Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 19, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 June 1928 — Page 7
JUKE 2, 1928.
PASTOR TO CELEBRATE SERVICE Rev, U, S, Clutton Will Observe Twentieth Anniversary, / The Rev. U. S. Clutton, pastor of the Tuxedo Park Baptist Church will celebrate the twentieth anniversary of his coming to the church as pastor on Sunday, June 3. Services will be held at 9:30 to 11:15 a. m. and at 7:30 p. m. (daylight saving time). After graduating from the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary at Louisville, Ky., and serving as pastor of the Culbertson Avenue Baptist Church, New Albany, In(J. 4 a little over three years, the Rev. Clutton accepted the call of the Tuxedo Park Baptist Church of this city and began his work the first Sunday of June, 1908. The church has had a steady growth, growing from slightly more than 100 members to a present membership of nearly 600. Six years ago 100 members were dismissed to form the Emerson Avenue Baptist Church which was an outgrowth of the Mission Sunday school, established by the Rev. Clutton. The frame building, which was the church twenty years ago has been replaced by a modern church and Sunday school plant. The church and Sunday school, with an attendance averaging about 600, ranks well among the leading Baptist churches of the State. In 1910 the first Boy Scout troop in the city was organized by the Rev. Clutton, who has served as scoutmaster since then. The first Daily Vacation Bible school was held" in the Tuxedo Park Church in the summer of 1915. In January 1921 the Week-Day Bible school, meeting on Thursday after school, was instigated and has become a permanent part of the program. Last spring a moving picture machine wa§ installed and is used thorughout the year for education, entertainment and in the evening service during the summer months as part of the worship. The Rev. Clutton has been made president of the Indiana Baptist Assembly, the young people’s straining school at Franklin College, for five summers. He has served as the president of the Indiana Baptist convention for two years and for fifteen years has been on the boards of the denomination in the State. On the Rev. Clutton’s twentieth anniversary the church has voted to begin anew order of service for Sunday morning and try it out for months of June, July and August. Instead of having the Sunday school and morning worship, in which two distinct services were held, only one service \*ill be had, which will consist of worship, the message by the pastor and the study of the Sunda--school lesson. The service will begin at 9:30 a. m. and be dismissed at 11:45 a. m. A varied program will be given at the Seventh Christian Church tomorrow evening. The greater part will be musical, by the E. V/. Hoover Concert Orchestra. Christene Wagoner Roush, director: Jean Duthie, pianist: Alice Diver, harpist; Margaret Rasbach, orchestra soloist, giving the following program: "White Queen”—Overture Metra "Mignonette” "Chant Sans Paroles” Priml "Twilight Meditation,” "After Vespers" Moret Vocal Solo—" Beautiful Garden of Prayer" Fillmore "Old Refrain,” "Viennese Song”. Kreisler Invocation Rev. A. H. Moore Berceuse” Goddard "Feast of Lanterns,” overture Bennett "Evening Star,” romantic song from Tannhauser Wagner "Heartsease" Moret The address will be given by the Rev. A. H. Moore. “In the Suburbs of Christ’s Kingdom’’ will be the morning sermon of the Rev. William Talbott Jones, pastor of the Edwin Ray M. E. Church Sunday. In the evening the sermon Will be “The Condition of Christ’s Coming.” The church states that it is conforming to the daylight saving law. At the North Park Christian Church the pastor, the Rev. J. A. Long, will speak Sunday morning on “The Character of Cash; or Making Money Immortal.” “Out of the Dust-Man” will be the evening topic The Rev. Homer Dale, pastor of the Hillside Christian Church announces “Unselfish Service” as the morning sermon. In the evening the service will be “Memorials and Their Meaning.” The Red Men and the Pocahontas Ladies will attend the service in the evening in a body as a memorial to their dead. The Lynhurst Baptist Church will follow the daylight savings plan in their services. Sunday morning the pastor, the Rev. C. H. Schieck, will use “Christian Certainty” as his sermon. In the evening the theme will be “Life Seekers.” The Rev. Bert R. Johnson, pastor of the Downey Avenue Christian Church will preach Sunday morning on “An Open Door.” In the evening the sermon will be “The growing Heart.” The Rev. Joseph G. Moore, pastor of the Capitol Avenue M. E. Church announces “A Strange Defense” as his morning subject. “A Modern Conception of Heaven and Hell” will be the evening topic. Services will be conducted on standard time. Members of the G. A. R., Spanish War Veterans, American Legion and their allied organizations have been invited to the services at the First United Presbyterian Church in commemoration of Memorial day. The services will be held at 10:45 a. m., (standard time). Max J. Young will deliver the address “Honor to Whom Honor Is Due.” The Rev. H. B. Hazen. pastor of the Emmanual Baptist Church announces that his morning subject will be “He Restoreth My Soul.” In the evening the sermon will be “Paul’s Remedy for Evil.” The Lord’s Supper will be observed at the i morning service. The Rev. Floyd Van Keuren, rector of Christ Episcopal Church, will have a quiet celebration of the Holy Communion Sunday morning at 8
