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Page Two—B In Washington Standard Oil Conuilefes Free Movie Saluting Ohio's Sequicentesimal The Standard Oil Company (Ohio), thru its Columbus division office, headed by J. P. Sharkey, will hold a triple preview of Sohio's new, full-color motion picture saluting Ohio's sesquicen tennial here on January 25. The motion picture entitled "Freedom's Proving Ground" has beei. .. U' i \(.ivsly by Sohio as a salute to the sesquicentensnial of Ohio's statehood in 1803. The (Continued from 1-B) the election o! a majority leader. Such a battle would have left numerous scars within the ad ministration. Second, Senator Taft is deter mined that the Republican ad ministration will be a successful one. And he desires, above all else, to keep the Republican party strong and healthy. That can not be done with discord within the administration. And third, as majority leader Senator Taft is pledging a new loyalty to Eisenhower. In that post, he becomes the President's representative at the capitol. Such a position calls for trust and understanding between the White House and the senator. Most observers believe that Eisenhower would never have backed Taft for the post if there was a possibility for an un breachable conflict. No one in Washington is think ing that the two men, both force tul and intelligent, will agree upon every subject. But observ ers do believe that they will dis cuss their points of disagreement and compromise for the good of the Republican administration and the country. As time goes along there will be numerous rumors concerning discord. It is unlikely, however, they will ever reach the stage of the famous Barkley-Roosevelt split of the New Deal era. HOME FROM HOSPITAL Vera Dearth, of Middleburg, was removed to her home there last Thursday from the Memorial hospital, Marietta, in the B. B. Wheeler ambulance. All III A BAY'S movie will be released for clubs and organizations on March 1. The January preview is the climax of the state meeting of the Junior Chambers of Com merce in Ohio, following the crowning of tfce Jaycee's "Ses quicentennial Queen." Governor Frank J. Lausche and members of his cabinet will be guests of the Jaycees at the luncheon and Harvey S. Firestone, Jr., Chair man of the Ohio Sesquicenten nial Commission, will also speak. At the Ohio State Historical Museum at 4:00 in the afternoon members of the Ohio Legislature and their families, members of the State and Franklin County Ohio Sesquicentennial commit tees and their families, and Sohio employees, dealers and jobbers in the Columbus Division will be guests at a showing of the 40-minute motion picture. Mr. James R. Riley, chairman of the Franklin County Sesquicenten nial Committee, will speak in appreciation. Again at 8:00 in the evening there will be a special showing for the faculty and students of Ohio State University. President Howard L. Bevis will speak. From the brave beginnings of pioneer Ohio based on the new Ordinance of 1787, the mighty* surge of 150 years of history in our state since 1803 unfolds in 40 minutes in the picture, which has been five months in the making, to present Ohio "firsts" of light and flight, of oil and rubber and steel, of clay and sand and glass, of rich farmlands and busy water-ways, of men and materials and methods and man agement which have brought such progress and prosperity to our people through the years. for Your Telephone fit Away? A call will tell you in a jiffy. With out a telephone, you would have to make a trip there only to find that your friends are not at home. Your telephone serves you many ways each day. It provides the only easy way for people to reach you. How much does your home tele phone cost you per day? It is a small amount compared to the use fullness of your telephone. '$• in) w i A telephone call requires little time or effort. But think of the miles you would drive if you didn't have a telephone to deliver your messages. hOUi'S gs)i'P-S ot wotiY Relatives ill hus band late .. children stopping off on way home from school.. a call from them saves you worry. GENERAL TELEPHONE COMPANY OF OHIO -Sermonefle- Three l'ypes oi Men There are three representative men spoken of in the Word ot God. All men, regardless of na tionality, color, religion, culture or education are included in one of these classifications. They are known as the natural man, the carnal man, and the spiritual man. The natural man is unregen erate he has not experienced the new birth. This one lives in the natural realm. He is sensual and lives for the flesh. This man can not comprehend spiritual things. (I Corinthians 2:14) "He knows many things within the circle in which he dwells: but outside that circle he is an utter stranger To understand the things of the Spirit is impossible. Keen though he may be intellectually, bril liant and trained in mind, mighty in brain power when it comes to spiritual things he is like a little child. He has never experi enced what he seeks to appre hend." He must be translated from the natural to the spiritual. Everything of a spiritual nature seems utter foolishness