Indianapolis Times, Volume 34, Number 176, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 December 1921 — Page 12

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Open Saturday Evenings Main Office 6 Jo 8:00 P. M. Branches Until 8 P. M. Jflfttfjrr Swings ant) Crust Company INDIANAPOLIS EBERHART, NEW U. S. ATTORNEY, TO STUDY JOB Successor to Van Nuys Plans to Master Duties of Office. Judge G. M. Eberhart of Huntington, who has been selected to succeed Frederick Van Nuys. United States district attorney, probably will spend several weeks in the office of the district attorney beginning about Dec. 13 familiarizing himself with the work of the office, according to a statement made today by Mr. Van Nuys. "I understood that Judge Eherhart's court calendar runs until Dec. 12," Mr. Van Nuys said. “After that I am told he will take a few days to arrange some personal affairs and that he expects to come to Indianapolis abont Dec. 15 to familiarize himself with the duties of the office he will assume officially Jan. According to the Federal Court calendar no criminal cases are set for trial before Judge Albert B. Anderson after Dec. 12, so It Is hardly probable that Judge Eberbdrt will have an opportunity to see Federal Court In operation before he takes office.

Sunday Services in City Churches Cr*c M. E. Church—Pastor, Rev. C. E. Line. At the morning services Rev. Jesse Bogue will occupy the pulpit and in the evening the pastor will speak on "Two Ways, Which?” ~ St. Paul M. E. Church—The pastor. Rev. Frank L. Hovis. will administer communion at 10.45 o'clock in the morning assisted by the Rev. B. H. Ivey. In the evening the pastor will speak on "The Price of Birthrights." Mayor C. W. Jewett will address -he Other Fellow's Bible Class in the morning. East Park M. E. Church—Pastor, Dr. E. A. Robertson. The subject of the Sunday morning address will he "A Breach in Zion's Walls” and at the evening services his topic will be: ''What's the Harm in Not Going to Church.” Capitol ATenue M. E. Church—Pastor, Rev. J. Bdward Murr. “Heaven” will be bis subject at the morning services and in the evening he will speak on “Excesses.” All Souls Cnitarian Church—Pastor, Dr. F. S. C. Wicks. "Obed'ent Unto the Heavenly Vision.” will be the subject of the pastor's Sunday morning address, and in the evening there will be a “getacquainted" meeting. First Presbyterian Church—Pastor, Dr. M. F. Smith. The topic on which the pastor will speak Sunday morning is, “The Secret of Joy." Second Presbyterian Church—PaPtor, the Rev. Jean S. Milner. The subject of the Sunday morning adress will be. j "Supreme Moments," and in the evening the theme will be, “Angels of Light.” Tabernacle Presbyterian Church— Pastor, Dr. J. Ambrose Dunkel. At the Bnuduv morning services the pastor will speak on. “The Elimination of Evil." and In the evening his subject will be, "Broken Cisterns." .Meridian Street M. E. Church—Pastor. Dr. Virgil E. Rorer. Dr. C. E. Bacon will occupy the pulpit at the morning services and in the evening the speaker will be Dr. M. S. Marble, whose subject will l>e Credential of Christian Dlscipleship.” Roberts Turk M. E. Church—rastor. Dr. George M. Smith. "The Holy Communion” will be the pastor’s theme at the morning services and in the event.'g -••A Living Hope," will be the topic. ' Central Avenue M. E. Church—Pastor. Dr. O. W. Fifer. Sunday morning the pastor will have as his theme “An Island Life," and in the evening “The Cradle’ will be his subject. This is the first of a series of Christmastide evening sermons. First Baptist Church —Pastor. Dr. F. E. Taylor. Dr. Clarence A. Barbour, president of Rochester IN. V.) Thet logical Seminary, will speak and in the evening the pastor will deliver an address on "Is God Your Father?" Central Christian Church—Pastor, the Jtev Allan B. Philputt. The subject of the Sunday morning address will be "What Jesus Was Like” and in the evening the pastor’s topic will be “Peter's Shadow." At this service the Butler College Girl's Glee Club, under the direction of Arnold Spencer, will sing. Third Christian Church —Pastor, the Rer. T. W. Grafton. “The Church of Action" will be the pastor's topic at the Sunday morning services and in the evening he will speak on "Am I Saved?" Hall place M. E. Church—Pastor, the Rev. Horace A. Sprague. “Unified In Christ," will he the subject of the pastor's address at the morning service and In the evening he will speak on, “Three Rs, the First.” St. Mathew's Fvangellcal Lutheran Church—Pastor, ti e Rev. L. C. E. Fack ler. At the Sunday morning services th<* pastor will sp -ak ou, "Christ Will Come Again," ar.d in the evening, “The King With Carnal Self-Will," will be the theme. Morris Street M. E. Church —Pastor, the Rev. E. P. Jewett. The subject of the Sunday morning address will be. "The Relation of Faith to Progress," and at the ever'ng services the pastor will take as h:s topic, "How to Receive Christ's Blessing.” Fourth Presbyterian Church—Pastor, Dr. E. H. Kistler. At the Sunday morning services the pastor will take as his topic. “A Repudiated Father.” First Congregational Church—Pastor, the Rev. George Savary. Sunday morning the pastor will speak on, "Increasing llfchea.” Memorial ’Protestant Church—Pastor, the Rev. J. L. Buckley. A two -weeks revival period will be held at this church with E. T. Taylor as the solosist. The pastor will speak at the Sunday services. . Central Universallst Church—Pastor, the Rev. Edwin Cunningham. The pastor will speak at the morning services and In the evening T. C. Sehlagel will talk. The Ladies Aid Society of St. Mathews Evangelical Lutheran Church will meet Thursday afternoon at the, home of Mrs J. P. Knannletn, 1609 East Michl an Street. Professor Edward Shiner’s Boost *r Chorus of the Capitol Avenue M. 11. ChnrCh. will give a musical program Wednesday eveninp. Friday night the pastor. Rev. J. E. Murr, will present a drama In three acts for young people. Thursday evening the pastor of the Fourth Presbyterian Church, Dr. E. H. Kistler, will address the preparatory service on "Tne Church’s Daily Clinic. The Church of Silent Unity and Practical Christianity will hold a Healing meeting at 2 o’qlock Wednesday afternoon at 22 East St. Joseph street. Fix Tentative aVlue on Hoosier Railroad WASHINGTON. Dec. 3. —The Interstate Commerce Commission today announced that It had fixed a tentative valuation of sloo.o® on the property of the Elwood, Anderson & Lapel Railroad Company of Indiana. 81 EEL TREATING LECTURE. Frank P- Gilligan, national president of the American Sorietv for Steel Treating, and secretary-treasurer of the Henry Southern Engineering Company o? Hartford. Conn., will be the speaker at the smoker that Is to be given by the Indianapolis chapter of the society at the Chamber of Conitnerco building Monday night. He will epeak of the activities of the society In research for better matetrials and workmanship and his talk will lift* illustrated with stereopti.on slides.

