Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 266, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 March 1932 — Page 6

PAGE 6

HEARING TESTS ! INAUGURATED IN CITY'SSCHOOLS Pupils at 76 Are First to Don Earphones, Listen to Fading Numbers. Audiometer tests for hearing i were inaugurated in the Indianapolis public schools Monday, when pupils at school No. 76, College avenue and Thirtieth street, donned the earphones. Similar examinations will be af- j forded to pupils in all grade schools in the city, according to W. A. Hacker, assistant superintendent of schools in charge of special classes. The tests, which are not compulsory, are being given by Dr. Ralph S. Chappell. Dr. Chappell states that he expects to spend the rest of the school year in making the tests. Forty Listen at Once Forty children may take the test at one time. They wear earphones which are connected to an electric talking machine. A record is played in which a woman’s voice, and then a man's, is heard. The voices give numbers, and gradually diminish in volume. Each pupil writes on a sheet of , paper the numbers he hears. Dr. Chappell can determine the acute- j ness of each pupil’s hearing by no- ; ting the place he begins to write down mistaken numbers. In other cities where the audiometer tests have been taken, 4 to ; 12 1 2 per cent of the pupils have ! been found to be tending toward deafness. Lip Reading Is Help Dr. Chappell stated that less than - 8 per cent of the pupils at school No. 76 were deficient in hearing. Pupils found to be beyond a certain degree of deafness will be taught lip reading, in order that their eyes may supplement their ears. Hacker said. “Many children who now are considered dull really are only slightly deaf,” Hacker said. “They require two to three times as much attention as do the same number of normal children, and cost the taxpayers a lot of money in needless tuition. “We can institute classes that will give these pupils a better education at less expense. “In many cases, partially deaf pupils who can read lips have been able to work side by side with normal pupils at almost no disadvantage.” CAST SELECTED FOR PLAY AT SHORTRIDGE Nine of Senior Class Win Roles in “The Millionaire.” Cast of "The Millionaire,” play to be presented by the senior class of Shortridge high school, has been chosen by William N. Otto, head of the English department, and senior class sponsor, and Miss Eleanor Dee Theek, play coach. Eighteen girls and sixteen boys competed for roles in the production. Five girls and four boys were named. Members of the cast are Martha Belle Bright, Mary Vance Trent, Jeanne Helt, Margaret Stark, Mary i Jane Steeg. Jack Strickland, Robert Ellsworth, Howard Wiant, and j Clifford Emhardt. Three committee chairmen have been named to the staff of the play. Frank Fitch has been named j manager; Walter Scheidker, assistant stage manager, and Betty j Jane Tcmperly, chairman of the properties committee. USHERS ARE APPOINTED Shortridge Junior Vaudeville Show .to Be Held April 9. Barbara Jean Holt, chairman of the ushers for the junior vaudeville of Shortridge high school, has announced appointments of ushers. The show will be staged Saturday, April 9, matinee and evening performances. Those appointed as ushers are: Jean Anderson, Marjory Hennis, Josephine Jackson, Barbara Haines, Jeanette McElroy, Jane Laßlant, Louise Brown, Catherine Funkhouscr, Janet Hill, Mary Eleanor McCoy, Jane Shideler, Clara Jane j Anderson and Frances McCotter. >

AGE OF INNOCENCE’ ONE OF JOSHUA REYNOLDS’ GREATEST PICTURES

BY ALICE ROHE. # Written for NEA Service IT IS a relief after so many tragedies to find one child in a famous painting whose story has a happy ending. “The Age of Innocence,” is named well, for the little girl, with her hands clasped to her breast, her eyes fascinated by a butterfly, breathes the very essence of innocence. “Her dress is white and the ribbon in her brown hair is pink. She was just as charming as Sir Joshua Reynolds painted her, sitting under the birch trees on the lawn. Her name is Theophila Gwatkin and she was the grandniece of the famous artist. He loved her not only for her small self, but because of her mother, Theophila Palmer, who was his favorite niece. The famous painter was a bachelor and he adored children. He gave his sister no peace until she permitted Ossie,” as Sir Joshua called her, to make her h*.me with him. So, from the time she was 13 until she married Robert Gwatkin, little Ossie's father, she was Sir Joshua's constant companion. She posed for him many times, the Strawberry Girl being one of the best known paintings. But she was really, with her sister Mary, the boss of his home. a a a T'HINK of letting a 13-year-old girl take charge of your house! The result was happy it not formal. Sir Joshua always was giving dinner parties at which the most important people of the time sat down to a table the like of which many of them never had seen. The china was nicked, nothing matched, the food was not very

