II The Stat man, Salem, Orxjon. Saturday. January 12. 1952 Inter-Church Leader Training Plans Launched by Ministers 6-Week School For Workers Begins Jan. 29 Salem's first co-operative church Leadership Training School in bout five years will begin Tues day, Jan. 29, Dr. Arthur H. May nard, dean, announced Friday. The school is sponsored by Salem Min isterial Association, with some 30 churches participating. The courses will be given each Tuesday evening for six weeks in First Presbyterian Church, design ed especially for Sunday School workers but open to all interested. Seven classes are planned, di vided among two 50-minute per iods each night. Either one or two may be taken, at a cost of one dol lar each. First session classes, at 7:30, are "Teaching Primary Children." taught by Mrs. R. E. Moshier, Eu gene, children's superintendent for Oregon Christian churches; "Teaching Junior Children," by Ruth Towne, on the faculty of Texas Christian University and do ing graduate work at Oregon State College; "Teaching Intermediates," by the Rev. B. J. Holland, assist ant pastor of First Presbyterian Church; "Christianity at Work in Salem." teacher to be announced. Worship services will be at 8:20 n. arranged bv the Rev. Eu gene Stowe of First Church of the Nazarene. At 8:40 the classes will be "The Umu? of the New Testament for Today," Dr. C. P. Gates, Portland, district superintendent of the Evangelical United Brethren Church; "How to Use Audio-Visual Aids," the Rev. Lloyd G. Ue cker of Englewood EUB Church; "Improving the Sunday School, the Rev. Donald Payne, minister of education at First Christian Church. The program was set up by the Ministerial Association's Christian education committee, headed by the Rev. Dudley Strain, and the leadership education sub-committee headed by Maynard. Ralph Johnson is in charge of publicity, and Dr. John R. Turn bull of the book table. Kiiigwood Will Begin Series A series of timely topics on the Question, "How Can I Know?", will be presented by the Rev. Alex H. Sauerwein at Kingwood Bible Church for the next few Sunday mornings at 10:45 a. m. The topics are "How Can I Know There Is A God?", "How Can I Know The Bible Is The Word Of God?", "How Can I Know Jesus Christ Is The Son Of God?", "How Can I Know Why Jesus Christ Died?", "How Can I Know There Is Life After Death?" Expositions in the book of The Revelation are the messages in the evenings. Lutheran Church School Leaders Meet at Keizer KEIZER Annual meeting of the Associated Church Schools of the southern conference. Pacific synod of the United Lutheran Church, will be held Sunday at Faith Lutheran Church in Keizer. Between 100 and 150 Sunday School staff members from the area are expected for the sessions5 from 3:30 to t p. m. Oscar Liu dahl of Salem is president. Main speaker will be Dr. L. H. Steinhoff of Portland, synod presi dent. Discussions will be led by the Rev. John Cauble of St. Mark Church in Salem and the Rev. George Holmquist, host pastor. SaEemm (Dliiraircllies APOSTOLIC JESUS NAME 443 Cen ter. ASSEMBLY OF GOD Central 315,i N. Commercial. Evangelistic Tempi Park and Market. rbe Chapel 12th and Leslie. BAPTIST Bethel Cottage and O. Calvary Liberty and Miller. Capital Summer and Hood. First Liberty and Marlon. Immiaael Hazel and Academy. Bible Fellowship Memorial hos pital chape L CATHOLIC St. Joseph's Cottaxe and Chemek eta. St. Vincent Paul Myrtle and Columbia. CENTER OF THE LIVING CHRIST 678 N. Cottaxe. CHRISTIAN Coart Street 17th and Court. Pint Cottage and Marlon. CHRISTIAN MISSIONARY ALLIANCE SUs and Gaines. CHURCH OF CHRIST Cesktral Cottaxe and Chemeketa. CHURCH OF CHRIST. SCIENTIST Firs Liberty and Chemeketa. CHURCH OP GOD. FIRST Cottaxe and Hood. CHURCH OP GOD. THS 40 S. 22nd CHURCH OP JESUS CHRIST OP LATTER DAY SAINTS