Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 320, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 May 1928 — Page 3
MAY 5, 1928
PASTORS HELP GOOD MUSIC IN THECHURGHES Dr. Wicks to Talk Sunday on ‘Human Symphony’ at All Souls. At All Souls Unitarian Church Sunday morning, All Souls Unitarian Church will do its part in recognizing Music Week. Dr. Wicks wil speak on “The Human Symphony,” resulting from thoughts suggested by a sympohny concert. Miss Louise Schellschmidt will play the harp and Miss Gertrude Conte the cello. Mrs. Frieda Steinman Robinson will be the soloist. Dr. Wicks announces the following order of service at 11 a. m. Sunday: “Waither’s Prize Song - ' Wagner •Flower Song” Gounod Hymn 336 First Service Covenant Anthem Largo Handel Voice. Harp, Cefio, Organ Words of Aspiration Hymn 58 Notices and Offering Unfinished Symphony Schubert •‘Spring Song" Mendelsohn Harp. Cello. Organ Addres—"The Human Symphony” Solo—" The Year's at the Spring” “Berceuse” Adolph Schellschmidt Harp, Oello Hymn 18 Benediction Postlude "Salute d’Amour” Elgar A musical program will be given at the Capitol Avenue M. E. Church Sunday evening at 7:30 o’clock by the E. W. Hoover concert orchestra: Christine Wagoner Roush, director; Jean Duthie, pianist; Alice Diver, harpist; Margaret Rasbach, soloist. Program follows; "The White Queen” (Overture) Metra "Mignonnette" “Chant sans Paroles” Friml “After Vespers" iMeditationl Moret Solo "The Beautiful Garden of Prayer" Fillmore "Tile Old Refrain Kreisler “That Wonderful Mother of Mine.”.. Goodwin Specially arranged for Flute. Strings and Harp “Evening Star,” Romantic Song from “Tannhauser” Wagner “Heartsease" Moret A musical service will be given at Christ Church at 7:30 p. m. Sunday under the direction of Cheston L. Heath. The choir of fifty men and boys will take part. The program follows: “Why Seek Ye the Living Among the Dead?" C. W. Henrich “Awake Thou That Sieepeth" iDaughtcr of Jairus”) Sir J. Stainer Solo—“ The Penitent” . Beardsley Van de Water Paul Leslie Raymond, basso “Hail! Gladdening Light” Sir George Martin Solo—“lnflammatus” (Stabat Materi.. G. Rossini Master Maurice Fowler, boy soprano • "The Recessional” '(Kipling) Harry Alexander Matthews Lillian M. LeMon, president of the Indianapolis Music Promoters annoupnces the various soloists that will appear in some of the churches Sunday. The soloists and the churches are as follows: Leonard Franklin, Bethel A. M. E Church. Waiter Price. Second Baptist. Elizabeth Stewart. St. Paul Presbyterian. Pinkye Corley, Witherspoon United Presbyterian. Charley Rhea, Greater St. John. Rhoda Williams. Greater St. John. Lena Lewis. Corinthian Baptist. Willa Johnson, Metropolitan Baptist. Vernon Doyle. St. Phillips Episcopal. Fannie Murray. First Baptist. North Indianapolis. Eunice Richardson, Second Christian. Mane Gardner. Mt. Paran. Florence Finley. Shiloh Baptist. Blossie Roberts. Simpson M. E. Church. Nodie Rogers. Allen A. M. E. Chutc'n. Maymle Davis, St. Paul Baptist. Clarissa Winlock, St. John A. M. E. Church. Helen Chenault, Mt. Zion Baptist. Mary Montgomery, St. Paul A. M. E. Church. Francis Davis. Jones Tabernacle. Leon Freman, Tabernacle Baptist. Fannie Hadley. South Calvary. Viola Wilson, New Baptist. Two musical programs have been arranged by W. J. Condrey, director, and Lee Walker, organist, at the North M. E. Church. A vested choir of thirty voices will take part. The programs are as follows: 10:45 A. M. Organ Prelude—" Adagio in A Flat”... W. Volckmar Anthem—"O Holy Father’ Marchetti-Parks Offertory—" Andante”. .Felix Mendelssohn Quartet —“It Was for .Me" .Chas. B. Blount Postlude—“ Processional March Alex Gullmant 7:45 P. M. Organ Prelude—“ Prelude and Fugue" ~ J. S. Bach Anthem "Soldiers’ Chorus” from “Faust” Charles Gounod Offertory—“ Largo G. F. Handel Anthem —“The Marseillaise” Rouget de Lisle Postlude —“Priests’ March” Felix Mendelsohn The Rev. Fred A. Line will preach at. Central Universalist Church at the 11 o’clock morning service his subject being, “The Other Fellow’s Shoes.” There will be music by a mixed quartet. Sunday school convenes at 9:30. Y. P. C. U. meeting 4:30 p. m. At the Second Monravian Church the pastor, the Rev. James Weber, will preach Sunday morning on “A Christian’s Social Justice.” In the evening the subject will be “A Christian’s Sacrifice and Service.” The sermon subject Sunday morning at the Bethlehem Evangelical Lutheran Church will be “Alertness in Carrying Out God’s Commands,” while at the 6:30 vespers the pastor will present the theme “The Church Bearing Fruit.” “My Candidate” will be the subject of the morning sermon of the Rev. Joseph G. Moore, pastor of the Capitol Avenue M. E. Church. In the evening the Hoover concert orchestra will play and the pastor will speak on “The Right Uses of Music in the Program of the Church.” At the Beville Avenue Evangelical Church the Rev. Ambrose Aegerter, pastor, will use “The Divine Foundation” as the subject of the morning sermon. The service for the evening will be in charge of the E. L. C. E. Society with Miss Marie Fuchs presiding. For the morning sermon at the Downey Avenue Christian Church, the pastor, the Rev. Bert R. Johnson. will use “The Life That Overcomes.” In the evening the subject of the sermon is to be “Removing Mountains.” i At the Second Reformed Church the pastor, the Rev. George P. Kehl will speak on “He Knew Not That the Lord Had Departed.” The new consistory officers are to be installed. The Rev. L. C. E. Fackler, pastor of the St. Matthew Lutheran Church wil preach Sunday morning on “Jesus Sifting His Disciples.” In
