ce Muperi Vuly sews irday, October 18, 1052 ————— ignt that of these “ook not On ail the rale ibove me expe hi ore (oO ot on e King ence es IRE TORY it “y Soheol am at THEDRAT at ” a.m Tht \KMY ! HIT RAN ry Presbyterian Church ETH NOT AS e impulse of Ged seeking a e's home Samuel found seven sons. He nd was moved by their appearance picked the eldest as the Lord’s an- qn cai A Mind and hfe how him Pavid Would wield a any |@eater than his own ; ol} inWitation i Saturday Sermon ay REV. L. G, STEBER, First United Charch MAN SEETH I Sam. 16:7 propnet had gone down to Bethlehem f Jesse. a sheepman, He had gon and he lost the power to ald to rule Well, Samuel asked Jesse if he erve the bad any other sons besides these because | seven, He said thre younves w the Lord|O@t tending sheep Devid was for b¥ought to Samuel, and Samue| was eet tward ap- knew this was the bord’s an looketh nointed, There came the cere "ony Of ermomting and David unce were | ¥8s set apart for the public ser ired, who | “tee of God. Par more important king than “an anything seen that day was he throne? “Me spirtt within the lad himself Une shape and color of From tha a day power Bach amd every ust that. Re of power greater than is true not alone i; leader she wield his owr the state but the school, the Church the shop and office, the factory and farm, and in the heme Dae Vid Was hamdsome. Bis physica! prowess equalled that of hi brothers: afd on the Bile he learned to do the Wil of God a with Joseph and Moses befor: him, David bad learmed to bx loyal to God. Bo lomm as David walked and thought & thet he was rightly brown « Shepherd King The Of God was in | ie \O serve. Bo it ix wit doe This also in way > f power nm each i every one of ASIAN Sugar cane is Pe China a SUGAR the chief product cadore Islands bet nd Pormosa {) Seeneeenteteneneees PENTECOSTAL TABERNACLE {02 Sixth Avenue West f th I i Wie ween SUNDAY SERVICES 40) Su nday School an Bible Clase Morning Wor Evangelistic Ability of wip Service Oo WEEK NIGHTS ~#:00—Prayer and Study Christ An ; Missionary D ay YOU ARE INVITED WORSHIP WITH Green 331 Rev. C, Faweett TO TATE ST. PAUL'S Wed Bit tri Wt —8 00 mie? ibassador TO { LUTHERAN CHURCH Sth Ave. at McBride St. REV. H. 0. OLSON You are invited to come and Wership at St. Paul's Lutheran Oburch The Just Shall Live By Fait! OCTOBER 19, 1952 11:00 a.m Woman Wit Morning Service Sermot "he the Infirmity Songs by the Girls’ Chorus a: » A weigg, Choir with us Bveriing Service 7:30 p.m East Sermon bitte Sins Wright, D.D.| — Chorus singing }. Smith Sunday School 12:16 p.m te First United Church irst Uni urc ; Sixth Ave, W. and Musgrave ‘ | 4th Day (11 a.m.—Morning Worship Sermon Toward Spiritual re Success ri Children’s Story A Boy AN Learns GELICAL Anthem: “Hosanna, Loud Hosanna E CHURCH '7:30 pam.—Evening Worship Sermon: “An Unfailing Light Sat LOO’ Hall, Anthem: “Céme Thou Fount Fourth Awe 5 of Every Blessing.”—Ande: son School COME AND WORSHIP & good ft) SUNDAY SCHOOLS at First United Church: Beginwers and or stile Primary 11 am; Older pupils oom ae 12:16; at Conrad United Hall ne nh nn all at 11 am Young People (High Sehoo]) Meet ind find for supper at 5:30 in Church earch for Hall, ae d Young Ad@wit Club mreets after Stor: ( Jer, 20:18, the Evening Service mm the W. Strelatr Church Hail, ee ernest iepenenneaae —_—— ST SrViCG: 9 4) tm ACHER THE ‘NDREW’S CATHEDRAL CAURCH m"slican Youth Sunday, Oct. 19 11:00 and 7:30, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 22 Service of Prayer and Witness ARCHBISHOP OF BRITISH COLUMBIA Sanday School 2 p.m. king for Bump’ : > e * “toad Works” "Ohildren Enfants’ “Pedestrian Crossing” "Passage pour piftons” ime > “Narrow Bridge” A * Travaux" i , Road narrows” “Stop Sign atiead”’ “Chauseée rétrécie” 2 ‘Pont étroit Matt lle tt, “Dangerous Hill” “Descente” ou “Montée dangereuse” ng “Narrow Clearance” “Attention: signal stop” Largeur limitée tin "Uneven Road Rough Road : “Lona toesetag Guarda PARIS (AP) —Did vou know Dos dane” “Route A