Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 302, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 April 1932 — Page 5

APRIL 27, 1932.

WASHINGTON TO BE HONORED BY CITY'S SCHOOLS 100,000 Persons Will Have Part in Observances Here Friday. Approximately 100,000 persons are expected to take part In Washington bicentennial observances Friday, when all public, private and parochial schools in the city will present programs. Programs will center about the anniversary of the inauguration of the first President, who took the oath of office April 30, 1789. School No. 1 will plant a tree. In addition, first-grade pupils will give patriotic poems and a selection of the primary band. Second and third grade pupils will present a dramatization of “The Ghosts of Bygone Years.” Fourth and fifth grade pupils will have a flag drill. Older pupils will take charge of the planting of the tree in memory of Washington. “Broadcasts” Scheduled Children of the upper four grades of school No. 10 will present “A Chain of Broadcasts—Washington’s First Inauguration.” First four grades will plant two elm trees. “The Patriot,” a pageant of Washington's life and times, will be given by pupils of school No. 61. Owing to the limited capacity of the hail, the pageant will be given on a small scale with a small number of participants. Children giving the Prolog and epilog will be attired m modern dress. Children taking the other parts including the “Story Teller" will wear the clothing of the colonial period. Furniture suggestive of the colonial days will be used to add reality to the scenes. Other patriotic exercises will be held. Activities of school No. 3 in grades four through eight will center around the life of Washington. The first group will show Washington as a planter. The second group will show Washington, the society man. The third group will present a dramatization, entitled, “The Constitution Convention and the Inaugural.” Shadow Show Arranged “Through the Years With Washington” will be shown on the shadow picture screen at James Whitcomb Riley school No. 43, in celebration of the bicentennial program. The picture will be posed by the pupils of grades four to eight. Readers will carry the thread of the story and there will be incidental music and songs. By means of living pictures, several of the famous Ferris Epic series will be reproduced at Theodore Potter Fresh Air school No. 74. Selection is being based upon the relative importance of the pictured episode. Each of these will be preceded by historical description arranged by the children. A pageant will be given at school No. 84. Twelve girls dressed in colonial costume will represent the twelve phases of colonial days. Each grade in the building will be represented. Big Program at No. 54 Children from all grades in school No. 54 will take part in the celebration in the school auditorium Friday. An elaborate program consisting of colonial dances, patriotic songs sung by the boys' and girls’ glee clubs, and several short plays depicting scenes and stories of his life, is planned. This program is to be given for both the Parent-Teach-ers’ Association and the entire stuejent body. Each room in the school is contributing an article about Washington, which will be published in a special Washington edition of the school paper that will be ready for distribution Friday. The school orchestra will have a medley of patriotic airs as the opening number of the program at school No. 41. Silhouette pictures of events in the life of Washington will be under charge of children of the sixth grade. The minuet dance in costume will be given by sixth grade girls. The boys' glee club and the third grade chorus will sing a group of patriotic songs. A playet, “Washington Takes Oath of Office," will be presented. Outdoor Event at No. 25 Exercises at school No. 25 will start at 1:30 in the school yard.* The program will be a combination of the regular May day and Washington programs. Features will include tree planting, flag drill, minuet, concert poem, band, primary chorus, intermediate chorus and massed singing. Program at the Christian Park school No. 82 will be held Thursday at 8. A pageant play. “Scenes From the Life and Times of Washington,” will be presented. A tulip tree will be planted following the auditorium exercises. Tree planting exercises will be held at school No. 68. with each child having a part in the planting. Hie P.-T. A. is furnishing a tree. Bicentennial programs have been presented on two previous occasions recently. Exercises by the primary band, songs, poems and a playlet will be offered at school No. 52. An evergreen tree will be planted. All pupils will participate. A play, “Why Washington Did Not Become a Sailor,” will be presented as one of the features at school No. 53. Patriotic exercises also will be conducted in the building, while a tree planting will take place in the school yard. War Scenes to Be Depicted All children will participate in the patriotic exercises at Horace Mann school Nb. 13. An elaborate program is planned. Colonial costumes will be worn. Scenes from the Revolutionary war will be depicted by the youngsters. A pageant, featuring living pictures, shadow pictures and dramatizations of episodes in the life of Washington, will be given at the Mary E. Nicholson school. No. 70, Thursday and Friday night. The school orchestra, under direction of Mrs. Helen I. Pollock, will provide a musical program in harmony with the various episodes. Negro spirituals will be a feature of the plantation period and the girls’ glee club will give a number of appropriate songs. A minuet will be danced by a group of department girls. The pageant will cover the entire span of Washington’s life and will culminate with the presentation to the school of a dogwood tree to be planted near a redbud already in tha school ground*. Red and white