Supreme Test for Sharp Ears

SCHOOL PRESS PARLEYCALLED Groups Outside of City to Meet at Warren. Invitations have been Issued by the Press Club of Warren Central high school for a second annual Marion county high school press conference for schools outside of Indianapolis, to be held at Warren, Friday, March 18, from 1 to 3:30 p. m. Schools which have publications and which will be represented at the conference are Ben Davis, Southport, Castleton, Lawrence, New Augusta, Acton, New Bethel, Decatur Central, Beech Grove and Warren Central. Wayne Guthrie of the Indianapolis News will give the principal address. Round table discussions of high school, publication problems will be features of the program. These will be conducted by Miss Louise Eleanor Ross, associate editor of the Marion County Mail, and James R. Sims, Warren Press Club president. An exhibition of many high school newspapers from all parts of the United States has been arranged. Pupils in charge of the conference are June Ellenberger, club secretary; Charles Blake, Dorothy Charlton, Arthur Lantz, Russell Craig, John Willoughby, Evelyn Fye, Martha Jackson, Donald Sanford, Fay Kneirihm, Kathryn Kirkpatrick, Juanita Bunting, Pauline Karnes, William Spence and Maurice Fancier. Ruth Norwalk is chairman of a social committee. Also on the committee are Tyrell Lynam, Ivan Glaze, Lillian Denny, Evan Stuart, Naomi Price, Martha Esther and Hubert Crays. SHOW SHORTRIDGE ART Exhibit Will Continue in School’s Galleries Until March 24. Exhibit of the art work t of Shortridge high school pupils is being made in the Roda Selleck galleries on the third floor of the school. The display, started Tuesday, will continue until Thursday, March 24. Included in the exhibit are sketches, wood cuts, design work, and lettering. The exhibit was arranged under the direction of Theodore Van Voorhis, head of the art department; Miss Marie C. Todd and other members of the department. ROBERTSON HEADS CLUB William Robertson has been elected to the presidency of the boys’ glee club of Arsenal Technical high school. Other officers chosen by the club are Edward Page, vicepresident; Raymond Rogers, secre-tary-treasurer; Roscoe Wehmeier, sergeant-at-arms, and Richard De-Tar,-librarian. J. Russell Paxton of the school’s music department is faculty sponi sor of the club.

good—but everybody had a good time. Everybody made a fuss over Ossie. There was Oliver Goldsmith. Edmund Burke, David Garrick, I Samuel Johnson—one of the stories Sir Joshua used to tell Ossie was how her mother offended ! Dr. Johnson so that he never forgave her. One night, when all the guests had gone except Dr. Johnson, Of' fie went to her room and took off her party dress. When Dr. Johnson saw the house dress she had donned, he took it as an insult j and said that she considered him of no importance. It must be admitted that when Ossie fell in love with Robert Gwatkin and married him, Sir Joshua’s house ran just as well. n n n YTTHEN little Ossie was born * V Sir Joshua hardly could wait to see her. As soon as she was big enough, he made her his companion just as he did her m cher. He painted this graudniroe in two of nis most popular pictures: The Age of Innooence and Simplicity. His interest in children was quite different from Gainsborough's. Sir Joshua gave them an idyllic and sometimes artificial quality. He regarded' them as pleasant and amusing little creatures while Gainsborough saw ' and painted them as individuals and human beings. Not long after he painted little Ossie’s portraits he was stricken with partial blindness due to overstraining his eyes. Then it was that his niece and his grandniece became his great comfort. They used to road to him and copy letters and papers, for Sir Joshua, who was the first presi- . dent of the Royal academy, wrote | discourses on art.

