Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 February 1938 — Page 5

any Form

Parties for| Guild Dance

‘Sunnyside Benefit Fete Set for Columbia Club Feb. 26.

Week-end activities in Indianapolis Saturday night, Feb. 26, will center at the Columbia-Club when Sunnyside Guild’s annual benefit dinner-dance is held. The event, which is to be one of the- largest and most elaborate ever given, will help with relief work among needy tuberculosis patients and their families. Among numerous parties attending ‘the dance will be that of Dr. and Mrs. A, L. Marshall, Dr. and Mrs. A. E. Hubbard and Dr. and Mrs. Maurice B. Thomas. With Mr. and Mrs. Ancel P. Harvey will be Dr. and, Mrs. B. B. Pettijohn, Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Johnson and . and Mrs. L. W. Hancock. Attending with Dr. and Mrs. James H. Stygall will be Mr. and ‘Mrs. Harvey Beldon. With Mr. and Mrs. Wilfred F. Seyfred will be Messrs. and Mesdames Thomas Spellmier, B. B. Wood, Miss Mary Swank and P. J. Shaughnessy. . In one party will be Mr. and Mrs. Farless L. Hewlett, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hobbs, Miss Elizabeth Stayton and Arnold Davis. With Mr. and Mrs. Boyd W. Templeton will be Messrs. and Mesdames W. H. Vinzant, G. J. Oglebay, Joe Kettery, F. Eugene Thornburg, Albert Evans, Charles G. Black, Mrs. Ethel Osborn and Clem Dahlman. In H. C. Tysons’ Party In a party with Mr. and Mrs. Herbert C. Tyson and Mr. and Mrs. E. Park Akin will be Messrs and Mesdames William F. Sandmann, E. N. Gimbel, Paul L. McCord, Howard W. Linkert, Chester A. Cones, H. A. Gus Shumaker, Fort H. Moore, Larry J. Blackmore, Earl Wolf; Miss Mary Helen McKee and Jr J. "=McGarrell. - In a party with Mr. and Mrs. ‘Chantilla E. White will be Messrs and Mesdames Robert Pike, Homer Archer, Charles Martin, Carl Ittenbach, DeWitt Brown, Philip A. Rohan, C. W. Butler, Maurice Gronendyke; Messrs. and Mesdames Henry Jennings, Sam Bufkin Jr., and H. M. Bramberry, all of Newcastle; Arthur Perkins, Crawfordsville; Mesdames C. J. Underwood and ‘Ethel Robertson; Misses Harriet Terry, Sonoma Craig, Ada Riley, Mildred Horn, Marie Hutton and Waldo Blievernicht, John MecEwen, Elton Leffler, Sam Dennin, Chalmer Warren, Charles Paige and Dr. R. J. McElwee.

. With Mr. and Mrs. W. B. McCaw |

will be Messrs. and Mesdames O. W. Bridgeford, F. X. Kern, M. W. Rhoads, R. E. Mitchell; Drs. and .Mesdames B. E. Ellis, F. M. Gastineau, R. V. Myers, D. N. Goode, J C. Schoenlaub. Before going to the dance they will be entertained informally at the home of Dr. and Mrs. Goode. : With E. A. Lawsons With Mr. and Mrs. Edward A. Lawson will be their daughter, Jane Lawson, and Dick Wilson; Messrs. ani Mesdames Harold I. Platt, J. J. Mullins, J. B. Messler," Claud M:

~ Allen, St. Louis; L. T. Glidden, R. [UY

C. Beckerer, J. Wayne Fiscus, William Marschke; Dr. and Mrs. Robert Botkin, Dr. and Mrs. Ralph Elsea; Mrs. Ella V. Staub, Misses Helen Klasing, Philis Minter and Lucille Smith; Dr. John W. Sluss, Thomas Matthews; John Summers and Dr. W. B. Cufrie. With Mr. and Mrs. Joe J. Speaks _ will be Messrs. and Mesdames Wil-|in liam T. Miller, George Rice, W. J. Overmire, David Jolly and Michael Carr. With Mr. and Mrs. Lee M. ~ Gutzwiller will*be Messrs. and Mes- ° dames Walter R. Capp, Hal C. Irons,

