Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 309, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 May 1934 — Page 3

MAY 7, 1934

200 ARE LISTED ON HONOR ROLLS AT SHORTRIDGE Scholastic Recognition Won by Upperclassmen and Junior Students. More than 200 pupils of shortridge high and junior high schools qualified for their respective honor rolls at the close of the recent grade period. Those who qualified are: I pperclassmen High Honor Roll Hilton Atherton. Bob B. Brown, Marguerite Call. Genevieve Campbell, Charlotte Cox, Pierre DeLawter, Paul Farrington. Harry Ferres, Jean Lou Foley, Sophia Gerson, Barbara Jean Johnson, Alice Kettner Jean Knowlton, Lois La titer, Constance Lewis, Sarah Elizabeth Marks, Lois McCaskey, Kelsey McDaniel, Betty Mclntyre, Janet Meditch, Gordon Messing. Elizabeth Myers, Harless Parmclee, William Rasmussen. Junior High High Honor Roil Eliece Aiman. Juanita Armstrong Jane Axtell, Dina Barkan, Mary Bell, Frances Carlsen, Annamargaret Chapman, Anna Louise Clancy, Anne Combs, Anne Davis, Jeanne Davis, Virginia A. Davis. Virginia L. Davis, Annabelle Dean, Katherine Durham, Mildred Freeman, Martha Gage, Marjorie Glass Miriam Goldfarb, Esther Gray, Thomas Harrison, Hyla Jane Hadley, Margaret Harbaugh, Ruth Higgins. Betty Hocker, Mark Holman Charlotte Jeanes, Thelma Kammen, Jo Ann Keller, Doris Koning, Danna Lansley, Dorcas Marohn, Helen Marxer, Marilyn McElwee, Johann McLean, Malcolm McVie, Boris Meriitch, Maclin Milner. Mary Betty Moldthan. Jean More, Maynard Morris, Rose Myers. Val Nolan, Vivian Petersen. Martha Nell Plopper, Myra Elizabeth Porter, Robert Price, William Riker, Jane Shaw, Tula Smyrnis, Jeanette Tarkington, Virginia Trickey. John Van Horn, Charles West. Helen Widdop. James Wisehart, Margaret Wohlgemuth. I'pperclasmen Honor Roll Marjory Allerdice, June Ambuhl, Elma Louise Ater. Rosalind Barrows, Louise Beechrv. Chloris Bell, Julia Anne Benson, Mildred Benson, Eleanor Berger, Trcva Berry, Ruth Bertsch, Robert Bill. Romaine Birkmeyer, Arthur J. Borinstein, James Briggs, Maxine Brossart, Buddy Brown, Jane Brown. John Brown, Marion Burmfirld. Ralph Bryant, Mary Anna Butz. Helen Cain, Virginia Carson, Katherine Cauble, Elizabeth Cavanaugh, Robert Chowning, George Clarke, Sam Cohen, Betty Cohen, Martha Cook, Grace Cooke, Jane Coling, Barbara Crise, Ruth Cronk, Jack Curry. Martha Dailey, Fred Day, Jennie Mae Dennis, Alberta Densford, Evelyn DeWees, Max Dunlevy. Florence Easterda.v. Mary Efroymson, Carter Eltzroth, Bill Evans. Rachael Feiblcman. Burton Fielding, Corrine Fletcher, Dan Flickingcr, Barbara French. Thomas Garland, Helen Louise Garman, Marjorie Goldberg, Ida Mae Good. Gale Graber. Jean Hackerd, Thelma Harman, Joel Harrod, Mary Elizabeth Hayes, Ethel May Heil, Elizabeth Henderson, Leonore Heppner, Donald Herr, Marguerite Herriot, Mary Hesseldcnz. Rembrandt Hiller. Anne Holmes, Volivia Huber, Mildred Hume. Nelie Ittner, Grace Izor. Priscilla Johnson, Josephine Jones, Jo Anne Jose. Alexander Kahn. Bernice Kaplan, i Robert Keen, Betty Kesphol, Paul Klinge. Lois LaFnra, Jeanne Lavelle. Edwin Lejuste, John Lennox, Edna Levi, Evelyn Little, Lorene Lutz. Rudy Makcla, Donald Malcolm. Robert Mann, Eleanor Marlowe, Ficttv Rose Martin, Robert L. Martin. Kathryn Mayer, Mary McClure, Roy McCormick. Sara Alice Mclntosh, Julianna Menncl, Janet Morgan, Lewis Morrison, Martha Morrison, Mary Morrison, William Gray Murray. Bonnie Bess Myers. Kathryn Neat, Rosemary Newman. Eleanor Nicholas, Ann Noel, Betty Noonan. David Oliver. Mary E. Orr. Karen Osborne. Margaret Ottinger, Sam Otto. Mary Lou Over. Margaret Parrish. Marguerite | Payne, Georgianna Pittman, Mary j Pope. Myrtle Rappold. Philip Redwine, Caroline Rehm. Charles Rice, Betty j Ann Ritchie, Mary Roland. Mildred Scales. Arthur Schappell. Nora Schiltges, Betty Schissel, Rosamond Schlaegel, Robert Schnell, Dwight Schuster. Mary Jeanette Seller. Myrtle Short. Isabel Simonson, Gene Smith, Richard Smith, Jane Spencer. Tevis Spencer, Richard Stradling. Barbara Strauss, Margaret Stump. Alice Marie Sullivan, Evelyn Sutherlin. James Tebay, Fred Thurston, Rosemary Treanor, Lou Ellen Trimble. Anna Van Dorn, C P. Van Meter, Bobby Jo Vestal, Richard Voyles. Helen Waters, Robert Waters, Betty Wichman. John Williams, Stuart Williams. Hazel Wilson. Jeane Wintz. Kenneth Wooling, Tommy Wright. Junior High School Honor Roll Jean Alberty. Claribel Allen, John | Ambuhl. Betty Berrie, Rae Lea Binzer. Jeanette Briggs, Donald Bruce, Virginia Burkholder. June Carlisle, Mary Jane Carr, i