Washington Plays Hold Attention of Schools

■i f US Bl Si ~ w Thelma Rose, 711 East New York street. l N ° 801 S ° Uth State * street; Katherine Graham, 602tz Lower—Mary Alice Snell, 1628 atfofra.- >,T^Z East Washington street; and Nor- Fletcher avenue, and Eileen Blair, * ' ‘wit ma Hallam, 413 North Davidson 1028 South Randolph street, who street - will have prominent parts in the t W ||| Upper Right—Eva Sheffey, 541 McKinley school production. Mb , > s&* : ' tHI

Wherever there is a school there will be a Washington Friday when the public, private, and parochial schools of the city present programs in observance of the bicentennial. More than 100 schools will present pageants, plays, and musical programs. Upper Left—A scene from the pageant to be presented by Clemen’s Vonnegut School No. 9, at 407 North Fulton street. The pupils will depict the making of the flag. Left to right—Louise Bennett, 725 East St. Clair street; Thelma Rose, 711 East New York street; Katherine Graham, 602 V 2 East Washington street; and Norma Hallam, 413 North Davidson street. Upper Right—Eva Sheffey, 541

being the colors of his family, Washington planted the two varieties of trees in close proximity on his Mt. Vernon estate. As these are also the colors of the Mary E. Nicholson school, it was deemed appropriate to adopt his plan. A tree will be presented by a member of the graduating class and accepted by a boy and girl representing the IB grade. School No. 4 Offers Feature The program of school No. 4 will be the most elaborate of the bicentennial celebration at this school. It will be for both parents and children. Several features will be presented and there will be patriotic music. “Voices From the Past’’ is to be a special number. ' Woodrow Wilson school, No. 75, will have special exercises, with the upper grade children honoring Washington in the morning and the other grades having patriotic programs in the afternoon. Some of the features throughout the day will include a drill, a dialogue, “To Be Like Washington;” a minuet and “A Message From Washington,” a playlet; a patriotic illustrated cantata, songs and musical numbers. Appropriate costumes will be worn. Two programs will be given at school No. 26. At 8:30, department grades will offer, “The Patriot.” a playlet, and the rest of the school will present patriotic exercises at 10:35. Dialogue, songs, special numbers and other Washington features will be conducted. Film to Be Shown Coburn school No. 66 in a feature pregram will stress the moral qualities on which Washington’s greatness rested. A Washington film will be shown. Poems, stories and plays in literature and composition classes have furnished the material for much profitable work. Other features will be a tableau, a play, “The Lure of the Sea.” and “Washington at Valley Forge.” a tableau. Appropriate music will add to the program. School No. 79 plans one of its most elaborate programs. Patriotic plays, speeches, compositions, songs and stories will be given. There also will be a tree planting. The history department at school No. 17 is sponsoring the celebration Friday. Plans include patriotic songs by the group and special selections by the school choral groups, and an address by Dr. Paul Haworth of Butler university. Living pictures representing four important incidents in Washington’s life will be given. Decorations will consist of portraits of Washington, flags and colonial furnishings. Lieutenant Frank Owen will talk on “Safety.” Pageant Is Rehearsed School No. 67 will present a pageant with Washington represented by three boys: "Childhood.” Kenneth Williams; "Youth," Fred Eastwood; “Adult," Basal Reiss. Lillian Harding will portray Martha Washington, and Arlouine Hooper that of Washington’s mother. Other roT will be played by James Gas-

