Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 December 1942 — Page 4

was as an atitomobile sales- _ that he developed the sales which carried him later to top as an evangelist.

“He became known to business associates as “Car-a-day” Cadle, by maintaining an average sales record of one new car a day over a long His final strictly business venture was the building of a chain of “re- | pair-while-you-wait” shoe repair shops. But he never forgot his . business experience and was known in the religious world as & man ‘who combined business. methods and modern publicity technique with bis evangelism :

Begins Evangelistic Career ‘About 1920, Mr. Cadle took his first step in evangelism, built a

tabernacle in Louisville and presented it to the United Brethren

church, In 10921, he built the famous Cadle Tabernacle in Indianapolis, pat- . terned after the Alamo Mission in © Ban Antonio, Tex. with a seating 1 capacity of 10,000. The project cost

erection of the huge was only the _ of the evangelists fight to convert men and women into the way of life that he felt his own personal the

Dogged by the depression which . followed the first world war, Mr. Cadle lost his home and the great

. tabernacle which fell into the hands

of commercial interests. Continuing bis evangelistic work, he took fo the courts in an effort to stop the holding of dance marathons, prize fights and other entertainment in the tabernacle. . He lost ‘the court fight, but dur-

4

ing the battle he rallied his growing throng of followers and raised enough" money to buy back the building. During its two decades of existence the tabernacle, first dedicated by ' Evangelist Gypsy Smith, has resounded to the oratory of Billy Sunday, Uldine Utley, Aimee Semple McPherson, and a host of other famous revivalists. Convinced that he had something worth while to offer, Mr. Cadle was not content to let his work grow under its own momentum. He bought an airplane and, piloted by his son Buford Cadle, crossed . and recrossed the cont to extend ‘his work.

bought radios for small com-, ale ba which he could not react even by airplane, and returned to Indianapolis from his travels each week-end to preach to what was believed to be one of the largest religious radio audiences in the world . To the first great tabercnacle in Indianapolis, he added two other halls, one at Ft. Wayne and the other, a log structure, in a grove near Plainfield, Ind. Mr. Cadle reached the zenith of his preaching career, which already in 1931 had brought on a serious heart attack, when 20,000 persons thronged Crosley field baseball park in Cincinnati to hear him in June of 1936. On that day 6000 persons moved by his appeals, made public profession of faith.

Brief Whirl in Politics : Once, in 1832, Mr. Cadle undertook a whirl in politics, as the Prohibition party's candidate for governor. He resigned the nomination in favor of another candidate before the election. During the last 12 years Mr. Cadle kept regular preaching engagements, by plane, in: Ohio, Kentucky, Tennessee, West Virginia, Virginia, Pennsylvania and Michigan as well as in Indiana. - His survivors include his widow, Mrs. Olga Collier Cadle; his son,

Biiford, now with the air transport] command of the U. S. army aif forces; two daughters, Mrs. B. W. ‘Major of Indianapolis and Mrs. H. Max Good of Columbus, O.; sa brother, K. E. Cadle of Clayton, Ind.; two sisters, Mrs. C. M. King of Orleans, Ind, and Mrs. John Green of Salem, Ind. and iwo granddaughters, both daughters of his son. : The body will remain at the Flanner & Buthanan mortuary today and Tuesday and will lie in state at Cadle tabernacle from 8:30 until 10 a. m. Wednesday.

INDICT STATE FIRM IN WAR FRAUD CASE

(Continued from Page One)

transported to our troops overseas.” The indictment, returned before Federal Judge Thomas W. Slick at Pt. Wayne, named: Thor &. Johnson, general manager of all Anaconda mills, Frank E. Hart, manager of the company's -Anaconda division at Marion, Ind. Don ‘R. Carpenter, ‘plant superintendent at Marion. Chalmer O. Bishop, chief inspecitor and plant engineer at Marion. Frank Kunkle, assistant chief inspector at Marion. Make No Comment Mr. Hart said today that he is in “no position to make a statement” regarding the indictment. “I haven't even had a chance to examine the indictment or its allegations,” Hart said. Officials said “no authoritative statement” was available because company heads were in New York. Mr. Hart said officials in New York told him by phone they would make a statement on the charges today. Carpenter, Bishop and Kunkle were unavailable for comment.

Rost Will Be Closed All Day Sat., Dec. 26

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Diamond Masonic CATs)

Diamond Bridal Set

Diamond Wedding Ring

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Men With Dependents Are Likely to Be Called ; Next Year.