fith and Madison. CONGREGATIONAL Pint Cottaxe and Marion. Kalcht Mesaerlai 19th and Ferry. SPISCOPAI. St. rami's Church and Chemeketa. XT ANGELICAL AND REFORMED Ret ha ay Capitol and Marion. KV ANGELICAL UNITED BRETHREN Eaa-leveo4 17tn and Nebraska. First Summer and Marion. FAITH TABERNACLE 1305 N. roURJQCARR eM N. tftt. For Children I: - it ' -s I. -:- . ' W' 1 DR. MARY ALICE JONES Portland Meet Calls Teachers Several Salem churches are planning to send delegations of children's workers to Portland Wednesday for a mass meeting conducted by Dr. Mary Alice Jones, director of the department of Christian education of children of the Methodist Church. Dr. Jones will speak that eve ning in Portland First Methodist Church. Author of several relig ious books for children, she has served on the last two White House Conferences on Children, the National Committee on Chil dren in Wartime, was children's book editor for Rand-McNally and directed children's work for the International Council of Religious Education for 16 years. Those interested in going to the meeting by chartered bus were asked to call Mrs. Lee Haskins at 2-1929 or Dr. Arthur H. Maynard at 3-7642 by noon Tuesday. State Church Council Meet Here Feb. 7 Salem will be host Feb. 7 to one of the four sessions of the annual meeting of Oregon Council of Churches, according to the Rev. Gilbert B. Christian, executive secretary. The session will be in First Christian Church, with peo ple of 12 Protestant denominations from the Salem area participating. The sessions will begin in the afternoon, with a conference on juvenile protection led by Dr. Ed ward D. Rapp, of New York. Fol lowing this, there will be confer ences for men, women and youth on the work of church cooperation in the local community. The annual business of the coun cil will be conducted at the 6 o'clock dinner meeting, and the evening inspirational messages will be brought by Ernest Peterson, church editor of the Oregon Jour nal, and John Merrifield, insurance executive of Portland. Bible Reading List Growing More than 40 members of Cal vary Baptist Church are enrolled on the 1951 Bible Readers' Scroll, signifying that they read the en tire Bible during that year. Many are planning this achieve ment during 1952. The pastor, Omar N. Barth, will speak Sun day morning on the second of his "How" series, " How to Read the Bible." Sunday evening's message will be the second in the series on "Great Nights in the Bible." Bruce Stewart is conducting the song service. Miss Grace Erickson will present a violin solo. FREE METHODIST Winter Market. and FRIENDS Highland Hixhiand. Avenue Church and South Salem Commercial and Washington. FULL GOSPEL PENTECOSTAL Calvary Chapel 1143 N. Liberty. Jesas Name Pentecostal 1173 Lewis United Pentecostal - 445 Ferry. INSTITUTE OF RELIGIOUS SCIENCE 460 N Cottaxe. JEWISH Broadway and Madison. KINGWOOD BIBLE 1123 Cm. Central Capitol and Gaines. Christ 18th and State. LUTHERAN St. John's 16th and A. St Mark S43 N Church. METAPHYSICAL CENTER S62 N Cottaxe. METHODIST; First Church and State. Jason Lee Winter and Jefferson Leslie Commercial and Myers. West Salem 3rd and Gerth. NAZARENE First, 13th and Center. OPEN BIBLE STANDARD 1233 N Commercial. PILGRIM HOLINESS 2283 Carlton. PRESBYTERIAN First Winter and Chemeketa. REORGANIZED CHURCH OP JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS 17th and Chemeketa SALVATION; ARMY 241 Stat. SEVENTH-DAY ADVENT1ST Summer and Hood. SPIRITUALIST First 46 N. Cottaxe (Woman's clubhouse). UNITARIAN FELLOWSHIP Memorial hospital chapel. UNITED BRETHREN First 1145 Mission. ( WESUCYAN METHODIST Uth and Editor Slated For Gty-wide Meet Jan. 20 A city-wide meeting of church school workers to hear Dr. Virgil Foster, editor of the International Journal of Religious