to this type of person. He has no ap petite for the things of God hence he does not relish God's menu. It is not a question of in tellectural apprehension, it is a question of appetite. The Apostle Paul was lead to describe the carnal man in I Corinthians 3:1-4. He is one who has experienced the new birth. He has acknowledged Jesus Christ as his Lord and Saviour, but he is still a babe. There has been little or no growth. He is spiritually immature. He cannot feed himself others must do it for him. So the Bible is a closed book unless he can find someone to explain it. The marks of a carnal Chris tian are given as "envying, and strife, and divisions." In other words, there is too much of a re semblance to the natural man (read, also, James 3:14 and 15, and Jude 16-19.) "It matters not how wonderful your testimony may sound, if there is envy in your heart. If you are at strife with your neighbor, if you are not on speaking terms with some one against whom you cherish a grudge, if you refuse to shake hands, forgive and forget, if your life is marked by division, you are not spiritual you are carnal. For these are the signs of carna lity." In Roman 8:7 we learn that "the carnal mind is enmity against God for it is not subject to the law of God, neither indeed can be." No Christian can afford to give place to it. The Spiritual man is mention ed in I Corinthians 2:15. He is a Christian who is able to dis cern. He can detect false doc trines and false worship it mat ters not how much truth may be intermixed, if there is error he knows it. This man is not always able to meet and combat error, but he can recognize and avoid it. He can warn others and thus protect the flock from the wolves who go about in sheep's cloth ing. The spiritual man is one who is able to help one who is over taken in a fault (Galatians 6:1). There is a natural man, a car nal man, a spiritual man. Which are you? Are you living in the vorld that sphere which is an tagonistic to God and the things the Spirit the sphere of the natural man. Or have you been delivered from the bondage of sin but have not entered into a full Christian experience are you carnal? Or have you claimed the promised blessings which God has reserved for them who love Him? Is your life controlled by the Holy Spirit? Is your lift' lived in the spiritual realm? liov F. Wikander Examiner To Assist Vendors in tteporis John D. Strahl, examiner of •.ales tax from the department of Taxation, will be in Noble county Wednesday, Jan. 21 and again on Jan. 28 1o assist Noble county vendors in filling out their re ports. Mr. Strahl will be located in the auditor's office on both these days from 9 -a. m. to 4 p. m. The returns represent the last six months period ending Dec. *1, 1952. Vendors are asked to bring their last report and also a blank report, for the second period in 1952 and all information neces sary to complete the ••eport. Stop Taking Harsh Drugs for Constipation End Chronic Dosing! Regain Normal Regularity This Ail-Vegetable Wayi Taking harsh drugs for constipation can punish you brutally! Their cramps and griping disrupt normal bowel action, make you feel in need of re peated dosing. When you occasionally feel consti pated. get gentle but sure relief. Take Dr. Caldwell's Senna Laxativecontained in Syrup Pepsin. It's all-vegetable. No salts, no harsh drugs. Dr. Caldwell's contains an extract of Senna, oldest and one of the finest natural laxatives known to medicine. Dr. Caldwell's Senna Laxative tastes good, acts mildly, brings thorough relief comfortably. Htips you get regu lar, ends chronic dosing. Even relieves stomach sourness that constipation often brings. Try the new 25t' size Dr. Caldwell's. Money back if not satisfied. Mail bottle to box.280,New York 18, N. Y. IT HAPPENED-i IN OHIO January 11: Two keel-boats sailed from Cincinnati to Pitts burgh. Each boat was covered as protection against rifle and mus ket balls, had port-holes, and was provided with six pieces carry ing pound balls, a number of muskets and ammunition, against Indians on the banks of the Ohio. (1794) Ohio's first general election was held for the purpose of selec ting a governor and members of the General Assembly. (1803) John Brough replaced David Tod as* the Governor of Ohio. (1864) Joseph Benson Foraker, a Re publican, was inaugurated as the Governor of Ohio. January 12: Pickaway county was formed from Rose, Fairfield, and Franklin counties the name a misspelling of Piqua, a tribe of the Shawanese. (1810) Joseph Smith and Sidney Rid gon, leaders of the Mormons, fled Kirtland to escape arrest. (1838) January 13: Salmon P. Chase, later to be Governor of Ohio, Secretary of the Treasury, and Chief Justice of the United States Supreme Court, was born. (1808) David Tod was inaugurated as Governor of Ohio with a great military display, provided by the troops in training near Columbus. (1862) James M. Cox took office as the Governor of Ohio. (1913) January 14: Richard F. Out calt, inventor of comic strip, was born in Fairfield county. (1863) George Hoadly, a Cincinnati lawyer, was inaugurated as the Governor of Ohio. (1884) January 