Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 302, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 April 1928 — Page 16
PAGE 16
SAMSON'S LIFE WILL BE TOPIC ' OF JINISTER The Rev. Mr. Fackler Will Speak on ‘Ending Trouble’ in Morning. Sunday morning at the regular hour at the St. Matthews Lutheran Church, the Rev. L. C. E. Fackler will speak on an important theme. His subject will be “Ending Trouble.” At night, he will give an illustrated talk on “Life of Sampson.” The Dorcas Society will meet Tuesday night at home of Mrs. L. C. E. Fackler, 406 N. Oxford St. The Brotherhood will meet Tuesday night in the church auditorium. At the Brookside United Brethren Church, the Rev. Forest A. Reed will speak in the morning on “The Great Partnership.” At night he will give the first sermon of a series on “The Hortie,” first topic being “Marriage.” “The Resurrection” and “Mighty Trust” will be the 1 sermon themes of the Rev. Homer C. Boblitt of the Linwood Christian Church. At the Second Moravian Church James Weber, a student at the Indiana Central College, will speak in the morning on “Such As I Have, I’ll Give.” At night, the theme will be “Avoiding Lost Steps.” The Rev. P. D. Turner of the Church of God, 900 W. Thirtieth St., wilj speak Sunday morning on “Sanctification and the Infilling of the Holy Ghost.” At night “Divine Healing As Taught in the Bible.” At the Broad Ripple Christian Church, the Rev. L. C. Howe, will speak in the morning on “The PostEaster Appeal and Challenge” and at night, “The Scriptural Solution of a Great Problem.” There will be a baptismal service at 3 o’clock Sunday. Dr. Frank S. C. Wicks of All Souls Unitarian Church announces the following order of service at 11 a. m. Sunday: •‘Allegro and Adagio from O Minor:” ‘Sonata”—(James Rogers); Hymn, 336; Third Service; Covenant; Anthem; Words of Aspiration: Responsive Reading, 15th Selection; Scripture; Hymn Ne. 176; Notices and Offering; “Spring Song,” (Mendelsshon); Address, “Red Rust”; Hymn No. 307; Benediction; Postlude; ‘‘Gavotte, Mignon,” ((Thomas.) At the St. Paul M. E. Church Sunday morning, the theme for Rev. Elmer Jones’ sermon will be “Our Master.” By request the senior choir will again sing the Lenten or Easter cantata, “It Is Finished,” by Angelo M. Read, at the hour of evening worship. The Rev. Fred A. Line will preach at Central Universalist Church, Fifteenth and New Jersey Sts., at the 11 o’clock morning service on the subject “Universe Religion.” Some of the beautiful Easter music will be repeated. Sunday School convenes at 9:30. Ciases for all. Regular monthly meeting of the Calendar Club, Thursday evening, April 19. The Rev. H. C. Odell will speak at the Emerson Avenue Baptist Church in the morning cn “Christ Will Come Again.” In the evening the subject will be “Baptism.” A group of illustrated sermons on New Testament characters will be given by the Rev. Edward A. Daum in the First United Presbyterian Church, beginning next Sunday evening. The series will include: “John, the Life of the Loving Endeavor”; “Peter, Who Erred and Regretted It”; “Mark, the Man Who Once Failed, But Finally Sue-
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Duchess De Nemours LONDON, April 14—The Duke De Nemours, nephew of Albert, King of the Belgians, was married today to Miss Marguerite Watson, of Washington, D. C., at the Henrietta St. registrar’s office. The marriage was the climax of a romance which would not be denied by alleged parental objection. The couple came to London three weeks ago. Last week Miss Watson underwent an operation for appendicitis. She recuperated quickly. ceeded”: “Paul, an Eventful Life”; “Mary of Bethlehem.” The last of this group will be given appropriately on the evening of Brothers’ Day. The First Evangelical Church, the Rev. Edmond Kerlin, pastor, announces a special service of sacred music, Sunday night, at 7:45. Arnold Spencer and the vested choir will present the following program: Organ—“ Scherzo from Sonata”....Rogers Miss Bertha Jasper Anthem—“ Speak Ye Comfortably”.... Shackley Arnold Spencer and Chorus Soprano Solo—“ Glory to God”....Spencer Miss Helen French Anthem—“ They Have Taken Away My Lord” Harrington Arnold Spencer and Chorus Baritone Solo—“ The Earth Is the Lords” Lansing Mr. Franklin Williams Brief Address bv the Rev. Edmond Kerlin Soprano Solo—"I Mourn Asa Dove”.... Bennedtct Miss Helen Eaiand Anthem—“Hosannah” Grainier Arnold Spencer and Chorus “The Garden of Joseph,” an Easter song story, will be repeated by the choir of the First United Presbyterian Church Sunday morning. Pastor E. A. Daum will give the first of an illustrated series on some New Testament characters at the evening service. “John, the Life of Loving Endeavor,” will be the first of the group. “The Mastery Self” will bP the subject of the morning sermon of the Rev. Ambrose Aegerter, pastor of the Beville Avenue Evangelical Church. In the evening the sermon is to be “The Main Purpose of Jesus.” At the Second Reformed Church the pastor, the Rev. George P. Kehl, will speak on “For Me to Live Is Christ to Die, Is Gain.” There will be no service in the evening. The Rev. Robert M. Wood, pastor of the Crooked Creek Baptist
