Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 July 1939 — Page 5
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bouquet of Johann
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John Atwater, Laura Zipplies United "Today
Trip Planned to Florida Following Savannah, Ga., Rite. |
Times Special | SAVANNAH, Ga. | July 20. —Miss Laura Virginia Zipplies, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul H. Zipplies, will be married today to Dr. John Spencer Atwater, son of the Rev. and Mrs. Carleton W. Atwater, Indianapolis, Ind. The Rev. Mr. Atwater will read the marriage service at 7 o'clock
tonight at the First Baptist Church|'
here. Miss Edith Bennett, a roommate of Miss Zipplies at Georgia State Woman's College, will sing.
Sister Is Maid of Honor
Miss Margaret Zipplies will be her sister's maid of honor and the bridegroom's sister, Miss Mary Atwater of Indianapolis, will be bridesmaid. Dr. J. D. Carr of Indianapolis will be best man. Ushers will include George Edward DuBose Jr, Julian Hudson Lines Jr. Oscar Asbill and Leonard Sterne. A reception for the families and friends will follow the service at the home of the bride’s parents. The couple will leave on a trip ta Florida and New York and will be at home temporarily in Indianapolis on their feturn. Dr. Atwaterwill begin his appointment as interne in the department of medicine, Billings Hospital of the University of Chicago Clinics, early in the fall.
Ruth Wallace to Attend
Miss Zipplies was graduated with honors from Georgia State Woman’s College at Valdosta. Dr. Atwater studied two years at the Indiana University Medical School and three years at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, where he was graduated in June. He is a member of Phi Gamma Deltg, Fraternity and Nu Sigma Nu, medical fraternity. Miss Ruth Wallace of Indianapolis and Mrs. W. D. Gerow of Cleveland are among the out-of-town guests in Savannah for the wedding.
Mary Hughes’ 5 Wedding Is Set
For Tomorrow
Dr. Alexander Sharp will officiate
“at the marriage of Miss Mary
Hughes, daughter of Mrs. John Hughes, 227 S. Audubon Road, to Cleatis’ 4 Wilkerson, Los Angeles, tomorrow afternoon at 3:30 o'clock in the McKee Chapel of the Tabernacle Presbyterian Church. Mr. Wilkerson is the son of Mr. and Mrs. William Wilkerson, Los Angeles. Preceding the ceremony a halfhour program of bridal music will be played by Miss Virginia Byrd at the organ. Miss Xine Schroeder will sing Schubert’s “Serenade.” Palms and lighted candelabra will decorate the chape
William Hughes will give his sister in marirage. A colonial gown of white net over taffeta made with short puffed sleeves land a hoop skirt will be worn by .| Her fingertip veil will | hang from. a wreath of pearlize orange blossoms and she will carry a colonial Hill roses. Mrs. Albert Granneman, matron of honor, will be gowned in a colonial style dress made similarly to that' of the bride’s in aqua net Re will wear a cap of real flowers and will carry a colonial bouquet. Miss Mary Elizabeth Hull, bridesmaid, will wear pink net with aqua trim. | Mr. Granneman will be best man and ushers will be Melvin McCully and Orrin Arnold. A sheer print of blue and white will form Mrs. Hughes’ costume with which she will wear a corsage of tea roses. Mrs. Wilkerson will wear old rose lace and a white tea Lose corsage. Reception Will Be Held A reception for friends and relatives will be held at the Hughes home after the ceremony. En route to Los Angeles where ‘the couple will make their home after Aug. 15, they will visit the Golden Gate Exposition in San Francisco. Out-of-town guests at the wedding will include Mrs. Irvin McNinch and Mr. and Mrs. Paul Randall, Noblesville; Mrs. Joseph McNinch, Washington; Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Shaw and Mrs. Carrie Shaw .and her two daughters, Louisville, and Messrs. and Mesdames Otho Grayson, Curtis Cobb and William Smith, Evansville.
)
Dexheimer-Carlon Photo. Mrs. Edwin Steers Jr. was Miss Dorothy J. Hamilton, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey C. Hamilton, Cleveland, O., before her marriage June 15. Mrs. Steers was graduated from Indiana University and is a member of Pi Beta Phi Sorority. Mr. Steers is a graduate of the Indiana University Law School and is a Beta Theta Pi Fraternity member.
