! .jumn Cliapei A. M. fc. Church 8th rnd C Streets Rev , H Brooks Pastor tj.00 p tn. Young Peoples bellowship : :30 p tn Evening Service 9:45 a rr Sunday School 10:45 a tn Morning Worship Tuesday 1:00 p m . Prayei meetlnr North side Church oi Ood 23rd and 1 Street 10.00 a tn Church School. 11:00 a m Morning Worship 7:30 p. m Evening Worship 7:30 p tn Midweek Praye. Meeting 7:30 P m Friday Bible Study. For place of meeting call 2-4673 \llon . Impel (Seventh-day Adventist! LeCount Butter Associate Pastor 9:45 a m Sabbath School 10:45 a m Missionary Meeting. 11;00 a tn Morning Worship. 4:00 p tn Young People's Society (HKIS1 1’EMPU Church ui Christ HoUiicsbi 2149 u Street. Pho 2-3901 Rev 1 O McWilliams, Jr. 'astor. Rev r T McWilliams. Sr ass t. Pasioi Ordci oi Worship. Sunday Scnooi. 10 a. m. Morning Worship, if a. m. Service at Jarvei Nursing Home. 2001 Vine Street, 5 o'clock Evening Service 7 30 o tn. Ml. /,ion Baptist Church. Rev W t. Monroe, Pastor. Cornel 12th and l- Streets. 10:00 a. in. Sunday School. 11:00 a. m Morning Worship 6:30 p. m Baptist Training Union. 8:00 p m Evening Worship. Vcwniao Methodist. £3rd & S. iUv G. W. Nathan, pastor, io a. m. Church School. •i.:;0 p m Methodist Youth Fellowship 11:00 a m. Morning Worship. CMl Methodist Church. 9030 l Street. First and Third Sundays Rev i W. Simpson, Pastor. 9:30 a m Sunday School. 10:3' a. m. Methodist Training Union. 11:00 a. m Morning Worship. Church ot God Ui Christ. 9:00 a. m. Sunday school. 11:00 Morning worship. 6:30 p. m X. P. W W 8:00 p. m. Evening worship. 8:00 p m. Tuesaay and Friday regulai service. natei aand y p m lunioi murcb serv ice 7:30 p. on. Thursday prayei and Bible pastor. Rev Charles Williams. Conference in Missouri The Rev. J. W. Simpson, pastor of the CME congregation here, left Sunday evening to be present as his annual conference which con vened Wednesday in Mexico, Mo. Mrs. James Fuller, a respesenta tive from the cjiurch, left Monday morning enroute to the Kansas and Missouri Annual conference. She joined a delegation in Kansas City where she plans to spend a few days on her return. The Right Rev. J. Arthur Ham lette of Kansas City, Kansas is the presiding bishop. VINE ST. MARKET GROCERIES & MEATS 22nd and Vine 2-6583 — 2-6584 Gillett Poultry FRESH DRESSED POULTRY QUALITY EGGS Phone 2-2001 528 No. 9th TYPEWRITERS ANT MAKE SOLD RENTED REPAIRED Nebraska Typewriter Co. 130 No. tSth St. Phone 8-tl6Y Lincoln. Neb. Went* I0«-23c- 39* Lincoln* Fovorit* Potato Chip i k— . -i Sunday School Lesson Paul, World Evangelist Scripture—Acts 16:9-15; 17:22 23; 26; 11 Corinthians 11:22; 12:10 Printed Portion—Acts 26:9-20. Memory Selection—I determined not to know any thing among you, I save Jesus Christ, and him cruci { lied. I Corinthians 2:1. Present Day Application Frederick I). Jordan Los Angeles, Calif. Paul was a man of action, an ! explorer of new regions, a founder ! of churches. Above all he was a i Christian missionary. Every other , phase of his life was subordinate to this, Paul had a pioneer spirit. I He had a genius for penetration into unworked fields, and at : whatever cost of suffering or hardship. He believed in a mis sionary Christ. To him Christ was sovereign of the whole earth. He was King of all. Christ died, to his thinking, not for a few, or for 1 a class, but for the whole world, j If we have the missionary spirit, we too, will believe that Christ died for all, and be willing to do what we can as individuals to let all know. Paul Quinn had the vision of Paul when he asked the General Conference of 1848 to permit him to establish churches in the “west.” He returned to the General Conference of 1852 re porting 44 churches established God is calling today for pioneer spirits to do as did Paul. A min ister was talking to two young men concerning their call to the ministry, and the claim of Chris tian work in mission countries. One gave an excuse with a fa- ^ miliar ring, “But I have never