Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 June 1939 — Page 5
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SATURDAY, JUNE 8, 1939 Thalia Eby to Become Of Edwin Dunnington at Country Home; Eleanore Mothersill Will Wed Tonight
{ = = Richter-Rainey Rite Due, Hazel Lee and | Gene Lacy, June Ambuhl
At North Methodist Church at 4:30.
In a setting of white peonies and greenery, Miss Thalia Eby, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. L. J. Eby, will become the bride of Edwin Thomas
Dunnington, son of Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Dunnington, at 4:30 o'clock this afternoon at the Eby country home on 52d St. The Rev. W. A. Shullenberger will officiate at the ceremony before a fireplace altar banked with ferns and palms and flanked by large baskets of peonies. Two seven-branch candelabra will light the altar. The aisle, which will extend from the stairway, will be marked by rows of tall white vases bf peonies. Mrs. Edwin Payson Hart, organist, will play bridal airs on an electric organ. Miss Eby, who will be given in marriage by her father, will wear white silk net over white slipper] satin fashioned on Victoria lines) with a bolero bodice of net.
John Edmonds Wed Tomorrow
Mrs. Hazel Lee, daughter of Everett H. Miller, 4558 Guilford Ave., will be married to John L. Edmonas, 3777 N. Meridian St. in an informal ceremony tomorrow at the Christian Church in Andrews. The Rev. Kenneth Webster Ball, brother-in-law of the bride, will officiate. Music will be provided by Mrs Thomas Rockwell, vocalist, accom- | panied by Mrs. Ball, the bride's sis-| ter. Mrs. Lee, who will be attended | by Miss Joanna Fielding Hinman, will wear a pink orchid sheer dress with a turban and shoulder length veil. Miss Hinman will wear a lime green ensemble. Their flowers will be orchids. The couple will be at home after
{July 1 in the Chateau Apartments,
1501 E. 38th St.
. vn |
Corselet Band Marks Waistline
A corselet band of white satin marks the waistline and the bouffant net skirt is bound with satin] and tied in a bow in front. The skirt] extends into a wide train and her| illusion veil, fingertip length, will} fall from a crown of orange blos- | soms. She will carry an arm bouquet of gardenias and lilies of the valley | Miss Mary Katherine Harbison, | maid of honor, will wear a gown ol madonna blue net over matching satin fashioned like that of the bride. She will wear a hair bow of} daffodil yellow and will carry Token | roses and blue delphinium tied with| daffodil ribbon. The Misses Alice Jane Rice, Patsy | Boggs, Eva Blake and Jane Renard, bridesmaids, will wear bouffant style gowns of daffodil yellow net over matching slips. Yellow eyelet embroidery threaded with Madonna blue velvet ribbon will edge the puffed sleeves and necklines They will wear blue bHOWS their hai and will carry Token roses and biue delphinium tied with blue ribbons
i
ai
m al
Helen Cole Flower Girl
Helen Cole, daughter of Mr. and] Mrs. Joseph Cole, will be flower girl. | She will wear a floor-length frock | of daffodil vellow net with a ruffie edeed bolero and short puffed] sleeves. Charles Pahud will be best man | A reception will be held follow ing the ceremony after which the couple will leave on a motor trip. They will be at home in Indianapolis after July 1. The bride will travel in a white ‘crepe jacket dress with navy and white accessories. ' She is a graduate of Gulf Park College, Guifport, Miss, and Mr Dunnineton is a graduate of Purdue University and is a member of Sigma Chi Fraternity
Mavilla Rainey To Be Bride Today
Miss Mavilla Rainey, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. G. C. Rainey and william E. Richter, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Richter, will he married at 4:30 o'clock this afternoon in the North Methodist Church. Dr. C. A. McPheeters the service before an with pa lichted by two seven-branch can-
will read
delabra The bride will wear of white French marquisette over taffeta fashioned empire style with a high neck line and puffed sleeves The train is formed from graduating ruffles Her illusion veil will fall a tiara of lilies of the valley and she will carry a bouquet gardenias and sweetheart roses with swansonia. The shower will be of sweetheart roses and lilies of the valley. She will wear a string of gift of the } srrill Lit
will be maty
a gown
from
of
peal is idegroom sister of the
ey ( on of honor. Her tulle made
ort snort
bride, gown will be of vell with shirred bodice puffed sleeves. The bouffant skirt vill be trimmed in hvacinth biu sroserain ribbon and she will car-| rv a bouquet of wine carnations and ellow shapdragons tied with white
and yellow ribbons
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bridegroom, Their
Richter, sister of the and Miss Martha Reynolds dresses will be hyacinth blue witl vellow ribbon fashioned like that of e matron of honor Their bouquets will be of yellow snapdragons nd Kokomo carnations tied with salmon colored ribbon. The three attendants will wear colonial hats matching their gowns Herbert B. Murnan, law of the bridegroom man and ushers will rill Lindley, brother-in-law the bride, William Birthright, Burton Fieiding and John McKinstray. After the ceremony, the couple will leave on a motor trip through northern Wisconsin. The bride will travel in a summa-cool blue suit, pink hat and white accessories. She will wear a corsage of gardenias and sweetheart The couple will be at home after June 11 in Seymour The bride is a graduate of But1 University and is a member of Pi Beta Phi Sorority. The groom was graduated from Purdue University and is a member of Alpha Tau Omega Fraternity.
