Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 August 1941 — Page 5
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SATURDAY, AUG. 16, Grandtather
Of Bride Will Read Service
0’Malley-Scheidler Rite Is Tomorrow
The bride's grandfather, the Rev. I. M. Scheidler of Cambridge City, will officiate at the wedding of Miss Mary Scheidler and John Jackson Q'Malley tomorrow afternoon. The ceremony will take place in the garden at the home of the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph R. Scheidler, 3434 E. Kessler Blvd. Mr. O'Malley is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Lawson O'Malley. Miss Mary Catherine Stair, harpist, will play for the ceremony which is to be read at a rock garden bordering the terrace. The bridal party will stand between flanking arrangements of vari-colored urns holding garden flowers. The bride has chosen a powder blue alpaca dress in street length with a voke and sleeves of matching Chantilly lace. The lace outlines an apron effect over the skirt. She will wear a matching straw picture hat trimmed with dark brown grosgrain, blue linen sandals and a corsage of white orchids.
Sister to Be Attendant
A softly tailored pink silk jersey dress will be worn by Miss Jean Scheidler, her sister's maid of honor, with a white picture hat, brown and white shoes and a cersage of white roses and blue delphinium. Colton Rogers will be best man. Mothers of the couple will wear rose corsages with their ensembles. Mrs. Scheidler’s corsage will be of yellow matching the yellow felt hat she is to wear with a dark brown] marquisette frock and brown ac-| cessories. Red roses will accent Mrs. O'Malley's black silk jersey peplum frock worn with a black milan hat and black accessories. Assisting at a reception after the ceremony will be Mesdames Paul Isley, William Woolley, J o hn Combs, Jack Curtis, Robert Merrill and R. E. Biser, Misses Marguerite Ellis, Bonnie Jean Drechsel, June Billeter and Martha Egger. Guests will be seated at vari-colored umbrella tables dotting the lawn, After a motor trip north the couple will be at home, Sept. 1, at 5727 Central Ave.
Lynch-Fritz Ceremony Is Performed
In a ceremony at 9 o'clock this morning in Sacred Heart Catholic Church, Miss Lucille Marie Fritz,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles J. Fritz, 437 Sanders St., became the bride of William P, Lynch, son of Martin Lynch. The Rev. Fr. Egbert Fischer of Mt. Airy Seminary in Cincinnati read the wedding service.
wp li The bride entered alone, wearing pacer Chicago; Mrs. A. G. Kendall, [riage service.
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lat 6022 Crittenden Ave.
{of Mr. and Mrs.
Marriage Is Announced
Mrs, Charles Barnhill was Miss Phyllis Grace Landis, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Rex | Dowell Landis, before her marriage Aug. 8. Mrs. Barnhill attended Indi- § ana University and is a member of Pi Beta Phi Sorority. Mr. Barnhill is attending the Indiana University Law School and belongs to Phi Delta Theta Fraternity.
Miller-Y oung Rite Followed By Breakfast
Following a wedding breakfast at Whispering Winds this morning. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond F. Miller were to leave on a motor trip north and will be at home after Sept. 1 The bride was Miss Sylvia Young, daughter Henry C. Young, 1125 N. Oxford St., before her marriage at 9 o'clock in St. Philip Neri Church. The Rev. Fr. Albert Busald read the service at an altar decorated with gold altar vases of white gladioli and candelabra. Miss Marie Pfleger was the bride's maid of honor and Mrs. LaRue Carraway her bridesmaid. Mr. Carraway stood
with Mr. Miller as best man and]
ushers were Arthur and Raymond Wittman. , Given in marriage by her father, the bride wore a gown of whiie velveray marquisette, made on princess lines with a sweetheart neckline, long fitted sleeves puffed at the shoulders and a long train. Her two-tiered fingertip veil fell from a wreath of orange blossoms, She carried a shower bouquet of white roses, The attendants were in frocks of marquisette, topped with lace bodices made with sweetheart necklines and short puffed sleeves. Inserts of the |lace were in the skirts. Miss Pfleger was in pink and wore a halo of pink taffeta with a shoulder veil, while Mrs. Carraway had a similar headdress matching a blue gown. Both carried colonial bouquets of mixed | flowers. { For traveling, Mrs. Miller is wearling a jungle green jacket dress with (a matching hat and brown and | white accessories. Out-of-town guests at the cere-
Photo Crt Photo. Legion Auxiliary Unit Installs Officers
Mrs. Elsie Collins will begin her year as president of Memorial Unit 3, American Legion Auxiliary, in September. She succeeds Mrs. Gladys Pribble. Mrs. Collins was installed recently with other new cfficers and board mempers. Officers of the unit include Miss Irene Sattelle, first vice president; Mrs. Lillian Acton, second vice president; Mrs. Eva Van Meter, recording secretary; Mrs, Helen Munger, corresponding secretary; Miss Rosemary Kirkhoff, treasurer; Mrs. Barbara Moore, chaplain; Mrs. Dessie E. Meyers, historian, and Mrs. Marie O'Donohoe, sergeant-at-arms. Executive board members, in addition to the officers. are Mesdames Bessie Sammons, Vivian Hughes and Elsie Arata. Delegates to the 12th District Council are Mrs. Collins and Mrs. Elsie Johnson and alternates are Mrs. Margaret Feath'erstone and Mrs. Emily Francke,
Couple to Take Wedding Trip
to Wawasee *
A wedding trip to Lake Wawasee will follow the marriage of Miss Loretta Mae Herndon and Richard L. Miller at 8:30 p. m. today in the Olive Branch Christian Church. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry L. Herndon, 2509 Union St., and Mr. Miller is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Stanley J. Miller of Edgewood.
