Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 22, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 June 1929 — Page 11

Second Section

SHOW GIRL IS DEAD IN LEAP OF 12 STORIES Love Spurned, She Calls Hotel Office, Plunges From Window. DIARY TELLS STORY Leaves Note With Name of Wan With Whom She Had Quarrel. _',’y United prf.it CHICAGO, June 6 A torn diary and * seven-word declaration of love told the story today of the twelve-story death leap of Miss Barbara COK show girl, who played in 4 Rose Marie" and Ziegfelds , Blue Boy." Miss Cole took t.he receiver from her phone Wednesday night in her luxurious north side apartment and called for the hotel office. “This Is Miss Cole lam going! to jump from my window.” she an- , nounced calmly to the startled opera tor. A minute later her body was j round in State street. She had replaced the receiver, walked across the room, lifted the screen and dived out the window. Felice Find One Vote The only note police could find was h single sentence written across the ftv leaf of her diary. It read: •‘I love Ed Page, 1209 Astor street." Edwin Page. La Salle street, broker, lives at that address and when communicated with, said he and Miss Cole had had a love affair but, it was broken off Wednesday afternoon after a quarrel. "She telephoned mo." Page said, "and accused me of being distant and cold. She threatened to jump from the window, but I thought it was idle talk. I hung up the receiver.” Entries from -tune 6 to 19 had been ripped from the diary and the missing pag*s were, not found. Clipping Tells of Suicide A newspaper clipping telling of the suicide of Vernon Peters May 1. also was found in the apartment. Peters shot himself after reading a no-ej by a college classmate in which one of the characters was called "drunken Peters." Police interpreted Miss Cole's pos--cssion of the clipping as proof she had been contemplating suicide and had been reading of other methods. : A half filled highball glass was found on the mantle. Attendants at the hotel said Miss Cole lived alone and had not. received any visitors last night. Miss Bessie Norrien. an accuaintance. said Miss Cole had been married and was the mother of two children. HOSPITAL WORKERS TO REPORT NEXT MEETING Drive to Raise Million for Methodist Institution Started. The first- report meeting for workers In the Indianapolis Methodist hospital million-dollar expansion fund appeal " ill be held a? the Columbia Club Monday noon, it was announced today by Arthur R. Baxter. genera! chairman. With preliminary gifts totaling $300,000 announced. Indianapolis workers tackled the task of raisins the $700,000 needed with enthusiasm. The preliminary gifts were secured order the leadership of Arthur V. Brown, president of the hospital trustees. Final instructions to the workers were given a* a. luncheon at the Columbia. Ch.b Wednesday noon. Lawrence Wheeler, campaign director. outlined the opportunities for memoria’ gifts. BEGIN ARMY SHAKEUP Eeren Generals to Sift Service for L'nfit Officers. F ■ United /’* WASHINGTON. June * —Seven general officers "ere appointed today to conduct the annual army shakeup designed to rid the service of officers unfit cr incompetent for further duty. The board .consists of MajorGenerals Hanson E. Ely and Frank Parker and Brigadier-Generals Hugh A Drum. Campbell King. M. y Walker. Charles D. Roberts and James B. Gowen. BEECHGROVE GETS GAS franchise Is Accepted by Citizen Company Directors. Acceptance of a franchise from the town of Beech Grove today was was authorized by Citizens Gas Company directors. The franchise granted last week by the town board provides extension of mains s o the suburb shall be started in ninety days. Clarence L. Kirk, general manager. said orders for pipe w-ill be placed at once. Estimated cost is 581.000. HEATH IS TREASURY AID Michigan Man Succeeds Scbcnneman as Assistant to Mellon. P'ce WASHINGTON. June B—President, Herbert Hoover todav appointed r. K. Heath. Grand Rapids Mich., to be assistant secretary of treasury. succeeding Carl T Scheuneman. Heath will begin hi* new duties at once.

