Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 February 1946 — Page 18

carrier, 30 cents & week. Tal des 15 ear: all other states

.

o, NEA Service, and Audit Bureau of in Marion County, § Genta & sopy; deliv-

Canada and Mexico, 87 cents a _ RI-B851.

believe the Case bill should be rejected. i: opponents’ do—that corporations” are responsible for this overwhelming vote. Wall Street and the corporations don’t swing any such influence as that in congress. And big industry, as represented by the National Association of Manufacturers for example, has been urging congress not to pass hasty, halfbaked labor legislation, such as the Case bill is. You'll have to look elsewhere for the real reason why 106 Democrats as well as 152 Republicans voted to take up the Case bill. Only 97 Democrats, 15 Republicans; one American-Laborite and one Progressive voted against considering it. - The real reason is that house members, all of whom must run for re-election this year, have been hearing from voters in their districts—from farmers, small businessmen, housewives, workers. And that what they have heard has convinced most house members that most of their voters want “a law with teeth in it to stop these strikes.”

1 .v

“Wall Street interests” and “giant

is public opinion that may force passage of the Case bill, If public opinion does force passage of this or any other angry, punitive and dangerous labor measures, selfproclaimed friends of organized labor in congress and in the administration will be to blame. i For many years these supporters of labor right-or-wrong have defied public opinion and thwarted all attempts to obtain calm, careful consideration of legislation that . might have averted the present strike crisis. Through their control of the house and senate labor committees they have bottled up bills sincerely designed to promote indus- - trial peace. » : They have made it impossible for congress to legislate «wisely by normal methods. Unless they alter their obstructive tactics, they will make it inevitable for congress to | legislate by abnormal methods with results that probably ~ will be very bad.

#

INDIANAPOLIS HIGH SCHOOL NO. 1 as LAST night a handful of members of the class of '96 of Shortridge High School held a 50th anniversary meeting. It was ‘only nine years before their graduation.that the board of school commissioners had changed the name of their alma mater to Shortridge High School. ‘Abraham C. Shortridge, for whom the institution was ‘named, had been head of the city’s schools in the Civil war

* development of an educational system which stood high in comparison with others of the country. He reorganized the school under the handicap of a court decision that, startlingly enough, held the high school was not to be maintained at public expense. This critical situation did | not last long, but it reflected the narrow views of the time “on public education. bp Shortridge has come a long way since its classes were held in the former Second Presbyterian church on the - northwest corner of the Circle and Market st., one-time home church of Henry Ward Beecher. The class of 1928 was the last to be graduated from the old location on

The contribution of this high school to the community have been rich. Dr. David Starr Jordan taught there, to ~ be succeeded by Dr. Alembert Brayton. The role of honored | includes, too, such teachers as W. W. Grant, Charity Dye, i Roda Selleck, George Hufford and, of course, the “Four Immortals” who taught many who today are numbered i among the city’s parents. The names of that group are revered wherever Shortridge folk gather . . . there are many .vond memories of Miss Laura Donnan, Mrs. Angeline P. Carey, Miss Amelia Platter and Eugene Mueller. : In seven more years, Shortridge will observe its cenlennial, as the oldest educational institution in Indianapolis ext to Butler watversity, founded in 1850. To its alumni, 1's still Indianapolis High School No. 1.

ANOTHER SECRET DEAL

\ NOTHER secret agreement made by President Roose- ~~ velt and Marshal Stalin at Yalta has come out. Many who believed the original Roosevelt statement Jat no secret political deals were made are now surprised. We are not. When the first leak occurred six weeks after Yalta, that the President had agreed to give Russia threé votes in the UNO, we assumed there were other secret agreements and said so. ~The latest revelation concerns President Roosevelt's romise to give the Kurile islands and south Sakhalin to Russia. At the same time, he promised Russia some control of Port Arthur, Dairen and Manchurian railroads. China has since made good on that agreement in her treaty with

