Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 290, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 April 1932 — Page 6
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OPERETTA WILL BE FEATURE OF CHORAL EVENT Mothers’ Federation Will Hold Annual Meeting Next Tuesday. An operetta, “Se-A-Wa-Na," will be presented next Tuesday as an added feature of the annual luncheon meeting of the Federation of Mothers' Choruses of Indianapolis public schools in the Broadway M. E. church. The session will open at 10 with a business meeting. Luncheon will be served at 12:30. Miss Grace Black will present an organ recital at 1:30. The operetta will be staged at 2. Approximately thirty members of the various mothers choruses, in addition to twenty pupils, will take part in the production. Mrs. Juliet Shaw Is director of the musical drama. Score for the operetta will be played by the Indianapolis Little Symphony orchestra, under the direction of Robert Shultz of the Shortridge high school music department. More than 700 members of mothers’ choruses are expected to attend. Principal parts in the operetta will be taken by Mrs. Otto Bell, who will play the title role; Mrs. Juliet Shaw and Mrs. Fred Stucky. Others in the cast are: Mrs. Anna Bell, Mrs. Lola Crockett, Mrs. Madda Boyce, Mrs. Marie Holt, Mrs. Merle Foster, Mrs. Maude Keough, Mrs. Esther Niles. Mrs. Dorothy Davis. Mrs. Mabel Monroe, Mrs. Vida Fietz, Mrs. Tekla Stenger, Mrs. Julia Willman, Mrs. Doris Deebe, Mrs. Dora Nickerson, Mrs. Irene Randolph. Mrs. Jesse Wells. Mrs. Mary Hutchens, Mrs. Nell Westlund, Mrs. Fern Norris. Mrs. Carl Stucke, Mrs. Myrtle Van and Mrs. Agnes Johnson. PIONEER IS HONORED School 78 Is Named After Mrs. Minnie Hartman. Naming of- school No. 78, Sherman drive and Vermont street, as the Minnie Hartman school, in memory of Mrs. Minnie Hartman, pioneer educator and first ParentTeacher Association president in the city, was approved Tuesday night by the school board on request of patrons of the school. The board approved plans for decorating eight art rooms at Manual Training high school, at a cost of $750; roof repairs at school No. 91, at a cost of $962, and redecorating of the school at a cost of $2,113, and installation of new sanitary equipment in schools Nos. 18 and 20.
LIBRARY OFFERS AID TO CITY GARDENERS Books Offer Wealth of Data on Vegetable Growing. Since the Hoover relief organization is sponsoring a garden campaign to aid those out of employment or on part-time basis, the public library calls to the attention of potential vegetable gardeners books on its shelves covering all phases of soil treatment, fertilizers, special crops, marketing methods, and all the practical points of the vege-table-growing industry. As the garden project grows in scope, thousands of Hoosiers will be i able to augment their family food supplies with home gardens or have j a chance to earn part of their food in community or industrial gardens. Also, in connection with this relief j plan, the library has compiled a helpful list of books on this subject j by well-known authorities. The lists j are for free distribution and may be obtained at any of the branch libraries or at the Central library. 15 IN BLUE BELLE RACE Contest Will Be Decided in Shortridge All-School Party. Fifteen Shortridge high school girls will compete for the title of school's Blue Belle at the all-school party to be held Friday afternoon at the close of school. Each person attending the party will be allowed one vote. The candidates, who were named by a nominating committee, are: Betty Lou Blackmore, Barbara Haines, Barbara Jean Holt, Pauline Judd. Martha Karns, Lois LeSaulnier, Betty Lutz, Sara Maurer, Jane Priesmeyer, Suzanne Schmidt, Janet Shuman. Jo Ann Stedfield, Betty Jayne Temperly, Carol Wagner and Louise Wilbur. SCHOOL PLANS REUNION Former Teachers and Fupils of No. 41 to Meet Friday Night. A reunion for those who attended the school ten or more years ago will be held by the P.-T. A. of George W. Sloan school No. 41, 3002 Rader street, at 7:45 Friday night. On the program will be former principals, teachers and pupils of the school. In charge of arrangements will be Richard Sprague, Carter Elzroth, Earl Meyer, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Fesler, Mrs. Bert Combs and Mrs. E. E. Shelton. G. M. C. SHOW SUCCESS 77,094 Visited Fairground Exhibit; 170 Bought Cars, Says Report. W. F. Moyer, general chairman of General Motors, in the final report of business transacted at the General Motors exhibit at the state fairground last week, today reported that 77.094 persons attended the show and sales exceeded $150,000. Sales of G. M. C. products at the exhibit, recorded only when a deposit of at least $lO was made, totaled 284. Os these, 150 were passenger automobiles, and twenty trucks. Police Make “Two-Bit” Run Ay United Prrsit ELIZABETH. N. J., April 13:— Myles M.cManus reported to police that “a sum of money had been stolen from his home. The patrol wagon arrived, and an investigation showed a qaurter placed on the ice box for ice was missing, and there was no ice.
