Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 194, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 November 1926 — Page 2
PAGE 2
STATISTICIAN TO SPEAKATSECOND SAFETYMEETING Accident Prevention Topic at State Conference in December. As principal speaker at the second State -wide industrial safety conference, Dec. 7-9 "at the Claypool under auspices of the State industrial board, Ethelbert Stewart, United States commissioner of labor statistics, will discuss accident prevention. Stewart will Bpeak at the afternoon session on Deo. 7, following the welcome by Governor Jackson. R. J. Young, safety superintendent for United States Steel corporation, will discuss safety organization, following which Fred M. Wilcox, chairman of the Wisconsin Industrial board, ' will speak on cooperation between the State and employers. Bynum to Preside Dixson H. Bynum, chairman of the Indiana industrial board, will preside at Tuesday's sessions. At a smoker Tuesday evening the Ford Motor Car Company will present a safety picture- Vaudeville will accompany the showing. Eph P. Dailey, a member of the Indiana board, will preside at the morning session on Dec. 8. Speakers will be William P. Evans, attorney; H. R. Witter, director of the Ohio department of industrial relations; Fred D. Hatfield, safety director for the Indiana Limestone Company, and Dana Ward, safety engineer for the Aetna Life Insurance Company. Engineer on Program With Walter W. Wills, a member of the Indiana board, presiding at the afternoon session, Louis H. Ward, superintendent of the Ft. Wayne schools, will speak on industrial safety instruction. He will be followed with addresses by Dr. Herbert T. Wagner of Indianapolis; J. W. Hartley of tho U. S. Fidelity and Guaranty Company, and Henry B. Barnard, Chicago contracting engineer. William A. Hough, Indiana tax board member, will give readings at the dinner Wednesday evening. Edgar A. Perkins, a member of the Indiana board, will preside the final day. Speakers will be H. W. Heinrich of the Travelers’ Insurance Company, J. J. Forbes, chief engineer for the extension service of the United States Bureau of Mines; W. J. Hockett, safety director for the General Electric Company, and Dr. Cameron A. Leatherman, safety director for General Motors Company. WABASH HEAD TO TATKAT DINNER Employment Topic at Second Bureau Meeting. The second annual meeting of the Indianapolis Employment Bureau will be held tonight at 6:30 p. m. at the Chamber of Commerce. George E. Gill, director, will report the year’s activities. “Responsibility of Placement In Industry,” will be the topic of Dr. Louis B. Hopkins, president of Wabash College. Directors are: Stanley Roth, chairman; John F. White, vice president; Pearl B. Forsyth, secretary treasure; Adelaide Cronin, G. A. Efroymson, Eugene C. Foster, W. B. Harding, J. I. Holcomb, Charles W. Kern, Charles O. Lee, D. B. Luten, George T. O’Connor, Merle Sldener, C. C. Winegardner.
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BEST ROUTES TO GAMES ARE GIVEN Hoosier Motor Club Sets Forth Ways to Reach Scenes of Football Contests Saturday.
Best routes to the football games Saturday, as given by the Hoosier Motor Club are as follows; Dayton vs. Butler Indianapolis to Dayton, O.—From Indianapolis go east on Washington St. and follow State Rd. 40 through Greenfield, Knightstown, Cambridge City, Richmond to the Indiana-Ohlo line. Continue on State Rd. 11 through Eaton to Dayton. The distance si 106 miles. The road is paved throughout. There is a temporary bridge a mile east of Cambridge City. D© Pauw vs. Wabash , Indianapolis to Greencasfle —From Indianapolis go west on Washington St. to the forks in the road. Bear left on State Rd. 40 and follow same BLIND ARTISTS TO PRESENTPROGRAM Hope to Bring Public Realization of Ability. Mrs. Norah Henderson Shofield, blind reader and impersonator, will appear in a program at Indianapolis Hebrew Temple next Tuesday evening. The program has been arranged by Morris W. Shofield, husband of the entertainer, who is a graduate of the Indiana State School for the Blind. All artists participating are blind. The purpose of the program is to bring to the attention of the seeing public the ability of blind artists in music and dramatic art. Shofield expects this to result In the establishment of a bureau for blind artists here. In Chicago a blind artists’ booking agency has been established through the Blind Service Association, Shofield declared. He announced that many persons and organizations are interested In his efforts here, including the K. of C., W. C. T. U., Writers’ Club, Research Club and the Sisterhood and Council of Jewish Women. The movement has the approval* of the secretary of State and other public officials. Hopes to Set 72-Hour Record at the Piano Holding the world’s piano playing record of sixty-six hours and eight minutes, J. M. Waterbury, started on a piano playing marathon at the McGinty. Oakland Sales Company, 111 Kentucky Ave., today. He will attempt to set anew record of seventy-two hours. Waterbury has been doing "continuous playing” stunts for forty years. Dempsey as Villain, Suggestion of Shaw Bit Press _ ' LONDON, Nov. 19. George Bernard Shaw thinks the screen rights to his early boxing novel, “Cashel Byron’s profession” are worth $250,000, but he would sell them to Jesse Lasky, who would star Gene Tunney, for SIOO,OOO. Lasky has offered $75,000. Shaw suggested id a cablegram to his American agent that Jack Dempsey play the villain of the story. Tame rabbits are commonly kept without water, but drink eagerly when they have a chance. Most other rodents, Including rats, are thirsty creatures. TO STOP A COLO IN ONE OAT Take Laxative BROMO QUININE Tablets. The Safe and Proven Remedy. (The Firat and Original Cold and Grip Tablet.) Signature of E. W. Grove on the box. 30c.—Advertisement.
