Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 61, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 July 1923 — Page 9

MONDAY, JULY 23, 1923

GOD’S LOVE FOR ALL SINNERS IS AS * OLDASCREATION Pastor Declares There Is Hope for Those Who Make Missteps, “God’s love for the sinner is as old as creation,” Rev. Charles H. Gunsolus declared Sunday night at the Brightwood Congregational Church while preaching on “Go and Sin No More.” “Though we have sinned, He has mercy and pardon,” the pastor said. "Though our sins be as scarlet, they shall be white as snow The story of the woman taken in sin displays Christ’s compassion for the sinner. His words and advice to the penitent are ever as of old, ‘Go and sin no more.' “Sin is a cancer of the soul and is high treason against God. All men are born in sin and sin means separation from God. “We are warned not to judge lest we be judged. Why should we pass judgment upon our brother or sister who has fallen by the wayside? “We have all sinned and fallen short of the glory of God. We are not responsible for being in this world, but we are responsible for w'hat we become in this life. As man sows that he also reap. tends to destruction. It premffures its own punishment. It carries its own condemnation. The prodigal will find peace and consolation in the divine words, ‘Go and sin no more.’ It means that God is willing to forget the past and to save from sin. "Only he that is without sin can cast the stone at his brother. As all have sinned, there is none that dares to pass judgment upon a lost soul. “Jesus does not delight in condemnation, but in forgiveness and forgetting the past,” the Rev. Gunsolus said. URGES TABERNACLE HARMONY Hites Scores Factional Strife at Sunday Meeting. Harmony within the ranks of Cadle Tabernacle supporters was discussed today following an appeal of Earle F. Hites, evangelist and superintendent Sunday afternoon in the tabernacle urging factions to unite. Factional differences in the Gypsy Smith choir which has led to a suit in Marion County court concerning the name of the choir, and other family disturbances within the tabernacle were scored by Major Hites. “Satan has had his eyes on this tabernacle since its inception, and has tried to defeat the Christian program,” said Major Hites. “It's a question of what we are going to do as servants of God.”

CLASS INSTALLS “BAR" Christian Men Builders Dispense Before Session Opens. A ‘‘free drink bar” was the 'innovation of the Christian Men Builders, me., a class of young men taught by Merle Sidener. at the Third Christian Church, Broadway and Seventeenth St., Sunday. This "bar” dispensed pink lemonade until the session started. “We must recognize the spirit and not merely the word or letter of God’s moral Jaw,” Sidener said in his talk. REVIVAL SERVICES CONTINUE Oklahoma Evangelist Speaks at Nazarene Church. Evangelistic services at the South Side Nazarene Church, Olive and Naomi Sts., will continue this week under direction of the Rev. T. M. Ellis of Bethany Okla The Rev. Ellis will speak on "The Promise of His Coming” tonight. TO PLAN 1924 ACTIVITIES State Sunday School Council Trustees Meet Thursday Program of 1924 activities will be mapped out by trustees of the Indiana Sunday school council of religious education at the Lincoln Thursday. Dr. William Lowe Bryan, president of Indiana University will preside. Trustees axe expected to approve the convention time change from June until & Warmony needed in church Rev. Philputt Says Room Must Be Made for “Strong Members” A church is not large enough to solve the problems of today if It cannot make room for all its strong members, declared the Rev. Allan B. Philputt, pastor of the Central Christian Church, in a sermon Sunday morning on “The Art of Getting Along Together.” “SPASMODIC” PRAYERS SCORED Minister Says Most Appeals to God Not of Highest Type. Most of the prayers men offer to God are only spasdomic and not of the highest type, said the Rev. E. E. Roberts. pastor of the First Evangelical Association Church, in a sermon Sunday morning. REVIVAL SERVICES CONTINUE Dr. Boyer Says World Has Greatest Need of Christianity. "The world never before has been in need of Christian leadership as it is today,” declared Dr. Edward S. Boyer of Chicago, in a sermon Sunday night at the Roberts Park M. E. Church on “A New Demand in the New Age.” THIRD BODY IS FOUND Three - Day - Search for Drowning Victim Ends Near Attica. By Timet Special ATTICA, Ind.. July 23. —After three days search, the body of Mrs. Elmer Strasser of Evansville, who was drowned With Mr. and Mrs. George Regener, also of Evansville, in the Wabash River at Flint Friday, was found Sunday. The bodies of the '■'her victims were found Friday.

