Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 12, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 May 1932 — Page 5
MAY 25. 1032
MEMORIAL RITES FOR CITY’S SOLDIER DEAD START FRIDAY IN GROVE OF REMEMBRANCE Parades, Rifle Salutes and Addresses to Mark Services Scheduled for Monday. children TO AID IN OBSERVANCE Autos Are Needed to Transport G. A. R. and Disabled Veterans of World War. Soldier dead of Indianapolis and Marion county will be Honored with parades, wreaths of flowers, rifle salutes, and addresses Memorial day. Memorial services will open Friday afternoon, with rites ii. Garfield park at the Grove of Remembrance. City school < <iren will feature the pre-memorial services by decorating :’.*7 trees with flags.
On Sunday* eight cemeteries will hold services for • ,n Olive-drab, Rlue and Gray v o died on battlefields. Cvy memorial ceremonies will be i r\n on Monday and will be fearrf b' a paradr at. 10;30 am. on I, downtown streets with short a* Soldiers’ and Sailors’ j. itr.rnt at 8:30 a. m and the V . >wing of the graves at 3 p. m p- Crown Hill cemetery. The parade's line of march will i„ t h from streets surrounding ti Memorial plaza on Meridian , irr to Michigan street, east on • rhigan street .to Pennsylvania, .o .’h on Pennsylvania to Vermont. VT" on Vermont to Meridian and outh on Meridian to the Monument Circle and thence around the Circle to Fast Market street and thence 50i;; h on Pennsylvania to Georgia
, 'rre to disband. A-hford Grand Marshal William S. Ashford is the grand marshal of the parade. Police escorts will lead the line of march. The first parade division will be composed of Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War escorting the Grand Army of the Republic. The second division will be formed with United Spanish War Veterans and Veterans of Foreign Wars with the American Legion and Disabled Veterans of the World War in the third division R. O. T. C. units of city high schools will be the backbone of the fourth division with Bov Scouts, Camp Fire Girls, Girl Reserves and school pupils in the fifth and last division. As the parade passes the World War Memorial plaza each organization will uncover or salute the shrine. Wilson C. Oren, president of the general Memorial Association, said a final meeting on plans for Memorial day services will be held Thursday night at Ft. Friendly, 512 North Illinois street. Autos Are Needed Autos are needed for transporting G. A. R. and disabled World war veterans in the parade and to cemeteries. Detailed services scheduled on Memorial day. May 30, at city cemeteries and shrines are as follows; CROWN HILL CEMETERY Time. 3 p. m. Master of ceremonies, Oren. Assembly, Bugler David Springer. Songs, invocation by the Rev. C. I. Roush. Brooksidc United Brethren church. Reading of legion's general order No. 11 by Catherine Mcßride Hoster. Massing of colors and flag salute by Girl Scouts. Campfire Girls and other organizations under Mrs. Clementine Vano- dal. Memorial wreath presentation by Major Anderson Relief Corps. Music by Mother’s chorus of School 41. Strewing of flowers and evergreen by school children. Address by the Rev. Guy O. Carpenter, Irvington Methodist church. Benediction by the Rev. Mr. Roush. Firing of Salute by Harold C. McGrew Camp, United Spanish-War Veterans. Echo taps. MT. JACKSON CEMETERY Time. 9:30 a. m., under auspices of Alvin P. Hovcy, Woman's Relief Corps. Master of ceremonies. Mrs. Clementine Vanosdal; songs and invocation by Iva Wise; general order readme by Bessie Harf. Lincoln's Gettysburg address. Mable Buchanan: address by the Rev. Ephraim Lowe; taps. SOLDIERS AND SAILORS' MONUMENT Tune. 8:30 a. m.: master of ceremonies. Charles R. Michael; concert. Indianapolis Newsboys band; address, Frederick Van Nuys; firing of salute and taps by Lavelle Goscpg post No. 908. Veterans of Foreign Wars. NEW CROWN CEMETERY Time 10 a m . under auspices of Otis C. Brown post of the World War veterans. Master of ceremonies. Walter Putt. Assembly with invocation by James C. Hett: readings. Miss Esther Putt; address. Rev. Harrv C. Lince of