Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 93, Number 17, 19 January 1923 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., FRIDAY, JAN. 19. 1923.
RUSSIA NOW OPEN TO EVANGELISTIC MOVEMENT, REPORT CHICAGO, Jan. 19. Soviet Russia is open to a large evangelistic and reform movement in the Russian church and outside of the Russian church, according to Bishop John L. Nuelson of Zurich, Switzerland, who is in charge of the Methodist Episcopal church activities In Russia and vho has recently arrived in the United States after extensive travelling and investigation in that country. - Bishop Nuelson tells ot a recent interview with the archbishop of Moscow and the whole governing body of the Russian church. He was asked many questions regarding the American churches in general and Methodism in particular. " ' The bishop says: "They told me, 'our aim is to puree the church of the
elements of heathenism and lead the church back to the gospel of Jesus Christ, and to rid it of the monkish idea.'" Quotes Dignataries Bishop Nuelson quoted the Soviet church dignitaries as saying, "We havje to build a new church, which is a free church and under a republican form of government; we want to build on an evangelistic basis. You have had this experience in America, you can tell how to do this thing. "I received two documents from these men, one an invitation issued by the governing body of the church of Russia to the Methodist Episcopal church to send fraternal messengers to their next conference which will meet in February 1923, in order to advise and guide them in the building up of their church. The second was one inviting the Protestant churches of America to send fraternal messengers to the church of Russia." "The Board of. Bishops have assigned three of its bishops to attend the conference in Russia and the Federal Churches of Christ will also tend fra-messengers.".
ing needlework. Refreshments were served by the hostess.
The Women's Bible class, and Every Man's Bible class of the" St. Paul's Lutheran church held a banquet at the church Wednesday night. Prof. Louis T. Jones, of Earlham college, gave a short address. Community games and singing featured the entertainment.
Galled by Death
In Richmond Churches
Members of the Virginia Asher Business Women's club are invited to at
tend the service at Reid Memorial
church Friday night at 7:30 o'clock.
The Auxiliary of the Women's Aid
society of the Science Church of Spiritualists met at the home of Mrs. Mat-
tie Balser, S13 North Third street
Thursday afternoon. Eighteen mem bers were present. Nine new mem hers have been taken into the auxil
iary. The afternoon was spent in do
The Fellowship Circle of the West Richmond Friends church held a discussion of "Indian Missions" at the church Thursday night. Indian blankets and pottery were on display. A group of young people in Indian costume told stof.es of Indian life. Herbert MeMahan, Walter FulghumT Dud ley Woodman and Gladys Cosand spoke on the need of workers in the Indian mission fields. Indian music was furnished by Lois Edwards and Mary Louise Mathews. A solo was sung by Mary Hubbard. Ora Stegall's team of the Bible Sunday club will have charge of the serv
ices at the united Brethren church Friday night All members of the club
are invited to attend and are asked to
meet in the Sunday school room of the church at 7:15. They will attend the services in a body.
A social meeting of the Good Cheer
Bible class of the First M. E. church
was held Thursday afternoon at the home of Mrs. A. E. Ewan, 121 North
Fifteenth street. Fifty-two members and guests were present.
Mrs. Phariba Stephen, missionary
worker from Mexico gave an interest
ing missionary study at the meeting of the members of the East Main street Friends church at the church Thursday night. This was the third lesson in a course of six that is being conducted by the class. Five new members were
taken into the church at the regular
Whitewater monthly business meeting held just after tU.e missionary study class.
B. Willis Beebe gave an interesting
address at the meeting of the South
Eighth Street Friends church Thurs
day night. He gave a description of
the economic and religious work in British East Africa. For several
months Mr. Beebe traveled in East Africa for the purpose of studying the
conditions there. .
The Women's missionary Boclety of
St. Lutheran church will hold a public
meeting Friday evening, Jan. 19, at
7:30 o'clock in t.e church auditorium. Mrs. Gertrude Bushman, a missionary
from Africa, who is home on furlough, will give an address. Members of all
missionary societies in the city and other persons interested are extended
a cordial invitation.
Christian Endeavorers of the First Christian church will conduct the evening service at the church Sunday
evening. The service will begin at
MRS. MARY E. HAWKINS EATON, Ohio, Jan. 19. Funeral services for Mrs. Mary Elizabeth Hawkins, 100 year3 old Dec. 22, last, who died Wednesday afternoon in her home here. West Main street, after a brief illness of influenza, will be conducted Saturday afternoon at 2 o'clock in her late home, where she had lived the last 80 years. The Rev. Vinton E. Busier, Methodist church, will officiate. Burial will be in Mound Hill cemetery.