LEGISLATURE’S PREPARED BILL MAY HIT SNAGS Representative Gill Censures Commission for Reformatory Removal. SAYS SITE DECIDED That there will be opposition to rushing a previously prepared bill for the removal of the reformatory from Jeffersonville through the Legislature when it meets in special session Dec. 14, is becoming increasingly evident. The latest note of opposition comes from Representative W. E. Gill of Cloverdale, who has made a detailed statement setting out his view that the institution should be removal commission to locating the Rewas planned. Mr. Gill also criticized the action of the Governor in selling the property before it was learned whether the law could be carried out. At the same time there comes a statement from Senator Oliver Kline of Huntington in which he advocates keeping the institution at Jessi rsonville. It is not improbable that this stand will meet with the approval of some other members of the assembly. REFORMATORY REMORAL AND LOCATION DISCUSSED. In discussing the Vojeetions of the removal commissione to locating the Reformatory in Putnam County, Mr. Gill says, in part: "The report submitted by this commission recites that they visited the Reformatory and linanimously agreed that it ought to be removed. But they were not charged, under the law. with this question at all. This had already been decided by the Legislature itself. "The commission then repaired to Putnamville to make a thorough investigation as to whether it should be removed there . or elsewhere. This question also had I been decided in these plain words. 'The i Indiana Reformatory, now located at ■ Clarksville shall be removed to I'utnamville. Putnam County, Indiana.' "The only point In the law left to the discretion of this commission was as to wtether It should be located on or adjacent to the penal farm, as to whether all the land should be taken from the farm now owned ly the State, or additional land should be bought adjacent to said farm. And in determining this question whether it should be on or adjacent to they were to take into consideration the water supply, railway facilities, etc., not in determining as l>etweeu rutnamviUe and some more distant ! site. This question had not only been settled by the 1921 session, hut the 1913 - session had appointed a similar commit- i slon for the selection of a site for the penal farm, they also were charged with a consideration of the same facilities and were not limited as to location. Ihe State of Indiana was the field from which they were to select a site, and after a careful consideration of many available sites, with the concurrence of the State board of charities. selected Putnamville. As to whether they acted wisely Is best answered by the results. In less than ten vears this Institution, the only one in the State, is not only paying all Its own expenses, but a handsome profit on every dollar invested. To the i burdened taxpayer of Indiana this an- i swer is sufficient to meet every objection offered by- this commission to the site selected ly the Legislature. Yet, notwith- ; standing all this, they report that they adopted unanimously the following mo- i tion: ‘That no available site for the lo- . cation of the Indiana Reformatory could | be found upon the lands near Included in the Indiana State Farm.' REVIEWS ATTITUDES OF SENATOR DUNCAN'. “Where was Senator Duncan when this j motion was adopted? Where was the location he must have had In mind when he intrndieed the measure providing for its removal to Putnamville? When was he rendering Intelligent service to the people? When he introduced the bill or when as a member of this commission he voted to repudiate his own measure! "The Senator In a public meeting In hig own home being pressed for the reason 'of this sudden reversal of himself replied that he had discovered on his trip to the eastern reformatories that if the two institutions were too near each other the guards (not the prisonersl would become Jealous of each other. It is presumed that the extra session is being called In the hope that this new light will have the same effect on his fellow legislate, s who voted for his measure. “This commission gives five other reasons why the location should be abandoned ns follows: "1. A lack of water supply. Yet the farm is loca-c and on a stream fed by large springs that were never known to go drv. 1 her,; have been from 1.000 to 1.200 prisoners in the driest times nnd 1 never a thought of a lack of water. The commission in 1913 believed that the : farm would be an institution of such magnitude that thev purchased nearly i 2'toft acres of land fully satisfied on this matter. Besides, if the unexpected should come, there is barely two miles away a much larger stream that could be used at a moderate cost. ! -2. There is no available outlet for ! sewage. In view of the answer to the first and all modern septie facilities this obWtlon will disappear at once “3. A lack of railway facilities. This is a verv strange objection In view of the fact ’that the farm is in close proximity with two of the finest steam roads in the world running east and west, and another running North and South, besides one of the best traction lines in the State. “4. A total lack of housing for officials. The houses now occupied by the officers of the farm for the most part were built by the convicts with material furnished by the same labor. There always have been some objections to placing the product of prison labor on the open market. What better employment with less objections to competing interests could be found than building these houses as well as the buildings for their own use? "5. An insufficient amount of fertile land. Admitting that the soil is not the best yet the fact remains that the penal farm "on this very land is self-sustaining, does not cost the State one dollar, hut is actually yielding a profit. The boys’ school at Plainfield hag as fine a body of fertile land as there Is in the State, yet it is not paying its way, but every year must draw on the treasury for help. “Let the people and the members of the Legislature remember that,'notwithstanding the soli of the penal farm is not the best, yet the natural resources, of this location selected by the Legislature but rejected by this commission have made this institution stand out in a class by itself. “Can any man give a consistent reason why the reformatory shall not be put in the same conspicuous class? "It has been publicly admitted by a very prominent member of this commission that the rejection of the Putnamville location will Increase the cost of

