Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 237, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 February 1930 — Page 14
PAGE 14
SCHOOL BOARD PICKS LIBRARY , ADVISORY BODY Citizens’ Committee of 23 Will Help Determine Future Policies. A citizens' advisory board of twenty-three to act as a group which will determine matters of policy and expansion for the city library system, was appointed by the board of school commissioners Tuesday night The board includes: Mrs. Will H. Adams, Mrs. Fred Balz, Hilton U. Brown, Mrs. Lee Burns, Laurence D. Chambers, Rabbi Morris M. Feuerlicht Herbert Foltz, the Rt Rev. Monsignor Francis H. Gavisk, Boyd Gurley, Dr. Murray N. Hadley, Dr. Marie Haslep, Thomas C. Howe, Mrs. W. H. Insley, Harry E. Jordan, Hugh McK. Landon, Mrs. Kate Milner Itabb, Theodore Stempfel, James A. Stuart, William M. Taylor, Charles N. Thompson. Guy A. Wainwright, Dr. Frank S. C. Wicks and Evans Woollen Sr. The board heard petitioners for larger buildings to replace portable school No. 37, Paris avenue and Twenty-fourth street. Teachers Named Five teacher appointments recommended by D. T. Weir, acting superintendent of schools, were approved. They were Hazel Johnson and Maria Daugherty, elementary schools; Merle Dangprfleld, domestic art; Florence Fritts, Latin and English at Shortridge high school, and Myrtle Van Nauker, home economics at Emmerich Manual Training high school. Recommendation of A. B. Good, business director, for reappointment of all nine employes In the secretary’s office was approved. Edwin C. Bulthaup was reappointed purchasing clerk, John Hubbard, superintendent of the supply department, and Charles C. Ruth, superintendent of the school book and lunch department. Resignations announced by H. Frank Osier, superintendent of buildings and grounds, included George P. Kem, custodian of main library; Charles Douglas, carpenter foreman, and Robert Whiteman, truck driver, son of Lewis E. Whiteman, board member. Kem is the father of Charles W. Kem, president of the former board. Two Reinstated C. E. Hinesley and Julia Wynn, janitors, removed by the former board last summer, were reinstated. Five new appointments by Osier were E. C. Hamilton, janitor; Thad Gurley, carpenter foreman; H. M Newhouse, custodian main library; C, Morris Meek, janitor main library, and Henry G. Brandt, janitor. Dismissals, recommended by Osier, were Charles Conyers, fireman; Dave Miller. James W. Hyatt, Wilmer C. Olsen, Henry Yely, janitors; Charles Free, carpenter, and John Dooley, custodian. SCAN RIVER FOR BODY Authorities Believe Slain Man Was Hurled Into Stream Near Knox. Bn United Press KNOX, ;nd.. Feb. 12.—A group of men, under Sheriff Frank Hildebrand. continued today to drag the Kankakee river, four miles west of here, where it was believed a man’s body was thrown after being shot on Monday night. Reports of the shooting were given by Charles Larimore, warden at the Starke county game preserve, who told officers he saw four men around a car on the bridge and heard several shots. When he approached the quartet fired on him, Larimore said and then left. Pools of blood on the bridge floor and stains on the railing strengthened a belief that a man had been shot and thrown into the river. The average weight of a man’s brain is three and one-half pounds; women's are two pounds eleven ounces.
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Committee Chairmen Are Named at Memorial Session of Association. Abraham Lincoln typifies the utrepid spirit of the pioneer and crystallized the ideals of government an dsocial life that had so much to do with the building of the western empire. This was thd tribute of Roscoe Kiper, state industrial board chajrman, in an address at the Lincoln memorial meeting of the Indianapolis Bar Association Tuesday night at the Columbia Club. “Lincoln’s vision of individual freedom for every opportunity for those who labor has been one of the greatest forces in the building of the republic,” Kiper stated. Announcement of committees was made by Howard S. Young, vicepresident, in the absence of William L. Taylor, president. Chairmen follow: Bar admissions committee, Charles Remster, Remster A. Bingham and Frank C. Dailey; amendment of laws, Samuel Ashby; library, Thomas A. Daily; grievances, George M. Bernard; judiciary, Louis B. Ewbank; legal education, H. Nathan Swain; entertainment, William E. Fitzpatrick; legal ethics, William A. Pickens; advisory, James M. Ogden; auditing, Carl Wilde; house, Ralph M. Spaan; employment bureau, Lloyd
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D. Claycombe; arrangements for memorial meeting, Michael E. Foley; disbarment committee, Michael E. Ryan; inter-association conference; Edward V. Fitzpatrick; legal aid, Joe Rand Beckett, and American citizenship, Henry M. Dowling. Members of the committee on admission to the bar are recommended by the association and appointed by Circuit Judge Harry O. Chamberlin. Attorneys admitted to membership were Charles W. Cook Jr., Earl B. Barnes, James E. Sargeant, Don R. French, Bert Beasley, Newell Ward and George A. Hoffman. Judges of the state supreme and appellate courts were guests. Two Autos Stolen in Day Bn Times Special ANDERSON, Ind., Feb. 12. Charged with stealing two automobiles in one day, Paul Goins, 17, is in custody here. One car was taken in Muncie and another from Lee Imel, living near here.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