Bennett-Free Ceremony Set For Tomorrow
‘ Before a background of palms and ferns lighted by two seven-branch
{candelabra, Miss Martha Elizabeth
Free, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. S. C. Pree, will become the bride of Jesse
D. Bennett at 3:30 o'clock tomorrow afternoon in the Capitol Avenue Methodist Church. Mr. Bennett is the son of Mr. and Mrs. S. T. Bennett, Rochester, N. Y. : The Rev. E. Arnold Clegg will officiate at the single ring ceremony. Mrs. Forest Bennett, sister-in-law of the bridegroom, will" sing “The Sweetest Story Ever Told” and Herbert Rennard will sing “Because.” They will be accompanied in their solos and in a duet, “At Dawning,” by Mrs. Russell Sanders, organist. Miss Free’s gown will be of duchess lace in princess style with a Queen Anne collar andysworn over ivory bridal satin. Her fingertip veil will fall from a Juliet cap banded with orange blossoms and her shower "bouquet will be of Johanna Hill roses and babies’-breath.
Chooses Turquoise Gown
Mrs. Don W. Peoples, her sister, will be maid of honor in a turquoise lace and net gown. She will have velvet ribbon streamers in a peach shade in her hair and will carry a bouquet of gladioli. Mrs. Ernest Bennett, another sis-ter-in-law of the bridegroom, will be bridesmaid. Her dress will be peach chiffon with turquoise ribbons in her hair. Her arm bouquet also will be gladioli. Miss Phyllis Brinkman, flower girl, will wear a floor length dress of green organdy and will carry a yellow basket of rose buds. Forest Bennett will be best man. Ushers will be Hobart Free, brother of the bride, and Ernest Bennett. Mrs. Free will wear a street length dress of dusty rose lace and net for her daughter's wedding. Her corsage will be of gardenias.
Reception Arranged
A reception at the Free home, 352 W. 31st St, will follow the ceremony. The couple will leave for New York where they will visit the World's Fair before going on to Rochester where they will be at home after Sunday, Aug. 6. For traveling Miss Free will wear a navy blue costume suit with a gardenia corsage. Out-of-town guests will include Mrs. Charles G. Akin, Nashville; Mr. and Mrs. Edward Ernst and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Frye, Cincinnati; Mr. and Mrs. James ‘Crain, Kansas City, Mo., and Kenneth Kerber, Chicago.
Moose Women Attend
Ei . District Sessions Here
Representatives of chapters of the Women of the Moose are to attend sessions of the Fourth District, Indiana Moose Association, meeting this afternoon and tonight at Moose Hall. Contests between ritual teams will be a feature of the afternoon. Dinner will be served at 5:30 p. m. and a business meeting is set for 8 p. m. The Tipton Women of the Moose Band and a group of entertainers from Bloomington are to present a musical program. Delegates will attend from Frankfort, Kokomo, Elwood, Tipton, Muncie, Anderson, Hartford City and
Columbus.
-
‘|an empire gown of white silk net
.|sion will make up her fingertip veil
Earl R. Riley,
Harriet Wright Wed Tonight
Central Avenue Methodist
, Church to Be Scene of Ceremony.
Two large hampers of white gladioli and a pair of seven-branch candelabra standing out from a background of palms and ferns will decorate the Central Avenue Methodist Church altar for the marriage of Miss Harriet Jean Wright to
|| | Earl Roger Riley at 7:30 o'clock tok | night.
Dr. Guy O. Carpenter will read the single ring service. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph W. Wright, 5202: Central Ave., and Mr. Riley’s parents are Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Riley, Marion. Charles Hamilton, soloist, will sing “Because” and “Ich Liebe Dich” accompanied at the organ by Miss Louise Swan, who will present a program of bridal melodies.
