Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 171, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 October 1926 — Page 4
PAGE 4
The Indianapolis Times ROT W. HOWARD, President. BOTD GURLET, Editoh , WM. A. MAYBORN, Bu*. Mgr, Member of the Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance • • • Client of the United Press and the NBA Service • * * Member of the Audit Bureau of Circulations. Published daily except Sunday by Indianapolis Times Publishing Cos., 214-220 W. Maryland SU, Indianapolis •• • Subscription Rates: Indianapolis—Ten Cents a Week. Elsewhere—Twelve Cents a Week • • • PHONE—MA in 3500. \
No law shall be passed restraining the free interchange of thought and opinion, or restricting the right to speak, write, or print freely, on any subject whatever.—Constitution of Indiana.
KNOW YOUR STATE Indiana supports forty-three institutions of learning ranking above the public high schools. These employ more than 2,200 instructors, annually enroll 18,000 students and maintain plants having a property value of nearly $40,000,000.
SAME OLD TRICK The poison squad of whispering women was relief upon In the spring primaries. The poison press is relied upon In the fall tionIt Is the same old trick of misrepresentation which has so often been used, this effort to keep power through misleading the citizens by the distortion of facts. And it is the trick which Clyde Walb, as manager of the campaign of Senators Robinson and Watuon is now using to cover his own exposure. Mark what happened when Senator Reed hurried down from Chicago. The inquiry at Chicago had drawn forth statements which reflected upon both Senators Watson and Robinson, stories of devious deals with more devious forces, stories of pacts and secret alliances of which the citizen knew nothing, but which other facts made easily believable. Senator Reed at once sent telegrams to both Senators. The press which serves this machine, dominated by group, has not as yet printed one line to suggest that this action had been taken. Two hodrs and a half after those telegrams had been sent, there went back to Senator Reed a telegram from Senator Watson so worded as to contain no reference to the Reed message. And then the press which serves Watson’s purposes blazons in headlines the statement that Watson had asked Reed for a chance to explain. Two and a half hours before that message went. Senator Reed had offered to come if there was any inclination or desire to submit any statement or any evidence. It amounted to a command. The fairness of Senator Reed, his eagerness to be eminently and evenly just, was suppressed. He was misrepresented by implication and suppression. Add to that the real news of what happened when Senator Reed came to this city. Had he been a partisan and not a Senator with a regard for his oath of office and the duty placed upon him by the Senate, he might easily have been tempted to stretch his authority and peer beneath the charges that connect the days of Stephenson with the candidates in the present election. That was the fear that was held by those might have much to fear from a Federal investigation of those grave charges which Stephenson has said that he could prove by documentary evidence Instead, the final act of Senator Reed was to call Clyde Walb and tell him plainly and emphatically that his compelling reason for entering In diana was the charge that international bankers had put money into the pockets ot' fakirs in every pre clnct. He outlined his mandate from the Senaie to investigate just such charges and all such/charges when made by men who hold the responsible political position occupied by Walb and was limited to 1926. He read again to him his letter to Senator Borah, the dharge of evidence everywhere of corrupt money in every precinct, used to promote slanderupon candidates. Walb, who had failed at Chicago to point to a single dollar in any precinct and who tried to explain that he had not meant money at all, but had meant that societies which favor the World Court, fostered by President Coolidge, had sdnt literature and arguments to citizens and that the corruption which he had said could be proven was the spoken word of recognized authorities on foreign affairs. Walb was told in unmistakable language that he had brought a Senate investigation to tliiii Stale and given another chance to again furnish proof of his charges. And again he failed to give one-bit of evidence to support his chargesHe stood unmasked and revealed as the maker of Irresponsible charges, as a man who had attempted to mislead the Senate of the United States, as one who had resorted to a desperate fabrication which he could not Justify and the explanation for which was puerile and meaningless. To make his explanation stand in any degree would mean that