Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 August 1939 — Page 22

PR Modern "Man Without Country’ NOTRE DAMEISHOST 19- Year-Old Girl to Become Carmelite "ORPHAN HOME [HF lL | | 701500 KT RETREAT Ary ss in Monastery Ceremony T omorrow IsTa nets ff " db. 3, tf ~ Program Will Include Band

Concerts; Ladies Auxiliary ~~ To Serve Supper.

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__ FRID. 1G. 4, 1930 |MISONNE'S PHOTOS . J TO BE SHOWN HERE 8

| The Indianapolis Camera Club's exhibit of pictures by Leonard Mi= sonne, noted French photographer,

Times Special NOTRE DAME, Ind, Aug. 4— Fifteen hundred men ,including more than 100 from Indianapolis, are gathered on the campus of Notre Dame University for the annual two-day laymen'’s retreat. The first period of = thie retreat which opened yesterday will close

Miss Dorothy Eichinger will be-| After the mass, she will be led|going out from the world to dwell come symbolically - the bride of from the choir by the heavily- forever in the Land of Carmel.” Christ in a ceremony tomorrow | veiled prioress, while a Psalm is| As the Psalm is concluded, the| : hoping 6th. Coma Sons Peslin) “mexitis: Torasl Pel 5 Vil Ie led lek, clothed. now er diy hy astery on Cold Springs Road. * |, » lexi SFael in the habit of the order, to receive “ 2 ot Aegypto,” which refers to the exodus Ninth St. The high mass for her investiture of Israel from Egyptian bondage was the scapula, girdle, veil and mantle :

me ae Limb

The 728 anniversary of the founding of [the General Protestant Orphan Home, the oldest in Indianapolis, will be celebrated Sun-

day, Aug. 13, with the annual “Orphans’ ; Feast.”

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Rev. Fr. Edward. R. Fitzgerald, C. 8. Eichinger of ‘St; Paul, Minn, will C., for the second. ~~ . {be dresesd in ‘her’ white bridal Prayers, masses, reading, medita- robes when she receives friends and tion, visits to the Grotto of Lourdes | visitors at the Shrine of the Lit-

in the habit rel : | : from the bishop and the prioress. | Private showing for club members ey a in, he [iwi of the onder. wil be Calle by tire gifers apurepsinie 10) *ruiy ‘vesiod: she: wil prostrate wil bs foom Augie Sept. % This | second, beginning Sunday afternoon. | Most Rey. Joseph E. Ritter, bishop - : herself with arms outstretched to/Will be the first Indianapolis £xThe Rev. Fr. Patrick J. Dolan,|of the Didcese of Indianapolis: gs El form a cross while the monastery hibit: of Misonne’s photography. C. S. C., superior of the Holy Cross| Eimer Steffen will be in chargé of BRADSH AW T0 T ALK bells ring. : "| Called “the Van Gogh of POtoEMission band, has named the Rev.|the music at“the ceremony. 1 | When the service has closed with raphy,” Misonne has exhibited his Fr. F. J. Schulte, 0.8. 0. retreat Miss Eichinger, 19-year-old| . : | . Benedietion. Sister Mary of the oe Indivigusiistie camera Studies in master for the first: period, and 4he CMY a a : charist, Miss Eichinger’s new e every country o e world since rard pe SEE read Mis Tad : AT EXCHANGE CLUB in religion, will return to the shrine |their first showing at Brussels in a to talk with visitors, which she will | 1896. a Lar rT also do on“/Sunday, Monday and mn Judge Wilfred Bradshaw of Mar- Tuesday, between the hours 9 a. m.| SERMONS HEARD BY PHONE

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The program will begin at 2 §. m. and include band concerts. The Ladies’ Auxiliary of the Home will

_ serve the supper.

Organization of the home began in 1867 when members of Germania Lodge 129, I. O. O. F.,, and other interested persons learned of the success of the General Protest-. ant Orphan Home at Cincinnati, O.

Formed Here in 186%

On Aug. 5, 1867 the organization was formed here and Friedrich Thomas = was elected Heinrich Mankedich, vice president; Carl Schmidt, financial secretary;

president; | .

looking at a globe of the world in a

d Gausepohl, recording secretary, and W. Schoppenhorst, treasurer. : The committee visited Cincinnati several times, perfected its plans and then in 1870 bought the property at 1404 S. State Ave., where the building is now located. At| that time there was a log -cabin ‘on| the property. Before the new building was completed two orphan sisters were /admitted to the home ang lived in the log cabin.

| © Completed .in- 1871 he building was completed in 1 g

1 Several years later the north wi was added and the portion now occupied by the dining room wes completed. : : uring the early years of the Home the demands on the facilities were so great thdt the building capacity. The building was damaged by fire in 1883. The loss was restored and additions. were again made. Funds for supporting the institution are ohtained from membership dues, bequests and endowments.

