What Can They Do) Many of these mod . under conditions that era jail look like the For every Hung Jti : ample) who manusJ United States and » . Hfe t5 >ere are thouj# in barracks, sum,,, IT SURPRISES most people when ' World Council of a they first look mto it. how much United Nations ~ ° the Bible has to say about prison- K it were not for th ers. To .-mention - only two ex- ganizatiohs million, Ten Commandments, starved and many n whiph^hang on many, a have been resettled, church wallvbegm with a reference 'in rigged tents or i! to a “house of bonds sc." a Hebrew . out hope or help % expression S' no means from the I police w,h back home.-Most of t] slaves andpt feaaiohal people, Ut, - - «rs are;k ' workmen, persons * under guard. an .independent livifir a chancel "The writer) • ' HGng%|in”.-famUy wl( - Ga.d meat .of ■‘■writing ' ' ha^py-to- J come-to‘. Then iiraeN States, Aut are btrnd - Testament though the-fattfcrli: ■* Jesu* Ispreac. . .. - educated and able i own village rirhasbeen*,uijd»i a- text-.from- theSi. They haw Isaiah describing-his own work children, and units,, . ONE OF THE POULTRY GIRLS from 14 northeastern states who will -compete ' do &^ u * rantMs « for the tiUe of “Poultry. Princess of- NEPPUOIand” at the. Council’s annual exposition , *<“ ■* Stv to the “ d ' du S.* tl ° n ,n c ‘» in Harrisburg, October 6-7-B.' She’s Caroline Schiapelli,-who haila from Vineland* New liberty-to the ,-die lt the,U. S.-wiU not Jersey, one of the nation’s three largest egg producing centers. As one of - New Jer— - -capuTe*. This hr only on« cm, sey’s candidates she’ll compete with poultry glamor girls from Maine to West Virginia .. HrrMMHIkfW f stiff and- westward to the Indiana state line. .She*takes her cue for her costume from the - h of th* exposition theme-“ Northeast Poultry Producers Round-Pp.’> ~ ' bS63SSS^£S^S ... , . ,- _ -... ■ .bean .in Jail,or were actually in a titude toward Communists .writing. The prayer and communism. - - whlch4s the subject of this weeK's The P«rkr Maneuver • ' - Btudy coaes -from the Hebrew Russian, threatsto withdraw for. it--represents not sim P^ from East Germany is an ex- „ . .. t vthought of^as-the-desire of many amp e of the <|evious meth- wc have to remem ods the Communists use to foi m of captivity gam a point. Khnishchev chains. Living in exile is like a bear wanted very much to visit m a modern zoa . he slts in n 0 cage, Washington views the com- 1116 H. ®- for propoganda pur- hut is free to roam around on the ing exchange- of visits by P° ses spd to strengthen the ro cks. He- does not have bars President Eisenhower and, communist position around abound him, but.there is .something Soviet Premier Khrushchev the world - He needed pres- just as effective, a deep moat all S fSSJJ“ «« recognition. around his rocky island, too wide +tw ... , ... and too-steep for him to cross. So that it will ease the threat Officials here hope that the (Daniel or Nehemiah or of a shooting war, but uncon- the visit will convince* j osep h, for instance) may be free vinced it will thaw the cold Khrushchev on two points, enough to build a house or to plant war ’ First, that the industrial and a garden; but all around him is the To get the background on agricultural strength of Am- invisible pit, the impossibility of the real significance of the erica Jar outstrips that of ever going home again. Wool Growers To Vote By Mail on USDA Incentive Plan A mail-ballot wool refer endum is to be conducted in September by the Agri. Sta bilization Committee in Lan caster County, according to J?red G. Seldomridge, acting county committee chairman. Seldomridge said the bal lots will be mailed to all county wool producers by Aug. 28, and must be return ed by Sept. 30. If producers across the exchange, we’ve talked off- the U.S SR. Second, that the nation vote for the program, the-record with military, dip- American people are firmly producer payments under Somatic and congressional united in support of freedom the wool incentive program experts on Commufiist doub- am democracy. tjtj ll Up rrmtmued 1 e-talk. None of them can he ’ quoted by name. Doubtless, Khrushchev has A vote of two-thirds of consensus is The Rus- been told those things by his I\T T TTI r|V the producers, by volume, is . ine consensus is. ifte ±lus subordinaces who have tour . IXJrvW IQ Ihp I irYlft required for the program to ed this co , unlry > and his 1 11 C * * remain in effect. ~i ejr ls seldom ne + wor j- excellent snies The agreement, which has '"hat they seem to be deman- ’ been in effect since the 1955 din g- The y P ut Pressure on No one weve talked with marketing year, will be ex- at one P° mt m order to get thinks the exchange of visits tended for three years in the concessions on an entirely will alter one iota the long event'of a “Yes” vote different point time communist objective of