Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 September 1941 — Page 22

CT U. B. MEETING SET|

Convenes Here Tomorrow; Dedication of Fout ‘Chimes Oct. 19.

United Brethren Chureties of InSaree will start their fall activities with a district convention tomorrow afternoon. The next event ‘will be the formal dedication of the Fout Memorial Chimes on Oct. 19. The meeting tomorrow will open at 2 p. m. at the first United Breth-

ren Church, Park and Walnut Sts. Three to Speak _ Prineipal addresses will be delivered by the Rev. K. K. Merryman of Columbus, Ind., who will speak on “The Great Preaching Imperative;” the Rev. Roy H. Turley of University Heights, on “Enlisting Every Church Member for World Communion Sunday,” and the Rev. Roy Laswell- of Gwynneville, on “Every Church Member a Christian Steward.” The final session at 7:30 p. m. will be led by. the Rev. George F. Snyder, pastor of the First United Brethren Church, who is leader of the Indianapolis district. The Rev. A. R. Jansen of Terre Haute will speak at the evening ‘session on “The Necessity, Importance and Place of the Church Today.”

Arrange Dedication

Special services have been arranged for Oct. 19, when the Fout Memorial Chimes will be dedicated to the Pirst United Brethren Church. The chimes were given to the church by the Bethel family and a “personal friend” in honor of Bishop Henry H. Fout, D. D. A program of music and addresses by the Rev. V. G. Hunt and Wal- - lace O. Lee have been arranged for the dedication.

I Really Was Crippling Row

PALMER, - Mass., Sept. 17 (U. P.).—One-legged John F. Beckwich, 86, got into an argument about women with one-armed .John J. McInerney, 71. Because Beckwith didn’t see eye-to-eye with him on the subject, McInerney hit his companion with a pail of water and knocked “him down. ; Convicted of assault on Beckwith, whose left hand was broken, McInerney was placed on probation for one year. In what respect the two men

By JOE COLLIER

Robert Danley has completed the equivalent of a high school course under the guidance of the State Department of Public Instruction.

partment head, will present him with a diploma on the afternoon of Sept. 21 as the feature of the 19th annual homecoming celebration at Sunnyside Sanatorium, Because 19-year-old Mr. Danley has been a bed-ridden patient there since July of 1938 and he is apt to

his tuberculosis can be arrested. “1 figured,” he said with a smile, “that whatever I do Fl have to do with my head. Because it's a cinch that I'm out for anything that’s muscular.” Already, young Danley has applied for correspondence courses in a basic course in science with both

University of Illinois. He plans to continue his higher education, and is shooting at a caréer as a bacteriologist.

Optimism Is Rule

All of the 260 patients at the sanatorium and all of the 300 to 400 former patients expected to attend the homecoming will be pretty proud of Robert, because of his accomplishment and because he’s one of the best liked persons on the Sunnyside “campus.” But, in a way, his optimism and his industry are the rule at Sunnyside, where everyone seems to- be cheerful most of the time, and every one is busy although afflicted

enervating. Perhaps no other kind of a hospital has homecomings. At no other hospital do the patients become so thoroughly acquainted with one another, and at none other, apparently, do the bonds of friendship develop so firmly. Another major event of the homecoming will be the dedication of a Christmas tree which will be transplanted outside the new recreational building which was given the sanatorium by the Sunnyside Guild and was completed last year. This tree, and a bronze plaque ‘which dedicates it to the Guild, were bought by former and present patients. Russell Owens, who is general chairman ‘in charge of all events for the homecoming, ‘says that again Boy Scout Troop 175, under the leadership of Scoutmaster S. W. Crosby, will direct traffic. This troop has directed traffic on the homecoming for the last five or six years. There will also be a photography contest and an exhibit of the ar-

disagreed was not . brought out.

With one year of formal high} schooling as a starter and a guide,

‘Accordingly, Di. C. T. Malan, de-

be there quite a while longer before :

the University of Chicago and the]:

with a disease that is especially].