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Indiana Girl in Talkies

and ■' ’a- ' ■

Ell Timet Specie l GREFNTOWN. Ind.. June 6 Acting in the talkies is tiring because the studies are made airtight to be sound proof, according to Miss Miriam Seegar. Greentovn, who has

NOTED DETECTIVE SEEKS DEATH GUN

Man Who Sent Carl Wanderer to Gallows Enters Cassler Case. By United Press VALPARAISO. Ind.. June 6.—The detective who sent Carl Wanderer to the gallons by tracing ownership of a pistol, started a search today for the weapon with which .Miss Cainebla, Souta.r, Chicago “but- j terfly" girl, was killed in a swamp j near the former home of Mrs. Cath- ; erine Cassler, who is charged with ; the murder. Lieutenant John Norton, of the 1 Chicago homicide squad, who pinned ] the death of Mrs. Wanderer on her husband, has been lent to Porter county authorities here to round out their case against the woman charged with murdering her love rival. Swamp to Be Searched Norton said he believed Miss Sdutar was iured to the swamp, shot through the heart and the pistol cast away in the muck. He said he would make a minute search in the • icinity of where the girl's body was found face downward in the stagnant waters of the bog and covered with a thin layer of willow twigs. Later Norton said he would search the old Cassler home a mile and a half from the swamp. Mrs. Cassler. who dodged the gallows recently in Chicago after being convicted of the murder of a man for his insurance, remained m the Porter county jail here, denying any connection with the crime. Held as material witnesses in the case are Truman Cassler. her husband, sweetheart of the slain girl, and Edward Cassler. son of the couple. On the theory that he has held back information about the romance of his father and Miss Soutar. Edward was taken to the swamp murder scene Wednesday and questioned by Coroner E. H. Miller. w 7 ho is conducting the inquest. Calmly Faces Questioning The youth denied he ever had been in the swamp before and calmly puffed a cigar as he was questioned. A farmer. August Kuenniger. approached the youth and asked: "Remember me?" "Never saw you before in my life." Edward replied. "Well, I've seen you around here a dozen times and last year T towed your car with you and your mother in if when it broke down here " the framer said. Edward also denied that, but the coroner said he had evidence that the youth had trapped animals in and around the swamp and was fa- | miliar with every foot of it. FLAG DAY PROCLAIMED Leslie Urges Displays. Exercises for Holiday June 14. I "To the downtrodden, our flag is i the emblem of hope and salvation,” I Governor Harry G. Leslie points out | in his proclamation today, calling i attention to the observance of Flag ! day June 14. He asks that all Hoosiers provide appropriate displays of the national emblem and that civic and religious bodies foster exercises.

READ THIS GREAT FEATURE IN THE TIMES

DARE, by virture of her ten million reader - follow ing in America, the largest single fashion feature audience in the world, has access—through private invitation —to the fashion collections of Europe's most celebrated couturiers MONTHS y

The Indianapolis Times

Mhs Miriam Seegar

completed her first talkie, "Fashions In Love," at Hollywood. Adolph Menjou is the leading man in the cast. The picture was completed in a little more than a month. With Miss Seegar in Hollywood is her sister, Mrs. J. C. Stone, Kokcmo.

They Gambol —/ B’J United Frees , PARIS. June 6.—The gambling dance has arrived as the latest Parisian fad. The floor of the dance hall is marked out in numbered squares, like a roulette table. A roulette w 7 heel spins on the wall. Where it stops spinning, the dance ends and the dancer who happens to be standing on the square corresponding to the number on the wheel wins. Money, dolls and other souvenirs sxe given as prizes.

STORE WORKERS FINISH JXHIRSES 61 Get Awards for School Completion. Sixty-one members of classes, from the L. S. Ayres Company. William H. Block Company and the H. P. Wasson Company, were awarded certificates for completion of continuation school work, at a dinner at the Lincoln Wednesday night. Edward E. Greene, vice-principal of Arsenal Technical High school, spoke on “Responsibility," and Mrs. Harry E. Wood read a group of original verses. Harry E. Wood, director of vocational education and manual training, was in chargo of the meeting. Recipients were: L. 8. Ayres <fc Co.—Harriet AJplegate, Esther Bennett. Cornelia Burrell. Ruth Btagg. Lucile Clore. Ina Cornell. Carolyn Coombs. Jeanett Cochran. Wanda Fierek, Helen Friedman. Evelyn Hit?. Ruth Marie Jones. Irene Lucas, Dorothy Miller. Mary Ellen McDonald T'.lma McCormick. Vera O’Day, Helen O T>; y. Ruth Oertel. Leona Pounds. Lillian Rrcrser. Edna Reed. Helen Short, Martha c !‘iwe!l. Laura Stackelbeck. Louise Troke. Lura Thomas. Dorothy Vaughn. Edna Wray, Hilda Wiekliff, Frances Tearing. Wm. H. Block Company—Monna Applega7e. Ida Mae Bales. Ruth Baxter, Anna Becker. Irene Cobb. Annabelle Eaton. Rdith Hadle-. Ruby Horne. S 7 e'.ia Mae Jordan. Edna Moore. Margaret Mullr.n. Helen Ovens. Marie Fetro. Bertha Petty. France. 7 Pita. Anna Reidy. He’en Winings. R. P. Wasson Compaw—Caroline Aehgill. Dorothy Alberts. Vivian A. Granger, Lucille Hamilton. Mare K. Horner. Norene Houser, Susie M. Kemper. Edna Miner, Virginia M. Roc*rs. Ruth F. Schaffner. Mary Helen Spic-r. Daemar Von Agnes M. Wegman. Teachers in the classes are Misses Ruth Boyer, Bertha Mallory and Louise Ross. Legion Forms Drill Squad ANDERSON. Ind.. June 6.—A drill squad of sixteen men to augment the work of a drum and bugle corps is being organized bv George Hockett post of the American Legion here. Both units will parade at the state convention in Richmond in August. The local post will send a large delegation to a district meeting at Elvood June 16.