Palms and ferns interspersed with candelabra and white flowers will decorate the altar at which the Rev.
ony were Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Ephraim D. Lowe is to read the mar-
Mrs. Ralpn O. Ste-
a white lace and net frock in full-| pact St Louis, Ill; Mr. and Mrs.|phens, organist, will play bridal airs skirted style and a fingertip-length| 5 L. Pond and Mr. and MTs. Ed- and Jess Gasaway will sing “Be-
veil. She carried white asters. Miss Florence Baumann, maid of honor, carried lavender asters with her peach lace and net frock and Miss Peggy Lynch, sister of the bridegroom and bridesmaid, carried pink asters with a pale blue lace and net dress. David and Joseph Lynch, brothers of the bridegroom, were best man and usher, respectively, and Thomas Mulhern was another usher, The bride’s mother chose a navy lace costume with which she wore a pink aster corsage. A breakfast at Bluff Crest followed the ceremony and an informal reception was to be held this afternoon at the home of the bride's parents. As the couple leaves for a wedding trip north the bride will wear a blue silk print with black accestories. They will be at home in Indianapolis upon their return.
New York Trip To Follow Rite
gar Barger, Fairland; Judge and] | Mrs. George Barger and Mrs. Earl | Eads, Shelbyville.
Rev. Fr. Pfau Performs Ceremony
Following their marriage this morning in the Church of the Lit{tle Flower, Mr. and Mrs. Howard 'J. Birch will receive friends this |afternoon at the home of the bride's mother, Mrs. Mary Farmer, 629 N.
cause” and “Ah, Sweet Mystery of Life.” The bride, who will be escorted hy her father, will wear a gown of embroidered mousseline and lace made on princess lines with sweetheart neckline, long, pointed sleeves and a lace paneled train. Her long veil of illusion will fall from an orange blossom halo and she will carry white asters. Her only attendant, Miss Dorothy Hier, will wear a Grecian style frock of French biue chiffonese with long, full sleeves, a satin girdle and a high, round neckline with satin ties, Blue ribbon streamers will hold deep pink asters in her
quet of matching asters. Robert H. Miller will be his
Grant St. Mrs. Birch was Miss Mary Ruth Farmer prior to the 9 o'clock ceremony read by the Rev. Fr. Jerome Pfau. | Miss Margaret Farmer was her [sister's only attendant. Mr, Birch, the son of Richard J. Birch, had Louis Ostheimer standing with him as best man and as ushers William
Robert Spauiding of Dayton, O. With a white crepe costume suit, the bride wore a small ribbon hat,
brother's best man and ushers will |be Harvey L. Herndon, the bride's brother, Thomas Esmon and Mer(rill Dodds. | Mrs. Herndon, mother of the bride, will wear a beige costume | with summer brown accessories and
‘a Talisman rose corsage. Mrs. Mil-| Farmer. a brother of the bride, and |ler’s black sheer with white accents
{will be worn with black accessories |and gerdenias. { Leaving immediately
after the
The Rev. Louis Crafton will read Whi'e accessories and a corsage of ceremony, the bride will wear a
the wedding service tonight at 8:30 o'clock for Miss Mary Louise Causey and Edwin O. Hammer, The altar of the Garfield Park Baptist Church will be decorated with palms and ferns and flanked by candelabra for the ceremony. Miss Causey is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Causey, 2459 Madison Ave., and the bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. E. O. Hammer, 309 S. Lyons St. Preceding the service, a musical program will be given by Miss Ruth Schaefer, organist; James Waltz, violinist, and Miss Wilma Bell, soloist. Mrs. Reid Owens will be her sister's only attendant and Clarence Causey will stand with Mr. Hammer as best man. Ushers will be Robert Ecton and Earl Causey, the .bride’s brother. Mr. Causey will give his daughter in marriage. At the reception in the garden of the Causey home, the wedding cake will stand on a table covered with a white linen eloth. Donna Lee White, Billy Galloway and John Macknany will'present a program of accordion music for reception guests, including several from out-of-town, Mr. and Mrs. Hammer will leave by train for New York. Following their wedding trip they will be at home in Indianapolis.
