Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 203, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 January 1929 — Page 5

JAN. 12, 1929.

BROTHERHOOD TO HOLD MONTHLY DINNER SOON First Baptist Church Men Plan Special Program. THE Brotherhood of the First Baptist church will hold its monthly dinner and meeting Monday night, Jan. 21, in the assembly room of the church. William G. Spencer, M. A., L.L. D., president of Hillsdale college, Hillsdale. Mich., will be the principal speaker of the evening. Dr. Spencer is a graduate of Franklin college, Dennison university, Colgate Theological seminary and was president of the Michigan Baptist, state conference in 1928. He is widely known as a lecturer and educator. A special musical program will be in charge of J. J. Albion. The Bible school orchestra will play with C. W. Plgg a a director. Special reports will be made by the committee chairmen as to the work of the brotherhood for the first half of the year. A banquet will be served at 6:30 by the ladies of the church. Other features will be on the program. Dr. J. B. Carr, president of the men's organization, will preside. The meeting is open to all men. a a a HOLD MORNING PRAYER SERVICE The Rev. Floyd Van Keuren, rector of Christ Episcopal church, will have a quiet celebration of the Holy Communion Sunday at 8 o’clock. School of Religious Education for children and adults will be at 9:30. Morning prayer service will be at 10:45, and the rector will preach on the subject- “Buchmanism.” The boy choir will sing the anthem, “The Heavens Are Telling.” from “The Creation,” by Haydn. There will be no evening service. The monthly meeting of the Woman's Auxiliary will be at 2:30 Monday afternoon. Mrs. B. H. Dugdale will speak on “Church Current Events,” and Mrs. David N. Alierdice will speak on "New Africa.” The Men’s Club will hold the monthly luncheon meeting on Thursday at 12:15. Professor Stanley Coulter, formerly dean of men at Purdue University, will speak on “Science and Religion.” nan TO CONCLUDE CHURCH PROGRAM Sunday id the last day of the dedication program at the new Riverside Park M. E. church building. In the morning worship service Dr. A. T. Briggs, superintendent of the ! Greencastle district of the northwest Indiana conference will preach on “The Meaning of Consecration.” In this service the staff of ministers for the church will be consecrated for their future work. At 7:45 p. m. Bishop Edgar Blake will preach on “The Church and the Home.” A service of baptism and reception of new members will follow the bishop's sermon. a a a BAPTISTS TO HOLD MEETING The quarterly business meeting of the Federation Baptist Churches of Indianapolis will be held at the Garfield Park Baptist church, the Rev. C. P. Greenfield, pastor. Monday night. Jan. 14. at 8 p. m. The speaker for the evening will be the Rev. J. Drover Forward, minister at the Emmanuel Baptist church. Mr. Forward's ability as a speaker is well known and he will address himself to the "Baptist Spiritual Life.” The vested choir of Garfield Park Baptist church will render the following program of music: Overture 'Opero, ' Martha” Flotow Curtis D. Davis at the pipe organ Hymn—" Blessed Assurance" Crosby "I Come to Thee" Clara Roma Anthem--" Love Divine" Petri Vested choir, directed by Mrs. Viroqua Stephenson. Pipe Organ, Piano and Mirimba Selections— "A Still Small Voice." Ruth Hashman. Mrs. Viroqua Stephenson, Curtis B. Da’is, Joanna Stephenson ana TO DEDICATE NEW CHURCH The Westview Baptist church, Jones and Belmont streets, the Rev. S. E. Hamilton, pastor, will dedicate the new 4ddition to the church and Its baptistry on Sunday, Jan. 20. Special music has been arranged and the Rev. W. T. Buckner, pastor of the New' Bethel Baptist church, and the Rev. F. A. Hayward, executive secretary of the Federated Baptist Churches of Indianapolis, wi',l assist Pastor Hamilton In the service of dedication. These servicos will be morning, afternoon and night. The addition to the church consists of two rooms for Sunday school and baptismal purposes and an enlargement of the choir platform as well as an entirely new and modern baptistry’- The church has been making steady progress under the leadership of Pastor Hamilton, who has been with the church about t\#o years. a a a CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SERVICE ANNOUNCED “Sacrament” is the subject of the lesson-sermon in all Churches of Christ. Scientist, Sunday. Jan. 13. Among the citations which comprise the lesson-sermon is the following froth the Bible: “These words tfpake Jesus, and lifted up his eyes to heaven, and said. Father, the hour is come; glorify thy Son, that thy Son also may glorify thee; I pray not that thou shouldest take them out of the world, but that thou shouldest keep them from the evil. Father. I will that they also whom thou hast given me, be with me where I am; that they may behold my glory, which thou hast given me.” (John 17:1. 15, 24.) 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: “The world must grow to the spiritual understanding of prayer. If good enough to profit by Jesus’ cup of earthly sorrows. God will sustain us under these sorrows. Until we are lhqs divinely qurlifled and are willing to drink his cup, millions of rain repetitions will never pour into

