The Key West Citizen Newspaper, January 2, 1943, Page 3

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SATURDAY, JANUARY 2 a tiecit FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Eaton, Between Duval and Simonton Sts. Rev. Ted M. Jones, Pastor Sunday School, 9:45 a, m. E. L. Wilson, superintendent. Morning worship, 10:50 o’clock. Sermon subject: “God’s Cruel- est Grace”. Public Ordination of Rev. Harry Perkins into the full gos- pel ministry, 3:30 p. m. Evening worship, 8:00 p. m. Sermon subject: “A Love That Satisfies”. FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH 527 William Street Samuel P. Reinke, Minister Sunday School, 9:45 a. m. Carlyle Roberts, superintendent. Morning worship, 10:50 o’clock. The pastor preesnts “God’s An- swer to Suffering”. The con- gregation will share in the Lord’s Supper. Intermediate and Senior Chris- tian Endeavor, 7:00 p. m. Evening service, 8:00 o'clock. The pastor preaches on “The High Calling of God”. The Annual Meeting of the congregation will be held Wed- nesday evening at 8:00 p. m. in place of the regular. Missionary meeting. The newly-elected Official Board meets Thursday evening at 8:00 p. m. at the church. The choir practices under the leadership of Mrs. Bodler Friday ! evening at 8:00 o'clock. ' NAVAL CHAPEL SERVICES Movie Hall, U. S. Naval Operating Base Ghaplain Blake Craft Children’s Sunday School at 10 a, m. in the Chaplain’s Building, No. 129. { Holy Communion will be ad-; ministered in the auditorium of, the new Chaplains’ Building, No. | 129, Sunday at 0815. Chaplain, Craft will be in charge. Men’s Sunday School class will; be held in the station library from 1000 to 1045. Lieutenant G. E. Barton, station person-| nel officer, will be the teacher. General service at 7:15 p. m.! to 8:00 p. m. Program: Congre-'| Sermon subject: Responsive: Christ” (St. John 17:11). Commun- gational Singing, Reading. Selections by Navy Choir -(Stan Flummer, Spie, . di-/ rector), and sermon by Chaplain; Craft. Date”. | Roman Catholic Services at the; station include Confessions every | Saturday from 1400 to 1730 by | Chaplain T. J. Fallon at the} new Chaplains’ Building, No.| 129, arid Mass at 0815 every Sun-; day morning, at the Movie Hall. Confessions will be heard from 0745 to 0810. Hl Chaplain Fallon will hold a} mid-week service in the Chap- lains’ Building at 1715. Services held every Wednesday. It will consist of the Sacrifice of the Mass, short sermon and Novena pravers in honor of Our Mother of Perpetual Help. Jewish Services Jewish Services are held every | Friday evening at the Temple, B'Nai Zion, on the corner of Si- monton and Southard streets, at 2000 by Rabbi Lehrer. | FIRST vst ale Mi ae { CHURCH | White at Washington Street } Rev.iM. :G. Lyerly, Pastario | Sunday. School, 9:45 a. m. . Morning worship, 10:50 oie | Sermon subject: “The Holy Sup- | per”. i Young People’s meeting, 7:00! p. m. | Evening worship, 8:00 o'clock. Sermon subject: “A Prosperous | Man”. Choir 7:30 p. m. Folowing the morning message | there will be the celebration of | the Lord’s Supper. We cordially invite service men, defense work- ers and friends to worship with us at this service, as well as the} evening service. | \ | practice, Wednesday, THE CHURCH OF GOD Over Which A. J. Tomlinsen is ; General Overseer ‘ 1113 Olivia Street H Mary. H. Thompson, Pastor ‘ible School, 10 a. m., Sunday. fern at 1l a.m. ‘owng People’s meeting at 7:00 p. m. Evening service, 7:30 o'clock. Prayer meetings, Monday and Wednesday nights. Bible Study, Friday night. UNITY SERVICES 708 Baker’s Lane (Off Elizabeth, near Southard) Sunday Services Unity Services, 11:15 o'clock. Class in “Lessons In Truth”, 