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PAGE FOUR YESTERDAY: Someone again enters Christine’s apartment and leaves another written warning. The door was locked. Sarah, the maid, says she lost her duplicate keys. - Chapter 30 ‘Afternoon Adventure, be ia certain that MacDonald com- mitted suicide,. but I. can’t prove that he was here at the time of his sister’s death,” said the Ser- geant. ; “How about Miss Rogers?” I asked tentatively, expecting to be demolished with a look. But -the Sergeant apparently didn’t resent the question, or per-| haps it was because he had a soft | spot for red hair. “That poor little girl,” he said. | “She was afraid to tell me that} she’d been with him the other) night. Protecting him, she was. I} told her after this to tell the truth | always; it was better in the end. But she didn’t know if he came back to the house or not.” | With difficulty I restrained a smile. “Tl never get anywhere if some- one doesn’t come through. I must prove that he was here at the time.” “I think you’ve done very well, Sergeant,” Isaid; trying to be tact- ful. “How is your ankle this morn- ing?” “Still hurts. Didn’t have time to look at it.” “T'll be glad to help you bind it again.” “Wanting to strangle me, too?” he said wittily. “Or are you. just trying to stay on the right side of Mr. Kimball paced back and forth, eyeing the Sergeant anx- iously. “I didn’t know this, Ser- geant,” he said. “One reason why I never kept a duplicate set myself is that I don’t believe in having extra ones around.” The Sergeant was speechless. He finally exploded. “Ever since the night Joan Kent was murdered, someone has been walking around with keys to this whole house.” “That explains why the books are missing,” Mr. Kimball said in a tired voice. “I suppose if they have been sold it wouldn’t be hard to trace them, would it?” The Sergeant left right away, promising to put a man on trail of the books immediately. And, with followed him out of the room. Shortly after they left, Mr. Kim- ball called me to come downstairs. There was a telephone call for me in the shop. It was Dirck and his voice was so low and guarded that I could barely catch the words. However I gathered -that I was to meet him at noon on the southeast corner of Fifth Avenue and Eighth Street. I was to dress warmly and wear galoshes. 4 “You are all right?” he asked anxiously, after giving me the di- rections. “Of course,” I said. “Ts Patrick around?” he asked surprisingly. “T haven't seen him. Chris. Don’t tell anyone where you are going, and kéep an eye out to see if you are followed.” After that I felt more uneasy than before, and thinking that Mr. Kimball might find such a one- | sided conversation odd, for I'd said very little to Dirck, I stayed in the | shop for a few minutes to talk with | a wan smile at me, Mr. Kimball | “All right. Now listen to me, | ’ J —_ rweuvu + SO Se ed FIRST PRESBYTERIAN. CHURCH | ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH St. Marys Star of the Sea White ad Washington Streets John C. Gekeler, Pastor Sunday school, 10 a. m. . Norman, superintendent. Morning worship, 11 o’clock, ermon: “Seek God and Live”. Evening worship, 7:30 o’clock. P. J. Kelleher, S.J., Rector A. L. Maureau, SJ., Assistant Hours Of Service i Sunday Masses, 7:00’ahd 10:00/ B i i | | -Massés on Holy ‘Days; 6.00; 7:30 |S jand 9:30 a, m.