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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 1, 1958)
PAGE fl A HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON SUNDAY, JUNE 1, 1959 Sty FRANK JENKINS Editor BILL JENKINS Managing Editor FLOYD WYNNE City Editor Memorial liny Editor's Note This Is a copy ol the Memorial Day address that followed recitation of the Gettys burg Address at the memorial shaft. By FLOYD L. WYNNE You have just heard the im mortal words of President Ahra ham Lincoln at the battlefield of Gettysburg some 95 years ago. Those who assembled to hear Mr. Lincoln still had vividly fresh in their minds the sacrifices of those thousands who died here. These few simple words by Lin coln so summarized the principle that is America, and so commem orated those that have died in it's behalf that even today, 95 years later, there is little one can add. We, loo, meet today to pay trib ute to those who died that we might live. Men . . . husbands, sons, fathers and sweethearts , . . men who did not flinch from the foe nor cringe from, the complete cost that the cause of freedom demanded of them. We meet to pay them tribute The world and the nation has gone on without them, but they have not been forgotten. We come today to do more than pay them tribute. We come to re plenish our supply of courage in the face of adversity. From these dead we draw knowledge and strength that these wo honor to day valued freedom enough to die for it , . . surely we can do no less. These mens destiny carried them to a rendezvous . . , with death ... in the jungles . the beach . , . amid the clouds and beneath the deep ... in tropic heat and arctic cold . . . 0 final rendezvous from which they were never to return. We can view this hallowed roll and fervently pray that no more names need ever be added, know ing that our prayers might well be futile. The cause of freedom has ever been thus . . . calling forth the supreme clfort that is in man to preserve, protect and defend it. This freedom which we enjoy today was conceived in the mind; of visionary men . . . bought .with the blood of willing patriots . . . defended against all enemies at the cost of the flower of our youth. This is the freedom we enjoy today. Freedom . . . dearly bought . . . preciously defended . . . even unto death. We live in a bewildered world, best and belabored by spurious causes fostered by scheming men, all designed for the conquest of fellow men. The flickering flames of disaster even now lick eagerly at the perimeter of our civiliza tion. Around the world, freedom has again come under deadly assault. The names that are inscribed here are some from one war . , . fought to end wars . . . some from a second war which was fought (0 preserve that freedom from aggression and tyranny, and some from yet another war fought without dignity of being to either preserve or defend, but in the twilight zone that lies between vic tory and defeat. This, too, left battle scarred em bers enshrined forever on this his toric monument. Somewhere the agonizing ques tion comes swirling . . . must it always be this way? Must man always settle his dif ferences on the battlefield? Must there always be an aggressor loose on the world . . . always a perilous threat atoot whose aim is to destroy men's freedom and dignity? Certainly, this great gilt of ours, entrusted to us by God, gives man true nobility . . . clothes him In the dignity God intended. Surely, this great treasure is one that we will willingly share with all men. We stand ready to help lift them up . . . out of the darkness of dictatorship and tyranny . . squallor and superstition. We call out to all the world with the know ledge that ours is t h e noblest cause God ever entrusted to man. Wc oiler the hand of friend ship, not gloved in a mailed fist, but genuine . . . one that seeks neither gam nor glory. Wc hate shared our treasures willingly with the rest ol the world, sent our young men to tight and die on their behalf that they might be free. also. We have sought no gain. Three wars in 40 years, and 1 challenge the world to show where America has gained any material advan tage beyond the millions of our finest young men who hae given of their lives, their minds and their bodies. We have opened our hearts and lands as a haven lor the weary, the troubled and the oppressed. We have fused the clients ot all pro pics, all rates and all creeds 11110 Entered u cond clas. nutter at the pou iKflc at Klamadl Palla. Ore., on August 30. lMe. under act at Coocreu. March I. lilt 8EIVICIS1 ASSOCIATED PRESS UNITED PRESS AUDIT BUREAU OP CIRCULATIONS Serving Southern Oregon And Northern California I the mightiest nation the world has ever known. e remain slow