Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 7, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 May 1928 — Page 7

MAY 19, 1925.

Dedication

Service for New Church Out-of-Town Ministers Will Be First Speakers, The Grace English Lutheran Church will dedicate its new church building at Holmes Ave. and New Yobls. St. Sunday. Three dedicatory services will be held Sunday and there will be additional services Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday evenings. The Rev. Werner Kuntz is pastor of the church, which has taken as its slogan, “A Changeless Christ for a Changing World.” The new church w T as designed by Thornton and Rodecker, architects, and built by Joseph Reith, contract tor. The exterior is of skintled brick, the interior of open construction. Large hammer-beam trusses support the roof. A soft, dark stain is used on all interior woodwork, which is of white oak and gum. The entrance and the chancel, which measures twenty feet in depth, are laid in rough slate flagging varicolored. Members of the building committee, together with the Rev. Mr. Wgrner Kuntz, are Herbert H. Eickhoff, chairman; P. C. Hansen and Elmer Pr if ogle. The Rev. A. H. Kuntz, Minneapolis, Minn., will be the speaker at the Sunday morning service in the new building. The Rev. F. L. Oberschulte, St. Paul, Minn., will speak at a service at 2:30 Sunday and the Rev. H. Scheperle, Indianapolis, will speak in the evening. Monday will be Young People’s night, the Rev. Oberschulte speaking. Wednesday, the Rev. G. Gotsch, Jonesville, Ind., will speak and Thursday evening the Rev. E. W. Weber of Cleveland will preach. Special music has been arranged for all the services. The soloists include Miss Gertrude Eickhoff, Mrs. Paul Seehausen, William Behrman, Mrs. Nessler Lohes, Mrs. Claude Sumner, Miss Frances Olsen. The Trinity Quartet and the choirs of St. Paul, Emmaeus, St. John and St. Peter Lutheran Churches also will take part. The final hour of musical worship in the Fairview Presbyterian Church for this season will be given Sunday at 10:45 a. m., arranged by Mrs. E. T. Edenharter for the quartet of the church, assisted by the Misses Thelma Rubush and Mary E. Webb. The quartet comprises Mrs. Ruth Sterling Devin, sporano; Miss Mildred M. Schmedel, alto; DeWitt S. Morgan, tenor; J. Russell Paxton, baritone. The program follows: X J relude—“Triumphant” Baumgartner Anthem—“ Prepare Ye the Way of the Lord” Garrett Crusaders’ Hymn—“ Fairest Lord Jesus” A. D.. 1677 Offertory—“l Think When X Read That Sweet Story” (by requSsti Jno. A. West. Trio—(a) "Elegie” Arensky (b> “Ecstasy” Ganng Violin, Miss Thelma Rubush; ’cello, Miss Mary E. Webb; organ. Quartet —“The Lost Chord” Sir Arthur Sullivan Solo—“ Sheep and Lambs”.. .Sidney Homer Miss Schmedel Duet—“ Love Divine" .• Sir John Strainer’s “Daughter of Jalrus” Mrs. Devin, Mr. Morgan Quartet —“Thy Word Is Uke a Garden. Lord” Clarence Dickinson Hymn—“ Christ, of All My Hopes the Ground” Postlude—“Offertoire Toccata”,....Dußois “The Birthday of the Christian Church” will be the sermon-sub-ject of J. Floyd Seelig at the FiftyFirst Street M. E. Church on Sunday morning. In the evening he will present the .third of a series of sermons on “Pictures That Preach” with Holman Hunt’s “The Light of the World.” There will be a “Recognition Service” for the Boy Scouts in the* church school at 9:30 a. m.

