Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 October 1939 — Page 8
AA A SM BSS RS
is
instructors Named for State
Session; 700 Expected To Attend.
Sixteen study courses will be offered to social workers attending the State Conference on Social Work here Nov. 1-4 Allan Bloom, conference president, announced today. Speakers at general sessions will include Raymond Clapper, ScrippsHoward Newspaper columnist. The courses, to be conducted by social work leaders, will be held Nov. 1 and 2 at the Claypool Hotel. Plans have been completed to enroll 700 social workers, Mr. Bloom said. The series will be held simultaneously, making it impossible for one person to participate in more than: one course, he explained. The courses and their leaders - clude: Leadership in group work, Dr. Arthur J. Swift: Jr., Union Theological Seminary, New York City; basic concepts in case work, John Reimers, Ohio State University; case work concepts applied to aid dependent children, Mrs.-Lora B. Pine, of the Department of Public Welfare, Allegheny County, Pittsburgh
Others Are Listed
Case work concepts applied to old age assistance, Miss Leila Kinney
Denver ‘University; mental "hygiene |: aspects of family case work, Miss |:
Ruth Gartland, University of Pitts-
burgh; growing concepts of case]. work, Miss Elma Olson, executive |:
secretary, Family Welfare Service, Evanston, Ill.; problems of older children, Dr. Samuel W. Hartwell,
president of the American Ortho-
psychiatric Association. Child in foster care, Paul T. Beisser, president of the Child Welfare League of America; planning for the unmarried mother and her child, Mrs. Ruth F. Brenner, supervisor, St. Louis Children’s Aid Society; social imrlications of health problems, a symposium arranged by the Indiana State Medical Association. Techniques for the utilization of community forces for the development of social work programs, Prof. W. I. Newstetter, dean of the School of Applied Social Sciences, University of Pittsburgh; how to make your community aware of social work, Miss Ruth Laudeyp, publicity secretary, United Charities of Chicago, and Milton Shufro, public relations service, Chicago Relief Administration.
Dr. Loveland Named
The role of a social worker in a democracy, Mrs. Dorothy Kahn, assistant executive secretary of the American Association of Social Workers; mental hygiene and the community, Dr. George C. Stevens, director of the Division of Medical
* Care, Indiana Department of Pub-
lic, Welfare. The board members’ opportunity and responsibility in the social welfare program, Mrs. Hertha Kraus, Bryn Mawr College; problems in parole and probation supervision, Dr. Frank Loveland, .supervisor of classification, -U. S. Department of Justice.
CATHOLIC SCHOOLS? ‘CRAFTS EXHIBIT SET
The fifth annual exhibition of arts and crafts work done in Indiana parochial high schools and colleges will be held at the Central Catholic High School at Huntington, Nov. 9-23. The exhibition is sponsored.by the Hoosier Salon Patrons Association of Chicago. Sister Leontine, in charge of art work at Central High, will arrange the exhibits. Miss Florence Smith, supervisor of the art department of the Hunt« ington High School, will have charge of exhibit judges. Prizes will be
Smith Powner.
The wooden frame church, built after the first log Shiloh Methodist Church, had a waist-high partition in the middle separating the men and boys
from the women and girls. 8 8 =
Days of the old circuit riders will be relived Sunday when the Shiloh Methodist Church at W. 10th St. and Shiloh Road in Hendricks County celebrates its 116th anniversary. Mempers and former members will abandon their automobiles and come to the services in buggies, rigs, surreys, wagons, on horseback or by walking. Many will attend in oldfashioned clothing. A basket dinner at 11 a. m, will be followed by preaching in the afternoon, customary in circuit rider days. The Rev. Allen Lewis is pastor and former ministers of the church are being invited to speak. Old Organ to ‘Accompany sfhgers
Following the practice of other days, the members of the congregation will be separated, men and boys sitting on one side and women and girls on the other. An old-style organ, the only musical instrument to be used, will accompany. the “psalms” and “line” singing. Mrs. Belle Gossett, the oldest living active member, is to read the church history. Decorations will include split-log .seats and a model of the first log cabin church, pictures of members and picnic groups.
Present Church Built in 1927
In his memoirs, the Rev. Joseph Tarkington, a circuit rider, grandfather of Booth Tarkington and first authentically recorded minister there, tells of walking 12 miles of his journey to the church, carrying the saddle bags on his shoulders because the horse died en route.
Congregation to R oF nact Pioneer Customs Sunday
Cownty, 2
“help a neighbor out of “his prediCausse.sv ~ watesd lus hoine burned. + The present structure was biilt in 1927, using part of the brick from the former building destroyed by fire. Members of committees in charge of the anniversary are: Mrs. Gale Shewaltér, Mrs. Inez Pearson, Miss Mary Jane Ross, Mrs. Allen Lewis,
Mrs. Elmer Gerth, Mrs. Walter Pow-|
ner, Gale Shewalter, Curtis Gardner, Hortense Powner, ‘Mrs. Belle Gossett, John McClelland, Miss Jessie Powner, John Henry Davis, Miss Freda Hennipman, Kenneth, Trent, Alfred Clark, Maurice Wells, Horace Linn, Edwin Bremer, Will Pearson, and members of church organizations.
