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About Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 13, 1937)
Page Two. November AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER (Publlabad vr ivulu u Sundayl nm.A itn miDUlHU . Alton r. Bai SXnAOINO EDITOR WUlum WiwS SEBVJC1 AMOCUtM Fn. . Ot Jtom MEMBE1I EDITORIAL P A GW, OF THE REGISTER-GUARD Youth Day Will Honor Unitarian Leade Audit uraau oi cucuUUom Tta RuKur-OuvO-i poller l oomplitt tad Impartial thU opinion, on ovnuj oi th. 1.7 r,l " tawtun to th. community, mdwvorlng to bo eidll bul STaiS twlptul to tb. Uvlopmt of wmrtrutUv. som en unity poucy. WHEN PUBLICITY IS HARMFUL M OST of the publicity which has attended the search for. a new president for the University of Oregon has been harmful, and this paper which usually advocates "pitiless publicity" on all public business believes there should be some new understanding be tween the press and those in authority on this type of problem. Why Is publicity a handicap in such a situation? Well, because many men are being scrutinized simultaneously and most minute ly. It Is necessary for faculty council and chancellor and state board to examine every detail of the public and private life of each person whose name is suggested and con sidered worth study. Let's look at it from the angle of John Jones of PitUburgh who has permitted his name to be considered. He is fully aware of the fact that he may be only one of a dozen but he doesn't like to have that published. If he doesn't get the call or if he doesn't choose to accept after looking things over, he can find his position back home mighty uncomfortable. If he does get the call and If he does accept, he can be embarrassed by rumors that he was "not first choice." His prestige can be sapped before he takes of fice. It is a slap at the school to say this one has refused and a slap at the man to say that one has been rejected. The practical fact is that it is difficult to get the best men to be candidates if the process takes on the aspect of a "race" or a porting proposition. True, public institu tions cannot and should not take the attitude that these deliberations ire nobody's busi ness. But fair play to the schools and to the men involved demands intelligent coopera A CALL TO ARMS sales tax idea, close enough to get sales taxera tart.rt ncrnin nnlv this time they probably will want to call it something else, such as "transactions tax" to salve the feehngs ol lormer opponents who won't want it said they have changed their minds. . , . Probably It will all boil down to a sales tax Uea again, with the customary rejection in store for its suporters and no real tax money in sight when it is all over. Unless the anU-sales-taxers should have a tre mendous Joke played upon them and discover, after passing a "transaction tax," that they wish they had taken a sales tax Instead. ANOTHER WAY TO BLOCK THE RACKET (Grants Pass Courier) "THE Eugene city council has been asked by pe- titlon to pass an antl-picketing ordinance, and support for the plan comes from the rival college town of Corvallis, wtiere Editor Ingalls of the Gazette-Times declares that: "Every city should have an anti-picketing or dinance and the state should have an anti-picketing law. There is no such thing as peaceful picket ing and no reason on earth why an employer and the public should be harassed by such an un American scheme of compulsion. "Employers are forbidden to blacklist workers, a measure wholly unfair, unjust and violating all conceptions of freedom. Workers should also be forbidden to blacklist by picketing. "We trust the Eugene city council sets the pace. It would be the best thing that could happen for labor itself, and for peace in industry." There is some truth In what the Corvallis editor says." While Grants Pass has never experi enced such things, the residents of many another large and small city the nation over have be come accustomed to the sight of suckers carrying banners parading the streets in front of business houses. It would be nice if that particular racket could be done away with. The trouble Is, It can't