Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 231, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 February 1931 — Page 8
PAGE 8
ANNUAL STAFF !S ANNOUNCED AT WASHINGTON Marshal Smith Is Editor for Publication of Senior Class. BY JOSEPHINE HAL BING W*hlnrton Correspondent Editorial staff of the 1931 Senior Post, annual publication of the senior class of Washington high school, is announced. Marshall Smith heads the staff as editor-in-chief, assisted by Virginia Miller, associate editor. Other staff member! are: Garland Burns, activities editor; Mary Rocap, sports editor; Credella Campbell, extra-curricular editor; Eunice Vestal, literary editor; Carl Stevens, assistant literary editor; Hazel Jones, photographer, and Emil Tjnser, art editor. Seven Candidates Initiated Assisting Unser are the following art staff members: Hazel Jones, Marian Ratcliff, Emma Perkins, Bernard Lansing, Doris Poteet and Russell Mclntire. Typists for the staff are Evelyn Biven, Jesse Neil, Irene Goss and Eleanor Davis. Among other club activities at Washington this week will be initiation of seven new candidates into the Hi-Y organization. Candidates include Irvin Scott, Carl Stevens, Robert, Viewegh, Carlin Cambden, Edward Heise and Rufus Wheeler. Senior Frolic Held The annual senior frolic was held in the gymnasium recently. The receiving line was headed by Unser, senior class president; Mrs. Ina S. Gaul, dean of girls; Worth Pullen, senior class secretary; Nell Hollingsworth and Muriel Melvin. The committee in charge of the frolic included: Pauline Clark, decoration chairman; Marcella Beaman, order committee chairman; Dorothy Schwab, chairman of entertainment; Dean Berry, dinner chairman; Muriel Melvin, service chairman, anti Miss Geraldine Reep, sponsor. OFFICERS ELECTED BY CLUBS AT SHORTRIDGE History, Fiction, Dramatic Groups Organize for New Semester. Clubs of Shortridge high school closed the first semester of school with the election of officers. The shortridge Drama League, sponsored by Miss Flora Love, elected Nan Elizabeth Reasoner president; Jeanne Kelt, vice-president: Richard Hoover, secretary, and Louis Darko, treasurer. A committee composed of Martha Belle Bright, Doris Milholland, Duanne McKinney and Della Dawson was appointed to have charge of programs. The Fiction Club announces Clea Shullenberger as president; Caroline Coffin, vice-president; Mary Vance Trent, secretary, and Donald Hadley, treasurer. Milton Heller was named program committee chairman. History Club officers are: James Wenger, president; Mignon Wagner, vice-president: Frances Stalker, secretary, and William Hatfield, treasurer. ORGAN SCHOLARSHIPS WON BY TECH PUPILS Charlotte Moore, Margaret Towell Successful in Tryouts. Two organ scholarships offered by Miss Elsie MacGregor each semester recently have been awarded to Charlotte Moore and Margaret Powell of Technical high school. The scholarship awarded to Miss Moore is for one semester, while the one given to Miss Powell is for half a semester. Mrs. Elizabeth Cochran, head of Tech’s music department, assisted in the tryouts which were held at the First Evangelical church, where Miss MacGregor is organist. PLAY TO BE PRESENTED Lawrence High School Club Will Give “Beads on String.*' The Altrusa Dramatic Club of Lawrence high school will present “Beads on String,” at 8 p. m. Saturday at the high school auditorium. Members of the cast include Verna Hopkins, Donald Wright, Harold Young. Richard Young, Walter Barbour. Ethel Garrison, Edith Barbour, Rose Hensiey and Archibald Voorhis.
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Staff of Arsenal Cannon
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Members of the editorial staffs in charge of publishing The Arsenal Cannon, Technical high school paper, are shown above. They are: Front row, left to right.