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DOG HILL PARAGRAFS The musical entertainment at the church last Tuesday evening was well attended, and was both entertaining and instructive. About the only person seriously affected by the music was Sidney Hocks, whose mule broke loose and went home. * • • Just as quick as Sile Kildew can make the necessary financial arrangements he will go to the postoffice and redeem a letter that Is being held there pending the payment of 2-cenf postage due. • • * Jefferson Potlocks hasen't decided yet which looks the most out of proportion—a big hog in a little pen, or a little pig in a big pen. removal and construction from two, to five million dollars, yet If there are fundamental reasons against locating these two institutions near each other that will destroy the purpose of one or both, the people who are to pay this excess are entitled to know them, but this commission surely will not expect them to acquiesce with no better reason than that the employes may become jealous of each other." Children Under 16 . • Must Attend School Children of Indiana will bt required to attend school until they are sixteen whether or not there is a high school in the school corporation in which they reside, according to an opinion submitted by U. S. Lesh, attorney general of Indiana, tp R. J. Burris, State superintendent of public instruction. The ruling iS contradictory to a decision given recently by Judge Clements In the Posey Circuit Cc'urt In which a charge of violating the State law against Henry It. Knfght was dismissed on the ground that Knight's son. while under sixteen and a graduate of the eighth prade, was not attending high school because there is no high school in the corporation in which he resides. Mr. Lesh's opinion states thn£ there is nothing In thg iaw to excuse a pupil from attending school on account of the fact that this corporation has no high school, but that the pupil must attend high school In some other corporation. Funeral Ceremony of Former Soldier Last rites for Louis Bertrand Prohst, 26, whose death after being wounded In action, occurred in a German prison camp three years ago, were to he held at 2 o'clock this afternoon in Beck's funeral parlors, 125 South Capitol avenue. Burial will be in Crown Hill. The Rainbow Division Veterans’ Association is to be in charge. He served with Company V, 306th infantry. Besides mother. Mrs. Caroline Probst of Louisville, Mr. Prohst is survived by his widow. Sirs. Emma Prohst, and a 2-year-old son, residing at 001 Prospect street. Hutsell to Remain Harrison Club Head City Clerk George O. Hutsell was reelected president of the Harrison Club, a Republican organization with rooms at Clifton and Udell streets, last evening. Other officers were elected as follows: Valter W. Wise, vice president ; John J. Pickens, second vice president: Thad S. Garley, secretary ; ,T. Emmet Tyler, treas tirer. nnd Joseph L. Hogue, Robert N. Harding, Edward Warrick, Charles Eden nnd John E. Amhuhl, directors. A membership drive will be launched early In January. Plans are being made to rer ninhrriomf

