Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 October 1947 — Page 2

CST! aa a x (sat treatm

. Ask Mrs. Manners—

Reader Advises Church for Lonely People

I WAS READING your column Sept. 29 about lonely What Kind of Anniversary Gift? Young people will find friends in church, should go to the church nearest their own faith or to new a problem. Shall I give my wife a personal gift or something for the ones. ‘We have a friendly young pedple's group in our Sunday School and church. There are class parties and Suppers. jie to have to make it more comfortable. I know she would appreciate It is the Evangelical United Brethren Church, New York and ‘something like this.

Go to any church, any faith, and you will find friends Mrs. N. C. B,, City.

A Problem in Remarriage

I MARRIED a man four years older than myself in 1940. He so bad and mistreated me that I left him and took our child down to my My lawyer said I had to get a divorce before I could get support for my child, That was in 1942. I got the divorce and my husband Sentiment If tagged with a sentimental date invitation, became very sorry. He slowed up on his drinking and we went out to-

Then he begged me to go back and remarry him, That

wanted to get remarried in the small town where my married and divorced there We planned on remarrying right

asked me to go back with hum 1 did, much to us if we never re

away but we have married for we felt married a Now we have another child three years old that was born to US students t6 ministries throughout countants, speak at a dinner meetI'hey both are truly our own children and we ry 0 Indiana, has been announced by Our friends keep telling us thal pr, O. L. Shelton, Dean of the

it off until it wasn't

since we wel back uve right, but we haven't remarried sooner of later it will be found out and that we both will be arrested entence and our children taken away ob. We never bother any one. People also sav 1 couldn't get my husband s Insurance where he works, : Will you tell me if we are breaking the law? MARGIE AND RICHARD. safe as long as vou maintain a moral home, However, why object to remarriage? Your children might suffer embarrassment if you don’t remarry, You probably could get some help on this problem hy discussing the whole matter frankly with your pastor,

These Letters Really Are From Hoosiers REALLY publishing

Legally, you are comparatively

The letters that you read may be written by your that's how Hoosier we are. The column is not syndicated. It is published only in The Times. The Tucson writer is a Times subscriber.

Wants to Know What Picture Is Worth?

§ AM ASKING you information regarding a picture o his beautiful horse entitled “Custer’s Last Charge, were shot in the Sioux outbreak Tt was my father's picture man in Washington made me a small offer but I think the picture is Please advise me,

and 1s 70 years old or older

will want the artist's Lyman Brothers Inc, 31

Show your picture to art dealers. name and the year It was painted, ment Circle, and H. Lither Co, 24 W, Washington St, could advise you if the painting is an original or a reproduction, a print or an engraving, and then determine its value, sentimental value than intrinsic worth,

Old prints often have more

‘copper,

OUR WEDDING anniversary is not far away and I am faced with

house that we both can enjoy? o She ‘loves our home and there are so many things we both would

But would it be fair, when there are little personal things she needs that she could call her very own? What would you do if you were 1? { D. L. K, INDIANAPOLIS. Happy anniversary to a thoughtful husband concerned over pleas- | ing his wife. Why don’t you make the major gift for the home and

drank the personal gift a dinner-dance invitation?

Women are practical—your wife might like something for the house. She also is romantic. Even a washing machine could express

Name N Students Students to Hear

Gib Accountants To Ministries Butler University’s accounting oclety will hear Charles E. Steven: The appointment of 29 graduate And Charlton N. Carter, local ac-

ing In the Apex Grill, Thursday at

. 6:30 p. m, School of Religion, Butler Univer- y

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

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Lodge Congress Meets Next Week

43 Insurance Groups To Gather Here |

A two-day annual meeting of the/

Indiana = Fraternal Congress will open Monday in the Hotel Lincoln, The 48th affair will draw representatives from 43 legal reserve life insurance societies comprising the congress. A field workers’ luncheon in the charge of E. H. Wilson, Indianapo-| lis, secretary-treasurer, will follow opening remarks by Mrs. Dorothy Adang, Ft. Wayne, president. Speakers for the initial afternoon session will be John D. Pearson, Indiana insurance commissioner; W. Cable Jackson, Modern Woodmen of America, and Alden C. Palmer, Insurance Research and Review. Liebold to Preside Frank J. Liehold, third vice president, will be master of ceremonies for a banquet to be held at 6:30 p. m. Mrs. Gertrude Hoope will present the flag. Miss Patty Russell will sing. The Rev. Ambrose Sullivan, pastor of Holy Cross Catholic