What I Was Doing at 20 — By — A. G. Cavins , Assistant U. S. District Attorney

WHEN I was twenty I was studying law —not reading, studying—with John T. Hays, father of Will Hays, at Sullivan, Ind., and practicing before Justices of the Peace. CHECK-UP SHOWS 177 ARRESTED IN WEEK* RAIDS Chief Offenses Are Against Alleged Liquor and Gambling Violators, One hundred and fifty-five men and twenty-two women were arrested during the week-end, police records show today. Thirty-seven men and two women were charged with drunkenness. Twenty-one men and three women were charged with operating a blind tiger, and two men with operating a motor vehicle while under the influence of liquor. Ten men were charged with visiting a gambling house and two men with keeping a gambling house. In a raid on an alleged craps game at 309 Dorman St., Herman Glover. 832 Edison St., and George Hoover. 309 Dorman St., were charged with keep ing a gambling house. Two sets of dice and a box containing 35 cents and some cards were obtained as evidence. A raid was made on 532 E. Court St. Silesta Brown, 22. colored, was charged with keeping a resort Clara Campbell, 22, colored, 331 E. Louisana St., was held on a statutory chargeWilliam Payne, 26. colored. 532 E Court St.; Leslie Brown, 27, of 116 W. Walnut St., and Charles Elswell, 29. of 532 N. Delaware St., were charged with associating. Sergeant Dever arrested two men whom he found at Rural St. and Roosevelt Ave.. charging them with drunkenness. They gave their names as Charles Martin. 2730 Chester Ave., and Leroy Stelting, 3824 W. Michigan St. Sergt Wilson arrested William Ewing. 644 Johnson St., and Booker Thurman. 616 Roanoke St., charging them with operating a blind tiger.

DETECTIVES LIST FORGERYCHARGES William Maholm Record Recalled by Police, William Maholm, 33, alleged to be a nationally krown check forger, arrested Saturday night by Motor Policemen McClure and Thompson, and charged with vagrancy, was reslated today on a charge of issuing fraudulent checks and forgery. Detective Inspector John W. Mullin said Maholm, a native of Indianapolis, has served a prison term in this State and at least two other States. Mullin recognized the man, who had denied the charges. Maholm is alleged to have attempted to pass a check on the J. C. Sipe Company, 210 Merchants Bank Bldg., for a S3OO ring. It Is charged he posed as a nephew of C. L. Lam bert of the Lambert Coal Company. He was told to come back Saturday. Slpe called police, who were informed the man had just purchased a r ng for S3OO on a bad check given to the Leo Krauss Company, 43 N. Illinois St. Harold Thompson of the Slpe Company saw Maholm on Monument Circle and called police. Three months ago. It is alleged Maholm passed a fraudulent check on Harry Cobb, jeweler In the State Life building, for a $250 diamond ring. It is charged he also had . e,. ed, on bogus checks, a $240 ring from George S. Kern, 9 N. Meridian St., $35 worth of merchandlr from D. Selig Company, 135 N. Pennsylvania St., in August, 1919, and a year later, a SSOO fur coat from Mrs. Eva M- Geiger, fur dealer.

PENNSY VETERANS RETURNTO HOMES Railroad Convention Attended by 8,000, Several thousand veteran employes of the Pennsylvania Railrad are back home today, following the first regional fellowship outing of the Pennsylvania Railroad Veterans’ Association, at the State fair ground Saturday. Approximately 8,000 veterans and guests attended. Mayor Shank welcomed the guests. He praised W. W. Atterbury, honor guest of the occasion and vice president of the Pennsy system, as being a man who could be depended upon to work for the benefit of his employes. Benjamin McKeen, regional vice president, introduced Atterbury, who said in a talk that the veterans' organization has a membership of 43,000. The Zanesville division won the banner for the largest delegation, having 84 per cent of its members in attendance.

Foster and Messick FLETCHER TRUST BUILDING Telephone, MA in 6100 Surety Bonds and Casualty Insurance

The Times Pink for Late Sport News

ELECTRIC LIGHT w / AND POWER \ j j SERVICE ; i Merchants i Heat & Light Company * HC. O’B. Murphy, General Manager The Daylight Comer

INTERSTATE PUBLIC SERVICE CO. 14 —Limited Trains Daily — 14 Between INDIANAPOLIS and LOUISVILLE

Purchasers of WASTE PAPER NATIONAL PAPER STOCK CO. Cl rcle 4000-4001 320-330 W. Michigan SL

Phone, Main 3057 THE WHITAKER PRESS Inc. “Printing Done Right” Fifth Floor Print Craft Building. 223-25 North New Jersey Street

Ask for Browder’s Ice Cream Everybody Says It’s Good We give special attention to party orders. Browder Ice Cream Cos. MA in 5595. 918 N. Senate.

