Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 January 1939 — Page 5
Sororities
=
ns
~ N. Pennsylvania St.
| service work on the child:
: Plan Heavy
~ Schedules|
Phi Mus Prepare for State Day Here on March 11.
A card party, lectures, a luncheon and plans for a state day gre among activities planned by sorority groups for the week-end and the coming
week. Two mothers’ clubs affiliated | §
with a sorority and fraternity also;
are to meet.
Committees for the annual state luncheon and dance of Fhi Mu Sorority will be named by Mrs. H. D.
Eberhart, president of the Alumnae] §
Association, at an alumnae meeting Monday night. Miss Edith. Gingery will be hostess at her home. 210 S. Ritter Ave. The state meeting will be March 11. “Jadwiga, Poland's Grea! Queen,” (Charlotte Kellogg), will be reviewed by Mrs. Charles Miller. Mrs. W. B. Wilcox and Mrs. Dorrance Smith will be assistant hostesses.
Members of the Kappa Alpha Theta Mothers’ Club of Butler University will hold their first luncheon
of the new year at noon Tuesday at|
the chapter house, 442 W. 46th St. Dr. Elmer Harvey will speak on “Another New Year.” Devofions will be led by Mrs. Earl Wells. A program of piano music will be played by Mrs. Emsley Johlson Jr. and Miss Jean Stewart. “Mrs. O. L. Scales is hostess chairman, assisted by Mesdames Herbert Sawyer, Byram Dickerson. Homer G. Meek, R. N. Harger and C. H. Becker. ole
Members of the Lambda Chill
Mothers’ Club of Butler University will be entertained at a 12:30 o'clock
luncheon Thursday at the chapter)
house. Following the luncheon, # musical program will be presented by the Butler Speakers and Entertainers Bureau under the direction of Miss
‘Mary Hesseldenz. Mrs. H. W. Mason
will give a travel talk. Xostesses will include Mesdames Mary Willett, Smith Burns, O. E. Butz, W. F.
Wagener and J. Paul Johnson.
Alpha, Beta and Gamma Chapters of Sigma Delta Zeta Sorority will hold their annual card party this afternoon at Ayres’ Auditorium. A style show of spring fashions will be presented and several prizes are to be given. ;
J Bjorn Winger will speak on “Norway” to Pi icron Alumna Chapders at 8 o'clock Monday evening at the Indiana’ World War Memorial Building. Mrs, D. B. Wood, president of Zeta apter, will. be in charge.
Miss LaVern Brown will be hostess to members of Psi Chapter of Beta Sigma Sorority Tuesday night at her home, 108 E. 13th St. Members of thet Alpha Delta Lat reian Club will hold their monthly luncheon meeting Tuesday at the home of Mrs. T. Gordon Kelly, 3540 Several recently published books will “be .ré=viewed during the afternoon by Mrs. John Waldo. Assistant hostesses will be Mrs. James Ray snd Mrs. Matthew Farson.
Mrs.” Delbert Eberts, 1108 N. Pennsylvania St, will ontertain members of Delta Beta Chapter of Psi Jota Xi Sorority Monday night at her home. - Assisting Mis. Eberts will be Miss Mildred Letz and Miss Josephine Merchant.
Guild Will Hear Mrs. Brown on Travel Su! ject
Mrs. Demarchus Brown vill speak on “Reminisces of the Triveler at Home” Jan. 19 at the Nurses’ Home of the Methodist Hospital under the sponsorship of the Norih Methodist Churcin unit. of the White Cross Guild. ; Proceeds will be used or social en's ‘and maternity floors of the | hospital. Mrs. Brown will be guest 4it a dinner in the hospital tearoor: préced-
' ing the lecture in the evering.
Mrs. R. G. Manning i: general chairman, assisted by Mrs: John G. Benson. Mrs. Clarence Knipp and Mrs.” Ambrose Pritchard are in charge of tickets. Mrs. Herbert E. Hayes is president of the guild. Various units will sew stpplies in
_ the guild workrooms next week.
