Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, February 08, 1957, Image 6

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SIX MIDrOHU (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE
Church News
Youths Attend
Evangelism Services Planned
Members of the Walther Lea-
Sue of St. Peter Lutheran church
1020 East Main it., left today
for Portland to attend the Wint
er itate convention of the or
ganization. A number of families
from St. Peter congregation sup
plied the transportation and
acted at counselors for the
young people.
The Walther League, youth
Organization of the Missouri
Synod Lutheran church, is an
international organization com
prised of more than 3.000
groups.
o The convention will provide
training and opportunity in
group activity, worship and
Bible study, reports and discus
sions for future projects
Members of the local group
that attended include Roberta
and Jeanne Gemaehlich, Rob
erta Lee Danielson, Dennis Hen
derson, Barbara Bever, Curtis
Holmes, Bonnie Schrein, Tom
Kersten, Herman Korpi, Adele
Schrein, Bruce Boldenow, Bud
Bever, Judy Jarvis, Bill Rupp,
Roy Knoebel, Dennis Strauss,
and David Havileck.
College President
Friends Speaker
Milo C. Ross, president of
George Fox college, Newberg,
and radio minister of the "Quak
er Hour," will be guest speaker
at the Friends church Sunday
at the three worship services:
9:45 and 11 a m, and 7:30 p.m.
Soloist for the morning serv
ices will be Mrs. P. K. Nelson
and there will be anthems by
the youth and adult choirs. At
O 7:30 p.m. there will be a duet
by Kay Johnson and Gary
Smith and trombone solo by
Jk Hamilton.
The congregation of Talent
Friends church will dismiss
their 7:30 p.m. service and join
with the Medford group to hear
President Ross. James Bishop,
public relations director of
George Fox college, will speak
to the opening assemblies of
Sunday School at 0:45 and
11a.m.
At 3:30 p.m. an informal soc
ial hour will be held at the
parsonage for alumnae and
former students of George Fox
(College living in the southern
Oregon area. Milo Ross and
James Bishop will meet with the
group to give latest news of the
collie and explain plans for a
debt retirement program.
q Other local appearances of
the t-"o respresentatives from
the college will be at a dinner
for Friends high school seniors
Monday evening at the home of
Dr. Wayne Roberts and at
Crater high school Monday
owhere President Ross will ad
dress seniors interested in hear
ing about George Fox college
Oand gill speA to the Bible club.
Laymen Take Active
Jobs Formerly Left to
LOUIS CASSEI.S
United Press Correspondent
Washington, D.C. U.R) The
"Sleeping Giant" of American
church life is beginning to stir.
In thousands of Protestant and
Catholic parishes across the na
tion, laymen are taking on
church jobs that once were left
to clergymen, or left undone.
They are planning budgets,
conducting fund drives, leading
(youth organizations, visiting the
sick, writing and editing church
publications, and providing free
counseling senticef in profes
sional fields from law to psy
chiatry. D
Most significant of all, in
creasing numbers of business
men, doctors, lawyers; school
teachers and housewives are
moving into the field that Prot
estants call evangelism and
Catholics call the apostolic mis
sion. Changing Ideas
"We are rapidly getting away
from the idea that propagating
the faith is solely the work of
the professional ministry," says
Federal Judge Luther W. Young
dahl. (A Lutheran, Youngdahl
was nimed "layman of the year"
by the Washington Federation of
Churches in 1955.
Youngdahl, a former gover
nor of Minnesota, regards the in
creased activity of laymen as
"the most significant spiritual
advance in American churches in
many years."
"A dedicated layman," he said
in an interview, "can serve as a
witness for Christ in places that
a clergyman can't reach, in of
fices and factories, in clubs and
professional societies."
More Help
Martin Work, executive direc
tor of the National Council of
Catholico Men, reported a "re
markable increase" in the num
ber of Catholic laymen who are
"actively helping the church to j
carry out its mission."
This increase is reflected in
the growth of Catholic men's
organizations since World War i
II. In 1956, the council had about i
4,000 affiliated groups with a '
Convention;
The international group aids
in the support of the tuberculosis
sanitorium at Wheatridge, Colo.,
and with the development of
medical research in connection
with mission stations through
out the world. They also send
volunteer lay mission workers
to countries throughout the
world.