Students to Give Spring Recital
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There will be a dramatic art recital by the students of Mrs. Joe Kettery at Cropsy auditorium In the Public Library tonight at 8 o’clock. The students, who are known as the Dramatic Art Gypsies, who will take part are as follows: Back row, Vesta Kettery, Betty Jane Mathey, De Loris Easily, Gertrude Darling, Dorothy Myers, Jean Reid, Mary Evelyn Pigg. Front row, Rosilyn Johnson, Kathleen Mary Cole, Joe Pat Arvin, Billy Gill, Jimmie Reid, Joe Kettery Jr., Jean Ann Davis.
the evening “A Labrador Doctor.” a series of pictures presenting the life and work of Dr. Greefell in Labrador wil be shown. The Brotherhood will have a fish fry Tuesday evening. Walter D. Hickman of the Indianapolis Times will be the speaker. Thursday afternoon the Ladies’ Aid will meet in the church auditorium. This Sunday, the Rev. K. R. Roberts, pastor of the Ebenezer Lutheran Church, Keystone and Sutherland Aves., will preach on the theme, “The Invitation to Prayer.” This is the second in his series of special sermons. The sermons remaining in the series are: Mav 13 —“The Honored Mother.” May 27—''Looking Forward.” June 4—“ Hallowed Memories.” Dr. Edward Haines Kistler and Mrs. F. T. Edenharter have arranged a special order of worship for the Fairview Presbyterian Church, Sunday morning, for the beginning of National Music Week. Prelude—“By the Sea” Schubert Anthem "Tile Woods and Every Sweet-smelling Tree" West Offertory— “Bv the Rivers of Babylon” Vincent Postlude —"Allegretto” Barnby “Whose Heart-strings Are a Lute” will be the sermon theme. Anniversary day will be observed at the Fifty-First Street M. E. Church on next Sunday. In the morning service there will be a roll call of all the membership, reports from the various organizations and a sermon by the pastor, J. Floyd Seelig, subject “The Church and It’s Mission.” In the evening the pastor will present the first of a series of sermons on “Pictures That Preach” with “The Lost Sheep,’’ by Alfred Soord. J. Floyd Seelig, pastor of the Fifty-First Street M. E. Church will present a series of four Sunday evening sermons, during the month of May entitled “Pictures That Preach.” This series will consist of the study of four outstanding works of religious art, with a study of the picture which will be on exhibit and the life of* the artist together with the scriptural basis of the picture. Sunday .May 6—“ The Lost Sheep." by Alfred Scord. Sunday, May 13 —“ Christ In Gethsemanc.” by Johann Hofmann. Sunday, May 20—" The Light of the World.’’ by Holman Hunt. Sunday. Mav 27—" The Angelus.” by Jean Miliet. At the Speedway Boulevard Methodist Church, the Rev. Clyde H. Lininger will speak in the morning on “A Contrite Heart, the Delight of the Lord.” At night, “The Fortitude of Jesus.” “The Looker On” will be the morning theme of the Rev. William Talbot Jones at the Edwin Ray M. E. Church. At night, “Modern Pilates.” At 2 p. m. the annual Junior Epworth League convention of the Indianapolis district will be held. In the morning at the University Heights United Brethren Church, the local Senior Christian Endeavor Society will have charge of the observation of the forty-seventh anniversary of the Christian Endeavor. Talks will be made by Lowell Good, Vida Lehman, Evan Kek and Bennett Fulp, president of the United Brethren Christian Endeavor City Union. At night, the pastor will conduc tan evangelistic service. At 10:45 o’clock Sunday morning at the St. Paul M. E. Church, the subject of the Rev. Elmer Jones’ sermon will be “The Meaning of Manhood.” The theme for the evening message will be “Personality.” At the Broadway M. E. Church the Rev. W. Henry McLean, of De Pauw University, will preach at the morning service at 10:45. In the evening at 7:30 the Broadway choir will give a sacred concert, in observance of Music week. The choir will be assisted by Miss Loiinda Cottingham, violinist. Dr. McLean will give a brief talk on music at this service. The Rev. Floyd Van Keuren, rector of Christ Episcopal Church, will have the usual quiet celebration of the Holy Communion Sunday morning at 8 o'clock. There will be a choral celebration of the Holy Communion at 10:45 a. m. The sermon topic at this service will be “Escape.” The boy choir, consisting of fifty boys and men under the direction ofCheston L. Heath. M. A., will sing a special musical service at 7:30 p. m. There will be a solo by Paul Leslie Raymond, basso, and by Maurice Fowler, boy soprano. The seventieth birthday of the denomination will be observed in the First United Presbyterian Church Sunday morning at the 10:45 service. At noon, the new memorial bulletin board will be presented by Mr. M. E. Race in memory of his wife, a leader in church activities until her death. An illustrated life of Paul will be given by the pastor in the evening.
