Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 58, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 July 1928 — Page 14
PAGE 14
MORAVIAN MEETINGS SCHEDULED Thirty-Fourth Annual Endeavor Convention Here Aug. 2-5. THE thirty-fourth annual convention of the First Moravian Christian Endeavor Union will be held in the First Moravian Church of Indianapolis on Aug. 2,3. 4 and 5. The Moravian churches from the Atlantic seaboard to Indiana are included, and there will be delegates in attendance from most of the churches. A motor caravan carrying the Christian Endeavorers from the churches of New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Ohio w.ill arrive In Indianapolis on Thursday morning. Here they will be entertained by the Christian Endeavorer Societies of the First and Second Moravian churches, during the course of the convention. The convention program includes many distinguished speakers and workers among young people, and bids fair to contribute much constructive inspiration to the work of Christian Endeavor. The program is as follows for the four days: —Thursday, Aug. 2 4:30 P. M.~ Wei come meeting; greetings; Miss Bessie Bittrich. chairman of the convention committee; the Rev. F. P. Stocker, pastor of the First Moravian Church; the Rev. Vernon W. Couillard, pastor of the Second Moravian Church; response. Edward B. Clewell of Emaus. Pa., union president. s:3o—Fellowship supper and stunt program. 7:30 P. M.—Opening session; song service and devotional. 8 P. M.—Greetings from the provincial elders’ conference, by the Rev. Dr. S. H. Gapp, vice president. 8:15 P. M.—Convention sermon by the Rev Dr. Charles H. Rominger, professor of religious education. Cedar Crest College. Allentown. Pa. —Friday, Aug. 3 0 A. M.—Quief " 9:15 A. M.—E.';lc ...ucly, the Rev. Dr. B. H. Gapp. 10 A. M.—Address. "Progressive Endeavor," by the Rev. F. G. Fulmer, Hope, Ind. 10:30 A. M. —Open forum, "Is This an Age of Faith?” led by the Rev. R. Henklemann of New York City. 12 Noon—Luncheon. 1:30 P. M—Business session. Union President E. B. Clewell, presiding. 2:3o—Sightseeing tour and outing. 6 P. M.—Dinner. 7:30 P. M.—Missionary meeting; song Service and devotional. 8 P. M.—Missionary address, "The Mission Situation in Nlcaraugua,” by the Rt. Rev. Karl A. Mueller of Watertown, Wis. —Saturday, Aug. 4 9 A. M. —Quiet hour. 9:15 A. M.—Bible study, the Rev. Dr. 10 A. a £l.—Simultaneous conference on “Objectives in Christian Enedavor.” "Objectives in Prayer Meeting." led by the Rev. Vernon W. Couillard of Indianapolis. "Objectives in Personal Evangelism, led by the Rev. Theodore Reinke of York. Pa. “Objectives in the Social Program,” led bv Miss Margaret Kirkwood of New York City. 10:30 A. M.—Personal problems conferences (for boys and girls); conference for ministers. 12 Noon—Luncheon. 1:30 P. M.—Business session. 2:30 P. M.—Junior demonstration. 3 P. M.—Conference, led by H. A. Klahr. executive secretary of the Ohio Christian Endeavor Union. 6 P. M— Dinner. . . , 7:30 P. M.—Song service and devotional. 8 P. M.—Address, by H. A. Klahr. —Sunday, Aug. 5 11 A. M.—Services In local Moravian Churches. , _ _ 6:45 P. M. —Demonstration, C. E. meetU ?’:4s P. M.—lnstallation of union officers; closing sermon by the Rev. H. L. Eccles of Butler University. The convention song leader will be the Rev. H. E. Kemper of Egg Harbor City. N. J. All sessions will be held In the First Moravian Church, Twenty-Second and Broadway.
