Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 237, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 February 1931 — Page 8

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BOYS TO TREK INTO WEST ON EXHIBIT HUNT National Parks to Be Visited by Children’s Museum Caravan. Dawn breaking over hazy mountains, stillness save for a shoe's crunch on the sand, tumbleweed rolling In the breeze, and a few pup-tents crouched around the ashes of a camp-fire. Boys in olive drab crawl from the tents. Bacon sizzles in the frying pan. And you have just one of the otnes of the prairie trek camps of ihe Children’s museum, 1150 North Meridian street, as boys search out "here the west begins for museum pecimens. Fimi New Exhibits Seventeen boys went in 1930, and as many will go in 1931. t The treks are more than a byproduct of the museum's activities, .or they are productive of new exhibits for the shelves, in addition to making geologists, botanists, hcrpitologists and ornithologists ot the youths. The 1931 trip will broaden the work of last year, according to Arthur B. Can - , curator of the museum, by not only completing the last trek’s excavation of the mesa at, Sherrid Springs, but hunting newer fields. Travel by Auto Each trek is commissioned by the museum to bring back certain articles in addition to still and movie pictures of animal life encountered. Traveling in station wagons with the commissary on a ton and onehalf truck the trek becomes independent of restaurants and hotels. It would be possible for the boys and their supervisors to live eight days on their own resources. Hillis L. Howie is director of the yearly expedition. He is a graduate of the Culver woodcraft school, a teacher in Orchard school and owns the Brer’ Rabbit School of the Open, near Brendenwood. Howie is aided yearly by two competent university students who understand camping, woodcraft and Ihe needs of the museum. Explore the West Parents of children going dfi the trek finance the expedition. The museum furnishes a small sum for the purchase of mounted animals or odds and ends that can be picked up at bargains. “That's our need,” explained Carr, “good mounted specimens. Even our Indiana bird collection is shy on many species.” The 1930 trek visited “Ten Sleep,” the ranch of Ralph Hubbard, son of Elbert Hubbard; the San Luis valley; Mesa Vcrda national park in Colorado, Navajo lake near Cedar Breaks, Utah; Zion National park, Utah; the Kiabab National forest, the Navajo reservations, Canta Fc and Taos and the north rim of the Grand Canyon. The 1931 trip will retrace some of this ground, add new territory, and newer specimens. ENROLLMENT INCREASE SHOWN AT TECHNICAL Beys Outnumber Girls by 713 in School's Roster. An increase of 155 over last semester is shown at Tech with a total enrollment of 5,473. In the incoming class, 398 are boys and 297 arc girls. The freshman class is largest, with a total of 1,647 pupils, while the third year class of English V and VI is the smallest, with 1,062 pupils. In the entire school there are 743 more boys than girls. PLAN CABARET PARTY Speedway School to Hold Annual Valentine Celebration. Annual Valentine cabaret will be held at the Speedway school. Wayne township, in Speedway City, at 6 tonight. The program, sponsored by the Speedway Parent-Teacher Association. will be directed by Mrs. Florine Smith, president.

Popular Books Hi is list of the books most in demand by Indianapolis readers was compiled by the public library: ••THE HUMAN MIND.’* Karl Mentiinepr. ’CONQUEST OF HAPPINESS," Bertrand Russell ' BACK STREET. ' Fannie Hurst. •YEARS OF GRACE." Margaret Aver Fairbanks. "IMPERIAL PALACE." Arnold Bennett. "EDUCATION OF A PRINCESS." Marie. Grand-duchess of Russia. Most popular juvenile books at the public library: "TOM SAWYER." Mark Tuain. "ALICE IN WONDERLAND." Lewis Carroll. "LITTLE LORD FAUNTLEROY." Frances Hodeson Burnett. "HUCKLEBERRY FINN." Mark Twain. "BEARS OF BLUE RIVER," diaries Major. "TREASURE ISLAND." Robert Louis Stevenson.

Now Take Off Fat a Pound a Day on a Full Stomach

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Committee Greets New Students

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Members of the Washington high school hospitality committee are pupils with highest scholastic averages, and their duties are to help orient new pupils with high school life. Above, left to right, they are: Wanda Pcnizek, Francis Wright, Edythe Gingery, Helen Bingman, Lyla Fullen, Frederick Neaville and Helen Muterspaugh.