Fourth Graders Build Planes
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Left to Right—Jack Paris, 1215 West Twentieth street; Saul Scheff. 1252 Roache street; Donald Shaw, 2162 Sugar Grove avenue, and Billy Keers, 19.1 Dexter street.
You have to keep your eyes open when you enter the 4A-4B room at Riverside school No. 44, Twenty-first street and Sugar Grove avenue. There are airplanes—big ones, little ones, me-dium-sized ones—in the air.
CITY LIBRARY CHIEFS ON NATIONAL PROGRAM
In Charge of Vaudeville
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In charge of the junior vaudeville at Washington high school is Marguerite Halbing, shown in the picture. She was appointed bg officers of the junior class. The shmv will be staged April 22.
LIBRARIAN RESIGNS Assistant Head Will Take Post in Baltimore. Selection of an assistant city librarian, to succeed Miss Amy Winslow, whose resignation was submitted to the school board Tuesday night, today was being considered by Librarian Luther L. Dickerson. Miss Winslow, who has held the position five years, tendered her resignation, effective May 21, to accept a position in the Enoch Pratt library, Baltimore. Miss Winslow served as acting librarian in the interim between resignation of Charles E. Rush and appointment of Dickerson. She joined the Indianapolis public library staff thirteen years ago as head of the reference department. PLAN HOME INSTITUTE Religious Education Council to Sponsor Sessions April 20-22. An institute on marriage and the home will be conducted April 20, 21 and 22 in the First United Brethren church by Mrs. Jessie Burra 1 Eubank, psychology and sociology authority, under auspices of the Marion County Council of Religious Education.
— The Child in the Painting TRAGIC FATE BEFELL DAUPHIN WHEN REVOLUTION ROCKED FRANCE
BY ALICE ROHE Written for NEA Service IF ever a small boy had beautiful grounds to play in, it was the child of today’s picture. In the magnificent gardens of Versailles and the more intimate ones of the Trianon life seemed a gay and happy thing. He was the son of King Louis XVI of France and the beautiful Queen Marie Antoinette. When he was 5 years old the luxurious pastimes and the care-free rompings with his mother underwent a change. Things began to happen which confused him. It is sad but true that the sins of the fathers are visited too often upon the children. This time it was the sins of the grandfather, for the little boy's father, Louis XVI. and his family had to pay for the selfishness and extravagance of Louis XV. One night the little dauphin, which was the title given to the heir to the French throne, was hustled through secret corridors with his sister, his mother, father and aunt into a carriage and driven hurriedly toward the border. a a a He was so little he thought at first it was all a great and thrilling adventure until at Varennes they were stopped by none too polite men and sent back under escort to Paris, and he realized they had been trying to escape some great danger. Then came that awful day when the mob broke into the Tuileres and the king and family barely had time to escape and deliver themselves for protection to the assembly. The “Little Dauphin,” who never had received anything but kindness and courtesy, couldn't understand those rough and
The boys in the picture are builders of the airplanes and the airport. It’s a regular port, with hangars, wind "socks,” runways, and everything an airport should I have.