Chooses Empire Gown
Miss Wright, who will be given in marriage by her father, will wear
fashioned with a shirred basque bodice featuring a square neckline and short puffed sleeves. The very full skirt of the gown flows into a wide train at the back. White illu-
which will fall from a Juliet cap of shirred net banded with seed pearls. A short veil will drop over her face from the crown of the cap. A cascade of white roses and lilies of the valley will make up the bridal bouquet. Miss Roberta Riley, sister of the bridegroom, will be maid of honor and bridesmaids will be the Misses Jean Smelser, Marthana McWhir and Audrey Harrington, Goshen. Their gowns will be of white marquisette similarly styled with basque waists and very full skirts. Small half wreaths of flame colored rose-) buds will be worn on the backs of their heads. Miss Riley will carry a cascade of flame-colored roses and the bridesmaids’ flowers will be arm bouquets of flame-colored roses.
best man. Ushers are to be Robert Shambaugh and Herbert Kiser, Ft. Wayne, and Guy D. Carpenter, Indianapolis.
Wears Aqua Chiffon
For her daughter's wedding, Mrs. Wright has chosen an aqua chiffon gown with which she will wear Briarcliff roses. Mrs. Riley’s gown will be of blue lace and her corsage also will be Briarcliff roses. A reception in the church will follow the ceremony after which the couple will leave for a two weeks' trip in Michigan. They will make their home in Indianapolis. Out-of-town guests will be Mrs. Owen Wright, grandmother of® the bride; Dr. Orville M. Wright, Mrs. William Gibson, Miss Alberta Shank and Miss Geraldine Lois Wright, all of Dayton, and Mr. and Mss Russell Goucher, Columbus,
The bride’ was graduated from DePauw University and received the M. A. degree in music from Arthur Jordan Conservatory. She is a member of Alpha Omicron Pi and Mu Phi Epsilon. Mr. Riley was graduated from Arthur Jordan Conservatory and is affiliated with. Phi Mu Alpha, honorary music fraternity. -
REV.
‘SHARP IS DR. HOSTETTER'S APT PUPIL
Dr. Henry B. Hostetter’s map of Indiana Presbyterian work aids in training the Rev. Alexander E. Sharp.
Rev. Higdon Coming Here
Directs Oriental Missions; Australians to Preach.
“A man known and loved by more
Filipinos than any other living
American,” are the words chosen
Harry Michels, Cleveland, will ‘by World Call magazine ta describe Dory Le the Rev. E. K. Higdon.
He will come to Indianapolis to
assume his new duties with the United Christian Missionary Society Sept. 1.
The Rev. Mr. Higdon is secretary
of Oriental missions, supervising the society’s work in China, Japan and the Philippine Islands.
Preliminary training for his new
work was furnished the Rev. Mr. Higdon in his recent position as secretary of the Foreign Missions Conference of North America, cooperating body of missionary agencies of all Protestant denominations, and during more than 20 years as Disciples of Christ missionary to the Philippine Islands.
While he was in the Philippines,
he served as pastor of two churches and taught seminary at Manila. He also identified himself with inter-church activities as head of the National Christian Council and with civic interests through child health work, improving conditions for the rural population and in consulting with the Commonweaith Government.
in the theological
The Rev. Mr. Higdon is the au-
thor of “How to Find God” and “Jesus and National Aspirations.”
The World Call's article about hin
concludes:
"“He has grown into the kind of
Waugh-Wilkens Wedding Tonight
Miss Hazel Wilkens, daughter ‘of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Wilkens, will become the bride of Joseph H. Waugh in a service to be performed at 8 p. m. tonight at the home of the bride’s parents. | The Rev. Fr. Pierce Dixon will officiate before an improvised altar of palms, ferns and candelabra in the living room. Miss Edna Krause, La Porte, pianist, will play and Victor Vannacher will sing. White marquisette over taffeta has been chosen by the bride for her bridal gown. It is fashioned on princess .lines and minute white satin bows dot the marquisette. Her bouquet will be of white roses and lilies of the valley. Mrs. I. W. Wilkens, sister-in-law of the bride, and her matron of honor, and Mrs. Burleigh Owens of Cincinnati, her other attendant, will have gowns styled similarly to that of the bride. Mrs. Wilkens will wear blue and Mrs. Owens will be in pink. Their bouquets will be of Briarcliff roses and blue delphinium. Mrs. Wilkens will wear a black and white crepe print dress, white accessories and a corsage of gardenias. Dr. I. W. Wilkens will be best man and Mr. Waugh’s brother, George
the Rev. preach his first sermon as pastor of the Northwood Christian Church tomorrow.
man whom it is an honor to call a friend, whose gentle humor makes children love him, whose sincerity wins friends among youth, who makes the name Christian mean a person of sensitive integrity through whom the world-encircling purpose
of God “that they all shall be one” is daily being worked out.
