Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 September 1939 — Page 11
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THURSDAY, SEPT. 14,
BAPTISTS BACK CHURCH LIBERTY
Present War Called Clash Of ‘Democracy’ With ‘Oppression.’
h th The Indianapolis Baptist Associa- | 'ntion has reaffirmed its belief “In|?
SiOview of the European conflict, of |! cour historic Baptist tenet of reli- ¢ Eious liberty and that we should Support and defend that principle
b S ! by every peaceful and Christian ¥ means.” { The resolution was adopted yesterday at the closing session of the ! two-day meeting of the association. It defined the present war as one K. between “Autocracy and Oppression Kr on the one side and Democracy and FlicFreedom on the other.”
Ny Hold Youth Rally tony bast feature of the meeting was natthe Youth Rally held last night at dee the First Baptist Church. The Rev. nw Harold W. Ranes of the Central Baptist Church was the main speaker. Albert Dell, president of the Baptist Young Peoples Union, was in charge of the program. The Rev. Reuben H. Lindstrom, for 12 years pastor of the Southport Baptist Church, was elected mod-
district ‘superintendents,
Direct Meth
The first annual Indiana conference of the united t Methodist Church was being directed by Bishop Titus Lowe of Indianapolis and his cabinet of seven Cabinet cinnes; the Rev. W. C. Hartinger, Indianapolis; the Rev. A. S. McKinney, New Albany; the Rev. W. T. Jones, Evansville; Bishop Lowe; the Rev. J. G. Moore, Rush-
ville, and the Rev. S. L. Martin, Seymour,
members are (left to right)
Methodist Church today at the Broadway
Woodard, Bloomington; the Rev. C. P.
Times Photo.
the Rev. E. F. Schneider, Vin-
erator, succeeding Dr. U. S. Clutton, Tuxedo Park Baptist Church pastor. Dr, L. C. Trent, Woodruff Place Baptist Church pastor, was elected president of the permanent council for one year; Earl Z. Sigmon, vice president, and the Rev. Mr. Lindstrom, secretary. fe, Fannie; daughter,
43 Given Certificates B87. SUEVIVOrs Forty-three ministers were given Mrs. Arthir Tr ley Wr T De] certificates of good standing. Dur-|g tops av. Schemet, OL Tviven: ing the afternoon's program Sergt.| charles F. Forster, 74. Survivors: Sons, Charles E. Weddle of the Police gail Fowl) sisters, Miss SR orsien, > : . i { Mrs. 1da er 1; brother, 0. Crime Prevention Bureau spoke on HAZLETON—Homer T. Reed, 60. _SurJuvenile delinquency. gt Preparations for the Baptist Loy-| Small, Mr
Mary Cunningham. s, Mrs. Madeline Clevnson: sons, William, ie Davis,
ANDERSON Mrs. Survivors: Daughter enger, Mrs. Hal § Firman® brother, W EVANSVILLE—Thomas R. .Stevenson, | 87 rvivors: Wi
vivors: Wife; hters, Mrs. Loren :. 80
Maxwell, Mrs. Joseph alty Crusade Oct. 15 to Nov. 5 were | gizapein W Morris; Sister, ans made at the morning session. Speak-{ MARION- Mrs ers were the Rev. George King, Em- Survivors: Hush (itorges urents, Mr erson Avenue Baptist Church; the | Nellie Harp; ors. Ed, ~ James" and Rev. 8. W. Hartsock, Tabernacle Charles Coleman; son, William, Baptist Church; Dr. Trent; the Son. NORTH VERNON—Mrs. Wincie Rether-
S 1111S
ruia May Phillips, 50. | nd
ford. §3. Survivors: Sons, Chester, Ora. Louis Crafton, Garfield Park Bap-| owENSVILLE—John A. Price, 72. Surtist Church, and the Rev. C. A. rors Wife, Anna; son, Ewell; daughter, Metz, First Raptist Church at Leb- Miss Vivian Price; brother, Harvey. anon, Ind. Miss Frances Tencate of |
PRINCETON —Mrs. Jennie B. DePriest, , Survivors: Daughters, Mrs. Agnes Morris, South India spoke during the afternoon.
{ Mrs. Helen Stewart; sister, Mrs. John Thomas. | Miss Pear! M. White, 22 Survivors:
STATE DEATHS
AIR CORPS TO TAKE
Parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bert O. White;
brother, Jack. { WASHINGTON—Mrs. Lillian S. Herr, 65. Survivors: Daughter, S. Marjorie Burgermeister; rothers, Henry, Charles, and George Stone; sisters, Mrs. George Wetzel, Mrs. Anna Sahm.
30 MORE HOOSIERS Expansion or the Army Air Corps | will mean 30 additional Hoosiers will
{be accepted on the force in the next
two months, Col. Enrique Urrutia, recruiting officer, announced today. The regular September quota has been filled, he said, but 15 more will now be added. The October quota is 12 and 15 will be added to that number. The waiting list has been exhausted and more applicants are wanted, Col. Urrutia said.
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Rival War
Claims By UNITED PRESS GERMANY
High Command reports German troops entered Gdynia, Poles surrendering; Warsaw surrounded, 60,000 Poles captured near Radom 50
advancing on Brest-Litovsk (Bialytosk), 120 miles east of Warsaw and
160 miles west of Russian border. Reports received at Bucharest say Polish resistance west of Lwow (Lemberg), Polish-Ukranian capital, virtually eliminated and German troops encircling city preparatory to flanking swing northward te meet wheeling movement from Bialytosk sector in northeast.
