Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, January 10, 1945, Page 4, Image 4

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    PACE FOUR
ritANK JENKINS
MALCOLM EPLEV
Mtniglnf Editor
mmw, ., t. a ii
March I. ITO
carrtar
SUBSCRIPTION BATES:
monln Toe By man -
jaar 7.S0 By null .
SuioTE.'nTSrLU.. Modoc. BIfclyou onUa. -l.r H-W
A temporary combination ol u Evawns r raid and th.
Klaroatt Nm Publuhtd avarj aft.rnoon .xc.pt Sunday
SSS and Pin. .twaia. Klanutb rail. Oraion. Mr th.
Brald PuMUMnj Co. and th. New. PublUhlna Con.pa.ur.
Member.
Associated Preu
Member Audit
Bureau Circulation
News Behind the News
By PAUL MALLON
WASHINGTON, Jan. 10 Trying to dispel
some international fog yesterday, I re
ported that inasmuch as Russia delayed the
Dumbarton Oaks agreement, and is now sealing
off central Europe with her armies, she prob
ably would be glad to join the club-like Dum
barton world order in the coming promised
negotiations which Is to complete the club char
ter by April (we hope.) -
The club naturally would guarantee her gains
forever with arms and perpetuate a post-war
Europe which directly or indireotly is now
dividing spheres of influence between the Rus
sians and British, with the Russians in posses
sion of the lion's share.
These considerations naturally have raised the
Questions in the public mind as to whether this
nation, the senate or even the administration,
will be so strong for the coming charter to pre
aerve forever what is something short of our
announced ideals. What do we get out of it?
Well we get the mandated islands of Japan
in the Pacific. No question of that. We also
get our own hemisphere influence, or recogni
tion of it, as we already had it in fact. The
coming Mexico City meeting is supposed to
bring Argentina around and establish a front
of diplomatic solidarity on our longitudes. Thus
the coming world charter will direct our vision
westward and south. '
.....
No Red Assistance
WE are defeating Japan without the assist
ance of the Russians. The help we are
getting from the British will raise some question
of post-war British influence in the Orient
; (Hongkong, etc.) which must be settled, and
there is a communist army in China.
Yet the results of the war and the proposed
eharter give us the top position westward and
southward, which we clearly do not have in
Europe, Africa and most of Asia (India.)
Our future, under the current conceptions
of things here, would seem therefore to lie in
those directions, but not too far, perhaps not too
deep into Asia, .
- Our fleets will command the Pacific, Indeed
all the waters of the world, but political power
these days seem to march with armies, and I do
not know how far the charter will take our
armies into Asia,
- Very definitely, I think the administration
;will want this arrangement. Mr. Roosevelt is a
little on the Russian side anyway. Announce
ments have suggested this is about all we can
expect to get, and whatever we can get will
no doubt be accepted with considerable outer
enthusiasm and official justifications.
Will the senate and the people go for it?
They might. The available alternatives may not
be pleasant. The arrangement might be pre
sented upon a "take it or get something worse"
basis. Quite a powerful nation could be main
tained within the sights of our new vision, if
it if effectively organized.
But I think our acceptance all depends upon
how fully and convincingly our hopeful ideal
of democracy is held out to the rest of the
world, particularly in Europe, by this charter.
.....
May Not Be Popular
UNLESS there are genuine prospects of Atlan
tic charter idealism not mere words-and
real freedom for peoples, in place of the fake
freedom preserved by armed might and directr
ing powers which absorb the very souls of men,
as well as feeding out economic substance to
ti,em I do not think the charter will be very
popular or can be made very popular In tins
C And even if put through the senate by sheer
force of administration power, it could not
endure. Only solutions which answer the
yearnings for real freedom in the hearts of
men can permanently hold their support.
You can feed Europe, as some of our people
wish to do, to improve our prestige and power
there. True enough much food will have to be
sent as a matter of relief, but the use of food for
political effect generally has only a temporary
result. , . ' .,
The Chinese have a phrase , for such tactics.
