Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 29, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 June 1933 — Page 12
PAGE 12
HOOSIERS HAVE THREE BIG DAYS AT WORLD FAIR Historical Society Joins With Pioneer Group in Pilgrimage. BY MRS. MAURICE MURPHY Tlmrs Staff Writer CHICAGO. June 14.—A Century of Progress calendar is marked with three red letter days for Hoosiers, starting Tuesday with the arrival, ir Chicago, of approximately ninety members of the Indiana Historical Society and the Society of Indiana Pioneers. Each alternate year the societies plan a joint pilgrimage and this year the historcal society found it easy to plan, with a world's fair to see. Before starting for the exposition ground, the party visited the Del Prado hotel, the societies’ headquarters’ for the period of the pilgrimage. At sp. m. they gathered*at the Eighteenth street entrance of the grounds, where they had their first real view of the exposition. The late afternoon was spent in a sight-seeing tour of the ground before starting for the three-hour evening boat ride, before again approaching a Century of Progress—this time to view it by night—a veritable fairyland of light. Reservations for the pilgrimage were made by Dr. Christopher and party, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Harding and son, Mrs. Mattie McKrill, Miss Ann Howie, Miss Mildred Young, Cornelia Young, Mrs. Florence Lohss, Mrs. Eliza Blair and guests, Mrs. Frank M. Fauvre and party of four, Mr. and Mrs. Julian Wetzel, Jay Schelling, Mr. Smith, Zora Askew, Mrs. Sally Laughiin, Mrs. Cora Raber, Robert Raber, Marguerite Dice, Francis Connan, Phoebe Connan, Lean Bordener, Mrs. H. H. Friedley, Zenith M. Eller, Della McPherson, Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Snepp, Mrs. Clevenger, Miss Josephine Clevenger. Mr. and Mrs. George Vonnegut, Miss Moran, Mr. and Mrs. P A. Hennessey, Miss Betty Vanderbilt, Edna Mae Katzenverger. Bernice Barthlow, Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Arbuckle, Violet Toph, Alice Stevens, Ann B. Repass, Margaret Segur, Dorothy Segur, Grace Osterhus, Henry K. English, Frances McCotter, Mrs. R. C. Johnston, Miss Ernestine E. Bradford, Miss Elizabeth Burford, Miss Martha Fishback, Miss Helen Fleischer, R. Katherine Beeson. Miss Nettie Craft, Mrs. Letha Wells and Winifred W. Allison. all of Indianapolis; Miss Winifred Henriinger, Greenwood; Mrs. J. C. Burkle, Miss Louise Burkle, Mrs. Barnes and Mrs. Elizabeth Poorman and party, all of Lafayette. Among the Indianapolis guests who visited the Indiana building Monday were Alfred W. Brandt Jr., Mrs. Louis Wolf, Mrs. Walter Wolf, Dr. and Mrs. G. F. Kempf, Maurice J. Moore, Miss Martha A. Taber, Miss Marjorie Colloran and Miss Ethel H. Allen. Girl Holds Attendance Record By I nilrit /’rrss SPRINGFIELD. Mo.. June 14. Ora Dale Ryan never was absent or tardy during the eleven years she has attended public schools here. She completed the high school course in three years and attained grades of 90 or above each year. She received a scholarship to State Teachers’ college.
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Reads Bible 25 Times in 7 Years; Saved by Faith
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Miss Mary Ann Head and her Bible, the book she’s read twenty-five times since 1927.