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THIS HAS HAPPENED SALLY FORD, ward of the State orphanage from the time she is four, is “farmed out” to CLEM CARSON the summer she is 16 and meets DAVID NASH, cdhlete and student who is working on tne Carson farm during the summer. David becomes enraged when Carson makes insulting remarks about the student’s innocent friendship with Sally and strikes the farmer a terrific blow. Sally and David run away and join a carnival, David as cook’s helper and Sally in a sideshow, disguised as “Princess Lalla,” crystal gazer. NITA, Hula dancer, who knows the police are after Sally and David, tells Sally she will expose her if she doesn't keep “hands off” David. Nita admits shamelessly she is infatuated with the b °in Capital City. Sally soon forgets her fears under her successful cuise of the crystal gazer. She is confused one afternoon by a handsome, well-dressed Church announces that “Making the Grade” will be his subject for the morning sermon. In the evening the theme will be “Law and Grace of the Gospel.” “Steady” will be used as the service of the Rev. Joseph G. Moore, pastor of the Capitol Avenue M. E. Church Sunday morning. “The Door of Hope” is to be the subject of the evening sermon. At the Downey Avenue Christian Church, the Rev. Bert R. Johnson w T ill speak on “At the Portal” in the morning and “The Old and the New” at the evening service. The Rev. W. B. Grimes, pastor of Bellaire M. E. Church, announces that on Sunday morning the sermon will be “The Preacher and the Cross Roads.” In the evening the service will be a missionary meeting addressed by the Rev. and Mrs. R. H. Ewing, of Tura Assam, India. “Holy to Jehovah” will be the subject of the morning sermon of the Rev. Clyde H. Lininger, pastor of the Speedway Boulevard M. E. Church. In the evening the subject is to be “The Supreme Achievements of Jesus.” “The Mark of a Disciple” will be the sermon subject of .1. Floyd Seelig at the Fifty-First Street M. E. Church on Sunday morning -at 10:45. *The evening sermon will be “The Fruits of Indecision.” Special music in both services. A service of ordination and installation for the newly elected elders and deacons of the Fairview Presbyterian Church will be held Sunday morning. “Men of Faith and Works” will be Dr. Edward Haines Kistler’s theme. “The Day of the Lord Cometh,” (Nevin) and “Let Me Kneel at Thy Feet, O Master,” (Coombs) will be the special quartet numbers. Evening worship in this church has been discontinued for the season. The Rev. Floyd Van Keuren, rector of Christ Episcopal Church, will have a quiet celebration of the Holy Communion on Sunday morning at 8 o’clock. As is the custom the third Sunday in each month, the Litany will be said at the 10:45 morning prayer service. The topic ol the sermon at the midday service will be “Immortality.” There will be special music by the boy choir. They will sing the anthem, “Why Seek Ye the Living Among the Dead?” (Henrich). Christ Church Men’s Club will have a luncheon meeting in the parish house on Thursday noon. The speaker will be the Rev. Jean S. Milner, pastor of the Second Presbyterian Church. “My Rendezvous With Life,” will be the Rev. Edmond Kerlin’s sermon subject at the morning worship period of the First Evangelical Church, at 10:40 a. m. The Sunday evening “Peoples’ Service” at 7:45, will be an evening of Easter and sacred music presented by Arnold Spencer and the chorus choir, with a brief address by the Rev. Edmond Kerlin. Shelbyville Itotarians Elect By Times Special SHELBYVILLE, Ind., April 14. Shelbyville Rotarians have elected the following officers to serve on year: L. E. Webb, president; Frank J. Rembusch, vice president, and J. O. Pearson, treasurer.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Easterner who teasingly insists on reading her fortune in the crystal. He stays in the background of the crowd with his eyes constantly on her. However, Sallv forget* him when she secs ail of her little friends, the inmates of the orphanace, troop into her tent. Sally wonders v.ho is playinc “good ancel” to the orphans when she spies a woman with them, handsomely dressed, but with a look of sadness in her eyes. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XXVI CONTINUED Sally saw the tell-tale tremble of Eloise’s babyish mouth, and her heart ached with desire to comfort the child. Outwardly Eloise had become exactly like all the other little girls—shy, bleating when the other little sheeep bleated, obediently excited when they were excited, silent when they were silent—but underneath she was still bewildered and unreconciled to the death of her mother, the cheap little stock-com-pany actress, who had evidently adored her child and been adored in return. But someone else had seen Eloise’s hurt, so unconsciously inflicted by the lovely and arrogant lady. Betsey, the 6-year-old, ran from the herd to take Eloise’s hand, with an absurd and touching little gesture of motherliness. “Come on, Eloise, Sally heard Betsey cry in her shrill little voice. “Let’s just you and me look at the funny people.. We can see the giant when the crowd moves on. I want to see ‘Princess Lalla’ moren’ anything. I want my fortune told. I want to ask her where Sally is—you remember—Sally Ford. That man says she ‘sees all, knows all,’ so he ought to know where Sally is.” “The big girls say she run away,” Eloise answered, her eyes round with awe. “They say she did something awful bad and run away with a man—" “Sally didn’t do nothing bad,” Betsey retorted indignantly. “She couldn’t! She was the best ‘big girl’ in the Home. She play-acted for us little kids and—oh!” She stopped with a gasp, her eyes popping sis she took in the fantastic splendor of “Princess Lalla.” “Listen, Princess Lalla,” she mustered up courage to whisper coaxingly, “does it cost a lot to get your fortune told? I’ve only got a nickel that the New York lady gave me—she give every one of us a dime, but I spent a nickel for some salt water taffy—” Sally could hardly restrain herself from crying out: “Oh, Betsey, it’s me! Sally Ford! You don’t have to spend your poor little nickel to find me! I’m hfire!” But she knotted her little brown hands more tightly and managed to smile with a princess-like indifference and weariness as she cooed in her “Turkish” accent: “Eet costs noth-ing to get ze fortune told. Womens and mens must pay 25 cents to learn past, pre-ent and future, but for you—-noth-ing! Come up here by my side. I weel read the crystal.” Betsey’s eyes grew rounder and rounder; her little mouth fell open in astonishment. Then with a wild shout of joy she stumbled up the stairs and flung her arms about Sally crying and laughing. “You’re not Princess Lalla! You’re Sa!ly Ford, play-acting! Oh, Sally, I’m so glad I found you! Hey, kids! Kids! It’s Sally Ford, play-acting!”
CHAPTER XXVII IJ'OR a terrible moment, long enough for Gus, the barker, to jump from Jan’s platform and come toward her on a run, Sally sat frozen with terror. She felt that Betsy’s keen eyes had stripped her of her brown make-up, of her fantastic clothes, of the portecting black veil, so that anyone who looked at her could see that she was indeed “just Sally Ford, play-act-ing.” She wanted to rise from her gilded chair and run for her life—and David’s—but she had lost all control of her muscles. Betsey was still clinging to her, her babyish hands shaking the slender shoulders under the green satin.jacket, when Gus bounded upon the platform and took the almost hysterical child into his arms. “Hello, Tiddlywinks!” he sang out jovially. “Having a good time at the carnival? Listen, kiddie! I’m going to give you a real treat! Yessir! You know what you’re going to do? Just guess!” Sally felt the blood begin to thaw in her frozen veins. Gus was standing by. Dear Gus! But Gus was too wise to give the child in his arms a chance to reply. He hurried on, his voice loud and cajoling: “I’m going to let you stand right up on the platform with the little lady midget—her name’s ‘Pitty Sing’—and show all the other kids how much bigger you are than a grown-up lady. Yessir, she’s a grown-up lady and she’s not nearly as big as you. Now what do you think of that?” Betsey was torn between her love for Sally, whom she was convinced she had found, and her pride in being chosen to stand beside the midget. She looked doubtfully from Sally, whose eyes beneath the black lace veil were lowered to her tightly locked hands, to the platform opposite, where “Pitty Sing,” the midget was stretching out a tiny hand invitingly. The midget won, for the moment at least. “I’m six going on seven, and I’m a big girl,” she confided to the barker ’on whose shoulder she was riding in delightful conspicuousness. The children, true to the herd instinct which had been so highly developed in the orphanage, trooped after Gus and Betsey, even more easily diverted than she from their pop-eyed inspection of “Princess Lalla.”
