Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 45, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 July 1927 — Page 7
JULY 2, 1927
OSWALD RYAN 1 TO SPEAK AT CHURCHSERVICE Pastors of City Conduct Patriotic Programs , Tomorrow. Sunday night, the eve of the Fourth of July, there will be a patriotic service, in music and address, at the North Park Christian Church. Fred Newell Morris and mahy of the members of the Tabernacle Presbyterian choir will sing. -Oswald Ryan, of Anderson, Ind., fCCi Tngmber of the American Expeditionary forces in the World War will be the speaker. He will be introduced by Governor Ed Jackson. Members of the American Legion are invited, as well as the general public. The complete program is as follows: Organ Prelude—“Halleluiah Chorus’’ Handel Processional—“ The Star Spangled Banner’’— Keyes Hymn “America the Beautiful” Katharine Lee Bates Anthem—“ Recessional” DeKoven Floyd Chafee and Choir. Pass Solo—“ Arise, Shine for Thy light Is Come” MacDermid Mr. Fred Newell Morris. Evening prayer. —' ladies Chorus—“ Night Sinks on the Wave” Smart Quartet —“Search Me. O God” Rogers Mrs. Florence Kinnaird, Miss Viola Frye, Chafee and Morris. Scripture lesson. Offertoire—"The Song of a Hero”.. Volkmann Anthem—“ Holy, Holy. Holy” Stewart Anthem—“ Fear Not. O Israel”... .Snicker Mrs. Kinnaird. Miss Norma France. Chafee, Morris and Choir. Address—Hon. Oswald Ryan. Hymn—“ America” Smith Choral benediction. „ Organ Postlude—“ Triumphal March” Costa Special music and sermon on •Seasons of Refreshing” by the minister, the Rev. J. A. Long, at the morning hour. Rev. G. P. Maas, for seven years pastor of the First Evangelical Church here, now of Elkhart,\ will preach at the First Church at 10:40 a. m. Rev. Edmond Kerlin will conduct the service; Miss Bertha Jasper at the organ. “Our Land-r-God’s Country” is the morning sermon topic of the Rev. E. F. Prevo, pastor of the Riverside Park M. E. Church. In the evening he will speak on “Some Vacation Recipes.” A special patriotic service will be held at Central Universalist Church, Fifteenth and N. New Jersey Sts., Sunday at 11 a. m. The Rev. Fred A. Line will preach, his subject being, “Making Good in CitizenMOTION PICTURES ~( j jackhoxTe I “GRINNING GUNS” E 55 Danger and Daring—Love and Courage Abound in this Lightggg ning Speed Drama of the Far West F. B. O. COMEDY ■ “What Price Dough”
i \ Qaramo urd \ -pLU& in” on the year's most excit- | \ Qicture J jL ing melodrama. Find out what i *** happens when great political secrets fall into the hands of a pretty telej / phone girl. Something to keep your wires buzzing! WHAT Hft c P OMEDY TO JANE ' Ruth Noller’s “Jane’s Hubby”
‘Hiawatha ’
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Earl Gray This afternoon at Fairview Park, the Indianapolis Theatre Guild will present “Hiawatha,” with a large cast. Afternoon performances will be given Sunday afternoon, and Monday. Earl Gray will dance ‘The Invocation to the Thunder God.”
