I
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
TUESDAY, AUGUST 10, 1954
'DENNIS THE MENACE"
'There, New mou can see what Cfccte doin'in the
1 BASEMENT WITHOUT GOiN' DOWNSTAIRS.
Small Boy Dies
From Injuries
LAKEVIEW Funeral servlceB
were held today at 2:30 p.m. from
the Assembly of Ood Church for
Gary Dwane Griffin, infant son of
Mr. and Mrs. Hollls Griffin. The
child died Monday morning from in
juries received Sunday night when
he was struck by a car.
The little boy. who would have
been two years old later this month,
was apparently playing around and
under the cars at Hart's Camp
Ifround. Driver of the car which
struck him was Carl Webb, known
to be a very careful driver, accord
ing to the Herald and News corre
spondent. Witnesses staled lie walked
round his car to see that he had
clearance and that there were no
children nearby, then sot In and
started to back the car out. The
child was struck by the left front
wheel.
In addition to his parents, sur
vivors Include two brothers, Mike
and Robert and grandparents, Mr.
nd Mrs. t. V. Bytes of Canby.
California.
UNREST
' ' VOO tH JANEIRO, Braatl Wl
fwetdenb Getulio Vargas moved
to unall mounting political unrest
ttesday In the wake of police
reports blaming a secret service
agent assigned to bis palace for
Uie recent attempt to assassinate
an opposition politician editor.
Air Vnrrm Unl TJlhna Vlnranllnn
Vaa was killed In the attempt last
imirsasgr on tne lire or Carlos La
Cerda, editor ol an anti-government
newspaper.
STRIKE
FRANKFURT, Germany I
Armed police patrolled Bavaria's
biggest factories Tuesday as a
strike Involving 220.000 metal
workers crippled production for
second straight day.
'MM
MOTHER
DURING AUGUST
YOU MAY HAVI A
BEAUTIFUL S7"
PORTRAIT
OF EACH
CHILD
NOT
OVER
' 12
YEARS
NO L1MITI
n
0
STUDIO
706 MAIN PHONE 4526
KIAMATH FAUI, OdtOON
World Council Of Churches Plans Important Meetings
Editor's Note A meeting start
ing next Sunday In Evanston, 111.,
will determine whether centuries
old divisions among Christian re
ligions can be made smaller or
must grow Btill wider. Here Is the
first of lour articles on the As
sembly of the World Council of
Churches, which some churchmen
have called the most important
religious event since the Reformation.
By GEORGE VY. CORNELL .
EVANSTON. 111. VPl Most of the
world's churches are moving to
ward a fateful crossroad.
Which way they turn can mean
either closer ties or sharper gaps
in the centuries-old divisions of
Christianity.
The answer hinges on the As
sembly of the World Council of
Churches opening here next
Sunday.
"It will be a critical test," said
Dr. W. A. Visser 't Hooft, the
council's general secretary. "We
shall see which is stronger the
force of unity or the force of
division."
The meeting will be the most
widely representative Christian ,
gathering ever held on the Ameri
can continent. I
In range of subjects, purposes
and participation, it may well be
the most comprehensive Christian
assembly ever called.
All things considered, said Dr.
Franklin Clark Fry, head of the
United Lutheran Church and vice
chairman of the council's Central
Committee, "it is the most crucial
interchurch meeting in Christian
history."
Fundamental theological ques
tions, buried through the years in
the ashes of denominational cleav
ages and regional aloofness, will
be raised in the first such broad
attempt to cement Christianity's
scattered forces.
"The assembly will deal with
subjects that go to the very heart
of the faith," Dr. Fry said. "It is
daring thing to do.
"The outcome can determine the
lasting strength of the whole
movement to bring the churches
closer together and Increase their
effectiveness."
More than 1.500 representatives
from 161 denominations with ap-
Soflboll Championship
Play-Offs
TONIGHT
Conger Field
proximately no million members
in 48 countries on both sides of the
Iron Curtain will take part in the
meeting.
Dr. Henry P. Van Dusen, presi
dent of Union Theological Semi
nary and chairman of the coun
cil's U.S. Study Committee, de
scribed it this way:
"The most truly ecumenical as
semblage of the followers of Christ
who have ever met "in one accord
in one place' in the 20 centuries
since his life and death and resur
rection." Although the World Council met
once previously at Its founding
six years ago in Amsterdam it
Is digging for the first time Into
basic and potentially shattering
rnncntidatlnir matters of faith.
Nearly every major church will
be represented.
Although Roman Catholic
churchmen have attended some
previous meetings of World Coun
cil groups, none will be present at
Evanston under a ruling by Sam
uel Cardinal strltch of the Chi
cago archdiocese.
There have, however, been arti
cles and studies by Roman Catho
lic leaders on the assembly's
theme. Said an American Catholic
publication. The Pilot:
"No true Christian at any rata
will look with indifference at the
hopes that are set in Evanston."
Dr. R. T. Lindley
OPTOMETR I ST
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