Friday, March 4, 1932 LA GRANDE EVENING OBSERVER, LA GRANDE, ORE. Page Nine NEWS of the CHURCHES Easter Services Hold Interest In Local Churches Visiting Evangelist Will Address Baptists at Two Services On Next; Sunday. Easter activities are getting under way at La Grande churches, and Im pressive and appropriate services are being planned In observance of the Resurrection. Easter falls on March 27 this year, and will mark a new era of activity In La Grande churches, ushering In the spring programs. An Interesting winter has been en Joyed, with varied programs of wor ship carried out. prise the lesson-sermon will be the following from the Bible: "If any man be In Christ, he Is a new crea ture: old things are passed away; behold, all things are become new" (II Cor. 5:17). The lesson-sermon also Includes the following passage from the Chris tian Science textbook, "Sclenee and Health with Key to the Scriptures," by Mary Baker Eddy: "This scientific sense of being, forsaking matter for Spirit, by no means suggests man's absorption into Deity and the loss of his Identity, but confers upon man enlarged Individuality, a wider sphere of thought and action, a more ex pansive love, a higher and more per manent peace" (p. 265). Sunday school Is held at 9:45 o'clock; Wednesday evening service at 8 o'clock. Reading room, West Jacobson building, open daily except Sunday and holidays from 1 to 4:30. Services at church edifice, corner First and Washington streets, 11 a.m. and 8 p. m. . Baptist Church - Sixth and Spring Rev. C. W. Cutler, chapel car mis sionary of the American Baptist Publication Bociety, who has been conducting a series of evangelistic services In his chapel car during the past two weeks, will preach at' both morning and evening services of the Baptist church next Sunday. His morning subject will be "Road Build ers and Troll Markers." In the eve ning he will . speak on "A Saving Look." Special music Is planned for both service. " Rev. Cutler will also speak to the young people, at the regular B. Y. P. TJ. meeting In the church Sunday evening. . He has had considerable experience in young people's work, having Bpoken In high schools and Hoved will delight all who come. At colleges in various sections of the the evening service, Rev. Mortlmore country, and Is. sure to have an In- ' wm preach from the topic; "The Pre te res ting message for all who come j Millennial Theory of the Second out Sunday evening. Coming of Christ." He states that Tho hours of services are as fol-1 ne give much Bible teaching lows: Sunday school for all ages at up(m this Important subject, and ln 8:45 a. m., preaching service at Unites all who are Interested to at- u. in., d. i. r. u, ul u.ou v, m.t aim tend. A .song service oi old gospel Central Church of Christ Seventh Street at Pennsylvania A filled auditorium both morning and evening Is the ambition of the Church of Christ, and that ambition was very nearly realized last Sun day. Rev. Paul de P. . Mortlmore states that the attendance has been steadily Increasing, and that he be lieves the auxiliary rooms will be needed to seat the Sunday evening audiences this spring. The evening service Is especially featured, with a concert orchestra of 16 to 20 pieces as one of the attractions. The au dience was delighted with the pre sentation last week,' and a program of lively airs has been prepared for next Sunday evening which it Is be- hymns is planned for the enjoyment of all. At 9:45 a. m. the Bible school Is preaching service at 7:30 p. m. First Methodist Church . Fourth and Spring ' "TV.& VanHii rf Unn" 4o tVia Tiatyio . . . ... . an attraction to both old and young. on which Rev. W. H. Hertzog will ftnft j worltlM ' " Methodist church next Sunday morn- of the peculiarities of the Church of Christ Bible school Is that lng, at 11 o'clock. The chorus choir , , " , . m Hi.Hfi 0t.hm i thero are children. Old and young will sing Shelley's beautiful anthem, "The King of Love, My Shepherd Is," . and Miss Ethel Hansen will sing a soprano solo. The Epworth league will sponsor a social hour for young folks at 4:30, In tho social rooms of the church. The evening service at 7 o'clock will be a devotional period, at which time Miss Jean Williams will sing a soprano solo.. After Joint worship, the leaguers will be led in a dis cussion of "Prayer," by Bernlta Pier son, and the pastor will lead the adults In a discussion hour. First Church of' Christ, Scientist First at Washington "Man" will bo the subject of the lesson-sermon in all Churches of ( Christy Scientist, .on Sunday, March The golden text , will be, "O man greatly beloved, fear not: peace be unto thee, be strong, yea, be strong" (Dan. 10:19). ;k Among tho citations which com- f i First In In dougn. Then in (he oven. You can be sure of perfect bakings in uiinj RC