East Ohio street, who will be reader in the presentation at Vonnegut school. Center Left—Thelma Rose and Fred Lynn, 620 East New York street, who will take part in a minuet scene. Center Right, Left to Right— Edith Petty, 1602 Fletcher avenue; Amos Childers, 1427 Pleasant street; Betty McArthur, 2106 Prospect street, and Robert Payne, 813 South Villa street. These pupils will play the roles of the Wash-ington-Custis family in the presentation of William McKinley School No. 39, at 801 South State street. Lower—Mary Alice Snell, 1628 Fletcher avenue, and Eileen Blair, 1028 South Randolph street, who will have prominent parts in the McKinley school production.

tino, Omer Scott, Richard Ross, Way land Roberts, Neva Danner, Lu'-y King, Charles De Haven, Charles Young, Ralph Anderson, Bernard De Witt, Fred Eastwood, Keith Jackson, Robert Wilson, Crist Zoitas. Fourth graders will give an Indian dance. Other pupils on the program will include Mary Ellen Johns, Dean Gribelar, Ned Sharp, Jack Wunder, Max Hybarger, Victor Foster, Robert Long, Charles Cole, Ernest Rice, Theresa Casgey, Lucille Goodall, Melvin Phillips, Helen Cox. A tree will be planted on the school ground. Mrs. Richard Ross, president of the P -T. A., will present the tree and it will be accepted by Jack Wunder. Wayne Senter and Mildred Springer will participate on the planting. The feature w’M be "The Inauguration Ball.” Father Time to Appear Each room at school No. 20 will have special patriotic programs. Pages of a large book entitled "Episodes From the Life of Washington” will be turned by “Father Time,” as the feature on the program at school No. 85, Friday. Each page will announce a different incident in Washington’s life and each incident will be presented by a different room of the school. The bicentennial is being observed throughout the week at school No. 34, and a special program will be given. All of the children will participate in the programs. The earlier programs have been centered around the life of Washington and a play, “Valley Forge,” is to be presented. Patriotic songs, a minuet and other exercises are to be presented. Playlets Are Planned Plays, pageants, songs and other patriotic exercises will be held Friday at school No. 81. Some of the features will include “Betsy Ross,” a play by the primary grades entitled "Being Like Washington” and a musical playlet “When Betsy Ross Made Old Glory,” by intermediate and department grades. Colonial costumes will be worn, the primary orchestra will give several numbers and patriotic songs and poems will be presented. The programs are being presented under the direction of Milo H. Stuart, assistant superintendent of schools, and the Rev. Maurice O'Connor, pastor of St. Joan of Arc church. 29 WIN HIGH HONORS Named Ixrfty Scholastic Standings on List at Shortridge. Twenty-nine pupils were named to the high honor roll of Shortridge high school for the second grading period. They are: Hilton Brown Atherton. Marian Ballinger. Jean Boling. Alovse Bottenwiser. Walter Carnahan. Rena Dean. Clarence Gault. Mary Alice Hicks. Harriet Jane Holmes. Julian A. Kiser, Constance Lewis, Sara Elizabeth Marks. Jeane McWorkman, Janet Meditch. Mary Louise Merrell. Gordon Messing. Elizabeth Myers, Maxine Peters, William N. Rasmussen. Helen E. Rogge, Marjorie Schock. Mary Jeanette Seller. Warren Searer. James Shoemaker. Jeanne Stearns, Esther Steup. Margaret Stump. Mary V, Trent, Carol Wagner and Ar\ un yMta Hi r

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES'