. Stev alrma of the ~ sity, Mi tevens, chairman of the church will read the invocation. { { t tte rducat - 3 i : Btudents appointed to ministries are committee on education and vet Guests will include Governor and Peter Macko, Collierville, Tear who erans, Indiana State Association of

terve at East Union; Kenneth Broo ball, Minn, serving Btaunton. Landon Certified Public Accountants, will Willi tiela, V i . Fri “ns Paetlen, Ney gheying B Gok talk on the purpose and objectives West Point; Robert Black, Hope, serving of the committee, and Mr. Carter

Montezuma, James Wallace, Bluelield Vi ' erving Veedersburg. Haldor Heimer, Mur. Will discuss, “Accounting Reports intlan Kn ervir Bloomingdale and y Pair cls Kermet Pugh. Oelivetn = Town Guests at the dinner meeting will ervi¥ig Harmony, Other Reiber, Gravson . res | S Ky. rving Pennville, and Lynn Die include Presiden M. O. Ross, Dn Roadstown, Wis, serving Jack sonourg M. G. Bridenstine, assistant dean of

Jess W. Johnson, Tellamock, Oregon, the College of Business Administra serving Frankfort, Clarence

laren Btanke, ' x y serving Bethany Chapel, Loren tion, and Prof, William FF. 8hor

Bwedbur Minneapol Minn, serving Lich cdlouy, Mirnetpolis, Min portiand. head of the Butler accounting diviOre erving Omega Lloyd Benasmille on : . igononey, lows erving Smithville, Rot rt. Westmoreland, Rural Hall N (

Normandy Alvin Tillin Tuleoe (

serving Rocklane, Robert Fife Houquiam Unitarian Delegates

rerving Rich Valley, Robert Rowe, Omaha Neh erving ML Tabor and New Brun : wick: Vernon Bowers, Delle Vernon v To Give Reports ing Mt, Auburn and Freetown John FK Noel, Akron, O serving Oak Grove, ar Robert Barnes, Canton, O erving Plea nt Grave and Fountaintown ences of national or international William Walker Enid, Okla serving te . . > > Buck Creek Chapel; Joseph Copeland, In. importance at the luncheon meetdianapolis. serving Berea, Lloyd Tatlo "1 mT effersonville, serving Maahattar Jame. INE at 12:30 p. m. Thursday in All

Members will report on confer-

He and his horse Cline, Canton, O, serving Boston Union ¢

hurch: Edwin Gt Respess, Puntego. N, ¢.. Souls Unitarian Church. erving Westport: W. H. Shanks, Zephyi Mrs. Guy O. Byrd will speak on ex serving Fairland, and George Bag ger, Bt. Joseph, Mo. serving Elizaville the triennial meeting of the Inter national Council of Women which Schoolmen'’s Unit to Meet recently met in Philadelphia; Mrs Indiana Schoolmen's Club will Ernest Jones, on the Mid-West Unimeet at 6:30 pm, Oct. 22, in the tarian Conference at Lake Geneva, Claypool Hotel, President C. E. and Mrs. Thomas Snyder, on ‘the Eash will have charge. Group sing- International Relations Conference ing will be led by Ralph Wright. held at Antioch College. -Lhe ThursDon Bolt will speak on “Britain day meeting) is sponsored by the Battles for Survival.” Jessy Wallin Haywood Alliance,

bo.

Mrs. Gates, Mayor and Mrs. Denny, and Mr. and Mrs. A. V. Burch. Henry F. Schricker, former governor, will speak Drills will be presented by the Woodmen Circle Braly Guards Protected Home Circle, Royal Neighbors of America, and Women's

Catholic Order of Foresters. All will People in the United States crippled girls under 21. unite to present a drill directed by bY

“wl Eg a : » REPL el HEP TO CAT WEEK— "Uncle Elizabeth," leading cat in the

forthcoming comedy film, "| Remember Mama," mounts a soap a number of weeks: ‘ box in Hollywood to remind his pottery friends that Nov. 2 to Noy. | FIRST, in the failure of the ef-

8 marks National Cat Week. Unk’ wants all cats, inanimate or fort .of the Labor government to

otherwise, to get hep to the cause.