Gn

The Kuriles deal was kept secret not only from con“and the public but also—according to Secretary es—from the state department. He says neither he No President Truman knew about it until after V-J day. oh We point out, however, that the agreement is not ng- either legally or morally. President Roosevelt ould no give that territory to Russia because it was not i give. Nor was it the property of the United States. ky oo. ne. "8s \E is no moral obligation, involved because the deal was in violation of the binding public coms- made by the United States and Russian governsuch territorial .aggrandizement, Those Its were contained in the United Nations declara- : i% and reaffirmed several times. senate should make clear that it is agreements, and insist that the texts i be made public at once. President

yy are responsible for the months their discovery of .the

presentatives voted 258 to 114 yesterday drastic Case anti-strike bill. We regret

is sheer bunk to charge—as some of the bill's

period and, in that capacity, contributed greatly to the

Pennsylvania street between Michigan and North streets.

e8 cannot be blamed justly for |

IN WU Serves, te

By A o

: ‘one more day ‘Hoosier Salon- (Block's auditorium), I.deem it my duty to tell you something about Alois HW. Sinks, | the first’ art critic-«to practice his profession in Indianapolis: By which I mean to say that Mr, Sinks received real-for-sure money vg for what he wrote, Even if Mr, Sinks had not, re~ ceived real-for-sure money for what he wrote, he would still have, been an.object of considerable in« terest for he was as genuine a Bohemian as ever reached this

pants, , nothing of his unconventional manners, were nstant joy to everybody. Indeed, nothing like it had ever been seen around here, and the only man able to recognize and label the phenomenon was John Love who, curiously enough, had turned up at the same time to open the first art school in Indianapolis. Mr. Love was reasonably sure ‘that

Mr. Sinks had escaped from the Latin Quarter in Paris. '

"Cupid" —by Lew Wallace

NOBODY knows why Mr. Sinks picked Indianapolis as a place to practice. Born in Dayton, O., in 1848, he ran away from his farm home to enter the Union army as a drummer. He must have been a rattling good drummer boy for, in less time than it takes to tell, he rose to a position on Gen. McConnell's staff. He was wounded and honorably discharged before the end of the war and it was then, for some reason, that he decided to become an artist. Apparently, Mr, Sinks had it figured out that an artist's life couldn't be worse than that of a soldier. The way things turned out, he had a lot to learn. Alois E. Sinks turned up here in 1876, after a period of study in New York, and set up a studio at 49 N. Illinois st, and a home at 394 Broadway. He had been in town just two years when the Indiana School of Art, led by John Love, created a sensation

by putting on the first authentic art show ever held in Indianapolis,

~ Hoosier

Forum

"| do not agree with a word that you say, but | will defend to the death your right to say it." — Voltaire.

By Bert Wilhelm, 2106 8, Emerson ave.

analyst.”

{state some facts that go into the building of homes.

pay, and eventually pay out.

the owner is employed. Payments should not be over $25 per month and held at $20 if possible.

per week. Four people eat 12 meals the other car. per day or 84 meals per week. At] a low estimate of 15 cents per meal, ! a total cost of $12.60 for groceries add $6 for payment on the hom Jana you have $18.60 spent, leaving [$6.40 to buy . fuel, utilities, clothing, transportation, |g school books, insurance, doctor and!

enue,

dentist and miscellaneous other €X- | “special” cars for some time, some

"Since U. S. Went Into Housing . Business, Poor Man Is Ignored"

First of all, material, labor and finance are the principal factors, followed by creating a house at a price that the returning soldier can | stubborn? This home should be built of materials | that will last a lifetime, causing a minimum of upkeep and upon an acre or more offland within easy driving distance from the place where |

“MEASLY NICKEL RAISE MEANS LIVING COSTS UP”

By Richard A. Calkins, Indianapolis

As the picture .of the strike situation is presented to the public, . Not being a Harvard man and never having acquired a Back Bay with government final retouching, | SOVereignty of each of the 21 American republics. accent, I could never be accused of being an expert or “real estate {management is made fo appear as But, having followed home building since Aug, 14, 1893, and having built over 600 homes in Indianapolis in the past 25 years, I will!

iment . . .

x

|erage. ‘And since wages anu Su.

|chasing dollar, considering

set this extra cost is an equal in-

I don’t know why there should be crease in his income. such discrimination, especially dur-| > ing rush hours, but there are just as ing $40 a week, a five per cent in- € many people out Riverside way who crease in pay amounts to $2 weekly. | would like to get home in the eve-'It is most welcome. It is more than | pay for public ning as well as the people on the half of what he is putting away to! | provide for his family and to piece]

For the unorganized worker mak-

I have often wondered about these out his own social security in old| age. It will make a nice Christmas!

