Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 231, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 February 1928 — Page 10

PAGE 10

i>. T. A. CROUPS PLAN MEETINGS 9NWEDNESDAY Will Be Held During Afternoon at 19 Schools. I rineteen Parent-Teacher groups .1 hold entertainment and busi- : .."3 meetings Wednesday of next \ cok. Vceal solos, instrumental v.sic, group singing, playlets and oches will be features of the pro~:ns. Mrs. Myra Richards, Indianapolis ulptress, will speak at the meet--3 at School 43 at 3:15 p. m. Prof. Howard E. Jensen of Butler i diversity will address the Parent- ’ cacher Association, of Irvington hcol 57 at 3:15 p. m. Mrs. J. A. r tthews will sing. A talk to be given by William A. icker, superintendent of attend'ce of schools, before the associon of School 66 at 2:15 p. m. A cup of songs will be given by Mrs. el Stellman Spilt,, accompanied '• J Nelle Kempler McMurtrey. Plan Valentine Program The association of School 61 will Meet at 3 p. m. The speakers will • Mrs. Lillian Sedwick and Lieut. : - ank Owens. Miss Broks’ pupils ill furnish the music. A Valentine program will be given i 7 the children of School 67 before . o meeting of the association at :15 p. m. The Rev. L. C. Trent ill speak. Miss Gertrude Whelan will give musical numbers. The regular meeting of the assail ation of School 69 will be held in ”ie assembly room at 3:15 p. m. Miss ”dna Mann Shover, principal of the Herron Art School, will speak. Miss Geraldine Trotter, assistant music .supervisor will give a piano solo. Mrs. Jeanette Williams will talk at the meeting of the association of School 3. Miss Mabel LaFever, a teacher, will sing. Provide Music Programs The association of School 47 will meet at 3:15 p. m., F. E. Glass will talk. Dorothy Beanblossom will give a piano solo and Edwin Krause, accompanied by Thomas Grimes, will play a violin solo. Mrs. Alice Corbin Sies will speak at the meeting at School 45 at 2:30 p. m. The association of Sloan School 41 will hold its regular meeting at 2:30 p. m. There will be a musical program by the violin class, under the direction of Leslie Troutman, and a short playlet by the mothers. Mrs. O. M. Pittenger will speak. Miss Flora Dutcher of the Marion County Tuberculosis Association, will speak before the Parent-Teach-ers of School 22 in the auditorium. A health play will be given by pupils for the association of School 23 at 3:15 p. m. Dr. Hibben will speak. Gingery to Speak The regular meeting of the association of Charity Dye School 27, Seventeenth St. and Park Ave., will be held at .3:15 p. m. Dr. Ada Schweitzer will talk. The association of School 10 will held a meeting in the new audito- . oum in the afternoon. Miss Flora Dutcher will talk. Miss Maude Delbridge, assistant music supervisor, will provide music. Walter G. Gingery, principal of Washington High School, will address the association of School 44 at 3:15 p. im. D. E. R. Earp will address the association'of School 68 at 3p. m. A social hour will follow the program. Hoke on Program The P. T. A. group of School 34 will meet at 2:30 p. m. A special feature of the program will be an educational film. “A Tribute to Lincoln” will be given by Marie Schuster and Elfrieda Neimeyer. Mrs. Charles H. Smith will talk. A relay lecture with slides on the Panama Canal will be given by pupils of the 6A grade at the meeting of the Parent-Teacher Association of School 13, at 3:15 p. m. Mrs. Nellie Miner, radio entertainer from station WFBM, Firestone corner, will sing. Fred S. Hoke will be the speaker at the meeting of the association of School 58, at 3:15 p. m. A musical program will be given by Elden Nelson and Paul Frey, Butler University students. Add Twelve Boy Police Twelve boys were made officers of the traffic squad of the Oscar McCulloch school No. 5. Cecil Wyant is captain; James Manson, lieutenant; Harry Eads, chairman; William Henzie, secretary; and Charles Tomescu, William Gentry, ~ George Fleaka, Wilis Harmon, John Duvlea, Pete V. Stanoff; Earl Stokes and Fred Coram, officers.

