Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 September 1940 — Page 15

DAIRY-GHEESE ~ MEN TO MEET:

Sixth Annual Convention Begins Tonight and Ends Tomorrow.

Managers of milk plants and cheese makers from throughout Indiana will discuss problems affecting the manufactured dairy products industry in Inidanapolis tonight. They will attend the sixth annual meeting of the Indiana Milk and Cream Improvement Association which is fostering quality improvement in the industry and elimination of trade barriers. A. T. Money, the president, will be toastmaster at a banquet in the Hotel Lincoln. The state champion 4-H Club dairy demonstration team will demonstrate quality improvement. The team, which is from Tippecanoe County is coached by A. A. Dull. The members are William Reene and George Ramsey. H. J. Credicott, general manager of the Freeport Dairy Products Co.,| will speak. Speakers at tomorrow mor session will include E. A. Gannon | of the Purdue University Extension | Division; Dr. F. N. Adams of the | Purdue agricultural experiment sta-| tion; Prof. H. W. Gregory of the Purdue Dairy Department; J. O. Clarke of the Federal Food and Drug Administration; A. E. Mec-| Grath of (he Sugar Creek Creamery Co., Chicago; W. E. Treadway, secretary of the State Commission on | Interstate Co-Operation; John Taylor of the State Health Board, and | Merrill O. Mavghan of the American Dry Milk Industry, Chicago The election of officers will close | the meeting. i

ning’ S

INES

WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 18, 1940

Speaks Tomorrow

| |

Henry E. Beldon of Los Angeles will speak at the Indianapolis Association of Life Underwriters luncheon tomorrow at the Claypool Hotel. Oren D. Pritchard, new association president, will introduce Mr. Beldon, who is president of the Los Angeles Association of Life U nderwriters.

‘THOMAS RAPS FDR,

WILLKIE AND DRAFT

SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 18 (TU. {P.).—Norman Thomas, Socialist candidate for President, today scored Republican candidate Wendell Willkie, President Roosevelt and conscription. He said in an interview that Mr.

{ Willkie had a better chance of win-

ning the election before he started

making speeches

“Willkie has indorsed all the reforms which the Democrats took from the Socialists but still says the country is going to hell under the Democrats,” Mr. Thomas said.

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CANDIDATES FOR CLERGY TESTED

15 Young Men Examined For Admission Into Methodist Pulpits.

By SEXSON HUMPHREYS

Did you ever wonder what the requirements were to be a clergyman? About 15 young men are learning today. They are candidate for trial ad- | mission into the Methodist ministry |at the Indiana Annual Conference of the church, which will begin tomorrow at Roberts Park Church. They were being examined by the | Conference Board of Ministerial training, the Committee on Qualifications and the Cabinet of Bishop Titus Lowe.

Here Are the Questions

Here are some of the questions they are being asked: Can a creed formulated centuries ago fulfill the requirements of a modern day? What do you consider the high privileges of the ministry?

What is the mission of the Christian Church in the modern world?

In addition, numerous questions are being asked on the life of John Wesley, founder of the denomination and on Methodism in American history. And each of the candidates is being asked to write a sermon and 1000 words on the lite of St. Paul. Receive Reports Also meeting today are the conference statisticians and treasurers. They are receiving reports from all the Methodist churches of Southern Indiana and compiling the totals for presentation to the business sessions. Bishop Lowe will organize the conference for the transaction of business tomorrow at 10:30 a. m. There will be sessions through Saturday. The meeting will close Sunday with the reading of appointments. There wil be “upper” room serv{ice at 7:15 a. m. in the Second | Presbyterian Church chapel and at

|8: 30 a. m. at Roberts Park tomor- | vow. Rollin H. Walker, professor emeritus of New Testaments of

Ohio Wesleyan University, will give | an address to be followed by Holy Communion. The memorial sermon will be de- { livered at 10 a. m. by Dr. Orien W. | Fifer cf Indianapolis, retiring editor | of the Cincinnati Christian Advo|cate. At 4 p. m. Dr. Edwin Lewis

Supreme Court Justice Aron Steu

months a year.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Betty Goes With Mother

Miss Talley for the next nine months. court ruling, Betty resided with her father, Adolph Eckstrom for three |something natural that might cause Miss Talley charged that Mr. Eckstrom refused to |a fire, he must look, in the case of give up the child at the end of three months. previous ruling and awarded Betty to her mother.

Seated beside her mother, Marion Talley, former opera star, 5-year-old Betty Ruth Eckstrom tearfully drives away from court after

er ordered that Betty reside with Under the terms of a previous

The Court upheld the

APPOINT 18 AS POLICE ROOKIES

Safety Board Says All Rated Near Top in Recent Tests.