°"''2 | | Weekday Massés, 6:30 and 7:00 | Sermon: ‘a. m. First Friday at 6:30 andjvine Love”. {8:00 a. m. | There will be no mid-week Sunday evenings, 7:30 o'clock, | Bible study. Rosary, “eveninalfi 30 eeack,| Friday evenin, :30 o'clock, ;Sacred Heart Devotions. Sunday School, 9:30 a. m. Confessions Saturday —after-; !noons and evenings, on_ vigil of | |Holy Days and on Thursday pre-: ‘eeding First Friday, 4:00 to 6:00' |o’clock and from -7:00 to 8:00 | o'clock. First Sunday of month, Com- munion at the 7:30 o’clock Mass |for Daughters of St. Ann. | Second Sunday of month, Com- |munion at the 7:30 o'clock Mass | | : 327 Elizabeth Street Sunday school, 9:30 a. m. Sunday morning service, o'clock. “Unreality” is the subject of the Lesson-Setmon which will be iread in Churches of Christ, |Scientist, throughout the world fon Sunday, April 7. | The Golden Text is: !vain is salvation hoped for from the hills, and from the multitude i i of mountains: truly in the Lord Lae ais Bn) aera jour God is the salvation of Is- Third Sunday of month, Com-T#¢l”.—Jeremiah 3:23. | munion at the 7:30 o’elock Mass | | for: Children of the’'Parish. | Fourth Sunday’ f aénth, Com- | at the: 7:300'élock Mass | days | pe m. \ RSENS SAINT PAUL'S CHURCH | i 11 o'clock. Reading Room is open on Tues- | munion and Fridays from 3 to 5 |for Men of the Parish.’ Daughters.of St, Ann meet |first Sunday of month, Parish Sodality meets fourth Sunday’ of menth. Promoters of the Sacred Heart meet third Sunday of month. i Duval; and Eaton Streets | Until the summer months and Wm | “A Reflex Form Di-| CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCHTY| “Truly in|? Wednesday evening meeting, 8 | ‘unless otherwise advertised, the My God”. Observance of the Lord’s Supper. Christian Endeavor, 7:00 p. m. Topic: “Healing The Sick”. ! Leader: Miss Marie Knowles. Evening worship, 8:00 o’clock. |Sermon subject: “Assurance of the: Sinner in Seeking Salvation”. | Meeting of the Ladies’ Aux- itiary at the Recreational Rooms, | |Monday afternoon, 4:00 o'clock. | Official Board of, the Church | evening, . 8:00, | + 0eee6 A PLEA FOR JUSTICE } j | International Sunday School Les- son for April 7, 1940 Golden Text: “Hate the | evil, and love the good, and establish justice in the gate”. Amos 5:15. i | Prayer meeting, Wednesday evening, 8:00 o'clock. Missionary | ‘dues at close of service. | . | “God sent not His Son into : 7 rapesnpscoat 3 |the world to condemn the world; With this lesson, we begin a |but that the world through Him "ew series—a stuay of the mes-| might be saved”. !sages of the prophets. Through ————__——_ |the consideration of these mes- | THE CHURCH OF GOD {sages of the Old Testament Over ‘Lessoni Text: Amos 5;1,)10,15, 21-24 Which A. J. Tomlinson is | prophets, it is hoped that we General Overseer might discover thejr meaning and _— | value for cur times. 1118 Olivia Street About twenty-six centuries ago Mary H. Thompson, Pastor |Amos wrote one of the « earliest Bible school, 10 a. m., Sunday. books on prophecy. It was just Worship at 11 a. m. about a century after the time of Young People’s meeting at 7:00 Elijah. : i Amos was a shepherd and Evening service, 7:30 o’clock. | farmer, living at Tekoa, a_ little Prayer meetings, Monday and village six miles south of Bethle- Wednesday nights. hem. He was not trained as a \ Bible study, Friday night. prophet and belongs to that select | company of great men in the TRINITY PRESBYTERIAN Bible who were humble workers. | CHURCH Amos cared. for a special variety | _ jof sheep and: was also a dresser | (Colored) of sycamore: trees, which bore a. | 717 Simonton Street small, fig. .,This, was, pinched .to ‘Rev. Sigismund A. ‘Laing, Pastor hasten,its ripening. Hence, Amos | A. Milton Evans, Clerk of Session was a fig pincher. Morning service, 11 o’clock.! The Book of Amos is not very |Sermon subject: “The Ministry long but it is our first literary ‘of Prayer”. |monument of its kind. The Book, Chureh School, 3:30 o'clock. as Rev. George L, Petrie says, Christian Endeavor SOCsoscovccecevvcvesveges | ‘Sunday School Lesson gene oe whether by = incidental cruelty, or, as here, by deliberate viola- tion of the principles of equi- ty in the courts of justice. The worst offenders were those who poisoned justice at its source, those who by their venal de- cisions made it a bitter thing for the poor man when it ought to