Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 28, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 June 1928 — Page 3
I'JUNri 13,1928.
PRINCIPALS OF 1 HIGH SCHOOLS I REAPPOINTED {Special Directors Are Given ' Approval for Next Fall by Board. A number of appointments in addition to the list of teachers for 5.927-1928 approved Monday, were Approved by the school board Tuesday night. 1 All high school principals were Reappointed. They are George Buck, Ehortridge High School; Milo H. Stuart, Arsenal Technical High School; Matthias Nolcox, Crispus iAttucks High School; E. H. K. Mcipomb, Emmerich Manual Training High School, and K. V. Ammerman, proad Ripple High School. Gregg scholarships for the year Jtvere awarded to La Von Cox, school No. 58; Halsie Warren, school No. 3; Daisy Calvert, school No. 16; Leone Hurst, school No. 21; Gertrude Buehler, school No. 51; Fay Banta, school No. 39; Clara Moore, school No. 46; Margaret Jenkins, school No. 41, and Florence Schaub, school No. 54. Miss Flounce Newhouse of school ino. 2 was awarded the Seegmiller scholarship. Name Special Instructor Appointments approved by the hoard are: , Research Division—Frieda Herbst. Social Service Department—W. A. Hacker, director; Bertha Leming, assistant supervisor; Leila Brown, permits and records; Thelma Taylor, permits and records; Hilda Black, clerk; Dora Hastings, clerk, and Ruth Everett, clerk. Special Directors—Harry E. Wood, vocational education and manual training; Harold W. Gossett, assistant vocational education and manual training; W. A. Ocker, physical training; Florence H. Fitch, art; Ernest G. Hesser, music; Wood Unger, civics, and Jeanette Williams, director of the department of instruction of exceptional children. Other appointments included M. E. Hilton, special work in educational museum; Lulu Mae Miller, special investigator under direction of superintendent of schools; Lucy Montgomery and Ida C. Langerisch, supervisors of jewing and cooking, respectaively, and Clara Nieman and Flora Torrence, special Pick High School Teachers Instructors for Arsenal Technical High School include Edith M. Allen, Spanish; Bert Popowski, printing; John Donnelly, commercial; Winifred Brill, commercial; Walter H. Mcßride, art; Janice Truax, art; Ruth Dinwiddie, art, and Arthur Kendall mechanical drawing assistant. Instructors appointed for Shortridge High School were Naomi Fike, assistant librarian; Eleanor Roedger, chemistry assistant; Georgia Jean Giddins, chemistry assistant; Walter Osborn, biology assistant; Dwight Billings, biology assistant; Virginia Waller, art assistant, and Richard Bchey, art assistant, REALTOR GROUP NAMED Delegates to National Convention in Louisville Announced. Names of official delegates who will represent the Indianapolis Real Estate Board at the annual convention of the National Association of Real Estate Boards at Louisville, Ky., next week were announced today by Emerson W. Chaille, president of the local board. They are Joseph J. Argus, national delegate; Thomas F. Carson, E. L. Cothrell, Frank E. Gates, Dan W. Le Gore, T. E. Grinslade, William Low Rice and Carl G. Seytter. Alternates will be Marion Stumsa, H. M. Stackhouse, Joseph J. Schmid, E. Kirk McKinney, Forest 8.. Kellogg, f*. C Cash. SLAYER IN SURRENDER English Man Gives Up at Farm in Father’s Presence. Bn Times Special ENGLISH, Ind., June 13.—Cressy J. Cooper, 35, who fled after the fatal shooting in a drug store here of Carl C. Conn, 40, is in custody, having surrendered. • After communicating with Marshal Vollie Smith and Deputy Marshal Cummins, Cooper agreed to give himself up at the farm of Thurman Belcher, four miles south of here. The officers, accompanied by the slayer’s father, George Cooper, went to the farm and the arrest was made. CITY PIONEER IS DEAD Mrs. Mary Wilson Lived on Site of Hoosier Athletic Club. Funeral services for Mrs. Mary Wilson, 80, wife of James H. Wilson, 1716 N. Pennsylvania St„ will be held at SS. Peter and Paul Cathedral at 9 a. m. Friday and burial will be at Holy Cross cemetery.. Mrs. Wilson was widely known for her charitable work, having been active for years in the St. Vincent de Paul Society. She had lived here for half a century, her residence at one time being where the ■Hoosier Athletic Club now stands. She died at her home Tuesday night, having been ill since she fractured her hip in a fall three weeks ago. Her husband is the only immediate survivor. New Building for Dugger fill rr '.tnes Special DUGGER, Ind., June 13.—The *nrner stone of Dugger’s new town nail and community building will be laid Friday afternoon, the ceremony to be in charge of the Indiana Grand Lodge, Free and Accepted Masons. The Rev. Homer M. Campbell, worshipful grand chaplain of the order, will deliver the addressRefinance your debts now and repay as you earn. Low cost. Confidential and quick. CAPITOL LOAN CO., 141% E. Wash. St.—Advertisement.
