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The Logan Daily News from Logan, Ohio • Page 3

Location:
Logan, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

CHURCH OF THE N.AZARENE Roy E. Klinxlvr, pastor 9:30 a.m. Sundby School. lesson: Prayer 10:30 a.m. Morning worship.

Sermon: Is Your Special message for the graduating class. 6:45 p.m. S. 7:30 p.m. Evening worship.

Sermon: 7:30 p.m. Wednesday Prayer and praise meeting riRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Earl F. Srhottkp, pastor 9:15 a m. Church School 10:30 a.m. Nursery for preschool children 10:30 a.m.

Worship service. Sermon: Guidance of 4 p.m. Couples' Club meets for covered dish dinner at macher Park. 7:30 p.m. Monday Association meeting.

Musical pro- gran under the direction of Mrs. Carl Harsh. 7:30 p.m. Thursday Boy Scouts of Troop 160 meet 7:30 p.m. Wednesday prayer service Midweek Clfl HCII Or' CHRIST IN CHRISTIAN UNION Charles Turner, pastor 9:30 a.m.

Sunday School 10:30 a.m. Morning worship 7:30 p.m. Evangelistic service 7:30 p.m. Wednesday Prayer and praise service ELM ST. CiTY MISSION I lemon Scott, pastor 7:30 p.m.

Saturday Preaching by the pastor. 9:30 a m. Sunday School 10:30 a m. Morning worship 7:30 p.m. Preaching by the Rev, Willard Applcman.

7:30 p.m. Tuesday Prayer and praise service WITNESSES Room 7, James Building 7 p.m. Public address by C. Allen: the Mysterious 8:15 m. Watchtower magazine study: Responsibility Toward 8 p.m.

Tuesday Bible study: the Attack by Gog of 7:30 p.m. Friday Service meeting and ministry school. "Prayer Pilgrimage" Leaders Urge Civil Rights Legislation FIRST METIIOIHST CHURCII Stanley T. Benton, pastor 9:30 a.m. Church School 9:30 a in.

Nursery School 10:30 a.m. Nursery continues 10:30 a m. Morning worship. Sermon: Anthem by the choir. 6:30 p.m.

Intermediate Fellowship 6:30 m. MYF 7:30 p.m. Monday Boy Scouts 7 p.m. Wednesday Prayer service; 8 p.m. Senior choir rehearsal.

hirst evangelical united BRETHREN CHURCH D. S. Dunklc, pastor 9 a m. Sunday School 9 a.m. Nursery and Sunday School in the unit.

10:15 a m. Nursery continues 10:15 a.m. Worship. Sermon: Our Anthem: Morn of by Sibelius. Recognition of high school seniors.

6:30 p.m. choir rehearsal 6:30 p.m. Youth Fellowship 7:30 p.m. Worship. Sermon: Challenge and the Defense." 8 p.m.

Monday Christian Culture Sunday School Class meeting. Mrs. Marie Nixon, leader. 7 p.m. Wednesday Youth choir rehearsal; 7:30 p.m.

Prayer meeting; 8:30 p.m. Senior choir rehearsal. 6:30 p.m. Friday Progressive Young Adull Sunday School Class meeting and pot luck supper at Kachelmacher Park. ST.

EPISCOPAL CHURCH The Rev. Peyton Reed Minister-in-Charge 9:30 a.m. Church School 9:30 a in. Celebration of Holy 'ommtinion. the Rev Dr.

Gilbert Vnnock, celebrant. ST. CATHOLIC CHURCH Rev. Fr. Charles P.

Foy, pastor 8 and 10 a Sunday Holy Mass 8 a.m. week days except Monday Holy Mass APOSTOLIC GOSPEL TABERNACLE Earl Edwards, pastor 10 a.m. Sunday School 11:15 a.m. Morning worship 12 noon to 12:30 p.m. Radio broadcast on WATH.