Sunnyside Guild Will Sew Monday
Sunnyside Guilds Red Cross Chapter will hold its 33d meeting since its organization in January on
Monday from 10 a. m. to 4 p. m. at the summer home of Mrs. George Kohistaedt on White River.
Many members of the chapter
have nearly perfect attendance records for the spring and summer. For several months meetings have been held in summer homes and country estates furnished by Guild workers.
Picnic Tomorrow
The annua] picnic of the Co-Wa-Ma Club will be held at 3:30 p. m.
Johanna Hill roses. Her sister was in powder blue worn with a matching hat, natural linen accessories land a corsage of rubrum lilies, The (orchid print gown worn by Mrs. Farmer was accented with white accessories and a corsage of yellow roses. | A wedding breakfast followed the ceremony. For a motor trip Mrs. Birch will wear a green dressmaker |suit with white accessories. Out of town guests were Dr. and Mrs. Francis Gallen and Mr. and Mrs. Harry Shay, Columbus, O. and Mrs. Robert Spaulding, Dayton.
| Drury-Weidlich Rite Is This Morning
A wedding trip to Chicago is to | follow the marriage at 11:30 o'clock (this morning of Miss Frances Weid(lich, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George E. Weidlich, 4123 Boulevard |Place, to Sergt. Joseph A. Drury Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Drury Sr. are here from Noroton Heights, Conn. to attend the service. The Rev. Fr. Thomas Clark was to officiate at the ceremony in the Blessed Sacrament Chapel of SS. Peter and Paul Cathedral. Attendants for the couple were to be Miss Jean Drury and Jack Drury, sister and brother of the bridegroom. The bride was to be given in marriage by her father. Her costume was to be a pale blue lightweight wool frock, worn with beige
corsage of gardenias. Sergt. Drury was to be in full dress uniform. Following a reception in the Weidlich home, the couple will leave on their trip, the bride wearing a light green wool suit trimmed in beaver and brown accessories, They will be at home next week at 225 E. Michigan St, the Holloway Apartments. Sergt. Drury is with the U. S. Marine Recruiting Service.
Pienie Is Tomorrow Miss Helen Wallin, 3501 N. Sherman Drive, will entertain members and rushees of Indiana Alpha Chapter, Delta Theta Chi Sorority, Monday evening at 7 o'clock with a
tomorrow at Camp Joy, Acton.
picnic supper and outdoor entertainment. . :
and British tan accessorie®and ag
| traveling costume of summe: brown silk suit and tan coat, deeper brown accessories and Talisman roses. The couple will be at home in Indianapolis after Sept. 1.
Sub Debs to Vacation At Shafer Lake
Members of the Dashing Debs Chapter, Sub Deb Federation, are leaving tomorrow morning for a week's stay at Shafer Lake. They will gather at 10:30 a. m., tomor-
irow, at the home of the president,
Miss Catherine McCotter, 1814 N. Rural St. . Chaperons will be Mrs. Mildred Loflin and Mrs. Bonnie Black. The girls will honor Miss McCotter and Mrs. Loflin with a birthday party Monday night.
