Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 289, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 April 1932 — Page 5
APRIL 12, 1932.
BUSY PROGRAM ARRANGED FOR , P.-T. A. GROUPS Jalks on Child Training, Safety, Social Service Are Announced. Addresses on child (raining, safety methods and social service, supplemented by musical programs and entertainments, are features of activities this week of Indianapolis Parent-Teacher associations in city schools. Dr. Herman G. Morgan, city health board secretary, will speak at 3:15 Wednesday afternoon on “Child Health,” at school No. 66. Schedule of events follow: School No. 3 will hold Its April meeting at 3:15 Wednesday. Mr*. Jane Johnnon Burroughs will speak on "Music and Its Place In Character Education" at school No. 9. at 3 15 Wednesday. Songs will be given by the Oim Olee Club, and a minuet will be given bv nunil*. Tea will be served bv home economic* classes. Alleen Klaiber studio of dramatics will have charge of the program at, school No. 13. at 2:30 Wednesday. Music will be given bv the primary chorus. Mrs. Clavton Ridge will speak on “Juvenile Protection" at school No. 18. at. 3.15 Wednesday. A nlavlet will he given by the Olee club and Olrl Reserves. Miss Elizabeth Downhour will give a nature, talk at school No. 2* at 305 Wednesday. Mrs Erma Cook will sins and entertainment will be presented bv pupils. Miss Carrie Scott, of the nubile library, win speak at Oliver P Morton school. No. 29 at 230 Wednesday. Miss Scott s aiiblect will be “Choosing Suitable Magazine* for Children." Miss Delores Prather will give a reading When Ma Warns Something New.” Music will be furnished hv the Mothers’ chorus. A social hour will follow. Department* will have parts on the program at School No. 34 at 2:30 Wednesday. Departments represented will be: Mothers' chorus, study class, sewing class, nursing class, and dramatic club. Dr. R. Clyde White will speak on “Conditioning Children for School" at School No. 43 at 3:15 Wednesday. Mrs Demarchus Brown will speak on “In the Footsteps of Livingstone" at school No. 44 at 2:30, Wednesday. Music will be furnished by the Riverside ladles ouartette, composed of Mrs. Margaret Berry, Mrs. Ann Thompson, Miss Bernice Nichols, and Mrs. Lulu Alberts. Miss Carrie Frances will speak on “Visual Education as an Aid In Our Schools." at school No. 45 Wednesday. Music will be furnished by the Mothers chorus. Lieutenant Frank Owen will Rive safety talk at school No. 47 Wednesday night at 7:45. Music will be furnished by the mothers’ chorus, and by pupils. A safety pity will be given by the traffic Aquitcl. Miss Ethel Hargrave will speak on • Work of the Social Service Department in Our Schools" at school No. 48 at 3 Wednesday afternoon. Pupils will recite poems. Mi3S Anna Hasselman of the John Herron Art Institute will speak on The Child’s Appreciation of Art, at school No. 49 at 5:45 Wednesday afternoon. Music will he furnished by pupils of the third and fourth grades, and by the Mothers chorus. Pupils of school No. 54 will Riye a Washington bl-centennial program at. 2:30 Wednesday. The child study circle will meet, at 1:30. Lieutenant Owen will give a safety talk at school No. 57 at 2:30 Wednesday. A salety play will be staged under direction of Miss Bertha Denzler. Music will be. furnished by the primary band, under direction of Miss Julia Vestal. Program at school No. 58 Wednesday will consist of an operetta and group of gypsy songs by the mothers’ chorus of school No. 62, in costume. Plav bv the Camp Fire Girls will be a feature of the program at school No. 61 Wednesday. A violin solo will be given by James Bush. Dr. Herman G. Morgan will talk on “Child Health" at school No. 66 Wednesday at. 3:15. The Dauner trio, composed of Louise Dauner. violinist; Helen Dauner cellist, and Dorothy Dauner. pianist, will furnish music. The Rev. Lynn A. Tripp will specie on "My Work in Criminal Court,” at school No. 67, Wednesday at 3:15. Dedication of an elm tree, planted in honor of the Washington bi-centennial, also will be a feature of the program. Music will be given by the mothers’ chorus. Association of school No. 75 will sponsor an "Old Melodies Concert" at 7:45 Friday night bv the Triangle class of West Michigan street M. E. church, under direction of John Spicer. Mrs. Demarchus Brown will speak at school No. 76 Wednesday night on "Under Tropic Skies of Indo-China." A candy and popcorn sale will be conducted following the meeting. Dr. Ada Schweitzer will speak on “Child Hygiene" at school No. 82 Wednesday at 3:15. Music will be furnished by pupils. Dr. Stanley Coulter will speak at school No. 84 Wednesday night at 8. Special music will be furnished by the men’s quartet. The program will be in charge of Dr. William Doeppers. W. D. Peat, director of John Herron Art Institute, will speak on "The Child and His Art Appreciation’’ at school No. 83, at 3:15 Wednesday. Music will be furnished hv the school orchestra.