BAKING POWDER 25 ounces for 25c lIIIIM'L4.1 J J.lll'I.LIUJ.!t I Till EXTRA MONEY YOU can use It can't you? Why not sell some of those things you no longer have use for . . . you can do it with a Want-Ad in tho OBSERVER Want-Ad Columns PHONE MAIN 600 find enjoyment and inspiration in studying the Bible, which is the text book of this school, he states. They teach the Bible as the Inspired word of God, and urge that It be accepted as such. There are classes for every age and competent teachers for every class. Miss Dorothy Smutz Is the superintendent of the school. The Christian Endeavorers meet at 6:30 p. m. for prayer and study. Jun ior, high school and young people's groups provide congenial fellowship for those who attend. Young folks from 10 years of age upward are in cluded in this group. The morning worship service at 11 a, m. provides an avenue of wor ship for all who. are Christians, or who are interested- In the: Christian way, Mr. Mortlmore says.: As we ap proach the" Efistor season, these serv ices are especially devotional In char acter. The thought used for the Sunday morning Bermon will be, "Deny Thyself." "The great new doctrine which Christ Introduced to the world was humility," states the pastor in announcing this subject. "The more Chris tl ike we become, the more we will deny self. The world Is in sad need of men and women who will deny the ambitions of sel fishness, and serve mankind fully." The Lord's Supper Is served at every Sunday morning service of Churches of Christ. No Christian Is barred from this communion service, as the church believes that all of Christ's followers have an equal right at His table, the pastor says. The choir will present an anthem at the morning service, and will be present to lead In the son? service at the evening hour. A cordial In vitation is extended to .everyone to attend and enjoy these services. Zlon English Lutheran Church M Avenue Near Fourth At the morning service, 11 o'clock, the subject of the sermon will be, "Children of the Promise." The choir will sing the anthem, "Come Unto Me," by J. V. Henderson, accom panied at the piano by Miss Helen Jensen. Attendance at the services hatf been growing encouragingly. All are welcome to participate in the fel lowship and worship of the congre gation. The worship of the Sunday school will be centered about the Lord's Prayer. Following the worship pe riod, tho children go to the class for their own age to study the "Christian Life Course," well-graded Sunday school lessons. Now scholars are coming each Sunday to bo en rolled after they have attended three sessions. Parents are Invited to send their boys and girls to this Sunday school, i Henry Jensen will lead the Luther league meeting at 7 o'clock Sunday evening. The topic for discussion Is a challenging one, "What Does It Mean to Be a Christian?" If you are trying to be a Christian, come, and share your, Ideas with these Christian young people, the pastor urges. Presbyterian Church Washington and Sixth Streets "Seventy Times Seven," or "The RtowArriRhin Law of the Kingdom" will be the sermon topic for Sunday morning at the Presbyterian cnurcn, at 11 o'clock, when Rev. J. George vat minuter, officiates. Mrs. Har- ley Richardson, organist, will play the prelude, "The wooaiana ram, by Crawford. The quartet, Mrs. S. B. Morgan, soprano; Mrs. w. a. Bohnenkamp Jr., alto; B. E. Hurley, tenor, and W. W. Nuabaum, bari tone, will sing the anthem, "me Eternal." by Fox. and E. D. Towler, bass, will sing the offertory solo. The Sunday evening service la at 7:30. and Includes a sermon by the pastor, and .music by Miss. Gladys Miller. Junior Christian Endeavor Is at 3 o'clock, with Mrs. Lynne Bohnen kamp as superintendent. 1 Senior-Intermediate Christian Endeavors and young people will meet at 6:15 In the church. Bible school, with classes for all ages, la at 9:45 in the morning. Church of God Spruce Street at X Avenue The Sunday services at the Church of Gqd will be Sunday school, be ginning at 10 o'clock, and the regu lar Sunday morning Bervlce at 11 o'clock. The sermon subject will be "Humility" and the text I. Pet. 5:6. Sermonette Edited by Harriet R. MacDonald i (I Corinthians, chapt. 