Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, August 08, 1947, Page 2, Image 2

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    ' PACE TWO
HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
FRIDAY, AUGUST 8, 1747
Missionary
Criticizes
China Setup
BUFFALO. N. Y Aug. I fl -U.
8. foreign policy In the F-r East
liu been audi that our ally China
fares worse than our enemies, ac
cording to Or. Walter E. Juud, re
publican representative from Min
nesota and a former medical mis
sionary In China.
: Speaking last nlRht at the final
session of the third world conven
tion of the Churches of Christ, Or.
Judd declared that the Chinese
could have made a deal with Japan
causing 100,000 additional American
deaths, but fought with the convic
tion that Manchuria would be re
stored to them.
"We gave away the chief ports
and railroads of Manchuria to the
Russians, even though we didn't own
them ourselves," he said.
In an earlier address. Dr. H. R.
Wei. professor of physics at the Uni
versity of Nanking and advisor to
the Chinese delegation to the United
Nations atomic energy commission,
said the world's salvation depended
on "the gospel of Christ."
; He said that although the Chinese
church faced the trials of atheism;
nationalism and political ideology.
"we are not Ttiscouraged. There Is
'just one world. Its salvation depends
on the gospel of Christ"
Gospel Crusade
Under Vay
The gospel crusade under the aus
pices of the Klamath County Holi
ness association is continuing at the
county fairgrounds with the Rev. D.
Willia Cafferay in the pulpit Rev.
Cafferay is a world traveler and
has preached In almost every major
mission field.
'. The Youth for Christ will have its
Saturday night rally in the fair'
grounds auditorium. Rev. Cafferay
will be the speaker and there will be
special vocal numbers. .
A mass meeting is scheduled for
Sunday afternoon and all the Kla
math Falls churches are Invited to
attend. The service will be at 3 p.m.
with evening service at 7:30 p. m.
.Visiting Minister
To Speak Here
The Sunday morning sermon of
the Community Congregational
church will be .delivered by the
Rev. T. Davis Preston, minister
; of the Little White Church' In the
,Vale, Soquel. Calif. Rev. Preston is
; filling the pulpit of the Community
Congregational church In the ab
,sence of the Rev. Godfrey Mat
thews. ,
It was during the pastorate of
. Rev. Preston that the Community
: church wast erected on Garden
street, and under his leadership the
church was active in community
. . work, especially among children and
' young people. The early recreation
; al work carried, on by the church
in Mills addition developed into a
' city-wide recreational program
headed by Rev. Preston, who was
the first chairman of the city rec
, reatlon commission.
Plane Plunges Into Chimney
! n - !
,
I Human Suffering
: Sermon Topic
r "The Mystery of Human Suf-
fering" will be the topic of the Sun
t day morning service at the First
t Baptist church. N. 8th and Wash-
lngton. The Rev. C. C. Brown will
f discuss the reason and source of
J human suffering, the reality and
the results of suffering. He will seek
! to help tiie congregation to under
l stand the age old questions con-r-
cemlng sufferings.
1 "Kadesh Bamea" Is the subject
J to be discussed at the Bp. m. service
t Sunday, August 10. Rev. Brown
will outline the policy and program
of the church in its responsibilities
?' in evangelism and missions.
In the gray mist of morning a mobile crane at Everett Mass.. pulls
from an active-gas-fnme chimney a portion of the wreckage of a small
plane that crashed inU the structure as it sought a place to land In
focry darkness. Aboard the plane, and killed, were four persons, an In
dustrialist owner of the ship, his two daughters, and the pilot
AP wirephoto.
Golden Text To
Be Subject
The text for the Sunday morning
service at the Pilgrim Holiness
church will be taken from the
Golden Text of the Bible by the
Rev. Sherman Moore. Betty Res
trick will sing. Sunday school con
venes at 9:45 am. with the worship
service at 11 am.
The evening service will be held
in cooperation with the Holiness
association at the fairgrounds.
Revival Meeting
To Continue
The Rev. W. J. Willis of Grand-
view, Tex., is continuing revival
meetings at the Church of Christ
until August 17. Services each eve
ning are at S o'clock. Sunday Bible
school convenes at 10 a. m., the
Sunday sermon Is at 11 a. m., with
the Lord's Supper at 11:45 a. m.
Remodeling of the church build
ing is under way. ,
North Dakotan
Guest Speaker
P. O. Laurhammer of Edlnburg,
N.Dak., will be guest speaker at
the Klamath Lutheran church,
Cross and Crescent at the regular
Sunday morning worshiD at 11 a. m.
Laurhammer is the father of R. 8.
Laurhammer of Klamath Falls and
Is visiting here. He will fill the
pulpit in' the absence of the Rev.
S. M. Topness.
Square Dance
Social Event
A lively evening of square dancing
will be one of the highlights of the
Woe us box social Saturday night.