Sunday School Lesson
The International I’niform Sunday School Lesson for Mav (5. Jesus' Standard of Greatness. Mark 10:35--Iff. BY Wm. E. GILROY, I). D. Editor of The ConfTegat'onallst THIS lesson strongly enforces the teaching of the last; namely, that true discipleship is more than a matter of the renunciation oi wealth or power. It finds it meaning only as such renunciation springs from a supreme devotion of the life to God. We have seen the rich young man going away sorrowful because of his great possessions, declining the invitation of Jesus to come and follow him. Here we have two men of different mold and character, brothers, and sons of a mother who had commanding ambition for her boys, who stands before us in the brief glimpses that we have of her as the dominating influence in that family. She is not only Zebedee's wife, but the “mother of Zebedee's children" —a very suggestive distinction. Zebedee does not seem to appear in the narrative. He may have been a very plain honorable man who played his part well, but his wife, and the mother of his sons, had the chief share of the family ambition. Her sons. James and John, seem to have inherited their mother's energy and strength of character as well as her persistent ideal of success in life. They had cast in their destiny with Jesus. They were among those who had left all and had followed him. At least they had left their particular callings and ordinary interests, but it could hardly be said that ftiey had left all. for they had brought with them larger dreams of power and ambition than they had been able to achieve in their daily occuations They were as much enamored of these ambitions as the rich young' man was of his great possessions, and it was just as difficult for them to surrender those ambitions as it was for the rich young man; but they were strong where he was weak; they were men of large mold and commending spirit, and when Jesus set before them the ideal of true greatness, though they did not quite understand it and were not to understand it for some time to come until Jesus himself had shown them the truth through the supreme sacrifice of the cross, they rose to the demands of so supreme a calling and opportunity. They vindicated the truth of their words to Jesus, "We are able.” The story itself is one strikingly effective in the simplicity with which it sets forth the play of human interests and emotions. The mother of James and John is splendidly frank in revealing what she wants. She is concerned about achieving the highest place for her sons. Her eyes are full of a kingdom with a king sitting on a throne symbolic of his power, and if her sons can only share that power, the one sitting on the right hand and the other on the left hand of the king, her dream of ambition will be fully satisfied. It is interesting that there is in her dream no primary thought either of righteousness or of service, though, perhaps, to give her’ credit she may have thought of this kingdom as one of spiritual glory for Israel. The reactions of her request are almost exactly what one would expect. The other ten disciples were moved with indignation. One can think of the wrath of Peter when he heard this request on behalf of James and John; and one can easily picture foreeful and impetuous Peter stirring up the other disciples to the sense of the injustice of these other two trying to pick out for themselves in advance the chief places. But how quickly Jesus turns the • e incident into the simple witness of the deeper and glorious things of service! How beautifully in just a few words he portrays the glory of an ideal utterly different from this—an ideal of greatness in which not the reward, but the doing, is the supreme thing! It is an ideal of greatness that th.e world very slowly appreciates. It is so natural for us to think of life almost entirely in terms of getting and to think of it so little in the terms of that giving which is an expression of the human spirit. Can we doubt, however, that he lives most who most expresses his spirit, rather than he who mostly derives from life instead of making his contribution to it? This ideal of greatness in the teaching of Jesus was not merely a theory or a philosophy. The beauty of it all is that Jesus so truly exemplified it in his life, and it was here that he linked his teaching with the lives of James and John and the other disciples. He was not asking them to go
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where he would not go himself or to do what he would not do himself, but in all things he was pointing the way by going in that way himself. Not only does he say, “Whosoe/er will be first among you shall be the servant of all.” but he adds. “For the Son of Man also came not to be ministered unto, but to minister and to give his life a ransom for many.”
