Quinn Chape* A. M B. Chore* •th mod C Streets. Rev. 1 B. Brooks, r’aator. 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 9:00 p. m. Prayer Meeting. North side Church *1 CM 93rd and 1 Street. Mfa Alice Britt. 10:00 a m. Church School 11:00 a. ih. Morning Worship. 7:30 p. ba Evening Worship. 7:30 p. m. Midweek Prayer Meeting. 7:30 p. m. Friday Bible Study. For place of meeting call 2-4673. Alloa ChapeJ tSeveatb-aay Adventist! LeCount Butler. Associate Pastoi 9:45 Am. Sabbatb School 10:45 a m. Missionary Meeting 11:00 a m. Morning Worship 4:00 n m. Young People's Society CHRIS’I TEMPLE 2149 U Street. Phone 2-3901 Rev. T 0 McWilliams. Jr.. Pa«to» Ordei el Worship Sunday Scnooi, 10 a m. Morning Worship. 11 a. m. Seivice at Carver Nursing Home. 2001 Vine Street, 5 o’clock. Evening Service 7:30 p na. ML floe Baptist Church Rev. Wm. I. Monroe, Pastor Corner I2tn and S Streets 10:00 a m Sunday School 11:00 a m. Morning Worship • :30 p. m Baptist Training Union 9:00 p. a. Evening Worship NEWMAN METHODIST. 93rd and S; Ralph Q. Nahan. pastor. SUNDAY—Church %t study. 10; church •t worship. 11 a.m. MONDAY —Trustee ooard meeting. WEDNESDAY—Gladsome service. 7 to 9 p.m. FRIDAY—Ministry ol music. 9 p.m. CME Church. 4030 r Street. First and Third Sundays 9:30 &.m., Sunday School 10:30 a.m<. Methodist Training Union. 11:00 a.nr .. Morning Worship. Church el God Ih OMR. 9:00 a.m.. Sunday School. 11:00 Am., Morning worship. 9:30 p.m.. Y.P.W.W 9:00 p.m.. Evening worship. 9:00 p.m. Tuesday and Friday, reg ular service. Prayer bano » am. Junior church service. 7:30 p.m. Thursday, prayer and Bible pastor. Rev. Charles William a. •Courtesy Calvert Corporation Artist Named to Art School Faculty NEW YORK (ANP)—Charles H. “Spinky” Alston, well known Negro artist is again named as an instructor on the staff of the Art Students League for the coming season. r--i For Better Values • Drugs • Cosmetics • Stationery • Candy • Prescriptions CHEAPPER DRUGS 1325 O St Lincoln DONLEY-STAHl CO. LTD. 1331 N St DRUGS—PRESCRIPTIONS SICK ROOM NECESSITIES WE APPRECIATE FOUR PATRONAGE Sunday School j Lesson ENLARGING THE CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP 1:48; Romans 15:14-29. Scripture—Isaiah 00:1-3; Acts Memory Selection—I am not ashamed of the gospel of Christ for it is the power of God unto salvation to every one that be lie veth. Romans 1:16. Present Day Application By Frederich D. Jordan Los Angeles, Calif The followers of Jesus have al ways acted upon the assumption that they had the right to carry the gospel message to all peoples. They have deemed it an obligation. It is a strange fact that the Chris tian religious must be shared in order to keep it alive. Sharing is an expression of Christian living. When sharing ceases, the Christian spirit dies, An artist was once asked to paint a picture of a dead church. He sketched the entrance to a beautiful edifice, in the vesti bule clearly obvious was a box labeled Missions. Across the open ing he had traced the web of a spider. Ours is a responsibility to help build a world-wide Christian fellowship. The missionary en 'deavors of our own denomination have carried to the dominion of Canada and South America; to South and West Africa and to the Isles of the sea. Every loyal church is a supply for the churches that must be built for the missionaries trained and sent, for schools of Christian education, for hospitals, and clinics for a healing ministry. Is your church doing its part or is it dead? Library Opened at College INSTITUTE, W. Va.-(ANP)— The new library has been opened and 17 new teachers have beer added to the faculty of West Vir ginia state college for the 1951-52 school year, it was announced last week. Robert Clark, of the Depart ment of Political Science, has re turned from a year’s study at the University of Illinois. Alston O. Donovan, who substituted in Po litical Science, has been trans ferred to the Teacher Training High School. Miss Peare New Editorial Assistant NEW YORK, N. Y.—Catherine Owens Peare has been appointed editorial assistant in the Depart ment of Promotion and Publicity of the National Urban League, it Jwas announced recently by Lloyd K. Garrison, League president. The League is the nation’s oldest 'and only interracial voluntary service agency working for equal economic opportunity. Miss Peare is a magazine writer and author of several biographies for young adults including: “Al bert Einstein,” Holt, 1949; “Ma hatma Gandhi,” Holt, 1950; and i “Mary McLeod Bethune,” Van guard, 1951. Miss Peare will handle some I of the publicity of the agency and j be concerned especially with .magazine, radio and television. Prior to her Urban League ap pointment, Miss Peare was em ployed in the investment de partment of The Duke Endow ment with offices in New York. Miss Peare is a member of the ; Television Writers Group of the Authors’ League of America, Inc., Women’s National Book Associa tion and Brooklyn Interfaith Fel lowship. She is a graduate of the New Jersey State Teachers Col lege, and has done graduate work at New York University Graduate School of Business. AME Editor Dies Dr. J. S. Brookens, 61, of