Churchmen carrying Christianity to the Orient,
found it sold faster with a bowl of rice. But
they also found that not infrequently as soon
as the rice ran out, their converts lost real.
They were called rice Christians.
Nothing will take the place of genuineness
and soundness In human or international re
lations, and the measure of these qualities in
the coming agreement will determine u results.
The War Today
By DeWITT MacKENZIE
Associated Press War Analyst
phi! word for which we've been waiting since
I Bataan and "the march of death"! Mac-
Arthur has landed on Luzon and the pivotal
battle of the war of the Pacific has been
joined. ,
With consummate audaciousness the Ameri
can commander has flung an army ashore on
Lingayen gulf near the same spot employed
k ih victorious Jaoanese when they Invaded
the Philippines three years ago. He hit straight
for the strategically logical point of entrance, as
Nippon's own General Homma, conqueror of the
Philippines, predicted that the Americans would
have to do.
60,000 Troops Land
TOKYO says we have landed 60,000 troops
from the 70 mile long cbnvoy of 800 ships
which crawled across the open waters like a
huge sea-serpent to challenge what might have
been a desperate defense on the beaches. The
fleet entered the gulf under the protection of a
terrlfm air and naval barrage, and contrary to
expectations, encountered small resistance. As
a result we quickly established a 15-mile beach
head and pushed rapidly inland to give the
position the depth necessary for security.
Thus the MacArthur-NimlU brotherhood has
made a fine beginning of this crucial operation.
It likely is far better than they had dared hope
for, since they must have expected to encounter
greater enemy resistance In the air and from
shore batteries, and to have to fight up bloody
heaches.
However, we shouldn't make the mistake of
assuming that because the initial landing was
easy. This is the gauge of the ugnt to come,
This closing phase of the battle of the Philip'
pines bids fair to be long and sanguinary. For
the first time in the Pacific conflict we have
two big armies facing each other in territory
which is sufficiently open so that there can be
a full scale war of movement
Set For Clash
THE Japanese are powerfully set for the clash,
and may be expected to make a last-ditch
stand for this island, which is one of the key
stones of their war structure. Their light re
sistance against our landing may have been
due in part to doubt as to just where Mac
Arthur exDected to put his main force ashore.
However, it's not unlikely that General Yama-
shita, the enemy commander, decided he would
serve his interests better if he didn't try to de
fend the beaches under what he knew would
be an absolutely annihilating barrage of bombs
and shells.
We may be sure that Yamashlta has his plans
for counter-attack. And he's a soldier of great
capabilities, as witness his sensational conquest
of the Malay peninsula and Singapore. Mac
Arthur is up against a foe who is worthy of
his steel and one who is bound to battle to a
finish for this vital base.
SALTBURN, Yorkshire, Eng
land, Jan. 10 (flV-In. one of the
bitterest attacks on Russian poU
icy by a member of commons
since the war began, Cmdr. Rob
ert T. Bower charged today that
soviet Russia "stabbed Poland in
the back" and was cruel in her
treatment of hundreds of thou
sands of Poles.
Bower, a conservative and one
of the leaders of the Roman
Catholic factions in commons,
told the Saltburn Rotary club
tnat premier otaun was a cola
blooded realist."
Bower said that when Stalin
signed a non-aggression pact
with Hitler in 1939 he was act
ing from motives of "pure self
interest from the Russian point
of view."
"There is no reason to suggest
his policy has changed today,"
he said. "Russia is playing power
politics and the Atlantic Charter
has been torn to shreds.
"However unpleasant, we
must face the fact that Russian
imperialism is sowing dragons'
teeth in eastern Europe today. If
she is allowed to get away with
it, I believe another and more
terrible war will result in a few
years' time."