BOOM WINDERS FORDRY POST Mcßride Urged to Submit Name for Approval. F. Scott Mcßride, national superintendent of the Anti-Saloon League, will be urged to submit the name of the Rev. C. H. Winders as Indiana superintendent some time next month, it was reported today. Winders, who has been acting superintendent in Indiana since the death of the Rev. E. S. Shumaker, is said to have won approval for the permanent post at the headquarters committee meeting Tuesday. Mcßride must submit the nomination. however, under the rules. He nominated Sam McNaugh, superintendent of the Iow T a league, but McNaught refused to accept although approved here. Winders’ regime has been a stormy one thus far. with various factions in revolt. So far he has scored complete victory over his enemies. Unlike Dr. Shumaker, who was cordial and kindly under the greatest stress, Winders is a fighter, and refuses to talk to newspaper men who will not accept his dictums m news stories written concerning the league. REPUBLICANS VICTORS IN MICHIGAN CITY CASE La Porte Judge Orders Democrats to Vacate Municipal Offices. Bn United Press LA PORTE, Ind., Feb. 12.—Michigan City’s protracted election battle was decided in favor of the Republicans by Judge Alfred J. Link in La Porte circuit court today, but under an agreement by litigants the case will be appealed to the Indiana supreme court and its decision accepted as final. The battle was started before the November city election when the Democrats protested that names of Republican candidates had been filed a day later than required y law. Judge Harry L. Crumpacker in La Porte superior court ruled that the names had been legally filed and ordered them placed on the ballots. In the election the Republicans won. The case was taken to the state supreme court and dismissed. Quo warranto proceedings then were filed in La Porte circuit court, and it was the decision in this case which was handed down today. Judge Link ruled that the Republicans, headed by Mayor-Elect Harry B. Tuthill, were legally elected and ordered the Democrats to give up the offices which they assumed. A Swiss scientist declares that fish are not deaf and dumb. He ; says in the depths of the sea they I make a buzzing sound which con- I tains a certain amount of harmony j and gayety.
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While Carey Starks of Conneaut, 0., was driving along an icy road his car skidded, played leap frog and finally bounced into a tree, coming to rest suspended upside down from a limb, as you see it pictured above. Despite all this, Starks crawled out, uninjured. ASK APPRAISAL BODY Appointment of Permanent Board Is Asked. Appointment of a general appraisal board by Marion circuit court to appraise all city property to be sold will be asked by Smiley N. Chambers, assistant city attorney. The statue provides that three appraisers shall be named by the court to appraise all property whicn the city desires to sell, making the cost very high in the case of minor equipment and property. A general appraisal board to serve the entire year would save the city considerable money, it was pointed out. Appraisers’ fees in some cases have been more than the price received for the old equipment.
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LABOR LEADER OPPOSES BAND Police, Firemen’s Unit Held Drawback to Union. Continuation of the present police and firemen’s band, a civic organizaion for more than six years, was opposed today by John E. Smith, Central Labor Union organizer. Speaking before the board of safety, Smith declared the police and firemen’s band has “robbed many union musicians of engagements.” The band plays only on civic occasions and without receiving pay. Smith declared about 90 per cent of the city’s musicians are “unemployed as far as their chosen profession is concerned.” “Os course we don’t want to antagonize any one with the band. Its activities should be destricted to civic affairs,” Charles R. Myers, board president, advised Smith. Fire Chief Harry Voshell recommended continuation of the band as a civic enterprise. The board took the matter under advisement. Prisoner Confers Bn United Press TERRE HAUTE. Ind., Feb. 12. Two youths arrested here on charges of having a stolen automobile in their possession admitted they are Claude Jeneree, alias Harry Templeton, 27, Eagle Lake, Tex., and Ben Watson, 19, Marion, 111., who escaped from the federal reformatory at Chillicothe, O.
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WOMAN IN DEATH CELL Arizona Pardon Board Pondering Convicted Slayer’s Case. Bu United Press PHOENIX, Arlz., Feb. 12.—The fate of Eva Dugan, who may be the first woman to pay the death penalty in Arizona, hung in the balance today as two members of the state pardon board awaited the arrival of the third from Flagstaff. While Mrs. Dugan sits in her cell at the state penitentiary at Florence, the board will decide whether she must die Feb. 21 for the murder of A. J. Mathis, Tuscon rancher. Quake Rocks Island WELLINGTON, N. Z.. Feb. 12. An earthquake, the most severe shock in forty years, shook the southern part of North island today. The Porangahu area was damaged severely, with hardly i chimney left intact.
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