Quinn Chapel A. M. K. Church 9th and C Streets. Rev. J. B. Brooks, Pastor. 9:45 a. m. Sunday School. 10:45 a. m. Morning Worship. 6:00 p. m. Young People’s Fellowship. ' 7:30 p. m. Evening Worship. Tuesday 8:00 p m. Prayer Meeting. — Northside Church of God 3rd 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. Alien Chapel (Seventh-day Adventist) LeCount Butler, Associate Pastor 9:45 a. m. Sabboth School. 10:45 a. ra. Missionary Meeting. 11:00 a. m. Morning Worship. 4:00 p. m. Young People’s Sosiety. CHRIST TEMPLE 2149 U Street. Phone 2-3901. Rev. T. 0. McWilliams, Jr., 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 Corner 12th anu F Streets: Rev. Wm. I Monroe, pastor. 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 at worship, 11 a.m. MONDAY—Trustee board meeting. WEDNESDAY—Gladstone service, 7 tc 8 p.m. FRIDAY—Ministry of music, 8 P.m. CME Church 2030 T Street: Rev. W. M. Johnson, pastor 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., V.P.W.W. 8:00 p.m.. Evening worship. 8:00 p.m., Tuesday and Friday, regulai •ervice. 7:30 p.m. Thursday, prayer and Bible Pastor Rev. Charles Williams. Gillett Poultry FRESH DRESSED POULTRY QUALITY EGGS Phone 2-2001 S28 No. 9th I FREADRICH ] BROS. 1 • • • • 1 Since 1902 | The Best Place To Trade I After All—1316 N Street ^SHII>IIHBHIIWIHHWMBHHmiHHIIInmimiHlliUlif!!»l>)Bi!|)lllllil[llliillM[Hlliljnj|l!limilimilJIHtil.Mliii Where Your Furniture Dollar Buys More 1532 O Street Shurtleff's Furniture Co. Flowers By Tyrrell's D. L, Tyrrell* Flower* $.2357 1133 No. Cotner Sunday School Lesson THE PEOPLE MAKE THEIR CHOICE Scripture — Joshua 23-24. Memory Selection—Choose you this day whom you will serve. Joshua 24:15. Present Day Application By Frederick 3. Jordan Los Angeles, Calif. All life is a matter of choices. Each day we come to a “fork in the road” and must make a choice. Have you come to a fork on a highway and without con sulting your map, decided that one road looked more likely to be the right one than the other and turned on it? W° did once on an automobile trip from Leaventh worth, Kansas to Denver. Mile after mile slipped by as we chatted and sang. Suddenly jr.c of us remarked that the highway signs were getting far between. We began to watch in vain for the next one. Soon the road was less smooth and appeared less traveled, it took a sudden turn and wound up in a farm yard. Isn’t that what happens when we make unwise choices? The only right choice, the only right choice for Christmas is to seek the ! guidance of God. Evaluate every influence in the light of God, then 'stand by your convictions. I -- Critics Praise Dorothy Maynor’s Singing in Concert ST. LOUIS. (ANP). Critics were generous in their praise of Miss Dorothy Maynor’s singing in the Christmas Festival concert at Kiel Auditorium here. Miss Maynor a soprano was one of two soloist presented last week ;in the concert sponsored jointly ;by the Back Festival Choir, and the St. Louis symphony orchestra. The other was Glenn Schnittke a tenor. Miss Maynor sang two arias: “Come Be Glad in This Season of Joy” from Handel’s “Messiah” and the celebrated “Allelulia” of Mozart. She also participated in several ensembles. Commenting on her performance, the St. Louis Louis Post Dispatch said in part: “Dorothy Maynor’s soprano aria beginning with the words “Ah, my Saviour” was the expression I not only of a cultivated artist, in I its finely controlled inflection, but | also reflected a spiritual joy and [ elevation. i “The echo at the cadences—a note repeated by a voice in the | chorus and an instrument in the I orchestra—was a device that only a genius would think of and only I a genius could bring off without seeming theatrical.” .