8 p. m. Class in “Lessons In Truth”, every Thursday evening, 8:00 o'clock. vitation the subject: Sermon theme: “The New ; Sermon subject: , 1942 Baise « FLEMING STREET METHODIST (Uptown) CHURCH Rev. W. B. Mundy, Pastor Church School, 9:45 a. m. Wil- liam Knowles, general superin- tendent. Morning worship, 10;50 o’clock. Observance of the Sacrament. Epworth Leagué, 7:00 p. m. Evening worship, 8:00 o’clock. Sermon subject:/ “This Year Al- so”. Prayer service, Wednesday, 8 p. m, A special and a warm in- is extended to all service men, defense workers, visitors, friends and members to start the New Year off right by attending church. As a special request the pas- tor will preach Sunday night on “This Year Also”. All young people are invited to the young people’s class, which meets each Sunday at 9:45 o’clock. Each one is also invited to the Epworth League again at 7 p.m. A special invitation is extended to service men. LEY MEMORIAL METHODIST CHURCH Cor. Division and Georgia Sts. Rev. Wm. E. Bryant, Pastor j{ Church School, 9:45 a. m. Miss Miriam Carey, general superin- tendent. Morning worship, 10:50 o’cleck. Young People’s Department, 7:00 p. m. { Evening worship, 7:30 o'clock. Midweek service, Wednesday, j 7:30 p. m. t Choir practice, Wednesday, | (8:15 p. m. Come and worship with us} and we will do our best to give you that which you need in these days of need. Welcome to all. FIRST METHODIST CHURCH (Old Stone) Cor. Eaton and Simonton Sts. Rev. A. C. Riviere, Pastor Church School, 9:45 a. m. Each department meets in its own as- sembly room. Harold Russell, | superintendent. Morning worship, 10:50 o’clock. “One Body In ion Meditation. Epworth League, 7:00 p. m. Evening worship, 8:00 o’clock. “He Led Them; He Will Lead Us” (Psalms 31:3; Isaiah 48:17). Young Adult Fellowship meets after evening service. Mid-week prayer service, Wed- nesday, 8:00 p. m. Choir practice, Friday, 7:45 p. m. Mrs. Joseph Sawyer, or- ganist; Gerald Saunders, direc- tor. At the Sunday evening serv- ice we will have the New Year's sermon. To this service we in- vite you to come, think with us of One who can and will lead us through all that 1943 may hold for us. “EL SALVADOR” METHODIST CHURCH Latin Miission Grinnell and Virginia Streets Guillermo Perez, Pastor Church School, 9:45 a. m. Miss Martha Robinson, superintendent. Worship servite, 7:30 p. m. Prayer service, 7:30 p. m. Women’s Society of Christian ervice at ‘Wesley Community House, first and third Mondays, 4:00 p. m. Mother’s Club, Thursday, 17:00 p. m. BAPTIST HOME MISSION. BOARD CUBAN MISSION 1122 Watson Street Miss Elizabeth Taylor, Director Sunday School, 3 p. m. Kindergarten, Monday and Fri- day, 9 a. m. to 12 m. Sunbeam Band, Monday, 3:30] Midweek services, Tuesday and| p.m. Children 3-9. Girls’ Auxiliary, Tuesday and Thursday, 3:30 p. m. Girls 9-15. Royal Ambassadors, Wednes- day and Friday, 3:30 p.m. Boys 9-15. Prayer meeting, Friday, 8 p. m. THE €HURCH OF GOD os Be 4 | ‘ 4 Sunday School, 3:30+p."m. Sunday evening preaching service, 7:30 o'clock. Prayer meetings, Tuesday and Thursday nights, 7:30 o'clock. CHURCH OF CHRIST Second Floor of County use Services in Court Room, sec- ond floor of courthouse, 5:30 p.m., gach Lord’s Day (Sunday). Services conducted each Sun- day afternoon at the hour indi- cated as a convenience for the } Wednesday, ICHURCH CALLING FOR FULL SERVICE FROM LAYMEN EPISCOPAL HEAD SETS UP NATIONAL COMMITTEE TO PROMOTE MEN'S WORK: PROMINENT LEADERS (Special to The Citizen) NEW YORK, N. Y., Jan. 2— To engage the manpower of the Episcopal Church in constructive religious work, Presiding Bishop Henry St. George Tucker has organized a Committee on Lay- men’s Work, headed