Central Avenue, Third Christian and Unitarian Hostess nits will sew Monday; Grace Chu: h Guild, Tuesday; Broadway Guild. Wednesday; Temple Sisterhood and Municipal Gqrdens, Thursday and Tabernacle ( “len Guild, Friday,
2 Gifl Reserie | Units Adn itted
Representatives of net iv organ-
- ized Girl Reserve group: in Howe
High School and Bright aod High School were recognized as members of the Senior Inter-C lub Coun cil at the Council meeting and potluck luncheon at noon ic iay at the
Virginia Grabbe and Waggenor was used in nition services. Miss ® holtz, president of the XH: we group, and Miss Maxine Burlesor: president of the Brightwood gro ip, repre-
sented their organization.
month and for participa? © Reserves. in the progr | annual meeting.
Others on the f Miss Ella Mae Spauldinz’ Washing‘ton High School, secr='ary; Miss Betty Kuntz, Arsenal Te High School; and Mis
Peters and Miss Mildred Ott, Manual Training High Schoo!.
Johnston, dents,
Miss Lois Loder and Miss Virginia Butler University stuare advisers to the newly.
. formed Girl Reserve grotb at Haw-
on the beach at Miami, Fla.
Miss Dorothy Courtney and Barron Mallory are shown strolling They recently visited their parents, Mr. and Mrs. P. R, Mallory, who are aboard their yacht, Sangamo, at the Flamingo Hotel docks at Miami. Tudor Hall School, joined her parents for the holiday vacation period, _ as did Barron Mallory, who is a student at Yale University,
Stroll o on the Beach at Mic
Miss Courtney, a student at
Hostesses for the dinner, named by Mrs. A. A. Trefz, chairman, inclutie Mesdames Everett E. Campbell, Arthur J. Orr, Ray C. Friesner, Frederick A. Brier; Misses Jessie Russell, Doris Lynn, Helen Fullenwider, Belie Ramey and Dorothy Pennington. Mrs. C. Norman Green is director of the playlet. The cast will include Miss Helen Clever, Miss Marjory Hennis, Mesdames Arthur Van Arendonk, Louis E. Smith and Everett M. Schofield.
Speakers Are Listed
the latter part of the evening include: Mrs. Joseph R. Todd, State and Federal legislative programs; Mrs. Claude Potts, consumer’s re-
search chairman, the Food and Drug Bill; Miss Bertha Leming, Social Welfare chairman, new Child Welfare Code, syphilis control aad merit system; Mrs. William. O. Johnson, international affairs, in-
training in the schools; Mrs. Ervin Wicklund, equal rights of women and marriage law; and Mrs. N. Taylor Tadd, Federal aid for education. removal from the ballot of the office of State Superintendent of Public Instruction and tax revision. Mrs. Green also is chairman of the fellowship project of the Indianapolis_ branch of A. A. U. W. The group is selling tickets for the opening night of “Whiteoaks,” starring Ethel Barrymore, Feb. 3 at the English Theater. Proceeds from this project will go to the national Million Dollar Fellowship Fund. * Indianapolis last year had the highest per capita contributions to fellowship among branches with more than 200 members. All A, A. U. W. branches in the state contributed $3394 to the fund last year to put Indiana first in states. The fund is used to enable outstanding women students to do research at colleges and universities both here and abroad.
