Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 292, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 April 1934 — Page 18
PAGE 18
CITY CATHOLIC STUDENTS TO HONOR BISHOP Parochial Pupils to Attend Special Mass Services This Week. Pupils of the Indianapolis Catholic high schools and academies and the seventh and eighth grade pa-; rochial schools will honor the Most | Rev. Joseph Elmer Ritter, D. D.. who will be Installed as bishop of Indianapolis, April 24, with special celebrations in SS. Peter and Paul cathedral, Thursday and Friday. ■ April 26 and 27. High school and aradpmy pupils and their teachers will assist at a solemn high mass at 9:15 Thursday morning. At the conclusion. Bishop Ritter will address the children and impart his blessing Music of the mass will be sung in Gregorian by the senior and junior classes of St. Mary's St. John’s and St. Agnes academies. They will si-ig the Tenth Mass” in honor of th? Blessed Virgin Mary. The proper of the mass will be sung by Ladywood pupils under the direction of the Rev. Henry Dugan, i J. C. D.. Ladywood chaplain. The Rev. Edwin Sahm. assistant pastor | of St. John's church, will be organist. At 9:15 Friday morning, the seventh and eighth grade pupils of the twenty-three parochial schools will! assemble at the Cathedral for mass.' during which the children will sing ! The clergy of the city will be present with Bishop Ritter, who will address and blpss the pupils. FIRE VICTIM KILLED SELF, CORONER SAYS City Woman Shot Self in Head. Official Rules. A verdict of suicide in the death cf Mrs. Margaret Sloane, whose charred body was found in the ruins of her home at Thirty-first and California streets last week, was returned yesterday by Dr. E. R. Wilson, deputy coronor. A bullet wound in the head, said to have been self-inflicted, caused the death of Mrs. Sloane, according to Dr. Wilson. The body was found by firemen while attempting to overcome a blaze in the house. CASH RELIEF FAVORED Louis Markun, G. O. P. Candidate for Mayor, Suggests Change. A platform for poor relief which provides for some cash relief instead of all food tickets was presented last night by Louis Markun. Republican mayor candidate. Addressing the newly formed Markun-for-Mayor Negro Club of the Fifth and Sixth wards, he stressed also the need for more relief stations, declaring it “inhuman for men in all kinds of weather and without decent shoes on their feet to walk miles for their food tickets.”
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Os international interest is the engagement of Miss Alice Davis (above), daughter of Dwight F. Davis, former secretary of war and governor-general of the Philippines, to Roger Makins of the British embassy. They will be married April 30 in Tallahassee, Fla. W. C. T. U. TO HOLD INSTITUTE ON FRIDAY Annual Event to Be Held at Y. W. C. A. Here. Annual institute of the Central W. C. T. U. will open at 10 Friday morning at the Y. W. C. A. The morning will be devoted to departmental work and memorial services and the Rev. W. T. Jones, pastor of the Edwin Ray M. E. church, will speak on “Christian Citizenship” in the afternoon. Mrs. Charles A. Breece will be in charge of music. NATURE CLUB TO MEET Will Hear Illustrated Lecture on Rockies Tonight. A talk illustrated with handcolored slides on “Rambles Through the Rockies" will be given before the Nature Study Club at 7:45 tonight at Cropsey auditorium by Eben G. Fine, Boulder, Colo.
SPRING f LUBRICATION X / SPECIAL ,o ; E r 1. Specialized Lubrication using revolutionary Moto- sw a y JKtim mffijk, j Equipment. I.ubrication under actual driving conditions. The jKr Mmr only correct way to lubricate Jg|||p your car. sKgBH ——— 2. Drain and refill transmission Roe with new summer grease. * H $3.50 3. Drain and refill differential MEp; with new summer grease. tO 4. Vacuum clean interior of car. $5.00 5. Drain radiator and inspect V3! UO cooling system. HGg|l KiiiiiaW Open Open 7A a m to hiKD® iH to 9 p r M. @are the red STOP lights of Mother Nature. Don’t ignore Wear Miller Glasses! Headaches more often than not warn you of eye trouble. Heed the warning at once. Have us exam- J jflM eyes. We promise an accurate, honest dingDr. West. Registered Optometrist, In Charge! 21 North Meridian Street S. E. Corner Meridian and Circle 10-D A Y crosley B WtP m “SHELVADOR” 18^NMLLINOIS
