(inisters Off to
0nvention-Land'
By MARGARET BENSTON
t t tirontVier is sendinp thniiolitc P iv.; j
lki?De"e" . 1 , - ui'nom-
I""? ...mnlinni riancinff thronoVi Vnoon
nal coc"" , , ,. ? i. . " "musters
and there's no holding 'em. Most denominations have
S'tant decisions to make this year, due to record ex-
and prosperity in this country and to the critical
!0n ;ino situation.
F ..on signed the samblins petitions wMoh 'ita,'?n HCJB Quito, Ecuador.
re on me - -s- s-iHuniig suua-i-nurcn. tiemh and Monroe St.,
'" be clarified in Oregon by the voters, and persons as future of the Youth for Christ
low minister in Eugene, the Rev. E. Sterl Phinnnv Trover will sneak Sund.nv mnt-n.
xelical United Brethren, who replaces the Rev lln& June K- al the Sprinsfield
:L. a new church in Sprinofield. the F win' Free. Methodist Church, and in the
L . and to a new church building, the spectacular new! T'l R?d BaP'ist'
S dV Adventist Church at 13th Avenue and J"
et. Harcliy a wc. 6"- ' " " reports, to-the-minute report on the ad,
spansion
YFC Rally Will !
Hear Anecdotes
About Ecuador
Harry C. Trover, U. S. Deputa
tional Secretary for "The Pioneer
"""'"nary Broadcaster" rarlin
fcth opi
to
;van.
Lts too. . . . And the First Baptist centennial is coming
' !;)
x. f M
AS." i ; -1
fli J
r STERTi PHINNEY
I 'lakej EVB Church
w Pastor
j Many
pences
Bcv. E. Sterl Phinney who
Becently been appointed pas-
the Eugene Evangelical
Brethren Church, has ar
q fill the vacancy left by
Ifcv. Charles Fogg, who was
ited district superintendent
Montana Conference of the
ngellcal United Brethren
iney was born and reared In
ibus, Ohio. He received the
and the A.B. degrees from
in College, Marion, Ind.; and
I.A. deeree from Butler Uni
te, Indianapolis, Ind.
f 1937 Eev. and Mrs. Phinney
I to Japan as mlsslonairies.
puse of the war conditions
(me forced to return to the
kd States In 1940. After a
Ijd of deputation service, they
I sent to Colombia, South
Itica to open a new work in
I field. While there Phinney
d as president of the inter-
in organization called "The
ielical Mission Officers
He also nastored the
-ipeaking congregation in
ires. This congregation was
up of business men, diplo
and missionaries of all delations.
0K they returned to the
"States for their furlough.
year 01 deputational work
wre scheduled to return to
Rbia. htlt hnMlica nt in
k they were unable to go
!'o their field. Following seV
tears in the pastorate in In
to position at Taylor Uni
r. Upland, Indiana, as Dean
and instructor in Bible,
and missions,
he past two years he has;
9 nmr... i a- -
c- at. ine wesiern
PMcal Seminary at Jennings!
located between Portland
fwegon City. Mr. and Mrs.1
F! have three children: Ed
M?e 16, who was born in
"Paul, age 14, who was born
Wan; and David. 0. horn In
"'. South America.
up soon, a big celebration.
Both St. Mary's Catholic and St. Alice ivance of missions !,, .w , V,
churches have just announced school building !the world. is an alumnus of the
...uuujr xjjuiB insmuie oi cnicago,
Illinois, and was formerly associ
ated with the radio department
nT that in..
Dr. Miln Ch,min . .""' - :ripi
r , H..JU1 ut wnier ior station WMBI and
Theology at Pacific Bible College, I WDLM-FM. His radio stories,
Portland, Oregon, will be guest i amas' srials and religious
speaker in both the morning and ! A085" are ,amil'ar to mid
evening services Sunday, June 22.1 ITf"'
t ty,. r,.,.i, . n , n, , , ! In 1946 he accepted the respon
at the Church of God, Third and sibility of field director and story
Kit' " V sf
Br- " - ;- - -t-
Monroe streets.
