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About The voice. (Lincoln, Nebraska) 1946-195? | View Entire Issue (Aug. 30, 1951)
I . ,/ I I (fulan Chapel A. M K. Church Mb and O Struct*. Rev. J B. Brook*, -’astor. 6:00 p. m. Young People* Fellowship. 7:30 p m. Evening Worship. 9:45 a m. Sunday School. 10:45 a on Morning Worship. Tuesday 9:00 p m. Prayer Meeting. North side Church At God 99rd and 1 Street Mrs Alice Britt. 10:00 a. m. Church School 11:00 a. ra Morning Worship. 7:30 p. an. Evening Worship. 7:30 p. m Midweek Prayer Meeting. 7:30 p tn. Friday Bible 8tudy. ,'ir place of meeting call 2-4673. A lion (hspei (Seventh-day Adventist) LeCount Butler, associate Pastor 9:45 a. na. Sabbath School 10:45 a. m Missionary Meeting 11:00 a. m. Morning Worship 4:00 o m. Young People’s Society CHRIST TEMPLE 2149 U Street, Phone 2-3901 Rev. T O. McWilliams. Jr.. Pastor Order of Worship •anday School, 10 a. m. Morning Worship. 11 a. m. Bn rtrs at- Carver Nursing Home. 2001 7let Street, 5 o'clock. Evening Service. 7:30 p m. Mt. Zhm Baptist Choreh Rev. W. i Monroe. Pastot Corner 12th and F Street* 10:00 a. m. Sunday School 11:00 a. m Morning Worship 6:3Q p. m Baptist Training Union 9:00 p m. Evening Worship NEWMAN METHODIST. tSrd and S; Ralph G. Nahan. pastor. SUNDAY—Church at study. 10: church of warship, II a-ik. MONDAY—Trustee ooard meeting. WEDNESDAY—Gladsome eervic*. 7 to 9 p.m. FRIDAY—Ministry of music. S p.m. CMC Chore h. 9030 r Street. First and Third Sundays 9:30 a.m.. Sunday School 10:30 a.m.. Methodist Training Union 11:00*Am.. Morning Worship, j Oh arch of God in Christ. 9:00 a.m.. Sunday School. 11:00 Am.. Morning worship. 0:30 p.m.. Y.P.W.W 9:00 p.m.. Evening worship. 9:00 p.m. Tuesday and Friday, reg ular service. Prayer hand 4 o.m. Junior church service. 7:30 P.m. Thursday, prayer and Bibla pastor. Rev. Charles Williams. •Courtesy Calvert Corporation Hurricane (Continued from Page 1) soldier at Up Park Camp was crushed by a falling beam when a barracks fell. Patients were struck dead at the Poor House and the Mental Hospital. TheJ .... -gjj T —*1 AUTO PARTS MOTOR REBUILDING MOTOR EXCHANGE BEN’S NEW WAY AUTO PARTS 2018-2024 "O” St. Ph. 2-7039 “f out of 10 your ''Ml bet u Ben” For Everything m HARDWARE Baker Hardware 101 No. 9th «710 ■iiiiBi!!:iip«':,^i rd H. O. MeField Cleaners A Tailor* Specialise in Hand-Weavin* 301 No. 9th Phone 2-5441 Piihm MI ■Hill■!!!'■ SMITH Phormacy 2140 Vine . Prescriptions — Drur* Fountain — Sundries Phone 2-1958 -||^wmmmmmmmmrnmmmmmmm Sunday School i Lesson I Christian Relations Among Races Scripture—John 4:4-14; Acts 10:25-28; Collossians 3:11. Memory Selection ... Of a truth I perceive that God is no respector of persons; but in every nation he that feareth him, and worketh righteousness, is ac- j cepted with him. Acts 10: 34, 35. | PRESENT DAY APPLICATION By Frederick D. Jordan Los Angeles, Calif. Our denomination is an active participant in the National Coun cil of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America, as well as in other outstanding inter racial and intercultural move ments. Led by Dr. L. L. Berry we have had membership for years in the Foreign Missions 'Confer ence and the Home Missions Council. Through our Christian Education we have been repre sented by Dr. S. S. Morris, Dr. C. W. Abington, Dr. E. A. Selby and others in the International Council of Religious Education, and through Mrs. Heath in the Council of Church Women. Com ing to know people of other races and groups through Christian re lationships, we are helped to dis cover the true worth of all peo ple. The Christian teaching is that we value persons as persons without regard to race. Personal knowledge and experience often serve to break down barriers. King Stree pier was blown away and many small vessels at anchor [ either sank or were destroyed. At Port Royal there is nothing left to remind us of her prestine glory. , The damage, distress, and want are so colossal that the officials hardly know what to do. Elec tricity will not be restored for the next three weeks. All tele phone and telegraph posts and wires in every district are down. We can get no radio news. 95 Duke Street had water running through it, and people had to take refuge in my classrooms. Ttoey are still there. Damage