Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, July 21, 1944, Page 4, Image 4

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    ACB FOUR
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
1 rum JENKQIf MALCOLM EPLKTf
4 Editor " Menaftns Editor
! I tunmnn eomblnaUon of the Eventni Herald and U
iiSUlSk Newa PublUhed every afternoon exc.pt Sunday
'f. ffiffnidTind Pin. ttrtt. Klemetll rails. Or.on. by th.
jh-erVld KblUhlnl Co. and the N e w I PublUhln. Company-
" " SUBSCRIPTION RATESl - .
nonth 780 By mall 8 montru g-n
Jutalda Klamath. Lak
..... tl.no nv mall
Moaoc. BiiKiyou coun-ju
3ear 18.00
ei.uw
,'rnured a. wcond dan matter at the poitof flee cl Klamath
IriuOrV. m Ausmt 30. under act of tonmw.
March 8. 1879
Member,
t Auociatad Ptw
Member Audit
Bureau Circulation
Todays Roundup
i By MALCOLM EPLEY '
THE acceptance speech of Mr. Roosevelt was
IT delivered from an unidentified west coast
! "'That3 ended the speculation and the phony
reports about his being in tng- p
'land, wormanay ar iwm.
5 is on the west coast, and that
'hinia of the Dossibility of (1)
.1 tritj into the Pacific andor R
(2) a visit to other west coast t
military or production insiai
'lations. ( West coast points with such
Installations should get a heart-throb
out ot that. The presi-
dent of the United States, re
S nuhlican or democrat, candi
date or no candidate, rates EPLEY
I terrifically as a visitor in any town.
......
J Fate of the Camps
PEAKING of military installations, Klamath's
J own the air station and the Marine Bar
bracks are expanding, while certain others in
t Oregon are slated for the auction block and
J oblivion.
f The war department, we learn, has issued
S orders for the sale of a huge chunk of Camp
Adair, in the Willamette valley, while Camp
' Abbot, at Bend, also Is expected to be aband
' oned and sold. Want to buy an army camp?
, Some 43,000 acres of the huge Camp Adair
reservation will be disposed of. This acreage
was originally intended for maneuver space,
s Camp Adair is now being used for military
training only, and some 11,000 acres where the
buildings are located are to be retained by the
4 army at present. This, too, will probably go
,1 before long.
Camp Abbot on the Deschutes was de-acti-
vated recently as an engineering training center.
' Deschutes people have tried desperately to save
it. Our. suggestion was that it be made a hos
j pital or recuperation center, like the Klamath
Barracks, and another was that it be made a
p postacaderay training ground for engineers.
Latest reports Indicate these efforts have failed.
f Late reports indicate that an effort is being
made to save Camp White, near Medford, and
st here, too, a proposal for a recuperation center
f was indicated. Recent word is that Camp White
L- has been found unsuitable for recuperation from
ic tropical diseases, at least.
Amid all of this community head-scratching
in Oregon, Klamath goes along unconcerned.
There is no current problem of the sort here.
i There is general belief here that the Marine
' Barracks will continue for some years after
5 the war, and. this is not . without . some mill- .
tary confirmation. But we should not be too
. complacent, even on that score, and we think
. J further that Klamath should consider a de
' t termined effort to keep at least a small navy
j. activity on the airport when the war is over.
... ; It couldn't hurt a bit, and it might help a
great deal in maintaining active aviation here.
.:The navy, obviously, likes it here.
....
The Powder Keg
I" QTRANGE things are happening at the Tule
lake segregation center, and what leaks out
iV. is enough to show that the big camp still has
5" powder-keg potentialities.
Latest development, as this is written, is the
' resignation of all Japanese peace officers in the
,. colony area. They quit because of lack of
'cooperation by other colonists, according to of-
ficial announcement. That "lack of coopera
U tion," in some cases at least, consisted of sin-
ister threats. '
Within the camp are hoodlums and hell-
raisers. They have slit the throat of. one
1-5 man, (and gotten away with it) and forced- a
' whole police force of more than 100 evacuees
L,-. to resign. They appear to be doing fairly well.
' We confess a feeling of serious concern over
i the situation down there. It is to be hoped
3 e WRA is looking at it realistically, and is
:,.y.not hesitating, this time, to make full use of
the presence of an efficient army unit in the
Klt adjoining Camp Tulelake. Let the Japs do
?b the worrying about face-saving.
