The voice. (Lincoln, Nebraska) 1946-195?, May 29, 1952, Page 3, Image 3

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    I
Quins Cbapd A. M. E. Church
th and C Streets.
ssv. J. B. Brooks. Pastor.
9:45 A m. Sunday School.
10:45 a. m. Morning Warship.
6:00 p. tn. Young People's Fellowship.
7:30 p. m. Evening Worship.
Tuesday 8:00 p m. Prayer Meeting.
Northshle Church of God
ltd and T Street. Mrs. Alice Brin.
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.
A lieu Chapel
(Seventh-day Adventist)
LeCount Butler, Associate Pastor
9:45 a tn. Sabbotb School.
10:45 a m. Missionary MectinA
11:00 a m. Morning Worship.
4:00 p. tn. Young People’s Society
CHRIST TEMPER
2149 U Street Phone 2-3901.
Rev. T. O. McWilliams. Jr,. Pastor.
Order of Worship
Sunday School, 10 A m.
Morning Worship, ll a.m.
Service at Carver Nursing Home, 2001
7ne Street, S o’clock.
Evening Service. 7:30 P. UL
Mt Zion Baptist Church
Tomer 12th ana F Streets: Rev. Was. L
Monroe, pastor.
10:00 a.m., Sunday school.
ll:00 a.m.. Morning worship.
6:30 p.m.. Baptist Training Union.
8:00 p.m.. Evening worship.
New man Methodist
23rd and S; Ralph G. Nathan, pastor.
SUNDAY—Church at study, 10: church
at worship. 11 non.
MONDAY—Trustee board meeting.
WEDNESDAY—Gladstone service, 7 to
FRIDAY—Ministry of music. 8 P.m.
CMB CtaMk
2030 T Street; Rev. W. M. Johnson, pastor
9:30 a.m.. Sunday school.
10:30 a.m.. Methodist Trainlna 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, regular
7:30 p.m. Thursday, prayer and Bible.
Pastor Rev. Charles Williams,
service. _ '
Mrs. Edwards Will Give
Missionary Book Review
“We Americans North and
South” by George P. Howard will
be reveiwed by Mrs. R. Eugene
Edwards Thursday evening for
Quinn Chapel Women’s Mission
a r y Society.
The book is
one in a course
of study de
signed for the
society.
The meeting
will be held at
the home of
Mrs. W. M.
Hightower with
Mrs. John Irv
ing assisting asMrs. R. E. Edwards
hostess.
Doctors Cite Big Work
Of Priest for Negroes
Birmingham, Ala. — A citation
for his outstanding work in rais
ing the living standards of the
Negro people was presented here
to the Rev. Harold Purcell, 71, the
founder and director of the City
of St. Jude for Negroes in Mont
gomery. The award was made at
the 40th annual meeting of the
John A. Andrew Clinical society,
an association of doctors working
among both Negroes and Whites.
Father Purcell, who founded
Sign magazine in 1921, was editor
of that magazine until 1934, when
he resigned to devote himself to
the Negro apostolate. Since that
time he has built up in Mont
gomery the Negro community
known as the City of St. Jude,
which now has a church, grade
and high schools, and a new
$1,500,000 general hospital. With
the exception of a federal grant
for the hospital, all the projects
were paid for with the private
funds raised by Father Purcell.
Last year, 37,100 Americans
were killed in traffic accidents.
Sunday School
Christ’s Standard of Moral Purity
Scripture—Exodus 20:14; Mat
thew 5:8, 13-16, 27-32; Mark
10:2-12; Luke 2:40.
Memory Selection—Thou shalt
not commit adultery. Exodus
20:14.
By Frederick D. Jordan
Immorality is one of the many
forms of impurity having their lo
cation in the heart, rather than
in the flesh as many suppose. We
cannot measure up to God’s stand
ard without a reverent and puri
fied heart. If there is an absence
of moral principle, an individual
may be a slave to his senses. Dis
eased bodies, lunacy and spiritual
blindness are testimonies in every
generation against adultery. The
mutual love which brings a man
and woman together into a union
is in keeping with the idea of God
and the requirements of nature.