GENEALOGISTS LISTED Five City Residents Are Named in Institute’s "Who’s Who.” Five residents of Indianapolis are listed in "Who’s Who in Genealogy,” published by the Institute of American Geneaology, Chicago. The recognition was extended to Dr. Christopher Bush Coleman, 4314 Central avenue; Mrs. Theodore D. Craven, 1433 Bellefontaine street; Mrs. Bernays Kennedy, 5335 North Meridian street; Rivers Paterson, 915 Meyer-Kiser Bank building, and Mrs: Adolph Schmuck, 5808 East Washington street. NEW RATES ATTACKED Light and Water Adjustments Under Fire of Civic Club. Recent rate adjustments granted by the public service commission to the Indianapolis Power and Light Company and the Indanapolis Water Company are attacked in a resolution adopted by the Municipal Gardens Social Civic Club. Its officers urge the Federation of Community Civic Clubs "take a vigorous and aggressive stand toward obtaining a real saving reduction of r&tes for the people In this community.”
threatening men. Why did they put his kind father and his lovely mother and his little sister and himself in prison? For five months they remained in the Temple, treated none too well, and then one day—the day France was declared a republic—his father was taken away and executed. No one tried to comfort or calm this poor little boy and his sister. When his beautiful mother, whose hair had turned white during the agonizing experiences of the Terror, was led away to be guillotined, the little boy, -who was really king of France, was jeered and taunted and beaten by his cruel jailer. A brutal Jacobin shoemaker named Simon was given the custody of this delicately reared child, who died at the age of 10, of hunger, neglect and abuse. a a a THERE are many people who think that he escaped, and today there are stories about the Lost Dauphin which make us want to believe that the little prince found release from his misery other than death. Several men have insisted that they were the son of Louis XVI, and among the tales there is one that the child escaped and came to America. The artist who painted the portrait of the dauphin was a protege of Marie Antoinette. Louis, who became the dauphin in 1789 at the death of his brother, had been painted by many distinguished artists. But Kucharski worked mostly in pastel and was very much the vogue. He was a Polish aristocrat and had been reared at the court of the last king of Poland. He was a very great gentleman with polished manners and a truly
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Politicians who want to know how to economize should take a lesson from those builders. The whole outlay, airport, planes, searchlight and all, cost a total of SO.OO. And it was a lot of fun.
Bailey and Dickerson and Aids Leaders in New Orleans Meeting. Louis J. Bailey, di ector of the state library, and Luther L. Dickerson, head of the Indicnapolis public library, will take part in the program of the fifty-fourth annual conference of the American Library Association in New Orleans, April 25 to 30. Dickerson is chairman of the round table group on libraries in radio broadcasting. Miss Mary J. Cain, readers' assistant at the central library; Miss Hazel B. Warren of the extension division of the state library, and Miss Amy Winslow, assistant librarian, also will fill prominent positions at the conclave. Miss Cain will be leader of the section on young people’s reading. Miss Warren will speak on problems of county libraries before the rural library section. Miss Winslow, who is a member of the editorial board of the subscription books committee and of the special campaign membership committee, will speak before the general session on “Book Selection.” Other local librarians who will attend the conference are: Annette Hedges, Marcia Furnas, Wilma Reeve, Mary Henderson, Frieda Woerner, Mary Fishback, Florence Jones, Katherine Bailey, Frieda Newman, Ruth Brown, Jean Pescal, Helen Miller, Dorothy Lawson and Beth Garten. It is estimated that 2,000 representatives from libraries from all parts of the United States, Canada and Mexico will attend the conference. TRAVEL TALK LISTED Butler Student to Appear at Museum Saturday. Morgan Springer, a student at Butler university, who was in Russia, Finland, Esthonia and the North Cape countries last summer, will tell of his experiences in an illustrated lecture at 10:30 Saturday in the Children’s museum. The program will be free to children. Arthur B. Carr, director of the museum, will speak to the departmental class at the museum on "Dinosauers” at 9:30 Saturday. A setting depicting seven creatures of the reptilian age recently has been executed for the museum by Carr and John Quincy Adams, local artist. It is on display in the geological section.