Stll Seeks Meaning of One Passage in Book of Books. After reading the Bible twentyfive times in seven years, four times a year for three years, and once in forty days, Miss Mary Ann Head of 416 Berwick avenue* still is hunting the meaning of one passage in the Book of Books. “I just can't seem to find it again,” says Miss Head as she thumbs the second Bible she's used in her marathon reading. She wore out her first Bible in twelve voyages through Genesis to Revelations. She attributes faith in the book she’s read so often as playing a factor in saving her from death last fall when the auto in which she was riding was struck by a train in Kentucky. 35 Chapters a Day “If I hadn’t had faith, I don’t believe I’d recovered from injuries,” she says. Miss Head, a practical nurse, began her Biblical marathon while reading at the bedside of patients and ailing members of her family. In the years 1927 to 1929 she averaged reading it four times a year and on the occasion six years ago when she read it through in “forty days and forty nights”—the Biblical span of the Deluge—she would average as high as thirty-five chapters a day. Finds Someting New “Every time I read it I find someting new, a different meaning, that I didn't get on other readings. I like the entire book, but especially Psalms and Proverbs,” she says. Using glasses during her reading
you look at it A girl with the knowledge and trained ability to go into business for herself ik much to be envied during this period of uncertainty. A course in Beauty Culture offers immediate employment and ultimate business independence. Take that course where you can get the most for your money and where you will be taught the most modem methods with the most modem equipment. The Academy maintains a large Free Clinic where the Public can have the various branches of beauty sendee without charge. A personal or a phone call will convince you that ours is the course best suited to your credit.
she believes the morning hours are the best for scanning the book. She reads the King James version. And she’s not going to stop, if then, until she finds that passage in Genesis that gave her a meaning she’s never been able to find in her numerous persuals of the New and Old Testaments. INDIAN CAMP LEADER Full-Blooded Sioux Named to Post by State Y. M. C. A. A full-blooded Sioux Indian, from the land of the Dakotas, Isaac Greyearth, has been appointed one of the leaders at Camp Tecumseh, state Y. M. C. A. summer camp, on the Tippecanoe river. Born on the Sisseton reservation in South Dakota, Greyearth attended the Flandreau Indian school and later Haskell institute at Lawrence, Kan., and Mount Hermon school, Massachusetts. For the last eight years he has served as religious work director of several Y. M. C. A. schools. LAUDS INCOME TAX ACT Greatest Relief for Real Estate in State’s History, Is Claim. Joseph P. McNamara, deputy state attorney-general, declared the Indiana gross income tax law will mean an average reduction of 16 cents in the Marion county tax rate and 36 cents in other counties, at the luncheon of the Universal club in the Columbia Club Tuesday. “Before this law was passed, indications were that the state would come into possession of 25 per cent of the real estate of Indiana,” McNamara said. “It is the greatest relief from taxation of real estate the state has had.”
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
AGES RESIDENT DEAD;FUNERAL SERVICES SET Entha May Harman Will Be Buried in Sidell, 111., on Thursday. Funeral services for Miss Entha May Harman, 72, resident of Indi- | anapolis for forty-five years, will be : held at 7:30 tonight in her home, | 2547 North Alabama street Burial ; will be in Sidell, 111., Thursday morning. Miss Harman died Tuesday in her 'home. She had been emnloyed as a proofreader by the Rough Notes Company for several years. There are no immediate relatives. Former Rresident Is Dead Word has been received here by Mrs. Grace Myers of the death of her father, Robert H. Myers, 84, former resident of this city, at the home of another daughter, Mrs. Martha Daugherty, in Muncie, Tuesday. Mr. Myers formerly was a contractor and builder here. He was graduated from Northwestern Christian university, now Butler university, in 1878. He was a former elder of the Third Christian church and later an elder of the Hillside Christian church. Funeral services will be held in Muncie Thursday. Cremation will follow. The daughters are the only survivors.
Bank Employe Is Taken Gilbert Roberts, 47, of 1125 North Beville avenue, special policeman for the Fletcher American National bank for the last twelve years, died Tuesday in St. Vincent's hospital. Mr. Roberts was born in Detroit. He had lived in Indianapolis twentyfive years. For the last six years he had lived with Mr. and Mrs. J. L. an Buskirk at the Beville avenue address. Funeral arrangements have not been completed. He had no survivors. Funeral Rites Arranged Funeral services for Miss Nellie V. McClure, 37, resident of Indianapolis thirty-three years, will be held at the home of Dr. and Mrs. Oscar M. Jones, 1821 West Washington gtreet, where she lived, at 2 Thursday, Burial will be in Crown Hill cemetery. She died Tuesday. Miss McClure was born in New Frankfort. She was a member of the West Park Christian church. Survivors are two sisters, Mrs. Little Surber and Mrs. June Kelso, and three brothers, Thomas, Jacob and Albert McClure, all of Indianapolis. High School Pupil Dies Ward Thomas Smith, 15, of 414 South Warman avenue, a pupil of Washington high school, died Tuesday in the Indiana Christian hospital, of tetanus. The ailment was brought on by an injury on the elbow suffered when he fell recently while practicing jumping at the home of a neighbor. Survivors are the parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frederick J. Smith; a brother, Lionel Smith, and three sisters, Adeline, Martha and Katherine. Funeral arrangements have not been made.
