Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 January 1950 — Page 10

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Local Delegation

To Attend National Convocation in Ohio

‘Dean 0. L, Shelton of the Butler School of Religion will report . findings of a study of downtown Indianapolis during the National Convocation on the City Church tomor ow and Tuesday in Columbus, 0) Dean Shelton will attend the conference in a group of 28 persons of different denominations from here, The report he will present contains the results of an Indianapolis conference he conducted on “What's Happening to the American City and the City Church.” The Church Federation Comity Committee sponsored the conference. ing to the American City and the City Church.” The Church Federation .Comity Committee sponsored the conference. Fallowing the city church convocation, the Congress of the Home Missions Council of North America will meet. Approximately 1000 delegates then will draw up a 10-year Christian program to deal with problems challenging Americans today. These include poverty, sickness, racial tensions and social dislocation. , In addition to Dr. Shelton, those going to Columbus from Indianapolis include 21 staff members of the United Christian Missionary BSoeclety, Dr. Howard J. Baumgartel, Church Federation executive secretary and Mrs Baumgartel, the Rev. Ritchie Ocheltree, Dr. wer L. Hart. man, the Rev. Walter A. Laetsch, and the Rev. Joseph Johnston. First in 12 Years The convocation, which is the first interdenominational Protestant gathering of its type to be convened in 12 years, will be sponsored by three major cooperative bodies. They are the Federal Council of the Churches of Christ in America, the Home Missions Council and the Inter-| national Council of Religious Education, Delegates will come from 30 Protestant denominations. They will delve Into such questions as crime, juvenile delinquency and! race relations. : Ten seminars will deal with city church planning and group rela-| tions, the church's role in scale housing developments, city

neighborhoods. good residential areas and in changing racial and

ation districts,

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4 {dinner meeting, 6:30 p. m. ? day, Jan. 30, in the Broadmoor i. + [Country Club. : Mr. Cohn has been a member {of the board for 30 yearg. One ‘of the founders of the Indianapolis | Advertising. Club, he helped to {found the Better Business Bureau land served as its first president. Now advertising director of the + | Pitman-Moore Co., Mr. Cohn is a ) | former ‘advertising instructor at the Indiana University Extension Center. An authority on medical superstitions, his collection of “magical cures” is housed in the Smithsonian Institute, Washingiton, D. C.

Principal Speaker Isidore Sobeloff, executie director of the Detroit Jewish Welfare Federation and recognized expert in Jewish social work, will be the! principal speaker in the meeting. | Twelve directors will be elected to the board in a business session following the dinner. Mem|bers of the nominating commit{tee are Emanuel Deitz, chairman; (Dr. Harry A. Jacobs, Max Plesser, Nathan Regenstreif, Morris L. Jacobs and Julian Kiser. Honorary membership on the board will be conferred on Dr. Jacobs, Samuel Mueller, Harry Jackson, Marcus Furstenberg, {Louis J. Borinstein, Isidore Fei|bleman, Albert Goldstein, Mrs. Lewis Levy, Harry Herff, David |Lurvey and Mr. Cohn.

The Ungers of Indianapolis will go to South Africa as Seventh Day Adventist missionaries. The family includes the Rev. F. A. Unger, Mm. Unger, David (left) and Jimmy. The Rev. F. A. Unger and his for Seventh Day Adventists in family are in New York from Indiana.

where they will sail for South They left here with the good Africa In about two weeks. wishes of the Rev. Arthur Kiesz,

NAMED CONSULTANT ] Timés State Service GREENCASTLE, Jan. 21-Dr. Clyde E. Wildman, DePauw University president, will serve as a

The minister and his wife, minister of the North Bide |yigting consultant at a National Seventh Day Adventist mis- Seventh Day Adventist Church, |Commission on Teacher Education sionaries, are taking their two and the congregation with !prigay and Saturday in Chicago,

whom they worshiped while residing in Indianapolis. The- | membership gave a farewell | party for the Ungers and pre- | sented them with a substantial | gift, |

small sons, David and Jimmy, with them. During the past two years, while making their home in Indianapolis, the Rev, Mr. Unger has served as distributor of religious literature

Te Deum Forum to Present Father Schultz in Address

Meeting Arranged |7e0L | For Wednesday Night “Thou shalt love the Lord, thy|

{God, with thy whole heart, and | The Te Deum Forum will pre- thy whole mind and thy whole sent the Rev. Fr. John G. soul” Schultz of Washington, D. C., in| The speaker, a former teacher)

{in the Catholic University of] an address on “Modern Progress , ...., now does retreat and|

and Peace of Mind" Wednesday mission work all over the country|

at 815 p.m. In the Murat 44 3 member of a mission band. Theater.

{He served as a chaplain during Father Schultz who is a Re- the war. Memberships entitling | demptorist priest emphasizes the the holder to attend the talk may | idea that man's unhappiness pe pbtained at 202 K. of P. Bldg. |

striving for the greg C, Schoettle will introduce | wrong goals in his quest for hap- the speaker, »

piness. He points to the emptiness of seeking after this world's

it was announced here today.