Upper—Pupils in the 48-4A grade at School No. 76, College avenue and Thirtieth street, are shown taking the audiometer test to determine whether or not they are deaf.

MISS SARA EWING TO SPEAK ON AIR

‘Teacher and Community’ Is Topic Tonight Over WKBF. Miss Sara Ewing of the history department of Arsenal Technical high school, president of the Indianapolis Federation of Public School Teachers, will speak in the twenty-third weekly broadcast of the Indianapolis public schools from 9 to 9:30 tonight over WKBF. Her topic will be “The Teacher and the Community.” Miss Myla Herrmann of Manual Training high school will play two piano solos, “Etude,” by Chopin, and “Reflections on the Water,” by Debussy. Richard S. Orton of the Technical high school music department will play two violin solos, “To the Warriors,” by Burleigh, and “Liebeslied,” by Kreisler. A trumpet solo, “The Swiss Boy,” by DeVille, will be played by Robert S. Shepard of the Washington high school music department. A male quartet of members of the Technical music department will sing two numbers, “Home on the Range,” a cowboy song, by Guion, and “Standin’ in the Need of Prayer,” a Negro spiritual. Members of the quartet are Raymond G. Oster, first tenor; Richard S. Orton, second tenor; J. Russell Paxton, baritone, and John M. White, bass. CANNON DRAWS HONOR Arsenal Paper’s Cover Is Reprinted By Scholastic Editor. The Arsenal Cannon, student paper of Technical high school, is featured on the cover of the March issue. Scholastic Editor, official publication of the National Scholastic Press Association. The cover shows a pile of Cannons, with the January, 1931, number on top. The picture is the same as the one used in the January, 1932, magazine issue of the Cannon. BAND, CHORUS PERFORM Feature Entertainment for Broad Ripple P.-T. A. Meeting March 24. A musical program by the Broad Ripple High School band and a chorus of fifty selected voices will feature the entertainment to be given following the business meeting of the Broad Ripple ParentTeacher Association March 24 in the school auditorium. Speaker at the meeting will be Miss Elma Ingleman of the Arthur Jordan conservatory of music.

IT is no wonder he loved his grandniece, for she was a sweet, sensitive little girl. One day she came into his studio and found the artist groping blindly about in search of his pet canary. He used to let the bird out of the cage and would play with it in the studio. But, alas, the wind blew open a window and the canary flew T out. Ossie's tears and whispers persuaded her mother to buy another canary right away and the child pretended that she had found the pet. Sir Joshua may not have been deceived, but he was touched at the kindness of the little girl. The great artist died wher. Ossie was 10 years old and shortly after she went to live with her brother in India, where she grew up to be a great belle. She married a Mr. Luther and lived happily until her sixtieth year, when she died. Her mother, Ossie I, the Strawberry Girl, was-a. vivacious old lady up to the last of her ninety-one years. n m SIR JOSHUA REYNOLDS is ranked as England’s greatest portrait painter and his works ran up into the hundreds. He painted royalty and commoners, actors, authors, and children. All his life he studied color. In Italy he tried to discover the secret of the old masters, especially Titian. In the Age of Innocence he achieved a golden tone which, with the smooth creamy surface, brought him a real feeling of satisfaction. He died in 1792 at the age of 69. Next week's portrait will be of a baby who became a king when he was 9 years old—Edward VI of England.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Lower—Marshall Maas, 3257 College avenue, is shown listening hard for the numbers which are being repeated over the audiometer. Marshall is thinking, “To be or not to be —deaf.”

