Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 July 1941 — Page 5

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waist of lace and a wide border of

bat

y

k To Be Bride's

.

Three Siste

¥Attendants

Montieth-Van T alge Rite Tomorrow

Three sisters of Miss Margaret VanTalge will be her attendants at

her wedding tomorrow to Richard V. Montieth in the Third Christian Church. They are Mrs. Robert A. Lsiime of Eikhart, to be matron of honor, and the Misses Suzanne and Martha VanTalge, bridesmaids. They are the daughters of Mr. and Mrs. William E. VanTalge, 3810 W. Washington St. Mr. Montieth is the son of Oscar Montieth, 112 W. 44th St. i ‘Dr. William F. Rothenburger will read the 3:30 o'clock ceremony at an altar banked with palms and pastel gladioli and lighted by candles in tall candelabra. Mrs. Natalia Conner will-be organist. The bridegroom’s best man will be his brother, Oscar Montieth Jr., and ushers will be John Batchelor, Wilkensburg, Pa.; Albert McColloum Jr, Clair Hilliker and Clarence Elliott. Entering with her - father, Miss VanTalge will wear a gown of white marquisette, made with a basque

lace .at the hem of the full skirt.|She will have long lace mitts below short puffed sleeves. ‘Her fingertip veil of tulle will be held at the fore- . head with small blue delphinium blossoms. In her Colonial bouquet will be white roses, gardenias and delphinium. Pastel organza frocks designed like that of the bride will be worn by the attendants, the matron of honor’s in pale blue, Miss Martha VanTalge’s in orchid and Miss Suzanne VanTalge’s in pink. With

them they will carry Colonial bouquets of pastel flowers. The mother of the bride has chosen a jacket ensemble in rose and black with black accessories and a corsage of pink roses and delphinium.

Trip to Wisconsin

Mr. and Mrs. Montieth will leave on a wedding trip to northern Wisconsin following a reception in the NanTalge home. They will be at} home after Aug. 10 in the Common-

wealth Apartments, 245 W. 38th St. The bride will travel in a light blue silk jersey dress with brown and white accessories. She is a recent graduate of Indiana University and Mr. Montieth is a Butler University graduate. 2 Out-of-town guests at the ceremony will be Miss Emma Lemen of #Akron, O.; Mr. and Mrs. Frank L. 'Giltner of Lawrenceburg; Miss Margaret Shaw, Amherst, Mass.; Marian Glick, Canton, O.; rs. Margaret Russell, Miss Hattie pbb, Miss Katherine Burton and Bgron Burton, Martinsville, and Rdbert A. Lamme of Elkhart.

.C.T.U. Unit.to Meet

* The Frances Willard W. C. T. U. will meet at 2 p. m. Tuesday at the home of Mrs. Effie« Hobson, 1321 Edgemont Ave., to hear L. E. York, superintendent of the Indiana Antiloon League, speak.

These jugs are just a dollar and there are even modernistic spirals of plastic, made by Relly of California, which perform the same service for only 50 cents. And for those who don’t trust their equilibrium, the same counter shows tiny flower pots with real cactuses (or cacti, for the purists) growing in them. These too are lapel clips.

AN INNOVATION at Blocks is the series of ear-rings and buttons to match. For each two ear-rings—in flower or fruit designs or modernistic scrolls—you pay a dollar and for two buttons another dollar. When you go for them, don’t forget to look' at. the exquisite pins made from hundreds —it seems—of tiny seashells, tinted in pastel colors and mounted with larger shells as a base. They're handmade, naturally, and are a dollar each. Remember the childhood

Visit in Illinois ~ Mr. and Mrs. Albert Wyman . Lehman, 420 E. North St. are

spending the week-end with relatives in Mattoon and Sullivan, Ill

: days

Strauss Says: Our customary store hours are resumed Monday . . . Saturdays 9 till 6 other days 9:30 till 5 (We are closed today Saturday)

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It Begins MONDAY

Sweeping reductions on more than 3000 GENTLEMEN'S SUITS (2 and 3 piece). A world of SLACKS and JACKETS . . . reduced. Nearly all our STRAW HATS cut in price. LL A raft of SUMMER OXFORDS, A thousand or so TIES, Pull up SOCKS, ‘Summer MESH SHIRTS, Under SHORTS, etc! The Sale is On! Come and Get It!