National Defense
Talks Listed
Various phases of national defense will be discussed by Senators, Representatives, Army and. Navy officers and heads of patriotic organizations at the 14th Women's Patriotic Conference on National Defense, Jan. 24-26 in Washington. Mrs. James Morris, national president of the American Legion Auxiliary and conference chairman, expects approximately 1,000,000 women to attend. Security of the United States from foreign aggression and internal subversion are to head the list of problems for study, she stated. Secretary of War Harry H. Woodring and Stephen F. Chadwick, na-
Legion, will be the principal speakers at a patriotic mass meeting which will open the conference. Their addresses will be broadcast nationally, » Other speakers include Maj. Gen. Henry H. Arnold, Chief of the Army Air Corps; Rear Admiral William G. Dubose, chief of the Bureau of Construction and ‘Repair of the Navy Department; Lieut. Col. Ira C. Eaker of the War Department, and Lieut. D. N. Logan of the Navy Bureau of Aeronautics. Senator Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (R. Mass.) will speak at the annual conference banquet Jan. 25. —————. ——————————
Meeting Date Changed
Members of the Officers’ Wives Club of the Indiana National Guard will have a ‘dinner Saturday, Jan. 21, at the Naval Armory instead of
their scheduled meeting Monday. | Wives of all Nati al Guard officers
Speakers and their: subjects for|
cluding armament bills and military | -
tional commander of the American |’
University Women to Discuss Federal and State Legislation
A discussion of proposed Federal and State legislation and a fellowship: playlet, “The Magic Carpet,” will be program features at the general meeting of the American Association of University Women Tuesday night at the Woman's Department Club.
|Hoosier Tourists’ Club
Will Discuss ‘Sweden’
A program on Sweden will be presented at the meeting of the Hoosier Tourists’ Club at 1 p. m. Tues~ day. Mrs. C. M. Finney will be hostess at her home at 3868 Carrollton Ave. Talks will include “Stockholm,” by Mrs. H. K. Fabout; “Country House Life in Sweden” by Mrs. J. E. Andrews, and “Swedish Sports and Customs” by Mrs. J. W. Gammon.
Today’s Pattern
More and more, the trend is toward softness and cleverly placed fullness. Both flatter the figure and have a very charn ing, feminine chic.
This design, Pattern 8408, achieves the smart effect v simply and attractively, with gathers to create bust fullness. 3 It shows a modification of the spool waistline, pointed in the front, that is slenderizing, and especially| well-suited to those who take women’s sizes. The plain V-neckline is becoming and gives a wonderful} chance to displsly new Christmas| jewelry. It’s softly detailed enough for afternoon, and not too dressy for street and genersl wear. Velvet, silk crepe, small-figu-ed prints and flat crepe are smart materials for this design. Pattern 8408 is designed for sizes 32, 34, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44 and 46. Size 34 requires 414 yards of 39-inch material. The new Fall snd Winter Pattern Book, 32 pages of attractive desig for every size and every occasion, now is ready. Photographs show dresses made from these patterns being worn, a feature you will enJoy. Let the charming designs in this new book help you in your sewing. One pattern and the new Fall and Winter Pattern Book--25 cents. Pattern or book alone—15 cents. To obtain a pattern and step-by-step sewing instructions inclose 15 cents in coin together with .the above pattern number and your size,
i lin a few days.
Women Plan (Greater Help| To Refugees
Chinese, Spanish, Jewish And Czech Sufferers To Get Aid.
ment of unity and goodwill at home
Until June, when the Indiana drive is to end, she spends three days each week in her office in the Y. M. C. A. conducting the China Relief Work. “The churches are taking over
stop because of lack of funds,” Mrs. Hudelson said. “The project bélongs to both religious and nonreligious groups and individuals since all are interested in the starving millions, the destitute aged and the ‘orphans of China.” Mrs. Hudelson is presenting the cause of China Reliief to ministerial associations, and churchwomen in Ft. Wayne, Elkhart, Kendallville,
Indiana towns this week-end. She will visit Southeast Indiana next week-end. A women’s co-operating committee is to be organized by Mrs. J. F. Morrison, Indianapolis Council of Federated Churchwomen president, “This committee will arrange a luncheon for’ both men and women,” Mrs. Hudelson “said, “at which a speaker of national note
relief.” “It is planned that Race Rela~ tions Day, Feb. 12, also Lincoln’s Birthday, shall be a high point in |. the Indiana China Relief program,” Mrs. Hudelson added. “Pastors will be asked to preach special sermons, collections will be taken-and congregations reminded that 12 dollars will feed a Chinese for a year.