Gladys Cooper ; Beauty of Stage, to Be Married
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LONDON, June 13.—Miss Gladys Cooper, prominent stage beauty, has departed for the continent and it is reported she will be joined there by Sir Neville Pearson, publisher, and that the couple will be married. It was understood their engagement recently was dfnied while Pearson was obtaining a divorce.
SEEKS 100 FIREMEN Chief Says Stations Are Undermanned. Fire Chief Harry E. Voshell will ask an increase of approximately 100 firemen in the 1929 budget, he said today. Voshell said the extra men would be needed to properly operate several engine houses which are undermanned and provide personnel for the two proposed stations. It is planned to erect anew engine house at Hawthorne Lane and E. Washington St., and anew north side house. The extra men and salary increases for Assistant Chiefs Fulmer and Fred Kennedy will make an increase of $179,000 in the appropriation for personal service. Increases from $3,100 to $3,600 are to be recommended for assistant chiefs. Voshell's request ro the board of safety will call for about $215,000 increase over the $1,363,000 appropriation for 1928. Voshell said the 1928 budget was cut below the point of efficient operation. STATE POOL INSPECTED State Officers Visit Park at McCormick’s Creek Today. A State department of conservation meeting was held today at McCormick's Creek State Park. Additions to the park, including a swimming pool, were inspected. Pollution of the creek and White River which flows into the creek made it impossible to use these natural bodies of water for a swimming place and compelled the conservation department to construct the pool, Richard Lieber, conservation director said today. St. Mary’s Graduates 42 TERRE HAUTE, Ind., June 13— St. Mary’s-of-the-Woods academy graduated forty-two girls, the largest class in its history, at its eighty-seventh annual commencement held Tuesday. The oldest living graduate of the academy, Mrs. Isabelle S. McNamy, 89, Attica attended the commencement. Summer Term at I. U. By Times Special BLOOMINGTON, Ind., June 13— Indiana University’s thirty-ninth annual summer session will open Thursday, with more than 300 courses, 100 In graduate work, offered. Registration will be held Thursday and classes will begin Friday.
Have Fun With Studies Girl’s. Success Recipe
Manual Training Student Winner of Holliday Scholarship. “You have to have fun, too, along with your lessons,” is the bit of wisdom Miss Lora Meyer, 'Manual Training High School scholarship winner, would give to other ambitious students. Principal E. H. Kemper McComb publicly awarded Lora the S2OO John Holliday Jr. scholarship to Muncie S ate Normal and the Riley scholarship medal, the highest scholarship honor a Manual student can win. The girl thinks her success was due mainly because she insisted on "having fun” along with study. “Os course I had dates, although I don’t care an awful lot about them,” she admitted. "But I never studied if I had any place to go I went and made up the work later “I’m sure that anyone can learn to enjoy studying if she takes the attitude that she’s not making grades to please the teachers, but to please herself. If you make yourself like it, the first thing you know, you’ll really be liking it! It’s best to do your lessons every day and not get behind. They seem to get easier if you do.” Lora has an average of 96.85 for her four years at Manual. This means, in office records, that, with
COLONEL TAKES CHARGE New Head of Eleventh Infantry Is at Ft. Harrison. Col. Horace P. Hobbs assumed command of the Eleventh Infantry at Ft. Benjamin Harrison today, relieving Col. James G. Mclryoy, acting regimental commander since Col. George D. Freeman, Jr., was transferred to duty with the Florida National Guard in March. Colonel Hobbs, a regimental commander in the Twenty-Sixth Division in the Argonne, came to Ft. Harrison today from the University of Kentucky, Lexington, where he has been detailed as professor of military science and tactics. He will command the Citizens Military Training camp which opens at Ft. Harrison next Wednesday. He was accompanied here by his wife, a daughter and three sons. FISHING LAWS CONFLICT Opinion Received at Newcastle Refers to Private Ponds. Bu United Press NEWCASTLE, Ind., June 13— The law does not prohibit fishing in pr. vate ponds during the closed fishing season, but action can be taken where fish that are protected under the law are caught, even though they did come from private ponds, according to an opinion given Prosecutor Paul R. Benson here, by Walter Shirts, assistant superintendent of fisheries and game. State department of conservation. The opinion refers to Shively’s Park, where a lake is privately owned. It was pointed out that the closed season fish law applies “to waters of this State,” which exempts private ponds. A section of the 1927 acts, however, holds that It is unlawful to “catch, kill, take or be caught in possession of any fish protected under the closed season law.” Business Suit In Pulpit Wins Bn Times Special VALPARAISO, Ind.. June 13— Members of the congregation of the Christian Church here prefer their pastor garbed in a business suit while occupying the pulpit, a vote shows. Robes, overalls and full dress suits received some support. Group Three Bankers Meet By Times Special MUNCIE, Ind., June 13.—Group three, Indiana Bankers’ Association, met here today with banks in eight counties represented.
