Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 3, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 May 1933 — Page 7

MAY 15, 1033.

DEATH CLAIMS PHILIP WHITE. R. R. OFFICIAL Former Indianapolis Man Is Taken at Home in Cincinnati. Word has been received here by friends of the death of Philip T. White. 48, assistant general manager of the Big Four Railroad, at his home in Cincinnati. O, Sunday night. Mr. White left Indianapolis In October, 1931. He formerly lived a; 4320 North Illinois street. Mr. White had undergone an operation for appendicitis two weeks ago. Funeral arrangements have not been completed. Survivors are: the widow, Mrs. Gladys McNarry White; a daughter. Miss Frances White, and two sons. Roger White and Amos White. Burke Funeral Tuesday Funeral services for Timothy A. Burke, 23. of 119 East Thirty-third street, auto accident victim, will be held at 8:30 Tuesday in the home of his brother, Neal Burke. 1321 Marlowe avenue, and at 9 in the SR. Peter and Paul Cathedral. Burial V; 1 be m Holy Cross cemetery. Mr. Burke died Saturday in the city hospital, from injuries received when his auto struck the automatic traffic signal at. Sixteenth and Delaware streets, a few hours earlier. He was en route home from church services when the accident occurred.

17-Year-Old Girl Taken Last rites for Miss Emogene Howard, 17, of 866 North Gladstone avenue, will be held at 8:30 Tuesday in the home, and at 9 in the Little Flower Catholic church. Burial will be in Memorial Park cemetery. Miss Howard, a pupil in the Little Flower parochial school, died Friday in her home, after a long illness. Survivors are her mother, Mrs. Etta Howard, and lour sisters, Mrs. Treva Johnston. Mrs. Reva Hager, i Miss Nell Howard and Mrs. Eula Montgomery. Kingan Employe Dies Following an illness of several months, Charles A. Fink, 63, an employe In the repair department of Kingan & Cos. ten years, died Sunday in his home, 838 West Twenty-ninth street. Funeral services will be held at 2 Tuesday in his home, and at 2:30 in the Home Presbyterian church. Survivors are the widow', Mrs. Elizabeth Fink; two sons, Charles W. Fink and William F. Fink; a sister. • Mrs. Maude Whitson, Russelville. and two grandsons. EDUCATOR TO MAKE APE-CHILD COMPARISON Results of Prolonged Study to Be Explained Tonight. Results of a prolonged study of ; comparative reactions of an ape and 1 child to the same stimuli will be explained tonight at the Butler university college of education,! Twenty-third and Alabama streets, j Dr, W. H. Kellogg, of Indiana university, will lecture on “The Ape and the Child.’’ Four reels of motion pictures taken in the experiment will be shown. The test is said to represent a new approach to the problem of heredity and environment The j lecture is open to teachers, doctors j and all persons interested in psy- I chology.

NURSE REGAINS HER HEALTH After Taking Five Bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound

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Have a Hobby World's Fair Stamps to Show Striking Contrast

This replica of Ft. Dearborn, one of Chicago’s most thrilling historical monuments, was constructed on the shore of Lake Michigan at Twenty-sixth street for the 1933 Century of Progress exposition. Near here, a century ago. stood the original Ft. Dearborn, and still nearer occurred in 1812 the massacre by Indians of the brave inhabitants of the fort. A stamp issue will commemorate the fort’s history.

BY MRS. C. O. ROBINSON \ NEW issue of stamps always is of importance to philatelists and if the issue is in commemoration of a famous personage or an historical event, its appeal is general. In 1893, at the time of the World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago, the United States government issued its first commemorative sssstamps. They w'ere called the Co-

iumbian issue and the central figures, of the sixteen values, pictured episodes in the life of Christopher Columbus. Some of the 4cent stamps, by mistake, were printed in the wrong color and now they cataog u e for SBOO ach unused and >3OO used. This winter the members of the Indiana Stamp Club were privileged to

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Federal and States Building

see one of these stamps, when Dr. Goothe Link displayed his valuable collection to illustrate a talk on United States errors. Since the Columbian issue, the United States has printed many interesting stamps in commemoration of men and events, and now another world's fair so will be honored. This time only two values will be used, a 1-cent featuring Ft. Dearborn and a 3-cent picturing the Federal and States building at the fair. Development of Chicago and the middle west from primitive outposts of the frontier to the present eminence fittingly is portrayed by the designs of the two stamps. Ft. Dearborn, a crude log structure contrasts with the Federal and States building, the embodiment of the latest ideas in architectural and structural design.

a a a Tj>T. DEARBORN was built in 1803 -*■ and was named for Colonel Henry Dearborn, then secretary of war. It was a stockade with two blockhouses and quarters for the garrison, and stood on the south bank of the Chicago river, not far from Lake Michigan. The reservation of six squarp miles, which surruonded it, had been ceded to the government by the Indians, after the Treaty of Greenville in 1795. During the War of 1812, the war department ordered the garrison to evacuate the fort and go to Detroit. As the little band started their long journey around the lake, they were attacked by Indians at what is now Eighteenth street and all were killed or captured. Captain John Whistler, first commander of the fort, is the ancestor of James McNeill Whistler, the artist, and also of John Manson. who has charge of the replica of the fort. It is an exact copy of the original fort as drawings and discretions had been preserved by the war department in Washington. It was built by the South Park commissioners of. Chicago as a permanent historical museum, but is included as part of* the fair, though not in the fairground proper. The federal and state building pictured on the 3-cent stamp is shaped as a huge triangle. The exhibits from the states will be shown in the Hail of States, which forms two sides of the triangle. The murals being painted in Indianapalois by Thomas H. Benton will be placed in the Indiana portion of this Hall of States. a a a BENTONS models have been many of our prominent citizens. including the Governor. Two members of the Shortridge basketball quintet, in Seward and Dick Robinson, were used as models for the portion of the murals which portray basketball. In this building will be shown an exhibit of stamps prepared by M. L. Eidress of the Philatelic agency in Washington. It will contain one each of every type of stamp issued by the government from the first in 1847 to the current issue. The new exposition stamps will be sold during the fair at a branch of the agency, in this building, although they go on sale first May 25 at the general postoffice in Chicago. a a a Cachets COLLECTORS desiring first day covers of the Century of Progress Stamps may send addressed covers, not to exceed a total of twenty -five altogether, to the i