As Highlight of Annual H omecoming,

Sunnys side Youth fo Gel High School Diploma Sept. 21|

Robert Danley

FRENCH WIN RELEASE OF SICK AND WOUNDED

many has agreed to release immediately sick and wounded French war prisoners, it was announced today. (The dispatch did not say what France has agreed to do, if anything, in return for the concession.) The first group released under the agreement will arrive at Com-

said, would be released from military hospitals as soon as their conditions warranted.

SPEAKS TO AMERICA FIRST The Rev. William A. Mulford of the B. B. Kirkbride Bible Co., will address an open meeting of the America First Committee of Indianapolis at the headquarters, 40 N. Pennsylvania St. at 8:15 p. m.

ticles patients make.

tomorrow.

VICHY, Sept. 17 (U. P.).—Ger-| TORONTO, Ontario, Sept. 17

piegne tomorrow. The others, it was

‘Dionnes Must Learn English

(U.P.)—The Dionne quintuplets, after all these years, must learn to speak English. The Ontario Government’s Education Department disclosed that it had ordered the 7-year-old sisters to start studying their country’s official language. The girls, who speak French almost exclusively, will take English lessons this year as part of their regular schooling.

BARGAINING ELECTION SET SEYMOUR, Ind. Sept. 17 (U. P.). The National Labor Relations Board announced today a collective bargaining election to be held among

employees of Noblitt-Sparks Indus-

_l tries, Inc., here Sept. 19.

Says uv. S. Must Assure ‘Lords New Order’ Will Follow War.

. NEW YORK, Sept. 17 (U. P)—|

Vice President Henry A. Wallace, asserting that “the house of Hitler . +. will fall from within,” said last

night the world must not fail after this war to build a just and lasting

peace’ based on the Lord's ‘new|

order”—not on Hitler's. The United States must take a prime responsibility in molding such

'a peace, he told the Fordham Uni-

versity Centenary celebration. . Wallace said the American people “are tremendously interested in peace today, but they are not pacifists.” They would “hate to see

OF PEACE GOALS

this war end prematurely in a way| -™

which would insure a third .and Hore ‘horrible war in our genera-{ on.” The American people, he said, want to see the war end “justly” on the basis of the five points enunciated by Pope Pius XII, President Roosevelt’s “four freedoms” and the -eight-point peace aims drawn up by Mr. Roosvelt: and British Prime Minister Winston Chruchill. 4 Mr. Wallace “said “the , social teaching of the Catholic church is especially opposed to Hitler's new order.” : “The Lord is building a new order,” he said. “It is not Hitler's new order built on his alleged superior race, but it is a new order built on justice, charity and peace.” “No true Christian can speak bit-

: terly against the Jew, the Negro,

or the yellow man.” Mr. Wallace termed Naziism “godless culture” and predicted that “the winds are blowing at the foundations of Hitler’s house” in France, Poland, Belgium, Luxembourg, Holland, Norway, Jugoslavia and

Greece. {

FIREMEN’S ‘HELPER’ HELD IN FIRE DEATHS

HOBOKEN, N. J., Sept. 17 (U. P.). —Firemen couldn't keep Edward Mulvaney, 26, an unemployed laborer, from helping them fight a house fire in which a man and his wife burned to death. A policeman recognized him as the man who had been overly eager to help the Fire Department with a

burning automobile a few days be-|

fore, and arrested him. Mulvaney was in jail today, charged with murder. Police said he confessed setting the fire in which Henry Ruthman, 48, and his wife, Marie, 47, were killed yesterday, and five other fires since Aug. 29.

in the infantry).

‘Dog

Faces,

lamou Boy: Give Army a Brand New Slang

By RALPH MARTIN Times Special Writer.

WITH THE THIRD ARMY IN LOUISIANA, Sept. 17. ~The dignified

King’s English is taking a bully-ragging from the Army again.

A lush

a tomato can.