Catholics Assist 250 Thousand Chinese
The Catholic state paper, The Indiana Catholic and Record, published a column recently in which stress was laid on the necessity to rally spiritual forces to meet present day problems. It said in part: “We are inclined to wonder . . . with all the protestations and condemnations that have been hurled at Hitler during the past few weeks, just how many people ever think about offering a prayer for him. . « . History teems with examplés of men who were converted through prayer from lives of wickedness.... Indianapolis Catholic parishes lend their support to relief work done in China by the Society for the Propagation of the Faith.
Jesuit, has cared for more than 250,000 war refugees within the famous “Jacquinot Zone” which lies between the opposing armies. Thousands of war orphans have been given into the care of Catholic Sisters by Madame Chiang Kai-shek. It has been stated that the 30 million Chinese people who are in need of the barest means of subsistence form the largest concentrated total of human suffering in the world today.
Thrift Luncheon To Help Children
Each woman who attends the Hadassah Thrift Luncheon Jan. 17 will be hostess to 10 invisible guests. Hadassah, Jewish woman’s Zionist organization, is concerned with rebuilding the homeland in Palestine and settling refugees there, through its Youth Aliyah Committee. .Guests to the Thrift Luncheon will pay 99 cents per plate. Nine cents will defray the actual expense of the meal, which will be similar to that served to schoolchildren in Palestine by the Hadassah Child Welfare Committee. The remaining 90 cents will be used for the underRouirished school children in Palesine. 3 Mrs. J. A. Goodman, national Hadassah Board and Youth Aliyah Committee member and local Youth Aliyah Committee chairman, raised
'| $4000 for the Jewish refugee fund
recently in one evening when she
' |spoke on Youth Aliyah in ‘Daven-
port, Iowa. Mrs. Goodman will speak this week-end at Lexington and Frankfort, Ky., Louisville. | Mrs. Clarence L. Budd is Indianapolis Hadassah president and Mesdames L. L. Goodman, Herman Chalfie and S. A. Silberman are cothairmen on the luncheon committee.
Friends May Establish Refugee Family Here
| “The local, branch of the American Friends Service Committee will plan at their January meeting to assist a refugee family, probably Jewish, to become established near Indianapolis, ” Dr. Errol T. Elliott, {First Friends Church pastor, said ‘today. Members of the local committee are Miss Agnes Calvert, chairman; ‘Mr. and Mrs. Alvin T. Coate, Forrest Plymate and Irvin Schultz; Misses Jane Haramy and Lois N. Hodgkin and Mesdames G. W. Cresson, Irvin Callins, Clark W. Day, C. E. Trueblood and Frances Streighthoff. Dr, Elliott also spoke of the Friends Service Committee work in Spain among civilians living in both Generalissimo Franco's and Loyalist territory,” where. near-
‘|famine conditions exist.
“One of the most gratifying developments in the world situation is
governments to send their surplus foodstuffs into Brain for nonparti= san distribution ‘the Friends Service Committee,” or Elliott said. The First Friends pastor also explained that the underlying purpose of the Service Committee relief work was never to recruit new members for the Quaker Meeting, but to pro. mote peace, to demonstrate that the
Mrs, Ralph J. Hudelson sees in her| new activities as Indiana China Re-|§ lief committee chairman an instru-|!
as well as a means of aiding the| [Chinese war sufferers.
where the Red Cross was obliged to}
Michigan City and other Northern |
will make an address on China a:
The Rev. Fr. Jacquinot, a French
and Monday at|
the willingness shown by various|ti
seeds. of peace lie latent within all|
member here.
Evangelist
Missionary Retreat Set.
to Return;
‘Comradeship to Be Theme
123d Psalm fo Be Dramatized at Woodside Churchy : Divinity School Teacher to Speak; Two Jewish Sisterhoods to Mest.
