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Two—B Ortfr Senior Citizens There is evidence of growing financial independence among the older segments of ftoble county's population. It is seen particularly in their increasing ability to maintain living quarters of their cwn. No longer do so many of them reach ad vanced age with little or no funds. And no longer are they dependent upon relatives or upon charity, as they once were to a great degree. The new life has been made possible by the spectacular growth in pension and retire ment programs, combined with the rise in savings and in insurance protection. The progress is indicated in data com piled by the Department of Commerce, the Department of Health, Education and Wel fare and other agencies. They show, for Noble county, an overall growth of nearly 100 since 1950 in the num ber of separate households. This covers both large and small units. The rise locally has been from 3,454 households, recorded in 1950, to 3,550 last year. A. significantly large number of them, THE UNESCO INVASION OF OUR SCHOOLS By John T. FJynn An old enpmy is on m^rch a?ain. TU-, name is UN ESCO. The battleground is the American public schools. And the obiective is to capture the nvnds of your children. UNESCO stands for United Nation*? Educational. Scientific and Cultural Organization. It )•, as its name imnlies, an off choot of that collection of com munists, socialists and collec tivity of all Vindc known as the United N-t'ons—in which the Un'tor* jt aic-o en tangled. UNESCO. s nce its for mation more than a do/en years as*o. has been meddling in our schools. Its purrto^e is to brainwash vour children. It wants to destroy in their minds love of their own conntrv. If there is anvthin® UNESCO dislikes, it is patriotism. It wants to renlacp it witb what it ca"s "wortd-mindodnes' ." Tn order to brine about "world mi"dednec jt must, wine out of the minds of our vounesters reioect and admiration and love for Americai traditions and the "American Wav" of Life. Tn their place would be instilled respect and admira tion and love for all the coun tries of the world. Logically, this could only mean 'resoect and admiration and love for the socialist and fascist and communist wav of life which is prevalent in those countries. If you wonder what kind of people are presuming to re EDITORIAL PAGE —*.ji ™. la ill's Sia It For UleV Newspaper headlines can mean many things to many people. Take, for instance, a headline that reads: "New industry to locate here, will em ploy 75 persons" or another headline reading: "Local plant to expand, will add 30 work ers." To some, headlines such as these mean an opportunity for a job. To others they may mean a promotion and more money. Mer chants hope they will result in more business for them. When you read about a new industry coming to town or one of our present indust ries expanding, you may ask: "What's in it for me?" The answer is "plenty" regardless of whether or not you will be emnloved bv the industry or have a business that stands to profit from sale of products to the firm or its employees. That new industry coming to town may effer a job opportunity for your son when he £ets out of school in June or for vour unem ployed brother-in-law in Ohio, who you've been helninrr out with an occasional $5 or $10. It could result in a lob for vour teenaee daughter at the druc store downtown which had to add a part-time clerk because of an in -ease in business. But one thing is for sure -new jobs mean v *Co&RS NcQUL^OUNTy LlK£ T-HZ $UNf-HIN-E The American W»y mold the thinking of American children, here is what the Sen ate Interna! Secn* tv Commit tee said about. UNESCO sev eral vears at*o. Tt enjd that it looked as though "bv far the worst danger snot, from the standnoint of disloyalty and subversive activity among Americans emnloved bv inter national organizations is UN ESCO." UNESCO has been flooding the United States and its school* with this collectivist, one-world stuff with the active cnoner^jon of the Na tional Education Association. But docnifp tbe pressures whi^h the NEA can brine on the schools, a numlior around the nation Vmvo Gospel Meeting Services Each Evening at 7:45! fnrb dHon the estimated at 440, are one-person units. It is here that the greatest expansion has taken place in the last decade. The Census Bureau finds that 6.1 million households in the United States, one out of every eight, are now singles, occupied for the most part by older people. Living units of this size have increased more than 50 percent since 1950 and have more than doubled since 1940. No other size has come close to