The social will be held at the Silver
Dome and will begin at 9 a. m. Vic
Douglas will call the square dances
and Pop and Homer McGee will do
the fiddling. Mrs. Roy Fennlng will
be at the piano. Dorothy Ackerman
will open the festivities by singing
the national anthem and Mrs. Ray
South will sing "Just a Street Where
Old Friends Meet."
Awards-will be given to the boys
entering the stunt planned for them
by Pastega'a grocery. Lowe's candy
shop will present a gift to the next-to-the-oldest
lady present L. E.
Claudson of the Klamath Variety
store will give a prize to the lady
whose box wins second place.
All money collected from the
auctioning of box suppers- will be
used to build school bus shelters for
Klamath county school children.
Boyle's Column
Writer's Market Still
Open, Says Manuscript Boss
By HAL BOYIJi
NEW YORK. Aug. 8 iA't For
years Frank K. Kelly, a successful
free lance, cursed the Idiosyncrasies
of editors.
Now he Is an editor himself, and
finds It a bit disturbing to be Issuing
rejection slips to other writers.
As a matter of fact he avoids
printed rejection slips whenever pos
sible, remembering the bllteriiessfof
all writers toward turndowns of this
kind.
"I have had so many myself," he
said pleasantly, "they got to seem
like old buddies."
Now S3, Kelly began writing al the
age of twelve. At sixteen he had
overriden his first wave of rejections
to become a regular contributor to
science flctlcSi magaxlnes. Since
then, between tours of duty as a
newspaperman, a Nleimin Fellow at
Harvard university and wartime
sergeant overseas, he has sold some
sixty stories and articles to mug
aalnes as diverse as "Amiuuus
Stories" and "The Atlnnilc oMnthly."
One tale was selected by the late
Edward O'Brien for Inclusion in his
annual anthology of best short
stories.
Manuscript Editor
Recently Kelly became manuscript
editor himself for a well known
weekly magaxlne and learned the
other side of the picture. He con
scientiously rtads at least IS to
30 manuscripts a day and has be
come something of a problem to the
stenographers In his office.
"They say I write, too many per
sonal letters, to writers." he said.
"One girl brought me out a whole
stack of printed rejection forms
starting 'the editors wish to thank
you for submitting your manuscript,
but . . .'
"Well. I use them once in a while,
but I hate to do it That hurls a
writer most of all to get a printed
rejection slip attached by a paper
slip to his labor of love."
So' Kelly In most cases tries to
give a personal assessment of each
manuscript he finds It necessary to
return which is at least 89 out of
every 100 submitted.
'The result is the writers bombard
me with their other manuscripts by
return airmail, special delivery," he
laughed. "But that's all right. I
did that myself."
Kelly said that as a contributor
himself he always thought It was a
legend that editors were In constant
search of new talent, but he nas
found it to be true. The "name"
writers get turned down often Just
as do the "unknowns."
He said that all manuscripts gel
a thorough reading unless the editor
can tell at a glance that they are
hopelessly unndnpled to their needs.
Desperate Hunt
"I had the suspicion dcepln Uie
heart of every writer that editors
don l read his stulf with Hie loving
care he .-peels," he smiled. "Well,
It Just Isn't so. Editors really are
quite desperately hunting for new
talent, mid nothing gives them a
greater thrill Ulan Uniting It."
Most writers, Kelly mild, defeat
themselves.
"The mistakes they make most
often Is In not taking sufficient care
to see that the Impact of their ma
terial Is as sharp as possible so
that It will compel au editor to keep
on reading. He naturally feels that
If he doesn't want to read further
the people who buy the magaslne
won't either." i
I asked Kelly whether his ex
perience as an editor had helped him
as a writer.
"Yes," he Mild, "I learned that
editors have to look coldly on
leisurely dlscourslve writing and wel
come, most of all, a fast sparkling
style. The editor, like Die reader,
Is a busy Impatient man. He wants
to be pulled at once into the main
body of the narrative without any
preliminaries philosophical, observa
tions." But- Kelly said It was foolish for
any competent writer to be dis
couraged by rejection slips. One of
his own stories, "turned down by
practically every magaxlne in Amer
ica." promptly brought (300 when
submitted to a Canadian editor.
"One writer to whom I wrote a
personal letter of rejection told me
it gave him cause to go on," he
FOVLCn
III
Often Mmm xclwtlv fefvc i
I. 20-rcar re pUttrocnl tuaraatc.
2 Porctlincd Antrlctfi orifitul
Uslioed wettf buitr.
5. Ecoaomv tempeniare ComtoI-
liiatitpit. automatic.
4. 5 way iattilatioQ tow
o pernio cou
Hat pitatifal, rvti-irt ho wtMf
24 boon day. Coat im for rowr
Mw fowler Electric WaMf UeaMC.