surface Route détonc iw by Gates” ; that Mona Lisa gets fan mail? inégaie “Passage 4 niveau muni | Leonardo da Vinci's 4$6-year- al Ge barritres” ' old _bainting of ‘Mona Mrs.) Liga —Foot Lights— By LILIAN MILLER Here is what SOE a visitor might on 4a Tuesday or Friday night when the Little Theatre group holds rehearsals in the Civie Centre auditorium The group on the stage is re- hearsing lines, while that feliow pacing back and forth is the 12't 61N Ma, “Low Clearance” erities > 1a: i “Sewtour thenttler riticism whenever it is needed U.N, HIGHWAY SIGNS—The highway signs shown above group of U.N. experts for adoption throughout the rune *werywhere to understand road signs. Lack of under obheprinas vMmpenenson of ine en init eprocuced si¢g t On the part of six ex appointed by the U.N. Se Che “ions NOW go to the U.N, Transport and Comm inications ( Secial Couneil for further action = Historian Disputes Joan of Arc Burned ' By RUSSEL HOWE of Ar Bur a t ed PARIS (Reuter atrigence that learned th te y gait ot of Are ne _ Sd came saat flake t e a burne mask HEARD VOICES piace Most historia ive the i yan il ; : aS married of Joan's birth a Jar 1 1412 five years af the place as D ham Historian Je let on the bord: r it His the ind Lorraine a furore They agree that in 1 Jo world, a saying she yrompte ) Was ’ € eT SUA Ge ne On Shrine of Doremy, and that she | mander to let her he Dau Vane t Ay pi c% rie Ii a (‘ty Sh G nd, | Tow e. At that time, the B tte ig hit Of the i he Bu i Drakes brotnhe of were i posses all t King a France and norther: r F ice Isabej of Bay la except Britt d ere be Saint Joan—she was canon- leging Orleans ized in 1926-—is one of the most She demanded a trocp sf so revered of French saints. diers to relieve the bel Auger Ee Wreaths are heaped around city and fieh g ¥ then her statue in Paris on her fes- ’ he British awa 1429 tival day, May 36 she ied the Dauphin to be Pather D veur, Jesuit exper rowned at Rheir Ay at On Si. J0an, speaking to report Joan wa tries I ‘ Grime hesi et € here r ral i Piccadilly Trouper Inherits Famed Broadway Stage Part By MARK BARRON NEW YORK (AP)—Blonde Constance ¢ ter, a Piccadilly trouper of considerable persisten ] - ‘ + ory ! has inherited the Broadway mantle of Gertrud Lawrence in ‘J King and I. sigrie few 4 ar $1 OOF eek he tr s Carpe ‘ e ? f conguition ‘tor yours of tani eat ie GMNeS Mw ¥ al ; “a the anh te we Gue 1oO tn arose oth nat arse Art Classes ! . wrens ath i " nr roe ot the ENthusiasti ocal and poignant role of the EMMNUSIASTIC Rode Ha erst musical : The Civie t The 1s > ects ow H i , naccustomed th rok An iQ . rentble Cultered Anns Leon. | thusiastic as members re owens, the Englishwoman whe) denefit of expert 8 became governess the numer- }PAinting and ous children @f the King of Siam At each lass titere art rally Y Ue, eatip 1860's >. ia fe w visitors wad are iway As a statd-in f Miss Taw" wélcome ‘and Who find it vey rence I have played the rele for! teresting to Mi A more than 100 times,” Miss Car- | work. There pent sometimes When she | ginners to join a M ation ometimes | course still rem when she was il Kime the way to sta! “| was once also a standby 15 repeated for ‘ for a standby, That was when From each rat Mi I played the rote for Celeste Amadi Holm one night when she was new px seheduled to substitute for Miss At « e it may be Lawrence.” portance of lights and sha It happened this way Miss | and how to get volume. Fro Holm had come on from her! other pictur Hollywood film = wes to replace | how t Miss Lawrence while the latter how to obtair rd pic was ta ga veuamiee But the | ture. night that Miss Holm was to! ‘Te way to mix colors is al- take r, Richard Rodgers, the | ways interesting Mr in composer-producer of “The King | oi) painting, mixes his deep tones and I,” was conducting a SyYM~ first on the pallet then ipplies phonic concert on Long Island. yt to the picture, often with . Rodgers wanted to conduct forfone deft stroke. Next a lighter Miss Holm's first appearance tone