-~ Shepherdess Club Balharries Speak at Meeting Hawaii's Shepherdess Club recently held a three-day mect- ing in connection with the an- nual fall workers’ meetings. Featured guests were Elder and Mrs. Gordon Balharrie. Balharrie is chairman of the department of theology at Wal- la Walla College. The husband and wife team dealt with the worker's wife and the home. Central Church Associate Pastor Ralph Peuschel also spoke to the ladies on the “In- terpretation of the Spirit of Prophecy” relating to divorce and re-marriage. Meetings were conducted in- formally in round table style. A complete tour of the state capitol concluded the three-day meeting. Diane Degeraty, President Hawaii Shepherdess Club UrEenTLY Neebpeb Monument Valley Adventist Hos- pital has immediate openings for the following: Experienced Ac- countant, Medical Technologist, several RNs. If interested, contact P. A. Jorgensen, Monument Valley Adventist Hospital, Monument Valley, UT 84536, or phone (801) 727-3241. Secretary to the President—Gradu- ate of accepted secretarial school or five vears’ experience as Execu- tive Secretary. Typing skills of 60 wpm and dictation by shorthand at 80 wpm. Contact the White Me- morial Medical Center, Personnel Department, 1720 Brooklyn Ave. [Los Angeles, CA 90033; 269-9131, ext. 681. Manager—B.S. degree in Account- ing or equivalent. Minimum 3-5 years’ recent hospital accounting and supervisory experience needed. Responsible for total management of department. Contact the White Memorial Medical Center, Person- nel Dept., 1720 Brooklyn Ave., Los Angeles, CA 90033; 269-9131, ext. ) . Foreman Electrician—Must be li- censed in LA for contract work or will sit for license within six months. Contact the White Memo- rial Medical Center, Personnel Dept. 1720 Brooklyn Ave. Los An- geles, CA 90033; 269-9131, ext. 681. White Memorial Medical Center has openings for the following positions: Carpenter, Dual-registered Tech- rican, Graduate Respiratory Thera- pists, RNs all shifts, Emergency Room RNs, Bio-Medical Electronics Technician, Staffing Secretary—3- 11:30 part-time. Contact the Per- sonnel Dept., 1720 Brooklyn Ave. Los Angeles, CA 90033; 269-9131, ext. 681, Needed—NManager and saleslady for Health Foods store, Alhambra, CA tI.Los Angeles area). Please contact John H. Weidner, 820 E. Colorado Blvd., Pasadena, CA 91101. Phone, (213) 792-3189. Retired couple without children or woman to share home, including food and utilities, in exchange for some care to senior citizen. Live in ideal climate near new Templeton Hills church. Phone (805) 238-0308 or write Ethel Muir, 1929 Park St., Paso Robles, CA 93446. LAT YOULL SERVICE Air/Sea Cruises—No Sabbath de- partures. For full particulars and brochures call or write: Redwood Travel Agency, 493 N. State St. Ukiah, CA 95482, or call (707) 462- 8656 or 462-1979. Enjoy a dinner at Wu's Bamboo House where you can be certain all meals are vegetarian and 1007 lard free. Catering to large or small parties. "Keep in tune and vou will be in tone.” For information call (714) 792-2612. Lunch, noon-3 p.m.: dinner 5-9:30 p.m. Redlands Plaza, corner of 5th and Citrus Ave... Red- lands. Calif. Custom Heating and Air Condition- ing by licensed contractor. Residen- tial and commercial. We also do churches and schools. Contact George Rieder, G & LL Conditioning Co. (213) 443-4371. License 248679. Elder and Mrs. Gordon Balharrie Hawaiian Mission Lawrence E. Davidson, president; Mun On Chang, secretary-treasurer; ‘Box 4037, Zip Code 96813) 2728 Pali Highway, Honolulu, Hawaii 96817. Phone 524-3160. Wills, trust agreements and an- nuities should be made in favor of the legal association rather than the conference. For more informa- tion, write to Lawrence Davidson at the above address. LFORSA CE.) Discovered! The Corinthian (Gre- cian) definition of ‘‘Tongues,” pre- served for us by a second-century writer. Read about