Brookings-Harbor pilot. (Brookings, Curry County, Oregon) 1946-1978, July 19, 1951, Page 8, Image 8

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    Page Eight
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Medical Corpsmen
Trained at Portland
Jo Ann Berger of Mt. Vernon, tended the young couple good their Harbor boat building plant
Wash., was here visiting her cou­ wishes and congratuations. It is took all three first places in the
sins. the Carl Berger family for reported that Mr. and Mrs. Car- race down the Klamath River.
a month. Dickie Berger returned son expect to leave soon for So. Joe Rose, local bulb grower, en­
with her to Mt. Vernon for a va­ America where Jimmy will be tered a float in the parade, with,
employed by a lumbering concern. of course, lilies, both a huge on^
cation. This is his first bus trip.
A large crowd of Brookings and the regular size, featured on
Beverly Hill and Mary Lou
Berger went to Eugene Sunday, and Harbor people attended the it to please the crowd.
for a 4-day outing, and to visit Klamath River Festival, Sunday.
Boats made by the * Knutsons at
Pilot class das pay—try them.
relatives.
Sunday
Fishing on the ocean
was extraordinary, Mr. and Mrs.
Î
Elmer Parker, of Parker’s An­
chorage, told the Pilot, Monday«
Each boat that went out re­
turned with “plenty” of fish. By
Baptist Community
“plenty” Elmer Parkef said it
J. L. MUMBOWER, Minister
meant many pounds.
Mrs. A. F. Pierce, Sunday School
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Hale and
Superintendent.
family of Westfir, Ore., visited
Sunday School for all ages at the Carl Berger family last week.
9:45 a. m.
Mrs. Hale and Mrs. Berger are
Worship Service at 11 a. m.
sisters.
Evening Service at 7:30 p. m
Mrs. Clifford Harper of Portland
Prayer meeting, and Bible
is visiting her parents, Mr. and
Study at 8:00 Wednesday eve.
Choir Practice, Thursday at Mrs. W. Schleisner.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Lees of Los
8:00 p. m.
Several Camera fans of our fast-grounng
Angeles were visitors of Mr. and
Seventh-Day Adventist Mrs. Ted* Freeman last week.
community have, in order to indulge them­
Sabbath School, Saturday at
Mike Page, Robert Page, and
selves in their hobby, of which there is none
9:45 a. m.
Lloyd Harbin and their guests,
Church services, Saturday at
finer, have expressed their desire to form
Marvin Page and Everett Orford
11:00 a. m.
Wednesday, 7:30 p. m. Sabbath of Coos Bay, report excellent
a camera club in Brookings for all of Curry
school teachers meeting, follow­ trout fishing on the Chetco.
county.
ed by Player meeting at 8:00. ’ Mrs. G. P. (Clara) Straley is
Therefore we now seek prospective mem-
Mrs. J. J. Gallagher will lead in * opening her Beauty Nook today
the study on the Life of Moses. on Hwy 101, south of Harbor,
This service will be held at the across from the Croft monument. ।
Will All Interested Persons please commun­
school on Easy Street.
Mrs. Straley has had 23 years
Work on the new church for experience in beauty work, com­
icate their desire to join to
Brookings is progressing and we ing here from Grants Pass.
expect to be able to meet in । our
A reception was held at the
permanent home by the end I of Rod & Gun Club building Satur­
the month.
day evening for Mr. and Mrs.
DO IT NOW!!
James Carson, and attracted a
large group of friends who ev-|,.
(American Lutheran)
Divine Worship Services, 2nd
and 4th Sunday evenings of the
month, at 7:30 p. m.
Place: Harbor Grange Hall.
Pastor: fTRev. Norman L. Orth
of Coquille, Ore.
These services are held by the
authority and assignment of the
National Lutheran Council, rep­
resenting most of Lutheranism
in America. Come, You are al-
uays welcome!
God is eternal life through Jesus
Christ, our Lord” (Rom. 6:23).
Among citations which com­
prise the Lesson-Sermon is the
iollowing from the Bible: “In
the way of righteousness is life”
iProv. 12:28), together with the
iollowing correlative passage
from the Christian Science text­
book, “Science and Health with
Fey to the Scriptures” by Mary
Baker Eddy: “Life is eternal,
we should find this out, and begin
the demonstration thereof” (see
page 246).
