Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 272, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 March 1931 — Page 9

MARCH 25, 1951'-

REALTY BOARD'S MODEL HOUSE DEADLINE NEAR Pupils Urged to Complete • Entries Soon; Show Ten Days Aaway. With the close of the miniature model house contest of the Indianapolis Real Estate Board But ten days away, school children are urged ’o complete their projects by that ume. Competition opened several weeks go and will end April 4. All con’cstants are requested to deliver 'heir model houses to the manufacturers' building at the state fairground, where the tenth annual Realtors Home Show will be held April 11 to 18. J. Ray Monaghan, chairman ol he contest committee, reports that a large number of grade and high -chool pupils are participating in he contest. Some entries also have been made by pupils in other cities <nd towns over the state, he said. Large Entry Expected A large number of entries are expected from Manual high school, Monaghan stated. He also reported •hat Broad Ripple high school, Shortridge high school, Washington oigh school and Arsenal Technical high school will be represented in ; he contest. Realtors are assisting Monaghan m the direction of the contest. They -re: C. J. Corbin, William L. Hackemeyer, Ralph E. Hucber, E. A. Heassler, Alvin Jose, Howard W. Fieber, Joe J. Schoen, Wayne Temple, ! Anest L. Spickelmier, Jack Morion, W. T. Clifford and L P. • ikely. Others who are assisting ‘he real estate board in the event re as follows: 3cout Executive F. O. Bclzer. Harry ood. director of vocational training in 1 e nubile schools: E. C. Bclzer of the Indiana Hell Telenhono Company; Paul Co- > rt. Manual Training hlch school: Jacob Ifnes. Arsenal Technical high school; larold Hardinsr. Qeorco Washington high chool: Hubert Wann. Broad Ripple high chool; W I, King. Crlsnus Attucks high chool: O. W. Trlckev. Manual Training Jgh school, and Burton Knight. George "ashlngton high school. Many Prizes Offered Three sets of cash prices are being offered by the Real Estate Board to the winners. One set is for high school pupils who create their own designs. Another set is for high chool students who use the cut-out design furnished by the Real Estate Board, and the third set is for grade • chool pupils who use the cut-outs. Prizes in each class are: First, S2O; second, $10; third. $5, and six awards of $2 each. Monaghan announced all entrants, upon delivering their models to the • manufacturers’ building, will receive a free ticket to the exposition. Deliveries may be made on Friday, April 3, from 3 to 6 p. m., on the ’ollowing day from 8 a. m. to 3 p. m.

RADIO WILL DEPICT LIFE OF ROOSEVELT x'hool of Air Program Monday Based on Ex-President. A dramatization of the life of Theodore Roosevelt will be presented o school children by the American School of the Air and radio station WFBM through a coast-to-oast network of the Columbia system at 1:30 p. m. Monday, March 30. The program will feature two or i hree incidents connected with Roosevelt’s entrance into politics, his first rise to political fame and an almost unknown incident which happened i to him when he was a ranchman. The drama, which opens in 1880 with Roosevelt as a young member of the Republican Club of the Twenty-first district, New York, and ends in Dickinson with Roosevelt lodging some prisoners with the sheriff after a 300-mile journey, has been adapted for the radio by Henry Fisk Carlton. R. 0. T. C. CADETS PROMOTED AT TECH ;->ix New Officers Commissioned After Examinations. Six boys at Arsenal Technical high chool recently were awarded R. O. T. C. commissioners following a competitive examination held under direction of Sergeant Chester A. Pruett, in charge of the unit. The tests were to fill vacancies ■aused by cadet commissioned officers completing their courses. Those commissioned second lieutenants were: William Manning, Maurice Ireland, John Shimer, Francis Raub, Howard Bissell and Charles Reed. Cadets who were officers last semester and were advanced according to seniority were: Robert Moore, from lieutenant to major; Byron Padget, James Munro and Savo Stoshitch, first lieutenants to captains: Edwin Boweres, Loy Baxter, Robert Halstead, Edgar Baum and Max Wells, from second to first lieutenants. Butler Choir to Sing The first program by the Butler university choir will be given tonight m the Zion Evangelical church, under the direction of Franklin N. Taylor.

