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Oakland Tribune from Oakland, California • Page 16

Publication:
Oakland Tribunei
Location:
Oakland, California
Issue Date:
Page:
16
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

16 i Oakland Tribune, Monday, Oct. 18, 1948 Purchasing Agents to Gather Here for Annual Tour on Nov. 18 Northern" and Central California devoted to a tour of -Industrial top flight purchasing agents will piants in the. Metropolitan Oakland convene with industrialists andt. At j-i School of Religion President, Broadcasts Sermon to Nation ject will be The Cold War Berlin to Delhi." i L'Hommedieu said that Tooth the luncheon and dinner is open to of the Oakland chamber, will be Robert'Gros, director of publicity and advertising for the Pacific Gas and Electric Company, San Fran- manuia ciurers oi Aiameaa vounijr all Alameda Si Countv businessmen.

Cisco. Gros has just returned from 'Reservations may be made with A 5.30 pjn. reception is scheduled at the Claremont with the annual banquet set for 6:30 p.m. Guest speaker at the banquet, according a air tour of Europe. Ken Moeller.

manager of the cham- the Middle East Saudi Arabia. in Oakland November 18, for the annual luncheon industrial tour-dinner in honor of the Purchasing; Agents' Association of Northern1 California. The affair, which in past years has attracted upwards of 500 key 417 ber's-, manufacturing division. By JOHN E. ZOLLER Church Editor The Tribune to President James H.

L'Hommedieu Pakistan, India and Ceylon. His sub- 14th Street. truth which is hidden from us is that which relates to our personal identity when these bodies of ours work no' longer. "If we make sure of the quality of our Hedley continued, businessmen, will be sponsored by the Alameda County Manufacturers' BSy area Protestantism was reoog-i nized yesterday when Dr. Ronald Bridges, president of the Pacific I Sdhool of Religion, Berkeley, delivered the sermon over the Columbia Broadcasting' System's "Church of the Air" program.

Speaking on the subject. "The Wine of Astonishment," Dr. Bridges isaid: "Whatdo you do, wat ean 1 anyone do, when the end of the world is approaching? Radical "we can well afford to let the unknown quantity take care of itself. We do not know, how long we shall live. We ourselves, however, deter- Division of the Oakland Chamber of Commerce, it was announced today by William Harold Oliver, chairman, manufacturers division.

Groups assisting in completing detail arrangements include the Alameda Chamber of Commerce, Alameda County Industries, Berkeley Chamber of Commerce, Berkeley Manufacturers' Association, Emeryville Industries Association, and San Leandro Chamber of Commerce. mine how well we live. The life eternal is the life that is worthy of survival through all time. "What happens after we die?" Hadley concluded. "We do not know.

But if we take heed to what science and conservative religion agree on this point, and most ether people in between concur, that the end will come, some time "I do not know wheii this day will come, but I do know it makes a great dfeal of difference how we face it," Bridges continued. "If we in America are going to save ourselves and help save the happens before we die, we shall face the unknown future freed from I every doubt and fear." Oliver has named a special committee to arrange the all-day affair. headed by Hal Saunders, Clarence At theOntral Seventh-Day Ad- ventist Church, the Rev. W. L.

Hyatt, speaking on the subject "Tools of God," said: "People often say, 'If I belong to God, why doesn't He keep hardships, trial and tem-tations away from "God uses these things as hard and sharp tools to forge our characters, to make them strong and beau Jorgenson and Edward Hudson. Assisting will be Howard Ains-worth, Ben Celli Dunstan S. Gross, William Jamison. Ivan Johnson, Harry Lange, Milton Mauss-hardt, Joseph Moore Harold Ramsden, E. W.

Samuel, Floyd Snodgrass, Dave Taylor, Ford Tus-sing, Ray Young and Ken Moeller. First order of the day will be a 12:15 p.m. luncheon at the Hotel Claremont. The afternoon will be irest of the world, we have got to go lahead with no wailing and groaning, Ino panic. I "Today we not only have our own jpersonal and local crises to deal iwith" Bridges pointed out, "we jlive in the midst of everybody's jcrisis the world around.