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EDUCATION BOARD KILLS MOVE TO FOREGO FEES Table Motion to Drop Claims of Pay for Textbook Work. By tabling a motion, the State board of education Friday rejected a suggestion of Edward C. Elliott, board member and president of Purdue University that the members forego their claim to $1,300 per diem for acting as members of the State textbook commision. It was pointed out that if the members collect the $1,300 there will be a S6OO shortage in the fund out of which the members are supposed to be paid $5 a day and expenses for attending regular board meetings. The board denied principal’s license to Otis J. Briggs, recently convicted operator of a fake diploma mill here. C. L. HANKINS DEAD Funeral for Lifelong Resident of City Set for Monday. Funeral services for Charles L. Hankins. 62, member of the firm of the Ballard Ice Cream Company, will be held at 2:30 p. m. Monday at the home, 5305 Washington Blvd. He died Friday at Methodist Hospital, following a two-months illness, Mr. Hankins was born at Southport and spent virtually all of his life in ndianapolis. He had been connected with the ice cream company for the last forty years. Surviving are: The widow; a son, Ray Hankins; a brother, John Hankins, and a grandson, Rodney B. Hankins, all of Indianapolis, and four sisters. Mrs. Sue Thomas, Chicago; Mrs. William Surface. Greenwood; Mrs. Margaret Messersmith and Mrs. Mary Bryan, both of Indianapolis.
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Candidate Triple Father
Dr. Jorge Euardo Boyd, associate justice of the Supreme Court of Panama, is candidate for the presidency of the Canal Zone. Here are Dr. and Mrs. Boyd and their triplets, Mildred, Elena and Edith, 6 years old.
DEAN FUNERAL MONDAY /■ Rites for Former Printer Will Be at Johnson-Montgomery Chapel Funeral services will be held at 2 p. m., Monday, at the Johnson and Montgomery chapel for Thomas E. Dean, 75, former Hollenbeck Press employe. He was employed as a printer for many years. Mr. Dean died Friday at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Ada Mundell, 1103 Central Ave. The widow and
TI s outfit is on display in the window of the Em-Roe Sporting Goods Company, 209 West Washington St.—Look it over.
four sons survive. Burial will be in Crown Hill cemetery. National Party Parley June 1 National party candidates for Governor, Lieutenant Governor, secretary of State and other State offices will be named at the State convention here June 1. Members of the party, meeting at the English Friday night, voted to oppose the daylight saving ordinance. John Zahnd, National party candidate for President, was the principal speaker.
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BARNARD IS NAMED KEYNOIER FOR G. 0. P. Newcastle Attorney to Open Stata Convention Here. George M. Barnard, Newcastle attorney and former member of the public service commission, will be keynote speaker for the Republican State convention here. May 23 and 24. . The selection was made Friday by the conventio narrangements committee, of which Ewing Emison of Vincennes, Second district chairman, is chairman. Barnard, active Republican for years, is mentioned as a “dark horse” for Governor if no selection is made in the primary, and the convention should go beyond the circle of primary candidates. R. Eearl Peters, Democratic State chairman, set Friday, May 18, for reorganization of the State committee and Wednesday, May 16, for reorganization of district committees, except the Seventh (Marion County). Both Democratic and Republican county reorganization meetings will be held next Saturday. WOODMEN TO CHURCH Camp 9 Will Attend Men’s Class at Third Christian. Members of Camp 9. Modern Woodmen of America, will meet at Sixteenth St. and Park Ave., Sunday at 9 a. m. to attend the Christian Men Builders’ class at the Third Christian Church, Seventeenth St. and Broadway, in a body. O. M. Crays and M. T. Wright are in charge of arranging the event. More than 300 are expected in the delegation. The Modern Woodmen quartet will sing and Merle Sidener, class teacher, will talk on “Neighbors.” The program will be broadcast by WFBM.