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OKe 'Times School Pagej

Brothers Take Honors

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These brothers have attained the highest honors that can be given students by their classmates. Both are president of their high school and college senior classes. Right: Kenneth Higgins, 17, who was recently elected to head the June seniors of Arsenal Technical High School. Donald, 20, is president of the seniors of Butler University. The latter is a member of Sigma Nu Fraternity and the Blue Key, an honorary organization. Kenneth is center on the Technical Varsity basketball team and is sports editor of the Arsenal Cannon. They are the sons of Mr. and Mrs. Roy E. Higgins. 207 S. Arlington Ave.

Donations to Le Roy Arnold Relief Fund

Previously announced $307.65 Charles Bernaur 1.00 Mrs. J. P. Pee 2.00 Herman Tschndi 2.00 L. S. Straus 1.00 From a widow 2.00 Friend 100 R. S. S 2.00 W. E. C 1.00 H. D. Roebuck 1.00 Carl G. Wolfe 2.00 Abe Blatt 1.00 Morris Pollock 1.00 Freeland Mansfield 5.00 W. B. Garland 300 J. A. Seneff 5.00 William Albee 5.00 Mrs. V. P. Holden 1.00 Robert Pattison 1.00 Richard Schellenberg 1.00 Anonymous 100 J. W. Bell 1.00 William B. Wood 5.00 W. C. Brown 1.00 Charles Matney 1.00 Harry Jackson 1.00 William Schlogel 1.00 A. S. Brown 1.00 Gus Kamphaus 1 00 J. G. B 1.00 Mrs. Roy E. Fleetwood 1.00 Jack Strikland Jr 1.00 David Lurvey 10.00 A. L. Borinstein 10.00 Franklin. Ind.. friend 50 tittle Stark. Rushville 1.00 Minnie R. Smith 2.00 Mrs. George C. Scott 1.00 Samuel Frorr.mer 5.00 Charles Remster ../ 5.00 Friend 100 Pumper Company 20. Indianapolis Fire Department 2.00 Members Company F. 11th Infantry, Ft. Beniamin Harrison 11.10 1 D. T. Riggs 1.00 Sixteenth Street State Bank 5.00 Pi Alpha Class. Central Christian Church Sunday School 3.00 R. Brogom 1.00 Mrs. G. A. Espy 2.00 D. E. W 1.00 Charles J. Morgan 1.00 Clyde Frakes 1.00 Frank W. Yctts 1.00 C. R. Dunn 1.00 W. H. Starett 1.00 Ed Farlow 1.00 G. A. McMillan 1.00 Emil Rath 1.00 S. H. Newland 1.00 Charles Storner 1.00 A. S. Fogler 1.00 B. J. Forsha l 00 R. E. Satterlee 1.00 A. F. Wells 2.00 W. F. McNairy 3.00 Friend l 00 Hazel Eskew 1.00 Total $443.23 DEATH CAUSE IS SECRET jr Court-Martialed Army Chaplain in Philippines Was Asked to Quit. Vy United Press MANILA, P. 1., Feb. 3.—First Lieutenant Edmund F. Savageau. Army chaplain from Wisconsin, died at Sternberg hospital here today, four hours after an airplane brought him here from Camp Stotsenburg. Savageau was court-martialed a fortnight ago, and it was reported his resignation had been asked ‘‘for the good of the service.” Army officials refused to reveal the cause of Savageau’s death.

