubflibJng Co. and tha, N.w. PublUhlng Company. SUBSCRIPTION RATES! grade Is quite steep, and downhill travel soon picks up hazardous speed. Here again, cautious driving is essential. When additional work is done on this road, at least one bad turn should be eliminated. Several cars have gone off there, including one ambulance. 'sasrrrss'WB sisi58g The War Today nnXr&.matjTLa. Modoc Siskiyou coun'le. year tT.OO I " ' Cntared aa second clau martar at the poatoiflee J.1 JOamath armaria m . M l908 under act of congreaa. March 8. 1879 ' Member, Associated Press Member Audit Bureau Circulation I t VSJs V aaaaiaa I Today's Roundup By MALCOLM EPLEY F' AINT praise from Mr. Roosevelt seems to ho.,o onmntipated the candidacy of Heriry Wallace for the vice-presidential nomination at the democratic convention opening in Chicago tomorrow. Convention delegates today i were clashing in interpreta- il tions of a letter from Mr. Roosevelt. In it, the Big Boss said he would "personally" vote for Wallace if he were a delegate, because he likes and respects Wallace and is his personal friend. Obviously, he added, the convention must do EPLEY the deciding. vk.i f h vim nresident claim that this mild expression is tantamount to a dismissal, while his supporters claim that it is a clear and satis j factory endorsement.- i rw irW said that the president's letter left the convention "wholly free" to make its -,. ,hni whifh would be indeed a friendly t and kind act on the part or tne president. That there is any doubt at all indicates that J Mr. Roosevelt recognizes a certain disaffection i in the party, especially in areas where there is J little love for Mr. Wallace. He has seen to it t that if Mr. Wallace is placed on the ticket, it J will be the convention, and not Mr. Roosevelt, that does the placing. i The president, who is so powerful in his party j he could accept the nomination in advance, cer- tainly could name the second man on the ticket I without equivocation if he wanted to. . ' ! Traffic Hazards TRAFFIC has so increased in this area in the past few months that additions have been made to the state police patrolling force. Haz "t ards have generally returned to pre-war serious J ness, and the accident statistics are on the rise. The two major access roads to military in- stallatlons here are not only heavily traveled J but possess other qualifications as danger-spots requiring the most careful driving. . . Altamont drive, leading to the naval air station, passes through a thickly settled subur n ban area. There are no sidewalks there and J pedestrians, including many children, must walk along the sides of the paved street. The county , has cooperated with state police in their ef- forts to control the situation there, placing 25 e mile limit signs all along the route. ' ' " But traffic still moves with dangerous speed on Altamont. - The Marine Barracks road, while recondi- tioned from the days when it was just the "Old a Fort road," still possesses dangerous curves, as was illustrated in a- fatal accident today. The By DeWITT MacKENZIE Associated Press War Analyst ONE of the grave questions of this final phase of the European war is whether there's likelihood of liberated peoples taking matters into their own hands and exacting re prisals on the Hitlerites who not only have en slaved them but have committed wholesale atrocities. To put the matter bluntly, the problem is whether there may be bloody massacres of vengeance before the allied military is able to control the situation. Certainly the Germans are afraid of this, and there's no doubt they have reason for fear. The opportunities would seem to be ample. Quite apart from the occupied countries, Germany itself is full of slaves French, Dutch, Belgian, Polish, Czech, Italian many of whom are ach ing for revenge. Count 100, Then Answer WELL, what would you do if you were a slave and perhaps had seen your loved ones tortured or killed? Better not answer that one until you've counted a hundred. That re minds me of a conversation I had the other day with a distinguished American friend who, in cidentally, was a soldier in the last war. He got pretty hot over what ought