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THE n i aNDOTTE NEWS-HERALD PAGE SIXTEEN fcIVERBANK EVANGELICAL Rev. G. Knechtel. Minister % a. m., Church school. 11 a. m.. Morning worship. Topic: •Christians and Other People.” Sunday, 7:30, Evening Service. 7:30 p. m., Wednesday, Prayer ser vice. Women’s Missionary Society will meet at the church, Thursday, Feb ruary 22. at 7:30 in the evening. Acid Indigestion Relieved in 5 minutes or double your money beck Wb*n m<■*■!* stomach sc|«| nuM» painful, auffnrat- VC !»' amir itomuch and heartburn, doctor* usually prescribe the fastest -acting medicines known for ■yuptomatic relief —medidnas like tboaa In Bell-ana Tablet« No laxative Bell -ana bring* eomfon tn a itffy or double your money back on return of bottle te us. 25c at all drugxUU. Return To Vublic Office Lt. Commander— HAROLD E. STOLL for Wayne Comity Auditor # HONORABLY DISCHARGED FROM NAVAL SERVICE. FEBRUARY. 1945 A 0 FORMER REGISTER OF DEEDS FIVE TERMS—I 933 - 1942 O FORMER STATE SENATOR # HOMESPUN ECONOMY AND RIGID BUSINESS MANAGEMENT # ENDORSED BY ORGANIZED LABOR AND CIVIC. FRATERNAL AND WAR VETERAN ORGANIZATIONS # EXCELLENT RECORD IN BUSINESS. MILITARY and PUBLIC OFFICE Vote Democratic... Primary February 19 JAPAN In Bible Prophecy When Japan Leads All the Hordes of the Orient Into a Fatal World War WILL AMERICA BE INVOLVED? SUNDAY NIGHT FEBRUARY 13—7:30 P.M. ANOTHER GREAT LECTURE IN THE MUSIC HALL SUREST SIGN OF ALL That Christ's Coming Cannot Much Longer Be Delayed Friday, Feb. 23 7:30 P.M. "the UNPARDONABLE SIN What Is the Sin That God Cannot Forgive? Have YOU Committed It? ■ Sunday, Feb. 25 7:30 P.M. In the Auditorium All Meetings At ROOSEVELT A 540 EUREKA WYANDOTTE W W \No Meeting Tuesday Night THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1945 ST. STEPHEN’S EPISCOPAL 89 Chestnut St. Rev. G. H. Severance, Rector Special Lenten Services on this Friday (16th) at 7:30 p. m. Sunday February 18th as follows Sunday, 8:30 a.m., Holy Commu nion. 9:30 a.m. Church school. 11 a.m.. Morning service and ad dress. 7:30 p. m.. Evening service. 11:00 a. m. Accommodation Kin dergarten class. 7:30 p. m. Evensong and address. Each Wednesday during Lent. 10:00 a. m. Holy Communion. 10:45 a. m. Red Cross Meeting. 12:30 p. m. Luncheon. 2:00 p. m. Women's Meeting FIRST METHODIST Oak and Biddle E. H. Wilcox, Preacher Mrs. Harry Ward, Organist 9:45 a. m., Church school. 11 a. m.. Morning worship. Sub ject, "Riding the Beam.” 11 a. m., Nursery school, children 1 to 4 years. 11 a. m.. Children's church, ages 4 to 8. 6:30 p. m.. Young People’s Soc iety. Lenten services will begin this Sunday evening at 7:30 and will continue until Easter. ' ;.;;A ''flflPSaßt' i Hj l J p N. R. DOWER Noted Bible Lecturer Jlsk L AB I v. jp :3r jp^ E. H. ROBBINS America's Favorite Radio Gospel Singer Church News TRENTON PRESBYTERIAN Rev. Walter Teeuwissen, Pastor Sunday, 9:45 a. m., Church school for auu ages. Subject, “The Supreme Treasure”. Mt. 13:44-46, 14; 13-21. Golden Text. Every goc<l gift and every perfect gift is from above and cometh down from the Father of lights with whom is no variableness, neither shadow of turning, Jas. 1:17. 11:00 Worship service. Subject: “Our Failure in Confess ing our Sins”. Have mercy on me, O God, according to thy loving kindness; according unto the multi tude of thy tender mercies blot out by transgressions. Ps. 51:1. 11:00 Junior church for children from 5-10 years old. 6:30 Young Peoples meeting. 7:30 “They Live Forever -a full color motion picture with sound dealing with the spiritual aspects of World War Two will b" shown. 7:30 Wednesday, Bible study and Prayer. FIRST BAPTIST North Line and Second Rev. Robert Lietz, Pastor Lenten Program: Beginning a series of Lenten ser mon topics entitled “Seven Last Words of Jesus on the Cross.” First one will be in the morning, Febru ary 18. at 11:00, “The Word Inter cession,”; February 25. ‘ word “au thority”; March 4, word “remem brance”; March 11, word “loneli ness”; March 18, word “suffering”; March 25. word “victory” and on the evening of March 26, the last one will be presented, word “refuge.” 9:30 a. m., Church school. 11 a. m.. Morning Worship. Ser mon subject, "Crown of Life.” 6:30 p. m., Youth Fellowship. 7:30 p. m.. Evening service. 7:30 p. m.. Wednesday, midweek devotional service. School of Missions will follow the devotional period. A week of pre-evangelistic serv ices will be conducted at the church beginning on March 18 and running through March 25. