The voice. (Lincoln, Nebraska) 1946-195?, August 09, 1951, Page Three, Image 3

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    Quinn Chapel I. M IS. Church
9th and C Street*.
Rev. J B. Brooke. Jastor.
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.
Nurthalde Church of Ood
83rd and T Street. Mrs. Alice Britt.
10:00 a. m. Church School
11:00 a. m Morning Worship.
7:80 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.
Alloa 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 TEMP 1JS
2149 (J Street, Phone 2-3901
Rev. T. O. McWilliams, Jr., Pastor
Ordev of Worship
Sunday Scnool, 10 a. m.
Morning Worship, 11 a. m.
Seivice at Carver Nursing Home, 2001
Fine Street. 5 o’clock.
Evening Service, >7:30 p on.
Mt. Zion Baptist Church
Rev. W. i 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.
13rd and S; Ralph Q. Nahan. pastor.
SUNDAY—Church at study. 10: ohurch
ht worship, 11 a.m.
MONDAY —Trustee ooard meeting.
WEDNESDAY—Gladsome service. 7 to
• p.m.
FRIDAY—Ministry ot music, 8 p.m.
CME Church.
2030 r Street.
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 Ood la 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 i p.m. Junior church
service.
7:30 p.m. Thursday, prayei and Bible
pastor. Rev. Charles Williams.
♦Courtesy Calvert Corporation
Carl Makes Perfect Score
LOUISVILLE, Ky. — (ANP) —
Miss Irene Coppedge, 21-year
old air force recruit, has the dis
tinction of being the first female
ever to make a perfect score on
the Armed Forces qualification
test.
Miss Coppedge, who also passed
the physical examination with a
high rating, is one of a group of
women who enlisted in the ser
vice and is now enroute to Lack
land Air Force Base in Texas for
eight weeks of basic training. She
is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Samuel Coppedge and a graduate
of Central High school.
She expects to take up some
specialized work in the service,
preferably something connected
with mathematics, and hopes to
complete a college course while in
service.
FOR y
—n
1 Sunday School 1
Lesson
THE CHRISTIAN’S USE OF
MONEY AND GOODS
Scripture . . . Matthew 25:14-;
30; Acts: 2:43-47; 19:23-41. Mem-j
ory selection . . . Therefore all
things whatsoever ye would that'
men should do unto you, do ye so 1
unto them; for this is the law and
the prophets.
Present Day Application
By Frederick D. Jordan,
Los Angeles, California.
As an instrument in our eco
nomic system, money has a highly
useful part to play. If we ac
cept the fundamental ideas set
forth in the teachings of Jesus,
certain facts about our own ex
penditures and standards of living
stand out. First of all we must
set aside our “tithe” of offering
for the Church and Christian so
cial work. Our preaching about
“loving our neighbor” is mean
ingless and hypocritical unless we
remember the underprivileged. It
is wrong to spend money waste
fully or ostentatiously, to use
money for luxuries that debase,
to domineer over others, or to
obtain the disintegrative thrills of
speculation and gambling. The
love for prestige and wealth is a
passion unbecoming a Christian.
Used rightfully money is a bless
ing, not only providing creature
comforts for us but happiness for
others, and an effective instru
iment for the cultivation of the
higher life.
Business Men
Open Office
| WASHINGTON, D. C. — Mr.
Horace Sudduth, president of the
National Negro Business League,
Incorporated, has announced the
official opening of permanent na
tional headquarters for the league
in Washington, D. C.
According to Mr, Sudduth, an
Ohio business man and owner of
the popular Manse hotel in Cin
I cinnati, “the establishment of per
'manent national headquarters by
! the league, marks the inaugura
I tion of a broader program of edu
1 cation and service to business men
! and women and the public at
I large.” It is the first permanent!
national headquarters established
| by the league since its organiza
tion in 1900.
i Temporary headquarters have
been set up at 1229 You street
N.W. Washington, D. C., with Ar
thur Waller acting as Convention
Secretary and aiding in setting up
the national office; and Mrs. Jean
etta Welch Brown acting as direc
tor of Public Relations and aiding
with the national program. Per
manent headquarters will be se
lected at the 51st annual conven
tion of the league which will be
CLYDE'S DAIRY STORE
Hamburger and Cold Lunches
ICE CREAM
25* *27* k*
2230 R Street
Hodgman-Splain
MORTUARY
1335 L Street
Lincoln, Nebraska
GEO. H. WENTZ
Incot porated
Numbing and Heating
1620 N St rfaone 2-1293
News From
Elwood, Kansas
BY WILBERTA BRADY
Billy Chambers is spending his
summer vacation with his sister,
Mrs. F. Riley and her family in
Washington, D. C.
Mr. Lav Munroe returned home
July 31st, from Wadsworth, Kan
sas and is doing fine. He is up
and around after being ill.
Mrs. Mary Hayes and daugh
ter, Willa Mae spent the week-end
with their brother and uncle.
Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Brady and
son, Justin, were in Effingham,
Kansas on July 30th. They were
visiting the Wallingford family.