/ Wade L. Lushbaugh, Len A. New-

man, Farrel E. Potter, Arlie J. Wells and Lester H. Hahn. With Mr. and Mrs. Walter B. Knotts will be Messrs. and Mesdames Douglas W. Allen, Walter W. Hubbard, James A. Friedel, Jasper E. Fleming, Fred W. Kohlmier; Misses Jerry Johnson, Betty Moon, Lucille Jackson, Marion Gearen; William H. Hanning, Wallace De-

: Hart, Burt Kingan, Clifford Han-

With Mr. and Mrs. Gaylord T. Rust’ will be Mr. and Mrs. Arthur W. Shartz, Logansport; Mr. and Mrs. Roland B. Rust, Miss Alfreda Grande and Miss Anna Marie Iske: Glen R. Brown, Plamer F. Padgett, William T. Eix. With Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Keenan will be Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Adams and Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Kiftle. With Miss Hannah Noone will be Frank Quinn, Miss Sophia Engle, Anthony Wichmann and Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Derleth. With Miss Frances H. Carter will be Augustus Coburn and Judge and Mrs. Smiley N. Chambers. Others Form Parties Mr. and Mrs. Frank H. Cox and Mr. and Mrs. Roland B. Rust will attend together. With Mr. and Mrs. Seth Ward will be Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Christian, Noblesville. In another party will be Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Fisher, Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Brier, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Antibus, Miss Mary Margaret Brown and Pat Sullivan, Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Hopkins will include in their party Dr. and Mrs. O. E. Simons, Messrs. and Mesdames Charles M. Hoffman, L. S. Reed, Earl Prall, Howard T. Hill, Edinburg; Ordl Alexander and Wallace S. Bowman of Franklin; Misses Dru Fisk, Eleanor B. Poirier, F. Merle Walters and William Valodin, With Mr. and Mrs. Hal C. Meyer will be Messrs. and Mesdames Herbert Patrick, Vernon Gasper, Harry B. McKee, H. R. Throckmorton, Edward M. Curry. With Mr. and Mrs. QO. L. Fevrier will be Messrs. and Mesdames Harry C. Ware, Nelson Gorsuch, Earl Bach, L. J. E. Foley, Harry Crowe. With Mr. and Mrs: John L. Bulger will be Messrs. and Mesdames Hanly Blackburn, Paul H. Burget, Robert Clarke, S. R. Ryan, M. A. Gaskins and H. L. Townsend. With’ Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Martin will be Messrs. and

. Thomas W. Ledwith, Richard D.

Sheen, George W. Aloralent; Drs. and

Courtesy U. 8. Mrs. Henrik Mayer and her Culver Posto!

Treasury Department, Art. Projects.

glasses. is part of

Mural. (Story, Page Four.)

John Mason Brown Analyzes Broadway for Local Audience

John Mason Brown first shambled into the theater ‘world when he, scratched a steel-wool wig, quavered “Massa,” and dropped a tray of

That was when he took part in Harvard productions. Today he still e theater world which he terms “amiable Insanity” :

As New dramatic critic, his shamble has lengthened into a stride. He thas discarded Southern drawl for. a clipped New York accent, and he sheds brilliant phrase-pictures of the stage and its personalities as nonchalantly as he once doffed his wi

g. | Maxwell Anderson’s “pleasantenough” play, “The Star Wagon”; Tallulah Bankhead, “not quite equal to Cleopatra”; Burgess Meredith, “a kleptomaniac because he steals your time and attention”; Maurice Evans, “the finest male actor in the English-speaking theater,” and even Snow White who succumbed to Prince Charming were silhouetted for his audience last night in Caleb Mills auditorium.