(Continued from Page One)

abandoned suddenly. But until the war is won, Washington

the contingency of a long war. An official who calculated on that basis said that after Class 1-A men are exhausted it probably ‘would be necessary to go far down the list of classifications until practically every man of military age and fit for duty is under arms, regardless of dependency. As of now military age means from 18 through 37. If there were great popular outcry against gradual abandonment of dependency deferments, congress might intervene with some directives of its own. That is unlikely not only because congress would be reluctant, but because it is not expected that the American people, having gone into a life and death

~However, if a choice had to be made here is what it would be: 1. A good many men with dependents could be passed over if the army and ndvy were given substitutes drawn from the currently exempted 38-t0-45 year groups. 2. Plans for 9,700,000 men in the armed services one year hence and a great many more in 1944 could be re-examined. If the 1944 figure were materially reduced the number of persons inducted, likewise, would -come down in a. big way.

106 2 Clothed

21 Outfitted Direct; Mile - Of - Dimes Gets Bigger. Twenty-one children were clothed=all by direct donors—in The Indianapolis Times Clothe-A-Child campaign Saturday. The total for the campaign stands at

1062. The direct donors:

Children 3 2

Bowers Envelope Co. .. The Sawmakers Union......... Fulton Seaming Co. The Patrons of The Hotel War-

Kahn Tailoring Co. Gimme Club. Schwitzer-Cummins employees. . Clara. Stewart and Olive Scott.. Tri Kappa Club... Mr. and Mrs. Chester Ballard. . Girls of the RCA Microphone Dept. oc.vsne

sseebecessssnsene

Girls of Lewis Meier & Co .... Golden Glow Garden Club....,. Hayes Freight Lines...ccccc000

Total ... The cash donations: Allison Division, General Motors, Assembly Shift 1-2-3; Production Test, Shift 2-3; Assembly and Test Inspection, “Shift 1-2-3 esesse ese Cutting Dept. Local 117 ] at Kingan & Co. .... 105.20 The Plumbers and Steamfitters on the New Construction Curtiss ‘-Wright Corp..... Dept. 508 and 560, LinkBelt Co. Dodge Plant. Real Silk Boarding Dept. Allison Division of General Motors, ange Dept. cerpanmiys ne Employees of

0esescsseseerRBsR sO. »

$ 1,162.30:

90.00 |

72.00 60.00

.52.00 50.00 Employees of the "Union Trust Co. Office of the United . Brotherhood of Carpenters The Stine Club ..ccccc0 Employees of Metchum & Shaefer, Inc. ...... 36.00 International Harvester v Employees Dept. 43... 34.00 Navy Students of Butlér Field House . Allison Morning Bowling League :.ic.. Tool Room, R. C. A..... Employees of the L. M. Brown Abstract Co. .. O. HM ccconvess Fall Creek Ordnance Plant Employees P. R. Mallory, Stores Receiving and Shipping Depts. Employees of the Pure Qil Co. He 8 Xi Jr. vasassseness Pressroom Boys of The Indianapolis Times... Circle Tower Employees. Movie Operators & Stage Hands, Indiana Theater .E. C. Atkins & Co. Employees Bowling League Delta Chapter of the Beta Sigma Chi...... Anonymous Harry F. Clemens....... The Electra Club Past Matrons of 1940. O.E.S. Kappa Chi Theta SoIndpls. Bleaching Co. Weaving Dept., First Shift ...c.eesnnvssiva Federal Post No. 62,

50.00

41.00 40.00

@s®svsecntccee

32.18

30.00 26.53

25.00 25.00

ERR RNY

18.00

15.00

+ 15.00 15.00

ees0esescscsone

13.00 12.33

12.00 12.00 10.00 6.00 5.00 5.00

5.00

5.00 500 500

. 2.70 2.00 1.00

Roll Room 105 Jo... Connie & Richard essen Marie W. No Name cccecesesssess

esse gseesosanse

h Total TodaY ««cceaveee..$ 2,101.21 Previous nations. 8 5,727.96

Total to Date ....... .$ 7,820.17 Estimated on Mile-of-Dimes. sasssnsnsvsnes iS 2,600.00 Total (Estimated) ....$10,420.17

~~ MACHINELESS

TOBETHTER

pendency deferments are to bef

prudently} will orient its manpower Hedtagy 0 to

war, would balk at finishing the job.| -

longtiude)

1.00 ||

Capt. Jerauld Wright, U. 8. N., who picked up Gen. Henri Honore Giraud and took him from France out to sea where the general transferred to a plane and arrived in Algiers in time for Yank invasion. (Story on Page 11.)