Dealers to See '41 Oldsmobile

The 1941 line of Oldsmobiles will be shown here tomorrow to more than 300 Oldsmobile dealers from the Indianapolis sales zone. The dealers’ show will be held at B. K. Keith Theater by execu-

tives of the Oldsmobile factory home-office at Lansing, Mich.

Eighteen of the highest ranking graduates of the police merit school | will become rookie policemen Oct. 11.|

The men were appointed to the | Police Department yesterday by the | | Safety Board. They will fill vacan- | cies left this year by deaths 2nd retirements in the department. | The appointees were selected from a field of 30 men on the merit school | eligible list on the basis of the] grades made in competitive exams | nations. { The 18 selected were top-notch |

| professor of systematic theology at

| Drew University, Madison, N. J, will speak on “The Belief of | Christians.” At tomorrow night's] service beginning at 7:30 p. m.

‘Prisoner at the will be roma.

| temperance drama, ° Bar,” |

NO NEW POLIO CASES

¥ AT HOSPITAL TODA

|

Today, for the first day in more! than two months, Riley Hospital did! not admit any patients afflicted with | infantile paralysis. Only one patient, a 38-year-old | Vevay woman, was admitted yes-| terday. There are now 78 persons under treatment for the disease at| Indaina University Medical Center Hospitals. Sixty-five are children. State Health Board authorities said that no deaths have been reported from the illness this week. They said that cooler weather has checked its spread definitely.

{

|

| ors: | Rufus;

scholars, according to the examina- | tion grades. Most of them scored in the 90s none below ihe middle | 80s. The examinations were given | and graded by Indiana University. In addition to the written examination, would-be policemen must | pass rigid physical and phsychiatric | | tests. The appointees are: Grant W. Hawkins, ‘Cave, Oren P. Hunter, Marks, Maurice W Kinney, James |W. Burford, Bethel E, Gaither, | Joseph L. Hunt. Louis J. Grannan, pie, Norman B.

Marvin L. Bernard G.

John P. GillesBurkhardt, Daniel A. Newman, Francis F. Crail, James . ‘Gates, Arthur K. Ratz. Clinton C. Rosebrock, John W. Sherman and Charles M. Cavender.

SCHRICKER TALKS TO |

RAIL UNION BOARDS

The State Legislative Boards of | the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen and the | Order of Railway Conductors are | holding their 25th biennial meetings | at the English Hotel today. Lieut. Gov. Henry F. Schricker addressed a joint session of the group of 50 this afternoon. { The firemen and enginemen, | whose sessions will continue through | Friday, were expected to indorse a candidate for President. The conductors will continue their policy of making no indorsement. The conductors will adjourn after the election of officers. Alex E. Gordon, Indianapolis, is | legislative chairman of the firemen | and enginemen, and J. W Hanlon, | New Albany, is chairman of the conductors’ board.

TOWNSEND CLUB 26 MEETS

Townsend Club 26 will meet at 8 m, today at 1120 W. 30th St.

State Deaths

BLOOMINGTON Dr. Survivors: Son. Dr. Brid ters, Mrs Dorothy Claudia Brant; Adams and Mrs er, Arthur. BOONVILLE—MTrs. Survivors ter, Mrs. Davis. ly AW FORDSVILLE—MTrs 54. Survivors. aughiter. Mrs. rell, Clarence, Margaret

p.

Claude Brant, 68. ane Brant; daughSquires and Miss sisters, Mrs. Anna B Emma Shanklin: broth-

Margaret Long, 87. Sons, Louis and Edward; daughPearl Lemore; sister, Mrs. Lillie

ene i we. Husband, Opal Whipple; sons, Ha Noel and Ruel; sister, Mrs Williams; brothers, Alonzo, Charles. Roy, Clayton aad Ora

Mrs, Matilda Ramb, 76. Survivors: Walter, m lliam, Clifford and lan: ] Della Phillips Mrs. Hazel Mihay ELWOOD—Joseph L. Harris, 64 Wife, Maggie; son, Robert sister, Mrs. Harvey Foor. EVANSVILLE—Mrs. Mary Harbert, Survivors: Husband, William: daughters, | Florence and Leona; mother, Mrs. Ora Manchester; two sisters: three brothers John W. Schreck, 73. Survivors: Sons, William, Charles and Hdward; daughters, | Mrs. Teo Lintzenich and Miss Helen | Schreck: brother, Edward. Emery A. Beard, 44. Survivors: Wife, Edith; sons, Filmer and Joseph: daughters. Mrs. Pearl Gray and Misses Ruby, Dorothy and Bette Jane: brother. Andrew: sisters, Mrs. Martha Woolsey and Mrs. Lula Brock. James Hawkins, 40. Survivors: Brothers, Robert and Earl: sisters, Mrs. Charles Bryant, Mrs, Doke Whiphing and Mrs Charles Kepple.

