Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 156, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 November 1930 — Page 7
JfOV. 8, 1930
ARMISTICE DAY TO BE OBSERVED IN CHURCHES Orchestra and Chorus to Make Debut Sunday Night. At the popular Sunday evening eervice of the Sutherland Presbyfsrian church the junior chorus and the Sutherland orchestra, both activities of the Sutherland choir ichool under the direction of Mrs. I.ora L. Lackey, will make their initial appearance. There are twenty members of the junior chorus and the orchestra is sixteen pieces. Following a thirty-minute recital, the Rev. Florizel A. Pfleiderer will discuss “What Ails Our Youth?” The program follows: '•A Bone in The Night" ;. Baldwin Orchestra. So Loved the World" Lorenz Chorus. Orchestra. '‘lntermezzo" from “V Arleslenne Lint" Bizet Orchestra FSwlng Low. Sweet Chariot.” Solo and Chon/s. •'Berceuse” from ''Jocelvn” C-odard Violin Solo. *'Ba'. lour. Blessed Saviour” Fearis Chorus. '•A Perfect Dav" Carrie Jacobs-Bond Orchestra. At the morning service, Armistice klay will be observed and Mr. Pfleider will give the address “The Future of Government.” tt an BIBLE SCHOOL TO START DRIVE The Men’s Bible class of Central Christian church is making an intensive drive for new members. An old-fashioned oyster supper Was given at the church last Monday night for the committee in charge of the drive. It was a regular “pep” meeting. A numDer of interesting features nre being arranged for the coming v,lnter. Dr. William A. Shullenberper, pastor of the church, is teacher of the class which is the largest downtown men’s Bible class in the city. The church is located at Delaware and Walnut streets. An Invitation is extended to all tnen of the city who are not atfehding Sunday school. tt n tt STETSON WILL {TALK MONDAY NIGHT. Paul C. Stetson, city superintendent of schools, will address the monthly meeting of the Brotherhood of the First Baptist church Monday night, Nov. 17. “Ladies' night” will be observed pnd a musical program under the direction of J. J. Albion will be a feature of the program. Dinner will be served by women of the church. J. E. Shewmon, president, will preside. a tt u ADD DAY RALLY TO BE HELD SUNDAY Edwin Ray M. E. church will hold Its annual home-coming day on Sunday. This promises to be one of the biggest events on the church calendar. The program includes the Rev. W. O. Filer, superintendent of the dis- j trict. Honorable Albert Stump, and the minister, the Rev. W. T. Jones as speakers. In the afternoon at 2 o'clock a song service by former members of the choir, led by W. J. Condrey, now leader at North church, will be given. All former and present members are urged to come and bring a basket prepared to enjoy themselves among friends for the day. it tt tt SPECIAL ARMISTICE PROGRAM PLANNED At the Christian Men Builders, Seventeenth street and Broadway, the fourth and last of the harvest home series •Rill be delivered by Merle Sidener Sunday. His subject will be “The Crop, Wild Oats or Tame.” Armistice day will also be observed in the class Sunday. Various delegations of ex-soldiers and sailors will attend the class. Special music will be furnished by Miss Irene Bishop. She will play two numbers. tt tt tt C HRISTIAN SCIENCE LESSON ANNOUNCED “Adam and Fallen Man” is the subject of the lesson-sermon in all Churches of Christ, Scientist, on Cunday, Nov. 9. Among the citations which comprise the lesson-sermon is the following from the Bible: And the Lord God took the man. and But him into the garden of Eden to dress .It and to keep It. And the Lord God commanded the man. saving. Os every tree of the garden thou mayest freely cat: But of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, thou shall not eat of It: for In the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die (Gen. 2: 15-17). The lesson-sermon also includes the following passages from the Christian Science textbook. “Science and Health With Key to the Scriptures,” by Mary Baker Eddy: * Divine Science deals its chief blow at the supposed material foundations of life and intelligence. It dooms idolatry. A Belief in other gods, other creators, and other creations must go down before Christian Science. At the Capitol Avenue Methodist Episcopal church Sunday, the pastor, the Rev. Joseph G. Moore, will conduct an international good will service at 10:45, speaking on “An Army Without Banners.” The night