FOUNDERS’ DAY TO BE HONORED P. T. A. to Have Programs at Several Schools. Programs observing the founding of the Parent-Teacher movement will be held by several Marion county Parent-Teacher associations this week. Officers of the Lawrence and Oaklandon associations will be guests at a Founders’ day meeting of the Castlcton P. T. A. Friday afternoon in the Castlcton school. Progress of the P. T. A. movement since its founding thirty-four years ago will be the topic at the meeting Friday afternoon of the John Strang? association. Mrs. Fred Shidler will preside. Another Founders’ day program will be held at the Edge wood grade school Friday night. Problems of adolesence will be studied at a meeting of the University Heights Child Welfare Study Club Friday night at the home of Mrs. J. Shambaugh, 124 Bowman avenue. The Flackville P. T. A. will hold a “Father's Night" meeting Thursday at 7:30 p. m., with Judson L. Stark, attorney, as the principal speaker. HONOR POPILS TO BE GUESTS Anniversary Program Will Be Held at Nora School. Honor pupils of Nora school, Marion county, will be guests of the school's Parent-Teacher Association at a National Founder's day observance at 2:30 p. m. Friday. The event also will mark the fourteenth anniversary of the Nora P. T. A. Hostesses for the pupils will be: Mrs. Russell Newby. Mrs. Robert King, Mrs. Frank Sears and Mrs. Harry Irwin. Members of the school honor roll who will be guests are: . Glenda Cox. Kathleen Ingmite. Helen Lou Rose. Billy Ayers. Bobbie Rogers. Louise Clark. BUI Willcutte, Barbara Jean Osterhelc!. Rena Rue Vann. Scott Brewer Jr.. Georgians Landers. Shirley Landers. Theda Mae Meyers. Frank Cooper, Ruth Brown. Ethelyn Gillespie. Sarah Tvler, Clarence Gillespie, Franklin Overman, Bobby Newby. Jimmy Murry. Betty King. Elsie St. Clair, Shirley Talbott, Elmer Spencer. Esther Waggoner and Gretchen Huettrr.

spinach, cauliflower, cabbage, tomatoes. etc., and lots of salads. Eat a lot. Eat all you can hold. Don't go hungry a minute! Cut down on butter, sweets and desserts, bread. Eat any fruit except bananas, for dessert. That's all you do. Fat seems to melt away. The coarse lines of overweight give way to the refined ones of slenderness. You lose as much as a pound a day. You feel better than for years. For in this treatment you achieve two important results. The Jad Salts clear your system of toxins. ‘The diet takes ofl fat with food that turns into energy instead of weight. If T'>u re tired of being ewbarrassed by fat. try this wav. You'll be 'hat you did. You ran get Jad Salts at any drug store. •Note particularly— the ■•• airs are urged purely og a poison-banishing agent not as adducing. Tb® change in food dees the/? ork. —Advertisement. '

BUTLER COLLEGIAN STAFF ANNOUNCED

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Harlan Hadley

Mcdora Pupils Inspect Tech Seventeen high school students from Medora, Ind., visited Tech Feb. 3, and were taken on a tour of the campus by members of the seventh hour Advertising II class.

HIGH SCHOOL GIVES JOURNALISM COURSE

Museum Notes

Six types of bird houses are On display in the library' of the museum. and pamphlets on construction may be read there in connection with the bird home contest. One hundred and fifty boys and girls listened to Hillis L. Howie explain best methods of construction last Saturday. Those who are interested in entering a house in the contest may read the rules by applying to school principals, or by obtaining a copy from the children's museum. Entries must be in by March 11. There are six classifications for individuals and one group for boys or girl scout troops, museum clubs, camp fire groups and other junior organizations. Second talk of the third course for departmental representatives will be given at 9:30 Saturday morning in the auditorium of the museum, when Arthur B. Carr, curator, will speak on “The Indians of South America.” Among recent acquisitions at the museum is a mounted antelope from the Rocky mountain region, and several deer heads of varieties not among the museum's former collection, the gift of E. L. Lennox. Mounted animals are needed perhaps more than any other type of material in the local museum. More than 53 per cent .of the population of Canada is of British origin and almost 28 per cent of French, according to* the Dominion bureau of statistic;..

