Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 280, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 April 1931 — Page 21
APRIL 3, 1931
MEMORIAL DAY CEREMONIES ARE TO BE OUTLINED Monument Services Are Planned Tentatively by Group for May 30. Final plans for the observance of Memorial day will be made at the meeting April 30 of the General Memorial Association of Indianapolis at Ft. Friendly, 512 North Illinois street. Tentative arrangements for the service at the Soldiers' and Bailors’ Monument under the supervision of the Veterans o 1 Foreign Wars at 8:30 o’clock the morning of May 30 were discussed at the meeting Thursday night. It is planned to have the parade.* follow the services at 10:30 a. m. Services and ceremonies will be held at various cemeteries during the day with the foremost at Crown Hill at 3 p. m. Civil war veterans will attend the monument services and will appear in the parade. They will be served with dinner at noon at Ft. Friendly and transportation will be provided to Crown Hill. Two memorial services will be held before the holiday proper One will be May 24 at the Meridian street bridge over Fall Creek to honor the sailor and aviator dead; and another will be held May 29 in the Grove of Remembrance in Garfield drive. Organizations and heads of the various Memorial day committees are: Flags. E Xj Miller: flowers, Airs. Ella Allmond; honor roll. Mrs Augusta Stratford; automobiles. American Legioh; visiting commltee to take flowers to veterans who are unable to attend the ceremonies, Mrs. Fern Rogers; parade. Colonel Willt“d 8 Boyle; evergreens. William and Oliver Wright; transportation. William A Edwards: dinner, Mrs Belie Kiser; Crown Hill, Wilson C. Oren; services at the Soldiers and Sailors' Monument, Veterans of Foreign Wars; Mt. Jackson cemetery, Mrs. Madge Frady; decoration of Soldiers and Sailors’ Monument, Mrs. Ella Akers; Veterans; Ebenezer cemetery, Sons of Concordia cemetery, Daughters of Union Veterans and Women’s Auxiliary No. 10; Orove of Remembrance, Service Stftr Legion, directed by Mrs. Cora Young Wiles; Washington Park and the Indianapolis Hebrew Congregation cemeteries, Veterans of Foreign wars; Memorial Park cemetery. American Legion. EDWARD CAMPBELL IS ELECTED CLUB CHIEF Chosen President of South Irvington Community Organization. Edward R. Campbell today headed the South Irvington Community Club following election held Thursday night in Christian park community house He succeeds Oscar W Stoehr. Other officers named were R. O. Shimer. vice-president; Ollie Beck, secretary, and Mrs. Charles Dorn, treasurer. Directors are Dr. R. C. Whitmore, Mrs. Whitmore, Mr. and Mrs. B. M. Ash, Herbert Hayes, G. S. Williams, Angelo Pizzo, Dorn and Stoehr. The club ararnged an Easter egg hunt in the park at 3 Sunday and a dinner, social and entertainment program for the next club meeting May 7
HITS SOCIAL -BABOON’ IN TALK ON MANNERS Decries Peanut Eater, Highway Hog to Y. M. C. A. Audience. The lobby lounger in hotels, the peanut-eating parasite of theaters, the highway hog behind an automobile wheel and the bus baboon who sprawls over a seat were decried Thursday night at the first of a series of lectures on “Manners and Mannerisms" at the Y. M. C. A. John W. Atherton, financial secretary of Butler university, gave the talk before 125 young men. “There is nothing more uncomfortable than to be seated in a theater near the proverbial ‘peanut cruncher’ or a chronic talker.” “Thoughtlessness and carelessness are the two great crimes in public conducts today,” he said. MAN SLUGGED. ROBBED $5 Is Loot of Footpads, Henry De Neis Informs Police. Slugged by two footpads at New Jersey and Arch streets Thursday night. Henry De Neis. 826 North New Jersey street, informed police he was robbed of $5. City Awards Contract for Grease Contract for purchase of the city reduction plant's output of grease for the next three months was awarded Thursday to the Wilson Brokerage, Inc., of New York by the city sanitary board. The company’s bid was $2.65 a hundred pounds on approximately 480.000 pounds output. ■- ■ jflrtrher®rust Santa Where Thousands S-A-V-E
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40 Years ‘ln Harness , ’ ‘Bud' Quits ‘Fire-Eating ’
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Chauffeur Lewis M. fßud) Moore, 70, behind the driver’s wheel of fire tower truck at engine house 13, Kentucky avenue and Maryland street, for his last trip. Seated beside him is Lieutenant John Mahony.
