Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 March 1950 — Page 9

ee

. i

> Fok

Inside Indianapolis

a By Ed Sovolal al

the War Memorial? =e ‘ Since this corner blasted out with a “Boost Indianapolis” theme a couple of weeks ago, many readers have written in mentioning the many beauty. spots all of us should visit and promote. One man suggested the Indianapolis Chamber of ph merce , adopt the slogan, “See Indianapolis rst.” That's really seeing the bright side of our great city. . } Thinking in the “See Indianapolis First” vein, - I listed some of the more accessible and truly beautiful sights of the city. The Shrine Room re‘miained at the top of a long list as a singular example of inspirational workmanship and purpose - and universal appeal to all Hoosiers, all Americans.

Out-of-Town Visitors No Surprise F. J. (STAR) BROWN, executive secretary of -the World War Commission, and Patrick J. Shea, . t of the guards, said the day was unusually... slow. They expressed no surprise at the number of out-of-town visitors. “I have a.letter-in my office from a wife of a big shot in town,” said Mr. Brown. “She wrote it after a visit to the Shrine Room! She took herself to task. for living in Indianapolis for so long with out seeing this beautiful place. Also for driving hundreds of miles to see something that wasn't

seit

patriotism and good citizenship is different with

EE oe

green marble benches for hours without talking, ance inscribed. just drinking in the beauty of the architecture,

come from everywhere at once. : Sixteen huge blood-red marble columns stand in silent grandeur around the inside perimeter of the room. The eyes move upward along the polished and gleaming surfaces to the Star of Destiny hanging in the center of the room directly above the Altar of Consecration. -

Six portraits of the leading soldie france, Bngiand, Beligum, Italy

the room."

FOREWORD

There are no other sermons like Peter Marshall's. . For there was no other man like Peter Marshall. plain’ of the United States Senate, ssed away recently dt the age of 46. tion at an age when

The beloved cha Peter Marshall pa He had attained a national reputa

most clergymen are still unknown.

ve Indianapolis Times during the Lenten season is publishing the richest passages from Peter Marshall's were preached enue Presbyterian ddr, man he called “Mr. titude of clerks and taxi drivers, es, motormen and the lonely girl

Washington's historic New Church. They were addressed to the Jones,” to the mul butchers and houser in the hospital ward. the book, “Mr. Jones, Meet the preserve the emphasis of his special typographical style. The manu.- : Peter _ Marshall der may find them more effec-

half as impressive as the Shrine Room.” It's so close. . . . Indianapolis can boast of The effect of the Shrine Room undoubtedly i3 one of the most beautiful rooms in the United unique and different to each visitor. Just like States, the Shrine Room of the War Memorial.

every man. Above the wainscot is an allegorical sculp-| It was built primarily to inspire good citizen- tured frieze showing America joining the Allies,| ship, You might say the structure's main purpose the world in turmoil, is to provide a suitable setting for the American finally the contrasting conditions realized by peace flag. A good American will appreciate that and life that follows ultimate peace. : purpose. : The altar to the flag is in itself a work of art When you enter the room the first impression ‘that merits close inspection. Four marble eagles at is of entering a magnificent cathedral. It is not a each corner of the .altar are guardians. The top place of worship but rather a retreat where a of the. shrine is executed in colored enamels, person can pay homage to the flag and con- showing the American golden eagle, shield of the secrate himself to good citizenship. United States, wreath of memory, palms of victory Mr. Shea said people often sit silently on the and broad gold ribbon with the pledge of allegi-

prepared them. The rea tive if they are read al

Chapter 2—The Tap on the Shoulder EVERY MAN in public life every speaker who. takes the rostrum who mounts the pulpit

the great struggle and]

has certain reticences. He is reticent about u rience or that of his ¢ But the apostolic . prea restraints. Their sermons were full of thei Lately, | have had o feeling of compulsion t

sing illustrations out of his own expe-

chers and writers observed no such r own experiences. o tell my own story

lighting, craftsmanship and music which seems to A Place to See, Not Read About

IT'S A PLACE TO SEE, not read about, because we have it in the heart of the city. Mr. Brown tells me a company in town arranges regular tours for its salesmen and: representatives from all over the world. Always the visitors are impressed with the Shrine Room.