Transportation Fees
Total All-Time High
SALEM, Jan. 10 (P) Motor
transportation fees paid into the
state public utilities commis
sioner totaled an all-time high
of 52,126.369, PUC Commission
er George Flagg said today.
Flagg said that receipts were
$100,000 more than in 1943.
The biggest monthly receipts
in history were $195,155 last
July.
PILES
SUCCESSFULLY TREATED
NO PAIN NO HOSPITALIZATION
No Lo.. el Tl.
Permanent Rainltal
OR. E. M. MARSHA
Chtraaraotlo Pbnlrlan
It IK. la Km. It Tkeetre Bits
Man. IMS
Today On The
Western Front
By The Associated Press
Canadian 1st army: No
change reported.
British 2nd army: No
change reported in Holland.
On western tip of salient in
Belgium, advanced against
weakening German opposi
tion, reoccupicd Burc, took
jeveral other villages.
U. S. 9th, U. S. 1st armies:
Battled toward vital Houffa-lize-St.
Vith highway; nar
rowed waist of Ardennes sal
ient to nine miles.
U. S. 3rd army: Threw back
tank-led counterattack; scored
gains up to a mile and a half
on German southern flank.
U. S. 7th army: Threw Ger
mans back at Hatten, 10 miles
southeast of Wissembourg; re
pulsed armored counterattack
south of Wissembourg.
French 1st army: Stopped
German drive from Colmar
pocket 16 miles south of
Strasbourg.
FREE WATERMELONS
Watermelon seeds are relished
as tidbits in China and many
growers raise the melon just for
the seeds. Just to get the seeds,
growers in many localities offer
the meat of the melons free to all
who will cat it, thus harvesting
their crop with a minimum of
expense and effort.
If It's a "frozen- article you
need, advertise for a used one
Jnlhpplassiflprl
Lemon Juice Recipe
Checks Rheumatic
Pain Quickly
. 'L.r" f"1" trm rv,B",i'- rthmj or
Kdpe ftu Umntai r. ijalrjc. tin
II. of RiJ-Pt rompo'ind. a tro-v-'k fjpt.lv,
iMif. Hi 11 wtl a au.it of . VJill
lull.
X?" iM..
. i f, ol"n "I'M kuM
oM.lort. II ue nnu oV rot l,,,,
'.'J TJlf ." " " "1 h Mir itniajlat iiMrr
$4,000,(1 SET
FOD LANE PQSTWA
HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
SIDE GLANCES
Jaruiory lQ
' " -
L
Market
Quotations
NKW YORK, Jill 10 Af !
,K:' r.i.d iV iMdlnt war .liar.. '!'
rill.
.11
mora t'h..ilul
tics were
levels.
rutni quoiellons;
Amarln Mn
Ami i"r h rly
Am Tl Jk T1
Aiiafowl
rl Trartor ...
on.onwAlih Si 8ou
ttmral Motor
rtt Nor nv pM
Illinoli Ontral
jut lurvMUr
RnnaoU
l,K'kti(t
Uni-Btll'-A,.
Monlmry Ward ....
Niih-Ktlv
N V Cfrttrai
Northorn Pm-tfic
Per it El
Packard Motor
Pnn R n
lUpuhllc !!
RirhfiHd Oil
ft ft way fttor
Star Rotnck
8mithrn Paolfk-
Standard tUand
rtunnhlno Mlnln
Trtu-Amrtc
Union Oil 1 ullt -
Union Pacific
U S Sll
War nor Picture!
. 41
:i
... 3.'
.. ft.
. id
M
, IH't
- M't
J.
Jl'a
..nn,
Potatoes
eon. IHI IV NU ItRVKt. IDC. T. M.W0.U. IT T-m:
"An insurance policy and some oil Mock? And you
want to go through all this puef
SAN FRANCISCO Califor
nia, Oregon, and Washington
leaders of civic, religious, labor
and racial groups will meet here
in a two-day conference January
10 and 11 to map a coordinated
program for Improved pacinc
coast race relations and to study
housing, employment, farm,
legal and other problems facing
the Japanese - Americans who
will return to coast communities.
