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The Indianapolis News from Indianapolis, Indiana • 12
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The Indianapolis News from Indianapolis, Indiana • 12

Location:
Indianapolis, Indiana
Issue Date:
Page:
12
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Thursday, November 1, 1951 THE INDIANAPOLIS NEWS Page 12 Manual to Offer 5 Night Courses Disciples to Care for Own Aged, Church Told Rider Dies as Car Rams Tree Doctors Name Waggener as Secretary The Indiana State Medical Association has appointed James A. W'aggener as its-new execu Checks Under Mattress Trip Boy Safecracker SPKiil to Th tiewi BLOOMINGTON, Nov. 1 Finding of stolen checks hidden under a mattress in a hotel ended a 10-day buying spree by a youthful safecracker, Bloomington police apprehended a 17-year-old schoolboy, Kenneth Richardson, at a skating rink yesterday and charged him with the $1,000 robbery of a grocery October 20. The checks were identified as part of the loot. At the time of his arrest, Richardson had $311.50 in his pockets.

Circuit Court Judge Q. Austin East set trial for November 12 and placed bond at $3,500. However, he declared that Disciples "must be poor people" because they are 44th among 46 Protestant church bodies in their giving. He said the long-range program calls for doubled giving in the next 10 years. The Rev.

Roger T. Nooe, Nashville, will make the principal address at 8:25 tonight. Nearly 3,000 delegates from Indiana and Michigan are attending the assembly here, which will Disciples of Christ not rely on government to' provide for their aged, but will take care of their own, an area assembly of that denomination was told today. Dr. Harlie Smith, president of the board of higher educaton of the church, presented the idea of a long-range church program at a session in the Murat Temple.

The program will occupy most of the assembly time. A Chicago man was faiallj injured last night when the cat in which he was a passenger went out of control and crashed into a tree 4 miles south of Rock-ville on U.S. 41. Three other persons were also dead today in Hoosier traffic, out officials said one of them apparently suffered a fatal heart attack before the accident occurred, Dead are: Captain, Wife to Have Delayed 2d Anniversary Capt. James P.

Wheeler, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward C. Wheeler, 209 N. Pershing, and his wife, Mrs.

Wanda Wheeler, will have a delayed second vved-d i anniversary celebration when' they are united in Germany. Mrs. Wheeler leaves Indianapolis Tuesday for New York, then will leave New York November 8 for Ulm on the Danube, where Capt. Wheeler is stationed. They were married two years ago Sunday.

Capt. Wheeler is with the personnel division of the Air Force1. Both Capt. and Mrs. Wheeler are graduates of DePauw University.

A veteran of five and a half years' service in World War II, Capt. Wheeler was in the personnel department of the Radio Corp. of America before he was recalled to duty. tive secretary. Waggener, 41-year-old former newspaper man and the association's field secretary since May.

1949, suc- course will cover work with plastics, leather, wood or clay. Training in writing and producing radio scripts may be obtained in the radio technique workshop on Mondays and Wednesdays from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. Walter Hogan, continuity director for radio station WIRE, will direct the course. Tentative plans have been formulated for courses in dramatic production and a homemaker's workshop. Mrs.

Evelyn Fife, who recently returned from a three-month European trip, is expected to teach the drama course. Much of her tour was devoted to an extensive study of the Paris theater, The homemakers' workshop will be offered to mothers and daughters. They will study interior decoration, color schemes, foods, diets, budget and home management. Five workshop courses for mothers, fathers, sons and daughters will start next week in the adult evening division at Emmerich Manual Training High School. Registration for the courses is set for November 5 and 6 from 5 30 'to p.m.--E.' Edward Green, night school director, said the courses will be from 6 to 10 weeks long.

Dads and sons may take a oodworking course on Mondays and Wednesdays from 6:30 to p.m. Sons must be accompanied by tieir fathers and the two may work on the same or separate projfcts, Leonard Nolte, day school shop instructor, will be in charge. An arts and crafts hobby shop on Tuesdays and Thursdays will be taught by James Guillaume, a John Herron Art Institute and Butler University graduate. This close tomorrow night. Using the case of the church's Smith, who died 4 Jm i 1 in August.

EVERETT L. COOKSEY, 41, itVbea timm or a There were 35 applicants for the job. Waggener Last night the doctors attending the association's 102d annual session heard United States Senator Karl E. Mundt S. say that American voters will have a chance to put an end to "suicidal in the November election.

He hailed the Tory victory in Britain as a blow to Socialism and said the Americans might do the Same thing "more Chicago. WILLIAM SHORT, 54, New Albany. MISS CORA M. FEIGHTXER, 52, Albion. EVERETT BRIDDLE, 30, Shelbyville.

Cooksey, riding in a car driven by Charles Stumbaugh, also of Chicago, died early today in the Vermillion County Hospital from injuries received in the Rockport accident. Stumbaugh old people as an example of this expanded program he declared, "We Disciples expect to care for our dependent aged people. We will not say to the state, Tou must take care of We can take care of ourselves!" Outlining the 10-year program this morning, he said it is the Disciples's share in meeting critical problems which vex the world today. "We are setting some realistic and reasonable goals for ourselves. For example, we know that we cannot reach all of the 75 million non-Christians in the United States.

But we think we can reach 500,000, and we are going to try that," he said. I Vv THIS COUPON 7i i rig a was seriously injured. Short, dismissed from St. Ed if Richard Hu tmuu No Accident When Victim Passes Out ward's Hospital at New Albany a t.to unv following an accident Tuesday, died yesterday of a skull frac ture received in the same acci SPECML OFFER! dent Coroner J. D.

Seybert, Albion, LIWTED.TIME OMYt A regulam.75 jar of DuBarry said a heart attack probably caused the death of Miss Feight- lUeansing Crem for Dry Skin COVERED unUMMCO 1 If super-efficiefMor deep-down tleansing plus jar HAAG'S REGULAR LOW CLEANSING oi luxurious, moistffi-giving Teacher Retirement Law Study Proposed Recodification of the state teacher retirement laws will be recommended to the 1953 General Assembly Governor Henry F. Schricker. The chief executive said he will ask a "volunteer committee" of educators to make a thorough study of the laws and report their findings to the Legislature. He disclosed his plans yesterday after signing a bill increasing retirement benefits for about 1,000 Hoosier teachers who have 35 to 40 years of service. Thirty-year-old Donald Shin-namon passed out twice at police headquarters last night, but police said it wasn't from injuries received in the accident he came to report.

After giving him first aid, they arrested him for drunkenness. Shinnamon, who liyes in Tyn-dall Towne, didn't tell the truth, either, when he said his car was struck by a hit-and-run auto, police charged. They said his car crashed into two parked autos in the 700 block of West New York. IAKt A BUX HOME; FOR ONLY 49c w- 1 DuBarry Creme Super ft only 1 ,75 ner, who was found dead in her automobile near Albion after it left Ind. 8 and struck a fence.

Miss Feightner is believed to have suffered a heart attack after her car struck a fence near Albion. Briddle was killed on a SheJby County road between Smithland and Marietta last night. He apparently lost control of his automobile, which overturned several times. An unidentified farmer found him early today. Effective Friday and Wv.

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
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