to be done to reform the nazis. "If I were a soldier again," he exploded, "I'd bayonet every damned nazi civilian I could reach." "Wait a minute," I said. "It's a hundred to one bet that even if you were commanded to bayonet civilians, you wouldn't do it. More over, you wouldn't be ordered to do anything of the kind. That's exactly the sort of thing the allies are fighting to wipe out." A little later my friend reverted to the sub ject rather sheepishly. "About bayoneting civilians," he grunted. "You're right. I couldn't do it." Militarism, Not People, to Die OF course, he couldn't, and no more could any other civilized soldier. But that doesn't mean we've got to be soft with the Hit lerites. As a matter of fact the allied chiefs have promised just but stern retribution. The reich is going to lose territory. It will be deprived of all means of making war. It will be occupied for years by- allied troops. Nazism and Prussian militarism are to be wiped out. Still, with all this, there's something missing. It's the something which my friend had in mind something over which the enslaved peoples of Europe are brooding and that has to do with what punishment is to be meted out to individuals for . war crimes, from Hitler down to the. soldier who commits an atrocity under orders. - . , : ."AU that will be taken care of under the pro - gram we've been Ied'to expecCIf that is carried out there will be thousands upon thousands of trials for war crimes, and the punishments will fit the crimes. Presumably there will be '.many death sen tences and many life imprisonments. And this will be official and legal. SIDE GLANCES Mm. ItUlY IHA UKVKI, HtC T M. MB. U. . MT. Off V- .g "Don't tell me thai, young lady. - The government is billions in debt do you expect me to believe thev'd freeze my account because 1 owe seven dollars?"" i U. S. Participation in I World Association Urged For Demo Platform Plank CHICAGO, July 18 () A ueuitiiauon iur posi-war partici- tintinn nf iha TTn.ta4 CtafA. 4 association of nations "imple- be necessary to maintain world j-tai,c was fjiupusea 10 tne democratic platform committee today by the American Leeion Tf. xuaa nreeatitarl fn U i-i xuwu mniiKi- oy ijouis a. jonn- - bju, ncau 01 tne juegion s post 5 war committee, former national , commander, former undersecre- - 01 war ana personal repre- sentative of President in India. Embodying a resolution of its - lost jiauuutu uunvenuon, tne L,e- gion statement said: 4 uur own national concern r must ever be our first concern and we believe that our nation can best serve and protect its na- tioI!al """est, commensurate . With le nn.i.an ! ... ties by participating in the es J tablishment and maintenance of f an assuuiauon oi iree and sov- ereign nations, implemented f with whatever force may be uiamium worm peace and prevent a recurrence of war." The platform drafters also re- . uuHouua iur a party declaration favoring quick peace time elimination of the war la bor board, the manpower com mission, and the wage stabiliza- nun a i. if, J u T!e. Proposals were advanced ! py John R. Suman, director of J the National Association of Man , ufacturers. I n-Senat.or Harry S. Truman of Missouri said he thought the gamers would come out with a t Paorm of about 2000 words. I We. Pre Bolng to make it just as short as we can." he told re , porters. The hope, Truman said, , is to be "frank in every declara J Jj0.,, avoiding "straddling of is- J Knottiest Issue before the plat- , ' - t a a form committee at the moment is a controversy over the word ing of a plank dealing with the race question. Negro association leaders urged an outright state ment against poll taxes and re moval of any discriminations, which promptly ran head-on into an nnnnsinnn ninvamont southern delegates. , Heat Wave Felt In Oregon By The Aisociatsd Pr. Oregon thermometers saw roA again today in a heat wave that sent tne mercury to 102 at Med ford yesterday and into the 90's at a imiiiuei ui utner points. Klamath JTallo .cuilcu a max imum 94; Pendleton and Rose burg 93: Lakeview. 