Education, has been slated for Sunday, Jan. 20, under sponsorship of Salem Ministerial Association. The meeting will be at 3:30 p. m. In First Presbyterian Church. Dr. Foster, from Chicago, will speak on "How the Best Teachers Get That Way." Harland New Moderator at Knight Church Roy Harland was elected Sunday as moderator at the annual meet ing of Knight Memorial Congrega tional Church. Others elected to office included church clerk, Mrs. Nellie Cornell; church treasurer, J. E. Lucas; fi nancial secretary, Miss Laura Yan tis; church school superintendent, Lloyd H. Arnold; board of dea cons, R. C. Churchill, William C. Drakeley Sr., Raymond Andrews and Irving Brooks; board of Dea conesses, Mrs. Emery Feller and Mrs. Harold Ellis; board of trust ees, Harold Ellis, Waldo Lowery and M. E. Welch; religious educa tion committee, Mrs. J. P. Smart; Endowment fund committee, Dr. Frank E. Brown; representatives-at-large on the church council, Robert Ashby and William McKin ney Jr.; delegates to Salem Council of Churches, Mrs. Robert Ashby, Miss Marjorie Powell and William W. McKinney. Mrs. Amanda Anderson and Mrs. Alma Schindler were elected hon orary deaconesses for life. Good reports were received from all departments of the church, and the Men's Club, the women's groups and the young people's groups all reported im provements to the church build ing for which their groups were responsible, according to the Rev. Louis E. White, minister. Suburban Churches ANKENY Common! ty Schoolhouse. Liberty -Buena Vista rd Sunday school 10 man. Services 11 wn. 8 pjn. AUMSVILLB Bethel Baptist Sunday school 10 ajn Services 11 ajn.. 7 JO pjn Sun day 7:43 pm Wednesday. Wesley an Sunday school 10 a m Services 11 a. m., 7 :30 p. m. Sunday. BROOKS Assembly of God Half block south of school. Sunday school 0:43 ajn. Services 11 a.m., 7:45 pan. Sunday. 7:43 pan. Thursday. CLEAR LAKE Evangelical United Brethren Wheat land Ferry rd. Sunday school 11 am Service 10 ajn Sunday. EAST ENGLEWOOD Rrira I.nthrnn Lanslnff and Sun- nyvii.w. Sunday school 10 ajn. Ser vice 11 ajn. Sunday EOLA Community Sunday school 8:45 ajn. Service 11 ajn. Sunday. FOUR CORNERS Baptist State and Elma. Sunday school 9:43 a.m. Services 11 a.m., pjn. Sunday. I pjn. Thursday. FRUITLAND Evangelical United Brethren Sun day school 10 a.m. Services 11 a.m.. 7:30 pjn. Sunday. 7 30 pjn. Wednesday HAYESVILLE Halbert Memorial Baptist One mile north of 89 E underpass Sunday school 8:45 ajn. Services 11 a jn 7 30 pjn. Sunday. 7:3u pjn. Thursday. HOPEWELL Evangelical United Brethren Sun day school 10 a.m. Services 11 ajn.. pjn. Sunday. 8 pjn. Wednesday. KEIZER Church of Christ 1030 Dearborn. Sunday school 10 ajn. Services 11 a.m.. 730 pjn. Sunday. pjn. Wednes day. Community Elizabeth and Church dale. Sunday school 8:45 a.m. Services II ajn.. 7 43 pjn. Sunday. 730 pjn. Wednesday. Faith Lutheran 4505 N. River rd. Sunday school 9:45 a.m. Services 11 ajn.. S pjn. Sunday. t:13 pjn. Wednes day. Nazarene 4853 Bailey. Sunday school 9:45 am. Services 11 a.m.. 730 DJn. Sundav. 7-30 p.m Wednesday. LABIS H CENTER Community (Evangelical United Brethren). Sun day school 10 ajn. Service 11 ajn. Sunday. LABISH VILLAGE Community Sunday school 10 a.m. Services 11 p. m 7:45 p. m. Sunday. LIBERTY-SALEM HEIGHTS Liberty Church of Christ Skyline rd. Sunday school 10 ajn. Service 11 a.m.. 730 p.m. Sunday. 