Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 46, Number 332, 8 December 1921 — Page 3
V
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., THURSDAY, DEC. 8, 1921.
PAGE THREE
CAMBRIDGE PARADE SUNDAY WILL BOOST TABERNACLE SERVICES (Special 1o the Palladium) CAMBRIDGE CITY, Ind., Dec. 8. Dr. Bulgin, evangelist who has been conducting a revival here for two weeks, was somewhat embarrassed and congregation amused Wednesday evening by the literal translation of a humorous suggestion of the day preceding. In welcoming the foundrymen on Monday. Dr. Oulgin had stated that
factory workers sometime? brought i
samples of their product. Accordingly, the delegation from the casket factory, when they visited the tabernacle Wednesday night, brought with them a minature casket, the presentation of which was greeted with applause and laughter by the audience. The unique gift was a perfect reproduction of those manufactured at the plant, exquisitely upholstered, and upon being opened, the inside of the lid was found to be studded with flowers. Songs included in the regular opening song service Wednesday night were: "Jesus Saves." "Jesus, Set the Music Ringing." and "Do I Love Him." Daisy Barr to Preach. It was announced that in connection with the services for next Sunday, the women's special meeting at the Methodist church in the morning will be ad
dressed by Mrs. Daisy Barr, pastor of the Newcastle Friends" church. The men's meeting, also in the forenoon, will be addressed by Rev. James at the Christian church. "Wine, Women and Gamblers" will be the title of the union services; at the tabernacle in the afternoon. Plans are progressing also for the huge parade to be staged Sunday. Tiie juvenile choruses will march together in the parade, adorned with their blue and red badges, and earning lheir Bibles. Prayer meetings were announced for the first district tit the home of Mrs. Hugh Kosr with Mrs. Clark, for the second district., Mrs. Marian St mitotan
i'tifl for the tninl, Mrs. Kustcr
Juvenile Chorus of Grade School Pupils Organized for Revival Being Held by Dr. Bulgin at Cambridge City
Ohio Farmers Corn Nearly Equals Record (By Associated Press) COLUMBUS, O.. Dec. 8. Although not more than a third of the number
of fanners who qualified for the Ohioj
JOO-Bushel Corn club in 1920. wii! make the club this year, H. D. Folmer of West Jefferson, Madison county, has made a yield only a few bushels short of the state record, 128.81 bushels to the acre, bune iid hv C. L. Slack.
Pleasant Valley. Muskinpun county, in
1 1919. I Of the six farmers now on record!
af the tarm crops department of
university as having raised more than
100 bushels of Fhelled corn to the acre on 10 acres in 1921, Mr. Folmer lead3. His per acre average of production was 125.81 bushels, more than three times the average corn yield of the state. Returns on the contest are nearing completion and will be announced within a few days.
SHALER LENS They comply with the new lation.
regn-
Opp.
WEBB-COLEMAN CO. Postoffice Phones 1616-1694
The New Edison
"IN THE WESTCOTT PHARMACY
SWEETS FOR XMAS
miiiitiHnMNimiiumnMMMiniiiMiimutiiiiiMiiiiifiimiMMinttiuiMiininuiMinii!
il Give "Her" a Sellers Cabinet I
Front row, left tJ right: Robert Calloway, Edward Close, Hobart Brun, ner, Donald Browne, William Scott, Alpheus Huddleston, Paul Shealpen, John Peters, Ray Ingerman. David Stombaugh, Ralph Zeigler. Robert Evans, Wayne Whipple, George Fagan. Second row: Edith Milbourn, Frances ('rook, Maxine Xewkirk, Thelma Steffy, Martha Alice Groff, Carmen Ohmit,
Hazel Hubbard, Frda Close, Helen Jones, Ethel May Brown, Pauline Mar- j Thompson,
sen. Helen Morse, Drema Gihbs, Doris Clontz, Pauline Repp, Elizabeth Newkirk. Third row: Lillian Mullen. Erma Hoover, Julia Harnett, Marian Smith, Maxine Morris, Agnes Morris, Helen Sanford, Sarah Margaret Hinep, Anna Bell Hunt. Fourth row: Alice Bell. Martha Fancher, Olga Marie Bachman, Helen Franklin, Naomi Newton, Edna Newton, Valetta Brockman, Gertrude
Mr
M1ltllllltlllUlltHiniltllltll!llilllH!l!IIIIIM1IIIIIMIMIIlHinnuiinHII(IMITillliilltllMII
Everybody Likes Candy for Christmas.
