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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 1953)
8 && IV-Stotaaco, Salen, Ort;WtL. Oct 2L 1S53 JSazarene Meet Ends Today HI rirh MV - A It i v h - " V . if :,a,;MJ3, 1 -sll v. n 5jmn3 Leaders of the Church of Naxsrene, who end their two-day Mid ! .Year Missionary Convention in Salem today, inspect an African I exhibit during Tuesday's program. Left to right, Dr. G. B. Wil ' Eamson, general superintendent from Kansas City; the Rev. George Bayse, missionary from Africa; the Rev. William F. Clay, Salem, jaston Dr. Remiss Rehfeldt, general secretary of foreign missions. (Statesman photo.) 300 Attending Missionaries' Convention Representatives from 62 Naz areiie churches in Oregon will end their two-day Mid-Year Mis sionary Convention in Salem to day. ' Visitors . from Washington," Idaho and ' northern California are among the nearly 300 persons attending the meet at First Church of the, Nazarene. Dr. Remis Rehfeldt, general secretary of foreign missions from the denomination's interna tional headquarters at Kansas City, Mo., said the convention is designed to stimulate interest among local churches in world wide mission programs. ' , Three missionaries from for eign fields are Scheduled .on to? day's program. The Rev. George Rayse, who returned in March from a mission in Blaauwberg, North Transvaal, South Africa, has on display a collection of na tive implements from the 6a Pedi tribe which he has served for 4V4 years. ' r Included in his collection are band-made axes and spears, witch doctor beads and ornate belts and head bands. The tribe is extreme ly primitive, he said. He plans to return to Africa next spring. The Salem convention is one of nearly 70 meetings planned by the; Nazarene Church during the coming year.' They will be held throughout the United States and Canada, Dr.' Rehfeldt said. He and; his party will hold a similar meet in Spokane starting Friday. 3 Missing on Hunting Trip PETERSBURG, Alaska WJ A widespread search was under way Tuesday for three 17-year-old nigh school seniors who left Saturday in a small boat on deer hunting trip. ' They were Arden Hall, Leslie Reid and Sam Kito. Their boat was last seen at Five-Mile Point and a storm swept the area later on. Fishing boats and Coast Guard and chartered planes took part in the search. U.N. Delays Trieste Debate UNITED NATIONS. N. Y. 1 fhe;U. N. Security Council Tues day voted to postpone debate on dispute Trieste until Nov. 2 in order to give Britain. France and th ; United. States time to work out' a solution through direct diplomatic, action. The council voted 9 to 1 in favor pf the delay despite Soviet dele- E;ate. Andrei Vishinsky's demand or . . immediate discussion. Le tanon abstained. Rites Set for FV H. Frentz Of Woodburn -" Statesman News Service , WtX)DBURN Final rites for Frederic Henry Frentz, 65, Wood burn resident for 25 years, will held at 10 a.m. Thursday at fr" Bingo Funeral Chapel with e Rev. Ormal B. Trick officiat- g,. Interment will be at Belle assi Cemetery.1 Frentz, who worked at the Birds Eye food plant until his recent retirement, died Monday It his home, 112 Settlemier Ave. tie "was born April 12, 1888 at Albert Lea, Minn. The deceased was a member pf Lodge 102, IOOF; Home Re bekah Lodge and local 670 can- ierV workers union. Surviving are his wife, Edith, Woodburn; a son, Vernon, Myr tle? Creek; two daughters, Mrs. Helen Mulcahy, Vancouver, Wash-, and Mrs. Betty Holm, Woodburn: brothers, Vernon of Minneapolis, Donald of LeSueuer, Minn, and Wallace Frentz, of Rochester, Minn.; sisters, Liljian rrickson, Manna tun, tns- Dorothy Hunt, Perry, Mich and trtola Walters, Kicniieia, Minn.; Airliner Used In Getaway From Thefts SEATTLE UP) The use of com mercial airplanes to make long distance getaways from scenes of law breaking has come up again in the case of two men held here to face robbery charges in Pacific coast and mid-west states. FBI Agent Richard D. Auerbach said Tuesday. Richard E. Williams, 24, Re public. Wash., has admitted flying to and from Kansas City to Chi cago and to and from Kansas City to Billings. Mont., the past two months for market holdups at Kansas City. Auerbach said. Williams, Francis L. Rieker, 26, Kennewick. Wash., and Rieker's wife, Jessie. 