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Hawaii Tribune-Herald from Hilo, Hawaii • 4

Location:
Hilo, Hawaii
Issue Date:
Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

HILO TRIBUNE-HERALD A Daily Newspaper Serving the Island of Hawaii, U. S. Page 4 Sunday, September 26, 1948 KOKO-NUTS J- B- DIXON riJSF A NonMM How ft" by JOfef tU lest of Moa Corrrat IMC "I' i i ii Printed and Published Every Afternoo and Sunday homing: HILO Tribune-Herald Building, Hilo, Hawaii. U.S.A. DEAN D.

SELLERS General Haaager HARRT M. BLICKHAHK Editor THE HILO TRIBUNE-HERALD 1948 Primary Election Returns Clip out this handy blank and save it for jotting down primary election returns as they are broadcast by The Tribune-Herald Over Station KHBC next Saturday night. Territorial Officers DELEGATE Dillingham (R). GOLDEN TEXT: "The word of our God shall stand forever." Isaiah 40: 8. Lesson Text: Psalm 119: 91-15; John 2t: 38-31; II Timothy 3: 16-17 With this lesson we begin a new i series and 8 most interesting one, at ings of various men over the can- Kntered aa second class matter.

February It. 1913, at the Poat Office at Hilo, Hawaii; under the Act of March 3, U79. that We will study the Bible in the tunes, gathered together in one volume for convenience of the read light of the special nature of its lit MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, UNITED PRUSS AND AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS. erature, which of course, does not er. While it is possible for us to look upon the Bible as a great piece happened almost 29 years ago that changed the whole future of Hilo.

preclude a consideration of the Bible as the word of God, but will assist us in understanding its mes- NATIONAL ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVES O'Mara Orm.be. Inc. Offices: New York 170 Madison Atc; Chicago 23 N. Michigan Detroit 640 New Center Los Angeles 403 W. Eighth San Fraacisco Russ Bldg.

at literature, containing high noetrv. That date was Nov. 11, 1929, when Hawaiian Airlines, then known as Inter-Island Airways, flew its first passenger carrying plane from Hilo's appealing drama, fascinating history and mysterious prophesy, we have small ana undeveloped airport to Honolulu. Many people were skeptical not really understood the Bible un as to ns success and permanency. The Bible what a wonderful collection of volumes on history and romance, poetry and prose, biogra SUBSCRIPTION RATES Jl.tt per month by carrier.

By nail on Hawaii, Oaha, Maui, Holokai aaa La.nu (Payable In advance): 1 year $10.50. months 35.75. 3 months 37.00. 1 month J1W. Mainland U.S.

and Canada; 1 year 312 00, months 36.00. 1 months 33. M. 1 month LM. Foreija countries; 1 year 313.00.

months 33.00, 3 months 33 03. 1 month 3LTS. til we have seen in its pages the but some dozen or so Hilo people ITS NOT OVERCROWDED took a chance on the trip and the I Far the vast Kaa desert lace ox Jesus Christ. One proof of the Divine origin phy and idylls, drama and letters and, We make this so rr cation: pxane iook oil witn a capacity load PHONE 4621 FOR ALL DEPARTMENTS. best of all, the Gospels the mes and inspiration of the Bible is its sage of good tidings of salvation to indestructibility.

The writings con Throw the great area pen And reliere kaase congestion. of some dozen passengers. That was about the limit of the small plane then in operation. The flight was a all men. The Bible a library of tained in the Bible have survived many centuries and determined ef DELIVERIES Phone 4333 11 paper is not delivered ia Hilo by i p.

m. daily. Phone 44S82. or 42141 it paper is not delivered ia Hilo after 6:20 p. m.

daily. Phono 4623 If paper is not delivered by a. Sundays. Country subscribers should write to tha circulation manager regarding delays. complete success and since then reg Bats hibernate in caves during the SENATORS many books, thirty-nine of which were originally written in Hebrew and are called by us the Old Testament, and twenty-seven originally winter, says a newspaper filler.