ship.” Sunday School, 9:30. A welcome for everybody at these services. * At the Second Moravian Episcopal Church the Rev. Byron R. Horne, temporary pastor, will preach at the morning service on “The Land We Love.” In the evening the pastor’s subject will be “Excuses Not Reasons.” The Rev. Allen K. Trout, Bethlehem Lutheran Church, has for his sermon subject Sunday morning, 10:45: “God’s Attitude Toward the Sinner.” There will be no evening services. Faculty and pupils of the Daily Vacation Bible School of the Linwood Christian Church will close the year’s work by presenting a play, “Child in the Midst,” Sunday night. Members of the faculty include the Rev. Homer C. Boblitt, Eva Lancaster, Edna Applewhite, Florence Firth, Mary Davis and Geneva Smallwood. In the morning the Rev. Bobblitt will preach on “The Church of Christ” and at night, “Liberty and, Righteousness.” The pastor will not take a summer vacation, but will be in his pulpit each Sunday morning and night. At the St. Paul’s M. E. Church Sunday morning, the Rev. Elmer Jones will preach on “The Renewed Covenant.” Holy communion w’ill be administrteded at this service. The Rev. B. F. Ivey and the Rev. Hugh McGlasson will . assist. At night, the pastor will speak on “True Patriotism.” % A Fourth of July celebration
along religious lines will be held Monday at Salem Park. There will be two services and a basket picnic dinner at noon. Evangelist I. N. Toole of Alliance, Ohio, will preach at 10:30 a. m. and at 2:30 o’clock in the afternoon. The services will be conducted under the auspices of the Marion County Holiness Association. “Are We Free Slaves?” will be the morning theme of Rev. Kehl at the Second Reformed Church. This is the third of a series on observations of the pastor on his recent trip to the Holy Land. The Rev. Charles H. Gunsolus will preach Sunday night at the Christian Spiritualist Church on “Why Capital Punishment Is Wrong.” The following programs will be given Sunday at the First Moravian Episcopal Church: —ll A. M.— Prelude—“ Largo” (New World Symphony) Dzorak Processional Hymn—“O Lord, Our God, Thv Mighty Hand.” Patriotic Responsive Reading. Scripture Lesson®. Quartet—“ Peace and Light” Gordon Williams Mrs. R. Dyer, soprano; Miss L. Michael, alto; Mr. C. Michael, tenor; Mr. W. v Davidson, bass. \ Offertory—“ Song Without Words”...\. Mendelssohn “Prayer of Consecration” Beethoven Hymn—" Where Cross the Crouded Ways of Life.” Sermon Theme—" America’s Heritage.” Prayer. Hymn—“ God of Our Fathers.” Postlude—“ Finale” Rockwell —7:45 P. M.— Prelude—“ Meditation Religiose" Thome Processional Hvmn—"Weary of Earth and Laden With My Sin.” Responsive Reading. Hymn—“ Amazing Grace! How Sweet the Sound.” Scripture Lesson. Anthem—“Mv Evening Song” Stultz Offertory—“ Prayer” Reinecke “Prayer of Consecration” Beethoven Hymn—“ Come. Thou Fount of Every Blessing.” Sermon Theme—"A Precious Invitation. Prayer. Hymn—“ Come. Says Jesus’ Sacred Voice.” Postlude—“ March” Petrali The Rev. Christian O. Weber, minister; Miss Helen Louise Quig, organist.
NEW FUN DEVICE AT JVERSIDE (Continued From Page 6) with run throughout the day with an elaborate display of fireworks in the evening. There will be ceremonies at the open air theater with speaking by prominent persons. The fire works display will be supervised by attaches o fthe Gordon Fireworks Company of Chicago and will be staged in the new athletic field just east of thte swimming pool. It is the intention of the management to decorate the midway with flags and bunting. Myriad of gaily colored lights will* flash varied hues at night. At the swimming pool swimming and diving contests will be held. The pool at night will be lighted up with flashing colored lights along with the powerful Cahill lights that make the pool as light as day. Colored lights wil lalso be placed behind the two new fountains in the east of the pool which new spout streams several feet high. Dancers in the new Moonlight will be entertained by a special program offered by the Old Gold Serenaders, the popular dance orchestra from the Columbia Club. This orchestra has been engaged for an extended engagement at Broad Ripple Park. They will be heard also every Thursday and Sunday. In the Riley-Herschell Athletic field a base ball game, running races and other events will be on the day’s program.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Fishing The Air BY LEONARD E. PEARSON
Editor’s Note—All references In this column are to Central Standard (Indianapolis) time.
Saturday
The Boston Symphony Orchestra “pop concert” commences at 6::10 p. m. and with other numbers interspersed, continues until 9:10 p. m., transmitted by WBZ,- Springfield, Mass. The hits at WLW, Cincinnati, are: Johanna Grosse’s organ concert at 6:00 p. m.; 'orchestral concert from the Zoo; 7:1& p. m., and Coon Sanders Orchestra from Castle Farm, 8 and 8:50 p. m. • Spanish and Mexican dance airs will be played b> Chief Gonzales and his Barcelonians at 9:00 p. m. from KOA, Denver. Here's a choice of three dance bills r WCAE. Pittsburgh, at 8:45 and 9:30 p. m. WOC, Davenport, 10 p. m. WCCO. Minneapolls-St. Paul, 10:05 p. m. To the preceding list might be added the regular Saturday night,, national barn dance of WLS, Chicago, from 6:10 to midnight. The selections played by the Goldman Band for listeners of WEAF and its Red network will alternate with xylophone solos by George J. Carey. This program is at 6:30 p. m. Preceding it this chain carries at 5:30 p. m. the entertainment by the Week-Enders, a synthetic symphony, and it is followed by Eddie Elkins and his Hotel Roosevelt Orchestra at"8:15 p. m. Norine Gibbons and Ruth Reeves are the artists at the microphone in the WSAI studios, Cincinnati, at 6:00 p. m.
