Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 September 1946 — Page 5
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MINISTERS PLAN
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PICNIC FRIDAY
[Families ta Take Part in Annual Outing.
The Protestant ministers of Indianapolis and their families will hold their annual picnic and fun-
. fest Friday afternoon and night on
4
ow
the lawn of the North Methodist church. Dr. E. K. Higdon, executive sec-
® retary of oriental missions for the,
United Christian Missionary society, will speak on his recent trip to the Philippines and the outlook for missions today. Every family will bring a covered dish, sandwiches and table napery. The committee will servé coffee, tea and ice cream.
Mass Games Planned
Mrs. A. E, Clegg and Mrs. Dallas L. Browning will be assisted as co-chairmen of the table arrangements committee by Mrs. Richard Rettig, Mrs, Glen O'Dell, Mrs. Joseph Hughes, Mrs. Thomas B. Cline, Mrs. R. H. Peoples, Mrs. 1. Albert Moore, Mrs. Robert Lewis, Mrs. Virgil Ragan, Mrs. Daniel R. Ehalt, Mrs. Judge I. Saunders and*Mrs. Ernest Roesti.
| Mark Cowan of the city park
board will direct the mass games for ministers and Mrs, Olen
tee to arrange for the play period for children from 4:30 to 5:45 p. m. The .Rev. Mr. Rettig is chairman of the hospitality committee and the Rev. E. E. Russell is in charge of the singing to take place around the tables, Mrs. Howard J. Baumgartel will lead the devotions.
DELEGATES AWAIT PARLEY ON YOUTH
Indianapolis delegates will depart, Sunday for the national youth convention of the Epigccopal church in Philadelphia. The delegates are Miss Julia Hull and Phillip N. Smith. The Rev. Thomas R. Thrasher, rector of the Church of the Advent here, is their clerical advisor. Attending the House of Bishops in Philadelphia will be the Rt. Rev.
Richard A. Kirchhoffer, bishop of |
Indianapolis. Each of the 89 dioceses of the Episcopal church in America are sending two delegates to the convention at which the youth move-
ment of the church will be dis-!
cussed.
ROTENONE KILLS PARASITES WASHINGTON — Solutions containing 57 rotenone will destroy over 90% of the cattle grubs and all of the lice on the animals treated.
A | were told there was no ban on our
gd rings German homes or recipPeters is chairman of the commit- entering
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G.I: Wives.in Reich Told How To Treat Conquered People
By NITA POLASEK NEA Special Correspondent NEUBIBERG, Bavaria, Sept. 10.— The army is teaching the G. I. wives over here that we must get like rep= resentatives of America and ‘the American policy in our dealings with the Germans. And it is teaching us that in adAition to being here to make homes for our, husbands, we have an occupation duty to perform, too. What the Army calls “orientation ctures” are in full swing now, and | the major topic for® soldiers’ wives lis how to conduct themselves with [the conquered * people who live [among them—sometimes in the I'same block, sometimes next door.
Represent America Our teachers are quick to point| ui i 4 out that there is no taboo on a Nita Polasek. . . . She finds “housewifely” form of fraternization,| prides abroad are more | but they go on from there to point| housewives,
{out other’ things that don’t exactly ON er fraternization. y the others in this orientation school y for GI brides—that we're not in
“In ‘the eyes of our maids, cooks b and other help,” one teacher told Germany for a sightseeing tour. r
us, “we are representatives . of | America and the American policy. {When the occasion demands, we % as {must be firm, but fair at the same | time.”
G. L than
Told to Be On Guard : In the same breath in which we |
rocating for whatever hospitality we might receive from German neighbors, we also were told to be on guard against infectious diseases rampant among the Germans —and against the mental-disease of Nazi thinking from which many of | them still suffer. False Sympathy We were warned, in another lecture, not to let conditions in Germany lead us, into false sympathy | for the Germans. This lesson pointed out ‘that the { polite, humble and servile attitude of a conquered people might throw the occupation wives: off their| | guard, instill doubt in our'minds as| {to the justification. for the war | against the Nazis, and chill our | determination to stay here and help | our husbands see the job through. ! But we were asked, as a sort of| | homework assignment, to work with |
|
| German children whenever oppor-| tunity affords. . Not There for Sightseeing | The lectures we attended were | | climaxed by a movie that I guess] - would be called “how the Germans always made war.” That film un- | |reeled the horror of Dachau, and! | other equally cruel concentration | camps. | | If that had been the only les-| son in the course, it ‘would have "been enough to convince me—and |
TIMES SERIAL—
Devil's Laughter
THE STORY: I. Cecelia Hart, was only 17 when 1 came to Innisfail that eventful summer to help out Cousin Ellen, who was the Fitzgerald's housekeeper. Lovely Charlotte Brent ecaptured my heart immediately, but auteeratic old Honora Fitzgerald, who ruled the household from a sick bed, frightd me. 1 was terribly homesick until Prof. Mark told me I could read any of his books that I wanted. Then Colin Fitzgerald eame home and everything paled beside his magnetic charm.