15: Duncan McArthur, the lltli Governor of Ohio, was born in Ross county. (1772) Governor Frank J. Lausche will be inaugurated as Ohio's first fourth-term Governor. (1953) January 16: Nicholas Long worth, horticulturist noted for vineyards, was born in Hamilton county. (1782) Cuyahoga county, with its seat at Cleveland, was officially or ganized. (1810) January 17: Rutherford B. Hayes, Governor uf Ohio and President of the United States, died at Fremont, Ohio. (1893) Thomas Alexander Boyd, one of Ohio's talented authors, died just before his novel, "In Time of Peace" appeared. (1935) DISMISSED HOME Turn Senko was removed to his home in Coal Ridge on Fri day of last week in the McVay ambulance from St. Francis hos pital, Cambridge. THE JOURNAL. CALDWELL, OHIO O'nin State Fairoi To Add ridie Men Applications Heeded In Area One hundred twenty-five patrolmen will be added to the Ohio state highway patrol in 1953 as part of the organization's expand sion program, it was announced today by Col. George Mingle, superintendent. Addition of the patrolmen is part of the expansion program launched after the general assembly authorized a top strength of 650 men for the department. gariai'ij Hr-KF, UY" Since 1951, when the increase was authorized, the Patrol has expanded from 400 to 528 men on duty at the present time. 25 are now in the Patrol Training School and will be placed on active duty the latter part of January. Col. Mingle pointed out that it will take hundreds of appli cants to actually recruit the ad ditional 100 'men during 1953. Figures show that it takes ap proximately 1200 applicants to graduate 100 men frojn Patrol Training Schools. High require ments and rigid training result in only eight percent of accepted applicants receiving appoint ments as patrolman. However, Col. Mingle said there would be no "let-down" in standards in order to obtain the 100 men need ed to reach top strength. The first training school to be held in 1953 will begin in March with the second scheduled for July. Men who hope to attend the first school are urged to get their applications in immediately since applicants will be proces sed ort a "first come, first served" Application forms may be ob tained from patrol officers or by calling in person at any Patrol Post, District Headquarters or General Headquarters in Colum bus. The first ones received will be processed for the 39th Patrol Training School beginning in March. Applicants must be 21 to 35 years of age, American citizens and a resident of Ohio. Other re quirements include graduation from an accredited high school or the equivalent in scholastic training. Physical requirements include a minimum of five feet, eight inches in height and a minimum weight of 165 pounds. Training schools last ten weeks and cover 76 subjects. Recruits are paid $164 per month while in school and uniforms, quarters and meals are furnished. Starting salary for Patrolmen is $300 a month with an advance to $360 a month at the end of five vears service. Telephone Company Grasrtetl increases Three General Telephone Sys tem companies with district headquarters in Caldwell have been authorized to increase their subscriber telephone rates by $1,793,493 on an annual basis, it was announced today by Donald C. Power, President. General Telephone Company of Ohio has been authorized by the Public Utility Commission of Ohio to increase subscriber rates by $1,326,813 annually. This in crease is in addition to an interim increase allowed in March 1952 which amounted to $750,000. ith $ million miles mmm in literal fact, is the most advanced V8 engine ever placed in a standard-production American automobile. It is the first such V8 to reach un 8.5 to 1 compression ratio, and the first with a dynamic flow muffler that cuts power loss to zero. It is the first V8 to utilize vertical valves together with a 12-volt electri cal system instead of the usual 6. It is also the first designed with new "T" type intake manifold to replace the type conventionally used in V8s. Xt is, quite simply, the first V8 Fireball Engine —the engine that brings electri fying performance to the greatest Buicks in fifty great years —the engine that powers the 1953 Buick ROADMASTER with 188 hp., and the 1953 Buick SUPER with up to 170. Naturally, this spectacular new V8 has been proved by eight years of devel oping, testing, improving, perfecting— The Way American (Cunt miN'O f:v»n 1-B) were supposed to be his servants. And where workers themselv es were unable to see through the falsity of their leaders, their wives did the seeing for them. The housewife who had to bear the economic brunt of every work stoppage, direct or indirect, im mediate or remote, was yet to have her vote "delivered" by or ganizations with other fish to fry than the fish for her family's supper. In many an industrial area, the vote of the union work er's helpmate bravely countered his own. This was something the labor politician overlooked when he brashly asserted that he could "deliver the labor vote." His fail ure to consider the effect upon individual homes and hearths of his high-powered finagling