Walb does not know the difference between money in the pocket and a pamphlet in the malls. For Walb had charged the oorrupt use of money and could not point to a penny. You might tell the real facts to the readers of the papers which are so eager to see this machine triumph that they sacrifice truth. They might welcome the information, for no such facts can be gleaned from those papers. Senator Reed, holding his inquiry to the letter of his authority, regarding his oath of office, had failed to investigate Stephensonism because he had no power to investigate it, and then those who have fought against any inquiry of that matter shout in glee that Reed did not catch them. That situation may be one of/the reasons why Stephensonism was possible in Indiana—this policy of poisoning the news, of suppression and distortion. Well, the poison squads won in May. Will the poison press wip in November? SHINNY ON YOUR OWN SIDE. MEXICO! Out of the acrid smoke of our own battle with bandits emerges an urgent note to Mexico demanding the arrest and punishment of the outlaws who Saturday killed an American, J. E. Spriggs, and robbed him of S7OO. Os courqe that’s what Mexico should do. This thing of allowing cutthroats to run around loose should be discouraged. But why don’t we set the example. Why don’t we punish a few of our own thugs? ( Monday, at the time we were formulating our demands on Mexico, a band of outlaws held up a six-story building occupying an entire block in Chicago and “ruled It for about eight hours,” according to the United Press, before getting away with SIOO,OOO worth of loot. Simultaneously a thoqsand or so troops .were engaged in a futile beating of the New Jersey bushes for eight bandits who held up a United States mail
truck at Elizabeth, killed Its driver with a machine gun and made their getaway with a cool $300,000 — all in the bright light of day. Meanwhile across the river in the American metropolis, the wife of a former United States Senator, William M. Calder, was "kidnaped” In her own automobile along with her daughter and sister-in-law, and held prisoner until robbed of $16,000 worth of Jewels. Today in Washington, D. C., the Nation’s capital, they are vainly trying to find out who murdered Detective Arthur B. Scrivener, flower of the police force, killed by a bullet through the heart. And so on and so forth. Has anybody been arrested and punished for any of these murders, kidnapings, hold-ups and highway robberies? There has not Chicago alone pulls pff a first class murder two or three times a week, but nobody hears of an undue number of electrocutions or bangings in that or any other part of the country. For every half civilized Indian who kills or robs an American in an out-of-the-way corner of Mexico, we’ve a dozen outlaw dandies in high priced, high powered automobiles who shoot their way through the hearts of our great cities spraying the popular tion with steel-tipped bullets from the latest model Emma-gees as they go. By all means Mexico should punish the murderers at our countrymen We can’t have foreign bandits killing and robbing American citizens like that. What are our own bandits in business for? Home industry must be protected. WORK AND HEALTH With five days of work a week, many a factory sick list might look less like a roll call. In 1909 the National Conservation Commission estimated that on the average every person in the United States was disabled by illness thirteen days out of the year. In 1921 the Federated American Engineering Societies, following a national survey, estimated that tills time Loss per person had been reduced to eight or nine days. Part of this reduction can possibly be attributed to final general acceptance of the eight-hour day in industry during and following the World War. It was accepted during tjiis period, for example, by the steel mills and railroads. Despite the reduction, the Nation's economic loss from preventable disease and death among workers was running in 1921 about $1,800,000,000 a year, according to the engineering societies. Ot this total about $600,000,000 was attributed to tuberculosis. How much shorter working hours have really affected and can still affect the sick list only further test and trial will show . Industrial leaders should consider the experiment. A hale man consumes as well as produces better, if, by any means whatever. $1,000,000,000 could be removed from the red to the black side of the Nation’s ledger, no one would be helped more than the boss' at the big polished desk. Racks were instruments of torture in ancient day3. They are closely related to the rake which Willie wields of it Saturday afternoon while a football game is iu progress on the back lot. 1 * The open season on doorbells is here. And a line time to pub away the porch furniture.
