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The Herald-Palladium from Benton Harbor, Michigan • 5

Location:
Benton Harbor, Michigan
Issue Date:
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5
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THE NEWS PALLADIUM, BENTON HARBOR, MICH. PAGE FIVE SATURDAY, AUGUST 24, 1963 TT JACOBY OJV BRIDGE At Mercy Hospital Ne ws Of Local Churches PEACE TEMPLE B'nai Sholom School Board Head Named Bancroft's Banco By Nelson C. Nye 1963 Nelson C. Nye. Distributed by Newspaper Enterprise Assn.

THE STORY: Bancroft Benson has returned to the Ybarra ranch. He is very sorry he entered the deal with Dorrus to cheat the old r- THE STORY: Benson has met Linda Ybarra in the garden at her father's ranch. xvm The gloomy, massive furniture, dark with atain like coagulated blood, watched me with a kind of brooding blankness, remote, untouchable; disdainfully, it seem, ed, aware of my trespass. I was not kept long waiting. 0 i Will Enroll Its Children This Sunday Benton Harbor's Methodist Peace Temple tomorrow will begin enrolling the children of its more than 400 families in its church school classes and choirs, Dr.

Stanley Buck, pastor, said. Registration will be continued on the two following Sundays, Sept. 1 and 8. Tables for the purpose will be located in the hall of the Education building. Persons unable to register their offspring at any of the times listed may do so by calling the Rev.

Ralph Moores, director of religious education, or Mrs. Jack Spicer at the church office. STUDENT RECEPTION A reception for college students and 1963 high school graduates will be held in the church parlor tomorrow from 5 to 7 p. m. At 7:30 p.

m. the Children's Division Workers Conference will take place in the church parlor and fall program plans will be discussed. Departmental meetings will follow. There will also be a social period with refreshments. Busy Quarter At SDA Center The Seventh-day Adventist Welfare Center at 1626 Langley avenue, St.

Joseph, helped 321 people and gave away 3,171 articles of clothing during the quarter which ended June 30. Home Missionary Leader Charles Russell of the local Colfax Avenue church reported these facts to church members at the recent Home Missionary meeting. Cash distributed to needy persons and the value of food given away amounted to $66.15, he said. The center also provided needy people with 31 pieces of bedding The appointment of Arthur H. Blyveis as chairman of B'nai Sholom Congregation's Religious School board, was announced today by Congregation President Marvin Radom.

Mr. Blyveis will select his committee, whose duties are to coordinate and implement the Religious school in the year ahead. The committee's first meeting will be at the synagogue in Fair-plain next Wednesday, Aug. 28. B'nai Sholom synagogue operates a weekday afternoon and Sunday religious school program for an estimated 125 boys and girls and maintains a full teaching staff.

A graded curriculum provides religious education and a study of the Hebrew language for all synagogue members' children ranging from 5 through 16 years of age. REGISTRATION SEPT. 8 Students will register for the 1963-'64 school Sunday, Sept. 8, when completed school plans will be announced. The new school board chairman, his wife, Sally, and three children live at 364 Waverly Drive, Fairplain.

Mr. Blyveis is vice president of Central Pipe Steel Co. He belongs to Lake Shore lodge, No. 298, Free and Accepted Masons, and is a Benton Harbor Exchange club member. Niebuhr's Spring Post NEW YORK (AP) The Rev.

Dr. Reinhold Niebuhr, famed Protestant theologian now retired from his long-time professorship at Union Theological seminary, is teaching a spring lecture course at Barnard College here on Christian ethics. and seven pieces of furniture, Mr. Russell revealed. Church members donated 300 hours of time to the Center.

Mrs. Robert Ringer, Center leader, announced that the center is now open Wednesday mornings from 9 o'clock until noon. AT CHAPEL'S DEDICATION: The new $110,000 chapel of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints on Jakeway avenue, Fairplain, was dedicated at largely attended public services Friday night. LeGrand Richards of Salt Lake City, Utah, a member of the Council of Twelve Apostles, gave the dedicatory address. Other guest speakers were Ruel E.

Christensen of Eph-raim, Utah, who was Great Lakes Mission president when the local church was organized in 1958 and Sylvan H. Wittwer, Lansing Stake president. From left are: Paul F. Zielke, local church president; Wittwer; Christensen; Ronald Winebrenner, serving a stake mission in the local area and Ancel Herron, second counselor of the local membership presidency. (News-Palladium photo) NOTED ATHEISTS Cited As Valuable To Christianity The POWER of FAITH By WOODJ tGHMAS.