13). "Charity decent, modest, easy, kind, Softens the high and rears the abject mind, Not ever provoked, she easily for gives, And -much she suffers, where she much believes. - Soft peace she brings, wherever she arrives, Sho builds our quiet as she forms our lives, Lays the rough paths of, peevish nature even, ' j And opens In each breast a little heaven." ANONYMOUS. What Is Christian Charity? In the home It Is kindness; In bus iness it is honesty; in society it is courtesy; In work it Is' fairness; to ward the unfortunate It Is pity; toward the weak It is help; toward the wfeked It Is resistance; toward God, reverence and love. Primitive Eskimos Found by Woman Welfare Worker ANCHORAGE, Alaska m An Eski mo tribe which still lives in the "stone age" and with a "culture" more primitive than even the natives on St. Lawrence Island, Bering sea, has been discovered by Miss Mar jory B. Major. Miss Major, a nurse and specialist in child health and welfare of the medical service of the bureau of In dian affairs, said she encountered the tribe in southwestern Alaska while on a "mission of mercy" to Influenza stricken natives. Accompanied by Dr. W. A. Borland and a guide, she visited five villages and came upon the Tlkchlk tribe, which had left Its customary moun tain haunt In an effort to shake off the Influenza and had settled In a temporary village on , the Tlkchlk river. Every member had suffered greatly from the disease, she said, and a limited amount of dried moose meat was the only food in camp. Thoy were so 111 they could not gather wood for fire or lift their nets for fish., Miss Major believes she is the first white woman these natives had seen, and 'until v she bnViriced " them, through a 12-year-old Interpreter, that she was a human being, differ ing mainly in pigmentation from their women, she was not able to approach them. . The nurse described the Tikchiks as a hale and hearty tribe. Their skin garments were sewed with fibre. Their flint knives had bone handles and their dishes were of wood, Miss Major reported. Woman Sculptor, Arrested, Uses Cell as f Studio9 FORT WORTH. Tex. (ff) Stone walls do not a prison make. Some times they make a studio. Nora Currle Sweetland, arrested on charges of smashing windows of her former, husband's book store in a dispute over custody of her two chil dren, didn't let that interrupt her sculpturing. Fitting up her cell as best she could, she chiseled out two figures while awaiting an insanity hearing growing out of her actions. Freed on this count, she returned to put the finishing touch on the models. At first she had only a butcher knife and spoon, . furnished by a friendly turnkey, with which to shape the clay. Then, when she started working' in plaster, the Jailer found her a hammer and chisel. A wash rag from the jail bathroom, wrapped around the hammer head, served to muffle the sound of her blows and prevent disturbing other prisoners. One of the figures she has shaped while in Jail Is that of her younger child as a baby; the other Is her "Madonna of the Trenches," sym bolizing the Red Cross. Mrs. Sweetland has executed sev eral 1 pieces of statuary for public places in the southwest. Electrical Eye Defeats Human At Sorting Beans LOWELL, Mich. (P) A battery of electric eyes that sorts beans better and quicker than the human eye can do it has resulted in a new re quirement being set up by the de partment of agriculture for "grade 1" bean shipments. The machine, first of its kind In the country, employs light reflexes to pick out imperfect beans and for eign matter. Its accuracy is such that only one-fourth of one per cent of culls, stones and other matter pass without detection. ' Previously, "choice hand picked" beans accepted were allowed one and a half pounds of cull per hundred weight. In operation of the machine, the beans are passed singly before the "electric eye." When a white bean, which Is perfect, passes, the light reflex Is normal, and the bean goes Its way untouched. But when a discolored bean or foreign matter appears, a different light reflex sets an ejecting machine in motion and a trigger finger flips the cull aside. - Two carloads of beans a day canv be sorted by the machine. Because there were not enough beans in this section to keep the machine in oper atlon, carloads were routed Thirst, Machine Guns Erase Band In Libyan Desert TRIPOLI, Lybla W Burled in the unemotional pages of an army offi cer's report to the provincial au thorities Is a story of how the once dreaded calma of Orfella and 60 of his rebel tribesmen perished of thirst in the Taferust desert. The report gives no details other than that the band tried to negotiate the vast arid stretch, one of the worst in Africa, when fleeing to Al geria from the machine guns and airplanes of Italian troops. Marshal Pletro Badoglio, who In a three-year campaign has cleared Trlpolitanta and the western half of Libya of rebels, made the report. He mentioned (the calmafe fae Inci dentally In accounting for all the chiefs of the 10-year rebellion. The calma'B full name was Abd- V. 1 -Neta v-K nr. From 1024 to 1929 Its mere mention struck terror to the hearts of peaceful desert dwellers In the region of the Fezzan. Life there In the barren Interior of Libya Is made possible by a sprin kling of oases. By virtue of his office, which carries with It the title of muntsaref- of Murzuk, the principal oasis, the calma laid claim to the whole territory. . Leading 200 fierce warriors, he preyed upon the natives, and his power was undisputed until the Ital ian column went into the country. It was an uneven fight. The Ital ian weapons cut down the calma's men, and the relentless desert fin ished the work. lltz. a village of 400 people near Calbe. There is not a pupil to be graduated from the village school In the semester ending at Eastertide and not one new pupil has been registered for the following term. Ministry of the Interior figures show that in 1000 there were nearly 2.000,000 births in the nation. In 1030 this total bad shrunk to 1,128',- 800. That meant only 67 visits of the stork per thousand. 