The conference, called by the
Pacific coast committee on
American Principles and Fair
Play, will hear Dillon Myer, di
rector of the war relocation au
thority, and top west coast offi
cials of other federal and state
agencies, explain policies under
which the government will aid
the Nlsol who want west coast
jobs and farms.
Maurice E. Harrison, San
Francisco attorney and chairman
of the Fair Play committee, will
preside over the first day's ses
sion. A. J. McFadden, chairman
of the California state board of
agriculture, will be in charge of
the second day's program.
liiiiiiH
The Road to
Berlin
EUGENE, Jan. 10 W) The
Lane county area has approxi
mately $4,000,000 earmarked for
fiost-war construction, according
o an estimate made here today
by county and city officials of
several Lane county cities.
cugene nas live projects al
ready approved, totaling $2,281,
999, and including a new city
hall at a cost of $73,000, school
building project at $500,000,
sewage disposal at $130,000,
swimming pool at $56,000, and
an additional $1,800,000 is in a
sinking fund for post-war con
struction by the Eugene water
board, municipal power and wat
er utility.
In Springfield, a new city hall
will be built at a cost of $25,000,
sewage disposal and sewers at
$105,000, parks and playgrounds
(through a new district) calling
for a levy netting about $10,000
annually for five years, and a
school building project totaling
$150,000.
Lane county has voted a levy
that will bring in $500,000 for
new bridges and roads and, it Is
estimated, there will be another
$1,000,000 throughout the coun
ty for sewage and schools.
By The Associated Press
1 Western front: 301 miles
(from near Duren).
2 Russian front: 304 miles
(from north of Warsaw).
3 Hungarian front: 364 miles
(from Hron river).
4 Italian front: 544 miles
(from Reno river).
Federal Agency to
Set School Standards
Asked In Port-land
PORTLAND, Jan. 10 CP)
The city school superintendent
called today for a strong fed
eral agency to set basic educa
tional standards and distribute
funds to states in a manner that
will end "present chaotic con
ditions." Willard B. Spauldlng charged
that "dozens of conflicting fed
eral non-cabinet agencies issue
directives at the whim of their
superiors." interfering continu
ously with state and local school
departments.
He said federal aid would en
courage local initiative, but
should be given under standards
that will "safeguard the Inter
ests of the children . . . but not
subject the schools to undesir
able control."
In his lifetime O. Henry wrote
600 pieces of original fiction.
(lervous,Restless
Oa "CEBTAIN DAYS" 01 Ida Month?
If functions! periodic disturbance
make you ferl nervoui, tired, rettleu,
"dragged out" at men times try a
motu Lydl, E. Plokhum'n Vegetable
Compound to rnlleva such symptoms. It
helpt nature! plnkham's Compound Is
1m , Brand stomachic tonic. Follow
label directions. Worth trying!
LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S SSSSSSS
w
From the Klamath Republican
January 12, 1905
Augustus E. Bennett, Dairy
homesteader, found frozen' to
death in a snowbank, having lost
his way In a storm en route to
his cabin,
High school pupils ire jub
ilant and the county court has
covered itself all over with glory.
The court has just authorized
construction of a $25,-000 high
school building..
From the Eraning Herald
January 13. 1S35
Ellen McVeigh and Altha
Urquhart have been added to
the Klamath county relief staff
as case workers.
Circuit Judge E. B. Ashurst
will render a decision in the
equity suit brought by W. P.
Myers against the Bank of Bo
nanza m ns claim tor tne 5iu
found in a local hotel room.
The Bank of Bonanza claims
the money part of the loot stolen
from the bank and Myers con
tends it was assigned to him as
attorney s fees by George Wolfe,
acquitted 01 the charge.