7:30 p.m. Evangelistic service 7:30 p.m. Wednesday Prayer and praise meeting 7:30 p.m. Friday Cottage prayer meeting WASHINGTON leaders at a mass demonstration before the Lincoln Memorial called on President Eisenhower and Congress Friday to put more teeth in the Supreme anti-segregation decisions. Many thousands, almost all of them Negroes, took part in this pilgrimage for freedom" on the third anniversary of the ban on segregation in public schools As the program began at noon (EDT), however, police estimated the crowd at 5,000 or coin- pared with the 50.000 predicted in advance by sponsors of the ceremony.

The pilgrimage public relations director, Young, estimated the crowd at 25,000. The Rev. Martin I.other King Jr. of Montgomery. told the assemblage that so far only the iudicial branch of the government has given aggressive in the civil rights field.

The clergyman, a leader in the Mortgomery campaign against bus segregation, declared: the midst of the tragic breakdown of law and order, the executive branch of the government is all too silent and apathetic. the midst of the desperate need for civil rights legislation, the legislative branch of the government is all too stagnant and Another speaker. A. Philip Randolph, president of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, addressed his remarks directly toward Eisenhower. Randolph urged Eisenhower, who he is pos- ssed of a high sense of humanity to speak out against the Bible Translated For Marovo Christians WASHINGTON Three European and three native Seventh Day Adventist pastors have translated the Bible into the Marovo language for the once fierce headhunters of the Western Solomon Islands.

The initial printing of the new translation will run to 3,000 copies with the cost estimated at $4.20 per Bible. The translation has 1,360 pages. The Marovo people are mostly Christian. There are 17 Adventist churches on their islands Some linguists believe the Bible translation will influence the language of the Solomons, helping Marovo become the standard language for the 100,000 people of the area. lawlessness, terror and fears that hang like a pall over the hearts of citizens of color in the Another speaker, Roy Wilkins, executive secretary of the National Assn.

for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), special laws at the he said, in states ranging from Virginia to Texas. The to the anniversary meeting came to Washington from many parts of the country by train, bus and airplane Social Workers 4-Day Conference Set By Lutherans SPRINGFIELD. Ohio This summer, U.S. Lutheran churches will act as host to the first international church-sponsored meetings of social workers in Protestant history in this country. The Lutheran World Federation is sponsoring the event, the Lutheran World Conference on Social Responsibility.

Sessions will be held on Wittenberg College campus Aug. 7-10. An estimated 500 of the denomination's top leaders are expected to meet with the social welfare workers from the 57 member churches in 29 countries. The intensive four-day study will deal with their responsibilities in the atomic era. Adventists Plan New Seminary At Washington WASHINGTON iJT Adventist University has been chosen as the name of the new Seventh-day Adventist university to be located in the Washington area.

Ernest D. Dick, former president of the Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary, will be president. The seminary will' become one of two major schools of the new institution. Work will begin on the new campus as soon as a decision is made on location, officials say. WEST LOGAN PILGRIM HOLINESS CIIUKCII Earl Appleman, pastor 9:30 a.m.

Sunday School 10:30 a.m. Morning -worship 7 p.m. Young service 7:30 p.m. Evangelistic service Neglected Areas CINCINNATI, Ohio A new Methodist committee has been organized to study neglected metropolitan and rural areas and take steps to provide needed ministry. The committee is headed by- Bishop Roy H.

Short of Nashville. Church, Mission Councils To Meet NEW HAVEN. Conn. The first top-level World Council of meeting in this country since 1954 will he held here July 30 Aug. 7.

At that tune possibility of the merger of the World Council with its sister organization, the International Missionary Council, will be discussed. The World Council now includes 165 Protestant, Anglican and Orthodox churches in 50 nations. In 1954 the mammoth assembly was held at Evanston, ill. AT bought For This By The REV. EARL EDWARDS Pastor of the Logan Apostolic Church Faith is the substance of things hoped for.

the evidence of things not Hebrews 11:1. In every Individual's hands today is a mighty tool faith. Through use it becomes a key that will unlock the door to the countless treasures of storehouse In James 2:20 we read thou know, vain man, that faith without works is This is a push button age we must beware lest we of the Church get so mechanical we leave out part of the old fashion foundation of works and faith. There is no short cut, there is not an easier route. Jesus told Nicodemus must be born again of the Water and Spirit or ye connot enter the Kingdom of If we streamline the Gospel by leaving out part of its foundation we get the results of a weakened Church as a whole If we are to sfoy strong we must remain on the old-fashioned standards, for we are built upon the foundation of the Apostles and Prophets, with Jesus Christ as the corner stone.