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INDIANA DAILY TIMES, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1921.

GARFIELD PARK SHELTER HOUSE FINEST IN STATE Structure of Attractive De- - ‘ sign and Will Protect 3,500 Persons. READY FOR USE JAN. 1 Garfield Park, with its magnificent gardens and beautiful, rolling scenery will be further enhanced when the new shelter house, erected at a cost of $63,000 is opened about Jan. 1. Exterior work was completed this week and the interior will be finished within a few weeks. The building, which is 225 feet long by forty-five feet wide, contains facilities which make it available the year around as a community center, athletic clubhouse or park shelter. In case of a sudden summer shower 3,500 persons oou.ld find refuge in it. It will be the finest park shelter in the city and probably in the whole State. Its construction came as the result of several years of agitation by pebple of the south side. STRUCTURE OF COLONIAL DESIGN. In design the structure is Colonial, being patterned nfter a photograph of au old house in Georgetown, Vn., taken by James H. Lowry, superintendent of parks, several years ago. It has one story and gp basement with deep, columned porticos ou both faces. The building lies lengthwise north and south, a few hundred feet from the present small pavilion. It overlooks the Pleasant Run valley where the playground now is situated. It is so placed that it will be convenient for bathers who use the swimming pool (he park department plans to construct ftv the valley near the playground. There are two wings in the building, separated by a large assembly room located directly in the center. This room is sixty -five feet long/by forty-five feet wide. The floor is to be finished for dancing. The room is intended for general shelter and community gathering purposes. There are large fireplaces in both ends. Along the west side of the north wing, opening off of the assembly room, runs a dining room. On the east side, opposite the dining room, is a large kitchen and, suitably isolated, the men's lavatories. Across the extreme north end is a men’s locker and shower room. The east wing contains a women's room, suitable for holding small meet-