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Miss Lora Meyer
the exception of three solid A’s, her marks were all A-plus. Lora has decided to be a commercial teacher. She is planning to be graduated from the Muncie State Normal. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Meyer, 815 Weghorst St.
THE INHIXNAPOLIS TIMES
DISEASE LURKS IN ROTOGRAVURE PICTUREPAGES Rare Individuals Must Shun Sunday Sheets to Escape Skin Malady. By Science Service MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., June 13. —Disease lurks within the pages of the rotogravure sections of the Sunday newspaper. • Rare individuals who are susceptible to this new skin eruption described to the American Medical Association here this morning by Dr. Edward A. Oliver of Chicago must forego the pleasure of reading the brown picture sheets, on doctors’ orders. A patient of Dr. Oliver, suffering from a dermatitis that was not cured by ordinary remedies, was told not to use hair lotions, dyed clothes or to come into contact with other known skin irritants. The eruptions continued. They were worse on Monday or Tuesday, indicating the infection occurred on Sudany. The only difference in the patient’s life on Sunday was his reading of Sunday papers. Since Sunday papers differed from the daily editions only by the inclusion of the comic and the rotogravure sections, these portions of the newspaper were suspected. Comics Are Exonerated The comics were exonerated, but but the roto pictures were found guilty. When the patient shunned the familiar brown ink sections, he recovered and remained well. Fourteen other cases were cured. Dr. Oliver traced cause of the irritation to a dye used in the brown rotogravure ink, known as a diazo color, para red. This type of skin disease, that inflames the face, eyelids and sometimes the neck, is not found among the printers who handle the ink in printing. The disease is not believed very widespread. The fad of liver eating which has sent the price up to 80 cents a pound may do harm to healthy individuals and deprive those pernicious anemia sufferers of this lifesaving meat which they really need, the association was warned this morning, by Dr. William S. Middleton of Madison, Wis. How Color Blind See Anew and safer method of transfusing blood Into little children and babies suffering from severe infections or a lack of life fluid was reported, by Drs. W. C. C. Cole and J. C. Montgomery, of Detroit. The Detroit physicians inject the reviving blood directly into the peritoneal cavity, the portion of the body that contains the stomach, bladder, bowels and other organs, instead of into a vein. The case of a color blind girl who Is able to sew with threads of different colors, remembering them by their brightness and their place in her work box. and who works in a shoe factory painting leathers, was reported by Dr. S. Judd Beach, of Portland. Me. The totally color blind see things, not as a photograph or etching, but as the normal person sees things at twilight. PURDUE GIVES AWARDS Two Co-Eds and Man Among University Students Honored. By Times Special LAFAYETTE. Ind.. June 13Awards made at Purdue University commencement exercises here Tuesday included the following; Flora E. Roberts medal to Miss Madelyn Markley, Bluflton, outstanding senior coed. Junior membership in Illinois sec. tion, American Society of Civil Engineers, to C. R. Little. J. O. Beck, prize of sls for best writing in the Scrivener, new campus literary magazine, to Miss Jeane Mason, West Lafayette. $42,000 PRICE ON FOOT Martinsville Man Wins Suit Against Monon Railroad. By Times Special MARTINSVILLE, Ind.. June 13Judgment for $42,000 for loss of a foot has been awarded A. H. Stierwalt of this city, through decision of the Indiana Supreme court upholding a verdict given in Morgan Circuit court here. The case was appealed by the Monon railroad. Stierwalt was injured when his foot became wfdged in a switch frog at Gosport. He was unable to free himself before being struck by a Monon train.
Gone, but Not Forgotten
Automobiles reported stolen to police belong to? Charles Lentz, 3425 Speedway Ave., Ford, 615-523, from Market and Delaware Sts. Robert Rudd, 1709 W. Morris St., Lexington, 646-126, from Senate Ave. and Washington St. Stephen Bowman, 1219 W. Twen-ty-Fifth St., Ford, 625-411, from Senate Ave. and Walnut Sts. George Taylor, 2917 E. Michigan St., Ford, 210-690, from in front of that address. Detroit Steel Products Company, 321 Hume-Mansur Bldg., Whippet, 663-984, from 234 E. Pratt St. Henry Piper, 621 E. Michigan St., Ford, 652-093, from East and Washington Sts. C. E. Harshmann, Anderson, Ind., Buick, 434-467, from Anderson, Ind C. Alton Darner, 925 Ewing St., Ford, 663-413, from Washington and Delaware Sts.
BACK HOME AGAIN
Automobiles reported found by police belong to: Wilbur Andrews, 801 N. Gray St., Essex, at Hamilton Ave. and E. I'enth St. Capitol Motors Company, Capitol Ave. and Michigan Sts., Whippet, at Terrace and Emerson Aves.
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