Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 126, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 October 1934 — Page 14
PAGE 14
BISHOP RITTER WILL ATTEND CHARITYPARLEY Prelate to Head Delegation to Church Meeting in Cincinnati. Headed by the Most Rev. Joseph Elmer FUtter, bishop of Indianapolis, a group of Catholic charity executive* aed workers will leave here tomorrow for Cincinnati to attend the National Conference of Catholic Charities, which opens there Sunday and continues through Wednesday. Bishop Ritter, who will preside at Sunday afternoons opening session, will be one of more than fifty bishops and archbishops to attend the conference, which will be preceded by a solemn pontifical mass, celebrated by Archbishop Amleto Cicognani, apostolic delegate to the United States The local delegation will hear discussions of social and economic < problems, family welfare, community health service and work among Juvenile delinquents by prominent men both in and out of the Catholic church. These will include the Right Rev. Marcellus Wagner, conference president; the Right Rev. Frank A. Thill, conference secretary; Harold L Ickes, secretary of the interior; Henry A. Wallace, secretary of agriculture; former Governor Alfred E. Smith, New York; Governor George White, Ohio, and James S. Owens, New York state probation director. Among the clergy who will accompany Bishop Ritter to Cincinnati are the Rev. August Fussenegger, diocesan director of charities, and the Rev. Henry Hermann, chancery' secretary. Staff members from the Indianapolis Catholic charities office who will make the trip include Miss Catherine McQuinn, Miss Joan McHugh, Miss Florence O’Connor, Miss Mary Ryan, Miss Eleanora Ferris and Miss Frances Kotteman. Miss Hannah Dugan will head a Daughters of Isabella group which will include Miss Alice Connor, Miss Delia Dugan, Miss Helen O'Gara, Miss Mary Urbanic, Mrs. Aaron Behr and Mrs. John Quinn. Miss Dugan is regent of the local D. of I. circle. Miss Ruth Gottemeller and M?ss Mary Hannon will represent the Family Welfare Society. Sister-Mary Viola, head of the Catholic orphanage at Highland, near Vincennes, will join the Indianapolis group for the trip. GERTRUDE STEIN WILL SAIL FOR U. S. OCT. 17 Poet and Novelist to Lecture at Six Universities, By United Press PARIS, Oct. s—Gertrude Stein, poet and novelist whose writings are so phrased that few people can understand them, w'iU sail for the United States, Oct. 17, on the first visit home she has made since she came abroad thirty years ago. Miss Stein has refused an offer of SI,OOO each for a series of lectures, she said. She expects to lecture at six American universities, traveling as far west as Minneapolis and returning to Paris in midNovember. Is This too Good for Your Gough? Creomulsion may be a better help than you need. It combines seven helps in one. It is made for quick relief, for safety. Mild coughs often yield to lesser helps. No one can tell. No one knows which factor will do most for any certain cough. So careful people, more and more, are using Creomulsion for any cough that starts. The cost is a little more than a single help. But your druggist is authorized to guarantee it. so it costs nothing if it fails to bring you quick relief. Coughs are danger signals. For safety's sake, deal with them in the best way known. —Advertisement.
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" ! m Indianapolis Tomorrow Town Hall, Ruth Bryan Owen address, 11 a. m., Columbia Club. Boy Scout Council. 7 p. m., Scout reservation. Seventh annual laymen's retreat, 2:30 p. m., Butler university. Gideons, 7:30 p. m.. Washington. Sigma Alpha Epsilon, luncheon, Columbia Club. Alliance Francaise, luncheon, 1 p. m., Washington.
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118 NEW MEMBERS ADDED IN T DRIVE Otto Ray’s Team In Lead; 600 Is Goal. A second report luncheon of the Central Y. M. C. A. membership “round;up” campaign was held today with "Boss'’ Fred Hoke in charge. An enrollment of 118 new mem-
THE INDIANAPOLIS TDIES
bers was reported yesterday by “cowboys'” participating in the drive for 600 new members. The first “rodeo honors'” were won by Otto Ray, Democratic nominee for sheriff, who reported sixteen new members for his outfit. Other "foremen’’ making high records were Ralph Leas and L. E. Diamond, with ten new members each; Fred Barrett, nine members; J. R. Lynn, six members, and J. B. Fenner, two members. Workers who received red stars were A. F. Williams, Carl Alford, Berkley W.
Duck Jr.. G. V. Carrier, Mr. Leas and Mr. Ray. A boys’ "open house” program will be held at 7 tonight in the Central Y. M. C. A. V. D. Parker, boys’ work secretary, has announced that junior members have been asked to bring their parents and friends as guests. Tavern Owner Slain. By United Pr>* ELKHART, Ind., Oct. 5.—A beer tavern rivalry was blamed today for the slaying of Mike Montagano, 45, as police sought Joe Barone, 40. as the assailant.
MISSIONARY SOCIETY LEARNS_ABOUT INDIA Christianity Gains Summed Up for Convention. Approximately 12.000 British Indians have been converted to Christianity each month for the last ten years, members of the Northwestern branch of the Women's Foreign Missionary Society were told last
night by Mrs. E. Stanley Jones, missionary and wife of the noted missionary and author. Speaking in Cadle tabernacle. Mrs. Jones emphasized her statistics by the assertion that "Christianity there means much more than mere church membership.'’ She told the women that conditions in India improved immensely through missionary work and that there is no place in the country except the Christian missions where a sick child is accepted for treatment. Resentment against the Christian re-
.OCT. 5, 1934
ligion is disappearing rapidly among the educated classes, she said. The convention, which has been in session two days, will close tomorrow night. REPAIRING Trunks, luggage, purses, unibrrllas and zipper fasteners on coats etc. Gausepolil €Yi. 51 MONUMENT CIRCLE