Dr. J. W. McFall, pastor of the Broadway M. E. Church has beer at the Rivervale Epworth League Institute the past week, but will -e----turn for the services next Sunday. In the morning his subject will be “Jesus and World Needs,” and in the evening he will speak on “Some Downward Steps.” The Epworth League Fellowship hour at 6 p. m. Sunday will be in charge of Mr. Moffett, who will have a program of games and stunts. The devotional meeting at 6:45 p. m. will be led by Bryce Ham who will speak on the subject “Booker T. Washington.” A quartet will sing. Monday evening the Sunday school council will meet in the chapel at 7:30 p. m. to consider the Fall and Winter program of training and other work in the Sunday school. At the St. Paul M. E. Church next Sunday morning, the Rev. Elmer Jones will preach on the subject “Heaven.” At this service the young people, who attended the Epworth League Institute at Battle Ground, will receive their certificates. The fourth union service will be held at the St. Paul M. E. Church Sunday evening. The Rev. Aubrey Moore, of the Seventh Christian Church, will deliver the message, the subject of which will be “The Christian and His Diseases.” The chorister has planned special music lor this service. Miss Kathryn Hodapp will lead the Epworth League devotional service at 7 o’clock. The topic for discussion will be “Pioneers in Christian Adventures.” The United Luthern Churches Will conduct Union Lutheran services Sunday evening at the First English Lutheran Church, Rev. J. Earl Spaid, pastor. The vesper service will be used and the special music will be furnished by the Bethlehem Evangelical Lutheran choir, P. B. Moore, director. The sermon will be delivered by the Rev. Allen K. Trout, pastor of Bethlehem Evangelical Luthern Church and his subject will be “Ashamed of Jesus.” Rev. Trout came to Indianapolis a year ago having graduated from Hamma Divinity School, Springfield, Ohio, and at present is pistor of the United Luthern Church on the porth side. Bethlehem Evangelical Lutheran Church announces church services Sunday morning at 10:45 when the pastor will deliver a sermon on the subject, “Debtors.” Vespers will be held at First English Lutheran Church when he will preach upon the subject, “Ashamed of Jesus.” Rev. J. A. Long, the minister of the North Park Christian Church, will have as his morning subject, “The Adjuster of Life.” At the Second Moravian Episcopal Church, comer Thirty-Fourth and Hovey Sts., the pastor, the Rev Vernon W. Couillard will occupy hi3 pulpit after an absence of several weeks. His morning theme will be “The Kind of Love That Jesus Requires” while his theme for the
Curtis and Work Confer
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Swinging into his own campaign for the vice presidency, Senator Charles Curtis (left) is shown conferring with Dr. Hubert Work, chairman of' the Republican national committee, in Washington. Dr. Work, former secretary of the Interior, just had had his resignation accepted by President Coolidge and had been praised by the President for his/ "loyal cooperation in carrying out the policies of the administration.”
7:45 service will be “The Impatience of a Parson." Rev. P. B. Turner, pastor of the Church of God, 900 W. Thirtieth St., will preach at the 10:40 a. m. service on -the subject “Our Relationship to the Church.” His subject for the 8 p. m. service will be “Sin a Curse to Any People.” “Life’s Greatest Work” will be the theme of H. J. Bass tomorrow morning at the Hillside Christian Church. The Rev. Bass is the pastor of the Forty-Ninth Street church and is exchanging pulpits with Homer Dale who will preach at the Forty-Ninth Street church. The district conference of the Church of Jesus Christ of LatterDay Saints will be held in their chapel, on corner of Prospect St. and Villa Ave., Sunday, at 10 a. m., 2 p. m. and 7:30 p. m. Elder Noah S. Pond of Chicago, president of the Northern States Mission will preside. The traveling missionaries from the entire southern Indiana district will be in attendance. The Rev. Walter Chenault, pastor of St. Paul’s M. E. Church, will use "Stop, Look, Listen” as his sermon Sunday morning. In the evening he will speak on “When There Was No King in Israel.” The St. Paul choir will sing at A. M. E. Church in Anderson the second Sunday in August. The annual camp meeting of the Missionary Bands will be held at Salem Park, Indianapolis, Aug. 2 to 12. The Rev. R. E. Brockman and the Rev. M. Vayhinger will be the workers at the camp. There will be dormitories for men and women and also space for tents. Meals will be furnished on the grounds.