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN Chestnut and First Rev. Warren E. Halt Pastor 9;45 a. m., Church school. 11 a. m., Morning worship. Com munion service, re cption of nev members *nd also baptism of chil dren. Junior choir rehearsal, childrens play hour. 6:30, Westminister Fellowship. 7:30 p. m., Evening Service. Ma onic ladies attending. Wednesday. 7 p. m.. Boy Scouts Thursday at 4:00-Girl Scout. Thursday, 7:30 p. m., Boy Scout Pack. Board of Deacons. Tuesday 10 a. m., Red Cross sew ing. Wednesday. 7:30. Boy Scout Troop No. 6. Wednesday, 8:00, 25th anniversary reception. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE Corner Van A Ist.- ne and Chestnut “Soul” will l.e thi subject of the Lesson - Sermon in all Chr.stian Science churches throughout the world on Sunday, February 18. The Golden Te :t (P alms 62:1 > is: Truly my soil waiteth upon God: from him cometh my salvation. Among tiie Bible cite ions is this passage (Romans 13:8.19>: “Owe no man anything, but to love one another; for he that loveth an other hath fulfilled the law-. Love worketh no ill to his neighbor: therefore love is the fulfilling of the law-.” Correlative passages to be read from the Christian Science textbook. “Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures” by Mary Eaker Eddy, include the following (2D5>: “When we realize that there is one Mind, the divine law of loving our neigh bor as ourselves is unfolded; where as a belief in many ruling minds hinders man's norma! drift towards I the one Mind, one God, and leads , human thought into opposite chan ! nels where selfishness reigns.” FIRST CONGREGATIONAL Superior at First Rev. Norman Jackson, Pastor Eleanor Bcnnink. Organist and Choir Director 9:40 a. in.. Church school, Junior and Senior departments. 11 a. m.. Kindergarten and pri mary departments. 11 a. m.. Morning worship. Topic, “A Religion That Lifts.” 6:30 p. m.. Pilgrim Fellowship. Tuesday, 4 p. m., Junior choir re- I hearsal. Monday, 8:00 p. m., Guild at Mrs. Otto Welke. Thursday, 4:15, Girl Scouts and Brownies. Thursday, 7:00, Boy Scouts. Thursday, 8:00 p. m., Choir re hearsal. Friday, 6:00, Annual Father and Son Banquet YOUR VOTE MONDAY, FEBRUARY 19th for WILLIAM ‘Bill’ DAHLKA for Village Trustee WILL BE APPRECIATED 51 YEARS A RESIDENT OF TRENTON Notes From Bacon Library Continued from Page 4 Massachusetts for permitting this sad state of affairs to continue. Per haps the people of Boston are more to be blamed than the old booksel lers for as Harold Williams, attorney for Boston’s “Old Corner Book Store,” says: “It is easy to stand on the side lines and cheer while some clerk in a bookstore or lending library faces the chance of fine or imprisonment for selling some book he may not | even have read. It is another mat ter to fight your own battles. ... It seems that what we have a right to expect now is not words but ac tion.” The most lamentable part of the whole business is that Boston’s self-imposed censorship has never succeeded in keeping a single book from the public. New York book stores are swamped with orders from Boston citizens for Boston-banned I books. The best stimulant I know to thrust an ordinary, or even poor book, into the bestseller lists is to have Boston ban it. How unfor tunate that the public is so gullible! Today booksellers all over the country have w-aiting-lists for copies of a very mediocre historical novel that thfe ever-curious public has been most eager to read since its Boston-banning and the attendant publicity. What a paradise for the writer vhose aim is to use people’s curiosity as a means to making money! On the other hand, how unfor tunate that many serious books, written to make know-n to the pub lic lamentable social conditions have suffered from being banned in Bos ton! Such is the case with a recent novel dealing with racial conditions in the South. Boston’s stand has caused su h bocks to be read with entirely the wrong emphasis and. as I said last week. “The genuine purpose of many such books as analvses of social problems is lost in the furor of ‘page-scanning’." True, more people read the book I refer to than ever would have had Boston not “forbidden" it; but did the majority read it in its entirety? Did they grasp its so ial signifi cance? In a large par entage of cases I fear the answ-er is “No.” No thoughtful cit zen. no librarian, can fail to be concerned over such re grettable circumstances. Considering all this, you can un derstand why. li'*e Ecrmett Cerf, I felt like saying “Hear, hear!” when I read this paragraph, of his in a recent “Saturday Review of Litera ture”: “In Boston, a judge finally popped up with suff: ient gumption and common sense to tweak the blue noses cf imbecilic \rie snoopers. The here’s name is Judge Elijah Adiow. and in throwing out a case against anew book present ed in his court, he dcc'ared angrily. ‘This ! snt ind f it literature. I’m get- tired of becks being banned. It has ree-'hcl the point where th court's business is divided ’retween book !!crs and bookmakers. It’s not for me or yen or the police ; -v}.