Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 278, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 March 1933 — Page 4

PAGE 4

W.G.SPENCER NEW FRANKLIN COLLEGE HEAD Pittsburgh Pastor Named as President of State School. Selections of Dr. William Gear Spencer. pastor of the First Baptist church, Pittsburgh, Pa and former registrar of Franklin college, as president of the colleg,- was announced today by the board of directors. x'he choice was made at a board meeting in the Columbia Club Thursday night. Dr. Spencer was to appear before students at convocation today, but will not assume duties until July 1. He served several years as president of Hillsdale cohere in Michigan. Succeeds I)r. Rainey Dr. Spencer succeeds Dr. Homer P. Rainey, who re. igned the presidency in June, 1931. to accept a similar position at Bucknell universyit. R. H. Kent, professor of Philosophy, has served as acting president since. Born in San Francisco, Dr. Spencer was graduated from Denison university in 1907 and received the master of arts degree in 1908. After studies at Colgate Theological Seminary, at the Sorbonnc in Paris, and a trip through Italy, he became active in academic and church circles of the Baptist church. Has Six Children He served as professor of classical languages of Franklin college from 1920 to 1922, re. igning to go to Hillside. His other services were on faculties of Doanc academy of Ohio, Colgate academy of New York, and Chautauqua faculties. Active in civic affairs, he once served as a district governor of Rotary International. He also has participated m state and national affairs of the Y M. C. A. He is married and has six children. and holds memberships in various college associations, including Phi Beta Kappa. FORD STRIKE SETTLED Pay Increases Granted 8,000 Britons Who Walked Out. ft,'/ I II it i 'I /■/-. mx LONDON, March 31.—The strike at the Ford motor plant at Dagenham, which has affected approximately 8,000 at, the plant and allied industries, is ended. New minimum wage scales were agreed to by the company, increasing the pay of skilled, semiskilled and ordinary laborers.

You Don’t Need Money at Sommers! Buy These Spectacular Values Tomorrow on Sommers’ Very Low erms. If you have no account here, now is the time to open one! *: =~ s&Twjgm Felt Base Two-Piece c^g Tapestry Suite Now you ran afford to I Cotton Tomorrow’s Supreme Value! $ ' 43 J|f|[ A marvelous buy for those who wish ao exceptionally 11) Pounds smart Living Room Suite—we challenge you to duplicate this beautifully tailored Tapestry Davenport and Lounge Have a s° nfl night’s.sieep on (his soft t hair for *£ The suite has the finest spring construe- “"tSUTT JFiXX..”* non. covered in newest spring tapestry covers, large roll arms, serpentine fronts, reversible cushions—indeed an unheard of value for spring. Very Low Terms Arranged A^’"^ ter $J| .49 i hest Drawers iav t ottrit Special' A New Low Price for This Suite $ *S ©.OO Vanity, Chest and Bed j Opens into a double Sensational special purchase at a price made tVVmut finish. 5 draw- bed Colorful cretonne New wickless Florence. possible only by the hank moratorium—the 4* j|HH| ers. OniA- twenty-five pad, walnut finish 3 Burners without manufacturer needed cash. His loss is VOUr 8| at thence, ends, heavy springs. mantle. A real buy! gain follow y<m can charming V 111 Sl i Ye Vj9J complete 3-room outfit ■OL ylfe “ jFf£ q K ■ I I R I Why live in furnished rooms when you can buv every- * for the LIVING ROOM. BEDROOM 51 J h. 32-36 South Illinois Street^_^, l^—( ' \

MARY PICKFORD SHUNS PEACEMAKER ROLE

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Alary I’ickford Jiff Jim cm Special NEW YORK March 31—Mary Pickford will not assume the role of peacemaker in the marital difficulteis of Doug Fairbanks Jr. and Joan Crawford. Arriving here Thursday on the liner Rex from Italy, “America’s Sweetheart" declared, “There is nothing I could say or do to help the matter.”

RADIO TEAM TO APPEAR WITH OLD FIDDLERS Salt and Peanuts to Be on Program at State Contests Here. Salt and Peanuts, N. B. C. radio stars, will appear in person Saturday, April 8, at Cadle Tabernacle as a feature of an old time fiddlers and band contest sponsored by the National Fiddlers’ Association when an Indiana representative in a national contest to be held during the Century of Progress fair in Chicago will be chosen. Other entertainers who will appear will include: Jess Hilliard and his West Virginia “Hill Billies,” Richmond, Ind.; Natchee, the Indian, and his Arizona Cowboys; Jess Johnson, West Vir-

ginia’s champion fiddler; Hoosier Wildcats from WKBF; Kentucky Keg Tappers, Nighthawk, Kentucky Wildcats, Hoosier Ramblers, Radio Rangers, the entire barn dance group from WKBF and the Radio Ramblers. Harold Bentley, ”hill billy” announcer of WKBF, will be master of ceremonies, for two performances to be given at 2:30 and 8 p. m. Measles Normalize Tiny Babe fill l nihil I’ll ns FORT WORTH. Tex., March 31. Physicians now believe that Evelyn Bernice Williams, a two and one-half pound incubator baby, born last June, is a normal girl at last. She now' w'eighs thirteen pounds and has the measles.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

DEAN VOICES CRITICISM OF U. S. MISSIONS Foreign Hospitals Need Much Bigger Staffs, Says Dr. Emerson. Criticism of American missions in foreign fields was made in a speech by Dr. Charles P. Emerson, dean emeritus of the Indiana school of medicine, before members of the Central Christian church Thursday. “Some American missionary hospitals have physicians so overworked that they give hundreds of prescriptions in one day—prescriptions bearing a hit of the Scriptures and perhaps the wrong prescriptions,” he declared. Dr. Emerson charged the American missions are so short staffed as to physicians and surgeons that there is no time to discuss spiritual affairs with the patients. Sometimes in the rush, the medicine isn’t right. The natives begin to believe, after a time, that the gospel preached is no better than the medicine dispensed,” said Dr. Emerson. He recommended larger staffs of American missionary physicians and fewer dollars for large buildings. “If Christianity succeeds in the Orient,” Dr. Emerson concluded, “it won’t be the current American Christianity. America has no patent rights on Christianity; Christ was not an American, but an Oriental.”