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Banky Comes in Person in a Play
1— Mae West will open Thanksgiving day at English’s in, her widely discussed play, “Sex,” for a three-day engagement. 2 Here are Frankenberg’s Juveniles, a bunch of
sermon subject will be “The Old | and the New in Religion.” The Rev. Fred A. Line will preach j an Armistice Sunday sermon at the 11 o’clock morning service of Central Universalist church, Fifteenth { and North New Jersey streets. His j subject will be, “Three Flags." There j will be special music by the church j quartet. The Sunday school convenes at 9:45. y Dr. Edward Haines Kistler will speak tomorrow morning in the j Fairview Presbyterian church on, “One That Repenteth,” and the; quartet will sing Sir John Stainer’s j “Ye Shall Dwell In the Land,” and i Ernest Schmidt’s arrangement of the “Crusaders’ Hymn.” At the First Reformed church Sunday morning, the Rev. C. J. G. Russom, minister, will speak on “At the Place of Decision.” In the evening the dramatic society will present, “He Came Seeing,” a religious play. At Jhe Indiana Central college ; World Missions Advancement day j will be observed both morning and ! evening. Mrs. J. Hal Smith, former- ; ly a missionary to west Africa, will j speak in the morning. A playlet, j “Advancing Together in All Lands” j will be presented in the evening by i the Women’s Missionary Society and j the Otterbein Guild of the local j church, who will also have charge of 1 the morning service. George L. Stine, j pastor. The Rev. Floyd Van Keuren.: rector of Christ Episcopal church, I Monument circle, will preach at the i 10:45 a. m. morning prayer service tomorrow, the twenty-first Sunday after trinity. The other services will be a quiet celebration of the holy communion at 8 a. m. Church school at 9:30 a. m. and church hour kindergarten at 10:45 a. m. for small children, whose parents are attending the services. Confirmation classes are being held each Wednesday at 4 p. m. for children and on Fridays at 6:45 p. m. for adults. Next Thursday, Nov. 13, Dr. Lewis B. Franklin of New York will speak at an interparochial meeting of the woman's auxiliary at Christ church at 2:30 p. m. At the Hillside Christian church Sunday morning the pastor, Homer Dale, will preach on “The Whatsoever More of Christianity.” „ The evening theme will be “The Coin of Christian Character.” The Rev. L. C. E. Fackler of St. Matthew Lutheran church announces for his sermon subject Sunday morning “Mercy and Truth,” Righteousness and Peave.” In the evening at 7:30 the Rev. F. C. Piel of Cortland, Ind., will; preach. The Brotherhood will hold its j gala event on Nov. 13. 7:30 p. m., in! the form of a rabbit fry. In the First Moravian Episcopal church. Twenty-second street an£ Broadway, the pastor, the Rev. F. P. Stocker, will preach at 11 *a. m. ! o nthe subject “The Price of Peace,” j with particular reference to Arm- ; istice day. At the vesper service | at 4:30 p. m. the subject will be I “A Pursuing God.” In the Second Moravian Episcopal j church, Thirty-fourth and Hovey | streets, the speaker at the morning worship at 10:45 will be the Rev. j M. H. Barrick of the Central Y. M. | C. A. At the evening service at 7:45 i p. m. the speaker will be the Rev. j F. P. Stocker, pastor of the First j Moravian Episcopal church. “I Declare War” and “Jesus and I” will be the Sunday themes of the Rev. L. B. Moselet of the Emerson Avenue Baptist church. Home-coming day will be observed at the Edwin Ray M. E. church Sunday. The Rev. William Talbott Jones will speak in the morning on “Awakening the Household.” A dinner will be served at noon. At 2 o'clock there will be a song service led by former choir members.! Sr. O. W. Fifer will speak at j 2:45 p. m. A social hour will be j held at 4 p. m. with supper at 5:30.1
youngsters, who open today ai the Lyric on the stage. 3—Vilma Barky, famous screen beauty, will be seen in person in r. new play, “Cherries Arc Ripe,” at English’s nc:;t Friday and Saturday.