FALLEN GRID STAR WILL BE HONORED

Tech Pupils Plan Memorial Rites for Tommy Taylor Friday Morning. Technical high school pupils will pay tribute to the memory of Tommy Taylor, football star, who died last Thursday of injuries received in a game last fall, Friday in the school auditorium., Classes will be dismissed for an hour in the morning, while the entire student body turns out to honor the dead gridiron hero. Frederick Barker will play on the organ during the assembly. When the pupils are seated and the chimes sounded he will play “Nearer, My God. to Thee.” Following this, the Tech choir, a 51 ON HONOR ROIL ,-- ■ 9 102 at Washington Also Qualify for Grades. Fifty-one pupils of Washington high school won places on the school’s high honor roll for the second grading period of the second semester. In addition, 102 pupils made grades qualifying them for the honor roll. Those who received high honors were: Hazel Grundon, Betty Grannigan. Glen Ludlow. Julia Sparenblek. Frances Cates, Helen Walker, Pricilla Mitchell. Ethel Chiki, Alice Walker. Chester McNemev. Jane Leonard. Helen Bingman. Mildred Fletemever. Hayden Rahm, Lorene Eakins. Josephine Crider. Wanita Titus, Henrietta Poland, Evelynne Lewis. Charles Schwartz, Betty Douglass. Mary Margaret Wolf, Helen Sanford. Simon BrUl, Matilde Sparenblek, Eileen Morris, Vemie Grahm, Josephine Halbing. Edith Carter. Louise Farmer. Stanley Lawton, Sophie Somack, Ruth Barr. Charles Lockwood, Irma Smith. Viola Amos. Marguerite Halbing. William Walker. Cecelia Kupperschmidt. Mildred Neaville. Thomas Swindell, Opal Nance, Rudolph Brezansek. Herman Fischer. Lucille Broich. Kenneth Scott. Mildred Wisdon. Frank Vergo. Violet Powell. Helen Danforth and Wanda Penizek. Pupils making the honor roll were: Hazel Wilson. Elizabeth Penizek. Mildred Zorman. Irene Scott. Georgia Foster, Florence Burgess. Leonard Smith. Anna Marie McConnell. Fay Miller. Clifford Hart. Irene Scott. Vera Thompson, Floyd Blake. Evelyn Biven. John Lewis. Frederick Neaville. Janet Eamst. Hazel Englert. Mike Stanich. Margaret Arnold. Lottie Gross. Helen Alexoff. Allan Harlan. Geraldine Kelly, Josephine Brisnik. Thelma Boldman, Mary Brothers. Thelma Fitch. Anna Lascu. Charles Gibson. Marion Bugher. Harriett Fouts. Pauline Reamer. Margaret Trager. Helen Butler. Marv Jean Fairchild. Helen Weidner. Jane Fletemever. Mildred King. Brei* Wilson. Benjamin Russell. Margaret Case, Helen Muterspaugh. Dorothy Gorman. Geneva Cox. Louise Tansel. LaVerne Conway. Mary Ann Duke. Maynard Paris. Dorothy Degener. Margaret Schoen. Anne Avres. Lillie King. Elma Oisen, Frances O’Neil, Louise Brasler. Winifred Padgett. Violet Douglass. Mildred Poland. Eugenp Whitis. Lucile Rieck, Josephine Wells. Sadie Miller, Prank Zakrafesek. Elmer Koch. Anita Adams. Geraldine Britton, Catherine Brooks. Vera Cobb. Fleeta Edwards. Ruth Eldridge. Catherine Heichen. Fave Jones. Juanita Jones, Martha Van Talge. Doris Stark. Mariorie Randolph. Zavazda RaptclifT. Fred Richards. Robert Lemen. lolene Sheffer. Enas James. Robert Simms. Mildred Morrow. Loren G_ Rockev. Edwin Russell. Edith Gineerv. Harrv Greeley. Frank Cassel. Dorothea Burkholder, Clyde Carter. Doris Dougherty .Anna Skufka. Charlotte Crist. Leroy Stutsman. Ruth Walters. Elma QualUza. Dorothy Msie’ich. Charles Cox, Let* M*jr Fuiien and Dorothy 6m*.

