Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 163, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 November 1933 — Page 12
PAGE 12
MACHINE RAMS SIGNAL; COUPLE BADLYjRUISED Auto Smacks Into Stop and Go Light on North Side. Mr and Mrs George Newton, 1622 East Market street, were bruised severely and cut early today when their car struck a traffic signal at Thirtieth and Meridian streets. They were taken to St. Vincent's hospital by a passing motorist. Three women were injured, one critically, last night in a three-car collision at Leonard avenue and Morris street. Those injured were Miss Rosemary Newport, 19, of 1203 South Keystone avenue, who was riding in a car driven by Theodore Brumlng, 27, of R. R. 10, Bex 287-G; Mrs. Monetta Lighton, 40, Negro, 1110 Maple street, serious head injuries, and Miss Daisy Alexander, 26, Negro, 1001 South Senate avenue. The latter two were riding in a car driven by Henderson Bastic, Negro, 1045 South Capitol avenue. Passenger Is Arrested Driver of the third car, said by police to be Worth Williams, 27, of 1203 Singleton street, was reported to have left immediately after the accident. A passenger in his car, Leo Filcher, 25, of 850 Pleasant Run boulevard, was arrested on an intoxication charge. Miss Stella De Weese, 341 West Wyoming street, suffered severe face and body lacerations when she was thrown through the windshield of a car, driven by Ara Hughes, which was struck by another car a mile west of the city on Rockville road last night. The other car did not stop, police were told. Harvey Price, 27, of 835 East Thirtieth street, found lying in the street at Cedar and Shelby streets last night, believed to have been struck by an automobile, was taken to city hospital suffering with leg and face injuries . He was ordered held on intoxication charges. Martinsville Man Hurt Frank B. Shields, 45. of R. R. 7, Martinsville, was taken to Methodist hospital last night with head injuries after his car and , a car driven by Montgomery Wolf, 39, of 1613 Rembrandt street, sideswiped on Harding street one mile south of the White river bridge. • Arthur Brown, Negro, 316 West Sixteenth street, was injured last night when he stepped from behind one car into the path of a car driven by George Garlies. 36, North Manchester, at Thirty-fourth and Meridian streets. Will Tarnish, 60, of 543 West Michigan street, was sent to city hospital with body injuries last night when he was struck by a car driven by Philip Petercheff, 40, of 952 Arnolda avenue, as he was pushing a car across California street at Indiana avenue. Ginevra was the young Italian bride who hid in a chest with a spring lock during the wedding festivities and who was not found until her body had become a skeleton.
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Four Indianapolis Women Are Given Posts on Christmas Seal Board
15 Others Will Serve on Commission Heading 'Funds Campaign. Women of Indianapolis and Marion county are organizing in many groups to assist the Marion County Tuberculosis Association in its December Christmas Seal sale, from the proceeds of which preventive and curative educational work for next year must be financed. Leading these groups are four Christmas Seal commission, which women, who today accepted membership on the 1933 Tuberculosis will direct the December effort here 1 to raise enough money to keep the 1 community health program of the ; tuberculosis association going forI ward next year. The four women are Mrs. Henry H. Hornbrook, secretary of the tuberculosis association and president of the Indianapolis Free Kinder- ' garten Society; Mrs. E. C. Atkins, representing the Junior League of Indianapolis; Mrs. Bruce Maxwell, I trustee of Washington township ■ and prominent in many women’s ! activities here, and Mrs. William E. Balch, president of the Federation of Parent-Teacher Associations of the Indianapolis public schools. With fifteen other representative citizens, including many public officials and leading civic workers, i the commission will sponsor the offering in December of small quantities of seals to citizens throughout the city and county. The seals sell for $1 a hundred and the proceeds are dedicated to the carrying on of the preventive and curative work of the tuberculosis association during its twentyfirst year of service. Attention to prevention problems among children in schools and homes has come to be the important phase of the association’s work, as it is in many other communities throughout America. Under the guidance of the National and Indiana Tuberculosis Association, work among children for building resistance against the disease has gone forward here in exceptional manner. Fresh-air schools have been developed, Sunnyside sanatorium, with its children's department, has been made possible, the nutrition camp for sick children, a summer preventorium operated by the tuberculosis association, has set hundreds of un-der-privileged children back on the road to health, a general anti-dis-ease educational campaign has gone forward for many years in schools and homes, public health nursing has been broadened to include much child health, and clinical facilities have been elaborated to permit of important discovery of disease in its early stages and consequent early recovery. Eli Lilly is serving as chairman of the 1933 Christmas Seal Commission here and a group of committees from the board membership of the tuberculosis association, under guidance of Dr. E. M. Amos, president, is co-operating. Other members of the 1933 Seal commission are Dr. A L. Marshall, president of Sunnyside sanatorium’s board of managers; Postmaster Adolph Seidensticker; J.
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Mrs. Elias Atkins Jr.
Malcolm Dunn, superintendent of county schools; the Rev. Ernest N. Evans. Indianapolis Church Federa- | tion secretary; Rabbi Morris M. j Feuerlicht; the Most Rev. Joseph E., Ritter, S. T. D., auxiliary bishop of ! Indianapolis; Mayor Reginald Sulli- j van; Otto Ray, Twelfth district]
|| SPECIAL PURCHASE | POLICEMAN Fireman—Postman SHOES^, rubber heels. JBm% thrift WgSgljljShoe Store BASEMENT Merchants National Bank Bldg. \a. Meridian and Washington
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
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Mrs. Bruce Maxwell
commander, American Legion; Edward W. Harris; Edgar A. Perkins, member of the state industrial board; Paul C. Stetson, superintendent schools; Dr. Herman G. Morgan, Indianaplois Health Board secretary; Frederic M. Ayres, and John Lauck, Sr.
BANKS MAY BET HOME LOAN AID FOR LIQUIDATION Surveys Being Made Upon Basis of McKinney Proposal. E. Kirk McKinney, state manager | of the Federal Home Owners' Loan Corporation, announced today that preliminary surveys are in progress in many northern Indiana re--1 stricted banks for relief with aid of the corporation. A survey of the frozen assets of the American Trust Company and ; Citizens Loan Company of South Bend to ascertain if releases can be I effected through a “blanket loan” by the corporation. A survey also is being made of the Fowler bank and City Trust Company of Lafayette, which is to be completed by Saturday. Relief for all closed and restricted banks of Lake county next will re-
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KY A WANT AD IN THE TIMES. THEY WILL BRING RESULTS-
.NOV. 17, 1933