HAUBSTADT — Mrs.

Leslie,

Sons, Har- | —.

Surv iy - | brothe |

34. |

Mary Klinger, 80.

Survivor: Son, William. JJEFFERSONVILLE ~Mrs. Helen Tomlin, 37. Survivors: Husband, William: sons. | William Jr. and Paul; father Henry Beu- | tel Sr.: brothers. Henry Jr. and John: sisters. Mrs. Richard Knable, Mrs Evelyn | Krall, Mrs. Flovd Throckmorton and Mrs. | J. Manley Phillips.

KOKOMO-—Adoniram J. Tharp. 88 vivors: Sons. - Rufus, Oscar brothers, A. B. and Charles

Sur- | and Elsworth;

Edward H. Drinkwater, 89. | MOUNT VERNON — James Allison, 42 wards; brother, Roy: sister, Mrs. A. = Simpson Mrs. Louise Rethwisch, 64. Survivors: | s, Henry. Carl and William; brothers, Chris NEW ALBANY-—Miss Betty Lee Magn 18. Survivors: Mother, Mrs. Marietta PETERSBURG — Mrs. Tda B. Snowden, 82 Survivors: Sons Raver and John: daughters Mrs. B. Hitt. Mrs. Charles RICHLAND—Philip Atkinson. Survivor: | Wife, Mary SHELBYVI'LE — William T. Osting 78. | Albert White, Mrs Ada Turner and Mrs. | Leo Holliday: sons. Floyd and Roy; four | brothers; three sisters. | Krempp, 61. Survivors: Husband, George; | sons, Arnold, Ray and Earl, daughters, Mrs. Hubert Beiter, Mrs. John Drew and

Survivors: Wife, Isabel: stepson, i] Bd- | Sons, Oscar and John Reicken. ghess, 1agness: sister Miss Martha Magness. H Robb and Miss Edith Snowden Survivors Jife eeda. daughters, Mrs. | WASHINGTON—MTrs. Elizabeth Trexler Mrs. Ed Gill; brothers, Ed and Joe Trexler; sister, Mrs Qaurie Hoffman,

| Britain {naval bases in British possessions in| party accepted Gandhi's leadership | talking about? {how to strangle the guy. [him out when I | strike.

headed by D. E. Ralston, general sales manager. Sales and adver-

|tising plans for the ensuing sales

year will be outlined at the meeting. The local meeting is one of 26 to be held throughout the country. | Following the presentation of the new models, a motion picture will be shown. L. C. Burnett, Indianapolis zone manager for Oldsmobile said “Oldsmobile for 1941 will introduce the most beautiful and complete line of cars in the company’s long history.”

MORE DESTROYERS ON WAY AN EASTERN CANADIAN PORT,

| Sept. 18 (U. P.).—The second flotilla | of over-age United States destroyers,

arrived today. The destroyers, given in exchange for

to Great air and

the Atlantic, are to be manned by| | British crews before being trans-| ferred overseas.

FIREMEN STUDY SABOTAGE PERIL

Inspectors Have Added Course on Wartime ‘Cigar-Bombs.’

Indiana fire inspectors were introduced yesterday to their newest

enemy—the saboteur. “A cigar thrown from a passing freight train in peacetime may be just a cigar,” said J. Burr Taylor of Chicago, an actuary. “In time of emergency, it can be a bomb designed to blow up a grain elevator.” The meeting was the first of a three-day session of the Indiana Fire Department Inspectors’ School being held at the Fair Grounds. Firemen realize the danger and their responsibility, according to Emmett Cox, assistant director of the newly re-organized Indiana Fire Service Training School.

Long Training Cited

The course includes 10 units of fire-fighting and a new one—sabotage inspection—added July 1. Mr. Cox said that firemen must learn to fight the work of saboteurs “who have been trained from 16 to 18 years.” The problem is one of teaching municipal and industrial firemen and inspectors what to look

{nears capture, agents of the coun-

for. | “Where, in the case of accident or | arson, an inspector would look for

saboteurs, for something out of the ordinary,” he said.