SULPHUR BATHS AND SALT RUBS lADLES ONLY All Regular Beauty and Hair Work Open Evening. OHIO BEAUTY SHOP LINCOLN 5760. 17% W. OHIO ST.

For Service Call the Capitol Transfer Cos,, Inc. Heavy Hauling Contractor* General Hoisting and Rigging— Boilers, Smoke Stacks, Machinery 126-28 TV. New York St. Main 8319. J. R. Skinner, Manager.

LUMBER—MILLWORK ONE BOARD CR ONE MILLION FEET Quality Service O. D. Haskett Lumber Cos. Phone, WE bster 0114, WE bster 0115

“Sportsman Headquarters^* The Gus Habich Cos. A Complete New Display of Golf and Fishing Equipment The Gus Habich Cos. 143 E. Washington St.

H. H. WOODSMALL & CO., INC GENERAL INSURANCE—SURETY BONDS “We Insure Everything but the Hereafter." FIDELITY TRUST BUILDING

Cars Finished in Four to Six Days ENAMELITE SYSTEM AUTOMOBILE PAINTING A Complete New Paint Job Finished With SPARNAMEL Ford Roadster. Price *2O Ford Open Tonring. Price, *23 Ford Closed Car. Price *29 1009-15 Keystone, Corner E. Tenth St., Indianapolis

BUYERS’ WEEK TO BOOST CITY TRADE O. ®f C. Behind Move to Show Retailers Local Goods. Elaborate plans are being made by the executive committee of the Indianapolis wholesale trade division to make Buyers’ Week, Sept. 12*14, rnoA successful than 1922, Blaine McGrath

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Travelers’ Checks LETTERS OF CREDIT FOREIGN EXCHANGE TOURS STEAMSHIP TICKETS Richard A. Kurtz, Manager, Foreign Dept. The Union Trust Cos. 120 East Market Street MA In 1576, 2853

9x12 Rugs, $1.75 the lowest price In Indianapolis for A-l work. We call for and deliver. All work vna ran teed. Sanitary Rag Cleaners 901-3 Ka*t St. Clair St. IJnooln 7642

Without a Lambert V* \ 1 Trublpruf Tire* 129 W. New York St. Main 3719

If Your Car I. \Vreeked or IM.abled Phone PRESSLEY’S GARAGE 24-HOUR SERVICE Storage, I<nndry, UeneraJ Repairing 541 NORTH SENATE AVE. Circle 2400. Circle 1687

f P\tti:rson Engraving Cos. rooMtaiv iNO'*>,A t'.tr, T OQT 00. 93 West '\\larLflanci Street Indianapolis. Ind.

SPINK-ARMS HOTEL 410 North Meridian St. A Reality of Convenience INDIANAPOLIS’ NEWEST AND FINEST HOTEL. Unexcelled Transient Service—s3 and np One, two and three-room furnished apartments with kitchenette, sioo per month and up. Unfurnished apartments In our new addition, SSO and up; unexcelled case service; Table d'hote luncheon, 75 cents; Table d’hote dinner, $1.25; also service ala carte.

of the Chamber of Commerce said today. Allan B. Maxwell of Kipp Brothers & Cos., 37 S. Meridian St., is chairman of the executive committee. The purpose of Buyers’ Week is to acquaint retailers with the quality of merchandise that has caused Indianapolis goods to be bought over the continent. All of the local wholesale houses will open display rooms to visitors.

WEEKLY Business and Industrial PAGE

HUGE TRUCKS KEEP PACE WITH TIMES

Monsters of Transportation Held in Constant Readiness by Capitol Transfer Company,

Keeping pace with the great strides that have been made in the automobile industry with respect to pleasure driving are the ponderous trucks with capacity for almost a carlaod of goods. The streets, the main trunk roads, even by-roads are the thoroughfares for these huge gasoline transportation cars that creak and pound with their great loads but reach their destinaRIVERSIDE PARK UNDERGOING SOME NOTABLE CHANGES New Amusements Costing Thousands of Dollars to Be Erected Soon, These days with all their heat and humidity are swelling the crowds at Riverside Park to a very noticeable extent The park, under managership or A. W. Colter, has undergone many improvements during the pa3t few months. New amusement devices, carylng in I cost from SIB,OOO to $35,000, have been added, including anew dancing pavilion artistically constructed, with dome celling, costing $65,000, which affords dancing space for one thousand couples. Because of the splendid way in which the crowds are ipindled many people visit this pavilion who do not care to attend the usual public pavilion. Avery extensive landscaping project is under way. Much <>f the work has already been done and the rest will be finished before the end of I the year. A beautiful r.ew pond, j with weeping willows surrounding it, : will be stocked with every kind of j water fowl native to the State. A I lovely fountain plays in the center jof the pond. Walks are tKdrg laid out | over the park and all space that is ! not occupied by amusements or con--1 cession stands, will be sodded and I landscaped. Artistic dumpings of evergreens are placed throughout the rark. This : landscaping program calls for the expenditure of SIO,OOO, and when fin- ' lshed will make this park one of the | most beautiful amusement parks in ■he whole country. This fall all of the amusements now j on Thirtieth St. will be moved back | and all of the ones on the south side of the street will be torn down. A ! new skating rink will be built and | other new amusements will be added. The special free attractions, some of them costing as much aa $1,200 per week, are additional entertainment Inducements for the crowds that visit the park. A pyrotechnic display Is conducted every Saturday evening.

