Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 294, 18 October 1913 — Page 3

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, SATURDAY, OCT. 18, 1913

PAGE THREXX

CATHOLICS TO HOLD MISSIORCONGRESS Dlergymcn Gather in Boston to Discuss Church Progress.

Dignitaries arrive Eighty Bishops and Archbishops to Attend Notable Gathering. BOSTON, Oct. 18. Tomorrow BosIon will be the scene of a conclave of Catholic clergymen, such as this country has not witnessed since the second Baltimore council twenty-five years ago. More than eighty bishops and archbishops, beside a host of lesser church dignitaries from all parts of the United States, Canada, Newfoundland, Mexico, Cuba and the Philippines will participate in the opening ceremonies of the American Catholic Missionary Congress at the Cathedral of the Holy Cross. While the sessions of the congress proper do not begin until Monday morning, most of the clergymen will be present at the ceremonies tomorrow morning. The ceremonies at the cathedral will be opened by a procession in which the clergymen will wear their full vestments. The procession will be headed by Cardinal O'Connel, archbishop of Boston, followed by the chaplains of the cathedral, Mr. William J. Dooley, private chamberlain to his holiness Pope Pius X; Rev. Joseph F. Coppinger, the P. R. court and diocesan council and cathedral guild. Then will come the Most Rev. Monelgnor Bonzano, the papal delegate to the congress, and officers of the mass followed by the visiting archibishops, bishops, prelates of the papal household, clergy, seminarians and the cathedral sanctuary choir. To Celebrate Mats. After the participants in the procession are seated in the cathedral, MonBignbr Bonzano will celebrate the pontiflcial high mass and Cardinal O'Connell will preach the sermon. The pontifical vespers and the benediction will be celebrated in the cathedral in the evening by the Most Rev. Neil McNeil, archbishop of Toronto, and chancellor of the Catholic Church Extension society of Canada. The service will be preached by the Right Rev. Michael F. Fallon, bishop of London, Ontario. At the same time pontifical vespers and benediction will be held In seventy-five churches in the diocese of Boston. The formal sessions of the congress will open on Monday morning at Symphony hall. The congress will close on Wednesday evening with mass meetings in Boston and a number of the larger towns in the metropolitan district. Theee include Lynn, Haverhill, Marlboro, Lowell, Lawrence, Brockton, Salem and Natick. The openingaddress on Monday will: be delivered by the Most Rev. James E. Quigley, archbishop of Chicago and chancellor of the Catholic Church Extension society of the United States. An address on "The Spirit of Congress" will be given by the Right' Rev. Joseph Schrembs, bishop of Toledo, O. CHURCH FINDS ITS TRUE SPHERE

It cannot be an exaggeration to say that there never was a time in the history of the world when so many people were trying to help so many other people as today. It has happened like this. The study of sociology has been progressing gradually, some of its most earnest and its brightest scholars working outside the Christian faith. They did not care about the authority of Christ and the inspiration of his message. They were studying man and the earth, not God and heaven. And they found that the thing that is hampering and spoiling life is selfishness. They found that selfishness is unscientific, unreasonable. They found that co-operation, that interest in one another is the only reasonable way to live. So we have come to see just from a natural and earthly standpoint what a preposterous and ridiculous and disastrous policy selfishness is. Society and civilization mean co-operation. It is a grievous thing that in so many Instances the church, as represented by individuals or organizations, has failed to show the spirit of unselfishness which Jesus demanded of his followers. Indeed, the accusation ia often heard that it has at times set itBelf definitely against the movements which were working for the emancipation and the betterment of mankind. But Its members are more eager now than ever to be what Christ meant them to be the servants and helpers of their neighbors and of the world. Christian Herald. A WEAK WOMAN ANDHER STORY In Flora!, Ark., Lives a Lady Who Feels That Her Strength Was Restored by GarduL Floral, Ark. "I must speak a good word for Cardui," writes Airs. Viola Baker, of this place. "About a month ago I was In very bad health. I was so weak and nervous that I was not able to do my housework. "My husband bought me one bottie of Cardui, the woman'stonic. 1 took it according to directions and now 1 am in good health. "I think Cardui is a fine tonic for weak women." And you are not the only lady who thinks so, Mrs. Baker. Thousands, like you, have written to tell of the wonderful benefit Cardui has been to them. Cardui contains no minerals, or other powerful drugs. It contains no glycerin or other mawkish-tasting ingredients. It is Just a pure, natural extract of natural vegetable herbs, that have been found to regulate the womanly functions and strengthen the female system. All druggists sell Cardui. See yours about it