air
brother-in-will be best include Merof
roses
er
| bridegroom’s parents | Mrs.
{Jack
| Sorority.
come |in services at 11 o'clock this morning in the rectory of St. Philip Neri
altar banked | ferns and greenery and
Gamble-Fall Nuptials |
In Church Tomorrow |
The Rev. Stanley Mahan will officiate at the marrage at 2:30 o'clock tomorrow afternoon of Miss Juanita Fall and Milton Gamble in the Henninger Methodist Church, The bride is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Fall and the are Mr. and Beech Grove harpist, and will play
G. L. Gamble, Roberta Bland Wonnell, organist, bridal music. Attendants will be Miss Eileen Bird, maid of honor; Miss Mildred Strong and Miss June Newman, bridesmaids; Esther Louise Cunningham, flower girl; Jarvis Gamble, best man; Thomas Wonnell and Herbert Fall, ushers. The bride will wear white marquisette over taffeta, bouffant style,
Miss
| with a fingertip tulle veil caught in-
to a halo of orange blossoms. She will wear a gold buckle worn by her mother and grandmother at their weddings and will carry a cascade bouquet of bride’s roses and lilies of the valley Following a reception, the couple] will leave on a motor trip to the| Smoky Mountains. They will be at home in Indianapolis. Miss Fall is a graduate of Butler University and is a member of Delta Sigma Chi Mr. Gamble is a graduate of Indiana Central College and Purdue University and is a member of Sigma Pi Sigma Fraternity. =
Kathryne Binco Weds Philip P. Grove Today Miss Kathryne Louise Binco, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Michael
P. Binco, 818 N. Denny St,, will be-| the bride of Philip P. Grove
” ®
L
Grove is the Smith M
Catholic Church. Mr son of Mr. and Mrs. Grove, Brighton, Iowa | The Rev. Fr. John Casey will offi-| ciate at the single ring ceremony in the presence of the immediate] family, | Miss Binco will wear a street length frock of dusty pink chiffon with a hat in a matching color and a corsage of red roses. Miss Ann Atkinson, maid-of-honor, chose powsder blue linen for her dress. Her corsage is to he of gardenias and! she is to wear a white hat. Mus. Binco's dress is to be of a mulberry shade with white accessories and a corsage of violets. Wayne Garrigues is to be best man at the wedding. A wedding breakfast is to be served following the wedding at the Spink-Arms Hotel following the ceremony. Out-of-town guests are to include Mr. and Mrs. George Gilkey and daughter, Sue, Detroit; Mr. and Mrs. George R. Tove and son, Richard, Gien Ellyn, Ill, and Benjamin Seitzinger, Brighton, Iowa The couple will leave Monday on a trip through Minnesota, Iowa and the western states. Thev will be at home after June 15 in the Col-Ten
Apartments |
” ” 5 Hunt-Geis Nuptials Scheduled Today
Miss Julia Geis, daughter of Mr and Mrs. Albert Geis, 805 Woodlawn Ave, was to become the bride Norbert Hunt, son of Mr. and Mrs, Patrick Hunt, in a ceremony this moming in the 8S. Peter and Paul Cathedral | Miss Rosanna Geis, a sister of the bride, was be maid of honor. Robert Hunt, best man, and Harold Hunt and Louis Geis, ushers = = =
Frederick J. Resner To Wed in Ontario
Times PORT COLBORNE, Ont. —The marriage of Miss
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~f O1
{to
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|
Specinl June 3. Frances
| Jane Harty, daughter of Mrs. Hugh
Hardy, Port Colborne, to Frederick J. Resner Henry F Indianapolis, tonight in Church here After a short wedding trip, the couple will be at home in Niagara Falls, N. Y. Mr. Resner is a graduate of Purdue University and a member of Beta Sigma Psi Fraternity.
son of Mr. and Mus. Resner, 6000 Bluff Road, will be at 7 o'clock] the First Presbyterian
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Bride Late Today
PAGE 5%
Will Exchange Vows in Church Ceremony.