4 News Behind the News
By PAUL MALLON
HICAGO, July 21 For 24 years now I
have covered national political conventions -
W
as reporter At times it has been a great
strain on my faith in common sense, but I have
never before sam anyming
about it . .
From long press association
experience in nonpartisanship,
I developed a phlegmatic, el
phantine, Impregnable belief
that these quadrennlel grand
illusions- were human phe
nomena, like the breaking out
of a boil on a man s necK or
the rise of a blemish on the
face, which would soon pass,
n- ioct rnnlrl not nierce my
inith In democracy and the MALLOW
inevitable domination of sense from the mass
mind. .'
This one here in Chicago, however, ends all
that for me. The glamor of milling, footsore
delegates assembled from the 48 states into a
few hotels ana an arena to express um mu
of the party they represent, has always, ap
pealed to me as an accurate expression of the
United States, lis ways, customs, neiuagc,
.....
Accented Farce
0 eager and confident was my mind in this
J belief that I acceptea wimoui nesiwuuu
ih. - nf Madison Sauare garden in
the usual nonsense of platform writing, the
breast beating orators, tne looiisnness oi canm
dacies without a purpose and such typical con
vention manifestations.
I always had enough sense to realize these
things made no sense in themselves, but I had
. faith in the eventual essense, the final com
mon denominator, the ultimate average of these
things as they worked out tn we ena.
As I say. this one has ruined all that for me.
I could strain my intelligence to the acceptance
of the illusion that Mr. Boosevew was reaiiy
not interested in his re-eiecuon, mat ne is
nlavine the cart of fiood soldier, that he bowed
. to the will of the party In accepting Wallace's
cancellation, that his letter announcing nis de
cision to . keep hands off the vice presidential
matter came from the heart. .
... . .
Contrived Arrangements
THEN how can I turn around next day and
believe the opposite that Mr. Roosevelt
ordered the withdrawal of Assistant President
Byrnes. How can anyone faithfully report to
the neople the goings-on, the fundamental guid
ing theories and effects of a mass party meeting
which is not really one, but only the carefully
contrived arrangements of one man, one lead
er, who changes his mind from day to day.
As the gruff old sage, Indiana's former Sen
ator Jim Watson, once put it, commenting on
President Hoover who was his leader:
"How are you going to stand behind a man
with St. Vitus dance?"
1 give it up.
. . .
Outmoded Devices
CONVENTIONS, in my studied opinion, are
outmoded devices. They are the formulas
of a by-gone era oi slow transportation and
archaic communications.
Back in the time of the Civil war, it may have
seemed fitting and necessary for delegates to
come in from all parts of the country to
discuss freely their purposes and ambitions, in
order that a solid, common ground of party un
derstanding might be reached. It no longer
works that way.
These things are half political circuses aimed
at radio publicity (the hiring of Actress Helen
Gahagan, for instance as an' offset to Clare
Luce of the republicans) and frankly, the
delegates and their opinions no longer amount
to much. The other half of these affairs is a
planned mass deception, arranged usually by
one man or group of men on consort.
Abandonment Nears
COME day,, and not very far in the future,
O some one is going to abandon this stupid
conventionality and provide an accurate method
of mass expression. True, free primaries might
fill the need. Uncoerced state and county con
ventions also could accurately express the mind
of the people.
The trouble is not so much with the system
as with the manner . in which it has been cor
rupted for radio, for power politics for single
headed leadership, for domination.
Formerly you could look to the radicals and
intellectuals to resist such authoritarianism. But
the radicals now are authoritiarian. They just
want to be the authority. . There are no demo
crats left, at least no believers in the demo
cratic theory in positions of power and leader
ship. For example, a negro leader here says there
are no more than eight or ten seated negro dele
gates to this convention, and admittedly the
CIO controls no more than eight of the 48
state delegations. '
Yet they dictated, through Mr. Roosevelt, the
withdrawal of Byrnes, who is admittedly the
only man physically and mentally capable of
taking over the leadership of the country in
Mr. Roosevelt's absence, and this is said factual
ly, not partisanly, not conservatively, radically
or .anything else. Everybody knows it.