by Harvey S. Firestone, Jr., of Akron, Ohio, President of the Firestone rubber interests. Bishop Tucker has asked the committee to undertake the task of strengthening and coordinat- ing all laymen’s work in the Church. The committee will sponsor an annual Corporate Commuion of laymen throughout the Church during 1943, and will also sponsor a laymen’s corporate gift. Referring to the gift, Presiding Bishop Tucker calls attention to the fact that special offerings are being made by women of the Church, by Church school chil- dren, by the organized Youth movement, and by Church groups in colleges and universities, but that no such offering for the Church’s work has been made corporately by Church men. He on the part of the whole man- power of the Church will result eventually in a program that will strengthen and extend the Church in all of its activities. Forming the Committee with Mr. Firestone are: William H. Bulkeley, Hartford, Conn.; Frank ;Gulden, New York; Edwin Hyde, Richmond, Va.; D. Edward Hud- gins, Greensboro, N. C.; Jule M. Hannaford, St. Paul, Minn.; George D. Wilson, Houston, Tex- as; Wilmer M. Hammond, Los Angeles, Calif.; Eugene E. Thompson, Washington, D. C.; Douglas C. Turnbull, Jr., Bal- timore, Md.; Judge Oscar W. Ehr- horn, New York; Robert S. Bloomer, Rochester, N. Y. many service men and defense workers stationed here. SAINT PAUL'S CHURCH Duval and Eaton Streets Sunday Services Low Mass with administratien of Holy Communion, 7:30 a. m. Sung Mass, Holy Communion, Church School, 9:30 a. m. Morning Prayer said plain, 11 a.m. Sung Mass with short sermon, 11:15 a. m. Evening Prayer, Sermon, Bene- (diction of the Blessed Sacrament, 8 p.m. z Daily Services Morning Prayer, daily except Wednesdays, 6:45 a. m. Low Mass with administration of Holy Communion, 7 a. m. Evening Prayer, daily, 5:38 p. m Wednesdays Morning Prayer, 8:45 a. m. A second Low Mass with Holy Communion, 9 a. m. Other services as announced. LUTHERAN CHURCH (Missouri Synod) 728 Fleming Street (Knights of Pythias” Hall) F. H. Zucker, Pastor Divine service, Wednesday, 8 p. m. FIRST ASSEMBLY OF GOD TABERNACLE Rev. Quentin Shortes, Pastor Corner Petronia and Georgia Sts. Sunday School, 10 a. m. Worship service, 11 a. m. Evangelistic Service, 7:30 p. m. Friday, 7:45 p. m. All will find a welcome. JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES 620 White Street Watchtower Study, 7:30 p. m., Sunday. Salvation Study, 8:00 p.m. Wednesday. Field service, 9 a. m., daily and Sunday. 50 ay. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY 327 Elizabeth Street Sunday School, 9:30 a. m. o'clock. ‘Wednesday evening meeting, 8:00 _o’clock. Reading Room is open on Tues- days and Fridays from 3:00 to 5:00 p. m. MIXED BIBLE CLASS Sam B. Pinder and W. P. Monticino, Teachers ‘ | i 1 if | igismund 11) A. Milton Meetings every Sunday morn-j rehearsal. believes that an organized effort | Ceding first Friday, 4:00 to 6:00 |for Parish and High School So- ORDINATION SERVICE of the First Baptist Church, Ocala, Fla., and now of the US. Navy personnel in Key West, will be ordained publicly at the First Baptist Church Sunday aft- ernoon at 3:30 o’clock. Chaplain Glasgow of the Navy will present the Charge to the Minister and Rev. Ted Jones, pas- tor of the local First Baptist, will preach the ordination sermon. All ordained Baptist ministers and deacons are invited to be present in a council to examine the candidate at 2:30 p.m. The Ordination service is open to the public. SOME FOOD TO BE SHORT WPB CUTS CIVILIAN SUPPLY The people of the United States may continue to be the best fed as Food Administrator Claude R. Wickard asserts, but there is every reason to