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Beech Grove Parent-Teachers

R. 0. T. G. WILL GIVE MINSTREL Crispus Attucks Show to Have Cast of 30. A cast of thirty pupils will participate in a minstrel to be given by the R. O. T. C. of Crispus Attucks high school April 9, under the direction of Mrs. Stella Walker and other teachers. Members of the cast include: William Coleman. Edgar Hill, James Brown, Franklin Thompson, James Mullin, Ronald Saunders, as end men, and Ulysses Simmons interlocutor. Each of the five R. O. T. C. companies has selected three girls to sponsor the ticket sale. Os the fifteen girls, the one selling the largest number of tickets will receive the title of “Miss Attucks” and a gold wrist watch as a prize. Girls selected are Misses Elizabeth Hodge, Ruth Hamlin, Jean Coston, Gladys Benson, Lillian McArthur, Georgia Breach, Jamesetta Hodge, Margurite Gomez, Lillian Wortham, Lucille Taylor, Cordelia Jarman, Rowena Hardrick, Lama Porter, Maymie Manning and Edna Harris. CHILDREN’S MUSEUM Sixty-six bird houses entered in the annual bird house contest sponsored by the children’s museum will remain on display at the museum until April 15. ‘Winners of first places in the various classes were: Class A, for boys under 12 years, Phillip Kirkpatrick, School 1.; Class B, girls under 12, Mary Furscott, Orchard school; Class C, boys 12 years and over, David Speers, Park school: Class D, girls 12 years and over; Margaret Volz, School 8; Class E. best feeding station made by a boy, Howard D. Miner, Park school, and Class F, best feeding station made by a girl, Martha Jackson, Orchard school. Books on bird life were given as first prizes. Junior memberships for the museum for 1931 were given the thirty pupils receiving honorable mention. A moving picture film of bird life will be shown at the regular 10:30 o'clock children’s hour Saturday in the auditorium of the museum. Children of school age are invited. Boys from the Bth grade of School 10 will act as junior guides. During the past school week pupils from the following buildings visited the museum: Schools 8, 12, 16. 22. 35, 41, Tudor Hall, Lawrence township school, two rooms at School 62 and six rooms at School 40. There will be no departmental classes at 9:30 on Saturdays, until April 11 when anew course of talks will begin.

MANUAL HAS EXHiBIT Art Work of Graduates Now on Display, Work of eleven graduates of Manual high school, now students at the John Herron Art institute, is on display at the high school under direction of Miss Edna Mann Shover, Herron Art school principal, and Miss Estelle Peele Izor, art department head . t Manual. The exhibit, arranged especially for Manual pupils, also is open to the public today, Thursday and Friday from 9 a. m. to 3:30 p. m. The list of exhibitors and dates they were graduated from Manual follow: Elmer Spenner. 1913: Cleta Marsh, 1927: XI a vine Seim, 1928: Marie Shanks, 1928; Herbert Higgins. 1928: lona Johnson. 1929: Martha Walthers, 1929; Ruth Noerr. 1930; Harold Horwitz, 1930. and Nellie Truitt, who entered the institute in February. JOBLESS CUTTING WOOD C. of C. Made Work Committee Backs Unemployment PlanCord wood for fireplaces, prepared and delivered by unemployed men, is offered citizens at special prices, officials of the Chamber of Commerce “made work” commission announced today. Cut in suitable lengths and semiseasoned, the wood will be delivered and stacked to suit the purchaser at prices of $3.50 a cord or two cords for $6.75. It can be obtained by telephoning the emergency work headquarters, Lincoln 1551.