— - '-—I Southern Regional Council Outlines Neiv South Plans ATLANTA, Ga. — (ANP)—The Southern Regional Council at its recent Atlanta meeting issued a major statement calling for a “South of the future, in which artificial distinctions and dis criminations based upon race will no longer persist.” The meeting also elected officers. The council, which is made up of church, civic, business, labor and professional people of both races in 13 southern states, was assembled for its eighth annual membership meeting. Marion A. Wright, Linville Falls, N. C., was elected president of the organization to succeed Paul D. Williams, Richmond, Va. Wright, an attorney, practiced law in Conway, S. C., until 1948. Since then he has held several civic of fices in the state. Newly elected vice presidents are Dr. Albert W. Dent, president of Dillard university, New Or leans; Alfred Mynders, editor of the Chattanooga Times, and Dr. Gordon B. Hancock, Baptist min ister and professor at Virginia Union university in Richmond. Carter Wesley, publisher of the ! Houston Informer, was reelected 'vice president. | Functions of the council may be summed up as follows: “To serve as a meeting ground for citizens of all races, occupa tions, and religious faiths; to pre sent the facts about the region, and their implications, through available media; to counteract appeals to prejudice and violence by demagoguoes, professional j bigots, and hate organizations, j “Also to provide a program adaptable to local need in both the relatively backward and the rela tively advanced areas of the south; to translate appropriate research findings from universities anc I other centers to the practical situ ations with which the action pro [gram will be concerned. | "Also to give special emphash to the development of leadership among promising young southern ers of all races; to convene, by interest groups, key persons in the various fields of southern life, so that steps to genuine integra tion may be representatively agreed upon, and to stimulate local initiative to work for local solutions in full democracy...” In order to implement its pro gram, the council intends to use: Trained, competent, professional persons of both races working in j ' ~ Automotive Service at its Best < Tune Up Brake Service Generator Starter Battery CAPITOL AUTOMOTIVE 171» N St 2-2C2S ASK YOUR GROCER FOR GOLD CUP BREAD First With Remington Rand Mrs. Crystal B. Marmon has , recently been appointed methods technician for Remington Rand in Chicago. According to T. J. Norton, vice president and assist ant general sales manager of Remington Rand, Inc., Mrs. Mar mon is the first Negro to hold th's ! important position. Her job came as a result of what Norton says is “her out each southern state as agents of improvement in public life, and a staff in a central office of the council to direct and service the field people. Aim of the council is to help solve regional problems that transcend race. • The council said it was under no illusion that equal opportunity “can be realized in the soutt quickly or easily or perfectly. Nor do we imagine that the Southern Regional Council can play more than a modest but creditable part toward its achievement. “Yet it is the ideal toward which we strive . . . for it is nothing less than the American ideal.” ROPER & SONS MORTUARY 1319 N For Better Values • Drugs • Cosmetics • Stationery • Candy • Prescriptions CHEAPPER DRUGS 1325 O St. Lincoln standing ability to meet, instruct, and assist customers in account ing systems.” She trained for this post at Fishers Island. She has been assigned to the Chicago branch office of Reming ton Rand, and will work under the supervision of Major C. Udell Turpin, manager of special markets. Mrs. Marmon is a grad uate in Insurance at the Uni versity of Minnesota. During the past four years she worked for the Mutual Insurance company of St. Paul, Minn. — (ANP). THE EVANS CLEANERS — LAUNDERERS Save Money Use our Cash and Carry Plan 333 No. 12th St. Dial 2-6961 ■I 1 The Korn Popper Good Popcorn For 20 Years 1413 N St. DONLEY-STAHL CO. LTD. 1331 N St DRUGS—PRESCRIPTIONS SICK ROOM NECESSITIES WE APPRECIATE FOUR PATRONAGE AUTOMOBILE REPAIRING WRECKER SERVICE 2-4295 HARVEY'S GARAGE 2119 O St. . Gilmour-Danielsoi! Drug Co. PRESCRIPTION DRUGGISTS 142 So. 13th St 2-1244 Patronize Our Advertisers