MOSEOM WILL HOLDCONTEST Pupils Offered Prizes for Best Bird Houses. Rules for a birdhouse construction contest for school pupils have been issued by the Children’s museum, 1150 North Meridian street, sponsoring the contest. A talk by Hillis L. Howie, boys’ worker, on “Easy Ways to Make Good Bird Houses and Other Methods of Attracting Birds,” at 10:3d Saturday at the museum, will inaugurate the movement. A display of unusual birdhouse models will be exhibited by Howie. After pupils have constructed houses, the finished entries will be submitted to the museum for judging. Entries must be delivered at the museum on or before March 11. Awards will be made prior to a public showing of models, March 15 to April 15. Books on birds and memberships in the museum’s junior division will constitute the prizes. Judges will be Joel W. Hadley, authority on bird lore; W. H. Gossett, assistant director of manual training in public schools, and Kurt Vonnegut, architect. R. 0. T. C. PREPARING FOR ANNUAL DRILLS Cadets Arc Urged to Compete for Efficiency Awards. City R. O. T. C. units are preparing for the annual federal inspection by drilling and devoting attention to care of uniforms. Cadets are urged to compete for efficiency awards by Major Thomas E. Cathro, professor of military science and tactics in city schools. A weekly honor company selected by Major C. A. Manseau at Shortridge includes the following cadets: Stanton Smith, Richard Schiller, Lawrence Kryter, Creath Smiley and Ralph Barnes. Francis Sonday and William Burich tied for honors in the cadet officers’ group. PUPIL’S POEM PRINTED Lionel Wiggam of Tech H. S., Wins Place in Magazine. Lionel Wiggam, senior at Technical high school, has had a poem, "Song of a Desert Rat,” printed in the latest issue of the Indiana Poetry magazine. 4 “Air Castles,” also written by Wiggam, won honorable mention in tire high school poetry contest recently, conducted by the American Boy magazine, in which approximately 2,500 poems were submitted. Lionel is editor of the semi-annual Arsenal Cannon magazine, to be issued in June.
Beatrice Roehm, Myrtle Berkshire, Francis Nipp, Herman Champlin, Lorna Udell and Marthabelle Bond. Second row: Richard Kautsky, Alberta Kasting, Martha Mayo.
ART WORK OF CITY PUPILS DISPLAYED
Parents, Teachers Invited to See Exhibition at School Offices. School pupils, parents and teachers are invited to inspect an art exhibition by elementary grade pupils in the art department at the school administration building, Ohio and Meridian street. The invitation was issued by Miss Florence H. Fitch, art director, who said the display contains the best work done by pupils last semester. Miss Fitch recently presented parts of the display before the Par-ent-Teacher Association presidents of the city, who higlily commended the work. Special emphasis on life and manners of peoples in other lands is the policy in teaching art in the schools this year. Miss Fitch said. Activities of people as correlated with other subjects such as geography, history and literature are showm by the display. Large illustrated panels in crayon made by whole classes working together are exhibited in the primary grade group. Stories of the foreign countries arc illustrated in this manner. Intermediate grades are exhibitj ing studies in symbolic designs of j the Indians, Egyptians and Rus- | sians. The designs are formed in I units and fixed on cloth panels. RECOMMENDS BOOKS Library to Give Advice on Children’s Reading, Special attention ■will be given parents desiring information on books for their children, the children’s department of the public library announces. The following books are recommended for children: “The Painted Pig,” by Elizabeth Morrow, a picture of Mexican life; “Aunt Brown's Birthday,” by Elsa Beskow, a sequel to other picture books dealing with Sweden; “To Market! To Market!,” a Dutch story by Emma L. Brock; “Angus and the Ducks,” by Marjorie Flack, one of the best books on pets this season. The book by Mrs. Morrow w f as written while her husband w T as ambassador to Mexico. She also has written verse.
