Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 13, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 May 1928 — Page 11

MAY 26, 1928.

SHORTAGE TO GRADUATE 423 PUPILSIN JUNE One Student From Japan, One From Philippines, to Get Diplomas. Among the 423 Shortridge High School students expected to be graduated in June, are one from Japan and another from the Philippine Islands, The graduating lisc announced is: Muriel Adams, J. Virgil Adams, Agnes Herbert Anderson. Grace Hodge Anderson, Goldie Andrews, Panoria Apostol. Dorothea Arbuckle. Jeanette Arnold. Beatrice Axum. Charles Badger, Sarah Baird. Nellie Jeanne Baker, Agnes Ball, Helen Irene Banff ord, Ellen Eugenia Barr. William C. Baumann. John M. Bayne. Mary Louise Bartholomew, Rosalie Bastin. Janet Beale. Mary Louise Beeni. Mildred Begley, Margaret L. Berry, Marcella Bieknell, Dwight Billings. Olga Birk, Merle R. Bischoff. Marjory Blackman, Adolph Ebner Blatt, Helen Lucille Bohall, Elsie Boles. Lucile Boneslawski, Ruth Bontfteld. Charles Boswell. Charles Bouslog, Dorothy Jane Boyd, Eva B. Branham. Helen Martha Brewer. John Brooks, Mary Edith Brossman. Everett Brown, Morris Brown. R. D. rown. Kenneth Browne, Lillian Browne, Charlotte Ethel Bruce, Kenneth D. Brugman, Stanley Buntain. Lebert Bush. John Lee Butler, Tom E. Butz, Bernice R. Buxton. Regina B. Cadick. Madelyn Louise Caldwell. Ella Marie Carll, Mylis Carlson. Robert Carter. Ruth Carter, Margaret Jane Casey. Clementine. Casmire. Leo Charles Cassell. Mary Elizabeth Caswell. Albert Chill. Richard W. Christena. Mary Virginia Clark. Thomas Moore Clarke. Minnie Clemenz. Martha Louise Olinehens, Ralph Coble, Virginia Cochrane, Marjorie Coffin, Dvera Lucille Cohen. Harold J. Cohen, Eleanor Cohn, Robert Collester, Mary Elizabeth Cooper. Charles Droege Corwin, Marian Rosalind Corya. Franklin Couts, Leneta Rose Cox, Paul M. Crabb, Martha Eleanor Crawford, Bessie Cross, Evelyn Louise Crostreet, John Louis Cuiman. Ruth Dorothy Danke, Helen Danneker, Agnes A. Davis, Margaret Anna Davis, Monell Olive Davis, Russell Davis. William Davis. Louis Dawson, Harold L. Deer, Naomi Doan, Mary Frances Douglas, Mary Elizabeth Driscoll, Betty Ann Duckworth, Virginia Dynes. Roger M. Edwards, Jennie Celia Efroymson, Doris Winifred Egbert, Helen Elizabeth Egbert, Virginia Evelyn Elliott, Harold P. Ellis, Mildred Lucille Embrec. Edmund Engelking. Irene Engle, Sarah Epstein, Edwin Martin Esther, Nevil Ewing. Mary Jewell Fargo, Colonel H. Faught, Myron Arthur Feinberg, Charles Ferguson, Marian Elizabeth Fisher, Virginia Frances Fitch, Virginia R. Fleming, Meta Marie Fogas, Dorcthy A. Forman, Mildred Frand, Marjorie Suzanne Frankhn, Ruth Elizabeth Franklin, Mary Louise Free, Vera Frances Free, Clarice M. Freeman, Vivian Friedman and Margaret Elizabeth Fritsche. Maxine Gardner, Pauline Glidewell. Marjorie L. Goetchens, Frank Oakes Goode. Bernard A. Goodman, Waneta Graves, Theodore Greatbatch, Himie Greenburg, Helen Haines Grofl. Bernice R. Grossman, Bernardine A. Grow and Olive Faye Grube. Sidney Haase, Eloise Hale, Elizabeth May Hanft, Mildred Kathryn Hann, Esther Lucile Hanning. George Harakas, Margaret Elizabeth Harris. Martin G. Harris. Mary A. Harris, Edith E. Harrison. Louise Orell Hartc-r, Wenonah Hatfield. Philip Hauss, Ruth E. Hawkins, Ruth Irene Heede, Elizabeth Helm, Berta Clare Herdrich, Roger William Herider. Virginia Hetherington. Harry Higgins Jr.. Francis L. Hill, Fred Hill, Betty A. Hoatson, Virginia E. Hobbs, John Hobson. Lois Ann Hodgin, Caroline Gregory Hoflt, Iris Bernice Hollins, Helen Hazel Hollowell, Mary Holmes, Virginia K. Hot, Mary Ann Hood. Edith Anne Hoopingarner, Mary D. Hoover, Louis Hornberger Jr.. Paul Hostetter, Beatrice Nell Houze, Ethel L. Howe, Margaret Ruth Hudspeth, Betty Ann Huffman, Esther Grace Hutsell and Takeo Ito of Japan. Helen Jacobs, Marion Ray Jenckes, Florence Jefferies, Richard Job. Bettina Johnson. Mardenna Johnson, Alfred K. Jones, Frank Jones, Harriet Jones, Jane ones, Orange Leon ones. Nancy Schwenk Kalleen, Ruth Doris Kasdan, Charles Kauffman, Frank E. Kever, Claude Kelley, Thomas Kelley, Elizabeth Kelly. Robert Kelly, Mary Kepler, Archie Kimble, Genevieve Kirkpatrick, Merrette Kistner, Victor Klain, Grace Klingholz, George R. Knapp, Dorothy