All Dolled Up
ill
Norma Talmadge Here is such a nice drawing of Norma Talmadge as she appears in "Du Barry,” which opens next Saturday at the Palace. The Epworth League devotional horn: will be held at 6:30 p. m. Albert Stump of Indianapolis will speak at night. "A Church’s Definite Program” will be the morning theme of the Rev. Frederick Burnham of the University-Park Christian church. At night a service in commemoration of Armistice day will held. "Hope” and “The Misunderstood Christ” will be the Sunday themes of the Rev. Clyde L. Gibbens oi the Garden Baptist church. The Rev. Ambrose Aegerter of the Beville Avenue Evangelical church will speak in the morning on “The Unseen Vision.” At night Dr. Deleth E. Weidler, returned missionary from Africa, will speak. At the Church of the Advent, Episcopal, the Rev. G. S. Southworth will speak in the morning on "Paradise.” , The annual thanks offering for Foreign Missions will be held at the First Congregational church next Thursday night. Miss Catherine S. Quickenden of India will be the chief speaker. "Some Lessons From Armistice Day” and "The Peril of Unforgiveness” are the announced subjects of the Rev. Victor B. Hargitt of the Brightwood M. E. church. "Peace or War” will be the theme of the morning service of the Rev. Joseph A. Mears at the First United Presbyterian church. At the Downey Avenue Christian church Sunday the Rev. B. R. Johnson will speak in the morning on “Let Us Have Peace.” At night, “Will America Come Back?” “The Man Whose Name Was Changed” will be the morning subject of the Rev. E. G. Homrighausen of the Carrollton Avenue Reformed church. At night the Rev. H. L. V. Shinn of the Immanuel Reformed church will be the guest speaker. The Dodd Mission at 609 East Washington street will hold an oldtime meeting on Saturday and Sunday nights. A Holiness meeting will be held at 3 p. m. Sunday with a night service at 6:30 p. m. Dr. Frank S. C. Wicks of All Souls Unitarian church will speak Sunday morning at 11 a. m. on "The Wisdom of Solomon.” "The Church of the Living God” and “The Cost of Discipleship” are the announced subjects Sunday of Dr. Alpha H. Kenna at the Roberts Park M. E. church The Rev Eldred W Johnson of the Meailawn Christian church will speak in the morning on “The Blessedness of Peacemaking” and “John Mark, Backslider Extraordinary.” “The Call of Modern Matthew” and “Working With God” are the* announced Sunday themes of the Rev. Ferman T. Taylor of the East Park M. E. church ' On next Wednesday night in the Central avenue gymnasium, the Central Epworth League basketball team will play the Southport team. At 8 p. m. a combined group fellowship meeting will be held in the church The Amigos class will serve. The class every night next week will join the North and Broadway churches in an institute to discuss citizenship and missions. "If Any Man Thirst” and “I Have Found a Ransom” will be the themes of the Rev. James Harper at the Christian and Missionary Alliance. The Rev. Howard M. Pattison of the Barth Place M. E. church will speak Sunday on the following themes: “The Significance of Temptation” and “By Divine Appointment.” “The Unfinished Task” will be the morning theme of the Rev. Wilbur D. Grasat the Fifty-first Street Methodist Episcopal church.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
The Epworth League will elect officers at 6:30 p. m. At Forest Manor Methodist Episcopal church, the Rev. Robert F. Laycock will speak in the morning on “Boldness Through Love.” At the Bellaire Methodist Episcopal church, the Rev. Walter B. Grimes will speak Sunday on “The Place of Fear in Religion” in the morning. At night, “The Family Altar.” An indoor camp meeting will be held at the Missionary tabernacle on East St. Clair street starting Sunday. Evangelist Perry Rood will be the speaker. Service will be held nightly at 7:30 and all day on Sunday. Cannon Alexander of All Saints’ Cathedral Episcopal, will speak at the forenoon service on “Tire Church’s Contribution in Making This Gold’s World. Tire Rev. Ira C. Dawes, pastor of First Friends church, will use for his subject at the 10:45 worship service: “The Wages of War.” Helen Marley will lead the young peoples service at 5:30 p. m. > In the Broadway Evangelical church, the Rev. Lloyd E. Smith will preach in the morning from the subject “Finding Your Own Level.” In the evening under the series of Bible Rogues the subject will be “A Study of Pontius Pilate.” Time Is Short to Enter Big Twin Contest
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No. 33
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No. 38
Less than a week remains for you to enjoy testing your skill to determine whether you know twins when you see them. Two more pictures are published today and two each day will be printed until Nov. 14. Copies containing the thirty-six pictures that have gone before may be' had upon application to The Times office or by telephoning Riley 5551. A beautifuM93l model Stew-art-Wamer radio is included among awards to winners.
