Page 8 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Dec. 4, 1952 Religious Notes Mennonite Fellowship Reservations for the Mennonite fellowship Christmas banquet must be made by Saturday. The banquet is at 6 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 13, at Memorial hall in Debote. Canned food or toys to be given for Christmas to needy families in Lawrence may be brought to the banquet as part of the fellowship's project for this semester. Tickets, $1.25 per plate, may be purchased from Mrs. Wilmer Harms, 1646 Tennessee st., or Willard Kaufman, KU Medical center. Roger Williams A student panel on "Effective and Satisfactory Christian Living" and vocal music by Carroll Smith, pharmacy senior, will be featured at the Roger Williams fellowship meeting Sunday at the First Baptist church, 801 Kentucky st. The program will follow a supper at 6 p.m. Jim Gleason, college sophomore, will be the speaker at the University group church service at 7:30 p.m. *** Wesley Foundation The Rev. Herbert H. Duenow, pastor of Ivaneh Park Congregational church, Kansas City, Mo., will review Thomas Costain's latest novel, "The Silver Chalice," at the Wesley foundation Christmas dinner at 5 p.m. Sunday in the First Methodist church, 10th and Vermont streets. A capacity number of 200 is expected at the dinner, sponsored annually by Wesley foundation and Kappa Phi, Methodist girls organization. Centerbury Association Tom Wilkerson, college sophomore, will speak on "The Life and Rule of St. Benedict" at a Canterbury association meeting Sunday at the Episcopal church, 1011 Vermont st. His talk will follow holy communion at 9 a.m. and a coffee hour at 9:30 a.m. KU Christian Fellowship KU Christian Fellowship The Rev. Richard Burson, Hutchinson, will speak to the KU Christian fellowship at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in 32 Strong hall. Congregational Youth Two movies on better racial understanding, "Boundary Lines" and "The Meaning of Brotherhood," will be shown for the Congregational Youth group Sunday at the Congregational church, 925 Vermont st. The movies will follow a supper at 5:30 p.m. Gamma Delta Chaplain Howard Mueller, hospital social worker, Kansas City, Ma., will speak on "The Work of a Chaplain in the Church." at a Gamma Delta meting at 5:30 p.m. Sunday in the City building, 8th and Vermont streets. - * * YMCA Jan Brazda, graduate student from Czechoslovakia, will speak on "I Was a Communist Prisoner" at a YMCA meeting at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in 101 Snow hall. Brazda was active in YMCA work for several years in Czechoslovakia and has been working with the University chapter since he came here. The meeting is open to the public. Westminster Foundation - * * A fellowship supper will be held by Westminster foundation at 5:30 p.m. Sunday, Westminster house, 1221 Oread ave. It will be followed by a vesper service with sermonette by Dr. John Patton, foundation director, and commission study groups. Groups to Entertain Foreign Students Foreign students and their wives will be the guests of the Hiliel foundation and the Disciple Student fellowship at a joint meeting Sunday in Myers hall, 1300 Oread. The theme of the program will be "The Binding Force of Religion." Speakers will be Rabbi Louis Cashan, associate rabbi of Congregation B'nai Jehudah, Kansas City, Mo.; Dean Harold Barr of the School of Religion, and Dr. Amiya Chakravarty, visiting professor of humanities from India. The program will include: 3 p.m. a panel discussion led by Rabbi Cashdan and Dr. Barr; 4:30 p.m. recreation; 5 p.m. supper consisting of foods from other countries, and 6:30 p.m. closing address by Dr. Chakravarty. Anyone interested may attend. Color Added to New England Color Added to New England Boston —U.P. New England's traditional white houses are treated by rising tint of colored paint, in Massachusetts gray and yellow are becoming