be done. The national administration has decreed that pjcketlng Is O. K. legally, however wrong it may be morally. And anyway, the effect of picketing has worn pretty thin on the general public, many a customer these days brushing past pickets to trade with a picketed store in perference to the unplcketed one as a personal gesture of resentment against such doings. A worse phase of labor coercion perhaps may be easier to control. The more modern labor dic tator's attack aims not at influencing customers, but at blocking shipments. Deliveries to stores are halted, deliveries to customers prevented. Transportation lines in public service business be come selective, deliver only to union-approved places. Other, deliveries are refused, either peace fully or to an accompaniment of head-smashing or arm-breoking. It may be possible to legally insist that any delivery system that delivers to any part of the public, must deliver to all. If so, the step should be taken to affirm it. It would be a protection against the racket that Is so easy and that has be come so powerful today. But the legal penalties should be carried right down to the Individual who issues the delivery-halting order to be effective. It isn't enough seem to have much of the say. Dr. Ernest W. Kuebler Will Be Quest Speaker For Special Program Ice, 7:30 o'clock. Mid-week serv ice Wednesday, 7:30 p. m. By DORRIS H. BAILEY (Register-Guard Church Editor) DEVOTING its Sunday services to youth and the solution of its problems, the Community Lib eral church will have as their principal speaker. Dr. Ernest W. Kuebler, member of the National Student Committee and secretary of the religious education depart ment of the American Unitarian Association. Dr. Kuebler will also be the euest sDeaker at the Westmin ster Forum at Westminster House Ful Gospei Mission: Church of God: Third avenue west and Monroe street. Rev. U. G. Clark, pastor. Sunday school, 9:45 a. m. Morn ing worship, 11 o'clock, sermon topic, "A Program That Will Reach the Lost." Junior church, 11 a. m. Young People's meet ing, 6:30 p. m. Evening service, 7:30 o'clock, sermon topic, "Hope Without Shame." 0 iNB of the unnoticed by-products of the depression unnoticed, except by those 'directly Involved has been a rise in the 'death rate from tuberculosis. ' Dr. Kendall Emerson, managing director Of the National Tuberculosis Association, pointed this out the other day, remarking that the death rate from tuberculosis in the United States rose from 54.5 per 100,000 in 3935 to 55.4 in 1936. The rise is small, of Bourse, but significant; as Dr. Emerson says, It should be taken as "a wll to arms." The country has made great strides in Its fight against the white plague in the last few decades. It cannot afford to see its gains diminished even slightly. You might remember this, when the Christmas seals go on sale next month. WASHINGTON LETTER There is considerable squawking because Gen. Hugh Johnson wasn't allowed to talk about "social disease's" on NBC, but we are not inclined to worry about this as an at tack on 'Freedom of Speech" believing that a few good clinics could do more with these evils than Gen. Johnson. "After trying to 'see' Angna Enters," messages Karl Thunneman, "I imagine Ajax McGurk will concede that what this town needs is an auditorium." Yeh, says Ajax, either that, or borrow some of Herb Owens' rassllng effects from the armory. Touring American correspondent reports seeing the Duke of Windsor's auto parked in front of a Vienna hotel with not a soul around to gape at it. Just wait until the Duke gets to America! Bruce Barton, the political boys scout who favors "one repeal each day" has been elected to congress in New York. Mr. Roosevelt might regard that omen before drafting new "must" legislation. WHAT OTHER EDITORS THINK ANOTHER TAX MI DDLE LOOMS TOR OREGON (The GranU Pass, Oregon, Courier) IF Oregon doesn't watch out she is going to see still another scramble for taxes, and about 05 per cent of the people won't be able to get out of the way, this time. Governor Martin has rejected requests for a special legislative session, urged