Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 May 1941 — Page 22

PAGE 22

SCHOOL MERGER D. K.'D BY SYNOD

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State Lutherans to Ordain Two to Ministry at || Convention Here.

: The Indiana Synod of the United | Lutheran Church today approved | the proved merger of the Hamma Divinity School at Springfield, O.,] and the Chicago Lutheran Seminary, | Maywood, Ill. The Synod is holding its conven-| tion at the First United Lutheran Church. The convention opened § Monday and will continue through | tomorrow morning.

Chaplains Speak

Two of the United Lutheran] Synods already have approved the) proposed merger of the schools. Two others, besides the Indiara Synod, | Must act on the proposal before it! an be adopued. A special order of business this morning’s session included adgresses by two Lutheran chaplains] on “The Church Ministering to Men in the Service.” They were ChapJains Paul W. Schrope of Louisville, Ky. and L. HL Wyandt of Camp Shelby, Miss

2 to Be Ordained | Organizations

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flying cadet.

The Service of Ordination is scheduled for tonight with the Rev.

Sa HE \ Intently, Flying Cadet Lyman Shedron (left), former Butler University student, listens to last minute instructions from Floyd Andrews, | instructor at Parks Air College, East St. Louis, Ill, before taking off for a training flight. Mr. Shedron was enrolled in Butler's primary Civilian Pilot Training course last summer and is now a U. S. Army

NORTH SIDE REALTY

Paul H. Krauss of Ft. Wayne deliv- | ering the sermon. Robert Heine of Ft. Wayne and Gideon Wick of Lincoln, Neb. will be ordained. Mr. Heine will become pastor of the Elwood Church and Mr. Wick will serve at Terre Haute. At a banquet last night, Dr. Osear F. Blackwelder of Washington discussed “The Place of the Church in the World of Today.” Election of three new officers was held yesterday afternoon. Dr. A. H. Keck of Richmond was named

0. E. S. Sponsors

ticket chairmen.

John PF. Holaday, treasurer. Dr.|ly, 512 N. Illinois St. Homer E. Turney remains as presi- | dent. the dinner. Mrs, ke ght se ak is president. ‘WAR END NEARER'-NYE |

DENVER. May 14 (U. P).—U. S.|

night that peace advocates

hastening the end of the war. Antlers.

G. A. R. Ladies to Give Dinner— sold 17 houses, Chicken and noodles will be on the apartment building, and contracted ‘menu _at a dinner to be given by|ts build five homes. : . ‘the T. W. Bennett Circle, Ladies vice president; the Rev. G. C. Geor- |of the Grand Army of the Repub-|

ing of Logansport, secretary, and |jjc, at noon tomorrow in Ft. Friend-

A business meeting will follow Irene Compton

Stamp Club to Hold Auction— Senator Gerald P. Nye (R. N. D) |The Indianapolis Stamp Club will said at an America First rally last {have a stamp auction at its meetare ing at 8 p. m. Friday in the Hotel

—— SALES AHEAD OF '40

ways and means committee of En-| glewood Chapter, O. E. S., wil sponsor a card party at 8 pp m. | Tuesday in the home of Mrs. Mary | Reynolds, 11 E, 34th St. Mrs. Opa’, | Shipman and Mrs, Lena Keller are hic week a year ago.

Sales totaling $134,600 reported this wee.. by North Side Realtors bring the year’s transactions to $2,229,226. some $627,000 ahead of

Members during the past week 47 lots and one

House sales were: 715 N. Bolton

|Ave., 1728 Milburn St., 3621 Tacoma Ave. and 915 N. Harris Ave. by Jack C. Carr; 5325 Carrollton Ave. by R. E. Peckham and Forest Knight; 947 (Ewing St. and 1415 Montcalm St. by Mr. Knight; 4347 Gollege Ave. by [Ford Woods Co.; a home in Wil|liams Oseek by Fieber & Reilly and American Estates Co.; 2318 E. 58th St. by Kenneth Fry; 4250 Summit St. by B. L. Edwards; 401 E. 4lst

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

AR

WEDNESDAY, MAY 14, 1941

JEWISH CENTER | Carol to Speat T0 CELEBRATE

Panorama Showing Work To Mark Kirshbaum’s Annual Meeting.