While the Rev. Mr. Higdon was
busy with his many interests, Mrs.
Higdon found time not only to bring
up their two daughters, Mary and Joy, but to be principal of a nurses’ training school in Manila, teacher and principal of the Union High School. She has been head of the department of church history in Union Theological Manila, taken part in student and musical activities and done considerable research in the field of the evangelical church in the Philippines.
then
Seminary,
2 # 2
Rev. Mr. Fisher Popular With Youth
A 25-year-old Australian minister, Theodore Fisher,
The new pastor served the con-
gregation temporarily some time ago and is especially. popular with the youth of the church, Mrs. Emil Iverson says.
“But he is loved by older folk too,”
will |,
JANE JORDAN-
EAR JANE JORDAN—For some time I have known that my husband has been having an affair with another woman. I had successfully ignored the situation hoping he would not know that I knew, so when he tired of her he would come back to me. His mother found out and told him that I knew. Now he has moved out and left me. How can I tell him that he is welcome back, for I have heard that the woman is no longer interested in him and that he is very lonely. Am I weak in taking him back as my friends say I am? I think that he should be treated like a small boy who has had his fingers burned and now wants to come back to mother.
W. Waugh, will be an usher. A reception will be held at the home of the bride's parents. couple will leave on a wedding trip North and- their dress after Aug. 9 will be 921 Yoke
Wed Tomorrow In McKee Chapel
I love him so much ! thay I cannot bear to get along without him.
DISTRACTED.
Answer—Perhaps you would have more success with your husband §f you treated him as a mature man and not as a child. Men make mistakes as well as children, but it is humiliating to them for a
woman to treat them as a child who has bungled.
It makes them
feel little and helpless and inferior, the very reverse of the feeling which makes a man fall in love with a woman. Why: not simply invite your husband in to dinner one night and make yourself exceptionally agreeable and entertaining without discussing the error of his ways? | If he has a good enough time perhaps he will have the courage to make the next date himself and you can
start your courtship all over again.
If he does not respond to your overtures toward peace, you will have to accept the fact that he does not care for you. It is not easy to admit defeat of this nature, but it is more courageous than to
the Tabernacle Presbyterian Church.
Miss Helen Higgenbotham, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James M. Higgenbotham of Peru, and William Hermann will be married at noon tomorrow at the McKee Chapel of
'Mr. Hermann is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hermann, New Albany. The Rev. J. Ambrose Dunkel will perform the service. Mrs. James E. Higgenbotham will be matron of honor and Miss Jane Hermann, the bridegroom’s sister, bridesmaid. The bride's brother, James E. Higgenbotham, will be best man and Fremont Power and Lloyd
Class of the Broadway Church in charge of Russ Bauer and Harou Downey are in the lead in e
adds Mrs. Iverson. The Rev. Mr. Fisher is her house guest, The new Northwood pastor holds students’ passport. When it expires in two years he will return to his native Melbourne but meanwhile he will carry graduate courses at Butler University along with his ministerial duties. He received his A. B. degree in religion from Butler in June. Mrs. Iverson describes her guest as if he wore seven league boots. She says a scholarship brought him to Butler and that he went to the
Pacific coast last summer and the New York World Fair this summer.
The congregation will welcome
the Rev. Mr. Fisher with a reception and dinner in September.
101 BIBLE CLASS CONTEST TO END
Divisions of the 101 Men’s Bible Baptist
attendance contest having
press idolatry indicates the hold
phasis.
- hang on. s = = 2 = =
AR JANE JORDAN-—I hve been married a year and we live with my husband’s people, After dinner is over at my in-laws house, the one who finishes first gets up and leaves the table to read the paper or do whatever he wants. Within the next few weeks we plan to establish our own home, and I would like to know how to break this habit of his. C. B.
