Addling Machine 6for 47* 12 for 85C YeiIow Second Shoots, 38c 2Reams 1000 Shoots I Rubber Gem Clips as 24c per1 000 I-lb. box 63c. TYPE WRITERS NEW and REBUIIT MANY EXCELLENT BUYS Buy on Our Easy Paymnl Plan fo 4-Drawer Steel Lelter File Olive Green, Specal $1 6.75 * Spiral Steno Books Nos. 761, 762 *por doz. 89C I2 doz. 47C Oesk SI.f fers Regular,10c .ach fl< doz. Fie polders Manil. 87C por 100 lnvemlory Pads Spiral or Gumm.d 35C oach ..3 for $1.00 Commercial1 I.oit.r or $2.50 value priseca the resson-sermon was the ifollowlng from the Bible:t "I an:ithe Lord: that is my nrne: andd ny glory wilL I riot give to ariother, neither my praise to graven image's. Sing unto the Lord a new song, and 'hs pra.ise fromn the end of the earth,, ye that go. down to the seja, and, al that is therein; the isles, and the lin- habitants thereof. >L'et them g- ive g9lory unto the Lord, and. déclare his, praise ln the islands" (Isaiah 42: Theless:on.-sermnonalso .in- ciuded the foilowing passages frolm the Christian Science' textbook, "Science and, H-eaith, With Key to _the Scriptures," by Mary Baker Eddy: "God-is infinite, the.oniy Life, sub- stance, Spirit' or Souil, the only in- telligenice of the universe, including man. Eye hath neither seen God nor His image and likeness. Neither God nos. the.perftect man carn la dis-. cerned by the materlal senses', (p. 330). HINDUS LECTURE TUESDAY Maurice Hindus, rectognized as one of the best informed American citîzens on world affairs, author, and traveler, wili be the third lecturer on the Campus Evening Forum sponsored by the Elflel Foundation a8t Northwestern university. Mr. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE, SERVICES "Sacrament- will be the subject at the services in First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Wilmette, Sun- day morning, January 8, at Il o'clock, held in the edifice at 1003 Central avenue. .Sunday school con- venes at 9:45 o'clock. Grant Wood cornes from Cedar Rapids, la. It is a typical small, midwestern 'city with dlean streets and trim buildings - as neat and well-kept as the corn, andnieadow land that extends for hundreds of .miles in ail directions from it. For years the'namne Cedar Rapids, was used by vaudevillians. as a symbol. of the narrow, ,provincial mnidwest- ern village. Finds Parisians Enslaved I At the tie H. L.. Menken and. the other* satirlsts. were going ful blast, Grant Wood, t he painter, was one of.those who becamne convinced' of the'hbpeless narrowness and pro- vincialismn of the cornfed-midwest. He joined. the hegira of. the intel- lectuals to Paris, "the cultural capi- tai of thej world wh ere freedomn was the k eyn o te of living and people were not blinded by false conven- tions and inhibitions." Four trips to Europe coninced Wood th'at 'the Paris ians were more enslaved byý conventions and taboos than the in-, h abitants of his ho .me town. Yet, as a total foreigner, he had been able to adjust hirnself to the even more s tri n ge nt conventions of France, and it occurred to him that with a, littie effort he might be able to find something livable about his native environrnent. So, like Au nt Mirandly and Uncle Hiramn, he re- turned home to Cedar Rapids to aclose 'recise style that was the resuit of Careful observatîon. Later, in his schooling, he was discouraged from this' natural style, and for yeans he painted conventional land- scapes in b r o a..d, Impressionistic strokes. In Europe, however, seeing for the first time Flemish, German and Italian primitives, he deter- nuineçi to revert to the style which Grant Wood was natural to him. lus reversai of style was accompanied by a new outlook on s ub je ct matter. For.- merly, he had looked for soft pic- turequeefiets. Now 4ie began te' see a "decorative quality in Ameni- can newness." Portrait of Mother His first experiment upon his ne- turn to America* was a portrait of, his mother entitled "Womnan with Plants," done in a precise, clear style with painstaking craftsman- ship. There foilowed "Amnenican, Gothic," "Daughters of Revolu- tion," "Midnight Ride of Paul Re- 1Grant Wood has a reputation for talking in a dlean, outspoken, level- headed mannen about problems of the creation and appreciation of art-a subjeét long cluttered by, ab-_ struse and hysterical comment, in- comprehensible to the general pub- lic. It is Wood's contention that the arts are inherently democratic andý that the artist can make himself understandable to a wide and sig- nificant audience without sacrificing IDavis 2400 Greenleuf .9242 702 CHURCH STREET, EVANSTON, ILL. Phono University 1848 *Bu!grng Turimy RED CR OWN RECftEATION 1026 Davis Street, Evanston