Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 133, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 October 1933 — Page 20
PAGE 20
P.-T, A GROUP TO HEAR TALK BY FIRE CHIEF Bernard Lynch to Speak Wednesday on Blaze Prevention Work. Bernard Lynch. Arc prevention bureau chief, will give an illustrated talk at School 18. Parent-Teacher Association, at 230 Wedr.esdav. A talk will be given in the interest of the Community Fund Music will be provided by Harold Light, pianist. The Child Study Circle will meet at 1:30. A speaker representing the Community Fund will speak on the purpose of the crusade at School 38 at 3:15 Wednesday. The junior department will provide a program of songs. The P.-T. A of school 55 will give a reception and tea in honor of mothers new to the school, teachers and hostesses at 1:30, Monday afternoon. Oct. 23 2 An address of welcome will be given by the principal. Miss Elizabeth Kirbv. and a musical program will be provided. Halloween appointments will be used. Mrs Biorn Winger will speak on "The Philosopher Stone" at School 60 at 2:30 Wednesday. An informal tea will folllow. A silver tea for mothers and teachers new to the school will be given at School 75 at 3:15 Wednesday. Mrs. Martha Maginity will provide a program of musical numbers. There will be installation of officers and a speaker in the interest of the Community Fund. Miss Hazel McCollum will speak on "The Home—The Court" at School 80, at 2:30 Wednesday. Paul C Stetson, schools superin- ! tendent. will be the speaker at j School 81, at 2:30 Wednesday. “A Japanese Sunset” will be given by j a vocal trio of the Irvington School ! of Music. Additional music will be offered by the intermediate and up- i per primary choruses of the school, j Mrs. C. A. James will speak for the | Community Fund. A special election will be held at \ School 90 at 3:15 Wednesday for the purpose of naming a successor to Mrs. Louise Hoerger, president, who has moved from the city. A special musical program has been arranged I by former pupils of the school. In- j vitation is given to parents new to : the school district. SITE TO BE EXCAVATED Archeologists Will Go to Persia on Joint Expedition. By f niters Prva* PHILADELPHIA. Oct. 13. A party of archeologists from the University of Pennsylvania will go to Persia as part of a joint expedition with the Boston Museum of j Fine Arts. The group will excavate i near Teheran, the capital of Persia.
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STUDIES IN COLLEGE VETERINARY SCHOOL
* The first woman admitted to thi ■ HR fgffij school of veterinary medicine a W& hBhBT 111 the University of Pennsylvani; -^l9 since ,h,> school wa * established Jails' | ■ forty-nine years ago. is the disM* B 19| unction of Miss Connie E JohnsjpipW IWm ton of Greenwich. Conn picturer pf M i ■ here with a newly arrived patient at the schools hospital in Philadelphia. I WSSk 9 m>:,m llijf B||l |• 111 m i: 'f B* m <J mk
BARCUS LEGION POST INSTALLS OFFICERS Ceremony Is Preceded by Annual Dinner. Annual installation dinner of the Haywood Barcus post, American Le--1 gion, and the auxiliary was held Wednesday night at the D. A. R. hall on North Pennsylvania street. Honor guests were Mrs. Blanche Robinson, department auxiliary president; Mrs. Ruth Innis, department secretary, and Mrs. Edna M. Barcus. past department president Following the meeting, Mrs. Leila Lutes was installed as unit president and Mrs. Ruth Klare, the retiring president, was received in the past president club. 3.2, BEER? NO, IT’S JUST COLLEGE COURSE Numbers Used to Designate Study of ‘Ore Dressing.’ Ry United Pres* CAMBRIDGE. Mass., Oct. 13.—Almost anywhere else 3.2 means beer, but at Massachusets Institute of Technology, it is a mining engineering course in “Advanced Ore Dressing."
The first woman admitted to the school of veterinary medicine at the University of Pennsylvania since the school was established forty-nine years ago, is the distinction of Miss Connie E Johnston of Greenwich. Conn., pictured here with a newly arrived patient at the schools hospital in Philadelphia.
FALLS TWO STORIES: SUFFERS NO INJURIES 19-Month-Old Child Rolls Out Window On to Ground. Ry United Pres* DETROIT. Oct. 13.—Wallace Graham. 19-mcnths-old, was none the worse for a two-story fall from the home of his parents here recently. The baby was rocking in his chair near a window when he rolled over the windowsill and fell to the ground. He suffered no injuries, hospital attendents reported.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
POLICE SLAYER DIES IN CHICAGO ELECTRIC CHAIR Governor Refuses to Act; Electrocution First in War on Crime. Ry United Pre** CHICAGO. Oct. 13.—Morris Cohen. 38, the first man to be sent to death in Chicago’s intensive campaign against crime launched last summer, was electrocuted today for the slaying of a policeman two months ago. The condemned man entered the glass-paneled death chamber in the criminal courts building at 12:09 a. m. and was pronounced dead by twelve physicians seven minutes later. Cohen was convicted and sentenced to death nine days after he killed Joseph Hastings, on duty on the navy pier, when the policeman sought to arrest him -in connection with a robbery. An hour before he w'as scheduled to die, attorneys for Cohen brought him word of Governor Henry Horner’s refusal to stay his electrocution. He smiled complacently is he prepared for the short march to the chair. “I’m in here and I’ll have to take my medicine,” he told the small group gathered to witness execution of the sentence. “What can I say? There’s not much I can do.” RUSSIAN BILLIARDS LATEST PARIS RAGE Game Turned Down by English Is Sensation of France. Ry United Press PARIS, Oct. 13.—Last year it was yo-yo, this year it is Russian billiards. This game, which was turned down by the British, caught like wildfire in France and Belgium. It is like a miniature billiard table, only you have to shoot around a ninepin; if you hit the ninepin,j your score becomes zero. The game is installed free, yields 25 per cent to the house and J3 per cent to government tax. dA,
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OCT. 13, 1933