RAID NETS SUSPECTS Duet Is Returned to Ohio as Search f Continues for Joliet Gangster. With return to Columbus, 0., of two men arrested here Thursday during a search for the slayer of a Gary policeman, police today continued the hunt for H. E. (Bud) Corbin, Joliet, (111.) gangster, suspected of the murder. The prisoners, Steve Monies, alias MaJtis, and L. J. Donaghue, alias James L. Morgan, face grand larceny charges in the Ohio city. Police had information that Corbin was hiding in a room rented by Donaghue in a North Illinois street apartment. Raids resulted in the arrest of Morries, Donaghue and a woman.
STATE PUBLISHER DIES Harold Van Trump of Rochester to Be Buried Wednesday. Hu United Prcxs ROCHTSTER. Ind.. April 12. Harold Van Trump. 57. a newspaper publisher and editor for many years, diet.* of heart disease here Monday after a year’s illness. He had been connected with the Rochester News-Sentinel, the Marion Leader, the Owensboro Inquirer, the Rochester Daily News and the La Porte Times. Surviving him are the widow and a daughter, Mrs. Fred Ritchie. Lebanon. Funeral services will be held Wednesday. Terre Haute Man Heads Cleaners f Robert Ermish of Terre Haute was re-elected president of the Indiana Association of Dyers and Cleaners at the annual meeting Monday in the Antlers. J. V. Gore of Frankfort was elected vice-presi-dent and George L. Turner of Indianapolis, secretary.
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Odd Jobs —No. 6 If Will Hays Wants Cleanup in Films , City Man Cam Do It
BY ARCH STEINEL SAVING movie fans from the Jitters, after a siesta with a film that flickers, is the odd job of Harry 8. Teitel, 66 West New York street. He's the “shooer” of the mosquitoes and bird-like animals that crawl on talkie screens from “gosh knows where.” And when you see a film that resembles a woman's polka-dot dress, and shimmies before your eyes like a hula-hula gal, you can bank on it that film is in need of a rubdown and cleansing at the hands of Teitel. Teitei is the renovator of all of Indiana's films. He cleans an average of 50,000 feet daily with more rapidity than the average launderer of the family wash. For film gets as dirty as a child playing at mud-pies, and when it gets that way then the mosquitolike specks and birdies dance upon the screen. n n IT’S then that you get a headache watching your favorite heroine “neck.” You declare it was a “bum show," when the chances are that your disposition was ruined as much by the intruding birdies that spell grime to the film renovator as anything else. New film needs treatment before showing to a pre-view audience as much as old film needs cleaning. Film rejuvenation, Teitel says, is based on a thirty, sixty, ninety and one hundred twenty-day basis. For instance anew film is shown thirty days and then cleaned. By the time it has been shown those thirty days, the demand decreases for the film. It is not used as often, with the result that it’s sent to the cleaners sixty days later for its next renovation and then ninety days for the next cleaning, and so on. nan A MACHINE similar to a movie projector is used in the cleaning process. The film is run through white cloths saturated with cleanser. The cleanser not only takes away the birdies that cause flickering films, but oils the surface of the films, making it pliable and as easy to operate as the gears of your car after alemiting. The cleansing produces clearer vision and doubles the life of the film. Teitel serves film exchanges, the state board of health, the state fish and game commission, Indiana university, and other organizations cleansing films. He renovates the baby movies—the sixteen-millimeter films—as well as the Goliaths of the screen. He formerly was renovator for the William Fox Film Corporation, Warner Brothers, and other film companies. He operated the first film renovator in the country. The renovator was invented by his cousin, A. Teitel of Chicago, Teitel has been in Indianapolis since 1921.