Shoriridge Band Plays

Mr. Browih’s a nce here was under the auspi of the Indianapolis Business and Professional Women’s Club. In reviewing current plays in his lecture, “Broadway In Review,” Mr. Brown said that when a Cornell University professor removed two speeches from Shakespeare’s “Ana tony and Cleopatra” in which Miss

. | Bankhead starred this past season,

he reduced the play from magnificent high tragedy to a pulp paper magazine stery about two middlepasa people who should have known ter. “A Julius ~ Caesar wandering around in painted Coliseums with a toga draped around his middle has \ banished in the powerful Mercury Theater antiFascist drama, ‘Julius Caesar, in modern costume,” said Mr. Brown. “Rome has been modernized into an ageless state with the dictator problem. The stage where it is played is bare. Actors emerge from an abyss at the back into a glaring spotlight. The unforgettable sound of a mniob, like the beat of tom-toms ‘Emperor Jones,’ runs throughout the play. ‘

Discusses “Star Wagon”:

“Caesar wears a scowl like those of Hitler and Mussolini that make one wonder if they ‘ever relax at home on weé¢k-ends.” The audience goes home pracMd tically delirious with self-satisfac-tion after seeing Anderson’s “Star Wagon,” according to Mr. Brown, who said that the drama is easy to enjoy and impossible to admire. “Anderson has taken advantage of our approaching senility to give us a flash-back play of wishful thinking,” he declared. Leading roles are played by Lillian Gish and her “aggressive innocence,” he added, and by Mr. Meredith “who

while he does it.” Mr, Brown paused to tell the story of vapid Susan in “Susan and God,” the story of a society woman, both silly and dangerous, : who leaped from fad to fad and who “in a moment of spiritual ventilation confessed to the sin of having once tinted her hair.” “A far better play is ‘Of Mice and Men’ which includes some of the best dialog spoken in the contemporary theater,” he said. “The play has - wrongly been compared with “Tobacco Road.” ‘Of Mice and Men’ has beauty in its portrayal of human loneliness, while ‘Tobacco Road’ has not a single moment of beauty in it.” - “George M. Cohan’s over-publi-cized ‘I'd Rather Be Right,’ opened in New York, not to an audience, but to a congregation, because they all knew the responses,” Mr. Brown said. “The United States is the only country in the world,”. he added, “where anyone would dare satirize high officials. A newsreel of President Roosevelt's face as he watched the play would be America’s final proof of democracy.” Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs” is more than a motion picture of extraordinary inventiveness, | your Mr. Brown told his audience. the exploration of a new medium.” He deplored the fact that Miss White at the conclusion of the picture, left the dwarfs, particularly Dopey, for the prince, and described his meeting with Walter Winchell in the foyer of a New York theater after the show. “Winchell was misty-eyed,” said Mr Brown. “He paused to sob on my shoulder: ‘Why couldn’t she take them home with her to use for bookends?’ ”

Pastor Will Address Woman's Auxiliary Mrs. “Earl Mclaughlin, 2254 N. Alabama St., is to be hostess at 1

p. m. Monday to the Woman's Auxiliary

of 8t. Paul's Episcopal Church. Assistant hostesses are to

York Evening Post®

makes everything seem worthwhile |.

Garden Group

Will Hear Talk By Bird Expert

Orpheus ' Mayer Schantz, River Forest, Ill, for 16 years connected with Chicago public schools, will speak on “Our Native Birds and Their Migrations’ at a Friday afternoon meeting of the Woman's Department Club Garden Department. - Mr. Schantz has made a study of

bird life and conducts annual study groups through the Smoky mounins. The lecture is to be illustrated with colored slides. Incidental music by Mrs. Irving Blue, Mrs. George Dunn and Miss Pearl Keifer will also be presented. A short business meeting is to follow. Mrs. Merritt Woolf will preside. Mrs. William Hart and Mrs. Oliver P. McLeland will sell tickets to the coming Home Show. A tea will conclude the program. Mrs. Clarence J. Finch and Mrs. William C. Bartholomew, cochair-’ men, are to be assisted by Mesdames Robert M. Bryce, John Connor, Lewis G. Ferguson, Bert S. Gadd, Albert H. Off, A. W, Holtegel, Forest B. Kellogg, Gage McCotter, L. A. McDonald, Charles F. Thompson, J. R. Vandaworker and Clay L. Ward.