RELEASE NEW BOOK BY I U. PROFESSOR
Times Special
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. Oct. 5—
The Indiana University : Press to-|
day released: the third volume of a series of four on a “Bibliography of British History,” prepared by Dr. W. T. Morgan of the History Department. The volume covers part of the reign of Queen Anne and includes source materials published in 1717 and later. The first volume was published in 1934 and the second in ; Dr.” Morgan ‘is now on leave of absence in England doing research work, ‘preparatory to writing a history on the last four years of Queen Anne’s reign. At. present time he is the only American professor studying in the Bodleian Li-
The first church, according to
awarded by Peter C. Reilly, Indianapolis businessman. o
early members, was torn down to
brary at Oxford. All others have left the country because of the war.
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HEINZr=:S0U
ONE OF 23 KINDS
When the Shiloh Methodist Church celebrates its 116th anniversary Sunday, some members will recall ¢ this photograph taken ahout 1905 of a Sunday School party. In the front row are (left to right) Mrs. Anna Veweigh Bell, Mrs. Sarah Gerth Sullivan, Mrs. Merlie Starkey Clark, Miss Esther Clark, Mabel Holley, Miss Carrie Watt, Florence Jenkius, Mrs. Carmen Mills Medsker and Mrs. Stella Gerth Linn. (left to right) are D. V, Clark, the driver; Mrs. Hattie Davis Doyle, Mrs. Lenore Sanders York, Mrs. Edith Clark Jenkins, Elva Gable (deceased), Mrs. Marietta Foudray MgClelland, Miss Alverta Watt, Miss Leah Clark, Mrs. Althea McClain Mills, Mrs, Eleanor Parker. Clark,
In the rear. row:
Emma Watt Huron and Mrs, Stella
The brick structure above burned in 1927 but ‘part of its walls were used for the present brick church located at W. 10th St. and Shiloh Road in Hendricks
+} fying eligible taxpayers.”
| or. county and therefore did not owe
|set Jan. 1. However, during the last
| nouses: but the companion bill ‘on
| minute
|FIVE NAMED AT DEPAUW
| They: are. Bill: Horne, 5354 N. New,
- For Persons Without Poll Receipts.
A new auto license sale system designed .to strengthen the poll tax payment provisions of the license law has been adopted by the. State Motor License Bureau. Frank Finney, Bureau director, said “thousands of dollars have been lost in poll present haphazard method of veri-
The auto license law réquires male applicants to present a receipt show-
Mr. Finney said “no end of confusion has resulted in this procedure because hundreds. of persons claim they were not residents of the state
any poll tax.” Under the new system the license bureau will rquire a. to by the applicant t he has not the legal taxing period.
drivers’ licenses will begin Dec. 10 with the deadline for their purchase
two years Governor M. Clifford Townsend has extended the deadline to March 1 by executive order. The Governor has not indicated whether he will repeat the extension ‘order this year. Bills introduced in the last Legislature provided for extension of the deadline to July 1. The bill concerning the drivers’ licenses passed both
auto plates was lost in the lastlegislative drivers’ license bill was not signed by the Governor.
Five Indianapolis students have been named to the staff of the DePauw University student newspaper. Jersey St.; Joanne DeMilt, .5210 ‘Pleasant: ‘Run Boulevard; Claycombe, 430 Parker
Afiidavits. to Be: Reid)
xes because of the|
ing they have paid their poll tax Dr. " | before auto tags are issued to them.|~
affidavit sworn | been a resident of the state during
jam so the].
Mary |}. Ave. |’
Finger Printed
NEWARK, N. J, “Och, 5 (U. PJ. —The man who can’t be fingerprinted is William Lykins, 18, of Shawnee, Okla., who applied to ‘a clothing’ bureau here for aid.
“and. .was picked up as a matter
1:91 Soutine when. he sain he hag no y “But when’ police tried to finhim today they found
explained that he had an -afflic-
tion _ called keritasis paimares ||
plantarius. ‘SCHOOL 'ENROLLS 93 Solles for the 1939-40 school year at
the Normal College of the American’ ‘Gymnastic Union, 415 E. Mich-
[WANT WNUTT TO TALK fd fDinner
gerprint : that soft. calluses had obliterated | the normal loops. and whorls. He |
Ninety-three students have en-|}
1940 Foreign Trade
CINCINNATI, Q., Oct. 5.—A delegation from the Foreign Trade Club of the Cincinnati C “of Com‘merce: will go to Washington this | week-end to invite Federal Security || Administrator Paul V. McNutt to speak at the club’s ‘World Trade|
This “equipment ‘can be rented at -HAAG’'S ALL-NIGHT | DRUG STORE ‘22nd and’ Meridian
TE
atlanges On
‘next April. ~The meeting is to feature e Greater
REMEMBER E]0UR RATER
200 Roosevelt Bldg. 205 Odd Fellow Bldg. Bois od Washington Pennsylvasia 400 Washington
~ COMMONWEALTH. LOAN co.
* FOUNDED 82 YEARS AGO ’
igan St, it was announced today by Dr. Carl B. : Spush, president. :
The sale of 1940 auto plates and|
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