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About The voice. (Lincoln, Nebraska) 1946-195? | View Entire Issue (Nov. 9, 1950)
({ulna Chapel A, M. K. Church 9th and C Streets Rev. J. B. Brooks, Pastor. 6:00 p. m. Young Peoples Fellowship 7:30 p. m. Evening Service 9:45 a. m. Sunday School 10:45 a. m. Morning Worship Tuesday 8:00 p. m., Prayer meeting North side Church ol God. 83rd and T Street. 10:00 a. m. Church School. 11:00 a. m. Morning Worship. 7:30 p. m. Evening Worship. 7:30 p. m. Midweek Prayer Meeting. 7:30 p. m. Friday Bible Study. For place of meeting call 2-4678. Alluo Chapel. (Seventh-day Adventist) LeCount Butier, Associate Pastor. 9:45 a. m. Sabbath School. 10:45 a. m. Missionary Meeting. 11:00 a. m. Morning Worship. 4:00 p. m. Young People’s Society. CHRIST TEMPLE Church ol Christ 'Holiness) 2149 U Street. Pho-3 2-3901 Rev. T. O. McWilliams, Jr., *astor. Rev T. T. McWilliams, Sr., Ass't. Pastor. Order of Worship. Sunday School. 10 a. m. Morning Worship, 11 a. m. Service at Carver Nursing Home. 2001 Vine Street, 5 o’clock. Evening Service. 7:30 p m. Mt. Zion Baptist Church. Rev. W. 1. Monroe, Pastor. Corner 12th and F Streets. 10:00 a. m. Sunday SchooL 11:00 a. m. Morning Worship. 6:30 p. m. Baptist Training Union. 8:00 p. m. Evening Worship. NEWMAN METHODIST. 23rd and S; Ralph G. Nathan, pastor. SUNDAY—Church at study, 10; church At worship, 11 a.m. MONDAY—Trustee board meeting. WEDNESDAY—Gladsome service, 7 to 8 p.m. FRIDAY—Ministry of music, 8 p.m. CME Church. 2030 T Street. First and Third Sundays. Rev. J. W. Simpson, Pastor. 9:30 a. m. Sunday School. 10:3*' a. m. Methodist Training Union. 11:00 a. m. Morning Worship. Church of God In Christ. 9:00 a. m. Sunday schooL 11:00 Morning worship. 6:30 p. m. Y. P. W. W. 8:00 p. m. Evening worship. 8:00 i>. m. Tuesday and Friday regular ■ervice. Prayer band 9 p. m. Junior church serv ice 7:30 p. m. Thursday prayer and Bible pastor. Rev. Charles Williams. Sentence Sermons By Rev. Frank Clarence Lowry for ANP 1. The world has never been without sluggards who would al ways try to shirk, simply because they were lazy and didn’t want to work. 2. Some are of feminine gender and follow along this same line with the men, and wouldn’t even try to be progressive, and on whose word no one can depend. 3. These characters are found in the home, in business and in the church; but wherever they are found it is definitely certain, it is not work for which they search. 4. Such characters were in evi dence even in Jesus’ time and around Him for hand-outs would linger; and would quickly place burdens on other folks that they wouldn’t .touch with their little finger. 5. On account of such, Jesus would have to take up the slack, and would work every hour of the day, for He did not want His work, not in one thing to lack. 6. When He 7eft this earth, we His followers inherited His un ending work; and we too have to take up the slack because so many prefer to shirk. For Everything in HARDWARE > Baker Hardware 101 No. 9th M710 If You Have A Bad Break! CALL: 2-6931 And We’ll Fix It For Yon — Van Sickle Glass & Paint Co. 143 So. lOth Lincoln. Nebr. r~—- ..4 Sunday School i Lesson * SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON Fellowship with Other Chris tians. Scripture—Acts 10 and 11; Phil ippians 2:1-5. Memory Selection — Look not every man on his own things, but every man also on things of others. Let this mind be in you, which was also in Christ Jesus. Philippians 2:4,5. Present Day Application By Frederick D. Jordan, Los Angeles, Calif. Christian growth is stimulated and enriched through contact with other Christians. Do not get the idea from a lesson that fellowship with other Christians is confined to those of other races and coun tries. Our first face to face con tact with other Christians begins in our own homes. Christian fel lowship in its most intimate form may be found in the family circle, to worship together, to discuss re ligious truths and to counsel with each other concerning personal problems in the spiritual realm contribute greatly to our develop ment as Christians outside of the home circle. It is a fine thing for Christians to visit each other, for it is better to develop one’s social life within the circle of believers. Many opportunities come now also for Christians of different denomi nations to find fellowship in joint worship services such as the World Day of Prayer. A still broader fellowship may be ours if we will cultivate friendships with Christians in any of the foreign fields served by our church. There is something of a thrill in know ing a brother or sister whom we have never seen, our own life as well as our friend’s will be en riched. Names and addresses of [ Christians in distant lands will be gladly furnished by our Mission ary Department or by one of our , Bishops serving such a field. Henry Spann Dies Henry Spann, 75, of 516 No. 23rd, died Tuesday morning, Oc tober 31, after an illness of five years. He had lived in Lincoln since 1909, having been employed by the Burlington railroad as a chair car porter. He was a janitor at the Lincoln air base for three years during the war. A native of Brooksville, Miss., he moved to Alabama in his teens. He was married Sept. 5, 1901, to Johanna Cale. In 1905 they moved to Las Vegas, N. M. He was a member of the Church of God. Surviving besides his wife, are a sister, Mrs. William (Lula) Cokley of Chicago; brother, Will of St. Louis, Mo.; three nieces, and two nephews. The funeral was held at 2 p.m. Friday at Umbergers’, with Rev. Alice Britt and Rev. Robert L. Moody