Broadway Evangelical Church, on Broadway at Fifty-Sixth St., will observe holy communion service in connection with the mornjng service Sunday morning. Rev. J. C. Mosier, of Van Weft, Ohio, will preach the sermon. The pastor, the Rev. L. E. Smith, will deliver the evening sermon at 7:45 o'clock. The executive committee of the Lutheran Men of Indianapolis will meet in a Called session on May 21. This session is being called by the president, George C. Coffey, and the reason is that there are many items of business which must be disposed of before the next regular meeting. Plans will ailso be laid for summer activities of this group of men here in the city. The meeting will be held in First Lutheran Church at 8 p. m, Sunday morning at 10:45 the Rev. Allen K. Trout will preach upon the subject, “Preparation for the End” at the Bethlehem Evangelical Lutheran Church. Vespers, Sunday evening will be featured by an address oon “A Life at Its Lest.” The Sunday evening services will some to a close May 27, when the of a series of sermons will be delivered on “Service-.” The regular musical recital will be given Sunday morning at 9 (’clock at the Cadle Tabernacle Sunday school by the E. W. Hoover Concert Orchestra* The Rev. Edmond Kerlin will preach at the First Evangelical Church at 10:40 a. m.,"subject, “All, and Always,” an inaugural sermon for the beginning of the fourth year of the present pastorate. The evening “People’s Service” at 7:45 will be a “Welcome Service” for the Rev. George J. Long, late of Louisville, now associated with this church and engaged in evangelism. Sermon by Mr. Long. Music by Arnold Spencer and vested chorus. The Rev. G. H. Winders, pastor of tne Northwood Christian Church, will preach at Central Universalist Church, Fifteenth and N. New Jersey Sts., at the 11 o’clock morning service, in exchange with the Rev. Fred A. Line. Dr. Winders’ sermon subject will be “The Living Dead.” There will be good music by a mixed quartet. Sunday school convenes at 9:30. Classes for all. Men’s Fellowship Club supper and meeting 6:15 Wednesday evening. The Rev. Homer Boblitt will be the speaker. Bethlehem Evangelical Lutheran Church adopted the daylight saving system at Its council meeting last evening. This means that ever service on Sunday morning will be adI

Weekly Sunday School Lesson

The International Uniform Sunday School Lession for May 20. Love the Law of the Kingdom. Mark 12: 13-17, 28-34. BY WM. E. GILROY, D. D. Editor of The Congregationalist CLOSE to the authority of right and truth in the life and teaching of Jesus was the conception of the highest right and the fullest truth as manifest in love. Two adverse passages in this lesson reveal Jesus as supremely the monos truth and the man of love. Truth creates in men sagacity and power to discern right and wrong. It creates in the mind a noble sense of logic and an ability to see things in their right relations. Hence, when the Pharisees and Herodians came to Jesus trying to ensnare him on an issue of patriotism—a noble thing which narrow and bigoted people have often debased by trying to make it serve their own ends—Jesus revealed a simple but effective logic of facts which put them to confusion. Calling for a coin he asked concerning the image and superscription on it. They replied that these were Caesar’s and Jesus immediately stated a principle which took the ground from under their feet. “Render unto Caesar,” he said, “the things that are Caesar’s, and unto God the things that are God’s.” Misinterpretation Probably no passage in Scripture has been more grievously misunderstood or wrested to purposes that Jesus never intended. A common Interpretation of the passage is to make it the basis of a doctrine of the relationship between church and state. The separation of church and state as we have it here in America is a very 'good thing and something that commends itself to us all, but there is no particular reason to see this doctrine in these j words of Jesus. We must remember that he was meeting these Pharisees and Herodians upon their own ground, and we must be careful not to take his effective to them as a state-

