taxsm
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
TUESDAY, DEC. II. IMft
.. IU JTNXINt
uaacsiraoN atx
at tl By Mil
otha I tot
jaar tl0.ua
iiuih or tbi uwcuiit rait
a acuta ma as aatiUM ciulrl
e(7as wu as
ataasiw m aacaad das. ""V'Tii
fODArt WORLDWIDE BIBLE READING TEXT.
Lok must.
And behold. a certain lawyer stood up. and tempt
ed Wm!. Matter what (hall I do to Inherit
aJfonto him. What - written In the law?
"dalwng aald. Thou aha", lore the Lord
thy Ood with all thy heart, and with all thy toul,
and with aU thy ttrwrigth. and with aU thy mind,
and thy neighbour at thyielf.
And Re aald unto him. Thou hut answered right.
thU do. and thou (halt live.
But he. wUllnf to Justify hlmeelf. (aid unto Jeeua,
And who It my neighbor?
And Jetut answering laid. A eerUln man went
down from Jerusalem to Jericho, and feU among
thlev, which (tripped him of his raiment, and
wounded him. and departed, leaving him hall dead.
And by chance there came down a certain priest
that way: and when he taw him. he passed by on
the other side.
And likewise a LertU, when he was at the place,
earn and looked on him. and passed by on the
other aide.
But a certain Samaritan, as he Journeyed, came
whet be wat: and when he taw him, he had com
panion on him.
And went to him, and bound up hit wounds, pour
ing In oil and wine, and aet him on hit own beast,
and brought turn to an Inn, and took care ot him.
And on the morrow when he departed, he took
out two pence, and gate them to the host, and said
unto him. Take care ot him: and whatsoever thou
tpendett more, when I come again. I will repay thee.
Which now of these three, thlnkest thou, was
neighbour unto him that fell among the thieves?
And he (aid. Re that shewed mercy on him. Then
aald Jesus unto him, Qo. and do thou likewise.
e
Send GOP Down Under
- By DEB ADDISON
THE old battered up elephant It going to it again
news dispatches state that the OOP Is tackling
the problems of financing the 1950 political cam
paign, and of getting Jelled on a campaign program
that will entice both the finances
f Zy a n 406 yotea. Word comes almost
grudgingly. Instead of happily In
I ' v 1 lb underdog role, that it'll be a
"poor man's campaign." Lincoln
Day dinner, tl a plate. Jefferson
Jackson Day dinner, S10O a plate.
The best advice we can give
the elephant It to tend hit 33
man strategy committee down un
der. They know how to do ft
there.
After 14 yean of socialism in
New Zealand, the Toters turned
back to free enterprise. The A us-'
ales mutt have taken a page from
the New Zealander book because
they cut down on the time cycle quite a little and
threw out socialism after only eight years.
Whatever the life span of the socialism cycle
might be naturally here, from present outlook the
OOP could do wen to find a short cut Otherwise
socialism may set a record for the New World that
will be hard to beat.
tt't a byword that any damn fool ran give tome
thing away, but It takes a good man to tell on merit).
Here are the five baste urges that are taken Into
account In advertising generally. The boyt can put
the list In their hip pockets when they go down
under to see how It's done.
1. Urge for life: That la. enjoying living, like go
ing to a show or dance and having a good time.
1. Urge for art and love: Having an attractive ap
pearance (which twin hat the Tonl? and protecting
your loved onea (check your brakes).
1. Urge for comfort: Oetting a new easy chair,
and having pleuty ot wood In tht basement these
days.
4. Urge for personal Importance: Owning a Cad
illac will achieve this.
I. Urge of appealing to the five tensea: Something
that looks good, tmellt good. It to soft, and so on.
Everything you "buy" It to satisfy one of these
urges.
-f
SIDE GLANCES
MACKENZIE
ADDISON
SO far, the politicians have not been able to drum
up anything that will' outsell the security and
aomethlng-for-nothlng of the welfare state.
