Speedway Flyer, Volume 29, Number 37, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 September 1960 — Page 6

Page 6

ST. CHRISTOPHER’S CATHOLIC CHURCH (Continued from Page 1) lor the parishioners. Evening services on Friday, Saturday and Sunday will begin at 7:30 o’clock. The Devotion will close Sunday evening. It is hoped that every member of St. Christopher will become a part of this Devotion. The public is invited to join with the members in their prayers to God for peace in the world. Members of the Altar Society will receive corporate Holy Communion at the eight o’clock Mass Sunday morning. The ladies are asked to assemble in the back of church five minutes before eight. Mrs. Joseph Geiman, Jr., is president of the Society. The Feast of St. Francis of Assisi, the patron saint of the school, is October 4th. The school always has a free day on their Saint’s day. But this year, it was decided to give a free day at St. Christopher school on Monday, October 3d, instead, thereby giving a long weekend holiday. The Feast of St. Theresa, Little Flower of Jesus, is October 3d. h Wednesday evening, October sth, the regular Altar Society will begin with a pitch-in dinner at 6:30 pan. The Committee will furnish the meat, rolls and drinks. Each lady is asked to bring a covered dish of a salad, vegetable or dessert and her own table service. The program is in charge of Mrs. Marie Hatch, St. Christopher Confraternity chairman. Mrs. Carl W. Peterson, deanery chairman of the N.C.C.W. will discuss the deanery’s activities. Pamphlets will be an Information Table. Every lady who is a member of St. Christopher or whose husband is a member is invited to this dinner-meeting. They are loads of fun and afford a wonderful opportunity to get acquainted. Co-chairmen of hostess committee are Helen Gambrall and Louise Leming. Your prayers are requested for the repose of the soul of Lillian Leach who died Monday, September 19th, and was buried from St. Christopher on Thursday morning. Lillian was a faithful worker in

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With U.S. employment up ONE MILLION over last year ... an all-time high . . . With personal income up S2O BILLION over last year .. . all-time high .. . With gross national product up $25 BILLION over last year . . . an all-time high . . . f WITH AMERICA ON THE MOVE I ■ Protect and preserve the freedom and free enterprise that have made this progress possible . . . for ourselves our children and our posterity ELECT NIXON & LODGE President and Vice President CRAWFORD PARKER, Governor DONALD BRUCE, Congressman VOTE REPUBLICAN, Tuesday, Nov. Bth Paid Political Adv. 11th Dist. and Marion Co. Republican Central Committees, H. Dale Brown and Allen Hunter, Chm.

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the Altar Society in a quiet, unassuming way. On Monday morning the High Mass at eight o’clock was said for a special intention. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Stevens requested the High Mass on Tuesday morning for Madeline Petraits and on Wednesday morning for Lillian Leach. All the other High Masses this week are being said for the parish Agnes Benedetto (CH. 4-0218) or Rose Sherman (CH. 4-3426) will arrange for pick-up of any rummage from Catholic or non-Catholic friends if called. The Sale will be in the Social Room of St Christopher school Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday afternoons and evenings, October 12, 13 and 14. Anyone who can may bring their rummage down to the social room anytime now. Immaculate Conception Discussion Group met Tuesday evening, September 27, at 8 pan. with Bernice Theising in Clermont. Joe Armen was hostess for the Ave Marie Discussion Group also on Tuesday at 8 pan. Our Lady of Fatima Discussion Group met with Jean Schrader on Monday, September 26, at 8:30 pan. Any man in the parish with singing ability desirous of joining the choir has been invited to contact Father Terrill. Father Terrill is the director of the Men’s Choir. On Tuesday evening, October 11th, the fall pre-marriage course will begin at 8 pan. in St. Mary’s Academy, 429 E. Vermont street. Couples interested should contact Father Lindemann for an application blank. , We very much regret the passing of the Indiana Catholic and Record newspaper. September 23d was their last issue. The Catholic Theatre Guild is opening its current season with “Arms and the Man” September 30th, October Ist and 2nd in the K. of C. Hall, 1305 N. Delaware. Curtain time is 8:30 pan. Pray your Rosary daily for peace in the world. Nora Bray

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RILEY HOSPITAL CHEER GUILD The Riley Hospital Cheer Guild, with membership in 90 Indiana counties, will hold its annual Chapter Day at the Indiana University Medical Center in Indianapolis on Tuesday, October 4. Reverend William C. R. Sheridan of the St. Thomas Episcopal Church in Plymouth, Indiana, is the speaker for the eleven o’clock luncheon at the Student Union Building. Exhibits of the Guild’s work will be on display in the lounge area. Sponsors for Speedway chapters are: Mrs. H. R. Coughlin, 1221 Winton, I Mrs. R. W. Gilmore, 1672 Ellen Drive. Established in 1924 as a vohinteer women’s group to serve the James Whitcomb Riley Hospital for Children, the Guild’s program has now expanded to include the Robert W. Long and William H. Coleman Hospitals for adults at the LU. Medical Center. With over 17,000 members, it now has 556 chapters in Indiana and is the largest hospital auxiliary in the nation. Members contribute through special gifts, funds, and the making of supplies requested by the three hospitals. Chapters in the Indianapolis area and SUTrounding countries do volunteer work in the hospitals. Mrs. Henry F. Goll, Indianapolis, is director of chapters.

