Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 July 1941 — Page 5
47
| SATURDAY, JULY 12, i Mildred Frazee
r'o Be Married.)
This Afternoon Dr. Thomas White ¢ Will Officiate
‘Dr. Thomas B. Wile wis Oficial at the wedding o Mildred Frazee and Raymond Frederic Allen of New York at 5:30 o'clock this afternoon in the Second Presbyterian Church. Miss Frazee is the daughter of Mrs. Mae Ferree Frazee of 1005 N. Pennsylvania St., and Mr. Allen is the son of Mrs. Jon Frederic Allen of East Orange, N. J.
A program of bridal airs will be |
played before and during the ceremony by Dr. Charles F. Hansen, otganist. Altar decorations will be palms, ferns, white gladioli and single cathedral candles. The couple will be unattended. .
Bride. to Wear Linen
Entering alone; the bride will wear a street length frock of Blotta linen in off-white, made in two-piece style with bracelet-length sleeves. With it she will wear an Italian straw hat and white accessories and will carry a muff of greenery and blossoms shading from white through zold tones. 4 Her mother will be gowned in a green and white print with which she will have white accessories and a corsage of tuberous begonias. Aft-
er the ceremony the couple will mo- |
tor east. Miss Frazee is a graduate of Indiana University, where she was a
member of Alpha Omicron Pi Sor- |§
ority and Mortar Board. Mr. Allen was graduated from the University of California and Harvard Univer--gity and is a member of Delta Upsilon Fraternity. .
Phi Omega P1 Rush Tea Is
Tomorrow
Coeds who plan University in the fall will be guests of the Indiana Alumnae Club of Phi Omega Pi Sorority tomorrow at a tea from 3 to 5 p. m. in the Indianapolis Athletic Club. Mrs. A. E. Sporleder and Mrs. Glen L. Steckley will preside at the tea table. Mrs. Frank B. Lamb, general chairman, will be’ assisted by Mrs. John R. Haartje, Miss Lorene Reynolds, rush captain for the Indianapolis District, Miss Virginia Hunter and Miss Virginia Gray. . Out of town actives and alumnae planning to attend include Mrs. Fannie Weatherwax, Mrs. E. Fox, Miss Leota Bruner and Miss Mary K. Harris, Bloomington; the Misses Pauline Lowther, Rosemary Bailey and Dorothy Knoop, Gary, Mrs. Carl Broo, Kokomo; Mrs. Joseph Urban, Alexandria; Miss Dogothy Castle and Miss Rhead McCole, New Albany; Miss Marjorie Elliott, Jeffersonville; Miss Eleanor Taylor, Madison, Miss Georgeanna Giovanine, Hillsboro, and Miss Betty Bingham, Batesville. © Mrs. Clark Atkins, Bloomington, the province director; Miss Nell Jane Higginbathim, Gary, president of the I. U. Chapter, and Miss Betty Hauss, Cincinnati, are returning from State College, Pa, where they attended the sorority’s national convention and will attend the tea. :
Virginia Lemon To Be Married
A reception at the home of Mr. and Mr ed Stephens will follow the marriage of their daughter, Miss Virginia\ Lee Lemon, to Robert E. Mockbee; f R. L. Mockbee, tomorrow afternoon. - . The wedding will be at 3:30 o'clock in the Memorial Presbyterian Church. The Rev. Marcus Kendall will officiate. Ben Constable, vocalist, and Miss Virginia Byrd, organist, will provide a program of bridal airs. The altar will be decorated with palms and ferns and two bouquets of gladioli will flank the sides of the altar. : Mr. Stephens will give the bride . in marriage. She will wear a white marquisette dress made with a girdle of lace, a square neckline and short puff sleeves with lace trim. Mer fingertip veil will fall from a halo of orange blossoms. She will carry a bouquet of Johanna Hill roses with an orchid center. ; Her matron of honor, Mrs. Willard Brittain, will be in pink marquisette fashioned with a tight bodice and bouffant skirt and short puff sleeves. A halo of roses will match her arm bouquet of yellow roses. The junior bridesmaid, Miss Marthena Smith, a cousin of ihe bride, will have a dress of turquoise marquisette made on princess lines. She will have a halo of pink roses and arm bouquet of the same flowers. Mrs. Stephens will wear a navy ensemble with white accessories and eorsage of mixed flowers. After a motor trip north, the couple will be at home at 1558 Col= lege Ave. after Aug. 1.