to anger, at those who treat us with indignity . . . quick to offer ' assistance and solace in times of need, and ever willing to share the scientific advances God has given us with others of the world. In a world darkened by com munism, America stands 0 u t as the hope of the free, towering like a snowy giant over the forces that would seek to pull her down into defeat and disintegration. Certainly, we have not failed the trust with which God endowed this nation so many years ago. The cause of tyranny and oppres sion is as ancient as man. It has walked the face of the earth in one garb or another for centuries, but the cause of freedom is new. It gives new meaning to man . . . new purpose to man's direction and a new way of life such as we have today. But for freedom the struggle has but begun. A struggle that must go on until the day dawns when all men will have equal rights under God . . . until all men in all lands have the same dignity, freedom and justice that we claim as our birthright today. It is a cause that calls for the most supreme effort by all of us, The cause that those we honor today have advanced thus far at personal cost of their own lives. They have proudly and willingly carried the lorch of freedom this far, to this age and to this peo ple. It is for us to carry it for ward to all peoples. We have come here today to re-dedicate ourselves to the cause of liberty and justice for which they laid down their lives. Wo must re-consecrate ourselves to this task both physically and spiritually. Physically we must face all foes of freedom resolutely lirm in the knowledge that ours is a true trust, divinely inspired. spiritually, we must renew our faith in God and pledge ourselves willingly to the sacrifices, hard ships and perils that the cause of freedom will require of us in the times that lie ahead. From these honored dead we derive new spirit, new faith and new courage, that the cause for which they died will someday ex tend to all corners of this earth, and man will truly be free and equal, subject only to God. They have not died in vain, but will be remembered forever in the minds and hearts of free men ev erywhere, in every generation. Money I'iflurtt By SAM DAWSON NEW YORK (API-Encourag ing gains in home and other build ing contracts are being reported around the nation. And the cash for the construction and for other boosts to the economy isn't all coming from federal agency ac tion in making money easier. Some of it is coming from the marked increase in savings, indi vidual and institutional. More lending funds arc availa ble from the rise of personal sav ings in hanks and savings and loan associations, from the record gains in insured pension plans, and the rise in life insurance policy assets. , The drop in business demands (or loans for expansion and the slide last year in the home build ing industry have led some to for get that these demands are still strong on a long-term average, and that there has been a big buildup in demand hy communi ties for lunds for civic construc tion projects and by some indus tries servicing the growing pop ulation. Const niel 1011 contracts in the Cnited Slates last month were 4 1 Poqo AAAOlJH.' ) I Tusuvitv i f J CSU,0 cJUT tVALr i GO" AX Mt I 0V BNIN' AVVAV-.VCUe atfffff rf 1 e deb-whs.. pootfowi rr, I aintVcu ntfwiTu yofj. .Vaw wcec'l CUkMC V-.-JM WiTm PAdNAtflT I WHO I yHH-rH: j wk5a. y-o-O'H-u.'i .w f J per cent higher than a year ago, F. W. Dodge Corp., construction news specialists, report. The res idential building category rose 1 per cent in several dwelling units covered. A unit of gain of 12 per cent in New York is reported by the state housing commissioner. Government figures show that despite a slide this year in the feverish pace of business expan sion, industry is planning to spend 32 billion dollars for new plant and equipment. This isn't hay, de spite the comparison with 1057's record 37 billion dollars. The investment money is com ing from many sources, some from within the corporations out of retained earnings, some from without. The nation's 520 mutual savings banks report savings rising much faster this year than last. In the first four months of this year deposits rose by 811 million dol lars, compared with 442 million in the like period of 1951 Total billion dollars, held by 22 million depositors. "More of these assets are going into home building. In April the banks increased their mortgage loans bv 154 million dollars. I The Institute of Life fnsurance reports that in the first three months of 1958 new capital funds available for the economy from life insurance policy assets totaled $1,342,000,000, or 9 per cent more than in the corresponding period of 1957. The insurance companies fun