it in rate of gain. However people may feel about the so cial security system, there are none who deny that it has brought benefits to our elder citi zens. They have, as never before, been en abled to live with dignity and with security. The latest Government figures show that at least three out of every five persons 65 years old or over are drawing some kind of monthly benefit under a public or a private retirement plan. In Noble county, according to the latest official figures, payments to local residents under the Old Age and Survivors Insurance program alone amount to $41,000 a month. more money circulating in our town. And the industrial payroll dollar is a wonderful thing. In some ways it's like a roll ing snowball. It gets bigger as it goes through the community, passing through many hands and touching many people. Some of it is bound to rub off on all of us sooner or later. New industries and plant expansions mean more payroll dollars for our town, in creased economic security for you and your family and greater opportunity for you and your children. Everyone in the community must work together to attract new industry by telling others about the use of UNESCO material in their clashes. However, these inter nationalist termites are not ea^ilv discouraged. If thev get thrown out the front door of our schools, ttjfv sneak around to the hack 'nor and before v know, tbev're inside a?ain. Their newest gimmick i-^ K'"netnnf* called "Associate Schools Proinrt." As a ban ning, UNESCO and its Ameri can pronnwanda anencv—the UniteH States Nair.nnl Com mission for UNESCO—have penetrated nine American hieh schools with thi* latest rroiect. These nine schools are in stra tegic spots like New Vork, Pittsburgh. Washington. Mary land. Delaware, Virginia and a few other places. If th's latest backdoor assault on our schools work5, vou will find it turning up in schools all over the coun- David Powers advantages our town offers for industry. And we must encourage our existing in dustry to expand locally by letting it know we appreciate what it is doing for the com munity.. "What's in it for me?" is the theme of an advertisement, sponsored bv the Michigan Press Association and Michigan Economic Development Department, appearing today in the Marcollus News. It is another in a series of advertisements designed to stimulate local industrial devel opment protfrprrts which appear in this and 318 other Mich frnn newspapers as a public service. The Marcellus (Mich.) News try. A representative from each of the selected high schools has aere»d to use pamphlets and nudio-visual aids from ITNESCO in their schools. JudaintT from past UNESCO propaganda, vou can well ima gine the kind of stuff which is being fed tn the students in these n:ne high schools. This "Associate Schools Proi ect" is under the direction of an official of the National Ed ucation Association. UNESCO upniioc tVip material to be fed to the kids in the schools. But \«'bo runs the deoartment in Ijvpcpo nrovides the materia" TTN"pc:co has a sec tion cnllnd tbe SeconHarv Ed ducat'onal Division. Secondary education. as vou know, me^ns hich-school education. The cbjef of this Seconr^rv Educa tional Division of UNESCO is a ladv named Mrs. A. .Tepqlova. And who is Mrs. .Te«*alova? She is the former chief of tbe In direction Division of fV»t 2r»v JWV MTMTCT'PT} OV TTON Tn CP. it F1~TTr,(\- other words, w'tb tbe cooperation of the National Education' Accnrintion. the meddlers in UNESCO are feod in^ into nine American li'^h schools, material emanating from a United Nations division run bv a Russian Communis. And if we are not on the alert, it won't be lone before the same material from the same source will be turning up in other American schools. Even if we should succeed in protecting our kids from this latest forav on tbeir minds, never doubt that UNESCO will be back again with something else. This is whv many Ameri can* feel that our onlv real pro tection against. the trouble making United Nations and its busvbodv agencies is to *et the United States out of the United Nations, and eet the United Na tions and its alnhnbotical off shoots out of the United States. There are nearlv 10,000 4-H flub advisors in Ohio and more than 6,000 junior leaders. INSURANCE0F Farley and Elswkk THE JOURNAL, CALDWELL, OTTTO Cbfnma rider~in- Chief Allied Forces Southern Europe -J :r r\ 3$ -i&S. %'hmm mf to tax bootleggers. Governor Mike DiSalle has ap pointed a three-member com mittee to study what method Ohio can use to step up an anti vice campaign in this state. The new seci'etarv of state says he will not do as extensive traveling as the former one did. Maybe it's because of his present arthritic condition let's hope not. Daylight saving time through the coming summer month* in northern Ohio went into effect early last Sunday morning. Southern Ohio is not included, xcept for a few places in the astern part of the state. The governor of Kentucky ve centlv sent, as he said, most re pretfullv and reluctant. 