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SYMPHONY WILL OPEN MARTENS' BIG SEASON Next Week to Be Important in Musical Circles of This City. Music comes to the front next week with some of the biggest artists appearing under the various auspices of individuals and organizations. The Indianapolis Maennerchor on Sunday afternoon at 3:15 o’clock will open its season with Dusolina Giannini, soprano, as the artist. As she is the most popular individual artist now obtainable by th% Maennerchoir because of her many triumphs here, Giannini will tax the capacity of the hall. On Wednesday night at Caleb Mills hall, Hans Barth will demonstrate his new quarter-tone piano under the auspices of the Orchard school. On Thursday night at English’s, Mrs. Nancy Martens will open her orchestral season with the Detroit Symphony with Ossip Gabrilowitch conducting. On Friday night at Caleb Mills hall. Frieda Klirtk will appear in a song recital under the direction of the Matinee Muricale. An event of more than usual social and musical importance will be the opening of the “New Home for Music,” English theater, next Thursday evening. This event will also mark the opening of the series of concerts sponsored by the Martens Concerts, Inc., with the famous Detroit Symphony orchestra and its distinguished conductor, Ossip Gabrilowitch, in a program of orchestral music. Other concerts under the Martens direction will include Walter Gieseking, genius, of the piano, on Thursday evening, Dec. 4, and the Minneapolis Symphony orchestra ori Feb. 17. . , . In adidtlon to the three evening concerts, one of the most interesting series of Sunday afternoon concerts ever brought to Indianapolis will present on Sunday afternoon, Nov. 23, Clare Clairbert, lyric coloratura soprano, whose American debut with tlie San Francisco Opera Company in September was one of the most sensational musical events of the day; Sunday afternoon. Nov. 30. the Don Cossacks Russian male chorus of thirty-six voices, and Kreutzberg and Georgi, famous dancers, will close the season of Sunday afternoon concerts on March 8. \ The complete program for the concert next Thursday evening follows: “Concerto Grosso. In D Minor” (for string orchestra) Handel Maestoso. Allegro. Air-Lento. Allegro Moderato. Finale: Allegro con fuocc. (Played without pause. ) "Seventh Symphony, in ” major”.... .•!•••. Schubert Andante: ailegro ma non troppo. Andante con moto. Scherzo. Allegro vivace. —lntermission of Ten Minutes—- “ Norfolk Rhapsody” Williams "Ride of the Valkyries” from “Die' • Welkure” Wagner Prelude and ‘Love Death” from “Tristan and Isolde” Wagner tt tt B KLINK TO APPEAR IN CONCERT FRIDAY On Friday night, Nov. 15, at 8:15 o’clock, under the auspices of the Indianapolis Matinee Musical Club, Miss Frieda Klink, the well-known contralto, will make her first reappearance in America at Caleb Mills hall. Indianapolis is the birthplace of Miss Klink, and after an absence of six years, she is returning with the enviable reputation of being one of the best contraltos appearing in opera and concert today. Miss Klink has sung thirty roles in the leading opera houses of Europe with outstanding success, and has been requested to return to Europe for operatic appearances next season. .Before leaving for Europe. Miss Klink won for herself a distinct following, and it is with anticipation that Indianapolis awaits her reappearance. Members of the Indianapolis Matinee Musicale admitted on membership cards. tt B BARTH TO BE HERE WEDNESDAY NIGHT A piano with twice as many tones to the octave as the regulation pian6 will be heard by Indianapolis music lovers Wednesday evening, Nov. 12. It Is the new quarter-tone piano, invented by Hans Barth and to be played by him in a concert at Caleb Mills hall, under the auspices of the Orchard school. The regulation piano has twelve ones to the octave. Barth’s newly n vented instrument makes use of wenty-four to the octave, thus making available to the artist harmonies which, it is said, will revolutionize modern pianoforte ihusic. In his concert Mr. Barth will play many of his own compositions which he has written for the new quartertone piano. In addition he will also play the harpsichord, forerunner of
MbH HE’S BACK AGAIN, FOLKS! ■7? The big-mouthed comedia a in the role of a Ik* star football player with campus fun and Hk 'llaBk; frolic as you’ve never seen before. If FUNNIER THAN “HOLD EVERYTHING" TW-MAYSr fVyivEg JOE E. BROWN c JOAN BENNETT yWKKm james hall . } * I “Red” Sleight of Purdue, Tim Moynihan m I , of Notre Dame, and the entire 1929 Ail*■l - American Football Team. Hip NBBKm