02- F, and Burns 91; Portland. Baker ana nena ov; Meacnam 88. Only along the coast was it cool. Newport had a maximum jx uo miq OfOOKingS 01. Hundreds of Lives Taken In Other Explosions B Tha & IIAfiinlA J Tl Munitinnc ovn1ne.nn. iti tary establishments, on ships and . iouiiw nave cosi Hundreds of lives in the United States since the first World war. , None was so great, however, as wioaoici un uecemoer o. 1917 .... ywua wwc lust al ter a rnilisinn hofuioan n , tions ship and a relief ship off j ,"" oMB. jit; explosion destroyed two and a half square :Si. , J ', uVl "-"""Sana nnn "V130 seriously, and 20,- vum luaue noineiess. Prior tn Tasf niaM'e : Of a naval ammnn i nn t ti i i . HHiiiMi;ii vessel at Port Chicago, Calif., the nation's uisasirous snip Diast in re cent VPars nrpiifpor) Tn,, n trAA t 7, Xi waiiuttiy a , , - ci lurner w uRrat the entrance of low- ci new xors Day, The exact death toll has not been rilsrlncorl hut u:j ,rr, 7. "1C uiua na val public relations office said inuie man iuu lives were lost. A tntnl nf .Kd iirnH 7. saved. Mfirn tVion OK t,:filj cisons were f'"ei JSArJ-aJn!?u"ition explos- t".? "ic uiioik, va., naval air station September 17, 1943. vuier major munitions ex clude"3 m the laSt 28 years in- r-A Gem of Thought From Idella's bmh a Curvacious Cutle from Bend i Who is credited with Wisdom, No End. ;, v To me all Uniforms look the same, ; But I've observed, being a careful dame, , The more bars on the armThe more they spena. Solitaire Make-Up . . . ... 25c AT IDELLA'S Phona t 4846 8. atb July 31. 1918 Two killed in iwiiM8 Tom blast which shook New York waterfront and 000S000 estimated at $22,- TNsaym!'nf191? r.100 killed at TNS plant of Aetna Chemical company near Pittsburgh, Pa ,J,ui7 lO-.A9 TweAtyK,'ne yucu ana OU,UUO,000 worth of damage caused when lightnine rTUClan"aIai-,mu"it'0 depot w iC "owns most cost ly explosions was a gas blast in w,ndon' Tex- schoolhouse Mch 18 1937, in which 455 werekilled. aC"ers un May 15, 1929, 100 persons were killed when an X-ray film clinic,-filling thTSinTwitl! Hvm nd?,itLrh,u"dd? other v . ivai. in a ions list of mine explosions. PriP- D.O ...n.'.U 1 , uc a nice, res Jljt i. V " eauie it you didn't have to .love. If lf.' o need. Vrl'?" ""c'5 m in the classified. UMa "e Market Quotations NEW YORK. July 18 AP Stocks tried for a comeback In today's market but enough further selling appeared around mid-day to put leaders down fractions to 2 points or mora. Closing quotations: American Can . 01 Am Car & Fdy . 40" Am Tel St Tel - ..102 Anaconda . 2tHi taui Facxmg Cat Tractor Commonwealth & Sou Curtis-Wright uenerai jsiecuic General Motors Gt Nor Ry pfd Illinois Central Int Harvester Kennecott Lockheed Lona-Bell "A Montgomery Ward nasn-Keiv .. N Y Central Northern Pacific pac Gas & 1 Packard Motor , Penna R R Republic Steel . Richfield Oil . Safeway Stores Sears Roebuck Southern Pacific Standard Brands , Sunshine Mining 'iTans-Amenca . Union Oil Calif . Union Pacific U S Steel Warner Pictures Joan Atane . n: teSKic4 f V It f 1 JSk ' i frj a x -j : .. . t sv I -r- ., v;.,;v . r- a ) V'ts x f Z: I ffc" - "1irss-w ft ' i at, ,-y. a - ffSS v; Potatoes CHICAGO, July 18 (AP-WTA) Pota toes, arrivals 81; on track 201; total U. S. shipments 227; supplies moderate; for California Long Whites demand mod erate, market firm for best stock; for red stock demand good, market strong: for Missouri and Kansas cobblers demand Improving at lower prices; California Long Whites U. S. No. 1, 14.35-50: com mercials 93.85-4.25; Missouri cobblers fair to generally good quality 93.10-15; Kansas cobblers lair to generally good quality 92-00-2.35. WHEAT CHICAGO. July 18 fAP Weakness In the grain market In late trading today. Rye futures led the decline and at one time September wheat slipped to within less man a ceni oi ine loan -ivei. Weakness of rve. Increased hedse sell ing and commission house liquidation were responsible xor me easy undertone in wheat. Wheat closed He higher to Ike lower than yesterday's finish,- July 91.57H. Oats were off Vi to Vic. July 77Sic. Rye was ii to ic tower. juiy ti.oou, Barley was unchanged to Vie lower, JUiy ?1.Z6. II HED TO WORK AT HEAVY LABOR WASHINGTON. July 18 (IT) An appeal for moro women lo do strenuous uui:liu the forgo mid foundry industry was coupled