November, 1934
T H E K I N G ' S B U S I N E S S
392
The Tibie Institute FAMILY CIRCLE
Korb, Takeshi Nishikawa, Stanley Par rish, Paul Raynor, Orrin Rutschman, Les ter Wendt and Lyman Wendt. Other graduates who are enrolled for the present semester are: class o f ’33— William Jones, Otho Logan, Hamilton Morrow, Jacob Neufeld, Beverly Pegg, and Neale Thomas; class of ’32—Henry Hedrick; and class o f ’31—William Crouch. Zoa Shaub, ’28, sailed from Wilmington, Calif., for Honduras, where she will be serving, under the California Friends’ Churches. Her address is Capilla Evan- gelica, Calle 10 A , Tegucigalpa, Honduras, Central America. Nora M. Steiner, ’28, A frica Inland Mission, Lasit, P. O. Simba, British E. Africa, is busy with both nursing and teaching at her station. In the forenoons she has been assisting in the hospital, and in the afternoons she has been teaching arithmetic, reading, and writing. Her pupils have included several children, the native cook, and two young warriors who have been working at the station. Former Institute students who are con tinuing their training in other institutions are enrolled in the following schools: As- bury College, Wilmore, Ky.—Elwood Gray, ’32; Chaffee Junior College, Ontario, Calif. —Kenneth Chrisman; Fresno State Teach ers’ College, Fresno, Calif.—Agavnie Bo- yajian, ’30; Glendale Junior College, Glen dale, Calif.—Lorraine Coffman, ’34; Gor don College, Boston, Mass.—George Smart, ’33; Los Angeles Pacific College, Los An geles, Calif.—William Retts, ’34; North western University, Chicago, 111.—Law rence Keyes; University o f California at Los Angeles—Barbara Blackstone, Beth Coffman, ’33, Anna Entz, ’32, Sam Han kins, ’33, Lottie Jordan, ’33, Jitsuo Mori- kawa, ’33, Maxine McNabb, ’33, Gertrude Reese, ’30; University of Washington, Se attle, Wash.— Sterling Keyes, ’33; Whea ton Academy, Wheaton, 111.-—King Hand- ley; Wheaton College—Helen Catherwood, ’34, Neil Chrisman, ’32, Glen Cox, ’34, Don Hillis, ’32, Jack Hillis, ’33, Frank Lee, ’33, Jack Murray, ’33, Harry P lu m m e r , Lawrence Simpson, ’32, Robert Shields, ’34, Everett Bellwood, Byron Chase, ’33, and Willard Claassen, ’32; University of Kansas—Elizabeth Caswell. Married George Pearson, ’34, and Irma Helen Hughes, August 23, Santa Cruz, Calif. Gifford Wilde and Doyle Cole, ’28, Sep tember 20, Los Angeles, Calif. Born To Roy H. and Mrs. Fuller (Rebecca Harrison, ’27), a son, Gordon Stewart, September 4, Los Angeles, Calif. To Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Rose (Dorothy Gates, ’26), a daughter, Zelma Jean, Aug ust 20, Comstock, Mich. With the Lord Emma D. Wight, whom many members o f the Biola family remember with thank fulness for her ministry several years ago, when she was secretary in the office of John H. Hunter of the Institute faculty, went to be with the Lord on September 2. Miss Wight was living in Riverside, Calif., at the time of her last illness.
Christ. You know without my telling you how full of praise to God my heart is for the way God is working in their hearts and causing them to respond.” Mrs. King has with her on the mission field her little daughter, Virginia May, who is three years old. Ethel L. Brookes, ’28, E. S., with the North Africa Mission, Tunis, Tunisia, N. Africa, where Mabel Jones, ’28, E. S., is also stationed, tells o f the blessing of Dr. Harvey Farmer’s visit to Tunis, and de scribes her work, which includes home visitation as well as classes for Arab boys, for girls, and for women. She writes: “ I wish we could give you some really en couraging news from our field here in Tunis; what God has done in the hearts of those to whom the message has been given has not been revealed to us yet. W e have need of patience, much patience, but God is faithful—of that we are certain. W e heard of a man the other day, who after forty years learned that an Arab, or rather the son of one to whom he had given a Bible, had been saved by reading it. After forty years, just think of that! The Bible had been left with the father, who had written on the flyleaf: ‘Do not read this book; it is not a holy book.’ When the son got hold of it and read this, it spurred him on to read it, and he was saved.” Leon E. Keys, ’28, Elsmere, Nebr., has been working on a large ranch and has been having regular charge of three local community gatherings for preaching and Sunday-school. William ( ’24) and Mrs. Domin (Ger trude I. Seamans, ’24), Sacramento, Calif., are praising the Lord for the restoration of Mrs. Domin’s health. George C. ( ’20,. E. S.) and Mrs. Van Dusen, on their way back to A frica under the Africa Inland Mission, reached Cher bourg, France, in August. In order to de vote their time to the study o f French, they gave up their plans to go to England. Mr. and Mrs. Van Dusen wrote that they were booked to sail from Antwerp for Kribi, W . Africa, on November 2. They planned to take their Chevrolet car with them to the field, driving hundreds o f miles from the coast to their station. Harry and Mrs. Hurlburt (Alice Phair), who are also members o f the Africa ^Inland Mission, sailed from New York with Mr. and Mrs. Van Dusen, and expected to ac company them to the field after the period spent in Europe. William E. ( ’22) and Mrs. Kliewer (Alma A. Schindler, ’23) are in charge o f the Institute dining room. The west end, the portion open to the public, has been redecorated in attractive Spanish style, and the students’ section is used reg ularly by an unusually large number of students. Members o f the class of ’34 who have returned to the Institute for further work this fall include: Avalon Bergstrom, Hazel Bobier, Dorothy Bryan, Ella Claassen, Elizabeth Elliott, Alice Goss, Florence Hamilton, Audrey Matthewson, Emily Moses, Arrie Rouintree, Gertrude Schroe- der, Ruth Takamune, Fay Wallingford, Edward Bowman, Ray de la Haye, Harold Dutton, Frank Edmonson, Edwards Elliott, Harold Johanson, Earl Kalland, Norman
A lumni News M rs . H arvey J. K in g (Beatrice F. Tannehill, ’25) has been engaged in missionary work for seven years. Working under the Africa Inland Mission, she is stationed at Kacengu, Kasenyi, Congo Beige, via Mombasa, E. Africa. Mrs. King writes: “ One dear woman, Ujuko, I found enduring terrible persecu tion from her husband’s parents. They would grab her and cut her arm to put heathen medicine in her body, and she would jerk away from them and run to the grass and hide. She will not let them sacrifice for her when she is not well. She came to me, pleading with me to never for get to pray for her. When I prayed with her, she prayed and said, ‘Lord, don’t ever let Ng’itho forget to pray for me when she prays before she eats and when she prays before she sleeps.’ It touched me so, and I trust you will help me pray for strength for her to stand. Others also plead with me to help them by prayer. Do help me.” Mrs. King has at Kacengu a class of women called “Women Messen gers o f Jesus Christ.” The women of this class do village visitation work and use the funds of the class for helping the sick and the needy. O f this work Mrs. King writes: “ During this trip, over thirty more Christian women have expressed their de sire to join us as Messengers of Jesus • Play a Game In Bible School A new Bible centered series. Simple, effective, interesting— even exciting at times. Scholars will acquire the most valued thing in the world— a marked Bible. For daily or Sunday classes. Write, Bloomfield Publishing Co., West Webster, N. Y.
Thereis NO SUBSTITUTE
H i-Octane L ji (M iK | RICHFIELD
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