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IF YOU LIKE TO WEAR FLOWERS but haven't the money for corsages—and if your walk is fairly even and tranquil—you are just the one to visit Block's jewelry counter in search of their Mexican flower jugs. They're little round jugs in red, gold or silver, no larger than a silver dollar, but there’s a smal] hollow space to fill with water and the stem of a single blossom. ‘Back of that there is a clip which you attach to your jacket lapel—and wear a fresh flower every day.

when you had a set of wooden flower petals and leaves, all ready to be inserted into a bare stem and the calyx? There are some wooden lapel pins at Block’s that will remind you of the flowers you concocted—although the whole thing is quite firmly glued together. There are . red and white carnations, daisies and pansies in the group.

AN OPALESCENT GREEN pottery bowl and a set of old Chinese silver salad fork and spoon were not purchased together, Wasson’s buyers insist, but when placed together in the store’s gift shop make up

one of the most beautiful prospective wedding presents you could buy. The bowl was made in Californja by Bachelder, is green inside and a sort of silvery amethyst outside and is about $4. The handles of the fork and spoon are set with Suchow jade and just above the tines and bowl are single stones of jade and carnelian. The $5 price for the pair makes a present in the “Under $10” class.

REALLY UNUSUAL TABLE SERVICE is hard to find, but at Block’s there is a set of California ware that is worth looking for. It’s in muted desert colors of misty gray and creamy yellow and has an odd

squared-off design. As an example of price, the large square dinner plates are a dollar each. There are also cup and saucer sets, the smaller demi-tasse cups, bowls large and small, a pitcher and a cream and sugar set, all in the bold design that is softened by its colors.

THE TREND toward individual place mats instead of dinner cloths has resulted in a veritable deluge of graceful decorative patterns to supplement summer china. At Ayres’ there are some new ones of shirred

with strips of blue and yellow homespun. Other transparent ones have lovely fern designs in spring greens

‘jor a combination of deep red and

pink. The mats start at 29 cents for the least expensive and go up to $5 for layge green straw .oblongs.

NOTION TRIVIA in the stores— Newest, gadget for the young is a “Him” book for girls off to summer camps or their first year at ‘college. It's a wooden-bound notebook with a space for data on all the men they meet and for pictures of the same. The idea is that if you put all your dates together in such a fashion, -they may look quite impressive and offer a good basis for comparison when it comes to choosing one for keeps.

THIS IS FOR THE HANDY-MAN around the house who can never find the right size of nail in that cluttered-up drawer in the pantry. It’s a merry-go-round contraption of wood that has the tops of eight small jars attached to it. In the jars are separate sizes of nails— or whatever else you may want to segregate. When you pin all this on the wall, you can spin it. around until the right size is on the bottom and then you can unscrew the right Jar. Both the above are at Wasson’s for a dollar each.

Dr. Barco Will Take Bride

Times Special

ROCHESTER, Ind. July 5.—The Kewanna Methodist Church will be the scene tomorrow evening at 8:30 o'clock of the wedding of Miss Helen Clark of Logansport and Dr. Martin Barco of Indianapolis. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ora Clark of Kewanna. Dr. Barco’s parents are Mr. and Mrs. Thomas

* | Barco of Lawrence.

