Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 November 1938 — Page 11
REV, FR, O'HARA WILL WORK FOR CO-OPERATION
: Seeks. Exchange Program For North and South
as - THE
Ground Broken for New Chu
[100 STUDENTS \ FROM BUTLER SERVE PULPIS
Butler College of Religion| © Provides Preachers;
of South’ American schools the possibilities of locating stholars and teachers. who are being displaced in Europe,” Father O’Hara ‘said.. “Our own experience in. this regard has been highly gratifying and I | feel confident that other educators will be interested in it.” x Father O’Hara also said his trip will serve to broaden a plan inaugurated a year ago by D. Stewart Iglehart, W. R. Grace & Co. Steamship Lines, president. Mr. Iglehart created an industrial scholarship exchange for South American col- § : tei. lege graduates with incustrial plants :
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Approximately 100 students in the Butler .University College of ReIigion are serving as student preachers in City and state churches, according to Dean Frederick D. Kershner. : . Students are eligible for churches
after they have completed two years in the college, Dean Kershner said. Many of them serve the same church every Sunday, while others visit several churches, he said. Students are paid for their work in the churches and many earn all or part of their expenses in this way. Students serving in Indianapolis, are Donald Ashton, Beech Grove; Gerald Bright, Hubert Callahan, Melvin Dickson, Emmett Dickson, Fred Harold, William Griffin, Harold Hanlin, Daniel Heath, Arthur Hinrichsen, Roy Johnson, Monte Kluthe, Arthur Lively, Arthur Mills, Rudy Moss, Frederick McCoy, Russell Palmer, Portwood Mills, Barney Stephens and Blair Sparks.
State Church Aids Listed
State churches are being served by the following students: R. Q. Adams, Fairmount and New Liberty; Raymond Alber, Ladoga; Mark Ashley, Wabash; Samuel Bailey, Westport and Waynesburg; William Barney, Cambridge City and Milton; George Bell, Bargersville; Luke Bolin, Mt. Carmel and Johnson; Kenneth Brady, Monrovia; Ormonde Brown, Trader's Point and Homer; Nelson Cole, Bethel and Cincinnati, Ind.; George Curtis, Crown Center, and Eugene Fairman, Greens Ford and Jacksonburg. : : Others include Theodore Fisher, Orestes and Moscone; Robert Hall, Parkersburg and Liberty; Edwin Hayden, Flat Rock and Bengal; Paul Jones, Mt. Auburn and VeedRobert Lewis, Fountain
Mrs. Charles Noble, stewardess of the new South
" Keystone Community Church, dug
full of dirt at ground-breaking ceremonies recently, while Mr: Noble, her husband, a trustee of the church, accepted the deed to the property frem Wil- |
the first shovel- | Those in the
liam E. Myers, owner of the ground.
* [Rev. John PF. O'Hara, Notre Dame
Times Floto.
picture (left to right) are Mrs.
Noble, the Rev. D. W. Noble, pastor of the church; Mrs. Eliza May Wright, member of the congregation, Mr. Myers and Mr. Noble,
HOUSING PROGRAM ASKED IN NEW YORK
Moses Suggests New Plan For Slum Clearance.
NEW YORK, Nov. 24 (U. P.).—
A housing and recreation program, to be completed in three years at a
cost of $245,000,000, was proposed by New York City Park Commissioner Robert Moses today as part of the newly approved housing amendment to the State Constitution. Mr. Moses suggested that 10 slumclearance projects and. attendant public improvement, costing that amount, could be financed through the State, with $140,000,000 of it by an additional 1-cent tax on cigarets. The tax would yield about
cost housing projects which would be developed by limited -dividend companies. He said the City might induce insurance companies to start
_. American Schools.
SOUTH BEND, Nov. 24—The
in this country. Father O’Hara indicated that he will seek to arrange for academic scholarships paralleling those of-
| program of close co-operation ‘be- -| day.
_|for the Inter-American Conference,
president, hopes to work out a
tween South and North American universities, it was announced to-
The announcement was made as Father O’Hara prepared to depart
opening at Lima, Peru, Dec. 9. He
fered in practical work by some of the plants.
country’s major industrial
FABULOUS MINE HUNTED ORACLE, Ariz, Nov. 2¢ (U. P.).
Thwarted in his long-time search for the “Mine With the Iron Door,” R. Shaner of Oracle has gone ‘back
is one of 12 delegates to the conJeronce named by President Roose-. ‘| velt,
up into the Santa Catalina mountains to try again. Mr. Shaner be-
exist some place on the north slope
Compound Dividends Plus INSURED Safety
Of Yofir Account Up to $5,000 Save $1.00 to $5,000.00
SAVINGS & LOAN ASSOCIATION
lieves that such a gold mine does]
them, and estimated their cost at|
$90,000,000, of which $45,000,000 would be the initial outlay for the
$7,200,000 annually. New York Citv | 4
‘cigaret smokers now pay a 3-cent tax for relief.
Mr. Moses also proposes five low- | GE 3
Square; Julian Linkous, Williams Creek and Augusta; Leroy Logan, Greenwood; Lewis Marsh, Mooresville; and Floyd Marsh, Manilla. Congregations also are being served by Lowell Megorden, Boswell; Erby Messimer, Cicero; Walter Messimer, Chesterfield; John MecHenry, Darlington; Park Netting, St. | Bernice; Roscoe Nice, Kempton and State Line; William Norris, Normanda and Morgantown; George Ross, Rich Valley; George W. Ross, Mt. Summitt; Marvin Schramm,’
| | |
Cynthiana and North Liberty; Ken-
neth Stewart, Stilesville and Hazel-| wood; Cleo Strawmpyer, Darlington; Graydon Terbush, Clarks Hill and New Richmond; Gerald Timbrook, Hillsboro and carlile; Leon Weatherman, Alaska and Hobbs, Herbert Wilson, Whitesville and New Ross, and Glendale Burton, Buck Creek.
Honorary Group Elects
Fifteen members of the Butler: Univer¥ity senior class and three’ faculty members have been elected to membership in Phi Kappa Phi,
| national honorary scholastic organ- |
ization, Miss Faye Cantrall, secre-! tary of the Butler chapter of the organization, announced today. Seniors elected were Hilton Brown | Atherton, Chloris E. Bell. Max H.| Bird, Virginia R. Carson, Jean Lou! Foley, Mary Catherine Freeman, | Mrs. Adelaide M. Hayes, Marie S.| Kuntz, Mary Loretta McLane, Mar- | thana McWhir, Bonnie Bess Myers, Philip Redwine, Mare Schubert,
Wright. Members of the faculty elected were Mrs. Virginia Groves Brunson, assistant professor of German; Mrs. Ciyde L. Clark, assistant professor of romance language, and Dr. Clarence Walter Efroymson, assistant professor of economics.
HALF PWA PROGRAM ALREADY LAUNCHED
WASHINGTON, Nov. 24 (U. P.).— Public Works Administrator Ickes said today that more than half the projects authorized under the new PWA program are under construc-
tion six weeks ahead of the Jan. 1}
deadline. Projects now under way total more than one billion dollars. Mr. Ickes said the list includes 3222 locally-sponsored projects with a construction value of more than $787,980,000 and 1059 Federal projects with a value of $199,999,206.
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P. & L. property taxes in city
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Less Than a Dime a Day Jpaid for ALL Electricity used
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The cost of the fuel which produced all the
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Meridian
and mercantile companies combined. And that’s only half of our tax story—~ : Other State and Federal levies brought our tax total up to $1,762,833.90 last year. That was
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