ncled the largest block of their investment funds this year into corporate securities. Insured pension plans in force in the United States cover 4 000 employes with total reserves of more than 14 billion dollars, Lost year saw Ihe biggest gains on record. There was an increase of 2,820 plans, 385,000 in the num ber of persons covered and 114 billion dollars in the reserves. The greatest percentage gains were shown in the deposit admin istration plans, the type under which a fund is accumulated with a life insurance company for the covered workers as a group and used to purchase an annuity for each individual upon retirement. All of these sources of savings banks, insurance companies pension funds are in the market looking for good investment risks This can offer a sound basis for any pickup in home building. in business activity, in industrial expansion. "E.y For XeiMly" ny liuu yuiuii (United Press International) An organization called "New Eyes For the Needy" is getting whopper of a windfall. The good ladies who volunteer lo staff the famed 25-ycar - old project in Short Hills, New Jersey, arc accustomed to receiving 30 mailbags lull of donated eyeglass- every week. But nothing like the big shipment they're getting now. llus windfall includes 175.000 specs, new and used frames and lenses. From New England, north crn New York and Tennessee They were collected by the Lions Clubs in those areas, and they've been stacking up for two years The Lions Clubs were going to send Ihe eyeglasses lo needy peo pie of India. Hut the Indian gov ernment wouldn't cooperate. It re quired a duly 011 the shipment ol free glasses, and it was too much. So the Lions decided to turn the whole collection over to Ihe "New Eyes For the Needy" project, on organization which got a powerful boost in its infancy from such peo ple as Mis. Eleanor Hoosevclt and late Alexander Woolcolt I lie New Jersey organization sends eyeglasses to charity SUBSCRIPTION RATES CARRIER I MONTH t 1 SO MONTHS I t.OO I YEAR 111.00 MAIL I MONTH I I SO MONTHS $ 7 40 I YEAR .., m.00 throughout the United States, and in Africa, Indonesia, Burma, and the Philippines. Until two years ago, the "New Eyes" group sent glasses to dia, and large quantities were de livered to those who needed them But customs became so high the missionaries and hospitals asked that the shipments be stopped be cause they couldn't pay the fee. The "Windfall" shipment from the Lions Clubs will go through regular channels of the "N e w Eyes" organization. About young housewives work in 'the do nated basement of Christ Church in Short Hills to handle the 300, 000 pairs of glasses contributed each year. They're volunteers and they work two and one-half hours a week. They're a group of women sym patnetic lor persons who do not have normal vision and need glass es. The project wants only discard cd glasses, no longer needed by their owners. There have been cases where people unselfishly send in their own spectacles. But these are not wanted. People send in a lot of other things not wanted, too. Once women s guild sent in bits and ends of sandwich lunches. Oops, wrong box. The chairman of the "New- Eyes" group, Mrs. Arthur Goat says "We never ask for a cent Never any donations of money Hut glasses we need. We are get. ting many more requests for help in 1958 than any other year. The W4t 111a n's llnl By DELOS SMITH United Press Science Editor Psychology doesn't seem to mix well with the wife of an alcoholic In fact, you might think a wife doesn't want her spouse sobered. Donald MacDonald tried a tech nique called "group psychother apy to prepare women to live with rehabilitated husbands. Once week he gathered the wives around him to air their mutual problems. The meetings turned into gripe sessions, bach wife laboriously ex plained why her husband was the worst drunk and. therefore, why sne was the unhappiest wife, One woman constantly demand ed that MacDonald prove she want ed her husband to drink. MacDon aid once created a furor by the orizing that some wives have an emotional stake in their husbands drunkenness. Later the woman's husband imiKiu iiei- opining nis icea tea wun wniskey. she claimed it was an accident. But she never men uonea 11 at tne group sessions. MacDonald, who works at the North Carolina State Hospital at Butner, says some women attended the sessions to prove to themselves that their situation was hopeless Others had a "chip-on-the-shoulder detensiveness. He says one woman was plain ly unhappy because her husband was triumphing over drink. Her talk threatened to disrupt t h e meetings. But, says MacDonald fortunately she stopped attending MacDonald s original study snowed that 11 of 18 wives had emotional breakdowns, and needed