Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 June 1943 — Page 7
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3
RR oe
Ta
Gonvention to Be Held Here
SIOMa sorority in the Hi
an
-man of arrangements, assisted by ‘Mrs. Cisco and Mrs. Paul M. 5°
Officiates at
© denias.
_ podice and short sleeves. Mrs. Hin-
ororities—
Tomorrow
Kappa Kappa Sigmas To Meet at Lincoln
An annual dinner and a convention appear in sorority news. Mrs. Lowell Davis, of Mitchell, will preside at the annual convention tomorrow of KAPPA KAPPA
The Mooresville chapter, with Mrs. Ray Ulrey as
president, will be|
: convention chairEman. On the program will be business Mrs. Davis sessions, a dinner 4 tea in honor of sorority members the armed service. Indiana chapters to be represented at the convention are Indianapolis, Chalmers, Connersville, Rushville, Shelbyville, Columbus, Hope, Carthage, Martinsville, Morgantowfi, Bloomington, Bedford and Moonesville,
The annual out-of-doors dinner of Nu Zeta alumnae chapter of SIGMA ALPHA IOTA, national professional music sorority, will be given at 6:30 p. m. Monday with Mrs. Bernard Batty as hostess at . her home, Rose Hills, Haversticks’ ' park. Mrs. James H. Lowry is chairman of arrangements and is being asgisted by Mesdames Helen T. Martin, William G. Sparks, H. L. Barr, Eugene Van Sickle, Robert W. Blake and O. M. Jones and Miss Irma Mae Steele. There will be a songfest and special music by Mrs. Francis M. Helkema, accordionist, and Miss Lillian - Starost, violinist. Officers who will be installed are Mrs. Jones, president; Mrs. William A. Devin, vice president; Mrs. Philip A. Kappes and Mrs. A. H. Merriam Graves, recording and corresponding secretaries; Mrs. C. . Harold Larsh, treasurer; MIs. Harold Sweeney, editor, and Mrs. Natalia Conner, chaplain,
The grand council of OMEGA NU TAU will hold its June meeting tomorrow in the Hotel Lincoln. Mrs. Thomas Cisco, vice president, will preside. The group’s annual rose luncheon will precede the meeting in the Lincoln room of the hotel. Mrs. Russell Wattleworth is chair-
There will be an informal pa: night at the Lincoln in honor of — out-of-town members coming to the ‘meeting.
Dr.H.E.Hinton
Son’s Wedding
The bridegroom’s father, Dr. Herbert E. Hinton, this evening will read the marriage ceremony uniting Miss Filine Walesby and Herbert E. Hinton Jr. The service will be at 7:30 o'clock in the First Baptist church. Dr. Hinton will be assisted by Dr. Carleton W. Atwater, pastor of ' the church. Miss Walesby is the daughter of Dr. and Mrs. D. G. Walesby. Organ music will be played by Mrs. Farrell Scott. The altar will be banked with palms, ferns and bouquets of white roses and snapdragons. Entering on the arm of her father, the bride will be gowned in white marquisette with a lace bodice and leg-o’-mutton sleeves. A long panel of the lace extends from the bodice to form a train.
Wears Gift
She will wear an opal heart necklace, gift of the bridegroom. Her fingertip veil will be attached to a coroniet of orange blooms and she will carry white roses and gar-
Gilbert Hulme, Franklin, matron of honor, will wear nile green net. The bridesmaids will be Misses Betty and Lettie Roegge, Co‘Yumbus, Ind., and Misses Alice and Edng Lou Hinton, sisters of the pridegroom. x The latter will be in canary yellow and the Misses Roegge will wear orchid, The attendants’ ¥ are fashioned with sweetow t necklines and the five will earry pink roses. Mrs. Walesby also will wear nile green net and a corsage of pink roses. Her gown will have a lace
ton’s dress will be of teal blue faille and her flowers, pink roses.