I cannot resist the feeling that I have attend
ed the wake of democracy.
S Calvary Church '
Holds Special
1 Prayer Services
ji- ....
-v Everyone is invited 'tn ntonrt
;:j'the Calvary Tabernacle of apos-
luuc vnristian iann at 144Z Ore-
gon avenue in liiamath Falls.
"J Fred B. Hoff er is p a s t o r and
'5 evaneelist. -
There is special prayer every
uaj uum 4 p. m. unm o p. m. for
' revival for the nafcon. Meetings
DM kaU .......... .
v j j meat except mon-
dajv Theme is 'For I determined
s not to know ai. thing among you
5" . . '-""o'i ana tiim crucl
;fied." I Cor. 2-2. ...
'I 'RHODES DIES
rSli. Dt Rhodes, 77, president of
J the Northwestern Mutual Fire as
1 soclation, the Northwest Casualty
company and the Martin General
agency, died yesterday. He was
reared at McMiiinville, Ore., and
attended McMinnville college. He
came to Seattle after practicing
law at McMinnville from 1895 to
1901. Mrs. Rhodes survives. ,
Walkout Closes
Valsetz Plant.
VALSETZ. July 21 fjPWlv.
out of 180 men closed the West
ern xjUKKine COmDanv n ant hara
yesterday. Ed Morley, superin
tendent said the men quit in pro
test of the dismissal of a girl em-
tijxv iur an iniractlon nf fnm-
COMPLAINT TTf.vn
TACOMA. July 51 iim-A
moval cnmnlninf .it
j, wim inning to Keep in
touch with his Clackamas county
draft board, was filed in federal
court. Gottbere. arrested In Van.
couver, is in the Clark county J
Klamath Church Directory
Me4M Petal BeBllst
fAmnaill MlaVtltta
Sundif tchool, 10 a. m.; worship eerv-
ice. iias m. bl. 9 i
Klimath ftTlYl Center
im Mitxha.il at ahsute. war. Rev.
Warren IX Combe. pator. Sunday
school. 10 a. m. Mornlna Mrv.ee, 11
a m KVansnalUtltV IV m. Week-
ntfht Mrrlce. 1:30 p. m. VVedneedey and
Friday. Choir practice Thurtday, S
p. m. Phona 4ol a 9
Flna rh Hit tat.
Pine at 9th. Howard Rutchlna, mln
later. Btble school. a. nv Stanley Ken-
da 11. superintendent,
Mnrnlnf wnrahln. 11 n'clnck.
s-enlng Mrvlces, 6:30 o'clock with the
KvanceJlaUo ervice. 7:30 p. m.
Viral RasUtl
N. 8th at Washington. Kev. Cecil C
Brown, pastor. Residence, taT Udorado.
Phone tusl Btbia sortooi. : a. m.
Morning worship. 11 o'clock. Baptist
tralnlnc union, 6:15 p. m. Kveninj aer
vtca. 7:90 o'clock. Mid-week prayer,
Wednesday, T:30 p. m. Choir rehearaai.
weanesaay. au p. m.
Tall Raanal ChaBal
j, o. Joraensen. pasior. uksuu ai
1M N. th. Srviei Sunday. 11 a.
mornlnf worship and 7:4s evangelistic
services. Wednesday, midweek services
at T:45 p. m. Saturday night prayer and
praua at 7:s.
Bible Baptist
Wlard at IdeUi't corner. George w.
Wheauey, paitor. woranip, H a. m
Blbla training school. 0:4d a in. Zv angel
Utio sarvice. 7:45 d .xn. Wednesday
orayer service. 7:45 n. m. Women's
and children community Blbla claaaaa.
rriaay at 9 ana a p. m.. enures parioro.
Apeslella Palth
3lg N. 8th. Sunday achool. : a. an
WorshlD. 11 a. m. and 7:45 d, m. Wad.
nesday and Friday. S p. m.. regular
services. Services at Dorrls Sunday 3
p. m. and Tueeday at p. m.
IL Panl'a Ealsaasal Chareh
" Rv. F. C. W'iiaenbach. rector. Comer
Jefferson and 8th.
Sunday services. Holy comm union, ixi
m. Church achool. 6:00 a. m. First
Sunday oi each month Holy communion
at 11:00 a. m. and all other Sundays,
rooming prayer and sermon at 11:00 a.
m. noiy uaya ana aainta Mjt n&iy
communion. iu w a. m.