Muriel F. Venable, minister of
Unity Church of Eugene, left by
plane, Friday morning, June 20,
to attend the Annual Unity Min
isters' Association Conference at
Lee's Summit, Missouri; returning
by plane Saturday, June 28, in
time for her usual Sunday ser
vice, when she will give high-
ngnts on the conference. Tom An,
writer for the well-known "Chll.
dren's Bible Hour" broadcast, or
iginating In Grand Rapids, Michi
gan. Through his stories, Trover
is known as "Uncle Harry" to
thousands of children across the
country. He has written for vari
ous religious periodicals, news
papers and secular magazines.
At the beginning of 1949, Tro.
Uacobbemcr and Stanton Architects drawlnu, Wiltshire Engraving. I
CATHOLIC FAMILIES of Springfield, especially the children, will benefit by this classic
designed contemporary style building which St. Alice Catholic Church will erect at
their property, 15th and F streets. About half the building will bo built immediately, the
rest to follow, to make an eight-room modern school. For the present it will be used
not only as a school but also as a multipurpose unit for parish affairs.
New Springfield School Offers
Advantages to Catholic Pupils
St. Alice Catholic Church ever the necessary teaching Sis- been attending St. Mary's School,
Springfield, will take out a $60,000 ters can be obtained, probably; Eugene, where due to crowded
few children
Register-Guard, Eugene, Ore., Sat., June 21, 1952 Pag 3
Another New Church Announce
To Serve Springfield People
By VERA HANSEN
Springfield has a new church this week, the Free Will Baptists,
who organized as a church June 15, after meeting as a Sunday school
only for some time. The Rev. E. C. Pearson Is pastor. This Is the
first church of the demonlnation, they announce, In the state ot
Oregon. They open with 20 persons accepted for charter membership.
The Free Will Baptists use the Bible as the only Infallible guide.
Their doctrine; free will, free grace, free salvation. July 8, 1952, the
denomination celebrates its 225th year as a religious body In tht
United States.
Mrs. Francis Hickman
was
elected clerk, and Mrs. Maude
Miller, secretary and treasurer.
Assisting in the organization was
the Rev. Virgil Florence of Buhl,
Idaho, who was sent from the
Home Mission Board for the pur
pose. The first service was held
March 4, 1951, In the pastor's
home, and they will continue to
meet there, 1648 No. 16th, Spring
field, until a building can be
erected. Anyone interested In af
filiating with the church may call
the pastor at 6-2260.
J
building permit for a structure to September 1953, meanwhile, it
be used for a grade school and will fill an urgent need for ade-
multiple purposes. The building quate space to conduct youth
will be of one story frame con- work and social activities. It will
structlon with predominant use of : serve as a meeting place fortabllshed September 1947. The
local wood products, and will j weekly children's religion classes, I membership has doubled and now
have a concrete slab floor. i vacation religion school, youth crowds the church at both Sunday
This will be the first unit of groups and parish socials. : -asses. Besides having paid for
conditions, only
can be accepted.
St. Alice parish has shown
healthy progress since it was es-
Springfield Presbyterian women
will attend a meeting in Eugene
Friday at 7:30 p.m. In the Cen
tral Presbyterian church where
Voice of the Andes" as deputa-;and will consist of four classrooms i will eventually provide parochial isiderable improvements it has; Mrs. W. Vern Buchanan, national
ver joined the U. S. staff of "The an eventual eight-room school,! It is hoped that the new school the church and rectory and con-
Free Methodist Camp Bible
School is in progress on Lost
Creek near Belknap turn-off on
the McKenzie. Sixty five children
are enrolled with Rev. and Mrs.