Out-of-Town Guests
The best man will be the Rev. Roland Pickhardt, assistant pastor of the church, Sgt. Hulme and Pvt. Paul Phillips of Ft. Benjamin Harprison will be the ushers. The assistants at a reception in the church parlors will be Mrs. Brunson Motley, Mrs. Ralph Neumeister,’ Misses Miriam Clayton, Helen Villwock and Mary Atwater. The bride has chosen a blue eyelet dress with white accessories and 8 Sarens corsage for her wedding immediately following the retion. The couple will be at home ‘in Indianapolis. The guests who will come from out-of-town are Mrs. Gladys Ullrich, Chicago; Messrs. and Mesdames A. G. Walesby, Robert E. and Lee Walesby, Colum- » Ind.; Mr. and Mrs. L. Beekley, Mrs. William Mrs. Charles M Struble, Ft. Thomas, Ky. Mr. Hinton will be graduated Monday from Butler university.
bride and maid of honor, has chosen
{Purdue university before he entered
and Mrs. Frank C. Buddenbaum.
Buddenbaum, who is now stationed
Wedding Will Be Read June 15
The engagement of Miss Virginia Buddenbaum to Robert E. Bottin, son of Mr. and Mrs, William Bottin, is announced by her parents, Mr. The wedding will be Tuesday, June 15, at 7:30 p. m. in the Zion Evangelical church. This portrait of the bride-to-be was made from an oil painted by her brother, Pvt. Ralph
at Ft. Leonard Wood, Mo.
are the parents of the bridegroom.
Marianna Crossland to Be Wed To Lt. James W. Hamilton; Reception Will Follow Rite
In a ceremony at 5:30 p. m. tomorrow in the Central Avenue Methodist «church, Miss Marianna Crossland will become the bride of Lt. James W. Hamilton of Dunellon, ‘Fla. Miss Crossland is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George M. Crossland, 3113 Ruckle st. Mr. and Mrs. Miller Hamilton, 1236 N. New wiarsey st.,
Dr. F. Marion Smith will officiate before an altar decorated with palms, white peonies and candelabra. Miss Jane Butler will sing, accompanied by Miss Louise Swan, organist. The bride, who will be given in marriage by her father, will wear a petal white pointe de’esprit gown with a romance neckline, fitted bo- . | dice and long sleeves that taper into points over the hands.
Sister Maid of Honor
Her bouffant skirt will extend into a long train. Cascading from a coronet of pleated Breton lace, her twotieréd veil of English illusion will be || fingertip length. Miss Betty Crossland, ‘sister of the|
a flowertone blue frock with a romance neckline, short, puffed sleeves and a bouffant skirt accented with val lace. Her flowers will be pink roses. The flower girl, Miss Mary Louise Allen, will be in a white dotted swiss dress with pink and blue smocking. She will carry a basket of rose pet~| als. The best man will be Charles Crumbaker.
Leave for Trip
Mrs. Crossland will wear a navy and white printed chiffon ensemble with navy and white accessories. Mr. and Mrs. Hamilton will hold a reception for the immediate families after the ceremony. Following the couple will leave for a wedding trip. They will be at home in Dunnellon late this month. For her trip, the bride will wear a blue linen suit with white accessories. Lt. Hamilton was a student at
the army air corps.
Athenaeum Auxiliary
To Hear Program
A dinner at 6:30 p. m. Monday, followed by a business and social program, will be a feature of the meeting of the Women’s auxiliary of the Athenaeum Turners. Hostesses in charge will be Mrs. Lena Peters, chairman, Mesdames Olga Birk, Carl Westerfield, Henry Moesch Sr., Adolphus Hoffman and Maurice Wohlfanger.
Dinner Tuesday
The Officers’ Wives club will have its monthly dinnet at 6:30 p. m. Tuesday in the Claypool hotel. No reservations are necessary.
Clubs—
principal events in news of club-
lclub will have a picnic at the home son rd., Monday. The program
chairman will be Mrs. Green,
tain CHAPTER G, P. E. O. SIS-
with a picnic at her home, 5515
Monday at the Sun Dial tearoom, 3531 College ave., for the MONDAY
will be held at 1:30 p. m. Monday in the Homestead.
To Be Celebrated
home of Dr. and Mrs. Stephen J.
in Neoga, Ill, and have made their
will meet at 1:30 p. m. Tuesday in the United Brethren church, with Mrs. C. J. Eicher in charge of devotions. Mrs. C. W. Ackman will be the guest speaker and Mrs. George Bless Burkhart will preside.