Sunday Services At the Churches

St. Andrew's CathoMc Fifth and South C streets. Mass at 7:30; High Mass at 9:45; Vespers, serinonette and benediction at 3 o'clock. Rev. Frank A. RoelL. rector. St. Mary's Catholic Masses every Sunday at 6:00, 8:00, 5:00 and 10:00. Vespers and Benediction every Sunday at 8:00 p. m. Rev. Father Cronin, rector. St. Paul's Episcopal Holr Communlou every Sunday 7:30 a. m. Also on irst Sunday of each month, 10:30 a. m. Sunday school 9:15 a. m. Morning prayer and sermon 10:30 a. m. Evening prayer and sermon 5 p. in. Saints' Days. Holy Communion 9 a. m. Other days by appointment. Rev. John S. Ldghtbourn, rector. First Church of Christ, Scientist North A, between 14th and 15th Sts. Subject: Doctrine of Atonement. Sunday school at 9:30 a. m. Services at 11 a. m. Wednesday evening "testimony meeting at 7:45. Public cordially invited. Reading room No. 1417 North A street, located in south end of church edifice, open daily except Sundays and legal holidays from 1 to 5 p. m. First Presbyterian Rev. Thomas J. Graham, pastor. Sabbath school 9:15 a. m., J. Horace McAfee. Supt. Morning church worship 10:30 a. m. Vespers 4:45. Preaching by the pastor. Men's club opening banquet Monday 6:45 p. m. Prayer meeting without fail Thursday night 7:30. The welcome of the church fellowship to all who seek the Lord. Fifth Street Methodist. Arthur Cates, minister. Sunday school 9:15, Miss Hazel Craig, Supt. Epworth League 6:30. The pastor will preach at 7:30. Grace Methodist Tenth and North A. Arthur Cates, pastor. Sunday school 9:15, C. H. Cramer, Supt. The pastor will preach at 10:30. Subject, "Depravity and Repentance." This is the first of a series of Sunday morning sermons on Christian Experience. Class meeting 11:45. Epworth League 4:30. Mid-week meeting Thursday 7:30. St. Paul's Ev. Lutheran C. Huber, pastor. Sunday school at 9. Mr. Ed. Hasemeier, Supt. English services both morning and evening. Morning service at 10:30, evening service at 7 o'clock. Preaching by the pastor. South Eighth Street Friends Francis C. Anscombe, pastor. Bible school 9:10, John H. Johnson, Supt. Meeting for worship 10:30. Christian Endeavor society 6:30. Prayer meeting Thursday 7:30. A hearty welcome to all. Whitewater Friends, North Tenth and G streets Preaching at 10:30 a. m. and 7:30 p. m. Sabbath school at 9 a. m. C. E. at 6:30 p. m. Mid-week prayer meetin Thursday evening. All are welcome. A. Trueblood, pastor. Central Christian, Mostonic Temple, R. C. Leonard, pastor Bible school at 9:05 a. m. Communion at 10:30 a. m. Sermon at 10:45 a. m., subject of the sermon will be, "Steps to Heaven." Second Presbyterian Thomas C. McNary, pastor. Preaching morning and evenin; Sunday school at 9:15. Communion service will be observed Sunday morning, October 26. It will be a farewell service. Earlham Heights Presbyterian Sunday school at 2:15; Gospel service at 7:30. F. E. Warner will speak. Let everybody come. Earlham College and West Richmond Friends Elbert Russell and Murray S. Kenworty, pastors. Bible school, 9:00 a. m. E. P. Trueblood, superintendent. Meeting for Worship at 10:30 a. m., Elbert Russell. Intermediate Christian Endeavor, 2:15 p. m. "CASCARETS" CLEANSE LIVER AND BOWELS Feel bully! No headache, sour stomach, bad breath, constipation. Get a 10-cent box now. Are you keeping your liver, stomach and bowels clean, pure and fresh with Cascarets or merely forcing a passage every few days with salts, cathartic pills or castor oil? This is important. Cascarets immediately cleanse the stomach, remove the sour, undigested and fermenting food and foul gases; take the excess bile from the liver and carry out of the system the constipated waste matter and poison in the bowels. No odds how sick, headachy, bilious and constiiMted you feel, a Cascaret to-night will straighten you out by morning. They work while you sleep. A 10-cent box from your druggist will keep your head clear, stomach sweet and your liver and bowels regular for months. Don't forget the children their little insides need a gentle cleansing, too. ( Advertisement)

