Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 March 1952 — Page 8
ACP 14 Salo gg i rt eg
"PAGE 8 tg Pastor Retires To a New Job | =i
| soweth, . that shall Matt, Gal. 6:7.
S—
‘Sermon of the Week—
Scripture: “Be “not. deceived for he also
reap.’ THERE WAS a time in days past when many of the railroad in our land were marked by a post with this device written upon the cross-bars: “Stop, Look, and
Listen.” In more recentatime these have
By EMMA RIVERS MILNER Times Church Editor
DROP IN the American United Insurarice Co. office and it may suprise you to find Baptist - minister - Dr. Clive McGuire at work there,
Dr. McGuire retired recently as city executive of the. Indianapolis ‘Baptist SAssgeiation after
Crossings
ig
serving since 1930. He had De D iTucet, reached his 656th year when it is ’ large measure customary for the executive to i= beciis 30 make way for another, many people The insurance company lost no persisted in time “snapping him up.” ignoring the Dr. Carleton W. Atwater, one- practical ex-~ time minister of the First Baptist hortation of the words,
- Church, will act as executive of the association until a permanent appointment is made. Dr. Atwater retired from the First Church pulpit in 1950. " n =
THE FORMER Baptist execu-
For we seem to be a people impatient of any sort,- We
Rev. Barger
era that was ferociously inconoclastic; an age that destroyed
‘RETIRED?' — Dr. Clive Mc-
‘Stop, Look,
live today in the backlash of an
tive has a way of making prompt decisions. He began his career as a newspaperman. One day, as young Clive McGuire, he was thumping away at his typewriter ¢ when he suddenly felt called toa preach. In two hours, in his resignation as city edito of the old Vincennes Sun, From the newspaper, he University of Chicago to graduate & in theology. Throughout his = entire perio with the Indianapolis Baptist | Association, Dr. McGuire served as minister of the Garden Baptist Church, a small parish, And now though “actively retired,” he still holds the pastorate of the church. Under his guidance
ra
d
Churches of Geater Indianapolis sought aid of Dr. McGuire and constantly received a helping hand under his administration. Even so, he did a great deal of work for interdenominational groups, _ The Indianapolis Baptist Asso-
Second Ward Registration Open Monday
Branch voter registration boards will visit four locations in the Second Ward tomorrow. Residents who did not vote In either 1950 election or have moved to another precinct must re-regis-ter to vote in the May 6 primary. Branch boards will operate, from 2 to 9 p. m. at the following] sites: . 1 School 33, at 1119 Sterling 8t.;| School -81, at 3128 Brookside Pkwy., North Dr.; Fire Station 27, at 2918 BE. 10th 8t., and Brookside Park Community House, In addition, the Registration Board office, Room 12, Court-; house, is open from 8 a. m. to 10 p. m. daily, including Sunday.
Vv
Rev. Johnson | Takes New Post
The Rev. Marcus W. Johnson, | who has been minister of the First Congregational Church for more than five years, has re-| signed to go to Grosse Pointe, Mich. In Michigan, Rev. Johnson will assume the pastorate of the Grosse Pointe Congregational Church, May 1. | The departing minister came to the church here after serving as an army chaplain in the South Pacific during World War II. He was pastor of a church in Norfolk, Neb., prior to going into the army. The budget of the First Congregational Church now is the highest in the church's history. A| junior church also has been organized by Rev. Johnson and the church redecorated. | The Rev. and Mrs. Johnson will| enroll their two sons in Grosse Pointe schools in the. beginning. of the fall. semester.
}
Letters Copied In a Minute
By Science Service ROCHESTER, N. Y., Mar. 8 Photographic copies of letters can be made in less than a minute by a new experimental method demonstrated hereby Dr. Cyril J. Staud, director of the Kodak Research Laboratories. Based on a discovery made by a British scientist in 1879, a special photographic emulsion . unaffected by ordinary room lighting is exposed to a bright light with the document to be copied. A special activating solution] forms an image of soft gelatin containing a dark dye. When this is put in contact with “a plain sheet of paper a thin layer of the dyed gelatin is transferred to give a positive copy of the letter ready for immediate use.
Temperance Speaker
To Visit Decatur
A program designed to help boys and girls build for better Hving will be held tomorrow at Decatur®Central High School, Arthur Mills, instructor at the Indiana Temperance League, will spend all day at the school, distributing literature on. alcohol. He'll meet with biology, home economics, health and safety and physical education classes.