A series of evangelism serv
ices called, Preaching, Teaching,
Reaching services, will be held
in many Lutheran churches in
Oregon during the week of Feb.
24.
In preparation for these meet
ings representatives of St. Peter
Evangelical Lutheran church
1024 East Main St., and other
Lutheran churches will meet
Sunday afternoon at St. Paul's
church in Grants Pass.
These services will be held
each evening Mondav through
Thursday at 8 p.m. Each even
ing, before the services, mem
bers of the congregation will
make calls on people who have
no church connections. The
members will be trained for this
calling prior to the services.
Each congregation will have
a guest missioner who will
preach and guide the calling.
Each morning a mission to min
isters is scheduled as a study
and prayer period for the guest
missioners and host pastors.
Merville E. Morse is general
chairman for the services at St.
Peter Evangelical church with
Alan Holmes, publicity chair
man; Edwin C. Guetzlaff, prayer
chairman; and Clifford McGinty,
visitation chairman.
The public is invited to attend
these services and ask questions
about the Lutheran church's
teachings and practices.
Stanley Culy on
Campus Committee
Stanley Culy, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Gale Culy, 21 Washington
St., Medford, a sophomore at
Willamette university, Salem,
has been chosen as one of the
students to serve on the com
mute for Christian Resource
Week.
Culy, a student minister at
First Methodist church, Medford,
last summer, is on the steering
committee for the three-day ex
amination and re-evaluation of
religious beliefs scheduled Feb.
12 through 14 at the campus.
Theme of this year's Christian
Resource Week, "Why Chris
tianity?" will be carried out
through discussion, chapels, a
religious film, fireside seminars,
and individual prayer cells.
Culy, a philosophy major, is
second vice-president of the
campus Wesley fellowship and
a member of UNESCO on the
campus. He also serves as re
lief minister in some of the
neighboring town churches.
total membership of some 3
million. Today it has 9,000 af
filiates with 7 million members.
Protestant laymen's organiza
tions have experienced similar
growth. The National Council of
Presbyterian Men, for example,
was organized by 370 laymen in
Topc and Music
Announced for Sunday
"Albert Schweitzer-A Pulpit
Biography" will be the sermon
Sunday at both services by Dr.
First Methodist church. Dr. Sch
weitzer, a world famous physi
cian, organist, missionary,
writer, and phiolosopher, has
been written up as the "great
est man alive today." The soloist
for the services will be Mrs.
Howard Bush, singing, "God.
Make Me Kind." Anthems will
be "Praise to the Lord, the Al
mighty" and "Let Us With A
Gladsome Heart." Rosebuds on
the altar will honor Teresa Kaye
Williams, Mark Lewis Farmer,
Tarn Timothy Conrad, and Gary
Elvin Cave.
School of Christian
Living Series Ends
The last session of the Winter
series of the School of Christian
Living will be held Sunday from
5:30 through 730 p.m. at the
First Methodist church. Med
ford. Interest Groups will in
clude the following: Missions,
U.S.A.; Religion and the Arts;
and Creative Activities in the
Church School. The Shipmates
class will serve the snack sup
per, at 6:30 and the sound mov
ing picture, "The Challenge,"
will be shown at Inspiration
Time, at 7 p.m. Interest group
classes for all children have
been arranged.
CHURCH for Sale
Large corner lot with park
ing area located in Medford.
Ph. 3-3585 or NO-4-2829
Friday. February I, 1957
Ministers to Meet
Tuesday at First
Presbyterian Church
The Medford Ministerial as
sociation will meet Tuesday,
Feb. 12, at 10 a.m. in the fire
place room of the First Presby
terian church, Medford.
Dr. Hyman J. Appelman,
evangelist, who is conducting a
two-week revival at the First
Baptist church in Medford, will
speak to the group. The Rev.
George A. Trobough, First Meth
odist church, will give the de
votions. The association is open to min
isters of all denominations and
churches in the area.
EVANGELIST The Rev. J. H.
Philpot of Fredonia, Kan., will
be the speaker for a series of
evangelistic services at the
Pilgrim Holiness church, Jack
son at Bessie St., starting Tues
day, Feb. 12, through Feb. 24
each evening at 7:30 p.m. except
Mondays. The public is invited
to attend.
Eastwood Baptists
Select Committee
Dr. L. Paul Walker was
elected chairman of the build
ing committee of the Eastwood
Baptist church, North Keene
Way dr. at Ridgeway, recently,
and Mrs. William Garner was
elected secretary.