Whoever ignores this union, who
ever breaks it and whoever in
vades it, is to be regarded as a
criminal. The design of creation
is still the same—one man for one
woman. Two become one when
a marriage has taken place. So
ciety has come to consider them
as belonging together, they have
pooled their interests and should
have a mutual regard for each
other’s being. Marriage is not a
mere expedient, as the number of
divorces today would indicate, but
it raises passion to the level of
love. In listing the works of the
flesh which are manifest. Paul
includes adultery, and adds that
those who do such things shall not
inherit the kingdom of God. Clean
thinking means clean living. Pur
ity of heart and purity of life are
closely related.
Willie Mays a ‘Quiet’
Subject With N.Y. Giants
NEW YORK (ANP)—Nobody
talks about Willie Mays’ status
these days. He is now slated for
induction May 29.
The Giants were crossing their
fingers hoping that the quota from
Draft Board 5, here in New York
to which sensation Say-hoy Wil
lie’s papers were transferred stay
over quota for the next six
months. Willie was slated to go
into the Army on May 16, but a
delay in transferring his papers
by the Alabama Selective serv
ice local board at Birmingham
held up his induction.
Under the Selective Service
Lawr, once a man has been certi
fied for induction, he must go into
the Army. That makes any out
for Willie impossible, but his ac
tual induction might be delayed
sufficiently for the return of
Monte Irvin to fill the bill. Ir
vin, who discarded his crutches
two weeks ago, recently moved
into a new home in Orange, N. J.
IDEAL
Grocery and Market
Lots of Parking
27th and F Streets
SKYLINE
ICE CREAM STORES
1433 South St. Phone 3-8118
1417 N St Phone 2-4074
AII Products Manufactured At
Main Plant
Skyline Farms So. 14th St
_
Household
Hints
By
Miss Mary Sampson
2811 S. 24 — 3-6212
and
Mrs. Odessa Johnson
Miss Sampson 18,0 4 8t " 3~67B1 Mrs. Johnson
STUFFED BAKED TOMATOES
6 ripe tomatoes 4 scallions or 1 small
anchovy paste or onion
mushed sardines % tsp. dry mustard
4 hard cooked eggs % tsp. salt
Start oven at 400 or moderately
hot. Cut off tops of tomatoes and
scoop out pulp (save for later use)
Spread inside of tomato with an
chovy or sardine paste. Chop eggs,
scallions or onions, and tomatoes
pulp. Mix together with dry mus
tard and salt. Fill tomatoes with
this mixture, sprinkle with bread
crumbs, top with fish paste if any
is left. Place in baking dish and
bake until tops are a pretty
brown, about 10 minutes. Serves
6.
APRICOT BREAD PUDDING
1 M c. stale bread crumbs
% c.cocoanut 2 tbsp. sugar
1 Ms c. hot milk 1 beaten egg
*4 tsp. salt 6 canned apricot halves.
Method: Soak bread crumbs
and cocoanut in milk, add salt,
sugar and egg. Place half an apri
cot in greased individual custard
cup, fill with pudding mixture;
steam until firm like custard.
Serve with canned apricot syrup.
FRESH RHUBARB PUNCH
Method: Cut 3 lbs. fresh rhu
barb in small pieces, add 1 qt.
water, cook until tender, strain.
To 2 qts. of this juice add 2^4 c.
sugar, \Vf c. orange juice, 1 c.
lemon juice, % c. shredded pine
apple. Chill, add 3 qts. ice water,
pour in punch bowl with decorated
cubes of ice.
POTATO AND BEET SALAD BOWL
2 cups dictd cooked potatoes
1 cup diced booked beets
% cup French dressing
2 small cucumbers
1 cup diced celery
4 hard cooked eggs, sliced
% cup salad dressing
M tsp. salt
Lettuce for bowl
METHOD: Marinate the pota
toes and beets in the French dress
ing and let stand in refrigerator 2
hours. Pare 1 cucumber and dice
it. Slice the other one unpared.
