Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 27, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 June 1927 — Page 3

JUNE 11, 1927

UNITED POWER OF PRAYER TOLD I IN THIS LESSON Peter Respons to Angel’s Bidding to Bind on His Sandals. The International Uniform Sunday Schocn Lesson for June 12: The Power of Unitted Prayer.— Acts 12:5' 17. BY WM. E. GILROY, D. D. Editpr of the Coneregationalist The Christian church was facing, In its earliest days, the persecution which has done so much from the beginning to shape its course and to develop its strength. Peter ha been thrown into prison at a time when he was the most conspicuous figure in the church, and when the fellowship of Christians depended very largely upon his presence and influence. It is a tribute to the strength of character and faith that these early disciples, though Peter had beeen snatched from them, did not weaken. “Though he was in prison, prayer was made earnestly of the church unto God for him.” The verses of the lesson proceed to tell the story of Peter’s miraculous escape from prison. One thinks in connection with it of the experience of Paul and Silas in prison at a later day, with their feet fast in the stocks, singing psalms and songs of praise to God. Theere is a certain difference in the two narratives for which one cannot account. Though Paul and Silas had the opportunity to escape, they refused to leave, and they encouraged their fellow prisoners also to remain, in that way saving th'e life of the prison guard, who was aboutto kill himself, and winning in him a devoted and intense convert for the church at Philippi. Miraculous Deliverance Here in our lesson Peter meets the opportunity differently. He responds to the angel’s bidding to gird himself and bind on his sandals, and he follows the angel past the guards to freedom. At first, apparently, he thought that he was walking in a dream, but when he came to himself he realized that he had a miraculous deliverance. Coming to the house of Mary, the mother of John Mark, he so astonished the' little maid Rhoda, who responded to his knocking at the door, that in her excitement she ran back to tell the company, forgetting to let him in. Peter immediately told the story of what had happened to him, and made it an occasion of thanksgiving to God. A sad feature of the narrative, however*, is that the keepers of the prison were condemned to death when it was discovered in the morning that Peter had escaped. One would almost like to believe i that an element of tradition had attached itself to a story that is less noble and beautiful in its ending than the story of Paul’s prison experience. However, each must inAsthma Disappears, Had it 15 Years Mrs. Woodward, 65 Years Old, Says Cough, Wheezing and Asthma Gone Elderly people who suffer with asthma and bronchial coughs will find particular interest in a letter written by Mrs. Elizabeth Woodward, 65 years old. who lives at 3460 West Michigan St., Indianapolis. She writes: “I had asthma in severe form for 15 years. I coughed hard, wheezed and was very short of breath, and in addition my stomach caused me a lot of trouble. For one year I had been unable to do any work, not even to washing the dishes. On Feb. 7, 1025. T started taking Nacor. The wheezing and cough have left entirely, and t do not have the slightest sign of asthma now. My stomach condition has improved. 1 ara feeling fine, able to wash and iron and do the housework and am gaining steadily in every way.” If you suffer from asthma, bronchitis er severe chronic cough, you should Tpad the vital information about these diseases, in a booklet, which will be sent, free by Nacor Medicine Cos., 413 State Life Bldg., Indianapolis, Tnd. They will also send you the letters of people whose trouble disappeared years ago and never returned. No matter how serious your case seems, call or write for this free information. It i has led thousands back to health and ' strength.—Advertisement.

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Isham Jones

Isham Jones and his Brunswick recording symphonic jazz orchestra. inaugurates the fourth syncopation season of the Circle, beginning next Sunday, the week of June 12, according to an announcement by Allan S. Glenn, managing director. Thq orchestra is considered the finest ever assembled by Isham Jones, himself one of the greatest figures in the field of stage bands. terpret the lesson and its teaching according to his own sense of values; Symbolism in Lesson The lesson has been one of considerable interest to mystics who have seen in the guards and in the iron gate the smybols of life’s barriers and difficulties which disappear when they are challenegd with faith and the guidance of God. There are iron gates that seem to make the way of escape in life impossible, but which open of their own accord when one comes really up to them. We are all disposed to see the difficulties as we look ahead that can not be surmounted, but when comes forward with prayer and courage, not doubting the divine leadership, how often these things either disappear or become easy of conquest. We all remember how, in our boyhood days, when we went bicycle touring if we traveled a very hilly road the appearance of every new hill in itself gave a discouraging sense of fatigue. How often, however, one viewed a hilly road across the valley from the top of another hill. Seen from that angle the hill which one had to climb looked enormous, but when one got down t*s the foot of the hill which he was descending the road had often straightened out into a very slight slope. That is typical of the hills of life. There are mountain height that are particularly hard to climb, but in the main it is the tendency of mankin, despecially in the matter of moral and spiritual progress, to make mountains out of molehills. It was for this reason that the Scripture writers referred so to crooked ways be;ng made straight and mountains being brought low. They wanted to remind the people of the power of God to make straight the way of the soul.