This does not include baseball bats and people with bats in their belfry. ular daily flights have been made. Now we have one of the finest airports in the Territory and dozens of passenger planes shuttle daily between here and Honolulu. What a contrast to that memorable forts to totally destroy it We of this day hardly appreciate the terrible persecutions suffered by our forefathers to preserve the- Book for their loved ones and their descendants. For most of us today, it is an open book, available for perusal at any time This was not Farringfon (R) Burns (D) -Holt (D) Capellas (RJ -Chang -Nobriga Pakele (R) Ignacio -Kimi (D) -Wingate (D) The Bible says the lion and the U.

S. 'Intellectuals' Shocked In Poland; Henry Shoulda Gone It may be tnat the World Congress of intellectuals in Wraclaw, Poland, will accomplish a useful purpose. lamb shall lie down together, but no mention was made of a similar occurrence featuring the elephant and so just a century or so ago. day in iaz wnen tnis service was inaugurated! The other day this writer was present when a giant clipper took off with a passenger written in Greek, known as the New Testament The Bible a library of sixty-six books, divided into two parts the Old and New Testaments but with one message. It is strangely wonderful that over a period of many centuries, men who never knew each other could write a series of messages which, when gathered together, have one central theme.

There is a remarkable unity in this Divine Dr. Joseph Ford Newton noses the question. What would lappen if the donkey. A COSTLT WASTE afci America should wake up some morning and find that no Bible was The congress was Communist-inspired and Communist-dominated. Delegates attended not only from the Soviet-dominated countries, but from several free to be found, or that the people grew careless and forget all about the Bible.

He says: library, running from Genesis Well, something like that has ac through the Revelation. While the Jews, who have not be tually happened, and it is the greatest calamity of the last hundred come Christians, do not accept the years. The Bible is not actually lost, teachings of the New Testament Christians love and treasure both REPRESENTATIVES (East Hawaii) the Old and the New, believing that but it is unknown. Our people do not read it they do not even hear it read. We are faced by an amazing spectacle a generous, charm ing, candid generation without the load of 40 persons for a direct flight to San Francisco.

Other planes kept coming in every few minutes and there were hundreds of people present to watch the ta! of the clipper or meet friends coming in on other planes. It was thrilling sight. Twenty years previous to. this first passenger flight from Hilo, 1909, this same writer, who had great faith in the future of aviation, went to Chicago against the advice of friends and relatives to learn to fly. Such remarks as "crazy damphool" were hurled at him, "flying is not practical and airplanes are "only a rich man's and "you'll break your fool neck," etc Those were the days when the aviator sat out front of his plane a couple of bamboo sticks, then waited for the wind to subside and if he was lucky enough he managed a short hop of a few thousand feet at an extremely low altitude and spectators breathed a sigh of relief if he returned a few minutes later all in one niece.

Bible. It takes no. prophet to tell the both teach one truth. The Old Testament-tells of the coming of the promised Messiah, who will bring spiritual to the world, while the New Testament tells the story of His coming and of His Gospel. The Bible speaks of Him, prophesies concerning Him, announces Him, interprets Him and proclaims Him.

result:" it is obvious. It is ghastly! Sandy McPherson says it's too bad political platforms cant be salvaged after the campaign and the planks used for construction purposes. As things are, it's a deplorable waste of something or other. The Big Island needs more pub Law has lost its power, life is cheap literature is filthy. Our most bril liant writers many of them tell us that life itself is a disease.

Us acti vities religion, culture, ambition, As someone has suggested, the lic beaches. We've already got the beach beauties but not enough sex, song are so many forms of Andrews (R) Garcia (R) -Ignacio (R) -Low, Sr. (R) -Payne (R) -Sakakihara (R) Yamauchi (RJ -Low, Jr. -Searle (D) Biblei looked at from one angle is just a collection of the varied writ- doi which men take to deaden the pain, or folly, of living! "If we do not find the old Bible Who In 1900 made a trip Deacnes. The weather it seems Keeps us right on the spot; It's either too wet Or else it's too hot.

we are lost Nothing can take its To Hawaii in a sailing ship And decided then no more to roam. And made the islands his permanent home. Sanferd D. Walker, who never fails, place as guide, prophet friend. We cannot go on without its sense of God, of moral law, of the worth and meaning of life.