The Star of Destiny, a work of art in steel I saw a letter from Ruth Walker, R. R. 4, and glass weighing over two tons, shines against a Lafayette. Ruth writes Mr. Brown: “The World| receding ceiling filled with evenly spaced blue War Memorial formed a fitting climax to our tour.! lights. When you look up at the 17 by 30-foot There in the Shrine Room listening to our. National American flag, the spirit that sends shivers up Anthem, I felt a greater pride in Old Glory than I and down your spine at the sound of the National think I ever have before. The atmosphere of the, Anthem grows all out of proportion to the flesh. room seemed to lift me for an instant to a higher, At once you're a giant surging with patriotic place. Standing at the altar to the flag with other fervor and a tiny living organism which is insigni- Young Americans, I pledged myself to be ficant to the welfare of the nation as a whole. Worthy of my state and nation.” : £ o_charge, Open to the public. daily + 5 p. mi, the Shrine Room. merits in niches of the marble wainscotting around a visit from you in the near future. ; : - . given Indianapolis a boost today?

| do not know why it w | do not need to know Nor do | need to Christ say, “Go h the Lord hath do It is with the prayer that what | have to «+ « that | tell you the experiences of nine miles of the city of Glasgow

and Rabbie Burns. | never knew my father . . . for he my mother with two children; my s hree_years. after my.-.father's- death: y boyhood was profoundly

as laid on my heart to tell it right now.

offer any apology for doing so, for did not ome and tell thy friends w

say might help others a boy who was born within , in the land .of John Knox

died when | was four, leaving er ‘being only a few months: ;~+-ocquired a steps affected by this new pfather, for he was

¢ ed to fear my ste a jealous man with a vio :

It was worse when he had

| had few toys. ” Birthdays came and went unnoticed.

Elephant Myths By Harman w. Nichols

« Fabulous Color by

'CHNICOLOR!

§t., here never had a leg up on a pachyderm, In y fact he’s afraid of the brutes and won't get any

closer to one than the guard rail at the zoo. supplies. Our expert is Frank Hewlett, who won a Na- They were dummies all right, in some respect, tional Headliners Award for a masterful job of but they formed sort of a pachyderm union. They'd ouslas DICK reporting on Bataan, got his knowledge of ele- mire in their tracks and wouldn't budge if the

phants second-hand from one Col. (Elephant Bill) Brave” 8% Williams inthe China-Burma-India Theatre when

OF MOLLY 2" a press agent for the last couple of years but now 16 ‘work - is happy to report he again has a pencil behind * NN FORD v his ear and is a working newspaperman once We have been taught to regard the animals as AND THE GIRL more. He is about to become the Washington Very clean. They are not. The only time a self-

Le." Wai. j Elephani Reporting—Third Hand a sack of peanuts, | “id > ANYWAY, FRANK was so busy dodging In the tropics, elephants come down with lazinstallation—Our sniper bullets and fighting a. war with a portable ness and will work only in the morning when it Finer Plotures! . typewriter that he never got around to telling the isn't quite so hot. When the sun D—Joarne PRU § people what he learned about elephants. their tough hides. they give up... aor F It remains for me to report same—third hand. A . ET bo Here’s how Mr. Hewlett, who is getting a little Missouri Mule Team Stronger 0 pe cele a IE a oollawm® AND ANOTHER thing: Elephants, Colonel Bill | ur BE WEST ; mile, De mies mien A ooh was ac- Said, are not the strongest beast of burden in the) THE RIVER" quainted with more elephants than any man in SHitial Bisgdom, Any avo Missouri mules could . CBI. He was on first-name terms with most of “*''7 * i Aree the mahouts, or elephant boys, and even could And finally, the legend about elephants being| nk SINATRA address some of the elephants by their front names afraid of mice is pure nonsense. We used to be| IN CORT without getting a trunk over his head. - told that a mouse could worry an elephant to

W Wash Remon

ofuNsiu through the ages are plain bunk. TREE... AA SR TY HEART” | “For instarice, the one about dn elephant never According to Elephant Bill, all an elephant has IRL FRIDAY” forgetting anything. Most: elephants can’t remem- to do is to blow his trumpet and any mouse with NW Merete ber today what they had for breakfast yesterday. regard for his life gets out of there. ca. 1m | : net LEIGH

We never had a- Christmas tree,

FAIRLINGTON, Va. Mar. 27 — The best- My reporter friend talked with the Colonel at| MY mother's relatives i informed authority on elephants at 3470 8. Utah (he headquarters of the. British Elephant Corps, !

where 50 of the big guys were used to haul in|

ever visited us, for it was too unpleasant

How | longed to get off to sea . . . | realize now it was an glamor and the call of t | had just turned 14 when | ran off to At that time the Navy

escape | sought, romanticized in- the

‘ ) join the Royal Navy. mahout tried to overload them or make them! signed boys at 15 gnd nine months.