An Indianapolis Artist Wins Big Prize

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Randolph Coates and his painting. "Vanity,” which won a $750 prize at an exhibition of the Chicago Galleries Association. Coates is an artist of national reputation and this palntng and prze are typical of the large number in his possession.

prayer the unction of spirit in demonstration of power and ’with signs following'.” At the First United Presbyterian church. Edward A. Daum. minister, will preach in the forenoon on the theme, “Let Us Press On.” In the evening the first of an illustrated series on "Pilgrim's Progress” will be given. The series is in commemoration of the three hundredth anniversary of Bunyan’s birth. The Rev. Fnd A. Line will preach at Central Universalist church, Fifteenth and North New Jersey streets, at the 11 o'clock morning service, on the subject, "The Mission of the Christian Church.” Special milslcal numbers will be provided by the church quartet. Sunday school convenes at 9:30. Y. P. C. U. at 4:30. In the First Moravian Episcopal church. Twenty-second and Broadway. the pastor, the Rev. F. P. Stocker, will preach on the subject, "The Lost Jesus,” at the morning service at 11 o'clock. At 7:45 p. m. there will be a special service for the installation and consecration of the newly elected church officers, and leaders of the various organizations. The sermon topic will be “The Valiant Christian." In the Broadway Evangelical church, the Rev. E. W. Praetorius, D. will preach in the morning and in the evening the pastor, the Rev. L. E. Smith, will preach from the subject, “Will Reverence Live.” The Rev. E. T. Howe, pastor of the Unity Methodist Protestant church, will speak Sunday morning on "What Precedes a Revival” and in the evening “The Wrath of God.” Installation of officers and teachers of the Sunday school will be the order of service Sunday* forenoon at the Second Evangelical church, in charge of the Rev. J. H. Rilling. Sunday evening at 7:30, Bishop John S. Stamm, D.D., of Kansas City, Mo„ will deliver the sermon. This will be the bishop's first official visit to this church. “Christianity, the Religion of a Master" will be the theme of the 10:45 morning sermon Sunday at the Capitol Avenue Methodist church by the pastor, the Rev. Joseph G. Moore. In the evening at 7:30 the pastor will speak on “What Shall a Christian Believe?" The Rev. John W. Findley, Presbyterian student pastor at Purdue university, will speak tomorrow at 10:45 a. m. in the Fairview Presbyterian church, on "The Church and the University.” The quartet will sing Marston's “The Lord Is King” and Hadley's “How Lovely Are Thy Dwellings." At the 7:30 jp. m. hour. Dr. Edward Haines ; Kistler. the pastor of the church, will speak on “What Is ‘God'?" "Are You Fit to Live" will be the Sunday evening theme of Homer Dale at the Hillside Christian ehurch. The morning subject will be "The Church and Its Officers.” “Victories of Faith” will be the morning sermon theme of the Rev. Vernon W. Couiliard. pastor at the Second Moravian Episcopal church, corner Thirty-fourth and Hovey streets. His theme at the 7:45 evening service will be "Ashamed of Jesus.” The Rev. William I. pastor of the First Congregational church, will preach Sunday at 11 a. m. on “Who Crucified Jesus?” A. F. Dalton, for many years a Baptist minister and now principal of a W'ayne township school, will conduct the services at the Lynhurst Baptist- church Sunday. His morning sermon topic will be “Service” and the evening subject will be “Character." At the Second Reformed church, the Rev. George P. Kehl will preach in the morning on “His Messenger." “The American Home” and "The Hem of His Garments'* will be the themes of the Rev. J. Graham Sib- ! son at the Fifty-first Street M. E. jchurch. The Rev. J. A. Long of the North Park Christian church announces 1 that he will speak Sunday morning on "God's Fellow-workers” and “Life's Foundations” at night "Who Art Thou. Lord?” and “Who I are the Disciples?” will be the sub- ! jects of the Rev. Bert R. Johnson | at. the Downey Avenue Christian church. Bishop J. S. Stamm. Kansas City, will preach the sermon Sunday morning at the First Evangelical church instead qf the regular pastor, the Rev. Ednaoad Kerim, in