1 : ; The only bright spots In this sta-v tlstlcs are a decrease In Infant mor- tallty and the absence of epidemics. " PLACE TO GET LOST' SPOT TO BE KEPT IN SMOKIES KNOXVUjLE, To nil. ff Tourists who wish the thrill of being lost in primitive wilds are to be accommo dated at Smoky Mountain national park. The park Is to have a "lose your self spot," Just as most cities have a chauffeur-yourself car service. A large part of the park area Is to be kept In a wild condition. "We need places where people can get lost," says Horace M. Albright, di rector of the national parks service. "It's got so you can't find a place to get. lost except in New York." Dwindling Births Peril Germany's Status in World other parts of tho Lowell this year. state through . BERLIN (P) Germany's rapidly declining birth rate Is giving her leaders much anxious thought. The relch is losing population at the rate of 100,000 a year, deaths exceeding births by 1.6 per thousand Inhabitants. Having regard to the fact that to keep the race numerically at Its level there should be three children from born to every marriage, the ministry LANDSLIDE HITS GRIDIRON TACOMA. Wash. (JP) Football players of the College of Puget Sound here found a part of their grid field missing recently. A landslide during a rain storm swept, out 60 feet of the floor of the horseshoe Tacoma stadium. The gridiron Is located, on the side of a bluff overlooking Puget Sound. Corn Is the leading cereal crop of North Dakota in the amount of dl gestlblo nutrlonts produced per acre. of the interior says that the pre vailing no-chlld or one-child fash ion throatens a decline which may be fatal to tho fatherland's 'status In the world. . The outlook Is especially reflected in .education statistics. Here in Ber Hn, 23 schools are being closed be cause of lack of pupils, In six densely populated districts of tho capital the number of chil dren has diminished from 226,000 in 1013 to 126,000 in 1031. . Part of this, but not all, Is due to a move ment away from the city because of unemployment. More vivid Is a report from Werk TRY OUR DANISH PASTRY The Good Kind Apple Sauce Cake A Delicious Cake Saturday Special Each ..29c Spice Cup Cakes With Jack Frost Icing Dozen 15c BRAN MUFFINS and BRAN LOAF for Health Cocoanut Cream Pies Special for Saturday Each ........ 24c Our Danish Pastry The Big Piece None Better Each 5c Wind Up At The Windmill A Strictly Home-Owned Bakery modern., f'zt & til waytoVuy 31 sugar fcfc5l Jtlii W S i in Sea Island Granulated creams easily with butter ,j 'j . . . blends smoothly with ; other ingredients. Ask for "jt Sea Island, in the bright j I'; j red, scaled carton. SbatMing quick-dissolving ina scaled car ton with free- pouring spout V 5 EVERY GRAIN PU RE CAN E IraifflAnalyzi a "Barg am ;)!!! An Item that does not prove entirely satisfactory to the buyer) for .any reason whatsoever, is( not a realji bargain no matter how little was paid lor it. tverthing sold at Safeway not only carries the manufacturers guar- : antee but the unlimited resources of the entire Safeway organization are behind it, with an assurance of com plete satisfaction or money back. Safeway savings are real bargains for this reason. Shop at Safeway with the confidence of receiving full value for your money. Prices Effective Saturdayand Monday, March 5-7 Flour l r Bacon Oregon I Beauty, for I all purposes A - T Hi 49-lb. 7 Ug Han- II JU2 Csirs ten's well ptreak- ' ' " ed with lean (2 Pound J L,f)J Cheese Full Cream Made in Oregon Pound 16c Coffee Safeway Blend. No better QQg mffpR nfc anv nrice. 3 LBS. Owv coffee at any price. 3 LBS. Marshmallows Fresh and fluffy. ... LB. Par , . Perfect concentrated soap. PKG. Vanilla Bunny Brand. Will not bake out. 4 OZ. BOT. 18c 39c 25c Milk Federal. Catsup Bitter's. TALL CANS 2 LGE. BOTTLES 25c Jellwell True fruit flavored for "tQf better desserts. 3 PKGS. 3 CANS 29c Salmon Alaska Pink FOMAY Shortening Mb. TinJ9C 3-lb. Tingle BANANAS Golden ripe fruit of fancy quality. 4 lbs. 23c CELERY Chula Vista Krisp. Well bleached quality Bunch-.'. .. .. .. . 11c We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantity