Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 29, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 June 1930 — Page 18

PAGE 18

217 GRADUATED FROM TECH AT COMMENCEMENT faculty Medals Awarded to Leading Members of Senior Class. Scholastic honors were bestowed on 217 members of the Technical high school June graduating classes at commencement exercises this week. Leading senior awards were given to Haroid Hostetter, John Carroll and Vera Kunse, who received faculty scholarship medals. Honors were bestowed Jointly upon Hilda Korff. Emily Schubach and Miriam j Schurman. Emmett Lowry, Wright Cotton and Ryan Hall, were awarded the Marie K. Binninger medals for exerting most wholesome influences on the student-b- 1y during their high school careers. Two other graduates, Tilton Irwin and Robert Madison, received the Yenne medals, for vocational proficiency. Those listed on the commencement honor roll for scholastic records were: GIRLS OF A SECTION Evelvn Alexander. Mary Louise Alien, Marv Avres. Grace Barnett. Josephine Bennett. Thelma Berry. Irene Blacketer. Mary Bohnstadt. Euna Boling. Lois Broeeker. Bernice Brown. Ruth Bultman, Marv Butcher. Charlotte Carl. Ruth Childers. Msrv Cooi.'e. Vona Cox. Eunice Crismier. Dorothy Dean. Alberta Denk. Louise Dodd. Lldimae Duke. Marv Duncan. Marian Edward*. Alta Ruth Fox. Esther Garrison Jean Gouldlng. Hertha Graf. Winifred Hall. Louise Harshman. Florence. Hayes. Margaret Hewes. Anna Marie Iske, Winona Keuthan. Patricia 'ingsbury. Ida Knapp. Gladys Koehler. ... rv La Mar. Frances Lane. Marjorie Law.-.on. Neoma Lichtenberg. Lois Lund, Lucille McCallie. Blanche McDaniel. Marjorie McDonald, Caroline Maas, Pearl Markus. Dorothy Meadows, Janette Mikesell. Inez Millholland. Frences Milligan. Ruth Neely. Elizabeth Oglesby. Dorothy Philips. Elizabeth Pohlman. Eleanor Rathert. Marjorie Reinhart. Virginia Rich. Marv Risk. Katherine Robbins, Wilma Rose. Laura Royce. Odia Sachs. Clarlbel Schcchter. Margaret Schofield. Marv Search. Marie Shelton. Helen Shell Dorothy Short. Eliiabeth Smith, Marvel (Jnvder. Alberta Snelcher. Kathryn Spitz Luclle Stanley. Marian Stlers. Margaret Thompson. Louise Tiedeman. Louise Titus, Virginia Turner. Marjorie Watkins. Estella Williamson. Janet Wischmeyer. BOYS OF A SECTION Frank Baird. Emmett Bandy, Ray Barnes. Ralph Benton. James Borchert. William Brinkworth. Charles Brooks. Harold Buckhorn. Frederick Clark. Wayne Cole. Wright Cotton. Robert Cox. Frederick Darnell. Lester Engel. Raymond Esarey. L. D. Oinger. Charles Glore. Donald Gobrecht. Henry Goebel. Raymond Graham. George Hall. Frederick Hartman. Charles Hoyt. Tilton Irvrln. Bernard Jasper. Kurt Klee. John McCarthy. Albert McEowen. William McGaughev. Stauley Maliess. Bernard Marks. Donald Moschenross. Woodrow Moyer. Wayne Murphy, Hobart Myers. Frank Newland. Herbert Nordsleek. Tom Ochiltree. Rav Parish. Paul Rainey, Frank Relssner. Robert Robbins. Robert Seward. Paul Sims. Richard Sites. Marvel Snyder. Edward Stewart. Benjamin Stoker. Max Swalls. Julius Thorman Joseph Tomes. Harrv Walker. Harold Wells. William Wells. Forest Zaengleln. GIRLS OF T SECTION Carolyn Acltmann. Ann Bush. Bonnie Carr. Evelvn Adcock. Edna Carter. Sylvia Ecktman. Dorothy Arnholter. Pauline Fischer. Mildred Frantzreb. Rose Ashcraft, Mary Greenwalt. Martha Heller, Mary Grace Bare. Marjorie Hufferd. Fabra King, Ruth Buehler. Pauline Llttrell. Grace McVev. Margaret Mattingly. Ruth Merrifield. Margaret Sandstrom. Alvamay Mitchell. Florence Muenchen. Eleanor Mullen. Mary Neglev. Elizabeth Nichols. Kathryn Noland. Juanita O'Neill. Kathryn Perkins. Maurice Randolph. Marjorie Roesener. Margaret Sandstrom. Blanche Schoneker. Dorothy Shugart. Mabel Wilson. Erna Winkelmeier. Genevieve Wires. Thelma Storm. Geneva Tatum. Clara Walter. Alene Washburn. Adelta West. Elite Willey. Jane Williams. Ruth Williams. BOYS OF T SECTION Robert Annis. James Baker. John Bartlow. Paul Blessing. Fred Breidenbach. Russell Burkle. Harold Cron. George Good. Charles Hale. Rvan Hall. Robert Hammer. Olltner Knlpe. Leonard Thomas. Robert Tucker. Muriel Warrick. Lloyd Weddle, Robert Woods. HOLY NAME SCHOOL WiLL PRESENT PLAY Sixteen Graduates Will Be Given Diplomas at Exercises. f osing exercises at the Holy Name school, Troy and Seventeenth avenues. Beech Grove, at 8 tonight will be featured by presentation of a short play, “Camouflage,” by pupils. The cast includes Caroline McDonough, Mary Jane McDonough, Dolores Hagist, Alma May Kaney, Helen Rogers, Josephine Steigewald, Mane Van Benten, Betty Jane Gergen, Mary Frances Kennedy, Louise Spalding, Grover Walden and Vincent Rolles. Diplomas will be given sixteen graduates. They are Luke Billman, Betty Jane Bergen, Dolores Hagist, Mary Frances Kennedy. Alma May Kaney, Thomas Logan, Mary Jane and Caroline McDonough, Charles Mesling, Helen Rogers, Vincent Rolles, Arthur Simon. Marie Van Benten, Harland Vondersaar, Joseph Walsman and Grover Walden. TECH PAPER SPONSOR WILL BE HONORED Former Members of Arsenal Cannon Staff to Hold Luncheon. Former members of the staffs of the Arsenal Cannon, Technical high school publication, will meet at luncheon in the Columbia Club Saturday noon to honor Miss Ella Sengenberger, sponsor of the paper since 1919. Vaughan Gayman and Charles Traylor of the June (19261 class will act as toastmasters and Norman Brinsley will serve as general luncheon chairman. Guests will include Mr. and Mrs. Milo H. Stuart, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Green, Miss Mabel Goddard and Miss Esther Shover. Brinsley is assisted by Henry Stewemeier. Naomi Guild, Elsie Gilkenson. Dorothy Cooper, Harriett Trinkle, William Weiss. Hugh Rominger and Frank Sanders. ALUMNI BANQUET SET Broad Ripple High Grads to Hold Program Tonight. Broad Ripple high school alumni will hold their annual association banquet and business meeting at the high school at 7 tonight. Officers of the association have prepared a special entertainment feature in which Helene Harrison and Eleanor Watson, prominent radio entertainers, and Maurice Lucas. who has broadcast from station WLW, Cincinnati, will appear. PICTURE IS PRESENTED School 57 Receives Gift in Honor of Four Graduates. Presentation of a picture. “The Oregon Trail.” to School 57 by Mr. and Mrs. J. R. H. Moore in honor of their four sons who have been graduated from the school was announced today. Moore is head of the Manual high school history department. The last of the four sons completed his elementary school work at School 57 'f ii ii ■ ii —m

8A Graduates of School 50

Ernest Reepmaker. Thurman Radcliffe, John Jones, Frank Bunton, Thomas Marshall and Charles Smith.

Irene Kirby, Marthena Sipe, Eugenia Kart, Ruth Hendricks, Mildred Stelting and Agnes Harrison.

Paul Jones, Earl Rob'.rson, Howard Beckman, Paul Staniford, Jamrs Frown and Robert Farmer

Merlo Hybarger, Ethe'mae Aaarrs, Dorothea Eurk holder, Gladys Herk, Clara Raccbs and John Sharp J

Kathryn Gamier, Katherine George, Edna Veslal, Dorothy Rztcliffe and Dorothy Anderson,

8A Graduates of School 32

Cri’ ’ .JSL. &mm % \ v

Robert Bill, LaVeme Davis, Forest Robertson, Gail Kungerford, Bill Stoup and Harold Suhre.

Myrtle McDade, Catherine Hale, Violet Myrick, Roberta Waughtcll, Dorothy Chesline and Lola Lennox.

William McAbce, Beldon Spurlock, William Bolin, Jchn Morgan, Bruce ’leckley and Woodrow West.

Betty Warden, Lula Linkenhilt, Iris Pearce, Martin Wilson, Reba Harlan and Rose K.etler.

Laura Jessa, Edith Pike, Catherine Hurt, Mary Hammond and Elizabeth Elder.

ART AWARDS GIVEN 14 Graduates of City High Schools Are Honored. Scholarships to the John Herron Art Institute have been awarded fourteen graduates of city high schools. Each scholarship is valued at $l5O and is issued for the year 1930-31. Those receiving scholarships are: Shortridge—Howard Nichol. Marian Simon and Loleta Jackson. Technical Maurine Randolph, Charles Glore. Frances McCoy, Margaret Sandstrom, Ralph Montgomery and William Aust. Broad Ripple—Helen Wetherbee. Washington—Walter Kampovsky. Manual—Harold Horwitz, Ruth Noerr and Katherine Haley. JUNE FROLIC IS SLATED Steel Treaters to Hold Annual Picnic at Idlewold Park. The annual June frolic and picnic of the Indianapolis chapter of the American Society for Steel Treating will be held Saturday afternoon and night at Idlewold park, near Pendleton. Horseshoes, games, races, and a hill-climbing contest are highlights on the program. Those who have no means of transportation have been asked to meet at the Schwit-zer-Cummins Company, 1125 Massachusetts avenue, at 1:30 p. m. Farm Tour Made By Time* Special KENDALL VILLE, Ind„ June 13 Factors affecting farm labor income? were being studied on a farm record tour of Noble ccunty today. It is jfhgflrst tour of its kind cvg|j

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Frances Schneiderman, Anita Abel, Myrtle Rappold and Grace Hubbard,

PARK BOARD ORDERS PERSONNEL SHAKEUP Act on Follows Reinstatement of Suspended Custodian, Fatrick Bain, Brookside Community house custodian, suspended last week by the park board, was back at work today after his reinstatement Thursday. The board announced that the complaints against Bain were the result of an extended quarrel between employes of the community house. Superintendent Charles Sallee and Recreation Director David Kilgore were instructed to transfer a number of employes to bring

Marbles Tourney Entry Please enter my name as a contestant in The Times Marbles tourney. to start next Monday, June IS. I have permission of my parents to play and to accept the trip to Ocean City, N. J„ if I am winner, all expenses to be paid through arrangement of The Times with the National Marbles Tourney Association. Name Address Age Date of Birth , Editor or bring in person to The Times

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

about harmony throughout the park department. Herman Arndt, a Democrat, was awarded the $2,400 music contract for public parks. The board plans twenty concerts. Advisability of concentrating all of the park shops and store houses in a structure at Twenty-ninth and Harding streets, was discussed by the board and a committee named to survey conditions and make recommendations. Railway Veterans to Meet Em Times Special EVANSVILLE. Ind., June 13. Fourth annual picnic and reunion of L. & N. Railroad Veterans’ Club will bring more than 1,500 visitors to Evansville Saturday.

PLAYGROUNDS OPENING PLANS ARE UNDER WAY Institute for Instruction of Directors Heirs at Brookside Park. Final arrangements for opening of city playgrounds on Monday were being completed by recreation officials as approximately 60,000 pupils left schools today for vacations. An institute for instruction of playground directors was opened at the Brookside park community house Thursday and will continue in session until noon Saturday. Playground instructors are studying up-to-date methods of recreational supervision under direction of David B. Kilgore, city recreation department director, and assistants. Supervisors Assist The three men and three women supervisors appointed to manage activities on the forty-two playgrounds are working with instructors in preparing general schedules of playground routine. Kilgore, Miss Julia Landers, recreation assistant, and a representative of the New York Playground Association are principal speakers at the institute. Hold Story Hour Mrs. Laura Scott of the Central library was to give a story hour demonstration before instructors today. Organization of children’s bands by Paul Arbogast, newly appointed supervisor of music, will be an innovation on playgrounds this year. Recreation officials expect to have forty miniature band organizations giving concerts on the grounds within a few w r eeks. Persons interested in providing musical opportunities for children are requested to assist their neighborhood playground in obtaining used musical instruments. NIGHT CLUB TO OPEN “Pirates Den” in Sherman Inn to Offer Floor Show. With Dick Trotter’s Pirate Serenades and a floor show, anew night club will open its doors in the city tonight. It is the “The Pirate’s Den,” located at East New York street and Sherman drive, in the basement of the Sherman Inn, operated by B. B. Fisher, formerly proprietor of restaurants in Chicago and Evanston, and of a pastry shop on Monument Circle. Cover charge is one dollar a person, Fisher said. The club has been decorated in keeping with the motif suggested by the name.