FBI POLICE PLAN ‘KILLED AT GARY

Council Slashes Budget, Refuses Promotions Before 1941.

Times Special : : GARY, Ind., Aug. 4—City Council has killed a proposal to reorganize the Gary Police Department according to plans approved by the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Council slashed $6000 from requested appropriations for captains’ salaries and $10,800 from requests for lieutenants’ salaries. Even so, councilmen declared - themselves in favor of the reorganization but stated that if it is to be effected before 1941 the new setup should be in charge of officers holding their present rank but designated as heads of the various new divisions contemplated. Council members said the objection was to making any permanent promotions in the department until 1941 or 1942. The FBI plan calls for the organization of four divisions, headed by four captains. One would include patrolmen, squad car and motorcycle police; another the detectives; another traffic officers, .and the fourth the administrative staff to keep records and control communications.

‘OIL STRUCK ON GOLF COURSE SHREVEPORT, La. Aug. 4 (U. P.) —Oil has been found by geologists, not by duffers, under the city municipal golf course. The Shreveport City Oouncil received bids for leasing for exploration an 84-acre tract comprising the golf course.

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Florida is freed by strikers. Mr.

A diplomatic orphan of three countries, Haim Flukman is shown placed until the ship which has shuttled him between Havana and country on that giobe will accept him. He lost his Russian citizenship

by entering Cuba and then forfeited all chance of becoming an American citizen when he made an illegal entry into the United- States.

Miami, Fla., jail where he has been

Flukman probably wonders what

CHICAGO, Aug. 4 (U. P.) —Highlights of the biography of Wanda Ruth Erickson, 29, as read to U. S. Commissioner Edwin K. Walker by Government agents today: 1. At 15, when she lived at Grand Forks, N. D., she turned in false fire: alarms to keep a fireman she had a crush on too busy to keep dates with other girls. 2. When 16 she set fire to a vacant house “for the thrill of it.” 3. As a Halloween prank, when 17, she snipped telephone wires and sawed down a telephone pole. 4. A little later, at Mandan, N.|

Extortion Case Shaded By Biography of Crime

D., she robbed lockboxes at the Postoffice. z 5. She was sent to a reformatory for an attempted hotel robbery at Minneapolis, Minn. j 6. In 1935 she was convicted for extortion at Detroit. ; Government agents said that more recently she had attempted to extort money from a Fred Harvey of suburban. Glencoe, whom she had confused with the owner of a chain of restaurants. : Commissioner Walker issued a warrant ordering her held for trial on the extortion charge.

Boredom Gets

Medical Name

ANSAS CITY, Mo; Aug. 4 (U. P.).—Dr. Robert Lamar finally has discovered what ails the . General Hospital Clinic “patient who eats and sleeps well, looks robust and healthy, but feels badly all over. He has “weltschmerz.”

The ailment, says Dr. Lamar, is not tco rare and not too serious. The patient, an unidentified man, who came to the clinic several days age, says he is always bungry, but never enjoys his food. | He sleeps soundly, but wakes up tired. “I've felt this way as long as I can remember,” he said. A staff physician checked Dr. | Lamar’s diagnosis and said it was correct. The word “weltschmerz” means world-pain or: melancholy. “In other words. thé man is extremely bored,” said Dr. Lamar.

PRIBILOF SEALSKIN CATCH SETS RECORD

WASHINGTON, Aug. 4 (U.P.).— The Bureau of Fisheries reported today that the largest number of | sealskins- to be taken in any single | season has been gathered on the Pribilof Island seal preserves this | summer. : | Telegraphiz reports from the North Pacific Island said 60,473 skins have been gathered to date. Despite the large catch, the Bureau said, approximately 2,000,000 seals remain on the Pribilof group, where there were fewer than 125,000 | Fifteen per cent of the take goes; {to Canada gnd another 15 per cent! to Japan.

FIRE PREVENTION FIR

PITTSFIELD, Mass, Aug. 4 (U. P.).—An address on fire prevention was received with the aid of an unexpected illustration. Andrews Wyman was talking on- fire prevention when a rubbish can across the street blazed up, requiring the services of a fireman with a handextinguisher.

BE UNPOPULAR, 6.0.P. IS URGED

Barton Advises Republican President, if Elected, to Say ‘No, No, No.

