Quinn Chapel A. M, E. Church 9th and C Streets. Rev. J. B. Brooks, Pastor. 6:00 p.m. Young Peoples Fellowship. 7:30 p.m. Evening Worship. 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. Mrs. Alice Britt. 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) 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) 2149 U Street, Phone 2-3901 Rev. T. O. McWilliams, Jr., Pastor Rev. T. T. McWilliams. Sr. Ass’t Pastor Order of Worship Sunday School, 10 a. m. Morning Worship, 11 a. m. Service at Carver Nursing Home, 2001 Vine Street, 5 o’clock. Evening Service, 7:30 p m. Mt. Zion Baptist Church Rev. W. 1 Monroe, Pastor Corner 12th and F Streets 10:00 a. m. Sunday School 11:00 a. m. Morning Worship 6:30 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 Kt worship, 11 a.m. MONDAY—Trustee board meeting. WEDNESDAY—Gladsome service, 7 to • P.m. FRIDAY—Ministry of music, 8 p.m. CME Church. 2030 T Street. Rev. H. A. Simmons, Pastor. 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. 11:00 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 9 p.m. Junior church •ervice. 7:30 p.m. Thursday, prayer and Bible pastor, .Rev. Charles Williams. *Green Pastures’ Revival Postponed NEW YORK. (ANP). “The Green Pastures “revival (sic) or iginally set for Dec. 27 at the City Center theater has been set back to permit presentation of another play, “Captain Brassbound’s Con version.” - Last week it was announced I the revival in musical form of Bthe famous old stage hit “won’t ; arrive for at least a month later than that.” For the past few ^eeks, theatrical publicati o n s have carried ads asking for inter ested people to contact the man agement in person not by phone for the tentative revival. ■ COURT S. MULLEN JEWELER New Location Capital Hotel Building 139 No. 11th St. Phone 2-7912 — ... i. Smith Pharmacy 2146 Vine Prescriptions — Drags Fountain — Sundries Phone 2-1958 mmmmmmm— i Sunday School ; Lesson \ | The Stewardship of the Gospel. Sscripture: Acts 8:4-8; 18:1-7; 1 Corinthians 9:16, 17; II Corin thians 5:17-20; Philippians 1:12-18; 2:12-18. Memory Selection: Let a man | so account of us, as of the minis ters of Christ, and stewards of the mysteries of God. Moreover it is required in stewards, that a man be found faithful, I Corinthians 4:1, 2. Present Day Application By Fredrick D. Jordan Los Angeles, California All that we are and all htat we have belongs to God, and we are stewards of these possessions. The way in which we regard our stewardship is fundamental. It is also our responsibility to share the Gospel with others. Because one does not have a license to preach is no reason that he can not do something vital about the Kingdom. Oftimes lay people can witness much more effectively than a minster. A heart-to-heart testimony from a Christian lay man on the job or in school may reach and save a soul that the minister has no opportunity to contact. God’s call to be a full time ambassador of His will come to comparatively few, but if it does come, do not refuse Him. Un happiness, discontent and often wrecked lives have resulted when calls have been turned down for the ministry or for missionary work. Do not regard any call to service as unimportant. Per haps you ought to be teaching a Sunday school class, have you ever felt the urge? Today there are many additional ways to spread the Gospel other than the “word of mouth” method used by the early Christians. We can make effective use of radio, tele vision and other modern visual aids. We contribute as a church to the new literacy program of evan gelization, which has for its slo gan, “Each one teach one and reach one and save one.” We also aid in the support of the Ameri can Bible Society which has trans lated the Bible into more than 1,000 tongues and sponsors its its distribution all over the world. To those who know Christ there is no greater satisfaction than to kindle a love for Him in another heart. Mrs. Bly, Former Lincolnite, Dies Mrs. Lena Bly, a Lincoln resi dent for 31 years, died Friday, Nov. 25th in Chicago at the home of a nephew, Val Slaughter. Mrs, Bly, who graduated from St. Joseph High School in 1899 and later taught school in. Mis souri, lived at 321 South 20th in Lincoln until July, 1949, when she moved away following the death of her husband, Edward. Until re cently, Mrs. Bly had made her home in Leavenworth, Kans., with a brother-in-law, Captain William Bly and Mrs. Bly. THE EVANS CLEANERS — LAUNDERERS Save Money Use oar Cash and Carry Plan 333 No. 12th SI Dial 2-6961 Tales CARODINE Just how much it takes to make an all American pigskin player now-a-days, I confess as I know a lot of sports fans in the midwest do, I don’t know. When a young man travels over as much ground as Bobbie Reynolds did