|

the big bad wolf. At most, only five cents an hour increase stands in the! | way of immediate strike settle-| why is management so

Take a closer look at this measly | nickel. It actually represents a five |per cent wage increase on the av12S at the hospital and as soon 8s We swallow up the most of the purgot off there was another City hosFor example, let us take a typical pital car right in back of ours alfamily: the father, mother and two most empty. And when the River-| children, on an incame of $1200 side finally came he couldn't take|jjkely to get a four or five per cent per year, or, in other words, $25 all of us who had been dumped from

the! 'product’s entire route from mine or! soil to delivery wagon, the buyer is

price increase. All he needs to off-|

WASHINGTON, Feb. 1.—Differerices over Argentina and other préssures may cause the postponement, for a second time, of the inter-American conference at Rio De Janeiro. The Rio conference is supposed to take place between March 15 and April 15. Its principal purpose is to implement the act of Chapultepec by means of a treaty jointly guaranteeing territorial and political

| Argentina, of course, is one of the 21. After a ! protracted spell in the hemispheric doghouse because of her pro-axis leanings, the inter-American sisterhood at Mexico City last March invited her to ceenter the family circle. All she had to do was to Qeclare war on our side and rid herself of her:Nazi- | Fascist trimmings. And this she did—on paper. Her reformation, however, was superficial. The Fascist-minded Col. Peron remains more than ever dictator, While national elections are set for Feb. 24, the iron-fisted colonel controls the police, a large part of the army and a segment of labor. The indications are that by terror or otherwise, he intends | to get himself “elected.”

| Cleave Among Nations

AN INTER-AMERICAN conference had been announced for last fall. But the United States—some say by unilateral action—caused its postponement The state department's position is that this country does not intend to sign any mutual guarantee pact with the rest of the- Americas if Peron’s Argentina is to be a party. But Peron’s Argentina can hardly be barred from | ‘Rio. Legally she has the same rights there as any other American state. As host, Brazil will have to

penses. This typical family repre- of them with about a dozen people | savings fund. If he does not get!

sents 70 per cent of our American on them, and I knew where they

people. | were going. Why talk about a $10,000 modern very efficient mansion? Why not get out of ihe! ‘clouds and down fo earth and facts? He {We must accept the semi-modern {home or resort to tents, hen houses and house trailers as we have since the government went into the hous- | ing business, only to a greater de-

Indianapolis

gree. | It is possible to build a smal four-room house of cinder blocks today for less than $2200 but Wash{ington must face the fact that since they went into the housing business the semi-modern poor man’s home {has been completely ignored.

| these sirikes never

i ” ” 2 “WHY USE SPECIAL CARS {IN EVENING RUSH HOUR?” By One of the Riders, Indianapolis Here is a gripe and some questions for the car company to answer. Shortly after 4 one afternoon I went to get a Riverside car (to come home, and the first one (was so crowded the operator {wouldn't ‘open the door. The next jone about 10 minutes later came through with a “special” sign on it and not a single passenger. Another came along in about 10 minutes and {it was crowded. I was able to get on the next one that came although It was crowded; and then the op{erator changed the Riverside sign to City hospital with over two-

strikes. thirds of the crowd going out past

“ARE CONDITIONS TODAY | WHAT BOYS FOUGHT FOR?” | By Katblvne Parke and Nona Short,

boys that went over there to fight | for. their freedom. Nor of the boys|sessed with the idea that lying in hospitals seriously wounded. one who disagrees with him is a | Those that may never walk, talk, see |Communist. Likewise he seems to or ever hear again. Nor think of think that those that are hever coming back. | knowledge and progress that can The leaders and the helpers )f! the unions should have been the ones that went over to fight. They wouldn't be thinking of ways to get more money in their pockets. While our boys were fighting for li their country were they thinking of our freedom or thinking of ways to get more money. No, they thought! of their country and of keeping our| freedom which their ancestors had | fought for and of their homes they were coming back to, not these

The boys are asking you—is this |

it, but union labor does, he has to

I don’t think that is a reduce his savings in order to meet | way to handle crowds thé incerased cost of current livand earn an increase in fares.

ing. ” So the jitney takes on imporfance. If all union workers get it, and the alleged 15 million of them work 40 hours weekly 52 weeks each year, the total cost is going to be $1,560,-

Is this what our boys fought for? 000,000. It must be admitted that Did our boys go on a strike when our government fis inclined to toss

they were told to go fight for our such amounts around rather carefreedom? No, they didn't.

they were told to go fight, they did. | cannot afford it. For what, they are asking us now. | They didn't go over there and fight to come back to these strikes. The people that are helping with

When | jessly: but that is one reason we

yn» | “SHOULD HELP BUILD NEW | SOCIALIZED WORLD STATE” the! By Charles E. Geiger, Richmond The Watchman seems to be obevery-

think of

all possible human ever be made has been made and {that any change in either political or social behavior is pure demonism.