Emmanuel Baptist church: Gettysburg address rec.tation by Mrs. Louis Monroe, benediction. taps and decoration of gTaves. JEWISH CEMETERY Time 30 a. m, under auspices of Frank T. Strayer post of Veterans of Foreign Wars. Master of ceremonies. Leo Scharffm. Addresses by Mrs. Isaac Bom and Samuel Mantell. ritualistic work by Strayer post. HOLY CROSS CEMETERY' Time. 9:30 a. m. Memorial mass Saturday morning and Monday. W. F. Lawson, chairman, assisted by Dr. Michael McGinty, Clarence Beidelman and Leroy Cavanaugh; recitation by Father Joseph Duffy of St. Catherine's church: decoration of graves with aid of Boy Scout troop of St. Catherine’s. WASHINGTON CEMETERY Time, 10 a. m. Under auspices of Frank T. Strayer post of V. F. W., address. Judge Harry Chamberlin. Memorial services over the weekend open with the rites to be held at the Grove of Remembrance in Garfield park at 2 p. m. Friday. The detailed program follows: Under auspicies of Hamilton-Berry
chapter of Service Star Legion, assembly call, music by Manual Training high school band, invocation by the Rev. Ira C. Dawes of the First Friends church, greeting by Mrs. D. M. Parry, president of the legion; •Trees.’’ sung by children of school No. 13; address by Milo H. Stuart of Indianapolis public school; talk by Mrs. Edna E. Pauley of General Memorial Association; songs by Orville Bray and pupils of school No. 35; address, Asa J. Smith; placing of flags at 387 trees, taps. Eight cemeteries will hold memorial services Sunday. The programs follow: SHILO CEMETERY
Time, 10 a. m„ under auspices of Lavelle Gossett post of Veterans of Foreign Wars. Master of ceremonies. J. H. Butler. Assembly call, invocation and songs, address by Charles Michael, memorial services by degree team, firing squad by V. F. W. post and taps. FT. BENJAMIN HARRISON Time, 10 a. m., under auspices of Glenn Auilman post No. 2021, Veterans of Foreign Wars. Master of ceremonies. E. S. Thomas. Assembly call and music by M. Hooten, invocation by Chaplain H. H. Brown of Aultman post, decorations of graves by ladies’ auxiliary of V. F. W. post, address by Col. R. C. Langdon, benediction by Chaplain Brown. ROUND HILL CEMETERY Time, 2 p. m„ under auspices of American Legion. Reading by Emmalee Martin, address by Delbert O. Wilmeth, decoration of graves by Edgewood Boy Scouts, roll call, L. J. Weigand, taps. MEMORIAL PARK CEMETERY Time, 2 p. m. under auspices of Irvington ptxst No. 38 of American Legion. Master of ceremonies, C. A. Broadhead. Invocation by Father J. Duffy, Gettysburg address by Billie Cr'awford of school No. 57, song by Irvington quartet and reading by Donald Sipes, address by Joe Woods, roll call by Adjutant Ray Woods, symbolic decoration of graves by Commander Frank Lutz, salute to the dead by Ft. Benjamin Harrison firing squad, benediction by the Rev. Guy O. Carpenter and taps. FLORAL PARK CEMETERY Time. 2:30 p. m.; master of ceremonies, J. A. Weinbrccht; Invocation by the Rev. O. K. Black; assembly and songs by West Washington Street Methodist church quartet: address by the Rev. L. H. Kendall; benediction and rituals with song by Misses Janet Baumhofer and Katherine McArthur; firing squad and taps. ANDERSON CEMETERY Time, 2:30 p. m . under auspices of Anderson Cemetery Association and East Indianapolis post No. 13 of American Legion; master of ceremonies, Samuel S. Rumford and Harry B. Perkins; assembly ana songs by Old Bethel quartet; invocation by the Rev. Maurice Kerr of Old Bethel; Gettysburg address recitation by Katherine Shearer; recitations by Robert Schaub and Fred Carney: address by Schuyler C. Mowrer; roll call by Dr. C. H. Percival; ritualistic service by Post Commander Arthur V. Robinson; benediction by the Rev. Kerr; firing squad, taps, and decoration of the graves of the dead. CONCORDIA CEMETERY Time, 3 p. m. Master of ceremonies. Charles Holtman, assisted by Daughters of Union Veterans. Assembly call. music, address. ' benediction, taps and decoration of graves. MERIDIAN STREET BRIDGE Time. 4 p. m. Under auspices of 1 Ben Harrison camp and auxiliary No. 10 of the Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil war. Master of ceremonies. Mrs. Claudia K. Erther; song by auxiliary of United Spanish War Veterans. Harold C. McGrew camp, invocation by Otis Jones, addresses by the Rev. Joseph B. Henninger for the G. A. R.. and E. L. Miller for the Spanish war veterans, and an unnamed speaker for the American Legion, rituals by Mrs. Mary Henninger. salute to the dead by a firing squad from Harold C. McGrew camp. taps. Sunday, June 5. the Ben Harrison camp and auxiliary No. 10 of the Sons of Union Veterans will hold special memorial services at the Ebenezer cemetery at 2 p. m. The Rev. Frank C. Huston, commander-in-chief of the Sons of Union Veterans, will speak. Children will decorate the graves. RAINBOW MEN TO MEET Division Conven l ion to Open in Indianapolis June 11. Arrangements are complete for the fourteenth annual convention of the Rainbow Division Veterans to be held in the Washington Saturday, June 13, it was announced today by Norman H. Shortridge. general chairman. Earl T. Bonham of Indianapolis, president of the First Division Veterans’ Association of Indiana, will deliver the principal annual dinner .address. Frank L. Kelley, president of the Rainbow veterans, will preside. ,
Tresses Win
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Blond beauties were put to rout when Northwestern university students took one admiring look at Miss Margaret Black's long, dark hair and elected her queen of the university’s May festival. Their choice, smiling at you above, is a leader in women's athletics as well as pulchritude.
51 WILL FINISH NORMAL COURSE Commencement Exercises to Be Held Thursday. Annual commencement exercises of the Normal college of the American Gymnastic Union will be held Thursday night at the Athenaeum. Class of fifty-one will receive diplomas. SpcakeF will be Rabbi Milton Steinberg. Music will be provided by the Glee Club of the Butler university college of education, under direction of Ruth O. Benedict, and the Turner trio. Diplomas will be presented by George Vonncgut. president of the college board of trustees. Frederic A. Plag will be valedictorian. Graduates are: Degree of Bachelor of Physical Education —Valetta L. Bachmann. Cambridge City, Ind.. Cora Baldauf, Syracuse. N. Y.; Theofll J. Bednarcylc. Buffalo. N. Y.: Prank H. Bosse, Cincinnati:W. H. Browne, Lincoln, Neb.: Ada B. Crozler. Indianapolis; Leo J. Doering. Rock Island. 111.; Ralph S. Duquln, Buffalo; Paul D. Earnest, Altoona. Pa.; Robert Flancgin. Los Angeles; George W. Geoghan. Buffalo; David D. Gregg. Cincinnati; Maxine Heacock, Cambridge City, Ind; Leila Virginia Guenther. St. Louis; Charles F. Hertler. Philadelphia; Geraldine E. Hower, Decatur. Ind.: William S. Hubbard, Buffalo; Coleman F. Kortner. Pittsburgh. Pa.; Alvin Kremzier, Schenectady, N. Y.; Harold L. Oden, Chicago; Jean R Peterson. Knox. Pa. Ravmond Ping, Buffalo; Clarence Scott Porter, Missoula. Mont.; Clarence Power?.. Bt. Louis; Elmer C. Rosenthal, Buffalo; Evelyn Claire Sackett, Sault Ste. Marie. Mich: Mildred Schaefer and William Sehlefer Jr., Chicago; Charles William Scheitlin. St Louis; Rudolph Schreiber, Cleveland; Vera L. Simon, Buffalo, and Henrietta E. Zimmerman, Dayton. O. . Diploma of Three-Year Course—Ruth E. ’Bachman. Philadelphia. Ruth V. Bohon Louisville: Chester J. D'Amato, Buffalo: Henry Alfred DeNies. Manchester, N. H.; Carlton J. Flynn. Buffalo; Marian R. Hickey, Altoona, Pa ; lonia Jean Dodson. Tipton; Norman Krueter. Harold W. Kunz. Randolph Mineo. George J. Stephan and Angela M. Trijpl, Buffalo: Edward Sturni, Wilklnsburg. Pa.; Robert Morgan, Cincinnati; Frederic A. Plag. St. Louis: Dorothy Rath. Joseph Statz And Thomas D. Woods. Indianapolis. Special Teacher Diploma—William Kultzow. Yonkers. N. Y. NEW DEGREE SOUGHT Marion Rate Cut Target of Utility's Action. Motion for a now interlocutory decree enjoining the public service commission from enforcing a 20 per cent rate cut against the Indiana General Service Company in Marion, has been tendered for filing with Federal Judge Robert C. Baltzell by attorneys for the light company. The