Marie Kohls .aedt, Mary Jane Kruil, Katherine Kyle. Fred Lahr, Mildred Elizabeth Lawler, Dorothemay Lawrence, Jeanette Dorothy Lemon, La Verne Lenglade. Leota Leonard, Lois Leonard, Abraham William Letiff, Albert William Levi Jr., Laura Levy, Harold Lewis, Wesley Lewis, Mae Jean Libowitz, George Linaenborg, Charles Llneback, Bronis Eloise Lisby, Mary Catherine Logsdon, Lena Lohrman. Martha Long. Thomas Long. Carl Lutz, Josephine Lucille Lyday. Jean Coats McColgin, Constance Mary McCullough, Wallace L. McDonald, Harriett McGaughey. Elizabeth Mclntyre, Charles Colin McNaul, Katherine MacLean. Graeme Stuart MacLeod, Emma Louise Mann, Enoch Manley Mark, Margaret Anne Marshall. Katherine Maurer. Maurice May, Harry F. Mayer, Evelyn Mendenhall, Janice Michael, Dorothy Jane Miller, Esther Ruth Miller. John Frederick Miller, Margaret E. Miller, George Mitchell, Louise Moon, Elinor Louise Moor. Mary Virginia Moore. John B. Morris, Margaret Ethel Morris, Gilbert H. Morrison, Mary Morrison, Rosemary Camden Morrisey, Mi.fred E. Morrow, Ruth Henrietta Mosias. Bernice Ann Mull, Mary E Murphy. Mildred Magdalene Myers. Luellyn Nash, Shirley Louise Nelson. Mildred Newby. Bernice Nicholson, Mary Browning Noel, Noblesville; John Noller. William Carrigan Ogden, Robert S. Oglebay. Frank W. Oliphant, John H. Orr, James otto. Janet Park, Modesto R. Paragas. Llngayer, Pangasinan, P. I.: William Davis Patrick, George H. Pattison. Harriett Pauline Payne, George Pearce. Marv Jane Pearce, Dorothy Louise epple, Elmer W. Perry. John R. Peters. Henry G. Pfaftlln. Kenneth J. Porter, Thelma Porter. James A. T. Potter. Thomas otter, Marian Power, Josephine G. Powers. Robert M. Price. Ruth Marie Price. Audrev L. Pugh. Fletcher Thompson 1 ahke. Elizabeth Ray. William Delmar Ray. Alberta Keep, Ernest Charles Reyer, Sophie Lisette Rice, Hyacinth Richardson, Howard Edwin Robertson, Eleanor Roedeer, O. Ansley Rodeer. Stanley Rose, Mack Ross. Lillian Roth, Lois M. Rude. Viola E. Ruge. Howard J. Sample. Elizabeth Savidge, Pauline Schaefer, Edna Elizabeth Schardt, Joseph C. Schaub Jr., Mary Alice Scheffel, Robert Scheid, Helen Elizabeth Schmidt, Hilda Schmidt, Harriet Selma Schneidermrn, Marie Wilhelmina Schoch, Edna Mae Schoen, Charles Alger Scott, Margaret M. Semmler, Rhom Owens Settles, Mildred Bernice Shaw, Jennie Park Shefler. E. Ruth Shepard, Marybeth Shields. John William Shirley, Ruth Eleanor Shulman. R.ollin L. Shuttleworth, Fern Hazel Siler, Marion Silcox. Harold Wilson Simmons, Eva Marie Simpson. Lewis B. Skinner, Ethel Lenore Smith. Louise Smith, Martha Maxine Smith. Myia Dain Smith, Walter Smith Jr., John Malcolm Snoddy, Annabess Snodgrass, Hilda Sommer, Ralph Spurgeon, Willard C. Stamper, Esther Stapleton, Cecelia Gertrude . Stark. Margaret Maebell eStayton, Clarence Stiles, Marjorie Irene Stoltz, Elizabeth Stone, Charlotte Stratton, Betty Stutsman. Verna L. Sullivan, Mary Summer, Gordon Bennett Sutton, Annabelle Taylor Swager, Louise Swartz. Eleanor A. Taylor, Louise Taylor, Virginia Eleanor Taylor. Clara Opal Tellas Vivian Tevebaugh, Alma Katherine Thelss, John Thomas, Lura J. Thomas, Evelyn L. Thompson, Neal Barry Thompson, William Thompson, Byron Todd, Robert William Todd. Frances A. Tomlin, Margaret Caroline Townsend, Richard K. Trittipo, Enos E. Trover. Ruth D. Trusty. Dorothy Tucker. Lloyd Tucker. Ray L. Urich. Bernadine Vlict. Helen H. Wade, Leo Wagman, Wesley C. Ward, Etta E. Warren. Harriet E. ■Watkins. Gertrude Pearl Watson, George Hazen Weaver. Rex Nathaniel Webster, Maurice Weinstein. Sylvia Weissman, Thelma Wells, Joy Weyant, Frances Whitcraft, Thomas P. White Jr.. Marv Beatrice Whiteman. Donald Whitinger, Mildred M. Wickwire. George Allen Wier. Elizabeth Wiley. Ruth Louise Wilicox. Betty Louise Wilson. June Madren Wilson, Von Wilsoa, Mildred B. Winer, Dorothy Marie Wise, Leonard Wohlfeld. Thomas H. Woodard, Fred Newton Woodworth, June Elizabeth Woodworth, Rosemary Woodworth, Donald L. Wright. Herbert Wright, Robert Wright. Jean Bower Yates. Helen Louise Ziegler. Israel Zimelman. Ordered to South America Bn Times Special HARTFORD CITY, Ind„ May 26. —Donald Cady, 21, will leave July 1 for South America, where he will represent Swift & Cos. He will be sent to Argentina as an assistant to a veterinary.