Miss Eleanore Mothersill, daugh- § ter of Dr. and Mrs. Mark H. Moth- | ersill, will become the bride of John | Hutchens, son of Mr. and Mrs. B. E | Hutchens, Sheridan, in a ceremony at 8 o'clock tonight in the Memorial Presbyterian Church. Dr. W. H. Kendall will officiate at the double ring service at an altar banked with palms and ferns interspersed with candelabra. Farrell Scott, tenor, will sing. Mrs. William | E. Duthie, organist, will play. | The bride, who will be given in| marriage by her father, will wear aj gown of white net over white satin, | fashioned with a train and sweet-
| a |
|
‘heart neckline. Her fingertip length [veil will be caught with a wreath of
Two Brother
EIGHT PRIESTS CELEBRATE FIRST MASSES
EPISCOPALIANS TO HEAR METHODIST
s Will Assist
Rev.Fr.McLaughlin Sunday; Honor Bishop Kirchhoffer
Baptist Laymen's Retreat Is Scheduled June 10; Czech Pastor on Furlough Will Speak;
'King of Kings'
to Be Shown.
By EMMA RIVERS MILNER
The Rev. Fr. Edward McLaughlin, one of seven Indianapolis priests ordained Tuesday at St. Meinrad's Abbey, will be assisted by two of his
Church tomorrow at 9 a. m.
| brothers when he celebrates his first mass at the St. Philip Neri Catholic
The Most Rev. Joseph E. Ritter, bishop of the Diocese of Indianapolis,
| officiated at the ordination services
lin’s brothers are the Rev. Fr. W. G.
at St. Meinrad's. Father McLaughMcLaughlin who will be deacon and
{ Vincent McLaughlin, student priest, who will be subdeacon.
The McLaughlin family will be at
{home to friends and relatives from [ing spent many years among them
| Ruth
| marquisette with dusty rose acces|sories and a corsage of pink roses. | Mrs. Hutchens will wear black lace
June Ambuhl Sunday
ciate
orange blossoms and she will carry an arm bouquet of Johanna Hill roses, gardenias and orchids. |
Peggy Mentzer Maid of Honor Miss Peggy Mentzer, maid of hon- | or, will wear peach net over taffeta fashioned with a bouffant skirt, | short puffed sleeves and a square neckline. Velvet bows of aquamarine will ornament her hair and her |
‘arm bouquet will be of sunbeam |
roses and delphinium. Miss Mar-/ jorie Mothersill, sister of the bride, will be junior bridesmaid. Her dress will be of peach marquisette over
| taffeta.
Miss Dorothea Hanson and Miss! Swanson, bridesmaids, will wear aquamarine gowns fashioned like the maid of honor's. They will] wear bows of peach velvet in their hair and will carry arm bouquets. | Mrs. Mothersill, mother of the] bride, will wear gray embroidered |
with touches of white and a corsage of gardenias. Edward Hutchens will be brother's best man. Ushers will include Robert Stansbury, Ralph Brown, William Hickson and Robert
)
| Keltch.
Reception to Follow Rite A reception for the immediate | families and a few friends will be, held immediately after the cere-| mony. | Mr. and Mrs. Hutchens will spend |
[the summer months in Woods Hole, | Mass, and will leave for Denmark Youth Council will meet | i . . . : lin the fall where Mr. Hutchens will| four times a day. They will join
continue his research at the University of Copenhagen. The bride's going away costume will be a two-| piece ensemble of gray with fuschia] accessories. She will be graduated from Butler University and the Indiana University Training School for Nurses | Mr. Hutchens was graduated from Butler University and will receive nis Ph. D. degree from Johns Hopkins University this month, gy & «
Gene Lacy Weds
The marriage of Miss June Am-
buhl to Gene Lacy will be at 4:30 o'clock tomorrow [Roberts Park Methodist Church. |
afternoon in the]
| |
The Rev. Joseph Edwards will offi-
Miss Evelyn Little. organist. and Miss Alice Eari, soloist, will play and sing bridal airs. Miss Wilma | Ambuhl will be maid of honor and Miss Alberta Brandlein will bel bridesmaid. Herbert McKee, Chi-
cago, will be best man and ushers | will include Richard Johnson, Bill Harmas, Wilbur Little, Harold Lambertus, Jack Shriver and Wendell Lacy. | The bride will wear white net, with a shoulder length veil of net and organdy. She will carry a] shower bouquet of white roses, gar-| denias and lilies of the valley and will wear a strand of pearls, a gift of the bridegroom. |
a 3