The committee is composed of
the combined planning commit
tee and the Board of Trustees
and is entrusted with the respon
sibility of completing the pre
sent church building with the
funds now made available by
the American Baptist Home Mis
sion Boards. Other members of
the committee are: James Ticer,
Herbert Fields, Stanley G. Par
ish, Harold Hewlett, Mrs. G. Q.
D'Albini, Kenneth M c H u g h,
Keith Mobley, Maurice Tuttle,
and William Garner.
Work has already begun to
ward completion of the present
church plant, and will continue
through the spring. Landscap
ing of the grounds will begin as
soon as the soil is workable.
Eastwood Baptist Church is
located north of Hedrick Junior
High school.
Part in
Clergy
1948, and now has 2,700 chap
ters with 400,000 members.
The new importance of the la
ity to some degree is a result of
the postwar religious revival
that has pushed U. S. church
membership to a record high.
Brutal Routine
Charles L. Carr, a utility ex
ecutive who is senior warden of
an Episcopal church in one of
Washington's mushrooming sub
urbs, said:
"Our congregation has grown
from 300 people to about 3,000
since the end of the war. Our
rector and associate rector put
in a brutal work week just keep
ing up with essential parish
calls, conducting services, pre
paring sermons. The very least
that laymen can do is to relieve
them of some- of the time-consuming
administrative work."
While they, welcome lay help
in housekeeping chores, many
clergymen feel laymen have an
even greater service to perform.
"America will' never be won
to Christ by the clergy alone,"
evangelist Billy Graham told a
laymen's meeting recently, "It
will take dedicated laymen wit
nessing in every sphere of life."
SERMON SERIES
A series of four sermons on
"The Holy Spirit and His Mean
ing Today" will be given at
11 a.m. worship hour of the First
Church of God, Haven and Holly
sts., starting Sunday. The Rev.
Darold Jones, pastor, will give
the sermons during February.
Visitors are invited to attend.
e.-.; JV'w
Lid
William C. Piw
Minister
Cap). Ricken
Reports to Corps
Here for Duty
Capt. William E. Ricken and
Mrs. Ricken assumed duties as
commanding officers of the Med
ford Salvation Army corps Feb.
1. They were transferred here
from the divisional staff with
headquarters in Portland.
Capt. Ricken, who has com
pleted nearly 12 years of Salva
tion Army service, entered
Salvation Army Training college
at San Francisco in 1944 from
Tacoma, Wash. After graduation
he was assigned to the Denver,
Colo., Temple corps where he
served for three years. He has
since served in San Francisco,
Idaho Falls, Coos Bay, Portland
Temple, Portland St. John's and
Salem prior to reporting here.
Capt. Ricken has served as
secretary of the American Camp
ing association Oregon section
for the past year, and has been
active in the Oregon Council of
Churches, National Association
of Social Workers, and Oregon
Conference of Social Workers.
He has also been active in
Kiwanis.
Medford is not new to the
Rickens as they have visited the
city while on field trips through
out the state when they were
stationed in Portland on the
dividional staff.
Mrs. Ricken is the former Miss
Violett Hart of Denver. The
couple have four children, three
boys and a girl. .
Boy Scout Sunday
To Be Observed
The observance of Boy Scout
Sunady will be heightened at
St. Mark's Episcopal chuch by
the presentation of the God and
Country Award to three Explor
er Scouts who are active"mem-
bers of the parish.
James Boyd, Dewey Gail, and
Harold Sexton have completed
the necessary studies and activi
ties during the past year, and
the awards will be presented to
them by the Rev. George R. V.
Bolster, at the 11 a.m. service
Sunday.
The rigorous requirements tf
this award include that the boy
have an intelligent awareness of
the basic tenets of the Christian
Faith as taught by his church,
and a knowledge of the church's
missionary work. He must also
have completed at least 140
hours of work at the alter either
as an acolyte or an assistant in
some way with the church serv
ice. Other Scouts and Explorers
participating in the service will
include Leon McDougall, Greg
Milnes and Bill Dames. The reci
pients will be congratulated by
J. A. McDougall, scout commis
sioner. The Rev. John A Bright
will preach.