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MANY METHODISTS TO ATTENDMEETING Convention At Indianapolis to Be Under Direction of Laymen's Movement.

Between twenty-five and fifty lay and clerical members of the Methodist church in this city will attend the national convention of Methodist men to be held in Indianapolis October 28 to 31. The convention Is under the direction of the Laymen's Missionary Movement of the Methodist church, and is called to adopt a practical denominational program and policy of advance in the missionary work of the church. The convention is to be a represent-! ative gathering of the cnurcn body, including bishops, genera! conference officers, educators, district superintendents, missionaries, razors and lay- i men. Registration will be limited to three thousand. There will be no limit to the number of delegates that a church may send. The First M. E. church of this city will begin work to arouse Interest in the convention at ita quarterly confereice to be held next Monday evening. ine convention committee is optaining an extraordinary nst or speasers or national ana international repu-1 tation. Not only will speakers of the j Methodist church be heard but some j 01 ine strongest my aim iinuai ieiJresentatives or otner aenominauons Each speaker will be chosen because of pre-eminent relation to the theme discussed. Evening parallel meetings will be held where others besides the delegates will be able to hear some of the speakers who will address the convention. Christian Association. Earlham Hall, 7:00 p. m. Ladies' Aid Tuesday afternoon. Mid-week Meeting for Worship, Thursday at 7:30 p. m. Visitors welcomed. Third M. E. Church Corner Hunt and Charles street. Sylvester Billheimer, pastor. Sunday school at 9:30 a. m., Mrs. Patty, Superintendent. Services tomorrow at 10:30 for our aged people, sermon by the pastor. By order of the official board the evening services until further notice, will begin at 7:00 o'clock. Come and worship with us. First English Lutheran Church Corner Eleventh andSouth A streets. E. G. Howard, pastor. Sunday school at 9 a. m. O. P. Nusbaum, superintenrient. At 10:30 a "MembershiD Service" with addresses by members i of the congregation will be held. Ev-! ery member is asked to be present. Young People's meeting at 6:45 p. m. Evening service will be sermon by the pastor at 7:30. Music for the day will be led by the String quartette. Solo by Mrs. F. J. Bartel. First Methodist Episcopal Church Fourteenth and Main streets. B. Earle Parker, minister. Sunday school at 9:10 a. m. Promotion Day. Music by orchestra and quartette. Prof Pickell will speak to the men on "An Efficient Brotherhood." Public worship, sermon by the minister. Class meeting, 11:45 a. m. Epworth league at 6:30 p. m. Public worship, 7:30 p.