A LEMON A DAY* KEEPS THE VOTER AWAY ———By N. D. Cochran-
if a man doesn’t eat he’ll starve to death. If he wants to keep on living he's got to eat. In other words, it’s his duty to eat. • But if he went into a grocery store to buy food and all they had on sale was dill pickles, sponge-cake and tripe it isn’t duty to buy that kind of food if he dbesn’t like or doesn't want it. Maybe he wants corned beef and cabbage. If a good grocer wants people to buy food in his store he’s got to have on sale the food they want to buy. The fellow who sells’what people want will draw trade. Our amiatUe friend Calvin Coolidge Is a wise politician, but during all of his years of active practice he has evidently accumulated more or less political junk in his attic—like all the rest of us. In his message to the American Legion he got off that plaititude about the alleged patriotic duty of voters to vote. Here it is: “We cannot retain tiur liberties under our representative form of Government if we do not keep it representative. Too much stress cannot be laid on the necessity of ‘getting out the vote.’ ” Calvin believes in the two-party system of political Government. Very well. But why not talk about the duty of one or both of the. political parties getting out the vote by giving voters something to vote for? Why qot suggest that the parties cut down the stock of lemons, dill pickles, tripe and sponge-cake and lay in a stock of potatoes, apples, bread, corned beef and cabbage and other sblid foods that will supply the body Ivith needed nutriment? "Getting out the vote” generally means coaxing, begging, hauling or dragging it odt. Why not try tempting it out, or offering some real inducement to make it to come out? In other words, why not try making it a pleasure to ’ come out instaad of a duty? 1 Onc_ trouble with the political platform makers is that they make platforms that don’t mean anything. Too many platforms undertake to mean all things to all men. Instead of one party platform being black and the other white, so you can take your choice according to your color preference, both are a dull and deadly gray. " Take the grocery comparison again. The stock offered in the two-party stores standing alongside one another is so much the%ame that voters get the impression that they are connected at the rear end and one wholesaler is dumping his stock through one back door, ' ” The way to keep a representative democracy representative is to have the representatives represent. You’ll get the meaning of that if we use a hyphen and spell it re present. If when citizens present themselves at the voting booth they can be sure their representtW tives will re present them in Government they won’t have to be bullyragged into voting. If we are to go on witli party government let’s hear more about the duty of the patties and the representatives of the people and less about the duty of the people to go to the polls, shut their eyes and stick a meaningless piece of paper through a narrow slot into a ballot b<x. For illustration, let's have a bunkless story from Calvin on the duty of the Republican party. That may stimulate ambitious Democratic leaders to agitate their thinking apparatus and see if they 'can’t find out a duty for their party. , v NEXT: The High-Boat ot Christianity.
THE LN DJAN APOLJLW TIMES _
Tracy
Guarantee of Eternal Dividends Sought by Judge Gary.
By M. E. Tracy Judge Gary is for the Golden Rule, especially as It might be employed to eliminate competition between .European and American steel concerns. There is no profit in trade warfare, he says, which should be obvious to anyone, who has given the matter thought, and which the Socialists have always contended. But there is protection for the public. “A peace on earth” program In the steel business could hardly* fail I to ‘result in such a monopoly as this world has never known. It j would certainly make stock and bond holders safe, but how about Jones, who pays the freight? Price fixing on an international scale, which ts what Judge Gary seems to have in the back of hi| head would amount to nothing less than a guarantee of eternal dividends, which means an entrenched and petitioned aristocracy. •I- -I- -I'Scareface 1 a Convert “Scarface” Capone, Chicago* greatest overlord of vice as the po-! lice are fond of declaring, is another convert to the golden rule. “There is enough business for of us." he explains, "and ~T don’t | want to die in the street bv machine gun fire," i •!• •!