Chauffeur Is Retired After Life of Faithful Work for City. • BY DICK MILLER After forty years of faithful service in the fire department Lewis M. i Bud) Moore, 1126 Hamilton avenue, chauffeur on the fire tower Engine House 13, hung up his raincoat, gloves and helmet today, stood his boots in the corner and bid his comrades, many of them pals of years’ standing, good-by. Safety board members retired Moore last Tuesday. Not because he was incapacitated, Moore said. For he boasts of good liealth, strong arms that have guided the speeding fire tower through the most congested downtown streets with “nary a scratch,” year after year. But because his seventieth birthday crept upon him. Moore is indignant at only one thing—he was not allowed to remain in the service until April 11, which would have made his record forty full years to the day. It was a happy day, Moore said,
NEWS REEL SHOWS RETURN OF HOOVER
Return of President Hoover from his relaxation cruise of Uncle Sam’s southern seas, along with the enthusiastic reception accorded him in the Virgin islands, is the highlight of The Times-Universal news reel, now showing in leading theaters of the city. After the festivities in St. Thomas, the President is seen aboard the battleship Arizona, near home. He is given a thrill when a great army blimp lowers a mail pouch to the deck of the Arizona and the President receives his mail for the first time in many days. Elinor Smith’s crash at Mineola, after she had become unconscious more than five miles up in the air, is another vivid unit of the news reel. Additiona 1 thrills come from England, showing how Cambridge defeated Oxford in their annual boat race on the Thames. Also from England, at Richmond, comes the
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when he received word that he was to be mao': a member of the fire fighting forces. On that memorable morning when he took the oath of duty, his comrade was John J. O’Brien, since chief and now training school intructor. With the exception of eight years and five months when Moore served at engine house No. 2, Roosevelt avenue and Sixteenth street, all of Moore’s service has been in the downtown area. He has driven an engine, or fire tower truck for twenty-nine years of that forty years and has figured in only one serious accident. “And was driving a team of horses from headquarters company when that happened,” he chuckled. Ten years ago when the horses were discarded and the fire tower motorized, Moore took his place behind the wheel as driver, where he has remained ever since. Moore’s nearest approach to serious injury came when he fell down a staircase while carrying a chemical tank on his back. But he “shook off the shock” and carried on with his duties.
dashing record of a. motorcycle cross-country race in which many of the speeders somersault off the hills. Florida supplies two interesting subjects in a water ski demonstration by girl and boy aquatic stars at Winter Haven, and a train wreck at Delray. The width of the main stream of the Amazon river in South America is from four to six miles.
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xHE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
CHEMISTS END SESSION i VISIT PLANTS IN CITY Inspection Trips Are Made as Final Phase of Meeting Here. The eighty-first annual meeting of the American Chemical Society closed today in Indianapolis with inspection trips of manufacturering plants. Busses and motor cars took those chemists, who remained for the trip, to the various city plants. Plants visited were: Republic Creosoting Comp “Reilly Chemical Company, Reilly laboratories, Van Camp Packing Company, Real Silk Hosiery Mills, United States Encaustic Tile Works, Marietta Manufacturing Company, Prest-O-Lite Storage Battery Corporation, Esterline-Angus Company, LinkBelt Company, G. & J. Tire Company, Indianapolis Water Company, Eli Lilly & Cos. main plant and the city sewage disposal and garbage reduction plants. A trip to the Eli Lilly & Cos. biological laboratories, near Greenfield, also was made. The meeting here w r as termed “one of the most successful” by officials of the society. Approximately 2,000 chemists and scientists attended. The mid-year meeting of the society will be held in Buffalo, N Y., on Aug. 31. Railroad Veteran Retires VINCENNES, Ind., April 3.—Gus Hamer, 74, for fifty-six years an employe of the Baltimore & Ohio railroad, has been retired on pension. He has served as brakeman, conductor, engineer and yardmaster.
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$lO DAMAGES GIVEN PATIENT OF DENTIST Alleged Careless Treatment Followed Extraction of Tooth. By Time* Spcinl VALPARAISO. Ind., April 3.—A jury in Porter circuit court, after a trial which lasted two days, returned a verdict for $lO in favor of Gilbert St. John, Gary barber, in a damage suit against Dr. August Fehrenbacher, a dentist. St. John alleged that the dentist was not skillful and failed to use
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sanitary measures in extraction of a tooth, and that as a result infection developed. The plaintiff alleged he suffered impairment of the salivary glands and disfigurement of his face, neck and jaws. — Lie Detector Catches Chicken Thief By United Prt*s ASHLAND. WLs., April 3.—When the Ashland open forums council sponsored a mass meeting to demonstrate , the use of the lie detector, Milton Hamilton the subject, confessed the theft of thirteen chickens.
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