Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 August 1951 — Page 28

Mis. Dietz. “I told them all the thing, that God intended I

WILL TO ACHIEVE—Mrs, Bernisce Dietz had faith and strength.

| should be called the sons of | God.” 1 John 8:1.

A FATHER was seeing " his son off to Army

camp. Homé ties were

|| being broken.

Family influence henceforth

| ‘would be more of a recollection

than a reality, yet that recollection could be as real as the firm and steady hand of the

|| parents whé had guided him to | this point. The family had had ~

its day.

The father mused. “For 18

| years I have had my chance.

For 18 years years I have lived

+ before him; I have had oppor-

tunity to sow seeds of selfrespect, of discipline, and of personal and family loyalty. Have I done my best? Can I trust the seed I have sown to grow in the life of my boy? Can I trust my son?” It was too late now for sermons on the temptations of Army life or for suggestions that it was his duty to live a decent life for his own sake, or for the sake of his family, past and future, Yet, one must say | something. Words can be such {| futile tools in such a circum-

threads her machine in half the/She keeps up with and goes be-| “My children didn’t want me to! Stance.

time it takes sighted workers. |yond production.

And she’s an work, they wanted me to take a

» ” » THE FATHER was wise. He

The endless flow of heavy can- inspiration to a great many rest but that’s not the way I want] believed in his son. He took his

vas which runs through her ma- other workers and to me person- it,” she says.

“I can't thank Mr.

chine totals in production above ally. You have only to think of Ellis enough for giving me this that of some of the sighted her and you realize your own chance and I wish other employ-

workers. She makes up her own troubles aren't so bad or so in- ers would realize there are a lof

son’s hand firmly in his own,

AA AA OA A tll

d have the children and He time cards in Braille so she may | tended that I bring them up.”|find them. And at the same time ¥ Mrs. Dietz had learned to sew/she still does outside selling of | at the Blind School and for a her own handwork and products e had worked in a garment/of other handicapped persons, in ry. When the job of wage- her home and at church and sarner was put on her shoulders home parties. he set up a sewing machine in| Says Mr. Ellis: or home. | “Mrs, Dietz is one of our best.

’ Ohlidren Helped Ee

me evs, wee nr, Four. Odd Eye

ted fancy work, cooked, did

ther. With the “team work” m her five children who car- yor having only one pair of $ied papers and did odd jobs, cues most persons are pretty they kept their home at 1201. N.| arejens with their orbs. Olney together, { 4 La lis Ly those years Mrs: Dietz did! One Indianapolis eye specialist - _ had four emergency calls within mot attempt to go out into induastry because “I felt my most im-& few days—each a freak accl-| portant job was being at home dent that could easily have been where 1 could watch over my avoided. ¢hildren.” {| First came a call from an " Her proudest accomplishment amateur plunmber who had tried the rearing of that family with- to clean out a water pipe with lye out “any of that juvenile de-and a hand plunger. Pouring the finquency you hear about.” Today [lve Into the pipe, he pressed down Ber 16-year-old twins, Robert nd on the suction-cup, then jerked Roberta, are still in Technical it up—and caught a faceful of High School, a daughter Char- the searing chmical. lTotte lives at home and she has| Ha may recover the use of two married daughters, Mrs. Del- path eyes. mar Abbott and Mrs. Louis Veteto| 51 = Paint iaih and three grandchildren. sets Paint in Eye It was just recently that Mrs. wyumber 2 was a novice pai » § » painter Dietz decided to try again to who, not content with splattering prove the sightless can succeed y his walls, plunged the paintin industry, She heard about the brash inte his. Own ev Not i work for seamstresses at Kllis , ‘ nh aye. (Nol only Co. and sought a job is the painted orb a different And because C. H. Ellis, presi- color than his natural iris ‘but dent, and personnel manager Miss the doctor counseled him to Althea Mann both believe in the spend the next several weeks gbility of the handicapped in in- With a bandage over the injured

dustry, she got the chance, organ.) fre Eg ss RP «ass Thind -eall came from a frantic apr En os Yeo Cot “AA Ryd Poraro SHE WHase Jihad was wanted no “special considera- tightentng. a looks sdrew.. The tions.” serew-driver slipped.-next step When floorlady Mrs. Ruth Hon- WAS the call to the doctor. acker offered to make arrange An Odd Accident ments for threading the needle on her machine Mrs. Dietz an- Last--and far from least, the awered: “Let me learn to do it eve specialist averred —came one

myself.” Now she deftly re-iof the oddest incidents to date.

surmountable, She generates the will to achieve.” Grateful for Chance As for Mrs. Dietz she finds

working in industry as pleasant imagined. Her,

as she always only difficulties are coming to work on public transportation, the constant fear of a mishap.

