The voice. (Lincoln, Nebraska) 1946-195?, April 21, 1949, Page THREE, Image 3

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• _____ _ __y
Qalu Chapel a. M. B. Church
•th and ••O" Streets
Rev. J. B. Brooks, Pastor.
9:45 A m. Sunday School
10:45 a m. Morning Worship
6:00 p. m. Young Peoples Fellowship
7:30 p. m. Evening service
Tuesday. 8:00 p. m.. Prayer meeting
Morthslde Church of Cod
23rd and T Street.
Robert L. 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 of meeting call 2-4673.
Alton Chapel
(Seventh-day Adventist).
Urban League—2030 “T” Street.
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 (Holinessl
2149 U Street
Rev. T. O. McWilliams, Jr.. Pastor.
7:00 A m Early Morning Prayer
10:00 a m. Sunday School.
11:00 A m. Morning Worship
6:00 p. m. Service at Carver borne
6:00 p. m. H.Y.P.U., Richard McWil
liams, president.
7:45 p. m Evening Service
. 1st A 3rd Mondays, C.W.W.W. meets at
8:00 p. m., Mrs. Margie Turner, president.
Tuesday, Bible Study. 8:00.
Wednesday, Prayer and Praise, 8:00.
1st A 3rd Friday, Jr. Choir rehearsal at
parsonage. 8:00.
2nd A 4th Friday, Young People’s
Prayer Band, 8:00. Kathryn King, presi
dent.
You are always welcome to Christ
Temple Church.
Church of God In Christ. 30th A O.
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, regula
service.
fhursday, 1 to 3 p. m., Sewing Circle.
Wednesday. S p. m.. Prayer Baud.
Mt. ZMw Baptist Chart*
Rev. W. L Monroe, Pastor.
Corner 12th and F Streets
10:00 Sunday School
11:00 Morning Worship
6:30 Baptist Training Union
8:00 Evening Worship
Newmaa Methodist. 33rd A 8.
Rev. William Green, pastor.
9:45 a. m. Church School.
11:00 a. m. Morning Worship.
6:30 p. m. Methodist Youth Fellowship.
CME Methodist Church.
2030 T Street.
First and Third Sundays.
Rev. Q. E. Bibsns, Pastor.
9:30 a. m.—Sunday School.
10:30 a. m.—Methodist Training Union.
11:00 a. ra.—Mr.-ning Worship.
Our Children
By Mrs. W. B. Davis
Stuttering is making the lives
of 12,000,000 men and women
miserable. Their tendency to
stutter when they were children
was badly handled. But if this
speech handicap is treated not as
something a child will “grow out
of” but as a symptom of malad
justment, the child often can be
kept from joining that 10 percent
of the population which stutters
or stammers when speaking.
Moreover, experts are ready to
advise on how to aid in the treat
ment of all the other common
speech troubles to which children
are heir. You may be living on an
isolated farm in the mountains, on
a ranch, or in a town too small
to support a clinic, but there is
a great deal you can do to rem
edy your child’s words. However,
you must do it before his halting
becomes too firmly ingrained and
recognize his difficulty not as a
“bad habit,” but as a symptom
©f emotional disorder with which
you or his environment may have
had something to do.
I-~.^
Sunday School j
Lesson j
The Problem of Life as the Rich
Man Saw It.
This man had a problem. He
found himself in the possession
of great wealth, of a harvest so
much richer than he had ex
pected that he was not prepared
to handle it. His problem was
how to handle such abundance
so that it would not be wasted.
In his mind he had come to the
great crisis of his life. And it
was true that he had to think and
act quickly. Success depended on
wise and vigorous action now.
He must face the facts. His
equipment was not adequate. He
must not try to patch it up, to
use stop-gap methods. He would
act with vigor and clear-sighted
ness, destroy his old storehouses,
replace them with new and well
designed buildings, and have the
satisfaction of seeing his wealth
safely stored up. His problem
was solved. The crises was over.
His life work would be crowned
with glorious success. He would
receive the congratulations of his
neighbors with a feeling that
they were deserved, with a
gratifying sense of final accom
plishment.
Notice that his was not a slack
and undisciplined life. He had
not drifted into success. When
opportunity had come he had or
dered and regulated his life so as
to make the best use of it. The
labor and risk involved in a
complete “scrapping” of his en
tire system of storehouses was
not a task which could have been
undertaken and carried through
by a man of lazy unwillingness
to exert himself or to rule his
conduct by a definite plan. If
discipline means the organization
of life on a plan clearly con
ceived and carefully carried out,
this man led a disciplined life.
Jesus’ Idea of Human Life.