CONCERT CLUB ELECTS Dave Ziffrin Is New President of Organization at Technical. Newly elected officers of the boys’ concert club of Technical high school are Dave Ziffrin, president; Richard Davenport, vice-president; Otto Frey, secretary-treasurer; John Miller. sergeant-at-arms; and Harold Woolf, librarian. Director of the club is J. Russell Paxton of the Tech music department. REHEARSM PLAYS Dramatic Entertainment to Be Given at Broad Ripple. Four one-act plays and a skit will make up an evening of dramatics to be given March 24 at Broad Ripple high school. Proceeds of the entertainment will go toward the financing of the Riparian, school annual. “The Leap Year Bride” will be presented by pupils in the English II class. Mgmbers of the cast will be Mildred Zehr, Gordon Foxworthy and Mirvin Carrier. Sponsor of the play will be Miss Flora E. Will of the English department. Pupils in English 111 and IV will present “Pat’s Matrimonial Bureau.” In the cast will be Bill Walker. Julia Heaton and Ruth Marie Hamill. Miss Margaret Coombs of the French department will direct the play. The English VII class wall give “The Man Who Couldn't Say No.” Making up the cast are Gordon Coombs, John Butler, Marjory West, Roberta Mikels and Frances Sigman. Miss Ruth B. Carter of the English department will sponsor the play. Pupils in the public speaking class will present “The Wonder Hat—a Harlequinade,” and a skit. Those having roles in the two presentations are Margaret Hitchcock, Dallas Smith, Robert Mattox, Frances L. Dungan, Lucille Hamill, Loraze Brackett and Sara Goss. Miss Lillyon L. Snyder of the English department will be sponsor. Mistress of ceremonies for the entertainment will be Nancy Heaton. Prepare for Theater Party A theater party of 110 Shortridge high school pupils will attend the Thursday matinee performance of “A School for Scandal.” The party is sponsored by Miss Mary Pratt of the English department. Miss Pratt recently sponsored a similar party to “The Merchant of Venice,” starring Maud Adams and Otis Skinner.

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“The Age of Innocence” ... a little girl just as charming as Sir Joshua Reynolds painte^er.

INDUSTRIAL ART TEACHERS WILL MEETJMFRIDAY Kokomo Will Be Host to 100 From City Schools at , Parley. Approximately 100 Indianapolis industrial arts teachers are expected to attend a two-day convention of the Industrial Arts Association of Indiana at Kokomo. Friday and Saturday, April 15 and 16. The convention will be the first meeting of the newly formed association. Decision to hold the convention and to organize into the Industrial Arts Association of Indiana was made last fall at the state teachers’ convention in Indianapolis. Permanent organization will be made at Kokomo. At the Indianapolis meeting a temporary executive committee was chosen to be in charge of the association until the Kokomo convention. Organized Into Districts The state was organized into ten districts, and district meetings were provided for. They were held during the latter part of February and the early part of March. The Eighth district, made up of Marion county, met March 3 in the Technical high school cafeteria. Temporary chairman of the Eighth district is Dwight Morris, instructor of industrial arts at Southport. W. Harold Gossett, assistant director of vocational education and manual training in the Indianapolis public schools, is a member of the executive committee. Principal speaker at the Kokomo conclave will be Professor Robert W. Selvidge of the University of Missouri department Qf industrial education. He will speak Saturday, April 16. Numerous Speakers Also speaking Saturday wall be Harry E. Wood, director of vocational education and manual training in Indianapolis. His topic will be ‘Design in Relation to Industrial Arts Projects.” Others who will speak during the two-day meeting will be G. E. Wuelfing, director of industrial arts at Gary; John Dillon, teacher of general shop at Bloomington; C. V. Hayworth, superintendent of schools at Kokomo; C. E. Hinshaw, principal of the high school at Kokomo, and Z. M. Smith and George K. Wells of the state department of vocational education. Visits to Kokomo schools and seeing some special industrial arts work offered there will be the program for the afternoon of the first day. Banquet to Be Held A banquet and a general session will follow in the evening. Professor M. L. Laubach of the State Teachers’ college of Terre Haute will be toastmaster at the banquet. G. W. Weber, director of industrial arts at South Bend, will submit a constitution and by-laws for the approval of the convention. Approximately 8,500 pupils take industrial arts work in Indianapolis. SCHOLARSHIP AWARDED Helen Webster, Tech Junior, Wins Annual Organ Contest. Helen Webster, a junior at Technical high school, won first place in the organ scholarship contest, conducted annually by Miss Elsie McGregor, organist and choir director for the First Evangelical church. The scholarship covers six months’ training and is worth SIOO. Jane Eberhardt and Geneva Howell tied for second place, each gaining a half-scholarship. Requirements of these scholarships are that a student must be able to read music well at sight and play the piano well. GLEE CLUB WILL SING Group at Benjamin Harrison No. 2 Will Appear Before Teachers. Boys’ glee club of Benjamin Harrison school No. 2, at 700 North Delaware street, will sing before a meeting of the high school music teachers at school No. 2 Thursday afternoon at 3. The glee club also will sing Monday at the luncheon of the Women’s 1 Rotary Club at the Columbia Club.

