Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 April 1940 — Page 7

[ THURSDAY, APRIL 18 1040

METHODISTS OF STATE SEND 26 0 CONFERENCE

First General M Meeting of New Church to Open Wednesday.

Twenty-six Hoosiers will be delegates to the first general conference of the united Methodist Church beShming next Wednesday at Atlantic

Ol conference is expected to last from 10 days to two weeks. It will be different from any general conferences of the Methodist Episcopal Church, Methodist Episcopal Church South or Methodist Protestant Church, which merged to found the new church, because there will be no elections All elections including bishops in the new church will be held in six “Jurisdictional conferences,” meet- - ing in May, June and July. The North Central Jurisdiction, which includes Indiana, will hold its conference June 26 in Chicago. Indi- : ana Negro churches will meet in “= the Central Jurisdiction at St. Louis June 21. X 782 Delegates Named All parts/of the United States and 29 major areas in Asia, Africa, Latin ’ America and Europe will send a total of 7 delegates to Atlantic City’s Municipal Auditorium. Most ing problem concerns a system of weekly church papers, now published in New York, Nash ville, Cincinnati, Chicago, Kansas City, New Orleans and San Francisco. The proposal heard most often would establish one national Methcdist weekly with a regional edition for each qurisdiction. A uniform system of ministerial pensions is another topic frequently mentionéd in resolutions sent by annual conferences over the nation to the general meeting. The Women’s Missionary Council of the former Southern Church will renew a proposal lost by a few votes at the Uniting Conference to admit women to full standing in the ministry. ~ There also will be a parliamentary struggle over whether there should be one board of education or one for local church work and one for colleges. Bishop Lowe May Preside

Bishop Titus Lowe of Indianapolis is expected to preside at one session of the conference. Bishops preside in rotation. Only Texas, Ohio, New York and Illinois will have more delegates at the conference than Indiana. Delegates by annual conferences follow: INDIANA Cc CE — Ministerial, Dae n W. Fifer of Indianapolis, Cin:

nati *Chplatian Advocate e Dr. LC. Hartin er, indianapolis aistrict

r. Jo y a 5 ite trict superintendent, and D { I I Jones, Evansville district super-

Tl Morton McDonald of Princeference lay pre eSident; Russell M farmer pi , Everson of len, Indian a: Reich ia 3 leader, and attie Indianapolis, foreign Missionary

ON CONFERENCE—Mini Stepial re from Illinois and Arkan Sonn A, Patton of Ihdianaponie, the General Contetente en—tertainment mile, and D. A, Bethea - of apsen

o Wesley ey Pugh, of hncte yg % Mgthodis t Protes: 1 oy. Wayne sup Been ent; Phillips Books Smit chmond District: bibssn, aot nt, and oe William Wabash District superinNo

Laymen, oF R. ouqebush. Greenseld, conference 1 y restagat:. r R. Getil of Pt. Wa SB. F Croxall of

WoO t Protestan Chureh, and Pro enstermacher of Taylor oat:

S George H. versity, U Upl Ay, me NOR =r INDIANA CONFERENCE— Ministers, Hen sp

iis, Preacher Ts’ d fety secretary; : t D. Beck, Lafayette District superinten ent, and the v. Claude Young, Terre Haute pastor. Laymen, J. Lee Yocum of Attica, Prof. Jerome Hixson of DePauw University, Greencastle, and Mrs. E. R. Bartlett, Greencastle.

MAJ. GEN. STONE GETS RETIREMENT ORDER

WASHINGTON, April 18 (U.P.). —The Army today ordered Maj. Gen. David L. Stone, commander of the Fifth Corps Area at Ft. Hayes, O., relieved from his assignment about April 25 to return to his home at Stoneville, Miss., to await retirement next August on reaching ‘the statutory limit of 64

years. Col. John E. Hatch, who has been on duty with the 18th Field Artillery at Ft. Sill, Okla., was assigned, effective about Aug. 1, to Iowa State College at Ames, Iowa.

ENCE_Min- NR

Elder to Talk

Elder Leo J. Muir... he will address Mormons.

Elder Leo J. Muir of Chicago, Northern States Mission president, and Sylvester Q. Cannon, Salt Lake City, Utah, Mormon apostle, will speak at the TriDistrict Mormon Conference here Saturday and Sunday. The meeting will start at 1 p. m. Saturday at Prospect and Villa Sts. Officials will meet again at 7 p. m. Saturday and public sessions will be held Sunday at 10 a.m, 2p m. and 7 p. m.

BUTLER SPONSORS NEWSPAPER FORUM

A Newspaper Institute and Cure rent Affairs Forum, sponsored by the Butler University Journalism Department will be held tomorrow. “Offset Dangers and Possibilities”

1 p. m. registration tomorrow by J. W. Cull, sales manager of the William B. Burford Printing Co. Also to speak during tomorrow’s sessions will be T. M. Overley, Manager, Indianapolis Better Business Bureau; Paul Richey, vice president of the Russel M. Seeds Co., and Arne Rae, executive secretary, National Editorial Association. “The Newspaper as a Commumity Leader” will be discussed by Miles Tiernan, city editor of the Indianapolis Star, following the 6 p. m. dinner.

Ozzie Nelson to Play For Junior Prom

Ozzie Nelson’s Orchestra will pro-|§.

vide music for the Butler University Junior Prom at the Naval Armory tomorrow night, Stephen Hack,

°%e | Indianapolis, prom committee chair-

man announced ftoday. Students aiding with arrangements are William Crawford, Arnold Russo, John Ticusan, Max Wildman, James Stewart and David Yarian.

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TOWNSEND TO JOIN IN HIGHWAY FETE

Gov. M. Clifford Townsend will be one of three governors to join in the Columbus, O., celebration of a Century of Progress on the National Highway May 17. Cities and towns on the highway, Road 40, will take part in .the celebration from Richmond, Ind. on the west to Wheeiing, W. Va., on the east. A pageant sponsored by the Columbus Chamber of Commerce with the assistance of the Ohio Archeological and Historical Society, will present the history of the National Highway through the last 100 years. Gov. Townsend and Gov. Homer A. Holt of West Virginia will be guests of Gov. John W. Bricker of

CCC DINES REARTILY —164,273,374 MEALS

- WASHINGTON, April 18 (U. P.).

rollees have eaten 164,273,374 meals, at a cost of $21,577,050.08 to the taxpayers, since last July 1, CCC Director James J. McEntee reported today. The average per meal cost, he said, was 13.14 cents. During January, $3,158,326.51 was spent for 24,490,499 meals at an

ring yesterday presented the Cheney

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BOMBER PILOT GETS 1939 CHENEY AWARD

WASHINGTON, April 18 (U. P.). —Secretary of War Harry H. Wood-

Trophy to First Lieut, Harold Nee.|that the

ly, Lowry Field, Colo., as the Army's

{duty for staying with an Army] bomber, whose motors had stopped] CGALES FERRY, Oonn., during a dust storm over Hill City,|(U. P. Kas. last Nov. 18, and landing it|have the “old gang” with because he thought one of his three he . celebrates his birth passengers was still in the plane. Only after landing did he find|there came to his George jumped, but his parachute did not James isgiuley, 82, was Yoo ll to open and he was killed. attend.

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