The Chinese incense burner Dr. Rebecca Parrish is showing the Rev. Robert C. Alexander and Mrs. Norman Beeson is one of miany curios she will dis= play at a tea and garden party given by the Woman’s Auxiliary of All Saints Episcopal Cathedral at the home of Mrs. Hartley Sherwood, Tuesday. Dr. Parrish will aiso tell of her work in the Methodist
131st Synod’s |Dr. Errol Elliott Goal Is High WIBC Speaker,
. { Church pastor, will give the meditaPresbyterian Men, Women tion during the Indianapolis Chureh Federation vespers tomorrow at 3: And Youth to Meet. p. m. over WIBC. The Rev. Frederick G. Kuebler will be in charge | : : and the Bethel African Methodist | A 25 per cent increase in church Episcopal Church Choir will sing. attendance, a 6 per cent gain in Daily devotions will be broadcast membership and a 10 per cent rise from this station, Monday through in Sunday school attendance are ob« | Thursday at 8:45 a. m. | jectives to be outlined at the state] pederation devotional broadcasts Presbyterian synodical meetings at| gover WIRE will be led by the Rev.| Franklin June 12 to 15. Roscoe C. Henderson, Bethel AfriMen of the 131st convention of can Methodist Episcopal Church the Indiana Synod of the Presbyter- pastor, daily at 6:30 beginning Monian Church in the U. S. A, women «day.
of the 57th Women’s Synodical So- | ciety and young people of the 10th . h Two Jewish | Schools End,
together Sketches illustrating the work of of Detroit who will speak on five activity groups will be presented “Christ's Conquering Army,” and by children and young people at the Mrs. Jacob Pfeiffer of Chicago from|closing exercises of the religious the church's board of national mis-|school at the Indianapolis Hebrew sions, on “Peace and International Congregation Temple tomorrow at Relations.” Other speakers are Dr.[10:30 a. m. John A. Gates, dean of the College The group programs which proof the Ozarks; Dr. Charles J. Turck | vide expression for classwork in of Philadelphia representing the de-| Bible deal with dramatics, journalnominations department of social|ism, chorus, art and debating. education and action and Dr. Her-| The choral group and primary
only about a mile
Atchison, Kas.
in a morning Bible hour, morning | and evening addresses and in the seminars. Out-of-state speakers and their subjects include Dr. Joseph Vance]
{man N. Morse of New York, the children will sing tomorrow directed vention.
board of national missions. (by Mrs. Claris Krongold. Other features will be in charge of Miss {Nancy Lichtenberg and Miss Estelle | Dr. Gibson Wilson of Rushville, Levin, dramatic group leaders. | moderator, will preside at the synod Prizes will be awarded to individual sessions. Among Indianapolis people pupils for exceptional work done on the synod's program are Dr. Jean during the year. S. Milner, Fermor 8 Cannon, the] y ww» | Rev. F. A. Pfleiderer and the Rev.! vo x Henry W. Chace. | Finish 6-Year | “The Missionary Churchwoman in Course in Hebrew | Training for Christian World Serv-| goven bovs and girls will be ice” is the theme of the Women's! 1 fi | Synodical Society meeting at which A po gg gg Mrs. Frederick Backemeyer, Gary, schnol 9 ill preside . 7» School at the 28th annual meeting | NN PLENIES, |of the Jewish Educational AssociaWomen to Give Reports |tion in the Beth-El Zedeck Temple| " ah : : t row 30 p. m. | Mrs. Howard F. Stout will give ‘OMOITOW at A . | the society's social Service Rd The meeting will be preceded by | and Mrs 1 B. Sebastian. ore on | dinner and graduation exercises. | IMISSIONALY education. Mrs Theo- | Ln€ speaker for the evening will be | dore Petranoff will talk about the | Bora Shapiro of Cleveland, lawyer, | new state paper, The Indiana Pres. | Nationally known Zionist and Cleve-| byterian, and Mrs. Will H. Adams|\@nd Hebrew School and Institute will read the list of officers submit. | Prestacnt: are ted for election by the nominating | 5..1ius y committee. All four women Are Herman
Four From Here on Program
|
Morris Bernstein) Bunes, Robert Hollander, | Hurwitz, Sarah
Hospital she founded in the Philippines which is | of her friends are in the mission. Woman's Auxiliary president and the Rev. Mr. Alex-
ander is cathedral vicar who is leaving Indianapolis | soon to become rector of Trinity Episcopal Church, {7 p. m. to 10 p. m. tomorrow.