1941
Wed in
to enter Indiana | §
The bride is the daughter of Mrs. Mark A. O'Hara, 3254 Graceland Ave., and Mr. Brown is the son of Walter Brown of Chicago. Pedestal baskets of white flowers were arranged at the chapel altar and Miss Helen Shepard, organist, played a program of hridal airs for the ceremony. The bride, entering with her brother, James O’Hara, was gowned in white taffeta fashioned with a square neckline, fitted bodice, and a full skirt falling into a train. Her fingertip length veil was held by a cabochon of net flowers and she carried an arm bouquet of white roses and gardenias. ; Her sister, Mary Margaret, was her only attendant. She wore pink
with a short-sleeved bolero jacket. A short pink net veil which she wore was held by a crown of pink roses and delphinium matching her bouquet. The bridegroom’s atténdants were his brothers, Earl and Harold, both of Chicago, best man and usher, respectively. Richard Fogarty also served as an usher. The bride's mother chose a blue and white printed sheer with which she wore navy accessories and a| corsage of gardenias and pink roses, A: breakfast at the Indianapolis Athletic Club after the ceremony was to be followed by a reception at the O'Hara home during the afternoon.
Is to Take Trip North
For a motor trip north, the bride will wear a printed silk jersey frock in shades of blue, yellow and white, a blue and yellow straw hat veiled in blue, and white accessories. The couple will be at home after next week with the bride’s mother. Mrs. Brown is a graduate of the
Nursing. Among out-of-town guests attending the ceremony were Mr. and Mrs. Conrad Herrman, Mesdames Walter Brown, Earl Brown and Marie Barry, Missés Frances Grabow, Margaret and Mary Barry and Isadore O'Hara, and Alfred Conrad, all of Chicago. Also attending were Francis J. O'Neill, Cleveland; Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Dillon, Ft. Wayne; Mrs. Marion Harbert' and Mrs. Edward Layden, Hoopeston, Ill.; Mr. and Mrs. John: Walsh, Terre Haute; Mrs. Henry O'Hara and Misses Honora and Marie O'Hara, Tipton, and Mr. and Mrs. William derson. :
Entertain Soldiers From Ft. Harrison
Doris Sohn Wed To C. A. Deer
The Rev. E. A. Piepenbrok read the double ring ceremony for Miss Doris Sohn, daughter of Mrs. Margaret Sohn, and Charles A. Deer, son of Mr. and Mrs, Frank Deer, this ‘morning at 8:30 o'clock in St. ~ John’s Evangelical and Reformed
vocalist, a JEogeam of bridal airs. bride wore a white linen
t| At Lake Wawasee
The first of a series of entertainments for soldiers stationed at Ft. Harrison was to be held at 2 p. m. today at 2929 Guilford Ave. Among those arranging the entertainments which are to be held each Saturday for groups of 15 soldiers are Mrs. Sheila Shideler, ersville; Mr. and Mrs. Ray Thomas and Ralph Boles. Dancing, cards and outdoor activities are planned for the men and an évening meal will be served. Groups of girls, are to act as hostesses and assist in ! ;
The persons organizing entertainments hope that a number of similar entertainment centers may be set up in homes large enough to accommodate large groups of the Soldiers, and are offering information on the project to persons in-
.
The Misses Virginia Foster, Bar-
* | bara Beggs, Colleen Laster and Jean
Ruschaupt are spending the weekend at the South Shore Inn on Lake Wa : sed Bon Ton Club to Dance A dance and card party will be
held. at 7:30 p. m. tomorrow by the ‘Bon Ton Club, 323 E. New Tone St
St.. Vincent's Hospital School off
C. Hollingsworth was Miss Marguerite Bernatzs, daughter of Mr. and Mn, Louts J. Bernatz, before " her marriage on June 21 in the St. Joan of "Are Catholle Church. Dr.
and Mrs. Hol- |
lingsworth are ‘at home _ in the Sheldrake Apartments.
Bretzman Photo.
Breakfast at I A.C. Follows Catherine O'Hara's Marriage To Leo Patrick Brown
The Most Rev. John F. O'Hara of New York officiated at the wedding of his cousin, Miss Catherine O'Hara, and Lee Patrick Brown at 10 o'clock this morning in the Blessed Sacrament Chapel of SS. Peter and Paul Cathedral. Bishop O'Hara, former president of the University of Notre Dame, is the military delegate of the Army and Navy Diocese.