kind heart. This he proved by his devotion to the queen and the dauphin. On the terrible day when the mob broke into the Tuilleries, Kucharski was painting Marie Antoinette and he succeeded in diverting the rabble’s attention to the portrait likeness while the queen escaped. When they saw the face of the queen they hated they wreaked their vengeance on the painted likeness. LATER Kucharski painted Marie Antoinette as a widow in the temple and he copied it many times in the days of his adversity. His portrait of the dauphin, made in pastel, is in the Petit Trianon today, the spot beloved of the queen and her children. Among the artist’s cherished possessions up to the time of his death in 1829 were the little gray moire vest, the cordon bleu, the decoration of the Holy Spirit which the dauphin wore in the temple before he fell into the hands of Simon. When he was an old, old man, his fortune gone, Kucharski used to make sketches of his little lost friend the dauphin and reproduced faithfully the costume he had conserved. At the height of his fame he had painted portraits of great people, among them Catharine of Russia. He was popular as a man and as an artist and gave distinction to all of his portraits. The child in next week’s painting never wouid have been bom if the little dauphin had become king of France, for he is the son of Napoleon Bonaparte, whose star rose from the revolution, and tha daughter of an emperor.
L-Z SENIORS AT TECH TO STAGE COMEDY FRIDAY ‘Skidding’ to Be Presented at Murat Dress Rehearsal Tonight. "Skidding,” a three-act txjmedy, will be presented by the L-Z section of the senior class of Arsenal Technical high school at 8 Friday night in the Murat theater. The A-K section of the class presented “A Kiss for Cinderella” in December. Leading roles in the production will be taken by Dorothy Sanders and Dave Ziffrin. Miss Clara Ryan of the English department is director of the play. Dress rehearsal will be held tonight. Committees Are Named Besides the leading characters, pupils in this cast are Kathleen Sims, John Miller, Emily Voyls, Henry Reedmaker, Rosalind Romel, Raymond Rogers, Mae Spence and Henry Moffett. Student committees in charge of the play are as follows: Finance—James Bettis, chairman; William Grepp, Richard Kautsky, Frederick Lantz, Ralph Willis and George Schmidt. Makeup—Jean Sullivan, chairman; Eunice Ashbury, Adna Bridges, Lillian Casey, Ruth Davis, Irma Flutro, Pollyanna Fricker, Albert Kennedy and Adelia Lovick. Faculty Assisting Costumes —Marie Leuth, chairman; Maxine Mertz, Annette Wor- ! rell, Evelyn Willsey and Kathryn • Addison. Properties—Virginia Woods, chairman; Norman Titus, William Rider, Paxine St. Helens and Lucille Mitchell. Faculty members in charge of the j | various departments are Chelsea ! Stewart, state manager; Herbert D. Traub, electrician; Miss Sara Ewing, j assisted by her advertising L class, publicity; Miss Ruth Dunwoody, costumes; Miss Dorothy Harder, properties; Frederick A. Barker, music; Dwight W. Park, finances; John F. Simpson, makeup, and Miss Frieda B. Lillis, assisted by her advanced printing design class, programs.
City Poet
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Lionel Wiggam Six poems in March issues of three magazines is the newest feat of Lionel Wiggam, 1931 graduate of Technical, and now a freshman at Northwestern university. He had two verses printed in each of "College Verse,” official publication of the College Poetry Social of America; "MS,” literary magazine of Northwestern, and “Voices: A Journal of Verse.” Wiggam is poetry editor of “MS,” and is a member of the staff of the "Purple Parrott,” campus humor magazine. He is a member of the Northwestern Poetry Club and the Chicago Poetry Circle. Teachers to Hear Chicagoan Dr. William S. Gray of the University of Chicago will speak on "The Teaching of Reading,” before a meeting of elementary school teachers at 3:30 Friday in the auditorium at Manual Training high school. Dr. Gray's talk is to be part of the program of instruction in preparation for the revision of the courses of study in the grades.