2.000 state troops into the eastern part of the state to control the enormous coal ners srike in that sec tion. Report has it that the situa tion became desperate. The prosoect of there being a third polit cal partv in I960 in the heretofore solid Democratic '•outh prows dailv as time passes. Such wru'd doubtless cause in that section of the nation a poli tical explosion never before known down there. No vice president was ever known to be eWtod to the presi dency of the .United States. But the indications now stroncly point to the nomination and the later election Vice President Richard M. Nixon in I960. How ever, time alone will tell. Business conditions in some of the nearbv cities seem to have drorped to such a low ebb that certain dealers offer to present to each purchaser a check for $50.00 who purchases of their wares an amount equal to a cer tain sum. The St. Lawrence seaway, be tween the United States and Canada, was formallv opened with important and highly im posine ceremonies last Saturday Seventv-two seagoing vessels participated ill the gigantic parade. E A E I A N WAr rue BIBLB ssrtfB l/y/M6£E£0&l> OF MAM'S TDM PS dO/. JT &£FOG£ I PJ2A V BE£AUS£ jtmaxfs Mfreet. UOSE TO 600. F/A/P Tr/£g/BlFArt UMFA1LM6 6U/t£ Am aPTAl*/soaece OF S7~e£H$7M ANt COL/gAQG* The national labor department JOE YONTZ West Street Phone 14-J CMwrfm tATNENVNMIMM. The Bible —Source of Strength and Courage LITE MATTERS OF GENERAL INTEREST liv JKSS S. HARRIS Governor DiSalle has strongly expressed himself as being in favor of the abolishment of the sales tax stamps in Ohio. A national bank in Wooster, Ohio, was robbed of $40,000 one day last week and the robbers made good their escape. So much of the state of Texas is in the dry column that the legislature has a bill before In two different states, Mon tana and Massachusetts, mutinies occurred in the penitentiary in each in as many days last week. During the past week five women in different sections of the nation have been seized by men thought to be demented and spirited away. The Ohio legislature has clin ched the proposal to add another two cents tax per gallon on gas oline, payment to begin at once and continued indefinitely. Ul KINDS is becoming somewhat grouchy because there appears to be no apparent reduction in the high cost of living. With strikes in connection with big industries throughout the nation, the grant ing of higher wages and other costs to the operators what else could be expected? The appointment of Christian A. Herter by President Eisen hower as secretary of state has been confirmed by the United States congress. The senate vote was 93 to 0. This should place at rest any criticism as to his necessary qualifications for the position. Judging from the number of solicitations that are almost daily 1 ing made throughout the coun try for monetary donations for various purposes, one is almost led to the belief that practically everyone thinks the other fellow is loaded down with ready cash. In many instances the extremely high cost of livinc is a Mfeat hindrance. Strong indications are that be cause John Foster Dulles re cently resigned as secretary of state he is to be relieved of his connection with public affairs he will not. Only a short time ago Mr. Dulles was appointed by President Eisenhower as his special consultant with foreign matters of nationwide interest and importance. Charged with having made a criminal assault on a white woman, a Mississippi negro was jailed and early last Saturday morning one hundred white men broke into the prison and took the accused to an unknown spot Neither he nor the members of the posse have since been found desipte all efforts. The search is being made by FBI agents. Two prisoners in the San Quohi ten penitentiary in California made a temporary escape one day last week from the prison, wend ed their way to an ocean pier where was seated a woman en gaged in fishing, caught her by the hair, lifted her by the hair to her feet and at the point of a knife held her as hostage from chasing prison guards until they were finally taken into custody and returned to the prison. Due very largely to the ex pensive cost of living there ap pears to be at the present time a much greater number of thefts, robberies, murders, fires