Gone, but Not Forgotten

Automobiles reported to-police as stolen belong to: Claude A. Mahoney, 1402 North Alabama street. Ford coupe 41-225 1 38 ■. from Pennsylvania and New York streets. Robert S. Kinnaird. 207 West Fortyfourth street. Dodge sedan. 113-082 1 33. from Thirty-fifth and Illinois streets. O. D. Ellis. 5174 West Washington street. Ford sedan, 62-313 1 32>, from Ohio street and Senate avenue. John Bookwalter 2614 Sutherland avenue. Buick sedan. 25-794 •33 t. from garage in rear of 2614 Sutherland avenue.

BACK HOME AGAIN

Stolen automobiles recovered by police belong to: B F. McCauley, 1043 West Twenty-ninth street, Chevrolet sedan, found in dumps in rear of Riverside park. Augustus SafTell. 3537 North Illinois street. Chevrolet coupe, found at Twentyseventh street and the canal. Charles J. Whitmore. 2716 Highland place, Nash sedan, found in front of 862 Torbett streetjack Smith, 607 North Illinois street. Chevrolet coupe, found at Tenth street and Temple avenue. Thomas Walsh. 6241 Buckingham drive, Chrysler brougham, found near Lawrence. Ind. Jesse Holselaw, 1641 Somerset avenue, Chevrolet coach, found by owner: location not reported. Ford coupe. 60-947 (32), found in front of 523 East Ninth street. Auburn sedan. 7-790 i32>. Ohio, found at Illinois and Twenty-second streets. William Edmonds, 208 South Summit street. Ford coach, found in front of 11 North Tacoma avenue.

BEER PERMITS ON TAP

r --y * 'x- ‘ . • . • ' , 1^0: > 11 * * Engulfed with applications for beer permits. Dr. James M. Doran, commissioner of industrial alcohol, is one of the busiest men in Washington. Here you see him at his desk in the prohibition bureau, untangling the morning mail. Gets Lions for Pay DALI,AS, Tex., March 31.—Two lion cubs were given Dr. James J. Hamiter, veterinarian, for his services at a zoo here. He will raise them as pets and build a run in his back yard. /chapped! J!j To quickly relieve \\\ J chapping and roughness, \\\ ' apply soothing, cooling Mentholatum. wV

WATSON FLAYS DIRECT VOTE FOR SENATORS Speaks to 500 Republicans at Annual Columbia Club Beefsteak Dinner. Scathing the Democrats and pointing to Republican superiority, former Senator James E. Watson indulged in oratorical fireworks before nearly five hundred Republicans attending the annual Columbia Club beefsteak dinner. Urging united support for President Franklin D. Roosevelt in his economic recovery program, the former senator praised the Republican minority in congress for voting to give Roosevelt wide powers in the present emergency. He condemned the former Democratic minority and Republican insurgents for refusing the same power to former President Herbert Hoover. The sore spot in our government, he said, is direct election of United States senators and the primary system. He added that before the popular election of senators “it was not

AYRES’ SPRING SALE

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necessary to promise everything *° ! ipr 11 IT A Finn HC every bodv in order to be elected.’ Alll Mu f A 1111 H Hr With a straight face. Watson paid ■ nUUII Ul tribute to Senator Arthur R Robin- PHAIIi 10 OflllPUT uf rv " hatl a d,f - or AIN lo oUUun I When someone in the audience : . shouted: “Tell us about Huey Long.” n , ~ , the former senator asked “Have POpilldi’lty COfltGSt FclflS 10 smg-r" sccn lhat play - Thee 1 Solve Issue. Referring to the magazine article of 8 ,, , , . Davtd Barry, former senate ser- MADRID . March 31-Who at gcant-at-arms, stating “only a few m 1S the best matador in members of congress sell their m <, votes, Watson said. i The question is hard to answer. “I never knew one member of, In the pld davs thc a , os camc in congress m my thirty years service pairs on dfnvn -through the cenwho would sell his vote for cash. tunes that continued . unt;l tho , oc . ~ „ onri decade of the twentieth centurv. Diners May Serve Beer Xhc preat pair then , v . us j ose Gomez PHILADELPHIA. March 31. and Juan Belmonte. Pennsylvania railroad officials said in a recent popularity contest to today they are considering the sale settle the question. Domingo Ortega of beer in dining cars if it can be received 2.147 vote- Marcial Ladone without financial loss when i landa received 2.127 votes. Vicente the foaming beverage comes back. | Barrera received 2,116 votes

Home Builders’ Savings & Lean Ass’n ORGANIZED 1891 Will Begin Its Forty-First Series Monday, Aprii 3,1933 For Information Call During Business Hours at 1000 I.emcke Building, or Monday Evenings at 2130 East Tenth Street. NO PREMIUM NO COMMISSION Payments: Mondays Only, at 1000 I.emcke Building, from 8:30 A. M. to 4 P. M. or at 2130 E. Tenth St., between 7 and 8 P. >l.

.MARCH 31, 1933