Answer—He may be a different man in his own home. When he has his wife to himself he may not be so bored with his dinner comthat he bolts his food and rushes away. You: can avoid it by making yourself so entertaining that it is a pleasure to him to linger over his coffee and dessert. JANE JORDAN. Put your problems ia a letter to Jane Jordan ho will answer your auostions
- 4 this column dailg fl wo
Wilkins, ushers. The couple will leave on a ‘trip to the Smoky Mountains and will pe at home Aug. 15 at 2240 Park
Mary O'Brien Weds
Miss Mary O’Brien, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel O’Brien, 1411 Springdale Place, became the bride of Timothy J. Walsh in a ceremony performed this morning at the Holy Cross Catholic Church. Mr. Walsh is the son of Mrs. Hannsh ashington, Ind,
scored 26 points more than the divisions under Jerry Layton and Roscoe Caylor. The contest will be decided by the attendance at tomorrow’s meeting when the Rev. Jack Caldwell will teach the lesson. Paul Patterson of the Christian Men Builders Bible Class, Third Christian Church, reports that the baseball attendance contest is urider way with Companies A, B, H, D and E “out in front” at the end of the first week. ° “In the Long Run” will be Merle Sidener’s Jone tomorrow when ‘he addresses the class.
Big Eagle Camp
Looks to August]
Boys and girls 15 and older are registering now for senior periods at Big Eagle Camp, sponsored by the Indianapolis Jewish Federation. Girls will attend for one week beginning Aug. 14 and may register until Aug. 7; the boys will have their visit to camp the week following or from Aug. 21 to 27 and may register until Aug. 14, Mrs. Lena: Barnett, camp intake worker, reported today. Mrs. Barnett also described table tennis tournaments that are going forward at Big Eagle through the use of equipment presented by Irv-
ing Reuben as a memorial to the].
wife of Dr. Harry Jacobs. For more
(than 20 years Dr. Jacobs has served
as camp health adviser and is now camp committee chairman. Small girls now in camp are proudly ‘wearing belts decorated with embroidery in bright colors which they designed and made and boys display beadwork of various kinds which they have woven in original patterns. Regular Sabbath services were held -last night at camp with one of the boys reading the prayers.
Mission Boa rd To Meet in City
Maurice G. Lipson of Indianapolis, recording secretary of Board of Home Missions of the Reformed Church in the United States announced today that the board will hold its annual meeting here in January, Mr. Lipson, elder in the Carrollton Avenue Evangelical and Reformed Church, will arrange the convention, assisted by the Rev. Charles E. Schaeffer of Philadelphia, board general secretary. The board meeting will immediately follow the annual conference of the International Home Missions Council to be held here Jan. 12 to 16. This will be attended by the Philadelphia headquarters staft, district superintendents and Women’s Missionary Society representetives.
CLUB TO BE HOST FOR BREAKFAST
The Colonial Boston Chapter of the International Travel Study Club will be hosts to the Wheeler Mission Breakfast Club tomorrow morning. At the service preceding the breakfast, the Minute Men's Class of
7
Father Led Son to City New Synod Head Half Age Of Predecessor.
A visitor dropping into the Presbyterian State Office on Friday mornings will probably see Dr. Alexander E. Sharp, 36, new synodical executive secretary, deep in conference with the retiring executive, Dr. Henry B. Hostetter, just twice his age. “Alex will grasp all this office detail in about six weeks of coaching,” Dr. Hostetter predicted. “It took me two years to cover it in actual experience but he’s unusually gifted, and tually fond of hard work.” Dr. Sharp was further described by Dr. Hostetter as being a contradiction to the prophet-without-hon-or-in-his-own-country doctrine. The young man spent his childhood and youth in Columbus, Ind. as a member of the church his father served for 20 years. When the elder Dr. Sharp resigned to become head of
(the Peabody Home for the Aged at
North Manchester, the congregation clamored for his son as successor. They got him. He has been there ever since. ‘Dr. Hostetter pronounced Dr. Sharp “liberal in his views, modern in his interpretations of life and its problems and the loyal, understanding friend of youth.” Dr. Robert J. McLandress, synodical Christian education secretary, recalled that Dr. Sharp started his career as being “the picked man of
his class the year he was graduatea
from the McCormick Seminary (Presbyterian), Chicago, winning a fellowship that gave him a year’s study in Scotland.” Mrs. McLandress, dean of women at the Presbyterian Young People’s Conference held each summer on the Hanover College campus, praised his unusual “way” with youth. Dr. Sharp has purchased a house at 711 E. 34th St. where he, Mrs. Sharp and their two children, Elizabeth, 5, and Carol, 3, will live. . Dr. Sharp names among his future plans the intention to visit many churches of the Indiana Synod during September. Dr. Alexander Sharp Sr. since
the Edgewood Methodist Church will present a program,
Text: By WILLIAM E.
