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Saturday, April It, 1953 Chaplains Felder And Tindall To Preach At Ley Memorial The two sermons for Sunday,' April 19, at Ley Memorial Metho dist Church, 1304 Truman Avenue at Georgia Street, will be deliver ed by two local Navy Chaplains - LCDR George Felder, Jr. of the USS Howard W. Gilmore and CMDR Ray C. Tyndall of the Na val Base. Chaplain Felder will deliver the sermon at the 10:50 morning hour. Mr. Felder comes from Harris burg, Pennsylvania, and is a min ister in the United Lutheran Church. He received his academic training in the public school of Pennsylvania and Gettysburg Col lege in Gettysburg. He took his professional training at the Luth eran Theological Seminary, also located in Gettysburg. After serving a short time as assistant pastor of St. John's Lutheran Church in Salina, Kan es, Chaplain Felder entered the Navy in 1943 where he has ser ved continuously ever since. Much of his ten year stint with the Navy has been spent with the United States Marine Corps. Immediately before going aboard the Gilmore he served with the Marines in Korea. Chaplain Felder, along with his wife and two children, now live here in town at 1505 White Street Chaplain Tyndall, who will de liver the evening sermon at 7:30, is on his second tour of duty in Key West, having served at die Navy Hospital and Boca Chica about 1948-49. He comes from Spartanburg, South Carolina, where he attended the public schools and Woftord College. He received his professional training at Southern Baptist Theological School in Louisville, Kentucky, after which he served as pastor of a Baptist Church in Bluefish, West Virginia, and at the same time taught in Bluefish College. Mr. Tyndall entered the United States Navy for the first time in 1942 and served until 1946. Then for a two year .interim he was associate pastor and director of SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON Hatching aut fram Antioch - Acts 11:25. 24 - 14:82$ BY RALPH ROGERS Following the m order of Stephen t e Christians Bed Jerusalem and r :ly w;nt to Antioch. These men p'd women when they reached i M ba?.tr preaching the fos r ! to the Jews and to the Greek C ;4t i;s as well. Thev felt that the Gentiles needed this Gospel ad so were really missionaries. Following his conversion and be iig rejected by his people in Jer v "’em, Paul went back to tent m iking in his home city, Tarsus. Iln was soon found by Barnabas vno persuaded him to go to Ant i He was so influential that he brought one after another to accept Christ as his Savior and so the missionary chain was start el. It has continued down through the year® and General McArthur lias said that the Church has nev er met such an opportunity as they now are meeting in Japan. He says that where we sent one missionary, we should now send one hundred. This great General believes that missionaries is one graat need to solve the world’s problems. As we find in today s lesson, Barnabas, the gentle, generous and broad minded Christian, went to “seek for Saul.’’ Barnabas moved as a benediction and blessing through the bloody bigotry and ex citement of the day. He had con siderable influence with Saul and persuaded him to go to Antioch. Perhaps these two had met before hi the schools of Tarsus and Bar nabas knew Paul by reputation and knew further that the new convert would over-saadow him as an apostle. The two did not return to Jer *s*lem but went instead to Ant ioch, the third city in the Empire being outranked only by Rome and Alexandria. Antioch was at the cross-roads of the Graeco- Roman world and was a key city for missionary wofk Here was an opportunity to establish with other Christians a work that was to spr e*t to both east and west until eventually the whole civilised world knew of the Savior who died tor all Paul and Barnabas made a good •earn. Barnabas lent the encour agement and Paul preached the Gospel with all the sincerity and conviction at his command. At Iconlum a mob bad been raised •gainst these two missionaries and they fled for their lives to Lystra. At this latter city they found a cripple who bad been unable to walk Atom birth The sorcerers, quacks, priests erf many heathen gods bad failed to give tom lad relief. Paul looking at the cripple aaw Chat be bad faith to be made whole and before the idolatrous crowd at Lystra he said, “Stood upright on thy feet Paul bad ace* Peter with John fasten his •yea upon a lame