We have a mixed and
Nuts
Home Made
large assortment boxed candies.
of all kinds.
Cracker Jack
of
'Phil Zuttermeister's
Stonecipher, Lillian Tague, Myrtle Trent, Roma Milbourne, Erma Duncan, i
Edith Dale, Emma Huddleston. Back row: Charles Richard Bertsch, Chase Gruell, Howard Gaar, Clayton Cornthwaite, Robert Moore, Norman Longnecker. Robert Sturgis. Stanley Bell, Wilford Clontz, Carlton Browne. Dilliard Willison, Scott Hubbard, Everett Hoover, George Wilson, Hugh
Eugene Harter, Raymond Marson, Richard Ingerman, Harold
Rowe. Additional members who have joined since the picture was taken are: Josephine Shipner, Rosaline Newkirk, Doris Mildred Ellsbury, Mildred Fancher, Lorraine Petty, Robert Feemster, Hazel Harper. Royal Shepner, Vinton Alfred. Grace Petty. Eugene Evens, Ellis Kiner, Mary Rush, Mary Halsey, Grace Halsey, Herschel Bunce.
GOD WILL PAY FOR YOUR SINS IF YOU THROW YOURSELF ON HIS MERCY, DEGLARES BULGIN IN DISCUSSION OF SIN AND GRACE AT CAMBRIDGE
don't you go to a minister? just as honest as a lawyer
CAMBRIDGE CITY,
benefi, of t lie high
Ind.. Dec. R (
Announcement was made also of the 'The problems of sin and grace were; lecture to be given Fiiday afternoon H.i bv nr K j iu;,, jn his'
evangelistic address in the tabernacle 1 here tonight. He urged a large and-1 ience in ask for pardon because of; Christ's sacrifice on the cross. He presented the following as some prin-;
cip
ni
th
BerNch casv.ill visit the
at 2 o'eloek for th
x'hool students. A delegation from th k t factory at N'e-.vcastl
tabernacle Friday. j Mr. Box Sings. i Mr. Harry Bex sang duets, both with pianist David Christiansen arnl witlii Rev. James, besides a solo Wednes-'. day night. The opining prayer was. given by Rev. McCormick of Milton, j In his preliminary remarks. Ir. Bid- . gin stated, "Conditions in Cambridge ', City were not overdrawn by Rev. Ho-! an and Mr. Owens when thy visited me a' Louisville. Who would have) i bought that a tabernacle, seating I 2.."('0 would be filled here night after j nieht. w ith a conureea' ion larger than j ihe population of the towa. j ""e could not liave crowds assenibUi! here at ti or t:",tt o clock every .
night wiili nothing better than po.it i-j mankind. If eal discussions. W. J. Bryan, or a n..,t,,ri, would
God fool
draw
them for a , i,pr chililren than for trees and toad
or two but only the "Jos-j stools and mushrooms and animal obChrist could draw people j jec, s Nature declares there is a God.
Roosevelt might
single night pel of Jesus
as they have been coming hfre." The crowd was well it eee; j (Kin Wednesday night-, only a seat.- in fine corner being left ocvupii d.
To assume that there i;
makes a fool out of you, for
says there is no God. "2. To assume that there is a God and that God cannot speak to His creatures, makes a fool out of God. If God is and must be, accord ing to v hat we see around here. He is a God of love, of beneficence, of kindness.