Members of the Parent-Teacher Association in Beech Grove are, reading from left to right: First Row —Mrs. Walter A. Saffell, Mrs. Bert J. Jenssen, directress of the choral club; Mrs. Roland L. Stewart and Mrs. David L. Mann. Second Row—Mrs. Joe M. Dugan, Mrs. Eart E. Singleton, Mrs. Carl Dunlap and Mrs. Byron Saunders. Third Row—Mrs. Carrol McDonald, Mrs. Bernard Koehring, Mrs. John Ferris, Mrs. Everett Ryan and Mrs. Frank Vestal, accompanist. Mrs. Fred Parker and Mrs. Charles Adams are not present in the picture. ORCHESTRA TO PLAY AT P, T. A. SESSION Members of Ensemble Group for Entertainment Named. Music for a city-wide dinner of Parent-Teacher Assoications at Technical high school Thursday will be provided by two high shoo"l ensemble orchestras, directed by Henry Hobert and Kenneth Alyea. Pupils who will take part in the groups are: Marjorie Goldsborough, Ruth Brenton. Mary Ann Kullmer. Martha Atherton Mabelle Schumacker, Gertrude Saxton Hazel Guio. Alice Green. Betty Randall, Ada Louise Ryan, Doris Mae Brady. James rriby. Clarence Lenker. Douglas Ewine. Thomas Wood. Edward Fritts. Marrraret Clawson. Stanley Hoeltzer. Harold KottlowsKi. Donald Gwninn. William Schneider. Richard French. Richard Morrissey. J ?. hn Kenneth Colgrove. Jeanette Petti John. Alice Washburn, James Reic. William Hebert, George Carothers. Robert Kuerst. Ralph Schofield. Richard Jones. William Fox and James Westover.

DISCUSSION LEAGUE CONTEST SLATED

William Otto, Shortridge, Chairman of High School Event. William N. Otto of Shortridge high school, has been appointed chairman in charge of the state high school discussion league contest for Marion county. Mrs. Adele K. Bittner of the Indiana university extension division, today announced the names of county chairmen for the fifty-four different counties entered in the discussion league contest this year. The local meets for the contest were held in the various communities a week ago. District meets in which the county contest winners will participate will be held April 10. One winner from each of the thirteen congressional districts will be entered in the state meet at Indiana university, April 24, Mrs. Bittner explained. At this time, the champion high school orator of Indiana will be chosen and will be awarded a gold medal. A silver medal and a bronze medal will be awarded to the winners of second and third places. The subject for discussion this year is “The Chain Store.” Approximately 1,300 Indiana high school students were entered in the local meets of the state contest, according to Mrs. Bittner.

County Children Will Plant 20,000 Walnuts

Ceremony Will Be Part of School Pupils’ Arbor Day Program. Four thousand Marion county school children from the fifth, sixth, seventh and eighth grades will plant 20,000 walnuts on April 19, as part of the Arbor day observance. The planting program has been arranged by the Marion County Fish and Game Protection Club. Walnuts are to be secured from the forestry division of the state conservation department. President Gerry Winders of the club asserts that this is the largest planting program ever attempted in Marion county. ' The children will not include pupils of the Indianapolis city schools, he said. State forestry officials estimate that 20.000 tested walnuts, planted by the children on Arbor day, should produce at least 16.000 trees. The nuts will be planted along streams, highways, school yards and on laVms of churches and public buildings. Exercises will be held at

Useful for Club Women Then ycu will find very useful a group of four bulletins which our Washington Bureau has ready for you in a single packet of particular interest to clubwomen. The titles are: 1. The Club Woman's Manual 3. Parliamentary Law Simplified 2. Debator’s Manual 4. Common Errors in English This packet of four bulletins will be sent to any reader on request. Fill out the coupon below and send for it. CLIF COUPON HERE Dept. A-10. Washington Bureau, The Indianapolis Times, 1322 New York Avenue, Washington, D. C. I want the packet of four bulletins for CLUBWOMEN, and inclose herewith 15 cents in coin, or loose, uncanceled United States postage stamps, to cover return postage and handling costs. Name Street and No City s la te I am a reader of The Indianapolis Times (Code No.)

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

PLAN SNOW OF SCHOOL WORK Poetry Projects Will Be Especially Encouraged. The teachers’ special library in in the old library building, Ohio and Meridian streets, is planning to co-operate w r ith the city schools in encouraging the best original work of children in the elementarry grades. An exhibit of children’s work will be held from April 6 to 30, which will feature children’s creative response to poetry, according to Miss Kate Dinsmore, librarian. It will include original poems, illustrations of poems, dramatization and stories interpreting ideas generated by poetry. Paul Stetson, school superintendent, has requested that examples of the pupils’ work been sent to him for inspection after the exhibit. Poetry anthologies and volumes of poetry may be taken from the teachers’ special library. The children’s department at the central library and the seventeen neighborhood branch libraries are planning to co-operate by displaying collections of poetry for children which may be borrowed on a library card. All the elementary schools in the city are urged to submit examples of the pupils’ work.