I really feel sorry for him." His

such modern improvements as the bathtub were once opposed and out{lawed so one cannot expect much {less in regard to social improve- | ments. pe However, may I suggest that per{haps it might be safer in the future to “hang together?” rather

the hospital. We had to pile off what we fought for? No. No. No | han lake a chance of “hanging

Side Glances—By Galbraith

separately.” , The first law of nature, self preservation, is the motive for the not-too-distant future

|

1,

© OOPR. 1946 BY NEA SERVICE, INC. 7. M. NEG. U. §. PAY. OB.

world government, like everything else, will have a crude and imperfect beginning, but we should try and give helpful suggestions for improvement rather than total opposition.

oe ® = “RETURN TO JOBS AND PRICES WILL ADJUST”

By Ralph Royalty, 24 W. Southern ave.

The unions are not using good Judgment. Why did they not take { | what they have been offered long ago, I just cannot understand. They will never again regain what they have lost. They could have asked for more in their next contract and no doubt got it without striking. I fully understand thet the cost of living has gone up far too high, but it people will go” back to work and stop this striking and put out production and get material on the ‘market, I feel sure that prices will adjust themselves and get back to normal in a short time. I do and have belonged to a union for years and am a union man at heart. Remember that you are fighting the big money trusts of this country and you will have to get what is coming to you little at a time. Be true Americans,

DAILY THOUGHT

These things I command you, that ye love one another.--John

ra ied

io.

24

"Yop pick up with fhe strangest people—that young man is with the OPA, and you know, very well your father is a A

ve

18:17. : THEY DO not love that do hot Heywood.

ndlord!" show their love,—

fe must be a nightmare. Well, |

socialized |

! WASHINGTON, Feb. 1.—The mess in U. 8. labor relations gets dirtier by the day. Far from being a harbinger of peace, the union of John L. Lewis and his United .fine Workers with the American Federation of Labor may be the first maneuver of bigger and better union warfare—A. F. of | Lu vs. C. L O. i The Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen is talking strike, and the National Mediation Board, having | failed to” settle. the wage question for the railroad ! unions, proposes arbitration in admitting that the | “model” Railway Labor Act still does not provide the perfect solution for labor disputes. President C. E. Wilson of General Motors, and President R. J. Thomas of the United Auto Workers, | appearing as first witnesses on the proposed “fact- | finding bill” before the Senate Labor Committee, con- | tributed not one single constructive idea. for solving | ldbor difficulties, i Wilson put on one of. the finest four-hour demonstrations of beating around the bush and dodging the Issue ever seen in this capital of the evasive answer | and the polite. brush-off. Thomas, by his cheap charges against Senator Vandenberg for proposing the Labor-i .cnagemess Conference last fall, did neither himself nor his union a bit of good. '

Labor and Business Rebel

C. 1.0. PRESIDENT Philip Murray's charges that | the leaders of big business are in conspiracy to bust | the unions and defeat the aims of the U, S. govern- | ment are based on circumstantial evidence only, On ! equally flimsy evidence, management may charge that the leaders of big C. I. O. labor are in conspiracy to

|

LONDON, Feb. 1.—While the leader of the British Conservative party is nting landscapes in Florida, considerable jockeying for position is going on among his Tory colleagues in London. Some dispatches sent out from here have suggested that an intrigue is afoot to displace the present leader during his absence, Nothing could be further from the truth. The Tory chieftains have at this moment neither the power nor the inclination to change the leadership of their party. But in the same way that Ernest Bevin and Herbert Morrison. contend for the future leadership of the Labor party against the day when Clement Attlee shall fade from the political scene, so in’ the conservative party, particularly now that they are the opposition, there is rivalry to establish claims to the succession. Until a few months ago, it seemed certain that, on the retirement of the present leader, Anthony Eden would be his successor. But being in the opposition affords entirely different methods of gaining political strength than does the holding of office.