Irish Hai'p on Radio

MM} %'s

Happy were the Irish boys and girls this morning who listened to music from Mary Catherine Stair's Irish harp during the School Ship of the Air program at 9:35 over WKBF. Mary Catherine, who lives at 3861 North New Jersey street, is

Handicrafters Pupils Will Exhibit Their Work at Central Library Ail Next Week.

in handicrafts of pu- * * pils in the Indianapolis public schools will be exhibited in the Cropsey auditorium of the Central library, starting Monday, March 21, and extending to Saturday, March 26. Love for and ability in the handicrafts is one of the aims of the art department. “Handicraft arts are almost non-existent in contemporary civilization,” said Miss Florence Fitch, director of art in the public schools. “We hope to stimulate an interest among the children.” School pupils are taught how to weave, make hooked rugs, wall hangings, panels, pottqry, tiles, book jackets, and portfolios. u n * THE exhibit at Cropsey auditorium will fill the entire room, according to Miss Edna Levey, who is in charge of the library's part of the fair. All the work has been designed and executed by the children themselves, with the aid of books, magazines, and plates borrowed from the children's department and the art room. Lists of books on handicrafts have been compiled by these departments for free distribution. The articles have been selected under the supervision of the art department of the public schools and shown as typical examples of what the children are learning to do with their hands. Members of the Parent-Teachers’ Association will co-operate with the public library in presenting this handicraft fair to the public. I. U. MEN, DETROIT CO-EDS TO DEBATE Debt Cancellation to Be Argued in Extension School Tonight. Men’s debating team of Indiana university will uphold the negative of “Resolved: That all World war intergovernmental debts should be canceled,” in a debate at 6:15 tonight with the women’s team of Detroit university. The debate will be held in the auditorium of the Indiana university extension school. Butler university students and pupils of Indianapolis high schools interested in public speaking have been invited to attend by W. N. South, who is in charge of local arrangements. The debate will be open t 6 the public. No admission will be charged.’ PUPILS TO HEAR HOW MAPLE SUGAR IS MADE Miss Lucy Campbell Will Speak at Children’s Museum ' Saturday. Miss Lucy Campbell, a member of the Nature Study Club, will discuss the Vermont maple sugar industry before the departmental class in nature study at the Children’s Museum at 9:30 Saturday morning. The class is open to two pupils from each school in the city. E. E. Trisler, a bee keeper in Greenwood, will speak on “How Bees Aid Mankind” at the 10:30 class. He will illustrate his talk with a working hive of bees. The program is open to all pupils. Two rooms of the University Heights township school will attend the lecture in a body.

TRUSSES For Every Kind of Rupture. Abdominal Supports Fitted by Experts HAAG’S 129 West Washington Street

ALTERATION SPECIALISTS —WE REPAIR RF.LINE. REFIT m r/sai TAILORING LEON COMPANY 1.51 T';tt New York Mre-t

Mary Catherine Stair

a pupil of school No. 66. She was dressed in an Irish j costume, done in green and black and white—mostly green. ; Her playing was part of the St. Patrick's day program which was | sent to the shut-in- children of ' the city. '

EDITORS,ARE NAMED Miss Julia Ann Sprague Is I. U. Paper Chief.

