Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 116, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 September 1922 — Page 2
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MANY CHURCHES WILL BE ICTIIE HERE NEXT WEEK Annual Sunday School Convention Will Convene Monday at Central Christian. PLAN TWO-DAY SESSION Mid-West Reformed Church to Open Synod Here Tuesday. Religious activities will demand much consideration next week. The synod of the Mid-West Reformed Church will convene Tuesday at the St. John's Reformed Church. The Women’s Missionary’ Society of the Mid-West synod will hold its meetings at the Immanuel Reformed Church. The forty third annual Sunday school convention of the Marion County Sunday School Association will have a two-day session at the Central Christian Church. The Junior-Senior Epworth League raljy will be held at the Merritt Place Methodist Church Wednesday night. A Christian Endeavor supper-rally will be held at the Y. W. C. A. Monday evening. Annual Sunday School Meet The forty-third annual Sunday school convention of the Marion County Sunday School Association will convene Monday afternoon at the Central Christian Church. The convention will close Tuesday night. A. B. Cornelius will preside Monday afternoon. The Rev. O. W. Fifer will preach. The principal address will be delivered by Frank M. McKibben, religious director of St. Joseph County. Other speakers will be: Wayne G. Miller, State young people’s superintendent; E. T. Albertson, general secretary of Indiana; the Rev. O. B. Moor, pastor of the Immanuel Reformed Church; Frank M. McKibben, Allen 'White, William S. Bovard, Garry L. Cook, Miss Nellie C. Young. Wayne G. Miller, and William S. Vovard. O. W. Fifer will again give the Bible message Tuesday evening. E. T. Albertson will talk on “The Association and Its Contribution.” Church Leaders Here Prominent churchmen of the Reformed Church will begin arriving here Monday to attend a flve-day meeting of the Synod of the Mid-West Reformed Church to be held at St. John's Reformedd Church of which Rev. Ernest N. Evans is pastor. Sessions of the Women’s Missionary Society, of which Mrs. J. N. Naly of Orangeville, 111., is president, will be held at the Immanuel Reformed Church.
Bible Institute To Open Dr. A. I. Beringer, dean of the Indianapolis Bible Institute, announced that the twelfth annual session of the institute will open on Monday night, Oct. 2, at Shortridge High School. • * • League RaHy Announced A Junior-Senior Epworth League rally will be held on Wednesday night at the Merritt Place Methodist Church. The rally will be held under the direction of Miss Nellie Shepherd, district junior superintendent. Frank M. W. Jeffrey of Indianapolis, district president, will speak on ‘‘The Margin.” •* * Christian Endeavor Rally A Christian Endeavor supper-rally will be held Monday night at the Y. W. C. A. under the direction of the Marion County Christian Endeavor Union. A banquet will beV served at 6 p. m. Doyle Mullen, known as the "boy preacher," will speak on “Youth.” • • • ST. MATTHEW’S EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN CHURCH Sunday will celebrate a mission festival at both services. In the morning. Rev. H. W. Disbrow of Terre Haute, will preach, and at night Rev-. L. C. Fackler will occupy the pulpit. The Luther League will have a social Tuesday night at the M. S. A. Camp, 610 W. FortySecond St.