BY OSWALD JACOBY Newspaper Enterprise Assn. Good defense is far tougher than good dummy play. Somehow or other it is much harder to visualize the division of cards between your partner and the declarer than for declarer to visualize the division between his opponents. West opened the six of hearts and East's king lost to declarer's ace. South led a diamond to dummy's Jack, then tried the club finesse.

At this point most defenders would simply lead the Jack of hearts in order to establish some heart tricks. West was not the ordinary defender. He took time out to think. What did declarer hold for his opening bid? The ace NORTH Q7 AQJ86 QJS5 WIST EAST 4KJ92 AS5 VJ1O70I VK8S2 75 41043 K4 732 SOUTH (I A 10 843 VAQ K92 A1098 No one vulnerable Sooth West North East 14 Pasa le Pass 14 Pan 3 4 Pass 3N.T. Pasa Pass Pass' Opening lead 9 and queen of hearts made 6 points.

The king of diamonds made nine and the ace of clubs 13. Could East hold either the king of diamonds or the ace of clubs? No! If he had one of them he would have played it when he had the chance. How about the ace of spades? If South held it he would have held 17 points and opened one no-trump. Hence, East is marked with the ace of spades and a spade shift is clearly indicated. West shifts to a spade, but if he wants to beat the hand he must lead the king.

He continues with the deuce whereupon East takes his ace and leads back the suit to give West two more tricks. CARD SENSE The bidding has been: East South West North 1 Double Pass 2 Pass 4 Pass 5 4 Pass You, South, hold: 4AQ87VAK65 3 4 10 8 6 2 What do you do? A Bid five hearts only. You have already bid your hand to the hilt. TODAY'S QUESTION Your partner has bid two spades after your double. You have Jumped to four spades and he has bid five clubs.

What do you do now? Answer Monday Chorus To Note 8th Anniversary The Angelic Chorus of New Bethel Baptist church Townline road, Benton Harbor, will celebrate its eighth anniversary Sunday at church services at 3 and 7 p.m. Afternoon program guests will be musical department of West-gate Baptist church, Muskegon Heights, and the local Progressive Baptist church, and the Muskegon Heights church's pastor, the Rev. T. F. Cupp.

Choirs of Second Baptist church, Dowa-giac, and the local Union Memorial AME and Second Baptist churches and the host church's New "Bethel chorus will sing at night with Keith Davis as soloist. The Angelic chorus started with 12 and now has 40 members. It recently purchased new choir robes. of posies, might have passed for a madonna. Except for her eyes and those magdalene lips.

"You're not staying for dinner?" I wasn't a complete fool. I'd heard enough about the upper-class customs of these hacenda-dos to suspect it was forbidden an unmarried female living at home to have private talk with an unattached man. But Linda seemed to be bent on a private talk, upper-class cus toms notwithstanding. I suppose my apprehension showed, tt brought a low, husky laugh from that provocative mouth. "Surely," she grinned, 1Mll' i juuic nuv tuimu iu a woman! (To Be Continued) First Christian Church Summer Schedule I A.M.

Communion 1: A.M. Sunday School A.M. Morning Worship Hot. frank Knwer. Fatter St.

John's Catholic Church SUNDAY MASSES Columbus and Catalpa Ph. WA 5-2425 ADMISSIONS Patients admitted to Mercy hospital Friday were: Benton Harbor W. E. Wood-ley, 1265 Nlckerson; Marshall Lard, 1050 South Crystal; Mrs. Edward Newton, 2120 Irving; Mrs.

Charles Johnston, 1631 Berrien; Robert Dryden, 1673 Broadway: Mrs. Roy Newton, 2136 Irving; Ophelia Bradford, daughter of Willie Bradford, 235 Butternut; Aklmie Williams, daughter of George Williams, 986 Buss; Donald Oobels, 314 South McCord. St. Joseph Donald V. Anderson, 831 Wisconsin; Suzanne Byers, 985 Waudena.

Eau a aire Mrs. Ernest Buf-ford, route 1, Box 197; Mrs. Hulon McAfee, route 1. Sodus Aleen Esalhorst, route 1, Box 116. BIRTHS Benton Harbor A girl, weighing 7 pounds ounce, was born to Mr.

and Mrs. Leon Dean, 122 Britain, at 5 a.m. today. DISCHARGES Benton Harbor Percy Bulley, Box 447, House of David; Glynn 1 Coffman, route 2, Box 39, North Shore; Mrs. Richard DePolder, 546 Columbus; Mrs.