Dr. Errol T. Elliott, First Friends!
|
(nursery or a playground where they
|ers’ section and speak at the con-
8 p. m. to 10 p. m. tomorrow. | A first mass will also be cele-| brated by the Rev. Harry F. Hoover lat St. Philip Neri Church tomorrow at 11 a. m. and a reception held at| {the home of his parents, Mr. and |Mrs. Harry L. Hoover, from 8 p. m. (to 10 p. m. tomorrow. | The Rev. Fr. Anthony Conway will celebrate his first solemn mass lat SS. Peter and Paul Cathedral to{morrow at 11 a. m. The Rt. Rev. Msgr. Raymond R. Noll, V. G., rector, will preach the sermon. There will be a reception for Father Cont the home of his parents, Mr. from
from the Episcopal Mission. Many Mrs. Beeson is | way a and Mrs. Michael M. Conway,
The cathedral also will be the scene of the first solemn mass celebrated by the Rev. Fr. Leonard Robert Lux O. S. B. at 7:30 a. m. tomorrow. Among others assisting will be the Rev. Fr. Maurice Patrick
uncil Nea Son B. director of the Junior
hers at St. Meinrad’s. The Rev. |Fr. Lux was ordained for the abbey at St. Meinrad's. The reception at w | his home will be from 7 p. m. to 10 p. m. tomorrow. The Holy Name Church pastor, the Rt. Rev. Peter J. Killian, recently made a monsignor, will be A pageant showing the changes in archpriest at the first mass celeHoosier Sunday schools over the last brated by the Rev. Fr. James H 75 years, written by Miss Nellie C.|Rogers in the church tomorrow at Young of Indianapolis, will be pre-(10 a. m. A reception will be given sented at the Diamond Jubilee Con-|in honor of Father Rogers in the vention of the Indiana Council of school hall tomorrow beginning at Christian Education at Madisonig p. m. June 14 to 16. St. Joan of Arc Church will be the Miss Young says there will be two [setting of the first mass celebrated scenes running simultaneously dur- hy the Fev. Fr. Ronald J. Hostetter ing the pageant, one illustrating tomorrow at 11 a. m. Father Hosthe old-time method by which religious facts were poured into children and that of the present day tomorrow from 4 p. m. to 10 p. m. which enables children to learn by| The Rev. Fr. Malo Topmiller will doing and seeing. | celebrate his first mass in the Little For example if a trained church | Flower Church tomorrow at oes school teacher wishes to present a. m. and with his parents, he Sid some of the results of Christian in- Mrs. Louis J. Topmiller, will be N fluence to a class of children today, home to friends from 7 p. m. to he doesn't simply tell them about it, | P according to Miss Young, but takes] the children to a hospital, a day
Jubilee Year
Co
Madison Pageant to Sho Church School Change.
. m. On June 30 the Rev. Fr. John Meyer will leave for the diocese of Cheyenne, Wyo., for which he was ordained. Father Meyer will celebrate his first mass at St. Joseph's Church tomorrow at 10:20 a. m. land with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. {John J. Meyer, will receive friends and relatives from 7 to 10:30 p. m. = n ”
On the day that Dick Kirchhoffer, oldest son of the Rt. Rev. Richard A. Kirchhoffer, bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Indianapolis, finishes his junior year at the University of the South, Sewanee, Tenn., Bishop Kirchhoffer will be awarded the honorary degree of Doctor of Divinity by the chancellor of the university, The award will be made at the commencement June 12. This is the third honorary degree which has been awarded the bishop within two weeks. The other two are an S. J. D. degree from the General Theolegical Seminary, New York, and a D. D. degree from the University of Southern California.
may observe it in actual operation.
Miss Young, who is children’s minister and youth adviser for the Central Christian Church, will also be in charge of the children’s work-
Dr. E. R. Bartlett, DePauw University religious education professor, is state council president
Numerous Sections Provided
“Watchman What of the Morning” is the convention theme. Its purpose as outlinea by local officials is to inspire and inform pastors, church school teachers, superintendents, parents, young people's workers and county and township] leaders with the hope of aiding] each to do a better job whether in the church, the church school, the young people's society or the family.