have been sweet,/and who laid righteousness prostrate upon the ground when she ought to have been erect and smiling”. He seeks to make the religion of Israel @,sincere one. Speaking for Jehovah he tells them to! |“seek good and not evil” and, with emphasis, “hate the evil and love the good”. As for the |formal religious ceremonies he |points out that these mean noth- ing unless the people live rigkt- jeously! Outward, formal wor- |ship will not be accepted by God jand he appeals to his hearers to | |“let. justice roll down as waters and righteousness as a mighty! stream”. The preaching of Afhos was not appreciated by the king and the priests of Israel and they | sent Amos back home where he wrote his immortal little book. writings of Amos af -im= mortal words”, says J. E. id den; “they express in . able ‘form the ‘essence of my the imple demands of God upon men. The justice, the righteous- ness for which Amos here pleads, SATURDAY, APRIL 6, 194! TRAINING SCHOOL OPENS MONDAY A school for the training of Church School teachers will be ‘held at the Ley Memorial Church |beginning Monday night at 7:30 lo’clock to continue for four ‘nights. Rev. G. W. Hutchinson, pastor of the “First Methodist Church, ‘has been engaged as instructor. The ni ie, of -the course which jwill be taught is entitled “What ‘Is ‘Teaching? Rev., Hutchinson is well quali- fied for this ‘work since he de- voted several years of his entire {time to it when he was Exten- sion Seeretary for the Florida Conference. Sessions will be 59 minutes each and two sessions each night for the four nights. All Church School teachers especially are in- vited to attend this course. Teachers from the other church- es are also invited to take the course. MINISTERIAL ALLIANCE WILL MEET MONDAY Key West Ministerial Alliance will meet in monthly session on Monday, 10:30 a. m., at First Methodist Church. All preacher-members of the group are urged te attend by Rev. S. W. Hutchinson, _presi- dent. 0 is a social thing; it is tender re- gard for the poor, hatred of the evil conditions that have devas- ANSWERS TO TODAY’S DAILY QUIZ : Ps League, “4 ; the police?” in Sud aie Wahi waniprety | sidietvenaiodes ons) |regular order of services in the gue, “has not the charm. of. poetry, \t3124 their lives; it is the spirit I smiled. “Do you still suspect me?” I tried to sound disinterested. The Sergeant leaned back in the chair and looked at me with half- closed eyes. “I do and I don’t.” ‘Then he opened his eyes and stared | at me curiously. “Mrs. Evans told me about your goings-on last night.” “Goings-on?” I raised an eye- row. “Umm. She seems to think you had the lawyer in here all night. He paused expectantly. “T was just trying to provide my- self with an alibi,” I said. He shook his head and growled. “T can’t get it,” he said. “When you bring a bunch of supposedly re- spectable people together and start to question them, the things that come out would floor a respectable | crook.” | Before I had time to defend my | honor, Mr. Kimball put his head in the door to ask the Sergeant if} he could take some of Joan's books y are too valuable to leave here,” he said. There was some argument, but, it seems she hadn't left a will, so finally Ishi dragged up several large boxes and the Sergeant went into the apartment to superintend | the packing. I hadn't forgotten that Dirck | told me to be careful, but there} seemed to be no reason to keep the | door locked while Ishi carried the | boxes down to the shop. Besides, the Sergeant was in and out of my apartment several times. Twice he nt downstairs to telephone but he didn’t say anything when he came back. Before they’d finished with the packing Mr. Kimball rushed into my room. | “Have you seen anyone taking things from Joan’s apartment?” He was very much excited. | I shook my head. | Then the Sergeant followed him into my room. “You