Walter Er-wln, route Mark Hauch, 885 Superior; Jess Honicutt. City of David: Meredith Johnson. 12(10 Empire; Angela Lawson, 2135 Law rence; Randy McGrath, 204 South Euclid; Roger Parrish, 180 Emery; Andy Tarajick, House of David Motel. St. Joseph Mrs.

Adolph Eich-ler, 1216 Ansley. Buchanan Dennis Luhrsen. route 2, Box 36C. Coloma Eddie Edwards, route 3, Box 154; Herbert Fairbanks, route 3, Box 110. Covert Ernest Dailey, route Eau Claire Edith Bishoo.

Ro 25; Mrs. Edward Street, route 1. Hagar Shores Mrs. Leon Hos-tetler, general delivery. Sodus Mrs.

Henrv Czuba and son, route Mrs. Lewis Powell. Watervliet Mrs. William Mari tal, route 2. Huge Eastern Orthodox Fete Set Aug.

31 The First National Eastern Orthodox Religious Cultural Festival ever to be held in America is set for Saturday, Aug. 31, at 3 p. m. in the multi-million dollar Civic Arena in Pittsburgh, Pa. This historic and unprecedented event is expected to bring together ten to fifteen thousand Orthodox Christians from across the United States, Canada and Mexico.

Sponsored by the Council of Eastern Orthodox Youth Leaders of the Americas, the Festival is to be primarily a religious one with the highest ranking Orthodox prelates of the Orthodox Churches in America attending and participating in a Great Vespers service. The Most Rev. Benjamin, Russian Orthodox archbishon of the Pittsburgh Diocese, will officiate during tne Vespers service, and The Greek Orthodox Primate, Archbishop Iakovos. chairman' of the Standing Conference of urtnoaox Bishops in America and a president of the World Council of Churches, will, speak. The Festival -will be featured on the CBS national network radio program, "Church of the Air." on Sent.

1. and the CBS-TV show, "Lamp Unto My Feet," sept. b. The Voice of America will beam a special broadcast to the Iron Curtain countries and to Greece. The Greek Orthodox church on Broadway and the Russian Orthodox Church on Thresher avenue are branches of the Eastern Orthodox faith.

The First Presbyterian Church Green ond Morton Avenues on Morton Hill in Benton Harbor Rev. Ellis Marshbura, Pastor SUMMER SCHEDULE Family Service A Chnrch School 10:00 a'clock by people who attend church ond SHARE their FAITH 9:45 A.M. SUNDAY SCHOOL 10:50 A.M. WORSHIP 7:30 P.M. GOSPEL SERVICE Guest Minister At All Services Reverend H.

C. MULVANEY NAPIER AT BROADWAY D. G. Foot, Pastor II Jt is better 1 UNDERSTOOD ho it Heralded by a squeaking rasp of bootsteps Don Alfredo appeared all smiles, hand extended. Watch ing him suspiciously I made out not to notice.

He gave me back the same treatment and, Ignoring mv rudeness, briskly clapped his hands. To the hatless lackey who came darting in. he said: "Please see to the gentleman's horse. An armful of hay and" "I can't stay!" I cried. "I've a million things to see and plunged on impatiently.

"I was told you wished to see rati "But, of course," Ybarra smiled It will keen. I think. Sit down, my friend. This poor house is yours. May I offer you some coi fee, freshly roasted? Perhaps some cakes and a glass of wine? It was made in Hermosillo "Really, I don't have the time, Don Alfredo," I scowled, feeling churlish, "what do you want of me? Your "Yes Pablocito.

Muy impetuoso Would you believe he worked one time In Del Norte? It is true. Always, now, he is in the great hurry," the old man Informed me with a tolerant chuckle. "Very Americano, Pablo but I disgress. Forgive me. With your permission I would like to speak of those.

senor ones you bought with the little ranch" "Yes?" I said. "A thousand pardons, but if you still wish to sell He must have noticed my surprise. "It is not, youll understand, that I have actual need. But if you have not already arranged for their disposal I would be glad since we are neighbors to take them off your hands." He smiled. "And how much are you prepared to offer?" I shot back.

"How many do you count?" I said rather testily, "I haven't made any count" and could have bitten my tongue. But he did not appear to find anything unusual in my having bought the place without insisting on some sort of tally. He said pleasantly, "I am fairly well ac quainted with what you have over there. "I will give you $4,000 for the herd as it stands, and round them up myself." I was about to growl "Done!" when, with his smile growing wi der, he astonishingly said, "Or I'll run you a race for them, taking the cattle in any event but paying you an additional thousand if I should happen to lose. And how does that strike you, my friend? Is it fair?" "Race what?" I said, excited but wary.