his retirement from the Peabody Home, has lived in Indianapolis.
SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON
Il Chronicles 17:1-6, 9-12
GILROY, D. D.
21 Editor of Advance N Asa we Hive studied the life and service of a king whose benevolent
reign was founded in trust—in trust of God and of his people. was the son of an unworthy father who had made so serious a mess of
his own life and kingship that the
Asa
kingdom had been disrupted early
in his reign. But Asa was more fortunate in the: son who succeeded him, for he followed in his footsteps in every respect. Like his 1ather Asa, Jehoshaphat had to face a major problem in the worship and ideals of the people. The vigor of the measures that he took to sup-
that false worship had taken upon the people. False worship means false ideals and practices; and this was particularly true where the worship of Baal, into which the unfaithful were lapsing, was mixed up with licentious and debasing rites, and the moral practices that were contrary to the purity of family and social life upon which the supreme teaching of the teachers and prophets of Israel laid such em-
HERE are times when the true king or statesman must show his strength of character and his capacity for service as much in opposing the popular trend as in expressing the will of the people. ‘In our modern democracy where so much stress is laid upon majority rule, we are apt to forget that there are great moral and social issues that are never settled by mere maJorities.. In the long run it seems fairly well established in history that majority rule is better than minority rule, and that the voice of the people may be more nearly the voice of God than the voice of some corrupt or self-seeking ruler or of some self-seeking ruling class. But there are times w i popular
sweep over a people. We have in fact stressed something of this in our recent American life. The immense increase of drinking and drunkenness, the widespread and deeply rooted development of all forms of gambling, the great increase of martial infidelity and divorce, with a general lowering of standards in relations between the sexes—these and many other things have been very acute problems in recent years. > " ” o HE fitness of leaders is to be judged not by the extent to ‘which they yield to popular clamor and demand, but by the firmness with which even at considerable sacrifice they stand out for integrity and decency. In the long run it is this type of leader who most truly represents the people and who becomes established in popular regard. Our national men of honor have not been the trickstérs and the corrupt and self-seeking politicians, but the men who showed some allegiance to higher ideals of statesmanship and service. : Jehoshaphat was a king of this type. He did not believe that it was a king’s part simply to give the péople what they wanted. It was his duty, rather, to guide the people toward what was best and to suppress in every reasonable way everything that was making for the debasement of the people. . ‘Majority rule does not alter the rigorous demands of righteousness truth and justice. A task of democracy is so to educate and train a that these fundamental| the basis
women’s work.
ley, now in charge of the cathedral furlough at the All Saints Cathe-
dral here.
‘The Rev. Mr. Linsley will fill the pulpit vacated by the Rev. Robert C. Alexander, who is now rector of a Wichita, Kas., church. The Manila minister may be asked to serve the All Saints permanently, Bishop Kirchhoffer said. He is returning to the United States because of
§ | Mrs. ‘Linsley’s health.