Junior High Age
Group At Camp
Five youne people from the
Community Congregational are
now at tne fugrim xoutn iet
lowship for junior high age at
camp Adams, wmcn is locatea
between Molalla and (Jolton. la
miles southeast of Oregon City.
The camp started with the eve
ning meal Sunday, July IS, and
will close with the noon meal
Sunday, July 23. Rev. Willard
Hall, pastor of Knight Memorial
cnurcn, saiem, is directing this
camp of over 100 young people.
ine young people attending
from Klamath Falls are: Lois
Larson, Delia Mae Robertson,
Jack Lust, John Stone and Jim
Edwards.
This group of young people
was accompanied to Camp
Adams last Sunday by Rev. Eu
gene v. fiaynes, their pastor.
and they will return by bus next
Sunday evening.
Maxine Hardin of Klamath
Falls is one of the girls' coun
sellors for this camp.
Tom Grubbs to Lead
Morning Services -
Next Sunday. July 23. at 11
a. m., Tom Grubbs will conduct
the morning worship service at
the Community Congregational
church in the absence of Rev.
Eugene V. Haynes, the minister.
Mr. Grubbs is a student at San
Anselmo Theological seminary
and is doing summer student
work in southern Oregon and
northern California.
The church will continue, to
now services each Sunday. The
church school will meet as usual
at 0:45 a. m.
The church is located nn r,ar.
den avenue between East Main
ana martin streets.
DIES
LOS ANGE'.ES .Tnlw 51 ton
Mildred Harris, beautiful actress
in the silent film days and first
wife of Comedian Charles Spen
cer Chaplin, died yesterday of
pneumonia which followed a ma
jor aoaominai operation. She
was HDOUt 41.
rirH Caarek OX
Altamont and Delaware. Kev. O.
Gelwlu. oa.tor. Sunday tchool, 1:45
. m llnrnln,, ibunllAH. If n'liulr
Preaching. T:S0 p. tn. Prayer eerviet
Wednesday. 7:w k m.
S.v.niB-Day AdT.nllil
Sabbath echoo! Saturdavi. t:M a.
al church. S3 N. th. P.itor B..I1.V
peek, at the U a. m. Mrvice. Prayar
meeuns. weane.aay, iia p. m.
rree Milhedlil Ckarek
4a s. lh. Rev. June Homing Miliar.
onone ooiu. Sunday achool. 10 a.
morning Mrvice 11 a. m.; song and
prl at 7. 0 p. m.: evanlng wonhlp at
o p. 111.
rourlh and Klamath. Sunday achool,
,v .. in. nwineu meeting. 11 a. m.
V. P. Legion, 1p.m. Evanmltsi Mrv-
e p. in. major an
Curry In charga.
Slea Lath.raa
ins High. Victor A. SehulM, pallor.
Ice, 7:30 p. m., Thunday and Saturdaya,
Major and Mre, William Charlaa
Phon. 6783. Dlvln. wonhln. 11
Sunday ecbooL S:4S a. m. choir. Thura.
d.y' P- ra- Chlldrena confirmation
ciaw, ..-go to ii.xt a. m. at we paraonage.
Plral Covenant
833 Walnut. Phone .JIT. Albert L.
Owight, paitor. Sunday lehool. 10 a. m.;
motnlng wonhlp, 11 a. m.; Young peo-
?in meeting, t p. m.; evening aervice.
44 p. m. Mid-week Mlowahlp, Wed
needay. T:49 p. m.
...
Cmnanlly Cengr.gatleael
Garden hMiwn R.. M.ln .nil VTa-.ln
Pev. Eugene V. Haynei, paitor. Church
chool, M a. nv: lervlce, 11 a. m.i
ComradM ot the Way. p. .. conunuq.
1 is, II. 1 1
...
Ckarek Ik. Naiereat
CSardan and fkt.rtln. Sunilav vhMt
S:4S a. m.: wonhlp. 11 a. m.i depart
mental meeting!, 6:9; Evangeltitlc. 7:4S
p. m.; mid-week preyer, Wednetday. 7:4S
6 m. Paitor. Bertrand P. Petanoa. 00
arlla, phone 4870.
e e
Aaiemtly el Oed
Rev. A. Hamlil PMln. .ulu .44
Oak. Sunday ichool. :49 a. m.; aermon.