• ' Golden Rule Pays I Thei octogenarln nS steel • magnate and 27-_jear-oid gang leader are not only in favor of the same idea, but approach it from the same angle. They have come to see wisdom in the golden rule, because it can be made to pay Thus is righteousness put on * commercial basis, which is an ac i commodatlon of conflicting ideals i that orthodox millionaires and prosperous bootleggers have long desired to arrange. Common folks will continue to | cherish the golden rule not because it can lie used to make an unbustable ; trust in steel or free Chicago’s peer j trade from murder, tint just because i it is right. .1. ... 1 Watson Spoils the Fun Senator Watson denies everything from his sickbed He had Senator! Reed come to the hospital -o that ! he could. He hasn't been flirting j with the Txu-Klux Klan, didn't “get to” Senator Moses with regard to; the Mayfield case and knows noth I ing about being groomed for the j presidency by I>v' Evans. Such sweeping denials spoil the fun. Vou can’t seem to get anywhere with evidence these days. No sooner does a witness mount the tand to make some real juicy charge than the accused rises, even though it he from a hospital eot. to call him a liar. Senator Borah says that the great campaign issue is ‘‘You’re a liar.” .t. ii Mary Garden Back Mary Garden comes back from Europe with hair cut short, weighing 118 pounds and ready to star In an opera that “will make Salome look like a nursery rhyme." She has been eating dry toast for | breakfast all summer, having a good lunch and going without dinner. “But when I finish my career," she says, "I’m going to buy a farm on a mountain top where no one will bother me. and I’m going to eat and drink and syioke until T get so fat no one will know ine.” It’s a bet she will, too. .(. -|. .j. Quake Headlines Nobody was late for breakfast in San Francisco Friday morning, there being an earthquake at 4:30, another at 5:30 and still another at 6;42. No danger In these earthquakes, of course, but we San Franciscans are wide awake and want to know what Is going on. . Seriously the occurrence deserved no such headlines as it received throughout the country. There Is hardly a place in America but has heard windows rattle and seen clocks stop on account of earth tremors, and that Is about ajl that occurred in San Francisco. Wild West Seven men, four of them armed with sawed off shotguns, raided one of New York’s most exclusive night clubs Just before sun rise Friday, taking some $20,000 in cash and jewelry and getting away in a taxi. It sounds like the wild west In pioneer times, and It Is. To a measurable extent we are getting hack to the back woods through the back alley. Paradoxical as it may seem, our congested life Is developing the same stripe of mental crookedness that comes with soiitude and Isolation. Those who have been lonesome in a great city, and they are legion, can appreciate how this comes about. -|- -I- -|- Hall-Mills Inefficiency For a third time, the bodies of Rev. Edward W. Hall and Mrs. Eleanor RS Mills, who were murdered at New. Brunswick, N. J., four years ago, a.re to be examined by surgeons. Either* there is nothing to learn and this Is a useless violation of the dead, or those who performed the other two autopsies were bunglers. You Just can’t understand the inefficiency that has surrounded this case,' not to use an uglier word. America has had some peculiar tragedies, hut not one where so many people were Involved, or there was a more obvious ovstruction of justice, either through sheer incompetence or through a concerted effort to shield the guilty. Wliat is tin* meaning of the names 1-iMa and KnMf Enid means “spotless purity” and ‘ Mila ‘‘a lily" or “pure.”
Lauritz Melchier Will Be Soloist at ' the First Symphony Concert of Talbot
SHE opening concert of the | fifth annual season of orchestral concerts of the Indianapolis Symphony Society, Una B. Talbot, managing director, will present the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra, Fritz Reiner, conductor, and Luurltz Melchier, famous Danish tenor, on Monday evening, Nov, 1, at the Murat Theater. Five of the most famous tenor arias from the music drama of Rich* ard Wagner will be sung by Mr. and the drehestra will give compositions of Mouwsorgiiky. Havel Debussy and Wagner. The* two remaining orchestras to be presented by the Indianapolis Symphony Society are the Philadelphia Orchestra, Hoopolu Hlockowski, conductor, and the Cincinnati Orchestra, Frits Reiner, conductor, ! and Sophie liras fun, contralto, so I loist. Siegfried Wagner was frantically j .scouring Europe. He was looking j for the ideal tenor for the first postwar festival at iiuyreutb. lie must : have the requisite voice for the dlflli cult roles. He must understand the ' traditions of Wahnfrted. He must be Intelligent. And he must look as well tin sing the ‘ fearless heroes” of | the Wagneriul muslc-draiuas. Then Siegfried Wagner came to ! Munich. Aius there he