Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 35, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 June 1930 — Page 3

JUNE 20, 1930

AID FOB POOR AND JOBLESS IS CONSIDERED fund Executives Study Plans of County Commissioners After Session. Plans of county commissioners to afford relief to the poor and unemployed by providing work for persons appealing for aid were being considered today by executives of the Indianapolis Community Fund following a conference with commissioners and trustees. Tentative plans were adopted at the conference Thursday afternoon in agreements between county and townsftip officers, representatives of private and charitable societies to co-operate to relieve the poor. William H. Insley, president of the Indianapolis Community Fund, and David Liggett, secretary of the organization, appealed to commissioners and trustees with a plan that trustees contribute 75 per cent of the relief money need, while the Community Fund, through the Family Welfare Society, will give the remaining 25 per cent. Another meeting will be held soon to complete the plan and to arrange for its operation. It was agreed tentatively that agents of the Welfare &>ciety investigate appeals for assistance, providing trustees with the facts in each case. Commissioner John E. Shearer proposed that those in need of relief be given work by trustees. "The suggestion of Community Fund officials for the county to appropriate special funds for relief is hardly feasible, although the county will do everything in its power to aid the unemployed.” Statistics showing that Marion county pays less than any other comparable county toward poor relief were presented by Liggett. "The Community Fund has gone as far toward meeting the situation as it can in view of an approaching deficit,” Liggett said. Sees Police Search for Own Body By United Press NEW YORK, June 20.—Like Tom Sawyer, Edwin Brehm, 15, sat on Howard’s beach and watched police grapple sixteen hours for his body. Unaware that an alarm had been spread, he returned to his camping site, watched the men, and then learned of the "drowning” in a newspaper.

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Broadway Stages Own Commencement Rites

m, ■ it"

Lottice Howell

Lions Seat Officers RICHMOND, Ind., June 20.—New officers installed by the Richmond Lions Club are: Noah Stegall, president; the Rev. William Sayers, first vice-president; Dr. R. M. Taylor, second vice-president; A. Bradford Harrison, treasurer; Ray Kinder, tail twister, and Irvin Stegall, lion tamer.

Summer Time Is Travel Time Vacation days are nearing, bringing with them the question of where to go and what to see. Why not plan to spend a vacation that will not only be restful, but instructive as well? Bring us your problems, and let us help you plan a trip that will bring you back home with a feeling of having had a hundred cents’ worth out of every travel dollar you spent. Long years of experience in this field have enabled us to be of real assistance to thousands of Indianapolis people. May we not have the pleasure of helping you, too? Richard A. Kurtz, Manager Travel Bureau The Leading Travel Bureau of Indianapolis & UNION TRUST* 120 East Market St. Klley "ssr*

fin SEA Kerr ire NEW YORK, June 20.—While schools and colleges hand ribboned diplomas to the sweet girl grads. Broadway also issues its diplomas. The ‘‘graduating class,” according to the show street, is made up of youngsters who started as mere students in the theaters and lived to return as feature figures of film or stage. The Capitol, which has one of the most impressive list of graduates, held its most recent ceremonial for Lottice Howell, latest of its ‘graduating’ pupils, who was merely a minor figure in the stage presentations a year ago. Now she has been given a diploma in the form of a movie contract. Previously this same theater had out Dorothy Jordan, who had been one of Chester Hale's dancing girls and is now an ingenue lead; James Murray, who was an usher and a doorman, and Sally Rand, who was another mere dancing girl in the divertissement which precedes the showing of a picture.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

FUNNY MAN OF FILMS EXPLAINS ‘PLATONIC; GIFTS Langdon Admits He Spent Nights at Wife’s Home Before Her Divorce. Bu United Press LOS ANGELES, June 20. —The serious moments which Thomas O’Brien injected into the life of a 1

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movie comedian, Harry Langdon, with a suit for collection on a $11,500 “hush note,” continued in superior court here today. When Thursday’s session of the trial closed, the comedian was explaining why he gave the former Mrs. Thomas O’Brien, now his wife, a S9OO ring, a SSOO wrist watch and SI,OOO for a fur coat. Langdon admitted that he had stayed overnight in the O’Brien home before the couple separated, and that Mrs. O’Brien had stayed at his house. “Her mother requested me to stay at their home on several occasions,” Langdon said, ‘‘and when Mrs. Langdon stayed in my residence before we weree married, she was very ill.” The gifts were tendered solely in

a spirit of platonic friendship, the ccmedian testified. He has denied he stole the love of his wife from her former husband, a Toledo (O.) engraver. He said he gave O’Brien the note and $15,000 cash to ward off a threatened $250,000 alienation of affections sOit which he feared might bring unpleasant publicity. Bachelor Pastor to Wed By United Press _ BROOKLYN, N. Y„ June 20.—The engagement of the Rev. Henry C. Offerman, pastor of St. Lutheran’s church and known as the bachelor pastor because of his frequent statements describing the difficulties attending the single minister, and Miss Grace Altenau has been announced.

STRAND H OX THE BOARDWALK H. B. RICHMOND, Vrop. T. E. RAXDOW, Mgr.

TRY A WANT AD IN THE TIMES. THEY WILL BRING RESULTS.

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