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INDIANAPOLIS, THURSDAY, JUNE 6, 1929

lURY TO GET DRY KILLING CASE TODAY * 1 Deputy Sheriff Denies He Shot at Auto With Slaying Intent, DEFENSE STORY HIT Doctors Declare Youths Showed No Signs of Intoxication, Ev United Press ABINGDON, Va., June €.—A superior court jury probably will begin deliberations today in the case of J. W. Crow r e, deputy sheriff, one of three law enforcement officers charged with murder in connection with the death of J. W. Hendrick, Emory and Henry college student, w ho was wounded when the officers fired on a, suspected rum-carding car that failed to halt. Crowe, who is 50, and father of twelve children, was the principal witness in his own defense Wednesday. He told of following an automobile on the night of May 6. Paul Phelps and Sterling Dutton, friends of Kendrick, whom he suspected either of being intoxicated or carrying liquor, were in the car. Crowe denied there were more than two men in the automobile. Crowe claimed the bullets he fired at the tires when the car failed to halt on order were not copper jacketed. as were those that pierced Kendrick's head, and caused his death twenty hours later. Has Beeen Indicted Before Testimony was allowed to show that Phelps was indicted in April, 1925, for carrying alcohol, and had been arrested by Crowe a few 7 days before Kendrick’s death on a similar charge. Phelps and Dutton now await hearing on intoxication charges, brought after the shooting episode. Three doctors testified for the prosecution that none of the three youth showed signs of having been drinking when they came to the Johnson Memorial hospital to get treatment for Kendrick. Final arguments began at opening of today’s session. In his instructions Judge Buchanan cautioned the jury that Crowe and the other two officers had nc right to shoot at persons suspected of a misdemeanor, and that driving while intoxicated is a misdemeanor and not a felony. Moreover, the judge added, even, if Crowe and his fellow 7 officers were convinced that Phelps was committing a felony by transporting liquor, they had no rig at to shoot recklessly or otherwise endanger the lives of innocent citizens. Puzzle for Jury In another instruction, however, the judge advised the jury that, as long as Crowe did not shoot recklessly or wantonly, he was justified, if convinced that, Phelps had committed or was committing a felony, in shooting to kill. Under such instructions the jury will be left to determine whether Crow 7 e and the other officers had reasonable grounds to believe that a, felony had been or was being committed and whether Crowe shot recklessly when he fired upon the fleeing automobile. Crowe is being tried separately on an indictment charging him. Deputy Sheriff W. H. Worley, another fee system dry law 7 enforcer, and Town Policeman James Mcßeynolds with killing Kendrick. 18NURSES GRADUATE Indiana Christian Hospital Commencement Tonight. Eighteen nurses will be graduated from Indiana. Christian hospital at Hillside Christian church. 1737 Ingram street, tonight at 8. The Rev. Homer Dale, pastor, will pronounce the invocation: Dr. Charles P. Emerson, dean of the Indiana university school of medicine. will make the commencement address: Mrs. Carrie McCoy, superintendent of the training school, will present the class and Charles H. Young, hospital superintendent, will award the diplomas. Musical mimbers will be given by Bonnie Lou Sydnor and Glenn Seitz. Graduates are the Misses Bernice Vance, Edith Carson. Edna Svank. Villa Lawrence. Lillian French, Katherine Sydnor, Martha Mount. Katherine McCain. Clara Mae Lindeman. Mary Bravard. Bonnie Byers. Thelma Mattox. Ruh Durham, Esther Craig. Esther Hantz. Ethelle Baker. Beulah Bullard and Deloris Snider. Safe Blast Ruins Clothes Bn United Press LA PORTE. Ind.. June 6.—Scores of families moured the loss of their weekly wash today 7. It was blown to shreds bya n explosion in the La Porte laundry by burglars who blew 7 a safea nd obtained S4OO. Loss in laundry and other property was considerable.