- ~y -S £]-* i liter. ry t..~te of th ~'m.m nlty.’ Her’". An t it was v-lt’i real hope that 1 ead the fallowing item in the Jan '3th issue of the “N:w York Time’s Look Review”: “They tor anyhow a lot of people up there) are less than proud of Boston’s way of ban ning books esteemed elsewhere In the land, and so the Massachusetts will presently be enter taining a bill to. end the private suppression of bocks in the Ameri can Athents and elsewhere in the state. “The bill was initiated by Rich ard F. Fuller, president of the Old Corner Book Store and head of the Boston Board of Trade of Retail Book Merchants, and it will be backed in the Legislature by the Massachusetts Library Association. Its most important provisions arc for legal action against a book in civil court (instead of against a bookseller in criminal court, as un der the present law) and considera tion of the effect of a book upon the adult mind <as it now stands, the law concerns printed matter j ‘tending to corrupt the morals of youth.) “Whatever happens, the proposed bill makes clear that the Boston booksellers, who have been held up to much ridicule and even taunted with cowardice, have a defense for their unofficial, ‘cooperative’ book bans, for they are otherwise subject to criminal prosecution before the alleged impurity of a book is legally determined. But the new bill would give only a District Attorney or the Attorney-General the right to start legal action after receipt of a com plaint, and would allow police de partments no say in the matter. “It all seems to make sense.” 1 Let’s hope that this time the seri- TRINITY LUTHERAN Oak and Fifth C. J. Krahnke, Pastor Sunday Services: 9:15 a.m., German service. 9:30 a. m., Sunday School and Junior Bible Class. 10:45 a. m., English service, Luke 4 1:15, “Temptation of Christ. 7:30 p. m., English service. Text, Corth. 11, verse 1. Topic, “Receive not the grace of God in Vain.” Holy Communion in the morning and evening. Wednesday, 6:45, German. Wednesday, 8:00, English Lenten Service. CHURCH OF GOD Rev. A. J. Swift, Pastor 1634 Eureka Sunday, 10 a. m., Church schooL 11 a. m.. Morning worship. 7:45 p. m., Evangelistic service. Wednesday, 8 p.m., Prayer meet ing. Friday. 8 p. m.. Young people’s meeting. ous minded people of Massachusetts, backed by the Retail Book Mer chants and the Massachusetts Li brary Association will be successful in passing this bill which will do much to rid the literary world of books which actually are immoral and will avoid placing the wrong emphasis on volumes, either fiction or non-fiction, seriously written as sociological treatises. In the meantime bills are also pending in the United States Con gress “for transferring the power of censorship from the Post Office to the courts, with a jury wherever demanded. While courts and juries may not always accurately reflect the changing standards of public morals, they are the best means we have of doing so, and far superior in this field of subjective judgment to a small number gs legal or postal officials professionally engaged in “guessing” what is immoral. As David A. Kronik so aptly says in the “Wilson Library Bulletin”: “One idea can hardly be challenged, and that is that although the social amenities must doubtlessly be pre served. it must not be at the ex pense of intellectual honesty, schol arship, or the integrity of the arts.” We must remember that this is one of the four freedoms for which we are fighting. One hundred and thirty-six years ago today was bom our most internationally-loved citi zen who made the plea, since echoed round the world, “that this nation, under God. shall have anew birth of freedom —” \ /omen of Wyandotte $ What will you say to them? I ! * m i l i Z 5 >1 Vi * '*W jPWHI W jffFHHKrßWiflniiflWHßMßMrTr ■ 8 * B I •». M ■» j 1 • '•••• 8 V HI I Thousands will come home from