Chairman
Kindred Photo. Mrs. Iris Lynch heads the committee on arrangements for the dinner which the Indianapolis Business and Professional Women’s Club will have Thursday at
khair and she will carry an arm bou- |
The Bridal Scene— Bridge Party Tuesday Fetes Helen E. Fehr
Emma B. Fromhold Names Attendants
Engagement announcements and notes on showers for young women to be married here are included in today's story of pre-nuptial activities. Miss Emma Blanche Fromhold’s engagement to Delmar H. Wilson has been announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Joseph Fromhold, 3970 Broadway. Mr. Wil-
son is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry N. Wilson, 333 Cable St. The wedding will be next Saturday in the St. Joan of Arc Catholic Church. Miss Fromhold has named her sister, Dorothy Anne, as her maid of honor; another sister, Mary Elizabeth, as bridesmaid, and the Misses Sylvia and Judy Johnson as ring bearer and flower girl, respectively, L. Wilbur Kaufman will be best man. A shower will be given for Miss Fromhold on Monday evening by Mrs. Wendell S. Smith, 1655 N. Alabama St. = The hostess was Miss Dorothy E. Moore before her marriage in June. With Mrs. and Miss Fromhold the guests will be the Misses Mary Louise Booker, Clementine and Dorothy Beckerich, Delia Dugan, Katherine Ford, Anna Gaska, Winifred Galvin, Betty Greiner, Charlotte Heck, Victoria Kattany, Helen Lawler, Mary Jane Mannix, Mary Jo Maher, Irene Mitchell, Loretta McMannamon, Adele Massing, Elizabeth O'Hara, Adele Rababa, Anna Louise Roth, Dorothy Rail, Mary Kathryn Sexton, Gertrude Tripp, Margaret Widoff, Catherine Zink, Mary Bee and Dorothy Anne Fromhold; Mesdames Robert Barher, Arthur Cecil, Loretta Goory, John Greiner and Larry Zapp.
n ” Mrs. Willaim Fernandez, Miss Martha Lee Brenner and Miss Martha Harvey will entertain Tuesday evening at the Columbia Club for
Miss Helen Edith Fehr, whose marriage to S. Kirk Dinkins Jr. will take place Aug. 27. At the ceremony in the Broadway Methodist Church, the couple will be unattended. Hostesses for the dessert bridge and linen shower Tuesday were Delta Delta Delta Sorority members with Miss Fehr at Butler University. Guests invited to the party include Mrs. Harry Nevison and the Misses Jane Hardman, Naomi Harrington, Eloise Wilson, Ruth Cabalzer, Alice Belle Young, Esther Gray, Janice Murray, Jean Nevison, Mable Clift, Rosemary Lohman, Katherine Elgoth, Betty and Harriet Krueger.
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Miss Martha Fry, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Zeno Fry of Greenfield, was to become the bride of Woodrow Worrell this afternoon at 2 o'clock in the home of the Rev. George Snider of MecCordsville. After tomorrow they will be at home at 1202 N, New Jersey St. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. George Worrell of Beech Grove. Assisted by her daughter, Mrs. Wilford Furgason, Mrs. Worrell will give a miscellaneous shower for her daughter-in-law Wednesday evening at her home. Mrs. Fry will be among the guests. - Other guests will be Mesdames Fred Challis. Thomas Bodenhamer, Robert Rasner, Ralph Worrell, Erd Collins, Walter Worrell, Robert Challis, Clara Furgason, Myrtle Haymaker, Robert M, Worrell, Verl Pierson, Arch Pierson, Harry Pierson, Everett Harmening, Eugene Furgason, W. D. Stewart, Raymond Sachs and Roy Arnold; the Misses Mary Conway, Alice Fitzgibbon, Mary Kernodle, Wilma Worrell, | Ferris Bodenhamer, Elizabeth Wed- | dle, Allene Champion, Ruth Furgason, Margaret Pierson, Betty and { Dorothy Fry. 2 » { Mr. and Mrs. James Fletcher | Mitchell, 814 Weghorst St., have announced the engagement and approaching marriage of their daugh- | ter, Evelyn, to Richard W. Tubbs II, son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Tubbs, 819 Weghorst St. The wedding will take place next Saturday. Among showers and dinners planned for the couple is a party tomorrow night to be given for them by Miss Lucille Stanley, 2035 N. Meridian St. The parents of the engaged couple will be present. Approximately 40 guests have been invited,
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Miss Mary Bailey, daughter of Mrs. Blanche Bailey, who will be married Aug. 30 to Max W. Galloway, was honor guest at a surprise ‘miscellaneous shower given recently by Mrs. Jennie Galloway. Mrs. Wilburn Galloway assisted her mother-in-law. Guests included the Mesdames E. M. Carter, Forest Monical, Scott Teal and Bailey and Masters Buddy and Tommy Teal. 2 2
Mr. and Mrs. George Trexler, Lafayette, announce the engagement of their daughter, Betty June, to Robert E. Hall, son of Mr. and Mrs. P. B. Hall. The wedding will be Sept. 10 in Lafayette.