the tax-proposers to plan their own legislation. Which they will do, and they will want several million dollars, too big a sum to be found by scratching around the edges of the public purse. The 95 per cent of the people will expect the money to be found by raising 6regon's taxes on the rich. But fixers are getting smarter these days, and realize that further raises of such taxes will bring In only Insignificant returns. When millions of taxes have to be added to Oregon's burden, everybody has to be soaked, Tom, Dick and Harry and all of their friends. Proposed tax sources are a 2 per cent levy on life insurance premiums, 2 per cent on real estate transfers, 2 per cent on state liquor receipts, 1 per cent en wholesale sales, perhaps a 2 per cent severance tax on timber, taxes on chain stores, i comes so that the government will have that boosts on race track nd gasoline and property, j much more to take away from them in taxes. Soot (4 hjc)i tom H Ettttx sign to th I (Copyright, 1937, EA Swvice, Inc. By RODNEY DUTCHER WASHINGTON, Nov. 13 The New Deal admlnl stratlon, once widely accused of a crime called "planning." more recently and with more justice has been criticized for lack of plan or consistency in policy. A general uncertainty as to the tuture Is often linked with this apparent lack. The uncertainties are not being removed. But five years after the 1932 election, what Informed persons in Washington are calling "the enduring economic philosophy of the New Deal," has been bound up in book form. The 'book is "Why Pay Taxes?" by David Cushman Coyle. You can call Coyle a New Deal major prophet. Roughly, more than 75 per cent of the key men In the admini stration who are "close to the President" agree with him on essential points. The degree to which -these points will appear In subsequent administration programs is prob lematical, but Coyle's small volume is a guide book for those who want to know what the New Deal today is shooting at. Follows a summary of "Why Pay Taxes?" and certain conversations with the author: Taxea Seen as Key Democracy's fundamental problem, says Coyle, Is to keep democracy going. When economic power becomes concentrated in a few hands it's democracy's business to break or control that con centration and to encourage growth and survival of small businesses. It Is also the government's duty to provide public services necessary to keep the country in a sound condition. Taxation Is the device which democracy must use to preserve itself, first by control and second, in order to finance the public services. Taxation can be used to control and adjust the economic system. The tax system can get revenue most simply by leaning on the middle Income brackets. Higher brackets should be taxed at still higher rates (snys Coyle), not primarily for revenue but to keep individuals from getting "too much" money and power. The future calls for heavier income, Inheritance and state taxes. Kerplnc Money Moving Money must be kept circulating. Poor people spend it. Rich people Invest It. Unlimited In vestment, which lends to dangerous booms, must be curbed. Taxes are not a burden, but a saving of expense when public services are cheaper than private costs for the same services. Coyle quotes a Danish farmer who, asked how he could pos sibly stand paying out 30 per cent of his income In taxes, replied: "What do you mean? We get It all bark." Money paid in taxes goes right back Into the system with increased velocity which swells the national income, according to this theory. Under the present tax system in America about 75 per cent of taxes hit poor people. The smaller a person's Income, the higher a proportion of it is aid in taxes. Real estate, tobacco, movie, liquor taxes, all nuisance taxes, tariffs and most con spicuously sales taxes, soak the poor. This vio lates (he ability-to-pay theory of taxation. I'sefulnesa Is Test The question of budget deficit or surplus should be made to depend on whether there's enough money In the country, says Coyle. Most people, think there Is enough money, so that the treasury ought to have a surplus. But although most