Riley E. Miles Takes Bride «
Miss Anna Mae Gilday, daughter of ‘Mr. and Mrs. Martin Gilday, and Riley E. Miles were married this morning in a ceremony performed by the Rev. Fr. Hilary Meny in St. Philip Neri Catholic Church. Palms and flowers’ were used to decorate the altar. Miss Helen Brook, organist, played a program of bridal airs and the church choir sang the
organza made in full skirted style mass
The bride, who was given in marriage by her father, was gowned in a whiter marquisette dress, trimmed in lace, and a fingertip
weil which fell from a cap of lace.
She wore a pearl necklace, a gift of the bridegroom, and carried a
sheaf of white lilies. s Her sister, Miss Agnes Gilday, was her maid of honor. Another sister of the bride, Rosalind, and Miss Frances Bretthauer were the bridesmaids. They wore frocks of chiffon, tiaras of flowers in their hair and carried bouquets of assorted flowers in pastel shades. Miss Agnes was in bjue; Miss Rosalind, in yellow and Miss Bretthauer in pink. Philip Prieshoff was best man and John Dudley and Joseph Bretthauer, ushers. ' . Mrs. Gilday, mother.of the bride, wore a brown chiffon street frock and a corsage'of roses and asters. Mrs. Miles, the bridegroom’s mother,
{chose a- brown. chiffon frock and
corsage of roses. The couple: left on a motor trip north and will be at home after Aug. 15 at 3510 N. Meridian St.
Bride
Pra
P. Maroney, An-|
Tri Delts Enroll
For Red Cross Work
~ Mrs. Thorngren Heads Unit
resulted :n the scheduling of sum-
the organization’s history. -The Alliance recently organized a new Red Cross unit at a tea at the home of Mrs. Marvin Lugar. Day and evening meetings will be held to enable the group to enroll practically its entire m 3 Many members have volunteered to continue working through the summer despite leaving the city for vacations and are taking work with them to return it in the fall. Mrs. John L. Thorngren is general chairman for the unit, assisted by Mrs. Lugar, chairman for day meet. and Miss Ruth Shewmon, chairman for night meetings. The next meeting will be held on Wednesday at the home of Mrs. G. Schuyler Blue, 4701 E. 78th St.
| Yarn is to be distributed.
Meyer, Merritt Thompson, Harry Houghtalen, William Walker, Murray DeArmond, Harry Hooley, Fred Howenstine, Elbert Gilliom and Frederick L. Barrows and the Misses Shewmon, Helen Tichenor, Frances Longshore, Elizabeth Johnson, Alice Evans, Sara E. Baird, Frances Stalker and Lucille Wade. -
Rev. Alderton To Read Rite
Floyd Chapman will give his sister, Miss Dorothy Lucille Chapman, in marriage tomorrow when she becomes the bride of Sylvester A. Strong, son of Mr, and Mrs. §. M. Strong. The bride-to-be is the daughter of Mrs. John T. Lents. The Rev. Ivan C. Alderton will officiate at the service in the Belmont United Brethren Church. Mrs. Alderton, pianist, will play a program of bridal airs. The attendants will be Miss Grace Gorrell, maid of honor, Miss Mar= jorie Selky and Miss Louise Rust, bridesmaids; Mary Ann Lents, the bride-to-be’s sister, ringbearer; William Strong, brother of the bride-groom-to-be, best man, and Leroy Selky, Edward Bopp, John Harold Garver and William Sipe, ushers. The bride-to-be will wear a white satin dress, princess style. The hemline will be tucked up in front with two tiny sprays of orange blossoms. Orange blossoms will form the tiara from which the full length veil will fall. The bridal bouquet will be of lilies and white roses. The maid of honor and bridesmaids will have dresses of organdy made with drop shoulders and full skirts. Miss Gorrell will carry pink roses and will wear ribbons of a matching shade in her hair. Miss Selky will wear blue and have red roses and red ribbons for her hair and Miss Rust will be in pale yellow and carry tearoses with pea green ribbon streamers and matching ribbons in her coiffure, Little Miss Lents will wear white taffeta and carry the rings on a white satin and lace pillow. A reception at the home of Mrs. Lents will follow. The couple’s at home address will be 1418 Hiatt St.