INSULL GUARD TIGHTENEDED AT SICILIAN PORT Sailors Watch for Suicide Attempt on Part of Aged Man. By l uitei! Prrtt CATANIA, Sicily, April 17. Samuel Insull, returning to the United States to face trial on fraud charges, arrived at 7 a. m. today in the steamship Exilona, under close guard to prevent a possible bid for freedom. During the first part of the cruise of the Evilona from Smyrna, where it picked up Insull, the aged utilities man was accorded every privilege. As the ship approached port —a regular stop on its way to Boston — two members of the crew were detailed to watch him instead of the usual one. In fear of a suicide attempt, he was refused permission to inspect the ship's engines. Insull was told he could receive visitors aboard the ship, in the presence of Captain Wenzel Habel, master of the Exilona, and Burton Y. Berry, third secretary of the American embassy in Turkey. He asked first of all that no Italian newspaper men be permitted aboard. In order to avoid international complications the state department had arranged that at Italian and other ports on its homeward journey it should be treated as a ship in “innocent passage." so that it could halt at any port overnight without becoming subject to port regulations and possibly losing Insull by some legal move. Seamen were continually at Insull 's heels when the Exilona reached port. Insull, clad in blue pajamas and black slippers, accompanied by the head steward, stood back on the deck watching the shore, while members of the crew' guarded the gangway. Duvall Favors Lottery Bill John L. Duvall, a Republican candidate for mayor, spoke last night at the Walker theater and at Twenty-seventh street and Northwestern avenue. He spoke in favor of the proposed legalized lottery bill to be brought before congress.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
HOW TO BE COLONEL. KENTUCKY BRAND. IS BARED BY RECIPIENT
By l.nitrd Prrt* PHILADELPHIA, April 17. The secret of Kentucky colonels, suh, is a secret no longer. Governor Ruby Lafoon of Kentucky. conferred the title of colonel on Rex Moyer Gilmore, Philadelphia sportsman, in return for “distinguished service to the state of Kentucky.” Reporters found the new colonel at his club. "I can't remember doing anything for Kentucky,” he explanied, "but the appointment was easy. A senator fixed it up.”
EX-SENATOR BLAINE, RFC DIRECTOR, DIES Noted La Follette Leader Is Pneumonia Victim. By United Pro* BOSCOBEL, Wis.. April 17. John J. Blaine, director of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation and prominent leader in the La Follette Republican political party, died last night of bronchial pneumonia at his home here. Asa follower of the late Senator Robert Marion La Follette, Mr. Blaine was elected to the governorship for several terms and the United States senate. He also served as a Wisconsin state senator. The fatal attack came after a week’s illness. Mr. Blaine rallied several times during the course of his sickness with the aid of oxygen, but his weakened condition failed to respond to treatment yesterday as five physicians tried to save him. Young Democrats to Meet Seventh Ward Young Democratic Club will meet tonight at 2249 North Illinois street. J. Harold Wanner and Carl Woods will speak.
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BAPTIST GROUP ELECTS SLATE Officers Named Will Serve Until Merger Is Made With Federation. Officers of the Indianapolis Baptist Association were re-elected last night at the annual meeting in the First Baptist church to serve until the merger of the association with the Federated Baptist Churches of Indianapolis within the next five months. Officers re-elected are Eugene C. Foster, director of the Indianapolis Foundation, president; Charles O. Lawler, vice-president; Arthur D. Moore, secretary; Thomas C. Osborne, treasurer, and the Rev, Clive McGuire, executive secretary. Members of the executive committee, also re-elected, are George F. Woody, H. C. Bearry. Z. Earl Sigmon, Mrs. Frank Stickney, Dr. Herbert F. Thurston, Elmer Fye, Mrs. F. L. Warner and Mrs. H. D. Kinman. British Air Hero Dies WENDOVER, England. April 17. Air Vice-Marshal Francis R. Scarlett, 57, commander of the 1927 Schneider cup seaplane team which defeated Italy, died today. HOBBS Bridgeport Nurseries ! TREES and *[ PLANTS largest Nursliana Over 400 in 1875. DRIVE OUT 6 miles directly west of Indianapolis on U. S. Hoad No. 40 (W. Washington St.) C.M. HOBBS & SONS Bridgeport, Jnd.
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THIS advice is addressed to the bride because she is usually the one to take care of these things even though the husband thinks it is his task. After the honeymoon the time arrives when the newlyweds start thinking about a place to display their trousseaus. It may be an apartment that has gained their attention or it may be a house with trellises and a winding walk. Whatever type place they may have been considering it’s certainly no fun going up one street and down another looking for vacancies. The advice to follow is the advice that more and more people in Indianapolis are taking. Instead of wearing themselves into a heat over this place or that, they merely avail themselves of the daily service offered through the Want Ad columns in The Times. Every day these columns present a list of the most desirable vacancies to be found in Indianapolis. If you are a bride just back from your honeymoon or if you are still celebrating the one you had long ago and are faced with the problem of anew home turn back to the Rental Columns in The Times, the very place you are looking for may be listed there now. ♦ ♦ ♦
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