Now advertising It a tool of telling ideas as well
at commodities. Any advertising man knows that
security and aomethlng-for-nothing are good urges
toward telling. (Examples: Retirement Insurance
plans, and the current give-away radio shows).
But the advertising man knows that these two
r only minor Items In the five basic urges. (And
World Today
By DEW ITT MacKENZIE
THE disappearance ot England's landed aristocracy
through heavy taxation continues apace, and
this economic revolution It no respecter ot persons.
Among the latest victims Is King Oeorge't own
nephew, the young Earl ot Hare
wood, son of Princess Mary (the
princess royal) and the sixth
Earl ot Harm ood who died in
1947. The present M-year-old earl
Inherited an estate valued at 12 -194.4M
and this has been taxed
728,07l
It's the earl's hard luck that
much of his Inheritance consist
ed of an ancestral estate ot 34.
000 acres on which Uve hundreds
of tenant farmers. In order to
raise the cash to meet hit taxet
he must sell much ot his proper
ty, which has been in the family for generations.
More than Incidentally this presumably deprives him
of a large revenue.
The earl's predicament it that experienced by to
many others of this class of society. In the case
where property changes hands three or four times
quickly, the estate may be virtually wiped out.
THIS of course means that the day of the crimson
coated squire riding to hounds with a "tally-ho
across his rolling acres Is Just about ended. Thus
Britain Is losing one ot its most cherished traditions.
The red coats are being hung away, and the own
ers are trudging to Jobs In office or shop, even at
you and I.
It's an Ironic twist of fata that only as far back
as 1933. when the present earl's father married the
princess royal, the Harewood fortune was huge. Not
to put too fine a point on the matter. It had to be
In order to support the king's daughter In the man
ner to which she wat accustomed.
The Viscount Harewood. who succeeded his father
In the earldom In 1939,. was hand-picked at suitor
of the young princess. He was 40 years old, of im
peccable reputation, a grenadier guardsman, a thrice
wounded veteran of the World War, and with con
siderable experience In diplomacy. And, at I recall It,
he Inherited a vast fortune from an uncle, apart
from the family estate.
What a wedding that wast I wat stationed In Lon
don at that time with the A. P, and It was my good
fortune to attend the ceremony In Westminster
Abbey. The American public devoured the story and
reporters poured a torrent of words across the At
lantic. Tor weeks before the wedding the press on
both sides of the ocean wat full of details about
the forthcoming event.
One assumes from the size of the estate left to
the present Earl ot Harewood that his father spent
a fortune In maintaining his position, the elder since
was reputed to have had much more than he handed
on to hit heir. That of course Is understandable, for
the expenses of royalty are heavy.
However, the current holder of the title Isn't do
ing to badly. It't tough to lose to much ot hit an
cestral estate, but If my ""thnittct are right he
still had close to the equivalent of a million and a
half dollars In property. A feller can squeeze along
on that for a while.
HE'S more fortunate than a good many others.
A lot of the landed aristocracy are to close to
broke that they are making their livings In all sorts
of Jobs, many involving manual labor. They are the
shadows of a fast disappearing class.
Business Mirror
Bitter Oil Fight Shapes
With Consumer in Middle
Br SAM n(vsnv
rTEW YORK, Dec. 13 VPTht
world battle for on It likely to
center next year more over who It
going to ten It, the Americans, the
British or the Dutch, than over
who It going to get It. And this
fight It likely to cause Increased
bitterness here at home between the
big and little oil companies, with
the final price to the consumer very
much at stake.
Several Indications ot the coming
battle are Included in today's newt
packet: the Tnns-Arablan oil line
it being pushed toward the Medi
terranean; big U. 8. oU companies
expect to Import more oil next year
than last; a group of small opera
tort complain that Independent oil
refineries here are being destroyed
by oU pricing policies; the price
of heavy fuel oU goes up-In Chicago;
tome Pennsylvania crude oU prices
rise; and talk of an oil loan to
Mexico revives In Washington.