it in Tongues Are for Real and Paul's Sixteen Reasons for Not Talking in “Tongues,” a brief digest of three sermons by Elder Donald Mackin- tosh. Book and brochure just $2 b»ostpaid. Write Elder Mackintosh, ox 36, College Place, WA 99324. Scenic country living beneath the tall ponderosa pines and scented cedars in a lovely 3-bdr., 2-bath home, nicely landscaped. Small barn for animals, lots of fruit trees, all on 3 fenced acres, $48,500. Call (916) 675-2340 or write Bob Smith, Box 194, Brownsville, CA 95919. Magnificent new 3-story chalet, 2,512 sq. ft.; 5 bdrs.,, 3 baths, 2 fire- places, 1,780-sq.-ft. decks. On 3.2 acres with 360 view of breathtaking mountains, beam ceilings, exquisite interior. Pure well water, clean fresh mountain air. Area for gar- den and horses, must see to appre- ciate. Near 8-grade church school. Call (916) 926-2388 in Mt. Shasta, Calif. Rural living—Available trailer or mobile home space among the trees, Fresh air, good climate, altitude 3,000’. Also have small cabin and small apartment to rent. References required. Write Box 79, Whitmore, CA 96796. Best discounts on new and used air- planes. Airplane leasebacks avail- able for big tax break. Light multi- engine airplane needed on leaseback for training and charter. Angwin Aviation, Inc., Piper Flite Center, phone (707) 965-2402. Under mission appointment—3-bdr. house near St. Helena Hospital and PUC for sale ($45,000) or will lease furnished or unfurnished. Large living room w/fireplace, lg. dining room, all-electric kitchen, 2 baths, w/w carpet and air conditioning, swimming and Jacuzzi pools. No vard work. Carpeted veranda. View from all rooms. Call (707) 963-4013 at St. Helena Villas. Three-bdr., 1,200-sq.-ft. house In San Gabriel. W/w carpet, drapes, central heating, patio, carport and garage. Large avocado tree. Four blocks from academy. $45,000. Write or call: 5435 North La Presa Ave. San Gabriel, CA 91776. (213) 286- 0883. I.ovely 3-bdr. house, 2 baths, wall- to-wall carpet, fireplace, 2-car ga- rage. Large 60 x 130-ft. lot, with garden space and fruit trees, cool ocean air. $43,000. Immediate occu- pancy. Ten-grade academy. Arrovo Grande, California. ail Ken Berry - hill, (805) 489-7274. 4-bdr. house. 2 baths, attached gza- rage, large Jiving room. beautiful rock fireplace, electric kitchen, car- pets, drapes; 3 acres among pines, elevation 3.5000" above smog, fog. near SDA church, school. retiring owner licensed for retarded chii- dren care; call (209; 878-3618 or write 11014 Stout Ln, Coulterville, CA 95311. PACIFIC UNION RECORDER / MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1976 ELAA4-UTa4 October 8, Vespers - YOUR ADVENTIST BOOK CENTER Presents Elder Stephen Bukojemsky Have you ever wondered about our work in socialist coun- tries? Is it growing? Is it made up only of older people? Are you interested in answers to these questions? Salt Lake City Wasatch Hills Church 2139 Foothill Drive, Salt Lake City October 9, Worship Service and afternoon meeting General Hl (Continued from page 1) Elder A. M. Matar will be- gin a series of meetings Sat- urday night, September 18, at the Bishop Seventh-day Adventist church, located at 7/30 North Home Street. The crusade will feature films and colorama sermon illustrations as well as sacred music. Please send names of po- tentially interested persons to A. M. Matar, Box 728, Bishop, CA 93514. The Voice of Hope—Adventist World Radio the small choir took its place next to the organ—a Yamaha given the school by Pastor Stan- ley Folkenberg not long ago. “Small” in this instance boiled down to six women and one man, plus the organist and di- minutive directress. The choir was from Belgrade, and the courageous young man with the beautiful tenor voice was the pastor of one of the three Ad- ventist churches in that city. AWR listeners will be tuning their dials to some of the love- liest music this side of