Jew ad the tem ple (ate hr Jerusalem and heel Mm, and he knew that m the THE KEY WEST CITIZEN religious education at First Bap tist Church in Mobile, Alabama, before re-entering the military ser vice in 1948. He and his family are now at home at Sigsbee Park. Other services of the day will include Sunday School at 9:45 in the morning and the Methodist Youth Fellowship at 7:30 p. m. Navy Chaplain To Preach Here Sun* Chaplain A. M. Carpenter ef the USS Bushnell will be the guest preacher Sunday at the First Methodist Church, replac ing the Reverend J. Paul Touch ton who is on-route to Richland, Georgia whore he will held re vival services next week. Mr. Harold Russell will de liver the message at the evening service on Sunday. Gems Of Thought SPRING The holy spirit of the Spring is working silently. —George MacDonald. Earth, with her thousand voices praises God. —Coleridge. Humane hope and faith should join in nature's grand harmony, and, if on minor key, make music in the heart —Mary Baker Eddy. The time of the singing of birds is come, and the voice of the turtle is heard in the land. —Song of Solomon. Flowers may beckon towards us, but they speak toward heaven and God. —Henry Ward Beecher. The giving earth remembers And only men forget. —John G. Neihardt name of Jesus Christ the same could be done with this cripple. To the astonishment of the crowd, the man sprang up with a joy ous consciousness of power and walked like any other man. The only gods the people of Lystra knew were the half-human capricious gods of Olympus and so there was a mixture of wonder and superstitution among the witnesses di this miracle. The followers of the false gods fought, stole, ro manced as did their gods before them and for the first time they found gods In the flesh. Accord ingly they called Barnabas Jupi ter and Paid they called Mer cury. These missionaries had a hard time to convince the crowd that they were men the same as the citizens of this great city. As this great honor is being be stowed upon them they apeak bluntly to the hushed crowd. They find this an opportunity to tell them of the true God who made heaven and earth who sends rain upon the just and unjust alike. Paul appeals to their good sense and so adapts his message to their needs, and calls his hearers to repentance. It is a wonderful time to tell them of the foolishness of following gods which fail to give them the real necessities of life and so an useless in any future life. Whenever a man tries to change the thinking of any people then an always some who prefer the old way of life. Some Jews had fol lowed Paid from Iconlum and they stirred up a beautiful riot Thye incited the mob and dragged Paul out of the city and stoned him leaving him for dead. This was the first that Paul had been thus treated hut not the last As this great missionary continues his ministry we find that he met fanaticism, ignorance, intolerance, bigotry that was racial and reli gious. lust, greed and blasphemy. He sang ia chains, laughed at his tormentors and led many to know Christ as their Savior. Paul had a purpose which can be put to five words. “This one thing I do.” He never swerved from his ooe tremendous purpose and has find the peges of the New Testament with his courage and eoftvktions. There have been other gnat missionaries. It it ueM that when William Cany announced Ms piaa to go to India, the dimeters of the East Company eppoeed the piaa bitterly. They said. “The - otit of tt iiitanriiw into our Eastern pomndeni la toe | maddest, meet extravagant, asost costly, most indefensible project [ which has ever been suffered by 1 a moon struck fanatic. Suck a scheme is penurious, hftpmd—. fillets and tba&istie. It strikes j votottan hteMMto to>pg2 * ** mg widows and ho gave them a New Testament In l ift gall a i church, a grade scheeL a ctrftopr Page 3 6CCZ InCOmPAEaBLE COMPAQ shs TH c eg— s AC I^ :E ' S? AMD " v ,JK," M 4 Ik 1 CAREY R. SCARBOROUGH. LIEUTENANT JR. GRADE USMR. assistant communica tions officer of the Key West Naval Station, is being released to inactive duty this week. Lt Scarborough will visit his par ents, Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Scar borough, 51 Nassau Dr., Great Neck, N. Y. After an extended visit with them he will return to Clearwater Beach, Fla., where he intends to establish his residence. Although bacteria can reproduce very rapidly, such reproduction usually ia curtailed in a short time because the