By EMMA RIVERS MILNER ers Plans for the new St. Thomas Aquinas Catholic Church will be displayed by the Rev. Fr. John Barrett Tieman, pastor, at the open house celebration in the remodeled rectory tomorrow from 2 to 5:30 p. m. The church, of early American design, white frame with a green roof, and windows of stained glass without liturgical figures will be
completed in time for dedication services on March 7, the feast day of St. Thomas Aquinas. \ The church will be used until the
{congregation -outgrows it, when a
larger structure will be erected. A
| sisters’ residence; school house, and
the rectory, which was formerly. the Butler University Newman, Club, will comprise the. completed
* |unit.
Dr. Errol T. Elliott, First Friends Church pastor, discusses refugee work with Miss Agnes Calvert (right), local American Friends Service Committee chairman, and Miss Jane Harainy, youngest . committee
By WILLIAM E. GILROY, D. D. ‘Editor of Advarice ETER commended and rebuked.” How well that seems to sum up a great deal in the life of Peter, both during the days of his earthly associhtion with. our Lord as a disciple and as an apostle and founder of the Christian Church. Later on we shall find Peter, after his Master who commended and rebuked him in love had been crucified, commended by
he preached at Pentecost but rebuked ignominiously in the vision on the housetop, as he was still in his pride and narrowness disposed to be a respecter of men and to call unclean the things that God had cleansed. How much these words concerning Peter—‘‘commended and rebuked”’—might apply to us all, for which one of us has not something to be commended and a great deal to be rebuked? It is this nearness of Peter to ourselves that makes him so vital a study for Christians today, and that makes these lessons so incisive and helpful in establishing our own faith and vision. Here in our lesson we find Peter making the great confession of- his belief in Jesus as the Christ or the Messiah, the son of the living God.
8 2 =n
HE words in which Jesus replied to Peter have been the occasion of a great controversy in history and in some measure a division of the Christian Church. The Roman Catholic Church interprets these words with considerable literalness and establishes its authority upon the succession to Peter as the first bishop of the Christian Church, the man to whom Jesus committed the keys of the Kingdom of Heaven. Protestants interpret the words in a more spiritual and mystical sense. They point to the fact that almost immediately afterward Jesus rebuked Peter with the startling words, “Get thee behind me, Satan.” They take the whole passage as one, and they regard as the rock upon which the Church is built not the ‘weak and impulsive Peter but the Peter of the moment of that great confession and the faith that Peter expressed. They point to the fact that it is by the words and acts of the disciples of Jesus that the Kingdom of Heaven is advanced or retarded, and that, much as Christians might wish to be relieved of the responsibility, they do by their own words and actions bind or loosen it. Into these controversies the teacher cannot very well go, but they cannot be altogether ignored for they have had historical reality.
" ® ” e
ERHAPS we could give altogether too much importance to questionable interpretations. The one thing that is sure is that no church on earth—no matter what its name or its profession—will, in truth and reality, represent the Kingdom of Heaven on earth except as the Kingdom of Heaven is enshrined in its life and its teachings. The great truth concerning Christians and Christianity is that “if any man have not the spirit of Christ, he is none of this.” In all churches and in all creeds wherever men have found the manifestation of God and have yielded themselves in devotion and consecration, the Kingdom of Heaven has become established in their hearts and in their relationships. ‘Why did Jesus rebuke Peter so keenly when Peter urged Him that He should not go to Jerusalem,
church tomorrow at 4 p. m.
C.\ Unitarians to Aid
Czech Refugees
“Czechoslovakia. will be especially mentioned in the sermon tomorrow morning in All. Souls ' Unitarian the: Rev, BE. Burdette
to the Songvgaion to aid With i work in that country,” Rev. Mr. Backus added. He athe of the recent visit made by Robert C. Dexter to the Praha community where there is a large Unitarian church, ‘and of the report of Mr. Dexter’s findings now being given in this country. The work in Czechoslovakia is in
en and to redefine “ - gresst ive goodwill, peace” by a-{
the greatness of the occasion when |
ization, on refugee problems, at the |.
way co-operative, being done| Uni n funds and per- |
Weekly Sunday School Lesson
PETER PRAISED, REBUKED
Text: Matthew bi 13-25
where Jesus intimated that He was
‘labout to suffer many things?
