Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 232, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 February 1934 — Page 6
PAGE 6
COLLEGE CHIEFS CONSIDER U. S, STUDENT HELP State Institutions Asked to Take Part in Meeting Here. To discuss a plan of providing part-time employment for needy college students, a conference of presidents of Indiana colleges was called by the Governor's commission on unemployment relief for today at the commission s headquarters, 217 North Senate avenue. The program was authorized in a bulletin received from the federal emergency relief administration, which will pay the wages of the students employed under the plan. The colleges whose presidents were invited to attend the meeting are: Indiana university, Bloomington; Purdue university, Lafayette; Terre Haute Normal school. Terre Haute; Ball State college, Muncie; De Pauw university, Greencastle; Notre Dame university. South Bend; Wabash college, Craws ordsville; Earlham college. Richmond; Taylor university, Upland; Butler university, Indianapolis; Indiana Central university, Indianapolis; Franklin college, Franklin; Hanover college, Hanover; Evansville college, Evansville; Vincennes university, Vincennes; Manchester college. North Manchester; Central Normal school, Danville; Goshen college. Goshen; Huntington college, Huntington: Marion college, Marion; Oakland City college, Oakland City; Valparaiso university, Valparaiso. Members of the executive committee of the state relief commission; Wayne Coy, secretary to the Governor, who also is secretary to the commission, and a representative of the state superintendent of public instruction, will be present. Quotas Are Limited Under the requirements of the Federal Emergency Relief Administration. the quota of students to be employed under this plan will be limited to 10 per cent of the full time student enrollment of each college, on Oct. 15, 1933. Each college which accepts the plan must waive all fees for registration, tuition, laboratories and other purposes, for the students employed. Selection of the students will be on the following basis: They must be persons who could not otherwise attend college; they must be of good character, and must “possess such ability as to give assurance that they will do high grade work in college”; not more than 75 per cent of the money allotted to any college shall be paid to students regularly enrolled in some institution last month, so that at least 25 per cent of the money is to go to students who were not in college last semester: the emplos"ment is to be divided between girls and boys in proportion to the enrollment of each in the particular school. The pay is to be limited to $lO to S2O a month for each student employed, the allotment to each school being based pn a sls a month Average. This is to be worked out on an hourly rate basis which is to be the rate commonly paid by the institution for the type of service given, but in no case less than 30 cents an hour, and no students is to work more than thirty hours a week or eight hours a day.
Covers Usual Work The work to be done by these students, the FERA authorisation said, will cover the range of jobs customarily done in the institutions by students who are working their way through college, including clerical. library and research work, work In buildings and grounds, and in dormitories and dining halls. Regular class instruction is excluded. In the case of institutions not under public control, any construction and repair projects must be on nearby public property. It is further provided that all work under this program must be in addition to any work now provided by the school. SMOKER TO BE HELD BY CWA LEGION POST Veterans Will Conduct Meeting in Tomlinson Hall. 4 Meeting and smoker of the new CWA post of the American Legion will be held in Tomlinson hall at 8 tomorrow night, it was announced today by Captain Otto Ray, Twelfth district commander, who will direct the ceremonies. All former service men with CWA jobs have been invited. ‘Y’ CLASS TO ORGANIZE Trade School Students to Be Taught by Frederick Ray. The first class in a course in mechanical drafting, tracing, and tool and machine designing will be held at the Y. M. C. A. trade school under Frederick Ray at 7:30 tonight. Gone, but Not Forgotten Automobiles reported to police as stolen belong to Dan Stiver. 37 West St. Joseph street. Ford roadster, from 1815 North Illinois staret. Ralph McCarthy. R. R. 3 Greenwood. Tnd.. Pontiac roadster. Irom Wilkins and Meridian street. Kevin A. Walsh. 840 West Fortv-third street. Marmon coach 36-918. from Capitol avenue and Market street. BACK HOME AGAIN Stolen automobiles recovered by police belong to: E Reeves. 308 Villa avenue. Ford coach, found at Scottsville. Kv. R F. Jordan. "50 Campbell avenue Ford coach, found at 2054 Bellefontaine street E Neutiman. 2206 Barrett avenue. WhipKtt sedan, found at Belmont avenue and mbert street L Hot tell. 2650 Napoleon street. Buick coupe, found on vacant lot at end of Hoefgen street. • W. Grote. 2139 Mattson avenue. Chevrolet coupe, found in front of 515 West Merrill street Hudson coach. 321-641 <3S. license plates issued to Mrs Dorothv Franstm. Laurel. Ind. and rebated at State House in July, found parked in front of 3744 North Meridian street. Hoosier Taxicab Company, found Booster taxi No. 26. at Thirtieth street and the canaL
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Indiana News in Brief m m m mum * * •* Interesting Stories About Events in Lives of Hoosiers Vi ritten and Assembled for Quick and Easy Reading.