For there is a spirit in the Bible which, if it gets into men, makes them tall of soul, tender of heart, just, gentle, patient strong, faithful in life and fearless in death. We must recover the Bible." Is now the manager of Ruddle Sales. Because of efficiency he was se lected. After his record had been REPRESENTATIVES West Hawaii) To make a long story short we spent all our savings at the so-called "school" learning to build the flying contraptions but never once got off the ground. Anyhow it was a nice try and we landed back in Ta-coma, later on, broke and discouraged and subjected to the ridicule of all the wise guys in that city.

Today people think no more of taking a trip in a plane than they did in those days in a buggy. Maybe we were born 50 years too soon or The meanest pest: The bonehead who passes your window at 2 a.m. on. his motorcycle and stops and leaves the motor running so that it's sure to wake you up from a sound sleep. Wouldn't it make you feel like shooting the guy? Maybe somebody will.

Waiakea Willie says: "In the long ran yaa cant get something for nothing in this world, but you can have a lot of fun trying to." And. found it measured to all de mands Requiring the work of skillful hani BUSINESS MAN SHOWS HOW NEW YORK (UJO Joseph J. Joenig, a 41-year-old business man, was graduated from New York -University's school of commerce, accounts and finance after six years of night school with the highest scholastic average in the history of the school. No need, we feel, herewith explain- mg His work as head of Vocational maybe were just plain nutty. Training, Bond (R) Hind (R) Perry-Rske (R) -Richardson (R) Nielsen (D) Pule (D) Which proved his skill and his effi nations as well, including the United States and Britain.

They were treated to a series of opening speeches which had little to say about peace, but much about America and none of it good. A fellow named Fadayev, president of the Soviet Writers' Association, denounced "American imperialism," of course. He also dwelt on the "reactionary aggressive" elements of our culture, spoke of our literature as "disgusting filth." Ilya Ehrenburg, the Soviet journalist who paid us a visit a couple of years back, field forth on America's "bourgeois barbarism" and asked the delegates to enlist in a fight against "America's aggressive obscurantism." The intellectuals, being intellectuals, doubtless knew what that meant. Included among these speakers' listeners were O. John Rogge of the United States, and Prof.

Allan Taylor of England. Prof teaches history at Oxford University and once got fired as a BBC commentator for being too "pro-Russian." Mr. Rogge, former U. S. Assistant Attorney General, is now running for office in New York City under the banner of the left-wing American Labor Party.

One might think that Mr. Rogge and Prof. Taylor might have been in the amen corner. But instead the charges of Comrades Fadayev and Ehrenburg seem to have offended their good sense and perhaps even their patriotism. Prof.

Taylor made a reply in which he said that "this has been a congress preaching war, not a congress preaching peace." He denounced the Russians' violent abuse of the west, and urged them to "improve your intellectual good manners, to think further and try to understand other people." Mr. Rogge told the congress: "I am opposed to authoritarianism of any kind. I do not think any state or political party should authoritatively tell human beings what to think. I do not think there are any panaceas in any system of religion or economics or politics." We wonder whether Mr. Rogge will return to his activities within the far-left ALP with the same enthusiasm he may have taken with him.

It must have been quite a shock for him to see laid before him in Poland the bare bones of the desperately anti-American policy which, with some sugar coating, so often seems to be the position of his own party. The sponsors of the World Congress of Intellectuals made the old, time-wasting political mistake of convincing themselves. Instead of trying to win over the opposition, they gathered togther a group of apparently like-minded people by vehement exaggeration, tried to whip them into a frenzy of believing anew what they already believed. But apparently they went too far for Mr. Rogge and Prof.

Taylor. Our guess would be that, as a consequence, these two gentlemen may have lost a little of their feeling about the Tightness and purity of Russian motives. Seems a pity that Henry Wallace couldn't have been there, too. THE SWAN SONG (By Sad Sam in A Flat) ciency In handling work requiring In the Rotary Club his name's on KHBC I 1 1 I the list, And Masonic meetings he seldom has missed. He's a bit of all right, has genius A normal human body is said to be worth exactly $1.28.