postmaster, Chicago, 111, with cash or money order to cover exactly the value of the stamps required for affixing. Covers should reach Chicago not later than May 22. A world's Fair postmarked from the postoffice on the Fair Grounds, for the opening day, May 27. Send 5 cents for each cover desired to Hobbies Magazine. 2810 South Michigan avenue, Chicago. Lakewood Stamp Society will have a cachet as an Akron Memorial on May 30. Send not more than three covers to the Society Municipal building, Lakewood, N. J. The covers w'ill be mailed from Lakehurst.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

STATE DENTISTS START ANNUAL SESSION HERE Clinics Held at Claypool as Three-Day Meeting Is Opened. Clinics for, oral surgery, X-ray, diseases of the teeth, and teeth straightening were held today at the Claypool for delegates to the Indiana State Dental Association convention. The three-day meeting, opening today, marks the seventy-fifth anniversary of the association. A special exhibit of dental instruments and documents in use as early as 1844, property of the Indiana University School of Dentistry, has been prepared for the meeting. Included in these are hand-made instruments, a pearl handled, and jeweled set of instruments, and a fiddle-bow drill used by Dr. R. A. English, pioneer dentist of Worthington, Ind. Recommendations w r ere passed Sunday, in a council before the meeting, commending the state health board for its reorganization plans, and advocating the continuation of socialized health service for needy. Dr. Howard R. Raper, formerly of Indianapolis, and now a resident of Albuquerque. N. M., and Dr. Harry G. Mayer, of Indianapolis, spoke this afternoon. A jubilee dinner will be held Tuesday night at the Indianapolis Athletic Club. Invitations to this dinner have been issued to Governor Paul V. McNutt. Mayor Reginald H. Sullivan. Dr. William L. Bryan, president of Indiana university; James W. Fesler, chairman of the university’s board of trustees, and to Evans Woollen Jr., president of the city board of health. Tuesday noon 800 association members will attend laying of the corner stone of the new Ipdiana university school of dentistry at the Medical Center. Dr. Bryan will lay the stone. Members of the State Association of Dental Assistants are holding the thirteenth annual meeting, in conjunction with the dental association. They will be addressed by Dr. A. L. Harter, of Kokomo, retiring president of the dental association.

PLAY FOR THOUSANDS

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Billy Schrolucke and Charlotte Marie Grosskopf

More than eighty programs have been presented to audiences totaling more than 150,000 people by two 9-vear-old entertainers. Billy Schrolucke and Charlotte Marie Grosskopf, since last August. The boy is a son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Schrolucke, 3716 North Capitol avenue, and the girl a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph F. Grosskopf, 4847 Carrollton avenue. They are pupils of Arthur J. Beriault and Miss Helen Frances Starr. They have been on radio programs and those of Leisure Hour clubs, parent-teacher associations, churches and other institutions, and neighborhood theaters. PRISON RIOT IS HALTED Two Disturbances in 24 Hours Reported at Concord Reformatory. By United Press CONCORD, Mass., May 14.—The second riot in the dining hall within twenty-four hours at Concord reformatory was subdued Sunday by seventy guards, who used clubs and tear gas to quell the 1.000 prisoners. A similar riot broke out Saturday during the supper hour.

U, $. EDITORS TO MEET HERE National Association Will Convene in City on June 5 to 8. With three state newspaper organizations acting as hosts, the forty-eighth annual convention of the National Editorial Association

I HOPE YOUR COUSIN WE goTH KNOW WHY, ENJOYS HER VISIT MOTHER, BUT WE HATE HERE,LAURA.SHE'S TO TELL HER. IT'S SUCH A SO PRETTY BUTCAN*T DELICATE SUBJECT. HOWSEEM TO MAKE EVER,I HAVE A PLAN .. . „i.no! j

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will be held in Indianapolis, June 5 to 8. Following the sessions here the visitors will be taken on a tour of the state, June 9 to 13. and the following two days will be spent in Chicago at the Century of Progress exposition. During the tour of the state. mem?rs of the Indiana Weekly Press Association, the Indiana Republican Editorial Association and the Democratic Editorial Association will act as hosts. Features of the program, fcs announced by Walter Crim. chairman of the executive committee after a meeting Friday, will be attendance at the corner stone laying for the George Rogers Clark memorial in

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PAGE 7

Vincennes, an exhibition of pioneer industries at Spring Mill park and a display of 300 prize-winning newspapers at the business sessions in the Claypool. Purdue university will be included in the tour, with George Ade. Indiana humorist, as principal speaker at the meeting there. Principal speakers at the sessions here will be Thomas Beck. New York publisher: Meredith Nicholson. Indiana author, and Douglas C. McMurtrie of Chicago. Governor Paul V. McNutt will be principal speaker at the annual dinner. June 8. which will be a testimonial to H. C. Hotaling of St. Paul, Minn, association secretary for fourteen years.

PERHAPS I SHOULD BE~MORE CAREFUL ABOUT *8.07 PERHAPS I'D BE MORE HP.U, ....