Communiques

MacARTHUR COMMUNIQUE

(Issued Monday, Dec. 21) NORTHEASTERN SECTOR: NEW GUINEA—Buna * Area: the right, ye ‘launched a general attack. Under cover of artillery, our tanks accompanied closely by our infantry are moving in. The enemy’s position is deteriorating. ed ae oy 15 EDU ps, hen gained and supplies and equipment captured, including 20 machi yf 4 casualties have - been commander Lieut. Gen. Torn was reported killed in action. dang, our hea bomber t wharf area and downed attempted interception. NORTHWESTERN SECTOR:

Reconnaissance activity only,

NAVY COMMUNIQUE 228 (Issued Monday, Dec. 21) SOUTH PACIFIC: (All dates are east

three zeros which

, 1. On D (A) 0 . bombers Douglas oh) a with Grumman “Wildca escort attacked Japanese installations & the Munda area New Georgia* island. Several buildings were set on fire and destroyed. (B) Army “flying fortresses” with Lockheed “Lighting” escort aiso attacked the enemy positions at Munda and started several fires. hree * of the twenty “Zeros” which intercepted were destroyed. o U. 8. planes were lost.

stripe.

and rubber heels. trim.

he BEND A, +h

Jeepers =” 1 :

122d sts. and injured her bac <.

| Mercury Dips to 1 B low at

Airport; Transit Sv t-m Here Jammec.

Mrs. Harvey (Hancock, 48, of 2442 N. Meridian st., fell at Illir >is and She was taken to St. Vincent's : os; ital. Hericondition is fair. ‘Others injured were Irvi “hillips, 10, of 225 S. Summit st : far jorie Murray, 23, of 225 N. ¢ ak and ave.; Louise Donnelly, 49, of ' 3! Jollege ave.; Cynthia Collins, 49, of 545 W. Morris st.; Mary Ne» on, 53, of 1336 Roosevelt ave., W Spratt, 51, of 1521 Saulsey Bryant, 25, of Clayton; Ma terson, 27, of 943 Irvingto: Arthur Delong, 49, of 2830 ave.; Grace Owen, 47, of 418 mont st., and Rose Cox, 40, « Summit st, A fire truck from engine I skidded into locomotive at t Four grade-crossing on 8. H: at 9 a, m. today. Both ° were moving slowly because conditions and no one was i

ROAD TOLL DROPS ; Samuel C. Hadden, chairp in the state, highway commisgic day reported a drop of 48 p: in Indiana highway deaths November. Bureau of bag ures showed 36 fatalities last against 69 in November, 1941 major reductions occurred in areas. "

Lee Pate © ve. u ton ‘er-

al

> Big ric st. bizles of ley ured.

roaret|

oi such 2 large sale; The preparation and execution of the operations were classi \ 2. Plans for the counter-offensive were worked out under the direction of Premier Stalin. Clock-work precision was needed because the Germans enjoyed superior : fo onges and better communication facilities, . 8. The allied occupation of North Africa gave a tre- - menidous boost to Soviet morale, according to Red army 95 rs. As they expressed it, the Russian army now is ent that it is not fighting alone. ‘4. The Stalingrad winter—bad as it is—was not the : primary factor in the axis set-back. Soviet officers say the German-Rumanian forces were out-fought and out= - thought. : “

HWBE IS THE SITUATION on the Stalingrad front: At} present the Red army has two objectives (1) to keep ths: trap closed on the remainder of the 22 enemy . divisioms caught between the Don and the Volga and (2) £0 thrust westward and southward and keep open a Soviet corridor fat the bend of the Don river. : The #irst phase of the Soviet operations had ended just before 1 arrived at the staff headquarters of the northwestern sector, the most important of the three sectors at Stalingmd. Soviet troops had just destroyed g Rumanian army that! was holding the enemy’s left flank and had pushed on fio make a junction with the Russian army that was pushing up from the southwest. I found! that not a single ‘gap ‘had been left in this Russian semfi-circle guarding Stalingrad. Recent German. attempts to \pierce the Soviet ring on the southwestern sector have been frustrated. Inside the trap, the main axis forces are caught between the Stalingrad garrison and the outer ring of fihe Red army. 1 saw evidence of rapidly-increasing Russian strength, There were endk ess white, motorized caravans and infantry columns moving up to the front, Occasionally we encoun tered bewildered hordes of Rumanian prisoners trudging northwestward and almost unescorted.

PRIVATE RITES SET. (FOR JOHN J. PYM the. “esiement. o¢

Private services for John J. Pym,| Logan county, Ohio, he had lived in who died yesterday at) his home,|Richmond, Va. before coming to Ine 1212 Central ave., after {a brief ill-|dianapoils 15 years ago. ness, will be held at 4 pd m. tomor-| A sister, Mrs. Austin.L. Denny, is row at Flanner & Buchanan mort-}his only survivor:

uary. Cremation will Sellow, Born in Bellefontaine, O., of &

'l You Have the MAN, WE HAVE THE GIFT

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