In the First Moravian Episcopal Church, Twenty-Second St. and Broadway, at 1?. o’clock, the pastor, the Rev. F. P. Stocker, will preach on the subject “The Unexpected in Life.” At 7:45 p. m. the sermon topic will be “Not Far From the Kingdom.” “The Lost Money” will be the sermon theme of the Rev. Forest A. Reed, pastor of the Brookside United Brethren Church. “The Man Who Did Not Have His Price” will be the evening sermon. The following is the order of service at the All Souls Unitarian Church, as announced by the pastor, Dr. F. S. C. Wicks, to begin at 7:30 p. m.: “At Twts'.tfht” Frysinger “Kvensong” Dudley Buck Hymn 144 Responsive Reading, page 79 Covenant Anthem Words of Aspiration Scripture Hymn 163 Notices and Offering “Melody" Brahms Address, “The Modern Idea of God” Hymn Benediction Postlude "Blest Be the Tie” The services at the Roberts Park M. E. Church Sunday are as follows: 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 city-wide Bible class of the Indianapolis Gospel Tabernacle will meet every Friday evening at 7:30 p. m. The class will be a blackboard study on Paul’s Epistle to the Romans. The Rev. K. R. Roberts will preach Sunday morning at the Ebenezer Lutheran Church on “The Joys and Sorrows of Service.” In the evening the church will unite in the union services to be held at the First Lutheran Church at 8 p. m. The Rev. L. C. E. Fackler, pastor of the Si. Matthew Lutheran Church will deliver the last of his series of sermons on “The Human Body.” “The Operation” will be the subject. The Dorcas Society will meet Tuesday evening at Brookside Park for a “Pot-Luck" supper.
“Don’t Worry” will be the morning sermon of the Rev. Homer C. Boblitt, pastor of the Linwood Christian Church. “Seeing God” is td be the evening sermon. “Confering With God” is to be the morning sermon of the Rev. Bert R. Johnson, pastor of the Downey Avenue Christian Church. The Rev. Johnson will preach the evening union service at the Downey Avenue Church and the subject is to be “The Mind of the Master.” The Rev. Ambrose Aegerter, pastor of the Beville Avenue Evangelical Church will preach Sunday morning on "Trifling With Spiritual Duty.” The evening service will be preached by the Rev. J. H. Rilling, pastor of the Second Evangelical Church. At the Washington Avenue M. E. Church, Washington and S. Warman Sts., Rev. Mark Salmon of Chicago, a Hebrew Christian, who is now engaged in Evangelistic work, vsll speak at the morning service.
His subject will be “The Christian’s Obligation to the Jews.” The Rev. Salmon was a Jewish business man and has been led to devote his life in the interests of his Jewish brethren in order to bring about a better understanding between the Christians and the Jews. The pastor of the Washington M. E. ChurCh will be present at that service to introduce this Jewish speaker to his congregation. At the Indianapolis Gospel Tabernacle on North and Alabama Sts., two big meetings are scheduled for Sunday, July 29, under the leadership of Dr. Armin A. Holzer. At 11 a. m. he will speak on the subject “The Church of Christ and the Churches of the Saints.” He will point out the scriptural distinction between these two terms. In the evening he will conduct the happy Sunday evening meeting and speak on "The Startling Developments Among the Jews of the World a Testimony of the Veracity of the Scriptures and the Soon Coming of Christ.” It was intimated last week that Dr. Holzer will begin a tent campaign in this city, but on account of not having been able to secure a proper site was one of the reasons that the campaign had to be postponed. But a site has been secured, very central and accessable from everywhere and the tent campaign will start in real earnest on Sunday, Aug. 5. “Love” will be the subject of the lesson-sermon .In all Churches of Christ, Scientist, tomorrow, Sunday, July 29. The Golden Text will be from I John 4:16, “We have known and believed the love that God hath to us. God is love; and he that dwelleth in love dwelleth in God, and God in him.” Among the citations which will comprise the lesson-sermon is the following from the Bible: “Then said Daniel unto the king, O king, live for ever. My God hath sent his angel, and hath shut the lions’ mouths, that they have not hurt me: Forasmuch as before him innocency was found in me; and also before thee, O king, have I done no hurt” (Dan. 6:21,22), The lesson-sermon also includes the following passages from the Christian Science textbook, “Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures,” by Mary Baker Eddy: “Understanding the control which Love held over all, Daniel felt safe in the lions’ den, and Paul proved the viper to be harmless” (p. 514).