are sure?” he asked Mr. Kimball. | “I know it, Sergeant. Her collec- tion of books is as familiar to me as my own. There are half a dozen missing and they are the most val- uable ones. The officer rubbed his chin re- flectively. “What would they amourt to in cash?” “Well,” Mr. Kimball said after | a moment's thought, “this is a bad time to sell books. They bring low prices now as a rule. In good times they would have been worth close to a thousand dollars.” Speechless i Sergeant’s jaw dropped. “How in hell did she happen to | have such expensive books?” “When her father died, he left her some. They were all first edi- tions and very old. I'd given her} some, but not as valuable as he: others. Of course, they wouldn’ bring that much now. About five hundred dollars or perhaps a little more.” His face was strained. “The door has been locked,” he an- nounced. “I don’t see how anyone could get in.” Well, Sarah had been in there, of course, but I was sure neither she nor Mrs. Evans would have taken the books. It would never occur to them that they would be worth so much. “Anyone could have gotten in,” I said, “or at least the person who found the keys.” I didn’t knowi whether, Sarah had mentioned it to Mr, Kimball, but if she hadn’t I thought‘ both men should know about it. “The keys?” They shouted si- multaneously. I told them what Sarah had said. Tr t EXPANDS SKULL AUGUSTA, Ga.—Born with a solid skull, which would not ex-' buried under six feet of sand for pand to make room for her growing brain, Mary Noonan, of Savannah, Ga., underwent an op- eration last year which would enable her skull to grow. The second such operation known to medical science it was pronounc- ed a success recently when the child was examined and was difficult to seem natural, for the call had excited me tremendously. Finally I left to go upstairs, Within fifteen minutes I was bun- dled to the ears in my fur coat, a beret and a red wool scarf and was leaving the house. Trailed ‘HERE wasn’t anyone around. Norton wasn’t stationed out- side of the front door today and there were only a few people on the street, mostly women with market baskets. I wondered if the Sergeant would bother to have anyone follow me. It was grand to be out of doors. The only fresh air Td had were thg hurried trips out to meals and Whe ride to Four- teenth Street when I hadn’t had time to breathe. And the day, though it’ was gloomy and cold, was invigorating. After I passed the Knife and Fork I turned, back to look in a shop window, and less than half a block behind me I saw Ishi. He hesitated when I stopped, crossed the street and headed back to the shop. When I saw his back turned I slipped around the corner and hailed a taxi. At a little before noon I landed at Fifth Avenue and Eighth Street, |but Dirck’s long yellow roadster was already parked near the cor- ner. The less said about the first leg of that drive, the’ better. Dirck tucked me in the car, a heavy blan- ket around my knees, and headed up Fifth Avenue without a word. His attention seemed to be entire- ly on the driving, except for a preoccupied frown that showed he had something more important than the car and me on his mind. Tt was noon when we started and the little sun there’d been during the morning-had disappeared be- hind heavy clouds. New York lay in an oppressively somber mist. And_ Dirck’s continued silence didn’t make me feel any too cheer ful. We drove block after block, finally turning right on Fifty-sev- enth Street, and I was one large | question mark in regard to where | we were going. When we stopped for a red light at Second Avenue I said in a ten- tative voice, “Ishi was following me.when I left the house. When I turned around and saw him he went: back towards the shop.” Dirck whistled softly, then laughed. “TI think Ishi is playing detective,” he said. “He waylays me every time I see him, to