Indianapolis Times, Volume 47, Number 39, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 April 1935 — Page 4

PAGE 4

DARROW CALLED ‘SOUL DAMNER" BY CITYPASTOR Famed Materialist Bitterly Criticised for Views on Religion. “Clarence Darrow is a damner of souls. Because of what Mr. Darrow said last week about there being 'nothing after death’ thousands of youth will be doomed to the eternal Fire. Mr. Darrow is a man to be pitted and also held in contempt.’’ That Is a summation of the remarks which the Rev. O. A. Trinkle, with the aid of numerous gesticulations, and boomings of voice, made to an overflow meeting at the Englewood Christian Church last night. After preliminary explanation of his sermon theme, “What Ii I Am Wrong?” the dynamic Mr. Trinkle said in his 19 years of preaching he had saved 6000 souls in four or five states, from the "moonshine” districts of Kentucky to the highly cul- | tured sections of the metropolitan areas. He admitted that he and Mr. Darrow had started at approximately the same educational point. “I’ve Done More Good” “But I have done more good in preaching gospel than any man who has spent his life defending criminals or evolution,” Mr. Trinkle said. “What if I am wrong? “If I am wrong, I have given not only the best to this world that I could, but I will realize the most in the world to come. I will not sit at 78 and wait for death and decay, but I will wait for the transformation from life into life.” “It is pitiable that Mr. Darrow has never had the religious experience,” Mr. Trinkle lamented. “Because if he had, he would be here sitting on the front row of church at 78, waiting to drop into Glory.” Mr. Trinkle waded deep into the theory of materialism. “Sprinkling Baptisers” Scored “The doctrine of materialism makes beasts of men and women and nobody knows that better than

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ANNUAL SPRING OPEN AIR SALON MERIDIAN STREET AT 38TH First Complete Showing of All Models of the New Ford V-8 for 1935 OPEN SATURDAY, APRIL 27TH At noon and continues through all of the following week. Open each week day from noon until 10 o'clock p. m. Closed Sunday all day. SPECIAL ATTRACTION! One-half hour radio broadcast every evening direct from the salon over Station WIRE, featuring the best amateur talent that can be selected. SIOO.OO in prizes to be awarded. NOTICE—Any amateurs who desire to compete in these broadcasts first must report to station WIRE studios ot 2 P. M., Wednesday, Thursday, Friday or Saturday for an audition. NO ADMISSION CHARGE Indianapolis Ford Dealers

JUNIOR FLIERS PREPARE MODELS FOR DERBY TEST

Left to right, James Mitchell, James Cox and James Koors, all members of Flight 2, Wing B. The above members of The Indianapolis Times Squadron of The Scripps-Howard Junior Aviators are busy putting the finishing touches on models that they will enter in the Transcontinental Derby elimination contest on May 4. The event will be staged at Stout Field and all members of The Times Squadron are eligible to compete. The two winners will represent the local Squadron in the great Derby which will be held in the near future. The Times is making arrangements to obtain various other prizes for runnersup of the elimination affair and members are busy assembling their planes in hopes of copping some of the awards.

Mr. Darrow. If he had won that Loeb-Leopold case he would have definitely lowered the level of human morality. The life of any man who believes in God, no matter what his worldly status may be, is worth more than any materialist.” Not only the materialists, but the universal Salvationists, the “1000 years second chance” believers, and the “sprinkling baptisers,” felt the goad of Mr. Trinkle 's ire last night. “Right or wrong, I'm safe all the time,” Mr. Trinkle concluded. Then with perspiration standing on his brow', the Christian minister hopped up on a chair near the Communion table and vchile the audience sang six or seven verses of “Just as 1 Am,” and “Almos, Persuaded,” the pastor likened the Gospel to an “insurance policy on Salvation,” and God to “a sending and receiving station,” and brought ten new members into his congregation.

