Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 127, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 October 1933 — Page 24
PAGE 24
SOCIAL PARLEY NAMES MUNCIE WOMAN CHIEF State Conference -Session Here Ended With Election. Delegates to the Indiana State conference on social work named Mrs. Edmund B. Ball, Muneie, as president at the closing session of the three-day convention yesterday. Vice-presidents elected are Joseph A. Andrews, Lafayette, Mrs. Louise Swain, Pendleton; Frank J. Sheehan, Gary, and Dr. Hazel T. Mansford, Madison. William A. Hacker, head of the social service division of the Indianapolis public schools, was named treasurer, and William H. Book, director of the state unemployment relief commission, secretary. EMERSON CHURCH TO MARK ANNIVERSARY Baptist Congregation to Take Part in Rally Day Program. Rally day. marking the twentyfirst anniversary of the founding of Emerson Avenue Baptist church, will be observed Sunday morning with a pageant directed by Mrs. Robert Caplinger and Mrs. H. G. Rowe. Pastor is the Rev. H. G. Rowe.
" merit’s ■■■■ SHOE MARKETS We Are Unloading $75*000 Worth of New Fall Shoes TlfrhflSl west IUpBW If • **ss: wash. Jg m K, ™r Be Here s^BB Early Shop Our ii/ j? S Windows I flftQ p r c Gladly f S Women's Shoes X“/ New Fall / Styles / SI aB IH , Pumps, Straps, Ties in black and / vllt brown combinations. You’ll want at * Styles, least two pairs. ah *Jf Jf They ""' s Go! <|>B AQ Kids Patents 1 \ gji “ / A ■ W Sturdy School Shoes and Oxfords Jk Foot form lasts. f v l*atent-Guaranteed Flexible stitch down ) soles. Sizes B'i to MEN’S FALL SHOES_xA . BUY NOW — Prices Are Going Up jß&fflSßjh '■■L STYLES $4.99 jmw Shoes Grain Leather Rubber Soles I SATURDAY MORNING SPECIALS^ — Between the Hours of 8 A. M. and 12 o’Clock Only! boys’ hi-tops nVii ce" mem’s HI * TOPS sturdy c4 fi q GALOSHES c< qq Built O I DO Chance O ■ 00 A real buy ■ #U C “ l,u >‘ , for winter '£ t HeeU ‘ This Price ■ i a BIG Bo\ S’ WORK SHOES school oxfords Leather or in cO 4Q Sizes 16 o 4 AQ Rubber Soles * I == to Gunmetal. Composition O I ■ ■■ Soles, Reg. $2 Value i MERIT SHOE MARKETS I 332 WEST j I 132 EAST WASH. WASHINGTON I I .Next to Meyer-Kiser Bank Bldg.
THESE CHILDREN HAVE ROLES IN COMMUNITY FUND MOVIE
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The appealing lineup of youngsters pictured above are inmates of the Indianapolis Orphans Home and are part of the cast of a movie to stress “human needs’’ of the community which must be met through the Community Fund campaign Oct. 20-30 with a goal of $824,462. The film is being shown now in neighborhood motion picture houses and will be shown at the downtown houses starting Oct. 13.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
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FINDS EVIDENCE OF MAN-EATIND INDIANJRIDES Discover Human Bones in Refuse Heaps at Wisconsin Site. By Science Service MILWAUKEE. Wis., Oct. 6. “Abundant evidence” that prehistoric Indians who lived at Aztalan, Wis., ate human flesh as a regular article of diet when they could get it is reported by Dr. S. A. Barrett of the Milwaukee Public Museum. In a comprehensive report on the site which has interested archaeologists for many years, Dr. Barrett declares that human bones found in refuse heaps at Aztalan are almost unbelievably numerous. The usual explanation that aborigines who practiced cannibalism did so as a special rite, and thus ate a bit of heart, brain or flesh of the enemy to acquire power, can not be accepted here, Dr. Barrett says. The human bones are too numerous. They are almost all broken open for the narrow inside. The skulls have been opened for the brains. The remnants are tossed aside. “Revolutionary as this idea may seem,” says the report, “we are forced to suggest that the evidence points to the probability that human flesh was here used as a regular article of diet whenever it was obtainable and that the human flesh was handled in every way pre-
cisely as was that of the larger animals of the chase. Marrow and brains were considered as delicacies, whether they were the marrow and brains of the deer, bear, and buffalo or whether they were those of a slain enemy or of a captive.” The Indian village which held this strange custom was built in an unusual manner. Excavations by the museum show that it was a large village protected by no less than three stockades. A wall of posts twelve feet high surrounded
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the settlement. There were watch towers at regular intervals, and the gates were so p ced that they could be easily guarded. The actual fortifications have long since vanished, but fragments of posts have been found and lines of the post holes can be traced. An An earthern embankment added to the strength of the outer stockade. From the earthworks at the site and other clews, it is believed that the village was most nearly like the 1 culture of the mound building In-
DCT. 6, 1933
dians to the south, at Cahokia id Illinois. The theory once advanced, that Azatlan was the place in the north whence the Aztecs migrated to Mexico. is not upheld by evidence that can be found there, Dr. Barrett reports. The traditional first home of the Axt ecs was called Azatlan, and the Wisconsin site was merely given this name when an early explorer examined it and thought it might explain the Aztec migration story.