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Clarence Jackson Council Speaker Clarence A. Jackson, State Civilian
Defense Director, will be the speaker at the quarterly meeting of the
# (May Wright Sewall Indiana Coun-
cil of Women at 10 a. m. Thursday in the Hotel Lincoln. Each affiliated organization will report on its defense activities and the Kokomo Local Council will be
‘ {welcomed as a new member.
Miss Connie McLean will sing,
|accompanied by Miss Mary 'Lou
Wilkerson.
Visiting Here
Dr. Joseph B. Cooper, San Jose, Cal, is visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Cooper, 9124 E. Washington St. Dr. Cooper, in-
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES Former Traveling Salesman Now Gives Free Talks on Birds, Gideons and Religion
structor is psychology at California State College at San Jose, will be here until Sept. 1.
Pledge Party Tonight
Final pledge party of Verae Sorores Chapter, Verus Cordis Sorority, will be a slumber party tonight at the home of Miss Maryanna Perry, 4208 Boulevard Place.
By EMMA RIVERS MILNER
Doves do not carry branches nor does the ostrich hide his head in the sand, Emile. Walli will tell
you. The goose is a “wise old bird” while the owl, for all his reputation to the contrary, is quite foolish, he says. These, and other surprising facts of bird lore, Mr. Walli has woven into his lecture, “The Bird of the Bible.” He is a layman and one-time traveling salesman who now finds pleasure and diversion in giving free, religious talks to groups of all ages and denominations. Mr. Walli has spoken in Indiana and various other states. The bird talk is perhaps the lecturer's masterpiece. In it he describes a dramatic personal experience with an eagle. Mr. Walli was in the Garden of the Gods when he looked up one day and saw an eagle performing very strangely. The bird darted toward the earth then unexpectedly flew upward, several times, finally beginning to circle crazily, faster and faster, as if it had become dizzy. At last it suddenly flew downward, in the manner of an airplane in the falling leaf act, striking the earth and remaining still, Upon examination, Mr. Walli discovered the eagle stone dead with a leech fastened in its side. The moral is obvious: The blood sucking leech, small though death dealing, symbolizes wrong doing and its destructive grip upon the human spirit, The eagle, in spite of its title, “king of kings” among the birds, although unsurpassed in wingspread and strength, is classed as a bird of abdomination, in the Bible, Mr. Walli says. This is because the eagle, the raven, hawk, crow, buzzard and other such birds, according to Mosiac Law, were unfit for human food, were unclean and fed upon dead creatures. “Our -Bible,”. “Hast Thou Entered Upon the Treasures of the Snow,” “How Big Are You?” and “The Gideons” are titles of additional lectures presented hy Mr. Walli. He is a life member of the Gideons and feels that the organization has done great good by the distribution of Bibles in hotels, prisons, schools and other institutions. Mr. Walli gathered a great deal of his information about birds from a book by the Hoosier author, Gene Stratton Porter, also titled “The Birds of the Bible.” Mrs. Porter, who was a famed
Await 400 at U. B. Meeting
96th White River Parley To Be Aug. 26-29
About 400 representatives of 160 churches will attend the 96th annual session of the White River Conference of United Brethren Church to be held at the University Heights U. B. Church, Aug. 26-29,
composed of churches in central
Indiana, eastern Illinois and western Ohio. Some 30,000 United Brethren church members will be represented at the annual meeting here. Conference presiding officer will be the Rev. Fred L. Dennis, United Brethren Bishop. The conference will open Monday night with an adult rally. An attendance check, religious drama, and music has been scheduled for the evening program. Feature of the opening session will be an address hy R. G. Leturneau, Peoria, Ill, manufacturer, and president of the Winona Christian Association. He will speak on “The Layman’s Part in Church Work.” Formal welcome of delegates by conference superintendent, the Rev. vilgil G. Hunt, is scheduled for Tuesday morning. The conference will close Friday.