hospital treatment, when their hus bands went on the wagon. It s the woman of the house who does the painting today, in side or out. The vice president of the Magic Color Paint Company reports that some 80 per cent ol paint is put on the wallaby do-it yourself fans and at least half of these are women. ue says mat once a woman starts painting, she never stops. Nio starts by touching up cracks men she tries painting a room eventually she winds up outside painting the entire house. government survey shows that one family in four is not getting enough Vitamin "C." You can get this elusive vitamin in strawber ries, cantaloupes, green lcafv veg etables and potatoes, as well as citrus fruits. Try to cut up veg (tables just before cooking them. ind cook only until tender in a small quantity of water. Use veg etables raw as much as possible. Slash dry cleaning bills hy wash ing some woolens yourself before packing them away for the sum mer. Pro-treat spots w-ilh deter gent and water. Wash onlv one 01 two bbnkcts or sweaters at a time. Use warm or cold water in the washer. Here's today's beauty tip: Scam ess stockings in light shades can make a thin leg look more shape ly. MOMIiEAL-The husband ol Oionnc quintuplet Annette. Ger main Allard, reporting his wife expects a baby in September: We're hoping for a boy." They'll Do It Every Lrs TO GET DADDY SOME MUCH NEEDED CL0THES-TH4TS WHV MOM IS T4KIMG HIM SHOPPING met . f t-H IHC.K UUWN ILAVIM IWL7 ' 4MGOI?4--HE OP CLOTHESWELL,yoU DO, CGOTON-VOU .look snteey lately- TWO-WAY WONDER Printed Pattern 9142 10-18 1, Iffwtf. Slim skirt or full choose the silhouette that flatters you most! tuner way, tnis Printed Pattern is divine for sun or stars the shoulder-baring bodice sets off a tan so dramatically. Printed Pattern 9142: Misses sizes 10. 12, 14, 1H. 18. Size lli dress with slim skirt: 2-lii yards jn-incn; omer version 4 yards. Printed directions on each oat- tern part. Easier, accurate. Send thirty-five cents (coins) for this pattern add 5 cents for each pattern for lst-class mail ing. Send to Marian Martin, care of Herald and News, Pattern Dept., 232 West lath St.. New York 11, N. Y. Print plainly name, address with zone, size and stvle number. Gl Electrocuted After Saving 3 AFTON. Okla. (API A vounc soldier, ignoring warnings for his personal salety by bystanders, rescued three men from a wrecked and burning car Friday. ' After he pulled the third man out of the car and up an embank ment, the soldier touched a hiqh- voltage line knocked down by the wrecked car and was electrocuted. He was A'llliam Howard Britt. 21, Cashmere. Wash., who stopped to aid the motorists while en route from Fort Ord, Calif., to Ft. Monmoulh, N.J. The tragedy was witnessed bv Britt's bride of less than three months. Joanne. 18. The wrecked car had gone out of control 250 feet and down a 10 foot embankment before catch ing fire. Four Boys Die In Auto Crash SMILEY. Tex. (API - A car- truck collision early Saturday snuffed out the lives of four teen age boys. the four were in an auto which collided with a truck on the out- kirts of this South Texas town. State Highway Patrolman O.L. Whaley said the auto, driven at high speed, passed an auto, then met the truck. The truck driver werved. Hhalcy said, and the aulo crashed into its side. The trtiCK driver. Sabino Torres. 4S. was not injured. The dead, all of Nixon, were Icssie Leal, III. Miguel Fonseca. 111. Mamie- Sandoval, 18. and Bonifacio Infante. 18. BUCKHORN Mineral Springs Ahlan1. Oregon Eniov hmliK rrt comfort, nm; ftnpt tv mirti nJtTA- nt urrmindi-B ..... mi.mfu. RATHs (or Rheu matism. Ar?hriti, NeuritU and iNervoinntM i Rn ntoxinr VPOR BWII for Hth and lw Blood Prrwure. Sinu. and Skin Erup tion I onr.r and I iiiht imi r- MM'IMi t.WMNS. at reason able rule Write for rrwrvatrvn Thnnf: I nn 0lnre Rurkhnrn Minrral JipHnr 1:t Hacfchtirn tt'lnf R Ahlnd, Ortfan if K 5 Time 0HVE4M? NOW, SO WH4T I'M T4KIM6 VOUI? V) MEEDS A LOT 4CTUal.Ly COMMUNITY HOSPITAL Editor's Note This is the third in a series of articles discussing the need lor a community hospital. By BILL DECKER One of the first problems facing a community in a campaign for a new hospital is how to raise the necessary money. If, for example, Klamath County found that a 100 bed hospital will soon be needed to care for our increased nooula tion the initial construction cost for such a facility will be approximate ly two minion dollars. This esti mate is based on a report from the American Hospital Association which states that the national aver age cost per bed for hospital con struction has risen to $20,000 a bed. This seems a staggering amount, and indeed it is, but there are many sources of outside aid avail able to a community which can prove that there