Eden Tired of Party Politics

IT IS a classic tradition of politics that, in absence of the king, the crown prince’ tries onthe crown; but in the absence of the Tory léader, there are several crown princes who are grooming them- | setves or being groomed for the role of successor, even though no succession is envisaged in the immediate future. . This contention and jockeying for position would not have arisen were it not for the fact that Anthony Eden, long predestined as successor, has recently let it be known through his nearest friends that he is | somewhat wearied of party politics and would wel|'come some other outlet for his talénts. In recent | weeks, his name was mentioned as a possible ambas

| sdidor to Washington as well as a candidate for the

A pe HE

t Show Held 68 Yea

left to ‘see the

TODAY IN EUROPE . . . By Randolph Churchill em Rivalry On for British Tory Reins

post of secretary general of UNO. The job in Wash« ° “ington has now been given to Sir Archibald Clark

ie

rs Ag

© Included in the exhibit ‘were two paintings by Gen. Lew Wallace who, but for the watchfulness of

i ke

a

-

his father, might have been another Indiana artist" *

instead of the soldier and man of letters he turned out to be, hy ’ : a el Gen, Wallace's two pictures were labeled: “The Dead Line at Andersonville” and, believe it or not, “Cupid,” ; : : Our art eritic lit into “Cupid.” Gen. Wallace, it appears, had painted Cupid with purple wings and it was so preposterous; so utterly repugnant to Mr. Sinks’ artistic and clissie conception of what the

* God of Love should look like that even his abundant

vocabulary failed him. At that Mr. Sinks made it perfectly clear that he didn’t care for cupids equipped with purple wings.

The controversy’ rocked Indianapolis to its foune

dations because nobody could figure out how two such worldly-wise and experienced gentlemen could have such diverse opinions concerning the proper appearance of cupid.

Retreat Via the Classics THE DEBATE might have lasted Gen. Wallace put an end to it. Picking the precise ment when Mr. Sinks was having pthin own way, Gen. Wallace came out with a formal statement regretting that he had not had the ade vantage of Mr. Sinks’ superior training: after which he publicly apologized for having been treacherouily deceived by Milton's historic lines:

Here Love his glorious shafts employs, here Aights, His constant lamp, and waves his purple wings, : Reigns here, and revels , , . Indeed, Gen. Wallace went even further and cited “Paradise Lost”; Boak 4, 1.764, as the source of his inspiration, Besides being everything else under the sun, Gen, Wallace was also a good lawyer ‘with a fine feeling for precedent.

years had not

It took Indianapolis years to recover, Indeed, it wasn’t until comparatively rece y that profes sional art criticism was re-established: at any rate, to

to point where a critic was handed real-for-sure money for what he wrote.

WORLD AFFAIRS... By William Philip Simms Argentina Possible Cause of Rift |

invite her along with the rest. Of course—and that was the openly expressed hope at the time of last fall's postponement—Argentina may have a new government by March 15. But if Peron is still boss, it looks as though the Rio gathering might be a bust, or worse. It might break up in a row. For the Americas, as a whole, do not see eye-to= eye regarding Argentina. Some claim it is diamete rically contrary to’ good-neighbor commitments to intervene, directly or indirectly, in each other's ine ternal affairs. And those persons assert that, like. it or not, what Peron does within his own frontiers 1s none of our business. Others say that Peron, like Hitler, is a menace to his neighbors, if not to the hemisphere, and should be dealt with “multilaterally.” Diplomatic, economic or other steps should be joint.

Delay May Be Necessary MOREOVER, it is observed, postponement is ade visable on other legitimate counts. The next meet ing of the Big Five foreign ministers is due in April, The UNO assembly, after recessing in London, may resume its sessions in this country, also in April, And the peace conference is scheduled to convene in Paris not later than May 1, The pressure of work on foreign ministers, there~ fore, is tremendous. They don’t have time to finish one job before dashing off to another, Secretary of State Byrnes, for example, has done little but travel since he went to the Crimea with President Roosevelt. He has gone from Yalta, to Potsdam, to Moscow and back again to London. Small wonder that diplomatic Washington's current bon mot is: “The state department fiddles while Byrnes roams.”

