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About The voice. (Lincoln, Nebraska) 1946-195? | View Entire Issue (July 24, 1952)
L_I QhwvdksiA Quinn Chapel A. M. E. 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 ot 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. Allen Chapel 9:45 a.m. Saobath School. 10:45 a.m Missionary Meeting. 11:00 a.m. Morning Worship. 4:00 p.m. Young People’s Society CHRIST TEMPLE 2149 U Street. Phone 2-3901 Rev. T. O. .McWilliams Jr. Pastor. Order of Worship Sunday Scnool, 10 am. Morning Worship. 11 a.m. Service at at Carver Nursing Home, 2001 Vine Street, 5 o'clock. Evening Service. 7:30 p.m.' Ml. Zion Baptist Church Corner 12th and F Streets: Rev Wm L. 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. Nathan, pastor. SUNDAY—Church at study. 10, church at worship, 11 a.m. MONDAY—Trustee board meeting. WEDNESDAY—Gladstone service. 7 to 8 p.m. FRIDAY—Ministry of music. 8 p.m. CME Church 2030 I 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. Chorea of God Christ 9:00 a.m. Sunday school. 6:30 P.m. Y.P.W.W. 8:00 p.m. Evening worship. 8:00 p.m. Tuesday and Friday. regular service. Pastor Rev. Charles Williams. 7:30 p.m. Thursday prayer and Bible. Sentence Sermons REV. FRANK CLARENCE LOWRY FOR ANP 1. One certainly cannot expect to reap a bumper crop of life’s blessings when inferior seeds are sown that can’t even pass or dinary testings. 2. Mother’s pies, and even sauer kraut tasted better than any bought, because she knew just what to put in, and what to leave out. 3. To little of the right, and too much of the wrong thing, rob m-my rfien of blessings that could make their souls ring. 4. When a men seers his con science in an effort to get ahead, he is only adding to his long, re morseful hours ahead.' 5. The building of human lives is perhaps man’s greatest task, be cause he wants to do it carelessly, as well as fast. 6. But more technique is re quired than for the construction of an architectural pile; for much prayerful meditation is impera «= ~ I BRIGHAM’S . . . for cleaning .. . 2-3624 We give W&F Blue Stamps 2246 O Si Gillett- Poultry FRESH DRESSED POULTRY QUALITY EGGS Phone 2-2001 528 No. 9th THE EVANS CLEANERS — LACNDERERS Save Money Cse our Cash and Carry Plan 333 No. 12th St. Wai 2-0961 Sunday School Lesson GOD PREPARES A LEADER Scripture—1 Samuel 1 to 4:1. Memory Selection—T h e child Samuel grew on, and was in favor both with the Lord, and also with men. 1 Samuel 2:26. Present Day Application By Bishop Frederick D. Jordan Los Angeles, Calif. Again we come face to face with the question of the influence of the home. Parents are important people with a great responsibility. Without good home training the good training of the Sunday School may avail little. Judges today decry ‘parental delinquency’ as the prime factor in juvenile delinquency. Our court records to day are filled with the stories of young men and women who are the product of the modern home.1 A home in which godlessness reigns supreme, where the rum-| pus room with its bar has taken the place of the family altar with its worship center; where the radio and television blare continu ally their crime stories and com ics. The only literature is the funny books and current “love Confession” magaizne, the decan ter has replaced the fruit bowl on the buffet. This is the picture! first, then it is that of the broken1 home. In each case it is the chil-1 dren who suffer. What kind of a home do you have? tive to build a life free of preju- ! dice and guile. 7. Foundations for such lives • should be started early, and after' being laid strong and deep, must be of the best material, and noth ing considered that is cheap. 8. The average builder of a life today, starts to build in his own way; copying some faulty parts of his neighbor’s plan, though he knows the specifications cannot stand. 9. The “rrte too” way won’t build an eternal structure; for uncertified materials give way under pressure. 10. God wants men and women j who do not blush to speak His name, and who sacrifice to pu* the best into their spiritual struc tures by hard work and sincere aim. 11. Putting the best into life is leaving out every scintilla of strife and imitating Christ who stood alone, that every man might finally inherit the riches if His throne. 