Great Star

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Pauline Lord

When the New York Theater Guild presents O'Neill's, "The Strange Interlude.” at English's for three days, starting Thursday at 5 o'clock, Jan. 31. Pauline Lord will be the Nina Leeds.

the evening the Rev. Kerlin will preach on "A Look Through Paul’s Magmfiying Glass.” An organ recital by Miss Elsie Macgregor will be given at 7:30 p. m. The Rev. G. H. Gebhardt, pastor Carrollton Avenue Reformed church, will preach on “The Gospel of Patience" at the Sunday morning services. No evening service will be given. “Harmony” will be the sermon subject at the Bethlehem Evangelical Lutheran church, the Rev. Allen K. Trout, pastor. “Our Salvation” will be the theme for the Sunday evening services. Dr. Frank S. C. Wicks of All Souls Unitarian church announces the following order of service at 11 a. m. Sunday: "Benediction," Karg-Elert: "Sanrta j Maria." Faure. Hvmn 336. Second service. Covenant. Anthem. Words ot aspiration. Besponsive reading. Selection 13. Scripture. Hymn 46. Notices and offering. "Cradle Song." Brahms. Address. Hymn 338. Benediction. Postlude. "Offertoire in D," -iatiste. The Rev. L. C. E. Fackler of St. Matthew* Lutheran church makes the following announcements: Holy Communion will be celebrated Sunday morning. Preparatory service will be held at 10 o'clock. The subject for the morning sermon Is: "The Feast tor the ! Soul." Sunday evening the pastor will use as his subject, "What Do You See in the Bibte?” The Southern Indiana conference of the Joint Synod of Ohio will hold their regular meeting in St. Matthew Lutheran church Tuesday and Wednesday of next week. Jan. 15, at 8 p. to., the Rev. William Grabemann of Otwell. Ind., will speak. A special program has been arranged for the evening of Jan. 16 at 8 o’clock. This night has been designated as guest night. All of our friends are invited to this service and enjoy with us a feast of good things. The Rev. J. B. Ringle of Shelbyville, 111., has been secured as one speaker and the Rev. C. G. Meyre of Evansville. Ind., as another. It has been a custom in our congregation to designate one evening in Januarv as guest night.. Our friends have appreciated this fact. We appreciate their interest and co-operation. The sermon subject for the 11 a. m. hour of morning worship at the Speedway Boulevard Methodist Episcopal church will be "The Other Boat.” The subject at the 7:30 p. m. service will be “Be Thou Made Clean.” Sunday service at the Bellaire Methodist Episcopal church, the Rev. W. B. Grimes, pastor, will be conducted by the Rev. M. Vayhinger, evangelist of Upland. Music will be in charge of Dr. B. F. Neiman. j Evangelistic service will continue all next week. The Rev. Homer C. Boblitt. pastor of the Linwood Christian church, I will preach on “The Rich Poor Man” Sunday morning, and "The Greatest Thing in the World,” in the evening. Services at the Beville Avenue Evangelical church, the Rev. Ambrose Aegerter. pastor, will include a sermon. "The Victory of Faith” in the morning and in the evening Dr. E. W. Praetorious, Cleveland, will speak. At the Centenary Christian j church, the Rev. Clarence E. WagS ner. pastor, the sermon topic for j Sunday morning will be “A Plea ; for an Every Member Church.” At • the evening service he will speak on ’•ftorgivenesfc*