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3 with th f If , p So Mins wi » Joy 0! hm Don't
{Baptist Convention” he had handed rected its affairs,
{Church Federation executive comwent to ‘themittee ever since coming to Indl-|
. Past presidents of the Indiana d | Pastors’ Conference number him
has With the organization of the In-|
were published and column of the Baptist Leader for: 10 years. |
Guire retired as Baptist city executive and immediately entered business.
jation was honored as a “Stand rd city society of the American while he di-| Dr. McGuire! Iso has been a member of the
napolis.
mong them. And he assisted
fana Council of Churches. | The laymen’s group, Baptist
Men, Inc, the All Baptist Fellow-| ship and the Baptist Superinten-|
ents’ Association came into being|
e was built.[under his leadership. In addition, the new Garden Same [del hia Jeagersiup. In addition MORE THAN 30 Baptist executive committee of the Indi-|
ana Temperance League for 10| years, |
In his “spare time,” he wrote arious articles and: poems which the main]
165
with careless abandon all forms of authority,” whether legal, social or moral; a day that insisted upon identifying liberty with license, freedom with folly.
0YS! GIRLS! IT
Se, whl gy. ane MR JRE)
y 2 Il a aed NE i DP
\ \ \ PS \ - fi > ‘8 | EE 1 lp NW | wm Ni *. a —
Mrs. Anne Foster
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Ladies’ Strayer VFW Post 1405. Mrs. Anne Foster, Auxiliary president, made the presentation to the pastor, the Rev, Blekking. Others on the program were Minnie Griebelbauer, Nina Long, Flossie Mavity, Virginia Swartz, | Myrna Hayden, Earline Metcalf, | Lucy Adams, Lucille Crumbo and Cecilia Genaro.
s Free
2,
TW TNT M.A DAT IQ BIAS
Listen’
Trial marriages, bootlegging, arm-chaijr _ cynicism, and unrealistic realism all battled for first place in the race to pour «contempt upon the “archaic” past, and trumpet the glory of “modern” emancipation. The tragedy of our days ‘is ‘simply that nothing was put forward to fill the vacuum left by the mighty rush of the “liberators.” Nor. could there have been; for, to use an old chiche, we throw out the baby with thé wash. o n w ADMITTEDLY, life is larger than any system of rules, however complex. But that certainly does not mean’ that they have nothing in common. In a very real way, the need of our world is for adult persons of character. Such persons don't “just grow,” as did Topsy. The building of character is a painstaking process demanding our very utmost. And one of its bases is self-discipline, and authority self-imposed leading “to the emergence of a richer personality. May not the words of the old railroad crossing warning serve as a useful “rule-of-thumb” in this connection? Stop.
4
far too important to be treated
VFW Auxiliary | Gives Church Flag A VFW Auxillary has pres} an American flag and
standard to First United Presbyterian Church.
They were gifts from Auxiliary to Frank T
VA)
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
a»
©
” By the Rev. George W. Barger
NOTE—The Rev, George W. Barger, associate minister - of the Central Christian Church, ‘wrote this “Sermon of the Week” for The Times. y
casually, ‘or haphazardly, sub-
jected only to the scrutiny of our ‘quixotic feelings. “Take time to be holy,” the hymn asks us; and that is just what it takes—time. The battering of events upon us nrust be slowed down by us so that we can view them from a reasonable perspective. Life is not so short as one might think. Hope deferred may still be hope. Look. The musical play of some years back, “'Cabin in the Sky.” contained an interesting song about that “old devil consequence.” Take the words of Paul for what they are; an axiomatic expression of the sureness of consequences: What 4 man sows, he does reap. We do nothing without a resultant consequence. To live is to function, and actions inevitably "bring results. It seems almost commonplace to say that the
people in it. That doesn’t alter the truth of the assertion, however, : “It Is not just as we take ‘it, This mystical world of ours;
Life's field will yleld as we make it, A harvest of thorns or of flowers.” —Goethe
Listen. Alone ana unaided mortal man can never achieve his salvation, temporal or eternal. Listen for the promptings of God in all your ways. It may be a call to help a needy person, or visit the sick, or to simply rejoice in the beauty of a friendship or an evening sunset. There are the Bible, pare with the book, itself. It is our good fortune to live
many books about
in a day when alternatives are |
elear, and choices ‘relatively plain. May we thank God for
the opportunities of the hour, .
and eagerly meet each new
testing of ourselves and our |
rich faith? Stop, look, listen, and grow in strength and pow-
er toward the stature of the |
Consult the Bible often, |
but none can com- |
ot
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