HENRY McNEAL EATON, Ohio, Jan. 19. Funeral and burial of Henry McNeal, 70 years old, groceryman, who died Tuesday night in the home of h!s son, LeRoy McNeal, after a several weeks' seiious illness, were conducted Fiiday afternoon in the Christian church, wiih the Pythian lodge in charge, assisted by the Rev. Hiley Eaker. Burial was in Mound Hill cemetery. SuiViving him are two
sons, two brothers and one sister. !
JENO REID CONNERSVILLE, Ind., Jan. 19.
Jeno Reid, a well known resident of Connersville, died Wednesday morn
ing at 10:30 o'clock at the Memorial hospital of bronchial pneumonia. Fu
neral services were held at 2 o'clock
Friday afternoon at the Grand Avenue M. E. church. Burial was in Lick
Creek cemetery. His wife died of
pneumonia last Friday and her funeral
was held at the Grand Avenue M. E. church last Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Reid are survived by two daughters, Mrs. Oliver Wentz, of Cambridge City, and Mrs. Sarah Vickery, of Connersville. MRS. SALLIE WINSHIP LYNN, Ind., Jan. 19. Mrs. Sallie A.
Winship. 70 years old. died at her home here about 5 o'clock Thursday
afternoon. She was a lifelong resl
dent of Washington township and was widely known in this section. She
was the widow of a Civil war veteran,
She is survived by three daughters.
Mrs. Lona Chenoweth, and Miss Ethel
Winship, of Lynn, and Mrs. Daisy Wright, of Eaton, Ohio. Funeral services will be held at the home Sat-
Madame Devi to Sing Enchanting Melodies The enchanting melodies of the East will be sung here by Ratan Devi, the famous European folk song exponent, at a recital Saturday evening a.t 8:30 o'clock at Earlham college. A New York paper said of her arpearance there: "It is not often that so beautiful an art as that of Madame Devi comes to New York." Madame Devi attended school in London with Miss Martha Pick, of the Earlham college faculty, and it was through Miss Pick's influence that the enchanting mezzocontralto comes here. The recital will commence at 8:30 o'clock. Tickets will be 50 cents and may be secured at the door.
the regular church service hour, 7:30 o'clock. A copy of the program for the evening follows: Introduction, Florence Cornes; opening song, hymn No. 211; hymn No. 123; devotional
service, Marvin Pickett; special musical number; topic, "Missions at
Home and Abroad;" general discussion of topic; special mission talks; benediction. Gordon Borton is leader of the meeting. Mrs. Buschman, a returned missionary from Africa, will give a lecture at St. Paul's Lutheran church Friday night at 7:30 o'clock. The public is cordially invited to attend.
large registration to keep Indiana in the lead. N Of the calf club enrollments, the children are rather evenly divided in their preference for beef and dairy breeds. Early returns are mostly from communities near Richmond, with a few scattering registrations from more distant towns.
MANY IN CALF CLUB; TON LITTER DRAGGING
Registrations in the boys' and girls'
calf club are coming in to his office rapidly, but those in the Hoosier Ton
Litter club are not so plentiful, reports J. L. Dolan, county agent. The
scarcity of ihe swine feeding club registrations, unless remedied soon, would indicate a small number of contestants in Wayne county, as the closing date for registration is Jan. 25. Gold, silver and bronze medals are offered for this contest, and as Iowa, Illinois, Ohio and other states have taken up the Indiana idea this year, Purdue is especially anxious for a
City Lodges
' ' Women of the Mooseheart Legion held a business meeting in the Moose club rooms Thursday night. A special meeting for the women of the lesrion will be held next Monday night at 7:30 o'clock. K members are urged to be present. Deputy Grand Regent, Mrs. Jungle will make an address. The regular meeting of the Women's Relief Corps was held yesterday afternoon in the G. A. R, rooms at the court house. The following committees and their chairmen were appointed by the president: Flower committee, Mrs. Cary Pioneer; relief, Mrs. Ada Warfel; executive, Mrs. Frances Da
vis; auditing, Mrs. Belle Gregg; conference, Mrs. Mary White; calling, Mrs. Mildred Stevenson; pension, Mrs. Jones; home and employment, Mrs. Nancy Hazelton; music, Mrs. Elizabeth Ireton: Americanization, Mrs. Goldie Reynolds; child welfare, Mrs. Emma Hodson; thrift, Mrs. Minnie Hall.
urday afternoon at 2 o'clock. Rev
Henry Pickett, pastor of the Friends
church of this city, will officiate. Burial will be in Quakerlynn cemetery here.