people appear convinced that, the surplus should be attained by economics, the matter of budget balancing (says Coyle) really has no relation to what the site of the budget should be. Site should be determined by the answer to the question: "Is government work being done?" The American people. Coyle concludes, should pay taxes enough to keep the country in good condition. If we balance the budget and still con tinue a spending program, making up the differ ence with higher taxes, we can employ a huge number of people on Improvement of the country through soil erosion work, conservation, public health work, retaining of workers. Dust Bowl efforts and so on. Coyle believes In discouraging big business monopolies, but would like to see corporations maki big profits and individuals receive big in- on the university campus at six thirty o'clock Sunday evening. His subject will be "The National Student Outlook." Morning Sermon "Whose Responsibility Is Re ligious Education?" will be the subject of Dr. Kuebler's morning sermon at 11 o'clock. Prior to this he will speak before the Junior church congregation and make an inspection of the church school. Visiting the Pacific coast for the first time, Dr. Kuebler will make his first stops in Portland and Salem. From Eugene he will travel to California. He arrived in Eugene Saturday in time to meet with the faculty of the Lib eral church school. The meeting took place at the home of Mrs. J. A. Hoffman, 942 Lawrence street. Community Liberal (Unitarian):. Eleventh and Ferry. Junior church worship service, 9:45 a. m., Dr. Ernest W. Kuebler speak er. Adult forum, 10 a. m., Joseph A. Holaday speaker, topic, "The Building of a Social' Ethic in Youth." Morning service, 11 o'clock, topic, "Whose Responsi bility Is Religious Education?" Eclectic half-hour, KORE, 2:30 p. m. Women's Alliance silver tea at church Wednesday afternoon at 2:30, Dean Wayne L. Morse speak er. Trustees meet Thursday at 7:30. Choir rehearsal, Friday, 7:30. Church of Christ, Scientist: Corner of Twelfth avenue east and Oak street. Sunday school, 9:30 a. m. Sunday services, 11 a. m. and 8 p. m. Lesson sermon topic, "Mortals and Immortals." Evening testimonial meeting, Wednesday, 8 o'clock. Reading room at 432 Miner building open dally from 9 a. m. to 9 p. m. On Sundays and holidays from 2 to 5 p. m. Closes Wednesdays at 5 p. m. Church f Natarene: Eighth and Madison. Bertrand F. Peterson, pastor. Church school. 9:45 a. m. Morning serv ice, 11 o'clock. Young people's meeting, 6:30 p. m., Verda Muir, leader. Evangelistic service, 7:30 p. m., sermon by pastor. Prayer meeting, 7:30 p. m. Wednesday. Young people's study class, 7:30 p. m. Friday. 251 Eighth avenue west. Rev. Warren Hull, pastor, ounuay school, 9:45 a. m. Morning wor ship, 11 o'clock, sermon topic, "God's Treasure Chest." Evening service, 7:45 o'clock, sermon topic, "The Blessed Hope." Bible study, Tuesday, 7:30 p. m. Young Peo ple's meeting, Thursday, 7:30 p. m. Methodist Episcopal: Twelfth avenue and Willamette street. Dr. B. Earle Parker, pas tor. Sunday school, 9:45 a. m. Morning worship, 11 o'clock. Wes ley club, 7 p. m. Epworth League, 7 p. m. Women's Union turkey dinner, 6 p. m. Fireside Fellow ship service, Thursday, 7:30 p. m. Central Lutheran: Sixth avenue east and Pearl street. Rev. P. J. Luvaas, pastor. Sunday school, 9:45 a. m. Morn ing worship, 11 o'clock, sermon topic. 'The Panoply of God." Jun ior Luther League. o:ju p. m, Choir practice, Wednesday, 7:45 p. m. Confirmation class Satur day, 10 a. m. College Crest Lutheran: Twenty-eighth and Friendly. Martin P. Simon, pastor. Sunday school, 9:45 a. m. Cottage Grove Lutheran: S. D. A. church building, West Main street. W. Sylvester, Rose burg, pastor. Sunday school, 10 a. m. Morning worship, 11 o'clock, sermon topic, "The Christian's Three Striking Bible Names." United Lutheran: Thirteenth avenue and High street. Rev. Frank S. Beistel, pas tor. Sunday school, 9:45 a. m. Morning worship, 11 o'clock. Ser mon topic, "Some Bible Teachings About the End of the World." Lutheran student meeting in Ger linger hall, 7 p. m. - - TXR. W. E. KUEBLER, whe