Sunday School Lesson
The International Uniform Sunday School Lesson for June 3. The Fellowship of His Sufferings. Mark 14: 17-35. 33-36. BY WM. E. GILROY, D. D. Editor of The ConKregationalist THE title of our lesson is from an expression of the apostle Paul—a beautiful expression which emphasizes the privilege of every man and his proper attitude toward Jesus of Nazareth. What is our attitude toward the sufferings of Christ? Is it, simply the attitude of indifference and carelessness? “Is it nothing to you, all ye that pass by?” Is it the attitude that Jesus has suffered for us, and, therefore, we may go free, that he has borne some penalty instead of us? Or is it the response of love and gratitude that makes us yearn to share life with him in its burdens as well as in its joys and triumphs? Yearning for Fellowship The picture of the human Christ given here in the story of the Last Supper, and in the story of the agony in Gethsemane, in its revelation of the heart of God, reminds us how the Christ himself yearns for fellowship. We may think of Jesus as all sufficient, but we find him weak and lonely in the garden, praying earnestly to God the Father and finding strength through his prayers, but yearning also for that human sympathy and loyalty in which for the time being the disciples had failed him. It is Instructive to consider the attitude of Jesus when faced with last great tragedy. Possibly there are times when we condemn ourselves because it seems so hard for us to follow the way of sacrifice. We shrink from bearing the cross, and we are ashamed that we should be so weak and so faithless. But it is well at such a time to remember that Jesus Himself prayed earnestly that (he cup might pass. However, if he normally o’clock. There will be a choral celebration of the Holy Communion at 10:45 and sermon, “Dramatis Personae,” a sermon for Trinity Sunday. The choir will sing Rachmaninoff’s anthem, “Glory to the Trinity.” There will be no evening service. Christ Church is observing daylight saving time. “The Christian Sabbath” will be the sermon subject of J. Floyd Seelig at the Fifty-First Street M E. Church on Sunday morning at 10:45. In the evening service at 7:30 the subject will be “The Mote and The Beam.” The services for this Sunday will be according to standard time. Beginning Sunday, June 10, they will be according to daylight saving time. The children's day program will be given on June 10, at 10:45 p. m. Tire Rev. Edmond Kerlin will preach at the First Evangelical Church at 10:40 a. m. on “A Love Letter from a Prison.” At 7:45 p. m Col. A. J. Daugherty, commander of the Eighty-Fifth Division Organized Reserves United States Army will speak ten minifies on “Habit Formation,” preceding Mr. Kerlin’s sermon on “Habit Reformation.” Music by Arnold Spencer and vested chorus. Daylight saving time will be observed. The Rev. Fred A. Line will preach at Central Universalist Church, Fifteenth and N. New Jersey Sts., at the 11 o’clock morning service. His sermon subject will be “The Real Christian.” There will be good music by a mixed quartet. Sunday school convenes at 9:3Q, Y. P. C. U. 4:30 p. m. All services on daylight saving time. The Rev. E. T. Howe, pastor of Unity Methodist Protestant Church, will speak in the morning on the “Parable of the Sower” and in the evening the theme will be "Pleasing God.” At the morning service thev sacrament of the Lord’s Supper will be administered. The order qf service at the All Souls Unitarian Church is announced by the pastor, Dr. F. S. C. Wicks, to be as follows, starting at 11 o'clock, daylight saving time: Prelude Bastßte Hvmn et 33 fr ° m " Lucla " •••••••• '-Donizetti First service ■Covenant Anthem Words of Aspiration Scripture Responsive Reading. Third Selection Hymn 246 Notices and Offering "Kamennoi Ostrow" Rubinstein Address Hymn 475 Lambeth Benediction Postlude "Coronation March” Meyerbeer The following is the program of music at the Broadway M. E. Church Sunday morning starting at 10:45: Prelude-“Sanctus" Gounod Processional— "Love Divine All Love Excelling" Zundel Doxologv Hymn—“He Leadeth Me** Bradbury Anthem—“ Build Thee More Stately Mansions ’ Mark Andrew Incidental solo, C. C. Llovd “Gloria Patri” Offertory Prayer by Choir—" Saviour. Thy Dying Love” i Lowry Hymn Anthem—"By Cool Siloam” .... Tt • Woodbury Hymn—" From