Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 May 1944 — Page 9

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(Continued From Page One)

up all ambition to

After the family dinner, he sat down on the kitchen steps while his mother washed tha dishes. “Mother, I've decided to study for the ministry,” was his simple announcement, No response came from the kitchen. The lad turned and saw his mother, tears streaming from her face. He will never forget, he says. Presently, she found

| “Early Prayer of Mother

rs

Ewington, O., a town founded by his mother’s people, the Ewings. As a barefoot, freckled-faced boy, he hoed the garden and raced on

his bicycle. He dived off the mill

dam, skated and swam in the pond, stole an occasional watermelon, fought fist fights, was licked and grew up to lick his adversary. Between these pastimes so ¢haracteristic of the small town lad, he found time before he’ was 10 to know Milton, to revel in the adventures of James Fenimore Cooper and steep himself in

Shakespeare. He met Jessie Dobson, young organist, when he went South to Washington and. Tusculum -college, Greenville, Tenn. and fell in love with her at first glimpse. In ‘church! Seven years later, after he was graduated from college and Princeton Theological seminary, they were married. Their partnership has included pastorates in New Jersey, Tennessee and Illinois as well as the great Woodward Avenue Presbyterian church, Detroit, from where

marrow bones, Dr. Vale does not criticize other churches. His intimates include Jesuits and Jews.

ciples’ “witness to the scriptures” and the unity and breadth of the

Episcopalians. One of the fathers of Dr. Vale's church once said: “You don't count Presbyterians, you weigh them.” Representatives of his 2051869 fellow churchmen “weighed” Roy Ewing Vale and did not “find him wanting,” but made him their moderator.

BEDFORD EX-MAYOR DIES By UNITED PRESS Services were arranged today for John R. Andrews, 72, secretary of the Bedford Chamber of Commerce since 1940, a former Republican mayor of Bedford and Lawrence

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sufficient voice to tell him that | they came to Indianapolis. They county clerk. He died yesterday. she had prayed earnestly even before he was born that fe might become a minister, if he were a boy.

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Prayer Is Answered

Her prayer was answered but she died next year. Today, her son, who is the pastor of the Tabernacle Presbyterian church, one of the largest of his denomination, has reflected an even greater honor upon her. But he did not seek to do so. His brethren of the Indianapolis Presbytery sponsored him for moderator over his protest. His wife, using a time-honored | Presbyterian phrase, said jokingly | her husband was “predestined” to be a preacher since his initials, “R. E. V.” spell the abbreviation for reverend. What is more, it is in his blood to think seriously on religion. She has his printed genealogy including the story of his ancestor, young Robert De Vale, to prove it. Robert was the son of an English peer who was an ardent Roman CatNolicc. When Robert joined the Quakers, his father told him he would be disinherited unless he forsook his new religion. Robert did not yield to the threat, but instead renounced his title, struck the “De” from his name and came to the colony of | Pennsylvania. i

Become Presbyterians

Somewhere between the time of | Robert and Roy, the Vales became | Vv Presbyterians. Dr. F. Fremont | Vale, late father a Of Khe new mod- . - . 3 : erator, was & , college pro- | Sheer Beauty Hosiery Ahernoon, Business, and Luxury Dress Shests fessor and the holder of a Ph. D. | Full Fashioned — 75¢ 10 93¢ Bareleg No-Seam — 45¢ w 34¢ degree. He provided the atmosi ' phere of books in which his son

21 N. ILLINOIS ST.. NR. W. WASHINGTON ST. Was Feared. ~ NG]

Roy Ewing Vale was born in RRR i

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