REV. HORACE A. SPRAGUE of the Hall Place M. E. Church will take for his Sunday subjects, “Imitators or Followers?” and “Why Be Fearful?” * • * • "CONTINUE AS YOU BEGAN” will he the Sunday morning subject of Rev. E. D. C. Koeth of the Trinity Methodist Church. At night he will talk on "The Only Way to Overcome Evil.” • • • AT THE GRACE M. E. CHURCH Sunday morning. Rev. M. B. Hyde will preach on “The Minister’s Mission” and at night on "The Christian’s Output." • • • “SERVING SELF OR OTHERS" will be the Sunday morning subject of Rev. W. E. Cissna of the West Washington St. M. E. Church. His night subject will be "The Power Within.” • * • REV. EDWIN CUNNINGHAM of the Central Universalist Church will preach Sunday morning on “Salvation by Education.” • • THE REGULAR DEVOTIONAL MEETING of the Roberts Park Epworth League will be held in the Sun-
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Dr. Lewis Seymour Mudge, stated clerk of the Presbyerian Church In this country, is in Indianapolis making plans for the next general assembly of the church to be held here next May. day school room of the church at 7 p. m. Sunday. Special music will be given. Mr. Overly will talk on “Using My Bible for Others.” • • • REV. FRANK S. C. WICKS of the All Souls Unitarian Church will speak at 11 a. m. Sunday on ‘ Glad to Be in Church.” • • • DR. EDWARD HAINES KISTLER of the Fourth Presbyterian Church, will preach at 11 o'clock Sunday morning on “When the Sun Rises in the West.” Thursday night he will preach on "The Board’s Consecration of Newly Appointed Missionaries.” * • • DR. MADISON SWADENER of the Anti-Saloon League will preach Sunday morning at the Garden Baptist Church. At night, Rev. W. H. Harris, pastor, will preach on “Lost tfnd Found." •• • $ "DR. E. A. ROBERTSON of the East Park M. E. Church will preach Sunday morning on “The Marching Orders of the Church” and at night on “The Secret of a Common Tragedy.” • • “FORWARD,, will be the Sunday morning theme of the Rev. W. W. Clouse of the King Ave. M. E. Church. ■‘Finally” will be the evening subject. • • • VINSON H. MANIFOLD will address the men at 9:30 a. m. Sunday at St. Paul's. Rader and Eugene St. The morning theme of Rev. Frank L. Hovls, pastor, will be “Importance of Christ’s Work" and “Not to Judge but to Save.” • • • THE SUNDAY MORNING SERVICE at the Brookside Park U. B. Church will be given over to a Promotion Day program. At night Rev. Charles P. Martin will speak on “What Have I Done?” • • • A COMMUNION SERVICE will be held at 10:30 a. m. Sunday at the Cumberland M. E. Church. Rev. Charles H. Rose will preach at night"on "First Things First ’’ • • • “THE VALUE OF A DETER MINED PURPOSE" will be the subject of the Sunday morning sermon of Rev. E. P. Jewett of the Morris Si. Methodist Church. The subject at night will be “What is the Remedy for Sin?” Mrs. Blanche Walt will conduct the Epworth League service. The subject will be “Using My Bible for Others.”
BOARD WILL FIX TWOJIEMS Also Rejects Several Bids for Permanent Paving lm-. provements. Contracts have been awarded by the board of public works for permanent improvement as follows: First, alley east of Bancroft Ave., Michigan to Walnut Sts., two course concrete. W. C. Halstead, *2.48 a lineal foot, total *3,164.56. First alley south of Tenth St., Rural St., to first alley east, two course concrete, W. C. Halstead, *2.49 a lineal foot, total *697.20. Because they were too high bids were rejected for permanent improvement of the first alley west of Tacoma Ave., New York St., to first alley north of Washington St., of Roosevelt, Ave., Hillsside to Tacoma Aves., and of the first alley north of Twelfth St., Tecumseh St. to Keystone Ave. Resolution for resurfacing Delaware St., from Georgia St. to Virginia Ave., with asphalt was adopted. Preliminary orders were made for permanent improvement of first alley west of Capitol Ave., Fortieth St., to point 40 feet north of Thirty-Ninth St., with two-course concrete, and of Randolph St., Washington to New Sts., with asphalt.