Dr. Recter W. Johnson (right) superintendent of the Metropolitan District of the Methodist Church, chats with the Rev. Charles E. Lord, pastor of the First Methodist Church of Alameda, at the celebration of the 95th anniversary of uie church.

Dr. Johnson was the speaker at the banquet tiful. He does not promise to kep us out of tribulation, but he promises 1 i I A growing niness vi uui uaj 10 A 75 7 a continuous record serving Oakland and tlc astay area Hhe news neurosis the effect of the to be with us in the time of trouble. day-by-day chronicle of woe. Andj "We should realize that it not new, neurosis leads to.

hysteria strange that trials come," Hyatt VENETIAN BLINDS 3 Day Service Aluminum-Steel WW OAKLAND SEA FOOD GROTTO W( Ll: Ci ni tm: nA KWA Foot rrmiMin jweei rnone i tt inuaKS 3-xrT continued. "Indeed, if would be strange if they did not. "But why does God allow temptations to come? He sees the over-all picture and works for our ultimate good, although His ways are sometimes past our understanding. "Enduring trials and, overcoming temptations develop patience and stability," Hyatt concluded. "This is God's way of preparing us to spend eternity in His glorious kingdom." jand despair.

"But not only do we know about jtheills of the world," Bridges continued: "with the growth of democracy we feel responsible too. 'Un-ieasy lies the head that Wears a crown' is an rld adage. In a demoT fcracy the common people wear the trawn' and they lie uneasily, too. "Not many ot us can do anything jbig and dramatic to save our Nation or civilization." Bridges con SQ. Ft! PLENTY OF PARKING SPACE ABALOIIE N0W season TOP QUALITY sh received dally from fishing Bwatj right al our pier.

Visit our cocktail lounge. Listen World News KLX Neon every day "A Quiet Mind" was the topic of cluded. "But we can do the plain irtootB uios raQ ie eo year dial ALBERT BROWN MORTUARY 3476 Piedmont Avenue OAKLAND Telephone Piedmont 5-0731 O-O F. VAN FLEET, Prtsident R.CH. MARTIN, Vice-President 2300 FOOTHILL BOULEVARD AN.

1-6820 DR. PAUL REAGOR. Trtattnvrommtor bommon tasks before us faithfully Dr. L. D.

Gottschall at the St. and cheerfully. This will add to the Peter's Episcopal Church yesterday, health and strength of the world." "Peace of mind is one of the most sought after conditions," he said, At the First Unitarian Church, "Confessing your sins is a spir-fepeaking on the subject, "Wherrirual cleansing," Gottschall pointed Does Our Duty to Others out. "It removes from your mind jhe Rev. Arnold Crompton said: "To a sense of guilt, add to all the many conditions which i 'A quiet mind means a sense tend to confuse us today are two of your personal security, unham-tonflicting ethical practices, pared.

To have peace of mind i "On the one hand, we confront brings freedom from anxieties the standard that 'a righteous per-j caused by fear of death, ion is one who lives for others. On You are saved from this fear by iua hanrf wo arp face-to-face being cleansed -from your sins and Here it is, Oakland! 171777) lith the point of view which claims giving yourself over to the idea of the One Presence in. the Universe that righteousness begins with an intelligent pursuit of one's self- in that is the Universe," Gottschall concluded. terest. I Much oi tne inner tension, we Experience is rooted in this fusion," Crompton continued.

"We want to do the right thing, but what Dr. Adam Rutherford, of London, England, and president of the Institute of Pyramidology, was the guest speaker at the Oakland auditorium recently under the auspices of the British Israel Federation of this area. Speaking on the subject, "The 'lis it? I "This tension comes from what I amounts to a misreading of the Essential Christian commandments Great Pyramid," Rutherford said: ion love, we forget that we are human beings as much as our "The object of the pyramid is to make' the Bible easy. It is an archi brothers. tect's plan given to make clear T1 I ah 11m UnitA -v U.c jt made tQ scale 7" ine pyramid symbology runs Try iia ww through the Bible, Rutherford con- trompton pointed tinuecL "Dates in the pyramid re- laid.