Today’s Pattern’

ECAUSE it’s so young looking. so full of verve, she nautical theme is .a favorite for all sports apparel. This flattering Princess frock in Pattern 8893 deserves unusual attention because of the sailor collar, striped pockets and

button dress that you'll ‘enjoy wearing, that you'll agree is very flattering and that will fit into spring and summer plans. Make it up now in jersey, later in pique) linen or acetate sharkskin— trim 4t in navy or red to give it a real nautical theme. You'll find the style becoming even’if you require a size 40. And Pattern 8993 is as easy to make as sailing before the wind—and just 3s Pattern 8893 is designed for sizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 20 and 40. Size 14 requires 41% yards of 39-inch material, plus % yard of 39-inch material to contrast. : To SHiaii & paiterh and step ps. step instructions inclose 15 (cents in coin together an. the "above pattern number and your size, your name and address, and mail to Pattern Editor, The Indianapolis Times, 214 W. Maryland St., Indian-

apolis.. The new Spring and Summer Pattern Book, 32 pages of attractive for every size and every ocis now ready. Photographs dresses made from these patbeing worn; a feature you will

Raising a Family—

Moderate Discipline, | Parent Told|

Proper Correction Method | Must Be Started ~ In Babyhood. (Eighteenth of a Series) * By OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON

| In this. matter of discipline, |S! mother, perhaps you may wonder

why your liftle fellow under 3 or your little daughter under 6 is sapposed to be treated with less severity than the older child, if we can

¥ | speak of real discipline as severity.

This is why. Tiny children are throwing out feelers to- test the

world. They are 'like small plants 5 RB

that cannot bear too much bruising or handling if they are to live and grow strong. I am speaking of

mental and emotional growth, of ger

course, although health also depends upon contentment and happiness.

The preschool child has more im- | portant things to be encouraged in| ga.

him than rigid conformity. Need Pat on Back : Our young pioneers do not need |T discouraging but rather encouraging; or they will turn back on their tracks. These impressionable tots become shy, and decrease in self-respect, if overburdened with commands, or made fearful by scolding and over-punishment. Their fears increase, both inborn and grafted, and they may even, in some cases, attain that unfortunate and heart-breaking boundary known as “arrested development,” keeps them forever juvenile and prevents the natural pr of maturity. This is a dreary picture, to be sure, but when reasons are given for any particular course, the truth is best. Little children need to develop happily. Discipline should be blended with growth, but should not crowd it: Our forbear, good grandmother of the past, knew little about all this, but she did the right thing instinctively. Her little red-cheeked “comfort” wasn’t being “trained” or put on a scientific slab to be analyzed. He just grew and had few rules to hinder him. But as he waxed in knowledge, he was expected to conform, and do his share of work. Discipline became part of his lot and a pretty strict discipline, too. He did pretty well, and matured early. Yet. discipline does have a be-

ginning. And it has its place even | Edzew:

in babyhood, as I have said. The big idea is not to invert the process of discipline and pile it all on the [little . child, while we allow adolescents to get away with murder, Impress Rules Gradually Gradually, the little fellow will learn that certain actions bring not only reproval but a certain huft. Maybe not spanking (although I am not preaching entirely from an antispanking platform),

but reprisal in the form of denial. |

Even a frown can be punishment to a baby.

He must learn the sad story of | First consequences, but" they should ‘not | Ho

fill his day, his mind or his every action. Fear will certainly hinder his moral growth. And fear might be everything, when it should be little or nothing. Love is our ally. I give no formula. Mix the recipe yourself, mother. Love, brightness, happiness! Punishment of the proper kind and degree only when and Where it is needed.

Progress Theme gol |Of P.-T.. A. Event

“Council Progress” and “Civic Responsibility” will be the themes at the February meeting of the Indianapolis Council ' of ParentTeacher Associations at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday in School 80 auditorium, 6202 Bellefontaine St. i Mrs. William R. Shirley, council membership chairman is to speak on “Council Progress.” School 80 pupils are to present a dramatization of the framing of the Constitution. Miss Minnie Lloyd, Short ridge High School history department, is to speak on the history of the Constitution and its significance. The program has been arranged in observance of the Constitution’s sesquicentennial celebration by Mrs. George L. Clark, council juvenile protection chairman, Carl Wilde, School Board president, and A. B. Good, business manager, are to speak on budgets making.

Past presidents will be bonoF guests at the 7:30 p. m. Tuesday Pleasant Run P.-T. A. meeting. George Washington’s birthday is to be biserved.

The Pleasant Rin Study Club is to meet with Mrs. E. FP. Timmerman, 6100 E. 16th St. at 1 p. m. Thursday. to lead a discussion on practical English.