Couple to Take Trip to Dells
A trip to the Dells in Wisconsin will * follow the marriage of Miss Theodora Morgan, daughter of Mrs, Lucy Morgan, to Richard E. Pfister, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Pfister, tonight. The couple will be married at 7:30 p. m. in St. Matthews Episcopal Church by the Rev. Willard Yoder. The altar, before which the will be read, will be decorated with palms and ferns and two bouquets of gladioli. ' Robert Taylor, violinist, and Edward Holloway, organist, will play bridal airs. Miss Helen Ruegamer, the bride’s. maid of honor, will wear a pink taffeta
pink net and will carry &n oldfashioned bouquet of pink roses and blue delphinium. Richard Erward will be Mr. Pfister’s best man and Robert Jackson will usher, The bride, who Will be given in marriage by her uncle,. Frank P
Endsley; will wear a white embroidered organdy gown made with a long waistline, full skirt and
sweetheart neckline. Her finger-
veil and cap will be edged with lace. She will carry a shower bouquet of white gladioli. A reception at the parish house
Out-of-town guests at the wedding will include the bride's sister, Mrs. Clarence Kerberg, Franklin;
mer meetings for the first time in|.
gown and an open crowned hat of |
tip veil will fall from a cap. Both|S
et
By EMMA RIVERS MILNER WITH THE SAME lack of fanfare with which he “took off” 63 pounds of excess weight, Bob
Defense work of the Indianapolis! day Alliance of Delta Delta Delta has|
self. Now he is 6: ft. 3 in: high and weighs 166. : Bob made contact with Senators Gerald P. Nye (R. N. D. and Burton K. Wheeler (D. Mont) when they visited Indiana, secured their autographs and told them about the Shortridge Senate. ‘He was & member of the Shortridge Honor Society and won the Hayward-Barcus American Legion Post essay award this year. He teaches a Sunday School class in the junior départment; is president of the Christian .Endeavor Society; vice president of the Disciples’ Youth Fellowship Meet for Indiana, and a member of the interfaith Social Recreation
Mortgage ‘Burning Set
Asbury Memorial Ceremony ‘To Be Tomorrow,
The church mortgage will be burned in the newly air-conditioned, redecorated auditorium of the ASBURY MEMORIAL METHODIST CHURCH tomorrow at 10:30 a. m. William Terrell and Mrs. Terrell will sing at the services in charge of the Rev, C. M. Croft Mrs. Kroft, pastors, : ; t t 4 = Traffic will be diverted from Meridian St. between North and Walnut Sts. tomorrow at 8:15 p. m. so that the carillon program broadcast from the Scottish Rite Cathedral may be heard. :
Children's Sermon
A feature of the worship service in which both the church school and the congregation unite at 10:06 a. m. in the WOODRUFF UNITED RESBYTERIAN CHURCH is a children’s sermon. The children’s sermon delivered tomorrow by the Rev. Walter Farris, supply pastor, is “The Egg of Columbus.”
® 8 =
An old fashioned singing convention with services all day and a noon basket dinner in Garfield Park will be sponsored tomorrow by the BEREAN MISSIONARY BAPTIST CHURCH, The convention is to celebrate the third : anniversary of the church which began with 35 charter members in a private home. The congregation, now is 300.
DIST AND - THE GRACE BAPTIST CHURCHES will assist with the program. The Duncan sisters from Greenville, S. C., and the Denver Bible Institute Quartet of Denver, Colo., will sing. . Speakers include Rev, Porter, ey tor, H. O. Parris and the Rev. R. D. McCarthy of the THIRTY-FIRST
TIST CHURCH. 9:30 and 10:35 a. m. and at 2:30, 6:30 and 7:45 p. m.
—~ 2 =»
Sings af Vespers:
{land making other words, such as
indispensable) sometimes hides the meaning or weakens Translation into: this literal, everyday English will give new pleasure and Jone to
he already with the Scriptures.
[dd
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Ale
,emmer, Leader at Shortridge, Directs Northwood Church Play-Hour
SR pl fh 1 rk nly My cain
Bob Gemmer awards Billy Spencer with a camera for being present at church-play-hour 52 out of 55 Sundays. Jimmy McCallum looks on.