Trail of Death Is Left by Rickenbacker in Air War
This is the third and last of s series of stories on'Colonel Eddie Rickenbaeker. America's premier World war ace. just decorated by President Hoover with the Congressional Medal of Honor. Today's story tells of his tbrllUng air battles. In which he shot down twenty-six enemy aircraft. BY ROBERT TALLEY NEA Service Writer "ITT ASHIN GTON, Nov. B.—Two * * days after Eddie Rickenbacker arrived at the front to become an air fighter in Uncle Sam’s famous Ninety-fourth or “Hat-in-the-ring” squadron, he was off on his first trip over the German lines. Major Raoul Lufbery, an American who had fought with the French before his own country entered the war, took Rickenbaeker and Lieutenant Douglas. Campbell, another newcomer, on a three-man patrol in the Champagne sector. It was in March, 1918. and Lufbery—who had shot down seventeen enemy ships while with the Lafayette Escadrille —was then squadron commander. They met no German planes that day, but Rickenbaeker was under fire in the air for the first time when 80-pound German anti-craft shells began popping under and around him. He did not realize they had burst so close until he returned to his airdrome and found the tail of his plane had been punctured in several places. A few weeks later—on April 29, 1518 —he shot down his first enemy plane, a scout of the Pfaltz type that he and Captain James Norman Hall picked up near Pont-a-Mousson. They dived for the German and the latter started to run, with both Rickenbackerand Hall in hot pursuit. “I was gaining on him every instant,” Rickenbaeker has related, “and had my sights trained dead upon his front seat before I fired my first shot. “At 150 yards I pressed the triggers. The tracer bullets cut a streak of living tire into the Pfaltz’ tail. Raising the nose of my airplane slightly, the fiery streak lifted like a stream of water from a garden hose. Gradually it settled in the pilot’s seat. “The swerving of the Pfaltz' course indicated that its rudder was no longer held bjT*a directing hand., At 2,000 feet above the enemy’s lines I pulled up my headlong dive and watched the enemy machine continuing on its course. Curving slightly to its left, the Pfaltz circled a little to the south and the next moment crashed on the ground just at the edge of a wood a mile inside their own lines. “I had brought down my first enemy air plane and had not been subjected to a single shot.” tt tt tt That is Rickenbaeker's own story of the first of his twen-ty-six victories over German airplanes and balloons. That deed won him the D. S. C. To guard against exaggerated heroism, suppose we let the official citation of the war department tell about some of the others. “One bronze oak leaf is awarded Lieutenant Rickenbaeker,” continues the citation after making the original award for his first victory, “fev each of the following acts of extraordinary heroism in action: “On May 17, 1918, he attacked three Albatros enemy planes, shooting one down in the vicinity of Richecourt and forcing the others to retreat over their own lines. “On May 22, 1918, he attacked three Albatros monoplanes 4,000 meters over St. Mihiel. He drove them back into German territory, separated one from the group and shot it down near Flirey. “On May 28, 1918, he sighted a group of two battle planes and four monoplanes, German planes, which he at once attacked vigorously, shooting down one and dispersing the others. “On May 30, 1918, 4,000 meters over Janinoy, he attacked a group of five enemy planes. After a violent battle he shot down one plane and drove the others away. “On Sept. 14, 1918, in the region of Villecy, he attacked four Fokker enemy planes at an altitude o’ 3,000 meters. After sharp and hot action, he succeeded in shooting one down in flames and dispersing the other three. “On Sept. 15, 1918, in the region of Bois-de-Warville he encountered six enemy planes in the act of attacking four Spads, below them. Undeterred by their superior numbers, he unhesitatingly attacked them and succeeded in shooting one down in flames and completely the regulation jiiano, and also the regulation concert grand piano of the present. Barth’s program is as follows: “Gieus” Coreili (1653) “Gavotte’" Rameau (1683) “Minuet” Haydn (1^32 "Tambourine” Gossec (1<41) Harpsichord. “Sonta Wo. 3” Hans Barth “Rhapsodle E flat" Sr? 111 " 5 "Valse E minor” Chopin “Nocturne F minor” - Chop n "Etude B minor” Chopin Piano. 11l "Spirit of Dawn” Hans Barth "Prelude" ■ .Gershwin “North Wind" Hans Barth Quarter-Tone piano.