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Pupils of School No. 12 Will Present Pageant
Mhe title of the pageant which will F school Elizabeth Warner, room teacher, is tion is Alene Gallagher, who is |P 3ueen of the year. The complete ' :ast includes twenty-three pupils. ' Members of the cast are: K> • '.j* * Alene Gallagher. Claud Re.d. Maurice f .- |L Scarbrough, Vernie Hatten, Goldie Bene- t. \JrfF aH* del. Edna Collins, Dora Sarfoty, Isaac f Vosha, Catherine Donahue. Dorothy Gedek. t M MlMr Y; Melba Creon, Virginia Neff. Edith Gaiter, * ' v '\ kBBBET Elia Catnbi. Geneva O Brien, William Col- jlpllfilr m;. John White, Ernest Honevcutt. Rus;ell Thorndike. Genevr. Gentry. May - \dams, Robert Hughes and Frieda Cohen. b| DR. POTTER COMING ‘ M , I * •' > A
Festival of the Months to Be Given by SA-6B Children Friday. “The Festival of the Months’* Is the title of the pageant which will be presented by the pupils of the SA-6B grade at Robert Dale Owen school No. 12, 733 South West street, Friday in the school auditorium. The presentation, which was written under the direction of Mrs. Elizabeth Warner, room teacher, is made up of songs, dances and pageantry. Leading character in the production is Alene Gallagher, who is queen of the year. The complete cast includes twenty-three pupils. Members of the cast are: Alene Gallagher. Claud Maurice Scarbrough, Vernie Hatten, Goldie Beneflel, Edna Collins. Dora Sarfoty, Isaac Yosha, Catherine Donahue. Dorothy Gedek. Melba Creon, Virginia Neff. Edith Gaiter, Elia Cambi. Geneva O'Brien, William Collins, John White, Ernest Honeycutt, Russell Thorndike. Geneva Gentry, May Adams, Robert Hughes and Frieda Cohen.
DR. POTTER COMING Milwaukee Educator Will Address School Men. Dr. Milton C. Potter, Milwaukee superintendent of schools, will speak at the dinner of the Indianapolis Schoolmen’s Club at 6:15 Monday at the Severin. Dr. Potter also is president of the department of superintendence of the National Education Association. f Paul C. Stetson, superintendent of Indianaplis schools, will be toastmaster. In charge of ticket sales are E. L. Norris, principal of school No. 12; H. H. Siemers of the physics department of Shortridge high school; Wilbur S. Barnhart of the commercial department of Manual Training high school; Bjorn Winger of the English department of Technical high school; Raymond B. Hall of the music department of Broad Ripple high school, and Allen R. Stacy of the science department of Washington high school. EDITORS AIK NAMED Manual Pupils to Publish Senior Yearbook. Clara Allee has been named edi-tor-in-chief of the senior Booster, publication of the senior class at Manual Training high school. Others on the editorial staff are: Associate editor, Harold Hall; art editors. Beatrice Perue and Frances Bernhardt; athletics. La Vaughn Brabender; fclass play. Anna Cauldron; Ivy day, Carl Johnson; personals. Adrabelle Fisher. Anna Mary Koehring, Eileen Davis. Lillian Jensen. Marie Brulbs. Martha Posma, Ross Becker. Rex Morell. George Strieker. Harold Brittenback. Winford Rox, Max Vin,stein and Don Linson; organizations. Lucille Moore, and lokes, Clifford Mattson. Heading the business staff is Robert Hiatt, business manager. Assisting him are Garnet Warren, assistant business manager; Rose Becker, Marietta Tormohlen, Joseph Levy and Morris Schwartz, bookkeepers and Hilda Brink and Merle Williams, typists. ZEPPELIN HOME AGAIN Completes Trip From Brazil in 101 Hours Without Incident. Bi/ United Press FPIEDRICHSHAFEN, April 13. The Graf Zeppelin was moored here today, completing a trip of 101 hours from Pernambuco, Brazil. The ship carried eleven passengers and made the trip without incident.
