]^hwvduL&\ Quinn Chapei 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 Northside Church of God 23rd and T Street. Robert u* Moody, Pastor. 10:00 a. m. Churcd School. 11:00 a. m. Morning Worship. 7:30 p. an. Evening Worship. 7:30 p. m. Midweek Prayer Meeting. 7:30 p. m Friday Bible Study. For place cf neeting Tall 2-4673. Allan Chapel (Seventh-day Adventist). LeCount Butler. Associate Pastor. 9:45 a. m. Sabbath School. 10:45 a. m. Missionary Meeting. 11.00 a. m. Morn ng Worship. 4:00 p. m. Young People's Society. Christ temple Church ol Christ (Holinessl 2149 U Street Rev. X. O. McWilliams, jr.. Pastor. 10:00 a. m. Sunday School. 11:00 a. m. Morning Worship 6:00 p. m Service at Carver nome 6:00 p. m. H.Y.P.U.. Richard UcWii Hams, president. / :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. Wednesoay Prayer and Praise, 8:00. 2nd A 4tb rriday, Young Peoples Prayer Band. 8:00. Kathryn King, presi dent. You are always welcome to Christ Temple Churcn. Mt. Alon Baptist .toureh Rev. W. r. Monroe, Pastor. Corner 12ih and r Streets 10:00 Sunday School J1:00 Morning Worship 6:30 Baptist Training Union 8:00 Evening Worship Newman Methodist. 23rd A 8. Rev vVUJiam A. Greene, pastor. 9:45 a. m. Church School. 11:00 a. m. Morning Worship. 6:30 p. m. Methodist Youth Fellowship CMK Methodist Church. 2030 T Street. First and Third Sundays. Rev. J. W\ Simpson, Pastor. 9:30 a. m.—Sunday School. 10:30 a. m. — Methodist Training Unlor. 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 p m. Tuesday and Friday regular service. 7:30 p. m. Thursday prayer and Bible bail, 9:00 p, m Junior church service, pastor, Rev. Charles Williams. Baldwin to Resign NEW YORK. (ANP). Roger N. Baldwin, director of the Ameri can Civil Liberties union since it was founded in 1920, will resign Jan. 1 to devote full time to specialized work in the field of international rights, it was an nounced last week. According to John Haynes Holmes, chairman of the agency’s board, Baldwin’s registration was attributed to the “increasing con cern of the union with the rela tion of the United States to the problems of international stand ards of civil liberties. He will devote part of his time to the International college foe the Rights of Man, the committee of international civil liberties and the committee on American colonies. O SO GRAPE BOTTLING CO. 6322 Havelock Jess Williams Springs j Sunday School Lesson t_____J SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1949 THEME—God Comforts His Peo ple. Isaiah 40-41; 42:5-9; 54; 61; 63:7-9; Luke 4:14-21. America’s Need of Comfort. Our own country is much in need ol ii comforting message today. There are.so many signs of unhappiness in America. If we look at the world of industry we are re minded of the factory in Mr. Priestly’s book. We have splendid machinery, highly effective man agement, great hosts of skilled workmen. This vast industrial or ganization is one of the bases of our national strength and those who work at it are as truly sol diers of the commonwealth as any man in uniform ever was. There are fellow workers in the great cause of demonstrating that a democratic society can give to its members abundant means for se curing the richest life as far as material things can help. Industry ought to be a great happy family. But what do we find? Manage ment and labor are at chronic war. Both are guilty of putting selfish profit above the public welfare. Each party is justified to some extent, not a small one, in its suspicions of the other. Neither labor nor management has yet fully learned the lesson that the only way to happiness in industry is to work together unselfishly, not merely for wages and profits, but for the welfare of the repub lic. This is the only message which will bring comfort to the sorrows of industry. Utopian? Impossible? Wild idealism? Or is it simply the Christianity which we profess but do not put into practice? Did not Jesus say, “Take heed and beware of covetousness’’? Did He not say, “Seek ye first the kingdom of God and his righteousness and all these things shall be added unto you’’? Until we take Him seriously there