Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 282, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 April 1930 — Page 5

APRIL 5, 1930

SECOND REFORMED TO BE DEDICATED Formal Ceremonies Sunday Will Usher in a Week of Special Services at New Church Building. THE formal dedication of the new Second Reformed Church building at Pleasant and Shelby streets will take place Sunday morning. The Rev. F. W. Leich, D. D., member of the faculty of the Central Theological Semite,-y 0 f Dayton, 0., will dt-uver the dedication sermon. The dcdicanon comes as the completion of a relocation plan which has been planned for some time. Mayor Reginald H. Sullivan and Albert Stump will be speakers at largj fellowship and community service to be held in the evening. From 2 p. m. to 5 p. m. on Sunday, the entire building will be open to visitors and ushers will be provided to welcome and escort those who are strangers.

The observance of dedication veek will continue on Tuesday evening when Dr. J. M. G. Darms. president of Mission House college and seminary of Sheboygan, Wis., will deliver the mam address at a ervice at which the neighboring churches and the other reformed churches of the city will be guests. The final services of dedication week will be held on Palm Sunday. In the morning at a service planned especially for visitors, the pastor, the Rev. Goerge P. Kehl, will preach oil “The Old Ruggea Cross.” In he evening a concert on the new organ of sacred music will bo presented by the organist, E. W. Muhienbrush. Founded in 1859, the Second Reformed church is one of the oldest in the city. For the last forty-five years the congregation has woi-‘-hipped in a building located at Alabama and Merrill streets. In the last four and one-half years tinder the pastorate of the Rev. George P. Kehl. the church nas been very actively growing. In this time, 204 new members have been received, an average of one for every Sunday. An attractive souvenior program issued by the congregation shows that in this time the Rev. Mr. Kehl has made 2.950 pastoral calls, preached 366 and conducted seventy-six funerals, fifty-four of which were for people who were not members of the congregation. The church is active in many lines. Its two bowling teams are leading the Reformed Church Bowling League. Its basketball team won the pennant in the ReformedEvangelical Church League for the last two years and in this time lost only three games. The church baseball team closed the season last autumn with high standing in the city Si. :day school baseball league. Recently attention was attracted to an unusual record of service in the Sunday school when Miss Katherine Eberhardt resigned as teacher of the large Truth Seekers class after a record of fifty years of continuous teaching in the Sunday school. The new' building contains besides the worship auditorium, a large | dining room and social hall capable of seating 325 at tables, a well equipped kitchen, a social room in the basement and fourteen other class and department rooms used by the Sunday school. The building committee consists of John Schmid. 872 East drive. Woodruff Place; Ernest Howe, 2136 Shelby street; E. E. Gross, 1349 i Madison avenue; Frank Stienecker, } Bluff road, and A. D. Noggle, 919 | Shelby street. a o u PRE-EASTER NOON DAY SERVICE PLANNED The annual pre-Eastern noon-day service of the Interdenominational Ministers’ Alliance and the Y. W. C. A., will be held at the Walker theater from April 7 to the 18th. The hour of service will be from 12:05 to 12:40. No expense has been spared to secure for this year’s services two very outstanding speakers. The speaker for the first week will be the Rev. Richard H. Bowling. D.D. LL.D., president of the Virginia state Baptist convention and pastor of Norfolk’s First Bapchurch. Dr. Bowling is a convincing speaker who will bring a series of messages which anyone vitally concerned with their religious “welfare” can ill-afford to