In addition to the children’s workers’ section, there are to he general, | adult and administrative, young] people's and rural church sections. The Rev, Howard E. Anderson, Speedway Christian Church pastor, will direct the young people's section, and county officers will be led by E. T. Albertson, council general secretary. Dr. R. H. Mueller, district superintendent of the Evangelical] Church, will be a resource leader]
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Baptist Laymen Plan Retreat Next Week
2
tetter and his mother, Mrs. Flora E.| Hostetter, will receive their friends
The couple will take a short wedding trip and will be at home in Indianapolis. ” ” ”
William Wylie Weds Alice Catanzaro
from Indianapolis. Young people will discuss “Youth Week,” the coming Amsterdam youth conference, vouth budgets and other allied subjects at their council meeting. Miss Josephine Sears, president, will preside,
Passo, | | Marie Sassower and Helen Samuels : : i ? Si “land assist in various other ways. Ar-
| They have completed courses in| hur Pittenger of Kokomo, a De-|;
“The Church and Every Day Liv-
ing” is the discussion topic for the
(studying their problems and having
written and spoken extensively about them. He is the third generation in his family to go as mis= sionaries to India. Both Dr. McGavran and his wife are Butler graduates. Dr. C. O. Hawley, United Promo= |tion director for the Disciples of Christ, will address the University {Park Christian Church tomorrow at 10:45 a. m. | Dr. Ernest Weiss of Cincinnati, | Bethesda Hospital head resident physician, who will sail for China in August to take charge of the | Methodist Hospital at Chanchang, (will speak at the New Jersey Street | Methodist Church at 10:30 a. m. Dr, | Weiss is a brother of the host pas= (tor, the Rev. Edwin J. Weiss. His {wife is a registered nurse. Judge Fred G. Bale of Washing ton, Methodist Board of Temper= ance, will give an address at the evening service at the Merritt Place Methodist Church.
Ld ”
Colored pictures taken while he was traveling in the West will be shown by the Rev. E. J. Unruh at All Souls Unitarian Church tomorrow at 10 a. m. The offering will be used for the Lake Geneva Conference fund to send workers and young people to the conference June 18 through 23.
8
» Eg
‘Movie, ‘King of Kings,’ Will Be Shown Twice
“The King of Kings,” Cecil B. DeMille moving picture, will be shown at the Washington Street Presbye|terian Church today and tomorrow (at 7:30 p. m. The. picture is syn= {chronized with choral and sym phonic music and requires two hours for completion. |
n ” ”
‘Former Pastors Listed At Home-Coming Service
|
| Former pastors will speak at the Homecoming service commemorat= ing the 17th anniversary of the Garfield Christian Church tomorrow at the church. Addresses also |will be given by the Rev. O. A, | Trinkle of the Englewood Church and Dr. G. I. Hoover, Indiana | Christian Missionary Society executive secretary. Women of the church will serve a basket dinner lat noon and supper in the evening. [It is expected that former members and friends of the congregation will | attend.
” on LJ
For Christian Science Churches tomorrow the les-son-sermon subject will be “God the Only Cause and Creator” and the Golden Text: “The Lord reigneth, He is clothed with majesty; the Lord is clothed with strength, wherewith He hath girded himself: the world also is established, that it cannot be moved.” Psalms 93:1. on ” ”n
Two Churches Mark Children’s Day
The Children's Day offering toe morrow in Disciples of Christ Churches will be given to foreign | missions according to an annual custom, Observance of the day was started in 1881 to mark the be-
(reading, writing and conversing in|pa.w student, and one of four state Baptist Laymen'’s Retreat on the In-|ginning of the first Disciples’ work |
| Hebrew, in modern Hebrew litera- | young people planning to attend the ture, the Old Testament, and IN|\world Christian Conference \Jewish history, customs and cere- no People at Amsterdam, Hol- | monies. land, this summer, will preside at| {one of the young people's meetings. |
Miss Alice Catanzaro, daughte: of Mrs. Marie Edwards and l.eo Catanzaro, and William Wylie, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wylie, were married yesterday evening in the Ebenezer Lutheran Church. Mrs. Ray Eccles was matron of honor. Miss Ruth Beard and Miss June Kaish were bridesmaids and
Text:
SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON Acts 21:40.22:
By WILLIAM E. Editor of Advance
Miss Lois Lee of Indianapolis will be | a song leader. Dr. Stockdale to Speak
Some of the out-of-the-state [speakers are Dr. Roy G. Ross of | Chicago, International Council gen{eral secretary, who will speak on| “The Outlook for Religious Educa- | tion”; Dr. G. S. Dobbins of Louis- |
4; 24:14.16; 26:19.23
GILROY, D. D.
Miss Carol Eccles was flower girl. James Merrilees was best man, and William Watson, Paul McCormack and Raymond Bates were ushers.