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IVTADOO HIT BY MALONE Attorney Attacks Dry as “Extinct Volcano, Emitting Gas.” By United Pn ii GAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 3.—Dudley Field Malone, here on an antiprohibition crusade, said today that William G. McAdoo, supporter of the dry cause, is “an extinct volcano emitting lava, sulphur and gas.” “Prohibition is muddling the Nation's political waters, even though we haven't got it,” said Malone, commenting on McAdoo's speech before dry organizations last night at Richmond, Va. "The only good thing the Eighteenth Amendment has done is to wipe out the saloons, but it has given us thousands of speak-easies. They are hotbeds of crime.” BAR CHIEF TO SPEAK City Lawyers Will Have Silas W. Strawn as Guest. Silas W. Strawn, American Bar Association president, will speak at this month’s dinner of the Indianapolis Bar Association which will be held in conjunction with the Indiana State Bar Association session Wednesday night at the Claypool. Strawn will speak on, “The Lawyers Job.” “A change in the week-end rates on the T. H., I. & E. Traction Company, effective Feb. 4, will provide for a fare and one-half for the round trip. Tickets will bo good going all day on Saturday or Sunday. Ask the Agent for further information.—Advertisement.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

23 SHORTRIDGE STUDENTS WIN A-PLUSHONORS Roll for Last Marks of Semester Announced by Teachers. Twenty-three Shortridge High School students were named on the A plus honor roll for the last marks of the semester. They are: Dorothea Arbuckle, Clementine Casmire, Robert Cavanaugh, Josephine Davidson, Marie De Burger, Harold Dunkel, Meta Fogas, Mildred Grayson, Thurston Harrison, Florence Hessong, Esther Hutsell, Bruce Johnson, Helen E. Johnston, Krjtetal Kegerris, Jeanette Le Saulnier, Marcia Morrison, George Pearce, James H. Prescott, Robert Price, Delmar Ray, George Underwood, Warman Welliver and Etta Warren. The following students are on the A roll. Martha Adams. Robert Adler.* Goldie Andrews. Constance Apostal. Panorla A postal, Beatrice Axum. Julia Baker. Nelli* Jean Baker. Janet Baumann. Margaret Berry Robert B-thel. Ebner Blatt. David Bon Ruth Bonlfield. Helen Bradley. Eva Branham. Bertha Bretzman. Latham Breunlg. William Breunlg. Marian Brown, Charlotte Bruce, Thomas Butz, Regina Cadlck. Charlene Colling. Eleanor Cohn. Walter Cohn. Nelson Cooper. Jane Crabb. Roberta Cramer. Martha Crawtord, Charles Cring. Dorothy Dauner, Agnes Davis. Jane Davis. Margaret Ann Davis. Vera Davy. Dorothy Dean. Robert Deupree. Margaret Dirks, Edward Donnell. Edmund Engelking. Myron Feinberg. John Forney. Barbara Fowler. Carolyn Franklin. Ardls Gardiner, Evelyn Goldsberry. Waneta Graves. Bernardine Grow, Olive Grube, Robert Hamtll. Dorothy Hammitt, Mildred Hnnn, Isabel Hanson. Wenonah Hatfield, William Hausman, Kathryn Heath, Martha Hedrick. Allen Helt. Harry Higgons. Frances Hill, Mary Margaret Hill. Jane Hodges. Iris Hollins. Harold Honderlch. Paul Hostetter., Elizabeth Howard. Jane Howe. Marv Elizabeth Huff. Mildred Hulen. Robert Humphreys. Takoo Ito. Janet Japua. Marion Jencke* Mardenna Johnson. Harriet Jones. Leo Kammen. Sidney Kauffman. Frank Keever. Thomas Kc ' y, John M. Kitchen. Dorothy Ko’ulstaedt. Mary Jane Krull. Helen Langston, Marie Laut. Marcella Long. Thomas Long. Eliza beth Lupton. James Marshall, Harry Mayer, Lois McCallister. Jean McColgin, Alene McComb. Constance McCullough, Dorothy Melchiors, Josephine Meioy, Martha Metclaf, Don Miller. John Mlllett, Muriel Mlllett. Doris Mitchell. George Mitchell. Nancy Moore. Robert Oglebay, Frank Ollphant, John Pedigo, william Phipps. Thelma Porter. Audrey Pugh. Dorothy Rath. Olno Rattl, Herman Robinson.. Elva Mae Roeder. Eleanor Roedeer. Virginia Sanders. Elizabeth Savldge, Mary Alice Scheffel, Luella Schilly, Eloise Bchmtdt, Franklin Selndenstlcker. Angelina Shaneff. Alice Shatsky, Frances Shaw, Jane Sherer. Lewis Skinner. Mary Sommer. Margaret Stavton, Elizabeth Stone, Donald Taylor. Harry Taylor. Richard Thompson. Emma Lou Thornburgh, Paul Tischer. John Torian, Harvey Trimble, Er.os Trover. Dorothy Tucker. Fred Vedder. Pauline Vonnegut, Gordon Ward, Louise Waterson. Harriet Watkins. Delste Wells. Elsie Wells. Robert Whltham, Jane Wlddop. June Wilson, Edward Wright, Ellnore Young. FORM FREE VIOLIN CLASS Twenty Pupils Will Be Trained Without Tuition. A free violin-study class is organized this semester at the George W. Sloan School No. 41, directed by Leslie Troutman. The class will accommodate twenty children without tuition fee. Instruction will be given each Wednesday after school hours. City Man Is 90 Saturday Andrew Wahl will celebrate his ninetieth birthday Saturday at the home of his daughter, Mrs. G. W. Squires, of 919 Berwyn. He has been a resident here for forty-eight years, coming from North Vernon, Ind.