ROTARY CLUB HEARS COLLEGE CHIEF SPEAK William Gear Spencer Addresses Group; New Members Introduced. William Gear Spencer, president of Hillsdale 1 ollege, Hillsdale, Mich., was the speaker Tuesday before the Rotary Club at the Claypool. Four new members were introduced. They are D. Reid Dixon, manager of the Kokomo. Indianapolis & Muncie Transit Lines: Paul O. Ferrel, vice-president of Real Silk Hosiery Mills, Inc.; Clyde E. Parsons. secretary of People’s Coal and Cement Company, and Russell C. Rottger. vice-president of Indiana Bell Telephone Company. PROPOSE FINANCING TAX House Bill Would Levy on Autt Radio Business. Calculated to raise an annual revenue of approximately $1,000,000, a bill was introduced in the house Tuesday by Representative George B McCammon (Deni., Madison > which 1 would levy a license tax of 50 cents ! on each SIOO of business done by I companies financing the sale of autos and radios. The measure also provides for an annual report to be made to the state auditor with penalties for ! omissions or falsifications. OBSERVE FOUNDERS’' DAY Founders’ day was observed by the Parent-Teacher Association of Margaret McFarland School 4, Marion county. Tuesday. A playlet, ’The First Valentine.’’ was presented by fourth, fifth, sixth and seventh grade pupils. A social hour followed the play. Veteran Newspaper Man Dies By United Press HOLTON. Kan., Feb. 4.-M. M. Beck. 92. known as the dean of Kansas newspaper men and father of Edward C. Beck, managing editor of the Chicago Tribune, died suddenly at hi&Aome here Tuesday night. *
THE INDIANAPOLIS TRIES
Thelma Coleman, Katherine Ross and Warren McDermed. Back Robert Dick, Kenneth Harlan, Louise Crouch and Bettie Belk.
Censor Texts Russ Empress’ Amours Too Much for Pupils, Says School Head.
By United rresi CHICAGO. Feb. 4.—History textbooks which recount the loves of Catherine the Great of Russia were ruled out of Chicago high school libraries and classrooms today as unfit reading matter for 14-year-old sophomores. The ruling was made by William J. Bogan, superintendent of schools, who was chosen for office when Mayor William Hale Thompson won his battle to “purge school books of favorable references to England. Bogan said he found passages “entirely too raw’ in Katherine Anthony's “Biography of Catherine 11, Empress of Russia from 1762 to 1796.” and criticised Miss J. Louise Hanna, Austin high school teacher, for assigning the book to her students. Miss Hanna replied with a challenge to Bogan to “censor” the shelves of Chicago high school libraries, declaring that the w r orks of Spencer and Shakespeave should be withdrawn if fault is to be found with Catherine the Great’s history. Among the passages Bogan called “entirely Loo raw” were these: “The love relationships of Catherine the Great form the most fascinating aspect of her life and' career. She has been celebrated as a northern Semiramis, a Russian Messalina.” “At the age of 60, the empress had no eyes for anything but youth. Her lovers had been growing younger and younger.” “Potiomin (designated as the fifth of Catherine's thirteen lovers) was a great Russian brute who drank outrageously and swore heavily.” BOOK CENSOR NAMED Chicago School Libraries Will Be Purified, CHICAGO, Feb. 4.—A censor of history text books used in Chicago schools was appointed by Superintendent William J. Began today. Bogan named Dr. Eston V. Tubbs, director of the bureau of curriculum, to head a principals’ committee which will “purify” high school libraries and outside reading lists. The committee particularly will seek out text books dealing too fulsomely with torrid romances like those of Catherine II of Russia. Katherine Anthony's biography of Catherine the Great’s eighteenth century loves will be the first to be banned. Bogan, acting on complaint of a high schoolgirl's father, agreed that the Anthony biography was “too raw” for sophomore minds.