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Miss Sprague Partridge Miss Julia Ann Sprague of Batavia, 0., “was named editor-in-chief of The Reflector, student publication of Indiana Central college, last week. She is the first woman student ever to be named to the post. She has been an associate editor this year. She will have control of the publication beginning with this week’s issue. Associate editors are Donald Partridge of Malta, Mont., and Ferd Hampel of Butler, Ind. Other members cf the staff are: Marietta Leland of Plymouth, society editor; Delmar Moore of Bloomington, 111., sports; Alva Ward of Walkerton, columnist; Loraine Wells of Corydon, typist, and Edward Gault of Elkhart, business manager. Faculty adviser in Miss Anna Dale Kek. 27 WIN HTGH~HONORS 142 Other Shortridge Pupils Get Excellent Grades, Report Shows. Twenty-seven pupils of Shortridge high school made the high honor roll for the first grading period of the second semester, it was announced Tuesday. In addition, 142 pupils were named to the honor roll. Pupils on the high honor roll are: Milton Brown Atherton. Marion Ballinger. Alovse Bottenwiser. Hattie Lou Bridgford. Mary Anna Butz. Virginia Carson. Elsie Connan. Lucile Craiale. Betty Davenport. Clarence Gault. Harriet Jane Holmes. Julian Kiser. Jean McWorkman. Mary Louise Merrell, Gordon Messing. Elizabeth Mvers. Kittv Mvers. William M. Rasmussen, Philin Redwine. Marv Jeanette Seller. Marv Jane Sheerin. Esther Steuo. Mary Vance Trent. Carol Wagner. Charles L. Williams. Arleen Wilson and Helen Zitzlaflf. Debate Painting Purchase The Fine Arts Association at Shortridge is considering the purchase of a painting from the Chicago Art Institute. Mrs. Nell Sharp, president, said that the painting would be by a modern artist. The association has bought several paintings which now are hung in corriders of the school. The money is obtained by popular subscription in the session rooms.

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.NEIGHBORHOOD THEATER? ~~

NORTH SIDE ■BHBBmI Noble at Mas*. | , T . ■ UVOVOV.W FAMILY SITE GARY COOPER In i “HIS WOMAN” CARTOON—NOVELTY—SERIAL i9th F*milT Nit*. JAMES DETNNMn*** “OVER THE HILL” NOVELTY WEST SIDE Rl TH CHATTERTON “Tomorrow and Tomorrow” ! W'aih. Sc Belmont rsljh FAMILY MTS ■ ALICE WHITE in “Murder at Midnight” If Year Farorice Theatre Is Not Lilted I rELL YOUR THEATRE MANAGER I