expect drastic changes in the nature of the ay supply for American fami- j lies. 5 % | With huge reserves of food, ing at the Harris School audi-|the nation begins its food battle torium, 10 o'clock. with a running start, but th Men and women not connected { a eee with any other Bible Class and| Wil! be_ shortages of specific pile This is apparent when wees pcp cenomina tous are we consider recent orders of the | WPB, stopping the canning of ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH jay household foods for civil- ian use and reserving approxi- St. Mary's Star of the Sea mately half the caidas jof canned fruits, vegetables and \fruits for the use of our fighting | forces. The shortage of agricultural Rev. Thomas Atherton, S.J. Rev. Terence King, S.J., and J. J Murphy, S.J., Assistants Hours of Services Sunday Masses, 7:00, 8:30 and 10:00 a m. Benediction. Masses on Holy Days, 6:30 and 8:00 a. m. Weekday Masses, 6:30 and 7:30 machinery, which has _ seriously hampered the harvesting of some crops, and the question of farm wages aggravate the problem of food production. ‘It is entirely a, m. First Friday at 6:30, and/|P' le that arrangements will 8:00 a. m. be\mjdde to'insure the most pro- Sunday evenings, 7:30 ‘v’clock;+duttive use of available farm Rosary, Sermon and Benediction.|equipment and that some steps Friday evenings, 7:30 o’clock,! will be taken to provide addi- Sacred Heart Devotions. tional agricultural machinery. Confessions Saturday after-| If farm wages under $2,400 a noons and evenings, on vigil ef;year increase, as they probably Holy Days and on Thursday pre-jwill if agriculture competes with industry for workers, Mr. Wick- ad believes that the present plan to support farm prices will take care of the situation. The Food Administrator insists that waste must be avoided and hints that whole wheat bread may become a necessary substi- NEWMAN METHODIST CHURCH o’clock, and from 7:00 to 8:00 o'clock. First Sunday of month, Com- munion at the 7:00 o’clock Mass} for Daughters of St. Ann. Second Sunday of month, Com- munion at the 7:00 o’clock Mass | dalities. | Third Sunday of month, Com-} munion at the 8:30 o’clock Mass for Children of the Parish. 1 Fourth Sunday of month, Com- munion at the 7:00 o’clock Mass for men of the Parish. Daughters of St. Ann meet first Sunday of month. Parish Sodality meets fourth Wednesday of month. Promoters of the Sacred Heart} meets third Sunday of month. Ushers’ Club meets at 7:30 p. m. on the first Monday of every month. (Colored) Corner Division and Whitehead Streets Rev. Monroe, Pastor Church School, 9:45 a. m. Morning service, 11:00 o’clock. Epworth League, 6:00 p. m. Evening service, 8:00 o’clock. Tuesday night, class meeting, 18:00 o'clock. ORTHODOX CATHOLIC CHURCH GOSPEL HALL. 720 Southard Street Morring worship, 10:45 o’clock. Sunday School, 3:45 p. m. Gospel meeting, 7:30 p. m. Bible Study, Wednesday, 8:00 p. m. B’NAI ZION CONGREGATION (Colored) Rev. G. E. Finley in Charge Mass, 10 a. m. Vespers and Sermon, 8 p. m. Public invited to attend. FIRST PENTECOSTAL (Colored) Olivia Street, between Thomas and Whitehead Streets Rev. J. C. Wallace, Pastor Gussie Wallace, Secretary Preaching service in morning, 11 o’clock. Evening service, 8:30 o’clock. er setvice, Tuseday night. All are invited to attend these services. ZION PRIMITIVE BAPTIST CHURCH Rabbi L. Lehrer Joe Pearlman, President Hebrew Sunday School, 11 a. m., and every day in week, ex- cept Friday, at 4 p. m. Regular services every Friday evening 8 o'clock, and Saturday morning, 7 o'clock. FIRST PENTECOSTAL CHURCH 1008 Olivia Street Miss Flora E. Mitchell, Pastor and Evangelist Services Tuesday and Friday, 