Conversation Club Picnic To Be Monday
Picnics and luncheons are the
women’s activities. The MONDAY CONVERSATION
f Mrs. William Schiltges, 8642 Wat-
Hadley
Miss Nellie A. Hester will enterTERHOOD, at ‘5:30 p. m. Monday
Lowell ave. The program will be conducted by the program ' committee. Convention reports will be given.
A 1 p. m. luncheon will be served
AFTERNOON READING club. The hostesses will be Mrs. Clark C. Griffith, president, and the program committee.
The presidents’ day luncheon of the ALPHA NU LATREIAN club
Mrs. Pauline Whitney will be hostess “for a meeting of the LUCKY-FIVE club at 8 p. m. Monday.
Golden Anniversary
Dr. and Mrs. Frank J. Wright, 6061 W. National rd., will celebrate their golden wedding anniversary tomorrow night at Willowmere, the
Burich, Brookville rd. They were married June 8, 1893,
home in Indianapolis during the past 29 years.
W.C.T. U. Session
The University Heights W.C.T. U.
ONE OF THE first Indianapolis enlistees in the WAVES will become the bride—late this summer— of a member of the army medical reserve COrps. She is Ensign Dorothy E, Paul, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. S.
announce her engagement to Mar-
Mrs. Martin C. omson Sr. Lexington, Ky. The wedding will be in the Roberts Park Methodist church.
Forest university and was graduated, magna cum laude, from the University of Kentucky last year. # ” ” MR. THOMSON also attended the University of Kentucky. The bride-to-be is a member of Mortar Board, Chi Delta Phi, Phi Beta and the Pitkin club, honorary organizations, and of Alpha Lambda
Ensign Dorothy Paul to Be Wed
Paul, 123 N. Herman st. Her parents tin C. Thomson Jr., son of Mr. and
Ensign Paul entered the WAVES 8 Aug. 29, 1942, and received her com- | #i mission at Smith college on Jan. 9 |g of this year. She attended Lake ||
dent of the Baptist Student union Delta. She also was a member of {at the university and is a member : ENO. 2 Sabiiui the WA [uf the iL CA siiiuy, Ge
Harris & Bwing photo Ensign Paul
Mr. Thomson has served as presi-
3 het ty
Church News— | | Churches to Devote Day To Children
Younger Set Will Hold Interest in Services
Tomorrow.
Children will have their day tomorrow in a number of churches in the city in accordance with a longtime custom which devotes either the first or second Sunday in June to Children’s day. Parents are asked to find seats for themselves in the balcony of the Olive Branch Christian church where 200 children will occupy the center of the sanctuary. Small children will be brought to church for the service of the “Blessing of Little Children” conducted by the Rev. Wales E. Smith, pastor, at
9:30 a. m.
us n
Plan Dramatic Service
Mrs. Ruth D. Estes, director of Christian education, wrote the dramatic service of worship which she will lead at Children’s day services tomorrow at 10:45 a. m. at the Third Christian church. Since the Disciples dedicate Children’s day offerings to missions, the theme for the service at the Third church is “My Country Is the World.” Mrs. Grace Parris will direct the youth choir in the spiritual, “Go Down Moses,” and Garrett's “Prepare Ye the Way of the Lord,” and Prof. Joseph Lautner, the chapel choir, in “Forward to Christ” by O’Hara. The two choirs will unite in singing “Ye Watchers and Ye Holy Ones” (traditional). There will also be solos by Robert Barnes and Jeanette Pogue. John Palmer and Phyllis Little will give the continuity and Mrs. Natalia Conner will play the organ accompaniments,
2
Hold Open House °
Open house will be held all day in the newly decorated and furnished church residence of the Downey Avenue Christian church tomorrow. Children up to-nine years receive their religious education in the church residence. In the afternoon at 4:30, a Children’s day service will be held in the sanctuary. The youth choir robed in white will sing; a string trio, including Miss Peggy Rose, Virginia Reese and Martha Payne, will play; and Dr. E. Robert Andry, pastor, will read a consecration service title “This Small Flame.” Senior boys will usher and children will take speaking parts. Miss Mary Brown is general chairman for the program'and Paul F. Brown is church school superintendent. » #” #
Honor Graduates
Graduates of school 75 will be honored and the school orchestra and choral club will present special music, under the direction of Mrs. Hazel Callahan, tomorrow at 7:30 p. m. at the Eighth Christian church. The Rev. E. E. Russell, pastor, will preside and Dr. Walter Gingery, principal of George Washington high school will speak at this church and school program. # t 4 t J
“Let the Children Come” is the title of a program to be presented by the junior and primary departments tomorrow at 10 a. m. at St. Paui’s Evangelical and Reformed church. Miss Minnie Koop and Mrs. E. H. Klingel will direct the performance and Dr. Klingel, the pastor, will preside.
