Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 August 1943 — Page 7

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| Lady of Mount Carmel.

ICARMELITE NON

IN FINAL VOWS

St. Louis Girl Takes Veil As Sister Mary of the

Eucharist.

Final vows as a cloistered nun of the Sisters of Our Lady of Mount Carmel will be taken by the former Miss Dorothy Eichinger of St. Louis during ceremonies at the Carmelite

monastery on Cold Springs road Friday morning. Known in religious life as Sister Mary of the Eucharist, she will receive the black veil of a professed choir nun. . The Most Rev. Joseph E. Ritter, bishop of Indianapolis, will be celebrant at one mass. After he performs the veiling ceremony there will “follow the votive Mass of Our The sermon will be by the Rev. Fr. John Casey, diocesan superintendent of schools. Enters Convent

Sister Mary of the Eucharist has spent five years in religious life, having entered Carmel in 1938. That summer, having completed her postulancy, she received the brown habit during a public ceremony. A year later she made her first temporary vows and Friday's ceremony will be her final in her religious dedication. Attending the public ceremony Friday will be Sister Mary's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Eichinger, St. Paul; her sister, Eileen; her brother, the Rev. Donald Eishinger, who soon will be ordained for the diocese of St. Paul, and her uncle, the Rev. Fr. Albert Eichinger of St. Paul. Following the ancient custom of the Order of Carmel, the newly professed nun will have the priv. ilege of seeing visitors and friends in the speak room on the day of her veiling and Saturday and Sunday. After the three days in the speak

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PUT VICTORY -FIRST, URGES VANNUYS

ANDERSON, Ind. Aug. 25 (U. P.).—Senator Frederick Van Nuys (D. Ind.) urged the nation to put aside petty annoyances and Sogial and partisan differences and devote itself to one cause, a quick, conclusive victory in the war. Van Nuys, an honor guest at a reoeption and dinner at the Anderson Elks lodge last night, made a brief address in ‘which he summarized conditions here and abroad. Van Nuys said that “when we compare conditions in allied countries . ... we oughn't to complain too much.” “Let’s not get too critical but keep before us this one objective— winning the war speedily and conclusively, he advised. “Civilization and Christianity are in the balance.”

PARALYSIS EPIDEMIC SWEEPING CHICAGO

CHICAGO, Aug. 25 (U.P.).—The board of health ' said today that Chicago is suffering the worst epidemic of infantile paralysis in its history. Health authorities believed the outbreak would growsworse before it begins to subside. cases were reported yesterday, bringing ‘to 200 the total reported since

"July 1. -

for

Thirteen new|

OTTAWA, Aug. 25 (U. P.). —The text of President Roosevelt's address here today: Your excellency, members of the parliament, my good friends and neighbors of the

dominion of Canada: It- was exactly five years ago last Wednesday that I came to Canada to receive the high honor of a degree at Queen’s university. On that occasion—one year before the invasion of Poland, three years before Pearl Harbor-—I said: “We in the Americas are no long er a far away continent, to which the eddies of controversies beyond the seas could bring no interest or no harm. Instead, we in the Amerlcas have become a consideration to every propaganda office and. to every general staff béyond the seas, The vast amount of our resources, the vigor of our commerce, and the strength of our men have made us vital factors in world peace whether we choose it or not.” ‘We did not choose this war—and that “we” includes each and every one of the united nations. War was violently forced upon us by criminal aggressors who measure their standards of morality by the

tion that they can inflict. upon their neighbors. In this war, Canadians and Amer-

‘licans have fought shoulder to shoul der—as our men and our women

and our children have worked -to=gether and played together in happier times of peace.

CELEBRATE SICILY VICTORY

Today, in devout gratitude, we

won by British, Canadian and American fighting men in Sicily. Today we rejoice also in another event for which we need not apolo- . ‘A year ago -Japan occupied several of the Aleutian islands and made a great “to. do” about the ine vasion of the continent of North America. I regret to say that some: Americans and ‘some Canadians— political purposes chiefly— wished our governments to withdraw from the Atlantic and the Mediterranean campaigns and divert all our vast strength to the removal of the Japs from a few rocky specks in the Aleutians, Today our wiser councils have maintained our efforts in the Atlantic area and the Southwest Pacific with . ever growing contributions; and in the Northwest Pacific a relatively small campaign has been assisted by the Japs themselves in the elimination of the last Jap from Attu and Kiska. We have been told that Japes never surrender; their headlong retreat satisfies us just as well, Great councils are being held here on the free and honored soil of Canada—councils which look ta the future conduct of this war and to the years of building a new progress of mankind. To these councils Canadians and Americans alike again welcome that wise and good and gallant \gentleman, the prime minister of “Great Britain. ~ Mr. MacKenzie King, my old friend, may I, through you, thank the people of Canada for their hospitality to all of us. Your course and mine have run so closely and affectionately during these many long years that this meeting adds another link to that chain.