"Do you not claim to be a breeder of horses? Run anything you wish against my stallion, La-grimas, por tres estadios at three furlongs." He had probably done this sort of thing before to make such an offer with so much confidence. Prom the little he had seen, he was hardly in any position to have correctly asssesed the potentials of my stock. On that score, of course, we were in the same bind; but I had paid the Waggoners a fancy chunk to bolster my respect for the claims they had made. Why, their foreman had solemnly put himself on record that each and every horse I'd bought was bred in speed crammed bloodlines. Why should I be afraid? But my thought did not dissipate the uneasiness I felt.

"And if I lose?" "You get only three thousand for your cows," Ybarra smiled, "and I get, besides, the horse you run." I suppose it was the smile that finally tipped the scales. He didn't care if I saw how sure he was of victory. That grin was a taunt. "AU right!" I said, and grabbed tip my hat. But I was not to get home without seeing Linda.

She was gathering flowers and glanced up with bold eyes as I came from the house. She had the grace of a puma stepping into my path and, with that rainbow Fairplain Presbyterian Church 210 W. Napier Ave. 9:45 a. m.

Church School 11:00 a. Worship Service Rev. George Donma, Pastor Bethlehem Temple The Apostolic Faith Oneness Pentecostal Church MS BUSS Elder W. H. Hooter, Faitar Bandar School 10 A.

M. Moraine Worship at Nmo rosnf People Meet at I JL 1 hi By GEORGE W. CORNELL (AP Religion Writer) Thanks be to God, the Christian scholar said, for the blessings bestowed on the faith by those two atheists, Karl Marx and Sigmund Freud. It may sound strange for the Season At Gull Lake Nears End The Rev. Robert Shelton, pastor of First Baptist church, Pontiac, and the Rev.

Edwin S. Johnson, pastor of the Wheaton Evangelical Free church, Wheaton, 111., will share the platform during the last full week of services at the Gull Lake Bible and Missionary Conference at Hickory Creek, near Kalamazoo. Following the series with these workers only a Labor Day weekend program, running from Saturday, Aug. 31, through Monday, Sept. 2, remains for this season.

The final week of meetings begins tonight at 7:30 with a sacred concert. Musicians include Mr. and Mrs. Frank Garlock, music instructors at Bob Jones University, Greenville, S. who play trombone and piano respectively and are also vocalists, and Ken organist from Zeeland, who is beginning his second consecutive week at the conference.

All three musicians will remain through Aug. 30. Mr. Garlock will lead congregational singing. Dr.

Quentin Kenooyer, a missionary from Assam under the Baptist Mid-Mission Association, will be heard at the missionary hour Sunday through Tuesday. Wednesday and Friday missionary speakers will be the George Bakers of South American Indian Mission. Children's meetings and teenage services will be in charge of John J. DeVries of Grand Rapids, director of Hi-way Bi-way Youth Association, who uses magic to illustrate his Bible messages. world's two most noted disbelievers to be cited as sources of value to religion.

Yet among many theologians and philosophers, the thesis often is expressed. They maintain that Marx, founder of communism, and Freud, founder of psychoanalysis, have contributed stimuli and insights to Judeo-Christianity that were neglected. A long-standing church concept holds that God frequently may work through antireligious forces and individuals to correct, lead and strengthen the church. It was at the Anglican World Congress in Toronto, this month that a British churchman, Canon Max Warren, stressed that divine guidance may come from outside the Christian fold from other religions, science, and even atheists. Christian concern for social righteousness "owes a little, under God.

to the stimulus of Karl Marx," he said. He said the church also' owes thanks to God "for His grace at work in Sigmund Freud," in bringing the light of psychiatry to bear on the healing of men's spirits their personalities. Both Marx and Freud spurned religion as wishful thinking. Marx saw it as a kind of mass tranquilizer to obscure the exploitation of common people. Frued considered it a kind of obsessional neurosis, brought on by desire for paradise beyond the difficulties and death of earthly existence.

Nevertheless, the psychoanalytic procedures he developed are widely credited with deepening understanding of Christ's teachings, and aiding in their application. Theologian Paul Tillich says that Freud's approach of accepting, rather than condemning, the guilt-ridden was the very heart of Christ's gospel of forgiveness the "acceptance of the unacceptable." As for Marx, the idea of ties between his influence and Christianity is a matter of frequent analysis in academic circles. In the current issue of Jubilee, a national Roman Catholic monthly, British Catholic philosopher R. C. Zaehner says that "Marxism Is not old enough yet to realize that it has no essential quarrel with religion." pop -fftiest M.