Peace Goals Set By Three Faiths
Times Special WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass., Aug. 16. —Reconstruction of the post-war world will be the theme of a nationwide gathering of Protestants, Catholic and Jews here, Aug. 24 to 29. The conference on the campus of Williams College is known as the 1941 Williamstown Institute of Human Relations, and will be the first nation-wide, inter-faith post-war reconstruction conference to be held in the country.
conference of this kind for its own denomination and the Federal Council of the Churches of Christ in America has appointed a peace commission which is at work on suggestions for a new world order. But representatives of the three major faiths will come together here, this month, to consider the aims on which Americans should co-operate in re-making a world shattered by war. Dr. Everett R. Clinchy, president of the National Conference of Christians and Jews, has announced that District Attorney Thomas E. Dewey of New York will open the Human Relations Institute by leading a panel discussion, “Inalienable Rights—Inescapable Duties.” Among the leaders in labor, business, education, religion and youth who will be present are Dorothy May, editor of the Catholic Worker; Harold K. Guinzberg, president of the Viking Press; David Hinshaw, Quaker Standard Oil official; Miss Mildred McAfee, president of Wellessley College, and James N. Rosenberg of the American Jewish Committee.
Sorority to Initiate
Formal initiation services for the new members: of the Indianapolis Chapters of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority will be held Tuesday at the Claypool Hotel under the direction of Mrs. Carol F. Guibert, field secretary, and officers of the six local chapters. Miss Eunice Johnson will be given an international honorary membership in the organization and
will serve as social sponsor for Beta Eta Chapter, ;
The White River Conference is|
The Methodist Church has held a’
'
8 tJ a
Emile Walli, bird lecturer, and Ralph Smith (left) examine the
huge brass eagle which forms the pal Cathedral. The eagle, similarly
to symbolize St. John’s Gospel in references found in both Ezekial and
in Revelation.
naturalist, went to the Holy Land to study the birds mentioned in the Scriptures before writing her book. Jack Miner, who founded the bird sanctuary in Ontario, Canada, not far from Detroit, also assisted the lecturer. Mr, Walli is a native of New York State and still carries an accent although Indianapolis has been his home for years. He was brought up without any religious emphasis, he says. He is now supervisor of work at Sunnyside Sanitorium with a large staff under him. He first became interested in religion because of the influence of his wife. They are both active
Latter-Day Saints To Hold Sessions
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints will hold a District Conference temorrow in the Villa Ave. and Prospect St. Chapel Leo J. Muir, president of the Northern States Mission with headquarters in Chicago, will address both the 10 a. m. and 2 p. m. sessions. The conference is one of the quarterly meetings of the church with members from the surrounding cities expected to attend. Arrangements are heing made by William Sharrer, president of the Indiana Region, and Reed P. Larson, district president.
Wheeler Club Services Set
Group Singing to Precede Breakfast.
An anonymous friend of the Wheeler City Rescue Mission will | sponsor the Sunday Morning Break-
| fast Club tomorrow at the Mission,
lin, song leader, will lead an 8 a. m. Gospel service, conducted by men of the Mission staff, preceding the breakfast, : Classes for all ages will be held at the Sunday school service at 2:30 p. m. tomorrow. An old-fash-ioned praise and testimony service will feature the weekly meeting of the Young People’s Fellowship at 6:30 p. m. and the regular Sunday evangelistic service will follow at 7:30 p. m. in the main chapel. The Rev. Herbert Eberhardt, mission superintendent, will speak. The Rev. George F. Snyder, pastor of the First United Brethren Church, will be the guest speaker at Monday's services, beginning at 8 p. m, Tuesday's meeting will be in charge of the mission's gospel teams, with the Rev. Robert D. McCarthy, pastor of the 31st Street Fundamental Church as speaker,
COX TO BROADCAST SUNDAY PROGRAMS
Otto N. Cox, Indianapolis attorney, will begin a weekly Sunday broadcast series Sept. 7 on WISH from Memorial Presbyterian Church. Mr. Cox, who will broadcast from 10 to 10:30 a. m. each Sunday, will discuss current events in their relation to the International Sunday School lessons. Harry B. Duncan, director of the Sahara Grotto Band, will have charge of the dedicatory musical
program. John McKee will be class announcer.
THE REV. ALDRICH RETURNS TO DUTY
The Rev. E. E. Aldrich and his family have returned from a fiveweek vacation at Nashau, N. H.,, and Buzzard’s Bay, Mass. Mr. Aldrich will take his place in the pulpit of the Roberts Park Methodist Church at 10:45 Sunday. His subject will be “The God Who Never Fails.”