That seems like too high a price for some people we have met. A sweet young thing from the mainland, on her first visit ta Maui, thought KaJa was the name of some new kind of soft drink. The soda jerker was somewhat embarrassed when she asked him for a glass of Kula. She is still wondering why the customers tittered. Thirty days hath September, That's something to remember.

"Keep smiling!" The optimists shout; But nobody knows What it's all about. County Officers CHAIRMAN and pluck And in his new job we wish him good luck. ARE THEY BEAK'S BARE CLAWS? Sign in a Mama street pastry aTHFilGGEST $H0W INJ Cunningham (R) Kealoha (R) -Akina (D) In tBose good old days when folks rode bikes, We had no worries about ill-timed strikes, And people on Sundays took long hikes 1230- ON FOUR DIAL SUPERVISORS (East Hawaii) "them Days 'R gone frev- ER." Correct this sentence: "I left my shop: BARE CLAWS 20c PER DOZ. And in a more or less rural res- tan rant all yea need is good strong teeth so yoa can eat STAKE PIE a QUESTION AND ANSWER Dear Koko-Nuts: Is the sun unusually bright this summer or are the women ing thinner dresses? WAIAKEA WILLIE How should we know? We always look the other way. Maybe your glasses are too strong.

Shame on you, Willie. And at your age, too. umbrella in a restaurant but nobody touched it and it was there next day just where I left it." Los Angeles youtli, arrested in Honolulu for allegedly robbing a bank so he could get enough money to come to Hawaii to see his girl friend found a quick way to get here. His fare back home won't cost him anything, he can be assured. WE WILL NOW SING Father, dear father, come home with me now.

The clock in the steeple strikes ten, There are many good reasons for drinking, And one has just entered my head, If a man doesn't drink when he's 'Where is If you try to shoot craps with the boys who know how You'll go to the cleaners again. Question of the day: Richard Lyman, Jr?" THE END. SUNDAY EVE. SEPTEMBER 24 5:55 ConsolicUt.d Shew Prd 6:00 Curtain Cad 7:00 Sunday Evening Nws 7: 15 Here's to Veterans 7:30 Pause That Refreshes (Coca Cola tottlisq Co.) 8:00 Lynn Murray Show 8 JO Music for Sunday 9:00 Prudential Family Hour (Prudential lasaraace Co.) 9:30 Concert Master 10:00 News Headlines 10:15 Music Boi 11:00 Sign OH MONDAY. SEPTEMIEI 27 4:00 Japanes News Ahuna (R) BeH (R) Bowman (R) Doi (R) Isherwood (R) Jitchaku (R) Wilson (R) Abe (D) Asau (D) -De Silva (D) living How the heck can he drink when he's dead? Contributed by M.I.

Price of Pepper Forced Way Up. x-; 72 Merchandising note: Only shopping days till Christmas. Newspaper headline. Well, that GOOD CITIZEN No. 69 RADIO SERVICE Phone 42684 K.

RADIO APPLIANCE CO. 114 Ponahawai St. The subject of this verse today Is a man well known in Hawaii Nei, A California native son LOOKING BACK In The Tribune-Herald 20 YEARS AGO Vocational aggie teachers of the Big Island have organized themselves for the first time. In fact, this is the first organization of its kind in the territory. Officers are: Frank Kinnison of Hilo, president; Harry Larson of Laupahoehoe, vice president; August Lund of Pahoa, secretary-Veasurer.

15 YEARS AGO And a veteran of World War l. KIPA something to be sneezed at. WEDDING WRITE-UP They praise the bride as lovely and fair, They tell us what she had to wear, But of the groom they merely say: Mr. So-and-So got married today. There are baby sitters to enable parents to go to church for salvation, but how about the salvation of the baby sitters? Dixon (CaD Tribune.