IMMEDIATE REPAIR OF FURNACES URGED Rybolt Furnace Company Asks Home Owners to Have Work Done Early to Avoid Rush,

In keeping with the continued heavy building program, the Rybolt Heating Company, 632 Massachusetts Ave., has done a brisk business throughout the summer. New homes in the process of erec tlon, remodeling of old residences, all call for new furnaces, and In other Instances people have to replace their old furnaces. No point in the construction of a house requires more careful handling than the problem of heating, according to Harry Ry bolt of this company, for in this climate, where heat is necessary by far the major part of the year the heating plant may do more than any other part of the house to make or mar its comfort. "We have had men build new houses both for their own use and for sale

Saving Made ‘Painless’ Under Budget System

Although living within one’s income may not be quite the fashionable thing to do these days, it has its compensations. For instance, as Miss Elizabeth L. Cowan, head of the home economics bureau of the Fletcher Savings and Trust Company, points out, there is a certain satisfaction in buying an automobile with money in the bank at the end of five or ten years, rather than going into debt to buy one now. Miss Cowan is teaching girls and women the art of keeping budgets. Every Tuesday and Friday at 10:30 a. m., girls, sewing baskets on their arms, gather about the table in the directors’ room at the bank with Miss Cowan. All women are Invited. And, Miss Cowan suggests, she would like to give men some advice, too. Miss Cowan sets no aribtrary figures, but shows how to balance one’s expenses. And she does emphasize the necessity of saving, especially In the first few years of marriage. Here’s a bit of advice she would give engaged couples: You should

tions in an agreeably suprisiing time, j J. R. Skinner, manager of the Capi-1 tol Transfer Company, 126-128 West New York Street, reports an unusually heavy season. With the addition of a fleet of new Mack trucks and trailers this company is prepared to do a vast amount of business. It takes care of heavy machinery hauling, moves smokestacks and general rigging—in fact it can move anything. These trucks not only take care of a very rarge volume of business in the city but they haul goods all over tho state and adjoining states. The drivers of these trucks are men who are particularly trained in this sort of hauling for the experience and knowledge it takes successfully to handle these big trucks when loaded with a mass of intricate machinery requires a techlnal sort of nowledge. The very process of loading the machinery is a complicated one. CEMENT BLOCKS BECOME POPULAR IN ALL BUILDING Helm-Lewis Reports Substantial Business in Concrete Construction, With two big plants operating at capacity, turning out 3,600 cement blocks a day, the Helm-Lewis Company Is doing a very heavy business. Concrete blocks are becoming more nnd more universally used In conatrution work of various types—no matter whether the building is to be for residential or business purposes, the specifications, in all probability, will call for some concrete blocks. The durability of the blocks, together with the rapidity with which they can be put together in construction form, as well as their Are resisting qualities, make them a very practical material for building. Various improvements have been made In the construction of concrete blocks, aqprding to Lucien Lewis of j this company. One of the m <st lm--1 portant of these improvements is the I more even distribution of the air space so that it will offer a wall of greater resistance. This evenness of the air space also guarantees a building free from dampness—one in which the air circulation is of the best. Certain laws must be met In the manufacture of blocks in order that they will be uniformin finished form and today these blocks furnish a wall of durability that makes a foundation of cement blocks one cf lasting endurance.

nnd have them come to our company in each Instance for a heating plant, knowing that the plant and its instillation will give the best of service; In many cases we have had contractors tell us that It helps them In the sale or exchange of a house to be able to say that they have a Rybolt furnace in their house, for the ma jority of people are well acquainted with the service of our furnace. “We are urging all people who have not done so to look after the repair of their furnaces during these summer months; it will not he long until the beginning of the cold weather season and then there will be the usual heavy lush to have furnace repairs made. We are better prepared to take care of any needed repairs before the fall rush.”