J SPIEUPITODAY J[ Interesting Incident by Readers
A man at a letter box waiting for the postman to take the mail out so that he could put his letter in.—G. E. M. , A street car motorman stop his car, get out and walk back about a block and pick up a wrench which had been dropped there. He said he was going to donate it to the street car company. —G. E. M. A woman, in an expensive auto, stop a street car and-* hand the conductor a letter to mail. —G. E. M. A “blind cripple” get up from the sidewalk where he had been selling pencils, put his glasses away, look up and down the street before crossing same, discard crutches and walk briskly down the street.—C. R. F. An officer strike a 16-year-old boy
ASSEMBLY COMING Head of Presbyterian Church Here
By THE VISITOR As the meeting place of important churfch conferences. Indianapolis is rapidly becoming a leading center. Next May about a thousand commissioners of the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in this country will meet here. Dr. Lewis Seymour Mudge, stated clerk for the Presbyterian Church, with offices in Philadelphia, arrived here today to perfect arrangements for the spring meeting of the assembly. Dr. Mudge will preach Sunday morning at the First Presbyterian Church. This church will act as host to the commissioners attending the assembly. Dr. Mudge became stated clerk by a call from the general assembly at Winona Lake in 1921. The office which he holds is the
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
and take the pennies he had won by gambling—J. H. A soda dispenser break an egg in a malted milk shaker and tljyn smell the shell.—H. L. C. Three deaf and dumb people Wliat odd or unusual sight or incident did you see today? Write It down and send it to The Times "I Spied Editor.” ing at phonograph records in a local store. —M. B. H. In a crowded North Alabama car a well-dressed elderly man, who was standing, spit three times on the floor of the car about six or eight Inches from the feet of a seated passenger.
chief permanent office of the denomination. By a vote of the last general assembly, Dr. Mudge is administering the details of the revolutionary consolidation of the church boards and agencies in conjunction with a special reorganization committee of which Dr. John Timothy Stone of Chicago 1b chairman. T Y’ ENROLLS 1,153 Night Classes Will Be Filled, Directors Say. The Y. M. C. A. has enrolled 1,163 students In night classes, according to an announcement today. One hundred fifty students Joined Friday night, at opening of cla'"- - 'n economics, accountancy, incoim t, coat accounts. business letters and reports.
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Building a Nation How Your Hardware Dealer Can Help You Do Your Part
You are living—right now—in the greatest days of building this country and this city and you ever knew. For the first six months of 1922 the total construction investment amounted to a billion, two hundred million dollars in 163 cities—7s% greater than any past record. All credit is due to those who have had the foresight to make possible this great new era of building a greater nation and the mechanics, carpenters and other craftsmen who hack them up. But back of them stands your hardware dealer who supplies such tools as Atkins Saws to make every ounce of effort more effective. * He will help you share in your part of this great era. In his store you will find tools and supplies which mean greater savings and value. Every one of the hardware dealers listed
HARRY ALEXANDER. IV. 10i h ami Belmont Ave. C. 11. BAKEMEIER, 831 Virginia Ave. BARRETT HDWE. CO. 530 E. Wanhingtnn St. BRIGHT WOOD II DIVE. STOKE 3002 Roosevelt Ave. BROAD RII’PI.E DEPT. STORE, Hardware Dept., Broad Rlppl*. CARTERS HIIWE. CO., 8406 E. Tenth St. CASH MERC. CO., 2638 Northwestern Ave. J. R. CHALK, 4*l E. 80th St. DE VORE BROTHERS, S2O Virginia Ave. EAST 10TH ST. HDWE. CO., 2901 E. 10th St. EMRICH HDWE. CO., 2626 IV. Michigan St. 408. FLEISCHMANN, 615 W. Washington St. FOUNTAIN SQUARE HDWE. CO., 110 Prospwt St. W. FOCRNACE, 111 W. 16th St. FBANKE HDWE. CO., 1683 Prospect St. CHAS. W. FKYBERGLR, 2312 E. Washington St.
E. C. ATKINS & CO., INC., Atkins Saws are handled by leading hardware jobbers, dealers, mill supply houses and factory branches all over the world.