will speak before the Community Liberal church and Westminster House Sunday. street. Rev. E. J. Fulton, pastor. Sunday school, 9:45 a. m. Morning service, 11 o'clock. Sermon topic, "A Pot of Oil." Young Peoples meeting, 6:00 p. m. Evening ser vice, 7:30. Sermon topic, "Un feigned Faith." Broadcast from 11:00 a. m. Sermon topic, "Cour age." Broadcast over KORE, 6:00 p. m. Sermon topic, "The Bible." Young peoples class, 7:00 p. m. Evangelistic service, 8:00 p. m. Sermon topic, "How to Build Up the Church." Cost Of War Has Gone Ud Sinr Great War Of 1918 WTiich Cost An Estimated Hundred Biflj First Congregational: Thirteenth avenue east. Rev. Williston Wirt, pastor. Sunday school 9:45 a. m. Morning services 11 a. m., sermon by Dean Victor P. Morris, Prof. Nelson Bossing presiding. Pilgrim fellowship, high school students, 6 p. m. riymoum club, 7 p. m. Discussion topic. Bible Backgrounds." Women s League, Tuesday, 2:15 p. m. Con gregational dinner weanesaay evening. Religious reading circle at parsonage Thursday 9:30 a. m. Choir rehearsal xnursoay, i.av m. Irving Lutheran: D. W. Hinnchs, pastor. Sunday school nnd Bible class, 9:45 a. m., Mark Baker, superintendent. Morning service, 10:45 a. m., ser mon topic, "The Destruction of Jerusalem, a Picture of the End of the World." Children's con firmation class, Saturday, 9 a. m. at church. Bethany Evangelical: Sixth avenue and Blair streets. Rev. C. S. Bergstresser, pastor. Sunday school, 10 a. m. Morning worship, 11 o'clock. Sermon topic, "An Ex-king Cancels His Trip to America." Young people's meet ing, 6:15 p. m. Evening service, 7:30 o'clock, sermon topic, "What Is Hell?" Bible Fellowship Thurs day evening, 7:30 o'clock. Central Presbyterian: Corner Tenth avenue east and Pearl street. Dr. Norman K. Tully, pastor. Bible school for all ages, 9:45 a. m. Morning worship, 11 o'clock, sermon topic, "God Loves Mohammedans." Christian Endeavor, 6 p. m. Evening serv- Flrst Baptist: Broadway and High streets. Rev. A. J. Harms, pastor. Sunday school, 9:45 a. m. Morning worship, 11 o'clock. Sermon topic, "The Greatest Work In the World." Young people's meeting, 6:30 p. m. Evening service, 7:30 o'clock. Sermon topic, "Conversion of Church Members." Westfir Lutheran: D. W. Hinrichs, pastor. Sunday school and Bible class, 7 p. m. KORE from 8:30 p. m. to 9:00 p. m. Choir and orchestra practice, Monday, 7:30 p. m. moie study on book of Revelations, Tuesday, 7:30 D. m. Prayer- service, Thurs day, 1:00 p. m. Bible school, Fri day, 7:30 p. m. Church of Christ: N. Jefferson between First ave nue, west and Clark street. Sun day morning services, 10:45 o- clock. Lesson, Mathew, chapter 9 Communion. First Christian: Eleventh avenue east, and Oak street. Dr. S. Earl Childers. pas tor. Bible school, 9:45 a. m. Morn ing worship, 11 o'clock. Sermon topic, "Greater thqn Soloman." Service to be broadcast over KORE from 11:30 a. m. to 12 noon. Christian Endeavor, 6:15 p. m. Evening service, 7:30 o'clock. Ser mon topic, "Aware of the Eter nal." Choir rehearsal Thursday, 7:30 p. m. Grace Lutheran: Missouri Synod, Eleventh and Ferry streets, Martin P. Simon, pastor. Sunday school, 9:45 a. m Morning service, 11 a. m. Sermon, Can a Christian Fall from Faith?" Broadcast over KORE, 1 p. m Evening service, 7 p. m. Church of Christ: 126 Blair street T. H. Tarbet, Jr., pastor. Bible school, 10 a. m. Sermon and communion service, Evening service, 7:45 o'clock, ser mon topic, "The Destruction of Jerusalem, a Picture of the End of the World." Lighthouse Temple: Twelfth avenue west and Olive SIDE GLANCES T " "I wiyit yojiJoAloj Pulling lhose dirty, fialUB oilQULUiS By ELMER W. PETERSON WASHINGTON, Nov. 13. The cost of war his gone tip along with a lot of other things since nations made their final ac counting in 1918. Just how much this cost has risen is a matter that causes ex perts to shrug and talk about what they call imponderables. If the World war cost an esti mated $190,000,000,000 and with interruptions to trade, property destruction and the like, this fig ure has been added up to $340, 000,000,000 it's now apparent that any war of today on the same