mixed group under the direction of Mrs. Elizabeth Cochran, head of the music department, will sing “I Heard the Voice of Jesus Say, 'Come Unto Me and Rest.’ ” The invocation will be delivered by the Rev. Peter F. McEwen, pastor of the Wallace Street Presbyterion church, of which Tommy was a member. | The prayer will be followed by a solo by John White, an instruc- ! tor in the music department. “There ! Is No Death.” Charles Applegate, football teammate of Tommy’s, and one of the | six senior presidents; John Mueller, I football coach; DeWitt S. Morgan, Tech principal, and a member ot the boys’ concert club, of which Tommy was president, will speak. The concert club representative has not yet been chosen. Closing the program will be “My Faith Looks Up to Thee,” sung by the choir, and taps, played by a bugler from Tech R. O. T. C. unit. Taps—“go to sleep”—and with it will go the prayer of Tech: “Rest in peace.” SCIENCE GROUP ADMITS NATURE CLUB OF TECH Pupils Are Given Certificates of Affiliation by Academy. Nature Study Club of Technical high school has been granted a certificate of affiliation by the Indiana Academy of Science. Having passed all requirements, each member of the club automatically .becomes a member of the junior branch of the academy. Pupils who have been granted membership to the state organization are: Juanita Brann. Edith Rowe. Frances Patterson, Herbert Hadley. Mary Johnson, Phvllis Millholland. La Verne Anderson Carol Geisler. Gaylord Evans. De Armand Dochez. Florence Baus. Mildred Chandler. James Croslev. Martha Walker. Ruth Hoffman. Thelma Pugh. Joe Dye. and Paul Baus. Clare F. Cox of the science department is faculty sponsor of the group. Paul Baus is president. Gary Cooper Back From Hunt By United Press HOLLYWOOD, April 27.—Gary Cooper returned to Hollywood today bringing with him a cargo of sixty mounted wild game specimens and a live baby chimpanzee, trophies of a hunting trip in Africa. No Bids for Artificial Arm By United Press DETROIT, April 27.—Police offered 3,000 unclaimed armies at auction yesterday. Today only one remained * unsold. No bids were made for an artificial arm, although two sets of false teeth were knocked down to new owners.

MUSIC WEEK TO BE OBSERVED IN CITY'SSCHOOLS Large Choruses Will Sing As Part of National Celebration. National Music week, to be observed throughout the United States, May 1 to 8, will be celebrated in the Indianapolis public schools with special programs in each school. The week has special significance this year as 1932 is the bicentennial anniversary of Joseph Haydn, Austrian composer and originator of the symphony, and is the centennial year of the writing of “America” by the Rev. Samuel F. Smith. Leading in the schools’ musical activities of the week will be the musical program to be presented at 3 Sunday in the Herron Art institute. Pupils from four schools will take part. Primary chorus of Abraham Lincoln School No. 18, 1001 East Palmer street, will sing a group of fifteen songs. They will be directed by Miss Anna Nackenhorst. Miss Kathryn Tacoma will be accompanist. Both are primary teachers. The chorus will be outfitted in robes. Chorus of 200 to Sing Three numbers will be sung by the intermediate chorus of Henry P. Coburn School No. 66, at 604 East Maple road. The chorus of 200 voices will sing under the direction of Mrs. Ada Clark. Accompanist will be Mrs. Catherine Lane. The selections to be sung are “From the Land of the Sky Blue Water,” by Cadman; “I Hear a Thrush at Eve,” by Cadman, and “Swallows,” by Cohen. TvTo musical organizations from Wallace Foster School No. 32, at Twenty-first and Illinois streets, will sing, the girls’ glee club and the boys’ glee club. Mrs. Rosalee B. Spong, music teacher, will be director and accompanist to both groups. The girls’ club will sing “Pippa’s Song,” by West, and “Dreamland Lantern,” by West. Selections by Boys The boys’ organization will sing ‘“All Through the Night,” an old Welsh air, and “Musica,” by Sullivan. Arrangements of both songs will be by Ralph W. Wright, director of music in the public schools. The boys’ chorus of Florence Fay School No. 21, at 2815 English avenue, will sing three selections. Miss Katharine Leonard, music teacher, will direct. Accompanist will be Mrs. Robert Moor. Numbers to be sung are “My Heart Ever Faithful,” by Bach; “Lift Thine Eyes,” from “Elijah,” by Mendelssohn, and “Contemplation,” by Verdi. The concert will be one of the regular series of Sunday afternoon musicals now being presented at the art institute. Second headliner event of the week will be the fourth annual concert of the Federation of Mothers’ choruses which will be presented in Caleb Mills hall, Thirty-fourth and Pennsylvania streets, at 8 Tuesday. 300 Mothers in Chorus Approximately 300 women, all mothers of children in the elementary schools, will sing. They will be assisted by Miss Maude Delbridge, assistant supervisor of music in the public schools, and Miss Lois Le Saulnier, Sarah Olinger, Luella Hopkins, and Eleanor Auty, violinists. Guest artists will be Ralph W. Wright, director of music. Miss Isabelle Mossman will direct the chorus. Accompanists will be Miss Geraldine Trotter of the music department and Miss Louise Swan, music teacher at Schoool No. 85, pianists, and Miss Grace Black, principal of School No. 54, organist. Mrs. Maude Moudy, principal of School No. 58, is president cf the Federation. The concert will be open to the public.