Years of advising women through the medium of her column has cabled Dare (Dahray' to know just about everything any woman would want to know. Her daily column anticipates the seasons and the requirements of women in va-

AUTO PLANTS KEEP UP RECORD OUTPUT SPEED; NO SIGN OF LET DOWN

First Half of Year Will Set Mark Far Above Any of Past. Bv United Prees DETROIT, June 6.---Record-smashing May production figures show no evidence of slackening output in the automobile industry, and though some seasonal recession doubtless will occur in June, automobile manufacturers this week bei lieved the decline will start from j such a lofty level that the first half |of the year will far eclipse any previous six months. In line with the tremendous increase in automobile production, manufacturers of automotive parts, accessories, and repair equipment have had the greatest spring season on record. The high level of both automobile and accessory production reflects the present prosperity of the automotive industry 7. After unprecedented by large output for the first quarter of 1929, a slight drop in the production curve was predicted and expected for May. Contrarily, virtually all leading manufacturers established new, alltime records, with Ford and Chevrolet leading the field with 200,903 and 160,895 units, respectively. Inspect Factories A party of sixty managing and regional directors of the General Motors export division from fortyeight countries of Europe, South America, and the Far East,, -who are on a tw r o weeks’ inspection tour of General Motors operations in Canaaa, Ohio, and Michigan, arrived in Pontiac, Mich, today. They will visit the G. M. C. and Oakland factories at Pontiac for several days before completing their tour at Detroit and Cleveland next week. Preparations for opening of a plant with a seventy-five-car-a-day capacity on the Bosporus in the city of Constantinople are being made by representatives of the Ford Motor Company Exports Inc. It is expected that the Constantinople assembly factory will be ready for operation late this year. Egyptian Plant to Close When completed, arrangements will be made to discontinue the Ford ! service plant, located, at Alexandria, Egypt.. Constantinople is considered a, more advantageous distributing point. The Marquette, the ninth product in the General Motors line, has received an enthusiastic reception, following its introduction last Saturday. The car is of the medium cost field. Another addition to present lines is anew Willys-Knight on the great six chassis, to be marketed about June 15.

DRY LAW HOLDS CAT PRISONER Court Order Saves Victim ‘Padlocked’ 12 Days, B:i United Press KANSAS CITY. Mo.. June B. Tom. a big gray alley cat, held as a. dry law prisoner since May 23, now 7 can resume his nocturnal wanderings. He was liberated after Judge and Mrs. Merrill Otis of federal court, listened to a, plea of Harry Hirsch, known as Kansas City’s most hardboiled detective, for a, court order to enter the padlocked “quick lunch” where Tom hungrily meowed for food and water. All Wednesday Tom stood before a w 7 indow and appealed for aid. Federal court attaches said they could do nothing. The place was padlocked by a federal order after liquor was found there and the owner w 7 as arrested. Wednesday night Kansas City papers carried Tom’s story on the front page. The street in front of his prison was congested. Then Hirsch rescued Tom. The city’s most hard-boiled detective purchased Tom the best dinner of liver and bacon obtainable. U, S, SHIP IMPERILED Flagship of Chinese Patrol Strikes Rocks, By Umted Pr^ss SHANGHAI. June 6.—The U. S. S. Luzon, flagship of the Yangtse patrol, was reported in danger of sinking today after striikhg rocks off the Woosung breakwater 1 ate Wednesday night. The crew of the vessel was transferred to the U. S. S. Ohio and the U. S. S. Helena. Two mine-sweepers were standing by the Luzon attempting to plug two holes punched in the forward bottom of the vessel when it struck the rocks.

rious walks of life. By reading Dare's daily column. the business woman will tind comprehensive sartorial helps, as will the matron, the mother and the debutante. Start reading this great feature in The Times next Monday, xtmjk ii.■. . . j .