Supplies Fl(ht
During and immediately after the
war, the great battle was to get
control of world oil supplies. Amer
ican oil companies Invested huge
turn In developing foreign fields,
refineries and pipelines. World de
mand seemed Increasing faster than
upply.
Then, almost over night, supply
caught up with demand. Two things
happened at about the tame time:
oil from the Near East began to
flow to the United States, and pro
duction In tome United States fields
was ordered cut back to prevent a
glut of the crude oil market.
Independent oil companies sent
up a howl against the flow of foreign
oil to our shores at tuch a time.
The big oil companies with foreign
holdings Into which they had poured
a lot of money finally bowed to the
storm and said they were cutting
back their Imports.
More Imports
But recent testimony before the
subcommittee of the house smaU
business committee Indicates that
imports of oil and refined product
this year will average (76,000 barrels
a day, and that the companies ex
pect to step that up during the first
half ot I960 to about 850,000 barrtlt
day. Their plant are based on an
anticipated Increase In demand dur
ing the cold months ahead. They
expect to use oi' from their ex
pensively acquired foreign fields to
meet part of that Increase.
Moreover, the big companies ex
pect to use more and more of their
forlgn OU to SUDClv Wnrlri mnrlret
and therefore export less from their
oomesuc wells.
But they may be reckoning with
out the British. England has an
nounced an all-out drive to sell oil
from Its foreign holdings in the
dollar market, and a sharp battle
for world's oil trade may develop.
8bort Cat
.The Arabian American Oil com
pany announces that It has pushed
Its big Trans-Arabian crude oil
pipeline a third of the way from
the Persian gulf to Slden on the
Mediterranean. When this pipeline
is completed it will cut tanker time
greatly between the Near East oil
fields and the European markets.
Texas, which cut back crude oU
production sharply to prevent over
supply of the market and conse
quent weakening of the price struc
ture, is allowing a little more pro
duction for December, perhaps
counting on the approaching cold
weather to perk up demand.
But the narrow margin between
high crude oil prices and the re
cently weakened prices for tome
refined products It bringing a pro
tst from the Consumers Cooperative
association In Kansas City. The
margin Is to narrow that small re
fineries cannot operate without loss,
the association president, Howard A.
Cowden, contends.
J com tt wr ma feramcc. hc t. h. Ma e. nt w.
HIGH
SCHOOL
News and
Comments
"r
Flo Ann
Forking
urn
"Mother, how about giving mo a few lessons on how to
be a detective? Dadtaya you thould have been on el"
Notion Today
ABCs of ihat Hot Census
Query About Your Income
By JAMES MARLOW
WASHINGTON, DEC. 13 Itfv The
government, which has been taking
national census every 10 years
since 1790, starts the 1950 census
April 1.
At that tune 140.000 census-takers
will start knocking on all American
doors, asking a number of questions.
Of every fifth person they'U ask
this:
How much is your Income a year?
For refusing to answer, you can
be fined tlOO or Jailed for 60 days.
or both. For giving false Informa
tion, you can be Jailed tor one year
or fined 1500, or both.
Secret
If the census-taker or anyone
else reveals the information you
give, It's a felony and he can be
fined tlOOO or Jailed for two years,
or both.
And. census bureau officials say,
the bureau cannot reveal Informa
tion about you to any other govern
ment agency, such as the FBI or
the Internal revenue bureau which
collects Income taxes.
This same question about Income
was asked In the 1940 census. Then,
if your income was over $5000 you
could say simply "over t5000" and
give no exact amount. If it was un
der $5000. you were expected to say
precisely how much. , t
In 1960, If your Income Is over
110.000, you can say "over 110.000"
but If It's less, you're expected to
say exactly how much.