SUB-ZERO temperature late in January and lack of rainfall caused much damage to wheat in Indiana fields, according to B. B. Benner, secretary of the Central States Grain Association. Another factor of damage in the northern part of the state was dust storms, he continued. Moderate temperature which prevailed during the greater part of the winter caused wheat to grow rapidly, Mr. Benner said, and without snow protection when the below-freezing weather came, the wheat was damaged badly.
Fofmer Banker Dies By / im>* Special SHELBVVILLE, Feb. 6—Funeral services were held today for Thomas K. Mull, 73, former banker, who is said to have died practically penniless despite wealth which at one time was rated at several hundreds of thousands of dollars. He was president of the Manilla bank, a private institution, which was closed more than two years ago. Closing of the bank led to other business reverses, and Mr. Mulls property was taken over by trustees for the benefit of creditors. Death came at the Masonic home in Franklin, where Mr. Mull had been ill several months. He suffered several paralytic strokes. n m m Never Moved By Time• Special PERU, Feb. 6.—Funeral services were held yesterday for Nathan Votaw. who died on a farm in Butler township where he was born and had spent all his life. ana State Group to Meet By Timet Special LAFAYETTE, Feb., Feb. 6.—Purdue university will be host Saturday for the fourth annual meeting of the Indiana Inter-Fraternity Council.
RE-ELECT PRESIDENT OF CITYJWNNERS George T. O’Connor to Head Board for Seventh Term. Re-election of George T. O’Connor, city plan commission president for the last six years, for a seventh term was announced following the annual reorganization meeting yesterday. Other officers named were Louis J. Borinstein. vice-president; Henry B. Steeg, secretary-engineer; D. E. Whitesill and George Rooker, draftsmen, and Miss Marguerite Gordon, stenographer.
The City in Brief
TOMORROW S EVENTS Kiwanis Club. luncheon. Columbia Club. Lions Club, luncheon. Washington. Purdue Alumni Association, luncheon. Severin. Twelfth District Legion, luncheon. Board of Trade. Mutual Insurance Association, luncheon. Columbia Club. League for Hard or Hearing. 7:30 p. m.. Stokes building. Automobile show, Indiana state fairground. Butler university forum. 7:30 p. m., Arthur Jordan hall. _ . , , _ Butler university. Founders day dinner, Claypool. MEDICAL SOCIETY TO MEET AT HOSPITAL List Speakers for Joint Meeting With Staff. The Indianapolis Medical Society will meet with the city hospital staff society tonight at the hospital. Speakers will include Drs. Brooks Smith. B. J. Larkin, Ralph McQuiston, B. E. Ellis, C. F. Kelly, C. B. Jackson, Frank Teague, H. F. Thurston, Norman Silverman, L. A. Ensminger, F. E. Jackson, Gerald Kempf, H. O. Mertz, J. Don Miller, K. Kohlsteadt, G. W. Gustafson, Leon Levi, Robert M. Moore and Russell Hippensteel. NEW COURSES OFFERED Many Interesting Subjects Listed for I. U. Semester. New courses being offered at Indiana university afternoon and evening classes for the second semester which opened yesterday include chemistry, English literature and composition. analytic geometry, American history, sociology, ac- ; counting. Spanish, business corre- : spondence. vertebrae zoology, em- ; bryology, economic radicalism, elementary economics, public speaking, income tax procedure, and business finance.
3 Doses oS Foley’s Loosens Cough Proof! 5 "Wouldn't be Foroldor young—during day jsshtuft -ji&xsssffcss ' ind C uickeet rtsxdlt. Coughs due They 2 1, ke the voids may get eenous fast, tte”klrs M don't delay. Get O'nwn* VJ*’ xtll ' FOLEY'S today—refuse eub|Mcron. Md. Sold everywhere What SHE TOLD WORN-OUT HUSBAND CHE could have reproached him •fSHK for his fits of temper —his “all BA in" complain-- Hu: wisely she XSpMB saw in his frequent colds, his nHr / “fagged out,” "on edge" condiLVy _-Jf tion the very trouble she herself had whipped. Constipation! The > _k. very morning afc* X e ter taking NR Ijjja / (Nature's Rem- { ■ vised, he like himself again— v keenly alert, peppy, cheerful. NR — the safe,dependable, all- , M. vegetable laxative and correc- 4 t:ve works gently, thoroughly. naturally It stim- ApF ■ •latesthe eliminative ■ .-eg-:, lr , 9 functioning Non-habit-forming Try a ggpv - at druggists’. “ . ... f.ll Quick relief for aejd lndiee*UM S t'• cm. heartburmOnly^Oc^
Store to Be Built ! By 7 imci Special ELWOOD, Feb. 6.—Bids will be received Feb. 15 by the R. L. Leeson & Sons Company for construction I of a two-story fireproof building to i house their department store_ destroyed a month ago in a $150,003 fire. The building, it is expected, will be completed between July 15 and Aug. 1. fm m n Business Pioneer Dies j By Timet Special BLOOMINGTON, Feb. 6.—Funeral services were held yesterday for George Adam Benckart, 85, second oldest Bloomington business man, who died of pneumonia. He had operated a bakery in one location here for fifty-three years. His former partner, Walter Collins, is j the city’s oldest business man. mam Accepts Pastorate By Timet Special MARTINSVILLE, Feb. 6. The Rev. J. V. Carlisle, East Enterprise, will become pastor of the Martinsville Baptist church on Feb. 11, succeeding the Rev. W. F. Badgett, who resigned to assume a pastorate at Vevay.