Institute of the Y. M. C. A. He is a temperance worker and does not smoke, » 8 o ~ THE PLAY-HOUR DIRECTOR also edits a Northwood Church paper; is associate editor of the Marion County Christian Church School Reporter, and writes the Northwood Church notes for the Northside Topics and the Northside Press. Since the children come ‘to the play-hour immediately after the church school session, Bob does not attempt to instruct them, but ‘has arranged a program of worth-
|New Testamen | English Is Pleasant to Read
A becok of historic importance has been published by E. P. Dutton &
Co.—The Bible in Basic English.
provide a quick and easy way of teaching our difficult language to foreigners, to adults of limited education, and to children. It is already used for this purpose on four continents. For example, “branch” is one of the 850 words but not “bough,” because “branch” has the sense not only of “branch of a tree” but “branch of a railway,” “branch of a bank,” and so on. Simple es are given for using the basic wor
“coal-mine” from “coal” and “mine,” and “player” and “played” from “play.” : The English verb has offered the most difficulty. In the basic system there are only 18 verbs, with the auxiliaries “may” ‘and “will,” and 12 of them are names of simple physical operations — “give, get”; “take, put”; “come, go”; “keep, let”; “make,” and “say,” “see,” “send.” The other four are “do,” “have,” “be” and “seem.” It is possible to put together the names for simple operations with the words for directions, qualities, and so on. For example, “get off the ship” for “disembark”; “put in” for “insert”; “take out” for “extract”; “put up” for “erect.” Thus combinations of .these 850 words equal 20,000 words in general use. To these 850 words have been added 50 Bible words and 100 verse words, making a total of 1000 words used in this version of the Bible, - The question is whether the Bible in basic English will have interest and value to the educated reader as well as to the simple, The answer is yes. The very familiarity and grandeur of phrase in
its force.
the man who thinks thoroughly familiar
while recreation for them. They color outline pictures with Easter, Christmas, Thanksgiving and other
themes, in season; model with.
clay; make designs with colored bits of cardboard or wood, and play store, using cardboard money, and other games. Careful playhour records are kept, prizes are given for long attendance, and now and then there is a party with simple refreshments. Are you surprised that numerous persons in Indianapolis are wondering how they will get along without Bob Gemmer when he enters Indiana University as a pre-law student in September?
tin Basic
Basic English is a simple form of English with which it is possible to say everything for all everyday purposes. It makes use of a vocabulary of only 850 words. Basic English is not intended to replace the English language as a whole, which contains. 414,825 words. But it does
ing, the New Testament takes 548 pages. It is presented like an ordinary novel] and makes easy and pleasant reading. Here is an example of the Bible in basic English:
13TH CHAPTER OF I CORINTHIANS
“If IT make use of the tongues of men and of angels, and have not love, I am like sounding brass, or a loud-tongued bell. And if I have a prophet’s power, and have knowledge of all secret things; and if I have all faith, by which mountains may be moved from their place, but have not love, I am nothing. And if I give all my goods to the poor, and if I give my body to be burned, but have not love, it is of no profit to me.
“Love is never tired of waiting;
love has no high opinion of itself, love has no pride; love's ways are ever fair, it takes no thought for itself; it is not quickly made an- , it has no thought of -evil; it es no pleasure in wrong-doing, but has joy in what is true; love has the power of undergoing all things, having faith in all things, hoping all things, Though the prophet’s word may come to an end, tongues come to nothing, and knowledge have no value, Jove has no end. For our knowledge is only in part, and the prophet’s word gives only a part of what is true; but when that which is complete is come, then that which is in part will be no longer neces- - Sary. “When I was a child, I made
love is kind; love has no envy; |!
does the soul.
tation.”
New Feature
ls Scheduled At Institute
Graduate Course fo Be Opened Tomorrow at Methodist Park.
