The voice. (Lincoln, Nebraska) 1946-195?, December 04, 1947, Page THREE, Image 3

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Quinn Chapel A. M. E. Church
9th and C Streets.
W' Rev. ft. E. Handy, Pastor.
9:45 a. m. Sunday School.
11:00 a. m. Morning Worship.
6:30 p. m. Evening Service.
7:30 p. m. Worship Service.
Northside Church of God
23rd and T Street.
Robert u. Moody, Pastor.
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 cf meeting call 2-4673.
AHon Chapel
(Seventh-day Adventist).
Urban League—2030 *T” Street.
Frank W. Hale, Jr., Pastor.
LeCount Butler, 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 of Christ (Holiness).
214 9 U Street—T. O. McWilliams, Pastor.
7:00 a. m. Early Morning Prayer.
10:00 a. m. Sunday School.
11:00 a. m. Morning Worship.
•'The Church of the Old Time Religion.”
^ 5:00 p. m. Service at Carver Nursing
“ Home, 2001 Vine.
6:03 p. m. H. Y. P. U.
Richard McWilliams, President.
7:30 p. rn. Evening Service.
Monday, 7:30 p. m. C.W.W.W., Mrs. Con
nie Fultz, President.
Tuesday. 8:00 p. m. Bible Study.
Wednesday, 8:00 p. tn. Prayer and class.
You are always welcome.
Church of God in Christ, 20th & U.
Rev. B. T. McDaniels, Pastor.
10:30 a. m. Sunday School.
12:00 Noon Morning Worship.
7 00 p. m. Y.P.W.W.
8:00 p. m. Evening Worship.
8:00 p. m. Tuesday and Friday, regular
service.
Thursday, 1 to 3 p. m., Sewing Circle.
Wednesday, 8 p. m., Prayer Band,
let and 2nd Saturdays—12 until 7 a. m..
Special Prayer.
.* ■■
Mt. Zion Baptist Clicreh.
Corner 12tn and F Streets.
Rev. John S. Favors, Pastor.
Sunday Scncol, 10:00 a. m.
Morning Worship, ll.:00 a. m.
Bpt. Training Union, 6:00 p. m.
^ Evening Worship, 7:30 p. m.
New nan Methodist, 23rd & S.
G. W. Harper, Minister.
9:45 a. m. Church School.
11:00 a. m. Morning Worship.
6:30 p. m. Methodist Youth Fellowship.
HOUSEHOLD HINTS j
By Mrs. Brevy Miller Phone 2-40.>I
* Be;
Scalloped Oysters.
2 doz. oysters, drained
2 cups coarse toast crumbs
*4 cup melted gutter or fortified mar
garine
’4 cup oyster liquid
'/•> leasp. salt
'4 teasp. pepper
2 tabiesp. cream or top milk
1 teasp. Worcestershire sauce
Dash cayene pepper
2 tabiesp. sherry
Pick over oysters, removing any
bits of shell; then drain, reserving
V4 cup liquid. Combine coarse
toast crumbs and butter; use %
to cover bottom of 12"x8"x2"
baking dish. Arrange \'z oysters
on top. Combine remaining ingre
dients; springle Vz mixture over
oysters. Cover with Vz more of
crumbs; then arrange remaining
oysters on top. Pour on remain
ing sauce; top with crumbs. Bake
at 425° F. 30 min. Makes 4 serv
ings.
Steamed Brown Bread.
2 cups unsifted whole-wheat flour
1 cup all-purpose flour
2 teasp. baking soda
1 tabiesp. granulated sugar
2 teasp. salt
1 egg
1 tabiesp. melted fat or salad oil
V-i cup molasses
1% cup sour milk
l eup raisins, seeded
Put whole-wheat flour in bowl.
Sift in remaining dry ingredients.
Stir in egg, melted fat, molasses
and sour milk. Add raisins. Fill
greased or oiled 2-qt., covered,
brown-bread or pudding mold 2/3
full. Cover tightly. Arrange rack
in cooker over beans, and place
mold on rack. Steam 3 hrs. When
done, remove from cooker; take
-off cover. Loosen bread from mold
with spatula. Slice, and serve.
Orange Baked Apples.
Core 6 large, firm red apples;
pare them about down from
stem end. Place in covered cas
serole. Boil 1 cup sugar and IV2
cups water together 6 min. Pour
over apples; cover; bake in mod
erately hot over of 400° F., bast
ing occasionally, until tender—
some take as long as 40 min.
Pour off syrup from apples. Add
% cup strained orange juice and
1 tablcsp. grated orange rind; boil
10 min.; pour over apples. Chill,
and serve. Makes 6 servings.
White-Grape Clusters.
Wash a bunch of seedless
grapes. Snip bunch into 4 to 8
smaller bunches, and place each
bunch on a drained slice of pine
apple or in a peach half.
Letters to The Voice j
(Continued from last week)
Thirty-two years ago the
writer met Rev. O. J. Burckhart
and immediately there grew a
friendship that neither time nor
tide has been able to wipe out. To
the contrary, it has grown
stronger as the years pass by
The scandal mongers who went
to Rev. Burckhart about me
gained nothing. Neither did it
avail them anything to come to
me about him. In fact, our af
ffections, one for the other, grew
stronger, knowing that we
needed each other’s prayers all
the more. Down through those
years we got into our fellowship
such men as Rev. Macklefresh of
the Free Methodist Church, Rev.
Killsworth of the same church,
--- - ■ ■ - -■■■
—
A REAL HASSOCK
VALUE
2 Tone for Color Harmony
# Only 2,98
Colors—Tan and Brown
Red and Maroon
i
# THE
WHITE FURNITURE
CO.