The spitter, by the way, was a wellknown lawyer.—M. H. A gentleman on East Washington car get up to give a lady his seat and then quickly slip into another seat to beat a lady to It. —G. D. A man riding a motorcycle downtown with his horse tied to the rear mudguard-—M. L. B. A woman go to a store manager and receive a 2 cent stamp to replace the one she had to give to the postman for receiving an invitation to visit the store. —W. R. T. Manager of one of our daily newspapers stop at the news stand at Pennsylvania and Ohio Sts., and sell a newspaper while the boy was busy with one of his other customers. — I. H. F. PLAN RADIO BODY Indianapolis Manufacturers and Dealers to Form Association. Radio equipment dealers and manufacturers here are planning an as sociation. Members of a committee on organization are Elmer P. Morris of the Radio_Manufacturlng Company, T. B. Hateld of the Hatfield Electric Company, G. W. Ball of the Adams Sales Corporation, L. F. Hornbeck of the Hook Drug Company and J. Lloyd Wayne of the L. S. Ayres Company. ROBS TAILOR SHOP Thief Gets Away With Money and Clothes. A thief entered the rear door of the Hyman Newman Tailoring Company store, 312 W. Twenty-First Bt., and carried away a cigar box containing $6 and a suit of clothes worth *3O.
These Leading Hardware Dealers Sell and Guarantee ATKINS SAWS
INDIANAPOLIS
GAGE HDWE. CO., 1701 Howard St. IRVINGTON HDWE. CO., 6605 E. Washington St. CHAS. KOKHRING, 882 Virginia AT*. 4. A. KLEBKR, 1687 South Meridian St. LILLY HDWE. CO.. 114 E. Washington St. LIPPMAN HDWE. CO., 442 E. Washington St. LAUCK BDWE. CO., 1004 South Meridian St. A. J. McCLOUD, 17*8 E. 10th St. JOHN MAULER, 1801 S. Eaat St. CHAS. MArER. 2101 W. Michigan St. MILLER HDWE. CO., 388 Masnachniette Ave. MOORE HDWE. CO., 2232 E. Wathington St. MARTIN MORGAN, 1857-1369 N. Senate Are. MOWWE * SOMMERS, 2130 Shelby St. METER E. MAGIDSON, 4th and Main, Beech Grove E. K. ODER, 42nd and College. M. J. O. POEB, 1904 College Are.
STARTDRIVtFOR FIRE AND MISHAP PREVENTION HERE
Chamber of Commerce Committees Plan Intensive Campaign for Oct. 9 to 16. SAFETY AS NEW FEATURE Committee on Laws and Ordinances to Fight Wooden Shingle Roofs, A fall and winter program of fire and accident prevention under the auspices of the fire prevention committee of the Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce will include a “No Fire. No Accident Week." Oct. 9 to 16. The personnel of a number of special committees which will! be n charge of file fall campaign was made public by the Are prevention committee consisting of Frank C. Jordan. John J. O’Brien, chief of the Ind'anapolis fire force, and Jacob E. Riedel, chief of the division of fire prevention of the Indianapolis fire force. Will Meet Tuesday Preliminary plans for the “No Fire, No Accident week" will be discussed by the committee at the Chamber of Commerce building Tuesday. The safety feature of the fire prevention committee’s work is anew one, but it is the expectation of the executive committee that the idea of a “No Fire. No Accident week” will lend ultimately to the formation of a permanent committee on accident prevention, Mr. Jordan said. To Prejare Bills A committee on laws and ordinances has been named to prepare a more stringent ordinance in reference to the elimination of wooden shingle roofs in Indianapolis. The committee will also
on this page can supply you with Atkins Saws backed by— The ATKINS GUARANTEE which means that every Atkins Saw must give you perfect satisfaction. Expert carpenters use and prefer Atkins Saws because of such exclusive features as genuine “Silver Steel” with its added years of life, the taper grinding which makes the saw cut faster and easier, the choice of Perfection or Old Style handles in a wide range of patterns suitable for every cutting purpose. Any of these hardware dealers will show you Atkins Saws and back them up with the Atkins Guarantee which insures you the greatest value from your investment. Good work is made better by better tools. See your hardware dealer today/- Ask about Atkins “Silver Steel” Saws, and Saw Tools.