Tech High Group To Give Concert
William Moon will direct and Eloise Gillespie will direct the Technical High School Boys’ Concert club in an evening of music tomorrow at 7:45 p. m. in the Centenary Christian church. The club of 40 members will sing the following numbers:
The Pledge to the Flag The Marine Hymn All Through the Night Stout-Hearted Men
Mallotte Arr. Waring Series
here’er Walk The Boze oF “the Old Brigade Parks Juanita Arr. Waring Series The Song of Man—A Cantata Kountz Soloists: Robert Borger Billie Quillen and Marv ields Winston Churchill will sing:
Page's Road Thou Wilt Keep Him in Perfect Fence’ a
The Boys’ Octet will sing: Thankful
The Paul Coble unit 26 of the 11th district American Legion auxiliary will present the music at the Protestant vespers tomorrow afternoon at the veterans’ hospital. The Rev. C. R. Lizenby, Protestant chaplain, will give the meditation which, ‘with the music, will be broadcast to the patients over the public address system. Mrs. Ernest Rupel is unit president. and Mrs. E. E. Burton, 11th district chairman.
TWO GIVEN POSTS "AT ROBERTS PARK
Miss Earline Hester is the new director of youth activities and Chester Elson, the new director of recreation for the Roberts Park Methodist" church. Both were ap-
pointed by the quarterly conferencegof yesterday.
By EMMA RIVERS MILNER The Times Church Editor Tomorrow, Dr. U, 8. Clutton will not wear the stiff wing collar and four-in-hand cravat with a scarf pin which added so much to his “presence” when he preached his first pastoral sermon in Indianapolis in 1908. - But he is still the pastor of the Tuxedo Park Baptist church where he preached that sermon. Tomorrow, he and the congregation will welcome homecoming members and friends for an all-day celebration of his 35th anniversary as church minister. Horse-drawn vehicles will not line a dirt road in front of a small frame building which was the original Tuxedo church. Nor will a small congregation of 117 members, the women folk wearing wide merrywidow hats and the men dressed in the fashion of three and a half decades ago, come pouring through its doors.
620 In Congregation
Instead, a congregation representing 620 members will worship in a sizable brick church and mingle in fellowship in its social rooms, all built through the leadership of the pastor. Careful to observe wartime regulations, families will fill their picnic baskets and remain at church for a noonday dinner together. What handshaking and what swapping of stories there will be about the nearly 100 youth of the church now in the armed forces over the world! Dr. L. C. Trent, old friend of Dr. Clutton and pastor of the Woodruff Place Baptist church for the last 20 years, will give the address at the forenoon anniversary service beginning at 9:30. There will be Bible study, a reception, the dinner and the afternoon program. Twilight holy communion will bring the day to a close.
Known As Progressive
Dr. Clutton is known as a progressive, one prompt to put new ideas into effect. He read about the Boy Scout movement in the Ladies Home Journal and organized his boys’ group into a troop just one month after the scouts were incorporated in the United States in 1910. It was the first troop in Indianapolis and the second in the state. He is still its scoutmaster. He also conducted the first vacation Bible school of the city in his church and will have one, as usual this year. Through Dr. Clutton’s influence, all the churches of the Tuxedo Council of churches expect to hold vacation schools this summer. He is president of the council. But in spite. of his reputation for being up-to-date, there is one practice, outmoded among most of his ‘brethren, to which he clings. Dr. Clutton still holds an evening worship service in his church 52 weeks of the year. No doubt his deacons would vote it out of existence if he asked their official opinion, Dr. Clutton says. But he keeps on because he thinks the church should keep its doors open on Sunday evening.