is a genuine need for help. Last year the Ford Foun dation completed a program ex tending services in private, volun- Grad Day Set By Academies ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP) June Week a gay graduation cele bration at the Naval Academy got off to one of its busiest starts Saturday. The annual pageant of parades, dances, athletic events and other lunctions is being crammed into five days this year, instead of the usual seven. The result is a con tinuous flow of activity which will be climaxed with the pre sentation of diplomas by Presi dent Eisenhower next Wednes day. The Navy hoisted anchor on the festivities Saturday with the first of three dress parades. Donald A. Quarles, deputy secretary of defense, was scheduled to review the 3,800-man brigade. WEST POINT. NY. (API ihe June Week program started Saturday at the United States .Military Academy. The first day featured athletic events, motion pictures and a cadet hop for the upper classes. Baccalauraeate ceremonies and presentation of military and aea. aemic awards take place Sunday. Graduation exercises will he neid June 4, when the main speak er will be Secretary of Defense McElroy. Isle Digs Out From Lava Jets HOftTA, Azores (AP) .Inis of lava from' the De Canelinhns oleano spurted 12.000 feet into the air Friday while Faial Island was still digging out from another series of quakes and eruptions. Ashes feil on some areas hadlv damaged when Calderia volcano in the center of the island spewed lorth ash and lava for 10 days earlier this month. De Capeiinhos has been auiet since last December, when it dam aged two villages badly. The cur rent volcanic activity began last (all when a submarine volcano off faial erupted and formed a new island. The island 0ank benealh the A(. lantic 30 days later. CUSTOM'S ORIGIN The custom of carrying the bride over the threshold came from an cient Rome. It was believed that evil spirits stood guard at t h c .nrcsiioid ot the new home, ready to trip the bride as she entered. To avoid this, the groom would carry her past the evil spirits. wn.n RICE Most of Ihe annual crop of wild rice in North America is still hand-harvested in the lake regions of Minnesota and Wisconsin, and in the Canadian prov inces of Man itoba and Ontario. Srukel Mtn. Gravel Serccninq and Crushing Plant in Operation Soon! Geo. R. Stacy Phone TU 4-3568 By Jimmy Hatlo WELUTMEV'r?E B4CK LETS SEE WHO CXJT tary hospitals with donations total ing 260 million dollars. Forty three privately supported hospitals in Oregon participated in this pro gram. There are more than 7,000 such foundations in this country today and last year they contributed nearly a billion dollars to worthy causes. A book titled "American Foundations and Their Fields" by W i 1 m e r Shields Rich describes more than 4.000 charitable funds and their special interests. But these philanthropic organiza tions only offer aid to areas which have exhibited a willingness to help themselves. The largest part of the needed capital must be raised lo cally. The same rule applies to as sitance from the federal govern ment, if such is desired. The com munity as a whole must demon strate not only a desire for the new hospital, but a determination to achieve the goal as well. Funds may be raised in a variety of ways or by a combination of several methods, depending upon tne type of institution desired. Pri vate subscriptions can be called lor along with donations from charitable organizations. Such a plan calls for intensive campaign ing and requires the help of every member of the community. A pro fessional fund raiser may be hired to conduct the campaign. Many areas employing such specialists in their hospital drives report that they more than justified the ex pense. A hospital district mav he es. tablished and a bond issue author ized by the voters within the dis trict. Such a district may be ar bitrarily defined: that is it mav in- elude all of Klamath County or any part of it. It would require the consent of the voters to issue the bonds which would be retired over a set period of years by tax lev ies. In this instance the hosnital directors would be elected by the oisinct voiers. These are only a few of the meth ods by which money may be raised to nnance a new hospital; oth ers will be discussed in future ar ticles. One thing to keep in mind throughout is the fact that no out side help can be obtained unless the community exhibits a determi nation to help itself. "I don't want to die and go lo hell," said s husky young sailor who lingered at a church afte'r the worship service. He told the pastor how he ran away to sea as an over grown fifteen-year-old, and had, during World War II, sailed on freighters through mine-infested waters. He