Place them both in water in the
refrigerator until ready to serve,
then drain. Also drain beet mix
ture. Combine by. tossing lightly
with two forks, the beet and cu
cumber mixture, the celery and
eggs, then mix with salad dress
ing. Serve from bowl, lined with
PARRISH MOTOR CO.
The home of clean cars.
120 No. 19 St.
Since 1871 . . .
The First National Bank of Lincoln
Lincoln. Nebraska
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
crisp lettuce. May save some of
cumcumbers for garnish if de
sired.
BAKED MEAT BALLS, VEGETABLE
SAUCE
!4 lb. veal 1 tbsp. salt
Vi lb. pork 1 small onion chopped
V4 lb. beet 1 green pepper
% C. applesauce chopped
% C. moist bread 1 carrot
crumbs 1 stalk celery
2 eggs, slightly beaten 2 c. tomato pulp
% tsp. pepper 3 potatoes, diced
Method: Grind meat, mix ap
plesauce, bread crumbs, egg, pep
per, salt, and half the onion. Form i
into balls or cakes, roll in flour,
and brown in hot shortening.
Chop vegetables (left-over cooked,
or par-boiled), add rest of onion,
and green pepper. Place browned
meat balls in greased casserole, j
pour vegetables over them. Bake
in moderate oven, 350 degrees F.,l
45 minutes.
DUTCH COCO CREAM CAKE
Sift together into a bowl—
1M cup sifted cake flour
1% cup sugar i
1 tsp. salt
3 tsp. Calumet baking powder
% cup coca
Add % cup hig.1 grade vegetable shortening
and 1% cup evaporated milk.
kETHOD: Beat with spoon 2
minutes by clock (150 strokes per
minute.) Add remaining Vfe cup
evaporated milk, % to % cup un
beaten eggs (2 medium). Beat 2
more minutes. Bake 30 to 35 min
utes at 350 ‘degrees.
j TUTTI FRU1TTI SALAD
1 tbsp. seedless raisins 4 half pears
1 tbsp. nutmeats 1 banana
Mayonnaise 2 oranges
Method: Mix raisins, nutmeats
and a little mayonnaise, fill th<
center of each pear with mixture
Place on lettuce, surround with
diced oranges and bananas. Serve
Serve with mayonnaise.
ijOPS Explains
Potato Shortage
The current potato shortage was
caused by romoval of price sup
ports and a poor 1951 crop,
rather than by OPS ceilings, ac
cording to a statement made to
day by D. M. Osborne, OPS price
j executive for the Nebraska dis
j trict.
Mr. Osborne pointed out that
the shortage of potatoes existed
before OPS ceilings were imposed.
“It was the threatened shortage
that caused the price to rise and
that in turn made ceilings neces
sary,” he explained. “The supply
of potatoes now on hand was de
termined during the 1951 planting
season. Obviously, any OPS ac
tion in 1952 could neither add to
nor subtract from potato stocks.
When price supports ended with
the 1950 crop, growers cut 1951
acreage to reduce production below
record crops harvested under the
support program. Bad weather
also played a part in some areas
in reducing the size and quality
of the crop.”
“It is evident,” he added, “that
in view of the current short sup
ply, potato prices would be con
siderably higher if OPS had not
imposed ceilings.”
In connection with Mr. Osborne’s
statement, W. W. Keenan, district
enforcement director for OPS, said
that intensive investigations are
now being made among potato
dealers in Nebraska. Several re
ports of violations have already
been submitted to the Department
of Justice, with requests for in- •
junctive action, treble damages
and criminal sanctions.
, FREADRICH
BROS.
i
• • • •
Since 1902 ,
The Best Place To Trade
After All—1316 N Street
Blll^
VINE ST.
MARKET
GROCERIES & MEATS
22nd and Vine
2-6583 — 2-6584
1mm
. . . for cleaning . . .
2-3624
We give W/&F Blue Stamps
2216 O St
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