Holds Week-Day Classes After nearly every such service, however small the attendance, some stranger will say he searched for a Sunday evening service and found one, at last, at Tuxedo park. Week-day religious education classes were held by Dr. Clutton years ago, long before there was so much talk about the necessity for them. Now, he is planning with the Tuxedo council to raise a budget in the council churches and employ & teacher to conduct religious education classes for public school children to the community. Children will attend during the school day, on released time, for periods of one hour each, twice a week.
35 Years at Post
Among the most recently organized groups of the Tuxedo church are the Service Men’s Mail box, the youth choirs and the Crusaders. Mothers and wives of service men form the mail box to send regular letters and gifts to the church’s members in the armed forces. The choirs sing regularly each Sunday evening at the worship service. The men’s group will award the boys and girls of the choirs by sending them to the Baptist camp on Lake Tippecanoe for vacations this summer. The Crusaders, a group of school children, meet weekly with
arks | Dr. Clutton, on Monday afternoons,
for stereoptican pictures, doctrine and Bible study. During his 35 years at Tuxedo Park, Dr. Clutton has had the constant help and counsel of Mrs. Clutton and, for a quarter-century, of A. K. Wolfe, the Sunday school superintendent.
Baptist
'GOD, ONLY CAUSE’
IS SUNDAY LESSON
All -Christian Science churches will study the lesson-sermon subject, “God, the Only Cause and Creator, tomorrow. The Golden Text is: “Whatsoever God doeth, it shall be forever: nothing can be put to it, nor anything taken from it.— Ecc. 3:14. Among the citations which comprise the leson-sermon is the following from the Bible: “Thus said God the Lord, he that created the heavens, and stretched them out; he that spread for the earth, and that which cometh out of it; he that giveth breath unto the people upon it, and spirit to them that walk therein: I am the Lord: that is my name: and my glory will I not give to another, I ha my piaise to graven images” (Isaiah
includes the the Christian
The lesson-sermon also
sts the unfolding of the spiritual ideas and their identities, which a in the infinite mind and rid ee These ideas ings from the infinitesimal to infinity, d the highest ideas are the sons and Fh Bay of God (p. 502).
867TH BROADCAST
,| denominational world {Schiobt SopNSNID whish 1s thus 8
Turedo Park Baptist Church Conaregation To Honor Dr. U. S. Clutton's 35th Year
Scenes of church weddings, ‘Christmas plays, services on high and holy days in the Tuxedo Park Baptist church fill the picture history being compiled by Dr. Clutton (above). history with the pastor are Shirley Bannard, choir member, and Robert Fleck, a second generation boy scout of Dr. Clutton’s troop.
Shown examining the picture
All the women’s societies of the Presbyterian church in the U. S. A. will be automatically affiliated with the new Council of Presbyterian women authorized by the denomination’s general assembly meeting in Detroit. Heretcfore representatives of the societies held unofficial meetings during the general assembly sessions. With the creation of the new council, meetings will be held regularly and officially at the same time the general assembly convenes. The sssembly, which closed Tuesday, will meet next year in Chicago. J. Dwight Peterson, layman of the Tabernacle Presbyterian church, will serve as a member of the board of pensions for a term ending in 1944. Mr. Peterson was elected at the general assembly meeting which he attended as g lay delegate from the Indianapolis Presbytery. Dr. Sidney Blair Harry, pastor of the Meridian Heights Presbyterian church, ministerial delegate, was secretary of the standing committee on theological seminaries.
Display Art Work At Roberts Park
Art works of members of all ages, belonging to the Roberts Park Methodist church, will be displayed tomorrow afternoon from 2 to 5 p. m. in the Hosea room of the church. Because people seem to be so much in need of wholesome and refreshing experiences which will not offend them in this grim time of war, the Kum Double class planned the exhibit. In a setting of June flowers and candlelight, while a varied program of music is played, friends of the church will view the pictures, ‘drink tea and mingle in fellowship.
dent and Mrs. J. H, Smiley, the teacher. Artists who have registered include: Lacy, Harold La Vier, R. A. Fenimore, Raymond Herath, Dorothy Speigel, Mrs. Laura Powell, Mrs. George Christian and Mrs, E. E. Isaac.