7 30 pjn. Wed nesday Good Shepherd Lutheran 3725 S. Commercial. Sunday school 9:45 ajn. Service 11 ajn. Sunday. Salem Heights Baptist Liberty and Madrona Sunday school 10 ajn. Ser vices 11 a.m, 7:45 pjn. Sunday. I pjn. Thursday. MACLEAY Community Schoolhouse. Sunday school 10 ajn. MARION Friends Sunday school 10 ajn. Serv ices 11 ajn. Sunday. Calvary Lutheran Sunday school 10 un. Service 11 ajn. Sunday. MIDDLE GROVE Community Schoolhouse. Sunday school 10 ajn. NORTH HOWELL Community Sunday school 10 ajn. Services 11 am. S pjn. Sunday. S pjoa. Wednesday PRATUM Isamanuel Meanonite Sunday school 5 ajn. Services 11 sjxu. 7:45 pjn. Sunday. Methodist Sunday school 10 ajn. Service 11 ajn. Sunday. PR INGLE Friends Baxter rd. west of S9E. Sunday Churches Set Choir Concert For Silverton Statesman News Service SILVERTON A male choir of 36 voices from Luther Theological Seminary, St. Paul, Minn., will give a sacred concert in Imman uel Lutheran Church, Silverton, Wednesday at 8 p. m. sponsored by Trinity and Immanuel Luther an congregations. The choir is under direction of Leif Monson, a graduate of Luth er College. An offering will be taken for the mission project of the choir, this year the home mis sion extension fund of the Evan gelical Lutheran Church, to help build churches for newly formed congregations. Dr. Lowell J. Satre will speak briefly. He formerly was profes sor of Greek and Latin at Pacific Lutheran College. Fellowship dinner will be ob served at Trinity Church Sunday following the morning worship Serving are Mr. and Mrs. Ray Dullum, Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Oh ren, Mr. and Mrs. James Nelson, Mr. and Mrs. Victor Sather, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Erickson, and Mrs. Ole Opperud. The Gideon Society will give the program under the direction of Ray Myers, Silverton. James Moen and Dean Libner are to be in charge of Luther League Sunday night at 7:30 The annual congregation business meeting will be Tuesday at 8 p. m. The Rev. J. A. Luthro, pastor of Trinity, plans to attend the evangelism conference in Minnea polis from Jan. 23 to 27. Installation of officers well be held at Immanuel Church Sunday morning at 11 o'clock. The Men's Club will meet Tuesday at 8 o'clock at the church. A Luther League visitation will be observed by Calvary Lutheran Church Sunday afternoon at 3 o'clock. Calvary Brotherhood meets Monday night at 8 o'clock. The Rev. M. Herbert of Salem will be guest speaker at both morning and evening services Sun day at First Baptist Church at Silverton, meeting at the Seventh day Adventists building at North 2nd and Park Streets. At the Seventh-day Adventist Church, Kenneth Trussell and El der Harold J. Johnson will be in charge of the Saturday morning services. This Saturday has been set aside as a day of special feast ing and prayer, E. B. Hyatt, clerk of the congregation, announced. The Rev. Douglas Harrell, pas tor of the Methodist Church, an nounced the United Methodist Evangelistic Advance Mission to b conducted in this area. A visiting minister, yet to be named. Will conduct a trainging course for evangelistic visitors in early March. The local pastor will also start a membership training class for youth at the parsonage at 4 p. m. on Jan. 17. The Evensong service will be Sunday night at 7:30. Fellowship dinner will be ob served at First Christian Church Sunday. Communion Time To Close Prayer Week, 1st EUB Closing Universal Week of Pray er witn a Day of Prayer Sunday at tne rirst evangelical United Brethren Church will serve holy communion between 3:30 and 5:30 p.m. Worshipers may present themselves at the chancel for in tercessory prayer and communion at any time during the period. The minister, the Rev. Wilmer N. Brown, will continue the series on the study of the book of Joshua at the 10:50 a.m. worship service. A Bible study of the book of Job is being conducted each Wed nesday night at 7:30. School Principal to Speak to Unitarians Carl Ashenbrenner, principal of Parrish Junior High School, will speak at the meeting of Salem Uni tarian Fellowship in Salem Me morial Hospital chapel Sunday at 8 p. m., on "What's Right With Public Education." An open for um will follow the talk. State Leaders Slated At 1st Baptist Church Guest speakers filling the pul pit at First Baptist Church Sun day will be the Rev. Charles Losie, state director of Christian educa tion for the Conservative Baptist Association of Oregon, at the 11 o'clock service, and the Rev. Ken neth Tobias, state secretary for the Conservative work, at the 7:30 evening service. school 9:49 ajn. Services 11 ajn.. 7 'JO pjn Sunday. 