First Christian Church
Services to Honor
Boy Scout Troop and Post
Scout Sunday will be
observed at the First Christian
church Sunday morning. Troop
9 and Post 9 which are sponsor
ed by the church will attend the
worship service in a body and
will participate in the service
Dr. William Roberts is scout
master of Troop 9 and Price
Shafer is advisor of the Post.
The Rev. William C. Piper
will continue his series on Stew
ardship. The topic of the morn
ing sermon will be "My God
and I." The chancel choir will
present the anthem "Fierce Was
the Wild Billow." At the even
ing service Mr. Piper will con
tinue the series of studies on
"Church History."
A coffee hour will be held
after the morning service.
WORLD FRIENDSHIP GROUP
The World Friendship group
of senior high girls of the First
Methodist church will meet for
Fun, Faith Fellowship and Food,
on Feb. 14, in the Library of the
Church at 5:30 p.m. Miss Sue
Donna and Miss Rosemary Doo
len will be hostesses. Mrs. G. A.
Trobough is the advisor.
Doctors, City Editors
Susceptible To Ulcers
New Orleans (U.R)' Dr.
John M. Waugh, governor of the
American college of surgeons,
told a sectional meeting of the
group Thursday that doctors and
newspaper city editors are the
likeliest professional men to de
velop ulcers.
"It's because they're such per
fectionists," Waugh said. "They
drive themselves too hard."
First Christian Church
"The Friendly Church
Welcomes You
TO ALL SERVICES
Bibla School 9:45 a.m.
Morning Service 10:50 a.m.
Youth Meeting 6:30 p.m.
Evening Service 7:30 p.m.
9th and Oakdale Medford, Or.
Capt. and Mrs.
ildinq Committee
To Tour Churches
Several members of the Med
ford Seventh- day Adventist
church building committee will
leave Saturday night for a tour
of church buildings in Oregon
and Washington. Committee
members include the pastor.
Elder John Trude, Dr. A. E.
Merkel, Dr. Bernard Thompson,
R. G. Gregg, G. J Lange. E. F.
Burrill, Oral Tucker, F. W. Big
ger, and Edwin Fjarli.
The group will bring a re
port to the church concerning
plans observed in the churches
visited which could be incorpor
ated into the church building
program here. Medford Seventh
day Adventists have puchased a
plot of ground on Crestbrook,
just off Barnett road, and plans
are being formulated for the
construction of a new church
building on that site.
Elder Trude, pastor of the
Medford and Eagle Point
churches, attended a two-day
Worker's Retreat in Portland
this week. The meeting was
scheduled to discuss plans by
which departmental heads of
the general and local conference
of Seventh-day Adventists might
work more closely with church
pastors.
ST. MARTIN'S MISSION
Shady Cove-Trail St. Mar
tin's Episcopal mission services
will be held Sunday, Feb. 10,
at 7:30 p.m. in the music room
of Shady Cove school. Hal Todd
will be lay reader. A coffee hour
will follow the service.
MEETING TONIGHT
Dr. Richard Lewis of the Pac
ific Press publishing association
will speak Friday, Feb. 8, at
7:30 p.m. at a meeting at the
Valley View Seventh-Day Ad
ventist church, South Stage rd.
Friends Service Committee
Tells of Work During 1956
While the Hungarian refugee
crisis has demanded an expan
sion of its relief program, the
American Friends Service com
mittee has announced its de
termination to strengthen work
"for the prevention of discord
and suffering." The statement
was made by Chairman Henry
J. Cadbury in the AFSC's 39th
annual report, just released.
The AFSC has collected over
a quarter of a million dollars
for Hungarian relief and shipped
over a half million pounds of
supplies to the refugees in
Austria.
"We seek to inspire under
standing between diverse and
suspicious peoples," said Dr.
Cadbury, citing conferences
which brought together 93
young diplomats from 35 coun
tries for off-the-record discus
sions, seminars for United Na
tions delegates in New York
and for U.S. government offi
cials and Congressmen in Wash
ington, cultural exchanges be
tween students of Asia, Europe
and America.
Quaker Principles
Although guided by Quaker
principles, said Dr. Cadbury, the
AFSC includes supporters and
participants of many faiths. In
addition to contributions for
Hungarian relief, the Commit
tee received voluntary contribu
tions of cash and material aids
totaling over 6.7 million dollars
last year.