Speaker
J. Raymond Schutz
State Christian Education Council to Hold 70th Convention Here
Tomlinson hall, where the uniform Sunday school lessons, used all over the world, were first planned, will be the scene of the opening of the 70th annual convention of the Indiana Council of Christian Education, June 15 through 17. . Dr. J. Raymond Schutz will speak at this session on ‘Pacing the Future with Our Heritage of the Past.” Dr. E. T. Albertson, pioneer in the field of religious education and for 21 years executive secretary of the council, will preside. Dr. A. H. Backus, state director of religious education for the Methodist churches, will present a stereopticon lecture on the growth of the uniform lessons which now reach more than 30,000,000 Sunday school class members. The Sunday schools of the entire world are affiliated with the interSunday
Presbyterian Women Unite In New National Council
Presbyterians in the nation will be asked to give $1,256,592 in 1942-43 as a wartime fund to be spent on the many emergencies arising out of the present conflict. The amount to be spent on such emergencies is $1,439,585, but a balance on hand will
cover the difference between the sum to be raised and that to be spent. Dr. Alexander E. Sharp, first director of the wartime commission, finished the term he agreed to serve as director and turned over the office to the Rev. Harold A. Dalzell of Pittsburgh this week. Dr. Sharp is the executive secretary of the Indiana synod which he says demands his full attention. During the past year he was absent frequently from -his office here, where the Rev. Roy E. Mueller served as temporary assistant. The general assembly passed a long resolution on peace and the post-war world. The final paragraph which seems to sum up the religious sentiment of the resolution follows: “We believe that the post-war world founded on righteousness, liberty and peace, depends not only upon political and economic measures, but upon moral and spiritual values and attitudes. We believe, therefore, that the peace should include not only political and economic provisions, but also a definite statement as to international moral
Rabbi to Be
Speaker on Broadcast
Program to Be Given by Hebrew Group Over WIRE Tomorrow.
Rabbi Samuel Fox of the United Hebrew congregation will speak on a special Pentecost broadcast tomorrow at 9:15 a. m. over WIRE. The program is in commemoration of the Jewish Festival of Shovuos, or Weeks, to be celebrated by worldwide Jewry, Wednesday. Mrs. Nathan Resnick, president of the congregation’s sisterhood, will deliver one of her original poems and the Minionaires and Junior congregation will sing and recite. o on ” A plaque honoring 71 members in the armed forces will be dedicated tomorrow at the 10:45 worship service in the Meridian - Heights Presbyterian church. Dr. Sidney
{Blair Harry, pastor, will preach on
“The Eternal Inseparables” and Elder Herbert Akers, chairman of the congregational committee on national service will present the plaque. Lloyd Claycombe, trustee, will accept the plaque. o n ”
Communion Set Ascensiontide will be marked by St. Matthew’s Episcopal church with a low celebration of the communion tomorrow at 7 a. m., and a choral service at 10:45 a. m. The Rev. J. Willard Yoder, minister, will be the celebrant. Lr Sa Mrs. Gerald W. Hutton will entertain the members and guests of the social circle of the Third Christian church with a covered dish luncheon Tuesday at 12:30 noon. Former presidents of the circle will be honored and there will be devotions by Mrs. W. T. Lemons with Mrs. A. C. Pebworth, president, presiding. » ” ”
Revelations Is Topic
Dr. John F. Edwards, pastor, will preach the first of a series of ser=mons on Revelations tomorrow morning at the Broadway Metho= dist church. The sermon is titled, “A Mirror for Events.” ” t 4 ”
Evangelist Carlyle Scott, recently returned from holding revival meet ings on the Pacific coast, will preach tomorrow at 7:45 p. m. at the Berean Missionary Baptist church. The Rev. Ford Porter is pastor. ” ” ” Oscar Stern, Christian Jew, fugitive from 'Hitler’'s Gestapo, will speak at 11 a. m. tomorrow at the First Moravian Episcopal church and at 7:30 p. m. at the 51st Street Methodist church. ” ” ”
The Rev. George D. Billeisen will conduct a children’s day service tomorrow from 10 to 11 a. m. at the
behavior.”
River Avenue Baptist church.
Indianapolis
| Mrs. Calvin Clymer is class presi- |
Donald Wendell!