. Miss Clark is a graduate of the City Hospital School of Nursing in

.|Indianapolis. The bridegroom fin-

ished a dental internship at the

City Hospital there recently and wiil be stationed at Ft. Knox, Ky. soon. He is a graduate of the Indiana University School of Den-

. > ori h gan Bi i i Si itn 7 i LT

y

ISets Aug. 2

As Wedding Date

Catherine B. Keiser Is Engaged

Preparations for July and late summer weddings include announcements of marriage dates, attendants and a shower. Miss Florence Gipe will become the bride of Erwin Krahn of Milwaukee on Saturday evening, Aug. 2, at 7:30 o'clock in the home of her parents, Mr, and Mrs. James C. Gipe, 8501 Spring Mill Road. The prospective bridegroom is the son of Ervin Krahn of Milwaukee. Attendants for the ceremony will be announced later. Miss Gipe is a graduate of Mt. Holyoke College and the Bank Street Schools of New York. She is a member of Kappa Alpha Theta Sorority.

” » s Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Keiser,

1oreén

: 12363 Broadway, announce the en-

gagement and approaching mar-

‘|riage of their daughi®r, Catherine : | Barbara, to Walter H. Judd Jr., son

of Mrs. Irma C. Judd, 325 Berkeley Road, and Walter H. Judd Sr. The wedding will take place Saturday, Aug. 2, at the Keiser home. » ” »

Maid of honor for Miss Catherine

. |O’Hara at her wedding to Leo Patrick Brown next Saturday morning :|will be her sister, Miss Mary Mar- : |garet O’Hara of Chicago. The cere- = ii : {mony will take place in the Blessed Initials are the vogue. Large ones and small ones in several types of lettering are being used on purses. The ones pictured here are gold block initials. The model wears the novel Mexican water jug.

Homemaking— They're New; Flower Jugs, Gadget for Nails, Place Mats

Sacrament Chapel at SS. Peter and Paul Cathedral. Earl Brown of Chicago will stand with his brother as best man. Miss O'Hara is the daughter of Mrs. Mark A. O'Hara, 3254 Graceland Ave., and Mr. Brown, 5911 E. Washington St, is the son of Walter Brown of Chicago. A dinner and linen shower at ‘the Riviera Club will be given for Miss O'Hara Monday night with Miss Margaret Mary Hanrahan as hostess. Guests will be Mesdames O'Hara, Giles A. Kelley, Arthur Raffensperger, Harold Huse, Richard Fogarty and Thomas J. O'Hara, Mrs. Joseph Haslet of Houston, Tex., Miss Katherine Healey and Miss Mary Margaret O’Hara. ” ” #”

Miss Elizabeth Averill, 4505 Marcy Lane, and Henry J. Kowal left over the Fourth of July holiday for the East. She. will visit with her

cellophane held together and bound]

mother, Mrs. Walter Averill of Poughkeepsie, N. Y., and Mr. Kowal with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. J. Kowal, Utica, N. Y., before their marriage on Friday. ‘The ceremony is to be read at Mrs. Averill’'s summer home at Ogunquit, Me. The bride-to-be’s sister, Miss Katharine Averill, will be maid of honor and S. J. Kowal will be his brother’s best man. Miss Averill is a graduate of St. Agnes School in Albany, N. Y. and Skidmore College.

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Mr. and Mrs. Fred Stephens, 2504 N. Talbott Ave., have announced the engagement of their daughter, Miss Virginia Lee Lemon, to Robert E. Mockbee, son of R. E. L. Mockbee, 2221 N. Meridian St. The ceremony will be July 13 in the Memorial Presbyterian Church.

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The marriage of Miss Phyllis Jane Blank, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harold B. Blank, 42 N. Mount St, to Ralph Mason Shott, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis E. Shott, 1414 N. Holmes Ave., will take place at 4:30 p. m. July 27 in the West Washington Street Methodist Church.

Visitors Return Home

Mrs. Louise McKenzie Malott and Miss Melinda Smythe, who have been the guests of Mrs. Maxwell C. Lang, 1226 Broadway, have returned to their home in Ashtabula, O.