Classic Crooks Rare Books Stolen at Miami U.
By Cnited Pres OXFORD, 0., Feb. 6 —Shade of Anatole France’s “Revolt of the Angels!” Just as in that tale rare books vanished from their shelves, confounding the dusty librarian. Authorities at Maimi university here found locks broken in the library and two valuable volumes, printed in Latin, were gone. Thieves had taken St. Augustine’s “Quotes Incunabulum,” published in 1492, and “Plautus Comedies,” published in 1585. E. W. King, librarian, appealed to confused policemen to recover the valuable books. The marauders had failed, he said, in an attempt to take a case of valuable coins of the days of Greek and Roman ascendency. LABOR LEADER TO TALK Mrs. Golde Meyerson Will Address Zionists. Mrs. Golde Meyerson, Palestine labor leader and executive secretary of the Histadruth, will address Indianapolis Zionists at Kirshbaum Center at 8 tomorrow night. STOP GETTING UP Nights—Backache Flush Kidneys of Waste Blatter, Poisons and Acid. When your kidneys are clogged and your bladder is irritated and elimination is irregular and painful you need Gold Medal Haarlem Oil Capsules, a fine stimulant and diuretic that always works and costs hut 35 cents at any modern drug store. It’s one good, safe way to put healthy activity into kidneys and bladder—you’ll sleep sound the whole night thru. But be sure and get GOLD MEDAL right from Haarlem in Holland —you are assured of results. —Advertisement.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Church Is Gift By Timet Special FOUNTAINTOWN, Feb. 6. An anonymous donor has given a lot and promised material for the construction of anew building for the Methodist church here. The structure will replace one which has been in use about seventy years.. The building will be constructed of brick and will have modern equipment. m m u Three Postmen to Retire By Timet Special COLUMBUS, Feb. 6.—Under a program of consolidating rural mail delivery routes operated from the Columbus postoffice, three carriers will be placed on the retired list, with pensions, effective April 1. Those to be retired are Jesse Van Wye, William Gressel and Irwin Hart.
w P W dl J a^l !i dVmmMwm % Penney's Has Planned Outstanding February Features to Demonstrate the Full Value of Your Dollar! t Most Spectacular Dress Event of the Season! Just Unpacked 500 NEW jflL Dresses (/ay aA cFphiruj / ' Scores of Refreshing Spring Styles! j Come to Penney’s ~ . select a vibrant frock . wrap it up take it home and be gay. There’s nothing quite as cheerful as one of our new dresses nothing quite so nice as their beautiful quality nothing quite so pleasing as their very modest price—s 2.93. Types that you need now and later on in the spring! Be sure to see these dresses tomorrow. IFEBRUARY 7 ?! "ZJZfZe I ’***-,*<**'. g: Smart HATS tt I Shoe Fashions Are at Penney s! Wm ~ r ■ m & For Eearly Wear |R| Smart Oxfords * mm'it f| A. 2.49 JWJ 98° b New “Sylvia” models—and ggp: \ j every JJjjjp Sophisticated straws that perch lEft stitching Slid > Choice'wlorJ 18 ”’ II Vm feather! ’ I W* PENNEY’S—Second Floor. PENNEY’S—Second Floor. WATCH FOR OTHER FEBRUARY SUPER VALUES!J
FIREMEN SAVE FUMESVIGTIM City Man Is Resuscitated After Being Overcome by Gas. Fire department rescue squad last night resuscitated George Hook, 38, of 1536 Hoyt avenue, who was overcome by carbon monoxide gas as he was working under his automobile in his garage. Mr. Hook was treated at city hospital where his condition is believed not to be serious. DENTISTS WILL MEET Dr. David L. Smith to Address Gathering at Washington. Principal speaker at the Indianapolis Dental Society meeting Monday night in the Washington will be Dr. David L. Smith, who will discuss “Inter-relationship Between Obstetrics and Dentistry.” The group will act on report of the credit bureau committee.
TRY A WANT AD IN TIIE TIMES. THEY WILL BRING RESULTS.
FEB, 6, 1934