motion follows another motion tendered for filing by AttorneyGeneral James M. Ogden and the commission Friday asking that the interlocutory injunction, issued May 17, be set aside because five days’ note of filing of the suit had not been served on Governor Harry G. Leslie, as required by law. The utility's motion today admits the technical error, which It attributes to a misunderstanding, asks that the restraining order, issued Jan. 30, be reinstated pending anew hearing on an interlocutory injunction decree. AUXILIARY TO SELL POPPIES SATURDAY Day Honors Memory of Those Who Fell in Flanders Field. Joining in the nation-wide observance of Poppy day, Twelfth district American Legion auxiliary will sell replicas of the Flanders field flower Saturday to commemorate memory o! soldiers who gave their lives in the World war. The sale, to be conducted by auxiliary members on all downtown street corners, will be in charge of Mrs. Barnett Breedlove. Twelfth district president. Proceeds will go to relief and rehabilitation funds of the auxiliary- The poppies were made by disabled veterans. Oldest Franklin Alumnus Dead By l piled Prr* FRANKLIN. Ind.,* May 25.—Dr. Barnett Wallace. 95, oldest alumnus of Franklin college, who practiced medicine in Franklin for fifty years, retiring in 1916. died at his home here Tuesday. He graduated from the college in 1860.
THE IN'DIANAPOLIS TIMES
HAWLEY LOSES OREGON RACE BY 175 VOTES Congress Veteran's Defeat Believed Indication Hoover Weak in West. By r nitrd Prc* PORTLAND. Ore.. May 25 James W. Mott, state corporations commissioner, defeated the veteran Willis C. Hawley, for the Republican nomination for United States representative in the First district by 175 votes, complete, semi-official returns indicated today. The returns gave Mott 30,909 votes to Hawley's 30,734. Shows Hoover Weak By Scripp-Hou:ard Xcxcpnpcr Alliance WASHINGTON. May 25—Primary results in the dry Republican stronghold of Oregon, where President Hoovers record, prohibition and the tariff dominated the contests, generally were regarded here today as indicating that the administration is weak in the far west. The administrations prohibition stand apparently was repudiated in primaries of both parties. Representative Willis C Hawley, veteran chairman of the house ways and means committee and coauthor of the Hawley-Smoot tariff act, appears to be in danger of defeat because of his extreme dry stand. Wet Certain to Win His opponent, James W. Mott, took the wet side of the argument, and had the backing of the hop growers in the district. Moreover. Mott is a follower of Governor Julius Meier, whose stand for government development of water power is a repudiation of Hoover’s. Senator Frederick Steiwer was renominated by the Republicans, but only after he declared for a prohibition referendum on the eve of the campaign. His Democratic opponent will be Walter Gleason, who ran as an extreme wet and easily defeated three dry candidates. Conservative 24 Years Hawley has been a conservative for twenty-four years, and has climbed to a position of influence as chairman of the committee which writes tariff and tax measures. His tariff troubles are due to the fact that he did not get high enough tariffs for Oregon lumber, rather than to his role as an apostle of excessive duties. Although he obtained high duties for almost every other product in the act he sponsored, he got only a $1 levy on dressed lumber. MEN’S BIBLE CLASS TO GIVE MINSTREL SHOW Event Scheduled for Friday Night Managed by S. D. Ranstead. S. D. Ranstead Is managing director of a minstrel show tfc be given Friday night by the men's Bible class of Northwood Christian church at the Meridian Heights Presbyterian church, Forty-seventh street and Central avenue. Caroline Ayres Turner will direct an all-male chorus of twenty-five. Orchestral arrangements have been prepared by Fred Jaehne. Soloists will be Everttt Hanks. John Stout Thompson, Charles Davenport, James Burrin, John Reavis and Paul G. Winter. Specialties will be offered by the Horton twins, Carl Winter, Burrin and Thompson.