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

URGES MORE PLAYGROUNDS Help Combat Crime. Says Hugh McK. Landon. More public playgrounds and recreation centers to nip crime in the bud and give young America a fair chance to go straight, were recommended today by IJugh McK. Landon, vice-president of the Fletcher Savings and _ Trust Company of Indianapolis. Landon, is a director of the Playground and Recreation Association of America. "Playgrounds arc a safety valve for the splendid energy of our American youth,” he declared, “They have the very definite effect of decreasing delinquency by filling the free hours of boys and girls with active, interesting and worthwhile things to do." Pointing out that playtime is the period of character formation, he said that thousands of boys and girls are still left to the dangers of the streets and the selfish exploitation of commercialized recreation in their play. Parks and playgrounds in Indiana have increased rapidly during the last ten years, he said. Twenty-nine towns and cities of the state now report 394 public recreation areas under leadership. Fifty-four cities report a total of 7,854.71 acres in park land, placing Indiana tenth among the most populous states in this respect. Indianapolis ranks sixth among the largest cities in the country in the amount of park land she provides per capita.RECESS POWER QUIZ Utilities Probe Halts After Two-Day Hearing, WASHINGTON, Jan. 12.—Investigation of power industry propaganda was recessed today by the federal trade commission after a two-day hearing during which new disclosures were entered in the commission's records. Testimony Friday by Mrs. John D. Sherman, former president of the General Federation of Women's Clubs, shed further light on payments of $14,000 to her by the National Electric Light Association for magazine articles. The payments were through the advertising firm of Lord Thomas & Logan of New York. Though admitting the association financed the articles, Mrs. Sherman denied she was influenced by power interests. The commission learned for the first time that virtually none of the articles was paid for by magazines publishing them. ALLEGED SLAYERS OF FT. WAYNE MAN HELD Wife of One Tells Police He Fired Fatal Shot During Robbery Bit United Press FT WAYNE. Ind. Jan. 12—Three bandits, who allegedly shot to death Clem Foley during a grocery robbery here, have been apprehended, according to police. The three, Carroll Cooper, 23: Wayne Williams, alias Ted Lewis, 23. were arrested at Georgetown, Ky„ and Lawrence Thompson, whose wife has confessed that he fired the fatal shot, was captured at Muncie. Police said the men would be brought here to face murder charge. According to police, the men have been implicated in a number of robberies here and might be responsible for several grocery holdups in Indianapolis. ADMITS BIGAMY AT 70 ShelbyriUe Man Given ThreeMontbs Penal Farm Sentence. Bit Times Special COLUMBUS, Ind., Jan. 12. Frank Marks. 70, Shelbyville, is under a three months’ penal farm sentence here today following a plea j of guilty to bigamy. | Last October Marks took as his bride Mrs. Elizabeth Richardson, 28, near St. Louis Crossing. He deserted her in a short time and returned to his first rife and was living with her at the time of his arrest. They t are married ia idWL

NOTED PIANIST TO APPEAR SUNDAY Sergei Rachmaninoff Will Give His Only Indianapolis Recital This Year Tomorrow at Murat. TNDIANAPOLIS music lovers and those who are devoted to the piano especially, will be given one of the real treats of the musical season at the Murat tomorrow afternoon when Sergei Rachmaninoff, foremost of living composers and pianists, will be heard in recital under the local management of Henry K. Burton. No other pianist who has reached these shores in recent years has so kindled and firmly sustained the Interest and applause of American audiences as this towering Russian. Wherever and whenever he appears he plays and conquers.

