Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 April 1944 — Page 7

RIL 26, 104

; Cents; ld Over:

. 8.000 oe ; "Cattle and Calves -

privisssse tags sete 10.

Seas tenen 10. 50 cerstsnnes i.

cisenssess 8.000 0.58 (steers) : erat erva « 11.75013.28 ewes cee 0.50Q1LN (heifers) MB Leeinnn [email protected] . EIEIRT 0.25011.58 - LAMBS (250) > shorn) 118 9 frevsreis 1 due «+ 15.28@16. .e Son a

OF BEEF

T00 i

April 25 (U. P), s “too tight” and

attle market glug

the gluts we had ,

er,” F. E. Mollin, 7 of the American association, Dene se banking come

beef should be aid, and kept with supplies. : in this country.

0000 a year hearing on a bh ntrol. TY necessary to keep f meat in 8 rces, but he fel eased for civilian

inst continuation

and urged creas

Agency with coms all phases of food

control, rationing

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ndigestion| {1 T0 CRADUATE IN PHARMACY

Indianapolis College - Hold-

ing Commencement Program Tomorrow.

. The Indianapolis College of Pharmacy will hold its 42d annual commencement exercise at 8 p. m. tomorrow in the Cropsey auditorium of the Indianapolis public library. Dr. P. Marion Smith of the Central Avenue Methodist church will speak and Dr. Prancis E. Bibbins, president of the board of trustees, will present the diplomas. Others participating will be Albert Jarvis, valedictorian; the Rev.

Stanley Mahan, Bellaire Methodist church, invocation; Prof. Learney

HF, Jones, address of welcome; Rus-

sell Survant, class history; Dean Edward H. Niles, scholarship awards, and Miss Helen Farrell and Edward Farrell, musical selections. Those graduating include Mary Jane Hood, Marion; Martha Hubbard, Connersville; Thomas Boruff, Bloomington; = Joseph Schultheis, Cletus Sebastian and Donald Wood, all of Evansville; John Secrist, Columbia City; Theodore Stalas, Indianapolis; Walter Wendling, Vin-

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Shortstop .

A SHORTSTOP is a soldier who persists in intercepting food on its way to some other section of the

table. Many shortstops emerge from the service with knife and fork wounds in their forearms, for soldiers have lusty appetites at mess and are not to be trifled with, If Pvt. Doaks passes the spuds along to Pvt. Blow, and then Pvt. Dudd, seated between the two, gouges out a large portion for himself while the spuds are in transit, he is shortstopping. The incident may pass with a few scathing remarks —but at the next meal Pvt. Dudd is likely to find the entire contents of the salt cellar in his GI coffee.

;

JH 25

El

CHURCH APPEAL ON PEACE FILED

114 From. Here Sigh Call

For “Infernational

Control Group.

Twelve hundred and. fifty-one prominent Protestant laymen and ministers from every state, including 14 from Indianapolis, today made an appeal to the President, congress and the American people to take practical steps nqw for the nucleus of a world organization, The organization would be that envisioned by the Moscow declaration and the senate Connally reso-

lution, the appeal stated, The proposed general international organization would seek to promote “unity of political and diplomatic decision

| by the principal united nations and | consistency with such aspects of the { moral law as have been proclaimed ' by the Atlantic charter and other

declarations of the ynited nations.” Signers indorse the “Six Pillars of

Peace” drafted by the commission jon @& just and durable peace of the {Federal Council of churches and agree with the commission that the

The Indianapolis signers include

{the Rt. Rev. Richard Ainslie Kirchbishop of the Episcopal dio-} Indianapolis, Bishop Titus

Indianapolis Methodist ward J. Baumgartel, Dr. Buckner, the Rev. A. C \rke, the Rev. A. E Cory, James A. Crain, Dr. Ralph L. olland, Dr. Robert M. Hopkins, PF. D. Kershner, Dr. T. J. Parthe Rev. Marshall A. Talley, . J. H. Smiley and Miss Dale

EE

CARD PARTY SCHEDULED The Capt. William E. English

{auxiliary 56, U. 8. W, V., will hold a card party at the Citizens Gas & Coke Utility at 1:30 p. m. Friday.