The real Russian objective world domination. FBI Di and the primary purpose of rector J. Edgar Hoover, the Khrushchev visit, is two- speaking on the record, is fold First, to convince the emphatic on that point. U. S. that it the Reds are Communist Conspiracy given their way they will not Communism, he said re start World War 111. Second, c f ntl y> 13 a materialistic en to “soften” the American at- f laving, atheistic evil. It is impossible to compromise with those who knowingly support it directly or indi re?.ny' ...... MAX SMITH TO DELAY THE BREEDING Communism and belief in .. ~,,11 God cannot peacefully coex- x Dairy cattle bred at this tun ist because God’s truth is' in the spring when most milk prices are reduced communism’s mortal enemy” fce more profitable to delay this breeding until laW Mr. Hoover said. It is a „. n Au batt e between the forces of fall so that the animals wdl start production Lancaster Farming Advertising Pays State Milk Flow To Year’s Record _ .g July Penna. milk flow con | turned the year’s trend for Lancaster Farming [records, Wlth 566 million (.oncaatar County’* Own Farm' > two P er cent above last weekly i year, although showing a ? ° i 524 fc’nine per cent seasonal de- I.aocaster, Penna S 3 , , T Offices: Ktlme from June. B 3 Noith Duke st. H Production for the first Phom ln< Lancaste^ nna " | SeVen only about pxnrese 4-3047 gone per cent above the same Dat MrGrew Editor, p period of 1958. Ilohfrt G rampHoll Advertising J Production per cow during £ Mbnage* Esin' 4, Saturdav h\ Lane* Lancaster Pa Ent a® ’’n* class matter a» Lano • tor Pa under Art of Mar 9 3. 13*" entry at Jov, n M Subscription Kates* $2 per vear; $ three years $5 Single copy Price 4 6 oer>'< a« M< m - f*a Newspaper Pubisli-B* ers’ mtjnn Vat on il B’ I*l A* OA lation fr, This Week in Washington br Clinton Davidson War With Russia Holds Levels :July at 615 ’bs., showed a [nine per cen seasonal de jclme, but was about three [per cent above 1958 Cow numbers are holding steady at 921,000, lowest level since .1953 i State farmers received an [average price of $4 50 per jcwt for milk, a 15 cent sea sonal increase but 21 cents below the July 1958 average. God and the forces of evd in September when milk prices are higher, which there can be no truce” Mr. Hoover, from long ex- TQ g EED WINTER GRAIN FOR PASTURE" 113 ’ penence, probably knows . in I more about the working, stock produceis benefit by having pasture law- membership and objectives and very early in the spring. Winter grams sue’ Party , in Wheat and winter rye (Balbo or Tetra-Pctkus) *! the U S than anyone else. - v ~ 0 t thi The Communist Party, under early as August Ist will meet .this need. Bom u orders from Moscow, has be grazed after frost without dangbr of poison lll ® bee" stepp ng up its efforts Urre e d ak Steter^hrough y infib TO PREPARE ALFALFA GROUND—Mid-A u^ tration, conspiracy and es- the best time to make a new seeding of alfalfa pionage, he said should be worked down and prepared sei era ’' It would be tragic, the FBI , x . ....... If a chief believes, if the ex- advance to S et 5t firm and to kill the weeds change of official visi s lulls shows the need of more phosphorus and P° the American people into should be worked deeply in to the ground fa hopes that communists. , , .. , . cuc^' uni’ke the leopard can Thfe band seedm S method has proven ver> - cha 'ge their spots. should be used without hesitation. 4—Lancaster - Farming. Safratfay, August 22^^. Btbl« Material: Dame! I—6: 9. Devotional Beading: Rc\elation 7 9-17. Prayer of Captives Lesson for August 23, 1959 Today, it is estimated, there are in the world more than eleven mil lion refugees, “stateless” people, Most people whon tuna are free andsel Concentration campi, barracks, the life of, flw away. But many read this .can do son the friendless prism world It may be tint has never undertaken refugee, or to take pi help (through Church dee or otherwise) to nate victims of wars governments in the« of the world. If 10,3 the person to spark Christian effort dot But there may be p /nearer. There is a jail tiafy somewhere not I (Based oil outlines c tile Division of Cin.lt rational Council of ft Christ in the U. S A Community Press Sonic BY MAX SMITH TO PREPARE THE SILO—In the corn or sorghum silage production t will be soon be present for the fil' lll atiom Masonry silos may need «P of motar joints or re-surfaced 1 silos need tightening of the hoops ■ terior treatment for preserving tlie In this time between hay and g ra,n and tobacco and tomato harvest fte could be accomplished. who have left their, cause they had t 0 ? cruelties of War ’ lll cruelties of pe Arabs, Jews, norths nese, Hungarian, t? Indians .. . the * than that Mm 10n , St l are Christians, th.v the prayer of capt,^ PristMrs Nsar By
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers