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About The voice. (Lincoln, Nebraska) 1946-195? | View Entire Issue (Sept. 13, 1951)
Quinn Chapel 4 M b. Church 9th and C Streets Rev. J B. Brooks, -'astor 6:00 p. m. Young Peoples Fellowship 7:30 p m. Evening Worship. 9:45 a. m. Sundaj School. 10:45 a. m Morning Worship. Tuesday 8:00 p. m_ Prayer Meettng. Northslde Church ot God 23rd and 1 Street Mrs Alice Britt 10:00 a. m. Church Schocfr 11:00 a. m. Morning Worship. 7:30 p. m. Evening Worship 7:30 p. m. Midweek Prayer Meettng 7:30 p m Friday Bible Study. For place of meeting call 2-4673. 411 on Chapei (Seventh-day Adventist) UeCount Butler. Associate Pastoi 9:45 a. m. Sabbath School 10:45 &. m Missionary Meeting 11:00 a. m Morning Worship 4:00 r> m Young People’s Society CHRIST rEMPLR 2149 U Street. Phone 2-3901 Rev. T O McWilliams. Jr.. Pastor Ordet ot Worship Sunday school. 10 a. m. Morning Worship. 11 l a Service at Carver Nursing Home, 2001 Vine Street. 5 o’clock Evening Service 7:30 p m. Mt. £1od Baptist Church Rev. W. i Monroe. Pastor Corner 12th and F Streets 10:00 a. m. Sunday School 11:00 a. m Morning Worship 6:3« p. m Baptist Training Union 8:00 p. m Evening Worship NEWMAN METHODIST. 23rd and S; Ralph G. Nahan. pastor. SUNDAY—Church at study 10: church at worship. 11 a.m. MONDAY—Trustee hoard meeting. WEDNESDAY—Gladsome service. '< to 8 p.m. FRIDAY—Ministry ot music. 8 p.m. CME Church. 2030 r Street First and Third Sundays 9:30 a.m.. Sunday School 10:30 a.m.. Methodist Training Union 11:00 a.m.. Morning Worship. Church of God In Christ. 9:00 a.m.. Sunday School. 11:01) a_m.. Morning worship. 6:30 p.m.. Y.P.W.W 8:00 p.m.. Evening worship. 8:00 p.m. Tuesday and Friday, reg ular service. Prayer band * p.m. Junior church service. 7:30 p.m. rhursday, prayer and Bible pastor. Rev Charles Williams. •Courtesy Calvert Corporation For Better Values • Drugs • Cosmetics • Stationery • Candy • Prescriptions CHEAPPER DRUGS 1325 O St Lincoln DONLEY-STAH! CO. LTD. 1331 N St DRUGS—PRESCRIPTIONS SICK ROOM NECESSITIES WE APPRECIATE TOUR PATRONAGE t Sunday School 1 Lesson i • I The Larger Fellowship of Chris tians. . Scripture—Luke 9:49, 50; Acts 11:22-30; 15:1-35; I Corinthians 1:10-13; II Corinthians 9:1-5; Phil lippians 1:15-18. Memory Selection—He that is not against us is for us. Luke 9:50. Present Day Application By Frederick D. Jordan Los Angeles, Calif. Discord among churches of the same or different denominations weakens the power of the Church to ^attract sinners. No two Churches are exactly alike in pro gram, policy, or point of view, but all seek to proclaim the Gospel and should respect each other Churches can cooperate in worth while community activities as well as in the larger work of Missions. There are many local interchurch and interfaith efforts your Church can participate in. Membership in local Church Fed erations and Councils of Church Women should be encouraged for co-operative work in reaching the unchurched and in building uj£ believers. I • - - Appreciation Fellowship The Senior choir of Quinn Chapel A.M.E. church are having an appreciation fellowship for their pastor, his wife and family I (Rev. and Mrs. J. B. Brooks) on Friday (tomorrow) September 14th at 7:30 p.m. The choir will give a musical program. Delegates Elected Delegates have been elected to the General Conference to be held in Chicago in May, 1952 as fol lows: Pudget Sound Conference: C. D. Tolivdt-, L. F. Greene and Edward Williams. California Conference: T. L. Hunt, H. Solo mon Hill, C. Wayne Love. L. S. Odom, and E. D. Chappelle. Southern California F. D. Jordan, A. K. Quinn, Henry W. Murphy, B. E. Allen, T. L. Scott and Alvin Shaw. Colorado Conference: J. W. Ford, J. Russel Brown, D. C. Cole man, Thomas J. Townsen. Organization Asks Bishop’s Return When the Lay Organization of the Fifth Episcopal District of the A M.E. church held its second an nual meeting in St. Louis in July, a resolution was passed request ing the return of Bishop D. Or monde Walker to the Fifth Dis trict for another four years. Mr. George Jones, president of the organisation, recommended that Douglas Hospital in Kansas City be accepted as a project for the organization and a definite amount be contributed toward maintenance. Enough swine was exhibited at the 1951 Nebraska State Fair, Sept. 2-7 in Lincoln, to feed the entire population of a city the size of Norfolk, Beatrice or Scottsbluff for 365 days. — Negro Chaplain, Back From Korea, Has New Duties LACKLAND AIR BASE, Texas. (ANP). The U.S. Air Force’s ranking Negro chaplain, Lt. Col. James C. Griffin, of Norfolk, Va., recently returned from Korea to assume new duties at Lackland Air Base. Chaplain Griffin, who returned from Korea in July, has served a total of 45 months in the South west Pacific and Far East since World war II began. He landed with the 93rd Di vision on Guadalcanal in 1944 and island hopped northward with the division to the Philippine Islands. Following the war, Chaplain Griffin earned the master’s degree in theology from the Theological Seminary at Boston university. He then returned to Okinawa in August, 1949. Since that time he has served in Japan and was moved to Ko rea last April as group chaplain with an aviation engineering out fit. At his new headquarters at San Antonio, he will serve with the wing chaplain’s staff. Schools to Be Open 9 Mos. SYLVANIA, Ga.—(ANP)— Negro schools™of Screven county will operate this year on a full I nine-month term for the first time I in history, according to J. Knapp Boddiford, county school superin tendent. A new elementary school wil’ employ seven additional Negrc teachers. .1 MHiiiniiimilnni.’T'mnimianmimniiimiuoii.iiiMiii. mnninnmmMnimmiuiiii: Urban League Continued from Page 1) closer co-operation between the league and government housing agencies and commended the American Nursing association for elimination of segregation in the organization. The league congratulated the National Negro Nursing associa tion for disbanding and merging with the American Nursing asso ciation. A proposal that the league meet biennially, instead of annually, with regional conferences in the “off-years,” is contained in an other resolution. The 1952 conference will be held in Cleveland, Ohio. Booker T. Half Dollars To Sell for 60 Cents LITTLE ROCK.-(ANP) Booker T. Washington Memorial Half Dollars, honoring the late founder of Tuskegee Institute, will sell for 60 cents. The extra 10 cents will go for educational funds for underprivi leged Negro youth. In the past Booker T. Washington halves sold for as much as $1.00 and $1.50. IDEAL Grocery and Market Lots of Parking 27th and F Streets OO SmUi 20Mi UwtffaNik • W»wi M747 The Nebraska Typewriter Co. 125 No. 11th Lincoln 2-2157 Royal Typewriters Mimeograph - Duplicators Dictaphones - Clary Adders Sold - Rented • Repaired -,. - . - .— •> Where Your Furniture Dollar Buys More 1532 O Street Shurtleff's Furniture Co. Flowers By Tyrrell's I . I » i * - - % I D. L. TyrretTj Plotters 6-2357 1133 No. Cotner _________________I . I 1 FREADPICH III BROS. f Hf • • • • I Since 1902 The Best Place To Trade | After All—1316 N Street B Please Ask For UMBERGER’SJNIBUIANGE 2-8545 Umherger’s Mortuary, Inc. f MM (&[MM)Cotnpcuu{' £That’ y three generations of dis criminating house wives have pre ferred to “Reach For Roberts’*! * ■ WE INVITE YOU TO TASTE and COMPARE! wach ,.OA„ ; ' cno GRADE A FOR MILK