Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 239, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 February 1924 — Page 3

MONDAY, FEB. 18, 1924

DR. WICKS SHOWS HOW THE CHURCH MAKESITSAPPEAL Pastor Proves Value of Re- % ligion in Lfyes of All People, "The old motives for going to church no longer influence many people,” Dr. Frank S. C. Wicks of the All SouL Unitarian Church said Sunday while discussing “What the Church Can Do for Us.” “It was once generally believed,” he said, "that the church was a divinely appointed institution to which was committed, as a sacred deposit, the revealed truth of God. The mother church has always taught that it held the keys to heaven and hell, and only with Its password would the celestial i ortals swing open. “It has been held that in a shipwrecked world the church was the one ark of safety. These views have been rejected by many today. They cannot believe the church has any trutji in its keeping not within reach of any earnest inquirer. They do not believe it is necessary to go to church to be saved. “With no promise of heaven and no threat of hell, how can the church still attract thinking pe%>le?” the pastor asked. Shows How the Church May Make Its Appeal Dr. Wicks set forth reasons why the church may still make an appeal. “It is the organized moral force of the community,” he said, “and he who would make his influence effective should join himself such an organization. . “The church is the one organization which definitely stands for the higher life of mankind. There is still such a thing as losing one’s soul even if no brimstone pit awaits the sinner. To lose one’s soul is to lose all capacity for love, all desire for truth, oeings satisfied with an animal con‘.entment, a loss of all aspiration for m ideal life. The church teaches us low we may save our souls from such in ignoble condition. “Again, the church affords a mount jt vision from which one gets a world ,-iew, and sees to the furthest limits if mankind, recognizing in the most distant man one like ourselves to' whom we owe justice and good will. “The church keeps our consciences alive by holding before us the eternal distinction between right and wrong. "It the cljurch gives us strength to bear our burdens, if it gives comfort

Kidney and Other Diseases Caused By Torpid Liver Blood carries body poisons through the system to vital organs To clear our systems of poison toxins that taint the blood and break down health, we must keep the liver regulated. Medical science now knows :hat the liver is cur most important organ because it destroys the body poisons that cause diseases of the kidneys and blood vessels, ’ and bring premature old age. When the liver becomes torpid, these poisons, instead of being destroyed, are ’ carried through the system by the blood. Then Nature gives quick warnings. You have sudden sick headaches/ dizzy spells, nausea when even the sight of food may sicken you. If your stomach is acid from sour bile and your skin becomes sallow’ or blotchy, you may know poisons are in your blood. Science now' has found the only way to keep the liver normal. Doctors know the liver cannot be regulated by drugs, but there is a safe Nature substance which will act directly on the Kver. The discovery is purified ox gall. Get from your druggist a package of Dioxol. Each tablet contains ten drops of purified ox gall. In 24 hours the poison toxins will be removed. Tour l'ver will be regulated. Blood purification will begin. Sallow skin w ill clear. You will feel so much better you will know you have found the cause of your ill health. Dioxol tablets are harmless, tastless and cost less than two cents each. —Advertisement.

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Sing Sing Boys Have Cooking Clubs

By STEVE HANNAGAN Vr t Btnff Corrrsnonrlrtit I "771 ING SING PRISON. OSS*NING. X. Y., Feb. 18.—A sonorous whistle blew dong and lustily. The streets of Sing Sing—streets withiv the closeted, walled city on the Hudson —became filled with men. It was 3:50 o’clock—the end of the day. Within a few moments the appetizing aroma of frying food drifted teasingly on a bracing February breeze. The writer was walking with Father William E. Cashin, a Roman Catholic prist, for twelve years chaplain of the prison. “That makes me hungry, father,” I said. “We must be near the kitchen?” • "No," he replied, “that's cookhouse, where some of the men cook their own meals.” In a jiffy we were within the shed watching an orderly array of cooks bending over long lines of stoves, conjuring wholesome foods in pots, skillets and pans. The men draw regular rations from the commissary and alsc are permitted to purchase certain foods from the prison store. As one cook finished and left the fire, another tcok his place. The men rushed with their steaming delicacies to their shops and other eating rendezvous, sometimes five or six of them clubbing tQgether and dividing

in our sorrow, if it encourages us in our desire to live the best kind of a life, if it gives us a passioji for human service, if it implants in us a love of truth, goodness, justice and beauty it should 'command our loyalty and win our devotion,” Dr. AVlcks said. CHRISTIAN CHURCHES TO MEET February Workers’ Session to Be Held at Xortliwood Tonight. Christian churches of the city will hold their February workers’ meeting at the Xorthwood Christian Church, Forty-Sixth St. and Central Ave. tonight. Pastors and Sunday school workers will speak. ‘QUENCHING SPIRIT OF GOD’ More Than 100 Converted in Revival Closed at M. E. Church. “We quench the spirit of God by ignoring it and we car. quench it out by' pilirg on it the rubbish of life,” declared the Rev. George S. Hc-n----nine-er in closing the series of revival services at the E. Tenth St. M. E. Church Sunday. More than 100 were converted. Special prayer services will he held Thursday.