will be no peace and no happiness in the world of industry. Or take America’s homes. Juve nile delinquency, the appalling number of divorces, are not evi dences of happiness in the Amer ican home. When he spoke to the Princess Elizabeth and her hus band at their wedding, the Arch bishop of York with impressive simplicity told the royal couple that the secret of a happy mar riage was in the unselfish sharing of life together in mutual self giving. Petty aims, small ambi tions, these destroy all chances of happiness in the family. Where are Americans to find a way to that happy dedication of their homes to high and worthy ideals in which husband and wife, par ents and children, can find a com mon goal and a lasting bond of unity? Surely the church has a message which will bring comfort to this great area of unhappiness. FREADRICH BROS. • • • • Since 1902 Master Grocers Tlie Best Place to Trade After'All—1316 N Street 9th & L Super Market Iluskerville at Air Base CMEs Send Two Missionaries To Study For Work In Brazil Christianity begins at home but it does not stop there. For forty years the CME church has had interest in foreign missions and was among the first Negro denominations to send a missionary to Africa. The late Dr. John Wesley Gilbert accompanied Bishop W. R. Lambuth, of the ME Church South to the Belgian | Congo and established missions among the Batetela tribes. Dr. Gilbert, one of the first students at Paine college, was ; the denomination s first mission ary to foreign fields. Nearly 40 years later, Dr. E. C. Peters, president of Paine college, announces that again a Paine col lege student is the first CME mis sionary .to go to Brazil. Mr. Em mett DeVerne Steele and his wife, Henrietta Rivers Steele, sailed for Brazil on September 22. They will spend their first six months in further language study at Campinas, Brazil, and later be gin their missionary work at Gvanberry institute, Juriz de Fora. Mr. Steele will be engaged in recreation, while Mrs. Steele will serve as social worker. They both come from historic Trinity church, Milledgeville, Ga. He became interested in mission ary work while serving overseas in the army. He made special studigs for missionary work at Latin American institute, Chicago, and Garrett Biblical Institute, Evanston, 111. Mrs. Steele is a graduate of West Virginia State and received training in Social Service at the University of Chi cago and has been a case worker in the Chicago Department of Welfare. This enterprise will mark the renewal of the joint missionary enterprise between the Methodist church and the CME church New School For Richmond RICHMOND, Va. (ANP). Plans for a new $2,500,000 high school to replace the overcrowded and inadequate Armstrong high school were completed last week. The new building is to be mod ern, and will contain all the neces sary facilities for efficiency. Final plans have not been made for the old Armstrong school when the new one is finished. It has been reported, however, that it will be used for an elementary school or junior high school. NOTICE McFields Cleaners & Tailors New Location, 301 No. 9th 9th and Q St. Phone 2-5441 Gilmour-Danielson Drug Co. PRESCRIPTION DRUGGISTS 142 So. 13th St. 2-1246 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 j. G. IRWIN JEWELRY AND REPAIRING 111 NO. ]1 LET DONLEY STAHL CO. 1331 N St B_UR—DRUGGIST \Hfko^4 I0<-2.»<- 39* Lincoln's Favorito Potato Chip^ For Everything in HARDWARE Baker Hardware 101 No. 9ih 2-3710 which started 40 years ago and will stimulate the present move ment for a missionary commission into Africa.—Christian Index. The First National Bank of Lincoln 10th & "O” St. Member F.D.I.C. 46 Years 13th & O National Bank of Commerce Lincoln, Nebraska Member F.D.I.C. , Qifts for all occasions! LUGGAGE AND LEATHER GOODS WRITING PAPER GAMES AND PLAYING CARDS —Many Other Items— LATSCH BROTHERS 1124 O St. 2-6838 HALF PRICE Boxed Stationery Well Known Brands (Lovely for Christmas Gifts) GOLDENROD STATIONERY STORE 215 North 14th Street QUALITY PHOTOS Low’er Prices—Faster Service PHOTO NOOK 9 a m. to 9 p.m. and Sunday* 1443 “O” Street Lincoln, Nebr. _