Every Stormy Wind That Blows” Hastings Choir Response and Chimes "Postlude” Whiting In the evening the music will be as follows, starting at 7:30 p. m.:. Organ—- " Postlude in C Sharp Minor” „ Vodorinski At Parting of Day” Frysinger "Echoes of Spring” Friml Hymn—" Day Is Dying in the West"... . Sherwin Anthem—“ Lord, for Thy Tender Mercies Sake" (a capella) Farrant Silent Meditation With the Organ—- " Softly Now the Light of Day" Anthem—" Lord of Our Life" Field Incidental Solo. Miss Charlotte Passwater Gloria Patri" Response by Things Come of Thee. O Lord; and of Thine Own Have We Given Thee. Amen.” Cornet Solo—" Holy City" Adams Wesley Lewis Hymn—“One More Da.vls Work for Jesus” Lowry Response and Chimes Postlude—‘"Suite Arabesque” Holloway Bethlehem Evangelical Lutheran Sunday school, located at Fifty-Sec-ond St. and Central Ave., have outgrown their present quarters. Last night at a meeting of the Sunday school it became evident that new quarters must be found aful accordingly Dr. and Mrs. Barr opened their home to the school. This home is located at 5150 Central Ave. and will be used for the primary and kindergarten departments, under the direct supervision of Mrs. Barr. The adult portion of the school composed of juniors, intermediates and seniors will meet in regular session in the present chapel building. Dr. Barr’s adult class and Mr. Miller’s class meeting in the main auditorium and the other classes meet-
human he was at the same time divinely great in his confession and prayer to God—“ Nevertheless not as I will, but as thou wilt.” Facing the Sacrifice There are times when sorrow and sacrifice must be faced unless a man is to prove a traitor to himself, to God, and to his fellow men. There are times when, having done all that one can to avoid loss and pain, the full sacrifice must be faced with courage and cheerfulness. These two attitudes may well go together; in fact they ought to go together, for pain and sacrifice are j good only when they ere a part of some divine purpose. Jesus needed the support and confidence of prayer. It was in communion with God his Father that he found strength to go forth and meet his fate. So, it is that in the fellowship of Christ's suffering we find strength to bear our burdens and to fare our trials. The full work of Christ for us is never accomplished until we discover the meaning and richness of this fellowship. Moreover there is a fellowship with Christ in the pleasant places in the fields and by the sea and on the mountain top that never brings to us the full revelations of love and power that come when we dare to enter Gethsemane and follow with him the way to the cross. These are lessons that one cannot effectually express for another. Even the most intense expression of them is apt to be conventional and formal, but the lives of men and women who have tested these things in experience speak to us with inspiration and with certainty. • The true mystery of life is not found in ways of ease and complacency; strange as it may seem. There are deeper experiences through which men must pass. Tnere are keen tests of the soul which they must undej-go if they would And the power of God. ing in the basement of the church For the past year the Sunday school enjoyed a remarkable growth under the capable leadership of George B. Coffey. The newest and latest up to the minute methods are in use in the school and it is one whose ranking in high standard of organization and efficiency is coveted by other Sunday schools. This move on the part of the school will solve one of the most serious of immediate problems, but there are many more friat come in the wa yof growth to be met. The Rev. William I. Caughran pastor of the First Congregational Church, will preach Sunday morning at 11 o'clock on “The Ascension of Our Lord,” The United Lutheran Churches adopted the daylight saving time yesterday at a special session of the Indianapolis United Lutheran Ministers Association called by the Rev. W. C. Donaldson. Quite a bit of discussion followed the proposal and yesterday afternoon it was finally decided that all the United Lutheran Churches of the city would adopt the fast time. The churches making this advanced move are: The First English Lutheran Church. Gethsemane Lutheran Church, Bethany Lutheran Church, Mars Hill Lutheran Church, Pleasant View Lutheran Church, Bethany Lutheran Church, St. Marks Lutheran Church and Bethlehem Evangelical Lutheran Church. This action is to take effect immediately and carries with it daylight saving time for all the midweek meetings. To satisfy the many requests received since last Sunday, the Holy Name Society of St. Philips Church will give a repetition of “Lines and Other Shines” minstrel frolic in the auditorium next Sunday, June 3, at 8:15 p. m. The end men are Charlie Lyons, Bill §hines, Bert Swain, Joe Swallow, Ed Krueger and Ina Neidhamer. The ballad singers and the