Et 2 2 Mrs. Frank Hartup is chairman of the Founders’ Day program to be presented at the 7:45 p. m. Wednesday Wayne Township meeting in the Ben Davis High School. Mrs. Elva Strouse and Mrs. Esther Sohl are to be in charge of the social hour,

A candle fienting” ceremony in observance of Founders’ Day will mark the Glenns Valley meeting today. Miss Louise Dresler is to direct the first and second grade pupils in a musical program. Mrs. William Kloess is chairman of the social hour. -

Conservatory to Sponsor Dance

‘The American Conservatory of Music is to give a dance ede night at Hotel Antlers. Music for the floor show will be Plaved by 3 flo sonsising of Mis Georgia Marie Neargarder, Rhea Stephens and Jean Cullom. Dances will be presented by | Betty Ann and Midgy Freeman Jane Mottern. Guest soloist will be Indianapolis

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Mrs. G. F. Middleton is]

and A. F. THOMAS 0 TALK

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CHRISTIAN SCIENCE -

CHURCH OF BRETHREN— Church of Brethren. Clinton I Weber.....

CHURCH OF CHRIST 3 East Side ........... E. G. Creacy cc.oco0es North Side

CHURCH OF GOD North Side EB 2 Turner ......s. Sherwood - Yona: J. Williams’ coe

CONGREGATIONAL Firs Ellis W. Hay

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bniitisn, ve T Belong to the Ghrisiian Churoh® ost The Kingdom Within”

a ensitiveniess to Spiritual ‘Truth”........“The Perfect Type Son of God” ... Baptismal Service.

“Jesus, the S mi! ame “ee nsibility” "| er ot ter’ 1+ When Rel

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“Taking the Stew out o¢ Stewardship”. .F. P. Cassidy, speake

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CHURCH TO GIVE - RELIGIOUS PLAY

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A religious play, “The Lost Church,” will be presented at the First Baptist Church tomorrow at 7:30" p. m. by members. Music will be supplied by an. orchestra comprised of Misses Roberta Trent, Betty Easterday, Joan and Virginia Fox, Mildred Schultz and Dorothy Weber, Mrs. F. L. Warner and Frank Stadler. ; Included in the cast are Clarence C. Deupree, Frederick H. Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Earl F. Beam and | Misses Caroline Beck, Janet McKinney, Flossie Beam, Adele Renard, Marjory Demaree, Gladys Connerly and Edith McKinney. The prologue will be given by Harold. K. Harding.

THE REV. STOCKER AT FIRST MORAVIAN

The Rev. Frederick Paul Stocker, Moravian Church Easfern District Board president, and denominational governing board member, is to conduct the First Moravian Church services tomorrow. The Rev. Mr. Stocker, former Indianapolis First Moravian Church pastor, has come here confer with Moravian offieials 4h Indianapolis.

‘GROTTO NIGHT PLANNED

Dr. Guy O. Cdrpenter, Central Avenue M. E. Church pastor, is to officiate at Grotto Church Night at 7 p. m. tomorrow at the church. Sahara Grotto members and their families are to attend. The Grotto band, directed by Merrill Henry, is to appear. The church choir 1s to sing.

Third Church Setiool will hold dinner at the church at 6:30 p. m. Thursday. De CB Lemmon of

Mo,, is to speak on “Affirmations of the Se Cutis Religion 4 in Life of

A. PF Thomas is to discuss “High fone in George Washington’s

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CHURCH SCHOOL MEETS | Christi ifs pinth annual ple,

cerning God's love and righteousFirst Christian Church, Columbia, oom. ov 8

rch is not listed above, it is because the required data has not been received by The Times Church

Weekly Sunday

Text:

«“Revelry and i re Christ fh Youth.”

.. Benediction,

ee pe os,

“The Return to God” Sermon

+ “The Ship

- .“Euduring

. Epworth

ve Beliets of Methodists Prayer”

ess Ri eo. “Sane Thinking +++ Bf,

“or oe Sewardship ot of Late”

oh “The Prophet in the Minority? - “The Fifth ndmen

oh Yoho Hayseed Mission’

+..The Rev. Arthur L. Mahr, speaker

CHOOS! NG COWORKERS

Mark 3:7-19,

ts Results.” = . “The Prayer Life.” DEVOTIONS— Sl

INovena 7:30 Tuesday. «+ Holy Hour, orm a ” .. Benediction, 4 gm 2: ». m

.. Benediction, 5 Pp. m.