vanced to an earlier hour. The Sunday school hour on and after the first Sunday in June will be 9 a. m. The church services will convene at 10:15. The week day evening meeting 8 p. m. This schedule to continue during June, July, August and September. At the First Moravian Church, the Rev. John Greenfield of Winona Lake will preach the morning service. In the evening the sermon will be given by the Rev. Ernest Avans of the Church Federation. • The Rev. James Weber, pastor of the Second Moravian Church will preach Sunday morning on “Ambassadors of God” and in the evening on “Life, a Vapor.” The Rev. Joseph G. MOore, pastor of the Capitol Avenue M. E. Church, having returned from the General Conference held .at Kansas City will preach both services. “Climates for the Soul” will be the subject of the Rev. W. T Jones’ sermon Sunday morning at the Edwin Ray M. E. Church. “Back Moves” will be the subject for the evening sermon. Sunday, May 20, at the St. Paul M. E. Church, Dr. Albertus T. Briggs, the superintendent of the Greeticastle district, will deliver the sermon for the morning hour of worship. The topic for Rev. Elmer Jones’ evening sermon will be “The Price We Pay.” Sunday school at 9:30. Epworth League devotional hour at 6:30 Sunday evening. “Soul Enlargement” is announced as the subject of the morning sermon at the Linwood Christian Church by the pastor, the Rev. Homer C. Boblitt. The evening theme is to be "Failure at the Crisis.” The Rev. Bert R. Johnson, pastor of the Downey Avenue Christian Church announces “Self-Examina-tion” as the morning sermon. In the evening he will preach on “The Kingdom of God.” A mother and daughter dinner was held at the First United Presbyterian Church last night and Dr.* F. W. Rothenberger was the speak-

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men tof his absolute convictions concerning the relationships between Caesar and God. Jesus would have declared in the most definite way that everytning belongs to God. The Christian who thinks that his religion is simply something that he practipes toward,God, but that he may be any sort of a citizen so far as the State is concerned, has not found the very simplest element of true religion. If our religion has any meaning, it must create In us a strong sense of duty in relation to our fellow men and In relation to the State as it represents the organized life of society. But this sepse of duty will not be very strong or deep unless it is embedded in a deeper sense of responsibility to God as a being of love and righteousress. Hence it is that the latter pirn of- this lesson has a very beautiful relation to the first part, for in passing the law of love as the greats law of man’s life, both toward .God and toward his fellow men, Jesus in • terprets in the fullest and richest way what it means to be both a good citizen and a good Christian. Law of Life Nor should we forget that this highest law of man’s life—the law of love —is the law of God’s life. The gospel is not merely a principle of duty or of brotherly love; it is first of all a proclamation of the great fact of God’s love. Why should we doubt the love of God? How could there be love in the universe without a Creator of love? So we are lifted into these highest and surest things of all life in this* teaching of Jesus concerning the law of love. However, when we speak at" brotherly love or neighborly love it is necessary to remember the definition that Jesus gave of one’s neighbor. The Parable of the Good Samaritan must be set alongside the teaching of the obligation of love, for it is in that /parable that its meaning is revealed.

er. Miss Margaret Huston was the toastmistress and Mrs. C. S. Buck hgd charge of the arrangements. “Just What Happened on Pentecost” will be the sermon theme of the Rev. Homer Dale, pastor of the Hillside Christian Church. The evening subject is to be “The Releasing of Lazarus.” The Rev. Edward A. Daum, pastor of the First United Presbyterian Church will preach in the morning on “The Ascension” and in the evening on “The Christian of Today.” At the Second Reformed Church the pastor, the Rev. George P. Kehl, will preach on “Thankfulness and Stewardship” at the morning service. m The Christ Church Choir will give a popular concert in the church Thursday evening, May 24, at 8:15. The program will be as follows: “The Bridal Chorus” (Rose Maiden) .' | F. CSwen “Irish Folk Song’’ Arthur Foote Tenor Solo—E. V. Alexander “The Miller's Wooing” C. Fannin “Only-. Begotten Eon” (A capellai.... OretchmanlnofT "Inflammatus” (Stahat Mater)..G. Rossini Bass Solo—Paul Leslie Raymond "Italian Street Song” (Nau*d>tv Marietta) Victor Herbert “Hymn to Music” Dudley Hue.;, “The Recessional” (Kipling i H. A. Matthews Chester L. Heath is the choirmaster and the organist. The Rev. Floyd Van Keurtn, rector of Christ Episcopal Church, announces that there will be a celebration of the holy communion at 8 o’clock Sunady morning. Bishop Francis Will be the celebrant. At the mornmg prayer service at 10:45, the Litany will be said. Bishop Francis will be the preacher. There will be special music by the boy choir. They will sing Gounod’s anthem, “Unfold Ye Portals Everlasting.” On Thursday evening at 8 o'clock the boy choir will give a concert in the new parish house auditorium. At the Brookside United Brethren Church the morning sermon, as announced by the pastor, the Rev. Forest A. Reed, will be “Misers and Midgets.” In the evening the service is to be in charge of the Christian Endeavor Society and will be 'an anniversary program. •