the most popular new shades. Elsewhere red, blues, greens and even pinks are reported. YOUR EYES Phone 601 should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or prescription duplicated. LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. Phone 425 1025 Mass. STOP taking chances You need your car more than ever in winter.Make sure that it keeps running with regular Motor In servicing. MOTOR-IN 827 Vermont CLUSTER PEARLS — Just the right gift for Christmas for the smart college woman who knows smart jewelry when she sees it. Clusters and multi-strands of all kinds of simulated jewels are right for holiday celebrations season-lightweight jewelry with the weighty look. Kappa Phi Sorority Pledges Forty Women Kappa Phi, Methodist student women's group, pledged 40 women this fall. weighty look. They are Diane Brown, Mary Sue Crum, Shirley Dean, Jean Dumler, Donna Dixon, Norma Lu Eshelman, Carole Fisher, LaVonne Godwin, Barbara Hampton, Carolyn Hawkins, Marjorie Heard, Carol Hill, Diane Hollis, and Margaret Howard. Dorolyn Humbarger, Julianne Keeter, Jacqueline Kimmel, Irma Lou Kalterman, Joyce Lundry, Carleen Mears, Joan Moherman, Margaret Moore, Delores Myers, Carolyn Neff, Norma Jean Nelson, Barbara Norrie, and Patricia Norrie. Elaine Ochrie, Lorna Plummer, Donna Robinson, Ethlyn Sejkora, Marietta Shannon, Marilyn Sorem, Phyllis Springer, Shirley summers, Rosalie Thorne, Gloria Kay Vetterick, Joan Zimmerman, Mary Schroeder, and Martha Taylor. GIRLS FUR CUFF SNOW BOOTS Front Zipper Closing White $6.45 Green, Black and Brown $5.95 M'Coy'S SHOES 813 Mass. Phone 259 Hubby May Not Realize Wife Does $7 Worth of Work a Day By HARMON W. NICHOLS United Press Staff Correspondent Washington—(U.P.)—Maybe we working guys don't realize what the little woman is worth. But the big thinkers in the government have figured it out for us. Mama, in her apron, mop in hand, is worth $7 a day. Let us have nobody in apromp charging my way with broom handles at the ready. I'm coppered on my facts. The experts have figured that the average home-maker scrubs her fingers to the bone a minimum of 50 hours a week. Our government experts in the Bureau of Labor Statistics figure that domestic help runs around $7 a day. So, you can put it down: The little wife-mate saves us around $7 a day, discounting overtime. And that runs into something like $35 for a five-day week. That adds up to $1,820 a year. I do buy my wife her duds. And they come to a pretty penny above $199 a year. The government claims that a man spends something like $199 for his wife's clothes, "which he would not have to supply to a paid maid." I would like to submit for the record that aprons, dust caps, and assorted other clean-up wearing gear around the house, alone, run into more than $199 a year. And this is not counting girdles, at around $20 a 'gird', nylons by the dozen, gowns for house parties and some dress-up—not to mention a coat of coats. The government isn't very clear on this point. Some folks supply their maids with uniforms. I don't because I don't have a maid. But Point is, the government apparently has not dressed many wives. There are, I learned to my astonishment, some 45 million American housewives. The government says that if you counted wives at $25 a week, it would run into something over a billion and a half a year in wifely wages. But let not us male characters mention same at the dinner table tonight. Brooks 14 oz. Bottle CATSUP 15c Kraft Quart Jar MIRACLE WHIP 47c IGA Fancy 46 oz. Cons TOMATO JUICE 2 for 49c Otoe No. 1 Cans TOMATO SOUP 4 for 29c Crescent Sliced Lb. BACON 39c Chase's Chocolate Covered Lb. CHERRIES 49c Swift's Cooked Half or Whole Lb. HAMS 59c New Crop Lb. ENGLISH WALNUTS 39c Florida Sweet and Juicy 5 Lb. Mesh Bag ORANGES 35c WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. WEEKDAYS 9 A.M. TO 8:30 P.M. SUNDAYS 9 A.M. TO 6 P.M. M hall from the be Man Thner. I ho mi ho