Frank was with the United Press. Frank has been push something heavy enough to get up a sweat. |

No amount of prodding or coaxing could get them| My career in the Navy was short-

my release because of my age.

ry foolishly refused to go back to school, since | riends | was off to sea.

lived, for my parents secured

correspondent for the Salt Lake City, Utah, Trib. Tespecting elephant will go near any water is

: 0 when it wants to cool off or to trunk-squirt water ram. \ ectory undiand Telegram at some kid thoughtless enough to show up without

There was nothing left to | began as an office boy, mechanical engineering. | became a junior clerk and then a timekeeper. “For two years | worked. in.an accountant’s office. Then | became a machinist in an iron and steel tube works. Then came the climax of an intolerable home life in o° and a violent scene when my stepfather, drink, gave me an ultimatum to leave th At the time | was earning 38 shillings per week, and the outlook was none too encouraging, for | envelope every pay day and had n

do but to start working. and enrolled in night school to study.

under the influence of

ad given my mother my pay

Most of the myths which have come down death by hiding in the hay and running up its| | pag no finance resources

-My-mether’s-faith was simple und stro secure lodgings elsewhere, she said, “Dinna worry, son, the Lord will provide. He'll open up the way.”

fig, and as T made plans to

THE GIRL"

soe = | No Cherries

2119 Prosveet

ny

That fall, a missionary returned from China and spoke: in our church to the young people. He was not seeking money—but volunt

‘ By Frederick C. Othman

ATEN io WASHINGTON, Mar. 27—Spring is busting Japanese-American war. Mrs. William Howard) THE BADMAN" out all over and I'm not even talking about Harry Taft, a first lady with a pleasant idea, caused the SETS ii - Truman’s fancy vacation haberdashery with palm trouble. THD SHsLBY . trees embroidered on the back. The bushes around She’d taken the grand tour of Japan and what nda. HENDRIX ade the scaffolding around the-White House are: turn~..impressed -her.-most.in: the Jand-pfthe ono! a Hits the Tee” - ~ing yellow; as the WPA writers’ project once put was thé cherry blossoms. She bought 70 trees and] a rains, ine— . it; they are taking on a halo of gold. ° planted them along the Potomac in! 1907. - SIDE Big busses from far places are wheeling school Br. JoRjehi Taxamin, a feutimanisl Jap Ty er ty kids down Pennsylvania Ave. The flower show is ng Fone ug his a was a Songlrind B 3 in progress. The drugstores are featuring cherry a gift of 2000 more trees to the city of "Washblossom sundaes, ington.” They were forthcoming immediately. And that's what this piece is. -about: cherry The band was playing when the ship docked : blossoms, soon. to appear on 2999 Japanese cherry at San Francisco with the free trees’ the diplo-|. in HODIAK : trees around the Tidal Basin. Even now the park mats of Japan and the USA were om hand in ttleground’ | department is waiting with bated breath and their striped pants. So were the customs agents. Life-True : loaded tank wagons to spray the flowers with These hard-boiled gents took one look at the! Thrill Drama 3 vitamins so they'll last a couple of days longer trees and consigned them to a bonfire. They3were than nature iritended. full of bugs, which the inspectors figured ¢ould! em m— . have spread across the tountry and ruined every |

The cherry blossom princesses are in town from the 48 states, the queen’s soon to be elected

ho . . official cherry blossom forecast, the local land- : y , scape should be looking like an Easter card, all laire TR! A INE” YOR 4 white and pink, by the end of the week.

i ; : and send over a batch of bugless trees. * | Morocco” 3 One Was Chopped Down Two long years the ‘experts at the Japanese pe ———— 1 THIS BEING the case, I'd better tell you about Imperial Horticultural Station spent selecting buds| c at Nb : our cherry trees, which once numbered 3000. Then from Yoshino ‘trees (which give white flowers) | A one dark night early in the war, when we all were and from Kwanzan (which give pink) and graft-|

eers for the mission field. 1 volunteered for foreign service. rm -

I had no responsibilities obeying some impulse to offer my life. ealize that it. might have-been the sortves to do, seeking glamorous adventure. The London Missionary . Society told me | would have: to through the university and have years of training. Now, I.had no money : no family to support me no friends able to finance my education and no means of borrowing enough. So we reached an impasse. -