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breaking the formation of the others. “On Sept. 26. 1918. near Billy, while on voluntary patrol over the lines he attacked seven enemy planes (five Pokkers protecting two Halberst-adts). “Disregarding the odds against him, he dove on them and shot down one of the Fokkers out of control. He then attacked one of the Halberstadts and sent it down, also.” tt tt a IT was for the latter fight—a double victory—that Rickenbaeker was decorated with the Congressional Medal of Honor by President Hoover. These were not all of Rickenbacker’s victories. In September! he was just getting started. Before the armistice ended the war in November, he bagged eleven more planes and four German observation balloons. “Balloon strafing.” as it was called, was a thrill indeed and one of the most dangerous jobs that an airman was called upon to perform. These stationary balloons, moored b" a long cable, were necessarily close to the ground; each was strongly defended by its own antiaircraft battery, by machine guns and often by hovering planes. They were still more dangerous to attack because their fixed altitude and position made protection easy. Rickenbacker’s most thrilling experience in “balloon busting” came unexpectedly when he was returning from an expedition of “ground strafing (swooping low and ma-chine-gunning columns of marching troops off roads behind the lines). It was near Sivry-sur-Meuse on Sept. 28, 1918. Cruising along a shell-pitted road, Rickenbaeker suddenly came upon a group of Germans towing an observation balloon toward the front. It was moored to a moving truck and'yless than 300 feet above the ground. The Gennan observer saw Rickenbaker’s little Spad coming for him and jumped from the basket with his parachute. A moment later a stream of Rickenbacker’s incendiary bullets struck the big bag and it exploded with a blinding flash and deafening roar. tt tt tt Major lufbery. who took Rickenbaeker on his first trip over the German lines, died the death of a hero. A German incendiary bullet struck his gas tank and his plane exploded in mid-air. Ground watchers saw" Lufbery climb over the side and jump from the flaming ship. His body fell in an aged peasant woman’s garden. Lieutenant Quentin Roosevelt was another. Sergeant Thom, flying a red-nosed Fokker in Baron von Richthofen’s famous “Flying Circus,” sent Roosevelt down in flames. The Germans buried him with military honors and that night sent a wireless message to his outfit —the Ninety-fifth squadron—to tell his buddies that he had died like a hero. / Rickenbaeker once tried to “steer” a Fokker with a dead engine to an American landing field, rather than shoot a helpless enemy. The German’s glide, however, was not sufficient to clear the trees and he crashed. He crawled from the wreckage, uninjured, and waved a cheery greeting to Rickenbaeker just as some doughboys rushed up and made him prisoner. tt tt ALL told, the Ninety-fourth pursuit squadron in which Rickeifbacker rose from lieutenant to commander, shot down sixty-nine enemy aircraft between April 14 and Nov. 10, 1918. It was the first to go over the lines and brought down the last German airplanes to fall in the World war. And what about Eddie Rickenbacker today? America’s greatest ace, who shot down twenty-six German aircraft, twelve of them fighting Fokkers, has a quiet peace-time job in New York now. He is president of the Indianapolis Speedway and vice-president and director of sales of the Fokker Aircraft Corporation—marketing the machines he once shot down. THEEND. Wife, 74 Years, Dies Bv Times Special COLUMBUS, Ind., Nov. B.—Funeral services were held for Mrs. Louise O. Jordan, 74, wife of James Jordan, who died at the family home, ten miles east of here, following a six weeks’ illness. She was a lifelong resident of Bartholomew county, and spent her entire life in the vicinity where she died. She and Mr. Jordan had been married fifty-four years. She was an active member of the Methodist church. She leaves her husband and five children, Mrs. Harry Fogel Lloyd and Roy Jordan, Hartsville; Mrs. Wilbur Thurston, Gwynnville and Leroy Jordan. Seymour.