Sunday
The Bamberger-Levitow Symphony Orchestra goes on the ether at 4:00 p. m. through WOR, Newark, and WMAF, South Dartmouth, Mass. The Chicago Evening American offers delightful studio programs. Tune in at 8:30 p. m. on KYW, Chicago. Alex Reilly will be at the Aeolian console for receptionists of KFI, Los Angeles, at 9 p. m. in an hour's organ recital. The best numbers at WLW, Cincinnati, are: 1:30—Cincinnati Zoo orchestra concert. _ , 2:oo—Organ recital. 2:4s—Continuation of Zoo program. 7:30 —Crosley Concert Orchestra and soloists in "Dream Melodies.” Major Brown’s Capitol Theater Family entertainers for fans of the Red network from WEAF, New York, at 5:20 p. m. “The Feature of Aviation: It’s Possibilities, Dangers,
and adventure mee t> with Dix as a | Qu&tsands I $ ADDED FEATURE s§§ 1 M 1 8s IN A DELIGHTFUL COMEDY /; (m 1 lOKF LETTERS I WITH STAN LAUREL AND FORREST STANLEY % FOX NEWS WEEKLY and 8g >, World-Wide Current Events j§S I APOLLO MERRYMAKERS ft H - EARL CORDON-ORGANIST
and Difficulties” will be discussed at 7:45 p. m. by Casey Jones, famed aviator. The chain broadcast erfds with Cathedral Echoes, 8* to 8:30 p. m. The artist on the Atwater Kent hour will be Paul Althouse, well known concert singer and for ten years a leading Metropolitan Opera tenor. His program, from 7:15 to 7:45 p. m., is: "Recessional” Kipling R. DeKoven “What a Wonderful world It Would Be Herman Lohr "Unfold Thy Snowy Pinions Maori Lova Song Wm. E. Jones “The Sorrows of Death” “From the Sacred Cantata”“Hvmn of Praise” .... Fells Mendelssohn “In the Luxembourg Gardens”—Words and music by Kathleen Lockhart Manning “Hawaiian Lev Bong Chas. Bennett “The Great Awakening” .. Walter Kramer Rudolph Gruen—At the piano KOA, Denver, has an organ concert at 6:30 and the Denver Municipal Band entertainment at 9 p. m. WCCO, Minneapolis-St. Paul, radios the Lake Harriet Band at 7:45, the St. Paul municipal organ at 9 p. m. The WSAI sacrec! chime concert comes from the Cincinnati radiophone at, 6:45 p. m. The Congress String Quartet is at the microphone an hour later. . The WOC String Quartet and Bernard Regan, baritone, will be heard from the Davenport broadcaster at 1 p. m* in the Old Folk’s musical bill. The Reverie hour of WMAQ, Chicago, begins at 6 p. m. Blue network numbers from WJZ, New York, are: s:oo—Estey organ recital. s:3o—Elks Male Quartet. i 6:oo—Three-piano concert of Bach—Lolita Cabrera Gainsborg. Keith McLeod and Julius Mattffeld 6:3o—Cook's travelog: “Haiti and Santo Domingo.” B:oo—Godfrey Ludlow violinist, and Lolita Cabera Gainsborg. accompanist. ts 30—Concert Ensemble.
Monday
The War Memorial dedication services will be broadcast at 11, Monday morning, by WKBF. Indianapolis. Gen. John J. Pershing is the chief speaker. Afternoon and evening features for Independence Day will be carried in this column that day. OPEN CRIMTNAL BUREAU New State Office to Assist in Identifying Crooks. Indiana’s State Bureau of Criminal Identification opened Friday in Room 413, Statehouse. The quarters formerly were occupied by the Pardon Board, which was abolished by the 1927 Legislature, which created the crime bureau. The bureau is to be a clearing house for Bertillion measurements from throughout the State and will co-operate with all- police and sheriff departments in identifying criminals.