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miss. The speaker for the second week will be Bishop C. C. Alleyne of the A. M. E. Z. church. Bishop Alleyne, previous to his election to the hishopric, pastored several prominent churches in New England, North Carolina and Washington, D. C. No one who has ever heard Bishop Alleyne can readily forget his forceful, clear-cut and deeply spiritual messages. The music will be in charge of Mrs. Maitie Stovall, as song leader, and Mrs. Mildred King at the organ. The public is urged to attend these services and will be permitted to leave the services before they are over, if necessary. mm m GILL TO TALK HERE SUNDAY NIGHT George Gill, director of the Indianapolis Bureau of Free Employment of the Indianapolis foundation, will conduct an open forum on “People and Their Employment Problems” at the Popular Sunday evening services of the Sutherland Presbyterian church. Gill lias been director of the bureau for the past five years and is well acquainted with the employment problems in the city of Indianapolis. The young people’s chorus will sing at this service. At the morning services the Rev. Florizel A. Pfleiderer will discuss the theme, "Strong Men.” Ban WILL SPEAK IN AUDITORIUM At the New York Street Evangelical church, the Rev. Edmund Kerlin preaches at 10:40 a. m.. the first sermon in the re-opened auditorium, subject, “Walls of Salvation and Gates of the Gospel.” Airministry, every Wednesday, 7 p. m., WKBF, a b a CHORAL SOCIETY WILL SING SUNDAY The Roberts Park Choral society will sing “The Day of Light,” by Farmer, and “O, Savior of the World” at the morning service. Dr. Dunlavy’s subject will be “A Courageous Gospel, the Need of Today.” In the evening, the quartet will sing “Come Kingdom of Our Lord” and Dr. Dunlavy will preach on "Significant Forces.” Th .- choir is under the direction of Hugh McGibeny, with Mrs. R. L. Burtch as organist. The quartet Is composed of Miss Leona Wright, i soprano; Mrs. Selma Zahl Scearcy, ! contralto; Raymond Ball, tenor, and Henry W. Laut, bass. B a a LENTEN SPEAKER IS ANNOUNCED The Rev. Walter Ovid Kinsolving, rector of Calvary church. Summit, N. J„ will be the Lenten speaker at Christ church five days next week, making the first of his addresses on Monday. He also will speak at the midweek service at the Church of the Advent, Wednesday evening at 8 o’clock. The Rev. Mr. Kinsolving was bom in Philadelphia. Pa., in 1887, but went to Texas in 1892, when his father, the Rev. George Herbert Kinsolving, was made bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Texas. He took his A.B. and A.M. degrees from the University of Texas and was elected to Phi Beta Kappa fraternity, in 1913 he received his 3D. degree

from the General Theological seminary in New York. The following year he became assistant at the Chapel of the Intercession of Trinity parish, New York. In 1915 he became dean of the Cathedral of St. Paul at Oklahoma City, Okla. For the past fourteen years he has been rector of Calvary church at Summit, N. J. The Rev. Mr. Kinsolving also has taken a prominent part in affairs of the national church, being at present a member of the commission on adult education. Ke also is librarian, examining chaplain, a member of the board of missions and a member of the Ecclesiastical Court of the Diocese of Newark. At the Wallace Street Presbyterian chrch, the Rev. H. T. Wilson will speak at 1:45 on “The Courageous Christ;" at 7:30, “The Sixth Word From the Cross.” The subject cf the morning sermon will be “Christ’s Come.” The evening service will be a missionary pageant presented by a mission group from the Indiana Central college. At the Second Moravian Episcopal church the pastor, the Rev. Vernon W. Couillard, will preach at the morning service on the theme, “Gethsemane.” At the 7:45 evening service, his theme will be “Jewish Sect and Party Leaders Question Jesus.” The sermon subject at the morning hour of worship, 11 a. m., at the Speedway Boulevard Methodist Episcopal church, will be “The Miracle of Jesus’ Personality.” The topic at the 7:40 p. m. evening service will be “Three Ways of Life.” At the First Friends church next Sunday morning, the pastor, the Rev. Ira C. Dawes, will use for his subject, “The Challenge of Christ.” Young people’s service at 5:30 p. m. At the Riverside Park Methodist Episcopal church in the morning worship service, the Rev. Mrs. Sara E. Selle, mother of the pastor, will preach on “The Way of the Cross.” At the evening worship hour, the Rev. Robert M. Selle, pastor, will preach on “The Joy of Pentecost.” In the Broadway Evangelical church, the Rev. L. E. Smith will preach in the morning from the subject “Be Ye Reconciled fc to God.” In the vesper service the subject will be “The Empty Mourner’s Bench.” Second Evangelical church, the Rev. J. H. Rilling, minister. “Jesus and Prayer” is the sermon subject for the Sunday forenoon worship. At the revival meeting Sunday p. m.. the Rev. Mr. Rilling will discuss “He Went Away Sorrowful.” Sunday morning, 10:45 o’clock, the Lenten worship in the Fairview j Presbyterian church will take the , form of a reverent, churchly cantata, “The Paschal Victor,” by J. Sebastian Matthews, sung by the quartet of the church under direction of the organist, Mrs. Frank T. Edenharter. Dr. Edward Haines Kistler is the minister of the church. At the Northwood Christian church the subject of Dr. Grafton’s Sunday morning sermon is “What Must the Churches Do to Be Saved?” In the First Moravian Episcopal church, Twenty-second street and Broadway, the pastor, the Rev. F. P. Stocker will preach at 11 a. m. on the theme. “The Challenge of Perfection.” At the vesper service at 4:30, the address will be “The True Vine,” being the fifth in a