r™What Can You Do?—: I Today business is calling for young men and women who are prepared. * I It wants those who are ambitious to start in positions that offer "a I future.” It wants business-college graduates, because they can "fill | the bill." But there ought to be more of them. Does this interest you? I If so, start your preparation here at once. Then, after completing a S thorough business-college course, you can answer the question. “What I Can You Do?" by accepting and satisfactorily tilling a desirable, protttls- I j ing position in business. Start your course Monday, December 5 | In the INDIANA BUSINESS COLLEGE, at Marlon. Muncie, Logansport, I Anderson, Kokotno, Lafayette. Columbus Richmond. Vincennes. Craw- I j fordsvllle, Peru or Indianapolis—this is the institution of which Chas C. I j Cring is president and Ora E. Blitz general manager. Get in touch with j the point you wish to attend. Or, for Budget of Information aud full I j particulars, see, write or telephone Fred W. Case, Principal. I Pennsylvania and Vermont—First Door North Y. W. C. A.. Indianapolis. ammmmmmmmmmmmmßumammmmmmmmmtMammmmmmmmamamm DAILY THROUGH SERVICE r;i5::; Florida I Via Cincinnati and the L. & N. R. R. in THE SOUTHLAND 10.10 f. M. L Indianapolis ..... Ar. 6.45 A. M. 3.55 A.M. L, Richmond Ar. 1.50 A.M. 7.00 A. M . L Cincinnati........ Ar. 9.15 P. M. 8.50 P. M. Ar. Atlanta Lw. 7.25 A.M. SB§ 9.45 A. M. Ar Jacksonville Lv. 8.20 P. M. Requests for reservations are invited end may be addressed to any Ticket Agent of the Pennsylvania System, or to J. C. Mlllspaugh, Division Passenger Agent, 610 Kahn Building, Indianapolis. Ind. Pennsylvania System fF r •. TP At/FI IMP wry Have all the Comforta of Homo at ■ ir4 W tLIIVSJ IvIE.IV one-half price of the big Hotela Fireproof. Modern. HOTEL PURITAN Corner Market and New Jersey Btreeta. ■■■■ - r -- i Just What Does FREE Mean A frank statement of a practice which is destructive of reader confidence in advertising. Webster defines FREE—1. Given or furnished without cost or payment. 2. Not subject to some particular authority or obligation. 3. Not gained by importunity or purchase, gratuitous, unrestricted, spontaneous, without charge, as free admission, a free gift. 77/t? Better Business Bureau Repeats: FREE means without obligation to purchase, do labor, or perform a service. An advertisement that requires the purchase of one article to get another FREE is misleading. An advertisement that requires the performing of a service or the doing of labor to get something FREE is also misleading. Anything advertised as FREE should be had for the asking, without obligation to buy or. perform some service. Report any case of misleading or untruthful advertising, including all cases of untruthful FREE offers, to the Better Business Bureau MAIN A, 203 Chamber of 0111 /riy : ?h\ Commerce Bldg. |

ings, with the womerf's lavatories and a women's retiring room, for use in case of sudden illness, beyond. Women’s -locker and shower facilities are located in a room at the extreme south end corresponding to the men's athletic facilities at the north end. The basement eventually will be finished so as to provide a place where children may play when the weather prevents them from using the playground. Itubush & Hunter are the architects and the Hall Construction Company the contractors on the.job. It originally was the intention to erect the building last year but the lowest bid received was for $92,000. By waiting until this spring the $63,000 bid was obtained, Mr. Lowry pointed out. Kansas City Seeks Exposition Secrets The large record book of the activities in promoting and carrying to a successful finish the Indianapolis Industrial Exposition will be shipped to the Kansas City Chamber of Commerce by John B. Reynolds, general secretary of the Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce, in answer to an urgent request from that organization for complete information as to how the manufacturers' committee of the Indiauapolis Chamber of Commerce handled the exposition. As the book is three feet by four feet by one foot in diameter, a special shipping case is being prepared for it. According to Mr. Reynolds, the Chamber values the volume at $4,000. The Kansas City Chamber will be allowed to keep the book for ten days, when it is scheduled to be shipped back here to be reshipped to the Toledo Chamber of Commerce, which contemplates following the example of Indianapolis in staging cn industrial exposition next spring. FORM BROTHERHOOD CLUB. The Jim Nipper Brotherhood Club, named in honor of a former superintendent of the Wheeler City Rescue Mission, was organized last night with a charter membership of forty-four, fft a banquet attended by mission workers at the Young Men's Christian Association. The following officers were elected: E. L. Taylor, president; Herbert Eberhnrdt, vice president: R. F. Laycock, secretary. The organization will meet once a month at the Y. M. C. A. Merry Christmas and j JK , Moorrfleld photographic ..... portraits—two good VJthings that go hand in Math Floor. Kftfcn Bldg.