The Rev. Edmond Kerlin will preach at the First Evangelical Church, 10:40 a. m„ the final sermon before the August pastoral vacation. Arnold Spencer and the chorus choir will present a special serivce of sacred songs at the 7:45 “Peoples Service,” the final evening service until Sept. 2. Dr. Edward Haines Kistler will preach his last sermon before vacation Sunday at 10:45 in the Fairview Presbyterian Church, “The Long, Long Trail.” “The All-Prevailing Church” will be the sermon topic of J. Floyd Seelig at the Fifty-First Street M. E. Church on Sunady morning at 10:45. In the evening he will speak at the community vesper service at the North wood Christian Church, the subject being “The Failure That Is Success.” BARE KILLING OF OHIOAN Witnesses Say Kin of Aged Man Threw Him From Car in Florida. fw United Press LAKE CITY, Fla., July 28.—A coroner’s jury will meet today to return a verdict in the death of Gr W\ Simmons, aged Steubenville Ohio) man, who was found dead with his skull crushed in a roadside drainage ditch early Wednesday. Simmons’ body was sent to Steubenville Friday. The jury already has heard witnesses who said they saw E. L. Booth, husband of the dead man’s granddaughter, standing on the running board of the machine, striking Simmons on the head while Mrs. Booth drove the machine along a highway near here the night before he body was found. ‘VETS’ TO HOLD PICNIC Outing Sunday Near Redkey for Spanish-American Men. Bn Times Special MUNCIE, Ind., July 28.—SpanishAmerican War veterans from Indianapolis, Anderson, Marion, Lafayette and Peru will attend a picnic sponsored by Paris Martin camp of this city Sunday, on the farm of Chester Reynolds, near Redkey. Albert H. Vestal, representative in Congress from the Eighth district, and Joseph Morris, Indiana commander of the veterans, will speak.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
HOOVER STARTS ON FISHING TRIP IN OLD CLOTHES ) Four-Day Motor Jaunt to Woods of Northern California Begun. Pit United Pram PALO ALTO, Cal., July 28. Herbert Hoover chucked a fishing rod and an old suit of clothe sinto his big automobile at dawn today and set out for a four-day fishing trip in the Redwood wilds of north-
ern CaUfornia and southern Oregon. Hoover is taking this method of i getting himself in physical trim for the arduous task of conducting his Republican campaign for the presidency. Always In the past when he felt a little shaky or when he desired to get into tip-top shape for a strenuous duty he has sought the quietude of the hills, reminiscent of his youth as an engineer. “Baits His Own” And when Hoover goes fishing he does not take along lackeys to bait his hook, nor does he load his car with the clothe sos a society fisherman. He travels light and cooks
his own bacon over the camp fire. He carried one old suit. There were forty-six members of the party in twelve cards which left the Stanford University campus for the first day’s journey of 285 miles. The start was made early so the parade could get through San Francisco before the heavy traffic set in. Crosisng the Golden Gate by ferry, it will start northward along the Redwood highway through Sausallto Valley and the Petaluma country to Ukiah, wheer it will stop for lunch. In the late afternoon it will reach the foothills of the southern range and will pass through Humboldt State Park to camp tonight without tents under the giant redwood trees in the largest redwood grove in the world at Mud Creek flat. Cots have been sent there by some of Hoover’s friends. Two Days’ Fishing The second day of the trip will start at 6 a. m. The party will proceed through Eureka, the largest city on the coast between Portland and San Francisco, past the lumber district in the northern part of the State, to shoot down the ocean highway up that night at Medford, Ore. Luncheon will be carried and will be served at any convenient point along the route. On Monday the party will move back westward to a point near Hornbrook, Cal., on the Upper Klamath River, and there fish for steel head trout Monday afternoon and Tuesday. The party will proceed Tuesday night to Davis. Cal., to board the train for San Francisco, where it will arrive Wednesday morning.
MAKE CONCLAVE PLANS FOR U. S. FOOT DOCTORS Chiropodists, Podiatrists of 46 States to Meet Here Aug. 7-10. Dr. R. Everett Snick, podiatrist, 523 Occidental Bldg., and Dr. V. W. Ramsburg, Minneapolis, are in charge of arrangements for the convention of the National Association of Chiropodists-Podiatrists, at the Lincoln, Aug. 7 to 10. Dr. Snick is the Indiana member of the execu- j tive council of the association, and | Dr. Ramsburg is convention man- [ iger. Dr. Snick is a former member of i the Indiana State board of podiatry j examiners, and has long been recognized as a leader in the profession in Indiana. Plans for the convention include a scientific congress, an entertainment program and a “Perfect Foot Contest” sponsored by The Indianapolis Times. A post-graduate course of clinics and lectures will be held next week. Members from forty-six States and six nations will attend the convention. Wife, 17, Faces Divorce By Times Special EVANSVILLE, Ind., July 28. Harry O. Bennett is seeking annulment of his marriage to Imogene Bader-Bennett, 17, alleging that after their elopment and wedding she told him she had been expelled from a convent school and from Indiana University because she went on all-night parties with men.