Ww
CHRIST TEMPLE
(Apostolic Faith.)
.402 W. Fall Creek Parkway Sunday, 11:30 A. M.,, 7:30 P. M.
ST. MARK'S UNITED LUTHERAN
Prospect and Linden Sts. R. H. BENTING, D. D.,, Pastor
Sunday School...... Sivas 10 A. M. Worship 10:55 A. M.
The University Church Undenominational—Fundamental 19th and New Jersey Sts.
'9:30 A. M.—Bible School. Lesson by REV. R. D. BROWN. Toronto, Canada.
10:30 A. M.—Sermon by Rev. Wm. E. Honeycutt, Pineville, Louisiana.
2:30—Afternoon service, Rev. R. W. Wolfe.
7:30 — Commencement address Chaplain J. W. Turnbull, Capt. Fort Benning, Ga.
; Minister DR. P. E. SMITH
First United Brethren Church Park and Walsy 3 Sis facing Mass. venu
We invite you to ahi with us in Sunday Church School at 9:30, and in Morning Worship at 10:35.
Sermon: ‘Learning to Obey.”
Evening Service 7:30 “The Rewards of Judgement”
REV. GEORGE F. SNYDER, D. D.
CHURCHES
Cordially Invite You To Attend One of Their Services
NORTHWOOD CHRISTIAN CHURCH
46th and Central DR. H. F. HANLIN, BuSTOR
Sunday School, 9:30 A Morning Were) 10: 4 Pig M.
“The OPPO Oot the Church” Young People’s Evening Service, 6:30
Central Christian Church Delaware and Walnut Sts, (700 North)
DR. W. A. SHULLENBERGER Minister
Bible School—9:30 A. M. Worship—10:45 A. M. Sermon—‘Effective Faith.”
Music by excellent choir. Youth Fellowship—5:30 P. M
TABERNACLE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
34th and Central
DR. ROY EWING VALE REV. RALPH L. O'DELL Ministers
9:30 A. M.—Bible School 10:45 A. M.—Divine Worship Dr. Vale Preaching “The Beauty of Holiness.” Communion and Reception of Members
Thurs. 7:15 P. M., Midweek Service
Second Presbyterian This Historic Church of Which Henry Ward Beecher Was Minister Vermont and Pennsylvania Sts. JEAN 8. MILNER, D. D.,, Minister Morning Worship, 10:45 A. M.
“Impossible Idealism’ Dr. Milner
Church School, 10:45 A. M,
“Al Saints Cathedral
CENTRAL AT 16TH 7:30 A. M.—Holy Communion. 10:45 A. M~-Holy Communion and Ser~
6:00 P. M.— EVENSON G. Young People’s Fellowship
ST. PAUL'S CHURCH EPISCOPAL
ILLINOIS AND NEW YORK STS. REV. WILLIAM BURROWS, Rector
Sundays, 8:00 A. M.—Holy Communion 9:30 A. M.—Church School 11:00 A. M.—Holy Communion
CHURCH OF CHRIST
2042 Shelby Street invites you to attend all its services.
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
Meridian and Vermont Sts. Carleton W. Atwater, D. D., Pastor Rev. Roland C. Pickhardt, Asst. Pastor, 9:25 A. M.—Bible School. 10:50 A. M.—Worship and Communion. Message by the Pastor. . M.—Youth Fellowship. M.—Young People's Service of Installation and Consecra~
tion, 7:30 P. M.—Midweek Prayer Service.
6:1 7:30 P.
Thursday,
West Side Gospel Tabernacle
Tune J, Every Sunday, 1:30 P. M--WIBC y Services, 2 and 7:30 P.
Radio program every Sunday, 7:30-8:00 WISH GA-1742
"REV, THOMAS PAINO
2112 Miller 8t.
Rev. Gene E. Phillips, Outdoor any Meeting on the Insid Night at
HEAR THE VICTORY JUBILEE GOSPEL QUARTET
SATURDAY NIGHT AT 7:30—SUNDAY MORNING, 10:30 Sunday morning broadcast, WIBC, 11 a. m., direct from church
pastor-evangelist, Me) ou LR
“FIRST CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE 1621 E. Washington—at State st.
“Our Old-Fashioned Program Saturday