8 p.m Wednesday. ROBERTS Community Schoolhouse Sunday school .10 ajn. tOSEDALI Friends Sunday school 10 ajn. ajn.. 7 30 pjn Sunday. SUMMIT Methodist Services 11 Orchard Heights rd. Sunday school 10 a. m. Service 11 a. m. Sunday. TALBOT Community Sunday school 9:45 a.m. Services 11 a.m. Sunday. pjn. Wednesday. TURNER Assembly ef God Sunday school 9:45 ajn Services 11 a.m.. 7:45 p.m. Sunday. 7:45 pjn. Wednesday and Fri day. Christian Sunday school 9:45 ajn. Services 11 ajn. 7:30 pjn. Sunday. 1 o rn Thursday St Mark's LUTHEBAII 34S K. Chnreh St. Welcomes Ym t:45 AJtf. Sunday Scbaal 11:50 AM. Orgsva Moments 11:00 AM. The Service TM Lather Leagn ALL ARE INVITED Minister to Retire Again Trfc' it. More living- in an easy chair like this, and less out of suitcase, is the top planning; now for Dr. Henry Marcotte, who is retiring from 55 years of ministry in the Presbyterian Church. Be said Mrs. Mar cotte has packed and unpacked 110 times in 16 years of ad interim pastorates up and down the Pacific Coast. (Statesman photo.) Dr. Marcotte Ends 55 Years Of Preaching Here on Sunday A possible record period of ad interim ministering will be clim axed Sunday when Dr. Henry Marcotte preaches at Salem First Pres byterian Church. And it will be done despite a fractured shoulder, the same one that was in a sling " A minister, outstanding in his . . . . - Leads Crusade -1 The Rev. Donald Hinkle (above), Gresham, will be the speaker at a revival crusade sponsored by Salem District Younc People's Missionary Society in Dallas Free Methodist Church, from Jan. 15 to 26. Bill Hansen, dis trict promoter, said programs each evening: at 7:45 will include special music, ginrspirations and Bible preaching. Revival Under Way At Santiam Chapel LYONS Revival meetings which began Jan. 6 at Santiam Chapel will continue until Jan. 27, with the Rev. Ferris Dodd of Hal sey in charge. Services are conducted at 7:30 o'clock every night except Monday. Saturday evening is an all-musical service. The Nelson party is as sisting with music. The Rev. Wells Gage is the pastor. Labish Singing Slated LAKE LABISH The young people will have charge of a sing spiration replacing the preaching service at 7:45 p. m. Sunday at Labish Community Church, ac cording to B. M. Brooks, pastor. ANTIQUE-DOLL COLLECTOR CHICAGO (JF) Miss Louise Gardner has collected dolls from almost every country of the world. She stopped counting them after passing the 500 mark. Some 250 of them are on display at Chi cago's Museum of Science and Industry. Some of the antique dolls in her collection are over 100 years old. Miss Gardner is 81. CHOIR MEMBER SUES CHURCH MINNEAPOLIS (JP) - A choir member who fell down the steps of a Methodist church here re cently enroute to choir practice has sued the church for $11,250 She contends the steps were poor ly lighted. Evangelistic Temple Assembly oi God Market SL & Park At. 9:45 Sunday School 11:00 Sermon "A Friend of God" 6:15 Youth Groups & Vesper 7:45 Erangelisuc Service Sermon Trom Blches to Racs Sat 6:45 Radio Broad cast orer KOCO. - . . 