At 7:45 he will preach on “The Recovery of Christ as Savior.”
'SOUL' TO BE TOPIC
“Soul” will be the lesson-sermon gtudied by all Christian Science churches tomorrow. The Golden Text is “Bless the Lord, O my soul, and all that is "within me, bless his Holy Name.” Psalms 193:1.
Friends Hold
| | |
{245 N. Delawgre St. George Hef-|
fill, Carl Hollingsworth, John Bis-
reading desk in All Saints Episcoused since the middle ages, is said
members of the First United Brethren Church. In addition to his lectures, he is the author of brief histories of the Meridian Street. Methodist and the Central Christian Churches and the Carmelite Monastery, The histories were written under the W. P, A. Writers’ Project. Mr. Walli keeps his lecture outlines and his writings in businesslike notebooks and saye he now puts the same “salesmanship” into selling ideas on Christian living, for the mere satisfaction of the doing, that he once put
— PAGE §] Election Set Tuesday For City Baptists
Permanent Council Also Will Certify New and Licensed Ministers.
The Indianapolis Baptist Asso ciation Permanent Council will meet at 7 p. m, Tuesday at the Acton Baptist Church to elect ofe ficers and authorize the issuance of certificates of good standing to ordained and licensed ministers for 1942. Dr. U. 8. Clutton, pastor of the Tuxedo Park Baptist Church, is president of the Council, which is composed of the pastor and two deacons from each of the 33 pare ticipating churches. The Rev. W, F. Buckner of the New Bethel Baptist Church is vice president, and the Rev. George T. King of the Emerson Avenue Bape tist Church is secretary.
Metz Heads Committee
Cimmittee on Ministerial Standing is headed by the Rev, Carl A. Metz of Lebanon. Other members are the Rev. Louis G, Crafton, Joseph Hutchinson and
Arthur D, Moore. The Rev. Charles H. Scheick, pastor of the Lynhurst Baptist Church, will make a report on the Committee of Ordination of which he is chairman. Others on the committee are Dr. George D. Billeie sen and William A. Rowland. The committee reviews the cree dentials of all candidates for ore dination. The provisions require a full college and seminary training.
The
Report On Licensing
The Rev. George G. Kimsey of the Memorial Baptist Church, will report on licensing of young men not yet qualified for ordination. The licenses must be renewed at the ree quest of the church concerned each year. Members of the Rev. Mr,
Kimsey's committee are the Rev, Floyd F. Smith, the Rev. G. W, Hartsock, Irvin Duncan and Henry C. Bearry. Courses of training for young ministers will be outlined by the Rev. Harold W. Ranes, chairman
into selling washing machines and other electrical appliances, for money,
84th Meeting
Western Session Scheduled | At Plainfield
Meeting of Friends will be held all next week, opening Monday afternoon, in the Friends Church at Plainfield. A highlight of the annual gather-
ing of Quakers from this section of the country will be a talk by Dr. Thomas E. Jones, director of civilian public service who is in charge of camps established for -conscifentious objectors. Dr. Jones will {speak Thursday evening. Committees to Report The opening session at 2 p. m. Monday will be the meeting on | Ministry and Oversight in charge of Albert L. Copeland of Vermillion | Grove, Ill. Among reports to he
(heard will be those of the peace and |garet Corlett and
[service committee, missions commit-
tee, temperance committee and stewardship committee. On Friday afternoon, President William C. Dennis of Earlham Col{lege will present a report on the college. Earlham students and young Quakers will hold a dinner in the evening. A Junior Conference will be held in the Plainfield High School concurrent with the adult sessions in charge of Miss Mildred E. Hinshaw, director of Christjan education at the First Friends Church here.
Services at 2lainfield
Dr. Errol T. Elliott, pastor of the First Friends Church, said there would be no services at his church a week from Sunday since the congregation will go to Plainfield for services to be held at 8:30 and 10 a.m and 2 p. m, Among those expected to attend the Western Yearly Meeting are Dr. Percy M. Thomas of Richmond, Ind., field secretary of the Five Years Meeting of Friends, and the Rev. Frederick E. Carter who is completing his eighth year as evan- | gelistic and church extension super- | intendent for the Western Meeting.