Frock and Bonnet

A pet summer fashion for miss two to six. A simple frock which she can learn to put on and take off by herself; it has straps which button on the shoulder. The little bolero has ruffled cap sleeves. Pattern No, 8970 is designed in sizes for 2 to’'6 years. Size 3 dress and bolero requires 2% yards 35inch material. Panties, % yard and bonnet 32 yard. For this attractive pattern, send 15 cents in coin, your name, address, pattern number and size to The Indianapolis Times Today's Pattern Service, 214 W. Maryland St. Pattern, 15 cents; Pattern Book,

Book ordered together, 35 cents.

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Monastery Arranges lts 3d Novena

Services for Our Lady to Open Tuesday, for Nine Days. |

“Under the wide and starry sky” thousands of the faithful and their guests are to gather for the third annual public. novena in honor of Our Lady, the Mother of the Prince qf Peace, beginning Tuesday on the grounds of the Carmelite Monastery on the Cold Spring Road. 2 Services will be held daily at 8 p. m. through Wednesday, July 16, the Feast Day of Our Lady of Mount Carmel. The sermons will again be delivered by the Rev. Fr. Francis P. Lyons, C. S. P., Paulist priest, who spoke last summer. Requests for prayer, ie. “intentions for the novena,” are being sent to the Reverend Mother Prioress of the monastery. !

Altar in Gold and Blue

An altar, decorated in blue and gold and furnished with the usual lighted candles and other liturgical objects, erected on the rocky promontory overlooking the monastery lawn, will be thrown into relief by floodlights. The congregation, which is said to have reached a maximum of 8000 on the closing night last

year will be seated and standing on the grass or in their cars parked just outside the grounds. busses will run between the Circle and the monastery. The Rev. Fr. Bernard Sheridan, vice chancellor of the Indianapolis Diocese and pastor of St. John’s Church, who is marking the 25th anniversary of his priesthood this summer, will give Benediction at the opening service. The choir of Father Sheridan’s church will furnish the music under the direction of the Rev. Fr. August Fussenegger, director of the Catholic Charities Bureau. On the closing evening, the Right Rev. Msgr. Raymond R. Noll, vicar general of the diocese and rector of SS. Peter and Paul's Cathedral, will celebrate Benediction. Others on Program

Other priests scheduled to give benediction, beginning Wednesday, with the Rt. Rev. Thomas Donnelly, S. J., rector of West Baden College, are in order: The Rev. James M. Downey, the Rev. Fr. James

Moore, the Rev. Fr. Edward T. Bockhold, the Very Rev. Msgr. Henry F. Dugan, diocesan chancellor, the Rev. Fr. Henry Trapp and the Rev. Fr. Clement Bosler. On the formal novena invitation sent out by the Carmelite Sisters, the following message is inscribed in part: “ .. amidst earth’s warring turmoil, it is sweet to turn to her who holds on high a little Prince of Peace. May the peace of her sweet Son be with you and His spirit’s light dwell in your heart.”

Says Prayers Are Too Short

In spite of all the groans and complaints that have come from the church-going public concerning lengthy prayers, the Rev. Ralph E. Webber of Indianapolis holds that prayers, nowadays, are too short. . In an article entitled, “Praying by a Time Clock,” published in the Religious Telescope, national organ of the United Brethren Church, the Rev. Mr. Webber says in part: “If the workmen of a factory depended upon their feelings, they would quit work long before the clock said they could quit. The clock keeps them on the job. Maybe we need to keep closer watch of the time spent in prayer.” :

* {| Alpha Chis En Route ot To Convention |

Several Indianapolis women were in a party of Alpha Chi Omega Sorority members which left Chicago this morning to attend the 24th biennial convention of the organization at the. Huntington Hotel in Pasedena, Cal. Convention sessions will begin Tuesday and con1inue through the following Sunay. The group will transfer at Cedar City, Cal, to a bus for a trip to Cedar Breaks National Monument before going on to the conference. Mrs. E. T. Small, president of Beta Beta Alumnae Chapter; Miss Hannah Keenan, director of the central office here; Miss Betty Graham, president, and Miss Helen Mock, vice president of the Butler active chapter, will be the official delegates. Mrs. A. A. Thomas and Mrs. Robert P. Tracy also will attend. ;

