Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 52, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 July 1928 — Page 11
JULY 21, 1925.
Wiggins Starts Anew in Liberty Beach Quarters Chuck Wiggins, local heavyweight, has established training quarters at Liberty Beach, on White River, and has begun a training campaign that he believes will cut off some of his excess poundage and put him in shape to battle every week. Chuck is eligible again under the rules of the National Boxing Association, after being under suspension for being disqualified during a bout in the West. The Hoosier pug believes a month’s work at his well-quipped Liberty Beach camp will put him right. He has taken up tree-chopping and is wielding the ax and saw on trees felled by the recent storm. He has tentative dates with Armand Emmanual, Johnny Risko and Otto Von Forat. Wiggins said he would be pleased to have Roy Wallace join his camp and work with him as a sparring mate. He also invites other local boxers to use his quarters.
4 Holdouts * Slow Up Contest
THE 906 fans who entered The Times all-A. A. contest are asked to have patience while The Times sport staff awaits answers from letters sent writers in Minneapolis and Kansas City requesting their choices for the various positions. The newspaper men in those cities wired they had mailed their selections Wednesday, but by noon today the letters had not arrived. Milwaukee, Columbus, Toledo, Louisville and St. Paul scribes got their lineups in on time, and it would surprise the fans to glimpse some of the writers’ picks of players. In fact, The Times sports editor was surprised himself. If Minneapolis and Kansas City fail to come through by letter the scribes in those cities will be sent a wire with a request to answer by wire. In that way The Times will be in a position to announce the contest winner or winners by Monday.
With Amateur and Semi-Pro Nines
Manager of the Municipal Gardens team Is requested to call John Hausman at Drexel 1859 in regards to Sunday’s game with the Indianapolis Orioles. A fast game is expected Saturday when the Illinois Central and Murray Body nines tangle at Riverside No. 3 at 3:30 (and. s. t.l. Railroaders are leading the league by a scant half-game margain with the body team in second place. Shanklln Club will play the Dodge Brothers nine at Rhodius park Sunday. The game will be called at 3 p. m. Hoosier A. B. C.s have several new men in their iim-.-up. A s will o:av at Columbus Sunday. Spann and Yateman will form the battery for the locals. Hoosiers have Aug. 12 and September dates open. Write Martin Moore, 1747 Northwestern Ave. Strauss Says team has been setting a fast pace this year and has won ten gamesm twelve starts. Last Sunday's 2-to-l .victory at Alexandria was featured by the pitching of Lefty Hall, who was touched for four hits and struck out twelve batters. Strauss’ meet the strong NickelPlate team at Frankfort Sunday. Universals and St. Philips will clash at Brookside No. 1 at 3 p. m. Sunday. Russel Oaugh, I. U. star, will be on the mound for the Saints. Claude Noggle will twirl for the Universals. Midway Juniors will travel to Danville Sunday and will play the strong Belleville Sluggers. Spears and Ellis will form the oattery for the Juniors. For games write Les Tuttle. 1504 S, Randolph St.
Heeney Boss to Demand Tunney Break Clean
Bu United Press FAIRHAVEN, N. J„ July 21. Charley Harvey, Heeney’s American manager, will go before the New York State athletic commission Tuesday and demand that they instruct the referee in the forthcoming heavyweight fight to make Tunney break clean. "Tunney got away with more holding than I ever saw in any bout against Dempsey at Chicago, and I don’t want him holding Tom in this fight,” Harvey said. “The commission has a rule against holding and I am going to demand that they enforce it.” V I. U. VS. NOTRE DAME Schools Agree to Basketball Arrangements for Two Years. Bn Times Special BLOOMINGTON, Ind., July 21. A horr.e-and-home basketball contract has been signed by Knute Rockne. athletic director of Notre Dame University, and Z. G. Clevenger, athletic director of Indiana University. The first game will be played at South Bend, Dec. 21, 1928, Notre Dame playing at Indiana in 1929. With the scheduling of this game, Indiana’s five hon-Conference contests for next season are complete. The Conference co-champions will meet Washington, Missouri, Pittsburgh and Pennsylvania, in addition to the Irishmen. RAIN PREVENTS RACES Bu Times Special KALAMAZOO, Mich., July 21. The Thursday program of the Grand Circuit meeting here was postponed on account of rain.