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Xj lS fwSttmMßf V BENNY RUBIN * * DOROTHY JORSAW H' tuneful talkie at I CHARLES CHASE TALKING COMEDY HEARST METROTONEWS MUSICAL FEATU|£TTE
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WORLD COURT ENTRY OF U. S. DEEMED LIKELY Hoover Is Expected to Ask Senate's Approval as Congress Opens, BY WILLIAM PHILIP SIMS Scripps-Hoffard Fereirn Editor WASHINGTON, Nov. 7.—Formal entry of the United Stateu into the world court now is regarded as likely during the coming session of congress. Administration speakers, from President Hoover and Secretary Mellon down through the rank and file of the Republican national committee, as never before, are stressing the vital hookup between America and the rest of the world. International conditions affect this country for good or ill, they declared over and over again during the recent political campaign. Our unemployment largely is a result of the depression abroad. Upon the assumption, therefore, that international peace and prosperity are essentioal to our own well being. President Hoover is expected, among .other things, to ask the senate to ratify -the protocol admitting the United States to* the world court. The President is on record as favoring such entry. But if he fails to act between now and March 4, the present Republican majority in the senate will give way to a coalition headed by Democrats and the initiative will be out of his hands Credit for the step would then go to the opposition party, and that on the eve of a presidential election SENIOR PRESIDENTS ELECTED AT TECH Five Boys Chosen; Other Officers Also Are Named. Newly elected senior class presidents at Technical high school are Ralph Simpson, Lionel Wiggam, Theodore Freeman. William Justice and Robert Brown. Other officers are: Vice-presidents, Helen Siefert. Helen Wurster. Bernice Markus. Louise Crouch. Virginia Hitchcock and Marthabelle Bond: secretaries. Wilma Rugenstein, Ruth Van Sickle. Portia Pltttnger. Josephine Gels, Helen Klaslng and June Blythe: treasurers, Le Mar Smoth .Owen Vicars. Norman Newbury. Harry Garman. Rudyard Jones and Edgar Baum: sergeant-at-arms. William Strar.g. Charles Voorhls. Robert Overtree. Douglas Ewing. Marshal Knox and Marshal Alexander. MOTION PICTURES
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n?> • i ki:z3 lHWhat would Sr ' ° 1 do with two husbands on : , 3\® nr wedding Ricy, spicy story of orange biosIpPw .' soms, bridal suites ’ and too many • husbands.’ 1C V A. fk, B OW let Hilarious marriage wow with— Skeets Gallagher Charlie Ruggles On tb Stage tfjk DAVIS spreadin* joy in "Harem Hoiu m" Morris Ac Campbell Sunny. Eddie 4; Eddie ARMISTICE OVERTIRE II How Go to Hold the Man S/ie|l Loves? I %?eyvde*> Universal sensation with CONRAD NAGEL GENEVIEVE TOBINROSE HOBART contort I •Wfteepee I || irsu- I