Accidents

kE rk ies mr mone Lari #0 Carelessness

room with blood streaming between his fingers, the injured man choked out his tale of selfinflicted woe,

Seems he'd been opening a

pack of cigarets with a pocket-

knife--and the sharp instrument slipped. Result: visit to doctor's office, loss of sight for a few days and unexpected bills to pay.

chance.” ‘Margaret Provided Car, | But Pays Own Upkeep |

{today that Margaret Truman has Staggering into the reception

‘of the secret service agents as-

of handicapped people who could do as well if given the opportunity. “We're just humans, like sighted people. You can't classify blind people as just blind people. Some can, some can't. Some fail and some succeed, but we all need the

WASHINGTON, Aug. 18 (UP) The White House acknowledged

a White House limousine for her! own use in New York, but said she pays all costs of operating it “out of her own pocket.” i Her chauffeur, it said) is one

signed to guard her. The limousine, an eight-cylinder Lincoln Cosmopolitan is one of a fleet leased to the White House by the Ford Mator Co, at an annual rate of $500 a car.

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Dr. Walter R. Hand

and said simply, “Goodby, John, always remember, you are my son,” It was enough. Volumes could not have said it better. “Always remember, you are my son.” The father's hopes and aspirations for the future of his son were bound to his confidence that he: would remember whose son he was,

Jesus said, “When you pray, |

say Our Father ,,.” This is the glory of the Gospel, this “good news” that we are all sons and daughters of God. The supreme tragedy of our day is this—we are apt to for-

get that we are all God's chil= dren. When we forget we begin to get in such a way that only the grace of a great and loving Father could forgive us, Yet God risked the future of His Kingdom on His confidence that we would all recognize Him as “Our Father.”

” - ” GOD IS THE BEST of Fathers to us all. He has provided for us in abundance; the “good earth”; “The cattle of a thousand hills”; the hills themselves and all the rich treasury of coal and metals and precious stones; the fields of grain and luscious food; the sea, the air and all that go through them; the miracle of our bodies; our brains. On them God breathed and we became "living souls. : “What more could I have | i ir {

SUNDAY, ‘AUG. 19, 1951 '

Samed | Se FST By Dr. Walter R. Hand

This “Sermon of the Week” was written for The Times by Dr. Walter BR. Hand, pastor of the Woodruff Place Baptist ‘Church. x

done?” asked the Father. This I can do—I will send my Son, Jesus, to be flesh of their flesh, blood of their blood; I will send Him to teach them to say “Our Father . . .” to say to all my children. “Don’t forget whose son, whose daughter you are.” “But suppose they do forget —what then? If they forget they will destroy and disgrace themselves, and I, even God, will have to wait until my people hear my voice, until they recognize me and say -— ‘Our Father, until they remember whose sons and daughters they are.” v

Concerts Planned For City Parks

| A. J. Thatcher, park director, Concerts for the rest of the has announced a full schedule of week will be Indianapolis NewsIpand concerts for the parks dur- boy Band, Aug. 20, 8 p. m, at ing the coming weeks, |Willard; Sacred Heart School | Today the Murat Shrine Band Band, Aug. 21, at Garfield; Saland Chanters will present a con- hara Grotto Band, Glee Club, {cert at Garfield Park at 8 p. m. Drum Corp and Clowns, Aug. 22, The Chanters are scheduled to{8 p. m. at Brookside; Newsboy sing seven numbers, with Ernest gand and Vocalist Jeanie O'Brien, |{F. dilyeat conducting and Hod at. Asmolds

| Williamson at the piano. jAug. 23, 8.p. m, Band William Schumacher will con. Playground, and Monarch Ban

duct the Shrine Band in several from Beaver Falls, Wis, Aug. 24, selections. * 8 p.m, at Garfield.

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