We must remember that Jesus took on Him our human nature and that, as a man subject to temptation, Peter probably voiced the temptation that was in His own soul—to avoid this way of peril and duty. But Jesus did not hestitate. For Himself and for His disciples there was only the way of truth and duty. The test of discipleship was selfdenial and willingness te bear the Cross. *
Consecrate New Rooms
Free Methodist Bishop To Be Speaker.
Bishop Leslie R. Marston of Greenville, Ill, former Greenville College president, will be the speaker at the dedication service in the First Free Methodist Church tomorrow at 2 p. m. : Visitors are-to be shown through the new junior Sunday School class rooms and auditorium by the pastor, the Rev, J. C. McCaw, after the new departments are dedicated. E. B. Allen and Elmer Cassidy are the two living members of the original board of trustees of the church . which was organized in 1912. The Brightwood and Second Free Methodist Churches are both branches of the First Church.
Class to Start Series on Radio
Radio programs tomerrow will include the first WIBC broadcast sponsored by the 101 Men’s Bible Class from the Broadway Baptist Church. The Rev. R. M. Dodrill, church pastor and teacher, will lead the discussion which will be broadcast every Sunday from 10 to 10:30 a. m.
The Rev. I. C. Alderton, Belmont Avenue United Brethrem Church, will have charge of the Church Federation broadcasts on WIRE every morning next week except Sunday at 6:45 a. m. The Simpson Methodist Church
choir, directed by Mrs. Elizabeth
Shropshire, will furnish the music on the 3:30 p. m. vesper hour on WIBC tomorrow. The Rev. Henry E. Chace and Dr. Ernest N. Evans will be ministers in charge.
PASTORS TO SCAN RURAL PROBLEMS
“The Rural People and the Rural Church” will be the title of Dr. O. E. Baker's address to the State Pastors’ Conference t3 be held in the First Baptist Church Jan. 30 to Feb. 1. Dr. Baker is Senior Agricultufal Economist, Division of Farm PopuJation and Rural Life, U. S. Department of Agriculture, Washington, D. C. In addition to his address, Dr. Baker will lead seminars on rural life all three days. ; A writer in the current Indiana Christian, Disciples of Christ state paper, says: “Dr. Beker is committed to the belief that the foundation of the future must be laid on the rural life of today and that whether or not that civilization will be Christian depends-on the rural church. “He is the authority on whom all writers on rural problems must rely for- statistical information. Dr. Baker makes his statistics live.”
in| SCOTTISH RITE ~ CHOIRTO SING
SL —— The 25-voice Scottish Rite Choir is to present a sacred music program at 7:30 o’clock tomorrow night in the University Heights Christian Church.
Father Tieman was ordained 13 years ago. He has served nine as assistant pastor at St. Patrick’s Church, and at SS. Peter and Paul’s Cathedral, here, and as pastor of St. Joseph Church, Corydon. He received his doctorate in Rome in 1933 and was appointed to St.
_.| Thomas Aquinas parish’ in Sep-
tember. » ® 8
Methodist Missions Retreat Scheduled
"A three-hour retreat will be held by the Woman’s Foreign Missionary Societies of the Indianapolis Methodist District in the Morris Street ‘Church Tuesday, beginning at 10:45 a.m, « The topic, “The Quest of God,” will be worked out in prayers,
hymns and talks by Mrs. George Henninger and Miss Emma White. A “sacrificial luncheon” at 10 cents per plate will be served at 12:15. The difference between this sum and the cost of a full meal will go to the cause of missions. Luncheon speakers include Mrs. John G. Benson, who will talk on “Bread of Life”; Mrs. S. C. Young, on “Milk of the Word”; Dr. Rebecca Parish, on “My Meat”; Mrs. George W. Christian, on “Salt of the Earth”; Mrs. C. P. Shulhafer, on “Living Water,” and Mrs. H. R: Pierson, on “The Abundant Life.” The ‘afternoon program will follow the plan of the morning one and include a solo by Mrs. Raymond Higgs and an address by the host pastor, the Rev.’ E. N. Rosier, on “Deepening Our Experiences of God Through Working With Him.” A consecration service will bring the meeting to a close. Mrs. Charles H. Sedam, district president, will be in charge of the meeting.