Easy to Lose a Pound of Fat a Day on a Full Stomach
Do Jast These Zwo Simple Things —Fat Melts Away Here is a quick and easy way to take off a pound a day—four to seven pounds every week!—with never a hungry moment. A way any doctor will tell you is safe and sure. This is what you do: Take two teaspoons ordinary Jad Salts in glass of water half hour before breakfast every morning. This reduces moisture-weight instantly. Also cleanses your system of the waste matter and excess toxins that most fat people have, and banishes puffiness and bloat. Then do this about eating. FILL YOUR STOMACH—eat your fill—of lean meats, vegetables like spinach, cauliflower, cabbage, tomatoes, etc.,
WINTER TERM
HONOR ROLL IS TECH'SLARGEST Names of 1,085 Pupils Are Placed on Mid-Year Grade List. BY FRANCIS NirP TeehniraJ Correspondent Largest honor roll in the history of Technical high school is reported by the school office which announced 1,085 pupils on the midyear honor list. Heading the honor roll are Pauline Blackburn and Geraldine Longest with sixteen and fifteen and one-half points respectively. Pupils with straight A-plus cards are: Russell Burkie Pauline Fischer, Frank Newland, Blanche Schoneker. Thomas Wilmeth, Nevian Chess. Eleanor Eldridge, Douglas Ewing. William Young. Elsie Ziebold. Dugald McDougall, Walter Noffke, George Prout, Karl Stipher. Savo St,oshitch. William Strang. Bettie Belk. William Justice, Lavon Knowlton, Marshall Knox. Harriet Lindeman, James Ali. Ruth Bandy, Jack Brossart, Donald Brown. James Butcher, Miliicent Cummings, Deo Dawson. Edith De Hart. Esther Ehringer Emma Helkema. Lois Henderson, Doris Kasting. Sylvia Lichtenberg, Mary Lydlck, Paul McGuff, Edgar Manier, Marjorie Mason, Louise Moorman, Mary Morrison, Donn Nicewander Grace Noblitt, Frank Noffke, Francis S. Nipp. Zypha Palmer, Edith Marie Overtice, Marion Phipps, Don Roberts. Beatrice Roehm, Elizabeth Russell. Paxine St. Helens. Donald Scott, William Stevenson, Ear! Townsend. John Townsend. Walter Twlneham, Gertrude Walsh. Those who made fifteen honor points are: Dugald McDougall. Savo Stoshitch, Ruth Bandy, Sylvia Wchtenberg, Donn Nicewander, Paxine St. Helens. William Stevenson and Walter Twlneham.
‘rIRST GLASS’ RATING IS WON * Warren Central Given High Standing. Formal notification of first class recognition as a commissioned high school was received by officials at Warren Central high school this week. The school is the only one In Marion county outside Indianapolis so rated by the state department of public instruction. Teachers’ training and tire variety and class of subjects offered at Warren were deciding factors in the rating. Enrollment at the school this term totals 510 pupils, according to the principal. Vocational guidance is anew course added to the curriculum at Warren Central this term. The course started this week and will continue until the last week in May. Its purpose is to assist the pupil in proper study of vocations and selection of school studies to correlate them with outside activities, according to Hugo M. Gale, director. J. H." HOOKER ESTATE VALUED AT $400,000 Henry W. Bliss, Nephew, Is Named Administrator for Property. Estate of James H. Hooker, president of the Sinker-Davis Company, who died Jan. 24, is valued at approximately $400,000, according to attorneys who admitted the estate to probate Tuesday. Henry W. Bliss. 2905 North Meridian street, a nephew, was named administrator. Two sisters, Mrs. Margaret H. Bliss of the Meridian street address, and Mrs. Mary W. Thompson, 666 West drive, Woodruff Place, are the heirs-at-law. Hooker's personal property was estimated to be worth more than $200,000, with the balance in real estate. P. T. A. Hears C. E. Trueblood Members of the Cumberland Par-ent-Teacher Association heard C. E. Trueblood, Technical high school teacher, at their regular meeting Tuesday.
Best Sellers The following is a list of the six best sellers in Action in Brentano's New York stores: “Back Street." Fannie Hurst: Cosmopolitan, $2.50. A story of a grand passion and a woman’s self effacement. “Festival.” Struthcrs Burt: Scribner, $.1.50. Another brilliant novel of modern life by the author of “The Interpreter's House.” “Portrait by Caroline,” Sylvia Thompson: Little Brown, $2.50. A charming study of a modern woman and her friends. ■ Imperial Palace.” Arnold Bennett; Doubleday Doran, $2.50. The author of “The Old Wives Tale” has written an exciting story of modern life. “The Last Days of Shylock,” Ludwig Lewisolni; Harper, $2.50. Ludwig Lewisohn carries on where Shakespeare left off. '“Roman Holiday.” Upton Sinclair: Parrar & Rinehart. *2.50. A social satire indicting our modern civilization.