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Sunday School Lesson
The International Uniform Sunday School Lesson for July 29. The First Foreign Missionaries. Acts 13:1-5, 13-15, 44-49. BY WM. E. GILROY, D. D, Editor of The Congrcgationalist THE inherent quality of Christianity, especially in the primitive form in which it came directly from the Master and inspired the early group of disciples, quickly became manifest in two ways. First, in its depth; that is, in its power to attack the worst situation in humanity and to effect redemption; and; second, in its breadth and extent; that is, in the persistency with which it spread itself to larger bounds. In all great eras of the church since the days of Jesus and Paul these two factors have been present. lln proportion as there has been a deep consciousness of the spiritual
power and mission of the church, there has been the consciousness, also, that that mission and power apply everywhere, and there has been the sense of a world-wide purpose and aplication of divine grace in the Gospel. It Ls, howeier, amazing that this world-wide note in Christianity should have developed so early at a time when travel was both difficult and dangerous, as well as very slow. Like most great movements, especially In its origination and beginning, the world-wide missionary movement of Christianity centered largely in one man. It was Paul’s enthusiasm, in his new faith, that led to the spread of the Gospel, for Paul seems to have been the prime mover in inspiring others with his own zeal and purpose. What was it that quickened in Paul this missionary vision and purpose? Possibly it was inherent in nis blood. He had a passionate and almost fanatical zeal which became steadied and balanced under the influence of a gospel of gentleness and love. With this was combined that instinct for travel which is as strong in some people as the homestaying instinct is in others. There was something essentially creative about him that made him reluctant simply to build upon the foundations which other men had laid and that sent him forth into new and untried fields where he might feel the satisfaction of his own accomplishment. There was a sublime expansiveness in Paul’s nature along with an indomitable purpose that led him to measure strength and the strength of the gospel against seemingly the most impossible tasks. He found inspiration and encouragement in the very things that would have disheartened and defeated other men. All these qualities became only enlarged, powerfully d:rected, and sanctified under the influence of Paul’s allegiance to Christ. All the minor motives of his being became secondary to this driving, directing power of his devotion to his Lord. Two expressions became typical of his whole consciousness and outlook: “The love of Christ constrained us’ 1 and “I can do all things through Christ who strengthened me.” These are the backgrounds of the Pauline missionary journeys, the beginning of the fi r ot of which is described in our lesson. It is a simple, direct, and very beautiful account, setting forth just what one would expect from the sort of religion that these men professed and
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the sort of men who professed it. As Christianity began to spread in its influence, so the impulse to confirm and strengthen the disciples in the faith and to win other disciples became dominant. We have seen how this group at Antioch, where the disciples were first called Christians, developed this strong consciousness of the Christian Church. The sending out of Paul and Barnabas from Antioch to visit the regions beyond was the natural expression of what had happened in Antioch itself. This first missionary journey was the shortest of Paul's journeys, but it was a journey of deep significance and apparently of much triumph, for the second missionary Journey arose through a desire to revisit the scenes where the influence of Paul and Barnabas had established Christianity during the first journey.
We would suggest the advisability of reading and studying these lesions with constant reference to the map. It will be found very helpful, too, if each reader or student traces the journey from point to point for himself, reading the entire sections of the Book of Acts that relate to thi journeys and to the missionary experiences of St. Paul and not merely the portions assigned for any one lesson. By using the map in this way one will come to a much more vivid and dramatic sense of Paul’s journeys, and the student will be further helped if he finds out all that he can about each of these ancient places which Paul visited in turn. New Golf Election Day NEW YORK. July 28.—Many golf clubs in thfe United States have agreed to close on election day in November, Herbert N. Straus, president of the Republican Business Men, Inc., said.
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