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES'

Members of the second semester staff of the Butler Collegian, student daily, have been announced by Professor De Forest O'Dell, journalism department head. Harlan Hadley, Danville, has been appointed editor to succeed Maynard Lemen, who graduated at midsemester, and Beatrice Burgan, 5154 North Capitol avenue, has been named assistant editor. Other staff members are; Edwin Hobson, new editor; Dorothy Quick, city editor; Richard Mitchell, community editor; Harold Templeton, sports editor; Charles Dayton, assitsant sports editor; Norman Hanna, night city editor; Max Schneider, assistant day city editor; Theresa Bagnolie. woman's editor; Adelaide Gould, church editor; Devera Cohen, exeditor; Helen Hitch, society editor; Ailene Mead and Mary Virginia Clark, assistant city editors; Honor Gregory, literary editor: Marguerite Jane Barrett, Isa Lawrence, editorial writers; Viglnia Seeds, .Marie Deßurgcr, Mildred Beard, rewrite editors; Betty Wilson. Martha Adams. Lillian Brafford, feature editors.

BEING STUDIED Trustees for Marion County Making Schedule. Uniform salary schedule for teachers of Marion county, outside Indianapolis, is being worked out by the county board of education, according to Fred T. Gladden, | county superintendent of schools. Schedule for the 1931-32 term will | pay teachers according to their training and experience. Robert Huffman is chairman of the schedule committee which will report next month. Other membei% of the committee include the following other trustees: J. Malcolm Dunn, Mrs. Maggie Maxwell, John Routon, Charles M. Walker and Superintendent Gladden. Marion county schools will hold a musical festival this spring under direction of Mrs. J. Hampton, supervisor of music in Perry township, Gladden announced.

Broad Ripple Dramatic Club Rehearses to Present ‘'Green Pastures/’ BY ALMA FINK MAN. Broad Ripple Correspondent. Journalism is being taught pupils at Broad Ripple high school for the first time this semester. Thirty pupils arc enrolled in the jtiass, directed by Ruth Carter, English teacher. Members of the class also visit Indianapolis newspapers to get the | practical side of the daily press. One of the largest journalistic projects at Broad Ripple during the | year is the publication of The Ripa- , rian, a magazine containing literary ; and art achievements of pupils. The dramatic club at Broad ! Ripple also is active this semester. : Members are preparing a drama, j "Green Pastures.” under direction of , Louise Pike, newly elected president. Other officers assisting the president are: Jean Ward, vice-presi-dent; Mary Margaret Cox, secrei tary-treasurer, and Myra McDaniel, parliamentarian. FLAGS TO BE PRESENTED Patriotic Groups to Hold Program at School 49 Today. A patriotic program and presentation of flags is to be hetd at 3 today at School 49, at 1902 West Morris street. Instructors of patriotic organizations allied with the G. A. R. will have charge of the program.