A prospective field worker is to
: 1be interviewed by the bishop and
the executive council of the House of Churchwomen in the Episcopal office Thursday. .At the same time plans will be made for the fall meetings of the House of Churchwomsn. For the first time they will meet by districts: Crawfordsville, Sept. 20; at Muncie Sept. 21; at New Albany Sept. 27, and at Evansville Sept. 28
Other events in the Episcopal falendar are celebration of the Golden Jubilee of the United Thank -Offer~ ing for missions this fall; Bishop Kirchhoffer’s meeting with diocesan laymen at McCormick’s Creek Sfate Park the wek-end of Oct. 7; the erection of a cross in Crown Hill Cemetery as a memorial to Bishop Joseph Marshall Francis, who preceded. Bishop Kirchhoffer, and changes among the clergy. The Rev. George W. Smith of Columbus, Ind. is being transferred to the pulpits at New Harmony and North Vernon and the Rev. R. F. Keicker of Bedford will preach at Columbus. The Rev. Mr. Smith will conduct Holy Communion at 7:30 a. m. and morning prayer and sermon at 9:30 a. m. tomorrow .at Advent Church here. ‘The bishop will conduct services at 8:30 and 10 a. m. at St. George’s Church tomorrow in the absence at Anderson of the vicar, the Rev. Francis H. Tetu, and at the cathedral at 7:30 a. m. and 11 o'clock, and coniirm a class of first communicants at Crawfordsville in the evening. The middle of August Bishop and Mrs. Kirchhoffer will motor to Santa Barbara, Cal. for their on cation, returning to Indian September. ena 0 ” 2 2 2 Of 3 Women's Indorse Merger
The Indianapolis Council of Federated Churchwomen is about to become part of a new world-wide woman’s organization, Mrs, Asa Hoy, council vice president, said today. Plans of a national committee developing the interdenominational agency described by Mrs. Hoy are expected to reach their climax in September when the Council of Women for Home Missions approves them. The home missions council is one of three groups which will form the new organization. The National Council of Churchwomen, with which the Indianapolis council is affiliated, and the Committee on Women’s Work of the Foreign Missions Conference of Nerth America have already given their approval. Mrs. Hoy was a delegate to the national council meeting recently at Lake Geneva, Wis, when the approval was voted and the committee empowered to work out the union. Mrs. Ralph J. Hudelson, who also attended the Geneva convention as a national council vice president and nominating committee chairman, said that eight years of hard work would come to fruition with the final steps of the merger. “If this does not hapepn in September —and I believe it. will—it certainly will soon,” Mrs. Hudelson predicted. Mrs. J. H. Smiley, who will serve as national council recording secretary during 1939 and 1940, compared the merger of the three women’s groups to the recent union of the three branches of Methodism. She said that both were evidences of the movement toward Christian union evident in the world today. ' 8 9 =»
Loyalty Crusade i Baptists’ Subject
The autumn loyalty crusade is one of the matters to be discussed by the Indianapolis Baptist Association executive committee at the Y. W. C. A. Wednesday noon. Alvah C. Waggoner, executive committee head, will meet with representatives of the 34 association churches including the new committee chairmen and members he has appointed. : The semi-annual association meeting at the First Baptist Church Sept. 12 and 13 will also be planned at the executive meeting. The Rev. Carl A. Metz will also outline the program of the Baptist Preachers’ Conference at the First Baptist Church, Lebanon, Sept. 18, which will include addresses br. the Rev. George T. King, the Rev. Li. C. Trent, the Rev. Oren A. Cook and the Rev. Adolph Bredy. Committee chairmén announced by Mr, Waggonér are evangelistic, George F. Woody; stewardship, the Rev. U. 8. Clutton; interracial, the Rev. 8S. W. Hartsock; laymen’s, Henry C. Bearry; camps and assemblies, the Rev. Reuben H. Lindstrom; youth work, Albert Dell; Rumanian work, Mrs. A. A. W mansee, and Christian center, Mrs. ‘Asa E. Hoy.
Terre Haute Pastor
Groups
Will Preach Here 5
Call Manila Pastor Here; ~ Churchwomen May Join In. ‘World Wide Council
Dr. Feusrlicht Asked to Talk on Disciples’ Fora: Baptists’ Executive Committee to Meet; St. Dominic to Be Radio Talk Theme.