met a young Danish tenor, yjver six feet tall, j with a rich, fr**k voice almost un* dun.med of in a finger of Wagnerian ■ i ole*. The result was that the sumj u.er of 1K24 saw buuritz Melchier ; tin leading tenor of the Bayreuth! Festival, the of mushul Europe, r From the guileless Parsifal to the ardent Siegfried, Melchior whs tie claimed Dm perfect Wagnerian In- i terpreiee The fact that he hud pre viously laico equally successful ill ! Italian and French parts made hi* triumphs at Bayreuth all the more astounding. And when the critics and public discovered thut as a Lieder and concert artist lie was just as accomplished, superlatives were exhausted in describing the amazing talents of this blonde young Thor from Denmark. At Ihe Metropolitan Opera Company. Mr. GatU-< tosuzza re-engaged Luurltz Melchior for 1926-27 directj ly after his first performance in January, 1926 The summer of 1927 he will again appear at Bayreuth- And f’ovent Garden audiences, whirh heard -him Lust May. are awaiting the of Mek-hier’s return to London r - -I- -I----ME Ninth district annual : meeting of the Indiana Federation pf Music cltlba, will j be held next/'Thursday In Veedersburg. Many representatives of In- . diunapnlls music clubs will attend. Practically all of the clubs In the district will lie represented. The session will open at 10 a, m. and will lie open to the public. A luncheon ut noon will be a social feature of the meeting which will clone at 4 p. m. Mrs. Hazel Mlmmons Steele, State president, will give an address, and a talk will be given by Mrs. Robert Tinsley of C’rawfordsvllle, State chairman of Ways and Means, and district chairman of Junior and Juvenile clubs. The junior and Juvenile program will Vie under the direction of MYs. Tinsley. Miss Grape Hutchings. lOprcscnling the Metropolitan School of Music of Indianapolis, will i give a model club program, n talk on “The Art Song” with Illustrations by Miss Mildred Johns, representing the Mu Phi Epsilon honorary musical sorority of the Metropolitan School. Reports will be read by club representatives and musical numbers will lie given during the dav. •!• ! -!- fT - ) ARTHUR MAC LEAN, dl | rector of The John Herron •J*- j Art Institute. cooperating with Ona B. Talbot, managing director of the Indianapolis Symphony 1 Society, has arranged for a series , ,of Sunday afternoons in the Sculpture Court, on the days preceding the three Sypmhony Orchestra concerts to be given In Indianapolis during the season 1926-27. Sunday afternoon, Oct. 31, will be the first, Sunday afternoon, Feb. 20. and April 17. the two remaining concert*. The three Symphony orchestras to be heard under the Indianapolis Symphony Society direction are: Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra. I-aurltz Melchier, teqor soloist, Nov. 1; Philadelphia Orchestra, Feb. 21, and Cincinnati Orchestra with Sophia Braslau, contralto, soloist on April 18. The programs to be given in The John Heron Art Institute will be of an educational nature, and will have I for their subject matter the programs to be given the following evenings by the orchestras. Margaret Bailie Stelnhart, pianist, and new comer to Indianapolis; Edward LaSalle, well known baritone, and I.enora, Coffin, will present analytical sketches both as to the history of the composer and compositions, with musical illustrations. These concerts are open to the > üblic without fee. -I- -I- -i----0 ESTER HUFF announces the following program for his organ recital at the Apollo Theater, Sunday, starting at 12:30 o'clock, noon: "Pierot et Piorrot” Bergman “Tlie Old Refrain" . Kirinler “By the Swanee River" Middleton Popular Song Selected Overture—"Meswuiiolto". Aubor -!- -I- -f- ' TIS IG LEMAN, Indianapolis violinist, has returned to De>—J troit to resume his desk in *he first violin section of the Detroit Symphony Orchestra conducted by Ossip Gabrllowvitch. Young Mr. Igleman is a graduate of 'the Metropolitan School of Music under Hugh McGibney and was winner of the 1 State contest for violinists conducted by the Inolana Federation of Music Clubs. WiJlard .MacGregor, artist pianist of the Metropolitan School of Music, will give the opening artist ’.recital for the Bloomington Friday Muslcale next Wednesday evening In the student building of Indiana University. This will be guest meeting of the club. Mr. MneOregor played for the State teachers’ convention last Thursday. Miss Frieda Haider, soprano: Miss 1 Frances Wlshard r pianist and
Great Baritone Booked Here
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Under the direction of the Federation of Indianapolis Public School Teachers, Louis Graveure, international baritone, will appear in recital this season at Caleb Mills Hall.