MOST HONORS GIVEN TO HIGH SCHOOL GIRLS Boys at Washington Lag Behind at Mid-Year, and Few on Honor Roll. BY JOSEPHINE HALBING Washington Correspondent Girls gained more than twice as many places as boys on the midyear honor roll at Washington high school, it was announced today by Mrs. Ina S. Gaul, dean of girls. Twelve high honor roll places were won by boys, while twenty-seven girls were awarded the same standing. Next highest scholastic averages placed fifty-one girls on the regular honor roll, as compared with twenty-five boys. Highest scholastic averages among the boys were won by the following: Marshall Smith, Ray Allen, Frederick Neaville, Glen Ludlow’, Michael Stanich, Mason Biven, George Mock, Stanley Lawton, Floyd Blake, Thomas Moffet, Ralph Howell and Edward Hiese. Girls on the high honor roll were: Virginia Miller. Cecelia Kupperschmldt, Edith Glneery. Wanda Fenizek. Elma Haworth. Jane Leonard. Christine Gareloff, Alice Walker. Eunice Vestal. Lyla Pullen. La Verne Conway. Elsie Stock. Frances Wright. Helen Bingman. Ruth Eldrldge, Mildred Fletemyer. Betty Branlgan, Helen Mutersoaugh. Geneva Cox. Dorothy Edwards. Lucile Bro'ch, Marv Margaret Wolf. Credella Campbell. Janet Nogle, Mary Louise Wilson. Lillie King. Edythe Flack, Lottie Gross. Mildred Morrow. Lucy May Powell, Violet Douglas. Ann Duke. Helen Sanford. Margaret Schoen, Ruth Fitzwater, Opal Nance. Catherine Twlgg, Mary League. Catherine Brooks, Edith Carter, Janet Ernst, Reva Wright. Dorothy Alexander. Josephine Halbing, Marguerite Halbing, Mary Slellev. Boys on the regular honor roll include: Donald Baldwin Norman Parnell. Leroy Stutsman, Morris Culbertson, Gilbert Specher. Edward Mock, Herman Fischer, Robert Hedge, Ralph Curtis, Frank Vargo, Paul Dunbar, Kenneth Scott. Russell Sendmeyer. Garrel Sexton. Vcrnis Garland, Emil Unser, Charles Gibson, Robert Flake, Charles Cox, Henry Kreutzinger, Sherill Richey, Walter Culbertson, Norman Curtis, Carl Pryor. Walter Pleczko. The following girls made regular honor records: Virginia Roth. Thelma Berry, Geraldine Kelly, Mary Brothers. Georgia Belle Weatherford. Corrine Gingery, Nell Hollingsworth, Lillian Montengro, Jane Fletemeyer, Frances O'Neil, Bernice McPeeb, Mary Elizabeth Johnson, Evelyn Biven, Dorothy Teepee Lenora Love, Ruth Henricks, Dorthea Burkholder, Thelma Baldwin, Marion Ratcliff, Ruth Toms, Dorothy Srader, Katherine Garnier, Audery Preston, Mary Condon. Lois Ely, Anna Lascu, Mary Elizabeth Jameson Irene Gross, Betty Douglas, Vera Smith, Evelynne Lewis. Ada Gooden, Margaret L. Trager. Vera Fowler, Ruth V,’alters. Evelyn Montgomery, Marcella Beaman. Rosamond Baker, Martle Wells. Sadie Miller, Helen Wilson, HHviers Mason, Eileen Duffy, Lucille Chambers, Helen Kunkle, Muriel Melvin, Ruth Gingery. Matilda Sparenf>lek, Norma Martin, Opal Hentz.

FACULTY AIDS FOR SHORTRIDGE NAMED

Staff of Assistants to Teachers at School Is Announced. BY JAMES ORR. Shortridge Correspondent.

Pupil assistants to teachers of Shortridg? high school for this semester have been appointed by faculty sponsors. Assistants in the high school book exchange and lunch room are announced by George M. Crossland, faculty business manager. Book exchange assistants are Dorothea Lane, Frances Miller, Lucille Westcrfield, William Blackburn, Von Roy Daugherty, Luth McCoy and Corliss Maxam. Lunch room assistants follow: Billie Klee. Robert Riggs, Gerald Blackburn, Porter Grant, Thomas Keller. Billie Dunn. Paul Holland. George Hale, Roy Breunig, Bessie Armstrong. Amy Carney, Barbara McClintock. Epsie Anderson, Zilpba Price, Nellie Murdy, Marcella Mark, Irene Werker, Anna Margaret Vorhces, Mildred Boyles, Elizabeth Davis. Jane Schnell. Evelyn Barnett. Marjorie Stettler. Helen Heller. Jane Coupland. Lois Hallam, Robert Quinn. Robert Jaeger. Carlos Catten, Billie Wilson, Robert Heckman, Howard Jewell. Willis Eikenberry. Robert Adler, Ralph lies, Robert Haase, Billie Goodwin, Bob Shaw, Lynn Jarvis. Edward Brown, Oris King, Robert Riggs, Billie Klee. Walter Voorhees, George Schofield. William Titus, John Bowman, Frances Yule. Ruth Harlan. Betty Leech and Christine Hilderman. History reference room assistants announced by Mrs. Neil Ridpath Sharpe, librarian, are: Frances Strong. Frances Shaw, Maxine