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Growing More Familiar
■* ’ ' grit-LfStt s^'V*'V
Tli is English starling, a darkcolored, metalgreen and purple bird with numerous white and y e 1 lowish specks, has been seen frequently by Indianapolis pupils, it has increased rapidly since its introduction from Europe several years ago. One flock noted near Crown Hill was estimated at
1.000 birds, and another large flock is being fed by residents in the vicinity of Fifteenth and New Jersey streets.
1,500 ENROLLED IN EXTENSION CENTER
62 Towns Represented by Students Attending I. U. Classes. Students from outlying parts of the state drive many miles to attend night classes at the Indianapolis extension center of Indiana university here. There are 181 out-of-town students registered, representing sixtytwo towns and cities. Shelbyville heads the list with the most pupils. Beech Grove Is second and Frankfort third. One librarian drives sixty miles with a group each week. Fortythree students are from rural communities, many of whom are pursuing a course of study extending over several years. Total enrollment for the semester just closing Is 1,446 different students and 1,944 class enrollments. The extension division also gives instruction in academic subjects to forty students at the John Herron Art school and fourteen at the North American Gymnastic Union, bringing the total number of persons taught at the present time in Indianapolis exactly 1,500. Most of the enrollments are in the general cultural subjects of the college of letters and science, although there is a large enrollment of teachers pursuing education subjects and of business men and women in the courses in accounting. business law, public speaking and economics. New classes in eighty-nine different subjects will be formed at the opening of the second semester, Feb. 9.
JOSSY TURNED OUT AS GRAND ROTTER The Faun Was Too Beautiful to Be Ridiculous But He Was Weak Enough to Cause Humans Tragedy. by WALTER D. HICKMAN JOCELYN MORLEY, known as Jossy, turned out to be a human rotter who was “too beautiful to be ridiculous” but cruel enough in an unintentional way to bring tragedy into the lives of those who loved him best. And Jossy with all of his beauty, his day dreams and his disregard to all conventions caused his wife, Barbara, to suffer most of all. Jossy could not pass on his great beauty, either physical or spiritual. His strange complex caused him to be a rotter when he could have been marvelous. You will meet Jocelyn Morley as the main character in Charlotte
Arthur’s “Poor Faun,” published by
G. P. Putnam's Sons. From the standpoint of being a psychological study of a man who practically defied classification, ‘Poor Faun” is a fine as well as being an unusual story. Jossy was married and he thought he loved his wife above every person but he had terrible mental affairs with men—one a lover of the out of doors. Still another was a tenor of great promise. And right on top of that peculiar turn of interest, he found time to seduce a young girl of a certain art club. And when he confessed all to his wife, he brought the victim of his passion to his own home, resulting in a real friendship developing between the girl and Barbara, the wife. Even when his wife was going to be the mother of his own child, Jocelyn runs away from home and all responsibility and goes cavorting around a wild section of California with a nature lover who lived in a tree. Then Jocelyn conceived the silly idea of causing this man to meet the girl that Jocelyn had seduced. The plot was a failure. And Jocelyn, the beautiful Faun, lost every real friend he had on earth. Death took away his baby. His abuse, mental abuse, of his wife, caused her to leave him after years of suffering. He even could not retain the respect of his men friends and in all of his misery, mental, at the end of the story, the sea beckons to Jocelyn because he had met two sailors who had set his mind on fire. Here is a strange story. It is dis-
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EVAN S' AT ALL GROOM
Talk Will Be Given at Museum
Third series of talks for departmental pupils will start at 10:30 Saturday at the children's museum, 1150 North Meridian street. The subject will be “Indians of North America.” Subjects and dates for other talks in the course are: Feb. 14. “Indians of South America”: Feb. 21, “Indian Art”; Feb. 28, “Modern Japan”; March 7, “The Philippines”; March 14, “Ancient and Modern Mexico.” Principals are requested to appoint two pupils from each school to attend this course, according to museum authorities. School children interested in soap sculpture may receive blanks, rules and booklets concerning a national soap sculpture contest by asking for them at the museum. This is the seventh annual competition for amateur soap carving. Prizes ranging from S3OO downward are offered in the contest, closing May 1. Presentation of anew flagpole and a collection of foreign objects, collected during travels in Europe, recently was made to the museum by Mrs. Richard Lieber. Another recent acquisition by the museum includes a large collection of early American war relics and curios, the gift of Dr. L. J. Baldwin, Westfield, Ind.