No such impressive figure as Rachmaninoff has suprised the eyes of his hearers in many a day. He plays and they feel the fineness of his touch, the wide range of his understanding and sympathies with music, the artistic devotion within him. He plays, and through the voice of Rachmaninoff his listeners also hear the glorified voice of the 1 composer. In his own music the two voices become as one, and the deeper and warmer Is the response of the audience. Until they have heard Rachman-* inoff play it, they have not truly heard Rachmaninoff's music. A master of the keyboard, he has shown no less signal ability as an interpretative artist, playing with rare insight and imagination, eloquence and poetry. In particular these notable qualities shine through his own music which will make a part of the program he w'ill offer at the Murat together with the works of Mozart. Scarlatti, Schumann, Chopin and Kreislcr. The program will be as follows: "Sonata. No. 14" Mozart Allegro. Adagio. Allegretto. "Sonata, D Minor" Scarlatti "Sonata. C Major" Sc&rlaUi "Carnava!" - Schumann Preambule. Pierrot. Arlequin. Valse noble. Eusebius. Plorestan. Coquette, Replique, Sphynxes, Papillons Lettres dansantes, Crterina. Chopin. Estrella, Reconnaissance. Pnntalon et. Cotombine, Valse allemande. , Paganini, Aveu Promenade. Pause. Marche des Davidsblundler. j Barcarolle" Chopin "Valse" Chopin "Ballads" Chopin ■ Moment Musical" Rachmaninoff "Liebeslreud" Kreisler-Rachmanlnoff As audiences invariably demand it, Rachmaninoff’s encore selections are most likely to Include his rej markably popular C-Sharp Minor prelude, which he plays in a most impressive manner, frequently following it with his rollicking "Pola de W. R.” The great Russian’s touch is absolutely unerring, and his interpretation superbly Rachmaninoff, whether his offering be gleaned from Liszt, Grieg, Chopin, or from any of the other great composers. As the artist who possesses both soul and gift. Rachmaninoff so controls the hearts of his listeners that they obey the dictates of his reverential bow. an a BRASLAU TO SING AT THE MURAT Af Sophie Braslau. who will be heard in a recital of songs in the Murat on Sunday afternoon, Jan. 20, under the direction of the Ona B. Talbot Fine Arts Enterprises the well known music critic W. J. Henderson of the New York Sun, wrote, “Her voice is indeed one of the few truly great vocal instruments of our time.” Critics everywhere have outdone themselves seeking for a comparison to convey the rich beauty of Miss Braslau's voice, the. fascination of her personality. “The SchumannHeink cf the younger generation,” one put it. “Her art is like that of Chaliapin, Bora > and Pavlowa” write others. Again—her voice is like a cello—but goes farther and says, "You cannot compare the voice of Sophie Braslau to the tone of just one cello. You will be right as far as the timbre is concerned, provided the strings are swept by the bow of a Casals. But when you consider the amazing volume of this superb contralto, you will have to liken it to a whole choir of cellos, playing in marvelous unison. . . . Her gift for interpretation, and especially dramatic interpretation, comes near to being unrivalled op the concert stage today.” In the matter of program making Sophie Braslau is a past master, and the one she has arranged for Indianapolis music lovers is unusual in scope and selection. Opening with "L'Amoresa Lontonanza,” a cantata for one voice by Bassini. the program continues with "Wildly | Storming.” Handel; Seven Gypsy | Songs of Brahms; "Amuri-Amuri” a form of Habenara, Sadero; "In Mezo A1 Mar." On the High Seas, Nadero; Song of the Bride, Rim-sky-Korsakoff: "Fate,” Rachmaninoff, adapted from Beethoven Fifth Symphony, Londonerry Air, Old Irish arranged by Kreisler. Ma L'ill Bateau, Strickland, “As We Part,” Ilgenfritz. The remaining Sunday afternoon concerts under the Ona B. Talbot Fine Arts Enterprise direction will present Emelio de Gorgoza, baritone; Rudolph Ganz. pianist and the Philadelphia String Simfonietta. ana “PASSION PI,AY” ATTRACTS ATTENTION The pageant sublime in the truest sense of the word. "The Passion Play” is to be brought to Indianapolis for one week beginning Monday evening, Jan. 28, with matinees Wednesday and Saturday by the Ona B. Talbot Fine Arts Enterprises in the Murat theater. This awe inspiring spectacle is to be portrayed by the Freiburg Players, who have been privileged through the generations since 1264 to present this great religious drama, the roles of the principal characters have become a sacred heritage in the Fassnacht family, and in this presentation Adolph Fassnacht portrays the Christus while George Fassnacht takes the part of Judas. The musical setting for this great religious drama has been worked out to the finest detail,, and orchestra with organ will be heard throughout the performances playing softly during the spoken drama excerpts from "Parsifal.” selections of Perosi, Gounod and Bizet. While a chorus of more than two hundred voices from the church choirs and leading singers of Indianapolis will sing twelve numbers, to include “Ave Verum,” Gounod; “The Palms." hallelujah chorus from Handel's "Messiah,” and others. The sing ere with Pemval Owens,