today with an nouncement that any volunteers mav offer themselves simply by wiring collect to tlio war man power commission. The anency suRdcsled the message could rend "1 would like a fore or foundry Job, and said it should Klvo mime, ago, address and telephone num ber. The lornl U. S. employment service will immediately com municate with the volunteer and refer him to an appropriate job, WMC Director McNutt said. Arrangements have been made with the 48,000 Western Union offices for proper handling of the messages, McNutt said. The industry, rated the coun try's No. 1 manpower problem and' regarded heretofore as among the hottest and toughest types of vvork, Is turning increas ingly to women, McNutt said. He disclosed that women are helping make parts for the D-20 superbombcr in a Iliuvcy, 111., plant. About 500 women there are producing forge and foundry parts. Electric hoisting ma chinery has been revamped so that women workers aro able to handle B-29 castings weighing 400 pounds. Byrd Surprised By Vote Pledge CHICAGO, July 18 fH) Sena tor Harry F. Byrd said todav the action of the Mississippi 'dele gation in pledging its 20 votes to him for the democratic presi dential nomination was "a com plete surprise" but had not caus ed him to alter his position that he is not a candidate. "I appreciate the compliment." he said, "but I am not a candi date and never have hern." . (NBA TeUpholo) Another- of Hollywood's "perlect marriaEes" ends as Actress Joan Blondell appears in Los Angeles court to win divorce decree from Actor Dick Powell after she charged "cruel and Inhuman" treatment. .Friendly,-, Helpfulness - To Every Creed and Purse Word's Klamath Funeral Home Marguerite M. Ward and Sons AMBULANCE SERVICE 825 High Phone 3334 Courthouse Records ComolalniR Filed Peter N. Gray versus Sue Mary Gray. Suit for divorce, charge cruel and in human treatment. Couple married In Salem on March 7. Plaintiff asks custody of two minor children. II. S. Balentine, attorney for plaintiff. Divorce Decrees Charles A. Pitts versus Lottie Pitts. Vivian Duffv versus TlnUnn rnfv Plaintiff awarded restoration of former name. Vivian Moore. OrvilJe R. Schroeder versus Luva M. Schroeder. Gordon B. Lenni riser versus Caroline jxirraine lenmnger. nerman n 111 versus uoris mil. Emma Ruth Robertson versus Everett Leonard Robertson. Plaintiff awarded restoration of former name Emma Ruth inexton. Ora Li. Gllloek versus Dean Rlllnrlr. Madae M. Land versus Harrv James John G. Crelghton versus Lola L, Crelghton. cnristine Hargrove versus Maxwell S, Hargrove. Plaintiff awarded restora tion oc xormer name, Christine Stewart. Irwin Welser. Drunk on nubile hifih- way. Fined $10 or 5 days. Juanlta May Chipps. Disorderly con duct. Fined $15 or 7A days. Rita Berkley. Disorderly conduct. Fined SIS or 7 "A dnvs. Ervin Richard Corbln. Failure to stop at stop sign. Fined $9.50. -Egbert Hugh Smith. Drunk on public Relieve that Tormenting PIN-WORM ITCH Too embarrassing; to Talk About! It It no knnr nxeaiarr lo ut np with tha trouble earned by Pln-Worm. Don't let jroor child or round! auffer that tor-meriting-, embarraulni rectal Itching, or take chancea with the Internal dlitrera. Medical ecleneo has now discovered es Jieio and Uphlu effective wav to deal with tW; atubborn and troublesome Infection. This Important sclcntWo discovery Is a remarkable druK known aa uontian violet. It Is the vital element In P-W, the new Pln-Worm treatment developed by the laboratories of Dr. D. Jayne A Son. Amer SMle2 !" """'allsU In worm medicines. P-W tablets are small and easy to take, jnd tber act In a special way to destroy the Ug-ly creatures. i Watch for the warning slims t ttehrcisT nose and seat, uneasy stomach, bed-wet-tin, uneven appetite. Remember that now there Is a treatment that works on Pin worms aa no old.fasMoned "worm eyrup" or worm candy" could. So If you even sus pect Pin-Worms, yet a box of P-W rlrtt away, and follow the directions carefully, f-W means fln.Worm relief 1 LIVESTOCK SOUTH SAM FRANCISCO, July 18 fAP-WFAl Cattle: 2.W. Generally steady, most steers, heifprs and range covs. Short strings 050-1000 lb. steers off grass $14.30-15.00 with few 000-950 lbs. to feed lot at $11.00-12.30. Short strings 850 900 lb. heifers Sll.00-U.50. Good cows $12,00. aged medium $0.00-9. SO. odd head common S8.00-8.50, cutters 97.00-7,30, can ners $5.00-6.00. Grassy sausage bulls $8.50-11.00. Calves 10. Steady: package 260-275 ibs. $14.00. HOgs: 250. Active, 15 cents higher on few; two loads Oregon good to choice 180-220 lb. barrows and gilts $15.50, sev eral short strings Catifornlas $15.25. Good sows steady $9.00-9.50. Sheep: 3300. Slow, asltinir strnriv. No early sales. Choice 80 lb. lambs scarce, bulk common to good. Ewes quoted $1.50-4.50. nnd cutter cows $4. 