" ” 8 Baptist Evangelist To Start New Series
Addresses by guest ministers, special music and other features comprise a variety of evangelistic programs and services in city churches. The Rev. Joe M. Strother of
evangelistic services in the Lyndhurst Baptist Church last year, will preach there again beginning Monday at 7:30 p. m, and continuing through Jan. 22, The choir and William Millett, director, will furnish the
music. At the Union Chapel (Methodist) at 62d St. and Haversticks Road, the Rev. Lucian Smith of Memphis, Tenn., will hold evangelistic services Sunday morning and at 7:30 p. m. The Rev. Mr. Smith will also direct the singing and play the trumpet. He will be assisted by Mrs. Smith, young people’s and children’s worker, and by the Rev. J. L. Johnson, pastor. Dr. O, H. Callin of Wilmore, Ky., will continue to preach for the Edgewood Methodist Church revival services each evening at 7:30 and each morning at 9:30 until Jan. 15. He will be assisted by the pastor, the Rev. M. O. Robbins, and the male quartet. . “Shepherd Psalm Night” ‘will be celebrated by the Gaddis Moser Party in the Woodside Methodist Church at this evening's service beginning at 7:30. In the “costume presentation of the 23d Psalm there will be shown the coat of many colors, rod, staff, horn, oil, flute and the like.” The Ellis Gospel Four program including chalk illustrations and music will be given in the Morris Street. Methodist Church tomorrow at 7:30 p. m. A special easel equipped with colored lights has been constructed for the illustrations. The Gospel Four are Bert Ellis, Roger Davis, Misses Josephine
Best and Eileen Huber. The Rev.
E. N. Rosier is church pastor. Indiana ‘Central College Student Volunteers will present a program of addresses and special music in the Wheeler City Mission, Tuesday evening. David McBurney and the local Gideons will: be in charge Wednesday evening. Dr. E, E, Flack, New Testament theology professor at the Hamma Divinity School, Wittenberg College, will assist with the Holy Com
‘munion and lead the communion
meditation in the First United Lutheran Church, tomorrow at’ 10:45 a. m. Dr. Flack is a former teacher of the pastor, the Rev. Arthur L. Mahr. The 11 o'clock service in All Saints Cathedral will be interpreted for the deaf by Roger P. Dunn, tomorrow morning. The Senior Young People’s Fellowship will hear an address on “Recent Trends in Government and . International ' Relations” by Prof. Rex Isom of Butler University, at 6:30 p. m.
Wee. Young People Plan Comradeship Week
Dr. Guy O. Carpenter, Central Avenue Methodist Church pastor, is to give the keynote address of the Roberts Park Young People’s League Comradeship Week program at the Roberts Park Methodist Church rrow at 6:20 p. m.
Oliver Pickhardt will direct. the d Mrs. H. L.