CHAPTER 8 WHILE I was standing there at the foot of the stairs, still glowing over Colin's sweetness to his old
mother, Mark and Miss Charlotte came, bringing Father Burke with
them. They were all quite wet and Father Burke, being momentarily
blinded by his rain-splashed glasses, nearly fell over Colin's bags there in the hall He seemed to think this quite amusing; but Mark's eyes, fixed: on the bags, were not amused. Indeed, they looked very grim and there was an edge on his voice as he said, “So the prodigal has returned once more.” Charlotte flashed an. anxious glance at him, then smiled at me as I took her wet things. » » MARK SAID, “Do celia Hart, Father?” “Ah, yes, Cecelia.” Father Burke's near-sighted brown eyes were twin-
= you know Ce-
kling as he wiped his glasses. “That |
would be Tom Hart's daughter, wouldn't it? Over in North Lynchester, Saint - Dominic's parish? Sure, I know Tom well. Good evening, - Cecelia.” “Good evening, Father,” I said, and with an embarrassed little bow, 1 retreated to the kitchen, where Cousin Ellen was inclined to be quite vexed with me until] I"teld her Colin had come home. ” » ” “THANK GOD he's home at last,” she said, the dour look leaving her face. . ; “That'll be enough to cure Herself entirely. Get out the best linen, Celia, and get your apron on. Ah, he's the one that knows the good things to eat and appreciates them, Colin is.” Shortly before dinnertime, Mrs. Fitzgerald horrified everyone by declaring that she- was going to get cut of bed and come down to the dining room and have dinner with Colin. And for a while there was quite a furore. : What magic words Colin finally used on her no one ever knew, but in the end she ate her meal, as usual, In bed and in seeming contentment.
By Alice M. Laverick
[Ellen was in fine feather when we came back to the kitchen. ” n n “WHAT DID I tell you?” she said | triumphantly. “I told you he'd ap- | preciate it, didn't I? Ah, just wait till he tastes my roast ducklings. And didn’t table look grand.| Celia, with those irises of the pro-| fessor's in the silver bowl?” } I agreed that it did. The irises] from Mark's garden were just the| color of Miss Charlotte's eyes and |
the
her dress in the candle iight, And from the way he kept looking: at her, Colin Fitzgerald must -have| appreciated this fact as well as that Cousin Ellen was a superb cook. Colin was doing most of the talk-| ing, course, which. was as it should be. After all, was he not, | the traveler just returned from far-| off ‘lands? Th —— It was only natural- that such a one should monopolize the conversation, especially one so gifted in|
the art as that same black Irish-| man.
of
n » = MISS CHARLOTTE'S eyes were sparkling and she laughed excited-| ly and often, and Father Gene was| intensely interested in Colin's tales. | | But Mark was not impressed, you | | could sée that. | It was when I carried in the salad | that he flared up at Colin, and Ij nearly dropped the tray in my agi-| tation. I laid it down carefully on! {the sideboard and stood there un-| {noticed while the storm swept by | me, : | Colin was saying, “So they haven't | made you a bishop yet, Father? | {Sure, it's a crying shame. I | thought by now -a man like your- | self, with your personality and ability, would have the whole diocese | | to "
3 ” o n “NEVER MIND what you thought,” Mark broke in furiously
{ “Have some respect for Father Geng and for the Cloth he wears. Be- | cause you've been among those who |” {hold nothing sacred, there's no need of your aping them.” | “Upon my word, you'd do well to {do a little traveling yourself, my | dear Mark,” said Colin hotly. “This | provincial life is certainly making [you more narrow-minded than ever, | which is saying a lot.” Miss Charlotte's eyes were wide] | with distress and Father Burke sdid | quickly, “Now, I'll not be the bone of contention between you two. 1t| | was noble of you, Mark, to take up| | the cudgels for me, but I'm sure; Colin meant no harm.”
| #8 | 8.4 TO BE SURE, Colin sat beside] “MY APOLOGIES to you, Fa-|
" her .whjle she ate and when -the{ther,” said Mark, “for my burst of |
nurse and I carried in the trays, he| temper and for’ my brother's -insowas making . outrageously com- | lence. And to you, Charlotte.” plimentary speeches to the old lady, ! “1 was notraware of being inover her delighted protests. solent,” Colin's dark eyes were]
He even persuaded her to take al flashing. “And, in any case, 1 am
little nap, promising to look in on/|able to make.my own apologies.” her again after his own dinner. | “Come, come now. Remember,| The dinner, so far as the food|both of you, you have a very sick | was concerned, was excellent, and| mother,” Father Gene said. “Stop
i, Vet
I managed to serve without mishap, even to pouring the wine into fragile crystal goblets without spilling a drop.