find out more of my methods.” “He couldn't leave the shop just because he felt like playing hide and go seek,” I said a little shortly. Dirck grinned at that. “Nobody’s going to put anything over on you, are they, lady?” “T'm not too bright,” I snapped, me Ido know when I'm being put off.” He swung the car onto the upper level of the Queensboro bridge be- fore he spoke again. “Mr. Kimball is keeping an eye on everyone in the house,” he said. “Long instruct- ed him to. After all, he can’t force you. people to stay indoors all of the time. A couple of people are or were being watched carefully, but T don’t believe the Sergeant is wor- rying about you.” “He's not suspicious of murder,” I told him, “but of my morals. Mrs. Evans told him that you spent the night in my room.” He chuckled. Then*I remembered the list of questions. “Dirck, someone wrote on my list of questions again while we were out to breakfast.” BURIED AN HOUR: SAVED j HARLINGEN, Tex.—Although more than an hour, Julian Vil- lareal, 17, was rescued uninjured. Clods of dirt which fell jthe boy’s head as he was trapped by a cave-in saved him from suf- focation. found to be “about normal” for a five-year-old. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH | Eaton between Duval and | Simonton Streets | Sunday school, 10 a.m. T. 1. | Kelly, superintendent. Morning worship, 11 o'clock. | ad P. Archer will occupy the pul- | pit. | Baptist Training Union, 7:00 |p. m. Mrs. L. C. Taylor, presi. | dent. 4 | Evening service, -8:00 o'clock. | |H. H. Fischer will preach. Sub-! jject: “Communism Challenges | Christianity”. | Prayer meeting, 17:30 p. m. j Choir rehearsal Thursday, 7:30} m. Harry H. Fischer. musica! | | Wednesday, | lo. }9. Parish Church’ is as follows: Sundays Mass with Communions, a, m. Mass for the Church School, 9:30 a. m. Morning Prayer and Mass with Sermon, 11:00 o’clock. Evening Prayer, Sermon, Bene- diction, 8:00 o’clock. Week Days Morning Prayer, 6:45 o’clock. Mass, 7:00: a. m. Eveging Prayer, 5:30 o’clock. Wednesdays Morning Prayer,.8:45 o’clock. Second Mass, 9:00 a. m. 7:00 THE CHURCH OF GOD about | : Sunday from 620 White street. lirector. | MIXED BIBLE CLASS I i | Sam B. Pinder and W. P. Monti- | cino; Teachers: 1 Meetings every Sunday mora- | ing at the Harris School :audi-} | torium, 10 o’clock. Men and wom} jen not connected with any other | | Bible Class and regardless of de- | nominations are invited to at- send. | | LEY MEMORIAL METHODIST | CHURCH L. A. Ford, Pastor 1106 Olivia St. Siinday morning worship, o’clock. Sunday School, 3 p. m. Sunday evening preaching service, 8, o’clock. Prayer meetings, Tuesday and Thursday nights, 8 o’clock. 11 GOSPEL HALL 720 Southard Street Morning worship, 10:45 o’clock. Sunday school, 3:45 p. m. | Gospel meeting, 7:30 p. m. | Bible study, Wednesday, 8:00 p. m. Prayer meeting, Friday, 8:00 | PD. m. | O. C. Howell, Pastor | Corner Division and Georgia Sts. Church school, 9:45 a. m. Miss | Miriam Carey, superintendent. |. Morning worship, 11 o'clock. Sermon subject: “Christ Our Sin-Bearer”. Intermediates meet at 6:30: p m. Mrs. O. C. Howell as leader. | Young — people’s “EL SALVADOR” METHODIST CHURCH Latin Mission Grinnell and Virginia Streets Guillermo Perez, Pastor |meets at 6:30 p. m. Church School, 9:45 a. m. Miss | president- ,Sazah-Fernandez, superintendent. | Evening worship, 8:00 o'clock.|" Evening worship, 7:30 o'clock. |Sermon subject: “The Quiters”.! “Prayer service, Wednesday, 7:30 | The change of time from 7:30! p. m. to 8:00 o'clock for the evening} Woman’s Missionary Society, service will take pli tomorrow. | first and ‘third Tuesdays of each he bled service, 2Wédnesday | month, 4 p.:m., at Wesley House. 