Gone, but Not Forgotten
Automobiles reported to police aa stolen belong to: Addison Beavers. 5872 Julian avenue. Ford coupe. 8-981. from 2750 North Gale street. Louis Strickler, Boggstown, Ind.,* Ford coach, from 100 Indiana avenue. Louis Guedel, 349 East Morris street, Buick coupe. 34-917. from Delaware and Thirtieth streets. Wiseman Motor Sales Company, 2213 East Washington street, Buick sedan, M-219. from in front of 1151 West Thirtysixth street.
BACK HOME AGAIN
Stolen automobiles recovered by police belong to: Gertrude Mall, 1140 Carrollton avenue, Franklin sedan, found in rear of 520 North California street, stripped of two front wheels and tires. J. H. Hamilton. 2507 Boulevard place. Peerless sedan, found at 2700 Boulevard place. Violet Ashford. 1932 Columbia avenue, Ford sedan, found southeast of city. John Hancock. 1131 Fairfield avenue, Ford touring, found at Bridgeport. Ind.. stripped of four tires, windshield. and other accessories.
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AUSTRIA USES i IRON HAND TO CRUSHNAZIS Plot to Seize Control in Vienna Is Charged by Newspaper. | By T'nitriJ rrr** VIENNA, June 14.—A Nazi plot to i inaugurate a reign of terror in : Austria as a prelude to a coup to seize power was charged today by the newspaper Oester Reich Isches Abendblatt as the government prepared more drastic measures for suppression of the Austrian branch of Adolh Hitler's party. Relations between Germany and Austria, once so close that a union of the nations was considered pos- ! sible, were at the breaking point. The German minister delivered a | sharply worded protest to the for- ‘ eign office.
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World Almanac takes par t in Dedication Ceremonies
tL. jBL When the cornerstone of the JBr Only^^ new Supreme Court Building in mW 4 Washington, D. C“ plunked W% ml JR n .down to rest for centuries, it W& H(* fp| entombed a copy of the World vj MR Wf Almanac. America's greatest iHI. wjffl Reference Book was preserved il||L /or heavy paper in a lead box, along with ceramic cover jjgjjßm photographs of the present Supreme Court and of Chief Justice Taft, a Congressional Directory, a copy oi the Declara-
When the cornerstone of the new Supreme Court Building in Washington, D. C~ plunked .down to rest for centuries, it entombed a copy of the World Almanac. America's grea te s t Reference Book was preserved in a lead box, along with ceramic photographs of the present Supreme Court and of Chief Justice Taft, a Congressional Directory, a copy c* the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, the Attorney General’* last annual report, and the latest volume of the Supreme Court’* opinions. In its airtight container. the World Almanac will inform generations born centuries from now about our life and times. The World Almanac is a veritable storehouse of information . . a thousand books a million facts condensed into one handy-size quick reference book an indispensable aid at
The Indianapolis Times A Scrippt-Howard Newspaper
-JUNE 14. 1033
home, in school or at your office. Its value cannot be measured in dollars and cents, yet the cost is so low anyone can afford it. Now on sale at new*, stands and bookstores. Only 60c per copy for heavy paper cover. 11.00 per copv for cloth binding. Or it may be ordered by mail direct. Send 10c additional for wrapping and postage. Address the World Almanac, 125 Barclay Street, New York City. Published by the New York World* Teleeram.
