Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 November 1940 — Page 8
TORE
NUNS TOGETHER
First Double ‘Investiture at Carmelite Monastery Set Tomorrow.
The first double clothing ceremony ever held at the Carmelite Monastery, here, will be celebrated tomorrow when two young girls from Illinois are formally received into the order.
The Most Rev. Joseph E. Ritter, bishop of the| Diocese of Indianapolis, and the prioress will present the novices with their vestments. They ace Miss| Jean Macy, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. G. BE. Macy of Chicago and Miss-Mary Rogers, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Rogers of Noble. The families of both girls are to be present. Bishop Ritter will preach the sermon and be the celebrant for the mass beginning at 8:30 a. m. at which the clothing ceremony will take place and Elmer Steffen, diocesan director of music, will direct the singing. According to immemorial custom, the novices will be dressed in wedding garments symbolical of their becoming the brides of Christ; will at one point in the service kneel holding lighted candles; and at another, prostrate themselves to indicate their complete submission to the will of God. | For an hour previous to the mass, Misses Macy and|Rogers will receive visitors and alsp for three days afterward.
It’s never too late to pay a bet so here they are. P y Norman Mascoe, 2115 W. Morton St., who really didn’t lose the bet because he didn’t make it, “subbed” for a friend who was sick. Enjoying the ride was James Graham, 1629 Berwick Ave., whose politics are obvious. Mr. Mascoe, who takes it all in his stride, said we could quote him
-“I'm going to keep on voting Republican until we win.”
The “pusher,”
pry
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PREPARE CAMP FOR HOOSIERS
Workmen on Duty at Post 24 Hours a Day Before Influx.
The construction work at Camp Shelby, Miss, where Indiana guardsmen will train next year, has resulted in the greatest “labor rush” in Mississippi's history. The camp is in the pine-land 10 miles south of Hattiesburg. According to reports reaching here from Guard officers who have made inspection of the expanding camp, 13,000 civilian employees are working three eight-hour shifts to get the camp ready for the some 45,000 guardsmen from four states scheduled to train there. Ten thousand screened and floored tents are being built. Mess halls going up for enlisted men total 294. Officers will require 24 dining halls. Besides these, work is under way on a 2000-bed hospital, a bakery, laundry, complete cold storage plant and two incinerators. Constructing quartermasters’ specifications also include 18 smaller infirmaries in addition to the big hospital. 3 Theaters, Too To discourage soldiers from wandering away for their play, Camp Shelby will have three tent theaters and three “service clubs.” Besides, there will be 21 regimental recreation buildings for reading and letter writing. For keeping Guards’ mechanized equipment in good shape, Shelby will have 46 motor repair shops and three utility shops. And to fuel the tanks and armored cars there will be 46 gasoline stations and 37 warehouses. For men commanding the troops, a total of 34 administration buildings and nine general officers quarters are in the plans.
2 Divisions Train
Camp Shelby will serve as training base for two National Guard Divisions, the 38th, with troops from Indiana, Kentucky and West Virginia, under command of Maj. Gen. Robert H. Tyndall of Indianapolis and the 37th composed entirely of Ohio guardsmen. Each division with a present peacetime strength of around 10,000 men will be swelled to war strength with draftees to- approximately 22,000 men each. In addition there will be several large units of service troops for camp “housekeeping” duties. The. Ohio Guard is already at Camp Shelby, at present housed in temporary quarters. The 38th Division is expected to entrain for Shelby in January. The camp will be ready for occupancy some time next month.
JURY TO INVESTIGATE SOUTH BEND SLAYING
SOUTH BEND, Ind, Nov, 22 (U. P.).—The St. Joseph County Grand Jury was expected to investigate today the slaying of Leo Sopczynski, 60-year-old South Bend gardener, following the disclosure hy police last night that David Beder, 51, Russian-born South Bend junkman, had admitted the slaying in a written statement. Sopczynski’'s body was found in a South Bend alley Wednesday night with its skull fractured. Beder said that Sopczynski came to his home asking for money to buy liquor. A fight ensued that ranged through Beder’s home, leaving a trail of blood and broken windows. Beder said that following the fight he placed Sopczynski’s body in his junk cart and dumped it in the alley where it was found.