” ” =
Schulz-Thompson
Ceremony Tomorrow The
To these elders Paul said, “Behold,
(abide me (Acts 20:22, 23). |Paul's girdle and bound with it his
It was under these circumstances Er ite Schuis, Indian- that Paul made his great declara8, : ompson, |, . “ Indianapolis, will be at 2:15 o'clock tion of purpose, “But none of these tomorrow afternoon in the Morris things move me, nether count I my
Street Methodist Church. |life dear unto myself, so that I {might finish my course with joy,
and the ministry, which I have re-
marriage of Miss Esther his prediction of what was awaiting Paul at Jerusalem. | Schulz, Crawfordsville, daughter of |
ville, Southern Baptist Theological Dr. Allen A. Stockdale
I go bound in the spirit unto Jeru- | turer, on “The Luxury of Strug-| sof Princeton University Theological | Seminary, formerly Carrollton Avenue Evangelical and Reformed pastor, on “Techniques for Building | Moral Codes of Living.” purpose as obedience to the Holy| Miss Ruth Shriver of Elgin, Ill, Spirit. national children’s work director for gy = 8 | the Church of the Brethren, will N these addresses there stands! discuss the topic, “Aiding the Child | forth above all things the sin-|in Facing the Problem of Living”, cerity of Paul, the intensity of the Mrs. LeRoy Geiger, children’s work experience of the new life that had director for the Evangelical Church | come to him, his deep love of the|in the Indiana Conference, will lead
hands and his feet, symbolically of
in
diana Central College campus June
for|yq
Eugene C. Foster, Indianapolis Church Federation president, is program chairman. Speakers include Lunsford E. Hall, Public School 16 principal; George Osteimer, Indianapolis school teacher, and Albert J. Thompson, Y. M. C. A. membership secretary. Supper will be served at 5:30 p. m. The annual picnic for Baptist pas-
tors in Indianapolis and the vicinity |
will be Monday at Memorial Park in Lebanon. The Rev. C. A. Metz
'IDAUL had returned from his missionary journeys to Jerusalem after Seminary professor, on “Training of Lebanon is in charge of arrange-
having bid farewell to the elders of the church of Ephesus at| for Living"; Miletus, the seaport, realizing full well the danger that was before him. of New York, pastor, writer, lec-|
ments.
The Rev. S. W. Hartsock will serve |
as pastors’ conference vice president
salem, not knowing the things that shall befall me there, save that the gle,” and Dr. E. G. Homrighausen and program committee chairman Holy Ghost witnesseth in every city, saying that bonds and affliction A certain prophet, Agabus, had also taken
for the coming year and the Rev. H. W. Ranes, as conference secretary and treasurer. ” =
Czechoslovak Pastor Will Speak Tomorrow
Among the guest speakers scheduled for Indianapolis tomorrow is the Rev. J. G. Bartak of Czechoslovakia on furlough from his work
MN
NE JORDAN SAYS JA e A EAR JANE JORDAN-—Please tell me what you think is wrong with a daughter who, with her husband, will live in her mother’s house for nine years without paying anything at all, when the mother pleads for four years for them to pay $15 a month | for repair bills. The house is large enough that the mother could ! rent two rooms out except for them. The husband is a carpenter and will not do better jobs. The daughter stalls for more time when asked how much they could pay on a repair bill. And just what is wrong with the husband? He makes $1.12 an hour and pledges 10 per cent to the church. He pays his dad's taxes and his mother's doctor bills. vet lets his mother-in-law go to work on crutches. He has paid his brother out of jail, but still pretends to need a little more time to make things right. S. 8S
a child, living wi support rather th It is too bad
young couple out
young babies. gin the education
own two feet and | you.
» s =
Answer—I am afraid that without meaning to do so you have brought your daughter up to to be ton dependent on you. I do not know whether you did this by spoiling her, waiting on her hand and foot, | and demanding nothing in return; or whether you did it by dominating her, make all of her decisions for her, and insisting on implicit obedience,
of their own, and rooms (0 someone
you.
Whichever way matter what her chronological age may be, she is still
it was, the :esult is the same. No th mamma to whom she looks for an her husband.
that her husband accepted this
childish clinging to home instead of taking her away from you to a home of his own. | want this at the time or you would have pushed the
Doubtless you didn’t
on their own. Now you are paying
for your mistake by having a couple of babies on vour hands, and grownup babies are harder to train than
The only thing I know that you can do is to be-
now that should have started with
the cradle, and teach vour daughter to stand on her
to lean on her husband instead of
It may seem hard-hearted, but I believe that the best thing you can do for all concerned is to ask vour daughter and her husband to move into a home
give you a chance to rent your two who can afford to pay.
Note to Peaches—There is nothing I can do for
JANE JORDAN.