Thomas Poggianl, violinist, ail from the faculty ot tlie Metropolitan School of Music, will give a program in Franklin next Thursday evening. Franklin N. Taylor, istritonc of the faculty of the .Metropolitan School of Music, has l/ecn engaged as choir dlreetor at tlie Irvington M. E. Church. .Miss Frances Beik. teacher of expression in the Metropolitan School of Music, has been engaged to take charge of the academic classes in expression in St. Mary’s of the Woods at Toyre Haute. She will give Thursday of each week to the work. Miss Helen Emert, graduate of the Metropolitan School of Music, dramatic department, under Miss Frances Beik last June, has been engaged to play with the Stuart Welker repertoire company in Huntington. Vlrvinla, this season. Tlie regular monthly muaicale broadcast by faculty members of the Metropolitan School of Music will bo given next Friday evening from 7:30 to 8:30 Instead of Wednesday as usual on account of the Radio Show being given next week. Tuklng part in the program will be Miss Mild ris 1 Johns, contralto; Robert Schultz, trumpet soloist; Edwin Jones, violinist, and Mrs. Gueille Wagner, pianist. Miss Grace Hutchings, pianist, and Miss Mildred Johns, contralto, of the faculty of the Metropolitan School of Music, will give a lecture-recital on the “Art Song" for the district meeting of the Indiana Federation cf Mujdc clubs to be held at Veedersburg next Thursday. Miss Johns will represent Mu Phi Epsilon, honorary musical sorority as well as the Metropolitan School. Robert Schultz, trumpet soloist, will also represent the school at the meeting. Jack Barker, leading baritone with "The Cocoamits” musical comedy showing in Chicago, spent Friday in the city doing special vocal coaching under Edward Nell, head of the voico department of the Metropolitan School of Music. Mr. Barker will spend each Friday in Indianapolis working with Mr. Nell as long as the show remains in Chicago. Miss Lorna Doone Jackson, Indianapolis. contralto, for many yoaxs a Btudent under Edward Nell, of the Metropolitan School of Music, Is singing leading roles with the San Carlo grand opera company in New York and has been acclaimed as an unusual success, especially in the role of "Carmen" by tlie leading New York critics. -!- -I- + SHE active chapter of the Sigma Alpha lota Musical Sorority has issued invitations to the Mu Phi Epsilon Musical Sorority, active chapter, the Alumna and Patronesses; also the Alumna and Patronesses ,of the S. A. I. for a Halloween party, at the Indiana College of Music and Fine Arts Bldg., FTlday evening, Oct. 29. at 8:15. The Sigma Alpha lota Sorority Is affiliated w iththe Indiana College of Music and Fine Arts and Is located in the college. .|. -|. SHE Schubert Quartet gave a program on Friday 1/efore the Philomathean literary Club of Danville. Ind. Mrs. Friermood, Mrs. Rulck and Mr. FYed Jefry are members of the faculty of the Indiana College of Music and Fine Arts. Mr. G. B. Van Arsdall. pupil of Fred Jefry of the Indiana College of Music has been engaged as basssoloist at the FaJrview Presbyterian Church. Bomar Cramer, artist-piano teacher. Is playing on Wednesday evening, for the Business Women’s Section of the Department Club. I -I- ISHE Supervisions ReunionGuncheon under the auspices of the Indiana College of Music and Fine Arts brought together a goodly number of teachers who have studied In the Indiana College of Music. Many of the faculty members were present and all enjoyed the 1 oppor tunlty of meeting old friends and making net*' acquaintances. Mrs. Henry Schurmann gave the greeting and presented the musicians, Mrs. Glenn FVlermood. contralto, and Miss Cleon Colvin, violinist, and 1