scale could boost these fig ures considerably. New and improved weapons, more expensive construction, and higher cost of materials are chief ly responsible. Soldiers' wages haven't gone up much, but their wages axe only a small factor In the whole new complicated pic ture of modern warfare as it might now be fought. $1,000 Per Ton Basically, there are certain war costs that can be judged fairly accurately in view of World war experience. Ammuniuon, as it is being consumed today in unina and Spain, for example, can be estimated to cost from $800 to $1,000 per ton or roughly 50 cents a pound for all kinds of am munition, from small arms to shrapnel and air bombs. An army or six divisions, or approximately 150,000 men, with 300 field guns, 1,000 tons of small arms ammunitions and 100 tons of air bombs, In the first day of fighting is a major effort. Which boils down to the fact that six divisions, in a day of Pleasant Hill Church of Christ: Melvin Traxler, pastor. Bible school, 10 a. m., Harold Roberts, superintendent Morning service, 11 o clock, homecoming day, ser mon topic, "Come Thou With Us." Basket dinner at noon. Afternoon service, 2:30, sermon topic, "The Inspired Word." Young people's meeting and Junior Christian En deavor, 7 p. m. Evening service, 8 o'clock, topic, "The Day of Pentecost" Topic, "How I Have Been Helped by Good Literature." Creswell Presbyterian: Creswell. Rev. S. B. Cook, pas tor. Sunday school, 10:00 a. m. Morning worship, 11 o'clock. Ser mon topic, "What Is True Re ligion?" Neighborhood group meeting, 7:30 p. m. Wildwood Calvary! Pentecostal Mission. Disston schoolhouse. Rev. Albert L. Adams, pastor. Sunday school, 10 a. m. Morning worship, 11 o'clock. Mis sionary Sunday. Prayer and song service Wednesday, 7:00 p. m. Leaburg Community: Leaburg. Rev. R. E. Clark, pas tor. Sunday school, 10:30 a. m. Christian Endeavor, 7 p. m. Eve ning worship, 7:30 o'clock. Ser mon topic, "God So Loved the World." Springfield Christian: Fourth and A streets. Claude O'Brien, pastor. Bible school, 9:45 a. m. Morning worship, 11 o'clock. Sermon topic, "Creating Christ like Personalities." Christian En deavor, 6:30 p. m. Evening service, 7:30 p. m. Sermon topic, "ChriS' tian Idealism." Church of the Brethren: Mabel. H. H. Ritter, pastor. Morning worship, 11:10 o'clock, Sermon topic, "An Example of the Believers." Young people's service, 7:00 p. m. Topic, "Thankful for What?" really heavy acti( away a cool two Si,;? . worth of ammunition?, round firH .5: I' COStl hilt .li.v., 75 i Shrapnel costsTbo4? An airolan. ,. r..'14,Pe thousand-Doimrt tJl" more than an S tiveDow"UWOr'M Economize on Balled fiMin T. ....... " 1 "stabilized effort" in . , the same amount f might be made to last fa vn me naval side of , there are mrh .- . a. 19 son 7. ". w Ol while a 14-inch sheTnSl about $90 or so. What it costs tn air bombing expedition thJ needs a lot of fancy 1 ascertain. It can be nowever that a bombarfcl . . .lupuuam osyj ( ins u ouu per ton. Hi, without consideration for airplanes shot down. Additional to all that urnitJd Ka ll 11 . . u ur vanM an weapons, transportation , communication, and the liit 3 a tiwi v. iwvaiiKioie iartftn, might increase the costs b poini oi doubling them and Preparation Costly Decidedly expensive al present time is the cost ol paring for war. Modem Is: snips, luiiy equipped, cost 000,000 where they once cost I: U00.U00. The United States new "flying fortress" cost $250,000 each. Britain's armament program of $7,500.' 000 for five years is aboE much as Britain scent four years of the World There are three new wa: of war to consider: the bombing airplane and poison All were used m the world but not as extensively u might be in a major conflict The destructive powers ol three has been greatly ini since the world war. Defensive measures have complicated by anti-aircraft and precautions. There is for thicker armor plate on t: ships. Civilian protection Is I factor, involving supplies masks and extensive and sive air raid precautions. To attempt to gather all tbli eether, however, in even an mate of future war costs, ii experts are agreed, a