As Look back upon it, |

I had to continue working to support myself, and so they agreed that 1 should go on and begin studying at night, matriculating at Glasgow or Edinburgh University and save as much os | could, with a view to entering the seminary the following year. It is not easy to work 10 or 12 hours a da night. | was finding the going difficult. In the midst of my discouragements, a cousin, whom | had not seen for 19 years; came home from America on business. . - ht -me out and told me that it was my father who had im to emigrate to the United States. He too had a stepfather, who made life miserable for them all. He too had been forced to leave home. He too had no resources, but my fathe passage to this land of opportunity. Now he wanted to repay the debt he owed, he wanted to to me, by offering to enable me to come to America... -

cherry orchard in America. y and go to school at

and if the weather stays warm, according to the Polite Hell to Pay THERE WAS POLITE HELL to pay and]

suave threats of mailed fists, but Dr. Takamino | prevailed upon his homeland to swallow its pride

r had paid his steamship

It was an attractive picture. But.| had nq desire to"come to America. However, | said | would pray about it and let him know. | prayed for guidance, for the answer. Day after day, night after night, | thought about it and prayed about it, but no answer came.

The weeks passed, and | could not understand why God did not ive me a plain answer.

Oy Nap aiar - : hating Japs and calling them names, a couple of ing them onto wild cherry root stock. They threw TW A 1258 ; © young men chopped one down and were starting in an extra thousand trees for good measure. { . : : y ecoats arrived. . The When this shipment arrived in 1910 we acADAM'S BIR } . 90 the second when the blueco ted them with thanks, If the i sf e to Lassie’ Color ©. cherry tree exterminators were led to the jailhouse sep ee ie y Ba i e BSPeetors Sound Emam— protesting that they only were doing their patriotic | y ’ oy 0p RoE ouLas SHUL. fle duty. It seems funny now but it wasn't then. .Afeés were planted and we've been holding fes- : . ’ s tivals ever since, except when at war with the! ax Ine. 2 The passing of the years has made the whole donors. { SINNI QAREY cherry tree story a good deal more amusing than Only trouble as T see it is this: Lots of flow- _~ IER™ o it was in 1910 when the trees nearly started a ers and, never a cherry for a fellow to eat. ALLY i Ee es ee pt | m— = E % f ; i 3 ‘ a . . <i The Quiz Master ??? Test Your skill 22? netear TRACY 4 - ” HE - i RIB Ee How much‘weight will each 50-gallon oil drum How man women cabinet members has the IMBUSH” § of a swimming float support if it is half sub-- United States had? ! § merged? : One—Frances Perkins, Secretary of Labor from

_ The weight stpported by a floating object is 1933 to 1945. equal to the weight of the water that it displaces. §f the 50-gallon drum is half submerged,

I

about 200 pounds, if fresh. Therefore the drum from? _ Will support this much, including its own weight. It

ER me ey ig! en SUA ed army Sra :

was impatient. . Tanner, M. Prettyman and Jessie

Jesus in the Synagogue—" . . . Straightway on the sabbath day He entered into the. synagogue, and taught. And they were astonished at His doctrine: for He taught them as one that had authority, and not as the scribes.” Mark 1:21.22, :

| prefer to say as little as possible about the first five months | spent in this country, in New Jersey. | worked hard for long hours. : | dug ditches. | wielded spade and shovel. ~ 71 was unemployed. but no contact with-any church, i no indication of any possibility of achieving my ambition and following the call. : Then came a letter from Birmingham, Alabama, offering me a position with a newspaper there. Should | go South? Was this the way into the ministry?

Within a week | knew that it was. My prayers were answered definitely and without doubt. | borrowed money, and made my way to Birmingham. There | found friends. Es Within the space of a few short weeks, | had joined the First Presbyterian Church % . . had been recommended by the Session as a candidate for the gospel ministry, a : had spoken at prayer meetings, had become interested in the Boy Scoufs of that

church, and had been asked to become the teacher of the Men's

Bible Class.