Ixniis G raveunr
Arthur W. Mason, director of the college, who gave a splendid address. Mrs. Buick and Miss Beauchamp were the accompanists. + + -IThw program for the regular noon organ recital at Christ Church, given each Wednesday from 12:05 to 12:30 p. m. by Cheston I* Heath, organist, will be as follows: "Grand Mare?)" (Alda) Verdi "Andante Can labile" Tsohslkowekt "A RUev Song” Frttr KruU "The Court* ol Jomstivd" (from Per!on Suite) R 8. 9UuurhU -I- I- -ISHE Welch Concert Artists will appear In a recital next Wednesday night at the St. Paul M. E. Church. The artists are D. Edgar Davies, baritone; Helen Gerln, pianist and reader, and Gladys Thomas Cutter, soprano. This Is their fifth American season but their Irst appearance In this city. -I- -I- •(• Oi” ■"! N next FTlday afternoon at 3 o’clock at the Masonic Tomple . the Indianapolis Matinee Musieale will present the following program: I. "Piano Quintet Op. 44“ Schumann Alh-irro brlllTante. in modo d'una marcia. Piano—Fram-en Hamilton Rjrbolt. Violin—Jeon Orlofl. Violin—Maud Cinder. Viola—Donald Wataon. Olio—Yuba Wilhite. 3. "Der Schlffer" Schutvrt “Auftraetfe" Bclnimann ‘‘Nochtuial" Brahma "Stand ilas Maedctlcn" Brahms Lillian A. Fllckemrer. Paula Kipp at the piano. 3. "Seven Etudes* . , Chopin Opua 10. No. 3. Opus 10, No. 4. ()|>ua 10, No. 5. Omui 10. No. 7. Opus 25. No. 2. &s: % SS: h. Bomar Cramer (Guest Artist). 4. "Deception" . Tchalkowsky "For a Dream's Sake" ...... Kramer ‘‘Recompense’ Ward Stephens Mildred Johns. Berta Miller Rulck at the ptano. • • • SHE Matinee Musical will present Helen Traubel in recital Friday night at the Moaonlo Temple. -I- L + The scholarship In voice offered by Miss Adelaide Coute. director of the Irvington School of Music, was divided between three applicants. Miss Dorothy Goulse Crosby, 3914 Ruckle; Mrs. Charles R. F'erguson, 5829 Park Ave., and Mrs. Martha Wlthner, 26 N. Arlington, all of whom have excellent soprano voices with great possibilities. About twenty were registered for the scholarship which was awarded after a competitive examination on Friday, Oct. 15. -I- -I- -IC" -jyrigga ADEGAIDE TUI tic, soprano, will sing the follow- - Ing group of songs, tomorrow night at the dinner concert at the Indianapolis Athletic Club: “Smile a Little Bit,” by Morton; “Care Selve,” by Mandel; "L’amour toujouds L'amour.” by Frlml. and “Mighty Like a Rose,” by Nevin.
Bible Test
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This test covers questions found in the Old and New Testaments of the Bible. The correct answers appear on page 12: 1. What incident in Biblical history does the accompanying picture illustrate? 2. What was the name of Jacob's wife whom he buried In the desert3. FVom what book of the Bible is this quotation taken: "The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom”? 4. Why was Jeaus called a Nazarene? 6. What bird brought the sign t<S Noah that the waters had receded? 6. Who was the mother of John the Baptist? 7. Who tempted Eve to eat the forbidden fruit? 8. Was the father’s joy fbr the return of his prodigal son shared by the prodigal son’s brother? 9. Who was the sister of Mary , Magdalene?