2 10 years ago for another sermon denomination, for 55 of his 81 vAot"? Mp TV 1 n v i i Kic Waav f i 1 1 ,voo, i. -aauwi.c iiao J.H1 - since 1935, at some 20 churches. This is his third such call to Sa lem. Now he will retire for the second time. His work will close here with the arrival of Dr. Paul Poling ! chesa Maria Cristina Marconi, wi from Philadelphia as pastor. Sun- 1 dow of the wireless inventor, and day morning at :45 and 11 o clock, Dr. Marcotte will preach on "Three Abiding Things." He and Mrs. Marcotte will leave Monday morn ing for their Portland apartment, 1610 N.E. Tillamook. The fractured right shoulder, which prevented his speaking last Sunday, was sustained last Satur day evening as he fell from a step at the church. X-rays showed it was not serious. He recalled that almost exactly 10 years ago he iraciurea tne same snouiaer in a similar fall in Portland, then came here to preach morning and eve ning. Marcotte grew up in Michigan and Wisconsin, attended Lake For est College in Illinois and Mc Cormick Theological Seminary in Chicago. Lake Forest granted him an honorary Doctor of Divinity degree in 1913. Ordained to the ministry in 1896, Marcotte's missionary urge brought him immediately to the then-rough port town of Astoria, wwcic iic scrveu seven years, ah- sat on inlor m ta i cf Ar o 4-V.a-a Inrt ! . coi c ' year, the church awarded him the title of pastor emeritus. Prior to his "retirement" in 1935, Dr. Marcotte then ministered at Westminister Church ia Portland, Second in Kansas City, was on the denominational board of education in Philadelphia, then had nine years at Grace (later First) Church in Evansville, Ind. Then there was ad interim work, sometimes repeating, at First in Spokane, Central in Portland, Wesminister in Pasadena, High land Park in Los Angeles, First in Berkeley, Park Boulevard in Oak land, Fremont in Sacramento, Cen tral in Eugene. The terms have averaged about eight or nine months and extend ed to two years. He came to Salem just before the church called the Rev. Irwin Williams some 10 years ago and before Dr. Chester W. Hamblin came six years ago. When Hamblin went to Palo Alto in October, Mar cotte came back. He said that the past three months have been his shortest assignment, but "really the climax." The interim work to Marcotte is done with the idea of preparing for the new pastor, helping to call the best man and ironing out lo cal problems. This time ill Salem, the task has been light, he added. Members of the congregation, however, praise his quick raising of $2,500 to bring the Poling family here and to re decorate the manse. The request was over-subscribed on the offer ing plates. The Marcottes have two daugh- Firsl Presbyterian Church Chemeketa at Winter Salem, Oregon Worship With Us Sunday Services at 9:45 and 11:00 AJvL THREE ABIDING THINGS" Dr. Henry Marcotte, Ad Interim Pastor Christian & Missionary Alliance Church North Fifth and Gaines Paul W. Gunther, Pastor 9:45 A-M. Sunday School 1 1 :00 AJ - "Prepare to Meet Thy God" 6:30 PJ4. - A. Y. Fellowship 7:30 P.M. - "Launch Out Into the Deep" Wed. 7:30 The Hour of Prayer Youth Crusade To Continue At Jefferson Statesman Newt Service ; JEFFERSON The Youth j Cru sade which began here Sunday will be continued for another week with an afternoon meeting scheduled for Sunday at 3 o'clock, and no meeting Monday night. Gordon McLean, teen-age evangel ist ' conducting the series, j ' will preach at the Marion Friends Church that night. i A youth choir have been organ ized, and full houses have attended the programs nightly. The i choir practices each night at 7 o'clock. followed by a devotional period at 7:30 and the service from 8 to 9. Mrs. Leonard McCaw is pianist. Bill Arnold is song director. ! The Rev. Edison Habegger of Los Angeles, will show colored motion pictures at Talbot Commu nity Church Monday night at 7:30 o'clock. Pictures are those taken during the past year in the neart of Africa of wild elephants, little pygmies, and leaf-dressed natives, as well as what the power of the gospel will do for those who lieed Habegger has travelled