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VARIETY SHOWN IN THEMES OF CITYPASTORS Some Ministers to Preach Their Sermons in Tents. The order of service at the All Souls Unitarian Church, according to the pastor, Dr. F. S. C. Wicks, is as follows, being at 7:30 p. m.: “Midsummer Caprice” Johnston “Fast June” Tschaikowsky Hymn 161. Responsive Reading, Page 73. Covenant. Anthem. Words of Aspiration. Scripture. Hymn 146. Notices and Offerings. Pastorale—"William Tell" Rossini Address—“ How We Read the Bible.” Universe.” Hymn 527. Benediction. Postlude. "Pomp and Circumstance” Elgar
The Emerson Avenue Baptist Church will hold evangelistic services at Emerson Ave. and E. New York St., this city, beginning Monday, July 23. The services will be conducted by the Rev. Elmer C. Miller, evangelist, of South Bend, Ind., and the Rev. Harry Clark, evangelist singer, of Chicago, 111. Services will be held in a tent. The Rev. Bert R. Johnson, pastor of the Downey Avenue Christian Church, who has been away for two weeks will take his pulpit again Sunday and his morning sermon will be “Looking Into t. Mirror.” In the evening Dr. G. W. Allison will preach the services to be held at the Irvington M. E. Church. This is another of the Union services. The Rev. F. P. Stocker, pastor of the First Moravian Episcopal Church will use as his subject Sunday morning “God and Daily Bread.'” In the evening the service will be “Castles in Spain.” At the Hall Place M. E. Church the sermon will be “The Unpeachable Gift,” by the pastor, the Rev. M. H. Reynold. In the evening the Rev. H. S. Bonsib will preach on “Christian Citizenship.” At the Brookside United Brethern Church the pastor, the Rev. Forest A. Reed, will preach on The Lost Faith.” In the evening the subject is to be “A Great Man Who Had a Real Case of the Blues.” The Rev. Ambrose Aegerter, pastor of the Beville Ave. Evangelical Church will preach in the morning on “The Great Divide.” The Rev. J. H. Rilling will preach the evening service and the service will be in charge of the Brotherhood of the Second Evangelical Church. The following is the order of services at the Roberts Park M. E. Church beginning at 9:30 a. m„ according to the pastor, the Rev. Edwin W. Dunlavy: 9:30 A. M.—Sunday school. 10:45 A. M.—Morning worship. 6:30 P. M.—Epworth League devotional service. 7:45 P. M.—Evening service.
The Sunday morning sermon of the Rev. L. C. E. Facklor, pastor of the St. Matthew Lutheran Church, will be “Hands and Feet.” This is the fourth sermon in the series of the humhn body. The Willing Workers will be entertained Tuesday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Edward H. Janke, 702 Carlisle PI. The Rev. K. R. Roberts will preach the morning service at the Ebenezer Lutheran Church. His subject will be “The Wings of Flight.” In the evening there will be Union Lutheran services at the First Lutheran Church. The Rev. H. E. Eberhardt, superintendent of the Wheeler City Mission, will preach the morning service at the Capitol Avenue M. E. Church. In the evening the Epworth League will conduct a service at 7 a. m. “The Crown We Strive For” will be the subject of the morning sermon at the Emmanual Baptist Church. The pastor, the Rev. H. B. Hazen, will also preach on “The Goinf of Life” at the evening service. The morning service at the Brightwood M. E. church will be “The Test of Christian Experience,” according to an announcement by the pastor, the Rev. Victor B. Hargitt. “A Message to the Children” will be the evening sermon. The Junior Choir will sing at this time. The Rev. J. A. Long, pastor of the North Park Christian Church will use as his subject Sunday morning “Thou Shalt Love.” The Rev. Edmond Kerlin wll preach at the service of morning worship, 10:40, First Evangelical Church, and also at the People’s Service, 7:45 p. m. Music directed by Mr. Arnold Spencer at both services.
