Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / Aug. 24, 1947, edition 1 / Page 5
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CRASH VICTIMS ARE LOCATED Mount Ranier Site Makes Removal Of Bodies Hazardous SEATTLE, Aug. 23 — UP)—'The bodies of all 32 marines who died {he crash of a transport on jlount Rainier last December 10 j,aVe been found on rugged Ta jj,,na glacier, the Navy announc »p today. Twenty-one bodies were located t,v two national park rangers and ' navy man who braved treach erous "ice conditions and caroming rooks on a survey exploration yes terday, eaid Capt. A. O. Rule, commanding officer of the Sand Point Naval Air station. The other r bodies were found last Mon day The men who found the remain bodies were Rangers Bill But and Bruce Myers and Navy j t Samuel G. Bowler. The 21 rlTC found higher up on the mountainside, Rule said, with bodiee imbedded in the ice. ■■But we still don’t know wheth er we'll be able to remove the foodie ” Rule added. “The party bed to withdraw from the glacier because of a terrific rock bom bardment.” Meanwhile all aircraft have been warned to stay clear of Eainier's southwest slope to pre vent rock and enow slides being se- off by engine vibrations. Memorial services for the' 32 victims will be conducted on the lower slopes of Rainier Sunday. PARACHUTING DEMONSTRATION SET AT BRAGG FORT BRAGG, Aug. 22—(tf3)—A demonstration of dropping a quar ter-ton jeep and a 105 MM howit zer from a C-82 Flying Boxcar transport plane will be staged at Fort Bragg the afternoon of Au gu.-t 27, it was announced by Cap tain James L. Hight of Wright Field, Ohio. A special crew of one officer and three enlisted men from V.'right Field will stage the dem onstration for Army Ground Forces board number one. To drop the jeep a German 16 foot ribbon parachute will be used to extract the vehicle from the plane and a 90-foot silk parachute will carry it to the ground. To drop tiie howitzer a cluster of two 96foot nylon parachutes will be used. The equipment will be dropped from an altitude of ap proximately two thousand feet. FATHER OF 13 (Continued From Page One) were on and off relief for six years. Arizona officials weren’t anx ious to have the Brays return, and there appeared little chance of shipping them to Oklahoma, where Mr. and Mrs. James Brink and their brood of 10 were sent this summer after collecting $.3, 600 in relief checks here. Bray once lived in El Reno, Okla., where his eldest child was born. But otherwise they appear to have no legal claim on Okla homa. “The county probably win have to continue to provide groceries for Mrs. Bray and the 10 children living with her,” county Supervi sor William Smith admitted. The Brays have been receiving aid under an emergency status because technically they were not eligible to get relief as a resident Californian. This despite their 16 months’ residence. Mrs. Bray has been the one get ting relief. Bray was not on relief rolls because a physical examina tion revealed he could do light work. Soon after his marriage in Oklahoma, Bray went out to gath er some wood and never was quite right, physically, since, Mrs. Bray explained. ne nad always oeen good m sharing relief checks, however, until he left Thursday in his ja lopy, with part of the relief money in the company of Betty Jo. Betty Jo, an orphan released three weeks ago from the Colo rado State Industrial school at Morrison, Colo., helped the Brays as a baby sitter after the birth of Bray’s 13th child less than three weeks ago. Mrs. Bray said she wouldn’t take Bray back because she couldn’t trust him after he ran off with the baby sitter. Asked if that meant she planned a divorce, Mrs. Bray said: ‘‘I don’t think I’ll have to worry about that for a while. The au thorities may keep him for a few years.” Odd Fellows Plan Convention In Goldsboro The Odd Fellows and Rebeccas of North Carolina, and the alumni of the I.O.O.F. home at Golds boro, will join in celebrating Homecoming Day at the home in Goldsboro, next Sunday. Discussion on the condition of the home and aleo of future plans, and talks will be followed by a barbecue dinner served on the home grounds. All Odd Fellows and Rebeccas as well as friends are urged to be present for thie occassin. There will be several cars go ing from Wilmington. Anyone in terested should notify Mr. G. G. Marlowe, secretary of Cape Fear lodge, I.O.O.F. News In The World Of Religion By W. W. KEID There are more “unsolved prob lems’’ lacing the Christian church and the world today—and known to them—than at any other time In the history of mankind; and there are more organizations and individuals ready and willing to lend their weight to the solution of these problems than hitherto; while it is evident that there must be closer cooperation and undcr manding among the forces work ing for “a better world”: these are some of the conclusions taken home by the 112 delegates