Speedway Flyer, Volume 32, Number 36, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 September 1963 — Page 4
Page 4
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ST. CHRISTOPHER’S CATHOLIC CHURCH (Continued from Page 1) and tonight from 7:30 to 9:00 p.m. in preparation for First Friday tomorrow. Tomorrow morning Holy Communion will be offered before the 6:15 Mass, as well as during Mass, at 7:00, 7:15, 7:30, 7:45, and at the eight o’clock Mass. Communion may be received at 11:45 a.m. and following the Rosary at 5:30 p.m., as well as following the Litany at 8:00 p.m. Since more and more Catholics try to show their love for the Sacred Heart of Jesus in Holy Communion on First Friday Father Lindemann and Father Richart strive to make it possible for them to do so. September 7th is the First Saturday. The men of St. Christopher will be a part of the Nocturnal Adoration at the Blessed Sacrament Chapel, 14th and Meridian, at the hour assigned to them on Saturday, 4:00 to 5:00 a.m. Attention Boy Scout Troop 500 members! Meetings will begin again tomorrow night, September 6th, at 7 o’clock, in the church basement. Junior CYO members are to have another bike-hike Saturday morning, leaving in back of school right after 8 o’clock Mass. They will take their own lunches, but the committee will furnish drinks. Congratulations are in order to the CYO members who turned out so faithfully at the City-Wide Mission last week. Members of the Holy Name Society will receive corporate Holy Communion at the 8 o’clock Mass Sunday morning. New members will be formally inducted into the Society after the Mass. A light breakfast will be served in the school social room following the induction. Mr. Charles Stimming, archdiocesan president of the National Council of Catholic Men, will be the guest speaker. Al Armin, president of the Society, will preside at the meeting, and he would like to have all the old members there to welcome in the new members. The priests and parishioners of Holy Trinity church have invited
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THE SPEEDWAY FLYER
all to the 11:30 Mass Sunday, September Bth, which will celebrate Monsignor Edw. T. Bockhold’s twenty-fifth anniversary as pastor of Holy Trinity. A reception will be held at 6:30 p.m. in the Holy Trinity Hall. Reservations may be made for the banquet at 1:45 at Westside K. of C. by calling ME. 8-2641. A request has been made not to call the rectory, as they hope to make it a surprise. On Monday morning at 8 o’clock, a High Mass was sung for Gurgan Gregoryan from the estate. The living and deceased members of the parish were remembered in the Mass on Tuesday morning. The High Mass yesterday morning, the opening of school, was for the teachers and children of St. Christopher school. This morning the Mass was for Gurgan Gregoryan from the estate. Richard J. Swift will be remembered in the Mass tomorrow morning at the request of the Rosner Pharmacy. The Richard Mattingly, Ralph Mattingly, and Edwin Beady families have requested that Paul Montgomery be remembered in the Mass Saturday morning. Plan to eat at St. Christopher Friday night, September 13th, and help the Junior CYO have a successful Fish Fry. Pray your Rosary daily for peace in the world. Nora Bray
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Peter Nero To Return For Concert At Marian The inimitable pianist Peter Nero, one of the most popular entertainers to visit Indianapolis, will return to Marian College on Thursday, October 10, for another concert of the kind that delighted his overflow audience last year. Tickets, priced at $3.00 each for the 8:30 p.m. concert in the college auditorium, will be available from members of the Parents and Friends Organization and the Marian Alumni, as well as at the college, 3200 Cold Spring Road, WA. 4-2601. Mail and telephone orders will be accepted.
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Thursday, September 5, 1963
PATIO PARTY The Amigas Siempre Chapter of American Business Women’s Association will hold its regular meeting in the Abe Martin Roonj of the Severin Hotel on Tuesday, September 10, at 6:15 p.m. Mrs. Howard Henneke, President, will preside. The speaker will be Dr. K. L. Kaufman, Dean, College of Pharmacy, Butler University, the Chapter’s “Boss of the Year,” whose subject will be “Quackery.” Mrs. John C. Stone, Program Chairman, has promised additional entertainment.
Clowes Memorial Hall Women's Group Officers and chairmen of the Clowes Memorial Hall women’s group have been appointed by Mrs. Frank C. Springer, Jr. Final appointments of committees will be made following the group’s organizational meeting to be held on Monday, September 9th, 10:30 a.m., at Clowes Memorial Hall. Anyone interested in supporting this new project is urged to attend this opening meeting. Mrs. Jules T. Gradison 6800 Wall St. Pike
Out, Darned Spots! _______ V ' With measles vaccines fully developed and Government-licens-ed, one more contagious disease can fairly be described as on its way to being “scratched” from the list. This may be even better news than is commonly realized. For measles never deserved its popular reputation as “just a nuisance,” to be faced and gotten over with at the proper time. As recently as 1961, deaths from measles officially reported in the United States totaled 510. However, it has been estimated that instead of the 400,000-to-500,000 cases annually reported, the actual number has probably been eight to ten times as large. There may also be a number of additional deaths attributable to measles but reported as caused by other diseases. In any event, this “plague of childhood” couldn’t possibly disappear too soon for the common good. Is its first cousin, German measles, also fated to succumb? Unfortunately, that will have to take a little longer. “Unfprtunatej ly” because of the especially pernicious effect it can have on women whom it strikes in the early months of pregnancy—the damage it may visit on unborjj children. Yet the day of its defeat, too, may not be very far off. For the German measles virus was isolated at little more than a year ago, and the development of an effective vaccine can reasonably be hoped for in the not-to-distant future. Beyond that, does another victory for medical achievement await just around the corner? Don’t hold your breath for it . . . but don’t bet against it, either!
Tomatoes Tomatoes are a good source of vitamin A. One raw, mediumsized tomato provides you with almost half of your vitamin C needs and about a third of your vitamin A. A third nutritional boon is the fact that tomatoes are low in calories. Good quality tomatoes should be firm, mature, well shaped, plump, smooth and free from blemishes. Proper color is important, too. Avoidstomatoes that are shrunken or bruised. Sometimes they have blemishes at the stem end called growth cracks which may detract from the appearance, but they don’t harm the interior quality. Tomatoes with large growth cracks may be a waste when you prepare them, but if the price is right, they can be a good buy. The proper home storage of tomatoes depends upon their degree of ripeness when you buy them. If fully ripe, the refrigerator is the proper place for them. If they are just a little green when you get them home, they will ripen in a day or two if kept at room temperature or a little below. Putting the tomatoes in the sunlight on the windowsill is not good practice—it will get too warm and uneven ripening will result
Centra/ YMCA Informal Adult Classes Don’t forget the informal adult evening classes being offered at Central YMCA this fall. Those courses being offered are Letter Writing, German, *Spanislt French, Ballroom Dancing, Round and Square Dancing, Law for the Laymen, Bridge Instruction, Judo, and Organ Instruction. First class- 1 es begin the week of September 23rd, so think about registering now. For further information and registration contact Jack Schaff, Residence Secretary, Central YMCA, 310 North Illinois Street, ME. 5-1331. Remember, most classes have limited enrollments, so register early!