A Three Days’ Cough is Your Danger Signal
Creomulsion relieves mptl - cause it goes right to romp of oe trouble to help loosen and expel germ laden phlegm, and aid nature to soothe and heal raw, tender, inflamed bronchial’ mucous membranes. Tell your druggist to sell you a bottle of Creomulsion with the unSoran Se you must lke the way it e co to have your money cg Toy ane
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AUTOS KILLS
‘OVER HOLIDAY
Victims; None Die in Marion County.
Five persons died in holiday traffic in Indiana, all outside Indianapolis and Marion County. The dead are:
MISS ELSIE LOHR, 37, nurse at Sunnyside Sanatorium, killed when her car collided with another near Alexandria as she was on her way to a Thanksgiving dinner at Fairmount. She had been a Sunnyside nurse for the last two years and previously was a nurse at Riley Hospital. LOVELL BEAN, 41, Cass County farmer, who died when his car struck a utility pole. LORENZO SMITH, 52, Cincinnati, killed when his car and a truck sideswiped near Batesville, Ripley County. : MISS NANCY SMITH, 17 of Mishawaka, a high school pupil, killed in an accident in which three others were injured. SAMUEL SCHUMACHER, Spencer County farmer, killed near Rockport when he drove his car from a side road in front of a ruck.
Former Riley Nurse Among|
Party for Dairy Workers—A Thanksgiving dinner and party was held at the General Protestant
Orphans’ Home, 1404 S. State St. Tuesday night for employees of the Weber Milk Co, and members- of their families. Al W. Buescher, company manager, was host at the sixth annual affair which was attended by 170 persons.
0. E. S. Meets Wednesday—Cumberland chapter 515, O. E. S., will met at 8 p. m. Wednesday at the Cumberland -Masonic Hall.
Mothers Dine Tuesday — The Mothers’ Club of the English Avenue Boys’ Club will have annual Thanksgiving dinner at 12:30 p. m. Tuesday at 1400 English Ave.
0. E. S. Plans Party—The Indianapolis Ladies’ Auxiliary to Chapter 393, O. E. S., will hold a card party tomorrow night in the chapter hall at 1522 W. Morris St.
Two and one-half tons of good seasoned oak logs regarded as a fuel, equal one ton of coal.
TAFTBILL SEEKS
NEW WAR BOARD
Senator Doubts Ability of Advisory Commission to Consolidate Plans.
WASHINGTON, Nov. 22 (U. PJ). —Senator Robert A. Taft (R. O.) will introduce a bill today proposing replacement of President Roosevelt’s Advisory Defense Commission with a war resources board under an administrator empowerc'! to “cut across red tape.” In an advance announcement of the bill, Mr. Taft said that “a coordinated plan is essentiai as the fourth arm of our defense” and doubted the ability of the present advisory commission to achieve that end. © His bill, he said, would follow the industrial mobilization plan of 1939 which “has never been put into effect by the Administration.” “We now have an advisory commission made up of seven able men without a chairman,” he said. “This body, however, is purely advisory and it is not perfectly clear whom the members are supposed to advise. “Apparently each member reports to the President directly. So,
in effect, we have seven new bureaus to co-ordinate e:cisting bureaus and only the President has] the power to co-ordinate the coordinators.”
1 r § CHURCHILL IN DRAFT WINCHESTER, Va. Nov. 22 (U. P.).—Winston Churchill was one of the selective service registrants re- ( ceiving serial numbers from a local draft board. He professes “no kin”
Primary objective of the new board, Mr. Taft said, would be to co-ordinate all industrial and pro-
curement phases of the defense program under the administrator. The latter and members of the board would be appointed by the President, subject to Senate confirmation.
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