organist of the First Baptist church are generously co-operating with the Ona B. Talbot Fine Arts Enterprises to make this event one of the greatest Indianapolis has ever known. Mr. Owens has called the first rehearsal for next Tuesday evening in the assembly room of the First Baptist church. Frank Waller is conductor of “The Passion Play” and Mr. Owens is assisting conductor. Mr. Waller is well known in music circles, having been conductor of the Chicago Civic Opera Company, and assistant conductor of the Cincinnati Symphony orchestra. t His arrangements of the musical numbers have added greatly to the beauty and majesty of the production. State-wide interest in the coming of "The Passion Play” is being evidenced by the large numbers of reservations for tickets for every performance, and the railroads are co-operating with the management by offering reduced fares for the week of Jan. 28. Schools and colleges are making up parties and chartering busses to bring them to Indianapolis at this time. ana WOMAN TO BE SOLOIST WITH ORCHESTRA The second orchestra concert of the seventh annual series of the Indianapolis Symphony Society, Ona B. Talbot, managing director, will present the Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra, Henri Verbrugghen, conductor, on Monday evening, Feb. 11, in a notable orchestral program to include works of Brahms, Beethoven, Dukas, Moussorgsky and De Falla. A year ago, fashionable Washington society was all agog with small excitement, when it was announced that one of the members of the Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra was a woman. And so, with no small amount of natural curiosity, the audience that heard the Minneapolis Symphony give its formal concert at the nation’s capital, went to the hall with half an eye cocked for "the woman, in the case.” And they saw her, for sitting right in the front row of the first violin section, was this solitary woman. Such a thing was unheard of. hitherto. But it needed only a few bars of music to discover to the Washington audience that this artist, Miss Jenny Cullen, a violinist, was vastly entitled to her responsible position with the Minneapolis Symphony. Miss Cullen enjoys the distinction of being one of the very few women playing with any ranking symphony orchestra in the world. With utter disregard for the silly convention which has ruled out women from most symphony orchestras in the United States, the management of the Minneapolis orchestra rested its decision to offer Miss Cullen a contract solely upon her own proven ability to carry her share of the load. For many years this artist was concertmaster of the State Symphony Orchestra of Sydney, Australia, and previous to that connection she was a playing member of the renowned Scottish orchestra of Glasgow, Scotland. She herself is a native of Scotland. and has been a pupil of Henri Verbrugghen. conductor of the Minneapolis Symphony, since she was 13 years oldVerbrugghen is a pupil of the great Eugene Ysaye, the Belgian violinist. On the concert stage of Scotland. England and the continent Miss Cullen won an enviable record for her playing, but eventually gave up concert tours, to devote her time exclusively to string qua .’tet and symphonic work. She Is also a member of the noted Verbrugghen string quartet which recently commemorated Its twentyfifth anniversary fc as a concert organization. ana , EVENTS AT THE METROPOLITAN Alpha Sigma chapter of Phi Mu Alpha, musical fraternity, will hold a business meeting at the Metropolitan School of Music, Tuesday evening, Jan. 15. Mr. Franklin N. Taylor is chairman. Willard MacGregor, artist pianist of the faculty of the Metropolitan School of Music, has been engaged to give a concert for the Knightstown matinee musical Sunday afternoon, Jan. 20. ana STUDENTS TO GIVE RECITAL The students’ recital of the Indiana College of Music and Fine Arts will be given at the Metropolitan School of Music on Saturday, Jan. 19, at 2:30 p. m. The north branch studios of the Metropolitan School of Music are