STRIKES PARKED CAR Driver Is Held After Crash on East Washington St. Two persons were injured, an alleged hit-and-run driver is held and another motorist was charged with drunkenness as result of traffic accidents Monday night, according to Dolice. After he is alleged to have failed to ston when his car crashed into a parked auto at 1330 East Washington street, Herman W. Aebker, 1302 East Vermont street, was arrested on charges of drunkenness, driving while drunk and failing to stop after an accident. Jack Kern, 47, of 2025 Southeastern avenue, was charged with drunkenness and driving while drunk after a collision with another auto at Capitol avenue and Washington street. When a taxi in which they were riding careened into a tree in the 1103 block West New York street, two persons were cut and bruised on the face, neither seriously. They are Nick Dimukoss, 35, of 714 Ketchum street, and Miss Margaret Owens. 25. of 2051 College avenue. Harold Shelton, 35, of 264 North Elder avenue, driver, escaped unhurt.
Gone, but Not Forgotten
Automobiles reported to police as stolen belong to: v Mrs. Edear Barnard. 861 North Drexel avenue. Willvs-Knight sedan. 19-679. from New York and Pennsylvania streets. Wilbert Pieoer. H2R Cameron street. Chevrolet- coupe 42-587. from 2900 Columbia avenue.
BACK HOME AGAIN
Stolen automobiles recovered bv police belong to: Carl Downev. lot 6 North Belle Vieu place. Pontiac coupe, found at Tenth and Mount streets. Mrs. Thomas Adams. 444 Schofield avenue. Ford coupe, found at rear of 1223 Massachusetts avenue Ford roadster. U-333. District of Columbia. found at 3134 Central avenue. , Edgar W. Barnard. 1124 North Butler avenue. Willvs-Knight sedan. ..found at Boulevard place and Thirty-second street. PROMOTE MAJ. CONWAY Salvation Army Makes Rushville Man General Secretary. Major W. R. Conway, of Rushville, has been appointed general secretary of the Indiana division of the Salvation Army. Major Conway, who will be chief assistant of Major James Murphy, commander of the division, has served in several capacities throughout the middle-west during the twenty-six years he has been affiliated with the organization.
DIUREX Eliminates the Poisons that Destroy Kidneys, Sold and Guaranteed At All HAAG DRUG STORES
Men’s and Women’s CLOTHING ON EASY CREDIT ASKIN & MARINE CO. 127 W. WathiDtton St.
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Harry S. Teitel at work keeping: the birdies out of the eyes of movie patrons.