from forty nations and as many Protes tant churches who met recently in Whitby, Ontario, Canada, as the “enla-ged meeting” of the In ternaional Missionary conference. This worldwide missionary gath ering, under the presidency of Bishop James Chamberlain Baker of California, impressed by the staggering needs of the world, agreed upon a program of coope ration and non-denominational ap proach to ‘.he non-Christian world. In a 2500-word statement ad dressed to Christian groups under forty flags and speaking more than 100 tongues, the conference said in part: "Anti-Christian forc es are massing themselves and strengthening their positions. Not a few Christians feel themselves to be living on or near the top of a volcano which is liable to erupt at any moment, and they are facing the future with anxi Problems that loom large cn the international horizon and tbs; might lead to bloody conflict include: increasing racial tensions and hatreds, the breakinr down °f traditional patterns of life, the drill;:.? apart in opinion and in action of the peoples of Russia ard those of western democracies, and the growing threat of curtail in'. of religious liberty and of of thought and speech in Does Stomach las and Bloat Mske You Feel Miserable ? >?cre bow you may get blesaed thV ‘ n freeing your stomach from ■ nervous distress. 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Tens of thausands of Christian leaders and ministerial, and “tons ol Christian literature”—both Bibles and books geared to the emphasis on the Christian way of life—are desperately needed now to help remedy the conditions in the world, the delegates said. But over and abve all else was the feeling that only the unity of the Christian church can cope with the materialism and secularism that mark the century in which we live. Dr. Norman Goodall, of London, Eng., summed up the feeling of many: “In this battle, the point of attack sooner or later proves to be an attack upon the Chris tian conception of truth, justice, mercy, freedom, charity. The at tacking forces may be govern ments—new or renewed 'otalitar ianisms. They may be organized religious imperialisms, or massed economic porces. They may be the armies of technocracy, of a pow erful but sub-Christian press, even of the radio and mass education. While appealing to needs and de sires that in themselves are right and good. . . the attacking forces exploit a deep-seated willingness in us all to become enslaved by something less than the love of God—by fear, class prejudice, ra cial prejudice, love of power, love of self. . . This is the terror of being alive today!” Two-thirds or more of the Meth odist church’s 42,000 parishes in the junited States arc located in small towns and villages, and some 18,000 are still housed in one-room edifices. Yet, through the last century, it has been the voice of the city church that has been most frequently heard in Methodist councils. . . But there recently met in Lincoln, Nebras ka 2,100 delegates and many visi tors from the rural and village churches and the colleges and seminaries of the Methodist church to consider problems of the country church and the coun try minister. Bishop William C. Martin, of the rural Kansas area of the denomination, was in the chair. Cnief or the United States Sou Conservation Service. Dr, Hurh H, Bennett, gave the keynote ot the conference when he told the delegates that “there is a close relationship between soul conser vation and soil conservation” and that the task of the Christian church is in both fields. “You can’t built! a sound civilization or a strong church with sub-soil and gullied-land farmers,” ne said. “If tbs church is to carry out its mis sion to serve mankind effectively it has to be strong, just as our land has !o be strong to produce enough for all.” It was pointed out that at least I, 000 well-trained rural pastors should be provided dach year by the seminaries; that the church should have a “revolving fund ’ to help settle young Methodist farm families or good land: that the church should help reduce ten ancy and promote owner-operated farms: that rural pastors should be encouraged, financially and otherwise, 'o “stay in the coun try.” that the church should co operate with all agencies helping ito improve the farm and farmer, Ours Alone Illusion” as Brewster The Hat, of the Powers Model These famous models choose Brewster for real style and Value TOWNER up one side and down the~other .with pinched draping $1295 • Exclusive With Us Stem-slim, yet petal-curved • • • that's the illusion Cymonette creates, in this SUIT OF THE SEASOI A new look, a divine look, achieved by exquisite detailing in Pacific's Verdoni worsted; quality lined in Duchess rayon crepe. 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Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 24, 1947, edition 1
5
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