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ISRAEL PICKS A KING IN THIS BIBLEjSTUDY Dr. Gilroy Draws Many Lessons From Life of Saul. The International Uniform Sunday School Lesson for July 3. Saul Chosen Kiqg. I Samuel 10:17-25. BY WM. E. GILROY, D. D. Editor of The Coagregationalist Israel was choosing a king. Trust in kirjgs and princes has not always been an evidence of spiritual life and progress, and Samuel, who as a religious leader of the nation had also been acting as judge and guiding the destinies of the people, evidently considered the desire of Israel to have leaders like the surrounding peoples, an evidence of worldliness and materialism rather than of spiritual d&pth. Asa matter of fact the idea of the people in wanting a king seemed to be associated somewhat with the age-long idea of war and battle. They wanted a warrior who could lead them as other peoples were led. Incidentally it was a warrior rather than a prophet that they secured, a giant in physical prowess rather than a'man of splendid character and spiritual power. Samuel yielded to the clamor and the choice taken, appareently by lot, had falleii_upon Saul, the son of Kish. Saul Was Good Choice But Saul, like many men of great physique, was bashful. At this stage of the game he had no desire for power, and when the people sought him, he could not be fougd for he had hidden himself among the baggage. However, when they brought him forth it was seen that he was higher than any one of the people from his shoulders upward. Was any wonder that Samuel set him before them as their king? No man ever assumed a great task under more favorable auspices than this man Saul. The hearts of the people were receptive. He was himsel in a duly humble and teachable frame of mind. He had the strong support of outstanding people in Israel for we are told that when he went home to Gibeah, after his choice as king “there went with him \ a band of men whose hearts God had touched.” It is true that there were some, called sons of Baliel, who murmured about the choice of Saul, and who said, “Shall Saul reign over us?” But even here Saul showed his strength and magnanimity, for when the people demanded of Samuel that this disturbing element opposed to . Saul should be put to death Saul intervened and said. “There shall not a man be put to death this day, for today Jehovah hath wrought deliverance in Israel.” No course could have been bet-
ter adapted to win to Saul those who in the beginning were opposed to him. Apparently also Saul assumed his task with a sense of its moral responsibilities. He seemed to have concurred ! n the action of Samuel in writing down the manner of the kingdom, or, as we should say in our days, writing the constitution in a book, and in the religious ceremonies and consecration to Jehovah with which his kingdom was initiated. Downfall Came Later Later lessons will tell the tragic story of Saul’s downfall, but if we would grasp the meaning of the picture as a whole we must first of all see Saul in his full stature entering upon his kingdom with every apparent assurance of success, and above in what seemed to be the proper spirit. It is a study worth following to see how this man, nature's nobleman, bc came overwhelmed with the power of evil suggestion and evil passions. With all his strength of body he lacked the great strength, of soul of his namesake of New Testament
% u>r George O’Brien, an Apollo of the screen, plays the role of a fighter who is laid low crashing into high society. Cupid blocks him with a blonde to the heart and knocks him out in the butler’s pantry. From then on it’s a light-headed governess and a thick-headed hero using their heads to batter down the door of the citadel of romance. A great comedy of the stage, played by an allstar cast including Edmund Lowe, Doug. Fairbanks, Jr., Kathryn Perry and Philippe De Lacy. Ted. Lewis (HIMSELF) “The High-Hatted Tragedian of Song” die ndj* | When Ted Lewis I sings, he gets 0 "inside” f J of you and he stays there ) u *r AND ms Merry Musical Clowns assisted, by - EDDIE CHESTER—ELEANOR BROOKS \ CIRCLE CHATS AESOP FABLES ANIMATED CIRCLE NEWS
PRICE SCHEDULE WEEKDAYS lp.mto6p.m. A UStau AU Seat*. . 40C / St. EVB.-SUN.-HOL. BL . A _ lU.m./o lp.m. FloorOUC conywUC
times, better known as Paul. whW found it necessary in the hours of I his triumph to buffet his body and keep himself under lest he himself should be a castaway. From this day of auspicious beginning we trace the career of Saul through jealousy and periods amounting almost to madness to his ultimate suicide on the field of battle in his hour of defeat- w ® may anticipate the lessons , of his whole life by emphasizing the warning, “Wherefore let hind who thinketh he standeth take hee,d lest he fall.” V ‘ (Copyright, 1927, NBA Servlo*. Inf I ’-! w- \ Root Starts Agi*i This week Hoot Gibson will stj)t the second of his Big Gun Gro JP features. It will be called “Gallo, Ving Fury" and will be directed t(y Reaves Eason from Peter B. Kyne’tP Siagazine story, “The Tidy Torea-l Or.” Sally Rand, Duke Lee, Ed-1 ward Coxen, Max Asher and “Pea* Wee" Holme# are in the supporting cast.
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HOUSE OPENS SUNDAY DA2.Y AT t PAL AT 11 AAC
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