male chorus number fifty voices The show is under the direction of Charlie Lyons, who is also the manager and end man, Bill Hornberger and Bill Shine. The Rev. L. E. Smith, pastor of Broadway Evangelical Church, corner of Broadway and Fifty-Fifth St., will preach Sunday morning from the subject “The Secret of a Great Life.” In the evening “Bringing Back the King.” Services convene on daylight saving time. Bible school 9:30 a. m. Worship 10:45 a. m. Evening service 7:45. At a business meeting of the Emerson Avenue Baptist Church, E. New York St. and Emerson Ave., it was decided to hold all services of the church, beginning with morning services, Sunday, June 2, on daylight saving time. Children’s day will * be observed Sunday at 10, daylight saving time, in the Fairview Presbyterian Church. Miss Lucia A. R. Ketcham and Mrs. Harold D. Robinson are in charge of a pageant. “The First May Basket,” presented by the. department of the school, E. H. K. McComb, superintendent; Mrs. Paul T. Hurt, junior department; Mr*. Richard D. Calkins, primary and Mrs. Richard D. Robertson, be dinners. Another service will be held. Price on Chicken Thieves By United Press PLYMOUTH. Tnd., June 2. Chicken thieves here “have a price on their heads.” The Marshall County Protective Association has offered a reward of $25 for information leading to identification and arrest of any person found guilty of stealing anything of value from members. The association asked this after chicken thieves became active in Marshall County again after a few weeks of quiet. Every member has been asked to mark his chickens in some manner so that he can identify them. Night Work on Buildings By Times Special BLOOMINGTON, Ind.. June 2. Under the glare of electric lights, work of erecting two buildings here is being pushed by night forces. Concrete work is being done at the new telephone building, and excavation on the site of the new Graham Hotel. j i *’
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
New Stunts to Be Given at Park Stuart Will Stage Many Thrilling Events at Riverside, A high-wire performance by Reckless Stuart and a flve-parachute balloon jump by Claude Shafer, “The Patent Leather Kid," will feature this week-end's free attractions at Riverside amusement park. Stuart will give his first-perform-ance at Riverside tonight. Seventyfive feet in midair, the aerial stunt man will stage an acrobatic performance on a slender wire stretched between the two balloon poles in the center of the resort, and will conclude by presenting a fireworks spectacle called “The Death Trap of Flame,” during which he will stand on the wire in the center of a volcano of fire from an immense pyrotechnic set piece. Again, Sunday night, Stuart will present the feature, introducing several new features in the second presentation. Claude Shafer, “The Patent Leather Kid,” who is rapidly becoming a popular idol among the Riverside visitors, will attempt a five-parachute leap Sunday afternoon from the big Riverside balloon. Shafer, who is employed during the week as a skilled mechanic in a local automobile body factory, has had several narrow escapes from serious injury or death this summer at Riverside, only last Sunday experiencing the thrill of having his parachute rope break, leaving him suspended a mile high by a single slender strand of hemp, and compelling him to ride to earth in one of the small parachutes. The beautiful stretch of White River at Riverside is proving a popular place for lovers of water sports and is dotted with canoes since the advent of summer weather. The free admission to Riverside, together with the free checking service and the complete restaurants which have been installed this season in the resort, are making it a favorite headquarters for the golfers, baseball players, tennis and horseshoe pitching devotees who injudge in their recreations out Riverside way. Bandits Ride Motorcycles By Times Speeial NOBLESVILLE. Ind., June 2. Two bandits riding motorcycles robbed D. D. Denny. Joliet (111.) traveling salesman, of $75 on Federal Rd. 31, six miles north of Westfield, he reported to police here. * Asks Shorter Name By Times Speeial VINCENNES. Ind., June 2.—Harold Glaubensklee has petitioned the Knox Circuit Court here for permission to drop all the letters of his surname excepting the last three.
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Graduating Class at School 36
V . a~i—. ,:
These boys and girls will be graduated from School 36: Front row (left to right), Mary Jane Bredell, Russell Ratcliffe, Dorothy Elkins, Robert Williard, Laura Huggins, Joe McKay, Virginia Brown; second row, Margaret Elliott, Wade Distel, Nellie Wells, Cleo Pierce, Elsie //ebb. Harry Miller, Ruby Woessner, Maurice Vestal, Maurine Campbell; third row, Ethel Helfenberger, Mary Jane Gent, Mary Ellen Beale, Lewis Grant, Florence Ante, John Leach, Ruth Floyd, Lee Alfred Hart and Lois Hold.