officiating. THE EVANS CLEANERS — LAUNDERERS Save Moner Use oar Cash and Carry Plan 333 No. 12th St. Dial 2-6961 The Christian Church Many of us have been dis turbed by wars and rumors of wars that hang like a dark threatening cloud over our in ternational horizon. Men in high places tell us that our whole way of life is involved in what a few men do with our foreign policy in this immediate future. Others freely predict that another world war would mean the end of our civilization. Two years ago a former dip lomat and Governor of Penn sylvania predicted that this end of our civilization was only five years away. What a dismal picture! Let us remember that the Bible says “Righteousness exalteth a Nation.” Now, if we could get enough of the ethical preached and ex pressed in our society, then our civilization need not break up, whatever the opposition. In the times of the Old Testament prophets, and the early church of the New Testa ment, God’s people witnessed the rise and fall of civiliza tions, but they did not go to pieces, because their saints held onto that which was eternal. There are some things in our civilization, and even in our or ganized church life, that are abominable in God’s sight and ought to go. But there are some basic assumptions of our civiliza tion that shall never pass away— come what may. I shall never give my loyalty to any order of kjbciety that ex alts the state above God, or denies the Fatherhood of God and the brotherhood of man or the sacredness of the individual personality, or the supremacy of love as exemplified in Jesus Christ. These seem to be of eternal value and are worth standing for amid all the clash of systems on this planet called earth. Our little systems have their day; They have their day and cease to be. But thou, O God, are more than they. “Blind as a bat,” is an incorrect saying, since bats can see. Diabetes Detection Week, Nov. 12-18 The House of Delegates of the Nebraska State Medical associa tion gave the Diabetes Detection Drive in Nebraska considerable impetus last May when it sup ported a request by the associa tion’s Diabetes Committee that physician-member of the state medical association give free dia betes examinations during na tional Diabetes Detection Week, November 12-18. Dr. Morris Margolin, Omaha, Chairman of the Diabetes Com mittee, announced earlier that the medical association would spon sor a diabetes detection program in Nebraska in conjunction with the national effort in November. The purpose of this drive is to find the unknown diabetics in Ne braska, as well as the nation at large. The committee chairman stated that the action of the House of Delegates favoring free diabetes examinations during the detection drive will “materially aid in dis covering the undiagnosed and un treated diabetes patients in Ne braska.” He added thaet his com mittee has requested that all doc tors routinely check their patients for diabetes for the one-week period. “The committee feels confi dent,” Dr. Margolin continued, “that all Nebraska doctors will give their complete support to this drive. If everyone will go to his ! doctor for this simple check, many undiagnosed and untreated dia betes cases can be uncovered and then given proper medical care.” The Omaha doctor pointed out that diabetes symptoms are often not easily detected which results, he said, in many cases not being found until it is too late to restore the patient to normal living habits. Dr. Margolin declared that every person who is “not under treatmen for diabetes should see his physician, if only to make cer tain that he is not diabetic.” Early diagnosis and skilled treatment is First Negro to Head Coop Group CHICAGO. (ANP). A Chicago student and research assistant at the University of Chicago was recently elected national presi dent of the North American Stu dent Co-operative league at the group’s national meeting in Los Angeles. Jenkins, representing the Uni versity of Chicago’s United Co operative Projects, is the first Negro to hold this office of the coop group which covers both the United States and Canada. When the league’s board of directors meets in Chicago, Dec. 27, Jenkins will preside. At the meeting in which he was elected only one other Ne gro attended from among dele gates from more than 50 coop groups. He is also president of his local University of Chicago coop body. In taking over the national presidency of the coop league, Jenkins is succeeding Jerome L. Blatt of California. The aim of the league is to develop and ex pand cooperative housing on col lege campuses. Jenkins was born in St. Loui9, but has lived in Chicago most of his life. Before entering the University of Chicago, he at tended Wilson Junior college where he was the first Negro to b€* elected president of the graduating class. In 1947, he was granted a scholarship to attend the Welles ley Institute for Social Progress at Wellesley college, Mass., and in 1948 he went to Europe to conduct a sociological research project, “British Race Rela tions.” He is a member of the Amer ican Sociological society. At the University of Chicago he worka as a research assistant. With this background he has been called on numerous times for discus sions and lectures. Recently he discussed India in a panel spon sored by the YMCA United Na tions Study group. He also has written several magazine and newspaper articles. especially important in the case of children, he said. MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION 10th and 0 St. Since 1871 [REACH FOR .. . I | RICHER MILK! BB ^ -J ■py - ■CMHB ■^sufrtmam 1 I Ih ___