and many other crimes for obtaining ready cash throughout the na tion than ever before known in its history. Added to this there are solicitations and beggings of many kinds upon every hand until "life seems to be hardly worth living" to many. And this situation, beyond doubt, is grow ing day by day. Ohio's secretary of state, Ted W. Brown, was placed under ar rest on a street in Columbus one day last week for having driven his automobile on the highway while in an intoxicated condition. In municipal court he was assesed a fine of $250.00, $75.00 of which was remitted. Later it was found that Ted had been ill and that he was under his doctor's orders to use the intoxicant moderately, Continued on Page 3-B Qn (xJaAhinqion with Rep. John Henderson John Foster Dulles The resignation of John Foster Dulles as Secretary of State last week dominated the news and comment in Washington. Mr. Dulles had become the symbol of strength opposing the aggres sive designs of the communist nations. His departure from the commanding position he has oc cupied sadden the fi-ee world. In the Congress, praise for his de dication and skill was expressed both publicly and privately by leadex-s of both political parties. Perhaps the most significant tri bute to Mr. Dulles is the fact that the Communist press over the years has reserved a special and continuing vilification for him greater than, that accorded any other figure in Western diplo macy To his able successor, Mr. Her ter, whose qualifications and abilities are of the highest order, go the good wishes of the nation as he becomes the President's chief assistant in leading the free world through the trying months of critical diplomatic negotia tions. Highways Interest in the huge highway program enacted several years ago remains high and, from time to time, I receive requests for information on the status of the program, particularly as it ap plies to Ohio. The Bureau of Public Roads has furnished some general statistics about Federal participation in the program which supplies a glimpse of the tremendous sums being poured into new and improved road throughout the country. The income of the Federal Highway Trust Fund for fiscal oar 1957 reached $1.48 billion with expenditures of $966 mil lion. This money is raised prin cipally through the federal gas oline and tire tax. During fiscal 1%8 the Fund's income exceeded $2 billion and expenditures were $1.51 billion. In the first eight months of fiscal 1959, $1.38 bil lion was collected and the fund spent $1.89 billion. Thus, of the $4.9 billion collected, there re mains a balance of $534 million. Ohio's share of federal funds for all highway programs will amount to $143.7 million in the year ending next June 30, and an additional amount totalling $197.9 million will be spent in the twelve months beginning July 1. A laree part ($93.3 million in 1959 and $162 million in 1960) is designated for interstate high way system construction. The re mainder, approximately $70.5 million is earmarked for prim ary, secondary, and urban roads in Ohio during the two years In addition, the State was auth orized $15.8 million to expedite the highway program and to bol ster the economy during the re cent recession The Bureau has advised me further that, as of April 1, Ohio was first in the country in the interstate program with all avail able funds obligated for the fiscal year 1959 and 98^ of its funds obligated for fiscal 1960 In the primary, secondary, and urban roads program, 83*^ of the money for fiscal year 1959 had been obligated but none of the funds for the next liscal year have been obligated. Student oans Many students making plans to return to colleges and univer sities next September are writ ing to me for information coi cerning student *loans authorizec under the National Defense Ed ucation Act of 1958. Approximately 1202 college and universities are expected to participate in this program and the selection of students is to be made by the educational institu ions under general provision written into the lav.. To be ehgi WE PICKUP AND DELIVER! NOBLE CLEANERS Phone 109 COMPLETE AUTO SERVICE ALL MAKES BARNHOUSE CHEVROLET COMPANY Telephone 261 Miller Street 1/ KOON NOLLE U s A The Test Sometimes we get so bogged down in the ruts of bad thinking that we almost give up the struggle. It gets dark and then it gets darker. It seems everything we touch turns to dust in our hands. Promise after promise is broken. Obligations pile up. Then come threats, etc., etc. In trials of this sort we are tested out. It is then we show the sort of metal we are made of. Anyone can keep a high head when