The “Lost Dauphin*
Upper Photo (left to right)— Geneva O’Brien, 1114 Church street; Claud Reed, 509 Abbott street, and Dora Sarapy, 1006 South Capitol avenue, who represent the months of July, October and February, respectively, in the pageant to be staged at school No. 12. Lower Photo—Alene Gallagher, 941 Chadwick street, who is “Queen of the Year” in the production.
In Play
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Rosalind Romel Prominent role in “Skidding." class play of the L-Z section of the senior class at Technical high schtfol, will be taken by Rosalind Romel. The play will be presented Friday at the Murat. Writes Story for Magazine James F. Burrell, editor of Staff II of the Arsenal Cannon, was author of an afticle published in the March number of the School Press Review, national magazine for high school journalists. The feature, “The Cannon Booms an Extra,” describes a single sheet extra, edited by Francis Nipp and Richard Kautsky, which was distributed among the entire student body, after an auditorium meeting staged by the Tech English department. The article, occupying a full page, was accompanied by a cut showing the extra edition. Talk to Be Given on Italy “Experiences of an American ‘Foreigner’ in Italy” will be the topic of Miss Grace Emery, senior adviser of the Arsenal Technical schools, speaking before the bi-monthly meeting of the Washingtonians, senior girls’ organization at Washington high school, Thursday. Thought Asthma Would Smother Her Sleeps All Night Now. Bronchial Cough Gone. Her prompt relief from asthma and severe bronchial coughs is described in a letter by Mrs. Emma Whisenand, R. R. No. 4, Bloomington, Ind. She says; * I bad bronchial asthma and was so weak it just seemed I would drop at every step. I couldn’t sleep at night. v> hen I would lie down It seemed I would smother to death. .Since taking Xacor. every symptom of asthma has left me. and I did not have a bad cold or cough all winter." Hundreds of people who suffered for years from asthma and bronchial coughs, state that their trouble left and has not returned. Their letters and a booklet of vital information will be sent free by Nacor Medicine Cos.. 498i State Life Bldg.. Indianapolis. Ind. Call or write for this free Information, and find out how thousands have found lasting relief.—Advertisement.
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-APRIL 13, 1932
MORGAN WILL BE SPEAKER OH WKBFPROGRAM Twenty-Seventh Broadcast of Schools to Be Given at 9 Tonight. “The Individual in Our Growing Schools” will be the topic of Dewitt S. Morgan, principal of Technical high school, speaking during the
weekly half-hour broadcast of the Indianapolis public schools from 9 to 9:30 tonight over WKBF. Tonight's broadcast will be a "Tech Night” program. featuring, in addition to Morgan, several pupils of the school. The ten-piece saxophone choir, directed by Ray-
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mond B. Oster. will play "The Concourse March,” by Holmes; "Twilight in the Mountains," by Weber; "The Local Pride.” by Ford; "Old Timers,” by Alford: "Adoration Waltz.” by Otis, and "March Militaire,” by Schubert, Marjorie Byrum, a junior, will sing two soprano solos. “Trees,” by Kilmer, and "Morning,” by Speaks. With Lillian Ball, she will sing a duet number, "Ah, Sweet Mystery of Life,” by Herbert. SHORTRIDGE P.-T. A. TO HOLD BENEFIT FROLIC Event Will Be Stated at Slain Fairground Night of April 23. Annual benefit frolic of the Shortridge high school P.-T. A. will be held at 8 Saturday, April 23. in the manufacturers' building at the state fairground. Dancing, a style show, and card games will feature the event. Proceeds will go to the association's student aid fund. General chairman is Mrs. Harold W.aNeeves. Mrs. Eugene Wilder is vice-chairman, and Mrs. Harry W. Dragoo heads the publicity committee. Mrs. George W. Losey is president of the Shortridge P.-T. A.
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Morgan