During the past year the
AFSC worked with committees
of citizens to enlarge oppor
tunities for minority groups in
Baton Rouge, Chicago, Dallas,
Indianapolis, Oakland, Phila
delphia and other cities.
More than 1,000 high school'
and college age volunteers work
ed with underprivileged peoples
in AFSC service units last sum
mer. They helped mentally ill
patients, juvenile delinquents,
flood victims, migrant laborers,
villagers and city slum-dwellers
You and Your Family Are Invited to Sunday School
and Church at the . . .
CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH
Thomas McCamant, Minister
Groveland Ave. and Oakwood Drive
Church 'Worship at 9:45 and 1 1 A.M.
Church School at 9:45
William E. Ricken
Pilgrim Fellowship
Members Attend
Portland Meet
Six young people from the
Pilgrim Fellowship of the Med
ford Congregational church and
nine from the similar group in
its Ashland Congregational
church left for Portland today
for the annual conference of the
state Pilgrim Fellowship, being
held at the First Congregational
church of Portland.
The Rev. Thomas McCamant,
pastor of the Medford church,
the Rev. Fred G. Plocher, Ash
land, and Gil Workman, advisor
to the Ashland group, are ac
companying the young people.
Mr. Plocher is on the program
of the conference. Mr. McCam
ant will attend an advisors'
meeting on Saturday morning
and return to Medford to be in
the pulpit on Sunday. The con
ference will conclude early on
Sunday afternoon.
A new Membership Prepara
tion Class will hold its first ses
sion at the parsonage of the Con
gregational church Tuesday,
Feb. 12, at 8 p.m. It is the prac
tice of this church to have all
prospective members enroll in
these classes as a kind of re
fresher course in the Christian
faith.
The discussion method is fol
lowed in the classes. Six ses
sions are held, dealing with
What is a Christian?, Prayer,
What Christians Will and Will
Not Do, The Church and Con
gregational Churches, Baptism
and the Lord's Supper, and Re
sponsibilities of Church Mem
bership. Anyone is welcome to
enroll in the new class.
in nine countries. The ASFC's
first work camp in Africa help
ed build a TB hospial in Kenya.
Self-Help Programs
Self-help programs were an
other means mentioned by Dr.
Cadbury to prevent tension and
suffering. Villagers in India,
Italy, Jordan, Mexico and El
Salvador were guided to im
prove their level of health, up
grade their crops and livestock
and strengthen local industries.
The AFSC also worked with
American Indians and published
the pamphlet, "The Spirit They
Live In," listing ways to achieve
a more equitable Indian policy.
"Varied as our activities are,"
said Dr. Cadbury, "they spring
from ideals tha't have been prac
ticed for 300 years by the Re
ligious Society of Friends. Care
for the growth of the spirit led
the early Quakers to face im
prisonment for their beliefs; to
day we strive for fre expression
of the individual conscience.
"Respect for personal dignity
motivates our helping minority
Americans to find suitable
homes and jobs, just as It
prompts our guiding Asian Vil
lagers toward a more whole
some existence. Our prayer for
peace has led us to help both
children and diplomats to grow
in friendly ways."
Dr. Cadbury is Hollis Pro
fessor of Divinity, Emeritus, at
Harvard university, a member
of the Philadelphia Yearly Meet
ing of Friends. He was re-elected
chairman of the AFSC corpora
tion last month.
Regional Offices
The AFSC maintains 12 re
gional offices, including Seattle.
Portland, San Francisco and
Pasadena. These local branches
of the Committee share in the
programs of international relief
and good will and, in addition,
conduct related program in the
home areas.
During 1956, the Portland re
gion extended its youth service
Evangelist to Speak
At First Baptist
Dr. Hyman Appelman, na
tionally known evangelist, will
conduct a "Twentieth Century
Crusade for Christ" at the First
Baptist church from Monday,
Feb. 11 through Feb. 24. .
Dr. Appelman was born and
raised in Russia and came to the
United States in his late teens.
He received a law degree from
De Paul university where he
later taught and then was ad
mitted to the bar in Illinois.
During his successful law prac
tice, Mr. Appelman, an orthodox
Jew, renounced his heritage for
the Christian faith. Feeling that
he should enter the ministry he
left his law practice and took a
theological training in the
Southwestern Theological semin
ary in Ft. Worth, Texas.