"Therefore, it is for the good of the, creature that the creature should know his Creator and if it is for us to know Him and He has not revealed Himself to us, God is not. God. j "4 God has revealed Himself to;
God were only nature.! be no more solicitous of!
; of f e w 1! 11-
AMATEURS DISCUSS WIRELESS AIR RULES
Discussion of interference of local , stations with each other and adoption; of a regular course of instruction, to be , given in a series of lectures or discussions at each meeting, was the prin- i ioal buiness of the regular meeting; f the I X Radio club in room of th" hii:!i r-eho.d WedneMlay evening. Two new members. Levi Rhoados of; New Wests i'le. and Edg:;r Bi'ters of R:chmond, were admitt d. i In discussing interference, a suggestion was made by Maurice Druley, i'nd approved by several others, that ! l ower lie (educed for local work. It i u:is decided to limit each man to ::o ' nnnu'cs work .-o that all may have an eoual chance to transmit messages. ';
Maurice Druley s resignation a traffic assistant, presented on the grounds of other occupation during the busy hours, was accepted and Robert Clark a - ( N oted in his plat e. ' Aerials ;,nd Grounds" the first siibi. ct in the course of study adopted at me tu ei ins, will be discussed by Fred lark at ti; ru xt meting, Dec. 21.
but nature is not God. ! Revelation from God is an alt I lute necessity to save humanity and j that revelation should be such that: all classes should know God. j "ii. If there is such a thing as wrong or evil in th' world before God can, deal with the sinner the sinner must : settle for his sins, otherwise it would !
produce anarchv in Heaven and
throne God. "7. God has settled the sin question in a way that satisfies Him. and that, was by the coming of the Lord Jesus Christ, who bridged the gulf between the finite and infinite on Calvary 2.mii) years ago. Saves People
"God is in this wicked and ruined world to save as many people as He t an. to give them the peace of heaven, ; the peace tha' His Son Jesus brought, . for He said. 'I will keep Him in per1 feet peace whose mind is set on Thee I because be trusted in Thee', i "The first false peace is the cradle i of immorality. We see men vvallovv- ! ing around here in the gutter. Why. ! I have not been in a city anywhere ; that I had seen as many drunken men ' as I have seen here in Cambridge. If i you can't enforce the law, give me a
fucius, all the gods except the God of Christianity, the attributes were put j into them by the fellow who made the) god. Jesus Christ alone has attributes j that are not imaginary, wisdom, pow-t er, holiness, justice, goodness, truth.1 We don't have to put thtin in Him.' He has them. He possesses them. , "The next, damnable cradle of peace; is the cradle of agnosticism. Ask anj agnostic if he believes ihe Bible is in-; spired. I don't know. Do you believe in bell? 1 don't know. Do you lieli-ve ; in regeneration? I don't know. S "Then in the name of tin- Lord, why; don't you get something that you do know? I have met a half dozen of those fellows since I have been here.
You can't pin them down. "And they stabbed me in the back by insinuating that I am a good-for-rothing, no-account free lance, answerable to nobody. 1 want, to tell you that an evanaelist that has not ecclesiastical standing is not doing much in this country. .Most, all of our evangelists are under ecclesiastical authority of some good church. They ought to be. The church is too dear to me to run around as a free lance. Standard Is Fixed "The next cradle of false peace Is the cradle of my own opi"ion. A man once said to me. "Bulgin, I resriect von.