An entirely new feature, a grade uate institute for an expected 200 youths, 18 and over, will be pree sented at the annual Riverdale Ine stitute opening tomorrow at Bishop Roberts Park, near Mitchell, Ind, In addition to the graduate Ine stitute which will continue tomore row through Friday, there will be
a camp for boys and girls, 10 to 14 years, July 21 to 26; and the institute of the Methodist Youth. Fel lowship, July 27 to Aug. 83. Young e from Methodist Churches in apolis and in the state south 4Q are to attend. en W. Fifer of Indiane conduct the course, “Pie alities in Christian Hise : d Dr. C. A. McPheeters, ! this city, the course, “The Church, Its Nature and Mission.” Dr. E. R. Bartlett, dean of De« Pauw University and president of the Indiana Council of Religious Education, will teach the class on au ns Pucatienal Task of the urch”; an . Frank R. Greer ot Maftisvil e, Ind. president of o ana Conference Council of Methodist Youth, on “Belief Matter.” ols Tha The Rev. Lee 8. Jarrett of Brooke ville, Ind., will be dean of the new graduate institute designed to fit the needs of young people who are graduates of earlier institutes. Dr, James Chubb of Baker University, Baldwin, Kas, will lead morning
-| watch and evening devotions,
Lutherans to Meet
Approximately 100 young United Lutherans of Indianapolis are exe pected to attend the 44th annual convention of Luther League of Indiana, tomorrow and Monday, at Oakwood Park on Lake Wawasee. Some of the young folk are plane
ning to remain, after the close of the convention, for the summer school for Indiana United Lutheran church léuders opening Tuesday.
{The Rev. Arthur L. Mahr, pastor of
the First United Lutheran Church here, will teach the summer school course, “The Church Worker and His Preparation.” Dr. Henry E, Turney, also of Indianapolis, president of the Indiana United Lutheran Synod.
Convention are to be the Rev. K. B, Neumann, head of Luther League promotion in Illinois; Al Schaediger, resident of the Luther League of erica; and the Rev. R. A. Daube, former foreign missionary now a pastor at South Bend, Ind. In addition to the Rev. Mr. Mahr, others to be heard at the summer school include Miss Ruth Juram of India; the Rev. E. T. Horn of
Schmidt of Columbia, 8. C.
Day of Prayer Set At Marian College
A Day of Recollection, sometimes called “a stepping stone to a ree treat,” will be conducted for lay women, Sunday, July 20, at Marian College on the Cold Springs Road. The Rev. Fr. Theodore Kohnen C. 8. 8. R. of Lebanon, Ind., retreat master, will give the conference talks. The Day of Recollection, al-= though shorter than a retreat which usually lasts from 24 hours to seve eral days, has the same purpose and atmosphere. It is sponsored by the Indiana Chapter of the Internae tional Federation of Catholic Ale umnae. , “Soul's Vacation” Church officials who have studied the retreat movement, point out that just as the body needs a change of air and surroundings so Thus the Day of Recollection, and all retreats, might be termed the “soul's vacation.” At Marian College, with the quiet
chapel, spacious grounds and wooded
campus, laywomen of Indiana say they intend to “go apart for a while to listen to the voice of God.” Shut-
ting out the distractions of everyday living, they plan to give themselves
to “re prayer and medi-
Started in 1936
is .
use of a child's language, I had ‘a child's feelings and a child's thoughts: now that I am a man I have put away the things of a child. For now we see things in a glass, darkly; but then face to face: Now my knowledge is in
part; then it will be complete, even as God's. knowledge of me. Buf now we still have faith,
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Romance Begun in Church
To End in Church Wedding|$it:
hope, love, these three; and the greatest of these is love.”
the Indiana Chap Miss Bettie Wolf is state chairman
Movement was inaugurated in 1936: to encourage retreats among women and girls of all walks of life. Ace cording to the Rev. Fr. John J, Doyle, Ph.D., moderator of lay re treats for Indiana, the movement has grown steadily during the five years. The general retreat movee
ment. started in France in the 17th century. tort 13 ane of the best ways to
me fo know Our Lord better, to
love Him better, and to serve Him more faithfully,” Father Doyle said.
Miss Marie Lauck is. of
ter of I. F. C. A;
The Rev. Mr. Ranes escorted Miss Hartzell home from church one Sunday evening and that|is how their romance started. Vocal selections with a spiritual theme will be sung at the wedding
istoric ot
Morning Comm
Henty' Ve
er was “Sein . pi
11 AM.
Mission singer, and Dr. W. P. Dear
Hashingion Park Gamuary
wi be. pleased . with your
TABERNACLE PRESBYTERIAN
34TH and CENTRAL
Dr. Roy Ewing Vale
Washington ark Sumsery
‘Hear JESSE
SALEM PARK CAMP MEETING of the MISSIONARY BANDS h WHITECOTTON, Evangelist, 10:30 Song Director
CETE Ee —SUNC Y, 2 PM
a
Speakers of the Luther League
or
Ithaca, N. Y., and Prof, John
The Catholic Laywonmen’s Retreat
Es SLT a BE