said: "Preacher, I've never been in jail, though I've done things I should not have done. 1 never worried much about it until recently. In the last frw months I've dreamed several limes that our ship was shipwrecked and that I was drowned, in the ocean; and preacher, I know that if I die like I am, I'll go to hell. I don't want to die and go to hell." In those unforgettable words, "I don't want to die and go to hell." the sailor voiced his con viction that there is a life be yond the grave and that choices in life determine fate in death. He believed that unrrprnting sinners would spend eternity in hell, and that godly believers would know the joys of an eternal abode in heaven. The Bible says: "The wages of sin is death; but the gift of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ our I-ord" (Romans 6:23). Two things lie beyond the grave eternal death and life ever-laline. -7 HOW DO VOU TZTVftfUXE THIS OJEP4MD V ' f I f I W,T TILL YOU SEE fe " 'ifr! f l THE DEE-VINE SUIT f mvi ' V I GOT-4ND WHAT S'v9Q 4 tHf?G4lN ' Attend one of these Churches: CALVARY BAPTIST, Eoif Main and Garden DORRIS FIRST BAPTIST, Dorrii, California STEWART-LENNOX BAPTIST, Emerald & Douglas, TULELAKE FIRST BAPTIST, Tulelake, California Benson Notes Farm Progress WASHINGTON (AP) - In i r port to the White House, Secre tary of Agriculture Benson says farming made progress in 1957 but less than he would have liked. Agriculture continued to ad vance in 1957," the report says. solid progress was made In ex panding markets and reducing surpluses. Our progress is slower than we would like certainly it is not as fast as I would like to see it. But we have been moving ahead soundly." Benson says major problems in agriculture have come from at tempting to support the prices of a few products substantially above ompetmve levels. In this connec tion, he mentions cottqn, 'aV3' and corn. ' "LONE STAR" FLAG The Lone Star was used on a flag as early as 1819 and on one designed by Joanna Troutman in 1835. It was officially adopted as the emblem of Texas in March of 1936 at Washington-on-the-Brazos. Realty Hamblinqs : by Orville Reichenberg ; ' Recently I wai faikad this interett- ing question ,l"Whot mokes a iD.-lfc.. . DEI 1- ITtjf-ABLE REALTOR?" V H-J Actually, voi- ' . lumei could be iH aiR"" 'B onswer 1 f3!tO il arfero such a query. practice, the ble Realtor follows closely the advice given by a man of the cloth the 17th century who penned this bit of wisdom "Make your self a seller when you ore buying, and o buyer when you are selling, and then you will sell ond buy justly." One can spot a Reliable Realtor almost as easily as he can pick out o blue uniformed policeman, sine the Reliable Reoltor will proffer his advice only when he feels in conscience he is qualified to do so; d, only then when he feels that his advice will help the one asking for it. He will try to fit the house to the buyer's needs. He will re member that he is basically a busi ness man and not an expert tech' nician versed in all trades. He will go further than the ethics of his business require him to go in seeing to it that equal rights in equal cases are available to both parties. In short, he bends every effort to be just what the name implies a RELIABLE REAL TOR. The RELIABLE REALTOR earni his title, not by the use of the phrase in his advertising, but by the use of honesty, integrity and honor in his every day dealings. ORVILLE REICHENBERG REALTOR - 627 Pine Ph. 2-2515 - Eveningi 4-3841 Ruth Robertson 4-653 John Aldridge 2-3352 '1U The death beyond the gravo of which the Bible speaks is a living death where "the fire is not quenched" (Mark 9:44). It is the inevitable end of the rebellious soul, an "everlasting punishment" (Matthew 25:46) that the unbelieving bring upon themselves. The life beyond the grave is "everlasting life" (John 3:16). It is the place of perfect knowl edge, "For now we see through a glass, darkly; but then fare to face" (1 Corinthians 13:12). It is a place of perfect peace,, for "God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes, and there shall be no more death, neither sorrow, nor crying, neither shall there he any more pain" (Reve lation 21:4). What lies beyond the grave for you? It depends on what you do with Christ. He said, "He that heareth my word, and believeth on him that sent me, hath everlasting life, and shall not come into condemnation; but is passed from death unto life" (John S:2t). Baptists preach Christ and him crucified, as the one and only way the complete snd adequate way to heaven. Right now, you can turn from all known fin and trust Christ as your personal Saviour. If you will do this God will give vou his free gift of eternal life. You ran t have it any other way.