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The smoker being arranged for next Saturday night promises to bring out one of the largest crowds ever together in the local club rooms. The committee in charge of the entertainment is workinsr hard tn main th affair a KiiooMR in cvcrv QnH is nrnmiin? a fine lunch with plenty of good cigars. ' Every member of the post is urged ; to be present and participate in the ; events of the evening. j The executive committee of the 1914 ! T. P. A. convention held its first meet-! inz last nieht anH th -arious com- i mittee assignments were announced by Chairman Harrington. The committee has already gotten down to work and hopes to be able to give to the memDers some outline or tnelr plans at the smoker next Saturday night, The entire list of committees will be announced at that time. George, Fred and Jake Miller tt the Miller Bros. Hdw. Co., will go to New York next week to be gone a couple of weeks. They will combine pleasure with business and take in a few of the sights of the big city before reClarence Finney has been the busiest man in Richmond for some time Togetner witn planning and arranging for his new gtore h(1 nas alg0 managed to find time to induce a young lady to become Mrs. Fini nney. Clarence was married Thursday night to Mrs. Brower and they have gone on a short wedding trip. The boys of the post wish the newly-weds all sorts of happiness. Elmer Lebo is kind enough to inform us that groceries are steadily on the upward grade and that prices are to be higher. Another point gained for Mr. High Cost of Living. More applications have been written up to date in the present fiscal year than during the same period of the past year. If the growth continues the T. P. A. will show the greatest gain in its history. m. "ermon by J. W. Zerbe. Good music and a cordial welcome to all. First Baptist Church North Elev-1 enth. near Main street. W. O. Stovall, pastor. Worship with preaching by the pastor, Sunday. Subjects, 10:40 1 a T 'GT.rtlro Tliot Pnnn " 7 311 ! p. m., "A Religion for the Sinful." Sunday school at 9:15 a. m. Young People's meeting at 6:45 p. m. Prayer t,,.,,, 7.m a iucrwiiB iijuiouaj ol . . ov y. .... welcome for everybody at meetings. all these First Christian Church Corner of Tenth and South A streets. Samuel W. Traum, pastor. Bible school, 9:05 a. m. W. M. Tittle, superintendent. Preaching services at 10:30 a. m. and 7:30 p. m. Special music at both services under the direction of Robert C. Wilson, chorister. Morning subject: "How One Man Was Brought to Christ Peter." Evening subject: "How One Man Was Brought to Christ Cornelius.' 1 UVT5e Del 1UUUQ are the first of a series on "Bringing Men to Christ. East Main Street Friends' Meeting Truman C. Kenworthy, pastor. Bible T ONCE END CATARRH j small bottle of "Ely's Cream Balm" at : any drug store. This sweet, fragnant 1 balm dissolves by the heat of the nostrils; penetrates and heals the in- i flamed swollen membrane which lines the nose, head and throat; clears the ; air passages; stops nasty discharges and a feeling of cleansing, soothing re-, lief comes immediately. j Don't lay awake tonight struggling j for breath, with head stuffed; nostrils j closed, hawking and blowing. Catarrh or a cold, with its running nose, foul mucous dropping into the throat, and raw dryness is distressing but truly ! needless. j Put your faith just once in "Ely's Cream Balm" and your cold or catarrh will surely disappear. sement.)

OLIVE BRANCH SYNOD MEETS HERE IN 1914 Rev. E. G. Howard Expects Many to Attend Lutheran Meeting.

The annual meeting of the Olive Branch Lutheran Synod wUl be held m "rst tngjisa Lutneran cnurcn of tnl8 c,t". October. 1914. The selec - ! tion of the delegates to the synod iiic-nug ai Lj.t u 1 r 1 1 1 tins cha announced today by E. G. Howard, Pastor of the First church here, Two Richmond young men were ordalned into the ministry at Louisville

Wednesday. They were Walter C j pose of formulating plans for a memHanning of the Second Lutheran bership campaign. The class now has church and W. F. Wallace of the First a membership of 11S. and meets every English Lutheran church. i Sunday morning in the Masonic tem-