t—.’ V, .. . 1 ■>■•'. * C'Jsi; V-3 Scholarship has been established as an encouragement to high school students to earn good grades, to maintain high character, . „ ® , . ~ . rm i .it Applications far the Kroger Qrocery 8 and to prove their ambition. Ihe award Will Baking Company Scholarship for mo be made to that student who, by virtue of his or her scholastic record, character, intel- t, You must be a graduating senior t , . . . _ 1 o •„ of some public or parochial high ligence, and ambition is most worthy of r Kho ° l ™<***> ** * ar - • .1 • . , (2. rout grades must be exception* tins assistance. 3. You must use the Scholarship t* Applications for this scholarship will be re-’ *. ceived from those of high scholastic standing. A committee cf judges composed of three prominent citizens will make the Fill out one of the application blanks obtain- ut'^^qfpl W able in any Kroger Store, and mail to the that you can qualify for this schol arship, we urge you to send in your The Kroger Grocery &. Baking Ca i jt 0 Clair Street

8A Graduates of School 80

Led ward Druilinger, Morris Conly, John Brittenbacb, Charles Herrin, Donald . ’der, and Harold Besser.

Ona Butler, Fairetta de Vault, Geraldine Jackman, Julia Keaton, Felly, ard Agnes F'sse.

HONOR PUPILS 6FJSCHOOL 8 59 Present on Time Daily During Semester. Fifty-nine pupils cf School 8 have been honored for being neither absent nor tardy during the past semester, Miss Mildred Weld, principal, announced today. Those honored are: Eugene Archer. Olen Bailey. Mary Beauregard, Bruce Betz. Mary Jane Bridgewater. Virginia Brooks. Leellen Buchanan. Meadlord Childress. Elizabeth Cole, George Cranmore, Kenneth Curry. James Curtis. Loyal Curtis. Mary Dalesio, Laura de Anzo, Charles Edwards. Edith Freeland. Marvin Grtmsley. Audrey Hagged, Robert Hazlegrove, Sylvia Hill. George Holden. Joe Hotseller. Edward Hyatt. Mildred Jackson, John Kennington. Lillian Knapp, Ada Lawson. Charles Lawson. Shirley Mahv.rin, Glen Meier, Carl Melloh. Ralph Milburn, Juanita Miller. Mary Mounts. William Patrick, Roseila Passwaiter, Angelo Presutti. Clarence Purcell. Elster Purcell. Joe Reek. Craig Rider. Grace Steinberger, Mary Shaffer. Helen Marie Shea. Helen Smith. James Soots. Dorothy Stewart, Irene Sullivan, Mable Sturdevant. Ralph Taccoiie. Lamar Thompson. Rosario Voi, Hugo Welch. Junior White. Phairy Zueener. ELLSWORTH AIDS FUND Explorer Gives SI,OOO for Erection of Monument to Amundsen, By United Press OSLO, June 13.—Lincoln Ellsworth, former companion of the famous explorer Raold Amundsen, has given SI,OOO toward the erection of an Amundsen monument in Tromsoe.

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Elsie Applegate, Ruth Glaubke, and Sherill Boardman

Swimming Contests to Be Held by Y. M. C. A.

Weekly Events Arranged for Summer Months by Committee. Weekly swimming contests throughout the summer months for persons holding Y. M. C. A. memberships are announced by the Y. M. C. A. swimmers’ committee. Contests in different aquatic feats will be held each week and records will be kept for determining the season’s champion. Meets will be supervised by the following members of the committee: Leroy Clouse, Robert Goodwin, Robert Hicks, and Alvin Storey. The fifty-yard backswim contest was held June 9 and the next competitive event is scheduled for June 16. Dates for other contests are: June 23, the 100-yard back swim; June 30, plunge: July 7, front and back dives; July 14, front and back jackknife dive; July 21, front and back somersault dives; July 23, diving for objects; Aug. 4, swan dive; Aug. 11, thirty-foot swim under water; Aug. 18, four style medley; Aug. 23, dead ■man float; Sept. 1, tread water contest, and Sept. 8, back float. During the summer all entrants

.JUNE 13,1930

who desire to enter may try for th long distance swimming contest of twenty-one miles to be completed by Sept. 15. This “channel swim,” as it is called, because the distance across the English channel happens to be twenty-one miles, will provide opportunity for regular daily exercises in the pool at the Central Y. M. C. A. building, where all contests and practices will be held. CHURCH MARKS GROWTH Dinner at Central Christian Observes 97th Anniversary. More than four hundred persona Thursday night celebrated the ninety-seventh anniversary of the founding of the Central Christian church, at a birthday dinner in the church. The church was organized June 12, 1833, by John O'Kane, with twenty charter members. Present enrollment is 1.675. First church building was located on South Illinois street, at Kentucky avenue; in 1858 anew structure was built at Delaware and Ohio streets, and in 1892 the present building was constructed at Delaware and Walnut streets.