32, were arrested by FBI agents in an automobile north of here last Thursday. Authorities had been tipped they were in the Northwest. Unlawful Flight Williams was charged with flee ing from Eugene, Ore., to Van couver, Wash., to escape prosecu tion for armed robbery and from San Diego, Calif., to Tia Juana, Mexico, to escape prosecution for robbery, and Rieker with flight to avoid prosecution for armed rob bery at Kiverside, cam. Mrs. Kiefc er was charged with aiding them in their efforts to escape arrest The use of airplanes in attempts to get a long distance away from the scene of law-breaking is un usual but not new, Auerbach said. Admit Robberies The . two men have admitted. Auerbach said, armed robberies at Spokane, Salt Lake, Richmond and Riverside, Calif.. Council Bluffs. Iowa. Kensas City and Den ver. Most of their holdups were of stores or supermarkets. They are being held in $5,000 bond each awaiting arrival of war rants from California and Oregon before being taken before a United States commissioner. Agents said they found several hand guns, a rifle and a quantity of ammunition in their car. i Williams was sent to the Wash ington state reformatory in 1948 for grand larceny, but was paroled within a year. He was returned for parole violation but later es caped. Rieker was paroled from the Washington state prison last July. Lumbermen to Discuss Imports From Canada REDDING, Calif. W) A district meeting of the West Coast Lum bermen s Assn. will be held here Thursday evening to discuss Ca nadian lumber imports, it was announced Tuesday. Local lumber operators said that a number of Northern California sawmills have had to close down because of the competition of the Canadian lumber. H. V. Simpson of Portland, ex ecutive vice president of the asso Teenagers for Christ Groups Start Crusade 5 MEMPHIS OR Memphis teen agers, worried that j'their genera tion may be going to the dogs, are "getting on the ball for Christ" ' ' Some 200 'youngsters, led by 16-year-old Don E. Johnson, a thin, soft-spoken high ' school senior, have launched a Teenagers for Christ movement they hope will spread acroSs the nation. . Now a full-blown evangelistic crusade, it started when members of a small Bible study class here became upset over increasing re ports of juvenile delinquency. "We decided the only way to push out crime-was to get to teen agers with the word of God," says Don. "Most of us believe the Lord is coming soon." Today Teenagers for Christ hold regular Bible . classes, conduct a weekly radio program and travel to nearby cities and towns in auto caravans to hold special services. Recently, they staged a city-wide revival here. Straight Forward . . - In all, some 300 youngsters have "walked down the aisle . to be saved" in the interdenominational teenage services. Don does the preaching at these and his ser mons are nothing if not straight "A lot of people in Memphis are 'going to hell," he announced at one revival meeting. And, ap pealing to the tougher element: "Christianity isn't a sissy sort of thing at alL . ." Don s sermons are framed by the singing of a 35-voice choir led by 18-year-old Dale Mountford, a sailor stationed at the Memphis Naval Air Base. The meetings often include sev eral "testimonies" from choir members, who step up to micro phones to tell how the movement has changed their lives. But the path is not always easy for Teenagers for Christ ' Some parents want their chil dren to attend their own churches instead of coming out with us and working for the Lord, Don com plains. ' Some Competitioa And the services don t always draw . a crowd. 'At one recent meeting Don observed after the opening hymn: "We ran into quite a bit of com petition tonight There's a fair go ing on just down the street . . and all the football games. But I hope the Lord will bless every one that came. Nobody came forward to testify or be saved that night Dons mother, Mrs. Mary John son, and his aunt, Mrs. Leona Wells, both of whom have con tributed time and money to the crusade, were downcast 'This is the first time, said Mrs. Wells, "the very first time that no one has heeded the call. Why,, we've had as many as 60 come down the aisle at one-serv ice. Sixty!" But, despite disappointments, teenagers keep turning in nickels, dimes and quarters 'earned from baby sitting, delivery jobs and earner chores to keep their move ment going. Lord Will Provide If. at times, they don't have the cash, - "the Lord , will provide," says Don. Teenagers for Christ travel to other cities only on invitation from churches. So far they've gone into Mississippi, Arkansas and Kentucky and to cities all over western Tennessee. The youngsters are busy now planning two big projects. One, an evangelistic drive aimed at pre-teenage children, may get un derway this fall. "After all," says Don, "the small child is the teenager of to morrow. For