,7 ' loung people, o ju p. m. cvan
eiiiua muni, I :ju p. m. TU.lday,
l' p- m" Prayer meeting; Thunday
7:30 p. nv, preaching.
...
Immaaa.1 Baellei
11th and High. Xev. J. T. Chlium.
Kitor. 1003 Lincoln. Phone 5410. C t
gerwell. director of muilc. Sunday
ichool, 8:48 a. m. Morning wonhlp. It
a. m. Young people, 0:30 p. m. Evening
lervlce. 7:J0 p. m. Midweek prayer.
Wedneaday. 7J0 p. m.
.
RJamatk T.wpl.
1007 Pin.. D.nt.1 R AmtiNiu n.iln.
Sunday ecbool. 9:43 a. m. Morning war.
eblp. 11 a. tn. Overcomen lervlce. 0:30
p. m. Jail meeting,. 3 p.m. Radio pro
gram. KPJ1, Saturday, 0:30 p. m. Evan
geiiitls lervlce 7:43 p. . m.i Wednetday
night, prayer meeting.
...
Plnl Cbarek of Cbrtn Beleatln
10th and Waahlrurton. Sunday, mamlne
tervlce, 11 o'clock. Sunday ichool, 0:30
a. tn. TeiUmonlal meeting. Wedneediy
at 8 p. m. Free Chrlitian Sclanca read
Ingiroora located at 1033 Main.
...
Plnl Priibrlirlin Charek
N. 8th end Pine. Rev. TUvlrf V ..
nett. Jr.. ontor. ass v. ith. rttM.i.
telephone 7311. Bible tchool at t:48 a. m.i
nU,-i.tH . m. inrae uiniuan En
deavor groupi at 8:30 p. m. .
Sacr.d R.art
Eighth and High Itreete.
Sund.y Mum: 7. S. 0:30 and 11 a. m
Holy Day Maiiee: 8. a and 8:30 a. m.
Weekday Man: 8 a. m.
Confeatlonii Satuntav, tm, a d.i.
daya and flnt Prldaya from S to 4 a. m.
and from 70 to 8:30 p. m.
Ckarek el Ckrlil
(Downtown!
an m.mhan and friend! are extend'
ad a ipeclal and cordial Invitation lo
attend the downtown Church of Chrl.l
al Sunday morning lervlcei. Song eerv.
Ice. 10 e. m.i Bible tludy. 10:14 a. m.i
UM.An anrf ivorahln. II a. m.i COmmUtl
Ion. 11:43 e. m.i evening tervlcei, 7::i0
o'clock. Located In the KC hill over
the Rainbow tneeira. (
AIUat.nl Pri.arl.ilia
Junior high ichool. S. 8lh and Bum-
m.ra R.v. Hugn T. luitcnaimor... paiior.
b:w a. m. wonnip.
Wonhlp. II
Junior Chrl.llan Endeavor. 4:30
Bible tchool
. m Jtinlfl
p. m. Sigma Pi loclaly, 8:30 p m., 4431
a. etn. tne men..
Ml. Lakl Priibflirlea
Rev. Hugh T. Mllchelmore, paitor.
Wonhlp, 8:43 a. m. Bible ichool, 10:43
a. m. Chrlillan Endeavor, 7:30 p. m.
Come out to any of Ihete eervlcet.
...
Pilgrim Itellnlll
Rev. W. L. Mediation, paitor. 1301
Wantlind. Sundiy ichool, 0:4S a. m.i
morning lervlce. It o'clock. PHYPS.
8:48 p. m.i evangellillo twice, 7:43
p. m.
Klita.lh Lalb.ria
Croia and Cmcent. Sundey ichool.
0:48 a. m.i wonhlp hour 11 a. m. Jun
lor conflrmtndi Thunday. 4:30 p. in.
Senior conflrmtndi, Thunday. 7:30 p. m
...
Ckarek el Preirimre Piyckle
DIvlRe Ruling
103 E. Main. Sunday lervlce. 8 p. m.
Lecture by paitor. Rev. Kathleen ICria.
weqneaaay mettege ena prey.r tervire
tcneiL rnone
I on
8 p. a). Reildince, 700 Mile
T77Z. All welcome.