OCT. 23, 1926
MISSIONARY WILL SPEAK IN CIIY FOR THREE TIMES Leslie Wolfe to Be Guest of Englewood Christian Church. Leslie Wolfe, for sixteen years a missionary to the Philippines, will speak three times at the Englewood Christian Church. JOasl Washington and Rural Sts., next Sunday. Mr. Wolfe, because of recent developments on the mission fields, has become one of the most talked about men in the brotherhood of the disciples. He is making a speaking tour of the United States previous to tlie national convention of the disciples to be held in Memphis, Tenn., Nov. 11-17. For a number of years Mr Wolfe was a co-laborer with Dr. Bruce Kershner, now of Butler school of religion, and a student"' under Dr. Fred Kershner, Dean of the Butler school of religion. His coming to I-inglewood promiaes to be the biggest pre-convention rally among the disciples. In the afternoon a mass meeting will be held in the community hail. The program will open at 2 with an orchestra concert. A combined male chorus from various Christian churches, led by Estel Taylor will render the special music. The Rev. Homer Dale, pastor of the Hillside Christian Church and president of the Indianapolis Min isters Association of the Christian Churches will preside. Delegations from various churches of the city and from counties round about us arc coming. The Englewood church is preparing to care for GEOO people. Mr. Wolfe will give the facts concerning his witheall and the visit of the good-will commission. He will discuss the action of the native churches in joining with him In An independent evangelizing program and the establishment of the school for the training of native workers. He will probably be Joined here by Dr. Barona, one of the native workers, now In this country. Fie will speak again In the evening on the future work In the Philippines, • • “THE ENDURING WORD,- is the morning subjeot of the Rev. E. F. Prevo at the Riverside Park Methodist Episcopal Church. In the evening he will preach on **Whv Christ Suffered.** • • • THE REV. FRED A. LINE, pastor of Central Universalis? Church, Fifteenth and N. New Jersey Sts., will preach Sunday morning the fourth of a series of sermons on Universalism,’’ his sub Ject being. ‘‘The Day of Judgment " There will be special music. This service will be broadcast by WFBM. , Sunday school at 9:30, ' t t • FIRST MONROVIAN EPIHCO PAL CHURCH, the Rev. Christian O. Weber will preach In the morn ing on the theme. "The Great Ad venture" and? on the thema, "A Faithful Witness,” at the evening service. • • • ELDEN H. MILLS, pastor of First Friends Church, will speak on the subject “One Faith,” at the 10:45 o’clock service. • • • “SONS OF GOD AT FIRST HAND,” or "The Evila of Second Hand Religion," will be Edmond Karlin’s topic at the Sunday evening "People's Service” of the First Evangelioal Church, New York and East Sts., 7:45 p. m., being the third sermon In the series on "God’s Ten Commandments in Relation to .the Life of Today.” \ThO Rev. G. P. Meeker, superintendent of the Chicago Hebrew Mission will speak at 10:40 a. m. on "The Present Hopeful Outlook for Jewish Evangelization." Muslo by the new gospel ohanug a • • AT SECOND MONROVIA IT CHURCH the pturtor, the Rev. Vtertv on W. Couillard will preach at the morning service on “Barnabas, the Sympathetic.” His evening theme will he “Redeeming the Lost.” Mrs. L. Sohultz will conduct the song service in the evening. • • • • • • NORTH METHODIST CHURCH, at Meridian and Thirty-Eighth Sts.. ( has arranged for special services. Dr. C. Perry Gibbs will have for his morning sermon subject ‘“The Boat’s Breadth,” and for the evening service, "Stormed and Taken.” * • • PROF. CHARLES HANSEN, blind organist, will giye a short organ program in the Travertine Room of the Lincoln preceding the lecture by Dr. Hill on Sunday evening, under the auspices of the Truth Temple. • * • "PETER'S RENEWAL" will be , tfce morning theme of the Rev. G. L. F'arrow of the Victory Memorial Methodist Protestant Church. At night, "Religion in tjie Home.” • * * AT ST. PAUL M. E. CHURCH Sunday morning the Rev. Eliriert Jones will preach on “What Shall I Read?” The Rev. E. F. Bowers of Orrville, Ohio, will speak at night on "The Ministry of Angels.” -* • • "F’EARS AND FAITH” will be the theme of the morning sermon of the Capitol Avenue M. it. Church of the Rev. Joseph G. Moore. At night, “Detached.” • • THE REV. L. C. E. FACKLEP. of St. Matthew Lutheran Church makes the following announcements: —Bible study. At this time both young and old nre given an nnnorpuiit.v to study the Bible. Even - person needs to . know more of the Bible truths. Form ( the good practice of studying the Bible in ' publie and then do not neglect to study it at home. IOrSO A. M.—Worship. The sermon subject. “The Crowning of Joshua. 7:30 P. M—Worship. “Tile Value of Christian Education.” Wednesday evening. Oct 77. at 7:30 will bo the first of a series of lectures on the doctrines of the Lull)* an Church. The reerntlsl doctrines of salvation will t>e clearly presented Every one ig welcome to attend these lectures \ Attending these lecture* will not place you under sny obligation whatsoever These le-uir** art n- "_r story for (Turn to Pag* 7)