Wesley Graves, Mrs. Joe Phillips,
Mrs. Jack Simpson, Mrs. Eugene
R. Walters, Mrs. Robert Barnett,
camp nurse: Miss Gay Worth and
Miss Beverly Miller on the staff.
riersnn of 9nHnfiirf win h i tional secretary, which post he has of latest regulation size, oil-fur-school facilities in Springfield, forjransed half the funds for the new
V .. I'l'i'Bi'eia will oe me fin-j - : utm- it.! - ...:,u :: 1 u- ;-u i -
speaker this Sunday.
First Baptist Men's Fellowship
has its annual strawberry feed at
Harlow Lodge, Tuesday evening.
Coming week is busy in prepara
tion for the centennial celebra
tion. Rehearsals for the historical
pageant are Monday, Tuesday,
Wednesday and Saturday eve
nings. A dedication service at Willa
gillespie Baptist Church Sunday
at 8:00 p. m. will feature the pre
sentation to Church School work
ers and Trainees of credit cards
for work completed recently in a
Leadership Training School in
Christian Education. The speaker
for the service will be the Rev.
Charles A. Thorman of Berkeley,
Calif.
filled since that time. "The Voice nace with provisions for future , children of the parish who have' building
or tne Andes, now in its 19th I expansion, teachers room, and
year of operation, was the first! standard unility rooms. The floor
missionary broadcasting station in ' space will be 7,000 square feet.
the world and is located in the
heart of the Andean mountains of
Ecuador, just ten miles south of
the line of the equator, at the na
tion's capital, Quito. Operating
six transmitters on both long and
short wave, HCJB (Heralding
Christ Jesus' Blessings) literally
is heard around the world, send
ing out more than 1,000 Gospel
broadcasts each month.
Recently the station was hon
ored by the Ecuadorean govern
ment with one of Its highest hon
ors, membership in the National
Order of Merit, and contract with
the government to broadcast was
extended to 1980.
The new building will be located
just north of the present church,
and there is adequate property
for a standard playground. The
parish property is at 15th and F
St.-eets.
Gale M. Roberts, Springfield, Is
the contractor, and Jaccobberger
and Stanton, Portland, the archi
tects. It is anticipated that a con
siderable amount of donated ma
terial and labor can be arranged.
The building will be ready about
Nov. 1.
The structure, designed accord
ing to the latest standards for
Oregon schools, will be used for
parochial grade school when.
Fiery Volcano Pokes Its Head
800 Feet Above Pacific Ocean
By FRANK L. WHITE
AsROclatfd Presl Staff Writer
MANILA UP) Up out of the
Pacific Ocean an old volcano
in three months has reared its
black lava shoulders and steam
ing crown 800 feet above the
Straits of Luzon like some spec
tre risen from a wet grave.
You look into its fiery mouth
and it is like looking into the
gates of hell.
Acrid yellow fumes, dense and
sulphurous, seethe in the crater
like an impenetrable cloak.
Molten laval boils in the pit,
spills over the rim, congeals in
huge blocks which build the
volcano cone ever higher.
Explosions wrack the crater.
Clouds of steam mount to the
skies. Jets of rock particles,
some as big as an office desk,
blast upward. They fall and
crash against the cinder slopes,
roll and tumble crazily into the
sea, disappear in blasts of
steam.
It is a pit of brimstone and
fire, stirred in nature's cauldron.
Even the name of this newly
risen volcano has a Biblical ring.
Didicas after the Didicas Rocks
which mysteriously appeared
nearly a century ago in this
same spot 38 miles north of
Luzon's northernmost tip and
as mysteriously disappeared be
neath the waves after four years.
The U. S. Navy is keeping
close watch on this phenomena
since a Portland, Ore., master,
Capt. J. J. Philippsen of the
freighter Brightstar, discovered
a five-acre Island of tumbled
volcanic rock on March 16.