CITY EMPLOYES TO FACE SALARY CUTS
Officials Agree to Slash Own Pay Along With Those of Workers. Salaries of all city officials and employes, excepting those in the lowest brackets, will be slashed in 1933, in an effort to balance the budget, Mayor Reginald H. Sullivan and department heads have agreed. The executives. met with the mayor Monday afternoon and agreed unanimously that the cuts are necessary. Sullivan's $7,500 salary and the pay of all other officials, whose salaries are fixed by statute, are to be included in the pruning task. How much the salaries will be cut will not be known until the 1933 budget has been studied carefully, it was declared after the conference. Sullivan stressed the fact that the tax payment showing in May will have considerable bearing on the matter. The cuts will become effective Jan. 1. “All executives agreed that a reduction of salaries should be made,” said Sullivan, “to give relief to the taxpayer. Naturally, the executives can not ask the employes to take cuts and not take them, too. Therefore, by agreements and waivers, the statutory salaries would be reduced along with the others.” Os the city’s total budget of more than $7,000,000, about $3,000,000 is devoted to salaries. More than twothirds of this sum is used for the salaries of more than 1,000 firemen and policemen. CRUISER AT ST. JOHNS British Warship Appears Despite Denials One Had Been Requested. By United Press ST. JOHNS, Nfd., April 12. The British cruiser Dragon arrived here today after recent denials by Governor Sir John Middleton that he had asked for a British warship to help maintain order. _ The city has been quiet since the recent riots in which the parliament buildings were sacked and the life of Prime Minister Sir Richard Squires threatened.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
LEGION TO MAP PLANS FOR ANNUAL ROUNDUP Membership Drive Leaders Will Confer Tuesday Night. Commanders, adjutants, finance officers, and membership chairmen of American Legion posts in the twelfth district will complete plans for the annual membership roundup at a meeting tonight in the legion clothing station, 118-120 East New York street. The district, with a present enrollment of 2,545, will set its goal at 3,000 during the campaign, which opens April 15, according to John W. Hano, district commander. The present membership is several hundred above the quota. 20 ESCAPE BLAST Roused From Beds Before Apartment Is Wrecked. By United Press M’KEESPORT, Pa., April 12. Twenty persons were roused from their beds early today just in time to escape a dynamite blast that destroyed the apartment building in which they lived. Gasoline dripping from an empty room aroused suspicions of two residents of the building returning home late. They investigated and found a charge of dynamite planted in the basement, A fuse attached to the explosive was burning. George Hall, 68. of Pittsburgh, a visitor in the home of Raymond Ritter, tried to extinguish the fuse. Failing, he attempted to carry the dynamite from the basement. The explosive was secured to the floor. Hall and Ritter then began rousing the three families who lived in the building. They succeeded in awakening all before the explosion. Fight to Save Commerce Bureau Campaign to prevent closing of the local bureau of foreign and domestic commerce, as an economy move by the government, has been joined by the Service Club.
BRITAIN BACKS 0. S. PLAN AT ARMS PARLEY Stimson Arrival Friday at Geneva to Revive Interest in Far East. BY STEWART BROWN United Press Staff Correspondent GENEVA, April 12.—The United States’ disarmament proposals, presented to the world disarmament conference, reposed today in the general disarmament pot holding hundreds of other plans. Ambassador Hugh Gibson's program courteously was received, then relegated to the steering committee. This meant that the conference would discuss it—sooner or later. It appeared that the United States plan, submitted with State Secretary Henry L. Stimson en route to Geneva, would not be successful in speeding up the conference by agreeing immediately to abolish certain aggressive land armaments and then proceeding with other related problems. League Delegates Divided French Premier Andre Tardieu, in the most polite and diplomatic manner, succeeded in sending the proposals to the steering committee, instead of acting on them immediately. The plan, will find its way to the league program like other propositions. League delegates were divided on whether the United States’ suggestions to isolate problems and deal with them effectively in succession was preferable to a complicated debate of many conflicting proposals. It was believed the British would support the American plan as a method of quickly gaining public attention. Possibly, in an enlarged form, the plan might afford a means of the conference saving its face if nothing concrete is achieved. Backed By Great Britain • Indicative of the closest AngloAmerican co-operation, it was learned that Ambassador Gibson advised foreign secretary Sir John Simon of the general terms of the United States proposals before they were submitted to the conference. Sir John approved them immediately as practically identical with the British objectives. It was indicated that the far eastern conflict would again become one of the league's most important problems with the arrival of Secretary Stimson Friday. It was learned that the Japanese delegation submitted a statement to the league council charging that Chirn. continues to foment disorders in Manchuria and anti-Japanese agitation in China. The Japanese, claiming that disorders still are likely in Manchuria, do not intend to withdraw their troops, but will use them to provide amicable collaboration with the new Manchu government, the statement indicated.