Another much needed invention is SUPERVISORS (West Hawaii) 00 Irxi at Niat (ABS) (Bstdele Salts SenricO 9:10 Japaars Preena Remote from Club Orchid Garden 10:15 At Year lebart (ABS) 10:30 Siat Off Naoma Beers, daughter of County Attorney and Mrs. W. H. Beers of Hilo, sailed for the mainland where she will enter business college. Miss Beers was graduated from the University of Washington last year and had been connected with the Honokaa branch of the Hilo library, for the past several months.

1 TEARS AGO Miss Aiieen McKenzie has been awarded the scholarship to the University of Hawaii by the Hilo chapter of the University Alumni association, it was reported Friday at the alumni meeting by Miss Rebecca Bohnenberg, chairman of the scholarship fund committee. an auto horn that will only toot Akamu (R) -Greenwell (R) Thompson (R) -Yoshida (R) -Sakai (D) -Ushiroda (D) MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, A.M. when absolutely necessary. CLERK onaraLuiauonj am ON YOUR DIAL 1110 (Mid-Pacific Soap Co.) 4:05 Rise with Rest 7:00 General Tire News (Hilo Motors) 7:10 Consolidated Show Parade 7: 1 5 Songs of Hawaii (the Maaaea Co.) 7:25 Rise with Rei (con'dj 1:00 Hawaiiaa Melodies 8:30 Concert Master 9:00 Winner Take All (Swan) 9:30 S. E.

House Party (General Electric Co.) 9:55 According to tha' Record 10:00 Mid-Morning News 10:05 Songs of the Islands 10:30 Crosby Club 11:00 Morning Melodies 11:30 Music for Monday 12:00 Von Hamm-Young News 12:10 Stock Reports 12:15 Consolidated Show Parade 12:20 Keyboard Melodies 12:30 Do You Remember? 12:45 Easy Aces (Miles California Co.) 1:00 Editor's Daughter (H. J. Heini Co.) 1:15 Dr. Paul (Consolidated Dairy Products) 1 :30 Aunt Jenny 1:45 Aunt Mary 2:00 Claudia (Pacific Soda Works) 2:15 Romance of Helen Trent (Kolynoi) 2:30 Our Gal Sunday (Anacin 2:45 Big Sister (Ivory Soap) 3:00 Ma Perkins (Oxydol) 3:15 Young Dr. Malone (Critco) 3:30 The Guiding Light (Duz) 3:45 This Is Nora Drake (Toni, Inc.) 4:00 Filipino Program 4:20 Japanese Piograa Desha (R) a BEST WISHES to AUDITOR Brown (R) 6:00 Sign On 6:01 Japanese Program 6:40 Morning Melodies 6:45 News (ABS) (Von Hamm luung Co.) 6:55 Mayhem in A.M.

with Amend 8:00 Cavalcade of Music 8:30 Hawaiian Harmonies (ABS) 835 MHicat Seattle Walt H. Dillingham (ASS) 9:00 tes (ABS) (Ruddle Salts Semite) RajtltiM by Keenest (ABS) 10:00 Spotlight Tine 10:30 Song Time 10:5 Hugh's Views liasArt laker's Hottboe (ABS) 1130 Queen for a Day (ABS) 12:00 News (ABS) (Rudttta Sal" "-itt) 12:10 hoon Tunei 1A0 Music at MinhattM 1:30 Cowboy Jtaiborct 2:00 Island Serenade (ABS) 2:30 This That 3:00 News (ABS) ORCHID GARDE1. TREASURER Tanabe (R) Auld (D) SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, P.M. 5 Curtain Call -30 News (ABS) :0 Thi Uthirsa Hour (ABS) (Lsthn- Uymin's Uaiuc) 6:30 Sunday Church is Wildwooi 6:45 Republican Campaign Rep. County Committee 7:00 tmii) Eiauas Center! 730 Wiyini Fmetitts 7:45 Four Knights 8:00 Family Theater (ABS) 8:30 Behin tht Front Past (Mutual Health ActMent Assff) (ASS TOM OKAHO ELECTRICAL CONTRACTOR ATTORNEY PHONE 42333 MAMO ST.

Felix (RJ -Okino (D) 3:05 Rttapui Roam (Ana) JSHi (FWasa a. Msfcl i.yfss.V..

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