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Fourteen Sets of Twins in School

Which is Vivian and which is Violet? Are you Irene or Rita? Albert, is that you at the blackboard or is it Alexis? These are a few of the questions faced by teachers in the Gayerre school, New Orleans, where are schooled fourteen—count ’em—sets of twins. But then there’s a boy and a girl in some of the sets so that helps a little.

Weekly Sunday School Lesson

The International Uniform Sunday School Lesson for May 27. The Misuse of National Privilege. Mark 12:1-12. BY WM. E. GILROY, D. D. Editor of The Congregationalist THE title of this lesson is particularly appropriate at present. We have been observing the misuse of national privilege upon a very large scale, and the supreme court of the United States has characterized in unmeasured terms the fraudulent course of men in high places who had a responsible trust. Such corruption is to be condemned in unmeasured terms. But while we make the condemnation it is worth while to remember that the integrity of a nation’s life does not depend altogether upon its official leaders and its trusted employes. The sources of a nation’s life are in its individual citizenship. If its citizens have not in their personal lives high ideals of honesty and devotion to the commonweal, it is useless to expect these things in the nationl life. Deserve What They Got It has been said with some truth that people deserve the sort of government that they get; especially under democratic conditions is this true, for the people have direct power of choosing their rulers and representatives, and if they do not demand honesty in all the conduct of civil and national affairs, they are

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not likely to get good government by some strange chance or circumstance. Here in the Parable of the Hus- j bandmen and the Vineyard Jesus i presents a tragic story of evil and incompetence. It is a story of the betrayal of trust and of the evil that resulted where men had deliberately chosen the )/rong course. The unfortunate part of it is that 1 the parable is so true to at least a great part of life, both in its social and in its personal implications. The husbandman of the parable corresponds to God himself who, in giving to us life, has placed us in a vineyard rich with possibilities. How few realize the responsibility of this gift and the privilege that God confers upon us! We turn to our own selfish ways and refuse to recognize his call to high and holy things, and then when all has gone wrong we are disposed to blame the laws of God rather than our own failure, just as these husbandmen in the parable took their lord's servant and beat him. When man begins to take a wrong course he starts upon a path of evil that becomes more intense as it goes on. Surely the deepest tragedy in all life is the meagerness of the response of man to the grace of God in Jesus Christ. We acclaim Jesus to be the world’s supreme man of

