Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 172, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 November 1927 — Page 7

NOV. 26, 1927

CHURCHES WILL HOLD ANNUAL BAZAARS HERE Two-Day Fete Is Planned by the Tabernacle Presbyterian. The annual Christmas Bazaar of the Tabernacle Presbyterian Church •will be held next Tuesday and Wednesday. On Tuesday the bazaar will open at 10 a. m. and continue through to 5 p. m., luncheon being served from 12 to 1:30. On Nov. 30 it will* open at 1 p. m. and continue through until 10 p. m. A chicken dinner will be served from 5:30 to 7 p. m. There will be special attractions for the children after school. Mrs. Thomas Thompson and Mrs. Fred Willis are in charge of the dinner and luncheon, and Mrs. Harry Wade is in charge of the dining room. Tickets can be bought from any member of the circles or at the office, for the dinner. There will be the following booths: Circle No. 1, Miss Rena Mallory, chairman—Apron booth. Circle No. 2, Mrs. Victor Stevens, chairman—Handkerchiefs, towels and lingerie Circle No. 3, Mrs. W. W. Hampton, chairman —Bedroom booth. Circle No. 4, Mrs. A. J. Colt, chairman— Things for dining-room and kitchen. The auxiliary will have a Christmas gift shop with novelties of every description. The two most popular booths for the little folk will be the doll booth and “ye game S&llery*’' Mrs. B. P. Forbes is chairman of the food booth. Anderson Chapter (Mrs. Walter More, chairman) will have a candy booth. The Calendar Club bazaar of the Brightwood Methodist Church will be held in the church basement next Wednesday night. A chicken, dinner will be served. Booths 6i handkerchiefs, aprons and candies will be ready for patronage. “Behold He Comes” will be the morning theme of the Rev. L. C. E. Fackler of St. Matthew Lutheran Church.' This is the first service preceeding Advent and is “to prepare the soul for the Christmas festivals.” At night, “Let Us Walk Honestly.” The Dorcas Society will meet Thursday at 6 p. m. in the church basement. The Indianapolis district of the Womens Home Missionary Society of the M. E. Church will hold its annual luncheon at the Elks Club on Thursday, Dec. 8. Mrs. H. C. Goode of Sidney, Ohio, national president, will be the chief speaker. An invitation has been extended to the other districts and representatives from Bloomington and Columbus have accepted. The De Pauw School of Musi 3 will furnish the music. Bishop J. M. Francis and the Rev. H. A. Hanson will take the twc* celebrations of the HOly Communion Sunday at the Episcopal Church of the Advent. The ceremonies will be held at 7:36 and 11 a. m. At the Capitol Avenue Methodist Church, the Rev. Joseph G. Moore will preach in the morning on “A Christian’s Defense” and at night “The Prodigal Who Never Returned.” This will be home-coming day. The Rev. L. C. Howe of the Broad Ripple Christian Church will preach in the morning on “Worth While Worship” and at night, “The Devil’s Junk Yard.” At the Blaine Avenue Methodist Church Sunday morning, Miss Martha E. Bennett; teacher in the week day church school at Cleveland Heights, Ohio, will speak on “The Child In Training.” At night the Rev. A. L. Bennett will speak on “Seeing Jesus.” "The Spiritual Drudge” and “Taking Life Easy” will be the sermon themes of the Rev. Forest A. Reed at the Brookside United Brethren Church. The Rev. Homer C. Boblitt of the Linwood Christian Church will preach in the morning on “Help These Women” and at night “Love Perpendicular and Horizontal.” "The Christian and His Amusements” will be discussed in the morning sermon of the Rev. E. A. Daum of the First United Presbyterian Church. At night, “Anxiety for God’s People.” “Whose Church?” and ‘“Eternal Life” will be the themes of the Rev. O. A. #Trinkle at the Englewood Christian church. \ At the Second Moravian Episcopal Church, Corner Thirty-Fourth and Hovey Sts., James Weber of Indiana Central College will occupy the pulpit both morning and evening. His