Caper Sub Deb Club Meets Wednesday

New officers of the Caper Club of Carmel, a Sub Deb Federation chapter, are Miss Margie Burnett, president; Miss Helen Hoffman, vice president; Miss Margaret Dinkelaker, secretary - treasurer; Miss Shirley Lay, publicity chairman; . the Misses Maxine Lamb, Myra Brown: and Doris Carey, program committee. : Club members and their guests will hold a covered-dish supper Wednesday evening at Northern Woods Beach, followed by a swimming party. At the recent election meeting, Miss Madalyn Applegate Sooke on dress and make-up probems,

Zook-Davis Wedding To Be in Sarasota

Word has been received here that Sergt. Lawrence R. Zook, son of Mr. and Mrs. I. J. Zook, 3660 N. Adams St., and Miss Bettye Davis of Sarasota, Fla., will be married tomorrow in Sarasota.

The bride-to-be is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert E, Davis, Sarasota, formerly of Indianapolis. Sergt. Zook is now stationed at Camp Shelby, Miss, with the 38th Division, Indiana National Guard.

City |

“World Friendship,” with the featured, will be taught the junior

Church. ”

Muncie Sisters

of religious social service,

girls display the same, Quaker-like, restrained eagerness in talking about their work with the First Friends Church, here. It is something of an honor to have been chosen to come to Indianapolis. The sisters are one of six “teams” sent out over the country by the Students’ Summer Service sponsored by the Five Years Meeting of Friends. The teams are working directly under the Society's Boards of Christian Education and Missions. Dr. Erroll T. Elliott, the host pastor of the Williamson girls while here, is chairman of the Board of Education. Various members of the First Friends Church will entertain Myra Lou and Ila Jane in their homes during the summer. :

Will Survey Neighborhood

One of the most ambitious things the sisters will attempt is a survey of the neighborhood of the church which is located on the corner of 13th and Alabama Sts. They will go from house to house inviting people, who have no religious affiliations, to come to church and the children of the households, to attend the afternoon classes and junior church conducted by First Friends. In the doing, the “surveyors” expect to pick up some valuable bits of information concerning the community. Ila Jane and Myra Lou will also help with the afternoon classes, junior church and in the church office under the supervision of Miss Mildred Hinshaw, director of neligious education for the First Friends Church. Of all the activities in which she is engaged, Ila Jane enjoys handwork most. It dates back to the influence of her Quaker grandmother who loved children and taught her to knit, she says. IlaiJane is also a weaver, having: studied the craft in the Great Smoky Mountains although she remarked rather wistfully that she has no loom of her own “yet.”

Would Be Journalist

The work the young Quaker teams are doing is perhaps the most splendid patriotic service they could render at this time, Myra Lou thinks. But ultimately, she said, with that unmistakable glint in her eye, she hopes to be a newspaper woman. She has been helping the society editor of the Muncie Star and has served as copy editor of the Ball State News and on her high school paper by way of preparing for that future career in journalism. ® Richly colored pictures on two large, simulated stained glass windows, being made by children, illustrate the theme of the junior church. The theme is “World Friendship,” fostered by Quakers since their society was first organized. : ) The colored pictures include the Christian and United States Flags, the Statue of Libery, the red and blue star of the American Friends

The story of how the Baptist Church in Spencer, Ind. split into two. congregations because of a disagreement among the membership and was reunited during his administration is told by Dr. T. J. Parsons, executive secretary of the Indiana Baptist Convention. Dr. Parsons says when one faction decided it couldn’t “get along” with the other, it withdrew from the church and held its services in the Court House assembly room. But as the years passed, the memory of why and how the “split” came about grew dimmer and dimmer. The pastors of the respective cengregations became cronies; union prayer meetings were held EE ros or “ e” were made. Thinking only of the spiritual growth and welfare of their. congregations, and in spite of the fact they were talking themselves out of their “jobs”, the two ministers, the Rev. Gary Allbritten and the Rev.