Thou shalt love thy neigh veal that it was finished 1000 years before Genesis was written. "The pyramid tells the time, place and conditions of the birth of Christ," Rutherford concluded. bor as thyself. "Our duty to others begins with ur duty to ourselves," Crompton Concluded. "It stops when we begin to serve others that we start to destroy the worth in ourselves." Zi333i TO EASE mm 1 nvrTYTVTifr? "Live a Bay at a Time" was the opic of the Rev.

Alfred W. Koehler it the First Trinity Lutheran Church Yesterday. He said: "Too many I people live in their yesterdays, while others are too concerned about the future. I i "Yesterday is gone. It is completely beyond our reach.

Tomor- rpw is equally beyond our reach because it has not arrived. The ojnly thing that is really ours is tiday. It is wise to live one day at a me because today is all we can rianage," Koehler suggested. "If you had the power to get back your yjesterdays and to project yourselves into tomorrow, you would have riore to handle than is possible. "Many of our trouble arise from living in the yesterdays or concerning ourselves too much about the tomorrows," Koehler continued.

"Woi-y is undue concern about to-rfrirrdw. "Christian faith gives us assurance that God will take care of our tomorrows if we-take care of today Viy living according to His will," itoehler concluded. I George5" Hedley, speaking at tjie Mills College Chapel on the Bpbject "What Happens After We Die?" said: "We shall not know all t-uth in this life, and part of the JT3 ft I I afford fa cam thurch Aid Shipment totals 2000 Pounds Once in a blue moon the stylists and engineers outdo themselves. They create a car that goes beyond today and sets the pattern for cars of the future. 7 is what theyhave done with the FRAZER for 1949 Low, sleek and differently handsome it is the trailblazer in style of cars to come.

Its exclusive colore and fabrics have made the world's leading fashion designers fall in love with it They call it "the dreara "Tired husband don't dserv frowns. So th minut corn Ps, I apply a Blue-Jay Corn Plaster. Instantly, aboa-prcssur pain is stopped I Nupercin; exclusive with Blue-Jay, relieves urface pain gentle medication loosens hard 'core' you just lift it out in a fe days!" In 3 sizes-Standard, Little Toe, Soft Corn. Get Blue-Jay today. BERKELEY.

Oct. 18, The Church of Christ, Prince and Fulton Streets, list week mailed more than 2000 pjounds of relief parcels to Germany, Japan and China, which will bje distributed by the church's missionaries in these areas. jThis shipment is just one of many sfch shipments in the past three yiears. More than 12,000 pounds of upuable clothing have been jent ok ersea by the church during this tpne. All the clothing is processed and packaged by volunteer workers at the church, Contributions of good used cloth-i iiig may be made to the church by cilling TH ornwall 3-8061 and it will bp picked up.

'America's loryetf StBmg CbrerWer" 0. 8. Pt.OO. hr CRw CMeege 16 The same car, the FRAZER for 1949, has even won the hard-to-win hearts of the test drivers who must relentlessly punish a car mile after mile for weeks on end. They say the Frazer makes such driving no punishment for them.

Its driving ease and riding comfort "make 600 miles a day a breeze," they say. 1 There's a thrill waiting for you at your dealer's tomorrow. With 100 new features-improvements and refinements, the 1949 FRAZER is ahead of its time rorf-trailblazing the way for all the cars, to come. First to break clean -and scrap tradition, the cars from Willow Run have done it again. Because unlike other "new" cars built since the war, they've road- trr Y1H0E EM III proved their dependability 2 billion miles worth! Value-proved to a quarter-million justly proud owners.

See and drive the new FRAZER Tuesday! It's at your dealer's. Kaiser-Frazer Corporation, Willow Run, Michigan. THE 'mrtL- JL IDE WILLOW SEE IT AT YOUR DEALER'S TUESDAY! A HTl Jim Heath John JB. 'Henry Henry J. Kaiser Motors 23rd and Breadway, Oakland Kilbourn Motor Sales S20 E.

Mount Diablo (Rr. 3), Lafayette Meder Motor Safes 21630 E. 14th Hayward Melrose Motor Sales 4431 Eaat 14th Oak! 1 056 1 1 4th Street, Un LnJr i' "2436 Santa Clara Alameda i cTiwtiiw.tiiiiiq. CUT1TAM LUTHU-WAmPIOCf-itlf ROCf.

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About Oakland Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
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Years Available:
1874-2016