Hoosier Briefs

When Rushville public schools resume in September Miss Georgia Morris will be absent. She has retired after forty years of teaching. She taught twenty-seven consecutive years in the fourth grade room. Miss Kate Riley, thirty lears employed by Portland post office, retired Friday. I Sid Esten, Pendleton, State conservation department member, addressed Anderson Scout Troop 18. The $5,000 set of plans for a Terre Haute belt sewer, unnoticed in the waste basket for three years, are to be used as basis for new plans being drawn by City Engineer Robert Tilley. . Ora C. King, Sweetser, has been named general manager of Grant county agriculture fair at Fairmount in August. Curtis Reilly, Lebanon, charged with illegal possession of wine, has been found not guilty because of a faulty warrant. Anew Scout troop has been installed at Bluffton by Hugh Dustman, Vera Crus scoutmaster. Golf season opened this week at Greensburg. Many contests are under way. After fifty-two years in the same place, C. M. White, Clinton, has j moved his office two blocks in S. j Main St. I Milo Dean. Brazil, has left to beI'come a student at the Naval Aca- ! demy, Annapolis, Md. Beginning next week, Crawfordsi ville Kiwanis plans to hold weekly I meetings in churches in neighbor- ! ing towns. Miss Minnie Trosinsky, Valparaiso University co-ed, had to pay Miss Fannie Hines, her schoolmate, $1 and foot court costs.- Miss Hines

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brought her to trial for stealing Miss Hines’ dress. An elk. this time an animal, has arrived at Michigan City, as the first exhibit for that city’s proposed Washington Park zoo. SHIPPERS WILL MEET One Thousand Expected Here June 21. One thousand shippers and railroad traffic men are expected to attend the Ohio valley shippers’ conference here June 21, when Lawrence N. Nelm, president of the Indianapolis Traffic Club acts as host. Indiana, Ohio, Kentucky and West Virginia shippers will b$ in the conference. Fourteen similar conferences operate throughout the country. Shipping problems will be discussed and attempts will be made to iron out kinks which have developed during the past year. Quarterly meetings are also held, it was announced. General officers of the Ohio Valley conference are Guy L. Cory, Springfield, Ohio, Traffic Ascociation, manager; C. J. Neekamp, Northeast Kentucky Coal Operators’ Association, secretary, and alternate chairman, and Paul C. Hodges, Marbled Cliff Quarries Company, assistant general manager, executive committee tb airman. NEW DRY CHIEF ‘SANE’ Lowman Gives Views After Appointment by Coolidge. Bu United Press WASHINGTON, June 11.—President Coolidge today formally appointed M. O. Lowman, former Lieutenant Governor of New York, to be assistant secretary of treasury, succeeding iLncoln C. Andrews, director of prohibition enforcement, resigned. The appointment will become effective Aug. 1. Lowman told newspapermen his enforcement work would be “sane and sensible, without fireworks.” The annual consumption of pencils in this country is approximately one biLion.

±i±E INUiAN APOLIS TIMES

The Book of Knowledge

The elements, battering.and*wearing,the rooks for . . r i(ir ... 1/ i , millions of years, have tortured them into fantastic, . • , .-•* ,?® r j shapes. One of'the unusual phenomena of Nature is iP, the pot-hole. Water rushing in at angles from a stream W whirls stones round and round, gradually hollowing out } #on done . 2 j a perfect hole. Ireland has some splendid examples. *' “ ' 8 —' 1 !

Fishing The Air

BY LEONARD E. PEARSON

Edltor’s Note—AH references to time In this column are Central Standard (Indianapolis) time.

Saturday

Yes, this is “Lindbergh Radio Day.” The program began at 11 a. m., but if you aren’t reading this too late it is not all over yet. 2f you haven’t already done so, fish for your favorite 9tation in one of the three networks of the National Broadcasting Company. Shifting from WRC, Washington, the special N. B. C. hook-up continues transmitting from New York until 8 p. m. The Times flashes late news bulletins at 7 p. m. over WKBF, Indianapolis. The Chicago American studio program radiates from KYW, Chicago, from 6 to 7 and 8 to 9:30 p. m. The “pop concert” a summer feature at WBZ, Springfield, Mass., is on the air from 6:10 to 7, 7:15 to 8 and 8:15 to 8:40 p. m. * Favorite classics will be reproduced by Johanna Grcsse, staff or-