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goodness, its savior and teacher, and yet we turn to our wilful ways and give him so little access to our lives. The misuse of national privilege will never end until we put an end to this misuse of personal privilege, until we begin to see and follow the nigher path of duty and responsibility. In the Old Testament It should, perhaps, be remembered in connection with this lesson that Jesus has built it up upon a much older story in which a prophet of Israel had sought to express the same truth. The Old Testament passage will b§ found in Isaiah 5:1-7. Our lesson records iiow the pointed truth of Jesus enraged those who listened to him. How typical it is of men whose course in life is wrong that instead of improving by rebuke and counsel they turn in bitterness against those who speak the truth! There is a great sense in which we might perhaps test the correctness of our conduct and attitude by our response to criticism. The vineyard is suggestive of opportunity. If some other figure had been used there might be doubt concerning lives of actual privilege. Perhaps the lesson is that even the lowliest and the least satisfactory life affords some measure of opportunity for character and service. Titian is the name of the great painter known for his portrayal of , red-haired women.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

PEGGY JOYCE PLANS TO WED ANOTHERGOUNT Alice Silverthorne’s Divorced Husband Will Marry Ex-Follies Star. By Un ited Press LONDON, May 26.—Peggy Hopkins Joyce, indefatigable seeker of martial happiness, is about to try again, the Evening Standard reported today. The newspaper said the former Follies star was about to marry another counts—this time Count Frederic De Janze, divorced French husband of Alice Silverthorne of Chicago and Buffalo. It was explained that Peggy fell in love with De Janze through a book of his she picked up idly in a bookshop. Purportedly, it was said, the book was prosy enough—about the Kenya colony in East Africa, where De Janze has a large farm—but Miss Joyce was enraptured. At the time, the newspaper said, Miss Joyce and De Janze were not acquainted, but this difficulty was overcome. De Janze divorced his former wife when she showed her love for Raymond De Trafford, son of Sir Humphrey De Trafford, by shooting him in a railway car at a Paris station as he was leaving her for England They had been close friends, but De Trafford had said he could not marry her after a divorce because his people opposed the match. De Trafford was not badly hurt, but the countess wounded herself desperately a moment afterward. She was arraigned in the French courts, but the charge against her was dismissed, as it was held that she was overcome by emotion at the moment and could not be held strictly responsible for her actions. INDICTED; REARRESTED Newell Black Nabbed Second Time on Liquor Charge. Almost at the same hour he was being indicted by the Federal grand jury on a liquor charge, Newell Black, 1116 N. Capitol Ave„ was rearrested by Sergt. John Eisenhut and squad when the officers found a quantity of liquor in Black’s home Friday. Upon learning he had been indicted by the grand jury, Black asked to be permitted to plead guilty to the indictment. He was to betaken before Federal Judge Robert C. Baltzell this afternoon.

EX-GRID STAR IS SHOT Whether Murder or Suicide Is Puzzle to Police. Bit United Press COLUMBUS, Ohio, May 26.—Police today were at a loss as to whether John A. Weldon, former star halfback and at one time captain of the Lafayette College football team, whose body was found in a ravine near here Thursday, was murdered or committed suicide. When found,-Weldon had a bullet hole in his head and his body was neatly covered with newspapers. An automatic pistol and -one discharged cartridge lay beside him.

The PASSING PROCESSION

News of the Week Boiled Down

KT-sHERE should be something cheerful to write about. Os course, theer was tragedy and drama in the news of the week. Was there anything cheerful for you? Some regarded it as a bit of mighty gcod news when Coolidge vetoed the McNary-Haugen bill.

Some didn’t. Then there was that woman at Bridgeport, Conn., who lost her fight to subdue her husband’s desire to have children. The lady has had thirteen children. Her husband, it seems, believes in large families. She had him arrested on the charge of “breach of the peace.” The judge didn't see it that way. There isn’t anything in the law books, he decided, which would give him the right to intervene in the private affairs of Mr. and Mrs. Cromwell. Perhaps some might consider it amusing that Peggy Hopkins Joyce is planning to wed again. Such was the news from London. Peggy, you know, already has had four husbands. Why not a fifth? Peggy usually pick ’em rich—and she's picked a couple o counts. This time it is said Count Frederick De Janze is to be the happy bridegroofn. The count’s first wife shot somebody else, because the somebody else didn’t want to marry her. But that sort of thing wasn’t all there was this week.