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Sally heard Thelma answer another child derisively: “Aw, Betsey’s off her nut! Sure that ain’t Sally! That’s a Turkish princess from Constantinople. The man said so. ’Sides Sally’s white, and the princess is brown—” - “All right, children, right this way!” Gus was ballyhooing loudly. “Permit me to introduce ‘Pitty Sing,’ the smallest and prettiest little woman in the world. Just twentynine inches tall, 29 years old and twenty-nine pounds heavy. Did I say ‘heavy?’ Excuse me, Pitty Sing! I meant twenty-nine pounds light! Look at her, little ladies and gents! Ain’t she cute? Her parents were just as big as your paps and mamas—” He remembered just too late that he was talking to orphans, and his jolly face went dark red. But he recovered quickly, glanced about his audience, saw that Miss Pond was straying nervously toward Sally’s platform, as if halfway convinced that Betsey’s childish intuition had been correct. “Oh, Miss Pond!” he sang out ingratiatingly. “I wonder if you’d do me the favor to step up on the platform. I believe Betsey is scared. Yessir, I believe she’s scared half out of her skin!” He laughed, stooped to chuck Betsey under the chin, then, with a couiy'’ gesture, offered Miss Pond his hand. Sally looked on, her throat tight with fear and with tears of gratitude toward Gus, as the barker, with a rapid fire of talk and joking; kept his audience completely hypnotized. He jollied shy little Betsey into taking the midget into her arms, like a baby or a big doll, and only Sally, of all those who looked on, could guess how keenly the artificially smiling little atom of humanity was resenting this insult to her dignity. He coaxed the flattered and flustrated Miss Pond into standing beside “Pitty Siife,” so that the children could see what a vast difference there was in their height. And somehow he had attracted the attention of a carnival employe, for before he had exhausted the possibilities of the midget as a diversion. Winfield Bybee himself came striding into the Palace of Wonders, mounted the midget's platfrom and, after a moment's whispered conference with Gus, made an announcement: “Children, I’m old Pop Bybee; Winfield Bybee is the way it’s wrote down in the Bible. I own this carnival and I war/, to tell you children that I’m proud to have you as my guests. I love children, always did! Now, boys and girls, the Ferris wheel and the whip and the merry-go-rounds are waiting for you.” He was interrupted by a whoop of joy from the boys, in which the girls joined more timidly. “It won't cost you a cent. If your chaperon—” and he turned to Miss Pond with a courtly bow—“will do me the honor to accept these tickets, you’ll all have a ride on the Ferris wheel, the whip and the merry-go-round absolutely free. Don't crowd now, children, but gather at the door of the tent. I thank you.” When he sprang, rather stiffly, from the platform, he offered Miss Pond his hand, then, with her arm pressed to his side, he escorted her with pompous courtesy to the door of the tent, where the children were already milling about, wild with excitement. In her terror Sally had forgotten the golden-haired woman in the green silk sports suit. Now that the
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danger was passing, miraculously averted by Gus and Pop Bybee, she started to draw a deep, trembling sigh of relief, but it was choked in her throat by the discovery that she was being regarded intently by the beautiful woman, who was standing beside the ‘midget’s platform. “Oh!” Sally thought in anew flutter of terror. “She heard Betsey call me Sally Ford. She’s going to question me. I wonder who she is. Maybe she’s a trustee’s wife—oh, she’s coming! She’s going to talk to me—” She rose from her high-backed, gilded chair, trying to do so without haste. Since the performance was ended she had every right to leave the tent, and she would do so, but she mustn't run. She must not give herself away—-“Hel-10, Enid! I couldn’t believe my eyes! What in the world are you doing so far from Park Ave.?” Sally, forcing herself to walk with sedate leisureliness down the little wooden steps of the platform, saw the New Yorker who had been paying her half-mocking, half admiring attention all afternoon, stride swiftly and gracefully across the tent toward the golden-haired woman. So he too had witnessed Betsey’s hysterical identification! She had forgotten that he was in the tent, watching her, smiling mockingly, biding his chance to ask her again to go to supper with him after the last show that night. The golden-haired woman halted, and Sally, out of the corner of her veil-protectetl eyes, saw an expression of startled surprise and