He has been invited to con
duct a series of evangelistic
crusades behind the iron curtain
in Russia. He is the first Amer
ican minister to be granted a
visa to preach in Russian church
es. Music for the crusade at the
First Baptist church will be dir
ected by John Bisagno. He was
a member of the famed Bison
Glee Club and he was trumpet
soloist for the Oklahoma univer
sity band.
Services will be held each
evening at 7:30 p.m. at the First
Baptist church.
Goal of 1 ,000 Set
By Church School
Having set a goal of 1,000 in
Sunday School attendance for
Rally Day March 24, members
of the Nazarene Sunday school
will choose up sides this Sun
day for the Sunday school con
test which gets under way Feb.
17.
All Sunday school members
are urged to attend Sunday
school this week for the kick
off of the contest. Last week
classes chose captains who will
lead the attendance drive in the
various class units.
Parents and church school
workers will attend the third
session of a training class,
"Guiding Children in the Nur
sery Class" Sunday at 6 p.m. at
the First Church of the Naz
arene, 520 north Holly st. The
class, taught by Mrs. Dora Mae
Shepard is open to the public.
BIBLE SERVICES
Central Point A series of
Bible services will be held at
the American Legion hall. Cen
tral Point, starting Sunday, Feb.
10, at 3 p.m. The services, non
denominational, will also be
held on Monday, Feb. 11, and
Friday, Feb. 15, at 7:45 p.m.
Donald Brist and Everett Blair
will be the speakers.
projects to include summer units
at the State Mental hospital in
Salem, and the MacLaren School
for Boys. Thousands of pounds
of overseas relief goods were
provided by many children's or
ganizations through special proj
ects designed to promote friend
ship through sharing. Active
volunteer leaders have main
tained these programs, and the
School "Affiliation program, at
an active level.
PRESENTING:
HYMAN.
APPELMAN
Russian Born t Jewish Christian
Powerful - Inspirational - Practical
7:30 Hightly - Feb. 11 -24th
First Baptist Church
North Central at Fifth
Investment Plan
To Be Started at
Saturday Service
A service to be held In the
Medford Seventh-day Adventist
church Saturday, Feb. 9, will
mark the beginning of the year'a
Investment program. The Invest
ment plan, begun approximately
75 years ago by one church
member in an effort to secure
additional funds for foreign mis
sion work, has grown to interna
tional scope with Adventists
throughout the world participat
ing. The plan, entitled "Investing
for God," consists of each in
dividual church member setting
aside some special and unusual
method of earning or saving
money throughout the year. Re
sults will be totalled in Decemb
er and the funds added to reg
ular church mission offerings.
All departments of the church
cooperate in the program from
the cradle roll to the adult class
es and special programs are held
through the year to encourage
its progress.
Many church members set
aside a certain number of fruit
trees, rows of garden produce,
or percentages of eggs, while
others sew, bake, or make spec
ial articles to sell.
Mrs. Don Amundson, invest
ment leader for 1957, will pre
sent children from the kinder
garten, primary, and junior divi
sions at the meeting who will
display goal divices and tell
their plans for the year. Two
adult members will oexplain
their projects and a plan for the
entire chuch to cooperate in
enlarging the fund will be the
adoption of Gina Rae Burrill,
weekold daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Eugene Burill as invest
ment baby for the year. Each
church member will be invited
to add ten cents to the fund for
each pound the baby gains in the
next ten months.
Adult Advisors Chosen
By First Methodists
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Igo have
been approved as Senior High
M.Y.F. counselors by the com
mission of education of the First
Methodist church at their meet
ing Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Igo
replace H. Leon Myers who re
signed to be the Faith Pro
gram Area advisor. Richard
Fanger was approved as Christ
ian Fellowship Program Area
advisor, which completes the
adult advisors for the Senior
High M.Y.F., together with John
Kent, Christian witness, Miss
Mary Vandenberg, Christian
citizenship, and Mrs. Ben Greas
er, Christian outreach. .Vein
Wolthoff is chairman of the com
mission on education.
UNITY
TRUTH CENTER
Sunday Devotional Service- and
Sunday School for Children a.m.
Regular Center Activities
Thursday Midweek Service 7:30
p.m., Friday morning Study Clats
11 a.m.
All Classes, Activities nd Sunday
Services now held at the
HOLLY BUILDING
Catherine Bosworth, Leader
c