in the Holy Land, Europe, Africa and throughout this country. He is dis trict superintendent of the Mis sionary Church Association cf Ft Wayne, Ind. Radio Marks A anniversary NEW YORK CPt-The chairman of the Radio Corporation of Am erica, David Sarnoff, recently sa luted the 50th anniversary oi the first signal radio signal sent across the Atlantic by sending the letter "S" around the world at a gather ing of radio executives in the i Wain- i.i, u Lfj, a tefegaph kVv.lS I - r ' ci emale U'Ara faovH mv 1,, speaker by the luncheon gather ing less than one-eighth of a sec ond later after they had travel ed around the world. Sarnoff also exchanged treet- ; ings by radio-telephone with Mar- I ner aaugnter. Driver Saved From Train HIGHLAND PARK, 111. iJP) - w itn the emphasis on the millionth traffic fatality, these two didn't ! quite make the list jirs. irene trior, driver or a brand-new automobile, and her companion, Mrs. C. V. Nichols, were stalled on the Chicago, North western Railroad tracks As the speeding "400" approach ed, a motorist, J. Dwight Evans, ana a gateman, John J. Janusik, tried to pusn the car off the tracks They couldn't move the car. The tires were wedged in an icr rut witn tne train a short distance away, both men pulled the worn : ters and four grandchildren in ; prtlanH or,H nnr'nor .M ; Santa Monica, Calif. Though this is a second retire ment, the man with the generous voice and spirit wouldn't say his preaching days are over. But he doesn't expect to travel quite so fast. Capital Baptist Church Cooperating with Southern Baptist Convention Meets in S.D.A. Church N. Summer and Hood Welcome to Our Services Sunday School 9:45 A. M. Training- Union 6:30 P. M. Worship 11 A. 7:30 P. M. Wednesday Prayer Serviea At 8 P.M. Richard E. Hunt, Pastor A Revival Thai's Different Sot 8: P.M. "Visitors From Other Worlds" Sun. Revival 8: P.M. "Christians In HeE" Snn. lit AJM. "Spiritual Vision and Church Outlook" Each Ilighl S Hex! Week Attend Our Friendly Growing Sunday School 10 AJi. FAITH TABERIIACIS i; 1305 North 5th at Gaines . ipiifc - - - i - flclu Bible- j Jesus said unto the centurion: Go, as thou , hast believed, so be.' it done unto thee... i his servant was heal ed the self-same hour. Mat 8:8, 13. seaa j-wt -t 5 ulo Tel ef these te all JVeic Leader RET. DONALD B. PAYNE Payne Begins Youth Work Here Tuesday 1 w The, Rev. Donald B. Payne, new minister of Christian education and director of youth work for First Christian Church will begin his work here Tuesday. - j Payne, 29, comes from Corvalhs, where he has been minister of the First Christian Church for four years. His home was in Chehaiis, Wash., befare entering Texas Christian University, then gradu ate work at Yale University, and serving as associate minister at Tacoma First Church. He is a member of the Oregon Christian Student Foundation, ad ministering work on the campuses at Corvallis and Eugene, rand it chairman of the youth committer and member of the education com mittee of Oregon Christian churches. J Payne is married and lias two small boys. i AIRLTFT FOR BOOKS KUANTAN, Pahang, Mftlaya (JP) - Recently a small Chines ment area several miles inland from here but not without diffi culties. There are -no roads to the area and a trip upriver would take two days through dangerous Jungles. So, in order to supply books to tha school's 41 pupils, an airlift wsa ordered and the books were drop ped squarely in the school grounds. en from the car to safety- Tha impact of the crash threw tfc car 300 feet against the depot platr form. ( A WARII WELCOIIE Awaits You at the Sunday Services of the Friendly 1ST CHURCH OF THE IIAZAREIIE "SALEM'S SINGING CHURCH" Thirteenth and Center EUGENE STOWE, Pastor - c in i ' vrrn r i i mv mi mailed free epea "wsesessssw ii 1 1 WT Vi,