Purdue Co-ed Honored

''S * ’’’Jmmi ' s > ■ i ••/'. S' •; < S- ss?* , Ssssfe®' I " c °S'®P^m ' S |- 'Mt ; % M' -

Bit Times Special KOKOMO, Ind.. June 6.—Purdue university’s outstanding sophomore co-ed is Miss Alma Williams, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Williams, Kokomo, chosen by a vote of stu-

Pet and Pay Philandering Papas and Mugging Mamas Get Their Warning*

BY ARCH STEINEL 1. Thou shalt not obstruct a state highway by parking thereon. 2. Thou shalt not park with a girl under 18 years of age at night time. 3. Thou shalt not sit in the rear seat of a car when parking. 4. Thou shalt not pet while driving a car. 5. Thou shalt not “mug" from sunup to sundown if thou dost not wish to be chased away. 6. Thou shalt not park under city arc lights, in bus zone, near fire plugs, theater exits or in alleyways. 7. Thou shalt not “neck" in public parks. 8. Thou shalt not park at night without keeping thy car’s taillight and parking orbs lighted. 9. Thou shalt not go fishing in bathing suits, (Farmer’s *cows scare easily.) 10. Thou shalt not cause neighbors to complain of the regularity with which thou parkest at a certain corner and the lights from your car reflect in bedroom windows. THOSE are the rules, boys and girls, for the 1929 osculation onslaught. After you’ve read them, adhered to them for a couple of week-ends—get a girl with a sofa and play safe. That’s the counsel at least of members of the sheriff's and police forces, as they lay down the above commandments to those who want to bill and coo in Marion county. For they say that if the bandits don't get you. then you'll wear out your auto cjutch moving from parking space to parking space as you're shoved away by one of the tour night patrols of the sheriff’s office or the district cars operating out of police stations. You can be arrested on any of the above ten commandments: on charges ranging from committing a nuisance to vagrancy—if—if—the officer who sees you has had a bum meal, or been scolded by his wife for forgetting to bring home the watermelon. Sheriff George Winkler isn't down on “petters,” but he warns them of the danger to their purses when they park on lonely roads. The safety of divan duets over highway hugging, katydid kissing, tree twosing and cushion cuddling, is a truism of daytime as well as night. For members of the sheriff’s patrol say that those who play tonsil tennis on roads and joining the city under Old Sol will be forced to vamoose with the same alacrity as if it were night. The sunshine “Strangler Lewises,” they aver, are foF the most part marital malingerers, who left the washing unironed or are playing out-of-town to their mates. But the nights bring out the class of the beak-bruisers and liploungers, and it is the nights that’ll see every county road patroled to protect the cheek-chirpers from footpads and urge them to play their “song of love” on their own front porch, instead of a cow lot.

Entered As Second - Class Matter at Postolf lee Indianapolis

Miss Alma Williams

i dents. She is majoring in home ; economics. Miss Williams is a member of Omicron Nu. honorary sorority, and of Chi Omega, national sorority, and is co-ed editor of the Purdue Exponent.

THIEF FLEES, LEAVES LOOT Drops Clothing Taken From Store on Seeing Cops, Two boxes of women’s apparel, stolen from the Joseph Wolf store, 233-40 West Walnut street, were recovered when Patrolmen Daniel Scanlan and Francis Logue accosted a Negro on Senate avenue near Walnut street early today. The Negro dropped the boxes and fled. When lights in four apartments at 418 East Nineteenth street were snapped off at 11:40 p. m. Wednesday, Mrs. Yvonne Wood of that address ran to her rear door and saw a man rim from the back porch, she told police. No one was arrested. A burglar who pried open two employes’ desks in the Freyn Brothers Plumbing Company. 1028 North Illinois street. Wednesday night, took an automatic pistol. $9 in cash and a. wrist watch, police were informed today. J. E. Moore, manager of the Standard Grocery Company store, 606 North Illinois street, complained to police that a thief who chopped in a side door to the store Wednesday night took $lO from an ice box. Mrs. L. W. Lewis. 120 East Fortyseventh street, this morning was looking for two maids, ore for her house and another for + he return of a SIOO coat. Wednesday a young woman, identified by Mrs. Lewis only as Mary, answered an advertisement and left at noon, presumably with the coat. EDITORS TO GATHER Democratic Publishers to Meet Friday and Saturday. Outing of the Indiana Democratic Editorial Association at Lake James Friday and Saturday will serve as a keynote meeting for the party in preparation for the 1930 off-year election. Frederick Van Nuys of Indianapolis, former district; attorney, will be principal speaker at the banquet in Pottawatomie inn Friday evening. The Democratic state committee* will meet Friday afternoon. Motor visits to neighboring lakes are planned for Saturday morning. P. Earl Peters, state chairman, returned to Ft. Wayne Wednesday to complete arrangements for the outing. An unusually large attendance is expected, including Frank C. Dailey. 1928 nominee for Governor: Albert Stump. 1926 and 1928 nominee for United States senator; Walter Myers and Charier A. Greathouse. national committeeman. BOARD OF TRADE MEETS Ohio Humorist Will Speak at Annua! Dinner Tonight, E. R. Kelsey, Toledo Rotary Club secretary, will speak tonight at the Indianapolis Beard of Trade annual dinner. Kelsey is noted as a humorist. Officers and members of the board of governors will be elected Monday night, William H. Howard, secretary, announced. , A _