«Rosary, Ben ediction, 5 ». m.

P. M. oChristians Unashamed’’ e Home"

The Despot of Christ’s Parables :. Christian Youth Council 5:30 p. m.

«The Temptation of Jesus”

“The World’s Need—The Christ” -

Supreme Question” an Endeav God the Deep. South’ Fouth Fellowship”

8 The.

“Ordered soute”

\ : “Greatest Things in the World”

“The Millenium” ; “A Garden With a Broken Wall”

. “Be of Good Cheer” “Know T| +.“The Call of Sinners”

Ler Arid the Storm”

- Young People’s Service

Pe of the Sower”

‘Love One Another? The Everlasting Arm. " The Silent Sphinx. Speaks

heeler I Be Done ‘Mission in Cliarge

th Leagu “Riehing Un ue Unfavorable Conditions”

T¢The Young Man’ Young People’s esting League 6:30 p. m. Sacred Con Young People’ s Meeting

Q. Robbins, speaker Ww. C. Hartinger, speaker

“The Christian “A Searching estion”

assidy, speake

.» Young People’s ting

Comma People’s Meeting Fellowship 6:30 p. m.

+ Bey, L. E. Markin, speaker ung People’s Meetin|

“Ye Are The Branches” .. Luther League

“he Fearlet Thread in the &Window”

Ee rnity, Where?’’ “The 1 Masters sof of the Far East”

“Three Jewels”

School Lesson

31-35

By WILLIAM E. GILROY, D. D. P one wished to mark the difference between the great and true Teacher and the demagogs who, in various ages, have professed to have panaceas for the ills of humanity, he could not find it more emphasized than in the opening words of our lesson: “Jesus with His disciples withdrew to the sea.” It is the mark of the demagog that he always wants to be with the crowd, or wants to have the crowd with him; but Jesus was continually withdrawing from the multitude. Was it that He had no message for the common people, and did not wish to give the Gospel to the multitude? Not at all. On the contrary, the common people heard Him gladly, and we see Jesus constantly ingplaces where people were congregat in their daily life, and in the synagogs and the temple, where they congregated for worship. But almost invariably, where the multitude surrounded Him, hearing of His fame, the emphasis was always upon the things that He had to express. The people were eager for some physical benefit, but they did not perceive the need of His spiritual teaching. “Ye seek Me,” He said on one occasion, “not befcause ye see the miracle, but because ye did eat of the loaves and Were filled” ~*~ 8 8 . . ESUS realized that the great influences were not upon crowds and multitudes, but were expressed in close contact with individuals and with small groups. He retired into quiet places with His disciples that He might teach ‘them and commune with them, He sent out the apostles and 70

Here we have the story of Jesus choosing the 12 who were to be His particular disciples, the inner circle whom we call “the -Apostles.”

We n chose. Their names and characters are well known, so far as: the Scripiures tell Ou any.

\and John.

not dwell upon the men|

We do not know so much about Andrew, yet it was Andrew who brought his brother, Peter, to Jesus. The nature of His relationship to His disciples and to the Kingdom of Heaven that He had come to claim is emphasized in a passage in our lesson that might grate somewhat harshly upon our modern feelings if we did not read it properly and perceive its truth. When Jesus was told that His mother and His brethren were waiting for Him outside, we are told that He said, “Who is my mother and my brethren?” and, looking ’round on the company, He added, “Behold my mother and my brethren, for whosoever shall do the will of God, the same is my brother and sister and mother.” » tJ 8

AS Jesus minimizing the dignity and beauty and responsibility of family relationship? Not at all. On the contrary, He was emphasizing - the reality and depth of the bond of love between those who have truly accepted the consciousness of God’s fatherhood, and are living in the communion of love and grace. If we doubted this, we should recall the fact that the mother of Jesus followed Him to the cross, and stood by, sharing His suf< fering; no th th agony Jesus committed the care of Tue Sother to the disciple wh om He ov!