Except to elect officers and ordain the new ministers, routine work occupied the time of synod delegates. The synod comprises forty churches from central and southern Indiana, Kentucky and Tennessee. The officers elected for the year are: Dr. C. A. Wilson, Louisville, presi dent; Rev. T. A. Estell, Muncie, secrej tary H. H. Combs. Shepardstown, statistical secretary; B. C. Bowman. Muncie, treasurer; A. E. Renn. Indianapolis, director of Wittenberg college. The Lutheran Women's Home and Foreign Missionary organizations of the Olive Branch synod and the Lu - theran brotherhood hold their meetines in connection with the annual synod meeting. These organizations are composed of delegates from the forty churches of the synod. school at 10:00 o'clock. Meeting for worship at 11 o'clock. This will be a continuous session with rally day services in the school, followed by a roll call in the meeting. We hope to have a full attendance of our mem - bers and friends. Junior Christian Endeavor at 2 o'clock. Gospel service at 7:30. Special music. Con - ference and prayer service Thursday evening at 7 o clock Reid Memorial S. R. Lyons, pastor. Sabbath school at 9:15: hours of worship 10:30 and 7:30; sermons by the pastor. MASONIC CALENDAR L B"UV' "er Vyal tnap-' i ter-, No: 4o- vh S' Stated meeting, i ! Monda - 0?tob0erT. 0 Richmond J I Commandery, No. 8. K. T. Drill. ! w.i-ej., on 'vw i-j suikouoj, unuuri - ruu luuge I No. 24, F. and A. M. Called meeting. ! work In Entered Apprentice degree. I Thursday, October 23 Wayne Coun-! cil No. 10. R. and S. M. Special assembly. Work in the degrees. TO HOLD SERVICE The ladles of the G. A. R. are requested to meet this evening at 7 o'clock at 22S South Ninth street, to ; attend the funeral of Mrs. Marv Moore.

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HELD CLASS ELECTION C. B. A. Re-Elects Dr. Biossom As President.

Dr. J. C. Blossom was unanimously re-elected president of the C. B. A. class of the Central Christian church at a meeting held In the Y. M. C. A. last evening. The class Is said to be the largest men's Bible study class in "-4..lc u is 1 scarcely more than a year old. Other uuufis ruosen were: umer lonn. vice president; Howard H. Engelbert. secretary, and John Pyle, treasurer. P. T. McLellan was re-elected teacher. A meeting Monday evening will be held in the Y. M. C. A. for the purpie. Palladium Want Ads Pay COLDS ARE CAUGHT IN In most parts of the United States October is the pleasantest month of the whole year. And yet October has especial liabilities for those who are subject to catching cold. September is liable to be warm, and thin clothes are worn almost univerj sally. When October begins the nights get colder, and the days also. t Yet people w ill cling to their thin clothes. The negligee shirt without vest is so comfortable, that the men do not like to give it up. Sleeveless underwear and peek-a-boo waists have given eo much comfort during the hot months that the women lay them aside I w ith great reluctance. So It is that j thin clothes are carried over Into the i month of October, and a great many j millions of people carry them a little 1 too long. Frequently, catching cold j j8 the result. J a cold acquired in October may last ; several months and do great damage, :

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BUYS LIGHT UNIT Earlham Increases Its Lighting Facilities,

In order to better facilitate its lighting system. Earlham college has Just purchased a new light unit from the City Light Plant of Richmond. This unit is an old one used by the City Light Plant before It wade Its recent improvements, but is practically as good as new. The sum of JI25 a paid by the college for this ouHit. which, according to Mr. Gluys. the college engineer, would have cost about $1,000. if it had been bought new. This plant is much smaller than the one regularly used by the college, and is therefore designed for day work and in cases of emergency. Heretofore, the college has been purchasing light from the city plant for night use after 10:30 o'clock and at times when the city plant is out of commission, the college has had to run its large plant, which entailed a great waste. OCTOBER THAT LAST ALL WINTER In spite then of the fact that October is a pleasant month, it is a month that presents especial liabilities for catching cold. Of course the best way to fortify one's self against cold ts to avoid exposure, but people mill not always do tlus, hence colds are the result. To have a remedy handy to break op a cold is almost a household necessity. It has been at least thirty-five or forty years that Peruna has been a standard household remedy for coughs end colds. It is generally sufficient to take a few doses at the first appearance of a cold. The experience of the people has been, if taken in the early stages of a cold Peruna is prompt in Its action. The cold disappears ery quickly. Those who object to liquid medicines can now procure Peruna Tablets. C Advertisement) BLAST

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