everything is going lovely and the goose hangs high. That requires no effort what so ever. However, life is not made completely out of sunshine. The road is not always smooth. Oft times our little ship is at the mercy of contrary winds. During such storms the wise man sticks it out. Having done all to stand, he just stands there holding the ground already won. There is so much dross in the most of us that it takes a heap of hot firing to make us pure. Such trials is nature's way of clearing up our thoughts and meditations. It is best to sort of relax and let the storm spend its force. Storms do not last forever. Quietly one should say, "This too will pass." Jesus when faced with such problems took a walk by the sea side or out in the waste lands. He advised us to do the same or to retire to our room and shut the door and there commune with the Lord. We can also find a good lesson among the birds. "Storms bring out the great eagles, little birds take to cover." Uncle Sam Stille ble, a student must follow a full time course of instruction and be in need of financial help. Special consideration is given to applicants with superior ac ademic background with an in terest in teaching in elementary or secondary school^ or with a superior capacity in scientific, mathematics, engineering, or modern foreign language studies. Loans may not exceed $1,000 per year and must be repaid within 10 years beginning one year after leaving school. An interest rate of 3r/ is charged. For students entering the teach ing profession, a portion of the loans can be forgiven. A pamphlet listing the partici pating schools and explaining the details of the program is avail able and I will be pleased to furnish it upon request. Xews of 10 Yeai's Aj|o Hazen G. Werner, D.D., L.L.D., Methodist resident Bishop for the Ohio area, is the distinguished speaker today at the Cambridge district conference of Methodist churches being held in Caldwell, with Rev. O. O. Wilson as the conference host. Another robbery "with no loot taken", was reported in Caldwell, Monday morning when Virgil Moore, manager of the Sunshine F^ed store on Cumberland street, discovered that thieves had brok en into his place of business, either on Saturday or Sunday night. A construction proiect. which involves several thousand dollars, f*of under wav last week in Noble eountv. with the Vo?t and Conant structural steel erectors, of Cleveland in charge. Howard Tarleton underwent a maior operation the past week at the veterans hospital in Aspin wall. Pa. The Washington Electric Coop, with Jocal offices in the I. O. O. F. building, was pranked a $610,000 loan bv the Rural Electrification administration in Washington las* week. Noble county farmers will re ceive $35,000 from the federal government in 1949 for partici pation in the agricultural con servation program, according to an announcement by William Archer, chairman of the Noble county triple A committee. Mrs. Clvde Parks and infant daughter, Mrs. Georpe Bliss and infant daughter and Mrs. Donald Johnson and infant son have been removed from the Thompson and Marietta Memorial hospitals to their homes. At a ioint meeting of the board of affaire qnH yillqcfA at home or away CALDWELL council, Tuesday evening, the hitherto secret report of Paul El well, Cleveland engineer, relative to the light and water works was I made public and discussed. No definite action was taken by the joint boards but the meeting was continued until Tuesday evening. May 10, at the city hall. Births Mr. and Mrs. Paul Yonker, of Belle Valley, are announcing the birth of a six pound, six ounce son born Thursday in the Mar ietta Memorial hospital, named Paul Joseph. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Gibson of Zanesville are the parents of a son born in Good Samaritan hos pital, named Gene Edwin. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Vaughn of Zanesville are announcing the birth of a daughter born in Beth esda hospital, named Sandra Kay. Mr. and Mrs. Silas Boyd, Cald well, are the parents of a daugh ter born April 26. Mr. and Mrs. Elvin Brown of McConnelsville are the parents of a son born at Bethesda hospital in Zanesville. GRAVELY Grstvcly's Rotary Plow gives yoo a perfect seedbed in one Operation! But that's just one of 30 performance-proved tools that help fou lick every lawn, garden, field and farm job Paster, Better, Easier! •ore Power) More Perfonmnml Because Gravely's all muscle. Direct engine drive puts power where it counts at working tool. All-Gear Drive, Power Reverse, Push-Button Starter optional. Don't take our word. 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