Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 43, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 June 1930 — Page 14
PAGE 14
JEWISH CAMP FOR CHILDREN IS DEDICATED Facilities for 60 Boys and Girls Provided at Site. Big Eagle camp, sponsored by the Indianapolis Jewish Federation for undernourished children, was opened at 2 this afternoon Facilities for sixty boys and girls are provided at the camp which was dedicated Sunday. It is located between Traders Point and Zionsville, just off United States 52. Samuel Strauss will be superintendent of the camp and Mrs. Sraauss matron. Samuel Bernstein, /'s’ counselor, and Miss Dorothy \‘hlessinger, girls’ counselor, will a!Nst. The Invocation at the formal opening was offered by Rabbi Samuel A. Katz, following which each unit of the fifty-acre camp on Big Eagle creek was presented by the donor or a representative and accepted in the name of the federation by the president, G. A. Efromson. Sullivan in Presentation Mayor Reginald H. Sullivan presented the camp site in the name of the unknown donor. Frank Wolf presented the recreation and dining lodge in the name of Mrs. William H. Kobin, now in Europe, as a memorial to her husband. This donation also includes the water supply, sewage system, roadway equipment, porch furniture and a dining room capable of accommodating 100 children. The girls’ dormitory was presented by Louis Wolf, as the gift of both Mr. and Mrs. Wolf, in memory of their daughter, Mrs. Pauline Wolf Blitzen. It is equipped for thirty persons, with library, first aid room, showers room and lavatory. Josephs Donated Barracks The boys barracks, which includes similar equipment was donated by Jackiel W. Joseph, member of the city park board. The Helen Jacobs memorial cabin was presented on behalf of the Council of Jewish Juniors by Miss Evelyn Hahn. The cabin is fully equipped to be used as a craft shop. Mrs. Henry Blatt presented the Etta Ebner memorial bridge; and the electrical fixtures, all of original lantern design, was presented by A. H. Goldstein of Goldstein brothers’ department store. A surplus of the fund raised to entertain Jewish soldiers at Fort Benjamin Harrison during the World war was used to construct the gateray of four field stone columns. The giteway will be a memorial to the Jewish soldiers of the World war.
STATE AID GROUP TO BE SPLIT FOR STUDY Session Scheduled July 9 to Work Out Schools’ Solution. When the state aid committee meets July 9, it will be divided into two sub-committtees for study, it was announced today by Chairman Arthur Sapp, Huntington. A sub-committee headed by State Senator Alonzo H. Lindley (Rep.), Kingman, will try to work out a single plan for state financing of schools from three that have been proposed to the general committee. The general idea will be for the state to replace the local levies, at least for minimum teachers’ salaries. State Representative George Freeman (Rep.), Kokomo, will head the other subcommittee assigned to work out plans for revision and simplification of the present state aid law. MERCHANTS PLAN DRIVE Group Contracts for State-Wide Advertising Campaign Independent merchants of the state through their newly incorporated organization, the Associated Independent Merchants, are preparing plans for a state-wide advertising and publicity campaign. The Ward Advertising Company has been engaged to conduct the campaign. TWO HOMES ROBBED Thieves Obtain S6O Brooch, Cash. Purses, Police Informed. A brooch valued at S6O and $2 cash was loot at the home of R. L. Reddick, 3324 Northwestern avenue, police were told. Three purses, containing $22, were stolen from the home of Mrs. Julia Dickinson, 303 ] -j East Ohio street. New Law Firm Is Formed Formation of the law firm of Batchelor & Keehn with offices at 427, 429 and 431 Circle Tower has been anounced by Hiram D. Keehn and Thomas C. Batchelor.
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Mad Romances of King Carol Amaze Europe
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and ran away to live in Paris with her. Now, his four-year moral holiday over and his tempestuous career steadied by the weight of more mature years, Carol has come back to Rumania to attempt to make his peace with his wife and recover the throne from his 8-year-old son, who ascended to it upon the death of King Ferdinand during Carol’s absence. n u * THE gay and reckless young Carol is a product of his environment and inheritance. He grew up surrounded by the deep political conspiracies and romantic intrigue of the Balkans, where marriages were made for political reasons and love went roaming anywhere. At 15, he was carrying on a violent romance with a woman who was 30 . . . and royalty was laughing In an amused way. A little older, he began to “play” the chorus girls of the National theater at Bucharest, and it seems that the theater manager won royal favor by aiding him. Such was the atmosphere in which he grew up. nun SO it had been with his father, old King Ferdinand who died of a broken heart after Carol had renounced the throne and run away to Paris to live with Madame Lupescu. For old King Ferdinand, back in his youthful days, had a somewhat similar love affair of his own. The young Prince Ferdinand fell madly in love with one of the old queen’s ladies-in-waiting. Helene Vacaresco her name was and she was as beautiful and intelligent as any woman in Rumania —but, alas, the daughter of a commoner. Nevertheless, the sentimental old Queen Elizabeth encouraged the romance ... as a poetess, she reasoned that true love should have its way, royal considerations to the contrary notwithstanding. The old queen gave her consent to a morganatic marriage, but when the hard-boiled old King Carol heard of the plan he gave vent to an outburst that shook the palace rafters. If Prince Ferdinand married a commoner, he stormed, it would cost him the throne. Ferdinand, finding the lure of the throne more compelling than a charming face, chose the former and the marriage plans collapsed. . . . Years later his son, the present Carol, made an exactly opposite decision when he chose to elope with Madame Lurescu and let the throne go to hang.
