Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 195, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 December 1929 — Page 8
PAGE 8
PLANS FINISHED FOR DEDICATION OF RILEY WING Kiwanis Club to Turn Over Addition in Ceremony Here Jan. 7. Plans have been completed for the dedication of the Kiwanis wing cf the James Whitcomb Riley Hospital for Children here Jan. 7. Kiwanis Club officers of the state also will hold their conference here on Jan. 7-8. Formal dedication of the wing will be the occasion of great ceremony with a banquet in the dining room of the hospital at 6 p. m. Horace McDavid of Decatur, 111., international president of Kiwanis, will be ♦he principal speaker. A leader in child surgery, to be selected later, will represent the Riley Hospital Association. Schultz in Presentation The formal ceremony will be held in the Kiwanis wing beginning at 4 p. m. J, Raymond Schultz of North Manchester, Kiwanis state governor, will turn the building over to Hugh McK. Landon, president of the Riley board, who then will turn it over to the state. Governor Harry G. Leslie, Dr. William Lowe Bryan, president of Indiana university; James W. Fesler, chairman of the university board of trustees, and other distinguished guests will have a part in the program. Unveil Tablets Three tablets will be unveiled. One representing the Kiwanis district; the other representing Mrs. J. L. McCulloch, first district Governor, who contributed funds to equip the laboratory, and the third for Mrs. Carl Semens, who contributed funds to equip the research laboratory. The midwinter conference will be held Jan. 8 at the Indianapolis Athletic Club. • Austin E. Kress of Terre Haute, past governor, is chairman of the arrangements committee.
DOE GROWING HORNS BECOMES LEGAL GAME Game Warden Rules Freak Deer Not Protected by Law. Bu United Press LANSING, Mich., Dec. 25Women may smoke, invade barber shops, or wear trorsers and get away with it, but the female of the deer species is out of luck if she oversteps the bounds of conventionality to the extent of sprouting horns. In fact, it may be fatal. Witness the case of the hunter who saw a deer in the woods near Marquette. It had the horns which are supposed to distinguish the buck from the doe. The hunter shot with effect, and then discovered he had killed a doe. Ernest W. Libby, district conservation officer, ruled that a doe with legal length horns has lost all her maidenly or matronly privileges and if she is mistaken for a buck it is her own fault. The hunter was allowed to keep the deer. HONEYMOON BY AUTO In Fact, W 7 ith Six of Them: Great Time While It Lasted. Bv United Press BERLIN, Dec. 25.—Herr and Frau West, off on their honeymoon, decided they needed an automobile. They stole one off the street. Then they decided they needed food, so they sold parts of the car, bough, food with the money and abandoned the car. Then they decided they again needed a car. They stole another — in all, six of them. They were caught in the act stealing their seventh honeymoon carriage.
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THii IiSWANAPOLIS TIMES
U. S. WILL SEND DELEGATION TO SAINTS’ JUBILEE N. Y. Supreme Court Head Is Lay Representative to Hungary. I Ru United Press BUDAPEST, Hungary, Dec. 25. Plans for an imposing American delegation to the celebration of the 900th jubilee of Saint Emeric in Hungary next year were announced here today. Victor J. Dowling, p esiding justice of the supreme court of New York, has consented to lead the American delegation as lay delegate, in conjunction with the American cardinals and bishops, who have been invited. Charles Huzar, former premier of Hungary, who is active in making preparations for the elaborate jubilee celebration in 1930, gave details of the arrangements in an interview today. Huszar, who is indisposed, said from his sickbed: ‘•The 900-year Saint Emeric jubilee which reaches a climax next Aug. 19 and 20, is receiving the greatest attention of the Vatican, The Holy See has notified the Hun-
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NEW CALENDAR 1 IN RUSSIA BANS CHRISTMAS DAY Anti-Religious Campaign Waged as Churches Draw Throngs. By United Press MOSCOW, Dec. 25.—The Christmas holidays having been abolished | in the reorganization of the Soviet calendar a few months ago, work, ; trade and amusement were carried on today as usual. The principal sign of the Christmas spirit here is a more than usually vigorous anti-religious campaign which began Tuesday night and will continue throughout the holiday week. Many of the churches here were crowded with worshipers Tuesday night despite the strenuous effort to obliterate this occasion. In past years Dec. 25 and 26 were recognized by the Soviet government as legal holidays. With the introduction of the five-day week and the unbroken work-week, however, all religious holidays were canceled. The vast majority of Greek Orthodox believers are not especially I anected by the change. To them
Dec. 25 always has been a workday, because the church officially still is run on the Julian calendar, under which Christmas comes thirteen days later, on Jan. 7, under the Gregorian time reckon ng. The real Christmas celebration especially among the millions in uie villages, will take place on that date. DOG MEAT FOR CHINESE Chow Still in Favor on Menus of Certain Restaurants. PFTpiNG, *Chlna, Dec. 25 —Every one to his own tastes—and China can have its cog r.;.at. Although this meat has been prohibited for sale since 1915. two or three restaurants still serve it here. Chow dogs in the main are used, and these are fattened on rice and killed for food at the age of about 9 months.
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