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Shafer to Jump at Riverside Dare-Devil to Attempt Another Thrilling Stunt, . / “The Patent Leather Kid,” balloon jumper de luxe, known in private life as Claude will attempt another five-parachute leap from the sky over Riverside amusement park Sunday afternoon, it is announced. Shafer thrilled many Riverside guests last Sunday by .tumbling from the clouds attired in formal evening clothes, and tomorrow will be similarly attired, with the addition of spats and a walking stick. Shafer is an Indianapolis man and is employed ip one of the large manufacturing plants here six days each week, but on Sunday takes his recreation in tne sky. Hundreds of his fellow-employes were on hand at Riverside last Sunday to watch the perilous feat of their buddie. His flair for parachute leaping is a source of amazement to his friends, who point to the fact that the “Kid” is one of the most timid auto drivers, never exceeding a speed of twenty-five miles an hour, and he is very conservative in taking any risks in the ordinary walks of life.

nun Regulation airplane parachutes are used by Shafer in his jumps. Each of the five “chutes” is folded tightly and the bundle of five Is strapped on the aeronaut’s back. An ordinary pocketknife is use-d by Shafer in cutting loose each successive parachute on his journey back to earth, the knife being strapped to his right wrist. The “first four parachutes used by the jumper after leaving the balloon are very small and retard his downward dash but little, but the last one is larger than the rgst and serves to bring him to the ground 'without shock ordinarily*. a a a BROAD RIPPLE READY FOR OPENING Only a few finishing touches are now needed to put Broad Ripple Park into condition for the gala opening which is scheduled for Sunday, May 27. While the park has been open for the past two Sundays, and will be open free to the public tomorrow in order to give the public an idea as to the extensive changes and improvements that have been made by a crew of painters, carpertters, landscape gardeners and others the regular opening has been defered until everything is in a spick and span condition. Next Sunday will be housewarming Sunday, that is to say the public will again be invited as the guests .of the management free of charge and will be given the oportunity of passing its opinion on the new fun devices, the elaborate Irqprovements and other changes that have cost thousands of-dollars and which has enabled the owner to give Indianapolis one of the most complete stimmer amusement resorts in this part of the country. “Joy Lane,” as the midway will be known this season, will live up to its name in the galaxy of fun dethat line both sides of the concourse from the entrance to the big bathing beach. One of the latest and the only one of its kind outside of Coney Island, New York is “The Temple of Mystery” a hugh fun house in which the visitor is treated to mirth and mystery in large doses. Outings and picnics will find many changes to their liking this seasop. One portion of the big grove will be utilized for gatherings and here tables, benches, stoves and ovens for those who wish to cook are being installed. All-Girl Program The Palace Theatre, New York, ace house of vaudeville, will shortly experiment „ with an “All-Girl Program,” turning the stage of that famous house into a veritable “no _ man’s land.”

Organist

Stuart Barrie

Stuart Barrie, premier organist, one of the, greatest exponents of organ music in America, comes to the Indiana today. Mr. Barrie is a nationally known organist who will bring anew type of music to Indiana patrons. His talent lies in diversified fields of modern music. He plays classical as well as popular music.

College Story? Harold Lloyd Is reported to be considering a story with a college setting for his next picture to follow “Speedy,” which is to be released'lit Easter time. The idea is suggested- by the demand of movie fans for another picture of the type ' of Lloyd’s smashing success, “The Freshman.”