Reduced Fares ti Every Sunday $5.00 Pittsbnrghß ROUND TRIP £Bl SATURDAYS |ffl| L.t. 1 ndien,pr>l>S.4o pm or 1 1 .00 pm HI? SUNDAYS |K Lt. Pittsburgh - . tl.iOpm^p $4.00 St. Louisl ROUND TRIP H SATURDAYS Mp. Lt, Indianapolis - 10.58 pm m L. I ndi.n.polt. .i.OS.m, Sinii.fi SUNDAYS pP Lt. St. Loui. - - a.OO pm or 12.03 am, Monday. fSE $1.40 Richmond! round trip mm $2.00 Daytonl ROUND TRIP Sl| $3.25 Columbus, 0.8 ROUND TRIP 8H! SUNDAYS wp Lt. Indianapolis - 7.48 am $2.25 Louisville! ROUND TRIP L-v. SUNDAYS fHI Lt. Indianapoli. - (.30 am Lt. Louiavilfa - - 800 pn> ; Ticket* Good in Coache* only on tr*in ihown. (All Ste.d Coaches) H Something New W#lc-.nd Far.., Friday, to BK Monday., Good in Pullman a™"' Car. or Coach*., at 4S ~ r lea. Itek than th* visual round trip urn I between all point*. Up CITY TICKET OFFICE fj*|§ 118 Monument Place 'iWW Phona Rilay 9331 $; PENNSYLVANIA I RAILROAD %
14-Inch Lawn Mower, 55.25 A Big Value: S Inoh wheels, erttelhle steel blades. Cuts clean and trim. VONNEGUT’S Downtown. Irvington. Belmont. Fountain Square.
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‘YOUNG BRIDE’ TO HAVE BIG PREMIERE
The Circle Theater Will Feature Helen Twelvetrees and Four Others in Movie for Speedway Race Week. FOLLOWING a preyiiere at 9:30 Thursday evening, the Circle theater will offer the new five star film vehicle. "Young Bride," as the headlining feature of the Speedway week program This program, scheduled to begin a weeks run starting Friday, will also include the special thirty-minute featurette, "Hell Below Zero”; an organ novelty, arranged and presented by Dessa Byrd; a comedy short film, and a Paramount sound news reel. Five popular screen names head the cast of “Young Bride." They are Helen Twelvetrees. star of •’Millie" and ’’Her Man." Eric Linden and Arline Judge, romantic team of “Are These Our Children?" and the two comedy
characters. Cliff Edwards and Roscoe Ates. The story of “Young Bride” concerns a beautiful and cultured girl who hungers for romance denied her in her prosaic situation of librarians assistant. Meeting the handsome shiek of a cheap dance hall, she is blinded by the glamour of his vivid talk of far-away places and big business deals. Mistaking the shell for reality, she surrenders to her longings for romance, only to meet disillusion and face a desperate struggle for happiness. The film covers a number of colorful locales with hundreds of atmospheric players adding to the real ltfe" touches provided by director William Seiter. The added featurette, “Hell Below Zero." is an authentic record of the expedition conducted into the mountains of the Moon in Equatorial East Africa, by Carveth Wells, for the Public Museum of Milwaukee. Wells has titled tjie subject “Hefl Below Zero.” owing to the fact that i the expedition suffered from extraordinary heat In the jungle, but nearly froze to death in the mountains just a few miles away. bub Indianapolis theaters today offer: “The Good Fairy” at Keith's, Grant Withers at the Lyric. “Huddle" at the Palace. “Attorney for the Defense" at the Circle, “The Mouthpiece" at the Apollo. “The Importance of Being Earnest” at the Civic, and "The Rich Are Always With Us,” at the Indiana. tt tt 9 Neighborhood theaters today of-
Doctor makes discovery in Alabama storm '‘You don't po to a doctor of medicine uith an oiling automobile,” says OTW H. J. Cnsev. famous Chicago Mcics reporter, "hut Dr. ii. M. Garrison ;; ; jj of Evansville. ind.. has his own prescription for automotive chills jB that is not found in medical hooks!” Hunting flown in Hohama with the nifl of his Hudson motor car is the Doctors favorite recreation.