ORCHESTRA IS ORGANIZED AT SCHOOL NO. 8 Candidates Are Divided Into Two Groups for Tryouts as Musicians. Candida Les for the school orchestra at Calvin P. FletchG* School No. 8. at 520 Virginia avenue, have been formed into two classes. One of the classes studies brass and wood wind instruments, and the other takes lessons in violin. Instructor of the pupils is Miss Ruth Hutchins, a student at the Arthur Jordan Conservatory. At present there are twelve members of the orchestra. They are: First violins—Carl Oossa. Jesse Brown. Harold Wikle. Evan Groves and Nadvns Motsinger: second violins. Harrv Colotin. Goldine Stringer and Maurice Hartsock: piano, Tosca Guerlnni: cornet. James Perkinson: drums. John Rvan. and saxophone. Billv Harritt. Thirty-two pupils are taking lessons in the violin class. In the class in brass and wood wind instruments are ten pupils. Their allegiance is distributed as follows: One baritone horn, two alto horns, one trombone, four cornets, one saxophone and cne clarinet. 49 ON HONOR ROLE AT BROAD RIPPLE HIGH All on List Have Averages of More Than 90 Per Cent. Forty-nine pupils of Broad Ripple high school were named to the honor roll for the first grading period of the second semester, in a bulletin issued Monday. All pupils on the roll have averages of more than 90 per cent. Those on the honor roll are: Leland Bass. Ann Chapman. Wavne Hallstein. Gladvs Scott. Evelvn Armstrong. Maurice Eddincfleld. Loraze Brackett. Marv M Clickner. Wilma Brackett. Janet Chapman. Ernestine Cline. Bettv Conlev. Betsv Murbaraer. william Nelson. Gladvs Blanton and Ruthmarie Hamill. Kathrvn Fern Cline. Jack Klein. Vnc Waggoner. Margaret Duvall. Cora Zaaer, Marv Arnold. Ruth Clidence. Gordon Combs. Cameron Graham. Henrv Hohlt. Edith Schenk and Mar.lerv Davis. Lueille Hamill. Jerome Ross. Thelma Harman. Edith DeHart Imoeene Kono. James Hoggatt. John Ammerman. Esther Smith. Marv Elizabeth Linson. Marv Transbarger. Helen Carrier and Ruth Stewart. Gordon Foxworthv. Jack Rich. Mildred Zehr. Elmer Sehloot. Phil Waggoner. Jane Christena. Roberta Mikels. Bill Walker and Billv Wood. PUPILS HELP MOVE TO BUY WASHINGTON HOME Manual Training Seniors Vote SSO to Campaign for Shrine. Fifty dollars, half the class’ gift money, will be sent to the George Washington Foundation by the senior class of Manual Training high school to aid in the purchase, restoration and endowment of the boyhood home of Washington as a national shrine. A bronze plaque, to be hung In I the corridor of the school, will be ! bought with the remainder of the money. The plaque will be a tribute to Washington, and in memory of the class. On the committee which decided on the disposition of the money are Frances Bernhardt. Geneva Sauter, Harold Brittenback and Ronald Grable. DIVER WILL GIVE TALKS R. M. Zimmerman to Exhibit Deep Sea Equipment at Library. Robert M. Zimmerman, noted swimmer and deep sea diver, will display his collection of diving equipment, deep sea fish, deep sea curios, etc., in Cropsey auditorirrg of Central library Tuesday after ~ noon, March 29. He will talk informally during the afternoon. Zimmerman will speak before the Rotary Club at noon of the same day.

AMUSEMENTS SnSSEECBIIEnZI r k w i .1 rj|2s | ■ I ADA BROWN " H RAY HUGHES & “PAM” | EDNA FERBER’S Best Since “CIMARRON” I The EXPERT i I with ‘CHIC" SALE ■ and DICKIE MOORE ■ DBn ENGLISH t a h t e B at , r 5 e TONIGHT m NO ONE SEATED DI KING IST SCENE ft ETHEL Barrymore IN THE SCHOOL FOR SCANDAL WLPIO&NS IMMORTAL CO*tOY„ MSTNBUISHEB N Y CAST KVES-: 60c to >3. MAT.: SOc to tZ M. In the Sensational Mystery Drams “THE 9TH GUEST” It Cascades the,Emotions! | MATINEE WED., THCBB., SAT. | ; Night, 60e, SSe A Site. Mats., SB<, Z&r NEXT WEEK—“WIDOW BY PROXE”

EAST SIDE JANET GAYNOR. UiaUUiSiy CHARLES rARRELL “DELICIOUS” —— MMHMBnm ISO? Kfw*evrlt A re. liW lit >1 FAMILY MTE Dourlaa Fairbanks J*, “UNION DEPOT” SPORT REEL—COMEDY—CARTOON G SM; E. Wash. St. BARGAIN NITE Wesle Rn-eles in “Are These Our Children” ■■■■■MMMPM 4*iit >.. tftth st. “DELICIOUS” I ■■■■■■■■■■ 3135 E. 10th St. i t. Montfomerr in I “LOVERS COURAGEOUS”

MARCH 16,1932