106 Service Men Add
To Oregon State's
Winter Registration
CORVALLIS. Jan. 10 UPU
Arrival of 106 new. service men
has increased the uniformed en
rollment for the winter term at
Oregon State college to almost
300.
Seventy-two of the men were
assigned by the army to study
advanced engineering. Veterans
number 93, as compared with 12
in tne fan term.
Bengston Also Hauls
Horses to Lawmaking
SALEM, Jan. 10 G(P) U. S.
Sen. Wayne L. Morse, who
hauled pair of horses to Wash'
incton, D. C, Isn't th only law
maker who takes his horses with
mm.
State Rep. O. H. Beniston
new member from Medford Is
having his two horses sent hore
for the session.
Bengston,. a member of the
Jackson county sheriff s posse,
his wife and two children all
ride.
Pota-
ioii
Inn vary llfhl. demand joi
CHICAOO. Jan. 10 IAP-wrA'-
rrlvn 711 On ty-.
5, Bmpnwnis
-r-'. u....
firm at coimia, ,.i..' ...
II S No. 1. S3 311 1-iMoran, i,
ii. s. no. i., '. "" : v; 7
Bllia Trlumpni u. o. r,o. ..
par uok.
LIVESTOCK
a r.n in fAP.VTA fll-
Ahl hoit lfl.OOO; total
fub y JtAdyspod and eholc. banow.
and IIU 180 . "! . ,U . A' li
odd lot food and cholca ISO-no io..
mis-liss: ood .nd cljolt. .ow. fll
W?."ar.,'SSSTMl.J
ealv.I WO: tolal IWO;'all graded medium
.-V. a .vih,v itrera rant hlin-
''.' .17 no" .liabla tupply lis M-
Tr.--. .,..a tn alrona. bait
JliuS: 'mid".l..r. and
bulk H iradu mm Jntf , '".Vint"
Jowl and bull, 'irons to e.nl. hjjh-
narrow Kilo in .tock.r .nd ...d.r
" .5i-i2f- ..ono, oo.n.d
5",V. "Ir.ilin. awtl oul .1
ll.Ofl dltcouul: .calloreo loi. n"."
S7.73 qnwn. on n, ....... -..
lot. ld '
llhily hiihor; two docki
wtihen Sts.J: .vrlln
s
. t.M to r AP.wr A
sss ?i "'.1..-; ' ''
Quality lots desirable: meaitim-iw;i
JKils sraree: odd euttjr .w".i0
sa.OO; few com m on m ki i u 11. u . v - -
haavTr Holillni lo 'tll.SO: rj';'1"
b"l co"? tlOSO II M: fr .orlad load;
afoind 04O lb.. S11.7S: rommommadlum
bull, is 00-10.35: Hood heavy beef bull.
Suolabl. to tll.&: 'St
Juoo: eommon-medlum je.ler. to 00.
1.1.00: ood-cholc ..l.blo tl3SO-H30 or
"salable, ho,. J.W. lnl.1 oM: mark.!
nhu' mostly 14. so': food tows p fw
Vf fa around 300 lU SM M; choice
B2..ao Ibe. feadar pl
JUIabla and total shp M: feaH-wl
steadv: food-rholca lambs lack Ing.
So.09 !ba. H0.no-I2.oo: mduim-tvl 7
oldar wthri 1000-50; food ewas Mi
bit w.no-w.
SOITTH SAN FRANCISCO. Jan. 10
'AP-WFA-Cttl: 7.1. Siaady to sironr
Good steers nd hclferi absnl. One
Pick a go mffdium looo lh. itaarf t 0:
rMd rna mw $13 SO-ia.", madlum
1J W.12.O0. weighty rlelry rows IIP W
1J.90. few S12O0, ruttr B.7-(I .W, fty
T nA. KTl Mrilntn axtKive hlllll
quoted StO.OO-io.M. CMve: 30. Good
Ia rhoir e vftters SI .oo-l 4. SO. Good
laughter reives Sljl.oo-M.oo.
nca. 'load-loU 300.2JM) lb. good and
choice borrows and alttn $15.78, medium
M.5.1: soon anws
k..n- nr.ru. rVnmlnnl f.U Tlttl
dev. oiif load SVOO lb. full-wnoled
lambs ittM no. Good full-wooled ewes
quoted WW.