Criminal Rarely Caught

Most of the saboteurs who worked during the last war in this country are gone, he said. But a new crop has grown up since the middle 20s and they “know all the tricks.” he said. “If an arsonist is caught, he may be able to ‘beat the rap’,” he explained, “but a saboteur is rarely caught. In most cases, if he fails or

try employing him will kill him.” Army Officers Speak

Inspectors were to get instruetion on how to combat incendiary bombs today from Col. Adelno Gibson, chemical warfare officer from the Headquarters of the Fifth Corps

Area at Ft. Hayes, O. They will hear another Army officer, Maj. Duncan G. McGregor

speak on storage of war munitions. Col. Roscoe Turner will tal on the protection of the airplane industry. The sessions will close tomorrow with a discussion between Chief Bernard Lynch of the Indianapolis Fire Prevention Bureau and George Popp Jr. City Building Commissioner

GANDHI GIVEN APPROVAL

| K. Gandhi its generalissimo by

BOMBAY, India, Sept. 18 (U. P.). —The all India Congress Coms= mittee yesterday elected Mohandas a of the

o {

vote of 192 to All wings

‘MURDER, ING.

‘burning me,”

Church Problems Leaders’ Subject

Christian Church leaders in the county will discuss church needs, service agencies and evangelism at

a one-day convention here Friday. Hopkins,

Dr. Robert M. Christian Missionary Society president, will speak Friday evening. The convention will Je held at the 3road Ripple Christian Church, The convention program will be divided into morning, afternoon and evening sessions, Dr. Hopkins with talks and panel discussions highlighting each session. Mrs. C. R. Wheeler will talk in the morning on “Between the Book Ends,” and Miss Merle Ward, a missionary to Africa, will speak in the afternoon. Dr. Hopkins’ subject will be “What Is Evangelism?”

United

DEFENSE BEGUN

Ringleaders Argued Over Slaying Technique, Ex-Pal Claims.

NEW YORK, Sept. 18 (U. P.).— Defense testimony starts today at the trial of Martin (Buggsy) Goldstein and Harry (Pittsburgh Phil) Strauss, who allegedly strangled a man with a rope, burned his body,

then sat down to boiled lobster, arguing about their technique— whether they had used the “right

end of the rope.” They are ringleaders of Murder, Inc., a Brooklyn mob believed to have committed more than 80 murders on a fee basis. They are being tried for the murder of Irving (Puggy) Feinstein, a small time bookmaker, Sept. 4, 1939, The state rested yesterday ning after an hysterical session in which Seymour (Blue Jaw) Magoon, Goldstein's former “bosom friend,” turned state’s evidence while Goldstein screamed and Strauss babbled incoherently, feigning insanity, according to the prosecutor, Magoon told substantially the same story as told by Abe Reles, leader

of Murder, Inc., who previously turned state’s evidence. Magoon said, he helped Gold-

used in the burning and then went with the Killers to a restaurant

arguing. “Strauss said to Abe, ‘You balled rope,” Magoon said. said, ‘What are you

end of the “Then Abe

| except the Communists, who favor a mass revolution and a general

You didn't know I knocked jumped on his

“you're | §

stein get rid of the gasoline can 8 where Strauss and Reles started |g

things up, you gave me the wrong Ee

PAGE 15

URGE VANNUYS T0 SEEK POST

Colleagues Point Out That Chairmanship Depends On Entry to Union.

Times Special WASHINGTON, Sept. 18. — A move is under way in the Senate to make Senator Frederick VanNuys (D. Ind.) chairman of the Judiciary Committee at the next session. It has been pointed out that seniority goes by the date of the admission of states into the Union and therefore Indiana ranks ahead of Nevada from whence comes Senator Pat McCarran, who has been slated for the chairmanship. Several Judiciary Committee members have urged Senator VanNuys to press the seniority rights. They point out that Indiana entered the union Dec. 11, 1816, while Nevada entered Oct. 31, 1864. “Just because you let Senator McCarran sit ahead of vou at the Committee table is no reason why you should forfeit your seniority rights,” one of his committee colleagues told Mr. VanNuys. Both Senators VanNuys and McCarran entered the Senate in 1932. They will move up on the commit= tee to the chairmanship and ranking membership because of the defeats of Senator Henry F. Ashurst (D. Ariz.) and William H. King (D. Utah) and the retirement, if elected Governor, of Senator Matthew M. Neely (D. W., Va), Should either Reps. John W. McCormack (D. Mass.) or Jere Coop= er (D. Tenn.) be elected Majority Leader in the House to replace Rep. Sam Rayburn (D. Tex.), who now is Speaker, Rep. John W. Boehne Jr, (D, Ind.) will become fourth ranke ing Ways and Means Committee member, Rep. Boehne already is a member of the highly important Ways and Means tax sub-committee,

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