50.3.7ft; shelly rows $1.00 down; fat dairy type rows up to 5O.S0; common berf cows $7.oo-.v); good bulls $9.00-30; common grades down to $7.00; good-choice around ;WO-323 lb. quotable to $13.00; common grudes dowtl HOC SJlljihin nnrl tntnl 1rw. I.l.t.. 7(x); iew early sales steady; Inter Initio 25 cents lower: few sales ..molly common 1 HO-2-10 lb. lot $14..i3.H.3U; good 180 20 lb. lalo $14.00-10: mostly unsold; choice 230 lb. $14.00; aW-310 l. $12 00: light lights mostly $11.00-12.00: few 160- light weight to $10; good-choico feeder Sheep salable .150; total 600; holdover 1300; demand extremely narrow; few sales spring lambs and yearling 30 cents lower: few owes steady to weak; good common spring lambs $11.30-13.00; liber.il IV?5i.y.m,lum'S0Kl UIld he'd around rn: (ew common springers S8.CO-0.5O; common yearlings 7.W: culls down to $5.00; good ewes $3.50-4.00: culls down to $1.00. CHICAGO. July IB (AP-WKA)-Salable hogs 17.000; total 31.000; moderately active; welgnts 270 Ibs. and down stcad, heavier weights and sows steady to most 1 wnU higher: good and choice 1B0-270 Ibs. $13.73-00. top $13,115; good and choice 280-300 lbs. $12.83-13.40; 300 330 Ibs. $12.05-13,00; 330-400 lbs. $12.23 75; good nnd choice 150-170 lhs. scarce ai $12.75-13.30: good nnd choice nso-fl. lb. sown $11.30-73. choice light v-elghts to $11,90; around 3000 held over. Salable cattle G500; salable calves 1000' general market active, largely fed sleer run. trade strong to 15 cents higher; medium and good grade showed most advance; $17.30 pnid with half dozen loads loads held above this price: bulk fed steers $14.30-17.00; host 101 0-1 h wE A?"".7'38' IonB yrU" $17.40; a a r vc',llnK,, $17.30; sharply .I.H.-IJJ1I, imminnipa enws, bulls, nnd common and medium grade heifers; ?f."div 1 l?1""fn: mmtly 5i2.oo-i4.50: stock cattle continued alow, steady at $9.00.12.00. ..th.. T ",,l!cp ,1UW lo,af VW market rather slow, early in Irs mostly ilrady to 25 cents lower: spring Inmbr. and shorn owes In scant supply; odd lots good and "1'niinrrn f,Wi-li,W): Willi bucks discounted M OO; frw medium and kind quotable to 50.00 and Im-Iow; odd lots shorn nntive ewes $4.00-5.75 accord ing to grade. Jap Dive That Failed rt"'"" x .tea. i v . , i.ih Minna n,tla nun. nn Mm hnnV 111 rtn.nm-n,H mi.. f illve n PucKIc Flout escort cnrrlor during recent Mr lu-tlon wmi 1 Mnrlnnni. This photo, tnken from dock oj nnollicr cnrrlcr, hon J . i. ll. ivl lu,nt, nftrtr Irlllfnl n,H..H... 1 "Y Oi tUtCUU ,UVOUtt, w. ww -v. ........ u. ..tiMtuicfuif tl prevented hit. U. & Nuvy photo. PORTLAND MEN BUY SHAW'S STATIONERY Al Hntton and L. C. Jones of the Kubll-Howcll company of Portland have purchnscd the Khnw stnt oncrv comnnny In Klamath Kalis from Mrs. Clnrn Shaw, It has been announced here. Hntton ins taken over as resi dent manager and has moved here with his wlfo and son Mark, 10. He has been with Bushoiin and company for the past 20 years, working up from stock clerk tn.salcsmonaiicr. Ho s enthusiastic over tne futuro of Klamath Falls and hopes to be able to take in some hunting and fishlnn here. The new owners of the store wish to thank Mrs. Shaw for the fine store she has maintained and they have announced they aro proud to tnkc on ship of the finest ilal'-t. biwi w un in urogon. PILES SUCCESSFULLY TREATED NO PAIN NO IIOSrlTAI.IZATION Ne l.e.s ef Time Termsnenl Reaullel DR. E. M. MARSHA Chlropranllo Physician N. lib lUiiuIrs Thtatra Bld Phons lOflft Paul O. Landry this quoition: In case I should hin an accident or becomii tously 111 and my docla ordered mo to a heipim 1 would