ALLIES
French claim steady advance into Saar region in front of German Westwall forcing Nazis to bring heavy artillery into play and to bring reinforcements into line; unofficially reported French capture] many Saar coal mines, render others useless with artillery fire; Polish radio charges Germans bombing open towns; claims defeat of two German divisions west of Warsaw, says attacks on Warsaw and Lwow repulsed; claims German tactical blunders and autumnal rains turning tide in favor of Poles. Great Britain, tightening contraband control, seizes phosphate cargo of American freighter.
Factor Refines Kissing Gadget
OLLYWOOD, Sept. 14 (U P.) —Max Factor Jr, who a few months ago gave the world the “kissing machine,” to test the durability of lipstick, today announced a refinement in his gadget. Factor says he now can adjust it so that its “plastic-flesh” lips can be brought together at varying degrees of pressure, to mimic lukewarm and other degrees of kisses. Unromantically, the pressure is registered on "a dial.
CRAZED MINER KILLS | TWO, WOUNDS FOUR
SALINA, Pa. Sept. 14 (U. P).— Crazed with drink and a thirst for revenge, a one-eyed 48-year-old coal miner killed two persons and then wounded four others before police routed him from his barricaded shack with rifle fire and tear gas. Unharmed, except for the effects of the gas, the miner, Martin Vnuk, was taken to Greensburg, where charges will be filed against him. Vnuk’s murderous campaign occurred yesterday at Tintown, tiny
One of his victims was the mother of 12 children.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES dist Conference Here
mining village just outside of Salina. |
REALTOR HEAD REPORTS TRADE MUCH BETTER
Teckemeyer Finds 10 to 20 Per Cent Improvement Over Last Year.
By LOWELL B. NUSSBAUM Times Staff Writer LAKE WAWASEE, Ind. Sept. 14. —Indiana’s real estate activity has gained substantially this year, Earl B. Teckemeyer, Indianapolis, said at the opening session of the Indiana Real Estate Association convention here this afternoon.
Mr. Teckenteyer, Association president, told the convention that on a recent tour of the state, he found scarcely a community that hasn't obtained one or more new industries or at least revived an old one this year, “Everywhere I went,” he said, “it was agreed that conditions in the real estate business were at least 10 or 20 per cent better than for the first nine months of last year,” he said.
Prominent Speakers Scheduled
Several prominent speakers were scheduled for the two-day convention, which is being held in the Spink Wawasee Hotel. Scheduled later this afternoon were Prof. H. E. Hoagland, of the Ohio State University College of Commerce and Administration; Newton C. Farr, Chicago, National Association of Real Estate Boards vice president, and J. H. Albershardt, Indiana State Publicity Division director, Mr. Hoagland, who is nationally recognized as an authority in the real estate and building field, was to speak on, “Let's Talk Business.” Mr. Farr was to discuss “Today's Real Estate Activity in the Great Lakes Region.”
More Than 100 Attend
More than 100 realtors from all sections of the State, including nearly 40 from Indianapolis, were on hand for the opening session. The formal opening was preceded this morning by registration and a meeting of the Board of Governors. In his opening address, Mr. Teckemeyer said that, on the basis of recent trips through other states, Indiana’s situation is extremely fortunate. “The building industry in Indiana,” he said, “has been much more fortunate than some of the neighboring states in the matter of labor disturbances and other outside influences.
Describes ‘Even Keel’
“While Indiana has not had a building boom, it has been keeping on an even keel and making substantial progress.” Mr. Teckemeyer predicted that within 10 years there will be fewer men in the real estate business. “By that,” he said, “I mean not fewer realtors but fewer general agents unable to keep pace with the times.” An informal banquet at 6:30 p. m., followed by dancing at 9:15 p. m., will conclude today’s program. Tomorrow's session is to open with two breakfast conferences, one on property management, with Mark Miltenberger, Muncie, presiding, and the other on real estate brokerage, with W. Glenn Hamilton, Richmond, presiding.
Appraiser Will Speak
George T. Whelden, state appraiser for the Home Owners’ Loan Corp., is to be the principal speaker at the general business meeting tomorrcw morning. Mr. Whelden, past president of the Indianapolis Real Estate Board and first secretary of the Association, is to speak on “Are We Rubber Stamp Appraisers or Sale Price Guessers?” The convention is to concluded tomorrow afternoon with committee reports, the president's address, election of officers and an address by Samuel C. Cleland, Ft. Wayne. Mr. Cleland, attorney for the Taxpayers Research Association, Ft. Wayne, is to discuss “The Indiana Tax Dollar.
GIRL BICYCLIST HURT Evelyn Jean Doan, 11, of 620 S. Lyndhurst Drive, was injured today when struck by a car while riding her bicycle home from school.
Stars of Gold Shine Sept. 24
ASHINGTON, Sept. 14 (U. P.). — President Roosevelt has proclaimed Sept. 24 at Gold Star Mothers’ Day. The President's proclamation, issued yesterday, said that “The service rendered the United States by the American mother is the greatest source of the country’s strength and inspiration” and recalled that the Gold Star Mothers “suffered the supreme sacrifice of motherhood in the loss of their sons and daughters in the World War.”
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SAN DIEGO, Cal, Sept. 14 (U. P). —Flying under unusual conditions of secrecy, 14 of the Navy's big PBY “flying dreadnaughts” were somewhere over the Pacific Ocean today on a nonstop hop from San Diego to the Hawaiian Islands. At midnight the squadron was believed to be about halfway along the 2000-mile flight. It was expected that the flotilla would put down at Pearl Harbor, Honolulu, sometime this forenoon.
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