“Truth” will be the subject of the lesson-sermon in all Churches of Christ, Scientist, Sunday, July 22. The Golden Text will be from John viii 31-32, “If ye continue in my word, then are ye my disciples indeed; and we shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free.” Among the citations which will comprise the lesson-sermon is the following from the Bible: “Pilate therefore said unto him, Art thou a king then? Jesus answered, Thou sayest that I am a king. To this end was I born, and for this cause came I into the world, that I should bear witness unto the truth. Every one that is of the t ruth heareth my voice.” (John xviii, 37.) The lesson-sermon also includes the following passages from the Christian Sciencetextbook, "Science and Health, with Key to the Scriptures,” by Mary Baker Eddy: “Prayer can not change the unalterable Truth, nor can prayer alone give us an understanding of Truth; but prayer, coupled with a fervert habitual desire to know and do the will of God, will bring us into all Truth. Such a desire has little need of audible expression. It is best expressed in thought and in life.” (P. 11.) The Rev. P. B. Turner, pastor of the 900 W. Thirtieth St. Church of
Sunday School Lesson
The International Uniform Sunday School Lesson for July 22. Saul's Early Ministry. Acts 9: 19-30; 11:25, 26. BY WM. E. GILROY, D. D. Editor of The Congregationallst THIS lesson deals with Paul’s early experience in the Christian life and ministry. Naturally, when the story of Paul’s conversation came to the Christians at Damascus they were amazed, but apparently his witness was so convincing that iheir distrust was entirely removed and they were led to see the genuineness of his conversion. Also, Paul’s adherence to the Christian way was quickly tested in persecution, for the Jews when they found that Paul had deserted their cause and become a Christian sought to kill him, watching for him at the gates of the city with such zeal that the disciples were compelled for Paul’s safety to let him down by night through the wall of the city in a basket. When Paul came to Jerusalem, however, the disciples who had not had an opportunity to witness the thoroughness of his conversion but who knew him only through his zeal as a persecutor were afraid of him. They distrusted the reality of his professed conversion and did not seem to And it possible that so violent a foe of the Christian way could suddenly become so intense a believer in Christ. Barnabas’ Part There was, however, a man of remarkably good judgment and selfsacrificing character at Jerusalem who had himself displayed his faith in the Christian way by sacrificing all his possessions for the promotion of Christianity, and this man, Barnabas, evidently became strongly impressed with the sincerity of Paul’s new faith. He brought Paul to the apostles assuring them of the reality of his conversion on the way to Damascus and telling them how Paul had preached boldly in the name of Jesus. Thus it was that Paul was accepted by the disciples at Jerusalem, and thus began the friendship between Paul and Barnabas which had its first great expression in the first missionary journey. The boldness of Paul’s preaching at Jerusalem put him in peril and the disciples sent him for safety far away to his birthplace, Tarsus. Meanwhile, Barnabas left for Antioch, sent there by the disciples at Jerusalem because of reports that had come concerning certain Greeks
God, will preach at the 0:30 a. m service on the subject, “The Masters Call.” His subject for the 8 p. m. service will be “The Present Christian Division, It’s Cause and Cure.” “Green Pastures and Still Waters” will be the theme of the morningsermon at Hillside Christian Church Sunday. Homer Dale is the pastor. The pastor of Bethlehem Evangelical Lutheran Church announces “Whom Do You Serve?” as his sermon subject for Sunday morning at the 10:45 o’clock service. The Rev. Fred A. Line will preach at the Central Universalist Church at the 11 o’clock morning service His subject will be, “The Man of Deeds.” There will be special music by the mixed quartet. This is the last service in the church before the summer vacation. The last Sunday of this month the congregation will go to Waldron Ind., for the all-day meeting. Services will be resumed the second Sunday of September. Sunday School convenes at 9:30. The Ladies Alliance is to have a lawn social on the vacant lot at Parker Ave. and Tenth St., Saturday evening, July 21. Ice cream, cake, lemonade, etc. will be for sale. A summer-hour service will be held Sunday at 10:45 in the Fairview Presbyterian Church, Dr. Edward Haines Kistler speaking on “Life Impetuous, or Life Discreet?” Three services will be held at the Indianapolis Gospel Tabernacle, Alabama at North St., on Sunday, under the pastoral leadership of Dr. Armin E. Holser. The Believers’ meeting at the Lord’s Table, which was usually held at 10:30 a. m., will be conducted at 8 o’clock in the morning, and at 11 o’clock, a general morning worship will be held, at which time the pastor will speak on “The Kingdom of God and the Kingdom of Heaven in the Light of the Scriptures.” At 7:30 p. m. Dr. Holzer will speak on the “Rebuilding of Ancient Babylon, the Future Metropolis of Anti-Christ.” Merle Sidener, teacher of the Christian Men Builders, Inc., will talk on the subject “Life’s Assembly Line” at the Third Christian Church Sunday morning. The Misses Rosanna and Katherine Stull will play a piano duet. The class will have as its guests about fifteen members of a Sunday School class from Union City, taught by R. B. Hunt, formerly a member of the Christian Men Builders. The class program will be broadcast over Station WFBM /between 9:30 and 10:45 a. m. The Rev. William Talbott Jones, pastor of the Edwin Ray M. E, Church, announces the morning sermon as an Object Lesson Sermon. In the evening the service will be "Pioneering for the Lord.” The Rev. Clyde L. Gibbens, pastor of the Mars Hill Baptist Church, will preach on “The Dew of Youth” Sunday morning. The evening sermon wil be “The Law of Happiness.”
