Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 290, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 April 1933 — Page 11

APRIL 14, 1933

THREE STATES MOVE TOWARD REPEAL VOTE Vermont, Minnesota and Missouri Will Ballot Next Fall. B v Time* ft pedal WASHINGTON, April 14.—Three more states took action Thursday toward elections on the question of repealing the eighteenth amendment to the Constitution. Minnesota set its vote for Sept. 12. Twenty-one delegates named on that date will meet in St. Paul on Oct. 10 to cast their formal votes. Candidates for delegates will be nominated by petition, names of twenty-one leading wets and twen-ty-one leading drys to go on the ballot. Governor Guy B. Park of Missouri, Thursday signed a bill to set up machinery lor Missouri's vote on repeal. The bill vests power in the Governor to name the dates for the referendum and the convention. Both are expected to be set for early next fall. In Vermont, a call was issued by Governor Stanley C. Wilson for a special election on Sept. 9. Convention date was set for Sept. 18. PURDUE TO HOLD RITES New Building Will be Dedicated During May Founding Ceremonies. 81l Time * ftp/ r ial LAFAYETTE. Ind., April 14.—1n connection with the annual open house of engineering schools and departments and the Founders day banquet, special dedicatory exercises for the new mechanical engineering building at Purdue university will be held on Friday and Saturday, May 5-6, it was announced today. The dedication exercises proper will be held between the open house on Friday evening, May 5, and the Founders day banquet on Saturday evening. May 6. The dedication program will open Saturday morning with an informal reception by the mechanical engineering staff in the conference room of the new building, which was opened for class work at the start of the present academic year. The reception will be followed with an inspection tour of the building and a luncheon at noon. Greenfield Pastor Is Robbed B/r I ailed Pree* GREENFIELD, Ind., April 14. The Rev. Aaron Napier, pastor of the Friends church, was robbed of a small amount of money late Thursday by a man and woman who posed as hitch-hikers.

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RETAIL DRUGGISTS TO CONVENE AT PURDUE Two-Day Session This Month Will Include Inspection of R.O.T. Corps. fit/ Time* Imperial LAFAYETTE. Ind., April 14 —Retail. legal, and business problems will be considered here Tuesday and Wednesday, April 25-26, at the third

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annual Druggists Business Conference at Purdue university, according to the complete program announced today. Following the address of welcome by David E. Ross, chairman of the Purdue university board of trustees, and the response by B. M. Keene of Indianapolis, the opening tession will be dismissed to give the visiting druggists an opportunity to witness

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

| the inspection of the Purdue R. O. T C. corps. In the afternoon, the conference will get into full swing with a session devoted to retail problems. In connection with the conference. a banquet will be held Tuesday evening. i The Times offers the lowest Want |Ad rate in the city. Three cents a I word.

GOAT BLOCKS TRAINS Leads Herd to Safety, Then Returns to Track to Defy Locomotives. Bp United Preie BOONVILLE, 111., April 14.—Billy. Patriarch of a large herd of goats at the Catherine Roetzel farm here, is a nuisance to Southern railroad engineers. Sometimes the herd gets on to the

right-of-way. Invariably, it is said, when Billy sdes an approaching train, or hears the whistle, he drives the herd to safety, then goes back to defy the train himself. Knowing how goat hair clutters up machinery', the engineers stop their trains and wait for Miss Roetzel to coax Billy off the track with a leaf of tobacco. He is like a lamb when she feeds him tobacco.

LUNCHES FOR 1 CENT No One Has Lost Money In lowa School Project. By l nitfd Pre KELLEY, la., April 14.—School children here have been served onecent lunches every day this winter, and no one has lost money on the deal. Furthermore, the lunches have

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been scientifically planned under supervision of Miss Hazel McKibben, the home economics teacher, so each child gets for his penny a nutritive, hot midday meal. The secret of this accomplishment lies in the fact that the school board accepts raw foodstuffs fronj the farms in payment for the hot lunches, and also, the children maintain a large vegetable garden on the school grounds.