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Witness
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Rose Ellis, above, was a witness in the London trial of the Rev. Harold Francis Davidson, elderly Suffolk rector, who has been accused of immorality with young w T omen among whom he was supposed to be conducting “rescue work.” Bandit Suspect Nabbed Suspected of being one of two bandits who robbed Morris Bornstein, 1244 Union street, of sl9. after taking him a ride in his own car, Francis Maier, alias Monty Maier, 25, of 1408 Charles street, was arrested early today by police. He is held under high bond on a charge of vagrancy.
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HIJACK SLAYING HUNT TURNS TO TERREJAUTE Gang Movements in Vigo County, Eastern Illinois Are Investigated. Gang operations in Terre Haute, Ind., and an eastern Illinois city were being traced by police today in a search for the killers of George Holland (Hots) Gardner, 25. of 225 South Holmes avenue, in a hijackers’ war Friday night. Following report that hijackers staged a gun battle near Greencastle the night Gardner met his death, authorities from that city were to come here today to link the shooting with slaying of Gardner. A man's cap w’as found at the scene. Police early today raided a west side residence, but failed to find one of a trio of killer suspects. Police believed Gardner’s slayers drove the dead man's car to the Holmes avenue address where it was found. A gangster companion of Gardner, known as “Mickey,” escaped after notifying Mrs. Gardner of the murder. Mrs. Gardner, another woman and two men were arrested by police, but were believed not to have participated in the shooting. Police recalled that Gardner, a dirt track race driver, was arrested several years ago as a suspect in the Rising Sun jail delivery, which resulted in arrest and imprisonment of Ted Geisking, gang leader. Gardner was realesed after questioning. Gardner also was —anted at Fowler, Ind., in connection with a hijacking in which gangsters mistook a truck load of auto batteries for a load of liquor. It also is believed Gardner may have participated in a shooting near Greencastle several months ago when federal agents w’ere fired on by hijackers.
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REVEAL JO STARVED Welfare Group Counts Toll in New York City. By United Pre NEW YORK. April 12.—Twenty persons died of starvation in New York City last year, according to figures released by Eleanor Flexner in the magazine Better Times, printed by the welfare council. The welfare council had the statistics gathered from New York hospitals which treated ninety-five cases. Thirty-five Governors had reported recently there was no starvation in their states. Translation of the Bible into English was the most remarkable event in the reign of James I. Why Fat Folk* Stay Fat “The trouble with me. and I guess this applies to 99% of the men and women who are putting on weight. I didn’t have the energy or "pep” to keep it off. Lost all interest in any healthy activity and just lazjd around accumulating the old pounds.” Start, faking Kruschen Salts—that* the common-sense way to reduce. This is what th°y and clean out the Impurities in your blood by keeping the bowels, kidneys ami liver in splendid working shape and fill you with a vigor and tireless energy you'd most forgotten had existed. Asa result, instead o( planting yourself in an easy chair eyery free moment and letting flabby fat accumulate, yon feel an urge for activity that keeps you moving around doing the things you've always wanted to do and needed to do to keep you in good condition. Be careful of the foods you eat —go light on fatty meats and pastry—then watch the pounds slide off I Take one half teaspoonful in a glass of hot water to-morrow morning and every morning—and if they don’t change vour whole idea about reducing, go back and get the small vrie you paid for them. Get a bottle of Kruschen Salts—lasts 4 weeks—at any progressive druggist nn.vwhere in the world, but for your health's sake when reducing be sure and get Krusghen—it's the safe, harmless way to reduce.—Advertisement.