LITERARY CLUB IS OR6ANIZED Group of Hawthorne Pupils Meets Wednesday. The Hawthorne Literary Club recently has been organized by the pupils of schoof No. 50. It meets every Tuesday afternoon at 3:15 in the Hawthorne branch library. The purpose is to encourage the reading of good juvenile books and to interest children in the great stories of literature. Herbert Russell acts as president and Herschell Sartor is secretary. Other members include Nina Britton, Wilma Casey, Edward Cotton, Charles De Moss, Marie Holler, Carl Housefield, Charles Irwin, Highland Jones, Eileen Kaufman, Mary McCracken, William Steckleman, Esther Viellieber, Eileen White, Mary Wilmer, and Dorothy Winters. The story of King Arthur is being told in cycle form. Book reyiews by the children are given at each meeting. Book contests and dramatizations are given each week for the children’s entertainment. Miss Mary MacArdle is principal of school No. 50. Miss Carolyn Eberhardt, teacher, and Mrs. Helen W. Miller, librarian, are the sponsors of the book club. PLAN WASHINGTON RITE Cathedral Pupils Will Honor First President With Pageant. Pupils of Cathedral high school will depict a day with Washington at Mt. Vernon in keeping with the state-wide observance of the Washington bicentennial Friday in the school auditorium. Nine boys will take part in the pageant in which Thomas Bulger is seen in the person of General Washington, Edward Boyle as General Knox and Lawrence Pfleger as Nelly, a niece of Washington. Other roles are played by William Brennan, John Bills, Harry Binder, George Hannon and Charles Murphy. The presentation is directed by Brother Virgil, C. S. C. Orchestra to Give Concert The Shortridge high school eighty-five-piece orchestra will present its second free community concert at 3 Sunday in Caleb Mills hall, Thirty-fourth and Pennsylvania street. The first half of the program will be devoted to the Symphony in D Major by Haydn, in honor of the composer’s two hundredth anniversary*

Managers for Broad Ripple's Play Appointed

' 'i '