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DjEffig SUNDAY Richard Dix in "SHANGHAI BOUND” MONDAY—TUESDAY John Gilbert in “TWELVE MILES OUT”

first Run Features ISIS Opposite Terminal Station FIRST HALF NEXT WEEK BUCK JONES “BLOOD WILL TELL” A Thrilling Romance of Lawn and Outlaws “TRAPPED IN MIDAIR” Second Episode of the Serial '“The Isle of Sunken Uoid” KRAZY KAT COMEDY

Adolph Bolm Will Bring His Ballet to Murat

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On Thursday night, Dec. 8, at the Murat, Adolph Bolm will bring his ballet in recital. His chief dancer is Miss Ruth Page of this city.

morning theme will be “Hilltop, Mountains Are in View.” In the evening he will preach on “The Tie Vote.” The Rev. Homer Dale of the Hillside Christian Church will preach in the morning on “The Heroic in Christianity” and “An> Unfailing Torch.” At the Beville Avenue Evangelical Church, the Rev. Ambrose Aegerter announces the following services: | 10:40 A. M.—Sermon by the Rev. H. E. Eberhart, superintendent of the Wheeler City Mission. 7:30 P. M.—Sermon bv the Rev. D. W. Gilliat, instructor of religious education at the Indiana Central University. “Growth” will be sermon subject of the Rev. J. Floyd Seelig at the Fifty-First Street M. E. Church in the morning service Sunday. Mrs. J. R. Freeman will sing “Fear Ye Not, O Israel.” In the evening service Mrs. W. P. Knode, who is associated with the Wheeler City Mission, will speak. There will be special musical numbers in this service. At the First Evangelical Church the Rev. Edmond Kerlin will preach at 10:40 a. m. on “The Sacrifice of Thanksgiving,” and at 7:45 a third sermon in the Sunday evening series on the parable teachings of Jesus, subject: “The Failure of the Supernatural, or “The Sufficiency of Revelation and Opportunity.” Special musical features under direction of Arnold Spencer. Young Peoples day will be ob served at Central Universalist Church, Fifteenth and N. New Jersey Sts., Sunday at 11 a. m. The young people of the church will have charge of the service. Miss Edith Line will deliver the sermonette, her subject being, “Loyalty.” The Rev. Fred A. Line will also deliver a short sermon on the subject “If.” Sunday school 9:30 a. m. “When You Talk With God” will be Dr. Edward Haines Kistler’s theme Sunday at 10:45 in the Fairview Presbyterian Church. At 7:45 p. m. his “Sunday Evening Seminar” will be on “Why Go to Chprch, or the Problem of Religious Mechanics.” J. Russell Paxton of Technical High School faculty foil be the evening soloist.

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Weekly Sunday School Lesson

The International Uniform Sunday School Lesson for Nov. 27. The Natur< of True Worship. Isa. 1:10-20. By WILLIAM E. GILROY, D. D. Editor of The Congregationalist That Micah's explicit and profound definition of religion, as doing justly, loving kindness, and walking humbly with God, was not an isolated instance of real and vital religious experience and outlook, in an age and religious environment that attached much importance to ritual and sacrifice, is evident in this lesson, taken from the introduction to the prophecy of Isaiah. The book of Isaiah is now commonly supposed by Biblical scholars to be the work of at least two h&nds. The latter part of the book, from the fortieth chapter on, is regarded as coming out of the period following the Exile to Babylon. It deals manifestly with that phase of Israel's life. The farmer part of the book of Isaiah is regarded as dating from almost two hundred years earlier. The writer of the earlier prophesies associated with the name of Isaiah, was practically contemporary with Micah. So that when we set the teaching of this lesson side by side with that of the last lesson taken from Micah, we have strongly enforced the impression of that age as one of religious revival in Israel. Stressing Reality The greatest revival and progress of religion have always come from anew emphasis upon reality. This means sometimes a going back to an early experience or teaching that may have become corrupted or neglected, Surely every man who has read the New Testament with intelligence and sincerity has often felt, as he has read, the impulse for a return to a keener and more practical following of the example and teaching of Jesus! The later religion of theology and form becomes quickened in such moods of exaltation in an impulse of deep allegiance to the personal Christ. At other times this revival comes through a going back, through form and ritual, to the spiritual experiences and meansing that form and ritual are intended to express. It is so easy for experiences that were vital to become merely formal, and most of us follow religious custom