Number of Children Crippled by Polio Up 45% was: ie gener

jattacks persons of all ages. It is re-

one-fifth of all young orthopedic handicaps of boys and, Similar delays are certain to be

14.—The sponsible number _ of

increased almost 45

Control W L Conditions of Work By JOHN W. LOVE : : Scripps-Howard Stall Writer LONDON, Oct. 14—~The economic planners, it becomes evident in this country, can do no effective planning except as the labor unions approve. : Britain may nationalize industrial property but the Labor government can't nationalize the terms of industrial work. . 4 The unions are the most conservative organizations in respéct to the fields in which they assert their control. The government may move indi‘vidual workers around, but must keep out of the domain of collec-

lof work, | The truth of these statements has been pretty well demonstrated over

arrive at a general wage policy. =| SECOND, in its failure to get the | nationalized coal industry to work {longer hours except on the union's | terms

ness with which coal miners can be induced to take on larger quantities or allotments of work.

encountered when the concentra-

The largest increase in cripoled ton of plants are undertaken under

Louie H. Mills, Mrs. Ann Wells will Per cent in the past seven years. survivors was recorded by Utah, Sir Stafford Cripps’ giant export

be organist. Carl Kiefer and or-

It has risen 10 per cent in the which showed a rise of 230 per cent. Scheme.

chestia will play for dancing. las two years, reparts to the U. 8./Other states in which the rate at! Demand Consultation

Mrs. Mdry McCullough will speak Children’s Bureau show.

Tuesday morning. Afternoon speakers will include Sam Hadley and

dent; John 8. Gonas, South Bend, fourth vice president, and W. F.

West Gets Moose Post

Judson West has been named a member of the constitutional and by-laws committee of .the Mooseheart Alumni Association. The group met last week-end at Mooseheart, Ill, where the Loyal Order nf Moose founded in 1813 a home for dependent children.

Isaac K. Beckes, executive,

cut

51,000,

of children in this country.

least doubled during this period were] Manufacturers have no explicit This is what might be expecied Indiana, Arkansas, Colorado, Ohio|right of = consultation under it, ince we have just passed through|and Tennessee. James Doody. the Other officers are C. F. Webster, 1946) of ‘sustained high numbers Dr. Marion, vice president; Paul Stump, 0f cases of the disease in the hisCrawfordsville, second vice presi- tory of the country. Nearly 74,000 persons under 21| Dr. vears of age were crippled to some Held, Peru, alternate vice president. degree by the disease as of Jan. 1 of

| though they have been consulted by government people.

Unions are demanding the right Beckes to Speak {of consultation “at every stage” of At Crispus Attucks |the pooling of plants and working

| forces. Recent occurrences make it seem

secretary of the United Christian probable they will get it in a formal this year, statisticians of the Metro- Youth Movement, a branch of the way, and that so many parleys wall politan Life Insurance Co. point International Council of Religious Slow down the ponderous under. At the beginning of 1940 the Education, will speak for the stu- BEng. r was in the neighborhood of gent pody of Crispus Attucks High GROUPS PLAN JOINT MEET ; : School at 10 a. m. Thursday. | The Women's Federation of the Only a small part of this rise 1S| Thomas Smith, president of the Emerson Avenue Baptist Church due to an increase in the number school’s Hi-Y Club, will preside. fwill meet jointly with the Helen The Boy's Glee Club will present Schmitz Circle of the church to-

Children are the chief victims of a radio program over station WISH morrow at 7:30 p. m. in the chureh, poliomyelitis, which nevertheless at 11 a. m. Saturday.

$Y,

Y NA

|Mrs. Noble Reynolds will speak.

S. Ayres & (Co.

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tion, revolving The conve! executive coun 13 vice preside sidered officers The Lewis fo by 50 district c the United Mi credited deleg: move if they ce the convention 000 votes. The miners, it alone. The) from “Big Bil penters, of abo but they will and anti-Lewi say they won't Mr. Lewis is tutional chang it as a surrend ley law, and | strong words a The row st Chicago meeti utive council, toed the wish council membe Taft-Hartley Communist aff Labor Relatio overturned a Counsel Rober way making it to comply. E “federal” or ur still cannot qu presidents, in William Greer George Mean) members of t Mr. Lewis w will do if he i sue. But his vocal—if they will not be pu “I look for out of the A one said. “Cs tion means s would be hel; law to work. irom operatin it such a do be forced to

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