PROBLEMS OF THE AGING The names of the 44 Indiana delegates to the White House Conference on Aging appointed by Governor Harold Handley, were announced at the conclusion of the Second Governor’s Conference on Aging at Lafayette, by Dr. George E. Davis, Chairman of the State Commission on Aging. Dr. Davis said that this group represented a cross-section of the state’s citizens interested in the problems of aging, and willing to continue in local action after the White House Conference on Aging, which will be held in Constitution Hall, next January 9-12, in Washington, D. C. They were chosen by the Commission on Aging, with the assistance of Regional Chairman of Aging throughout the state. The two-day Governor’s Conference discussed all aspects of the problems of aging, and came to a series of resolutions and instructions to the delegates for both the state and national legislatures next January. Footlite Presents "Wonderful Town" Footlite Musicals’ first presentation of the 1960-61 season will be “Wonderful Town” with music by Leonard Bernstein and lyrics by Betty Comden and Adolph Green. Mary Conner, producer, has named Trav Selmier as director and choreographer and David Dick as music director. “Wonderful Town,” a musical version of the stage hit, “My Sister Eileen,” will run two weekends, October 21, 22 and 28, 29 at the Zaring Theater, Fall Creek and Central Reduced rates are offered on group ticket sales. For information regarding group discounts and theater party reservations, telephone Shirley Rice at LI. 51787 or write Footlite Musicals, Post Office Box 68, Indianapolis.

New Faculty Members At ICC Five faculty members, in addition to four other part-time teachers, and three staff members are the new personnel at Indiana Central College this fall. The new full-time members are Miss Harriet E. Bunting, assistant professor of English; C. Richard Huston, instructor in economics; Miss Dorothy D. Rademacher, assistant professor of nursing; Dr. Kermit R. Todd, associate professor of education; and Ralph M. Williams, associate professor of business administration. The part-time additions to the faculty are Mrs. George M. Waller, instructor in English, and Liborrio Phillip Arcuri, Daniel P. Corrigan and Jack G. McKie, instructors in music. The new staff members are Mrs. Melissa Rider, residence director of Wilmore Hall; Mrs. Frederick D. Hill, college nurse, and Miss Virgil Branes, secretary in the general office. Miss Catherine Green, who joined the nursing faculty before the close of the last academic

Thursday, September 29, 1960

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year, also is continuing as assistant professor of nursing. PROBLEMS OF SMALL BUSINESS Problems of small business will be studied in a series of 14 meetings to be conducted in Indianapolis again this year by the Indiana University School of Business and the I.U. Downtown Center of Indianapolis in cooperation with the national program of the small business administration. The seminar will be offered on Wednesday evenings from Oct. 12 to Nov. 30, and after a two-month period for guided reading, meetings resume Feb. 1 to March 15. With the exception of the first meeting which will be a dinner, the seminar will be conducted at 7 pan. in the Board Room of the LU. Downtown Center, 518 N. Delaware. Swimming Courses The Central YMCA Youth Department will conduct the first in a series of special swimming courses for boys and girls from 2 to 5 years of age. The new class will be conducted from 10 to 11 a.m. on Monday and Wednesday mornings from September 26 to December 7. All classes will be held at the Central YMCA swimming pool at 310 North Illinois Street. Enrollment is limited to twenty children. For further information call the Central YMCA Youth Department at ME. 5-1331.

WATCH OUT FOR THIS ONE! Public Health officials are worried. In the first five months of this year, there were 50 per cent more cases of hepatitis than during the same period last year. And the Public Health Service knows very well that its figures don’t tell the complete story. There’s no reason to expect a real epidemic, perhaps, but good reasons for everyone to learn something about this illness. Helpatitis, a disease which attacks the liver, is baffling to medical science and miserable for the victim. A virus causes hepatitis, but nobody’s been able to grow it in the laboratory, which means no vaccine can be developed for the present. Hepatitis is highly contagious, spreading through infected food, milk, and water, and by touch. It can take anywhere from ten days to almost two months from the time you pick up the bug until the first symptoms appear. When they do, they include fever and chills, headache, tiredness, aching muscles, loss of appetite, nausea, vomiting and abdominal pain. After about a week of this, the skin and the whites of the eyes may turn yellow with jaundice. Jaundice lasts about a week or ten days. But hepatitis isn’t through with its victim yet. The patient is still thoroughly ill, and so infectious that he must remain in isolation for at least two weeks more—about a month altogether. After that he is still likely to be ill for another two weeks. Then a slow convalescence begins. It is not at all unusual for hepatitis to knock its victims out for three or four months. However, the disease rarely kills its victims. There’s no drug cure for hepatitis. Bedrest and diet is all medicine has to offer right now. Partial protection against hepatitis is possible with a shot of gamma globulin. REGISTER AND VOTE I Linde Unveils New Ribbonrail Service Welding Equipment A completely new rail welding system, a major breakthrough in railroad engineering, was unveiled by Linde Company, Division of Union Carbide Corporation. This new equipment speeds welding time and slashes manpower requirements by more than forty per cent. It also produces a weld superior in quality to those produced by any other equipment and it reduces equipment maintenance. Linde’s Oxweld Railroad Department has been in the rail welding business since the early twenties and has been machine welding rail since 1938. The vast majority of welded rail in service today has been welded with Linde’s “Ribbonrail” Service welding equipment.