n n n FERDINAND was only an indifferent bridegroom when the beautiful Princess Marie, the 16-year-old granddaughter of Queen Victoria of England, was brought to Rumania in 1893 to marry him at the age of 30. But beautiful, vivacious, and intelligent Marie made a good queen for the stolid King Ferdinand and soon eclipsed him to a point where she became the real head of the royal household and famous as “the mother-in-law of the Balkar s.” She bore him six children, five of whom are still living. So well has she succeeded in the royal marriage market, that she has married one of her three daughters to the king of Jugoslavia, another to a prince of Greece and is said to have designs on the prince of Wales, the greatest “catch” of all, for her third and youngest girl. Queen Marie’s close friendship with Prince Batu Stirbey, a powerful and equally mysterious figure at the royal court until his banishment by King Carol the other day, caused much comment in Rumania for years. It is reported that Carol, then crown prince, once struck Stirbey in the face. When Carol returned as king one of his first acts was to have the private telephone line between the queen's apartments and Stirbey’s palace ripped out. Next: Zizi Lambrino ... a prince renounces his throne for a pretty commone**, and then reconsiders and deserts his wife and baby.
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DUMMY FORT r TO BE BOMBED AT AIRREVIEW Plane, Artillery Show Is Slated at Mars Hill July 4. An artillery demonstration in which a dummy fort will be bombed is planned as the main attraction in an air and artillery show at Mars Hill airport Friday, July 4.. Military equipment and observation planes of the One hundred thirteenth observation squadron. Indiana national guard, sponsor of the show, assisted by commercial planes of the Curtiss-Wright Flying Service of Indiana, will be used in the show. Two formations of national guard planes will fly over the city Friday morning. Woman Pilot Leader The show proper will get under way at 2 p. m. when Miss Margaret Maibucher, woman pilot of Indianapolis, will lead the commercial section of an aerial review, comprising national guard and CurtissWright planes. The “three musketeers” of the guard, Lieutenant Cecil F. Reynolds, G. Carpenter and Paul A. Zartman, will fly in special formation. Stunting by Captain Lee Brutus, Troy, 0., formerly with the Indiana national guard squadron, in a taper wing Waco stunt plane, will be followed by the artillery demonstration at 3 o’clock. Fifty Rounds of Blanks Fifty rounds of blank ammunition will be fired and pilots will attempt to hit the dummy fort, to be built in the middle of the field, from the bombing planes. A spot-landing exhibition will be given by Joseph Steele, Walter Hiser, Jack Daugherty and Robert Gill, Curtiss-Wright students. Three parachute jumps will be made by Sergeants Evan E. Inman, Aaron Vance and Corporal Richard Reddie. Prior to the afternoon aerial events, the public will be allowed to inspect flying equipment of the national guard and Curtiss-Wright. Lieutenant Howard H. Maxwell, police and traffic details director, has announced one-way traffic will be maintained on Holt road and West Morris street, before the show.
TOOLS ARE STOLEN Blacksmith Shop Loot Used in Store Burglaries. Stealing an electric drill, a crow bar and files from a blacksmith shop operated by H. Miller, 2764 Roosevelt avenue, burglars used the tools in three grocery burglaries Sunday night, police believe. At the Kroger store at 2764 Roosevelt avenue cigarets and groceries valued at $25 were taken. A Standard grocery at 3214 East Twenty-fifth street was ransacked and a quantity of merchandise taken. The John Carr meat market at 2457 Martindale avenue, was entered and SBO worth of meats stolen. YEGGS GET SAFE IN RAID Something seemed to be missing when George Young, 2430 Pearson avenue, opened a poolroom operated by John H. McCarty, at 2140 North Illinois street, early today. Second glance proved there was. The safe was gone. Buglars entered the poolroom by forcing a rear door The strongbox contained about SIOO. McCarty told police.
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FORT ENTRANT LEADSJiONTEST Dorothy Rudolph Ahead in Veterans’ Race. Spurting after a Sunday drive for ballots, Dorothy Rudolph of Ft. Benjamin Harrison displaced Della Stahl in the race for the “Miss Victory” crown today with 4,150 votes to Miss Stahl’s 4,000. The “Miss Victory” contest Is conducted by the Veterans of Foreign Wars, in connection w’ith the “ Siege of 1918,” which will be given at state fairground July 19. The winner will receive a Mar-mon-Roosevelt sedan. Lillian Smock, E. C. Atkins & Cos. entry, holds third position with a 450-vote lead over Helen Malless, Sears. Roebuck & Cos. candidate.
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