Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, July 05, 1963, Page 5, Image 5

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HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Kalis, Ore.
Friday, July 5, 1963
PAGE 9
St. Barnabas Guild Plans
To Install Memorial Bell
in
N'GELL VALLEY At the plcted, painting of the church and
June 27 meeting of tile Guild ofj
St. Barnabas Episcopal Church,
with vice president, Grace Dear
born, presiding, the members set
Nov. 2 as the date for their annu
al turkey dinner and bazaar.
Ethel Jones reported that
stone mason from Klamath Falls
will meet with the group on Sat
ruday afternoon, July 6. to make
an estimate on electing the
church bell donated to the church
by the Clements ranch. The bell
will be erected in memory of I
tommy Lindsay, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Marion Lindsay
It was announced that two of
the guild's projects had been com-
JET PASSENGERS
More than one-half of all United
States airlines' passenger miles
were flown in jet-propelled air
craft in ,'.962, according to the
Britannica Book of the Year.
DOWNTOWN
OFFICE SPACE
Inquire At
GUN STORE
714 Main
parish nail and sending a mis
sion box to Alaska.
Following the meeting, refresh
ments were served by the host
ess, Beverly Roberts. The next
regular meeting will be held at
the Bonanza home of Dorothy
Peterson on July 25.
Four Make
Communion
BLY-Rev. Harold Fumo ad
ministered the sacrament of Holy
Communion to four young con
firmands at the St. James Cath
olic Church on Sunday, June 30.
Dressed in white to receive
their first communion were Lin
da Hall, Rebecca Hall, Hope
uillavou and John Hall. Bonnie
Rentle portrayed the angel who
opened the gates for the children.
In a setting of white carna
tions, yellow roses, and peonies,
the adult choir sang "Come,
Holy Ghost" and "On This Day,
Oh Beautiful Mother." The or
ganist, Mrs. Jack Dillavou,
plaved "Jesus, Jesus, Come to
Me."
First Church of Christ, Scientist
A Branch of The Mother Church, Tht First Church of Christ,
Scientist in Boston, Mass. 10th and Washington
Services: Sunday Service 1 1 :00 a.m.
Sunday School 11:00 a.m.
Wednesday Evening Testimony Meeting 8:00 O'clock
Lesson-Sermon Subject July 7, 1963
"GOD"
Golden Text: Psalms 62:11. Power befongeth unto God.
Nursery facilities available during church services
Fiji , ,
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COLLEGE QUARTET The Simpsonaires Male Quartet,
which will present a sacred music program at the Im
manuel Baptist Church on July 10, includes Richard Cox
of Klamath Falls, left, as tenor. Other members of the
Simpson Bible College group are Harry Ecklund, Don
Crawford, and Jack Teeter. Bruce Longstreth is the ac
companist. Local Man To Appear
With College Quartet
Pope Admits Legacy Of Popularity
Gained From Beloved Predecessor
A local talent will be rep
resented when the Simpsonaires
Male Quartet from the Simpson
Bible College of San Francisco
presents a concert of sacred mu
sic on Wednesday evening, July 1
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at the fmmanuel Baptist Church,
Eleventh and High streets. .
Richard Cox, 19, of Klamath
Falls is the first tenor in the
quartet. The son of Mrs. Kenneth
E. Free, 2350 Siskiyou Street, he
will enter his sophomore year at
the college this fall to major in
missions.
Interested in music for a num
ber of years, Cox sang with both
the a cappella choir and the Mad
rigal Singers at Klamath Union
High School, graduating with the
class of 1982. He is a member of
Immanuel Baptist Church.
Other members of the Simpson
aires are Harry Ecklund. sec
ond tenor, from Everett. Wash.:
Don Crawford, baritone, from La
Habra, Calif.; and Jack Teeter,
bass, from Sedro Woolley, Wash.
The accompanist is Bruce Long
streth of Santa Barbara, Calif. He
will also be featured at the piano
at the sacred music program.
the quartet will present a wide
selection of musical offerings in
cluding standard hymn arrange
ments, Negro spirituals, majestic-
worship melodies, and sprightly
martial selections.
The public is invited to hear
the college singers, according to
Rev. William E. Cross, pastor.
There will be no admission charge
ior the program which will be
gin at 7 p.m.
The college, represented by the
vocal group, is the West Coast re
gional college of the Christian and
Missionary Alliance, As an ac
credited four-year coeducational
school, Simpson Bible College
pecializes in preparing its stu
dents for full-time church occu
pations.
1 By LOUS CASSELS I
United Press International
No Pope in a thousand year.'
has begun his pontificate with e
greater reservoir of good will
than Paul VI.
As he takes up the lonely bur
dens of his office, Protestants and
Eastern Orthodox Christians are
praying as earnestly as thci
world's half-billion Catholics that
he may be truly guided by the
Holy Spirit.
The unprecedented interest
which non-Catholics are taking in
the new Pope is a carryover ol
the vast atlection they had for
his predecessor. By the sheer
force of goodness, Pope John
XXIII changed the whole image
of the papacy for the non-Catholic
world. During his reign, it was
possible for those outside the
Catholic fold to hear the authen
tic voice of a Good Shepherd
speaking from the Throne of St
Peter.
Pope Paul is too brilliant andl
sensitive, too aware of the world
not to realize that his present
popularity is a legacy. And, as he
made clear in his first formal
address, he is not ashamed to
acknowledge his inheritance. H e
is quite willing to be known as
the Pope who came after the
great John XXIII, and tried to
carry on his work.
