Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 230, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 February 1931 — Page 3

FEB. 3, 1931

SCHOOLS HEAD WILL ADDRESS P. LA. GROUP Musical Program Will Be Presented Wednesday f at School 82. Paul C. Stetson, city schools superintendent, will speak at 3:15 Wednesday before members of the Parent - Teacher Association of School 82. The recently organized junior choir will present several selections. Joe Macy will sing, accompanied by Mrs. A. M. Macy. Mrs. Esther Arnold alo will sing and Alice Adele Hite will present two piano solos. Miss flora Dutchcr of the Marlon Countv Tuberculosis Association will speak *t School 12 at 3:15 Wednesday. A motion picture. 'The Priceless Gift of Health.” Jill be shown. The Iresh air rooms of Mlsr, Elizabeth Goett and Augusta Cobum till have charge of the program. School 1 will meet at 2 Wednesday. Mrs. tynora Coffin will speak on music appreciation. The business meeting will be followed bv a social hour. The P. T. A. of School 46 will meet at 2:30 Wednesday. J R. H. Moore, of Emmerich Manual Training high school, will give a patriotic talk. A patriotic play will be given bv the fifth grade children and patriotic songs will be sung bv the Mothers' chorus. The Rev. L. C. Trent will speak at the P. T. A. meeting of School 30 at 3 Wednesday on ‘Our Adolescent Bovs and Girls.” A group of patriotic songs will be sung bv the Intermediate grades directed bv Mrs. Ellis. The P. T. A. of School 14 will meet at 3:15 Wednesday. Mrs. Henry Hayward wIU speak on "Girl Scout Movement.” The Mothers’ chorus of School 15 will sing. Harry E. Wood will speak at the P. T. A. meeting of School 21 at 2:15 Wednesdayon “Educational Opportunities.” The program Is a radio lecture by Mrs. Btancn E. Chenoweth of Chicago, “Facing the Wind.” addressed to the Indianapolis Free Kindergarten Mothers’ Club. The P. T. A. of School 76 will have a tea In honor of mothers new to school at 2:30 Wednesday. Mrs. S. C. Copeland will sing. Mrs. Thomas Woodson, pianist, will give several selections. Miss Ida Wilhite, teacher of home economics at Butler university will speak at the P, T. A. meeting of School 51 at 2:30 Wednesday on “History of Dress." Illustrated with figures. The program wIU be a group of violin solos by Dorothy Woods. P. T. A. of School 10 will meet at 2:30 Wednesday. There will be a Lincoln and Washington program bv the children of the fourth, fifth and sixth grades, followed by a musical program. Executive board of the Federation of Mothers' Choruses will meet Monday with Mrs. Clyde Titus, 736 Middle drive. Woodruff Place. A business meeting will follow a luncheon. The Ladles quartet, conducted by Mrs. Weedon. will sing at the P. T. A. meeting of School 83 at 3 Wednesday. Miss Ml E. Sales will speak on “Teeth and Their Relation to Health.” Wilbur D. Peat, director of John HerTon Art Institute, will speak at the P. T. A meeting of School 33 at 2:45 Wednesday on “Child Appreciation of Art." The P. T. A. of School 53 will meet at 3:10 Wednesday. Mrs. Clayton Ridge will speak on “Parent-Teacher Work.” Miss Corrine Ryan’s IAB primary band will play several numbers and Miss Bernice Hanna will give a vocal solo. Mrs. Logan G. Hughes will speak at the P. T. A. meeting of School 35 at 2:30 Wednesday on “Character Formation.” The pupils of the school will recite poems on Lincoln and Washington. There will be a bake sale by rooms five and six. Executive board of the Parent-Teacher Federation will meet at. 10 Wednesday in the ladles parlor of th'e Fletcher-Amcr’lcan Bank building.

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Tom and Goldie

It’s from goldenrods like the immense twelve-foot specimen with which he is pictured here that Thomas A. Edison hopes to produce commercial rubber at his laboratory in Port Myers, Fla. The famous inventor has just returned to his winter home to resume the experiments, wliich he hopes will make the United States no longer dependent on other nations for its rubber.

Gone, but Not Forgotten

Automobiles reported to police as stolen belong to: Thomas Long, 1518 Bast Eighteenth street. Chrysler roadster. 732-160 (1930), from 1608 Martlndale avenue. Mrs. Joseph E. Rudd. Connersvllle. Ind.. Lexington sedan, 289-674. from Senate avenue and Market street. Roscoe Bredell. 132 West Twenty-sixth street. Hudson coach, from 231 East Pratt street. Irvin Temler. 830 Union street, Buick sedan, from 830 Union street. Leonard Martin. 1503 Asbury street. Wlllys-Knight sedan, from garage In rear Os 1503 Asbury street. Harry Oliver. 18 South Tuxedo street. Ford roadster. 769-667. from Hunter and Woodlawn avenues.