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MEANING OF

Watchmaker a rigid examina-

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racy and quality of workman- Rev. Fr. J. 6. Schultz

2000-Year-Old Law Makes Heirs of Four

EDINBURGH, Scotland, Jan. 21 (UP)—A Scottish court cited | a 2000-year-old Roman law yesterday to rule that unborn children were legally alive. { The ruling allowed four chil-| dren born within seven months of their great-great-uncle’s death to share in his $288,400 estate. | The uncle, Charles Cox, left his

fortune to his brothérs and sis-| ters “and any of their descendants alive at the time of my death.”

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(suddenly. i I |1 was city editor of the Vincen I had never tried my abil I had [been devil, 12 , * dat rs. 4 ’ president, will preside. (TA Fapcraag af » typewriter at} One of the first events on the yyy in the afternoon working convention's agenda, will be the rougrighly, In a split second and | opening of a motorists’ clinie, at which an attempt will be made to arrive at a satisfactory set of vis-

ing tempo

drivers’ license applicants.

Ernest Cohn . . . Honored for

Dr. John W. Best To Lead Panel

Dr. John W. Best, director of

student teaching, Butler Univer- ynaiana Optome Board. will sity, has been named co-ordinator conduct a plomelsy for new

of a panel discussion on “The Wandering 1.Q.," to be presented at Butler at 8

The session will be the first in a series of i Education Town Meetings sponi sored by the College of Education, Dr. J. Hartt Walsh, dean, an-

Dr. Best

nounced today. Four panel discussions will be held during the series in Room 131 of Arthur Jordon Memorial Hall SOLAR RADIANT ENERGY Large windows are necessary to provide entry of solar radiant

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fron Sheets or Hendlkerchiofs With. out once leaving Your ir.

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recall any emotional steps lead- | {ing up to the de-

Business Session During the sessions, the Indi-

ana chapter, American Academy ision. {of Optometry, will have its annual The thought of {business meeting, and Dr. Ross| such a

Copeland, Chicago, will give a! {scientific lecture on “Cross Oy. ep dawned up

{linder Testing.” | Dr. C. Earl Fisher, of Sullivan, foes mark. but of

Became a Minister.”

»

MY INITIAL thought of entering the preaching ministry came

nes Sun, now the Sun-Commercial,

s in Other lines of work. Since boyhood an, compositor ‘and reporter, on small

of going into the ministry. I answered that I had not and that I

(had no talent or inclination in

that direction. He was satisfied with the answer and so was I. Four years later I changed my

= mind.

Practically everything I have

i [done in the last forty years dates

back to a “flash” on an August afternoon in 1909. A police sergeant, friend of for mer years, meeting me for the first time as a minister, asked how and why I changed my occu

past president of the association iy. oo iat oven Dr. McGuire and also retiring president of the point. There was no time t6 think it over. Two hours later, my |resignation, effective in 60 days, was in the hands of Sen. Royall E. Purcéll, owner of the paper. » . . SIXTY days later, I was a stu-

practitioners and students, Tomorrow afternoon at the second educational session, Secretary of State Charles F. Fleming, ! and Mahlon Leach, director of the

p.m. Wednesday. 1n4iana Bureau of Motor Vehicles, dent in the University of Chicago

[studying for the ministry. Before I chose the preaching

Owners of Injured |ministry as a life work I had al-

. ready decided to spend my life Black Terrier Sought

Owners of a black terrier re-|tian pattern of conduct and in the stored to health after it was/Promotion of the church which I found lying in a ditch off the 6900/held to be an effective medium to block W. Washington St. were [that end. sought last night. { .My definition of a Christian Operators of Wood's Sanctuary calling was; first, work that adds near Martinsville, with offices at/to the sum total of human well2502 N. Alabama St, found the being; second, work for which one male terrier with an injured eye is fitted. and broken leg last March 19th I was at first an active church lying beside the road. Only identi-{layman and expected to continue fication was a natural band of as such. white circling its neck. When I was eighteen years old

will address the convention.

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Adress ...cevsesesnss How Long There .oesss.

| (List at least 2) ....... Ba ams a

{pation so abruptly. | I-told the story as outlined |above. | “You just had a hunch,” he de |clared. vs | To me it was a “call.” i

118,811 Braille Bibles | Distributed to Blind

| The American Bible Society an- | nounces that it distributed more | Braille Bibles to the blind in 1949 than in any other year,

| The society has been providing the sightless with embossed scrip- | tures since 1935. The books are furnished in 34 languages and |systems. Last year a total of 18,811 volumes in Braille point found their way into the hands ‘of the blind through the society, Various Indianapolis churches include a gift of money to the American Bible Society in the ‘annual budget.

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Mode Split-Second Decision About Lie's Work “EDITOR'S NOTE: This 1» the second of & series of Sunday

man, work in tryi public that 1 “insane.”

MR. ENGI ‘teaching arti learned his e way, His re began in Ro plenty of fal beginnings, He came + the United 8 6 months old tinsmith, set New York's near the Bro as a child v den to ventu structure, an spanked for was some ye gels moved Y.. when Ha In Tarrytc first introdt he worked 3 a local ant some parce School for | neo-Gothie ton Irving the previou Harry peek at an art cl a look af youngster, and persuad their drawl to call reg class after joined the gi gport of sli hillsides on.