Since then, the volcanic island
has grown to 600 acres. Its
crater, 800 feet above the sea, is
almost a mile long and more
than half a mile wide. The island
I saw March 19 from the air
would fit neatly now into the
crater. There is no telling how
big Didicas will grow.
But this is but a minute speck
compared with the giant under
the waves. Didicas is a vast
underwater mountain with its
base resting on the ocean floor
five miles down.
Santa Clara
To Get Library
Santa Clara community will
have a library this summer,
through the sponsorship of the
local PTA group.
The library at Santa Clara
school will be open from 9 to 12
noon on Tuesdays and 1 to 3 p.m.
on Thursdays. Librarians will be
Mrs. Bill Adams, Mrs. Ray Nichols,
Mrs. Douglas Kapsa, and Mrs. W.
B. Persons.
Books are available for all ages,
including adults. The school libr
ary has been supplemented by
books from the state library.
There is no charge. The program
will continue to August 28.
In addition there will be story
hour for primary tots on Tuesdays
from 11 a.m. to 1Z noon.
Navy hydrographers from the
Sangley Point station near Man
ila chart the growing island fre
quently. Lt. Robert Ayers,
Seattle, took us so close in his
two-engined Martin amphibian
that we felt like we could toast
marshmallows if we had any.
Ayers took us over, around
and alongside the world's new
est active volcano on June 16
just three months to the day
after it poked its head above
the sea.
Congregationalists Gather For
Biennial Meet, at Claremont
The 11th Biennial Conference
of the general council of the Con
gregational Christian Churches
will be held June 18th-25th at
Claremont, Calif., with more than
2000 lay and clergical delegates
from all parts of the world. This Is
a voluntary organization of dele
gates from the Congregational
Christian Churches in America
brought together in the common
interests of these churches and
their more-than- a million members.
Subjects for discussion will in
clude the Council for Social
Action's methods and structure,
the decision of the Appellate Di
vision of the New York Supreme
Court on the merger of the Con
gregational Christian , Churches
and the Evangelical and Reformed
Church, and the proposed launch'
ing of a $4,500,000 revolving fund
for the church building society, all
of which will arouse controversy,
The general council has no
power to legislate for the churches
but has power to advise and guide
them.
The council elects a moderator
at each biennial meeting alternat
ing between a layman and i
clergyman with the present mod
erator being Dr. Vere V. Loper,
2345 Channing Way, Berkeley,
Calif.
Group meetings will be con
ducted on a wide variety of sub'
jects ranging from Foreign Policy,
Christian Education through
Churches, Human Rights, and
Economic issues. Distinguished
delegates and guests expected in
clude Senator Wayne Morse,
Ralph Flanders, Senator Hubert
Humphrey, Minnesota; Represent
ative Walter Judd, Minnesota;
Rev. John S. Whale, Cornwall,
England, and Mrs. Mildred Mc
Afee Horton. The pastor of the
Eugene Congregational Church,
Dr. Wesley Goodson Nicholson,
will be there.
president of Presbyterian organ'
izations will be the featured
speaker.
Hope Lutheran Church will hold
make-up class for those who
missed session of the Religious
Information class held recently.
This opportunity class will be
held Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. in the
church.
Among those on vacation are
Rev. Evan R. Williams of St.
John's Episcopal Church, Mrs.
Raymond Cales and Miss Jan
Kales of the Seventh Day Adven
tist Church. The two women are
visiting in Sacramento. Earlier
they were in San Diego and Los
Angeles with Rev. Cales. He has
since returned to Springfield to
begin work as state publtolty
chairman for the group's oamp
meeting to begin July 17th.
Want to Go to
Summer Camp?
The first camp for children of
Congregational families opens at
Camp Adams, June 29. Children
who have finished the third,
fourth, or fifth grades and are
interested in attending camp are
asked to call at the Congrega
tional Church office and obtain
registration blanks.
Trinity Baptist Church DVBS
reports a dally attendanoe of 181.