Newly coined ‘words flip’ from the agile tongs of sweating, march-

ing “gravel-agitators” (foot soldiers Out: of the “hell buggies” (army tanks) come other blunt, indelicate

The “glamour boy” and “dog-|-

face” (draftee and enlisted soldier respectively) hatch their terms out of conditions and factors that: press and bedevil them. Today’s American soldier calls his squad. tent his “boudoir.” The “Cross-Bar Hotel” is the guard house. . When on irksome KP duty, he calls dish-washing “bubble dancing.” - The hungry soldier who is eternally at the head of the mess

‘|line is a “chow hound.” The insects

that bother the soldier are “motorized freckles.” The descriptive ‘terms applied to the hated army bugler are multifarious—but the postal authorities frown on all except one, “wind jammer.” A sob story is called a “Mother Machree.” A ‘shack man” is a married soldier. The “button chopper” is the laundry. Newly inducted selectees are called “refug 3

AUTHOR IN LOG CABIN GOODING, Ida. (U. P.).—Idaho’s foremost novelist, Vardis Fisher, has gone back to the land. Fisher has built a log cabin home high in

growth of new slang is springing into 'being—a low-brow verbiage that is inelegant, tongue-handy, and: -as colorful as the label on

1st Lady's Roses

Comfort Mother

HEMPSTEAD; N. Y., Sept. 17

(U. P.)—Mrs. Arthur Kramer to-" day considered a box of roses suf= : ficient answer to her letter to Mrs.

Eleanor Roosevelt, concerning the Army plane crash here two weeks ago which fatally burned three

children. One was the only child of Mrs. Kramer and her husband, a physician. The Kramers and Mr. and Mrs, Peter Cuccio, who lost two children in the crash, received roses by special delivery from Washington yesterday. Each box contained a card, bearing ‘only Mrs. Roosevelt’s name, : Mrs. Kramer placed the flowers on the grave of her 3-year-old daughter, Georgene. She said she had received no other answer to her letter, but “this is sufficient. Mrs. Roosevelt is .the most considerate and understanding. woman.” She had . recounted her tragedy to Mrs. Roosevelt: and urged regulations to keep Army planes from flying over residential areas.

S GAIN AT + 1 Us MEDICAL 4

. Dental ‘School. Al Also Shows

Substantial Increase Over Last Year.

An increase ‘in enrollment was ree ported today for both the Indiana University School of Medicine and the School of Dentistry. os The Medical School enrollment is nearly 350 with a freshman class of 140, or 10 more than last year. The

‘|sophomore, junior and Senior classes '|were reported largest

several years. Upper class enrollment in the

| Dental School was 87, an increase of

25. There are 50 in the freshman class.

Dr. William H. Crawford, Dental School dean, pointed out that only 1550 received dental degrees last June in the nation, while 2000 left the profession through death, retire ment ‘and other causes. 2

DePauw Chemists “Score

Times Special - GREENCASTLE, Ind. Sept. I Marrott Sinex, DePauw University chemistry student, made the highest grade of 7046 students in 138 colleges who took exams given by the Amerie can Council of Education last June, Twenty-three of the 79 DePauw students who took the exam ranked in the highest 10 per cent, Dr. Jesse L. Riebsner, new Chemistry Departe ment: head, said.

{I U. Vacancy Filled

Times Special - BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Sept. 17.— Dr. Werner S. Landecker of the University of Michigan has been named to the Indiana University faculty, to take the place of Dr. A. B. Hole hed sociology professor, now on leave for research work. Dr. Dinko Tomasic, who had been named to Dr. Hollinghead's place,

.|resigned to accept:a mission for the | Yugoslavian Government . in. exile,

Dr. Landecker has been at Michigan since his ‘appointment to a fellow= ship in the International Student Service in 1936.

Gets Music Post

Times Special : BLOOMINGTON, Ind. Sept. 17.— Gerald Doty, supervisor of music in the - LaPorte schools, has been named director of the Indiana University. R. O. T. C. Band by the University Military Department. He will fill the vacancy created when Lieut. Frederick was called to military service. He has acted as conductor of the Indiana State Fair’s Hoosier Music Festival: ore chestra, sponsored by Indiana and the State Board of Agriculture, for

the last two years.

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