is mixed and applied, the REAL PINCH-HITTER Mlightest parts being left until the as So Miss Carpenter was called last te in to give a single perfomance) Many who began with w for Miss Holm. In baseball lang- colors have switched to oils, f ing them easier to handle, those who began with a compli- cated scene now have found the value of doing simple stil) lif Mr. Amadio says that the eciples learned first in a life or a portrait can later uage, it Was the same as a pinch- hitter pinch-hitting for a pinch- hitter who Was Supposed to be pinch-hitting for the star of the show Although in born England, Miss Carpenter is well known to ianbess audiences. Miss Car-} ®Pplied to a landscape penter played in two or three! “Prizes” are being brou shows here before she struck a| home trom each class—the gold mine in a show where she) tures worked on by Mr Ams lio first had composer Rodgers pro- sce demonstration Carol Elkins duce songs for her brisk and reveived a watercolor of the poetic talents SkKeena valley; Mrs, Telford, a ‘Rodgers was then composing | ©™&8ll harbour sunset in oils. Mr. that was in 1928—a musical) Amadio Worked over aq portrait based upon the Mark Twain/of Eleanor Greene begun by Mrs, story.” Miss Carpenter said. “The Hill, and a still life of a jug and fruit, when repainted, attractive it was left common lounge mantel play, musical Was ‘A Connecticut Yar kee’ and in it I sang two of Mr Rodgers’ best known songs, ‘My Heart Stood Still’ and ‘Thou Sweil’.” was SO on the for dis- “arpen- The few people out front mm ations of a watching are waiting for cues, ghway- users and discussing various aspects of the play. i ge would not ‘. . a , y . imi the Whey UUW linviaile, » Tr : the first two men are busy ex- E perimenting with lighting ef- ( ‘ . fects on the mock stage they have just built That group at the workbench painting attractive dvertise the The posters to coming event . studious-looking girl is working on costume sketches Eccle sti and working out a color scheme f ed sion for each character. Working in a the co-operation with her are the Er I two girls checking make-up, de- R cidi on correct colors to pro- nen she Was 19 years old.’ duce a realistic effect. They will Grimod pomits to the con- next discuss hair stylings tant questions of the court There is no end to behind- concerning Joan's origins and the-scenes jobs if a production sets out lo prove that the EOE- (& to be successful, but we've lish knew of them. Therefore, 1.4 4 glimpse of the chief ac- fo avoid burning someone OT | tivities This is. Little Theatre royal birth, they burned a at work masked “witch” in her place, * he says catcvtion which ae On the cit Ser he BOOK SHELF The historiarz say Joan's coat 1 nat the French al family, but bearing the F of bastardy jas married WITNESS Whittaker Chambers (Available at the Public Library) By Joan w Luxembourg in 1436 five ter he execution.” and Rarely is the central conflict ave spent the intervening Of an age dramatized in a his- 1 exile in Bi glan a toric experience which touches He her marriage certifi- al! men so closely that none can i by the ae 1 of Me disregard it; all men must react ‘ Ce a adds that to it one way or another. The ex of a t by Joan Hiss-Chambers Case was such oO 7 2 1en she was &@N experience 1 pounds by t When one of the chief figures r ip to in such an experience also hap- i ; If ge by pens to be a man who feels deep- lis ly and can give voice to what he ' jeclares, is feels, the result is likely to be a : i the city of Memorable book. “WITNESS” is Tours : such a book y existe the thesis The great theme of “WIT- YP able up to, NESS’ is the ordeal of the human 12 : ifter her “execu- | 80ul caught in the 20th century's conflict of faiths--religion against materialism freedom | against Communism. In the 20th . century it is every man’s ordeal. Mrs. Priest For every man has suffered—or within the next two decades will suffer—that ordeal and its con- sequences. Nevertheless, millions of men do not understand