For COLDS We all catch colds and they can make us miserable; but yours needi/t last long if you will do this: Take two or three tablets of Bayer Aspirin just as soon as possible after a cold starts. Stay in the house if you can —keep warm. Repeat with another tablet or two of Bayer Aspirin every three or four hours, if those symptoms of cold persist. Take a good laxative when you retire, and keep bowels open. If throat is sore, dissolve three tablets in a quarter-glassful of water and gargle. This soothes inflammation and reduces infection. There is nothing like Bayer Aspirin for a cold, or sore tliroat. And it relieves aches and pains almost instantly. The genuine tablets, marked Bayer, are absolutely harmless to the heart. BAYER .V* PI It I N Atffinm u toe tnd* sunk cl Bayu lUaufocture ci Moasacetuftsuiatlr of aoUrylintnrt

MILO STUART TO SPEAK Shortridge Farent-Teacher Group to Hear School Official*. Milo H. Stuart, assistant schools superintendent. In charge of secondary education, will address the Shortridge Parent-Teacher Association at 8 Tuesday night in Caleb Mills auditorium. His subject will be “Dead or Alive.” Music will be furnished by the Shortridge Boys’ Glee Club, assisted by Miss Hope Bedford, soprano, and directed by Mrs. Laura C. Moag.

CANNON STAFFS AT TECHNICAL ARE ANNOUNCED Sixty-four PuDils Named to Positions on Paper. BY FRANCIS NIPP. Technical Correspondent. Names of sixty-four pupils who have positions on the two weekly staffs of the Arsenal Cannon, Tech publication, are announced by Miss Ella C. Sengenbcrger, instructor in journalism. Francis Nipp and Herman Champlin have chief editorial positions. The June semi-annual magazine issue of The Cannon will be edited by Lionel Wiggam, assisted by Louise Crouch. Other members of the staffs are: Staff One —Myrtle Berkshire, associate editor; Thelma Coleman. Richard Kautsky, Alberta Kasting, copy editors; Beatrice Roehm. school editor; Helen Thomas, feature writer: June Blythe, contributions editor; Carl Pflueger and'John Martin, sports writers: Harriett Brown, exchange editor; Mary Helms. Charles Alcorn, Melvin Lichtenberg. Kathleen Sims, assignment writers; Kathryn Addison, Katherine Herbers, Mildred Kellam. Margaret Maxwell, Catherine Vanhoy, Mary E. Woods, Robert Chupp. James Burrell. John Kingsbury, Robert Wray. Lowell Zufall, reporters. Staff Two—-Lorna Udell, associate editor; Kathrine Ross. Warren McDermed. Martha Mayo, copy editors; Marthabelle Bond, school editor; Patricia Bundy, feature writer; Robert Lybrook, contribution editor; Frank Newland and Scott Ochiltree, sports writers; Ruth Groseclose. exchange editor; Leonard Smith, Robert Hively. Eleanor Eldridge, Bennita Hite. Dorothy Kellar. assignment writers; Leberne Borgstede, Louise Gise. Geraldine Longest. Elizabeth Russell. Elberta Watson. Josephine Williams. Loy Baxter, Joe Childers, John Hutchins. Louise Kent, George Schmidt and Mildred Langdon. reporters. Business Staff —Kenneth Harlan, business manager; Ralph Schofield, assistant manager: Robert Dick, circulation manager; Robert Graves, assistant circulation manager; Bettie Belk, alumni recorder; Robert Moore, photographer; Elsie Zieboid, Delores King, Florence Scarpone, Josephine C. Luciana. typists; Lionel Wiggam, magazine editor, and Louise Crouch, assistant magazine editor.

Wright, Bertha Louise Drane. Virginia Bonifield, Anna Lewis, Gayle Thornbrough, Charlotte Sputh, Anna Leads and Wtlla.iane Boyce. Miss Ina M. Gaskill. school nurse, has the aid of the following: Dorothy Saylor. Mary McKinney. Ruth Collins. Sara Wills, Bowman Downey, Louise Robinson, Helen Schiesinger, Janet Collier, June Julten, Helen Naylor, Mildred Newkirk, Jane Beale. Miriam Van Marre, Newell Williams, Louise Staples and Hilda Hamilton.

