Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 148, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 October 1931 — Page 20
PAGE 20
CITY TO KEEP 5 LINKS OPEN UNTILDEC. 1 Two Golf Courses Will Be Closed Jan. 1 Because of Budget Cut. All five municipal golf courses will remain open until Dec. 1, A. C. Sallee, park superintendent, announced today. Two courses, Pleasant Run and South Grove, which previously have remained open throughout the year, will be closed Jan. 1, according to Sallee. This will be necessary because of the state tax board reduction of the park department’s budget, which goes into effect the first of next year. However, these plans may change if the city wins a proposed court fight against the levy cut of 2 cents in the civil city rate. All courses will be run on reduced
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STARTING TOMORROW "TAKE ME! TAKE MElr^St -Wic f n jlßi i * ml S Fl *te so cruelly turn their path? liy Introducing to the screen one of America’s Greatest Stage Stars BNPH HELEN HAYES -'aIP? 'with a remarkable cast StcMLocMUHttHtM.^^WJ \| LEWIS STONE CLIFF EDWARDS NEIL HAMILTON MARIE PREVOST 4'% From the stay " The Eullaby” b Edward Kno block. Directed by EDGAR SELWYN A METRO-GOLDWYN-MAYER Picture I
Triple Jinxed By United Press DALLAS. Tex., Oct. 30.—0. L. Brentley is a glutton for hard luck. Police found his stolen car. Then a suit of clothes was filched. While he was in a pawnshop with officers trying to trace his clothes, his automobile was stolen a second time.
forces for the remainder of the season. The park board discharged twenty golf course employes Tuesday because of the tax board’s $70,000 budget slice. “Golfers pay for using the courses and are entitled to good service. We propose to leave the courses open as long as possible,” Sallee declared. CONTINUE RELIEF DRIVE Assessments of Printers to Continue Another Three Months. Assessment for relief of unemployed members of Indianapolis Typographical Union No. 1 will continue another three months as result of balloting by the union, it was announced today by President Guy Howe. The union began the assessment three months ago.
lOEWS PALACE
NEW EDUCATION PLAN APPROVED AT OHIOSTATE Complete School System May Be in Operation by 1934. By United Press COLUMBUS, 0., Oct. 30.—A program calling for the establishment of an individual school system at Ohio State university has received the approval of the university board of trustees. The complete school system is expected to be in operation by 1934, and will include a preschool, lower school, middle school, ten colleges and a graduate school. The pre-school, lower and middle school, under the program authorized, would be operated in conjunction with the college of education. They would be used to demon-
MEET AFTER 60 YEARS Brothers in Texas Reunited, Ending Long Separation. GRAPEVINE, Tex., Oct. 30.—Two brothers were reunited here the other day after a separation of sixty years, when James M. Richmond stopped off to see his brother Butler, on his way to their old home at Jonesville, Va. James now lives at Roseville, Cal. During their long separation neither brother wrote the other a single letter. strate the latest accepted developments in teaching and to give seniors in the college of education the benefit of the most modern practice. All residents of Ohio would be admitted, conditioned upon the payment of a nominal fee. The new middle school, now nearing completion on the campus, will accommodate pupils ordinarily attending junior and senior high school. In operation the plan would permit school attendance at the university from four years of age to the attainment of highest academic degrees.
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SEA GNAWING AWAY BASE OF TALLEST LIGHT Cape Hatteras’ Sailors Guide Faces Slow Destruction by Storms. By United Press CAPE HATTERAS, N. C., Oct, 30. —The tallest lighthouse on the American coast, Cape f Hatteras light, constructed in 1870, faces slow destruction by bad storms off shore. Efforts of government officials to harness the surf knawing toward the base of the spiral tower by building dikes and breakwaters have failed. Captain Jennette, keeper of the lighthouse, was bom almost within the shadows of the tower. When a boy he dreamed of becoming a steamboat operator. He went into the lighthouse service and has served for forty years. His early
activities being aboard the light tenders. That is the nearest he ever came to realizing his ambition to be a steamboat man. But back home, now and as keeper of America’s foremost lighthouse, Captain Jennette is finding contentment. He has been at the present station twelve years. Even during that time he has seen the ocean come in hundreds of feet nearer the base of t'ae tower. Just what other precautions the government will take to save this tallest of lighthouses are undetermined. Old-timers who have witnessed some of the worst storms during the last half century claim that it would take only one unusually hard off-shore gale to undermine the tower. Two Slayers Electrocuted By United Press HUNTSVILLE, Tex., Oct. 30. Two Mexicans, confessed murderers of a United States customs inspector, were electrocuted in the Texas penitentiary shortly after midnight today. They were Victory Rodriguez, 20, and Nicandro Munoz, 26.
COOKING FEVER GRIPS BOYS IN HIGHSGHOOLS Chicago's Athletes Proud of Their Ability With Pots, Pans. By United Press CHICAGO, Oct. 30.—There is a back to the home movement on in Chicago—and it’s centered in high schools among the boys. Nor are they afraid of telling about their accomplishments, taking no thought of being called “sissies.” To them, domestic attainments are not only a “woman's j
MOTION PICTURES y here's the sequels ’ VTARHER^pj BAXTER as ”7/1* Cisco KlO ° jgfc IBMUMD mL An TEMPTPCSS ts TUB STAKE/ .*™J I KIDDIES PUBLIX FREE DANCING CLASS I BALLROOM-TOMORROW 10 A. M. HNPIANA(2.gj I | FAMILY |\| oifth^ ; J v* mYI “HOT JAVA” IDEA || |Lk dill /fc Fanchon and Marco jam- S, 'm'&BkTAj. UFsy /ffi, horoe of joy and fun with Jr — /fcaSr the slzzlTngest galaxy of blg-tlme acts you rur ja Organ I HUSTON j JLI I RuLinGVoice I lts here TODAY! XJBB B\F First Indianapolis Showing! Unforgettable Thrills! MSf'NURDIRatI
OCT. 30, 1931
Job” and do not necessarily Indicate a leaning toward bachelorhood. The discovery of the culinary ability was made by a south side high school editor with a nose for news. He began a survey among his classmates. “What can you do in the kitchen?” was the question. “What can’t I do,” snorted a sedate senior. “I can make oatmeal, fry eggs, make tea or coffee, and' get up a steak dinner, with a baker’s cake thrown in. More than that, I can grab the darning basket, patch my socks, sew on a button and press my suit. “Fry frog’s legs to a queen's taste, shot back another. “I can fry steaks and chops which would do justice to a $5 banquet,” he went on. “The way I cook eggs not onlv makes them taste good but look good.” Others have their specialties, such as spaghetti, potato pancakes, fudge and apple sauce, while all sew. a freshman boasted of his bacon and eggs and stews, while a senior modestly admitted his proficiency with chops.