Mail Privilege
In 1940, If you didn't wish to give
your personal Income figure to the
census taker perhaps because
you feared he'd tell the neighbors
he provided you with a printed
form and stamped envelope. In that
way you could send the Information
directly to the bureau.
About 130.000,000 people were In
volved In the 1940 census. Only
about 113,000 mailed In their In
come tax Information. Can people
answer by mail In 1950 If they don't
want to tell the census-taker?
Census bureau officials say: they
hadn't planned on It, because such
a comparatively small number want
ed to answer by mall In 1940 and
printing the forms and envelopes
is expensive. But
They said last night that, because
of the storm kicked up about the
Income question by republican con
gressmen, they'U probably provide
for mall answers In 1950.
GOP Blast
Yesterday 23 republicans blasted
the census bureau. They said the
CARTOONIST DIES
PROVIDENCE, R. I., Dec. 13 iP)
James Henderson, S3, nationally
known cartoonist for The Prov
idence Journal since 1919, died from
a heart attack Sunday at hit home
in nearby Foster Center.
Hans Norland Fire Insurance.
621 Fine St.
FUNNY BUSINESS
0 P'?' J- A Ml
That poor.deportment grade tomet from u kid kxlng
a ttrlke!"
Truman administration "Is perpe
trating an outrageous discrimination
against small-Income people In the
1950 census." One ot thrm. Rep.
Clarence Brown of Ohio, has de
manded of Philip Mauser, acting di
rector ot the bureau, where he geu
legal authority for the income
question.
So far Hauser has not answered
him. I could not reach Hauser hut
night. But I did talk to a number
ot census bureau officials. This Is
their explanation:
Q. Where does tht census bureau
get the right to ask the questions?
A. In 1929 the republican congress.
under President Herbert Hoover,
passed a census law. While it did
not specifically say census takers
should ask such a question about
income. It said:
"The number, form and subdivi
sions of the Inquiries used to take
the census shall be determined by
the director of the census, with the
approval of the secretary ot com
merce." Hauser decided the ques
tion should be asked.
Q. Did Hauser decide that all by
himself, on his own?
A. No. This question about In
come was asked in 1940 before Hau
ser was In his present position. It
Is being asked again now, say the
officials,' because lnopme Informa
tion is important in a numoer oi
ways: for a knowledge of the Amer
lean economy: so businessmen can
leam where their best markets lie:
and so on.
The bureau was asked to ask It
by a number of business groups
which Include the National Indus
trial Conference board, the Nation
al Association of Motor Bus Oper
ators, the U. S. Savings and Loan
league, the Institute of Life Insur
ance.
Q. Why was the question about
Income first asked In 1940?
A. It wasn't. That was Just one
kind of question about Income.
Questions about it for example,
on property value, mortgages, and
others have been asked In every
census for 100 years, or since 1850.
And, the officials say. questions
on Income have been an important
part of the census taken every five
years among xarmera lor 30 years.
Q. W1U the census takers be the
neighbors of people they question?
A, In many cases they probably
will be. For this work, which lasts
only until the census Is complete,
each census-taker will Interview be
tween 600 and 1000 people In all
and average about W a day In pay.
Louise Unman has been chosen
to rule at queen ot tht Snowball
formal by tht DeMolay members
who are apoiuorlng tilt dance De
cember 37 at the Rramea country
club. Her princesses are Brv
Karnes, Bertha Arnold. Sandra
Moore and Fat Nelson, all chosen
by the DeMolays too at tilt last
meeting. The Snowball la an annual
Christmas formal to which DeMo
lays from nu'iy places in Oregon
and California are Invited. The
miMti It rnwnwl during lnlermls
slon and presented with uie utmo-
lay sweetheart pin.
Another formal In tht planning
stage la one scheduled lor New
Year's Eve by Uie Teen-Ate club.