If the early church after the day of Pentecost had power with God in which men and women hod their lives changed and filled with great joy, their sick bodies healed of all manner of diseases, why can we have these same works among us tpday? Has God changed? His Word says it declares Jesus Christ the same yesterday, today and forever. He does not chonge Kev. Education Need Of Ministers Is Cited INDIANAPOLIS Dr liarlie 1. Smith, president of the Board of Higher Education of the Disciples of Christ (Christian says imperative that ministers have an adequate educational background. Speaking to the recent Conference of the Disciples of Christ, Dr.

Smith listed seven years of college preparation, four years of undergraduate training and three years of graduate seminary study as the minimum requirement. He also said that too many young people who choose the ministry drop out of training. Of 400, he said, 200 get to college, 100 graduate still in a church voca lion, 60 go on to seminary and 54 graduate into the ministry. Ministry Of Music NASHVILLE, Tenn. The Rev.

Dr. Bliss Wiant of Youngs town. has joined the Methodist Board of Education in Nashville. A minister in the field of music for more than 30 years, he will be director of music on the staff of the Division of the Local Church It is a newly created position, due to the increased interest in the ministry of music. United States amateur photographers have about 34 million cameras.

THE LOGAN DAILY NEWS Page 3 Saturday, May It, 1957 Find yourself through FAITH In Mill mini's OM.Y HOFF 0 -M rmr-- A ow strong are your roots? In Sequoia National Park one may read: Sequoia Ciantea are of a noble lineage which bridges humanity back through eons of the age of reptiles. Here dwell venerable forest kings in reveries which carry back a thousand years before Jesus Christ walked the shores of Galilee." How strong are your roots? Christ may dwell in your hearts by faith; that ye. being rooted and grounded in love May be able to comprehend with all saints what is the breadth, and length, and depth, and height; And to know the love of Christ, which passeth knowledge, that ye might be filled with all the fullness of These reflect being well rooted. In a spirit of unity let us read: Him be glory in the church by Christ Jesus throughout the ages, world without end. Eph.

21. 'C -C'7r fGrrh 90 fO i a Both your FAITH and your CHURCH GROW through REGULAR CHURCH ATTENDANCE THIS CHURCH PAGE, ENDORSED BY THE HOCKING COUNTY MINISTERIAL ASSOCIATION, IS PUBLISHED EACH SATURDAY UNDER SPONSORSHIP OF THE FOLLOWING BUSINESS AND INDUSTRIAL FIRMS, WHO BELIEVE IN ACTIVE SUPPORT OF ALL CHURCHES AS THE MOST EFFECTIVE MEANS OF ACHIEVING A BETTER COMMUNITY: Heating Hording Spouting I Our Way 830 W. Hunter SI. Harden Hclber Super Market Logan Home Furnishings W. Main St.

Matlack-Oldsmobile Your OldsmobUo Dealer 111 Hunter St. Commonwealth Telephone Co. of Ohio Keller Weltner Monument Co. 1298 W. Hunter St.

The Building Center Logan Service Shop King Lumber Co. McClellan's All Star Dairies Logan, Ohio Oshel Rollins General Contractor Logan Federal Savings Loan Assn. 72 E. Main Logan. O.

Gift Shop 1203 W. Hunter St. Hocking Valley Feed Co. 287 W. Main St.

Chevrolet Cadillac Sales W. Second St. Cases Drug Jewelry Store Main Logan. O. The Logan Clay Products Co.

The Ferd Hack Auto Supply Co. Chas. Geil Pontiac Sales Service DtO W. Hunter St. General Hocking Brick Co.

Stoltz Drug Store Cor. Main It Spring Sta. Cole Motor Sales Mercury 899 W. Hunter SL Deluxe Cleaners 47 N. Market SL Log Cabin Restaurant 17 E.

Main SL, Logan, O..

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About The Logan Daily News Archive

Pages Available:
115,967
Years Available:
1935-1977