CHILDREN’S BOOKS

Indian stories and legends are in constant demand at the public library. Here are some books which the children’s room recommends •‘Queer Person,” by Ralph Hubbard— The story of a little deaf Indian boy who turned out to be a chief, the old story of Prince Charming dramatically told against an authentic Indian, background. “Book of Indian Crafts and Indian Lore,” by Julian Harris Saloman—This book tells about all phases of Indian life, their dress, weapons, music, games and dances. It is fully illustrated. “With the Indians In the Rockies,” by James Willard Schultz—A vivid account of the northwest trading posts in 1855 based on the true adventures of Thomas Fox. He made friends with an Indian boy and while trapping with him, was cut oft by snow and blizzards. The boys were obliged to spend the winter alone in the mountains. “White Captain.” by Georgia Fraser— Along with this absorbing story of Captain John Smith, runs an equally convincing story of the Indian princess. Matoka. to whom the white men gave the name of Pocahontas. The tale ends with the princess’ triumphant progress in England and a pathetic hint of her early death. For older boys and girls. “Indian History for Young People,” by Francis Samuel Drake—An excellent history of the Indians for young people. “The La#i of the Mohicans,” by James Fenimore Cooper—This book continues to be one of the most popular books for boys. It is the story of Hawkeye and Uncas in the French and Indian war and the siege of Fort William Henry. The capture of the two young girls by the Indians, and the efforts of an English officer to rescue them.

each school and men from the state forester’s office .and the state nursery at Henryville will be on hand to instruct in proper method of planting. RABBI SPEAKS TO CLUB War Attacked by Jewish Leader at Rotary Luncheon. “War is a conspiracy backed by authority,” said Rabbi I. E. Philo of Youngstown, 0., chairman of the Rotary international committee on world peace in that city, at the Tuesday luncheon of the Indianapolis Rotary Club at the Claypool. The recognized legality of war, and nationalistic concepts of patriotism and sovereignty were cited as being great obstacles in the way of settlement of international disputes by reason, rather than the force of war. “Cancellation of war debts should serve as an evidence of international mindedness and good will,” he said.

HONOR ROLL AT TECHNICAL HIGH TOPPED BY GIRL Leads 1,059 Students With 15V2 Honor, Points; Boys Tie for Second. Leading 1,059 Technical high school pupils in scholastic honors for the first grade period, Sylvia Lichtenberg has been named for highest honors on the school honor roll. She obtained 151a points. Second place on the honor roll was won by three boys: Charles Fisher, Robert Lunsford and William Stevenson, who tied with 15 1 3 honor points each. Those with straight A plus cards are: Melvin Lichtenberg. Russell Burkle. Marie Sue Eisenhut. William Young, Nevian Chess, Wayne Cole, Margaret Sandstrom. Leah McDermet, James All, Fred Cox, Miilicent Cummings. Mary Mae Endsley. Charles Fisher. Carol Helser. Lois Henderson. Robert Lunslord, Francis S. Kipp. John Nutter. Edith Overtree. Marion Phipps. William Stevenson. Richard G. Smith. Lewis Vogler. Mary Adele Weaver, and Bob Williams. Pupils with 14 hqnor points are: Dorothy Shugert. Kathryn Knfepper. George Mesmer and Walter Twineham. Those with 13 points are: Russell Burkle. Fred Cox. Lucy Daily. Lois Henderson. Hudson Moore. John Nutter. Beverly Zalczzl and Melvin Lichtenberg have 13 Vs points: while Onida Jones. Kathryn Borman. Leah McDermet. Helen Bishop. Violet Porter. Elizabeth Russell. Jack Schrader and Marie Schindewolfe, have 13. Others are: Elizabeth Medsker. Virginia Hitchcock. Ethel Lee Howe. William Strang. Donald Brown. Virginia Cromlick, Thelma Coleman, John Fargo. Doris Kasting. James Riley. Tove Thielst. and Evelyn Venltz. Charles McLaren. Marle-sue Eisenhut. Eleanor Eldridge. Wilmer Hardesty. Ver-, na Schwier, Mildred Vieweight. William Young. Pauline Blackburn, Nevian Chess. Wayne Cole, Fabra King. Margaret Sanstrom. James All, Jane Bosart, Warren Confer. Miilicent Cummings. Marshal] Knox. Mary Mae Endsley. Carol Helser. Elizabeth Jones, Robert Kessel. Mary Lucas. Marjorie Mason. Francis S. Nipp, Edith Overtree. Marion Phipps. Thelma Ropp, Jewel Smith. Richard G. Smith. Lewis Vogler. Mary Adel Weaver and Bob Williams.