and 1 think you are sincere, but I have j my opinion and you must respect me.j My opinion is just as gootl as yours.' for after all, this question of religion'
de-1 1S Just a matter of a man's opinion.' i That sounds pretty good, but it i the'
narrowest kind of a thing that can be; said. When you get sick why don't j ou send for a blacksmith? What do! vou send for a do.Hor for? If you get) in some business trouble, why do you' send for a lawyer? Whv don't you; send for a farmer? But you send fori the person who is posted in that par-i
iit.uiar ining. uon t you se how rar-
iow mat statement about verar on n on
is? When you get into trouble about ! scribed
finances you go to a banker for his advice, on stocks and bonds. Then
when you get in trouble about
t soul why ! They are
i or a banker or a tarmer. "And opinions change. If religion
is a matter of a mans opinion, when the man's opinion changes his religion would have to change. No, sir; it is not a matter of opinion. It is a fixed standard made by God that cannot be changed. "The next is the cradle of the seared conscience. God Can Pardon. "In a jail in Russia once there were, many prisoners confined and the Czar,
Nicholas II, went through to see whom j he should pardon. One of the prison-; ers had written with a piece of char-! coal everything that he had ever done ; wrong and he added it up ami said,! "How can 1 ever pay back for the
; wrong I have done. He went off to sleep. The Czar came along and look-: : ing in there and seeing what was there j read and he said, "Bring me some red j jink." Nobody but the emperor could' use red ink in that prison and he1 stuck the quill in the red ink and then i he wrote, ".Nicholas can." and then he I i wrote, " Nicholas II." and he went out i 'and they said. "Whom did you pardon,' 'and he said, '"I pardoned a man) ; who will show my signature in red j link. Let. him out. When the boy I awoke, from a dream of heaven and ! saw the red writing he said: I ""My God. the emperor has been I
here,' and then he saw tvhat was written, and lie shouted to the guard, 'Let me out, I am pardoned, I have the signature of the emperor, who alone uses red ink in this prison.' and the turnkey said I am instructed to let. out the man who carries that, and he went to the great doer and the turnkey said if I were you 1 would go by the feast at the royal castle and ihank the emperor, and he said 1 will. What was th ground of his peace, the fact that he was a bail man? No. The fact that he was a moral man? No. The ground of his peace was that the emperor had dipped his pen in the red ink and pardoned him. "Sinner, you and I and all mankind were in the prison walls of hell. We deserved it. God Almighty came to this wicked world. He came as God and He, dipped his pen in the blood of Jesus, and He said to us all Ihe sins you have committed or ever will commit I can forgive. And bless God he did. and if you come to God tonight confessing your sins and throwing vourself on His mercy lie will pay for all your sins."
NEAR EAST DRIVE TOLEDO, O , Dec. S - A drive for $30,000, Toledo's quota of the Near East Relief fund, will bo started Dec. 18.
mu&t
1 1
Bayer on Genuine Aspirin say "Bayer
Warning: Unless you see the name ralgia. Rheumatism, Earache, Tooth-
on naekaze or on tablets vou acne, (.uniDago ana ior rain, aii arug-
getting genuine Aspirin pre-
! "Bf.ver" i ! are not
rgists sell Bayer Tablets of Aspirin in i of 24 and 100. Asnirin is the trade
by physicians for twenty-One U,amtv tin hnvea of 1" nnrl in bottles
years and proved safe by millions, mark of Bayer Manufacture of MonoTake Aspirin only as told in the Bay- aceticacidester of Salicylicacid. Ad-
your' er package for Colds, Headache, Neu- vertisement.
splinter and some protoplasm will lay it out in the sun and , out something that is better to i
law than what you have :
Name "Booster Committee
to Promote Breeder s Fair
' K X T 1 1 is! er dnesd
i v in
iitYILLi:, Ind.. Dec. s A commit'ee" was appointed iv niht at a me.-t ing of the
County Breeder's association.