Fifteen years of building good citizenship will be celebrated at the annual meeting of the Jewish Community Center Association Tuesday night in the Kirshbaum Center, Meridian at 23d St. The theme of the meeting, President Theodore Dann said, will be a demonstration of the role the Association plays in building citizenship among those who participate in the association’s social, recreational, educational and group work activities. The various activities will be illustrated by a panorama written by Miss Jacqueline Wolf and Mrs. Ben Paller. It will be staged by Miss Emily Johnson, dramatics director of the Marion County WPA recreation project, and directed by Mrs. Paller and Miss Anita Cohen.

Dr. Cronick to Speak

The principal speaker will be Dr. Charles H Cronick, psychiatrist of the Riley Child Guidance Clinic of the I. U. Medical Center. His subject will be “A Psychiatrist Looks at Group Work.”

James F. Carroll, president of the Indiana Bell Telephone Co, will speak on “Telephone Servjce” at the Indianapolis Real Estate Board luncheon tomorrow noon in the Washington Hotel.

FORT HOSPITAL TOBE EXPANDED

Citations of honor for service to the community will be conferred on p

More Funds Allotted for Recreational Building, |

past and present presidents of the | Association and of its parent organization, the Indianapolis Jewish | Federation. Samuel L. Mueller is Extra Barracks. | the Federation president. ~ . A a a Efroymson and Isi- eral Hospital, now nearing comdore Feibleman, while those .of the pletion at Ft. Harrison, will be expanded to include a recreation

Association are Leonard A. Strauss, Sidney J. Sternberger and Jacob|building, additional barracks, an L. Mueller. administration building and garages, Kiser to Report Capt. Frank A. Ray, post construcJ. J. Kiser, association director tion quartermaster said today. apd. Shajemian of as Sry pad vy An additional allotment of $76,615 m » W ) - i ciation’s morale nny for mili- Jor She Tew Halling: vas poe ington.

tary visitors in the City. The Jewish Community Center| mo breakdown includes, $52,200 Association was established in 1926s... tire recreation building; $6900 for to carry on the work ; previously barracks: $5250 for administration carried by the Federation, which|pyjiding and $2265 for garages. opened the first community house Capt. Ray said the expansion will be the first since construction of the

in 1908. In 1914, larger quarters were taken in the Communal Build- | new 1000-bed hospital began. With the new allotment, total funds be-

ing, 17 W. Morris St., still operated ing spent on the project now total

by the Association, and recreation facilities were added four years|more than $2,400,000. The additional later. buildings will bring to nearly 80 the A bequest by Raphael Kirshbaum total number of structures composin memory of his wife, Flora, made ing the hospital and its service acilities.

possible establishment of a second Two hundred of the hospital's

community center, the present Kirshbaum Center. proposed 1000 beds will be ready for occupancy in one week and the re-

Aves. and in Sherwood Village. Mr. Carr sold an apartment at 2157 N. Pennsylvania St.

FRED DYER, RETIRED, | DIES IN HOME HERE

{| Fred Dyer, retired brick mason, |died today -at his home, 1338 Villa Ave. | most of his life, he was 69. | Mr. Dyer was a charter member {and past sachem of Pokogan Tribe | 2386, I. 0. R. M. He was trustee of the lodge.

A motorcycle enthusiast earlier in his life, Mr. Dyer maintained his contact with motorcycle organizations here. Services will be held at 2 p. m. |Saturday at the ‘Tolin Funeral |Home. Burial will be in West Newton.

3 HOOSIERS RENAMED TO CHURCH OFFICES

| Delegates to the 1941 Michigan-In-diana Synod meeting of the Evangelical and Reformed Church late

| Mayer, Detroit, president, and se- { lected Detroit as the 1942 conven[Hon city. Other officers re-elected were: Rev. Matthew Worthman, Bluff-

W. H. Hand; Culver, treasurer.

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| FT. WAYNE, May 14 (U. P).— racing cars of the past 40 years.

yesterday re-elected Rev, Edwin F.|

ton, vice president; Rev. Victor P.| Frohne, La Porte, secretary; and;

In the 15 years existence of the Association, Mr. Dann said, there | mainder will be ready by June 5, Capt. Ray said.

| has been an aggregate attendance DEFENSE HOUSING

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| baum Center and the Communal WASHINGTON, May 14 (U. P).

| Building. The attendance iast year |was 116000 at the Center and | 37,000 at the Communal Building. i —President Roosevelt has approved 13 localities in nine states and Alaska as defense housing areas, an act which permits private builders to obtain 90 per cent Federal hous-