Tell Your Friends eve BRING YOUR COAT IN And Save 10%

on Fur Cleaning and Storage

URGES CAUTION

*‘}operator to be physically incapable {of safely operating a motor ve-

AMONG DRIVERS

Don Stiver States Elderly Motorists Must Use Great Care.

Elderly motorists are being encouraged to comply with driving regulations in the interest of traffic safety, Don FP. Stiver, state:public safety director, said today, explaning that more than 4 per cent of the drivers reporting motor vehicle accidents are 65 or older. He pointed out that 464 drivers over 65 figured in highway accidents the first two months of the year. Of this total, 85.4 per cent

per cent were 75 or more. Laws Needed

“Accident experience of the higher age groups is indicative of a need for a more rigid control of driving privileges of persons past middle age,” Mr. Stiver said, explaining a plan used to keep unsafe drivers off the roads. Motorists in the upper age bracket, who are involved in a traffic mishap, are cited automatically for a hearing before a division reviewing officer, the safety official said. Following a review of the case, at a point convenient to the driver, the reviewing officer either recommends that the driver's license be. revoked or that he be permitted to continue to drive if Ci corrective measures are 3 “a CSR, aay Bt : : aie, “are ordered. only og “ariving tests show the car

hicle.- Negligent drivers are warned; others with defective eyesight are

were between 65 and 74, while 14.6].

BISHOP = AT

» {ference as senior effective bishop,

HOLD EVERYTHING ’ BE

“It's gadget to flatten tin sans!”

my new Sandy kitchen

CHURCH PARLEY

Many Areas. Meet in Kansas City.

By EMMA RIVERS MILNER Times Church Editor Bishop Titus Lowe of the Indianapolis Methodist area, and other representative Methodists from this and every state and more than 20 foreign countrias age City (OS or the seer nial General Conference of the Methodist church. , Bishop Francis I. McGonnell of | New York, who will open the con-

required to be fitted with glasses before driving again. Mr. Stiver reported that in the | first three months of the year 105! persons were ordered to have defects in vision corrected before resuming driving. Twenty-four driver’s permits were suspended because og incompetency behind the wheel, and 63 drivers were of unsafe practices. Six others died before their hearings were held.

J. Lowell Craig Gets Fund Post

J. LOWELL CRAIG, special agent of the Northwestern Mutual Life I Co., is the newly pointes aiimon of the individual gifts pp oo division of the | J 1944 United ¥ War fund cam- § paign’ in Indianapolis. The ca mpaign this year ¢, will run from °

wo Oral has a A a team captain, major, lowell Craig area chairman and assistant chairman of the individual gifts division in previous campaigns. Active in other civic affairs, he is a member of the board of management of the Y. M.C. A. and a past president of the DePauw Alumni association.

WAYNE G. 0. P. TO MEET Republicans of Wayne township will entertain all Republican candidates at 8 p. m. Friday at 4451 W. Washington st.

PHONE MA-9381

will be followed by other bishops presiding in turn at later sessions. Forty bishops will celebrate the {Lord's Supper for 650 kneeling delegates at the first session. This evening Bishop Arthur J. Moore of Atlanta, Ga., described as one of the greatest operators of the denomination, will deliver quadrennial episcopal address.

Organize Groups

The episcopal address has the equivaleny importance for the general conference that the President's message has for a new congress. The conference, operating as a legislative body, will organize this afternoon into committees to which the several hundred memorials pleading for new enactments will be | referred. International night, Sunday, when bishops from India, China and] Mexico will speak, is heralded as] one of the most colorful events of the 12-day program. One of the visiting bishops is Bishop W. Y. Chen of Chungking, who recently baptized the son of Gen. Chiang Kai-shek. A special period will be set aside for prayer for 1400 Methodist chaplains and men and women of the armed forces. . Several chaplains of high rank will be present and welcomed by delegates, more than half of whom have children in the

service. Delegates Fast Yesterday early arriving delegates

WOMEN OF MOOSE

EVENT SCHEDULED

"Mrs. Cora Stephens, chairman of the home-making committee of Women of the Moose, will sponsor a chapter night program at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the Moose temple, 135; N. Deleware st. will also be initiated.