Canada and you, I think, have always felt at home in the United States. During the past few days in Que-

bec, the combined staffs have been

sitting around a table talking these things over, discussing ways and means, in the manner of friends, in the manner of partners, I may even say in the manner of members of the same family. We have talked constructively of our common purposes in this war— of our determination to achieve victory in the shortest possible time— of our essential co-operation with our great and brave fighting allies. And we have arrived, harmoniously, at certain definite conclusions.

extent of the death and the destruc-|

are celebrating a brilliant vietory|"

I have always felt at home in|

Of .course, I am not at liberty to dis-

[close just what these conclusions

are. But, in due time, we shall communicate the secret information of the Quebec conference to Germany, Italy and Japan. We shall communicate this information to our enemies in the only language their twisted minds seem capable of understanding. Sometimes I wish that that great master of intuition, the Nazi leader, could have been present in spirit at the Quebec conference—I am thoroughly glad he was not there in person. If he his generals had known our plans they would have

realized“ that discretion is still the

better part of valor and that surrender would pay them better now than later,

REFUSE TO BE DIVIDED

The. evil characteristic that makes a Nazi a Nazi is his utter pebiltiy to understand and therepre to respect the qualities or the rights of his fellow men. His only method of dealing with his neighbor is first to delude him with lies, then to attack him treacherously, then beat him down and step on him, ‘and then either kill him or enslave him. The same is true of we | the fanatical militarists of Japan. That is why our enemies are doing their desperate “best to misrepresent the purposes and results of the Quebec conference. They still seek to divide and conquer allies who refuse to be divided just as cheerfully as they refuse to be conquered. We spend our energies and our resources and the very lives of our sons and daughters because a band of gangsters in the community of nations declines to recognize the fundamentals of decent human conduct. We have been forced to call out the sheriff’s posse to break up the gang in order that gangsterism may be eliminated in the community of nations. We are making sure—absolutely, irrevocably sure— that this time the lesson is driven home to them once and for all. We are going to be rid of outlaws this time. Everyone of the united nations believes that only a real and lasting peace can justify the sacrifices we are making, and our unanimity

gives us confidence in seeking that

goal. It js no secret that at Quebec there was much talk of the postwar world. © That - discussion was doubtless duplicated simultaneously in dozens of nations and hundreds of cities and among millions of people.

BETTER DAYS COMING

There is a longing in the air. It is not a longing to go back to what ‘they call “the good old days.” I have distinct reservations as to how good “the old days” were. I would rather believe that we can achieve new and better days. Absolute victory in this war will give greater opportunities to the world because the winning of the war in itself is proving that concerted action can accomplish things. Surely we can make strides toward

a greater freedom from want than the world has yet enjoyed. Surely by unanimous action ih driving out the outlaws and keeping them under heel forever, we can attain a freedom from fear of violence.

I am everlastirigly angry only at those who assert vociferously that the “Four Freedoms and the Atlantic Charter are nonsense because they are unattainable. If they had lived a century and a half ago they would have sneered and said that the Declaration of Independence was utter piffile. If they had lived nearly a thousand years ago they would have laughed uproariously at the ideals of Magna Carta. And if they had lived several thousand years ago they would have derided Moses’ when he came from the Ten Commandments,

teachings are not perfectly lived up to today, and we concede that the good old world cannot arrive at Utopia overnight, But I would rather be a builder than a wrecker, hoping "always that the structure of life is growing—not dying.

May the destroyers who still per-

sist Ih our midst decrease. They, like some of our enemies, have a long road to travel before "they accept the ethics of humanity. Some, day in the distant future perhaps—but some day with certainty—all of them will remember with the master—“Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself.’ My vist to the old city of Quebec has recalled vividly to my mind that Canada is a nation founded on a union of two great races. The harmony of their equal partnership is an example to all mankind—an example everywhere in the world.

BLASTS WILLKIE FOR INDIA STAND

Hale Says Problem of British Is Really ‘None of

Our Business.’

CAMBRIDGE, Mass, Aug. 25 (U. P.).—Wendell Willkie’s criticism of Britain's unsolved Indian problem has been attacked by a fellow Republican as the criticism “of a man who has never been to India and who didn’t understand the suation there.” U. S. Rep. Robert Hale (R. Me.) told a Harvard defense group yesterday that the Republican standard bearer of 1940 had no right to eriticize the British handling of the Indian problem. “Don’t talk about India being abused,” he said, “that is none of our business. Are we going to let Russia settle the Detroit race riots? Are we going to let England interfere with our policies in Puerto Rico?” Hale declared it was not the intention of any international partnership to “interfere with any nation’s so-called sore spots.”

CIVILIAN DEFENSE CLASS AT 8 TONIGHT

A class for auxiliary police, firemen and emergency medical personnel of district 22, zone 3, will be held at 8 p: m. today at the First Baptist church, Harrison McDamon, assistant civilian defense co-ordinator of the district, said. Miss Fannie Sykes, Mrs. L. Har-

ris and Mrs. L. Riddle will instruct |

the classes.

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We concede that these great °F the river.

L "AW 13 BIO AIA the Calhoun strest bridge had ity, determined, but police believed LEA IN AT ff an there | children playing on the banks of the hot ob doo io might endanger the city's water fil- river tossed matches on the fioat-

] A yh he tration and pumping station, as well |ing ofl. " 0 1 Ji as the Trenton-Morrisville, Pa, : : bridge. ~~ |the fire by playing heavy streams

Trenton firemen finally put out

Cause of the fire was un-|of water against the tide,

Thick Oil” Blazes From Three Separate Breaks

In Pipe Line.

TRENTON, NJ. Aug. 24 (U.P). —Fuel oll’ leaking from the “big inch” pipe line was afire at three points along the Delaware river here today, The Trenton. firé department first knew ‘of the blaze when an excited householder telephoned and said, “The Delaware river is on fire.” Investigating, fire and police

burning in three different places

Thick oil, which had floated down from the leak in the big inch, about 15 miles distant at New Hope, Pa. was burning, and dense clouds of black smoke hung over the western portion of Trenton as the flames roared along the embankment of the river. A concentration of thick oil at!

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