108 No. 10 2-1489
Rev. Shakespeare of the A. M. E.
Church, Rev. McWilliams, Sr.,
and Rev. McWilliams, Jr., Rev.
Hull, Rev. Bell and Rev. Cham
bers also worked with us.
We worked together only as
true brothers in Christ couid
work, indoors and outdoors, on
the streets and in buildings in
Lincoln and out of Lincoln,
amongst white and black. For
getting the things behind and
looking forward to the mark of
our high calling in Christ Jesus,
our Lord.
What we need today is not
more churchanity but more
Christianity. Not more- theology
but more kneeology. We don’t
need an “I hope so” salvation,
neither an ‘‘I guess so,” not an ‘‘I
think so,” not even an ‘‘I believe
so” salvation. But bless your
heart what we need is the old
fashioned ‘‘I know so” salvation.
The kind that makes you love
everybody and pray for every
body, even your worst enemies.
The kind, with a life back of it,
that is not ashamed to identify
yourself as one of His any time,
any place. That kind of love
shed abroad in the hearts of men
and women excells all else.
Church membership, creed, na
tionality and color become noth
ing. Such a love knows no
bounds. Blessed be our God and
Savior Jesus Christ, forever and
ever, bringing joy unspeakable
and full of glory.
Sinner friend try our Savior,
church member try our Sancti
fier.
Backslider God is married to
you, come back home to the
bridegroom. Every other way
has been tried and failed. Peace,
joy, happiness, contentment, as
surance and freedom from sin
can be had only through the way
of the cross. That way and that
way alone leads home. He that
tries to enter any other way is a
robber and a thief. Beloved, this
writer, the humble servant of
God, our Savior and Jesus Christ,
earnestly and sincerely asks for
and desires that you always re
member him in your prayers. He
promises to always remember
saints and sinners alike in his pe
titions to God.
Your Brother in Christ Jesus,
Rev. W. J. Jurgensen
Authorized evangelist in the
Church of Christ Holiness, 2012
Vine Street, Lincoln. Nebraska.
Hiltner Floral Co.
Co.
"FLOWERS FOR ALL
OCCASIONS"
2-2775 135 So. 12
QUALITY PHOTOS
Lower Prices—Faster Service
PHOTO NOOK
9 a.m. to 9 p.m. and Sundays
1443 “O” Street lineoln, Nebr.
—m,
Fairmont -~
A 252 f
MILK milk %
IN THE NEW
PAPER
CARTON
At Your Favorite Store
ROSE MANOR STUDIO
1029 Rose Street
Phone 3-2046
Portraits by Appointment George Randol, P. A. of A.
Price* reasonable — Work guaran
The S. S. Lesson
BY R. E. HANDY.
Subject: “Christian Fellowship.”
Scripture Text: John 3.
Memory Verse: “I thank God...
lor your fellowship in the gospel
from\ the first day until now.”
Phil 1:3-5.
Application.
Our lesson today is taken from
“John, the beloved Apostle.” He
wrote these words when he was
close to a hundred years old. Be
fore this he had suffered much as
a prisoner on the Isle of Patmos.
Yet while there God had also
given him much joy by revealing
to him that splendid vision we
know as “The Revelation.”
In today’s lesson John speaks
of certain persons who have put
themselves on the aitar of self
sacrifice. These men had gone
forth, without salary, to spread
the gospel and their influence was
felt throughout the world.
Today each and every Christian
has a personal influence for good
or ill, in what ever church their
membership rests.
Some members are forever car
rying “chips” upon their should
ers, ever ready to criticize the
choir, the officers or the minister.
Others go about pouring oil upon
the troubled waters, trying to
bring peace out of confusion. Our
Lord so aptly described these
times in the “Parable of the wheat
and the tares.”
“Independent churches” are
springing up every where, be
cause of the “chip” carrying peo
ple. There is not a single church
organization that does not have
its divisions.
Remember, friend, when you
join an organization, especially a
COMPLETE FUR SERVICE
HORACE E. COLLEY
“Trust your furs with a furrier”
1745 South 11 3-6582
For Better Values
• Drugs
• Cosmetics
• Stationery
• Candy
• Prescriptions
CHEAPPER DRUGS
1325 O St. Lincoln
*
church, you should be motivated
by two impulses. First, what that
church can do for your spiritual
improvement. Second, what you
can do for its advancement, ever
calling to mind that all of your
associate members are your broth
ers and sisters in the Lord and
therefore are in Christian Fellow
ship. Being human, they too have
ideas, which may run counter to
yours. Yet you should not let
those differences make you bitter
or separate you from your Lord.
UNION
SHOE SHOP
1022 "O" Street
2-7887
I
The
First National Bank
of Lincoln
10th & “O” St. Member F.D.I.C.
Smith Pharmacy
2146 Vine
Prescriptions — Drugs
Fountain — Sundries
Phone 2-1958
Jess
Williams
SPRINGS
2215 O St. 2-3633
Springs for any Car, Truck,
or Bus
We Can Duplicate any Spring
WALLY'S
USED CARS
TWO LOCATIONS
1126 "P" 13th & “Q"
* CARS
* GUNS
* SHELLS
* SCOOTERS
* TRAILERS
* HOUSE TRAILERS
* TRUCKS
* PICK UPS
* BOATS
Lincoln, Nebr. • Phone 2-7770
CLEANING and SANITATION
SUPPLIES
All Types
Brooms—Furniture Polishes
Mops—Floor Seal and Wax
Sweeping Compounds
Mopping Equipment
Kelso Chemical
117 North 9th St. 2-2434
Our Super Market
1717 R St. Telephone 2-3160