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now established in the new home at 3411 North Pennsylvania street. Andrew C. Haigh of the piano department of the Indiana College of Music and Fine Arts has returned from New York, where he spent the holidays, and has opened his studio, in the new building at 1204 North Delaware street, for private and composition class lessons a.yd ensemble work. Glenn Friermood has returned from Birmingham, Ala., where he went for the holidays. ana PIANO RECITAL IS ARRANGED The pupils of H. Otis Pruitt, assisted by the pupils of Hugh McGibeny and Frances Beik, will give a piano recital in the central building of the Metropolitan School of Music on Friday night, Jan. 18. The program follows: | "The Mill” ...Prahl Eileen White. Prelude—Mullen. George Carothers. "Melody" Dawes Nancy' Thompson. “To Spring ’ Grieg Maxjne Rigsbec. Reading—Selected. Betty Crandall. “Down Cherry Lane" Mokrejs Billy Lampe. Duo Plano—" Fantasia." Mazurka Bohm Willa Jane Boyce, pearl Stockdale Ruth Schwab and Betty Eakln. < "Elude Fantas'ique" . .Friml Pearl Stockdale. "Intermezzo" Huerter Dallas Smith. "Mlnka" Eggeling Doris Siavens. "Rigaudon" ...MacDowell Eleanora Ross. "Wedding Day at Troldhaugeu” Grieg Margarite Billo. "Tango" Albeniz-Godowsky "The Musical Snuff Box” Liadow Polichlnelle" Rachmaninoff Floyd Ross. “Hungarian Fantasy* \ Liszt Hilda Korff. (Floyd Ross at second piano.! Violin Solo— "Zapateado" Sarasate Carl Grouleff. "Three Scotch Dances" Chopin "The Lark" Gltnka-Balakirew "Etude Op. 10 No. 5” Chopin Hilda Korff. "Capriccio Brillante" Mendelssohn Floyd Ross. (Hilda Korff at second piano.) PLAV "CHIPMUNK LINK" . .. Characters: Chipmunk Link, a veteran of Gettvs burg William CragenFolly. his niece, a school teacher Betty Crandall Scene—ChlDmunks’ work shop. Incidental Music—Cornet, drum a a a , McLEAN TO BE GUEST ARTIST Cameron McLean, actor-singer, will appear at the jubilee concert given by the Caledonian Club on Tuesday, Jan. 29. McLean gave great pleasure to those who heard him last year. This concert is different from the ordinary musical offering. There Is variety in the kinds of entertainment and the quality of each of McLean's numbers. Those who heard him sing last year are showing their interest in the concert by their immediate demand for tickets to this evening of Scotish music. Miss Mabelle Howe Mable will be at the piano as his accompaniest again. Other artists on the program will be Miss Mary McMahan, called the Scottish nightingale: Miss Charleston, the dancer, with a group of pupils, and Pipe-Majr Robert Sim. n u tt SOPRANO TO BE CONCERT SOLOIST Elizabeth Gutman, noted soprano, will appear as guest artist with the Kirshbaum Orchestra at Kirshbaum Community Center, on Sunday evening, Feb. 10. Miss Gutman has appeared in concerts in Rome, Paris and other European cities, as well as throughout this country. Vincent D’lndy, famous French composer, says: "Mile. Gutman possesses all the qualities of a great artist and knows all the secrets of the art of singing.” The Kirshbaum Orchestra, operated by the Jewish Community Center Association, is carrying out its policy of bringing at least one artist of real ability "to Kirshbaum Center each year. Last year, Ellis Levy was warmly received. The orchestra, organized to afford the opportunity for all capable musicans to play in the group, has made unusual progress in its short career, and is rapidly coming to the fore as one of the leading musical organizations of the city. This will be the first appearance of Miss Gutman in Indianapolis. She has achieved an enviable reputation for her rendition of Brazilian, Spanish, Jewish and other folk songs, as v f ell as her operatic ability, and will appear in Indianapolis for the first time. The arts committee of the association is sponsoring the concert, and is composed of Mrs. J. A. Goodman, chairman; Leon Alder, Mrs. Joseph Bloch, Mrs. Hans Cohen, Mrs. Simon Kiser, Mrs. Samuel Mantel, Herschel Goodman, Mrs. Charles Sommers and Mrs. Ona B. Talbot. Asthma Absolutely Relieved. Pay no money until satisfied, then only SI.OO per bottle. Stops all misery. Sent postpaid. Sold only by BREATHE FREELY CO, Station A. Box 24 Indianapolis. Ind. Woodsmall Insurance

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A. M. E. BISHOP WILL PREACH ATJERVICES Mass Meeting to Be Held With Varied Program Monday Night. The Rt. Rev. Archibald J. Carey, D. D.. presiding bishop of the Fourt h Episcopal district of A. M. E. church, with headquarters in Chicago, will arrive in the city Sunday morning and will preach at Bethel A. M. E. church, at Vermont and Toledo streets at the morning service. He will be the principal speaker at a mass meeting in the interest of the Cathedral Community center, to be held Monday evening at the above named church. Bishop Carey was assigned to this district at the general conference held in Chicago las' May and has inaugurated stimulation of the social service idea. Plans Have been formulated to erect a community center in Chicago, for the purpose of training social workers for the district. Bishop Carey is chairman of the financial board located in Washington, D. C„ which board handled one and a half millions dollars during the quadreniufn. He served as a member of the exemption board of Cook county during the World w'ar, and as a member of the Constitutional convention of the state of Illinois. At present, he is a member of the civil service commission of the city of Chicago. Among other speakers who will appear on program Monday night will be Drs. J. A. Lindsay. Evansville: C. L. Upthegrove, Terre Haute; H. H. Black, Richmond; lj. A. Perry, Kokomo; C. S. Williams, J. P. Q. Wallace, W. D. Shannon, Indianapolis. The Rev. R. L, Pope is the pastor. ‘The thirteenth annual memorial service of Persian Temple No. 46, O. E. S., Noble Mystic Shrine, will be held at the church Sunday evening. Dr. S. A. Furnass, supreme grand commander, will talk, and Dr. R. L. -Pope will deliver the sermon.

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