15 cents. One Pattern and Pattern

The couple will be at home at Camp Shelby.

(left) and Ila Jane Williamson this summer in the First Friends

In Friends’

By EMMA RIVERS MILNER

Two young Quakers, sisters and students in Ball State Teachers’ College, have come to Indianapolis for a combined vacation and period

Christian Flag and “Old Glory”. congregation by Misses Myra Lou

Take Part Summer Work

They are Misses Ila Jane and Myra Lou Williamson, whose home is in Muncie. Ila Jane is a junior and Myra Lou, a sophomore at Ball State. Different in appearance and, apparently, also in temperament, the

Service Committee, the Peace Bridge at Buffalo, N. Y., the Peace Gate, between this country and Canada, in the State of Washington, Sn Queger Hill, Friends refugee otel.

Lyndhurst Aid Named

The Rev. Haakon Knudsen Arrives Aug. 3.

The Rev. Haakon Knudsen of Milwaukee will assume his duties as the new assistant pastor of the Lyndhurst Baptist Church, Aug. 3. The Rev. Mr. Knudsen, 28, was graduated recently from the Northern Baptist Seminary at Chicago where he won the Heagle Honorary Scholarship for outstanding work. He is a graduate of Marquette University, a member of Sigma Delta Chi, national journalistic fraternity, and the son of the Rev. T. A. Knud- i sen, executive secretary of the Nor- Rev. Mr. Knudsen wegian Baptist Conference of America and the Wisconsin Baptist Convention. The new minister will assist the Rev. Charles H. Scheick, pastor, under whose leadership Lyndhurst has grown from a congregation of 50 to one of 1000. The church is featured as the church of the month in the July Baptist Leader, published in Philadelphia and circulated throughout the Northern Baptist Convention.

2 SALVATON ARMY POSTS AWARDED

Glenn Harvey and Miss Esther Edwards, both of Indianapolis, are among 75 young people being commissioned by the Salvation Army after a year’s special study at the William Booth Memorial Training College, Chicago. ! Lieutenant Harvey is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Harvey and Lieutenant Edwards’ parents ' are Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Edwards.

BISHOP LOWE TO SPEAK

Bishop Titus Lowe of the Indianapolis Methodist Area is scheduled for an address at the Evansville District Missionary Institute

Instructors ‘include Mrs. J. E. An-

drews and Dr. O. W. Fifer and Mrs. Fifer.

Spencer Baptists Forget Old Quarrel and Reunite

to resign since neither thought it would be fair for him to be chosen pastor of the united congregation. Now the Baptist Church in Spen-| cer is vastly stronger in number of members but is without a minister. Says Dr. Parsons: “Thank God for pastors who love to unite God's people rather than divide them, even at great personal sacrifice to

themselves.”

Wednesday at Santa Claus, Ind.|

A new 10-passenger station wagon

will be ‘used in street preaching by the Rev. Fr. James Rogers and the Rev. Fr. Raymond Bosler this summer in the INDIANAPOLIS CATHOLIC DIOCESE.

The station wagon was presented the diocese by the Knights of Columbus. The body of the station wagon is in a two-tone effect of light mahogany and golden oak with a chassis of rich Jubonnet upholstered in tan.

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Plan Outdoor Altar

An outdoor fireplace and altar are to be built in the walled garden where old Knickerbocker Hall formerly stood on the property belonging to’ ALL SAINTS CATHE-

DRAL at 16th St. and Central Ave.

The former site of the hall is to be heautified by trees and shrubs planted by the Cathedra Garden Association under the leadership of Mrs. Hartley Sherwood, president of Cathedral Women. Parties and outdoor religious meetings will be held in the garden by diocesan church groups. Children of ST. MATTHEW'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH are making sure of decorations for their chapel altar by planting a flower bed in

the church yard.