Use Word "Continue"
In outlining the aims of his
pontificate to the College of Car
dinals, he repeatedly used the
word, "continue."
He said his "preeminent" con
cern would be the continuation of
the Ecumenical Council sum-l
moned by Pope John and auto-l
mitically suspended by his death.
He also promised to "continue
with full dedication the great
work started by our predecessor"
in attempting to "restore the uni
ty" of the Christian family.
We are opening our arms to
all those who take pride in the
name of Christ," he said. We are
calling them by the precious
name of brothers, and let them
know that they will find in us
constant understanding and benevolence..."
Despite his devotion to John
XXlII's goals of renewal and re
union, Paul VI is by no means a
carbon copy of his predecessor.
On the contrary, he differs trom
him very strikingly in tempera-1
ment and personality, and at I
would be unreasonable for anyone
to expect him to do things in the
6ame style.
Prasant's Son
John XXIII was a peasant's son
who retained an unaffected humil
ity and simplicity all of his life
He had an irrepressible sense o
humor, a natural affection for all
sorts of people, and an innate dig
nity which could not be marred
by the most outrageously infor
mal conduct. Like St. Francis, he
manifested the rare combination
of a Christ-like, sclf-donving1
.'haracter with a happy, outgo
ing personality.
Paul VI is an introvert and an
intellectual, intense in his feel-
ngs but disciplined in the ex
pression of them. He is subject
melancholy moods. His com
passion for humanity is said to
be great, but it seems unlikely
that he will display it with the
same kind of spontaneous little
gestures which so endeared John
XXIII to the world.
Being a good Pope, however,
is not the same thing as w inning
a popularity contest. And there
are reasons for suspecting that
Paul VI may prove to be even
more effective than his great pre
decessor in pursuing their com
mon goals.
The reasons include his rela
tive youth and vigor, and the
reasonable expectation of a fair
ly long pontificate.
Old Vatican Hand
Also, as an old Vatican hand
who spent 30 years in the secre
tarial of state, ho knows the'
varied and wondrous ways in
which curia professionals may
sidetrack and smother papal ini
tiatives of which they disapprove.
He is not likely to be as patient
with such obstructionism as was
the kindly old man whose slip
pers he seeks to fill.
lhe curia conservatives did not
approve of Pope John's Ecumen
ical Council. They tried to tal
him out of it, and when they
failed in that, they sought to post
pone the date indefinitely. When
it met last fall over their pro
tests, they tied it up in pro
tracted debate over draft state
ments which they had prepared,
and which were directly contrary
to the spirit of renewal and reunion.
The tolerance which Pope John
displayed toward these tactics dis
mayed many of the progressive
bishops at the council, and it was
not until weeks after the council
met that they felt sure enough
of the Pope's support to gt on
with the work of "updating" and
reforming the church.
When Paul VI summons the
council back into session, it is a
safe bet that things will move
faster.
M.tU. . ,ir .
Iff rc-
Slides Set
For Meeting
A program of slides narrated
by Dorothy Schupp will highlight
the July 8 meeting of the Wom
en's Association of Peace Memo
rial Presbyterian Church. The
slides will be concerned with
Miss Schupp's recent travels in
Hong Kong, Singapore, and Ro-torua.
The meeting will be held in
the fireside room of the church,
beginning at 7:30 p.m. Members
are invited to bring guests.
Youth Night
Ends School
BONANZA - Sixty children of
the Bonanza Community Church
concluded their Vacation Bible
School activities with a program
on the evening of June 28.
The program included reci
tations and special music by each
class, a play given by the junior
class, and a rhythm band fea
turing the nursery group. The
superintendent, Mrs. Russell Pe
derson, was presented with an orchid.
A "NEW" POPE Pope Paul VI, spiritual leader of the
world's 500 million Roman Catholics, is described as an
introvert and intellectual who differs both in tempera
ment and personality from Pope John XXIII, Yet it is
thouqht he might be even more effective in carrying out
his predecessor's goals of renewal and reunion because
of his relative youth, vigor, and more than 30 years of
experience in the Vatican secretariat of state.
FRIENDLY
HELPFULNESS
To Every Creed
and Purse
WARD'S
Klamath Funeral
Home
Marguerite Ward
and Sons
923 High Ph. TU 2-4404
Fully half of all women 45 to
54 years of age aro engaged in
gainful employment the high
est proportion for any age group
of women, according to the U.S.
Department of Labor.
Bible School
Program Held
MERRILL The Merrill Presby
terian Church held its annual Bi
ble School program on Friday
night, June 21, with children from
the primary through junior high
departments participating.
Recognition was given to those
who assisted with the school in
cluding Illys Reeves, director;
Leona Bcaslcy, assistant director,
and Christina Storey, secretary-
treasurer.
The
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FOOD FOR THOUGHT
.'Then ' n r'rinl 10 j8hovh av bV mn or bV '1 srn
We need la realize (hut the maorlty may be, but seldom Is, nn
the sfde ol right. The right or the wrong of cause Is not 1o be
determined by the number of people In that cause. Might Is always
on the side of right no matter how weak In number the right tide
may be. This we should always remember. The word of God will help
us to determine the right. Let us maintain our loyalty to him. It it
quality and not quantity or large numbers that count with the
Lord. May each ol us nave faith, wisdom and courage to seek that
which is right and then stand tlrm.
C. WAYNE LOWE, Evangelist
CHURCH OF CHRIST
2205 Wontland Ave. Ph. TU 2-0374, 2-4579
You Are Cordially Invited To Worship With Us
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