acting like ‘two hot-headed schoolboys." ; The two men stopped ‘glaring at|
pach other. Mark muttered, “Sor- |
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~~ PLANNED BY JAPS
TOKYO, Sept. 10 (U. P.) ~Japan never planned to land on American soil but hoped at best for a negotiated peace which would have allowed her to hold on to Her Far Eastern prizes of war, evidence in the war crimes trial showed today. ; ; * The evidence was a transcript of statements made to members of the U. 8. strategic bombing survey by Naoki "Hoshino, chief’ secretary to former Premier = Hideki Tojo, Hoshino, a defendant in the trial, was questioned last November, “There never was any thought, .of course, of gaining a decisive victory over ‘the Americans—that is
of landing on the American continent and bringing: America to her knees,” Hoshino said. He sald, although the Japanese were pledged to fight to the finish in China, they undoubtedly thought {they would not have to wage #&
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES _ rah
aa “a - w. o : oy
»
Don't Plan Moon Trip for Awhile
WASHINGTON, Sept. 10 (U, P).} —Bgtter put aside any plans for a rocket trip to the moon. ' * Col. James G: Bain, chief of the guided missiles branch of army ordnance, said it would be feasible to put a chunk of iron the size of a man’s fist on the moon in about 10 years. “But if you want to land
something bigger, it will take much longer,” he said in a radio ~ address, Brig. Gen, Henry B. Sayler, chief of ordnance development and research, said the time was not far distant when long range guided missles would be capable of spanning oceans.
LOCAL MAN ‘CHECKS HIS WAY TO ORIENT
An army embarkation = officer from Indianapolis got. a surprise trip to China while checking a passenger list in Seattle, Wash. First Lt. Robert C. Whitney, 1930 Sugar Grove. ave, stood at the gangplank checking the passenger list of -persons bound for China on a U. 8, army transport, On the docket were 221° military dependents and 10 war department civillans. Lt. Whitney came to the 15th officer'’s name, It: was his. He laid the list on the dock and walked aboard. His wife, the former Dorothy P. Kraps, exclaimed, “what an army.” She will meet the Meutenant in Shanghai.
7
® LISTS MORE ATOM USES similar WASHINGTON-—Atomic energy States. fie might be used for blasting out cave The Japanese, he said, thought |ities for lakes in desert lands, or that the pressure of the war in|for warming up the North Pole reEurope “would keep the United | gion 80 that it could be used as a
battle with the United
By EDWARD ELLIS . United Press Staff Correspondent CHICAGO, Sept. 10}—A word expert said. today that popular songs are a menace to masglage. “The soupy, sticky, love-sick songs we hear are too remote from teality,” said 8. I. Hayakawa, professor of English at the Illinois Institute’ of Technology, “Popular. songs bleat of dream girls who always are perfect. In real life women eat, blow their noses, and run for streetcars.” Mr. Hayakawa, a semanticist—or one who studies the relation of language to reality—is the author of a book called “Language in Action.” Recently he has pondered the language in popular songs. And he said it has made him shudder. L¥WIll I ever find the girl who is my ideeeel!’' "he snorted, para‘phrasing a song, “This means the guy isn't looking
States from bringing their full | holiday resort, a British scientist | weight to bear in Japan" |recently stated. |
by
Rich, lush,'r
Labtex’
fine new rayon
for a real girl, but a metaphysical woman who has nop existence in
Word Expert States 'Sticl Love Songs Menace Marri:
w reality, He gets married but be. comes Slaliugioned--nabrallt, © “After a series of divorces, he des
cides he'd rather have a paper ¢ he can eall his own than the doit who didn’t turn out right.» " i “Infantile marriages often go on the rocks because young men and women expect a lifetime of moon and June, instead of taxes and rent and cold coffee and hot tempers. “As for babies,” said the professor, the father of a 7-week-old “popular songs always see e through a golden mist. never any intimation that babies cg be cranky, “Well,” sald the professor, “I'd better get going. Got to go home to my wife and baby.” a
STEAMING ENRICHES RICE WASHINGTON-Lightér, fhiffies rice, which retains most of the’ vitamins found in brown rice cam! be produced by giving rough rice’ a steam bath prior to the usual
Colors inspired by the vineyard landscapes of Amoi
antic... and very flatering! ln CRAYON,
OA
crepe, 1.49 yard
1
Isabella grape, Puncheon, Riesling leaf, Lake Canadaigua; Sylvaner leaf green, Zinfandel, Cabernet, Sonoma sky, Napa vin rose, Grape blossom, Dew
bloom, Gold champagne, New wine, Monte rosso rust
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ON SALE TOMORROW
Sorry, no phone or mail orders
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What with Colin's’ enthusiastic ry.” And Colin laughed “Mea max- ’ comments on the sauce for the crab ima culpa, Father Gefie he said. | =
cocktails and on the onion soup,|And I dared to servé the salad. > Sh a ’ ’ ged & . i p : / .
both special concoctions of hers, (To Be Continued) j a ' 2 . i ;
i . : &
~ 3 + X ciate