SCHOOL PLANS 2 EXHIBITIONS Annual Warren Day to Be Abandoned This Year. Two exhibition nights will be held at Warren Central high school this spring instead of the annual Warren day on which schools of the township displayed their work, according to announcement in The Warren Owl, school publication. The first exhibition night, largely for physical training demonstrations and appearance of the township grade-schools band, will be held at the high school early in May. An entertainment and band concert by the- high school pupils will feature the second exhibition. Warren day was inaugurated seven years ago for the purpose of acquainting parents of pupils and school patrons with activities of the schools. Under the new plan, high schoql classes will not be disrupted, but will continue in regular sessions during the two days that materials will be on display. Grade schools of the township will display their work at their individual buildings. NIGHT SCHOOL TO END Series of Talks to Be Given By No. 83 Pupils Friday. Night school will close at 8 Friday at School 83. Talks on “Taxes vs. Rent,” “The Family Budget” and “Clean Up” will be given by pupils. The mothers chorus of the Par-ent-Teachers’ Association will sing. An exhibition of grade work in reading, writing, arithmetic, spelling, English and civics will be presented.

Simple to Lose a Pound of Fat a Day on a Full Stomach

Do Just These Two Simple Things—Fat Melts Away

Here is a quick and easy way to j 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 a teaspoonful 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., and lots of salads. Eat a lot. Eat all you can hold. Don’t go hungry a minute. Cut down on butter, sweets

In Play at School 73

*;•■ Ws9m jT '|2| pppl ; •r , * y,^lL^ . •&?8&Hh1

A play, “Tlie Wild Flower of the Hills,” will be staged at 7:30 Friday night at School 13, School and Thirtieth streets, by the ParentTeacher Association. Members of the cast are: Front row, left to right, Mrs. Lola William Edwards, Mrs. Cleo Edwards; second row, Miss Harriet Petro, Paul Barger. Mrs. Anita Barger, Mrs. Lora Jackson and Mrs. Marie Ashinger; rear row, Mrs. Lottie Seaman, William Stewart. Walter McHaffey and Mrs. Leona Slider.

BROAD RIPPLE HIGH IN PLAY TRYOUTS

Three Comedies Will Be Staged By Seniors of School. BY ALMA FINKMAN. Tryouts were held today for three comedies to be given by seniors of Broad Ripple high school. The casts will be announced Friday, according to Miss Lillvon Snyder, dramatic coach. The first of the three plays will be “A Wedding,” involving trials and tribulations of a bridal couple. Second will be “In the Spring a young Man’s Fancy,” involving the plight of six girls and a chaperone in Paris. The other play will be “Sham,” a comedy of a sophisticated burglar. * An exhibition in typewriting was given before Broad Ripple high school commercial classes recently by Albert Tangora, world champion typist in 1923, 1924, 1925 and 1928. Ben Davis and Warren Central high school commercial classes were guests. Pupils attaining an average grade of A or higher for the first grading period include: John Brittenback, Dorothea Hammon, Maurice Eddingfleld, Keith Roberts. Florence Hinshaw. Ruth Stewart, Mona Orme. Vance Waggoner, Billy Wood, Donna Taylor. Jane Christena. John Ammerman, Ruth Ferris, Janet Sutheland. Cora Zaser. Loraze Brackett. June Willcutts. Imogene Kopp, Mary Alley, Mary Arnold. Lawrence Cross. Jane Fisher. William Nelson. Virginia Thornton. Margaret Timson. Mary Jean Clark, Jean Ward. Joe Marquis, Hazel Abbitt. Dorothy Stemmeier, James Hogsatt. Evelyn Scott, Helen Carrier. Eleanor Earle. Jack Klein. Samuel Smith. Margaret Bates. Pearly Underwood. Florence Vandermeulen. OFFICERS SELECTED BY MANUAL SENIORS Clyde Crafton was named president of the January ’32 senior class of Manual Training high school at an election held recently. Kenneth Williams was elected vice-president; Rcsa Pence, secretary, and Myrta Tilson, treasurer. Fifty boys enrolled in the architectural drawing classes Lre working to complete their miniature model houses to be entered in the miniature model house contest at the state fairground April 11 to 18. Perfect papers in Shorthand I tests at Manual were handed in by Elizabeth Achenback, Ruth Burnstein,, Joe Calderon, Clarice Coffey, Ida Hazen, Yettie Lieberman, Eleanor Lovell, Dorothy Webber and Wanda Davis.