felt a compelling urge to give my life in the mission fields - broad.” The minister asked the disquieting question, “Are you sure that you are within calling distance?” Are you? I)an Bankhead to Tour i With Homestead Grays | BROOKLYN. (ANP). Pitcher l Dan Bankhead of the Brooklyn Dodgers will barnstorm with the j Homestead Grays of the Negro j American league at the end of the i baseball season. Under the direction of the Gale agency, the tour will be conducted in circus fashion through the use of ballrooms and theatres through out the trip. Bankhead will pitch with the j Grays Oct. 10 through Nov. 7. I Hampered by a sore arm early in i the season, he has recovered to ! become a top relief pitcher for the Dodgers. _ 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 ROSE MANOR , STUDIO 1421 O Street Phone 2-2247 Portraits by Appointment George Randol. P. A. of A Prices reasonable Work guaranteed MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION , 1 Oth and 0 St. Since 1871 ELWOOD NEWS By Wilberta Brady Hello Folks: This week will be full of inter est to some of you I know. Nova Jane Barker has entered nurses training in Salina, Kas. Shirley York, Willa Mae Hayes and Wilberta Brady represented Elwood at Ebenezer Sunday aft ernoon. The young women of that church gave a program. Atchison, Elwood and St. Joseph was well represented. There were also tw'o young men from Germany there. A panel discussion about the sit uation of the w'orld today was held. Elwood High played Leora High j Wednesday afternoon at Leora in a game of soft ball. Elwood won 18-9. Glendoris Cochrane is now re siding in Kansas City where she is working. Anna Lee Parker is ill at home with the mumps. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Enicks and family of St. Louis are visiting Mr. and Mrs. Luke Chambers and other relatives and friends. Mrs. Enicks is the former Beatrice Chambers. Caston Terrell has returned to work after a two week sick leave. Well, folks, that is all for this week. Will see you again next week. BERT. Lincoln (Pa.) Prof. To Lecture at Uni. COLUMBUS, O. (ANP). Dr. John A. Davis, political science professor at Lincoln (Pa.) uni versity, will work during the 1950 51 school year as visiting lecturer at Ohio State university. His appointment marks the first time this university has employed a Negro teacher above the rank of graduate assistant. Dr. Davis is the brother ot Dr. Allison Da vis, a professor at the University of Chicago. At Ohio State, the Lincoln in structor will replace Dr. E. Allen Adams who is to be a visitin lecturer at Oxford university in England during the coming year. Dr. Davis was graduated from Williams college in 1933, the Uni versity of Wisconsin the follow ing year with his master’s degree. Last year he received his Ph.D. at Columbia university. In public life he has served as assistant director of the New York Commission against Discrimina tion and on the wartime federal fair employment practices com mittee. Umberger’s 2-2424 illO r'unera ana Ainouiance .*rv ice. tferna Burke. Key Sheaft. uarolt Rohrbaueh. Fiord Umberger F’amllte* 2-5059 » ourieay Lincoln state jo. tnal. PLAINSMAN BULWARK—Bob Thurston. 22-year-old junior, was the lone bright spot in the Plainsman defense as Wesleyan took a 33-7 shellacking at Omaha University. Indian gains thru his left tackle spot were rare. Thurston hails frtvm Daytona Beach, Fla., is six f *’ •—e inches tall and weighs 196. (Journal Staff Photo.) NEW FABRICS MADE TO RESEMBLE FUR *395 n ■ a yard / % C •'wseae All 54" wide. You’ll admire these clever novelty fabrics made by Han ora to resemble various furs inelud j ing . . . 9 Karonduki 9 Xcbra 9 leopard 9 I nborn ealf 9 Krimmer These fabrics are warm as well as attractive. Save money and look lovely this winter in garments made from these fabrics. Here are just a few of their many uses. 9 Hats 9 Coats i 9 Trimmings 9 Jackets 9 Weskits 9 Capes GOLD'S . . . Third Floor