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

New Church Dedicated Sunday

The Second Reformed church will start Sunday a series of services which will officially dedicate this new and beautiful building. Civic , leaders have been invited to attend.

Lenten series on “What Jesus Said He Was.” “The Way of the Cross” will be the subject of the Sunday lesson of the Women’s Bible class of the Third Christian church. This is the sixth pre-Easter talk by the teacher, Mrs. H. A. Turney. Mrs. Katherine Garten will sing, “Think on Thy Way.” b a b CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SUBJECT ANNOUNCED “Unreality” is the subject of the lesson-sermon in all Churches of Christ, Scientist, on Sunday, April 6. Among the citations which comprise the lesson-sermon is the following from the Bible: “For He saith, I have heard thee in a time accepted, and in the day of salvation have I succoured thee: behold, now is the accepted time: behold, now is the day of salvation” (II Cor. 6:2). “Thou will shew me the path of life; in thy presence is fulness of joy; at thy right hand there are pleasures for evermore” (Ps. 16:11). The lesson-sermon also Includes the following citations from the Christian Science textbook, “Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures,” by Mary Baker Eddy: “ ‘Now,’ cried the apostle, ‘is the accepted time; behold, now is the day of salvation,’ —meaning, not that men must prepare for a future world salvation, or safety, but that now is the time in which to experience that salvation in spirit and in life. ... To break t’y- earthly spell, mortals must get the true idea and divine principle of all that really exists and governs the universe harmoniously.” At Calvary United Brethren church. State ancl Hoyt avenues, the Rev. L. P. Cooper will preach Sunday morning on “The Unique Universal Christ” ancl at the evening service at 7:45 his subject will be “The Inescapable Christ.” “From Jericho to Jerusalem” will be the sermon subject of Dr. Frederick W. Burnham, Sunday morning. In the evening, the topic of the sermon will be “Jesus and The Lost.” The Rev. Homer Dale, pastor of the Hillside Christian church, will preach Sunday morning on “Remember Now Thy Creator.” and Sunday evening on “The Church at the Gates of Hades.” The Rev. L. B. Moseley, pastor of the Emerson Avenue Baptist church, will speak Sunday morning on “The Tragedy of Being Misunderstood.” His subject for the night