8 p. m. Sunday, 11 a. m. and 8 p. m. Sunday School, 3:30 p. m. Everyone welcéme. {Colored) Thomas, Near Olivia Street Rev. L. Milerson, Pastor Sister A. McKinney, Reporter Morning service, 11 o'clock. . Evening - service, 8 o'clock. Service i a Weekly Prayer service, Tuesday, 8:00 p. m, SAINT PETER’S CHURCH (Colored) Center, Between Petronia SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH (Colored) 217. Southard Street Elder B. W. Abney, Pastor Mrs. G. Williams, Missionary and Olivia Streets Leader Services Throughout Year Sabbath School (Saturday), 1¢|Sundays— a.m. Sung Mass, Sermon, Commun- Church service, 11 a. m. ions, 8:00 a. m. -Y. P. M. V. S. meeting, 5:38} Church School follows imme- >. m. diately after the 8 o'clock rs service. BETHEL A.M.E. CHURCH Solemn Evensong, Sermon, —_ Benediction, 7 p. m. (Colored) Week Days— Rev. C. J. Prince, D.D., Pastor Tuesdays, Low. Mass, 7:45 a. m. Parsonage, 907 Thomas Street Wednesdays, Litany and Ser- (All Times Eastern War e) mon, 7:30 p. m. Sunday School, 9:45 a. m. Thursdays, Low Mass, 7:45 Morning worship, 11:00 a. m. a. m. Christian Endeavor, 6:30 p. m.} Fridays, Low Mass, 9:00 a. m. Si Laing, Mini Evans, Clerk of Session Church School, 3:30 p. m. Adults’ Bible Class, 6 p. m. “3 Meetings Christian Endeavor, 6:30 p.m.| Monday, 8 p.m, Stewardess Evening worship, 7:30 o'clock.| Board No. 1 meets. Tuesday, 8 p. m, Young Peo-} Tuesday, 8:00 p. m, prayer ple’s meeting and Adults’ Prayer) and class. Service. Friday, Thursday, 8 p. m., Boy Scouts’{ hearsal. Defense workers, Thursday, 8 p. m, Glee Club/ visitors and friends are invited - to all services at Zion. = 8:00 p.m. choir re- population in the world in 1943, | By HUGO S. SIMS. Special Washington Correspondent of The Citizen jtute for the highly-refined white bread which does not make use of the most nutritious part of wheat, the hull, in the making of flour. An idea of the shortages that Imay affect civilian diet comes {from the WPB’s food order, which {directs canners to save fifty per cent of their pack of canned {fruits, vegetables and juices for juse in connection with war purposes and directs them to set aside varying percentages of 31 fruits, vegetables and juices. The other WPB order will stop the canning of many items for civilian consumption, including specified meat spreads, some {fruits- and fruit salads, carrots, peas, sauerkraut, baking powder, chili sauce, chili con carne, meat loaf, lard, sweet syrups, bacon, boned chicken and turkey, beef, veal mutton and pork, beets, pumpkin and squash, tomato cat- sup and certain fruits and fruit juices. The list will give the reader some idea but not a complete picture of what, is ahead for 1943. A few quota restrictions have been lifted, notably on pineapple and grapefruit juice, some sea- foods and the probability is that foodstuffs will be prepared in glass instead of tin for civilian ADOPT PLAN TO _ SAVE MATERIAL | ADVICE GIVEN TO CUT GAR- | | MENT ACCORDING TO CLOTH By HERMAN ALLEN AP Features Service Writer Cut your garment according to lyour cloth! That’s what CMP, Uncle Sam’s new Controlled Ma- terials Plan, is all about. The “garment” is a complicated one —vital tools of war, ships, plancs, tanks, guns. The “cloth” is the raw material from which these tools are made. And the most ‘important raw materials are cop- per, aluminum and_steel—the Big Three of CMP. Suppose that all the copper, aluminum and steel Uncle Sam jean get his hands on were spread ;Out in a long sheet, like a length | of cloth. Now imagine that all of | the vastly detailed specifications \for ships, planes, tanks and guns {could be laid out in paper pat- terns. i Before CMP, Uncle Sam