Plnl Mllkellil
N. 10th and Hlah. Rev. Victor Phlllloi.
mlnlitar. Andrew Loney. Jr.. dlxeclor of
muilc. Mn. John O'Connor, orgtnlit
Mlnliter'i ratldence, 1000 Hlah. Tele
phone 3888.
wonnip. it a. m.
Sunday lehool. 8:48 a. m.
Methodlit Youth PellowahlD. each Sua
day. 7 p. m.
Ckerck of Chilli
X803 Wantland. Mlnliten. Raymond
I. Oibbe. 1131 Wantland. phone 4838.
and M. Uoyd Smith. 3337 Allamonl
drive, phone 30M. Bible itudy. 10 a. m-i
termon and communion, It a. m. to 13
noon. Evening tervlcei. 7:43 o'clock:
Ladtai Bible cteu. Thunday. 3 p. m.;
Prld.y Bible iludy. 7:43 p. m. Daily
radio broaden over KfJI, 8:30 lo 8:49
p. m. A hearty Invitation to all.
...
Ckarek ef 0.8
1307 D Villon. R.V. H. M. Biggin. MI
tor. Church tchool, 10 a. m. Preach
Ing tervlce. 11 a. m. VLB, 0:30 p. m..
pnaehlng eervlce 7:43 p. m.
taller-Day Stlala
The Church of Jaiut ennn of Latier
Day SalnU hold their tervlcee In the
auditorium of the city library, Blh and
Klamath. Prte.thood mealing Sund.y
morning at 8:18. Sunday tchool com
mtnet at 10:30. Sacrament meeting at
8 o'clock Sundey evening. E. E. Bur.
row., branch preildtnl, phone 8383 or
8731.
First
Church of Christ.
v K" Scientist
A branch of The Melher Cbarek. The
Plnl Chareh ef Chrl.l, 8e,ntltt, u
Beiten, Matt.
18lh and Waihlaglta
Strvleaa
Saadar Seheel 8UW e. m.
Saaday Servlc. Ilka,
Sabjeel, Jnly 33 "TRUTH"
W.dnaiday evening eervlee 8 p. aa.
Ruling Boom, IMS Mala St
Uss5Wfernd
from $unburn f
Vm Tsgelbio1 Perroiaiun JtOj
M snabora and all
saiaor boras. It's Lht Brit tii
treatment need for buna
oar bsUlefroatf I
Friendly
; Helpfulness
To Evory
Cresd and Purs
Ward's Klamath
Funeral Home
Marguerite M. Ward
- and Son
AMBULANCE
SERVICE
933 High Phon 3334
A Gem of Thought From .delta's s
To soma lhii may saom outrsgtoui
But in Ancient limes say The Siaeg
:.',., y Odds Zounds and Odds Zooks
2?Jfl" Gfu" lik,d ' CUrl "P With books
While others curled up with the Pages.
Magazines & Stationery
phon. 866 ft ID ELLA'S
- KJluU A Qalh V
The New Permanent Location
.. f ;
Helen's Beauty Shop
4056 Shasta Way
Just Across the Street From Our
Old Address 4077 Shasta Way
We Will Be Closed This Week
But Will Be
OPEN FOR BUSINESS
i at our new shop on
Monday, July 24th
SAME PHONE NUMBER 8200
. Customers wishing appointments for
next' week should phone now.
Fresh Orange Cake
A luscious moist layer eake made with
the Juices and rind of fresh ripe oranges.
Iced with a creamy orange icing. This
eake is a perfect summer dessert.
Only 69c
Be sure to include some of our
enriched Danish pastries and
rolls in your order. We have a
nice assortment from which to
nake your choice.
YOUNG PEOPLE TO
LEAVE FOR CAMP
N.. ..nt..tr iiAnnla Anrl thrnn
11711 JUMIi UI"" "
j. .11- ...llT Iiiuva fnr r?flmn
Acinms. tlia Plluilm Youth Fcl-
lowship fiunp which is ownott oy
.1.. ...iiillnnul Pnnfttrnnre
inn wuiih
. t A II nf IhpRA vnuno
people aro members of Iho Com
munity Coimrrantloiuil churches
group "Comrades of tho Way'
n.,H h. hi.n artlvn In tho work
of tho church this past year.