AUTHOR MAT BE DELEGATE Nicholson and Mooney on Seventh District Slate. William J. Mooney, president of Mooney - Mueller - Ward Company, wholesale druggists, and Meredith Nicholson, novelist and city councilman, are mentioned as likely selections for national Democratic convention delegates from the Seventh District. The two Seventh District delegates will be chosen Tuesday, 7 p. m., when the 105 State convention delegates of the district meet in the House of Representatives’ chamber in the State house. There is some talk that Mayor L. Ert Slack may be chosen as one of the two national convention delegates, but the Mayor is giving the idea no encouragement. Eight delegates-at-large, carrying a half-vote each will be named on the floor of the convention. Slated for selection are Thomas Taggart. William O'Brien, of Lawrenceburg; Lew G. Ellingham, Fort Wayne publisher; William Cronin, Terre Haute editor; A. C. Sallee, vice-president of the Evans Woollen-for-President organization; Mrs. Samuel M. Ralston, Mrs. Thomas R. Marshall and Mrs. John W. Kern. It is expected that Charles A. Greathouse, national committeeman from Indiana, and Mrs. James R. Riggs, of Sullivan, national committeewoman, will be re-elected by the thirty National convention* delegates
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Nervy Child By Times Special CONNERSVILLE, Ind., June 2.—Erma Jean Williams, 5 Mt. Vernon, will give a wing-w alking exhibition on an airplane at Stoops Park here Sunday. This will be her first attempt at the wing stunt, but previously she has transferred from the front to the rear seat of a planee in flight.
from Indiana after the State convention Wednesday and before the Houston convention, beignning June 26. MOTHERS’ CLUB ELECTS Cathedra! High Organization Elects Officers. The Cathedral High School Mothers Club, organized to assist the students in extra-curricular activities, have elected these new officers: Mrs. Timothy P. Sexton, president; Mrs. R. Kroger, first vice president; Mrs. J. R. Clements, second vice president; Mrs. M. S. Herold, third vice president; Mrs. George Connolly, fourth vice president; Mrs. Vincent Concannon, financial secretary; Mrs. George McDonnell, secretary, and Mrs. J. Wulle, treasurer. Research Manager Resigns By Times Speeial BLOOMINGTON. Ind., June 2 Charles F. Benzel, Indianapolis division manager of the Indiana University business research bureau, has resigned to be assistant manager of the Gimbel department store, Milwaukee, Wis.
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ESSAY PRIZE WINNER City Girl Places in National Meat Story Contest. Miss Alta Adamson, Manual Training High School student, was named one of the winners from among 16,000 contestants in the fifth National Meat Story Contest conducted by the National Livestock and Meat Board, Chicago. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Orlo C. Adamson, 1342 S. Harding St. She wrote on ‘Cooking Each Cut of Meat by the Best Method.” A second Indiana girl, Miss Marjorie Foster of Alexandria, will receive a prize for her essay, “The Place of Meat in the Balanced Diet.” Miss Adamson’s story placed tenth in the central district, of which Indiana is a part, and Miss Foster’s won the State championship and ranked second in the same district.
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G. 0. P. LEADERS RUSH PLANS TO OPEN MILAVE Butler Prepares to Turn Gavel Over to Fess as Last Act. BY IRWIN I. FEMRITE United Prras Staff Correspondent KANSAS CITY. June 2.—William M. Butler of Massachusetts today prepared for his last official act as chairman of the Republican national committee, the opening of the party’s national convention hero Tuesday, June 12. But many routine problems of a national convention must be met by Butler before he opens the convention and turns the gavel over to Senator Simeon D. Fess, Ohio, temporary chairman and keynoter. Butler arrived here Friday, accompanied by Roy West, Chicago, secretary of the national committee; James White, Washington, assistant secretary; Joseph A. Legare, Lowell, Mass., Butler’s assistant, and Miss Renie R. Jeffrey, his secretary. Mrs. Alvin T. Hert, Kentucky, vies chairnfan of the National committee, also was on hand and prepared to begin activities for the women of the party. Senator Reed Smoot, chairman of the resolutions committee, was expected today. He will begin immediately upon the party’s platform —A task which will involve many of the problems growing out of the recent veto of the McNary-Haugen farm relief bill. Butler announced hearings of contests for seats in the convention will begin Monday morning. J. Francis Duke, Pittsburgh, attorney for the committee, said the dockets would be announced tonight. The contested seats total seventythree and include nine from Florida, four at large and five from congressional districts, three from Georgia, two from Kentucky, twelve from Louisiana, two from Porto Rico, three from Tennessee and Twenty-six the entire State delegation from Texas.
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