ferent. The main character is just one human contradiction after another. He is an interesting rotter in avery rotten experience. Jocelyn is a strange one. He will give you something to think about. n ft n Indianapolis theaters today offer: Kismet ’ at the Circle, “Free Love” at the Indiana, “The Naughty Flirt” at the Ohio, “Fair Warning” at the Lyric, “Sit Tight” at the Apollo, “New Moon” at the Palace, mo\ies at the Colonial, and burlesque at the Mutual. Shortridge Enrollment Higher An increase of 224 in enrollment at Shortridge high school is announced for the present term. Total number of pupils attending the high school is 3,172. The school was built to accommodate 3,000 pupils.
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FEB, 4, 1931
CONTESTS FOR PUPILS ATTRACT MANY ENTRIES Realtors Offer Prizes for Posters. Booths and Model Houses. Hundreds of public and parochial school pupils are expected to submit entries in three contests conducted by the Indianapolis Real Estate Board, in conjunction with the tenth annual realtors’ horn* show. Cash prizes are offered by the board to winners in three events, which will terminate before the home show at the state fairgrounds, April 11 to 18. Competitions are in the miniature model house contest with J. Ray Monaghan, chairman; the poster contest of which Ray S. Tent is chairman, and the miniature booth designing contest with Fay C. Cash in charge. Milo H. Stuart, assistant school superintendent, and Harry E. Wood, vocation training director, have cooperated in making it possible for grade and high school pupils to participate. Heads of the vocational training and art departments in the various local high school also are co-operating. Many Queries Received Monaghan reports that many queries about the miniature model house contest have been received from schools over Indiana. The contest is divided into two classes, one for grade school and the other for high school pupils. Three major prizes for each class offered arc: First, $29; second, $10; third. $5, and fourth to ninth prizes of $2 each. The contest will end April 4. The poster contest which will close Feb. 23 has attracted hundreds of art pupils annually. Prizes will be SSO for first place and seven honorable mention prizes of $5 each. Ray S. Trent, poster contest committee chairman, said the competition is to advance the spirit and mission of the home show and to arouse interest in home building and home ownership. The posters must contain the following text: “Tenth Annual Realtors’ Home Show, April 11 to 18, State Fairgrounds, Indianapolis.” Held for First Time The miniature booth designing contest is inaugurated for the first time this year by the Real Estate Board. Contestants are required to design a miniature booth similar to the ones arranged by exhibitors at. the home show. This contest will end March 9. Winners in this event will receive the following prizes: ' First, S2O: second, sls; third, $lO, and ten awards of $3 each for honorable mention. The miniature booths will be shown in the lobby of the Chamber of Commerce after the contest is closed. Details on each of the competitions may be obtained by pupils from the Real Estate Board office, 820 Lemcke building. Rules governing each event have been sent to all teachers by the three contest chairmen. Opportunity for children in city orphan homes and the James Whitcomb Riley hospital to enter the miniature model house contest sponsored by the Indianapolis Real Estate Board has been announced. CITIZENSHIP CLASS IS STARTED AT MANUAL Additional Enrollments Are Being Received; Opened Monday Night. Additional enrollments are being received in a citizenship class which started at Manual high school Monday night. The United States government is co-operating with public schools in offering citizenship courses to persons of foreign birth desiring to prepare for the naturalization tests. Instruction is given at Manual this term on Monday nights at 7:30. The length of the course varies according to the ability and training of the student. Courses in English preparing applicants for citizenship, with a speaking and reading knowledge of the English language as required for naturalization, are taught.