their most ambitious effort. Teenagers for Christ have plunged, virtually penniless, into plans for a giant, six-day Christmas revival to be called . "Christmas for Christ They already have rented the 2, 500-seat south hall of the Mu nicipal Auditorium here at $25 per day. They re praying that of ferings during the revival will pay for it "We're doing it on faith In the Lord," Don says. "We wanL to offer teenagers a way to observe Christmas as it should be ob served as a great Christian event Restoration of Fort Clatsop Site Started by Club ASTORIA Un The Astoria Junior Chamber of Commerce is starting to restore the site of Fort ClatsoD. where the Lewis and Clark expedition spent the winter 01 1805-06. The aite Tnaa fwun TniHHon with brush, weed And riphria MtmStn of the junior chamber spent Sunday hacking at the growth. They intend to spend future weekends there improving ine site. Federal Pay Boost Asked ALBANY. Ore. VR Merit pay increases and more job security are needed for federal civu service workers in Oregon, the State Federation of Employes Unions said here .in a weekend meeting. ' The federation urged readjust ment of pay scales to make the merit increases, possible, and asked that the large number of workers now on temporary status be given permanent ratings., ' The group named Edward Kna- keL Albany, president; John P. Walstad, Albany, secretary-treasurer; James McDonald, Chemawa, one of five -vice-presidents. , Hope for lon Mexico Plane Abandoned MONTERREY, Mexico OB Hope for 12 persons missing since a plane crash northeast of here was virtually abandoned Tuesday. Among those missing was J. Clifford Safley, editor of the San Diego Union. E. J. Rogers, oper ations manager for American Air lines, said he was "almost cer tain" he had helped Safley to board the plane . which crashed while taking newsmen and offi cials to the Falcon Dam ceremon ies. Safley had been staying In Mex ico City with his wife. He went on the special train to, Monterrey and was assigned a seat in one of the planes flying the special's passen gers to Falcon. But Rogers said the man he aided knew little Spanish. Therefore he missed the assigned plane and had to take the later one, which crashed Many of those originally report ed aboard the plane no formal passenger list was made have shown up in the 18 hours since the crash. But those still unreported include the three-man crew; three Mexico City reporters; two news- reel cameramen; a member of the national symphony orchestra; and two employes of the gov ernment fine arts institute. A plane flying over the crash scene Tuesday reported coyotes were clustered around the wreck age. There was no sign of human life. The plane crashed in a dan gerous mountainous area. - Italy Students Stage Riot at Russ Embassy ROME (A Italian students and Rome riot police battled in front of the Soviet Embassy Tuesday as Trieste demonstrations broke out in a half dozen parts of the city. Earlier, several thousand teen agers chanting Trieste slogans, paraded past the United States and British embassies, and hooted "down with Tito" in front of the Yugoslav Legation. The fighting developed when riot police, backed up by a few troops, pushed the howling youths back from a 12-foot wall around the Russian Embassy. A dozen were bruised in the melee as police swung their clubs and the demonstrators fought back with sticks. Within moments the youths were shoved quickly Into side streets and dispersed. The demonstrators carried huge signs: "Tito Equals Russia," "Long live the Italian Army, and "Tito, Leave Trieste." Police Catch Supermarket Theft Suspects PORTLAND UP Two men and a woman wanted at Spokane on warrants charging armed robbery in a $43,000 holdup of a supermar ket there Oct 11 were arrested here Tuesday. Harold J. Atkins. 31, his brother, Alvin Atkins, 22 and Edith Taylor, alias Edith Yeager, 20, were jailed. petective Chester Inskeep saw a station wagon with Idaho license plates park on a downtown street Remembering that Spokane police had sent out an alert, he stepped up to it and puts its occupants und er arrest They, did not resist Inskeep said a loaded .45 caliber revolver was in the station wagon. Detective Capt William Browne said the Oct 11 robbery netted $15,000 in cash and $30,000 in checks. The three had a 'total of about $1,000 when jailed. Brown said two others charged in the robbery had been arrested earlier in Spokane. Seism Cliirofjratf ic V PHTSIOTHERAFHT ELECTROTHEBAPHY COLON IRRIGATION X-RAY Vital Organs Are Through Nerves Dr. J. 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