By EMMA RIVERS MILNER
- The Rt. Rev. Richard Ainslee Kirchhoffer, bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Indianapolis, announced today that a full-time, woman field worker will be employed by the diocese to assist with mission and
Bishop Kirchhoffer also has extended.a call to the Rév. John Lins-’ at Manila, te spend his six months i!
morning and evening at the North Side Church of Christ, is one of
to be heard here tomorrow. The Rev. Clive McGuire will speak at: the Memorial Baptist Church in the morning. At 10:45
liver the sermon at the Broadway Methodist Church and the Rev..O. M. McRae at the North Methodist Church. Dr. John J. Haramy will deliver the sermon at the First Baptist Church at 10:45 a. m. and Dr. J. H. Giliatt at the Immanuel Evangelical and Reformed Church tomorrow morning and -next Sunday. Both are Indiana Central College professors.
(8 = =
Prof. Bruce L. Kershn.r and Prof. Dean Everett Walker of the Butler Uni- . versity College of Religion, will lecture at conferences of ministers at Gordonsville, Va., and Lake James, Ind., next week. - Dr. Kershner will lecture : on education before a national meeting of Church of Christ ministers at Gordonsville. Prof. Walker will speak on problems of the church at the Lake James assembly.
Movies to Illustrate Evangelist’s Talk
his evangelistic series at the First Free Methodist Church Monday evening by showing a thousand feet of motion pictures he has taken in the Malay Peninsula, India, Egypt, Palestine and Europe. He will also show movies in connection with his talk on “What We Saw in China” tonight at 7:30. He will preach at~ll a. m. tomorrow, tell the story of his life from newsboy to evangelist at 2:30.p. m. and
Great White Throne” at 7:30 p. m. a a 2
Oaklandon Principal Leads Bethany Games
Dr. Moris M. Feuerlicht, Indian-
has been invited to be an evening forum speaker for the Disciples of Christ Adult Conference at Bethany Park, Brooklyn, Ind. Temple officials expressed the opinion’ that Rabbi Maurice Goldblatt, Dr. Feuerlicht’s assistant, will fill the engagement if Dr. Feuerlicht is unable to do so. The adult conference, which Des gins tomorrow and lasts until Aug. 5, is to train leaders over 24 years of age and graduates of the fouryear young people’s course. Among
study discussion recreation at Bethany will be directors of adult, youth and children’s groups both in churches and church schools, m= isters and their wives and offic board members. Ralph Prather, Oaklandon Public Scheel principal, -will direct a program of plays, games, songs and handcraft related to church activities in which the class: members will actually participate.
anapolis, young people’s and children’s work national director for the United Christian Missionary Society, will: teach the course, “Young People’s Work in ‘the Church”; Miss Mabel Niedermeyer, national children’s work director for the society who lives part of the year in Indianapolis, on “Helping aders’ of Children”; Mrs. Mari nihony of New Albany, on “The Home and the Church” (dealing with parent education); the ‘Rev. r. Masih on Christian Enterprise”; the Rev. Barton Hunter, formerly of. the
now of Lynchburg (Va.) Christian Cdllege, on “Personal Religious Living From the Young Adult Point of View,” and the Rev. D. J. McColl of Marion, Ind., on “The Life and Teachings of Jesus.” 2 2 8. = . For all Christian Science Churches tomorrow the les-son-sermon subject will be - “Love,” and the Golden Text: “Keep yourselves in the love of God, looking for the mercy of our Lord Jesus Christ unto eternal life.” t » ”
Two Catholic Radio Programs Scheduled
will deliver an ad “St. WIBC Friday at 8:45 a. m.| The Catholic “Highway to = Heaven
same station tomorrow at 12:15
p. m. Saturday the Rev. Herbert E.
WIBC at 8:45 a. m. The Bilianapiiis Church JFederation vespers at 3:30 p. m. .-tomorrow over WIBC will include a talk
Rev. Frederick G. Kuebler will be in charge. : Daily devotions sponsored also by
several local and out-of-town guests -
a. m. Dr. John G. Benson will de- .
The Rev. Harry Black will- close .
speak on “The Judgment of the
apolis Hebrew Congregation rabbi
the enrollees who will take part in.
pa
Miss Heien Spaulding of Indi-
“World-Wide
Purdue Christian Foundation and .
The Rev. Fr. Francis E. Reeves Dominic, Religious Founder,” over
Series” will be broadcast over the
Eberhardt, Wheeler City Mission superintendent, will broadcast over