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Dr. Sharp to Preach

+ Dr. Alexander E. Sharp, executive secretary of the Indiana Presbyterian Synod, will preach tomorrow

“lat 10:45 a. m. in the MEMORIAL

PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH. 8 nr 8

Bible Service Set

“Poise in a Perplexed World” is the title of the sermon to be delivered by Dr. Marion Smith tomorrow at 10 a. m. at the service for the church membership and adult Bible classes in the CENTRAL AVENUE METHODIST CHURCH. The children will be taught in church school at the same time.

s

Change in Services

The morning service hour at the FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH is now 10:30 while the evening service has been discontinued for July and August.

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Sing for Veterans

The CALVARY BAPTIST CHURCH Quartet including Robert Nosske, William Muterspaugh and the Misses Sara Andrews and Ruth Messersmith will sing at vespers to=morrow afternoon at the Veterans’: Hospital. Miss Helen Ferris is accompanist.

Guest Speaker

The DOWNEY AVENUE CHRISTIAN CHURCH will have as guest speaker, Dr, John H. Booth, executive secretary of thé Board of Church Extension of the Disciples of Christ, at the 10:35 a, m. service tomorrow. » »

Baptist Services

The Rev, Arthur Horton will speak at 10:45 a. m. and the Rev. D. P. Renn at 7:30 p. m, tomorrow at the BROADWAY BAPTIST CHURCH. The Rev. Herbert E. Eberhardt of the Wheeler Mission will teach the 101 Men's Bible Class,

Sacred Music Recital .

The 9-year-old violinist, Donald Bryan Crafton, son of the Rev.

ton of Indianapolis, will be. presented in a recital of sacred music at 5:30 p. m. vespers, tomorrow in the Garden Baptist Church. Other special music will be directed by William L. Millett.

Defense Workers' Pastor Is Chosen

Disciples of Christ announced today that the Rev. H. Glen Haney of Richmond, Va. has accepted a call to do spiritual work among men employed in national defense projects. The Rev. Mr. Haney will have headquarters in Indianapolis, but will travel all over the country carrying. out his program among soldiers, sailors and men in defense industries, *

AT BARACA MEETING

Indianapolis people in Los Angeles attending the World Wide Baraca Philathea Convention include Mrs. H. T. Chaille, state president; Mrs. H. B. Morrow, city union president; Mrs. E. J. Reinhardt and Mrs. Bertha Simpson.

SET GOLDEN TEXT

All Christian Science Churches will study the lesson-sermon sub= ject, “God,” tomorrow, The Golden Text is, “I am the Lord thy God, the Holy One of Israel, thy Savious.” Is. 43:3.

‘Second Presbyterian

The Historie Church of Which Henry Ward Beecher Was Minister, Vermont and Pennsylvania Sts.

JEAN 8. MILNER, D. D. Minister

Worship, 11 A. M

Mornin x %.Hours at Lift Us"

Sermon:

TABERNACLE PRESBYTERIAN

34TH and CENTRAL Dr. Roy Ewing Vale Rev. Stewart W. Hartfeter

Ministers 9:30 A. M. Bible School, Daylight Saving Time 10:45 A. M. Daylight Saving Time DIVINE WORSHIP

Dr. Vale Preachin a “The Shelter of a Great, Rock in Our Weary Land .

JESSE WHITECOTTON

Robert C. Cooper, encouraged the reunion of the church. Both agreed

10:30—REV.

SALEM PARK CAMP MEETING

OF THE

MISSIONARY BANDS, JULY 3-13 HEAR

PROGRAM SATURDAY 7:30 P. M. AND SUNDAY, 2:30 AND 7:30 P. M.—JESSE WHITECOTTON

SUNDAY MORNING, 6:30—REV. J. W. HARRIS 9:30 PRAISE SERVICE—MAUDE KAKE

=f

EACH NIGHT AT 7:30

FRED ABEL

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Louis G. Crafton and Mrs. Craf-

Ypten