be unahla In mut lh expense without b rowing money. It thtiau inexoemive form at a nee that will pro Ida In in paymont ot all coilid hospitalisation and audio! treatment?" For Information on uf Insurance problem, court THE LANDRY CO., 419 Main St. Ph. 5611 Tha Courthouse It Ne One Block Down Thl Street From Our Office, ure juiy it, ,t--wi--AI Cattle salable and total 150: holdovers .inn- -aluH ..I.M. . I .nr. .. very Blow: partial clearance at steady to weak: prices somo sales 25 cents or more lower: quality poor: few common steers 50.00-10.50: cutters down to 3(1.23: few common heifers S8.oo-O.00: canner nervous. Restless On "CERTAIN DAYS" OfTfia Month? If functional periodic disturbances roako you feel nervous, tired, restless, "dragged out" at such times try fa mous Lydla E. Plnkham's Vegetable Compound to relieve such symptoms. It helps naturel Plnkham's Compound Is also a grand stomachic tonic, Follow label directions. Worth trying t LYDIA E. PIKKHAM'S SZl Evangelistic BIBLE CONFERENCE Evangelist ROY L. BROWN One of the outstanding Biblo teachers In America today, is conducting services NOW July 18 through July 23 Every challenging message illustrated with a large col ored chart, Immanuel Baptist Church llth and High Sts. saaasaaaaaaaao ' W MSfM'ft&lffit -izi.'-' asai.sjia.1 mjp1' W'JMliP Hiiuav ' mursday, July 20th, 10 A. M. to 8 P. M. wi-Ne-Ma Hotel, Klomoth Foils, Oregon, Now; the hard of hearing are) offered a test that scientifically answer their question-. ''Canmyheariagofopeechberestoredtonormal?" T"!,! S.f ''"" l9 T.sf Is a Whether of eel you use a hear, lug aid. It plays no favorites, you have a mild, medium, er Sh'.!?T",,.f ",VW h,,rl" '"'-come l i.- m? " '. Iar. to above hotel with a relative mof fladingi, to this acid test. Hearing Test absolutely tree. ACOUSTIC ON INSTITUTE siTafS"1.6 N: Tlit and Associates. Dealer, 317-918 American Bank Blda., Portland, Oregon, 214 Miner Bldg., Eusene, Oraqon. ""UUii""" - awa. u VMlKmT For The Remission Of Sins -fr IN two former lessons we found that the baptism ol lb New Testament is Immersion In water. Having !"' that tha one baptism is water baDtlsm. and that the sell or mod of baptism is immoriiom m we will study tho design, or purport tl baptism, It should be sufficient to HI that Jesus commanded baptism, and lb' because he commondod it, it becom" the responsibility of every lndltid to obey that command in order to t saved. It is a fact well worth coniidtf ing that in every place in ths N Testament where baptism and saW" aro connected, baptism always procn salvation. How different is the l Inn nf tha Mau. Tulamanl. to that C. B. Shropshire, the creeds of churches, which Portland, 'hat men are first saved, and then bv r ,, . ' tlsod because they are saved. Evangelist ., ' of tho ,oxli (I the New Testament that deals with baptism and aalvatlo and see if mon are first saved and then baptliod, or iujj baptised then saved. "He that bolioveth and is bapli' snan co saved; but he that dlsbolleveth ahall be condemn (Mark 16:16) "Ropent ye, and be baptised every one of y in the name of Jesu Christ unto the remission of Y; Sinsi and va shell rar-olv k. h Mnlv Spi'U' (Acts 2:38) "And now why tarrlest thou? Arise, and bj baptized, and wash away thy sins, calling on his inn (Acts 22:18) "For as many of you as wore baptised v Christ did nut an rv,rl.i " in.i n.otv "ivkii. also ailH 1 truo likeness doth now save you, even baptism, not b putting away of the filth of the flesh but the Interrogate of a good conscience toward God, through the resurrect!" - tf.sis;. . j It would require help lo misunderstand the teaching the foregoing scriptures, Any person with an honost ' fair mind could never from these texts, understand thai ' aro first saved and then baptised. i It may be suggested that baptism alone will not save, a to this suggestion I heartily agree, but neiihor will alone save; but when we hear and do the words of J" who said, He that belleveth, and ia baptisod shall be ' we can trust Him for hi promise. Come Tonight Hear EVANGELIST SHROPSHIRE - Discuss the Subject: "UNITED WE STAND" Church of Christ BIG TENT MEETING Two Block Past Tower Theatre On South Sixth