the war with their heads up and their heart! free. Thousands will not return. Thousands of others will be limping, broken in body and mind* \RMY HOSPITALS NEED 22,000 Wacsl If you are fully qualified to do any of the fobs listed below, you are assured assignment to an Army hospital immediately after completing your basic training. If you are inexperienced, and can pass required tests, you will be given free technical training in certain selected jobs. Laboratory Technicians Dental Technicians X-ray Technicians Madical and Surgical Technicians Psychiatric Social Workers and Psychiatric Assistants Educational Reconditioning Personnel (Teachers) Medical Stenographers Occupational Therapists GOOD SOLDIERS. . ™ e WAC WOMEN'S MMY CORPS SPONSORED BY FASHIONETTE SHOPPE 3024 BIDDLE AVENUE. WYANDOTTE FORD BAPTIST R«v. Frank Blair, Pastor 360 Clinton 9:50 a. m., Bible school. Lesson, “Treasures of the Kingdom.” 11 a. m. Morning worship. Ser mon, “The Wronged Boy.* 6:30 B. Y. P. U. 7:30 p. m., Evening service. Sermon topic, “Lost, Strayed or Stolen.” Wednesday evening, 7:30 p. nr, Bible study and prayer service. LATTER DAY SAINTS REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST 271 StoU Street Willard Shotwell, Pastor 9:45 a. m.. Church school. 11 a. m„ Preaching. 7:30 - 8:30 pm. Pictures will be shown. Help Ease Muscular Aches, Stabbing Pain From Exposure to Cold, Chill & Fatigue Da poo End it herd to get about, to work or even to sleep comfortably because of peine caused by exposure to cold, chill, faticue or overwork ? Do aimilarly caused dull, wearisome aches in your muscles, or sharp, stabbing pains strike through your body with every movement? If you are so affected, try Templeton's T-R-C’s. Many sufferer* have obtained longed-for symp tomatic relief from such aches and pains with easy to take T-R-Cs capsules. Uso only at directed. Satisfaction guarantsed or DOUftLI four money refunded. AT CAHALAN DRUG STORES i ■ £& 'll JOHN BRANAGAN: 20 years machinist at Michigan Alkali Shop Steward for Local 12270 U.M.W. Past Post Commander of VJ-Wj —Past Detroit Commander of V.F.W.—P*.st Vice Com mander Military Order of Cootie Post 1, Detroit utility engineer, studied law two years. "I AM ONE OF THE COMMON MEN AND WILL DO MY BEST TO ADEQUATELY REPRESENT HIM!" REMEMBER VOTE FEB. 19th Per full information, about joining tha • Women'* Army Corps os a Medical Tech nician, 90 to your nearest U. S. Army Recruiting Station. Or mail tho coupon below. P U. S. ARMY RECRUITING STATION 1 2704 Biddle Arenuo 1 1 Wyandotte I Plmm send me, without any obligation on my port, full Information ebout i 1 wnriif u m Mtdidi Technician in the WAC •• • telling ehout the job they do, tho qutMatku mctutry, the technic*] training they receive, | eppertuaWea, etc. Please answer “yes'* I or “no” to each of tha i I M following questions: | | Are you ha tween 21 I and SS? Hare yen any ehfl * r ' i *T dren under 14? p hor . Are you a high school tt.t. - graduate I ■ They need your help. Yonr infinite woman’i compassion. They need it desperately note. If ever you’ve wondered just how you could truly serve, isn’t this the answer? • • * Serve as a Medical Technician in the WAC* Id the Army of tho United States. BVAXGEL KArIIST Telegraph at Pennsylvania David W. Etvart Minister 6:30 p. m. Young Peoples service 9:45 a. m. Bible school. 11 a. m. Morning worship. 7:45 p. m. Evangelistic service. Everybody welcome. UNITY CLASS The next meeting or cne Wyan dotte Unity will be held on Thurs day evening, at 8 pm at 234 Elm street. Friday, Tarry meeting, 7:45 o’clock. Elder Woolum is pastor. WALTZ CHURCH Sunday services at St. £>hr/» Evangelical church. Waltz, will bg Sunlay school devotions, 9:15 a. m., German service. 9:30 a. m. and Eng- Insh services at 10:45 a. m. CHOKING, COUGHING, WHEEZING, GASPING FOR BREATH DUE TO ASTHMA PAROXYSMS If you are seeking something that may help you to sleep without gasping, wheez ing or coughing from Asthma paroxysms, or to work more comfortably and to breathe more easily here’s good new|. Many sufferers from Asthma paroxysms and Coughs due to minor Bronchial irrita tions. after using Templeton’s RAZ-MAH have found comforting relief from their distressing symptoms. RAZ-MAH may be the very medicine that may bring you worthwhile relief. In capsules; easy to *ake. Caution: Use only as directed. Sat- guaranteed or money refunded. AT CAHALAN DRUG STORES NOMINATE JOHN BRANAGAN Candidate for COUNCILMAN PRIMARIES FEB. 19. 1945