7:30 p.m. | after prayer / FLEMING STREET METHODIST Choir’ practice service. Mrs. J. Roland Adams | (Uptown) CHURCH’ | Rev. Jim Liily, Pastor pianist. Ficiaing at William Street Church School meets at 9:45 a. m. Norman J. Lowe, general superintendent. Morning worship, 11 o'clock Young People’s Epworth League meets at 6:30 p.m. Jack | Weech, vresident. Evening service, 7:30 o'clock. Mid-weck Prayer and Bible | Study, Wednesday, 8:00 p. m. 6:30 p. m.| Choir rehearsal, Wednesday, | Evening worship, 8:00 o'clock. 9:00 p. m. |Sermon subject: “Character Or) Tuesday evening, 7:45 o'clock, |Chaos”. Note change from 7:30/ Brotherhood Banquet, 619 Wil- jo’clock of this service. | liam street. | Choir rehearsal, Friday, 7:45) You are cordially invited to_at- |®. m. “Mrs. Joseph Sawyer: /tend these services and bring a | organist; Gerald. Saundégs, direc: } friend. tor. | ASSEMBLY OF GOD | 1008 Olivia Street | ‘Evangelist Florence DeLanoy and Husband, in Charge Morning worship, 11 o'clock. Sunday ool, 3:30 p. m. Class- es for all ages. Evangelistic service, 7:30 p. m. Prayer Meetings Tuesday, 7:15 p. m. Friday, 7:15 p. m. FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH William L. Halladay, Pastor 527 William Street Sunday school at 9:45 a. m. | | | department | Cecil Cates, | FIRST METHODIST CHURCH | (Old Stone) | Rev. G. W. Hutchinson, Pastor | Corner Eaton and Simonton Sts. ; Church school, 9:45 a.m. Ger- | jald Saunders, superintendent. Morning worship, 11 o’clock. Sermon subject: “Assuming Re- | sponsibility”. Followed by Com- |munion. | Epworth League, | B‘NAI ZION CONGREGATION Rabbi Lolehier) xs! Joe Pearlman, President ef Con- * gregation Hebrew Sunday School, 11 a m., and every day in week, except Friday, at 4 p. m. Regular_services every Friday evening, 8 o’clock, and Saturday | morning, 7 o’clock. JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES | | | | | 935 Fleming Street | Watchtower Study, 7:30 p. m. | Sunday. | Salvation Study, ‘Wednesday. Carlyle Roberts, Field service, 9 a. m., daily and! Morning worship, 11 o'clock. Sermon subject: “My Lord And 7:30 9. m., ;6:30 p. m. Topic for discussion: but it has the fascinating power |“Healing The Sick”. of oratory; an oratory, not of the | Evening worship, 7:30 o’clock. schools, but of nature; not ornate, |Sermon subject: “Dare To Be but rugged. The illustrations of |A Daniel’. the Book are objects of nature Tuesday evening, 7:30 o’clock, and scenes familiar to plainest |Young People’s meeting and ‘country life. Of all fhe prophetic | Prayer service. : 5 |Books, this is the one which the | Friday night, 7:30 o'clock, choir! plain, uniettered laborer on the rehearsal. |farm, in the field or forest, may, | Sete: : most easily read”. : | Jesus seid: “The things which, The author was an able writer, are impossible with men are pos-|however. Professor Bernhard jsible with God”. Duhn. says: “Amos spoke with si unpolished plainness.. ‘But “he SAINT PETER'S CHURCH ean handle his language with a ;master’s skill; every sentence is jfull of meaning, and every work strikes the, mark, This reform- ing soul belongs among the clas- sic writers of Israelite literature”. Although Amos lived. in_ the country he understood, the life of his age. He saw, the wickedness of the cities when he carried his ,products to market, and many’ mn Sermon, |other evils, as Rev, Bernard C, | Benediction, 7 p. m. “ "Clausen enumerates: “Unscrupu- Week Days— ‘lous judges condemned the inno- | - Tuesdays, Low Mass, 7:45 a. m.