service will be “Will Your Grandchild Be an Atheist?” At the Beville Avenue Evangelical church, the Rev. Ambrose Aegerter will speak in the morning on “The Compass of the Cross” and at night, “The Unexpected.” “Herod, Novelty Leader,” will be the morning theme of the Rev. E. G. Homrighausen at the Carrollton Avenue Reformed church. At night, examination of the confirmation class by the pastor will be held. At the Indianapolis Gospel Tabernacle, “Two Supreme Court Trials,” will be the night theme of the Rev. Charles Kingston. In the afternoon at 3 o’clock, “Is Christ Coming in 1930?” will be the subject. At the Garden Baptist church, the Rev. Clyde L, Gibbens will speak in the morning on “The Broken Body,” and at night, “Good Tidings of Grear, Joy.” An all-day meeting will be held Sunday at the Missionary Tabernacle, East St. Clair and Spring streets. The Rev. Otto H. Nater will speak at 10:45 a. m. on “Explorations in Canaan.” In the afternoon, the Rev. C. M. Crider will speak. At 7 o’clock, C. Vandosdale will have charge of a prayer service. At night, the Rev. William Morgan will conduct an evangelistic sendee. At the Grace Methodist Episcopal church, the Rev. B. Brooks Shake speaks Sunday morning on “Making

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j Friendship Christian,” and at night, “Crowding Jesus Into a Uniform.” W. H. Harris of the Temule BapI list church will speak Sunday morning on ‘Man Plus God.” At | night, “A Wonderful Savor.” At the Union Methodist Episcopal I church, the Rev. Robert F. Laycock speaks in the morning on “Alone With God” and at night, “Christians Like Boats.” Dr. Frank S. C. Wicks of All Souls Unitarian church announces the following order of service at 11 a. m.: Prelude ‘Choral, Gothlque Suite'' Boellmann ‘Adagio’ Merkel Hymn First Service Anthem Covenant. W r ords of Aspiration Responsive Reading—6th Selection Scripture Hymn 16 Notices and Offering. ''Aria,'’ from St. Paul Mendelssohn “Judaism” Address Hymn 449 Benediction Postlude “Credo, Mass No. 1” Haydn The lesson Sunday will be taught by Merle Sidener, whose subject will be “Self Preservation,” at the Third Christian church. Special music will be furnished by Lewis Schwerin and will be tw r o base solos. Mr. Schwerin will be accompanied by Mrs. Lewis Schwerin at the piano. The program will be broadcast over station WFBM between 9:30 and 10:30 a. m. Tlie Rev. E. P. Jewett of the Madison Avenue Methodist Episcopal church announces that the Rev. John E. Hewson, evangelist, will preach both Sunday morning and evening. At the Fifty-first Street Methodist Episcopal church, the Rev. J. Graham Sibson announces he will preach on “A Red-Letter Day in the Life of St. Paul” in the morning. At the Brightwood Methodist Episcopal church, Dr. George H. Murphy will speak in the morning. At night, the Rev. V. P. Hargitt will open a pre-Easter revival by speaking on “A Great Awakening.” “A Great Believer” and “How a Coward Becomes a Hero” are the announced subjects of the Rev. Forest A. Reed at the Brookside United Brethren church. At the Barth Place Methodist Episcopal church, the Rev. Howard M. Pattison speaks Sunday on “The Abiding Life” and “Excuse Making Is Spiritual Suicide.” “The Other Side of the Door” and “Following Afar Off” will be the Sunday themes of the Rev. C. J. G.

Russom at the First Reformed church. At the First United Presbyterian church, the Rev. Joseph A. Meers will speak in the morning on “The Good Shepherd.” Young People’s meeting will be held at 7 p. m. The Rev. B. R. Johnson of the Downey Avenue Christian church announces he will speak Sunday on “The Inescapable God” and “How to Become a Christian.” At the East Park S&lhodist pni*-*

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copal church, the Rev. F. T. Taylor speaks in the morning on “Encouragement,” and at night, “Seven Steps in the Downfall of Peter.” SIB,OOO to Be Spent on School f?v Timet Special NOBLESVTLLE, Ind., April 5. The advisory’ boar-’ of Jackson township. Hamilton county, has approved a brnd issue for SIB,OOO with which to r—"del the high school building at Arcadia and erect an addition to be used for a gymnasium.