New candidates

Mrs. Ruth Buel, instructor in nu-

trition at the Indianapolis Power & Light Co., will speak, and Mrs. Frances Wiebke, associate grand regent of the Women of the Moose college of regents, will be among the guests.

Others on the program will be a

trio, Misses Mary Ramey, Dorothy Hayes and Josephine Lombardo; Mrs. Bea Brown, soloist, and the fadies’ drum and bugle corps.

DR. FRANK JENNINGS WILL VISIT PARLEY

Dr, Frank L. Jennings of Indianapolis will be among tuberculosis specialists attending the 40th annual meeting of the National Tuberculosis association in Chicago, May 9-12. Dr. Jennings will give the report of the undergraduate medical edu-

Methodist Delegates From| cation committee of the American

Trudeau society, medical section of the association, which is holding its 39th annual meeting in coniwynction with the national convention.

Electrical Brain Tapping x To Read Thoughts Predicted

pictures are developing because “the : electrical charges are widespread and not confined to any one area h as that which would be ex pected to be controlled Ll the eyes By analyzing these genes} patterns of electrical brain

WASHINGTON, April 26. —Electrical impulses from the living! Human brain will be able to give!

scientists of the future a method of | lal telling what a person is thinking about whether he wants to tell them |; or not, Dr. Edgar Douglas Adrian, British Nobelist in physiology and! fellow of Trinity college, Cambridge, predicted in delivering the second!fytyre, Dr. Adrian suggested, will Pilgrim Trust Lecture before the! give us a complete mechanical National Academy of Sciences Bega; scheme of brain action, without ree course to something uncertain and

The electrical pictures of practical] tr to explain what though will be possible only after | | pens,

“the young men come back from war and start doing research again,” Dr. Adrian explained. Not at all a matter of thought transference or any such thing, the brain physiological research of the post-war era has already had its| members, will meet in their new path blazed for it by research that! headquarters at the Coleman house, began as early as those that the 2500 W. Michigan st, at 7:30 p.m. British physiologist Sir Charles | today. Sherrington reported in American]

EE PRCT Er MEETING FOR TODAY,

The Buzz Buckets, teen-canteen

Plans will be completed for the formal opening of the canteen and Even now, by tapping the elec-|an inspection tour of the house trical impulses in the brain, known that the nerve cells work] simultaneously with the flickering! Mr. and Mrs. David Almas, George The ob-| Baxter, Mrs. Teresia Bennett and

it is| will be made. Sponsors of the canteen include

of light seen by the eyes. jserver can tell how the brain! Robert Kelley,

mr RE &

MY

For

fasted all day and attended the continuous prayer service conducted bythe commission on evangelism. li The general conference will meet | in the municipal auditorium where | just five years ago an historical | uniting conference consummated | the merger of three branches of | Methodism. These were the Meth- | odist Episcopal church, the Meth. | odist Church South ang the Meth. | odist Protestant church. The dele- | gates at the present conference will | review the accomplishments of the 114th annual conferences and 42.000 churches over that period. Among the 42,000 churches, including more | than 8,000,000 members, are 59 Marion county congregations. Present at today’s sessions from

Bishop Lowe are Dr. William C. Hartinger and Dr. Guy O. Carpenter of Indianapolis; Dr. Abram S. Woodward of Bloomington, and Mrs. E. 8. Riley of Greensburg.

Edward Wick Now In South Pacific

EDWARD WICK, pharmacist’s mate 1-c, who sailed on the U. S. 8. Sacramento in 1940 and who is a veteran of the Pear! Harbor blitz, is now serving with the marines in the Southwest Pacificc. He has been awarded the three - year good conduct medal and a proficiency rating of 36. According to . word received Edward Wick by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Wick, 144 Wisconsin st., he was in the battle of Emirau in the Southwest Pacific, where there were “no Japs and no casualties.” Mate Wick, who was in the navy three years, transferred into the marines in 1943. He has been overseas 31 months,

rrr op .

EXCISE OFFICER DIES BATESVILLE, April 26 (U. P.).— Lt. Dan Champan, 61, a member of the state excise police department, former Wayne county sheriff and president fo the Indiana Sheriffs’ association in 1931, died yesterday. The widow and one son sur-

vive. *

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