to the intersection of Rds. 40 and 43. Turn right on State Rd. 43 to Greencastle. Distance forty-four miles and the road is paved except the last five miles. Karlliam vs. Munoie Normal Indianapolis to Richmond —From Indianapolis go east on Washington St. and follow State Rd. 40 through Greenfield, Knightstown, Cambridge City to Richmond. Distance sixtyseven miles. Road is paved. There is a temporary bridge a mile east of Cambridge City. Rose Poly vs. Hanover. Indianapolis to Terre Haute—Leaving the city go west on Washington St. to the forks in the road (three miles west.) Bear to left on "tate Rd. 40 through Stilesville, Putnamville, Brazil to Terre Haute. Distance seventy-two mites. The road is paved except a six-mile detour entering Putnamville. This detour is very rough. Purilue vs. Indiana Indianapolis to Lafayette—From Indianapolis go north on Meridian St. to Thirtieth St. Turn left on Thirtieth St. and proceed west to three-quarters of a mile from Riverside Park. Turn right on State Rd. 52 to Lebanon; continue on Rd. 39 to Frankfort and Rossville; west on Rd. 26 to Lafayette. Distance sev-enty-one miles. The road is paved to Frankfort except two bridge runarounds, then gravel the remainder of the way. Notre Dame vs. Drake Indianapolis to South Bend—Leaving the city go north on Meridian St. to the canal. Turn right alongside the canal to Broad Hippie. Bear left on State Rd. 31 through Westfield, Kokomo to the intersection of Rds. 31 and 24. Turn left on Rd. 24 to Logansport; north on Rd. 29 to the Intersection of Rd. 10; east on Rd. 10 to Culver; a country road to Plymouth; State Rd. 31 to South Bend. Distance 156 miles. The road is paved to the intersection of State Rd. 24 except a short detour around a bridge repair at the junction of State Rd. 28. Gravel is encountered to Culver with a detour entering Logansport because of Intersecting pavement—then paved surface from Culver to South Bend. However, State Rd. 31 may he followed from Kokomo through Peru to Rochester and South Bend as various portions of the pavement are completed and the detours are negotiable. NEW SHORTRIDGE PLANSDUE SQON School Officials Return From Inspection Trip. Plans for the new Shortridge High School axe to be received by the school board buildings and grounds committee soon, Jacob H. Hilkene, superintendent Os buildings and grounds, announced today. With this in view, Hilkene and Charles W. Kern, committee chatv* man, made a two-day trip to St. Louis to visit the recently completed William Beaumont High School there In order to make comparisons of the latest advances in school architectural efficiency. They also visited the Roosevelt High School there, completed about a year ago. “St. Louis hag two wonderful new schools,” Hilkene said upon his return Thursday. “With the athletic field adjoining the school it seems to have made great strides towards an ideal in school building construction and arrangement.”
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS—By BLOSSER
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SKY DISPLAY VOLCANO HOUSE, Hawaii.—One of the most spectacular and viid displays of sky phenomena seen in Ha-
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wail National Park for a long time was observed here recently when an immense lunar rainbow arched itself over the crater of Kilauea volcano. The rainbow flared in a myriad of
colors, its brightest portion being directly over the fire-pit of Halemaumau, where the steam column from the grottos played in the reflected light.
FIGURING THEIR ELECTION COSTS Candidates Have Two Weeks to File Accounts. With the time limit for filing of campaign accounts less than two weeks away, both lucky and unsuccessful candidates today were busy estimating what they had defrayed and how much was received. The law says that candidates must
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NOV. 19, 1926
file their estimates in the office of the Marlon County clerk bofore thirty days after the election. Failure to file' acccounts makes ' the candidate liable to prosecution under tho corrupt practices act. Senator* Janies K. Watson and 1 Arthur R. Robinson must present ! their reports both to the county ' clerk and to the clerk of tho United® States Senate. " Campaign managers also are included within the scope of the law. TO ANY SKA RUGBY, Eng., Nov. 12.—England j now has a means of communicating ; with vessels on any of the seas. The new Rugby wireless station is the 1 agency.
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