CHRYSLER PACE CAR WILL BE DISPLAYED ic'oian oe conf rir ou

The ultra-streamlined Chrysler Newport, pace car for the 29th an-| The areas approved included ‘nual 500-Mile Race May 30, will be|gingsbury-La Porte, Ind. |displayed from 6 p. m. tomorTow until 10 p. m. Friday at the C. H. Wallerich Co., 950 N. Meridian St. The Newport's design has come from record-breaking racing cars of the past few years—Sir Henry Seagraves’ “Golden Arrow,” Capt. George Eyston’s “Thunderbolt,” and. ohn Cobb's “Railton.” ccompanying the Newport will ecturer from the Chrysler

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‘WHEELER FAVORS AID BUT OPPOSES WAR

TRENTON, N. J, May 14 (U. P). | —Senater Burton K. Wheeler (D. | Mont.) declared last night that he | favors aid-to-Britain so long as such aid does not involve the United States in the war. «I am in favor of giving all the aid to England that we possibly can,” he told an audience of 500, but I don’t want this country in this European war because I know it will destroy democracy in the United States.” It was the first public indorsement of aid-to-Britain by Senator Wheeler, staunch isolationist leader. However, he criticized provisions of the lend-lease bill and said “peace measures” proposed by Administration leaders are “leading us step-by-step into war.”

‘ROSIER, DEMOCRAT, VOTED SENATE SEAT

WASHINGTON, May 14 (U. P). —The United States Senate had a seat ready today for Dr. Joseph Rosier, West Virginia Democrat. It voted 40 to 38 yesterday to give him the seat in preference to Clarence E. Martin, also a Democrat. The outcome of the dispute between appointees of the outgoing and incoming Governors of West Virginia left the Senate with only one vacancy. That is the chair occupied by Senator Morris Sheppard (D. Tex.) until his death. Governor W. Lee O’Daniel of Texas has called a special election for June 28 to fill it. With Dr. Rosier’s selection, the makeup of the Senate is: Democrats, 65; Republicans, 28; Progressive, 1; Independent, 1; vacancy, 1.

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Married Persons Pay Less Because Their Income Is Shared Evenly.

By MARSHALL McNEIL Times Special Writer WASHINGTON, May 14—Married persons in eight states get special Federal income tax privileges not accorded to their fellows in the other 40 states, and the Treasury is preparing to ask Congress to put everybody on the same basis. These are Texas, California, Washington, New Mexico, Arizona, Idaho, Louisiana and Nevada—the so-called community property states, where a man’s income and property is regarded, under law, as being half his and half his wife's. Income is ever so regarded. So that in those states, it has been perfectly proper under local and Federal law for a man and his wife to file two separate income tax returns, splitting the family income in two, So Many Pay Less

This has resulted in many a taxpayer in the community property states paying less income tax than a person having exactly the same income but living in any of the other 40 states. For example, a married man in Indiana, with no dependents, and with a net income before personal exemption of $10,000 paid a Federal income tax of $528 this year. But in Texas, a man similarly situated with the same income, would file a tax return on a net income of $5000 and his wife would file a return on the other $5000; they would split the. personal exemption, and, roughly, each would pay approximately $154. Together, their total tax payment of $308, would represent a saving for them (as compared with the Indiana Jarnily filing a single return) of

New Yorker Pays More

A married man with $100,000 net income, living in New York, paid the Federal Government $43,476 this year. A married man with the same income in the community property state of California, however, paid a tax of about $14,000 less—by filing two $50,000 returns and thus escaping the higher surtaxes. For a long time, the Treasury has been trying to close this community property loophole, and put all Federal income taxpayers on an even footing. But it has faced the very practical situation in the Senate where these community property states have 16 representatives—and 16 Senators, if adamant, can kill any legislation. But now the Treasury is going to try again. Sometime later this session, it is expected to offer a bill to stop the filing of community property returns.

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Cites Fuehrer's Praise of British

WASHINGTON, May 14 (U. P). —Vice President Henry A. Wallace made so secret of his interest in the mysterious flight of Rudolf Hess, Germany's No. 3 official, and and at the same time quoted a paragraph from Adolf Hitler's book, “Mein Kampf,” praising British courage and tenacity in the face of long odds. Mr. Wallace handed reporters a typewritten sheet containing this paragraph from the 12th chapter of “Mein Kampf”: “The British nation can be counted upon to carry through to victory any struggle that it once enters upon no matter how long such a struggle may last or however great the sacrifices that may

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