CHILDREN NEED FOOD Contributions Asked to Aid Poor Pupils. Further contributions are needed to feed hungry school children, according to W. A. Hacker, assistant superintendent of schools in charge of social service. “Gifts from organizations and individuals to the free milk fund are being received daily, but SBOO more than now on hand will be necessary,” Hacker said. The problem of feeding children in schools, who get little nourishment at home, became acute a few weeks ago because of the general business depression. The social service department appealed for funds to provide food at the school building. It is expected to be necessary for the social service department to continue this work until May 1.

Physician Tells How Sargon Enriches Blood of Weak, Worn-Out Folks Despondent and Run Down From Dreaded Simple Anemia Explained by Former U. S. Army X-Ray Specialist, Dr G. C. Jones, M, D.

Feel renewed activity in every gland, nerve, muscle (issue and body cell eager appetite returns pale skin glows again—eyes regain their sparkle—aroused liver releases unbelievable old matter from lazy, tied-up bowels, and you tingle with anew sense of physical well-being.

“Ferro-lodized” Sargon helps to build richer blood for simple, anemia sufferers. It helps make you eat with a keen, hearty appetite. Next it helps you digesto what you eat, so your body gets the real good out of it. And then it sees that the left-over wastes are swept out of your bowels in the natural way before they decay and fill your body with toxic poisons and gas. The prominent Dr. George C. Jones, formerly X-Ray surgeon, U. S. Veterans’ Bureau, Pitts-

Mother of 13, Nervous and Frail o Puts on 15 Lbs.—Husband Gains f Youthful Sleep, Hardy Strength

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MR. AND MRS. THOS. B. REED Gratefully Aeknowledgc the Wondrous Good of Sargon

“Sargon has brought strength and happiness to both my wife and me and I would not take all the money in the world for the good it has done us,” declared Thomas B. Reed, well-to-do farmer and lumberman residing at 919 Holmes street, Kansas City, Mo. “I have suffered constantly from bilious attacks and splitting headaches that lasted for days a' a time. Everyth ng I ate disagreed with me. I would get so dizzy I could hardly stand up, and I was constipated all the time. I was nervous and did not get a good night’s sleep for years.

* gßr " )>aa ß Eminent Woman Doctor Urges Her Sex to Benefit by Sargon Ur ' Grace Kirkland's advice to women to let Sar--B°n P ul into your Checks the natural color that only II rich, red blood brings and keep your system free of the toxic poisons of constipation is a result of her W P ersona l examination of the Sargon lormulae, for which she was specially retained. “I have observed / * ■ the effect of Sargon in a large number of cases. I y; f ) know of many cases where it might be exceedingly ' —“ beneficial.'’ passes GUARANTEE ©FFERs 3 No need to delay. Begin taking Sargon today. You must start | 1 to enjoy renewed vigor, heartier appetite, sounder sleep and a 1 I glaa-to-be-alivc feeling from the very first pleasant spoonful— j§ 1 or you may return the partly used package and get your money I back. Sargon enjoys the hearty approval of eminent physicians is I only because it deserves it. If you arc sick and tired of drag- 1 | ging through life, put Sargon to the test and marvel at the re- 1 I suits! It is featured here by: 5 Walgreen Drug Stores § gs-riS:iSnSsSd “3srs I

/FEB. 11, 1931

burgh, Pa., retained to examine the formulae, not only agrees with this statement, but adds: “Sargon encourages sound, natural sleep without the use of harmful drugs or nerve sedatives by removing an outstanding cause, namely, the toxic gases of constiptation. “For those who feel their youthful grip weakening and the gratification of life's pleasures slipping away, Sargon may indeed prove a system builder and activator of genuine health.

‘ Sargon made a different man of me. My nerves are steady and I sleep like a boy. My old-time energy has returned and I have gained. 11 pounds. I feel fine all the time. ‘ Sargon helped my wife, who is the mother of 13 children, the same way. She has actually gained 15 pounds in weight and feels younger and stronger than in many yearsj” Mr. Reed was formerly a worshipful master in the Masonic order and Mrs. Reed is a beloved member of the Methodist church