However, having the dance dependa
solely upon finding a place to hold
It. The Teen-Ae club sponsored a
New Year's eve dance last year,
also and they are hoping tliey can
have another gay celebration this
year.
Oratlr U snlnff AH TlOW eVCrV
afternoon from 3 till 6 In prepara
tion lor me "Miicracser nuue. in
scribed as Uie KU1IS Christmas gift
ik mmmimitv. Dancers, dra
matics students, the orchestra and
the acappella choir will perform two
nights. December 11 and 22. The
(,, jtw hu set ud an elaborate
state set depleting various candles
and a castle In the background.
The Christmas edition of the Kra
ter la being put together now by
the staff members, and It Is planned
to be different from any previous
Krater, Christmas edition or not. A
special pictorial section will be ou
the side with two full pages of pic
tures of KUHS atudenta In their
preparations for the holidays. The
page will be sent away this week
for out of town lithographing. The
rest of the paper will be lull of
Christmas iolngs. Including KUHS
students' letters to Santa Claua and
even an Interview with 8anta Clans
himself.
Gollup Poll
Labor-Management unch
Club Peace Plan Popular
)
Mv (;i:OR(IK (lAI.Lt'P
PRINCETON, N. J. A proposal
made by young Philip Wlllkle to ra
in ve tome of Uie tension between
labor and business meets with wide
spread approval from the public In
a coast-lo-coatt survey by Uie Institute.
Mr. Wlllkle, ton ot Uit late Wen
dell Wlllkle, and a member of the
Indiana legislature, atmaeated using
the biulneM men s luncheon club
formula. He would have labor-business
clubs set up 111 Industrial cities,
vlth an equal number nl buslnraa
oien and labor traders meeting over
Hit lunch table onct a week to dis
cuss their problrma Informally.
To give till" Idea a public teat,
the Institute had Interviewers put
tht following question to a cross
section of voters:
"It has been auitesled that tae
lory workers and oilier laboring
men should form luncheon clubs
wltb businessmen In el Ilea
throughout the I'nllrd Males to
try to reach a belter understand
ing of each olher't problems.
Would you, yourself, favor ee ap
pose Ihls Idea?"
Here la the vote:
Favor - ""i
OnpiK - 1'
io opinion
Members ot labor unions who
were questioned reacted favorably to
the Idea, their vote being 71 per cent
for It. II per cent against tnd II par
cent no opinion.
llusineas ana proicwaiuiuu pvraona
also expressed approval by a ratio
ol mora than 4 In I.
The Winkle run
Mr. Wlllkle made hit proposal la
a syndicated article In August. He
declared that labor management
strife In America wat playing rltlit
Into the hands of tin communists.
"Business tnd labor llvt on dif
ferent tidea ot every town." he
rote. The Industrial conflict
irosve steadily worst. Labor tnd
business meet only In conflict
around a bargaining table, during a
.t.4b nr lii fisht for the coittrul
of a political or legislative body."
Ill describing nia iuncn ciuo piaii,
Mr Wlllkle said:
"One week, labor would have
I lie program. The nest week,
business would have Die program.
At llilntt now tund, business
leaden keep talking to business
people about (he t lories of 'free
enterprise'. And labor leader
keep talking about Iht horrors of
Taft-Hartley". Neither aide eon-vines-
anybody of anything.
"If labor would listen to buslnraa,
business ought to be willing to
listen to labor. Perhaps thla service
club formula of men breaking bread
Uwether can be put to use I or tht
betterment of the American way ot
lite"
Film Fanfare
Irene Dunne to Stick To
Comedy Roles in the Future
Doctor Soys
Cortisone Costs but Gives
Hope to Arthritis Victims
By EDWIN F. JORDAN, M. D.
Among the great unsolved prob
lems of medicine It the disease gen
erally known as rheumatoid arthri
tis. This is often a truly tragic con
dition usually attacking several of
the points simultaneously or one
after the other. It produces pain,
tenderness, swelling and stiffness.