BACK HOME AGAIN

Stolen automobiles recovered by police belong to: Taylor Carpet Company. 110 South Meridian street. Ford coupe, found in rear of 850 West Twenty-fifth street, car stripped of tires, battery and license plates. Joe Nash. Apt. 57. Pinex Court., Hudson sedan, found at Emerson avenue and Washington street. Louis Gordon. 519 North Davidson street. Reo sedan, found at Emerson avenue and Washington street. Fashioned cf straw, a large clock, constructed by a German, is said to keep accurate time. The maker devoted his spare time over a period of fifteen years to the task.

WORLD TO HEAR VOICE OF POPE IN RADIO TALK Speech Will Inaugurate New Vatican Station on Feb. 12. By United Brest VATICAN CITY, Feb. 3.—The Voice of Pope Pius XI will be heard throughout the world when his holiness broadcasts a speech at the inauguration of the new Vatican radio station Feb. 12, the ninth anniversary of his coronation. The entire ceremony at the station, which will be presented to the holy see by Senator Gugielmo Marconi, wireless pioneer, will go on the air. Marconi already has made tests etsablishing contact with stations in England and the United States. Further tests were to be held today. The Vatican station's call name is HVI. It is available for both telegraphy and telephony. 'The station was built by the Marconi com-

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

pany and designed by Senator Marconi for the Vatican's use. It is located in the Vatican gardens, where two tall aerial masts stand near the operating rooms. The transmitting tubes are of 20 kilowatt power, with a special cooling plant, establishing a world-wide transmitting radius. The station works on two short waves. The shorter wave will be used during daylight and the other during darkness. Inauguration of the Vatican station will bring the head of the Catholic church into direct communication with millions of Catholics in all parts of the world, and will mark another innovation sanctioned by the pope in the modernization of Vatican City. School Chiefs to Meet By Times Special PORTLAND. Ind., Feb. 3.—The annual meeting of the Indiana City Superintendents’ Research Club will be held here Wednesday and Thursday, with Frank E. Allen, Muncie city school superintendent, as one of the speakers. He will discuss educational finances. Father of Nine Kills Self TWELVE MILE, Ind., Feb. 3. Despondency over his wife’s health is believed to have prompted Alpha Bockover. 45. railroad section workman. to hang himself. He was the father of nine children.

BLESS THROATS OF THOUSANDS IN CHURCH RITE Actor, Singers, Business Men Take Part in Unique London Ceremony. By United Press LONDON, Feb. 3.—More than three tliousand persons crowded into the Roman Catholic church of St. Etheldretia today for the ceremony of the blessing of the throat. The ceremony has its origin back in 316 A. D., when St. Blaise, the patron saint of wool combers had his throat torn with a woolcombers’ iron comb when he suffered martyrdom. On the way to his death he saw a boy chokin'; with a fishbone in his throat. St. Blaise touched the boy's throat, the bone immediately became dislodged and the boy’s life was saved. The ceremony has been observed at the Etheldreda’s since 1875 and is

associated with the feast of St. Blaise. Father Bernard Roe, the rector, assisted by another priest held the crutch of crossed lighted candles to the throats of the suppliants while kneeling at the altar and repeated the following prayer over each one: “Through the intercession of Saint Blaise, bishop and martyr, may the Lord deliver thee from all evil of the throat, through Christ our Lord, amen.’’ Numerous prominent actors, singers and public figures regularly attend St. Etheldreda’s on this occasion and may claim to have been cured of throat ailments as a result. Business men, stenographers and office boys also a among the suppliants. Father Roe used to perform the ceremony alone, but during recent years the numbers attending the service have grown so vast that he now has to call on the sendees of another priest. A pencil eraser will polish a gold piece and make it lock fresh from the mint. Try This Simple Method For Blackheads It you are troubled with these un-, sightly blemishes get two ounces of Calonite powder from any drug store. Sprinkle a little on a hot wet cloth and rub over the blackheads. In a few minutes every blackhead big or little, will be dissolved away entirely.— Advertisement.

Injured Girl Arks 530.000 By Times Special MICHIGAN CITY. Ind . Feb. 3 Injuries suffered by Myrtle Denton, 17-year-old Hammond girl when an automobile in which she was riding was struck by a train have re-

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suited in filing of a $30,000 damage suit against the Michigan Central railroad in La Porte superior court here. It is alleged the train had no headlight and that a warning signal at a crossing was not in operation.