Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 17, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 May 1929 — Page 23
MAT 31. 1929.
CHURCH BODY ' FAVORS UNION WITH DISCIPLES Congregational Council to Act on Merger With Christian Group. r r ?* in Prorr his f or.y. the Con- ! crecational national council licrc tor. began acting upon incidental Hie final vote - ill he next Tues- ! cia’ . in the United States are repre-! hv council which voted! rentatives of the latter body felt rr *a in that the anon would be ap- j p ovrd by the Christian convention ! meeting at Piqua. 0., in October. This will be the first union oi r- Mnet denominations in the United 1 fit 1 ]! larger mergers. *ions today to hearing reports on foreign mission work, and hearing
SI Hwll tey Spots rORTH F 1— JL v/l\ JL aX ii iJ r w j • i * Again this year thousands of persons read in The Indianapolis Times * . In in ta nap Oils , . every detail of the world’s greatest speed race before it was possible Roosevelt „od Ludlow 18 Minxes (or to P urch,se the *” f “ y ’**' **>*• West and Vinton 2 Minutes paper* St. Clair and Massachusetts 11 Minutes -i n . * nci j* Indiana and West 13 Minutes Forty-eight automobiles carried The Times extras over all of Indian21st and Boulevard PI 21 Minutes apolis and Central Indiana as fast as they poured from the monster Highland and East Tenth. 15 Minutes printing presses. The entire delivery organization of The Times fob Hamilton and East Tenth 22 Minutes lowing a previously planned routing covered every key point with thorSherman and East Tenth,. 28 Minutes . . , Emerson and East Tenth.. 29 Minutes ouh ’ lightning-like dispatch. 'TI Indiana . . a fleet of high powered cars was used for speedy delivery to the theuANDERSON 15 Minutes **" d * of Times ’ Veaders in every town ’ vi,lage and ham,et in Ce " tral BLOOMINGTON 9 Minutes Indiana, BEDFORD 40 Minutes . , . , , „ CONNERSVILLE 1 Hour 5 Minutes "The third consecutive year of beating all competition proves beyond all CRAWFORDSVILLE 17 Minutes doubt that The Indianapolis Times can be depended on to give superior DANVILLE 47 Minutes service to its readers at all points. Better than 70,000 homes daily are mlflwrnDT ?r |^! nu * es satisfied with this dependable, superior service and with the' completeGREENCASTLE 4Minutes m-every-way newspaper now published by Ihe limes to the extent LEBANON 8 Minutes that many regular subscribers are being added every day, LAFAYETTE 55 Minutes MARION 25 Minutes RUSHVILLE 55 Minutes __ , r , ~ , MORRISTOWN 5 Minutes 1 \ Y 1 | 1 SmiiE wm 1 he Indianapolis 1 imes PENDLETON 1 Hour 55 Minutes ■' ■IB . . _ ■. „ A . v > PERU 1 Hour 55 Minutes (A Scri p p s ' H ow ar f GREENFIELD 1 Hour 15 Minutes HEBal “Indiana’s Fastest Growing Newspaper”
speakers from China. Japan, Africa. Bulgaria. Turke*, Philippines and other fields. "I wish to congratulate your group on the steps already taken toward church union and on the spirit which seems to prevail among you regarding all projects which iok toward union," Bishop McConnell said. I move about a great deal among various types of church organizations and I find that objection to union today does not have much to do with differences of doctrine or with ritualistic practices. but largely matters of temperament. "Now, differences of this temperamental order are sure to be overcome bv the very fact of our meeting together in co-operative enterprises." Co-Eds Outnumber Men L n 7 im< x .'utci'il MUN'CIE. Ind.. May 31. —Three women to every man are registered at Ball State Teachers College here, official records disclose. For the first time since the school became a state institution, Delaware county, of which Muncie is the county seat, fails to lead in total enrollment. Madison county heads the fiftynine counties represented at the school with an enrollment of fortythree. Delegation to Exceed 100 MUNCIE. Ind.. May 31. More than 100 war veterans of Muncie will attend the national convention of the American Legion at Louisville Four Pullman cars will be reserved for the local delegation.