IN WASHINGTON + + « By Peter Edson Labor Relations Bad Faith Mutual |

wreck big business and defeat the aims of the gove ernment. Both may be completely right in their accusations. Both big business and big labor are in rebellion against the people. It has been like this ever since the Labor-Manage= ment Conference of last fall The men who really make management policy for big business refused to attend. The labor leaders quarreled among theme selves like hooligans. When logic failed to win argue ments, they resortea to calling each other names. The very inconclusiveness of the Labor-Managee ment Conference deliberations and decisions demons strated what is now more evident than ever. Leaders of management and industry, competent though they may be as technicians in production, still haven’ learned the first principles in their human relations ships with eacH other,

Dog-Eat-Dog Policy Fatal PERHAPS no one is to blame for this. The science of labor relations is only about a hundred years old. The human race can’t be expected to learn its lessons that fast. It has taken four or five thousand years to learn that settling disputes by warfare doesn’t make sense. What negotiators: in the present disputes seem utterly unable to comprehend is that, as long as they persist in their present tactics of dog-eat-dog, they are destroying themselves. The way matters are now heading, government will step in and improvise to settle disputes the best it can, whether labor and management like the method or not. When that day comes, it may well be the heginning of the end for not only free enterprise management, but free labor as well. .

Kerr. The UNO job has been filled. Inevitably, the disclosure of Eden's distaste for the hurly-burly of party politics and his potential acceptance of a non-partisan appointment has whetted the appetite of other Tory leaders, who nourish perfectly legitimate ambitions to advance their political fortunes. His possible abdication from the role of leadership has put two other candidates in the running, They are Harold Macmillan and Oliver Stanley,

AFHQ Minister Is Candidate MACMILLAN, who comes from the famous pub lishing family, has earned a reputation of being modern-minded, ‘forceful and progressive, with an aclite understanding of economic problems. In addition, he gained -valuable experience during the two years he spent in the Mediterranean as British mine ister resident at allied’ force headquarters. He re<

cently made a series of successful speeches in the _.

ow

house of commons which have been admired by

friends and foe alike, ‘the

Stanley, who is a son of Lord Dérby, has had a political career of singular fluctuations. Nearly 20 years ago, when his career was first being promoted by Stanley Baldwin, he was spoken of as a likely fu ture prime minister. He held a succession of offices, in none of which he won distinetion. Then his reputation declined and he was one of those principally in mind when some wit, just before the war, remarked that the trouble with the Conservative party was that it contained so many “ex-future prime ministers.” In the last few weeks, however, Stanley's ambitions have been revived and he has made a series of extraordinarily successful speeches. His newly-discove ered vitality and ambition are today one of the prin cipal topics of discussion at Westminister, :

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Eni BOONVILL Mrs. An s of the Amer officials said -in Indiana to Enrolling 4 ard, Paul anc charged.- He in the army.

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SANTA MC writer Craig R

! the run of the the floors and of the sprinkle »

DETROIT, that his store | until noon. C

» eg British C BOSTON, deportation to Tyler. One hs The girls— 17, of Bournen land. They hi > Miss Shep: was lost in ac of St. Louis, M land with the Miss Buck bombs. She Ww

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Capt. Russel minal leave, h Shortridge high partment. He January, 1843, anti-aircraft o . San Francisco tion and educat

| The Indiana | ciety will meet i in the School © | Pennsylvania st Please,” will be sussion.

i * “Mexican Fe: topic of a lect 10:30 a. m. ton dren's Museum by Mrs. ( member of the The program ly for fifth an who will soon Mexico in the school age chil been welcomed

R. A. Ward « Co., is the pre new 20-year s at a recent di Others who 1 pre: 15 years— - Bend; J. J. C1 K. Grubb, Hun kle, Marion; Vic L. W. Martin, | Anderson and dianapolis. Ten years—E apolis. Five —) Muncie; J8.-C C. T. Burris, M Miller, R. C. M head, J. G. Vet ward, Indianaj

The Nature diana will hold at 3 p. m. Sunc dens. Jack Sy Day will be in’ ing and F. J. speaker. .

Harry 0. Ge

Bishop Episc

The Rt. R . Kirchhoffer, b apolis Episcop will ordain 1 clergyman in | Episcopal mini The candida the diaconate ' M. ‘Bangert, a South and ed seminary in t assume charge church, Conne tion will be c in the Episcop vent,

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