KamoitS- who referc himcoK LfcJ Artist Will Give Sacred Concert Here DICK ANTHONY The Napier Parkview Baptist church choir will sponsor a sacred concert by Dick Anthony, the well known artist of recording, -radio and television fame, on Sunday at 7 p.m. at the church in Fairplain. A tenor soloist, pianist and organist, Mr. Anthony has given sacred concerts throughout the United States, Canada and Europe in addition to his regular appearances on net work radio television shows. His radio programs, "Keep Praising" and "The Songsters," are aired on 60 stations.

Both originate at the Moody Bible Institute, Chicago. His recordings under the WORD label, both as a soloist and as a duet artist with Bill Pearce, and as arranger-conductor, have had wide acceptance. A recent album, Pinnacles of Praise," was awarded best duet album of the year by the National Evangelical Film Foundation of Philadelphia. Sept. 1, Mr.

Anthony leaves radio station WMBI in Chicago to assure a new task in Christian service in Long Beach, Calif. The public is invited to Sunday's program. Nun Becomes Lawyer DETROIT (AP) Graduated from the University of Detroit Law School last year, Sister Mary Leo Pavlowski, a Roman Catholic nun, has become the first woman member of a religious order ever admitted to legal practice in Michigan. CHURCH OF CHRIST 1495 East Empire Ave. Bible Study 10 A.M.

Worship 11 A.M. Evening Service 6 PJVI. Sun. Noel B. Roberts.

Minister Conrrerational Siofinf SStaiUilllllllBtllllBtiniBIIBIIllHIIIIBIIIIIHIIg First Church of I Christ, Scientist Benton Harbor, Michigan Sj 177 Chippewa August 25, 1963 Subject: I Miiin Sunday Service and Sunday School, 10:30 a.m. -Wednesday Evening Meeting 8 p.m. READING ROOM S03 Pleasant Street St. Joseph, Michigan 1 1 a.m. p.m.

except Sundays Holidays All Are Welcome 'CM ttuih icpumnan, najq Tann mar lias sustained him through many valleys of shadows. The night of Feb. 28, 1947, in hh native Hungary, Com-munist troops entered his home looking for a friend of his. He fried to assure ihem that he knew nothing of the man's whereabouts. They started shooting-his wife was killed, his infant daughter was wounded.

One of the bullets entered his left temple and came out through the right cheek, leaving him blind in the left eye and nearly blind in his right eye. He and his daughter escaped into Austria and then to the American Sector of Germany. The first winter they lived in on abandoned railroad cattle car. Through his faith in God ond himself, his talent for mechanics (he was an engineer in Hungary) and through others' faith In him, he finally reached America. Here he makes his living maintaining hospital equipment, ond repairs watches and clocks as a hobby.

He asserts, "God gave me two hands, and with God's help I will use them. When God closes one door, he opens up another." AP Newsfeatures You're Invited To SIUGSPIRATIOU PENTECOSTAL CHURCH OF GOD W. Ferry St. Berrien Springs SUNDAY; AUGUST 25 3 P. M.

SPONSORED BY P.Y.P.A. immii I iff jL is- i r. Hear GOSPEL MEETING Aug. 25-Sepl. 1 Church of Christ 1495 East Empire Benton Harbor, Mich.

Srvlcn Each Erroinf Monday torn Sat. 7:30 p.m. Sun. Evening Service 8 p.m. YOU HAVE LOOKED For a Sunday School and a place of worship (or your family? Btble Classei 10:00 a.m.-Sun..

-Worship 11:00 a.m., 6:00 p.m. YOU HAVE ASKED Where you could find a Church that believes and teaches the Btble only, as God's word? ,1 First Congregational Church Bellvlew, Pipestone, Broadway The Rev. H. Gardner Andersen, Minister Dr. Russell C.

Schmidt, Minister of Education 9:30 a.m. MORNING WORSHIP SERMON: "THERE IS AN ANSWER" Liturglst Dr. Jack Bronfenbrenner TheQuartett Master Let Me Walk With Thee" Mrs. Fasquale Iannelli, Mr. Keith Lawton, Mxs.

Rolland Day, Mr. David Mohr Nursery For Small Children Morning Worship Service 9 :30 a.m. and 10 :50 a.m. Service Broadcast WHFB Sermon: "THE NEW LIFE IMPERATIVE" Dr. Buck Church School, 9:30 Nursery, 10:50 EMERSON ESTES, Evangelist ve found What you are looking for right Mamphit, TaiMMSM here to Benton Harbor.

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