TWO CHICAGO 1 'LEGGERS' DIE Guns Flare Again, but Peace Pact Still Stands. ; Bv United Fr< st CHICAGO. May 31 —The quiet that has ruled for several weeks over j j gangland was shattered on Memorial i j day when two gangsters were killed, j However, since both were only minor members of the hoodlum element; | and not allied with any of the major j | eangs the peace pact signed by the gang leaders recently stilt remains unviolated. • Thomas McGilligot, racketeer, was | shot, to death in the basement of a | case. McGilligot apparently engaged in a, eun battle with his slayer. Four j bullets were found in a wall. , Dominick Costa, operator of a small "alky cooking" outfit, was shot j to death and his body carried to a I suburb. No motive for his murder | j can be learned. Victim of Saw Buried MULBERRY, Ind.. May 31. Funeral services were held today for Alexander G. Reichart, 66, who died of an injury to an arm caused by Ia buzz saw, suffered a week ago. A ; ( daughter. Miss Opal J. Reichart, is j connected with the Indiana uni- j I versity school for nurses at Indiani apolis.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Star at 21
Only a short time ago one of tlr leading young ladies of Spokane Wash., Marion Marchante. above •yow T is a young leading lady or 3roadway. In fact, being only 21. she probably is the very youngest. Her blonde loveliness graces "Music in May," an operetta in which she is prima donna.
BIGGEST A. E. F. CAMPS IS NOW SLEEPY TOWN Lc Mans Housed 1.000.000 U. S. Troops: Few Traces Left of Occupation. BV RALPH HEINZEN. tnit.d Press Staff Correspondent LE MANS, France. May 31.—Ten years ago Le Mans was the fourth largest. American city, with more than a million rather homesick doughboys wondering when their ‘-hip would come in to Brest to carry them back to Hoboken. Today Le Mans is a sleepy country town, with only a trace here and there still to be found of the American occupation. The streets which once rang with the Shouts ot men homeward bound from the battlefields are as quiet as churchyards. But Le Mans remembers the American embarkation center, for the soldiers left in Le Mans bank accounts something around $30,000.000 while others took more than : 300 Le Mans girls to America with ; them as war-brides. A score of i Americans like France, married | French girls, and settled down in
Le Mans where today they are • prosperous citizens. Only Memories Remain Os the army camps, only memories remain. The great Forwording camp, on the Arnage road, is now an immense wheatfteld. Before the American army came it was a pine forest, but the army cleared the ground and a million men passed through the tent city which sprang up there. The Spur Camp, which saw to it that the army went home with stomachs filled took off the returning outfits all the field equipment which they no longer required, has disappeared under a race course, tnd on June 15 several American * firms will be represented in a twen-ty-four-hour endurance race on the i track which stands where once great warehouses held American supplies French Occupy Camp The French aituy has taken back many ot the properties which were rented to the A. E. F. including the I dreary Classification Camp which is a gray-walled place typical ot all French army barracks and devoid ot i any comfort. It was nerc that the great ovens 1 weie built to bake the clothes of r eturning troops to kill trench cooties, while the men went through a series ot baths in adjoining buildings to take the life out of any remaining trench fauna. The ovens have disappeared and I with them the remains of millions j ot cooties, and in their place stands i a canteen where the bright red j wines of Bordeaux are dispensed to j French troops.
School Chief to Speak MARION. Ind.. May 31. -C. N. Roselle, superintendent of Mooseheart schools. Mooseheart. 111., has accepted an invitation to speak at the state convention ot the Loyal Order of Moose here.
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E’ectrd Lodge Life Member MARION. Ind,. May 31.— John J. Sullivan has been elected ft life member of the Loyal Order of Moose. are only four life members among the 1.300 Marion Moose.