DISASTER IN NEWS

There was disaster. Two hundred and twenty-five men died in coal mine disasters in the United States. At Mather, Pa„ 196 were killed in a mine explosion. At Charleston, W. Va„ seventeen died. At Harlan, Ky„ fifteen died. At Hamburg, Germany, eleven persons were killed when an aftermath of the World War threw the city into terror, A tank of phosgene gas in some way broke away from its container. The poisonous fumes, used by both sides in the World Wat, spread over the suburb of the city. Thousands fled from their home.. The wind finally dispersed the poison vapors, leaving behind a trail of dead. At Buenos Aires six were killed and more than a score injured when the Italian consulate was bombed. The Italian ambassador to Argentina and the consul general were to have arrived ta the consulate a few minutes later.

AGAIN CONQUER POLE

Then there was drama. The Italian dirigible of General Nobile made its journey over the North Pole from King’s Bay, Spitzbergen. The ship was late in getting back to its starting point. The results of the trip are unknown as yet. Perhaps disaster has overtaken the machine. In the field of aviation, Colonel Lindbergh shocked the world and the Wall Street speculators. Lindy took a job. He's chairman of the technical committee of the Transcontinental Air Transport Corporation. He must pass on routes and equipment of that company which plans to establish a forty-eight hour air-railroad service between New York a/id California. The Wall Street speculators celebrated the announcement by boosting the stock of airplane companies on the stock exchange a dozen or so points. The first non-stop airplane serv-

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j ice between Berlin and Paris was j instituted. Planes take passengers from Berlin to Paris in five and a ! half hours. The train journey takes seventeen hours.

TEST ‘ROCKET’ AUTO

Another development in Germany seems almost of the fairy tale variety. But many fairy tales havecome true, for men are flying in the air now and diving under the seas.' things which were thought impossible a hundred years ago. A “rocket” automobile attained & speed of more than 125.5 miles an hour in forty seconds on a Berlin race track. The car, its inventor announced, is the first step in the development of a rocket airplane which could fly around the earth in a little more than a day, or from Berlin to New i York in five hours. And a final step may be a rocket capable of reaching other planets. Tire secret of the mechanism of the “rocket” auto and the proposed “rocket” plane are carefully guarded, but the motive power of the vehicles are a series of rocket discharges.

VETOES FARM BILL

The principal news* at Washington was Coolidge’s veto of the McNaryHaugen farm relief bill. That was expected. The bill was killed, at | least for this session of Congress, j by the failure of the Senate to give j it enough votes to pass it over the : President’s veto. Four votes were j lacking. I The Senate concurred in a final I draft of the tax cut bill lopping off | $223,000,000 from the amount ot | Federal taxes citizens of these j i United States will pay this year. | j And the Senate killed the amend- j ment which would have made public j j property the amount of income tax j ! each person who paid income tax i j paid. I That cut the general public cut i

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of a lot of fun learning how much the movie and stage stars really made last year, and a chance to check up on those folks who pay so much income tax they can afford * to hire lawyers to save them 50 per cent.

The Whole World in Brief

LITTLE CRIME NEWS

There was a little crime news, too, but no Hickman case to stir up the nation. Five socially prominent women of the little town of Phillipsburg, N. J., organized a shoplifting exhibition to New York. They took $65 wdrth of merchandise from a New York department store and were arrested. The hard-hearted judge, who couldn't understand that bridge sometimes gtts tiresome and something must be done to pass off the monotony of small town afternoons, sentenced each to five days in the workhouse. But that wasn’t really crime news —just restless age news. SCHOOL CENSUS GAINS Increase of 762 During 1927, Shown by Enumeration. Indianapolis during 1927 showed a gain of 762 school age persons, the annual school enumeration compiled by the State education board shows. The total for this city is 81,898. South Bend is second with 27,100; Gary third with 26,681: and Ft. Wayne fourth, with 24,227. School age is from 6 to 21. Gary showed the largest gain with 1,829; Ft. Wayne gained but eight, while Evansville dropped from 24,385 to 22,874. Terre Haute also fell from 16,336 to 16,016. Over 553 million local calls were made last year by London telephone subscribers; while inland trunk calls from London averaged 16,000 a day.

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Last month’s complaints from Home Delivery subscribers was loss than three-one-hundredths oE one per cent. We aim to improve even this exceptional record for our many thousand Horae Delivery subscribers.

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