heaven when the Croatian and Serbian broadcasts are on, for the choir performed all its numbers in both languages. Their soft, licht tones literally float on the air. When the choir broke for rest, Myra Jakobanec took her place before a microphone at a table nearer the recording desk. Blankets were redraped and the engineer signaled for her to be- gin. Mrs. Jakobanec's husband is a pastor in Belgrade, and she teaches the children’s Sabbath school. Her radio assignment was telling Bible stories in the Serbian language. She did it as 1f the children were right there before her 13 stories, one right after the other. Back in Belgrade Mrs. Jako- banec had left her own three ATE & fobimd % Laing, wm His weed. THE VOICE OF PROPHECY Andrea Steele (left) goes through some of the interest mail with small ones (the youngest, one year old) with her mother, and she was cager to get home. In order to make the recordings for AWR, she had ridden from five in the morning till five at night. Most of that time had been in a car without a wind- shield, for the glass had shat- tered just an hour north of Bel- grade, covering the car's occu- pants with fragments of glass. Though a few tiny cuts were suffered, miraculously no one’s face or eyes were touched. Pastoral Messages Meanwhile back at the castle, high in one of the towers, far- thest from the sounds of school life, another technician was re- cording pastoral messages for broadcasts in Hungarian, Slav- ic, Croatian and Serbian. The speakers had come by bus or by car with 13 scripts each pre- pared. I.ater the first technician from the men's residence hall resorted to a higher room in the tower, where he recorded Bible stories in Yugoslavian, Slovenian, and Hungarian. These storytellers were Ljil- jana Babic of Zagreb, Mrs. Da- rinka Jelen, wife of a teacher at the school, and Marija Var- ga of Horgos, Yugoslavia, a Bi- hle correspondence school sec- retary. Recording’s End The second day of recording drew to a close. The tapes were full. Night had fallen, and we groped our way in the darkness down the steeply curved stone one of the studio technicians. The Steeles return home on furlough this month. stairs of the tower. Speakers, singers, storytellers were on their way home. Wisps of clouds over the mountains, carlier tinged with pink, hid in the dusk as campus lights becan to blink on. Someone spoke. “At evening,” the voice said in halting Iinglish. ‘““the people who live on the farms on the surrounding hills look here and watch the activities. Sometimes we have worship outside. They call this place their little Beth- lehem.” Then I thought of the star that shone over Bethlehem of old, guiding men to Jesus, and I praved that Adventist World Radio and the programs record- cd In this 1976 Bethlehem night might be such a star, likewise leading men and women of many nations to the Christ whose coming 1s so near. M. Carol Hetzell Editor's Note: Pacific Union constituents continue to give major support to AWR, so we print this story as a ‘stock- holder's report.” Thanks to you! Recent reports from divi- sion offices involved with broadcasts over Adventist World Radio show encourag- ing over-all results from broadcasts across Europe. The actual figures, covering a three-yecr period from tne beginning of 1973 io the end of 1975, reveal approximate- ly 500 recuess per year coming to Bicle correspond- ence schools in neqrty 20 lon- guages. This averzasns out to almost one request yer JO minutes cn the air. Total mail count aurg the same poriod amar od to just over 15,000 pieces, or about 10 pieces of mai ner 75 minutes on the air. “very listener wno writes in 5 sent an AWR program schedule and a Bible course enrcll- ment card. he Arabic, Swedish, Ger- man and British Bible schools cared for the maizrity of in- torests shown by listeners and I increasing main Coun reported py other ‘fanguage areas as well.