400 YOUNG BAPTISTS PRESENT AT BANQUET AT CAMBRIDGE CITY
(Special to The Palladium) CAMBRIDGE CITY, Ind., Jan. 19. Four hundred young Baptists of the Flat Rock association held a district banquet and meeting here Thursday night. Delegates- were present from Rushville, Cambridge City, Connersville Newcastle, and Richmond. The principal address of the evening was delivered by Dean Noble Sherwood of Franklin college. Meetings of the association are held quarterly for the inspiration of the B. Y. P. U. members of this district. The next meeting will be held March 15 at Rushville. Dean Sherwood's address Thursday evening was on "What Shall I Do With My Life?" His talk was one of value to young church members active in the several departments of church work." About 35 Richmond Baptists attended the meeting. Jack Cox, of Richmond, spoke on "The Life Service League," an organization which provides for the care of persons whose lives are dedicated to church service. A feature of the meeting was the
musical numbers presented by the 10piece orchestra from Rushville. The banquet at 6:30 o'clock was in charge of the Rev. Roy Reese, of Cam- V1 bridge City, who served as toastmas- x ter. Miss Ida Arnold, of Connersville, president of the district association, presided over the evening meeting. Other officers of the association are Ruby Geyer, of Richmond, secretarytreasurer, and Miss Mildred Whiteley, district editor for the Baptist Observer, the state publication of the Baptist church.
Births
CAMBRIDGE CITY. Ind. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Jacobs are the parents of a son.
8-Day Tambour . Clocks In Mahogany finish. Hour and half hour strike - $12.25 and up O. E. Dickinson 523 Main St.
&
" For tbe Business Woman
Light housekeeping is made easier for the office woman now that superiorpotatochips are easily obtained. She appreciates the clean package of wholesome food. A cnoo. a roll.
some coffee and a green salad, with the dainty chips, make an agree-
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Remember the name DenteH's. For these Goldencrisp Potato Chips are "greaseiess, due to an
exclusive process ot removing an excess fat. Their crisp salty flavor is irresistible. Order Derneli's at your grocer's.
POTATO CHIPS
HIMLLf'
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The sudden withdrawal of the last thousand of the American soldiers from the Rhine is interpreted by many Washington correspondents and editorial observers as an emphatic protest on the part of the United States Government against France's invasion of the Ruhr Basin and seizure of "productive guaranties" for the payment of Germany's reparations debt. This attitude .on the part of official Washington, it is generally agreed, is due neither to sympathy for Germany nor lack of it for France, but to a conviction that the seizure of guaranties will not solve the reparations problem, and that it opens the door to a host of disastrous possibilities, chief among which is another world war. Many American papers, on the other hand, whole-heartedly applaud Francef or resorting to a show of force, "the only language that Germany understands"; and they predict that her course will be fully justified by the results. The German-language press in the United States is pessimistic. "In taking from Germany her richest industrial district the French will deprive themselves of the last chance to get any further reparations," declares the Philadelphia Tageblatt;" which thinks that the results of the Ruhr invasion will amount to "French suicide as well as unspeakable misery and chaos for Germany, and possibly civil war in the Reich." Other German-language papers express similar convictions. THE LITERARY DIGEST this week, January 20th presents a sweeping survey of the criticism from all auarters upon the present acute situation involving France and Germany and, in fact, the entire world. Other news-features of very deep interest in this week's DIGEST are: The World Race For Oil
(With Colored Map Showing the Oil Region of the World) . -
The Plague of Tax-Free Bonds
A Defense of the Ku KIux Klan ' A Loose Cog In the British Machine Writing Two and Three Sentences At One Time "First Radio Nights" For Authors Matthew Arnold's Debt to the Jews The Anti-Catholic Torch In Canada How New York Society Got That Way How Business Came Back In 1922
The New Ohio Railroad Kings The Worst Blow to the Entente Brain Tests For Drivers to Make Motoring Safe A Plague-Proof Town The Stupendous Archeological Find In Egypt England Starving For Humor Bridging the Gulf Between Jew and Christian Is It Safe to Marry On $20 a Week? Topics of the Day The Spice of Life
Many Illustrations Including Maps and Cartoons
Where Do Jokes Originate? Some one has 6aid that there are only seven original jokes in the world. If this is so, what a vast amount of thought must be expended in furnishing mirth-loving America with material. First and foremost among those who keep the public good natured are the newspaper "Wits" and what is known as typical American humor must be based upon their efforts. The best jokes, the cleverest epigrams, the most humorous incidents as they are printed in the press of the world are eagerly scanned each week by The Literary Digest editors and a selection of them presented upon the screen in motion-picture theaters under the heading "Fun From the Press." This new short reel creates unbounded laughter wherever it is shown. Many hundreds of theaters have booked it and we would suggest that you attend the theater in your locality where "Fun From the Press" is advertised and you will enjoy good entertainmentIt is produced by The Literary Digest and distributed to theaters by W. W. Hodkinson Corporation.
Get January 20th Number, on Sale To-day
TheHY,
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At All News-dealers 10 Cents
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Fathers and Mothers of
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Why not make sure that your children have the advantage of using the Funk & Wagnalls Com
prehensive and Concise Standard Dictionaries in school and at home? It means quicker progress.
Ask Their
Teachers
Sam Vigran's 4th Semi-Annual
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PHONE 1295
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