Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 May 1943 — Page 13
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THURSDAY, MAY 27, 1048
THE
TRUCK DRIVER BADLY BURNED
Jrailer Missed Curve, Hits Pole, Catches Fire;
Two More Hurt.
John R. Asbury, 32, of 3422 N. Colorado ave, was burned seriously today when his tractor - trailer crashed and caught fire at 234 st. and Hillside ave. Police said the vehicle failed to make a curve, struck a utility pole and three trees; it caught fire when gasoline was exploded by the impact. Mr. Asbury was extricated from the flaming wreckage by Clarence Foster, 17, of 2363 Hillside ave. Paul Hutchison, 39, of 429 Blackford st, was injured seriously when! struck by a hit-and-run driver in! the 300 block of Blake st. He is in City hospital. Billy Arnold Bracken, 10, of 954 emp st, was taken to City hos{tal after he was struck by a car driven by Kenneth Watson, 17, of 901 Locke st.
OFFICER ON DAY OFF PULLS FALSE ALARM,
JERSEY CITY, N. J, May 27 (U. P)—A fire truck raced up to a signal box, found no fire and fire. men demanded of bystanders “who pulled the box” two men pointed to Patrolman Peter Finnegan, 41, off | duty and in street clothes. A police surgeon said Finnegan failed a sobriety test. The patrol-
Dr. Alexander E. Sharp 2 2 s
By EMMA RIV
members present. 8. Milner, Dwight Peterson, Dr. Sidney Blair Harry, the Rev. Sumpter Logan and Nevin Kendell, all] of Indianapolis. Sessions will con-| tinue through Tuesday. | | The assembly is the governing] | body of 2.400002 Presbyterians and | makes annual expenditures of $44,207.000 for its varied religious works
Local Pastors in Detroit
Presbyterian Commission Exceeds $1,000,000 Goal
The Times Church Editor
DETROIT, May 27.—Dr. Alexander E. Sharp of Indianapolis, di rector of the Presbyterian wartime commission, will report to the 155th land let us have some labor 8 General Assembly of the Presbyterian church in the U. 8. A. that the machinery for our farms. commission has exceeded its million-dollar goal by $26,000. The general assembly opened here this morning with 450 official They include in addition to Dr. Sharp, Dr. Jean
man was paroled on an disorderly conduct charge and then turned in
in all parts of the United States and 16 foreign countries. It em-
his resignation, ending a record of 14 years of honorable service.
stu LL TNE mATIONAL ROAD i pon* 1 MI.WEST OF BEN Dawg
§ “Sows oa
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braces 18 churches in Marion county, Indiana. The chief topic of discussion of the 1043 assembly will be the achievements and aims of the wartime commission, officials say. Dr. Sharp, who is also the executive secretary of the Indiana Presbyterian synod, inaugurated the wartime commission.
Lo
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| Saturday evening in the Masonic
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2 8
| that a “dark horse” may be led in
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END OF RED TAPE
Friends’ in Capital op Flood Problem. *
ST. LOUIS, May 27 Gov. Henry F. Schricker of Indiana
eliminated from the new deal farm policies if adequate manpower and machinery is to be sent to flood stricken farm areas. Gov. Schricker, Democrat, yesterday addressed representatives six states in the flood area—Illinois, indiana, Missouri, Kansas, Oklahoma and Arkansas—meeting to formulate emergency relief measures for farmers in the inundated regions. . Appealing to former Gov. M. CHli¥ford Townsend of Indiana, chajrman of the food production admin istration and flood conference representative for War Food Adminis trator Chester ©. Davis, Gov. Sehricker said, “Go back to Washington and tell your long-hal friends to cut out some red
Dr. Jean S. Milner 2 8 4
ERS MILNER
RQ B®
Indiana Needs Labor
“We'll take any kind of help to get our crops planted. Send us He has commuted between Indi- some soldiers, even prisoners of anapolis and New York for the past war. Searcely any planting is done year, attending to the commission’s|yet in Indiana.” business, ever since his appoint-| Gov. Schricker is the only goverment as director at last year's gen-|nor attending the conference, the eral assembly. He has staffed the other chief executives having sent New York office and set machinery | representatives. Those meeting in motion to continue the wartime agreed labor and machinery shortwork as long as it is necessary. Dr.|age problems were doubly acute in Sharp will give his official report their areas because of the fiobd. In Indiana, 70 to 75 per cent of auditorium where the popular seés-|the state is affected by high sions will be held. waters, said Gov. Schricker. Brig. The daily meetings are for fe Gen. Clifford W. Gaylord and Com- | most part in the First Presbyterian missioner John Ellis asserted Mischurch of which Dr. Frederick H.|souri had 442,000 acres of farm land Olert is the pastor. under water. In Illinois, it was es-
INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
SCHRICKER ASKS Indiana Bankers’ Officers
{ |
¢ Sends Word to ‘Long-haired
WU. P) g-}
believes red tape will have to be
New officers of the Indiana
Swezey, president of the Lafayette
apolis, vice president.
association’s annual meeting here yesterday are (left to right) Burr S.