COUNTERFEITING IS CHARGED TO FOUR U. S. Arrests Negroes on Bogus Money Counts. Four Negroes w'ere held to the Federal Grand Jury yesterday on counterfeiting charges by Howard S. Young, United States Commissioner. They are Wherry Tucker, 38; Anna Vance, 23; Clyde Reynolds, 30, and Mrs. Wherry Tucker. Bond was fixed at SIOOO for each of the first three. Mrs. Tucker was released on her own recognizance. Detectives arrested Reynolds Monday. The other three were picked up Tuesday in a raid in the 400 block, Toledo-st, by Federal agents accompanied by detectives. The defendants are said to be connected with four Negroes recently arrested in Fulton, Ky., who had 300 counterfeit $5 bills in their possession. Tw r oof the four arrested in Kentucky, Ella Davis and May Garrett, are residents of Indianapolis. ENGINEERS TO HOLD MEETING AT PURDUE City Society Members to Inspect Mechanical Building. The spring meeting of the Indianapolis section of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers will be held at Purdue University tomorrow' afternoon and night. Members will make an inspection tour of the university’s Mechanical Building in the afternoon. Dinner at 6 w'ill be followed by a business meeting. An address on “Problems Encounter' and in Cooling an Experimental House” will be given by Prof. Maurice K. Fahnestock, University oI Illinois School of Mechanical Engineering. It will be followed by a discussion by W. T. Miller, associate professor of heating and ventilating at Purdue.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

MOST TRUSTED AID PROMOTED BY ROOSEVELT Frank Walker to Serve As Chief’s Eyes and Ears in , Public Works. BY RUTH FINNEY Times Special Writer WASHINGTON, April 25. —The most reluctant official Washington has ever known has come back to help with the biggest job of the year, public works. Since Franklin Roosevelt became President, Frank C. Walker has had one job after another thrust at him. Most of them he has dodged. The few he couldn’t dodge he disposed of as quietly and as expeditiously as possible and slipped out of town. This last time he succeeded in staying away eight months. He doesn’t like public life and doesn’t care who knows it. Probably no one on earth could drag him into it but Mr. Roosevelt, but for Mr. Roosevelt he would make even greater sacrifices. If the President has one thoroughly devoted, it is Mr. Walker. And Mr. Roosevelt trusts him as he has trusted no one with the exception of his faithful Louis Howe. Washington expects him to be the eyes and ears without which the President could not assume personal direction of the great spending program. Gives Credit to President Mr. Walker w'ill never admit that he is filling such a role. If there is credit to be had he wants the President, not Frank Walker, to have it. This Damon and Pythias relationship started in 1920 when Mr. Roosevelt was a candidate for the vice presidency and Mr. Walker, as a leading lawyer of Butte, Mont., was a member of the committee which greeted him there. It continued when Mr. Walker moved to New York as attorney for an uncle w r ho owned a country-wide chain of moving picture theaters. He dropped in at Albany, at frequent intervals, to talk things over with Governor Roosevelt. He was one of the small group which financed the Roosevelt pre-conven-tion campaign. He was treasurer of the Democratic party through the post-convention campaign. After that he thought he was through with public life for awhile. He turned down every position the President tried to press upon him until the hectic winter of 1933-34 when he finally agreed to serve as executive secretary to the President’s National Emergency Council. Attended Notre Dame It turned out that this was the beginning of co-ordination in the New Deal and that Mr. Walker was charged with keeping everything running smoothly for the man at the top. When the consumer problem grew troublesome at NRA, he was put in charge of an ambitious scheme to organize consumers’ councils in the land—which was only partly carried out, however. When housing became the first issue of the day he whipped the plan for a housing administration into its earliest form This new kind of official was born in 1886 in a Pennsylvania coal town