BROOKSIDE U. B. PRESENTS DRAMA
“prisoner at the Bar,” a drama, will be presented tomorrow night by a cast of 22 at the Brookside United Brethren Church. The presentation is one of the educational features of the Indiana Anti-Saloon League. Cast members are Roy Frazier, Walter Imel, Travis Annis, Paul Cox, Carl Neubauer, Bob Sacks, Mrs. Walter Imel, Frank E. Wright, Joyce Slack, Walter Cook, Mrs. Travis Annis, Mrs. Josephine Woolbright, Mrs. Ernest Stanfill, Mrs. Carl Neubauer, Mrs. Elmert Stuart, Mrs. Paul Cox, Ernest Stan-
selburg, Perry Piercy, Wardner Burney and Horace Taylor.
BEGIN REVIVAL MEETING
The Rev.and Mrs. Leonard Whitely and the Rev. and Mrs. William Carlisle will begin a two-weeks revival meeting at the Christian Union Tabernacle, 138 N. Noble St. at 7:30 p. m. tomorrow. The Rev. Mr. , Whitely was formerly pastor of the Nazarene Church at Bridgeport, Ind. The Rev. Vern Maple is pastor of the Christian Union Tabernacle. '
Second Presbyterian
This Historie Church of Wh Henry War eecher Was Minister Vermont and Pennsylvania Sts. JEAN 8, MIL D,
ich
Minister Morning Worship, 11 A. M
The 84th annual Western Yearly |
lof the Committee on Ministerial | Training. Members of his come | mittee are Dr. C. W. Atwater, the Rev. C. A. Wade, the Rev. R. H, Lindstrom and Royal McClain. The Permanent Council was formed in Indianapolis six years ago to create and maintain high ministerial standards. The session at Acton will be held in connection with the fall meeting of Baptist churches under leadership of the Rev. William O. Breedlove, Asso< ciation Mederator.
Vacation School
At Camby to End
The Community Church, only church in Camby, a town with 300 inhabitants, nine miles southwest of Indianapolis, tomorrow evening will close its fourth annual vaca= tion church school. A special program and exhibit will be held at 7 p. m. For two weeks, youngsters of the community have undertaken daily Bible studies and service projects under direction of the pastor, the Rev. Jack E. Jones, a student at Butler University. Teachers for junior boys and girls are Miss Ruth Schnicke, Miss Mar= Mrs. George Oberle. Other teachers in)“Heroes of the Bible,” and “Living the Christian Life,” are Miss Aloma Remsburg, Mrs. Dee Benson, Miss Goldie Owens and DeWayne Hodges. The church is interdenominae tional, and although it is affiliated with the Indianapolis Baptist Ase sociation for supervision and mise sionary work, it has Methodists, Baptists, Disciples of Christ, Friends, Presbyterians, United Brethrens and Catholics in the congregation, according to the Rev. Mr. Jones.
SERVICES TO OPEN AT BETHANY PARK
The fourth in a series of special Sunday evening musical and preach ing services will be held in Carpene ter’'s Lodge, Bethany Park, tomor« row evening. Prof. B. L. Kershner of the Col« lege of Religion of Butler University will deliver the sermon and the music will be furnished by members of the Brooklyn Christian Church under direction of the Rev. E. E, Moore man, pastor.
DR. BAUMGARTEL IS GUEST SPEAKER
Dr. Howard J. Baumgartel, execu tive secretary of the Indianapolis Church Federation, will be guest speaker tomorrow at the BROADe WAY METHODIST CHURCH. At 10 a. m. Sunday the Rev. Wile lard M. Wickizer, executive secretary of the United Christian Missionary Society of the Disciples of Christ with headquarters here, will speak at the CENTRAL AVENUE METH ODIST CHURCH. Dr. Alexander Sharp will speak at 10:45 a. m. tomorrow at MEMORIAL PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH,
DODRILL ON WISH
The Rev. R. M. Dodrill, pastor of the Broadway Baptist Church, will speak on ‘Peter Encourages Suffering Christians” at 9:30 a. m, tomorrow on WISH. The broadcast is the third in a new series of International Sunday School broadcasts sponsored by the 101 Men's Bible Class of the church,
TABERNACLE PRESBYTERIAN
34TH and CENTRAL Dr. Roy Ewing Vale Rev. Stewart W. Hartfelter Ministers 9:30 A. M. Bible School, Daylight Saving Time 10:48 A. M. Daylight Saving Time DIVINE WORSHIP
Sermon by Dr. Thos. R. White, o
Mr. Hartfelter ching. “The Light of Our Life’
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