Jesus thought of him as
abysmally foolish because he had
thrown so much away. A man
could be really wealthy, he could
accumulate possessions of which
time could never rob him, from
which death coul£ never separate
him. He could gather riches
which God himself accounted as
valuable, the possession of which
give the true life of the eternal
kingdom. He could achieve high
character, he coi^d develop an
appetite for righteousness, an ap
preciation of truth, a love of the
highest as God reveals it. He
could heap up these heavenly
treasures, and when he did he
had a life which was life indeed.
He was rich, really rich, rich as
God counts richenss, successful
as God knows success.
46 Years
13 th & O
National Bank
of Commerce
Lincoln, Nebraska
Member F.DJ.C.
<
HOLLYWOOD. (ANP). Re
search, to most people, means
long arduous hours of poring over
“many a quaint and curious vol
ume of forgotten lore.” But to
Ted Behr, research director for
such popular CBS quiz programs
as “Hit the Jackpot” and “Winner
Take All,” it simply means more
of the reading he enjoys.
Behr made reading and research
his occupation when rheumatism
stiffened his hands and forced him
to give up studying for a career
as a concert pianist. To him, read
ing anything and everything from
a seed catalogue to a six volume
theory of philosophy has become
fun. And, as he reads, which he
does seven days a week, he picks
up questions for his programs.
Before deciding to use a ques
tion, of course, Behr double
checks each answer. If he finds
a medical question, he immedi
ately checks it with a medical so
ciety. If he has a question, on
government, he clears it, if nec
essary, with Washington. He al
lows little margin for error.
Behr’s extensive reading has
turned him into a veritable hu
man encyclopedia. He can tell
you the number of sections in an
elephant’s trunk (400), or the
number of times the Cleveland
Indians have won the pennant
(twice).
Behr thinks his best bit of re
search was done when he de
cided to figure out how many
snowflakes fell on New York City
during 1947’s “big snow.” After
considerable effort with a slide
rule and assorted laws of calculus,
he arrived at an answer—616 sex
tillion, or 616 followed by 21
zeros.
While Eddie (Rochester) An
derson gets most of his exercise
using his vocal chords with Jack
Benny, his son, Billy Anderson, is
busy cutting records for his ath
letic prowess. Billy is an all
around track star at Compton
Junior college and has already set
two new Compton records. Billy,
a 6-foot-2 incher, gets over 70
yard hurdles at an 8.4 second clip,
just 1/10 of a second of the
world’s record held by Harrison
Dillard and that’s not all, he can
pole vault, throw a better-than
average-javelin and is a right
half-back on the football field be
sides being expert at hurdles, dash
and broad jump. Billy is being
watched carefully by local track
coaches as a good bet for the
gruelling 10-event decathlon grind.
All this of course, swells the
pride of papa Rochester. He says
Billy has no ambition to become
an entertainer like his dad, but
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If you who are described in the
following paragraphs and can
successfully identify yourself to
the editors of The Voice, you will
be awarded a coupon redeemable
at some well-known place of
business.
You are a young married man
about 25 years of age. You’re to
be commended for the very fine
work which you are doing for
your community. You were ob
served Sunday singing with a
men’s group. You were wearing
a white suit with a black shirt
and white shoes.
Your name is.
Well you tell us and receive a
subscription to The Voice.
If someone else calls in before
you, the award will be divided
between you and the first caller
with the right answer. (Phone
5-6491 or 5-7508.)
Last week Miss Camilla Palmer,
was identified by Ted Sorenson
and received a coupon for Photo
nook, 1443 O Street.
he eats, sleeps and drinks sports.
Right now the 20 year-old boy
towers 8 inches over his dad and
everybody in southrn California
is betting that Billy will make a
name for himself in the athletic
world.
“One Man’s Family” begins its
18th year of NBC broadcasting in
May. Abe Burrows signed a
seven-year contract with CBS
covering and television services as
writer, producer, director and
performer . . . Columbia records
will release “You Are There” al
bums on “Battle of Gettysburg”
and the “Signing of the Magna
Charta,” two outstanding broad
casts of the “You Are There”
radio series. The program’s format
has the unusual approach of pre
senting the world’s great events
through the eye-witness method
of radio today, and has made his
tory live and breathe with moving
accounts. The Columbia albums
will be permanent records of
these two great events.
If your merchant does not
advertise in The VOICE, ask him
to place an ad.
r 1
HOUSE PAINT
Get it at
Sewall Paint & Yarn. Co.
2055 O Ph. 2-3622
m
WM" _*jg
Your City |
Light Department j
p»> f
• A small adjustment may put
your pen in perfect condition.^
Bring it in for expert service. 4
• Our men are factory-trained in
repairing Parker, Sheaffer, Ever
sharp and all other makes.
1124-26 O Street
--At Winterhalte g
Complete line ol Wallpapers,
Paints, Enamels, Varnishes,
Brushes and decorating sup
plies..
ne. I
(IRE DECORATIVE WAUFATERS AND PAlNTf
Formerly Columbia Glaac A Paint Co.
14th and P Streets Phone 2-7549
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