Dr. R. 8S. Mosby, 8 odist Church pastor
located at 46th and Illinois Sts® -|Work on the structure, which is lexpected to begin shortly, may be
Smithville, Tenn., who conducted |
| Executive offices are
gram with a communion service at 6:20 p. m. Sunday, Jan. 15. The Rev, Mr. Aldrich will address the league cabinet and group leaders at the Y. W. C. A. Monday evening at 6:30. o'clock, . i On Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday evenings, the: young people will meet in “Comradeship Groups” led by young people in leaguers’ homes. Leaders are to be Gordon Herrmann, Sexson E. Humphreys, Wray Stickford, and Misses Betty Lee and Alice Campbell. Hostesses are to be Misses Kathryn Reeves, Phyllis Bertram, Marian Ridgeway, Dale Brown, Evelyn Little, Mildred Owen, and Venice and Nina Grant. : Mr. Stickford, a Butler Univer sity theological student, will lead the prayer circles.
a » Quartet to Sing Negro . Spirituals
Negro spirituals will be sung by the Four Valley Wonders Quartet in the Fletcher Place Methodist Church tomorrow at 7 p. m. The musical program is one of a variety being presented in . Indianapolis churches throughout the day.
The quartet, Louis and Luther Cox and John and Cecil Scott, are all members of the Tabernacle Bap« tist Church. ; Speakers at the Fletcher Place * Goodwill services are the Rev. F. A, Pfleiderer, at 8 a. m. Monday; the Rev. R. R. Cross, Tuesday; the Rev, R. L. Holland, Wednesday, and the Rev. C. R. Holmes, Thursday. Harp solos will be played by Miss. . Helen Lou Rogers at the Speedway Christian Church vespers tomorrow at 4:30 p. m. Miss Rogers is a Shortridge Baton Club member and pupil of Mrs. Louise S. Koehne. Reid Chapman, bass soloist of the Swarthout School of Music, will present a program of music at the Christian Men _, Builders Class in the Third Christian Church, tomorrow morning. Merle Sidener, leader, will talk on “The Power of Enthusiasm.” The Floyd Jones Singers of the Indianapolis Civic Choir will pre- . sent a sacred concert at the Fleming Garden Christian Church at 7:30 p. m. tomorrow. This is the sixth year Floyd Jones of the Floyd Jones School of Sacred Music has taken students on concert tours ong the churches. :
@
o ”
Jewish Sisterhoods To Meet Monday
‘Sisterhoods of both the Beth-El Zedeck Temple and the Indianapeolis Hebrew Congregation will meet Monday afternoon. c Rabbi Albert M. Shulman of South Bend will address the Indianapolis: . Hebrew Congregation Sisterhood: after the 12:30 luncheon in the temple vestry rooms. Dr. Morris M. Feurlicht, rabbi, will pronounce the invocation and Mrs. Paul Dorsey will sing accompanied by Mrs. I. E. Solomon. Health Day and the works and. birthday of the\Jewish poet, Chiam Nachman Bialik, will be featured in the Beth-El Zedeck Sisterhood meeting in the temple, at 2 p. m, Monday. Dr. Lewis Robbins, acting Indiana Public Health chief, will speak and Mrs. Jacob Weiss will | read selections from Bialik’s poems ' which reflect the hopes and vicissitudes of the Jewish people. Mrs. Jerome Wachter will give the opening prayer and Mrs. Leon" Adler of Mooresville will play the piano, ” ” 8 Tomorrow is designaied Missionary Day, according to the Christian Year Calendar approved by the Federal Council of the Churches of Christ in America.
: » 2 8 Fathers and Sons To Join at Mass
The annual Fathers and Sons Holy Communion and Breakfast sponsored by the St. Roch Catholie Church Holy Name Society will be held tomorrow morning. Mass will be celebrated by the Rev. Fr. Leonard Wernsing, parochial superintendent, at 7:30
a. m. Father Wernsing will also. deliver a sermon of especial inters. est to men and boys. After mass, the Church Altar Soe
ciety, St. Roch’s women’s organizae
tion, will serve breakfast when Sheriff Feeney will be the. guest speaker. ;
PRESBYTERIANS HAVE NEW-PAPER |
The Indiana Presbyterian, a new state oficial paper published by the synod and synodical society made: its first appearance this week. : The paper will carry material for=,
terian. It is fully illustrated and" covers briefly the Presbyterian site uation in Indiana and the world. at Presby=: terian state headquarters, 1132 N,: Alabama St.