what New President Of Art Club that war of faiths is about or the nature of that ordeal. “WIT- M as Pr the NESS” is Whittaker Chambers’ Art Cl the erpretation of both. coming season following elec- t interprets them in the sim- h sek. Other plest, most gripping terms, in| are Miss Jeanne Faure, honorary is autobiography of a man ient; Mis. J. Rogerson, vice- whe, after thirteen years as a Mrs. J. T. Harvey, sec- Communist, repudiated Com-| I nd Mrs. Kathleen “Hill,; munism and fought it. It inter-| easuret prets them in a book of confes-| The rt Club pians, after the! sions, which may, in time, be | present exhibition and course, to likened to other great confes- | bring’ a serfes fart: exhibits to | sions in world literature i Prin¢e Rupert which) Wi) be.dis- It- is: ‘above sll_ an: Aexvithie | ay the Civic Céntré lobby. | pook Few who take it up will | be able to | ry it aside BONUS, WHEAT “ RAVELBOURG, Sask. (CP) [ headed wheat, with two i wheat on the stem, rne ip on the district farn: REMEMBER ! i R Bekker, He says that : While the whole crop was not One FREE Day at | variety, there we double - headed BULGER’S t crease the yield app- during October. E ASH vo RECOGNIZED The mallard duck, one of game birds, charac- the male bird's bright i “ELECTRICAL SUGGESTIONS" $14.50 . $24.95 .$ 5.95 $14.25 from $ 9.15 $32.95 Northern B.C. Power Co. Ltd. Besner Block — Phone 210 Prince Rupert, B.C. the Vorite is | Save all Sales Slips | till Nov. Ist ) General Electric Kettle General Electric Steam Iron Hanscraft Eqg Cookers Waffle Irons Toasters “Toastmaster” Toaster—Automatic Stewart, B.C director, ready to give advice or I de la Giacondo, wife of the Flo- rentine gentleman Francesco de ia Giaeondo, has inspired a trickle correspondence since 1880 A from of ecard simply New Year's greeting Germany, addressed Mona Lisa, Louvre, Paris,” was the most recent missi¥e. No file of the letters has been kept, but museu m staff members said the has been of a serious tone. The worlds most famous portrait of a woman hangs in the 50@-yard jong Grande Gal- lerie of the richly-ornamented Louvre Palace, once the home of France’s kings. mail Many years before the palace became a museum in 1792, Kinz uis XE once gallope p and down camel The the Grande Gallerie he had received ; Louvre is quieter nx on 2a probably just as crowded Mona Lisa's m ysterious smil WOR BEC) a poriral tar talizing trge s sombre can th length. But even this barri not enough. Reluctantly musewm's were. glass in the fr. portrait. Even ent Lisa, t rowds ame hol ling aside from the ever pres- Mon of nce throne around the been a the Louvre higae gt. vear Attenda been the j During net m a record dav iy re than 9.000 vis le 8 str d through the miles of galler some of the 146.750 statues and objects o: to see oaint- art Among visitors of all coun- tries at this great tourist mecea, the order of interest appeared to be: No. 1—The statue of Venus de Milo, No, 2— The Mona Lisa, and No. 3— Regent Dia q} ¥/) vj placed a SUPPORT THE CHILDREN’S Fashion Footwear | 450-Year-Old Painting Gets Fan Ma! The big winged statue of Vie tory of Samothrace. A hot competitor of the “Biz Three” for the interest of visit- tors is the magnificent 136-carat mond cut stone about the size of walnut burns with a low biue / flame in Guilded Gallerie oy ‘ D'Napoleon on¢e in thé ag. ¢ 7 crowns of kings, then the hilt of i B'S sword San ‘Minister Winston Chur- chill used to one of the Louvre’s frequent visitor visitor to touth Canvases, 4 * JUNE 2, 1953 -% Moke your , reservations now to aveid disappoint- ment. Let an experienced C.NLR. agent arrange your, trip, including pessporis, rail and Atientic patsage end ail other travei details. — For information call or write K. L. ROBERTSON, 528 3rd Ave., West Prinee Rupert, B.C. Phone 260 CANADIAN NATIONAL FROM THE GYRO CLUB PLAYGROUND This delicately ** He is the only the GAPD. APPLES a bie a with this brand-new, cabinet machine. 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