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

without thinking out and following the realities for ourselves. So it was thaat Micah challenged a religion of formal-offerings and sacrifices in which the heart itself w'as not concerned. Worship in good living, the surrender of the soul to God, is depicted as the only sacrifice in w'hich God has pleasure. The Drama of Isaiah It is this teaching of Micah that finds equal enforcement in this introduction to the prophecies of Isaiah. Isaiah presents the truth in dramatic form. It is a trial scene in which heaven and earth are the judges. It reminds us of Micah’s figure of the Lord’s controversy with his people. Here God himself is represented as saving to Israel, “What unto me is the multitude of your sacrifices?” Considering the fact that animal sacrifices were still an important ritual fact of the religion of Israel, it is almost impossible for us to grasp the full significance of the revolutionary character of the words of Micah and Isaiah. It is almost as if one should say today <hat forms and creeds are un-important and that it is the real life that counts. It ife as if one were to set Christianity over against mere ohurchianity. Those who have done so in our own day have often been accused of being unorthodox in fait hor disloyal to the Church. May they not often represent, however. in our .own age very much what Micah and Isaiah represented in theirs? The words thaat Isaiah attributes to the Lord are tremendous and sweeping in their quality. “Bring no more vain oblations: incense is an abomination unto me; the new moons and sabbaths, the calling of assemblies, I cannot away with; it is iniquity, even the solemn meeting. Your new moons and your appointed feasts my soul hateth; they aie a trouble unto me; lam weary to hear them.” < There is only one way of life, and Isaiah, in the words he attributes to God, finds it with equal insistence. “Wash you, make you clean; put away the evil of your doings from before mine eyes; cease to do evil# learn to do well; seek justice, relieve the oppressed, judge the fatherless, plead for the widow.”

RAHMAN BEY DUE AT KEITH’S (Continued From Page 5) his contention that mind is superior to matter in controlling the body. He is not in any sense a “magician,” but a member of an Oriental religious cult in which self-hyp-nctism is carried to an extreme degree. This is his first tour of the United States, and is attracting unusual attention from scientists and physicians who recognize the Egyptian’s powers as extraordinary. Bill includes: . ED AND LOTTIE FORD REVUE —The new Fords have arrived at Keith's this week in a dance, song and fun revue in which the Levan sisters are featured. Ed Ford, billed as “the paradoxical physiognomist” because of his entertaining pantomime. furnishes the fun. MAY USHER—A singing comedienne with a repertory of happy, snappy songs and entertaining character stories. VAUGHN CORNISH —A young southern baritone who came from Georgia to Indianapolis and finished his vocal training under Fred Newell Morris here. ‘ M'LOUGHLIN AND EVANS—Jim McLoughlin and Blanche Evans, who follow in the footsteps of Harrigan and Hart in their presentation of tenement house humor, have caught the human appeal and the laughter and tears of life in a crowded Irish settlement, and put it across in a vaudeville novelty that wins by its understanding interpretation. SURRENDER—A Universal picture of a dramatic episode of Russian peasant life. Mary Philbain, the appealing star, has the role of the peasant girl who surrenders her honor to save her townspeople from death at the hands of the invading troops. PATHE NEWS, AESOP FABLES and other short reels supplement the feature picture. DANCER TOPS * NEW LYRIC BILL Two of America’s noted terpischorean stars, Cecil D’Andrea and Neale Walters come to the Lyric next week with Kay Ballinger’s Serenading Misses, a girls’ band noted for the quality of its rhythmic syncopation, in an elaborate presentation of f songs, musical selections and smart dance creations arranged with an -especial appeal to popular taste. Mile. D’Andrea and Walters have entered vaudeville after several