and scores enough tochdowns and kicks to come out the nation’s highest scorer by a good margin besides scoring three of those T.D.’s against the nation’s No. 1 team and then wind up on the second All American team, I don’t know. But I suppose someone needs to travel around and take a look out in the midwest once in a while. Well at this writing the Com husker basketball team was de feated by a fast breaking Min nesota machine last Saturday night in Minneapolis. On the all western football sec ong team I see the name of Johnny Bright, the nation’s lead ing ground gainer from Drake U. * * * FREE THROWS FROM THE CAGE FRONT. (ANP). A crowd of more than 14,000 saw basketball’s two Negroes in organized pro basketball play last week at Madison Square Garden. Chuck Cooper played with the Boston Celtics in the first game of the doubleheader. He scored 17 points, but his team lost to the Philadelphia Warriors, 76 to 74. .. .In the sec ond half, the New York Knicker bockers, now clicking, walloped the Syracuse Nationals 108 to 84. Nat (Sweetwater) Clifton played with the Knickerbockers. Both teams are in the National Basketball association. A third Negro in this league, Earl Lloyd, of the Washington Capitols was drafted by Uncle Sam. .. Three Negroes are expected to be key men with the U.C.L.A. Bruins, defending Pacific Coast league champs. Gene Williams is on the starting team as center. Ernie Bond and Bobby Pounds also play with the team. These men are following in the footsteps of such famed cagers of the past with the Uclans as Jackie Robinson, Dave Minor and Don Barksdale... Among Negroes featured on white teams in college are Sher man White of Long Island uni versity, Bill Garrett of Indiana, Ed Warner of City College of New York, and Walter Dukes of Seton Hall... Flying backward is a stunt only one landbird can do—the hum ming bird. CLEANING and SANITATION SUPPLIES All Type* Brooms—Furniture Polishea Mops—Floor Seal and Wax Sweeping Compound* Mopping Equipment Kelso Chemical 117 North 9th St 2-2434 Jess Williams Springs Sentence Sermons By Rev. Frank Clarence Lo\».„ . For ANP HOMOGENIZED RELIGION 1. Homogenized milk is re ported to be the best, for when it is far spent, they say, the cream is none the less. 2. From all appearances it is a pretty good mixture with the cream all mixed in; but some folks still prefer the old natural kind that looks appetizing with the deep cream line. 3. Christian religion is an un changeable system and all those who know it to be real, live above the common clatter and mixtures and refused to lie and steal. 4. The careless unconcerned Christian carries around a make believe sign, and if one is looking for Christian virtues, about him will be found no cream line. 5. Such examples of Christian ity are like homogenized milk— it carries the name of the real thing, but tlie ingredients a,re mixed to the very hilt. 6. The cream-line of Faith has been displaced by false pride, and when things begin to look too religious they try to run out and hide. 7. Hope, to then has become a lost quality they now doubt that good things their way will ever come—the very spot where Satan would have them, and he’s got them on the run. 8. Their cream-line of Charity has also vanished and the hands For Everything in HARDWARE Baker Hardware 101 No. 9th 2-3710 Gillett Poultry FRESH DRESSED POULTRY QUALITY EGGS Phone 2-2001 528 No. 9th Couple W anted NORTH PLATTE, Nebraska.— Wanted man and wife to work here. Three room house free. Man to work in Hahlers Garage and his wife to work in the home. For details write Mrs. Rebecca Hopkins, Post Office Box 127, North Platte, Nebraska. are growing cold; acts, which once they refused to practice, in them they are now growing bold. 9. This is the state of a mixed Christianity . . . the homogenized sort, with no cream-line; contam inated with worldly elements, but Christian virtues too diluted to shine. 10. What a predicament when the world is looking for true Dis ciples, to find so many skeletons in uniform, with no sincerity of purpose and their cream-line ob literated and gone. 11. Children longing for whole some milk of kindness, and weary grownups for a bit of pure creamy Grace, find many forms moving about them, but the cream-line of loving kindness, hard to trace. 12. Thus our darkened world is all mangled today with Hate and Greed apparently having it their way; and though there is still balm in Gilead, the living seem not to outnumber the dead. | n. O. Me Field I Cleaners A Tailors ■ ■ m Specialize in Band-Weaving ^ m 301 No. 0th Phone 2-5441 . ^i.iiiiiininwiiiijaiiuniiiniiniiiininmininik PARRISH MOTOR CO. The home of clean need care. 120 No. 19 St. * Make WHITE'S Your FURNITURE HEADQUARTERS Its 108 Ho. 10th Street