HOME ON VACATION
Miss Nova Barker
Nova Barker, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Wilbur Barker, is spend
ing her two weeks vacation from
Nurses training with her parents.
Nova entered nurses school at
Marymound School of Nursing in
Salina, Kansas. In September
I she will enter her second year at
Wichita, then she will take her
I third year’s training at Salina.
j Mrs. John Gorman is spending
. a few days with her daughter,
(Mrs. A. Graves and family al
Skidmore, Mo. She was accom
panied there by the Kenneth Wal
iklnford family.
j Rev. and Mrs. J. Johnson and
[daughter spent Sunday July 29th
in Omaha, Nebraska, visiting
friends and relatives.
The Junior Stewardesses gave
a very successful fish fry Friday
evening, July 27th.
That’s all for now,
“BERT”
held at the U. S. Department of
Commerce here, October 10, 11, 12,
1951; and at which time an execu
tive secretary and staff will be ap
pointed to execute the program.
For Better Values
0 Drugs
• Cosmetics
• Stationery
• Candy
• Prescriptions
CHEAPPER DRUGS
1325 O Sc Lincoln
DONLEY STAHI CO. LTD.
1331 N SC
DRUGS—PRESCRIPTIONS
SICK ROOM NECESSITIES
WE APPRECIATE
TOUR PATRONAGE
Sentence Sermons
FACE OR HEART—WHICH?
1. It is hard to believe that a
man could think himself smart
who looks only on the face and
not upon the heart.
2. But there are folks who are
dumb and some highly educated
who act as if only a certain color
of skin and high character are
mated.
3. They don t seem to sense
that out of one blood, God created
all men to dwell upon the face of
the earth, and that He alone wou^d
be the judge of their real worth.
4. He also gave notice that He
would set the bounds of their
habitation, and certainly He in-1
eluded no space for hate and
segregation.
5. He threw into space the
heavens and outspread the seas
and made no exception between
Races, that one should bow to
another upon its knees.
6. God’s design for all men of
every birth, was that His will be
done in earth as it is in heaven,
and mankind be the crown of His
creation.
7. But here we are today in this
unfriendly world, with the ma
jority cf men striding frantically
for fame and fortune to embrace
. . . looking not at the heart of
man, but upon his face.
8. Thus nations are rising
against nations since outward ap
pearances have been the main at
traction . . . and the heart being i
so miserably neglected, is the1’
cause of all this distraction.
9. But this should not seem
strange, it has gone long without
a change—it has always happened
this way; the old order of “Racial
distinctions versus Reason,” seems
to have come to stay.
10. The spread of this dreaded
disease is stench in the nostrils
of an unbiased, impartial and for
giving God; love He delights to|
impart—ever proving to mankind,
that He looks not upon the out-!
ward appearance, but upon the'
; heart.
.1 11. This dangerous fog of hate
.'and deception has always left man
(afflicted with its terrible infec
r ■ ■
Illinois U Awards
1st Ph.D. to Negro
In Accounting
CHAMPAIGN, IiL (ANP).
Among the thousands of persons
awarded degrees recently at the
University of Illinois was William
L. Campfield, son of Mrs. I. K.
Campfield of Tuskegee, Ala.
Campfield became the first
Negro to win Ph.D. in accountancy
from the University of Illinois.
His degree-winning thesis was
titled, “An Inquiry into the
Nature Implications to the Public
Accounting Profession.”
Dr. Campfield was born and
reared in Tuskegee. The 39-year
old accounting expert earned a
B.C.S. degree from New York uni
versity in 1933, and an M.B.S.
from the University of Minnesota
in 1939. Two years later he quali
fied for a CPA (certified public
accountant) certificate from the
state of North Carolina.
He began study for his doctorate
at the University of Illinois in
1949. He is a member of Beta
Alpha Psi, the American Insti
tue of Accountants, and the Cali
fornia Society of Certified Public
i Accountants.
Dr. Campfield now lives in Cali
fornia where he has held a num
ber of important postions with
private firms as well as the federal
government in accounting.
New Albany’s Only
Negro Doctor Dies
NEW ALBANY, Ky.—(ANP)—
Dr. S. C. Alexander, 72, New Al
bany’s only Negro physician, died
here last week after a long ill
ness.
Dr. Alexander had practiced in
New Albany for 48 years.
lion; but now he is administering
a new kind of needle and his
condition is bejoming very critical.
12. Thus, this is the way, and
the only way mankind can hope
to get our world off to a new start;
(it is by looking not at the outward
appearance, but upon the heart.
r.111
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
VINE ST.
MARKET
GROCERIES a MEATS
22od and Via*
2-CSSS — 2-CSS4
km
Your City
Light Department f
The Nebraska
Typewriter Co.
125 No. 11th Lincoln
2-2157
Royal Typewriters
Mimeograph - Duplicators
Dictaphones • Clary Adders
Sold • Rented • Repaired
Flowers By Tyrrell's
D. L. TyrretT* Flowers
$-2357 1133 No. Cottier
Where Your Furniture Dollor Buys More
1532 0 Street
Shurtleff's Furniture Co.