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PU B IN V I T E D ELKS MEMORIAL SUNDAY, DECEMBER 4th., 8 P. M. ENGLISH OPERA HOUSE SPLENDID MUSICAL PROGRAMME

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Progress Laundry

SUNDAY NIGHT—MURAT —7:30 a “Keep Your Eye on that Bear" The Great Russian Riddle Solved! A Tremendous Future Foretold Orchestra 7 p. m. Doors Open 6:30 LECTURE 7:45 ADMISSION FREE

After till the question of paramount importance, and the question that has harassed and appalled humanity throughout almost 6,000 years of history is, Where are the dead? It has been superficially answered by the proponents of various religious faiths in one form or another of hopeless superstition. Purest sophistry has been resorted to and specious arguments have served to blind the willingly receptive minds of the bereaved of all ages into a credulous acceptance of false comfort, so that It has long been paradoxically true that men believe death, the very eatise of which is a belief of separation from God, Life, to be the gateway to the divine presence. Thus people try to believe that the departed loved ones are "with their Lord” (in modern time3 we seldom any more presume to consign any to the presence of his Satanic majesty, except it be facetiously) ; or that they are "U) a probationary state," or that they disport themselves "in the spirit world.” Our friends of the Roman Church are more logical when they

J THE CATHOLIC RELIGION AND THE HOST OF HUMAN DEAD By R. Stanhope Easterday, Professor of Eschatology, The Stantone Bible Cos "ge and Metaphysical Institute, Indianapolis.

consign their dead to “purgatory” and believe that prayer will help. And all the time the simple truth about the estate of the dead Is patent though appalling. The Great Teacher, the man who went into and through death and came out of the grave In triumph In the experience knowu as the Resurrection, taught so plainly, by precept and by telling example, that the dead are but asleep. On one occasion He said, "Our friend Lazarus sleepeth; but I go that I may awake him out of sleep.” He then went to the tomb wherein lay the decomposed body of Lazarus, commanded that the grave be opened, and then called "with a loud voice” to the dead man within, and the self-same Lazarus, healed of the decomposition of extreme disease called death, walked forth whole again. A careful study of the psychology Involved as well as of the physiology and anatomy ineldently to be considered. as brought out in my lecture, "The Psychology of Death, with Its Hope of Immortality,” logically substantiates the biblical record of this supreme "miracle,” and establishes substantial basis for man’s reasonr -

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able* contention for immortality. The essential fact must not, be lost sight of, however, that death is to be overcome in individual experience before the "estate after death” can be experienced, and there is nothing to indicate that any who have died, with the exception of the Man Christ Jesus, has ever so overcome "the last enemy,” and we must therefore conclude that the vast host of human dead are still in the sleep of death in their graves, awaiting the revivifying influence of the benign atmosphere of spirituality which will ensue at the second coming of Christ, approximately at the end of this century. Mrs. Mary Baker Eddy, known as the “Discoverer and Founder of Christian Science,” or of the Science of Christianity, gives to the world the only key to the solution of the great mystery of Death and the Resurrection in her published works on Divine Metaphysics, and we will continue our discussion of the subject of death later In the light of some of her statements. In the meantime we do solemnly call humanity to repentance, for no man knows "the time of the end.” (Daniel 8:17.) —Adr.