77)0 old Camp McQuaide mili­
tary reservation, where the army
once confined prisoners, is unique
training center today — military
and non-military, all at once. It
is the west coast headquarters of
the Seventh-Day Adventist medi­
cal cadet corps. Young men in
maroon-epauleted khaki uniforms
can be seen through drills and
working about the former army
reservation.
There
one big difference,
besides the maroon epaulets, from
an army camp. Neither the young
men marching along the dusty
roads nor those on sentry duty
at night carry weapons. And for
all of the duties of the average
army private they receive no
pay. Instead they pay for their
training.
The purpose of the camp is to
train Seventh-Day Adventist,
whose creed forbids them to bear
arms, to take their places in
army non-combatant jobs when
drafted. “While we believe it is
wrong to take a life, we really
are not conscientious objectors,”
explained Chaplain Clark Smith,
Pacific Coast Director of the Ad­
ventist war service commission.
“We like to call ourselves con­
scientious co-operators. A Sev­
enth-Day Adventist does not ag­
itate against war as he recog­
nizes that war is a natural un-
avoidable consequence of a race
in a state of sin. He willingly
submits to induction into the
armed forces, if he ran serve by
saving lives as a medical man
or a doctor.”
Selective service officials, rec-
ognizing the church’s position,
classify draft-age Adventists, 1AO
Available for non-combatant
service.
Before and during World War
2, the Adventist medical cadet
corps trained some 1O.(XM) church
members, most of whom later
served in the armed service med-
ical units.
One, CpI. Desmond T. Doss,
won the medal of honor —the na­
tion’s highest honor when, him­ Thr Church of the Lutheran 'Hour
W. O. Grunow, 754 I Street,
self wounded, he stayed on a
Crescent City, Pastor.
• shell-swept Okinawa clitT to help
Services
in Episcopal church
lower 75 wounded comrades to
Sunday
school
at 6:30 p. m. Wor­
safety. A few’ months before the
ship service at 7:30;
Korean war the church re-acti-
vated the cadet corps. Since then
1000 young Adventists have gone
Church of Christ
into the army through nearby
Meeting at the V. F. W. Hall.
Fort Ord.
Rev. Roy H. Reynolds, pastor
Bible Study at 10 a. m.
Sermon and worship at 11 a. m.
Everyone invited.
With The Churches
Episcopal
Church of the English-speaking
Race
Rev. C. W. Lever, Vicar.
Services at 8:15 a. m. Sunday
St. Timothy’s Episcopal Church,
church services w ill be held every
Sunday. Church school at 9:15
a. m. Everyone invited to come
to these »ervices.
Catholic Church
Rev. Fr. Donald Denman
First Sunday of month at 12
noon.
AU other Sundays at 8 a. m
Smith River Methodist
Sunday School at 10 a. m. Mra
Grace VanZee, supt.
Morning Worship at 11 a. m
<ev. Knutson will deliver the
morning sermon.
Christian Scientist
Services Sunday at 11:00 a. m.
“Life” is the subject of the
lesson-Sermon in all Churches
of Christ, Scientist, on Sunday.
July 22.
The Golden Text is “The wages
f sin is death; but the gift of
LOCAL
NEWS
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Munson left
Tuesday for San Francisco to be
present at the wedding of their
daughter, later this week. They
expect to be gone most of next
week from their duties at Hotel
Brookings.
Billy Struebing, who has been
visiting his uncle and aunt, Mr.
and Mrs. Ray Struebing, and cou-
sin, Marilyn, left for Sherwood,
Ore , last week-end tv visit an-
other aunt. From there he will
return to his home at Los /\n-
geles, Calif.
Vai Mendenhall Sr. has pur-
chased the Chetco Taxi service
from Richard Allen. Headquar­
ters will continue to be at the
Hotel Brookings.
Wendy and Merle Hlavka.
grandchildren of Mr. and Mrs.
V. A. Mendenhall Sr. will return
to their home at Portland Sun­
day after a month’s stay at the
Mendenhall home.
HETCO
URRY
OUNTY
AMERA
LUB
BY THE C(SEA)
EDGAR INGRAM
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