—By Ahern Out Our Way

ganist of WLW, Cincinnati, at 6 p. m. The South Sea Entertainers entertain at 7:05, Castle Farm at 8 and 8:40 and Latonia Melody at 8:20 p. m. WOR, Newark, radios a recital by Camille Plasscheart, violinist, at 6:15 p. m. WCCO, Minneapolis-St. Paul, has a dinner concert at 6:15 and dance program at 10:05 p. m. The staff artists of WFAA, Dallas. Texas, entertain from 8:30 to 9:30 and the Baker Hotel Orchestra plays dance tunes at 11 p. m. Light ballads and glee seleetions will be featured from 6 to 7 p. m. by the Falls of Schuylkill Male Chorus, of Philadelphia. WIP, tint city, and WGBS, New York, carry this program. An orchestra and popular “blues” singer will be heard at 8:30 p. m. from KFI, Los Angeles. A descriptive talk on Yellowstone National Park will be radiocast at 6:30 p. m. from WMAQ, Chicago. Tonight WQJ, Chicago, institutes a new summer diversion, a trio of

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Earth pillars, or perfect, umbrerins, carved by flwl ~ The wash of tides has lashing rain form a beautiful picture. They are formed* left great needles pro-' • by rain sweeping down on the landscape. Soft beds truding from the sea. j rock is washed away.Meavmg the large stones atopf (Thousands of years are i 1 slender columns. In the Tyrol there'is a remarkablef .involved in this,process., 1 .group of these pillars. v v Continued) "V|fclll * QtttZT BY Wt (tRVIC?.ISC .A . j;

Chicago’s leading orchestras. The newcomer is Armis Hand’s Hotel Stevens Orchestra, which plays at the world’s largest hostlery. The other, already regulars with this station, are Jack Chapman's Orchestra from La Salle roof garden and Katz and his Kittens, playing at the Rainbo Gardens. WPG. Atlantic City, now located in its marine studio, claims to be the only broadcaster a half mile out over the Atlantic ocean. Two features of the season’s formal opening at this resort are Arthur Pryor's Band and soloists and Jack Crawford's Dance Orchestra. The Pryor bill goes on the air at 6:45, the other at 9 p. m.

Sunday

WGY, Schenectady, has an organ recital at 2 p. m. The Chicago Sunday Evening Club organ concert by Stanley Martin comes at 6:40 p. m. The sacred chime concert of WSAI Cincinnati, is at 6:45 and the Congress string quartet plays at 7:45 p. m. WHO, Des Moines, radiates a glee club concert at 4 p. m. The Evensong is the 8 p. m. feature of WTAM, Cleveland. The regular Saturday night

broadcast of WLS, Chicago, commences at 6:10 p. m. It includes too many of the station's popular stars to list them here. *■ The hotel Ten Eyck Orchestra furnishes a dance program at 9 p. m. for WGY, Schenectady. KFl’s only popular music program comes at midnight. Other numbers go on the air over the Los Angeles broadcaster at 7 p. m. and after, including an organ recital at 9 p. n* From 11 p. m. to midnight Dick Richardson’s orchestra plays for fails of WFAA, Dallas, Texas. The Music Weavers give a novel musicale at 10 p. m. for fans of CNRW, Winnipeg. Manitoba. The KMTR Movie Club goes on the air at 9:40 p. m. Coming from a Hollywood station it should be all that its name suggests. WJZ, New York, broadcasts the People’s Radio Vespers at 3:30 and Cook's travelog, “Bits of Old England,” at 6:30 p. m. The features from this station carried by the Blue network are; 11 A. M.—The Mediterraneans. 12 Noon—Roxy and his Gang. s:oo—Estcv Organ recital ana Helen Turley. contralto. s:3o—Utica Jubilee Singers. 6:oo—Hotel Commodore Concert Orchestra. 7:oo—Godfrey Ludlow, violinist, and Lolita Cabrera Gainsborg. accompanist. 7:3o—Key Blue Ensemble. WLW, Cincinnati, transmits an

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—By Williams

—By Blosser

—By Martin

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organ recital at 2 p. m„ programs from the city zoo at 7:15 and 9:45 and an ensemble concert at 8 p. m> KDKA, East Pittsburgh, - radiC* organ music at 2 p. m. and the station’s '“little symphony” at 4:30 p. m. The Leamington Ensemble may be heard at 7:45 p. m„ the St. Paul municipal organ at 9 p.' m. from WCCO, Minneapolis and St. Paul. The Old Folks’ musicale at WOC. Davenport, comes at 1 p. m. WEAF’s Red network schedule includes: BoVei P dupYtoTeV?y m * M * lor 7:15 P. M.—William Simmons, baritone, on the Atwater-Kent radio hour. 7:45 P. M.—“A Tribute to Captain Lindbergh's Transatlantic Flight," by Lieut. Leigh Wade, one of the Round-the-World fliers. 8:00 P. M.—Cathedral Echoes, an organ recital (to WRC only). COLISEUM PLEA FILED Hundreds so Signatures on Request Work Be Started. The formal petition for the city to proceed with the erection of a municipal coliseum was filed today by the Chamber of-Commerce with the board of works. Several hundred signatures were attached although the law requires only fifty names. After the works board adopts a formal resolution on the coliseum, Mayor Duvall will name to direct the project,