-C<*kl Night” CS* = CA | JH $C.95! 7TO 9:30 R R A 7TO 9:30 On sale Friday J Friday night, Y B]ack and § also Saturday | chromium ] , 11 tt • i , jtf: All Day and Evening Full Height J LAMP SALE ALL METAL ! I Three beautiful new lamps of the latest design—jmjjj flHHjln rich and fine enough to grace the most refined •np "T . • ■'t • j home—yet so low in price any family can afford I -4--* I 1 iTT IHUHI t 0 own one “two—or all three, j I I | I I \j Either Lamp Delivered on Payment of $1 Down! Cabinet and ■ linoleum Exactly like cut J P IH SALE „ . *2? | 1111 On 60; "Jl I I I H ° n Sale Ml Day l Friday 7 f ° 9:3o Wk jLsJ. (q) -p •'P None to be sold at this price any jj 1 Y^j=y —" I fM VL \ f J ff \ fa f I other time whatsoever. No i I ( \ 8 I If I If f phone . ITT \J VtUO/ 1/ UOUUO UJ MERIDIAN AT MARYLAND

‘Y’ as World Force for Peace Lauded at Parley Former Workers in India and Japan to Tell City Men How Society Improves International Relations. The part played by the Young Men’s Christian Association in bringing about a better understanding between nations was stressed yesterday at a luncheon of business and professional men at the Indianapolis Athletic

Club. The meeting was called by Charles i J. Lynn, vice president of Eli Lilly & Cos., and chairman of the foreign work committee of the local Y. M. C. A. J. M. Clinton, New York, former organization leader in Japan, told of the dangers existing in the Chinese-Japanese-Russian sector. The “Y” has done much to relieve the confusion apparent throughout the world today, he said.

and played about the shop of the village blacksmith close by. While he was still a child his family moved to Montana, and he grew up in Butte. He went first to Gonzaga College in Spokane, and afterwards to Notre Dame, where he made a considerable name as a member of the debating team—a fact which always surprises his Eastern friends who can recall his making only one or two speeches. Back in Butte, he and his brother, Thomas, became law partners, numbering among their clients the Northern Pacific Railroad, the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul, and the Anaconda Copper Cos. He first tasted public life as assistant district attorney in Butte and later as a state legislator. In New York he has prospered in the legal end of the theater business. The thorough, methodical methods that have helped him succeed there have been applied to

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Harry Herman, member of the Y. M. C. A. staff in India, spoke of the difficulties arising among the many castes in that country and the manner in which the Y. M. C. A. workers are helping to overcome them. Both speakers praised the activity of the Indianapolis Y. M. C. A. in foreign fields.

putting order into the great national experiment. The men who know Mr. Walker, both conservatives and leftists, like him and praise him unreservedly. But the historian who tries to record his part in the Washington 6cene will face a difficult task. Mr Walker is a first-class poker player.

After Easter Sale Permanent Waves While there is still time you can have a permanent by competent operators—as you like it! It is smart to save and a permanent here costs you less than elsewhere. v CENTRAL Cor. Penn, and Wash. Sts. 209 Odd Fellow Bid a. 1.1-0432

COUNTY ODD FELLOWS TO MARK ANNIVERSARY Rf jekahs to Join in Celebration of 116th Birthday Sunday. A joint meeting of Marion County Rebekahs and Odd Fellows will be held at 3 Sunday in the Grand Lodge Auditorium, Odd Fellow Building, in celebration of the 116th anniversary of Odd Fellowship. The program, sponsored by the Rebekahs of District 6 and the Odd Fellows of District 23. will include features by a male chorus and by Miss Florence McGregor, Miss Mary

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_APRIL 25, 1935

S. Wilson. Mrs. Helen Scholey, Clifford Scholey, Paul Pfister and the Rev. L- C. Murr. BAN KERSH E A RJACKSON Indiana in Good Financial Position, Tax Official Declare*. Indiana is in a much better financial position than many other states, clarence A. Jackson, director of the state gross income tax division, said last night at the Marion County Bankers’ Association dinner at the Washington. W. c. Grauel presided. Nearly 100 representatives from county banks attended.