The victims of rheumatoid arthritis
are likely to become depressed and
eventually more or lest crippled.
At yet the cause of rheumatoid
arthritis Is not known. It has a ten
dency to afflict women more than
men and young women more than
older ones. Frequently those with
rheumatoid arthritis become thin
and emaciated. The muscles be
come weaker and anemia and low
fever are common.
Cortisone Still Scare
The great development for the ar
thritis victim has occurred recent
ly. This It the preparation of the
tubstance known as Compound E or
cortisone and Its trial on several ar
thritis sufferers. It Is still not clear
why cortisone should produce the
Friendly
Helpfulness
T Every
Creed and Pan
Ward's Klamath
Funeral Home
Marguerite M. Ward
. and Sons
ttf Bgk Flume IU4
remarkable effects that It does In
rheumatoid arthritis.
As has been pointed out many
times, this preparation Is simply
not yet available In quantity, Is ex
ceedingly expensive, the best dosage
has not been worked out, and one
cannot yet be certain as to whether
side effects are harmful or not.
It Is true that the way may be
long and disappointments many, but
In the view of many leaders In the
field, the line of Investigation now
opened up offers more hope than
anything which has developed In
the past.
The Doctor Answers
QUESTION: Not long ago you
said In your column that people
with goiter were not mentally re
sponsible In other words, they
were plain nuts. This hat ctused
me worry.
ANSWER: I tm sure that I never
said this. It certainly Is not true,
except In rare cases.
Yule Programs
Planned For
Carr, Yinema
TULELAKE Students In the
Tulelake high school, the Tulelake
elementary and in grade schools at
Carr and Wlnema are looking for
ward to the Christmas vacation
which for all ot them except Carr
begins Friday evening. December
16. Studenu at Carr will continue
until Tuesday evening. December
20. All will resume classes, Tuesday
morning. January 3.
The coming holiday season will
be heralded with programs for stu
denu. parents tnd Uie public, either
In Individual rooms are by the en
tire student body.
Starter
Starting the festivities will be the
PTA sponsored program at Uie high
school Wednesday evening, Decem
ber 14, In which muslo groups, the
Thespians, homemaklng class and
other organizations will take pan.
The program start at 8 o'clock In
the high school auditorium. This
ts the annual Christmas greeting
from the students and faculty to
Uie public and there wlU be no
charge.
Room programs for the entertain
ment of room mothers and other
guests are being prepared In Uie
Tulelake elementary school since
the building hat no auditorium
large enough to accomodate many
guests. These programs are plan
ned for Friday afternoon, December
16.
At Wlnema
The program at Wlnema Is to be
tht evening of Thursday, December
15, Is an all school presentation and
the public Is Invited.
Carr's program will be given the
night of Tuesday, December 20.
There will be choruses, skits, read
ings. Instrumental numbers and a
Christmas play. Fifty-one tludenU
will participate.
By BOB THOMAS
HOIXYWOOD. Dec. 13 ull Irene
Dunne Joint Rosalind Russell 111 a
resolution to pursue a comedy
career In the future.
Miss Dunne has broken her long
est screen absence to begin work In
"Come Share My Love." a comedy
In ahlch she will aing lour songs.
Why did she stay away from Uie
I screen two years?
"Well, I've been busy and have
I done a lot of traveling." aald the
i star, who received a variety of
I plaques and citations tor her rell
I gious work. "Also, t wanted to re
I turn In a comedy, preferably one
I with songs. I have done enouth
1 drama for awhile: I think people
now want to launn.
I reminded her that she 11 never
win academy awards with come
dies. "That's right." said the often
nominated Oscar contender. "But I
can't teem to win one anyway."
every day. nt
tired ot corn."
says. "Well, In
Capsule review: "Prince of
Foxes" TCK la above-averate
swashbuckling ttuff. Beautifully
filmed In aulhenllo Italian back
grounds. It has enough highlights to
offset Uie dull moment of florid
dialogue. Tyrol. Power It proiierly
dashing, and Orson Welles tnd Wan
da llendrix support. Oood escapist
entertainment.