Put your problems in a letter to J answer your questions in this column da Iv. Jeriut wae wil
ceived of the Lord Jesus, to testify the gospel of the grace of God.” These predictions had been fulfilled. Enemies of Paul made unjust and untrue accusations against him, saying that he had defiled the temple at Jerusalem, and had aroused the mob against him. He was in danger of his life, when he was rescued by the Roman chief captain and a detachment of soldiers. It was under these circumstances that Paul, having been permitted to speak by the Roman captain and making his defense to the people, gave the address of our lesson—one of the greatest autobiographical statements upon which we depend chiefly for our knowledge of the details of Paul's life and for the clear conception of his religious experience, his outlook and purpose, Along with this is a passage from a similar defense of Paul before King Agrippa, when he told the experience of his conversion on the why to Damascus and described the course of his life and his innermost
Christ who had saved him from an| attitude of bigotry and hostility to his fellowmen and had given him the vision of a kingdom of truth. There is in all his defense no suggestion of hatred of those who are persecuting him, for Paul had learned above all things the deep lesson of Jesus that a Christian must love his enemies. These addresses of Paul have a very insistent meaning for our own time. Though Paul was following essentially what he believed to be the reality of truth and the religion of his fathers, he was accused of being a sectarian and a heretic. If one would learn the lesson of Paul's life and experience, he must learn to regard all sincere men with seasonableness and tolerance and with appreciation of their conscientious convictions. The story of Paul's life ought to make us unready ‘o call any man & “heretic” The man whom we fail to understand may be the sincere apostle of new and
a forum for superintendents of church school departments, and Miss Elizabeth Taft, religious education assistant director for the Indiana Presbyterian Synod, will lead another on vacation church schools and similar subjects. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Richer of Peru will be in charge of music.
INDIAN MISSIONS
The summer meeting of the Afternoon Missionary Society of the
tinger in Sunset Lane, Wednesday at 2:30. Mrs. F. M. Ford, Presbyter-
“Our Church at Work Among the Indians.” Mrs. Matthew Smith will lead the devotions.
important emphases on truth.
drew Porteous.
WILL BE SUBJECT
as district superintendent of Methodist work in his native country. He will speak at the Young People's {meeting in the Broadway Methodist
worship service in the Roberts Park Church at 7:30 p. m. The Rev. Mr. Bartak is the representative in Africa for the Federal Council of the Churches of Christ in America as well as Methodist missionary. Bishop John M. Springer, Elizabethtown, Belgian Congo, for 38 years a Methodist missionary, will speak at the Broadway church at 10:45 a. m. In recognition of his work in the Belgian Congo Bishop
First Presbyterian Church will be | springer was decorated with the! at the home of Mrs. Ross C. Ot-|«Order of the Lion” by King Al-|
bert. | Mrs. Springer, wife of the bishop, | gregation tomorrow at 10:45 a. m. | Disciples of Christ work among | the people of India will be described
evening. Dr. McGavran is an au-
' thority on low-caste of India, have
«
Church at 6:30 p. m. and at the |
{in the foreign field financed by a [fund to which three children were the first contributors. | “The Message of th: Flowers,” a [Children’s Day pageant will be pre | sented at the First Friends Church | tomorrow at 9:30 a. m. This is the first of the summer's unified serve ices in the church. Children's Day is observed each vear on the first or second Sunday {in June. Another church celebrat« ing tomorrow is Central Avenue Methodist whose program will be given by all church school departments at 10:45 a. m. The junior choir will sing and there will be a pageant, “In the Heart of a Child.”
Unity Still Theme For Methodists
W. S. Arnold, who was a delegate to the recent Uniting Conference in Kansas City, will speak on “Laye men in the Methodist Church” at (the Methodist District Conference meeting at the West Michigan Street Methodist Church Tuesday {beginning at 9:30 a. m. Other addresses based on the Uniting Conference at which the [Methodist Protestant, the Methodist | Episcopal and Southern Methodist | Episcopal Churches were merged are (“Women in the Methodist Church,” {by Mrs. S. W. Robison; “Youth in
(the Methodist Church,” by the Rev, E. E. Aldrich, and “Methodism’s Mis=
{sion to a Troubled World,” by Dr. Logan Hall. |
VACATION SCHOOL DUE
It is expected that more than 200 North Side children of all denomi=-
ial literature secretary, will speak on| will address the Roberts Park con-| nations will enroll in the Tabernacle
| Presbyterian Church Community, Vacation School beginning Monday, Classes will be conducted in Bible,
Hostesses with Mrs. Ottinger will by Dr. Donald McGavran at the handwork, art, music, dramatics and be Mesdames Frank L. Truitt, Ben-| Eighth Christian Church tomorrow expression. A staff of 12 teachers is jamin Hitz, J. H, Pattison and An-|
‘planning work for children ranging |in age from 4 to 14,
