Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 159, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 November 1934 — Page 5
NOV. 13, 1931
CHURCH PAULEY IS OPENED HERE AT FIRST U, B. •Evangelism’ Is Theme of 3Day Conference: Eight City Groups Hosts. yin:' than 100 debates from five ..• - - da ' conference of (he northwest area of the United Brethren church by Bishop H. H. Font, prr'id<ni 1 1 the a: pi nine i- - m the First U. B. church, 704 Park avenue. In cr< *• * iris; members from Wi.srn:: Minnesota. Michigan. Illinois ar.b Indiana Bishop Font said: "The church wants from us the r.rf rptanc' of anew con.m; . ion in in'- name nf Christ in a world which . ..1 vibrating from the shock of a fc** vrars ago.” This appeal followed the theme of ; . • which is EvangelThe morning session was opened w i h a communion service ronduct(<l bv the Rev. J. B. Parsons, White R.ver The Rev. George F. Snvder ci the First church is host pastor. Bi'hnp Warner to Speak At this afternoon’s gathering, B; 1 hop Ira D. Warner was the hies speaker with "A Recovery Fr rram lor the Church," as his At the close of the short afternoon ession. discussions on various church problems wrre to be held .<nd B.shop Warner was to peak on "Motives for Christian Service." A s ipp< r and fellowship hour will f r P‘ur* this evening’s program with the Rev. M. I Webber acting as to-. ’rn- ter and the Rev. O. W. Bonchrake, the Rev. A. D. Smith and n i l. food Indiana Cen- ! <1 college pre: ident. giving short talks. The Rev. Charles L. Coodell will | !• >:> the i- liar cvr ning conference t the subject: "The Prepared >|M'i i.it C onferences to Be Held After an address at 9 a. m. tomorrow by the Rev. A. E. Wright rn ' k.am li in Through Our Edui . Agencu :ixe pastors and laymen will meet in special conferi group . Tliese w ill be followed I talk by the Rev. Charles W. Bi iker on "Vitalizing and Halt* |r.g Effective the Program." and a c Home Religion,” byllr C.oodell. Tomorrow afternoon the meeting will be in charge of the laymens f. .;> with short addresses by ProD E W Frank h. |.n it-.in. Louis F Scholl. Charles L. Ihiinond. and the Rev. W. H. Todd. < It tome C onstipation Easily I .cads to Painful GALL BLADDER TROUBLE li fr”m foii4i|i,iioß. you have Mnmn !|. (l r ittt>‘sliual |>ia. Ia .laches, I . diitlaro, jrrlb* ejrca nr I you nhnuhl Ih- gl.nl |<i try anew l i':n. . a*l <1 Kl.iv h->. liri-s r>■ I•*f S r- tlii -.ii' iii' li < a m* gall Kla * h Inn- ■ up the luer. mri - ipation. help* namm empty I . II 1.l ni'l.r rn.| thiii*. the hilr. It , ■ ii i-1 ■ i: I .1 .I.i -i .-r '..nr in..tu-r !.-• k tJet K i K '“lln --. I*, p.-nilal.ln Drug <-r nnr own ilmg-ist.—AUver-
y%V 4 j • v' \ 11 ' \ -.4 j' MAKE REPAIRS NOIV! Hopairs made to your home, non, will protect It against the severe wear of winter. Repairs made now' will give the craftsman, out of a job. work which will aid him in getting food and providing shelter for his family. Because materials and labor, tom are probably lower in cost than they w ill be next spring, and because, next spring, you w ill have to do more to your house for having put off repairs for six months more. Marion County Building and Loan Associations are and have been making repair loans. Present your problem to a building and loan association for immediate consideration. ;; Invest for Repairs I /V\ A little as 25c to Sl.Ofl a week will I / build, in two years, a fund of s2fi to 5104 plus dividends for repairs. Two aWHI dollars a week in five years -pill 'u make a down payment on a heme. BUY BUILDING & LOAN SHAF.ES. THE MARION COUNTY / The Demonstration Homes J (A N. Hawthorne Lane .just begun I _ _ _ __ - - - W m m *2 North LaSalle Street work begun) H I I I I O I hi | |1 D hi 1040 Kenwood \venue H|J|||J|N|jC I II [1 |W Smock and Dudley Sts.. Edgewood I W W ■ WM ■# ■- - “ 1054 Harlan Street finished* 1715 Ruckle Street (finished) 4* M tm |B| m | VPi I M fc | JO and Kenwood (work begun D tL 11 I I U I I II ■! W GriaUia. taaianaocU*.