CITY SCHOOLS PLAN CONTEST IN ATTENDANCE i, 41,000 Pupils Will Be Entered; Aim to Halt Truancy, Tardiness. Plans to enter the 41,000 Indianapolis high and grade school children in an attendance contest were discussed this week by school principals and Charles F. Miller, school superintendent. Mrs. Maude Moudy, principal of the Ralph Waldo Emerson School, is general chairman of the contest arragements. The city is divided Into seven school districts. Seven chairmen will direct the work in each district. They are: Mrs. Mary B Knowlton, principal of the Robert Dale Owen School; E. J. Black, principal of the Eleanor S. Skillen School; Miss Mabel Keller, principal of School No. 70; Walter M. Price, principal of Booker T. Washington School; K. V. Ammerman, principal of Broad Ripple High School, and Mrs. Moudy. Two meetings of the chairmen and Superintendent Miller were held this week. No definite plans have been made so far, Mrs. Moudy stated. “We are planning for one of the biggest movement ever made in the city schools,” she said. "It will be as big as the one launched for traffic safety. The contest will aim at increasing attendance percentage in each building and decreasing tardiness. The rules probably will vary according to schools. We hope that the whole thing will serve to arcute new school interest in the type if disinterested pupil.” TAKE IN 2,385 FRESHIES City High Schools Led by Tech in New Enrollments. Indianapolis high schools this week enrolled approximately 2,385 freshmen and new students. The majority of these came from city graded schools. Manual Training enrolled 224; Shortridge, 400; Arsenal Technical, 706; Crispus Attucks, 350; Bread Ripple, 395, and Washington, 210. Life insurance to the amount of $225,000 has been provided 203 employes of the Robbins Body Corporation, 1148 Division St., by a group plan from the Travelers’ Insurance Company.

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State Schools Will Get Radio Sets; No Charges

Music Club Federation Is Back of Movement to Broadcast Concerts. Arrangements have been made so that every Indiana grade school, high school, college, or normal school may have a radio set installed in its building to hear the concerts for school children to be broadcast by the New York Symphony Orchestra, under direction of Walter Damrosch, it was announced today by the Indiana Federation of Music Clubs. Mrs. nC. A. Maxwell, State chairman of public school music for the federation, has arranged with a large radio concern to install a receiving set, free of charge, In any school in the State. Indiana is the first and only State in the country to make it possible for every school child to hear the concerts, according to Mrs. Maxwell. Any school desiring installation of a radio set without charge or obligation should write to Mrs. Maxwell, 3504 Winthrop Ave., Indianapolis. Installation of sets in several Indianapolis schools already has been arranged. The first New York Symphony concert for school children will be broadcast next Friday at 10 a. m. A network of stations, including Cincinnati and Chicago, which probably will be heard best by Indiprogram. A program for high schools and colleges is to be broadcast Feb. 17 at 10 a. m. ORCHESTRA OF SCHOOL PLAYS FIRST PROGRAM School No. 83 Pupils Entertain Parents and Teachers. The nineteen-piece orchestra of School No. 83 has been newly organized for the semester under direction of H. M. Riley, principal. |lt gave its first public program Wednesday at the Parent-Teacher I meeting. The following pupils compose the l new group: Violin, Charles Hughes, Ward Hem, Jack Bridges, De Whit Jones, Minnie Stephens, William Young, Earl Golder, James Halliday, Charles Lewis, Harold Edwards, Elbert Jones, Frank Redd, Robert Wilkins, Clifford Harris, Elmer Channlng and Albert Shively; Virginia Morton, drums; William Stephens, mandolin, and Frank Golder pia.ro.

