Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 124, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 October 1931 — Page 2

PAGE 2

PUBLIC SCHOOL ! NIGHT CLASSES i' TO OPEN OCT. 5 Lip Reading Is New Course A Added to Curriculum This Year. Nightly classes sponsored by the Indianapolis public schools will begin Monday, Oct. 5, according to announcement made Thursday by Paul C. Stetson, superintendent. Courses will be given at Arsenal school, Emmerich Manual i raining high school, Crispus Attacks high school, Communial building at 17 West Morris street, and at elementary schools 8, 23, 24, 26, 42, 52. 63, 64 and 83. Any regular high school subject, for which there is sufficient enrollment, will be offered at the high New to the curriculum this ?ar will be a course in lip reading. 'Ommercial, academic and technical nd industrial courses will be ofered also in the high schools. K, Grade schools will offer work in arithmetic, language, geography and listory, with drill in spelling and ienmanship. Classes in English for foreigners M’ill be held at Manual Training nigh school, at the Communal building and at School No. 52, Walnut street and King avenue. The course at the Communal buildings will be presented in the afternoon, time to be decided on later. At other* places classes will be held at night. Tuition in all night classes is free. Each person enrolling, however. Is required to make a deposit, which will be refunded if attendance is satisfactory. In some courses a fee is charged for use of machines *,and materials. Classes will be in session Monday, Wednesday and Friday nights of each week. At high schools, meetings will be from 7:30 to 9:30, while at grade schools, classes will be held from 7 to 9. Last year, 2,881 persons took the regular night school courses, in addition to 200 who took the courses In English for foreigners.

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Religious leader of millions—and a man who has made millions laugh ... A striking study in countenances is this picture, taken as Mahatma Gandhi and Charlie Chaplin met by pre-arrangement in a tiny house in London’s East End. The meeting was

DON BBID6E LEAVES Advertising Man to Take N. Y. Times Position. Don Bridge, advertising director of the Indianapolis News since 1927, Monday will become advertising director of the New York Times and other Times company publications, a dispatch from New York stated today. Bridge has been associated with the business staff of the News since 1917, coming here from Cincinnati, where he had been a circulation representative and advertising salesman on the Cincinnati Post. Previously he had worked on a Ft. Wayne newspaper, following his graduation from De Pauw university. j He will leave Indianapolis either

at the seeking of the little Indian leader who, until he arrived in London recently, never had heard of Chaplin. Though their argument over the place of the machine in modern life was serious, their attitudes were good-humored, as seen here.

today or Saturday for New York. Bridge is president of the Newspaper Advertising Executives’ Association and a director of the Advertising Federation of America. He is a member of Phi Kappa Psi fraternity and Sigma Delta Chi, journalistic fraternity, belonging also to Rotary, Columbia and Meridian Hills Country Clubs here, to the American Legion and the Scottish Rite. PRINCETON BANK SHUT $50,000 Institution Is Closed, State Examiners Announce. Doors of the Citizens Trust and Savings Company, Princeton, Ind., were closed today, state bank examiners announced. The institution was capitalized at $50,000, with deposits totaling $363,C 00; surplus, $15,000, and liabilities, $122,000. G. C. Kindle was president and W. L. Wagner, cashier.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TfMES

NEW ENVOI NAMED Mexico Chooses Ambassador to Washington. By United Press MEXICO CITY, Oct. 2.—Appointment of Jose Manuel Puig Casauranc as ambassador to Washington, succeeding Don Manuel C. Tellez, was announced today at the foreign office. Puig Casaurane served as secretary of industry, commerce and labor and as secretary of education during the administrations of Presidents Portes Gil and Pascual Ortiz Rubio. The ne wambassador will proceed to Washington this month. English is displacing French as the first foreign language taught in many Prussian schools, *

PROGRAMS FOR SCHOOL PARLEY ARE ANNOUNCED Speakers Are Named for Teachers’ Session Here Oct. 22-23. Announcement of the programs for twenty-seven of the forty-three sections of the Indiana state teachers’ convention, to be held in Indianapolis Oct. 22 and 23, was made today. Notable among the speakers at the different meetings are C. E. Parmenter of the University of Chicago, who will talk to the modern language section on '‘Recent Trends in Modern Language Teaching;” Dr. E. E. Lewis of Ohio State university, who will discuss ‘‘The Place of Mathematics in the High School Curriculum” before the mathematics meeting, and Dr. Jean Betzner of Columbia university, who will talk before the kindergarten section on handling of small children. Paul C. Stetson, Indianapolis superintendent, will speak on “Some Aspects of the Junior High School Problem,” to the interme.diate school section. The home economics meeting will hear “Home Making as a Profession,” by Dr. C. G. F. Franzen of Indiana university, and “Three Thousand Years of Women’s Dress,” by Minna Schmidt, costumer, historian and lawyer, of Chicago. Featuring the meeting of economics and sociology teacher will be the speech by Dr. Thomas V. Smith of the University of Chicago, on “Social Intelligence and the Russian Experiment.” Dean Agness Wells of Indiana university will lead the discussion among deans of women. Two Are Injured In Crash Two persons were injured when their cars crashed Thursday night at the intersection of Highland avenue and Market street. Mrs. Lena Evans, 33, of 30 South Grace street, sustained cuts and bruises, and Thomas Marsella, 5501 Broadway, was cut slightly.

EVANS TO CONVENTION High School Journals to Hear Talk on News Writing. W. A. Eans, director of public relations for the Indianapolis public schools, today accepted an invitation to conduct two sessions of news writing at the tenth annual convention of the Indiana High School Press Association, to be held at Franklin college, Oct. 22, 23 and 24. More than 500 high school journalism students and teachers are expected to attend the meeting. In charge of the convention is R. E. Blackwell, executive secretary of the association.

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POLICE SNARE KIDNAPSUSPECT Wounded Gunman May Be City Youth's Abductor. While Indianapolis detectives continued investigation, word was received here today that Chicago authorities held a man believed was one of a pair of gunmen who kidnaped a Shortridge high school student here Sunday night. The bandits forced Burns Fitzpatrick, 18, of 2625 Central avenue,

-OCT. % 1931

to drive them to Chicago, and en route they held up a roadhouse, and staged a gun battle with an intended holdup victim. Archie Gilmore of Brookston, near Lafayette. Held in Chicago today was Ernest Bevington, 31, an ex-convict on parole from the state prison. Bevington was wounded, dispatches from Chicago sakl, and it is suspected he received his wound in the battle with Gilmore. Fitzpatrick returned to Indianapolis from Chicago Monday, he -ys. under threat of death if he revealed his adventure. Bevington, who also has a criminal record in Mansfield, 0., probably will be brought to Lafayette for identification by Gilmore, and the Fitzpatrick youth also may be asked to identify him, police said.