FRANK H. PRINK, 820 W. Washington St. O. KEMKRLY HDWE. CO., 136 Garfield Ave. FRANK H. KHEES, 1102 Oliver Ave. M. C. SCHNEIDER, 2962 N. Illinois St. GEO. M. SCHERRER, 1247 Madison Ave. SHEPARD HDWE. CO., 2882 Clifton Ave. ANDREW VAN.IELGERHOIS, 8002 iCareon Ave. WM. E. VANTALGE, 2505 W. Washington St. VONNBGUT HDWE. CO., 120 E. Washington St. J. H. A MINNIE KILLIE, 1640 Roosevelt Ave. J. J. KLAISER, 719 P. State St. C. P. KNARZER A SON, 1628 East Washington. C. H. I>Hn, 1642 Shelby St. MOORE BROTHERS, 2830 Shelby .it. HERBERT F. PIE RLE, 4887 E. New Tork St. JAS. D. WHITSON. 501 Bncbanan St. RETTIG HARDWARE CO., 3636 Kooeevelt Ave.
consider a bill by the State Legislature which would provide for personal liability for preventable fires. The re-roofing of homes with fire resistant material will be urged by a special committee on fire resistant roofs, which is scheduled to conduct a campaign from Sept. 25 to Oct. 14. COAL MINE SOLD Dana Property Goes to George Hilgemeyer for $95,000. The Dana Coal mine, located north of Clinton, Ind., was yesterday sold at public auction in Superior Court, room 5, by William Schrolucke, receiver to George Hilgemeyer, for $95,000. The property consists of 333 acres of Third and Fifth vein coal land. Indebtedness on the property was *167.000. The mine was owned by a corporation of Indianapolis business men, headed by M. E. Mogg. William Schrolucke was receiver for the Metropolitan Fuel Company, Massachusetts Ave., and Dav.dson Sts., Indianapolis, which was sold to Carl Kraig, for $20,100. Indebtedness on the property was *59,000. WILL GIVE RECEPTION Colored Pythlans Plan Public Meeting Next Friday. Next Friday evening the colored Indiana Pythlans will give a free reception for the public at Tomlinson Hall at 8 p. m. Grand Chancellor Tidington of Evansville has been in the city perecting plans for the occasion. A parade will precede the reception. HAS HIS TROUBLES Elevator Man Finds Prinmping Delays Exasperating Mirrors in elevators have caused untold exasperation and delay, according to several elevator operators in downtown buildings. “People stop to primp,” said one operator today, “and keep me waiting. Consequently there is delay to passengers, many of whom are in a hurry.
Atkins Saws Are sold by leading dealers In these towns surrounding Indianapolis: Anderson Bedford Bloomington Brazil Connersvllle Columbus Crawfordsville Edinburg El wood Frankfort Franklin Greencastl© Greenfield Greensburg Knightstown Kokomo Lafayette Lebanon Log&nsport Marlon Martinsville Muncie Newcastle Noblesvllle Peru Richmond Rushville Seymour Shelbyvllle Terre Haute Tipton
SEPT. 23, 1922
4 NEUTRALi Board Is Moist By United yews CHICAGO, Sept. 23.—The Chicago Board of Trade, at least, is overwhelmingly opposed to prohibition. Returns from a secret ballot sent out by a voluntary committee show a vote of 863 me raters in favor of modification of the Volstead act, with seventy-six opposed to any change and four just neutral about it. ABANDON AUTO Auto Thieves Make Get-Away After Smashing Into Car, Two qien riding in a stolen automobile last night turned from Meridian St. west on McCarty St., and colided with an automobile owned by M. C. Greinling, 1521 N. Temple Ave. After hitting that automobile the two men got out and ran. The car used by the thieves, owned by Harry McCoy, of Ravenswood, had been reported stolen fro ma downtown street. DIPLOMATS PUZZLED Activity Against Run Runners off Atlantic Coast Continues. By United Preee WASHINGTON, Sept. 23.—Diplomatic Washington is puzzled at tha continuance of the activity of American ships against rum runners carrying the British flag off the Atlantic coast. A note on the subject dispatched to the British government late in July remains unanswered. Refuses to Reverse Members of State board of health have refused to recind a former order condemning a school building at Gaston, despite the appearance of residents in protest.
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