BAPTISTS TO HOLD RALLIES Thirty-five District Sessions to Be Held in Indiana in March. Thirty-five district rabies will be held in Indiana in March by the Baptist Church. Speakers include missionary’ workers in the denominational fields. The rallies begin March 4 at Gary and New Albany, one or two days to be spent in each of the cities on the list. MOCKERY OF GOD Rev. Emery W. Pettieord Opens Revival Services at Cadle Tabernacle. "Much thar'we call prayer is simply mockery of God.” declared the Rev. Emery W. Pettieord, Oregon evangelist, opening a series of revival services at Cadie Tabernacle Sunday. “A deeper prayer life," was urged. MORE SERVICE IS URGED Speaker Says Money Will Not Win Worth-While Fame. Mere money will never win worthwhile fame in the world. Dr. R. A. Elwtood, of Atlantic City, N. J., said Sunday at the Y. M. C. A. Big Meeting at English’s Theater, in urging greater personal service for God. “The world needs Christians who will go out themselves and serve ” The Indianapolis policemen and firemen’s hand provided a cencAt 'ufure the address. PASTOR DISCUSSES PROGRESS Rev. Otto Moor Says World Never Will Outgrow Christ. “No matter how the world develops, Jesus Christ never will be outgrown.” said the Rev. Otto B. Moor, pastor of the Immanuel Reformed Church, Prospect and S. New Jersey Sts., in a sermon Sunday night. He said that if tfie world would take Christ as final there would be greater progress.

Wr m Jr fathlcr cashin the spoils of their cooking orgy—others eating alone and ’in silence. It's that way in prison. Fried ham, potatoes, spaghetti and coffee were prominent on the menu this day. We stepped into the auditorium, w-here each night there is a motion picture show, and w’here Father Cashin

CHICKEN THIEVES ACTIVE Thirty-One Fowls Valued at $45.50 Arc Stolen Over Week End. Week-end thefts included four chickens valued at $5 from Louis Gidkhoff. 1405 Finley Ave.; thirteen valued at $19.50 from Albert Killinger, 2031 Boulevard PI.: four valued at $6 from Charles McSpadden, colored, 657 W. Twenty-Seventh Bt.„ and ten valued at sls from Adolph Diledy, 559 W. Twenty-Seventh St. Other theft” victims:William Woodlawn Ave., automobile, $1,000; Susie Tracy, confectionery. Audubon and Brookville Rds., tobacco and candy, $6; J. N. Pritchett, 2803 W. Michigan St., coat, $75. BIBLE WORKERS GATHER Efficiency Is Object of Series of Sunday School Meetings. Bu United Prct* GOSHEN. Ind., Feb. 18. —Sunday school workers of Elkhart County gathered here today for an efficiency conference under the supervision of the Indiana Sunday School Council of Religious Education. The purpose of the conference is to increase the efficiency of Sunday school teachers. Similar meetings will be held throughout the State this month and in March. REV. SICHTERMAN RESIGNS Fairview Presbyterian Co-Pastor to tio to Port Huron, Mich. The Rev. N. S. Sichterman will preach his farewell sermon at the Fairview Presbyterian Church next Sunday. His resignation as co-pastor of the church was accepted by the congregation at a meeting Sunday afternoon. The Rev. Edward Haines Kistler will continue in charge of tb** church. The Rev. Sichterman will become pastor of the First Presbyterian Church of Port Huron, Mich., March 2.

•WANDERER’ ARRESTED Police Find Thomas Newsom Lost in Eg>e Creek Bottoms. “Help, help,’’ came a man's voice out of the darkness of Eagle Creek bottoms early today. Lyman Winkley, 27 Alton St., and Everett Xeal, 3429 W. Washington St., could find no one. _ Police finally found Thomas Npwsopr, 42, of 3515 W. Wash- j ington St. He was charged with intoxication. He was thinly clad and suffering from the cold. PEACE PLAN WINS FAVOR; Vote Shows Large Majority Advocate Bok Prize Project. Vote in Indiana on the Bok prize i peace plan shows 8,088 for the plan and 1,180 against it, according to announcement, today by the jury of award. The total vote in the country on . Feb. 13 was 449.508 for t,he plan and 64,750 against it. according to the" announcement. The proportion for the plan is 87 per cent. The proportion in Indiana is approximately the j same. The majority #h every State is for the plan. LIEUT. CORRIGAN RETIRES Veteran Policeman Accepts Pension After Thirteen Years “Over-Time.” After thirty-eight years of honor eervice in the police.department, during which he held every rank except that of chief, John Corrigan today stands retired, by his own wish. One year ago, politics is said to have prompted an attempt to retire Corri gan from his place in connection with juvenile court. When it failed, he was placed in the field as a lieutenant. Corrigan has been eligible for pen sion thirteen years. Kls pension will ; amount to $76 a month. tamp to Be in Park Arrangements have been made by the State conservation commission to hold the Purdue University summer j engineering camp at MdCormick’s j Creek Canyon State Park. In former i years the camp was held in Michigan, j The camp will be in charge of Willard I Knapp and George Lommell of Pur- i due. Burnt Match Burglar Returns The burnt match burglar is at work I again.- lie left his trail of burnt marches at The home of John Payne, colored, 924 Fayette St., ( where, he stole money satchel containing $6, police' say- i * -A-, ' ' Cornell Alumni Elect Anton Vonnegut is the new president of the Cornell Alumni Association of Indiana polis. T. S. Hood is _LLi£ uraaklem.. . Monk