INCHES OFF Neck Bust Stomach i I Hips

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 off fat with food that turns to energy instead of weight. If you're tired of being embar ■ rassed by fat, try this way. You’ll be glad thpt you did. You can get Jad Salts at any drug store, •Note particularly—the salts are urged purely as a poison-banishing agent—not as a reducing. The change in food does the work —Advertisement.

200 ENTER IRVINGTON CLUB HOBBY CONTEST More than 200 entries have been j received for the annual hobby fair i to be held by the Irvington Boys’ j Club April 3 and <*• in the Irvington branch library, 5427 East Washington street, according to Miss Beatrice Geddes, librarian. Entries include ship models, coins, i airplanes, soap sculpture, stamps and other articles collected by children. The library is offering both money and book prizes, and will award a number of ribbons. All entries must be in the library by Thursday, April 2.

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VAUDEVILLE TO OE PRESENTED AT SHORTRIDGE Staff Is Named for Annual Eight-Act Show on Saturday. The Shortridge i school Junior class will present its annual vaudeville show of eight acts in Caleb Mills hall Saturday afternoon and night. Homer Cornell Is general chairman of the production, and his staff includes William Burlch, business manager; John S. Matthews, ticket, sales manager: Robert Smith, assistant ticket sales manager; Pauline Judd, captain of ushers; John Leech, property manager; Warreu Atkinson and Frank Fitch, assistant property managers; Earl Robinson, curtain manager; Francis Sonday. stage technician; Richard Hoover, stage mechanic; William Gordon, chairman of the stage committee: Max Mann, Joe Hesselgrave and Dick Stanley, members of tire stage committee; Mary Anne Russe, chairman of the printed program, and Helen Root, publicity chairman. Dan O'Brien is master of ceremonies for the presentation, and chairmen of the eight acts are: Betty Sue Woolling, Jean 3oling. Homer Cornell. Peggy Jones, Katherine Morris, Rosalind Pugh. Bernice Showers and Jean Spicklemire. Dick Maxwell is to conduct the stage orchestra, and J. W Wainwright, head of the Shortridge music department, will have charge of the pit orchestra. Performances are sponsored by Mrs. Nall M. Thomas and Joel Had ley of the Shortridge faculty and sponsors of the junior class. New Legion Post Formed Applications for membership in the newly organized Garfield post. American Legion, were being received today-by temporary officers, headed by Charles S. Hand, editor of the Civic Leader-Citizen. The post was organized at Engine House No. 3, 1134 Prospect street, Tuesday night.

To CHICAGO on the Sycamore BIG FOUR ROUTE COMFORT THIS train is the choice of business men —most exacting of travelers. Leave after the business day enjoy the excellent table d’hote dinner, for which the Sycamore is famous arriving in time for an eve- „ ning's entertainment. Six other trains leaving at convenient times. Lv. Indianapolis 5:00 p. m, Ar. Chicago . , 9:25 p. ra. JSljßi OTHER TRAINS Leav* ArriJ Indianapolis Chicago 12:00 noon 4:30 p. m, 2:45 p. m. 7:25 p. m. 12:10 a.m. +5:40 a. m. *1:55 a. m. 7t35a. m. t12:05p. m. 5:50 p.m. tExcept Sunday*. •Sleeping car* open 9.00 pm. cars may be occupied until 7:00 a. m. Tickets and Reservations at City Ticket Office, 112 Monument. Circle, Phone Riley 3322; and Union Station, Phone Riley 3355. J. Corcoran, Div. Pass. Agent, 111 Monument Circle. ROUTE