acid byproducts of such multiplication hamper its con tinuance. Twenty-five per cent of all dri ven involved in fatal auto acci dents in the U. S. last year were under 25 years old. in Seram pore and a printing press. This *c-c ailed fanatic who was a cobbler became a colossus. Some do not believe In mission aries. It is said that the average Protestant gave for missions in 1949 only $1.25. The average in come for all Americans the same year was $1453. This means that the average church member gave 9-100'of 1 per cent of his income for missions while he was com pelled to give for military prepar ations from 25 per cent to 75 per cent of his income. We can save a large part of the cost of war when we heed the injunction. “Go ye into all the world and preach the Gospel." Tonight 7:30 PM. YOUTH FOB CHRIST 719 FLEMING STREET POINOANA BAPTIST SUNDAY SCHOOL . *43 KM. miasm* iuw lm. Subject: "THREE it A GOO IN HEAVEN" OE. IVEY JAIL i 2 PAL Oft Stock Island __ 2:21 P.M Tretotoft IMm at CTmrih 4:30 g.. PREACHING 7:20 PM SUNBEAMS. MONDAY - 4 Tuesday. T P.M. - Old White Ho—. Stock Mud. Wed—ay. T3O PJL-Mhl week Prayer Service. CARD OF THANKS We take this means to thank our neighbors and friends for their kindness during the illness and after the death of our loved one, Frank O. Weech. Also those who gave the use of their cars, the Donors of the beautiful floral offer ings. Father John S. Armfield, the Choir. Altar Boys, Mr. Sam Gold smith who played the chimes, all Masonic bodies, Knights of Pythias, and anyone else who might have lightened our burden. Your kind ness will never be forgotten. (sd) MRS. ETHEL WEECH, MR. AND MRS. REX WEECH AND FAMILY. Subscribe to The Citizen Church Of God 100$ OLIVIA STREET E. M. BEARD PASTOR SUNDAY SCHOOL 10 A.M. MORNING WORSHIP 11 A.M. EVANGELISTIC SERVICE 7:30 P.M. Prayer Meeting, Tues., 7:30 p.m. • ——i, 4 Nr Yeung People's Endeavor, Thursday, 7:30 p.m. *:• Everyone Welcome -r- Church Of Jesus Christ Of Latter Day Saints SUNDAY SCHOOL 10:00 AM. SACRAMENT MEETING _ 7:00 PM. 1100 Varela St. CHURCH of CHRIST M. A. CREWS, Minister Ashby end Ven Phistor Streets SUNDAY Bible Study 10:N A.M. Morning Service 11 :W A.M. WSNU _ 1:00 PJW. St. Petersburg*!, IN on Dial WO AM . . 1:W P.M. Evening Service 7:21 P.M. WEDNESDAY Bible Study 7:M P.M. Everyone Invited Church Of God Of Prophecy 911 ANGELA ST. Sunday School BR A.M. Oevettonal Service 11:to AM Evangelistic Service 7:45 PM _ 7:21 PM W.M.8., Thursday . 7:21 PM VAA. Friday 7:21 PM Mrs. Dolly Hall PASTOR Possible Key To Leukemia Is Announced By ALTON L. BLAKESLEE AP Science Reporter SALT LAKE CITY (R—Discovery of an “X” chemical which may be a key to leukemia, dread can cer of the blood, was reported to day. The “X” was described by Doc tors Thomas F. Dougherty and Jules A. Frank of the University of Utah Medical School to science writers on a tour sponsored by the American Cancer Society. It causes- production of millions of white blood cells within minutes. The white cells fight off invading germs, among other jobs. It helps make up for a terrific loss of white cells caused by al most any kind of stress or shock. The stress can be cold, heat, fear, emotional upsets, allergies, infec tion. The stress makes your adren al glands turn out more cortisone, a hormone that destroys white cells. The hormone and “X” work to gether, like thermostatic controls, to keep the number of white cells more or less in balance. Actually, your white blood cells do a roller coaster rise and fall all through the day, with big dips when stress produces a jolt of cortisone. Substance “X" brings a quick CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY 327 ELIZABETH STREET Sunday School, 9:91 A.M. Sunday Morning Service at 11:00 O’Ciock Wednesday Evening Meetings at 8 O’Qock Reading Room in the Church i* open on Tuesday and Friday evenings from 7 to 9. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH White and Washington Streets SUNDAY SCHOOL. 9:50 AH JOHN ARCHER - Superintendent Morning Worship. 11:00 O'Clock Guest Pastor: Ensign William Hill SUBJECT: “WHAT HOPET" Director ef Musk Miss Martha Morris Nursery Open During Morning Service PIONEERS - 4:3$ P.M. First Congregational Church 527 WILLIAM STREET REV. CHAS. H. MEBKER, Minister Chorister: Mr. Gerald Saunders Organist: Mrs. W. R. Dean and Mrs. Paid Archer Sunday School Superintendent: Mr. Joseph Boza 9:45 AM.—Church School With Classes for Ml Ages 11:00 Worship Subject: "THE ONLY WAY" 7:30 P.M.