matte guesswork where even gui futile. Besides, it's pointed war time economics is i unto itself. A ton of small ammunition, say 25,000 might cost $900 to product not having that ton of ami. tion when needed might railel worth its weight in gold. And property destruction modern warfare ti qi which exoerts say has partial answer in Bomtarc-! in Spain and aims, soi its possibilities that major of the world are likely to long and seriously before tl to war. Spencer Creek: Spencer Creek ehureh. Rev. P. J. Luvaas, pastor. Sunday school 2:00 p. m. Preaching service, 2:30 p. m. Coburg Church of Christ: A. Jackson Bailes, pastor. Bible school, 10 a. m. Communion and sermon, 11 a. m. Christian En deavor, 8:30 p. m. Evening ser mon, 7:30 o'clock. Potluck din ner at the church at noon Sunday. Danebo Lutheran: Elmira road. Samuel J. Hansen, pastor. Sunday school and Bibla class, 9:30 a. m. Divine worship. 11 a. m., sermon topic, "Things to Come." Fellowship hour, 8 p. Junior choir practice, Tuesday evening. Builders club meeting Wednesday afternoon. Fairmount Presbyterian: Fifteenth avenue east at Vil- lard street Rev. R. E. Clark, pas tor. Church school, 9:44 a. m. Morning worship, 11 o'clock. Ser mon topic, "Hearing the Unheard." Junior sermon, "Getting Even." Christian Endeaor, 6:30 p. m. Women's Missionary Society meets Sermon topic, "Guidance." Sun- Goshen Lutheran: Martin P. Simon, pastor. day school. 9:45 a. m. Coburg Methodist: Coburg. Dr. J. D. McCormick, pastor. Morning worship, 9:45 o' clock. Church school, 10:45 a. m. Epworth League, 6:30 p. m. Springfield Methodist: Springfield. Dr. J. D. McCor mick, pastor. Church school, 9:4$ a. m. Morning worship, 11 o'clock. Sermon topic, "The Soul Is Fed on Good Reading." Epworth and Wes leyan Leagues. 6.30 p. m. Song scrxige. and symposium, 7.30 p. n. Foursquare Church: Greenwood hall Junction City. Rev. Mae T. Perin. pastor. Sun day school, 9:45 a. m. Morning worship, 11 o'clock. Evening serv ice, 8 p. m. Foursquare district fellowship meeting Wednesday. Services. Jam. and 7 p. m. SUP' per will be served at 5:30 p. m. All denominations invited to take part. Foursquare Church: Bellfountain. Rev. Mae T. Perin, pastor. Sunday school, 2 p. m, Afternoon service, 3 p. m. River Road: River Road school house. E. M. Patterson, pastor. Bible school, 10 a. m. Morning worship, 11 o'clock. Sermon topic, "The Chris tian s Heritage." Open Bible Standard: Lowell. Clarence H. Anderson, pastor. Sunday school, 10 a. m. Morning worship, 11 o'clock. Over comers meeting. 8:45 p. m. Evan gelistic service. 7:45 p. m. Tuesday night prayer meeting at signal. Sorinrfleld Bantlst: Springfield. Rev. H. A. Wanvig, pastor. Bible school, 9:45 a. m. Morning worship. 11 o'clock. Ser mon topic, "The Ancestry of the King of Kings." Senior and Junior voune oeoDle's meetings, 8:30 p. m, Song servivce, colored stereoptican pictures, and message by the Rev. J. J. Ray. of the American Sunday school union, 7:30 p. m. Prayer and Bible study meeting, Wednes day, 7:30 p. m. Choir rehearsal, Thursday, 7:30 p. m. Jasper Community: Jasper. Rev. Robert W. Tindall, pastor. Sunday school, 10 . m. Moming worship, 11 o'clock. Ser mon topic, "Our Intrusted Stew ardship." Christian Endeavor, 6:30 p. m. Evening services, young people in charge, AT DEEKHOES TIFITRHORN. NOV. tt-(Si Harve Potter has returned i Culn Creek, where he hu I employed in a logging amp. Word was received ttu " from Ellen O. Stacy, who hu in the Shriners' Bospnai ' cvral weeks, thai rapidly Improving and wil"! home in a snort nme. MOVES TO N" K?J DEERHORN. Nov. -Ira Parks moved fumiw household effects to tug-; j ni mother. Mi rresent of K the past year. Mrs. "' . cently bought a home I Lane, where she will res- t,i.: rt.ASSES DEERHORN. Nov. lS-JSJ -Mrs. L. D. earnurc . ired classes In pjaao n rhildren of thtMf 1 " ' r r.armire. wM - STt Pleasant Hill, a 1 at the homes. " rv T.I.OBE t fTt AVE. Nov. 13.-il Ther.deschlh new giooe. i helred purcnasc ,rnn!I Of ft States, in in"' ,ai im corn, couuw, bacco and white wbest. potatoes- SPEC1 Kenwood nl.nb.tl . DDI TRAITS Butter- THAT GOOD Baked by BlttA yrilliifll