!i,-d io discu.-s arrangements for x; yt.n's lay" at Jackson's park. It ill be the dutv of : lie committee tu
t ach townsnip, apponn nu,u
attains and promote arrangements or exhibitions and stimulate entries r next year. The committee, comi.oseti of Joseph ltlose, Tuad Nichols ind Porur Bike, will act as a publicity ommittee for the fair.
s I
: pine j and 1 ' hatch
: enforce the
. around here. j "Now, I want to lay before you ale ' stract principles for those who are; ; rocked in the cradle of a false peace j
of morality without God. j "No one is able in this world to or- j iginate a code of morals or a system1
j of ethics any higher than the stuff- : from which it originates. That is ax-1 ioma'ie. An axiom is a self-evident! proposition which does not require ' any proof. 1 Man's Worship j ; 'Man by worship becomes ascimi-i 'ia'id in na'ure and character to the j ob.ieCi he worships. I Outside of the Lord Jesus Christ. J God's only begotten Son. all worships j that have ever been in the world have j 1 had imaginary attributes. The white ; bull, the white eh phan, the sun gods,' i the god of Buddha, the gods of Con-!
I
ley ;
Sk. A, TV
i & &
THE CHILDREN AT CHRISTMAS TIME The mother of these four children says that she has used Father John's Medicine for the past twenty years and in cases cf ssvere colds she believes it has no equaf. In a recent letter she said, "I have used Father John's Medicine for twenty years. I knew of its value and used it long before I was married, I have given it to all of my four children and for croup and severe colds I think it is very good", (signed) Mrs. Rose G. Kuffe, White Plains, N, Y. Millions cf mothers depend cn Father John's Medicine to keep their children well and strong and to restore their strength after any Illness. They know that it has had mere than 65 years of success for colds and coughs and az a tonic and body builder.
Our just
fecial Gift Values
In an Extraordinary Sale for Friday and Saturday New York office obtained a special lot of practical gifts at very reasonable prices, and we have received same and have marked them extremely low for selling on FRIDAY and SATURDAY.
GOATS
inn new- Coats, just received from our New York offic Bolivias and Velours, self and fur-trimmed, clever styles, in a'.l the newest shades; $S5.f'0 values
Dresses
200 new Dresses, forl-Ladies and Misses, of every description Satins, Taffetas, Crepes. Velours. Tricofines, Serges and Poiret Twills; all shades, clever styles. Values up to $"J5.0i. Special
s2l75
no00
SILK UNDERGARMENTS
Satin, Crepe de Chine and Taffeta Teddy
Suits, all shades, 5-5.00 values Special
S2.9S
KIMONOS Crepe Kimonos and Corduroy Robes, all shades. ?6.00 values QQ AO Special 5J-'0
Suits
We are going to clean out our stock of Suits regardless of cost, as we never carry over anything from season to season. Values up to $35.00, special
$12. 85
SKIRTS Prunella stripes, JS.0'1 values, special Friday and Saturdav S4.98
Camisoles Satin, Crepe and Taffeta, all shades. Special 89c
BLOUSES Georgettes. Crepes and Satins, all shades. Special
HOSIERY All Wool and Wool and Silk Hose, Sl.oo values. Pair
SWEATERS
A 11-Wool Sweaters. $ values-
Tuxedos all shades,
S3.98
98c
S3.98
V
IGRAN'S Ladies Shop
Petticoats Silk Taffetas and Satins, all shades. Spe-
923 MAIN STREET
$3.98
Christmas Gifts at Luken's
Do not fail to see our big line of
Ivory Pyralin
In separate pieces or sets
Ivory Toilet Sets
In elaborate cases
Manicure Sets
Filled m Ivory Genuine Leather
and Roll
Pearl, Cases
Perfume Sets
Hudnuts, Djer-Kiss, Melba, Mavis and Mary Garden. Range in price from $1.50 to $8.50. These make elegant Christmas Gifts.
Safety Razors
Gillette, Auto-Strop, Gem, Durham Duplex, EverReadv and Enders
Perfumes and Toilet Waters
Comprising Coty's, Houbigant, Rigaud, Pivers, Guerlain, Roger & Gallet, etc.
lev Hot Bottles
Make very acceptable Gifts for Christmas
The A. G. Luken Drug Company
626-628 Main Street