CONSTANCE -VMAWDGE * 00-la-la! Connie’s here! Right from Paris! A dish of entertainment you’ll want ov.er and over again .. . kisses ala mode ... highly flavored romanee ... a surprise dessert with French dressing! It’s spicy, delicious. Why not? . . . She married for spile . * . slipped on the peal of wedding hells and fell ... in love . . . with another girl’s sweetie! Now you go on with the story ... On the Circle Stage RUSSELL and MARCONI “Merry Moments of Music” Vitaphone Presentations GEORGE JESSEL in a “Theatrical Booking Office” THE FOUR ARISTOCRATS Circle Overture “A Melange of Modern Music” ED RESENER, Conducting Novelty Circle *‘A Short Tail” Animated News

Leman

Here Is ‘Babe*

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Meredith “Babe” Grubes

Meredith “Babe” Grubbs has proven to be one of the outstanding features of the Hocsier Harmony Kings, who have just finished the sixth week of their unlimited engagement at the Indiana ballroom. Grubbs, who is better known to the dance lovers of his home town, Indianapolis, as “Babe,” is the smallest man in the orchestra who plays the largest horn, a tuba.

years of brilliant success on Broadway in such productions as George M: Cohan’s "Mary,” “Spice,” “Up In the Clouds,” “I’ll Say She Is” and other hits. Mile. D’Andrea was formerly the stellar dancer of the artistic Stony Point Ensemble. The bill will include: LUBIN, LARRY AND ANDRE— Three vaudevillians ’/ho have a fitting vehicle for their manifold talents in a hilarious comedy classic called “I’ll Show You.” “THE SPIRIT OF WINTER”— One of the real novelties of the year. An impressive and entertaining exhibition of Winter sports and pastimes by Zofa and Sale and Chastine, the Great, the latter being the world's champion acrobatic expert on skis. CHARLES HORN AND COMPANY—Presenting a mirthful and up-to-the-minute comedy sketch entitled “Adam Killjoy.” DREIS AND COLLINS—A couple of hokum comedians whose melange of fun is labelled “Where Bliss Is Ignorance Folly Is Wise.” GARY AND BALDI—'“The Chauffeur and the Maid” in a laughable song and talk skit. AMAZON AND NlLE—lntroducing a remarkable series of spectacular and difficult contortion feats.

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‘T B' SUNDAY TO BE CELEBRATED AT SANATORIUM County. Association Will Have Part in Program at Sunnyside. First annual health Thanksgiving meeting will bo held at Sunnyside Sanatorium, Oaklandon, under the auspices of the Marion County Tuberculosis Association, the Sunnyside Guild and the sanatorium at 3 p. m. Sunday. The celebration is in connection with Tuberculosis Sunday, which has been set aside by the National Tuberculosis Association. Dr. Stanley culter, president of the Indiana Tuberculosis Association, will preside, and Michael E. Foley, tuberculosis association director, will speak. Public Is Invited The public and representatives of all civic, educational and luncheon clubs interested in health work have been invited to attend. A musical program has been arranged by Mrs. J. A. Roush and officers of the Sunnyside Guild. Indianapolis ministers have been requested to urge their congrega-

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No Sew? So! Hu United I‘rcsx GARY, Ind., Nov. 26.—Edward Roehm went around for weeks with a button missing from his clothes and Helen, his wife, wouldn’t sew it on. He tells all about it in a complaint for divorce, which he has filed in Gary Superior Court.

lions to attend the meeting. Among organizations invited to send representatives are the Woman’s Improvement Club, Indianapolis Flower Mission, Family Welfare Society, city and county schools, Public Health Nursing Association, Women’s Department Club, Council of Women. Jewish Council of Women and Seventh District Federation of Women’s Clubs. Seal Sale Explained An inspection of Sunnyside Sanatorium will be made. Murray A. Auerbach, executive secretary of the Indiana Tuberculosis association, Thursday night spoke on “The History of the Christmas Seal,” over radio station WFBM, emphasizing the life-saving program made possible by the sale of Christmas seals and health bonds. Get 50 Cents as Loot Burglars obtained 50 cents in stamps when they entered the Supreme Oil Company filling station at Troy and Madison Aves. Friday night.

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