DR. H. M. Garrison, 1029 Washington St., Evansville, Indiana, learned about the lubrication of automobiles amid the enow drifts of Alabama and the lilacs of Southern Indiana in that freak winter of last year. He smiled as he mentioned it while thumbing through the clinical chart of his Hudson car in the consulting room of his Evansville office. A polite but skeptical reporter gazed through an open window into the sunshine of a warm February day and admitted that the matter of winter lilacs in Indiana would not have to be proved. w lt’s all true,” said Dr. Garrison. ,f The first real test Iso-Vis oil got in my car was in a situation that would make any weather man run a
STANDARD OIL COMPANY
fer: “Forbidden" at the Tuxedo, "Shopworn" at the Belmont. ‘ Devil’s Lottery" at the Talbott. “Men in Her Life” at the Stratford, "The Wiser Sex" at the Daisy. "The Big Parade" at the Garfield. “Arsene Lupin” at the Emerson. "Two Kinds of Women" at the Tacoma, and “Three Wise Girls" and “The Common Law” at the Mecca. IVY POISONS CHILDREN Infection in Evansville Schools Bring* Board of Works Action. EVANSVILLE Ind. May 25. Poison ivy infection has become so prevalent among school children of Evansville that the city council has taken cognizance of the situation by ordering widespread destruction of the plants. The board of works started systematic eradication of poison ivy along all ditches, sidewalks and in the vicinity of playgrounds. DISCUSS ROAD DANGERS Deaths on Highway 52 Prompt Talk of Widening. Alarmed at the number of traffic fatalities occurring recently on state Road 52 between Indianapolis and Lebanon, state highway commissioners today discussed widening and straightening of the highway. The road now is only eighteen feet wide, and ha,s several dangerous curves, on one of which four persons were killed within a w*eek. i
An Interview by Robert J. Casey Chicago Daily Newt Reporter temperature. It was last winter, when I went down into the hills south of Birmingham on a hunting expedition. We actually got snowed in and had to fight our way out. But the oil stood up and that’s one of the chief reasons why I’ve prescribed Iso-Vis ever since. "I’ve driven it now 41,000 miles
ISO'VIS*. tl*o it refined by oar f J £ § f \ *7 ftw proem** girmf it n eißeimney C J\/M f \ “Ts \ tt Mcf M which /• mxemmdmd only by /ao-Vta. /jM \ Jg/ W \Jrl/ i .l- SlSSSfr* * Thm prtem i* 2Sc * Y 1 "
aCS* 0W rzSI WHITE f| I ~ i SUVA MESH. .LINENS WHITE KID..BLONDES Subtly ypi/e o JO'"J I •' Jj! ovf Decof.bo. D*y . . • •"d t*ftily / aW’OSwi I yoVN •( new !© .. . diet > tiK'ly BSjjliji-ijr • why we thii eeeitmj tele asPy* A ?pi the neweit io*ie fethiom ... they I heeetJyl and they re reel veUet . . .jj’ . J§| MORRISON’S 28-28 W. Wash. I
TRY A WANT AD IN THE TIMES. THEY WILL BRING RESULTS.
and I seldom have to add a quart between the regular changes.” ♦ ♦ ♦ Dr. Garrison's 41,000 trouble-free miles prove again xchat Iso-Vis has demonstrated in laboratory tests and in A. A. A. tests on the Indianapolis Speedway — Positive Lubrication Protection. Iso-Vis (a Standard Oil product) will not thin out from dilution. Sec the Rail and Bottle Test at Standard Oil service stations and dealers.
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