Father’s Blind Love for Son Leads to Prison mama m m Tragic Tale of Wastrel Youth, Indulgent Parent hood Revealed in Grim Courtroom.
r |' , HE tragedy of a father s over indulgent love for a wastrel son was 1 revealed yesterday in the quiet., book-lined federal law library as T. -year-old Daniel S. Perry, a broken, ruined man, and his handsome *on. Rus ell M Perry. Punxsatawney <Pa.i chiropractor, faced Federal Judge Robe." C. Baltzell for sentence on charges of misapplication of national bank funds. Both had pleaded guilty to the charges last Friday. The son sat - mii.ng at hi-s lawyer's elbow, while the father supported his head with
his slender fingers ar.d answered question* in apathetic monosyllables. It was a story as old as that of the human race. Letters produced in court by United Sta’es Attorney Val Nolan showed that the son, alwavs extravagant. had been a constant dram upon his father and had driven him deeply in debt. Then, in 1928. the son began cashing checks upon a mythical ... the Oreensburf National bank, where his father was cashier. Between 1929 and 1933 he cashed 1.084 checks for a total of $32,099. In the meantime, the son bought two expensive automobiles. maintained an expensive household and wrote his father to • buck up." assuring him that things would come out all right. a a a 'T'HE father, who. during a I year's sentence in Indiana •ate prison on an embezzlement charge, lost his wife by death, said in a hushed withdrawn voice that his son never knew of his illegal transactions. ei 'wo of them women. appeared before the court, a little abashed and confused by the solemnity of the court, to speak of the fathers good character. One man, a business associate, said that he could attribute the misapplication of funds to but one thing —a blind love of a father for his son. Judge Baltzell asked several questions, attempting to bring out the character of the prisoners. The judge, in sentencing the pair v drew upon his own experience and said that, since he was
INDEPENDEMT L GROCERs/
15. he had supported himself arid that Mr. Perry had been guilty of overindulgcnce toward his son. The elder Perry was sentenced to one year in federal reformatory. with the possibility of a parole after eight months have been i served. OSO Toward the son, judge Baltzell was more severe, saying that the younger man should receive a heavy penalty for driving his father to crime and indirectly causing the bank to fail. The son was sentenced to serve five years in federal reformatory without the possibility of any parole consideration from the court. When the proceedings were over and the visitors from Greensburg filed out into the hall to gather in excited knots, the son began joking with a dour-visaged clerk in the United States marshal's office and slapped him playfully on the shoulder. The father, his hopes, his illusions and his reputation behind him, walked slowly and listlessly down the corridor. YOUTH, WORKING OT FARM. JSHOT IN FACE Victim Slightly Wounded by Unidentified Hunter. While shucking corn in a field near his home. Forty-second street and Cold Spring road, yesterday, Raymond Sutherland. 18. was shot in the face by an unidentified hunter. The ten shot which struck young Sutherland were fired at such a great distance that they inflicted no • serious wounds.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
WORK PROGRAM FOR WILLING IS WISCONSIN PLAN Phil La Follette Charts New System for State, He Reveals. By Vnil'4 PrrtK MADISON. Wis., Nov. 13 —Gover-nor-elect Philip F. La Follette, Projgressive party victor m Wisconsin's flection, was reported en route to a Bermuda vacation today with plans of the new party’s "work for the willing" program. "No economic system can be continued in existence over a long perion of time when 25 to 30 per cent of the people within it are kept in enforced idleness," the Governorelect said in outlining the purposes of the Progressives before he left for Bermuda. The theory of the new third party feaches beyond the spoils system assurance of jobs "for all the boys’’ ;in the party machine, he said. It* platform advocates a system lof "full government assurance of i jobs in useful public activity to jthose who can not find work in priI vate business." "In a period of depression such as j the present you have two viewpoints,” La Follette said in the outline of the new party's wellsprings. •The conservative view is that cyclical or revolving twenty-five-year changes, necessarily involve basic changes in the superstructure of our economic system to accommodate changes in the foundation. "Neither of the old parties were willing to recognize the latter. They thought and talked in terms of the world in which we moved." In speaking of the spread of the progressive movement, La Follette said this will be determined to a great etxent by its success in Wisconsin. He admitted that deep rooting of the old parties in many states makes anew national political alignment in a third party difficult, despite- the fact that it represents a faction which has existed in both major parties since the war.
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