for personal political advantage created many a deep-seated pro test against his selfish regime, and all of these protests caught up with him when the really big election came along and all the votes were counted. And so today the labor- politi cian stands discredited" in the eyes of the nation—as a king with a broken scepter, as an overstuffed figure now spilling its sawdust onto the ground. But let no man misjudge the nature of the victory but recent ly scored at the polls. And li no group within our industrial economy regard it as a mandate to wreak vengeance upon n a n i z e a o a s s u o 1 1 i victory was not, strictly speak i n a o i i a o n e i w a s i n final analysis, an American one a victory for our. American way of life. The gains of organized labor over the years, to extent that they have enhanced the economic position of the American work ingman, have been gains for the nation as a whole. The right to bargain collectively with our em ployer for terms and conditions of employment is a right whic is sacred to our free society. Years of legitimate struggle were endured to achieve and secure that right by law. At no time and by no hand must that essential right be tampered with. If it is. the reaction will be more terrif ic than any we have yet experienc ed in our entire political history. American industry will there fore be foolish indeed to attempt anything in the nature of retail tion against unionism itself, now that the pendulum is swinging away from the grasp of laboi boss tyranny. Let it be remem bered that it is tyranny itsell' that arouses the indignation Mr. Average American, regard less of who the tyrant may lie and regardless of the political party he may run to for weapons, lie*II swing to bust a trust—on whichever side of the street lie sees it fattening. The last election should make that clear to all of us.—Maurice R. Franks. Infrared radiation is an invi sible form of radiant energy. All energy from the sun to the earth is converted to heat energy. 'S* and by more than a mil lion miles of driving through desert, mountains, cities and plains. Only then did Buick engineers mark it: Released for Production. tut these hard-to-please engineers gave these Golden Anniversary Buicks far more than new power. They gave them, too, a still finer ride, more superb comfort, new braking power and handling ease—and a sensa tional new Twin-Turbine Dynaflow Drive* that adds new quiet and whip fast getaway to absolute smoothness. Nothing, we believe, will do more justice to your automobile dollars-or to your love of magnificent motoring than a visit to us right now. Standard on Roadmaster, optional at extra cost on other Series. BAKES SALES & SERVICE, U. S. ROUTE 21 S^IH, CfilDWLLL, 0. THE .ftlfnSKAL (Continued from 1-B) much as 2500 gallons per minute. Some of the ranches produce alf alfa for sale and have very large storage sheds and much of it is stored in the open, just ricked in large blocks of bales. Eight to ten tons per acre is a common yield for the season. Over near Rosemont and Wil low springs at the foot of the mountains, (Sierras) we saw thousands of acres new larid be ing graded and readied for plant ing but did not stop to see what was being planted. Very fine cotton fields are in that section and cotton picking is just now under way. The cattle ranches are fully equal to the Texas Panhandle ranches and in addition there are very large sheep ranches. There are all fenced, but up in the mountains toward Mojave and Tehachipi there are a lot of cat tle on open range and we saw a herd of 75 to 100 wild horses up in that section a few days ago. Visited Tehachipi and saw the destruction of the earthquake and followed the fissure along the mountain side for several THE THE 'PERFECT' AFTER SCHOOL SNACK ... A Tasty "Caldwell Maid" Milk Shake! What kids love best (next to Mom and Dad) ... a creamy, frothy milk shake to top off the school day! Make de licious, health-giving, "shakes" a part of the daily routine with our creamy, enriched "Caldwell Maid" milk. Order it now from our deliveryman! GREATEST BUICK Produce Co. Phone 75 Caldwell Ohio f\ ifl Thursday, January 15, 1953 MSIL BAG... Have visited 3 gold mines in Sierras north of here. A great deal of various types of mining is being done here. Iron, copper, gold, tungsten, and lead. Bright sunshine and shirt sleeve weather is the rule here at present. Temperatures from 65 to 80 degrees the past week. Will visit the orange groves near Bakersfield soon. We saw many groves of oranges near Imperial two weeks ago and also large groves of date-palms. Will keep in touch with our J^foble county friends. Respective Clifton Miller PO Box 317 Edwards, Calif. CARD OF THANKS I wish in this way to thank all those who were so nice to me during my stay in the hospital. Especially want to thank those who gave or offered to give blood. Also all those who sent cards, flowers and gifts. To each and every one of you, I am grate ful. Luetta Hughes Caldwell, route 3 Television freol— the &UICK CIRCUS HOUR every fourth Tuesday IN 50 CSiAl YiARS WHEN BETTER AUTOMOBILES ARE BUILT BUICK WILL BUILD THEM &