It was a happy and a busy year. : "My salary with thegnewspaper was very small, and | was unable to save anything. : _ When the time came around for me to enter the seminary, some of my friends were quite concerned about how my theological

Call it naive ‘if you will, | believed the Lord would provide a way . . . and so He did. “ Just before | left for seminary, the Men's Bible Class pledged themselves to send me o specified sum every month while | was in seminary. This they did for two years. Since | supplied a rh in my senior year, | was able to graduate without debt, save thdt obligation to the Men's Bible Class of the Old First Church, which | can never repay.

My experience with God's guidance did not end there, for in -each of -my-first-two-pastorates-in—Georgia, | had clear-and unmistakable indications as to where the Lord wanted me to go. The historic old New York Avenue Presbyterian Church in Washington then called me, and | prayed about the matter for two or three weeks. | simply could not feel that it was God's will for me to come, and so | declined the call. Eight months later, the second call arrived, but this time there were factors that made it clear that it-was the will of God. I accepted the call for that reason. i a During the years in Washington, | have received honors upon honors, all of which have been undeserved and far beyond my fondest dreams. | have been honored more than any immigrant has any right to expect. And out of profound gratitude formy

“adopted country, I would Tike inthis Tand to live and die, and"

while I live to help other people as much as possible, believing “that only in service to other people can | possibly express my gratitude for all that America has done for me. :

For the tap on the shoulder that called me to the ministry came to me, and this is the call that brooks no refusal—to fall

adoring and wondering at the feet of Christ.

"God brought Moses from minding the sheep... .. He took Amos from the herds of Tekoa . . .-

From the mills, the factory, and the farm they come . . . From the ranks of mediocrity, or the gutters of sin He calls them . . . changes them . . . and makes-them His messengers.

Such was my tap on the shoulder.

“For 7 . it pleased God bythe foolishness of preaching to save them that believe.” ; TOMORROW—"Disciples in Clay.”

(Copyright, 1950, by Fleming H. Revell Co.)

State Podiatrists OES Installation

Tomorrow Night

ot u L the Worthy Matron tomorrow night. The .annual convention o Other officers are F. Ellis Dean Indiana Association of Podiatrists : » n, will be held Apr. 14-16 in the Clay-| Worthy patron; Mrs. Thelma Mills, pool Hotel. - {associate matron; William Abbott, Dr. William Cook, Indianapolis, |assoclate patron; Mrs. Hazel Marwill serve as convention’ sitange shall, secretary; Mrs. Georgia ments committee chairman. He q..enfield, treasure r; Mrs. Emma I Be A Ziegler, conductress; Mrs. Freda Wilder. Fern Hert, associate conductress,

Three weeks had gone_by, ond then one Sunday afternoon the

| could never describe: it to anyone how | knew, but there was I wos walking along undecided—and the next

aoe» : moment, | knew that it was God's will for me to go to America.

it will displace 25 gallons of water, which weigh _ Where did the vanilla bean originally come

was discovered in Central America. Six-| ribe it any more accurate . Porte. James Ash, Gary: O. ect. CENLUTY : GFEFs Inti ad Tt! : Grundy, South Bends and Jessie|Lucile Kramp, warder, and Samuel * McCann, Valparaiso, © |Marshall, sentinel,

treasurer, and H. R. Evory, La- Wanda Lancaster, Martha; Mrs.

3 Dorothy. Wiseman | . p

Ne Tmt x { AH sat ( ENT HN Ara 4] Sh HR a flog a A

| |mistic about the future of the

iF chairman of the ¢ [Council . of Eco- | jaomic Advisers

Lhad. three. different. jobs. in. fi ve..months.- rns PIE MY ATOR DORI

1 Dr. Jacques Maritain, noted

“Has been elected to Pi Alpha. Mu,

.|ternity at Northwestern Univer.

education could possibly be financed, since | still had no money. |S"

“Warwick, R. I, today with a

About People— =

Baby Boom foil lp

E. G. Nourse, Former Truman Aid, Says It Will Bar Depression

TDF EAWIN GR Noirse, Tormer ~~ economic adviser to President {Truman, said today he is opti-

nation’s economy because of the baby boom. .