| cent for paltry bribes. The rich Wednesdays, Litany and Ser- grasped the small possessions of. mon, 7:30 p: m. the poor. Prices were fraudulently Thursdays, Low Mass, 7:45 /increased and measures were a. m. fraudulently diminished, and bad grain was sold as good. The most shameful licentiousness was prac- tised. Idolatry, with its bestial immoralities, was rampant. Everywhere Amos saw wasteful sluxury end extravagance, the Fan Chon Tynes, Secretary _| more disgraceful in contrast with Morning worship, 11 o'clock. the wretched poverty of the peo- Sunday school, 3 p.m. Kermit | ple among whom he lived”. Gibson, superintendent. Amos spoke for social justice | Evening worship, 7:45 p. m./and he uttered a plea which the | world has not heeded yet. He} THE ORTHODOX CATHOLIC tells those who have become rich | CHURCH iby taking advantage of | their | Of St. Mary, The Virgin fellowmen that although they | (Colored) ‘build fine houses, they shall not | Thomas and Julia ‘Streets jdwell in them. He. condemns |} Father R. S. Hoagland, Priest [without fear the social evils ,of | High Mass, 7 a. m. 4) Church School, 3 p. m. \soul is for the establishment of Solemn Vespers and ‘Sermon, sociakjustice”, says Prof. J. -E.| 8:15, p. m. (Colored) Center between Petronia and Olivia Streets | Services Throughout Year | Sundays— | Sung Mass, Sermon, \ Com- munions, 8:00 a. m. | Church school follows imme-! | diately after the 8 o’clock service. Solemn Evensong; i CORNISH CHAPEL A.M.E. Zion Church (Colored) Rev. James D; Daniel, Pastor | { | McFadden,--“‘and- his denuncia- jtions and threats fall upon the | "heads" of Hose who frustrate that, | SECOND SHEETS 500 Sheets for NEWMAN METHODIST | - CHURCH ut A | (Colored) | Division Street between |White- | | head and Duval Streets | | Rev. Dr. J. A. Simpson, Pastor Church School, 9:30 a, m. Alice Sands, superintendent, Morning service, 11 o'clock. Epworth League, 6 p. m. Evening service, 8 o'clock. t Seema a SEVENTH DAt ADVENTIST CHURCH (Colored) | Southard between Thomas | and Emma Streets William Perkins, Pastor G. Williams, Missionary Leader | | Sabbath School (Saturday), 10) o'clock. 4 Church services, 11 a. m. - Y. P. MV. S, meetirig, 5: MH p. m. ( Prayer meeting, tures! } | | a 7:30 p. m. BETHEL AME. CHURCH (Colored) J. C. Bannerme, Pastor F. A. Johnson, General Secretary Division and Thomas Sts. Sunday school, 9:30 a. m. Preaching, 11 a. m. 3 Junior A. C. E. League meets at 5:30 p. m. Friday, 7:30 p. m, choi hearsal. which yearns and works for the removal of those conditions; it is, in a word, respect for person- ality, fair play as between man and man. Let justice, in that sense, run through society, unim- peded by avarice or selfishness or cruelty, let it roll on without let or hindrance like the waves of the sea”. DAY OF REJOICING MINNEAPOLIS, Minn.—Elmer | Larson, of this city,. became a father and grandfather on the, same, day—Easter: Sunday. His ‘wife, Isabelle, presented him with a son. and his ‘daughter, Mrs. William’ Vanderbilt, of St. | Below are the Answers to Today's Daily Quiz printed on Page 2 Eye’-rate; not ir’-ate. Inside wheels. In motion. Yes. Anzacs. Both are foot racers. Hounas. Dr. Paul Ehrlich. King of ancient Judah. Paul Revere and William Dawes. Just A Bag Of Wind Minister—Do you promise to love, honor and cherish this woman? Politician—Yes. Whatever the “The passion of Amos’ | Paul, gave birth to a girl. platform says, I subscribe to it. PIPPOPPOCCCLCLCLLL LLL COMPLAINT SERVICE... If you do not Receive Your Copy of The CITIZEN By 6 P. M. PHONE—WESTERN UNION Between 6 and 7 P. M. and a Western Union Messenger Boy will deliver your copy of The Citizen. WOITITSI IS II IIS ISLS SIM. N N N N N N N Fk k hide hah df The Refrigerator With CONDITIONED AIRE NEW 1940 GENERAL ELECTRIC Sz sweeter, cleaner air—controls humidity— practically eliminates | transfer of food odors — gives GC G-E PRICE LOWER FOR colder, faster freezing tempera- + tures t' er—and G-E prices go even lower for 1940! OM the greatGeneral Electric Research Lab- oratories have come new advancements that make this the most complete, the most thrifty G-E re- frigerator ever built: Yet General Electric prices go even. lower this year! "See G-E! And You'l Sea NEW Beautifully Styled All-Steel Cabinet: NEW Stainless Steel Super Freezer: NEW Stainless Steel Sliding Shelves: NEWG-E Ait Filter: NEW, Automatic Humidity Con- trol: NEW Humi-diah