We are recelvlnf regular
shipment of thU new mode)
MERIT'S
609 S. 6th Phone 69S9
said. "But I believe writing Is nn
Incurable Itch. No editor enn destroy
a real writer's passion for putting
black marks on white paper. And
the market Is always wide open for
fresh stuff."
Cotton Forecast
For Big Crop
WASHINGTON, Aug. 8 Ml The
agriculture department today fore
cast this year's production ol collon
t il.H,000 bales of 600 pound arm,
A'Clltllt. '
This estimate, bused un condition,
of Atiuiiia I, roiiiparxs with Mi
year's abnormally small crop 0
B.tHO.WK) bales and with a tu-yar
UUJd-M average of 13.3U0.OO0 bales.
Jrrr c fecial
uSEGWiia o&n Jiifin (SCO aiP o &XKP
Bible School
Commencement Set
commencement of the Vacation
Bible school of the Calvary Baptist
church will be held at the Pelican
City school house tonight, Friday, at
7:30 p. m. Doris Brown, principal of
the Bible school, invites the public
n ouau. a program- nas Been ar
ranged. BnH t H orn-lr auw,M..ll.l.
" mwuJll3llcU
during the past two weeks will be
on display. - J
Bentamln V Tnhn.. ... -
, - . vw.uuvu was Uie
pen name of James Whltcomb
CHURCH DEATH
NEW YORK. Aug. 8 () Dr.
John Wilson Wood, 81. retired sec
retary of the, department C(( mis- i
sions of the national council of i
the Protestant Episcopal church,
died last night. '
The Dobson fly is known under
16 names in the state of Rhode
Island.
Union Gospel To
Hold Services
T Regular services will be held at
: the Union Gospel mission, 251 Com
; mercial, on Sunday, August 10. Bible
i school is at 10 a.m., morning worship
service at 11, and evening servce at
7:30. Wednesday night prayer meet
r lng Is at 7:30. All are welcome.
White Pine Wanted
Kiln dried or thoroughly air
dried select grades most desir
able, 44 to 84 dressed pre
ferred, rough acceptable. Wire or
phone University 3-5700.
Midwest Plywood Co.
15480 Wyoming, Detroit 21, Mich.
HOTELS
OSBORN HOLLAND
EtWENI OE- MEDFOaD
Thoroughly Modern
Mr. aat Mrs. J. e. Carter
sai Js Earls?
Is Your Watch
In Good Voice?.
See
TOM DALTON
Licensed Watchmaker
901 Klamath
COME
For the Time of
Your Life
BRING THE
FAMILY
Saturday Nite, Aug. 9th
7:45 P. M.
FEATURING:
Speaker Rev. D. Willia Caffray,
World traveler and evangelist.
-Vocal Betty Rettrick, Clara Christiansen, Duet
Marie Casjeni Soloist.
Mono Del Fenwick, 6-year-old radio finger.
Fairgrounds Auditorium
400 --FREE SEATS--400
First Church of Christ. Scientist
knock f Th Hathu Church Tbk NM Church of Chrlit. Sclenlllt,
fa Bkitorj. Mat.
10th and Washington
Services: Sunday School. -3:30 a. m. ,
Sunday Service. 11 a. m.
Wednesday Evening Meeting, 8:00 o'clock.
Lesion-Sermon Subject, August 10 "SPIRIT"
Christian Science Reading Room
1023 Main St.
RADIO BROADCAST
SATURDAY 5:15 P. M. KFJI
Subject, "Proof That Christian Science Heals"
mm
YOU STILL HAVE TIME TO GET
THOSE POTATO APHIDS
Ask about our new method
for aphid control
MUREL LONG
FARMERS AIR SERVICE
SPRAYING
Telephone 8389
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Gal. Turpentine Keg. 42.58 1 1 tub Kui.inr hm B
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GD0DQ macrno
COLUMBIAN OPTICAL CO.
TWO STORES EXCLUSIVELY OPTICAL
Portland: 431 S. W. Alder Klamrth Falls; 730 Main
tTLII0 s0 ' ' ' ' 7121
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24" Towel Racks 1.19 .96
18" Towel Racks 98 .81
Robe Hooks 25 .19
Stair Treads 69 .55
Owl Cookie Jor 1,29 .99
Rag Rugs 2.19 1.49
Waste Baskets 1.29 .75
Laundry Hamper 8.45 7.95
Koke Kover : 1.59 1.49
8-Cup Percolator 3.69 3.49
Sessions Kitchen Clock ...4 69 3.83
Cork Tablo Mats 98 .86
Aluminum Clothes Lino
, 50 ' 79 ' .66
Ironing Pod and Cover . ..1.59 1.34
Shower Curtoin Set 3.09 1.29
Kinney Aluminum Wore . 50 oH
Tablo Stove-single unit .2.98 2.29
HOSTESS-SERVING TRAY ...... 2.5? 1
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Leather Goods-Golf Bags
n.li nml Pino
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t