then of annoyance sweep over the beautiful little lace. Odd that these two who had so strangely crossed her path in one hectic day should know each other, should meet a thousand miles away from home, in the freak show tent of a third-rate carnival! “Oh, hello. Van! I might ask what you’re doing so far from Park avenue, but I suppose you’re visiting your cousin, the Governor. Court’s here on business and I’m amusing myself taking the orphans to the carnival. Anew role for me, isn’t it—Lady Bountiful! Poor little devils! If only they didn’t want to paw m<ji" Now that she was safe from being questioned Sally wanted to make her passage to the “alley” door of the tent take as long as possible, so that not a note of the music of that extraordinary voice should be lost to her. She had expected the golden-haired lady's voice to be a sweet, tinkling soprano, to match her in size, but the voice which thrilled her with its perfection of modulation was a rich, throaty contralto, a little arro- ! pant, even as the speaker was, but so effortless and so golden that Sally would have been divinely conI tent to listen to it, no matter what words it might have said. Sally paused at the door of the j tent, and cast a swift glance backward over her green-satin shoulder. “Van” was holding one of “Enid’s” hands in both of his, laughing down at her, mockingly, but fondly, as if | they were the best of friends. Have Your Glasses Charged!
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“Well,” she said to herself, as she ran toward the dress tent, “now that he’s found her, he won’t bother me. I wonder who ‘Court’ is. Her husband? I hate rich women who play ‘Lady Bountiful’,” she thought with fierce resentment, “But—l can’t hate her. She’s too beautiful. Like a little gold-and-green bird —a singing bird—a bird that sings contralto.” She was resting between shows, lying on her cot in the dress tent, when Pop Bybee came striding in. “It’s all right, honey. Don’t be scared to go on with the show. That Pond dame came cackling to me, all het up, half believing what this Betsey baby said about you being Sally Ford, but I give her a grand song and dance about you being the same Princess Lalla who joined the show In New York in April. She wanted to talk to you, but I steered her off, told her you couldn’t hardly speak English and she’d just upset you. Just stick to your lingo, child, and don’t act scared. Ain’t a chance in the world the Pond dame will make another squawk.” He must have spoken to Gus, also, for the barker cut her late afternoon and evening performances as short as possible, although by doing so he lost many a quarter. She smiled upon him gratefully, was pleased to the point of tears by his whispered: “Good kid! You’ve sure got sand!” after the 10 o’clock show when she had apparently regained her confidence and her intuition in sizing up “rubes” who desired to know “past, present and future.” As the evening, wore on the heat grew more and more oppressive. The wilted audience passed languidly from freak to freak, mopping their red faces and tugging at tight collars. Children cried fretfully, monotonously; women reproved them with high, heat-maddened voices; Jan, the giant, fainted while Gus was ballyhooing him, and it took six “white hopes” to carry him him to his tent. At 11 o’clock, when Gus had just started his last “spiel’’ of the evening, a terrified black man, with eyes rolling and sweat pouring down his face, staggered into Mie tent, bawling: “Awful storm’s blowin’ up, folks! Look lak a cyclone! Run for yo’ lives! Tents ain’t safe! Oh, mah Gawd!” (To Be Continued) A crime follows in the path of the storm, and David is suspected.
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DANVILLE CETS SUNDAY MOVIES Town Board Sanctions Theater Opening. By Times Special DANVILLE, Ind., April 14.—Sunday motion picture shows will make their debut here Sunday, after practically unanimous consent by the town board and expression ol opinions from officials and ministers. Thomas Barnett anounce* his Royal theater will be open Sunday. Justice of the Peace A. H. Kennedy is among those inclined to favor Sunday movies. He declares: “I’d rather people would go to picture shows than do some other things. Sheriff Rodney of Hendricks County expressed himself aa opposed to the shows. Two local pastors, the Rev. M. B. Meeks and the Rev. J. A. Lord, oppose the shows, but the latter believes they will not operate to reduce church attendance. Hoover Manager Ls Named David J. McMurtry, of Sheridan, Ind., today was appointed by Oscar G. Foellinger, Hoover State manager, to direct the cabinet member’s presidential campaign in Hamilton County.
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