PROFESSOR BOOKED

Dr. Rollin Walker, professor emeritus of English Bible at Ohio Wesleyan University, is to speak at the World Day of Prayer at Central

YOUTH CONFERENCE OPENS

IN INDIANAPOLIS CHURCHES TOMORROW Pastorsin EL D.

19th Church Parley Here

|The Rev. Mr: Turpin Talks

Twice Today; Dinner Set for Tonight.

The Rev. Harold Turpin, Seventh Presbyterian Church pastor, was to speak at the 19th annual Interden tional - Youth Conference - at the Central Christian Church.. The Tonterenes which opened yesterday is to continue through tomorrow. Others who were to speak today were A, C.. Waggoner, Indi-

fana Council of |

Christian Educa- : tion treasurer; § Walter Pritchard, § attorney; Mrs. W. A. Shullenberger, wife of the Rev. Mr. Shullenberger, Third Christian § Church pastor, and Virgil Stinebaugh, of the public schools. The Rev. Mr. Shullenberger spoke yesterday. The annual conference banquet is to be held at 6 o'clock tonight. James ‘Johnston, Marion County Youth Council president, is to be in charge of the banquet. The Rev. Mr. Turpin will speak again -tonight. Ralph Klare of the American Legion and Dr, Guy O. Carpenter, Central Avenue M. HN. Church pastor conducted & discussion yesterday on “Peace.” : Miss Clara - Noffke Hittle, Buck Creek Christian Church delegate, spoke yesterday I Shternoon on “Morne ing Watch. ”

Dr. Fisher To Give Talk

Church [School Meeting Set For| Monday Night.

Rev. Mr. Turpin

Dr. S. Grundy Fisher, University Park Christian Church pastor, is to be a principal speaker at the Marion County Disciples of Christ Church School meeting Monday night at West orris Street Christian Church. The largest delegation present at the meeting of the Church School Association is to receive an award. The Rev. Roscoe Kirkman, West Side Christian Mission general superintendent, is to describe the work of his group. The . Rev. Garry L. Cook, pastor >

| of the host church, has arranged a

musical program, P. A. Wood, Marion County Christian Church Schoql head, is to preside.

Cervus Club Aids Jobless

Breakfast to Be. Followed By Wheeler Service.

Breakfast Club for unemployed men is to be sponsored at Wheeler City Mission tomorrow morning by the Cervus Club. Mr. and Mrs. Cur= tis Davis are to conduct Bible serve ices preceding 8 o'clock breakfast. Mission Sunday worship is to be

[| at 2:30, p. m. Following Young Peo-

ple’s Fellowship services at 6:15 p. m., an evangelistic meeting directed by the Rev. Herbert E. Eber= hardt, Mission superintendent, will be held.

2 CADLE GROUPS TO HEAD SERVICE

8 The Cadle Tabernacle’s Youth Gospel Choir and the Young People’s Prayer group will be in charge of the evangelistic service tomore row night. The program will include special musical numbers by the Youth Choir. The Rev. E¢ Howard Cadle and the Tabernacle radio staff will cone duct a revival service tomorrow aft--ernoon in Troy, O. The Tabernacle choir also will take part in the broadcast.

DR: FISHER SET AS MEETING SPEAKER

‘The Rev. 8. Grundy Fisher, University Park Christian Church pase tor, is to speak at the monthly fel« | lowship meeting of West Morris Street Christian Church at 7:30 p. m. Monday; Representatives of all Marion County churches are to attend. :

MURAT GROUP TO SING

The Murat Temple Chanters are to sing at Vesper services tomorrow afternoon at Broadway M. BE, Church. Arthur w. Mason is arector.

C. E. OLDHAM TO SPEAK | C. E Oldham is’ to speak on ‘Choosing Companions in Service” | before the Allen B. Philputt Bible | Class at Central Christian Church

Avenue M. E. Church on’ March 4.

tomorrow morning.

“THIRD CHURCH OF

announces s FREE LECTURE O CHRISTIAN SCIENCE LOUISE KNIGHT W WHEATLEY COOK; CS B.

CHRIST, SCIENTIST INDIANA

®

Member of Board ctureshi ghure The First Church em The of Lect: prin gt oe oh, of