—Evening Worship SONG SERVICE Visitors to Key West, Service Men and Their Families Will Find A Cordial Welcome At All Services The First Methodist Church PreociuMf Jesus Christ Fa* Over A Century THE OLD STONE CHURCH tows Eaton Cresses Sluisntou. tor Over MS Tears J. PAUL TOVCMTOM BA 80. Minister Alton Carey Soperwtendest 10:50 A^L—MORNING WORSHIP GUEST PREACHER—CHAP. JL M CARPZ2TTOL USN htJO PJL, MYF, MIF Worship Savkis 7:30 PJC-EVQIING WORSHIP I rise in white cells or lymphocyte, especially one kind. This kind is called the stress white cell. It is resistant to destruction by corti sone. Normal white cells are easily destroyed by cortisone. There is a possibility that the stress cells stimulated by the “X” stuff might somehow change to be come leukemic whi'e cells, which also resist cortisone destruction. Leukemia means too many white cells, and overgrowth of blood forming organs. In animals, Dougherty and Frank produced a leukemic-like condition in mice by subjecting them to re peated stress. Something going haywire in hu mans because of repeated stress might lead to leukemia. Learning SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST Services Saturday 1215 PETRONIA STREET Near WHITE Sabbath School 9:4$ Worship . 11:00 Proyor Mooting Tuos. Evening 7:45 Everyone Welcome Psalm 122:1 GLAD TIDINGS TABERNACLE "ASSEMBLIES OF GOD" Car. Georgia and Petronia Sts. W.K.W.F. "VOICE OF GLAD TIDINGS" _ 9:00 a.m. Sunday School 9:45 a.m. Morning Worship 11:00 a.m. Christ's Ambassadors 4:30 p.m. Evangelistic Service 7:30 p.m. MID-WEEK Tuesday— " Bible Study" 7:30 p.m. Wednesday— "lnspirational Singing" 7:30 p.m. Priday "Prayer and Praiso" 7:30 p.m. “You Will Find the Fellowship You’re Looking For” REV. AND MRS. D. T. NEWMAN. Pastors DIAL 2-5773 %y leukemia occurs could lead i to better controls of it. It is not yet known what the i “X\* stuff is. or where it is made. 1 It could be histaimi v. the chemi- j cal released when allergies strike: | something like histamine; or one of j a number of other ttiinss. The studies promise a gauge of j how well a patient with tuberculo- ; sis. rheumatoid arthritis, allergies, j jaundice or other diseases is re- I GRACE LUTHERAN CHURCH FLAGLER AVENUE and TENTH STREET On "Poinciane—Navy, City Hospital'* But Line iIARLY MORNING SERVICE 8:30 A.M. SUNDAY SCHOOL AND BIBLE CLASS 9:45 A.M. Morning Worship Hour, 11:00 A.M. "The Master Is Here and Calleth For Thee." John 11.28 CARL A. SAMMETINGER, PASTOR 2322 Harris Ave. Phenes: 2-5141 (Church), 2-7975 (Hair.*) Listen to the Lutheran Hour, Sunday, 1:30 P.M., Station WKWF Fleming St. Methodist Church J E. STATHAM, Pastor Corner FLEMING and WILLIAM Streets SUNDAY SCHOOL. 9:30 A.M. CLAUDE E. SALIS, Sunday School Superintendent Morning Worship at 10:50 /LM. Subject: “USING THE GIFT THAT 18 OURS" Methodist Youth Fellowship, 6:30 P.M. Evening Worship at 7:30 P.M. Subject: "LET THERE BE LIGHT" A Nursery Is Provided for the Care of Children During Services Service Men and Visitors Welcome A FRIENDLY CHURCH A Warm-Hearted Fellowship The First Baptist Church BATON and BAHAMA STREETS HAROLD H. LINK Pastor Uplifting Preaching Worshipful Music Morning Worship 10:50 . Sunday School 930 Evening Worship 7:30 Training Untoa 1$ Fellowship Hour 830 P.St. Prayer Meeting; - Wednesday 7:30 A Nursery Is Maintained At All Services A WARM WELCOME AWAITS YOU HERB St. Paul's Episcopal Church Comer of DUVAL ind I ATOM STREETS THE REV. JOHN S. ARMFIELD lußl 7:30 A.M.—Holy Eucharist 9:30 A.M.—Church School 11:00 A M.—Choral Eucharist and Sermon f Nvrsory Conduct** Ovrin Srk*| 6:30 P.M.— Young People's Service League 7:30 P.M.—Evening Prayer and Sermon Ley Memorial Methodist Church “The Church otth a Welcome -1394 TRUMAN AVINUC KLDOS SIMMONS. Pastor PHONES Parvenege 2-3212 - Church 34313 QIUCH SCHOOL. *42 AJt Mm Mima Cawj Supt IQ&O A.M** Morning Worship GUEST PREACHER—CHAPLAIN CEO. FCUDCR. JflL. 092 (Nursery Provtdsd Dunng Mnretoft Ben—H 6:30 CM.. Methodist Yorntk feUomshlf, 7:50 PM* Evening Worship GUEST wpyaryr^— CVtAPl A Tlf BAY C. TYfDALL Qgg Mledmodspf. 710 P M Mid Week Prays Servian sponding to drugs, or how sick he is. For by checking on the stress cells, and hormones in the Mood, it can be learned which ones are overcoming the .tress of sickness. By testing the blood of 30 TB pa tients. whom they had never seen, the physicians were able to tell which ones were very ill, which had recovered, and which were responding to treatment