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

reads mass on Sundays. The auditorium janitor was sitting at the piano, his legs, crossed, his- nimble fingers whanging out jolly jazz airs. “Good evening, father,” he said, and tipped his cap without skipping a note. As we' Walked through the cell house to our freedom,, some of the men were .preparing to turn in for the night. Their little sleeping compartments were neat arid clean —some of them had pictures on the wall, one even had draped curtains over his door. There is youth in Sing Sing. The average age is 24. Father Cashin has gone through the trying period before death, with many condemned prisoners in Sing Sing prison. “Those who die in the electric chair.” he says, “make a gqod preparation for death, as a rule, according to their capacities. “There are no smart men in prison —only the poor and ignorant suffer. Prisoners are boobs— they themselves call the place the booby-hatch. s . “Idleness is the crime of every prison. “Prison is not such a hardship. It is not as bad as the slums in which the majority of these men lived —and they are not subjected to the brutalities of their childhood. “The deprivation of their liberty is the worst punishment these men suffer.”

Hospital to Receive Vases Equipping 300 rooms at the Methodist Hospital with flower vases is the aim pf thirty members of Gamma chapter of Nu Sigma Phi, national sorority of women physicians, following a meeting at the Spink-Arms. COCKERELL SURRENDERS Husband, Charged With Shooting With Intent to Kill. Lodged in Jail. Walter Cockerell. 2849 N. Keystone Ave., is in city prison today charged with lowing his surrender Sunday. According to police, fired tC shot , as his wife left home following a quarrel. Mrs. Cockerell fell, but examination showed that she had not been hit. Cockerell told the police he hid in a deserted house until Sunday after throwing the gun in a creek. Mrs. Tullis to Give Recitals Mrs. Don-TulUs of Buffalo, N. Y., formerly soloist of the Tabernacle Presbyterian Church,, is in the city today to spend several weeks coaching with her former teacher, Edward Nell of the Metropolitan School of Music. She will give a recital at Terre Haute and at Indianapolis.

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ACTRESS’ STORY OF ATTACK MAY BE IMAGINATION’ Another Young Woman Found Bound in New York Apartment, Bu United Xtics NEW YORK, Feb. 18.—Lying unconscious in her pink nightgown, with her hands bound behind her back with a pair of silk stockings and her face covered with a towel, Olga Morton, pretty youyg actress, was found in her apartment Sunday. Circumstance revealed to” the police all the outward elements of another Louise Lawson tragedy. When she was restored to consciousness, the actress related to the officers a dramatic 1 story of a struggle with a man, who had throttled her and bound her hands, and then ransacked the apartment. There were no marks. of violence upop Miss Morton's throat. Officers pointed out no injury was done to the victim, nothing was missing and signs of struggle were superficial. Dr. Kreshover, the actress’ physician. said Olga was of a nervous disposition, had been suffering from heart

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ailments and, it was quite possible she had imagined the whole affair. The hosiery binding the actress’ wrists was knotted loosely, and police suggested it would have been- easy for her to have t}ed the knot and then slipped her wrists’ through it. r , DOPE PEDDLING CHARGED Agents Say Arrest of Hams Is Important. • Fedeial narcotic agents believe they have made an important catch in the arrest of Abraham Harris, 52, of Chipago. , Following his arrest at South Bend last week, $10,009 worth of morphine was found in his possession and at his home in Chicago, officers say. He was*, ordered removed to Chicago by Judge Albert B. Anderson, after he had waived arraignment. DOCTORS CONSIDER HOME A questionnaire on the subject of a permanent home for the Indianapoiis Medical Society bus been sent to members. A committee has been studying the subject for several months. The home, a social and professional meeting place, would provide place for the medical library now in the Indianapolis public library. A physicians’ telephone exchange would be a feature. Leap Year Dance Arranged h Drill Corps of R&per Commandery No. 1, Knights Templar, has engaged the Egyptian room. M[urat Temple, for Its tenth annual dance and leap year party. Feb. 29.

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OVERLOOK COMBINATION Rurglars Take Only 25 Cents With Safe Combination at Hand. . Burglars at the 11. L. Willis fish market, 238 Massachusetts Ave., overlooked the combination of the safe, written on paper in full view, and, after ransacking the place, left with 25 cents. A player piano in the Turf” Exchange poolroom, 414 Indiana Ave., was broken open and sls taken. One dollar was taken from the cash register. Mrs. Robert Stepp, 1223 Massachusetts Ave., reports nine chickens valued at $lO, taken from henhouse. William F. Keough, 4210 E. New York St., returned from a dance at the Athenaeum overcoatless. The stolen coat was valued at $55.

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Wielder of Axe Sought * John Campbell, colored, 219 W. Fifteenth St., is; in city hospital day and police are searching for a man who they say struck Campbell on the head with an axe following a quarrel Saturday.

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