The young people to attend
are as follows: Karen Hnrdln,
Maxine Hardin, Sharon Moore,
Edna Kenner, Juonlta Shlnii,
Leonard Harvey, iJ V
and H.nyTynd. .l
of tho enmp p,lcr.n!j; tJ
ny"f. who U to tn.?nr; l
on the bnckKround $ $
teatnmnnl .. ' "l lk.1
sellor, and miiiiaB f$'4
room. ov. Kurn v.H
hlh and colloV,
people. Betty jPa ' h
accompany her pttrcm.',
, This Is tho seventh V"
the Pelrlm YuVtr
iibvo nvia ineir rami, 7.1
own grounda at Cm1
Mr Haynes ha, J
at tho camp evny H
ThhPmc
Keeps its flavor
through baking
and freezing
Schilling:
TRULOVEt
Chicken
Center
trM wj zr n
h Colored
J)K,J Fl
JL I ItIB
Phone 4282
919 E. Main
IT
45c lb.
SMOKED PICNICS Lb. 32;
Bur Your Smoked Meat How While Point Fim
RABBITS ... . . . . Lb.Sft
COLORED HENS. . . , Lb,3S:
BACON by the piece . . Lb. 27(
BssssWBesssssVWM
IxL
, C. B. Shropshire,
Portland,
Evangelist
Dangerous Philosophy
, -fr
THERE Is a pi ominent philosophy working among i
ous people today, that Is dangerous In its very nitui
It is based on the theory that w. cannot all see lh. B1W"
alike, and gives lo all men th. rigu
see the Bible aa best suit. Ih.ir pK
iar theory. This philosophy alio
volves th. right of the Chrlitlm
fellowship .11 religious p.oplt,
withstanding they go beyond th. t
Ins of Chrlit. Such doctrine nullIIW
the doctrine of Christ, or makM It j
rl.. an that It ran he moulded to it-
man's whims. This Is indeed a dir
ous attitude to hold toward the
of God. ,. ,,
It has been said that memb.rrtlp"
church does not require that
late ourselves from those ot our tW
bors who. persuasions dllfsr t"P
..... UV...UI- iM rhurch f
wM.e. .ifii.,w. e,,,, - ..
com. to mean very little to anyone, and I cannot w '
nv. mw lil. ...u.. .HM. 1 - . . u. . mambsr W 1
.... , -w.i.w n.ri " -. w - .
church when church membership means so lltils t
Membership in a denomination I am sure Is of no eow
quence to the Lord, because h. recognises no such oraw1'
tlon in the inspired scriptures. But membership w
church of the Lord la necessary to fellowship with o
I'lvmuerinip in ine cnurcn oi we i.ora odii ". j
Isolate ourselves from those who go beyond the '"ch "'
Christ. "He that goeih onward and abldeth not In the MJ"
Ing of Christ, hath not Qodi He that abldeth In the teicnw
the aame hath both the Father and the Son. '"'I
eometh unto you, and bring not thla teaching, raceirj
not into your house, and give him no greetings for p
glveth him greeting partaketh In hla .vll works." Jn0, " '.J
The apostle Paul informs us thai "Our wrestling
oBoinei nam ena oiooa, out against mm I"" 7 j.a
against th. powers, against the world rulers of W a
ness, against the spiritual hosts of wlek.dn.ss in ti
ly places." (Eph. 61 12). According to th. inspired "M"wM
o urn niy 10 reiui 10 nave leuowsnip yj
transgress the law of Christ, but we are to put on th
armour Of Ceil .nil ilnht an.ln.. thalr anlrliual wiCKSt"",.
The most dangerous infidelity that prevails In the
today is that which works under the guise of rollgiou. "w
sorshlp. Let us beware that in our s.al to have unity a
religious people, that w. do not compromise with tns
The philosophy that teaches we ehould overlook o
llglous neighbor's rebellion against Qod, and fellowsnip
iiy in oraer 10 nave peace, wu wan -r
eternal ruin. '
Tonight
"Why nenomlnatlonUm U WrW
CHURCH OF CHRIST
BIG TENT MEETING
Two Blocks Past Towir TheotM on South Sixth
I