ANNEXATION IIEARIN'U
PORTLAND. Dec. IS ( Hear.
Ints on annexaUon petitions Involv
ing 1600 terra of suburban resi
dential area southwest and north
west nt the city will be held by
council members Wednesday.
Add finely diced green pepper
and canned pimento to creamed po
tatoes for a Chris Unas touch; flavor
with onion Juice.
For lew pennies per word you
can adve. else to thousands through
a Want-Ad I Phone 8111.
r-
u
No Ottw tab Acts Faster k
2CaCCL7
23)3,E)G
to rttitve CMgttt tcMng twnlti
Musterol not only brims fast rrliaf
but It great paln-mllaving medication
breaks up eonteeUon In upper bron
chial tabs. Muaterol offers AM, the
benefit of a mustard plaster without
tha bother of making on. Just rub
It on chest, throat and back.
Shirley Temple aayt she would
now like to leave the past behind i
and devote her thoughts to the fu- I
lure. She haa no comment on how
Uie recent dlvorre might affect her
career. Ail for work, a picture la i
being prepared f"r her at Warnert,
under the Sebtnlck loan-out deal.
But she's not ester to return to i
work. "I'd lust like to sit at
home," she sighs.
Harry James has one more com- !
mltment at 20th-Fox and ht tnd ;
Betty Ortble are dreaming of a film
together. Their last together waa
"Springtime In the Rockies." on
which they met. j
"Shadows of the Manger" Is a dif- 1
ferrnt kind of Hollywood production. !
It will be presented In the week
preceding Christmas right on Holly-
wood boulevard In front of the Con- I
gregatlnnal church. Among those j
taking part In the religious pageant :
are Barbara Brltton, Don Defore, :
Wendell Corey, Harry Ctrey Jr.,
and Lee Bonnell.
John Wayne It glowing over hit
li.test box-office rating and over his
new film, "Sands of Iwo Jlma " I
see the picture will be shown here i
at advanced prices. Ho hum. . .
fancy sign on a Christmas tree lot
near Beverly Hills: Xmas Tree Sa
lon. Evelyn Keyes excused herself
from an Interview on the set when
h rrJlu4 Knll frnm SCIrlr TV,. I
las. "You couldn't ask me to give
that up could you?" waa her expla
nation.
Joan Leslie may stay on at MOM.
where she started her film career at
11. . . Jack Carson Is happy with
his straight role In "Bright Leaf."
"You can get tired of having beef
For a holiday fruit cup add pome
granate seeds to a fruit cup for a
festive and dellclcus-tastlng combination.
Quake Shook Jail
BIBLE TIMES At midnight Ood
shook the Phillppl Jail with a great
earthquake, struck off every pris
oner's chains and opened every
cell door. Waking out of hit tleep,
the Jailer drew out hit tword to
kill himself, believing every last
prisoner had escaped. Now hear
the Apostle Paul cry from hit In
ner cell "Do yourself no harm for
we are all here." At that the jail
er sprung in and fell before the
Apostle to ask what he must do
to be saved? Yes Ood also shook
the Jailer. See Acta lth.
DIED FOR JAILER
The Apostle answered the Jail,
er "Believe on the Lord Jesus
Christ and you will be saved."
Like all of us, the Jailer had tin
ned and Ilka us, his tint were
against Ood. So In Christ, Ood
died for the Jailer and for ut also.
For OOD WAS IN CHRIST
BIBLE. ,
A letter at hand telle of a college
Instructor who knew himself to be
lost and In need of tha Savior.
Later, the man gave himself to
the Lord with hit heart free from
tn old bitterness. Yet Judgement
Day out end Eternal lift In. Whnt
tor you?
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