NEW YORK, Aug. 4 (U. P)—

Should the| “miracle happen” and}.

a Republican president be elected in 1940, his administration should strive for unpopularity in its first 18 months, Rep. Bruce Barton (R. N. Y.). wrote today: “It must have the courage to tell unpleasant truths; enact unpopular legislation and say ‘no, no. no,” Rep. Barton declared in “You and the Next Administration,” appearing in the current issue of Collier's magazine. Rep. Barton said such a Republican administration should: ® 1. Repeal indirect taxes, broaden the income tax base and lower the exemptions. 2. Permit efficient farmers to raise food as economically as possible and sell it at the lowest prices consistent with reasonable profit; help unsuccessful farmers to find fheir way into other activities. S 3. Deny the wishes of pressure groups of all sorts. 4. Lessen SEC restrictions so that capital may flow ‘freely into productive enterprise. 5. Modify the Wagner Labor Relations Act in text and administration. ; = 6. Assure utilities that competition by use of the taxpayers’ money is over. 7. Remove thousands of employees from the public payroll. Rep. Barton held that “all these steps and others of a similar character can be taken without sacrificing a single sound social reform.” “The big change,” he ‘said, “will come in the spirit of administration rather than the letter of the statutes.” :

etter peresmres— COCKATOO IS WATCH DOG M'GREGOR, Iowa, Aug. 4 (U, P.).| —Mrs. L.- D. Perrine’s cockatoo, which was brought here from Australia 25 years ago as a fledgling, is

as good as a watch dog. The cock-|

atoo ‘shrills a savage warning.

Savings Received by Aug. 10th Earn From Aug. .

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SAVINGS ¢ LOAN ASSOCIATION of Indianapolis 23 W. OHIO ST.

‘hospital bed today and told nurses ‘he wanted to go back to his i chickens.

4! A dwarfed, beni, aging man, hig name went on the register as G. L. |

| friends, who had witnessed his

A Far fo

Embellished most delight. fully with the proper rules for feminine coquetry, after the genteel fashion of the 18th Century. Given to Milady with each purchase of cooling, refreshing, en. ticingly fragrant « + « oo

Sight Restored, Aged Man Is Going Back to Chickens

KANSAS CITY, Kas. Aug. 4 (U,, P.) —Little Mr. Darby fretted in his:

- neighbors didn’t learn about that “1 until later—he seldom talked about

. |ceived, found it necessary to ask

‘| man, cHe

charity for years, and who had watched him slowly face ‘blindness with characteristic: courage, knew him only as Mr. Darby. : He

‘ings from his small flock of chick-|. . Darby, 74. But his neighbors and |

was almost penniless; last | Christmas after he spent the earn-

and the art gallery and conferences in the Sacred Heart Church will fill the days beginning at 6:30 a. m. and ending at 10 p. m. A high point socially’ will be the Sunday morning breakfast, coming midway between the two sections of the retreat when James E. Deery of Indianapolis, will speak.

tle Flower in the monastery for an hour preceding the mass, the Carmelite sisters explained. ‘As the service begins, the grates between the nun’s choir and the outside choir, usually closed, will be opened and the bride will be seen Bngeling, a lighted candle in her and. .

ion County Juvenile Court was to speak -on problems of juvenile delinquency at the Exchange Club’s meeting at Hotel Washington today. Club members also were to vote on a regular meeting place for the group, choosing among the Clay-

pool, Hotel Severin and Hotel Washington. A

HORSE CAR TOKEN PRIZED WILMINGTON, Del, Aug. 4 (U. P.)—A token, which once meant a ‘ride on a horse car in Sheboygan, Wis., is the prize exhibit in J. Baptist Milano’s collection of “good-for-one-fare” pieces.

GRAND RAPIDS, Mich, Aug. 4 (U. P.) —William- Vanderi.aan, 90, doesn’t worry any more when pains or inclement weather keep him at home on Sundays. He merely rings the Oakldale Christian Reformed Church and listens to the sermon over a line he had installed from his house to the church pulpit.

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ens to feed one of Kansas City’s]

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his charities—but they did know that his flock of chickens gradually was growing smaller. - The little old man, who suffered a spinal injury when he was a child that retarded his. growth, was selling the chickens because his sight was failing and no longer could care for them. ' Finally all were gone and he had no support but a $14 a month old-age pension. Then he went totally blind, cataracts forming upon both eyes. HE Neighbors who inquired about his chickens did not learn the truth about his eyes. He spoke of “re-

tiring” and they were’ convinced | (that he knew what he was doing.

But finally Mr, Darby, who always had given more than he re-

the state for aid. The eye operation resulted. The doctor took off the bandages and wriggled his finger before Mr. Darby’s eye. ; “I see four fingers,” cried the old tears

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