Mo bile, Ala., editor of the AME Church Review, was found dead in his drawing room in a Frisco train Pullman car Saturday morn ing, Sept. 15th as the train nearec Kansas City. The prominent AME ministe: and general officer was on hi: way to Kansas City from when he was scheduled to go to To peka, Kansas. Funeral services were heli Tuesday afternoon, Sept. 18 at th< Ebnezer AME church in Kansa; City following which the body wa: sent to Thomasville, Ga. A second funeral to be held in Cairo, Ga. Bishop D. Ormonde Walker, presiding bishop of the fifth Epis copal district, had charge of the Kansas City services. Survivors included his widow, Mrs. Florence Olivia Brookens and seven children. The Nebraska Typewriter Co. 125 No. 11th Lincoln 2-2157 Royal Typewriters Mimeograph - Duplicators Dictaphones - Clary Adders Sold - Rented - Repaired Where Your Furniture Dollar Buys More 15S2 O Street Shurtleff's Furniture Co. * Flowers By Tyrrell's D. L. TyrrelTs Flowers 6-2357 1133 No. Cotner Friendly Neighbor The following is the beginning of a series o.i Mexico written by Joseph Alexis, Lincoln, Nebraska. BY JOSEPH ALEXIS To all who have been in Mexico 1 on different occasions during the : last thirty years, outward appear ances have greatly changed. Mo dern buildings of pleasing design have been erected in all the cities, and excellent school houses have 1 taken the place of the dilapidated 1 buildings of a generation ago. The people of the United States should know more of the friendly neighbor to the south, and our geographical knowledge should not be bounded by the Rio Grande1 and an imaginary line running to the west of El Paso. 175 miles south of Nogales, Ari-| zona, has risen the capital of the great state of Sonora, Hermosillo,j meaning “the little beauty.” Within the last ten years the Uni-| versity of Sonora has come into] being, housed in well constructed and practical buildings. The mu seum and the library share an edifice of palatial proportions. While the institution is called a university, it is in reality a teach ers college, the purpose of which' is to train efficient teachers for the schools of the state. Thirty years ago it was not un common to find in Mexico within walking distance of the border of U.S.A. schools that had as sole openings the door and the space where windows were supposed to be which was covered only by ■ shutters to be closed when the jrain blew in or the weather was cold. Needless to say, it was im ( possible to read in the resulting darkness. The children were L often taught to commit lessons to _ memory by reciting in chorus, . and the sounds of the youthful ; voices penetrated the community. . We congratulate Mexico on the . marked advance made in the di rection of educating the nation, i With progress in teaching follows » a higher standard of living, which - 5 is made possible by the great ; wealth of the country. There is still much poverty in Mexican families, but conditions are im proving. Owing in part to disturbed con ditions in Europe, thousands of Americans have turned their tour ist eyes toward Mexico, and one of the flourishing industries of j the country is the tourist trade, j One decided advantage to the American tourist is the fact that he needs no steamer service to arrive in Mexico. He simply drives his car to the Mexican border, where he finds excellent paved highways awaiting him. The highway from Laredo, Texas, to Mexico City is the one best known. Few are aware of the fact that a fine paved highway now connects Arizona with Hermosillo, Guaymas, and Oiudad Obregon. In another year or two the high way will be ready all the way to Mazatlan, where these lines are written. In dry weather you can even now drive your car to this beauty spot on the Pacific. Every American that goes abroad should feel that he is a good will ambassador from the United States. We probably all understand that our country must be strong to meet possible dan gers, but we sometimes forget that one duty that every citizen owes his country is to win friends for America. This can be done by showing appreciation of the ac ! complishments of our neighbors 'and by making them feel that we *do not look down upon him but 'consider him our equal. If we have a culture to be proud of, they have one too. Let us not build our hopes for the future 'on physical strength only or on destructive bombs. When you talk with persons of other na tionalities, you find that they have the same desires as you, .namely to live peaceably with 'their fellowmen. HAL J. BOWERS DRUG STORE Prescriptions Carefully Compounded — Cosmetics 947 O Street 2-8585 AUTOMOBILE REPAIRING WRECKER SERVICE 2-4295 HARVEY'S GARAGE 2119 O St. Gilmour-Danielson Drug Co. PRESCRIPTION DRUGGISTS 142 So. 13th St. 2-1246 You Should Patronize Our Advertisers Please Ask For UMBERGER’S AMBULANCE 2-8543 Umber ger9» Mortuary, Inc. BRIGHAM’S .... for cleaning .. 2-3624 2246 O St. AUTO PARTS MOTOR REBUILDING MOTOR EXCHANGE BEN’S NEW WAY AUTO PARTS 2018-2024 “O" St Ph. 2-7039 “9 out of 10 your "•eat bet u Ben" GEO. H. WENTZ Incoiporated Plumbing and Heating 1620 N St Phone 2-1293 Patronize Our Advertisers