There are dally refreshments pe
riods and a nursery for tiny tote
which Is functioning efficiently.
School Probes
Leader Problem
Problems of leadership as view
ed by a labor economist, political
scientist, social psychologist, an
thropologist and sociologist were
discussed by a five-member panel
of University of Oregon professors
Friday before the Northwest Ele
mentary Principals' Work Confer
ence adjourned for a weekend
beach party at Sherwood Lodge in
Yachats.
Conference sessions will be re
sumed Monday in Erb Memorial
Union on the University of Oregon
campus, and will continue through
next Friday.
Chairman of this morning's pan
el on the topic of "Leadership Sen
sitivity to Community Groups and
Interests" was Donald E. Tope, di
rector of the Kellogg Foundation's
Northwest Regional project for the
study and improvement of educa
tional administration.
PANEL PARTICIPANTS em
phasized the need for school lead
ers to relate their work to the
social and cultural environment of
the community. Vincent Ostrom,
associate director of the Kellogg
project, said that the school should
act as coordinator in urban centers
where each public agency operates
in the belief that lt Is the most
Important part of the municipality,
Paul Klelnsorge, professor of
economics at the University of
Oregon told the principals that
membership in organized labor
groups has increased from 10 per
cent to 25 per cent of the nation's
60,000,000 workers within the past
10 to 15 years. The possibility that
more and more school children
may be coming from homes where
the provider is a member of 1
labor organization may necessitate
a change in curriculum that will
include a study of the history of
the American labor movement.
Theodore Stern, assistant pro
fessor ot anthropology, said that
although most teachers eome from
the "middle class," elementary
teachers must deal with a wider
range of backgrounds among their
students than da the secondary
teachers.
More than 80 children are en
rolled at Mt. Vernon Church of
Christ DVBS which operates dur
ing the afternoon.
Members of Concervarlve Bap'
tlst Church are holding services
in the new church they are build
ing at 17th Street and Mohawk
Boulevard although the edifice is
not completed. Even though han
dicapped by being without pas
tor the group Is active both spir
itually and In construction so that
all will be snug for fall.
RICHARD LITTMAN, assistant
professor of psychology, said that
there is no "leadership type," that
specific leaders emerge to meet
specific situations.
All members of the panel have
been conducting a seminar in So
cial Foundations of Education at
the University during the past
year. '
Dr. Inga McDenlu, school psy
chologist !cr San Bernardino,
Calif., county schools, presided at
the morning session.
1 y -; ill - W i p-HfJ Si
I i ii (fenlS' Photo, Wlltinirf ininra..,,
fettTHEKAN CHURCH pr.ud.y congratulated. -"" XZXMZ
s,n?""f to eominjinlcaBt membersnip. n"" " " ' pon. Sylvia Skorpen. Fern
11 'L'rjrSaX SPPL. Karen Olson. The Rev.
' Cha. Epple, Dianne Lynch. Ronnie PeltoU.
And The ATOMIC BOMB!
Tremendous Scenes of the Future as Portrayed in
Bible Prophecy -Hear Nationally -Known Bible Lecturer
ALDEN 0. SAGE
Sunday, June 22- Special Music- 8:15 P.M.- Sermon 8:30 P.M.
Grand Opening - 7 Nights Only
at the Beautiful New Seventh Day Adventist Church
Program for the Weeh:
June 23 Will Russia and America meet in armed conflict?
June 24 Satan appear! ai Christ.
June 25 Rome's challenge to the world.
June 26 The United States In Bible Prophecy.
June 27 The next president of the United States of the world
Who will he be?
June 28 11 a.m. The Judgment Day How near ore we to it?
June 283:30 p.m. The unpardonable sin What is it?
June 29 Why I em a Seventh Day Adventist,
New Church Located at 13th and Polk
Everybody Invited to the Grand Opening
mmmM
Thousands who heard Mr. Sags In the Sacramento Auditorium
v-