often ;fan into the same kind of diffi- |culty a dressmaker does when she spreads her pattern too gen- erously over the dress goods, leaving little islands of useless { material. Then he had to un-pin the pattern and start again to get the most out of his goods. Here's what used to happen too often, just to give you an idea. ,A manufacturer received a gov- ernment order for 1,000 machine guns for combat planes. Hoping to do even more, he bought steel for 1,600 machine jturned them out. That would have been fine, if the big pat- tern had called only for guns. But because the gun factory had bought extra steel, the plane fac- tory could get enough to complete only 600 plane engines. Uncle Sam had 1,000 temporarily use- less machine guns in his ware- houses. CALMNESS SAVES LIVES MILWAUKEE, Jan. 1.—When fire was discovered in a theater building in which there were 300 patrons, the manager calmly stopped the projection machine and said to the audience. “Our projection machine has broken down. The show is over for the night. Please step outside and you may have your admission re- funded.” Not until the crowd reached the lobby and safety did they see the flames and the smoke. None of them remembered to ask for their mcaey. LONDON.—The motto of the PAGE THRE. 1 30 Men Do One’s Work; (Cops Lose Handcuffs Speeds War Production’ With Prisoner Attached (By Associated Press) DAYTONA BEACH. Fila 2. — The patroimen knew prisoner, arrested conduct i away so they him before putti (By Associated Press) TOLEDO, Jan. 2—Putting 30 men to work on a job that one man could do doesn’t sound like mod- ern production economy in these days of manpower shortages, but the experience of a moter com- pany here was an exception that proved the rule. lice car. Sure It came about this way: Willys-, were stopped Overland Motors received an or-| argument, the der to produce gun parts for the jinte the night. Army. Studies indicated that af-| Before another night had pass- ter machine @perativiws,it would|ed, in came their prisoner at the take about 30 hoursbf an expert’ police station asking that the cuffs toolmaker’s time to do the hand/ be removed. He had filed them finish filing job required on each} down so deep he couldn't file any gun. | farther witheut cutting Because of the difficulties of ob- |The cost of the handeuffs. $15, taining expert tool-makers and{ was included in his $35 fine the fact that five years are re- quired to train one, Willys engi-! neers broke the operation down} and trained thirty men to do a small part of the total filing in an | hour, { Since it was always the same} part he was trained to file, each of | the workers became very profi-| cient on the operation in 30 days, | and the problem was licked. for dis: had a penchan 10:50 AM C . Senei 8:00 PM. THIS YEAR ALSO { WELCOME TO THIS —— { FRIENDLY CHURCH LONDON — The Southern Rail-| way in England employs more than 5,000 women. ' EMPLOYS MANY WOMEN ‘YOUR NEWSBOY . . . buys his copies of The Citizen at whole- sale, sells them at retail. - + + pays cash for his papers. . . « loses if a customer fails to pay- . . . is embarrassed if a customer is slow pay. . goes the limit for his trade, is on the job rain or shine, serves his customers well. . . . asks customers to cooperate by paying him promptly and regularly. THE CITIZEN INSIDE WHITE gal. $2.25 “Complete Line of BUILDING HARDWARE and PAINT” LINDSLEY LUMBER COMPANY Key West. Fla. Fast, Dependable Freight and Express Service MIAMI AND KEY WEST Also Serving AM Points On Florida Keys Between Miami and Key West i y H : ql : A g » g % 4 E E L it 3 i i i id a E : i ‘ nid ti if i ii

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