FEDERAL GRAND JURY TO CONVENE MONDAY One Hundred Cases Wait Disposition of New Tribunal. Albert Ward, United States district attorney, today was preparing for the session of the Federal grand •jury starting Monday. The grand jury is expected to be in session one week. About 100 cases involving 150 persons are t<i be investigated. The session was called by Federal Judge Robert C. Baltzell to cfear the records of a number of cases where prisoners are in jail awaiting trial. One of the more important cases to be investigated is the Terre Haute mail robbery. This is the first grand jury session since creation recently of two separate Federal court districts in Indiana. / Ft. Wayne Man Heads U, C. T. Up Time* Special MUNCIE, Ind., May 19.—Joseph Domera. Ft. Wayne, today became grand counselor of- the Indiana grand council, United Commercial Travelers, which is holding its twenty-seventh annual convention here, when officers were advanced one chair.

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GEORGIMLAN FIGHTSSMITHj ‘Organize,’ Urges Dragon in Letter. Bn United Press ATLANTA. Ga., , May 19.—The Ku-Klux Klan of C&orgla has been urged by General Nathan Bedford! Forrest, grand dragon, to unite against the presidential candidacy of Governor Alfred E. Smith of New York, the Atlanta Constitution said in a news story today. I The letter—said in the story to have been mailed April 23—said in part: “We find that the- ‘AI Smith’ sentiment is growing with such rapidity that unless the Klansmen of America wake up and do thenpart, it is almost a certainty that he will be with a possibility that he will be elected. “The Klan iai the only organization in the United States that can block his nomination, and we can not even do this- unless every Klansman will cooperate. “If you are willing to see a Roman Catholic as President of the United States, this letter, will not appeal to you. The situation is both serious and alarming, and our only chance of defeating A1 Smith is for every Klansman to start immediately to build up his own Klan.

Opportunity Knocks LITTLE RANCHES ' 12 Times Size of Average City Lot

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In Person

x SHfe r

Baby Peggy

This little girl who has been seen on the screen many times will make a personal appearance on the stage at Loew’s Palace for a week starting today. Writes Adaption Doris Anderson is writing the screen adaptation for “White Hands,” the Arthur Stringer story which has never been obtained for Esther Ralston.

There is no need to puzzle, ponder or fret about the room you want to rent. Many young men and women come to Indianapolis every day to work and live. All day long they are busy at their work, but when they want to change their room, it is in the evening that they turn to The Times “Room for Rent” ads and go “shopping”' for a room. NOW you can place your “Room for Rent”' ad in The Times six whole days for as low as SI.OO. ' Your ad reaches more than 250,000 readers daily, more than a million an£ a half in all. It works Tor you six whole days—l 44 hours. Surely out of such a vast number someone is looking for just such a room as yours. Will they know about your room? Not unless you tell them through Times Want Ads. Order your ad NOW. j #

PAGE 7

I. U. FACULTY CHANGES MADE Trustees Also Announce Fellowships. Pji United Press BLOOMINGTON, Ind., May 19. Appointments to the Indiana University faculty for the coming year ( were made as follows, by the board of trustees in annual session here: Alfred Evans, law professor; J. Wymond Frerich, associate journalism professor; Will D. Thornbury, geology instructor; Miss Winona M. Welch, botany instructor; Harry Engel, acting fine arts instructor, and Troy Daniels, part time chemistryinstructor. Miss Agnes Elpers *was reappointed English office secretary. Fellowship appointements are: Donald E. Corsline, education; George F. Taylor, history; Henry G. Nester. zoology; Clarence C. Powevbaugh, psychology; Prentice D. Edwards, mathematics; Ralph O. Hile, zoology, and Herschel Hunt, special chemistry. The following leaves of absence allowed: Conrad Felland and Miss Josephine Piercy, English department; Arch R. Addington, geology, and Agapito Ray, rortiance language department. Resignations of E. P. Appelt, German, and Oliver P. Field, polit--1 ical science, were accepted.