KLAMATH BASIN
Carload Potato Shipment!
(Figures from Sliite-rdeil Inspector flom Aubrey)
ll.y ol
Monlh
10
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19
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In lh rya m.rk.l bul Ih.lr olf.rlnti
war. Doroa wnu. . .
Al ina (mull l..al ; . W I Jf
low.r than y..i.rd
!l.4-l. Corn a. up 1. lo 'it. M.r
tl.13.'1.. O.u wra unrh.nt.u 10 ,c
Sii. tily .in''.'-.. u.ruy ...
). May ei.iB'i.
Courthouse Records
WtUNStllAY
M.rrl.i.i t . , ..
MII.TON-CAnriir.1. nown
ion. . USMC. n.Uv. ol Alabama,
d.nl ol Kl.m.lll foil". O,.on. I.ili
Elodl. l arnini. in. u.n,..
C.lllornU. r.lldaut ol Kl.malh rati.
nVEY-t.AWSON. Idw.rd Thom.i
c.n'.y. , u. o n.vy, .,, ...
York. r..id.nl o( Kl.m.ih ralla. 0'',
Vivian n. w-iuit. . j . u
op.r.ler. n.llva of Oraton, r.ld.nl
r.mpl.lnl. filed
AIU r. t.r.on vru. Hoy A. l-.ron-Sull
lor divorc. ch.rt. cruel .nd In
human lr.lmnl. Coupla m.rrl.d H.p
i,mhi, a. loai .1 cre-nl ctw. c.u-
lornl.. Plaintiff .k. cu.lody of on.
minor rnlio. J. v un.m .nwriwy
pl.lnllff.
Lumbermen Arrive For
Annual Convention
SEASIDE. Ore.. Jan. 10 (ll
More than 1000 lumbermen were
arriving here today lor tno Jam
annual Pacific logging congress,
which opens in mld-nflrrnoon
and continues through Friday,
Donald MiicKciizic, Wood
worth, Mont., congress president,
will open the session, which will
mull war and pcncctlme produc
tion, new logginK methods, wood
utilization and reforestation.
Delegates come from all west
ern states and from Canada.
f'.Hnt.
Ovarlpad. and Trueklaatftj
VITAL STATIST!?
OAM.OWAY-llorri t Klsmittti
itrupiiai, niainain tn
. imo. 10 "n mil. jruj
Iowa). 7oa St. Franrii, a boy, ,
7 pouiidt II ourtrei.
J ANIOIAN Horn al KUmttl l
hott'ltei Kiemem rut. wi, jj
0. ivi. to Mr. and Mis S A. hi
US Mlgll. a girl. Weight I pcnA
ires. I
i CALU'M-rlnrn at KUmiU J
pit I. Klamath Falli, Of., id
H3, if Mr. end Mrs. D M MKi
WHEAT
CHICAGO. Jen. 10 -AFt Corn and
rye rallied In the flnnl hmir of trading
todiy but other grain fqturft merkets
were easy to wenk with wheat suffer
ing the grwitent losses. ....
WheM started sternly 1a firm but the
scattered buying, tnnstly hy rommlnlnn
houses, aoon satlrflrd the demand and
prices broke sharply under profit taking
and hedge selling.
Pit traders were on the selling side
Piles ! Ow ! !
But He SMILES, Now
So wlaa as ht wan. TJao aame formula mtA
y avion art hinclivtlv ,t noltd Thorn-
Lol?.,Mln',rcJ"Lt- Surprlflng QUICK
Mlllallva rrllof of pain, Itch. Vr.nfi.1.