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NAME STAFFS FOR ARSENAL SCHOOIPAPER Ruth Pahud, Chris Sorhage New Editors-in-Chief for Cannon. New staff members of the Arsenal Cannon, Technical High School weekly publication, were named this week by Miss Ella Sengenberger, faculty sponsor. Ruth Pahud was made editor-in-chief of Staff I and Christine Sorhage of Staff 11. Fifty-one students were assigned work. Each was chosen according to merits earned in previous work on the paper. Workers Are Named Members of Staff I are: Ethel Mary Ostrom, associate editor; Mary Louise Lewis and Eleanor Russell, copy editors; Dale Dorsett, school editor; Doris Williams, literature; Adelaide Cohn, features, Dorothy Grimes, humor; Daniel Sullivan and Kenneth Higgins, sports editors; Charles Coffin, Gaylord Allen, Robert Blackburn, Mary Missen, Alberta Denk, Philip Crone, Olga Brown, Kathyrn Carlisle and Catherine Allison, reporters. Those on Staff II are: Hugh Rominger, associate editor; Mary Esther Kinney acid Mary Franklin, copy editors; Evangeline Lillenas, school editor; Mary Jo Ross, literary editor; Mildred Beard, features; Lillian Lacker, humor; Cecil Jordan and Frank Sanders, sports editors; Werner Bauman, Knoll Kutchback, Edwin Tomlinson, Bathena Holt, Rachel Timmons, Natalie Springer, Marian Gillbrech, Aurelia Davis and Albert Pearson, reporters. General members of both staffs are Farrington Bridewell, general manager; William Weiss, business manager; Henry Stegmeier, circulation manager; Francis McKenzie, assistant circulation manager; Harry E. Wood, Jr., alumni recorder, Harriet Trinkle, secretary; Raymond Reynolds, cartoonist; Adella Showalter and Louise Moorman, typists; Marion Schleicher, scrap book; Russell Potter, magazine editor; Louise Haworth, magazine assistant; Ruth Stein and Helen Louise Brown, exchange editors.

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MOTHERS PLAN CHOWJSMOSIC Emerson School Group to Broadcast March 2. Mothers’ Chorus of Ralph Waldo Emerson school No. 58 has planned an extensive entertainment program throughout the new semester. Mrs. Maude Moudy, principal, directs the group. The chorus will broadcast the first program of a series March 2. Mrs. R. J. Anderson is accompaniest. Their songs will be anew type of the more difficult music, Mrs. Moudy said. The chorus is made up of nineteen mothers whose children attend the Emerson school. The members are carefully selected and passed upon by a committee before they are admitted. The following make up the present chorus: Mrs. G. M.' Suester, Mrs. Thomas C. Osborne, Mrs. W. S. Osborne, Mrs W. S. Akin, Mrs. Oscar Blickenstaff, Mrs. M. T. Irwin, Mrs. M. PI. Irwin, Mrs. M. H. Norris, Mrs. Edward Madinger, Mrs. Frederick Stucky, Mrs. R. L. Hutchins, Mrs. Walter V. Jones, Mrs. Howard F. Passel, Mrs. C. L. Vann, Mrs. W. E. Rheeds, Mrs. R. T. Milbourn, Mrs. Lewis B. Willsey, Mrs. K. G. Foster, Mrs. Cora Nickerson and Mrs. Edward Geisler.

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