Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 300, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 April 1928 — Page 7

[APRIL 12, 1928

NEW YODK MAN NAMED HEAD OF HOOSiEB SCHOOL John B. Laing Appointed Director of Orchard Institution. Executive board members of the Orchard school, 610 W. Forty-Sec-ond St., have announced the appointment of John Bosworth Laing, M. A., formerly of the Garden County Day School at Jackson Heights, N. Y., to the position of headmaster here next year. Arrangements have been made for patrons of the Orchard school and others interested to hear Laing talk on ‘Aims and Purposes of the Progressive Private School” at the local school Friday night. Plans are being made to enlarge the school, especially the upper grades, for the next school year. Graduate of Oberlin The new head master has had wide experience with “progressive schools,” board member’s state, particularly in junior high school work. He is a graduate of Oberlm college and later received a master's degree from Columbia university. He taught in several Pennsylvania schools. He organized and conducted the Garden Country Day School of New York and last summer was connected with the school of euthenics of Vassar college. Miss Faye Henley, who has been director of the Orchard School since its organization in 1923, will continue to be associated with the school as supervisor of the lower grades, for which she has taken special preparation. Miss Henley is a graduate of Columbia University Teachers’ College and has several years of teaching experience. Stress Outdoor Crafts Executive board members are Mrs. G. H. A. Clowes, Mrs. William Ray Adams, Mrs. Fred G. Appel, Mrs. Leo N. Burnett, Mrs. E. M. Craft,

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Lindbergh Gets His New Airplane

Col. Charles A. Lindbergh has anew sky buggy now. The other day he “dropped in” at San Diego, Cal., to try it out and found everything O. K. The plane is much like the Spirit of St. Louis, in which he spanned the Atlantic. Here Lindy is shown with the plane and B. F. Mahoney, its builder.

Mrs. Willis D. Gatch, Mrs. Donald Jameson, Mrs. Robert J. Masters, Mrs. G. Barrett Moxley, Mrs. W. R. Sinclair, Mrs. Sylvester Johnson, Jr. The school offers a country environment, with outdoor crafts, games and nature study combined with the regular courses. No class is larger than twenty pupils and each pupil is given personal instruction adapted to personal needs. TAMES SHY BEASTS All Matter of Method, Declares Biologist. 7*// Rcinicr Scrrier WASHINGTON, April 12.—Even the shyest wild animals can be

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Hay! Hay! By Times Special GREENCASTLE. Ind., April 12.—Ralph Storm, truck driver, dodged forty-five bales of hay here when they rolled off the machine. Too many bales had been placed to the rear of the truck, and when Storm tried to drive it into an alley over a slight elevation, balance was destroyed. The truck reared back on its rear wheels with the front high in the air.

j tamed, Vernon Bailey of the United | States Biological Survey told mem- : bers of the American Society of Mammalogists meeting here today. It all depends on how you handle i them and how old they are when j captured. If gently treated the pronghorned antelopes, the most timid and retiring of our native animals, will make affectionate pets, the well-known naturalist declared. Many wild animals that have not come in contact with nnan and his destructive habits are naturally gentle and easily tamed, Bailey said. The inaccessible mountain sheep, now rarely sighted by hunters, had in the early days little aversion to man, according to the Indians and early settlers. To demonstrate his theory, Bailey exhibited at his lecture a tame beaver, a meadow mouse, some white-footed mice and kangaroo rats, all shy animals seldom tamed by man. The latter are denizens of the Mojave desert in the Southwest and only rarely come in contact with human beings. Today, in the real estate columns of Times Classified Ads, you will find scores es opportunitaies for profitable investment.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

BUS CURB IS SOUGHT Regulation of Interstate Traffic Advocated. WASHINGTON, April 12.—Hearings are being held before the House committee on interstate and foreign commerce this week on the Parker bill, designed to permit regulation of motor busses in interstate commerce. Although there are more than 4,000 such busses engaged in traffic between various States, none is subject to regulation at this time, owing to decisions of the U. S. Supreme Court in March. 1925. The Parker bill provides that no passenger motor bus running on schedule between various States can operate without obtaining a certificate of public convenience and necessity from each State it enters.

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CONTESTS FOR LITERARY DAY TO NET S9OO Arrangements Made for Annual Event at Culver. £'.// { nited I‘rcss CULVER, Ind., April 12. —Young writers and artists of Indiana are offered a total of S9OO in prizes in eight contests to be held in connection with the fourth annual Indiana Literary Field day, to be held Aug. 4. The contests are now under way in the schools and colleges and competition will close at the end of the school year. Heretofore the program has been a feature of the closing exercises of Culver Military Academy in June, but the date was fixed this year so as to come during the session of the Culver summer school. Thus the cadets of summer naval, cavalry and woodcraft classes will have a hand in the entertaining. Literary day was inaugurated at Culver in 1925 and has now become an annual brush and pen tournament, with the purpose of “selling” the arts and letters to Hoosier hopefuls, who, the advisory committee fears, are paying more attention to basketball scores and home-coming games than to sonnets and other compositions of rhetorical merit. Members of this year's committee are: Meredith Nicholson, chairman: Wavman Adams. Maxwell Alev. George Ade. E. R. Culver. Claude G. Bowers, D. L. Chambers Oconee T. Buckingham. Elmer Davis. A - R. Erskine, William Forsythe. Walter S Greenough. Will H. Hays, Edward M. Hol- & ov ,i H ?.' v ?. rd ' H ew*itt 11. Howland. Kin Hubbard McCready Huston. Rav Long, John C Mellctt. John T. McCutcheon. Anna Nicholas. C. E. Scoggins. Lorado

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Taft, William Herschell, Booth Tarkington and Will Vawter. Following are tire contests announced for this year: Drawing—Study from life or nature, in black and white. Open to any nonprofessional artist under 24. Prizes—s7s, SSO. and $25. One-Act Play—Open to any undergraduate student of an Indiana college. Prizes—s7s. SSO and $25. Short Storv. 2.500 to 5,000 Words—Open to undergraduates of Indiana colleges. Prizes—s7s, SSO and $25.

ANOTHER SLEEPLESS NIGHT

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Short Story. 2,500 to 5,000 Words—Open to high school students and others of high school age. Prizes—sso. $35 and $25. Piano Composition In any form, to be judged on melodic line, harmonic content and originality. Open to college, music and high school students. Prizes—sso. $35 and $25. Poem —On any theme, not more than thirty lines. Open to college and high school students. Prizes—s3s, $25 and sls. Composition- Descriptive or narrative composition. Not more than 500 words. Open to high school students. Prizes- $35. $25 and sls. Theme on “What Tr. a Good American | SCHLOSSER S OylSovE Butter Churned from'trtrhCnam The help-y our self plan of a cafeteria enables the finest of foods at u odd penny prices” to be served at White’s Cafeteria , 27 N. Illinois.

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