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
in Antioch, who had been led to believe in Jesus through the preaching of disciples who had been scattered to various places by the persecution at Jerusalem. We are reminded in our lesson that it was here at Antioch that the disciples were first called Christians. Barnabas went to Antioch and confirmed these new disciples in the faith, and then went on to Tarsus to look for Paul. Tarsus, as one may see from examining the map, it not far from Antioch, either by land or sea. Barnabas found Paul there and brought him back with him to Antioch, where he and Paul remained for a whole year, gathering together the church and teaching the people. Here in a sense it was that organized Christianity had its beginning, for the church at Jerusalem had represented anew experience among Jews, rather than the organization of anew institution representing a fellowship of both Jews and Gentiles in the bonds of anew faith and anew church with Jesus as its head. Probably it was this significance that was emphasized in the fact that the disciples were first called Christians in this church at Antioch. There was a deeper significance, also, in the Christian beginnings in this city, for the founding of this church at Antioch represented the challenge of Christnanity to the licentious and corrupt living of ancient civilization. Antioch was a magnificent city, fifteen miles from the Mediterranean on the river Orontes, but its moral condition was in strange contrast to its outward magnificence and glory. It was on the great ways of travel and commerce between east and west and the evil as well as the wealth of the ancient world poured through it. Immoral Life The life of the city was so immoral that when Roman moralists would condemn the licentiousness of Rome they were wont to say that “the Orontes had overflowed the Tiber.” It has been the glory of Christianity that it has ever made its power felt in the presence of the greatest need. Here in a corrupt city the leaven of new life begun to work. Just how great the triumph was in the ancient day we cannot say, but it is significant that Antioch is now remembered not so much for its splendor as a city as for the little group of disciples who were gathered there into a Christian Church and who began from Antioch the missionary journies that were to win the western world for Christianity. CLASS TO HEAR TALK “Life's Assembly Line” will be the subject of an address by Merle Sidener at his Christian Men Builders, Inc., Sunday School class Sunday morning at Third Christian Church. Misses Rosanna and Katherine Stull will play a piano duet. Fifteen members of a class taught by B. R. Hunt at Union City will be guests. The program will be broadcaset over WFBM, oetueen 9:30 and 10:45 p. m.
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FINANCE HOOVER ON GIFTS ALONE IS C.JKP. PLAN Ohiona Makes Survey on Campaign Needs Above $3,000,000. BY LEO R. SACK. WASHINGTON, July 21.—J. R. Nutt, Cleveland banker and business man, who is now trying to determine how much more than $3,000,000 will be required to finance Herbert Hoover’s campaign for President, feels that contributors should regard their contributions as a "privilege.” As treasurer of the Republican national committee, Nutt is having his first experience in practical politics. “I look at this as a business man,” he savs. “This Government is a great big corporation, the biggest in uie worui, in which we are all stock - holders. I look upon Hoover as the greatest administrator and executive in the world. Why not, then, try to get the greatest administrator that we know of to head our business. During the next eight years our
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Government probably will spend more money than ever in its peacetime history. Let’s have an able administrator spend it, and every contribution makes this possible, in my opinion.” Nutt announces there will be no fixed limit, “public or private,” in contributions. Subscriptions, he declares, will not be judged by their size, but by the “standing in the community of the donor.” “No subscriptions should be requested or accepted where any reasonable question could be rightfully raised as to the donor or the amount of the subscription.” Those who contribute to the Republican campaign, he declares, will be participating in a “great educational campaign” which will be conducted on a “high plane and the result will bring benefits to all people in every State.” “It should be an honor to assist financially, irrespective of the amount contributed,” he adds. Nutt says he will not know until next week just how much the campaign will cost. Sues Official for §IO,OOO if;/ Timet Special RUSHVILLE, Ind., July 21. Adolphus Cameron, Rush County surveyor, faces a SIO,OOO damage suit filed by William Martin, superintendent of construction on paving the William Dill road. Martin alleges Cameron libeled him with charges that he was “shorting” taxpayers in the road work.
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