Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 184, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 December 1931 — Page 6
PAGE 6
GERMANS AGREE DEBT PAYMENTS ARE IMPOSSIBLE Government, Fascists Unite in View as U. S. Bankers Talk Extensions. BY HAROI.D A. PETERS I'nltfd "rm Staff Correspondent BERLIN, Dec. 11.—Foreign bankeers discussed extension of Germany's $2,500,000,000 in short-term credits today as the government and Its political enemy, the Fascist party, united in the decision that Germany can not continue reparations payments. The interests of Americans in the private debts discussions were represented by Albert H. Wiggin of New York. Strictly private conferences were scheduled with representatives of German industry and finance. With the discussions under way, Chancellor Heinrich Bruening and Adolph Hitler, Fascist leader, continued thir domestic political battle with statements and interviews which agreed only on the reparations question. Intermittent fighting continued between Fascists and Communists. Several persons were injured in street fights. Police were active In suppressing the disturbances and made many arrests.
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Evans Woollen 111 and Harriet Vance Smith.
The Coach of Good Health is rolling through Indiana this December on millions of Tuberculosis Seals, financial agents of the anti-disease program of the Marion County Tuberculosis Association and ninety-one other county j organizations devoted to prevenI tion and cure of mankind’s plague. William Emmick, 2150 Webb i street, a Purdue student, built a
marvelous miniature coach, which now is being exhibited at the City Trust building as a near-replica of the health coach that forms the centerpiece of the Christmas Seals. In the picture this coach Is being inspected by Evans Woollen 111, 3924 North Delaware street, and little Harriet Vance Smith, 46 East Thirty-sixth street.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
9 ARE INJURED; CHILD RUNS IN FRONUF CAR Women Cut and Bruised in Crash; Physicians Escape With Minor Hurts. Nine persons were injured in a series of automboile accidents in Indianapolis Thursday night and early today. Running from behind a group of Christmas trees in front of a store, Billie Patrick, 5, of 1530 Hoyt aVenue, struck the side of an automobile. He incurred bruises and face and body lacerations. He was taken to his home by police. John D. Switzer, 31, of 1610 Lexington avenue, driver of the car, was not held. When automobiles collided at Sixteenth and Harding streets, two women were cut and bruised. Mrs. Edith Wiggins, 1321 West Twentysixth street, and Mrs. Edna Kagel, 1914 Medford avenue, were treated by city hospital doctors. In a three-car accident, Joseph Furry, 26, of 1918 North Pennsylvania street, sustained minor injuries. He was the driver of an automobile which was involved with a taxi and truck in a crash at Union and Ray streets. The other drivers were not hurt. Struck as he crossed Illinois and
Ohio streets, Robert Bridges, 60, of 21 North Capitol avenue, was cut on the head. He was treated at city hospital. Curtiss Taylor, 22, of the state fair ground, was driver of the car. Doctors in Crash Three city hospital physicians escaped serious injury this morning during a driving rain, when their car struck a concrete safety zone marker at Ohio and Illinois streets. Passengers in the car were Drs. L. C. Zerfas, O. M. Helmer and C. S. Kemps. Mrs. Lillian Page, Negro, 70, of 342 West Twelfth street, was cut on the face when the taxi in which she was riding collided with another car at Fall Creek boulevard and Indianapolis avenue. Joe Hanna, Negro, driver of the cab, was charged with reckless driving. Seek Unidentified Driver Police today sought the driver of the car who struck an unidentified woman in the 700 block, North Capitol avenue, and drove away from the scene after helping her to the sidewalk. John Willis, state accounts board examiner, obtained the license number of the car. E. J. Snyder, 68, of 1523 Churchman avenue, was cut and bruised when hurled to the pavement near his home by a truck driven by Walter Raymond, 57, of R. R. 8, Box 408. Raymond said he was blinded by the lights of an approaching car.
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CITY PRINCIPALS FAVOR BETTER TESTS FOR ‘IQ’ Believes Supervision Given Intelligence Exams Is All-Important. Indianapolis public school pupils will be given more and better intelligence tests, if the grade school principals have their way, according to the report of the teachers’ committee on research which gave its report this afternoon at a meeting in school No. 10, Ashland avenue and Thirteenth street. The report said a poll of city pricipals reveals their belief that supervision of “IQ” tests is the most important function of the research department of the public schools. The committee, appointed last year by Superintendent Paul G. Stetson, also recommended that the department give aid to the social service department in making adjustments for pupils needing modified courses. The committee reported that one of the foremost functions of the department should be adjusting
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( school room procedure to meet the pupils’ needs. The committee on reorganization of the curriculum, which also made its report, stated changes in the curriculum must be accompanied by a teaching of the basic philosophy of education to the public, in order to be successful. Recommendation was made that business and professional men, and social workers, be invited to talk to the teachers. Such persons, the committee believes, could give the instructors a layman’s idea pf what should be taught. Experiments in new curriculum subjects by individual teachers should be encouraged, the committee urged. The report stated that teachers should be released from classroom work periodically, in order that they might work out plans better. DRY CHIEFTAIN TO TALK Dr. James A. Crain to Speak at . Central Christian Chnrch. Dr. James A Crain, secretary of the board of temperance and social welfare of the United Christian Missionary Society, will speak on “The Issues of Prohibition” next Thursday night at the Central Christian church. The eightieth birthday and fiftyeight years of membership in the church of F. M. Wiley, 527 North Liberty street, was honored Thursday night. Dr. William A Shullenberger, pastor, paid tribute to Mr and Mrs. Wiley.
.DEC. 11, 1031
BOY RIFLEMAN I ADMITS KILLING Sniper Intended Bullet for Light Bulb, Police Told. Bv Vmitei Pre** WEST ORANGE. N. J., Dec. 11— Six months’ target practice from S nearby attic by boys shooting unmolested at light bulbs and telephone insulators preceded the death of an expectant mother from a sniper's bullet, 16-year-old Erwin Flaster revealed today. Flaster admitted he fired the bullet that killed Mrs. Giuliano Wednesday nighi. as the four boys; two of them in high school, toldi police of the nocturnal sniping. Flaster finally told details of th 4 shooting after five hours intensive questioning. “We were shooting at a vacanl house on the drive,” he said. “Than we started firing at an electric light bulb on a flagpole. Everybody missed; then I took the rifle to sea what I could do. I pulled the trigger, missed the bulb, heard some glass tinkle and then a woman screaming.” Flaster will be accused formally today, probably of homicide. The others will be held as material witnesses. China has about 2,000,000 square miles of arid country.
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