The former

lation is con-

everything. “The "more babies there are, FR the more cribs : and highchairs pr, Nourse, the nation needs,” he said. “And the more couples who marry, the more demand there is for new living quarters and for household goods.” Dr. Nourse said today’s rising unemployment was a result of in creasing production costs. But, he said, “There is just too much business to be done to permit” the unemployment problem to reach levels of the 1930's. He cautioned against efforts to curb government spending too much, saying it would be possible to “economize ourselves into a de|pression.” Last October, however, when he resigned as head of the Economic Council, he criticized the President's deficit spending. = » » The Rev. Robert Waterson, Bex» hill, England, an Angelican Church vicar, today went into the second day of a “fast” designed to bring about ‘international cons-

Fasting 12 hours a day, he said he would not return to a regular diet until Easter or until the Brit. ish government agreed to make a fresh effort to reach agreement with Russia on the hydrogen bomb. The vicar said members of his parish had joined him in fasting and that members of the American Society, peacemakers of Audibon, also would join the fast in New York and Washington.

French philosopher, today began {a three-day lecture series at Notre Dame. Now on Princeton University faculty, he formerly was ambassador from France to the Holy See. ion BY 2 Ed » » . Dale E. Hall, son of Mr. and Mrs. Roy H. Hall, 2243 Park Ave.

national publishing, advertising {and journalistic-management fra-

sity. He's working for a master of science degree in journalism. {Mr. Hall is a graduate of Butler {University and Milroy High

rma effet ff | - Miss June MacNabb, Indian apolis will. swim “in the spring water ballet, ‘“Aquatennial” at the University of “Rochester (Rochester, N. Y.). A junior, Miss |MacNabb is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Vernon MacNabb, 6616 N., Pennsylvania St. and a grad{uate of Broad Ripple High School, » - s

Donald E. Shelborn, son of Mr, and. Mrs. Walter Shelhorn, 7369: Edgewater Dr., will join the Oberlin College (Ohio) A Cappella Choir on tour in Ohio, Pennsylvania and New York next month, | He is a sophomore and piano major in Oberlin. » » » A 63-year-old great-grandmothe er returned to her restauran

husband, her 24-year-old short order cook. Mrs. Alfretta Jencks was married to William A. Baker, World War II veter Ee mg ng EL

[blanied’ a disgrunted taxpayer {for the Confederate flag swirling |above the courthouse today. —.|Lewish Nash, caretaker, declined {to say ‘who ordered him to raise {the flag for the first time since (Gen. Sherman marched through {Georgia to the sea.

[their wheelchairs in Tampa yes-

dian-born pianist, said his vows {with Flora Waller, Nashville, {Tenn. They met five years ago in a Tampa nursing home.

be counted in the 1950 census they're getting ahead of themselves, EH Barack, district census supervisor in Columbus, O., said today. Several people have returned their-census forms in spite of the fact that some questions refer to work they'll do this week,

St., has been pledged to Sigma Delta Chi, national professional journalism fraternity, at Indiana University. Bryan Bredlove, 523 E. 58th St., was pledged to Scabbard and Blade, advanced ROTC honorary, and Tillman Buggs, 1926 W. 10th St., was selected for Kappa Kappa Psi, band honorary. (Initiated recently into Pershing Rifles, military. honorary, were Paul Zartman, 3241 Graceland Ave.; Fred Faulkner; 629 Berwick : 1 Ave.; Alan Halpern, 4237 Coll Association officers are Drs./and Miss Marjorie ‘Simpson, chap- Ave, and Harry Hall, 1320 {Au J. Sluzewski, Bast’ Chicago, lain. — ~~ : “i Ipresident; J. R. Rees, Richmond, Mrs. Letha Van Brunt, mar “president-elect; R. KE. Sluzewski, shal; Miss Mary Louise Karstedt, ‘| Bast Chicago and C. W. Grinstead, organist; Mrs. Carmen Greenfield, |Lafayette, vice presidents; A. J.

2d Beech Grove Chapter 456 OES] 0 2 ere will install Mrs. Clara Cole as

[New Jersey St. - =|

RUBBER OFFICIAL TO SPEAK

, Adah; Mrs. Betty Devlin,” Ruth; ber Co. Ft. Wayne Deeley, Ft. Wayne, secretary - Mrs. Donna Sluder; Esther; Miss speak SB onupbet Pacts cies” at the lunch

Townspeople of Blakley, ‘Ga.,

An 82-year-old man and a 71. year-old woman were married in

terday. Arthur Cameron, Cana- ” » n

Some people: are so anxious te

” - Ray Marquette, 1212 Hoefgen

oT 5:

J. D. Morron. of the U. 8.

Remi cs