12. How unworthy then should we all feel, to even have a chance at this throne to kneel, and ask forgiveness for the wrongs we; have done; then start a brand new building for the Father and the Son. Lincoln Release New School-Year Catalogue JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (ANP) —The official 1952-53 Lincoln university (Mo.) catalogue bulle tin of the College of Arts and Sciences lists dates for opening and closing for the next school ■ year. _1 Every Item in Our Entire EAST WINDOW : . j OFF CHEAPPER DRUG STORE 1325 “O'* St. -7T”-1 OUTDOOR NEBRASKA J>JCK H. SCHAFFER^. NEBR. GAME COMMISSION Now that fishing is in its annual summer slump, we began re miniscing with fellow sportsmen and came up with these unusual stories, all of which are true. No. 1 is about the “lasso” fisher man from^Benkelman — Robert Merklin. Three years ago, Merklin was fishing for catfish in the North Platte diversion canal. His line had two hooks. Marklin felt a riibhle and jerked the line. He began bringing in the line and realized he had a fish. He did, too, but the fish was not hooked. It instead was lassoed. The line was wrapped around the stomach of the fish. What apparently hap pened was that as the fish nibbled, Merklin jerked the line. As he did this, the upper hook flipped around the leader, forming sort of a slip knot. When the line was reeled in, the loop tightened around the body of the fish. The fish was a 13-inch catfish. Occasionally, employees of the Game Commission have an op portunity to hunt. On the last day of the season a few years ago, Glen Foster, supervisor of fish eries, went after the ring-necks in southcentral Nebraska. It was about 10 minutes before closing time and Foster had an empty bag. A ring-neck flushed from the end of a corn field. Foster shot his double barrel .410. The pheasant shot straight up into the air and then came down, settling into the corn. Foster didn’t know whether he hit the bird or not. Foster was amazed a few seconds later when the pheasant flew straight up — a considerable dis tance into the air — and then flew toward him. It glided closer and then came down but five feel away. The ring-neck just stood there. Foster walked toward the pheasant and picked it up. It made no effort to get away. Later, when cleaning the bird, Foster could find no trace of the shot. It ap parently grazed off the head of the bird and stunned it. An unusual combination of birds was reported to the Game Commission by a resident of Uni versity Place living near 48th and Adams. The duo consists of a blackbird and a quail. The two tiave been inseparable companions for weeks. The blackbird is ap parently the “bird in charge” as his efforts are duplicated by the luail. If the blackbird flies up into a tree, the quail follows it. [f the blackbird flies down and begins feeding, so does the quaiL Apparently both became detached from their own species and sought companionship. Leavenworth prison is in Kan sas. - | GEO. H. WENTZ Incorporated Plumbing and Healing 1620 N St Phone 2-1293 AUTO PARTS MOTOR REBUILDING MOTOR EXCHANGE BEN’S NEW WAY AUTO PARTS 2018-2024 “O" St Ph. 2-7039 **9 out of 10 your host bet !• Ben" * WINS PHI DELTA KAPPA TOP SCHOLARSHIP—A New York student was recently named as the winner of the national $800 scholarship award of the national sorority of Phi Delta Kappa, composed of women in education. The winner is Miss Ann Louise Greenfield, sponsored by Theta chapter in New York. Miss Greenfield is a graduate of Hunter high. She topped a group of 254 studens from all over the nation in intelligence and achievement college entrance exams. Phi Delta Kappa gave out a total of $3,000 in scholarships to high school graduates who are going to pursue teaching careers. Regional winners were Miss Maurice Fitts, sponsored by Nu chapter, Birmingham, Ala., and Miss Barbara Lynn Morgan, spon sored by Kappa chapter, Youngstown, O. (ANP) !5,000 at CME Quadrennial Youth Conference ATLANTA (ANP)— More than 5,000 delegates and visitors at tended the Fifth Quadrennial Na tional Youth Conference of the Colored Methodist Episcopal* Church here last week. Bishop A. W. Womack, of the 8th Episcopal District, embracing host Georgia, said the quadrennial youth session was the largest in the history of the connection. The conference and convention of CME Sunday School superin-, tendents and Epworth League presidents were held on the cam pus of Gammon Theological Sem inary and Carver Vocational School. | skyline I ICE CREAM STORES 1433 South St. Phone 3-8118 1417 N St. Phone 2-4074 1845 R St Phone 2-8122 5400 So. 14th Phone 3-2269 “Ends Your Quest For the Best** Skyline Farms So. 14th St | Under the general theme "God Designs — Together We Build,” youth delegates received inspira tion and instruction from a large number of top leaders under di rection of Dr. B. Julian Smith, of Chicago, general secretary of the CME Board of Christian Educa tion. #