have SI,OOO saved before marriage, and —It takes $35, at the very lowest, to feed a family of two for one month. Her budgets are modern, and complete. For instance, her budget for newlyweds provides for such items as phonograph records, candy, ice cream, drinks —the legal kind—tobacco, automobile, and even for barber and hair dresser expenses. “For,” she explains, "it is the little ‘leaks’ that mount up.” Candy, this up-t*-date woman contends, is “the moat unselfish of luxuries, because so many people enjoy it: smoking is the most selfish.” So she believes every husband should spend as much for candy for his wife as he does for tobacco for himself. ‘‘Might make it candy and flowers, and keep down the doctor bill,” one of her audience suggests. The whole business of budget-mak-ing amounts to this, in Miss Cowan’s words: “It’s not how much you earn that gets you any place, but the sense you use in spending it.”

LUMBER SUPERIOR MILLWORK BURNET-BINFORD LUMBER CO. . " ’• . r. : - :• \ • : - -v .iitirliclh and the t ahul. ‘ \ * lirooes I; to*J o - / r> * a,.

Phonograph Repairing ALL WORK GUARANTEED PERFECT OR NO PAY Masicai Instrument* of all Kinds Sold and Repaired C. E. MORTIMORE 821 Massachusetts Ave. Phone, Lincoln 2435

A Rybolt Furnace In Your Home Insures Comfort and Convenience /a PCPAIPQ for all Makes of Furnace* \) by Expert Mechanic^ _ 632 Massachusetts Ave.

HELM-LEWIS Quality Blocks Concrete Products, etc. Capacity 3,600 a Day. Two Big Plants 14th and Fall Creek. Main 4967.

For Quality in Coal and Building Materials Call Peoples Coal and Cement Cos. 1109 E. 15th St. W “"U 9, ’ 4MI

Automobile Glass Replaced While You Wait Building Glass of All Kinds Indianapolis Glass Cos. 1002 Kentucky Ave, Clr. 7727.

“None Better Mill Work" SPEEDWAY LUMBER CO. LUMBER AND BUILDING MATERIAL Our Truck Service Covers Marlon County Herbert E. Hill, President Belmont 2000

Prto 1 From Kentucky, West Virginia, V£U*tllLy vUdl Illinois and Indiana Fields Service and Quality ACTIVE COAL CO. FOURTEENTH AND SENATE Phones—Yard, Circle <01?. Office, Lincoln 8636.

LEE TIRE AND RUBBER CO. RETAIL STORE SERVICE DEPT. 37 W. Vermont St. Phone, Riley 1357

Riverside Park Amusement Cos, Thriller—Derby Racer — Scores of Amusements Ride on the New Caterpillar Come Out— u Just for Fun” Indianapolis’ Own Playground

low Ms( 2,100 in Indianapolis Guaranteed TWO YEARS Exchange Prices; 611 Oak Case *14.00 611 Rubber Case *16.00 613 Oak Case *16.00 613 Rubber Case *IB.OO 615 Oak Case *IB.OO 127 Rubber Case *22.50 COLVIN BATTERY CO. 121 East Maryland Phone. Circle 1870

WASTE PAPER We Buy A!l Kind> Main 6089 American Paper Stock Company Incorporated

THE MANSFIELD ENGINEERING CO. 1011 Fletcher Trust Building Indianapolis, Ind. Contractors and Manufacturers of Pioneer Back Dump Gravel Buckets

The Times Pink for Late Sport News

UPHOLSTERING If It's Upholstering—Any Kind, Shape or Pattern CaU DARMER’S UPHOLSTERY SHOP 857 E. Pratt. Circle 3211

If It's for Your Office, We Have It HILLER Office Supply Cos. 28 S. Penna. St. Just Phene LI. 2231

JrffcflyHjjfc "Quick, as. I The Ductless Window Cleaner. At I I your grocer's, druggist or department I I store. Main 0367 I Marion Bldg. Indianapolis I

We will build you a home of 4 or 5 rooms, furnish the money and you can pay like rent. FLOYED PETERMAN 509 Mass. Ave. MA in 7029 WE bster 4327

INDIANAPOLIS. Centrally located, Illinois at N. Y. Sts. Room, rated from SI.OO to $3.00 per day. "Better than ’Bate. Indicate." Excellent Coffee Shop. Kcesonable Price*. F. R. STUBBINS, M*r.

Phone Main 2592 We Cater to Commercial Account. D & D Vulcanizing Cos. DAYTON TIRES AND VEEDOL OILS Delaware & Georgia Sts. Indianapolis

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