—Photo by Voorhis. Virginia Sheeley

Edward Schoenberger and Virginia Sheeley will be co-business managers of the senior play at Broad Ripple high school, it was announced Monday. The production, “The Mummy and the Mumps,” will be presented in the school auditorium May 20. Stage manager will be Lawrence Cross. Mary Jean Clark and Eli Heaton are to be his assistants. James Hoggatt will be in charge of lighting. With Louise Pike he will supervise making of posters and decoration of properties. Publicity will be in charge of Lawrence Cross. Pearl Underwood and Margaret Hoffield. Members of the cast are: Norval Ayers, Vance Waggoner, Keith Roberts, Maurice Eddingfield. Gordon Eaverson, Louise Pike, Cora Zaser. Betty Jane Gleichman, Frances L. Dungan and Jane Christena. Directing the play is Miss Lillyon Snyder of the English faculty. HONOR PUPILS TO BE FETED Banquet Will Be Given at Broad Ripple High May 18. Honor pupils of Broad Ripple high school will be entertained at a banquet at the school Wednesday, May 18. The day will be set aside for observance of the second annual Broad Ripple round-up day. Pupils in charge of programs to be staged in the auditorium are: Margaret Hitchcock, music; Vance Waggoner, science; Loraze Brackett, dramatics; Marjorie Davis, fashions, and Ruth Stewart, typing. Members of the faculty auditorium committee are Miss Winifred West, Miss Lillyon Snyder, Miss Marylizabeth Mooney, Mrs. Stella Richardson, Raymond Hall and L. P. McGhehey. In charge of exhibits will be Albert J. Kettler. Pupils who will work under his direction are: Jane Christena, representing the English department; Janet Chapman, mathematics; Gordon Eaverson, history; Cora Zaser, science; Donna Taylor, language; Lucille Hammill, commercial; Louise Pike art; Jack Rich, manual training; Edith De Hart, home economics, and Corvin Alexander, music. Guest speaker at the banquet will be Paul C. Stetson, superintendent of schools. APPOINT song writer Very Embry Wins Senior Honors at Technical High. Very Embry has been named song writer of the senior class at Technical high school. Members of the committee which chose him above other contestants were Miss Mabel Goddard, head of the English department, chairman; Miss Olive Brown of the English department; Mrs. Elizabeth Cochran, head of the music department; Miss Blanche Young of the commercial department, and J. Russell Paxton of the music department. Name Class Day Officers Officers for the annual class day [ exercises of the Shortridge high j school senior class to be held June 6 in Caleb Mills hall, are as follows: Ruth Shimer, historian; Robert Udell, giftorian; Dorothy Rinker, prophet, and Homer Cornell, will maker. Ladies! New Laxative Is “Kind” to Your System Just as you would guard the delicate mechanism of a costly watch, so must you protect the finely balanced mechanism of the feminine body. Women especially fall prey to constipation. Yet, never should you resort to harsh, irritating pills, candies, gums or drug cathartics. Be safe use French Lick Salts—a little in cold water before breakfast at least once each week. French Lick Salts, though prompt and thorough, is kind and soothing to your system. It is a (killful blend of the restorative (aline* found in the renowned water( at Fretich Liclc Spring*. Effervesces merrily —as pleasant to take as a fountain beverage. Never irritate* delicate tissues—and never nauseates or gripes. More than just a laxative, it’s a valuable systemic regulator. Regulates the liver, gall bladder—tones up the entire system. Clears skin blemishes, makes you feel year* younger. A wonderful aid, too, in reducing. Today, at any drug store, SO sect*.

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STETSON WILL BE HEARD ON RADIOJONIGHT Shortridge Girls’ Glee Club to Be Added Feature of WKBF Broadcast. Paul C. Stetson, superintendent of schools, will speak on “George Washington” during the twentyninth weekly broadcast of the Indianapolis public schools from 9 to 9:30 tonight over WKBF. In addition, the girls' glee club of Shortridge high school will present a musical program. The organization of fifty-five voices will sing under the direction of Will Wise of the Shortridge music department. Selections will include the Shortridge alma mater song. “The Lost Chord,” by Sullivan: “Deep River.” by Burleigh; "Drink to Me Only With Thine Eyes.” by Ben Jonson. and the Shortridge hymn. “Crew” to Visit Hospital Newell Williams, a member of the club, will sing a solo, “I Love a Little Cottage,” by O’Hara. Another member of the club, Martha Drake Williams, will present a violin solo, “Cabitina,” by Bohm. Performers on the School Ship of the Air program, which is given every Monday, Wednesday and Friday morning for shut-in children, will appear in person Thursday morning at Rotary hospital. The appearance is Rotary’s prize for its victory in a recent contest held by Miss Blanche Young, “skipper” of the ship. Tech Duet to Sing Mary Catherine Stair, a pupil of school No. 66, will give a group of Washington readings, a mixed quarWashington readings, a duet from Technical high school will sing a number of songs. Members of the duet will be Richard Harold and Herbert Hadley. Billy Jolly of school No. 57, on the banjo, and Jimmy Collins of school No. 78, on the violin, will play a duet. Jimmy Carlin, a pupil at school No. 66, will tell a series of stories. The performers will appear in sailor costumes, as members of the crew of the School Ship. Posture Winners Named Jean Welty, Isabel Sommer, and Dorothy Cheezum were chosen recently as having the best posture in the girls’ physical education department at Technical high school. They defeated twelve other contestants. 48 Enroll in Tech R. O. T. C. Forty-eight members of the R. O. T. C. unit at Technical high school have enrolled for Citizens’ Military Training camp, July 5 to Aug. 4.

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