Couch, cashier of the Citizens State bank at Mooresville, treasurer, and Otto N. Frenzel, president of the Indiana Trust Co, of Indian-
§ (for a mysterious
{
|
| | |
Bankers association elected at the
National bank, president; Oscar G.
of oats and 63,000 acres of hay has been damaged. Needed besides labor and machinery are seeds, credit, feed, wire fence and lumber, it was reported. The group urged extension of regional agricultural credit corporation loans,
WARNS OF AXIS AT PRESBYTERIAN MEET
NEW WILMINGTON, Pa, May
church officer and pastor of the dangers of Nazi and Fascist ideologies, representatives of 200,000 members of the United Presbyterian Church of North America opened the 85th general assembly here yesterday. Speaking at a pre-assembly conference last night, Dr. Harry J. Hager, pastor of the Bethany Reformed church, and a member of the board of foreign missions of the reformed church, told the delegates: “The church of Christ today must recapture the sense of divine ap-
The wartime commission minis-|timated 196000 acres of corn, ters to the armed forees, to persons|151,000 acres of wheat, 70,000 acres | employed in war industries, particularly migrants, to victims of war abroad and helps in ‘various other emergencies arising out of the present world conflict.
Official Delegate Dr. Harry, Meridian Heights Presbyterian church pastor, is attend ing the assembly as an official mine isterial delegate and Mr. Peterson, layman of the Tabernacle Presbyterian church, as a lay delegate. Mr. Rendell, a theological student assisting at Mayer chapel for the summer, is serving as usher. The Rev. Mr. Logan is a visitor from the Memorial Presbyterian church. Dr. Milner, pastor of the Second Presbyterian church, Indianapolis, is president of the board of national missions which will have charge
evening. Under the jurisdiction of Dr. Milner and the board, schools, hospitals, Sunday schools, churches, } neighborhood houses and similar} home mission projects are conducted. The board invests about $50,« 000,000 annually for these, Dr. Milner said. Schedule Election
The first matter of business of major importance scheduled by the general assembly is the election of a hew moderator late this afternoon to succeed Dr. Stuart Nye Hutchinson of Pittsburgh. The two announced candidates are the venerable Dr. Henry Sloane Coffin, liberal church statesman, clergyman of 43 years experience and president of the (interdenominational) Union Theological seminary, New York, and .a man about 20 years his junior, Dr. George H. Talbott of Passaic, N. J. Dr. Talbott has been much in the limelight as an attive worker with the wartime commission. Both he and his opponent have played leading roles in the settlement of strikes and labor disputes and both served with the A. BE. FP. in the world war Dr. Coffin was a chaplain and Dr. Talbott, a 1st lieutenant of ine fantry. However, it is predicted
at the last minute. Discuss Reports Post-war social problems and the peace terms, an overture on pen-
ed by the Indianapolis Presbytery and reports on the proposed union with the Southern Presbyterian and Protestant Episcopal churches are all scheduled for discussion. It is also expected that a special committée will recommend some drastic changes concerning the education and selection of Presbyterian ministers and the elimination of "several theological seminaries. Dr. Hutchinson, in his moderator’s address this morning, called upon the Christians of the world to sink their differences in a concerted conquest of the world for God. “The trumpets of God are sounding,” he proclaimed to his large audience, “calling to the church to strike its tents and march!”
cigarettes.
8
SHOCK KILLS FT. WAYNE MJN FT. WAYNE, Ind, May 27, (U. P) —Dr. D. R. Benninghoff, deputy Allen county coroner, said today that Elmer G. Fremion, 48, Ft. Wayne, died of an electrical shock from the conveyor he was operating to unload coal from a railroad car at the Ace Coal Co.
BACKACHE, LEG PAINS MAY BE DANGER SIGN
Of Tired Ki
's chief way of taking waste out of the
pointment and of kingdom enterprise.”
Where it comes from
What it's like
27 (U. P).—Warned by a prominent |
ANNUAL STATE CHESS
SEEK ‘MADAME X' IN DEMPSEY TRIAL
WHITE PLAINS, N.Y, May 27 (U. P.). ~The sheriff's office searched “Madame X" today while the Dempsey divorce trial was in recess because of a nervous collapse by Mrs. Hannah | Williams Dempsey, who was ill at home. Injection of the mystery woman, vaguely identified as Yvette Colbert, a singer, came as Supreme Court Referee J. Addison Young adjourned the trial until next Tues-
Doctor's 4-Way Relief Acts Fast
1. Sends pain flying 2. Removes coms
3. Prevents corns, sore toes
4. Eases tight shoes
| Lose no time these precious days? Jo ne dred pads atiasiment) Sr Somnt's Fut astopesiiysgicvs . | your pain gently ree Miss Colbert was regarded as an move them —while you carry onl important witness for Mrs. Demp- | Instantly stop tormenting shoe friesey, former Broadway singer, who| tion; lift peaia JFresmare ih soothe; survived only the first day of the gushion, prote ct the weir - spot. trial of the suit and counter-suit| —ue Sadion ona gun a 4 for quiet brought by her and her husband. Drug, Shoe, Department Stores and Toilet
Jack Dempsey, former heavyweight Goods Counters. Insiston Dr. Scholle.
champion and now a st guard, Dr Scholls Zino-pads
commander in the coast guard. Both charged misconduct.
MEET BEGINS SUNDAY
LOGANSPORT, Ind, May 27 (U.| P.).—Drawings for the second an-| nual state chess tournament, which has drawn entries from every part of Indiana, will be held at 1 p. m.| Sunday, and matches played Sun-| day and Monday, tournament officials announced today. | Topping the list of entrants were | defending champion Judge B. C. Jenkines of Gary and Charles Moore | of Indianapolis, Central Indiana champion. Matches will be played at the Logansport Y. M. C. A. on an elim~ | ination rather than round-robin basis, officials said.
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