in King ston and St. Andrew is estimated at sixteen million pounds sterl ing. Famine threatens. There is no. Deaths William Molden William Henry Molden, 78, 2117 T street, died in a local hospital Sunday. Born in Tennessee, he moved to Payne, la., at the age of five. On Nov. 13, 1904, he married lAnna Turner in Nebraska City The couple lived in Payne, mov ing later to Weeping Water where | Mr. Molden was a fireman for [the Missouri Pacific railroad for| 30 years. He moved to Lincoln April 15 of this year. He was a member of the Con gregational church in Weeping Water. Survivors are wife; three daughters, Jane of the Princeton Theological seminary in Boston, Dorothy of Portland, Ore., and Mrs. Kathryne Perry of Portland; three sons, Howard of Lincoln; Thomas of Omaha and Aldebert F., of Portland and six grand I children. I Funeral was held Tuesday at Umbergers with Rev. Trago Mc Williams, jr., officiating. Grave side services was in the Oakwood cemetery in Weeping Water. Rev. Mr. Pryor delivered the eulogy Melvin Dale Bradley Funeral of Melvin Dale Brad ley, 18, of 2148 T street was held Thursday, Aug. 23, at Umbergers. | Rev. J. B. Brooks officiated. Mrs. Izetta Malone sang accompanied ^ by Mrs. Hazel Wilson. Burial was at Wyuka. Melvin died Tuesday after a long illness. Surviving are ' his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles J. B. Bradley, a brother, Holbert; three sisters, Betty Louise, Paula •|Erline and Claire Marxine, all of 1 Lincoln and grandfather, W. M. Bradley of Alfalfa, Mo. Tazonia Taifci Hill ^ Funeral of Tazonia Tam Hill, 148, of 2718 So. Bth, was held at 2 jp.m. Tuesday at Umbergers with | Rev. J. B. Brooks and Rev. Eu gene Edwards officiating. Mr. Hill died in San Francisco, Sunday, Aug. 19. He had been food. They would not charge any duty on food supplies you may send. Gilmour-Danielson Drug Co. PRESCRIPTION DRUGGISTS 142 So. 13th St. 2-1246 CLYDE’S DAIRY STORE Hamburger and Cold Lunches Also Groceries ICE CREAM 25c mnl| 27c Pint 2230 R St. Hodgman-Splain MORTUARY 1335 L Street Lincoln, Nebraska Please Ask For UMBERGER'S AMBULANCE 2-8543 Umberger’s Mortuary, Inc. j| SKYLINE1 ICE CREAM STORES » 1433 South St. Phone 3-8118 1417 N St. Phone 2-1074 All Products Manufactured At Main Plant Skyline Farms ~ So. 14th St. ■ ■CEBCBEK riDIlAL DEPOSIT INSOEANCE COEPOEATIOII 10th and O St. _Since 1871 PARRISH MOTOR CO. Ihe bun ot deti ned e» 120 No. 19 St. - » - Five Champions Lost This Year NEW YORK—(ANP)—The 1951 sport swan song will carry an illuminating bit of boxing news. Five champions lost their togas this season, namely: Ray Robin son, Ezzard Charles, Ike Williams, Johnny Bratton and Jake La Motta. The influence of colored fight ers on world championships was never more fittingly noted than in this listing, for with the ex ception of LaMotta, the Bronx Bull, all of the dethroned kings were of African ancestry. In a recent instalment of “Trae Hall of Famors,” A1 Moses, sports authority whose articles have ap peared in the leading dailies if the nation, predicts that Negro fighters will reign just as long as “fight fixers” are kept out of the picture. The desire to escape insecurity spurs good Negro boxers to excel in this billion dollar industry just as the lowering of racial bars in ! baseball will admit hundreds of young Negroes to fat salaries and new life patterns during the next quarter-century. Close to championship class are a chef with the Burlington din ing car service out of Lincoln since 1942. He is survived by his wife, Edith; two sisters, Mrs. Brevy Lilly Miller of Lincoln and Dr. XaCadene Hill Fox of St. Louis, I Mo.; two brothers, Pahio and j Henry, both of New York _City I and a son, Roger L. of Lincoln. of coume Archie Moore, "un crowned” 175 pound division leader and Clarence Henry, young West Coast heavyweight who is being considered a likely Joe Louis opponent. Gil Turner is of championship timber beyond a doubt while Aaron Wilson, cam paigning in Europe, is rated by experts a mittman of class lead ership stature. Welcome Fair Visitors Remember the KORN POPPER at the same Old Stand I 1413 N Street KORN POPPER ■Ii I II '..~ • I WELCOME FAIR VISITORS For Better Values • Drugs • Cosmetics • Stationery • Candy • Prescriptions CHEAPPER DRUGS 1325 0 St. Lincoln 1 • ^ . --I