Second Section

CASH FUND OF CITY SCHOOLS IS ABOLISHED Controller Holt Orders Change In System Before July 1. HITS IRREGULARITIES SIO,OOO Annually Available to Principals Under Present Plan, Discontinuance of the Indianapolis school board's petty cash revolving fund system before July 1 was ordered today by City Controller Sterling R. Holt. Under state law 7 Holt is the auditor of school board accounts, although he is an appointee of the civil city. The revolving fund. whi<*h is understood to exceed SIO,OOO annually, was declared "irregular" by Holt at a conference with C. C. York, business director, and Frank L. Reissner, board secretary. It is said about a. score of school officials, including high school principals, have access to the revolving fund plan. Orders New System The conference failed to evolve a satisfactory plan of financing, it w 7 as said. Holt ordered York to “w 7 ork out” some system before the start of the new 7 fiscal year. Other "irregularities” which are understood to have draw r n the criticism of the controller were failure to send vouchers through with the proper affidavit and issuance of some checks on funds with an insufficient, balance. Principals use the revolving fund plan to buy articles for the schools without permission of the board, receipts being presented along with requests for replenishment, of the SIOO funds. It was pointed out that the system might permit "padding” of accounts. There is no law 7 authorizing the "petty cash” fund. New Plan Suggested It w 7 as suggested at the conference that principals send bills for purchases to the board, allowing them to be approved in regular manner, and monthly vouchers issued. Reissner is said to have a SI,OOO revolving fund, which he uses for payment of "express, telephone, telegraph and other minor bills." A plan of issuing vouchers monthly probably will be substituted. Holt, denied the request of school officials that Arthur C. Thomas, deputy controller in .charge of school accounts, move his office to the school building so he would b “closer in touch” with affairs. York said he and Reissner were attempting to carry out the request of Holt. "The only system T can find at present to avoid a petty cash fund is to charge everything w 7 e now buy from this fund, first, getting an order from the board office,” York said. Might Waste Money "This might prove expensive, ag a carpenter receiving $1 an hour needing a few 7 nails might have to waste a lot of time getting an order instead of buying the nails at the nearest store, obtaining a receipt and later receiving his money when he turned in the receipt." Reissner raid the petty cash funds amount in all to $2,125. They are: Reissner. $1,000; buildings and grounds department, shops, $300: library, $100: Arsenal Technical high school, $200: Shortridge and Washington high schools, SIOO each: Broad Ripple. Manual Training and Crispus Attucks high schools. SSO each, and Mrs. Jeannette Williams, director of school for exceptional children. $175. "Practically every business has a petty cash fund to avoid loss of time in making small purchases, such as a, 15-cent ruler,” Reissner said. "None of the money is lost, those holding it being required to account for every penny by receipts or cash.” statFemployment CONDITIONS APPROVED \ Federal Director Urges Youth to Learn Trade. Employment conditions in Indiana are "very satisfactory on the whole,” Francis I. Jones, director of the United States employment service of the labor department, told Governor Harry G. Leslie on a visit to the state house. Jones is making a nationwide survey of employment and halted in Indianapolis to confer with the federal labor bureau here. In this state there is a good demand for common labor," he asserted. ‘‘Then here a.-; everywhere there is an ever increasing demand for men in the skilled trades." "The hast advice to a young man entering the world from school is to learn a skilled trade as soon as possible and there will be/no unemployment problem for him. The ranks of the so-called ‘white-collar* workers are already overcrowded. SEEK _ MISSING YOUTH Boy. 15. Left Heme In Buffalo Several Weeks Ago. Mrs. Ray Tucker, of 1833 Lockwood street, has asked Indianapolis police to assist m a search for her nephew, Howard Weiand. 15, w 7 ho disappeared from his home. 1175 Kensington avenue, Buffalo, N. several weeks ago. The boy is 5 feet 7 inches tall, weighs about 123 pounds, is slender e.nd has brown eyes, black hair and -a dark complexion. He were a dark blue suit, blue sweater, light cap, green slicker and black oxfords.