Halp iofl.n and t.nrt. lo .hrlnk .wll
ln. Oat tube Thornton Mloor'a R.cl.l
Olntmenl or Thornton Minor R.clal
DOCTORS jray. low co.t l. r.fimded.
At all food drug atorea avarywhtra.
YWCA Liberalizes
Membership By-Laws
PORTLAND, Jan. 10 (,7i
Members of the YWCA don't
have to belong to a "proleatnnt
evangelical emiren anymore.
The organization liberalized
Its by-laws to enable any "chris
tian woman" to hold voting privileges.
P&rlSKIII
For CjwJelr relief from the itlntlni tofenesi.
oh bUnd, wmtortlnt aptcUlly medksted
ounces.
M TAU.t'M Born i et KUmiU if
no i
o I
ruuie a boa ISHA. rlty, a ber t
Like to boss
railroad
cars
around?
rtenlly make 'em move iri
'em where you want 'm'
hnve a switch engine to
shoving for you? Ano
with a ood engine crew
nnd tee the war frelilit iti
troop trains poitrlng In! j
M later, this la your job t
want It: Switchman with 5s
em Pacific at about W
nav. (Overtime can nitki
lot more.) No experlenti
stnrt. We train you In i
days, pay you an illw
while training . , . mkH
dill-pledged rnilroadcr. f
verv IniDortant lob. this. '
got to keep thote wtr tj
humping. And we've P
whale of a lob ahead el
which means lots of work!
(or you. Many other Jobi 1
8. P. Station, Klamtlh ft
or your nearttt 8, P. AW
So or writ Trainmalhj
Pepti-Cola Company, Utu hlan4 CUv. N. Y.
Franchltad BottUri Klamath fUs Paptl-Cola Bottling Co.
UP
HEAR
Evangelist
Y. M. Abbott
of
Turleek, California
at th
Friendly
Free Methodist
Church Corntr 9th' and Plum
GOOD GOSPEL PREACHING
(John Wetley Methodism)
Nightly Jan. 9 Through Jan. 21
Come Join In th. Good Old Gospel Singing.
Theie nd other subjects you will hear during this campaign:
rAWi; mtimatw or LIFE.
THt MOUNT or DECISION AND DESTINY.
THE DRAMA OF UFE.
WANTCDi A 1APTISM WITH FIHE.
N. H. Kufhai, Pastor. Phona 8882
it j "Knrr ,
Did Peter Preach in a Deal
Language?
Ptr wet th main laalr.tm.1. tn Iha mullltlld!
Jawt othrd at Jaruaalam iha rf nl Dantaeoil. H
praaehlng, at wall at all preaching, was to product I'1!
Thtrafor It had to b lnlelligiblo. Bine tht manr J
farant nationalist did not anaalr vha aama lanautot, "I
apottlei tpok In tonguat, Thlt enabled all of them to Bi1
Hand th thlngt that were being taid, At a remit ol I1
Funning torn throt thoutand wor baptlitd Into enrm1
that day,
Narr do w read of any of th apottUt prachlnj l
dad languag that their audltnc could not undrttin'
Paul tatd, "Even thlnat wliha.il 111., alvlno a
whether pip or harp, If thty glv not dlttlnctlon l '
oundi, how thall 11 k knnu, i. i.j r hum
For If th trumpet glv an uncrialn vole, who thill V
par hlmtalf for wart So alto y, unlaat y utlor by
tongu tpttch aty to b und.rttood, how thll b k""
what It tpoktn? (or y will b tptaklng Into th
hank Ood, I tpe.k with tonguat mor than you alh bwj
In th. church I had rath.r tpak flv words with my m"1"
ttandlng, that I might Inttruct othars tlto, than tn thou'"
".u. . . jongu.- (i cr. Ht7.jf),
RAYMOND I. GIBBS, ETanp'H'1
CHURCH OF CHRIST
MOS Wnllanl At.
Klamath Fills, Oregon.