WHAT GASOLIKJE HAS H q? million foot-pounds j

MALLARD DUCKS RELEASED AT RIVERSIDE PARK BIRD SANCTUARY

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Thirty-seven wild mallard ducks from the Brown county preserve have been liberated at the Riverside park bird sanctuary by Kenneth Kunkle. state conservation director. The ducks were provided at the request of Andy Miller, city parks nursery superintendent. The birds' wings were clipped and it was believed that by the time their wings grow sufficiently to permit them to fly, they would be so accustomed to the sanctuary th at they would not leave.

The DAILY WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND By Drew Pearson and Robert S. Allen

WASHINGTON, May 7.—The mushroom growth of Fascist-Nazi organizations in the United States has caused the justice department to make a secret study of them . . . Attorney-General Homer Cummings has concluded that while they are patently a menace to a democratic form of government, there is nothing he can do about them. No law' exists on the statute books, he says, preventing their organization or permitting him to interfere . . . Iniide word about the house judiciary committee is that the committee is going over the records of three Chicago federal judges, Charles E. Woodward, Walter C. Lindley, and James H. Wilkcrson, in connection with receiverships . . . Judge Wilkerson had been recommended for elevation to the circuit bench by Hoover . . . After extended hearings the senate judiciary committee refused to report out the nomination , . Judge Lindley handled the "friendly receiverships” for the Insull properties. Henry L. Stimson, Hoover's secretary of state, and Franklin Roosevelt have been co-operating more closely than any one suspects . . . It was not by mere accident that Stimson championed the Roosevelt tariff act, and that tw'o days later Roosevelt announced substantiation of the Stimson policy in the far east ... No deal had been arranged, but the tw'o men have consulted from time to time . . .

Incidentally Roosevelt, then a raw youth just out of Harvard, first got into politics in the 1910 campaign when Stimson ran for Governor of New York. Stimson was defeated, but Roosevelt was elected to the state senate . . . Stimson used to dislike Roosevelt cordially, but now is a sincere admirer. a a a AFTER being kicked out of the interior department by Honest Harold Ickes, Emil Hurja. Jim Farley's Man Friday, still poses as czar of Ickes’ patronage. Hurja learned something about the department, took some of the records with him, and is quicker to smell a government vacancy than a hound dog a raccoon. . . . Whenever he hears of a vacancy, he has his candidate ready before any one else knows it exists. . . . While located in the interior department, Hurja spent a good part of his time impugning the Botanical garden for flowers and potted plants; also was an ardent solicitor of PWA portraits and other small favors. an* PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT has a strong aversion to full evening dress, prefers the more comfortable and less formal dinner coat and black tie. . . . When asked to attend the spring banquet of the Gridiron Club, the only request he made was to be permitted to wear a dinner jacket. . . Informed that it was the fixed rule of the club to wear tails, he laughingly withdrew his suggestion... Colonel Lindbergh, at his first Gridiron dinner, attended in a dinner jacket, was the only man present so attired. Woman Aids Store Bandits A veiled woman who acted as a lookout for two armed bandits who robed the Standard grocery store at Mars Hill yesterday, was being sought by police today. The bandits held up Leroy Harris, manager, and stole an undetermined amount of money. Josephine Clark, Annabelle Cohen. Edythe Dale. Patricia Eaglesfield, Richard Edwards. Elmer Faust, Jane Gray Freihofer. Mary Guire. David Hardy, Mary Jane Hodge. Roy Johnson, Bobby Lee Jones. Robert Kahn. Louise Helen Klinge, Mary Rosalie Kimler, Kathleen Knecht. Patricia Ann Kriner. Mary Elizabeth Marott, Ruth Marshall, James Matlock, Betsy Mclntosh. Marjorie McLead. Gordon McWorkman, Richard Millard, Robert Mitchell. Harrison Nicholas. Helen Olsen. Elsie Perkins. Jane Day Pierce, David Porter. Marylee Porter. Lois Randolph. Julia Jean Rowe. Carolyn Schmidt. Marjorie Sing. Charles G. Smith. Robert Stacy, Marjorie Stinebaugh. Margaret Trembly, Dorothy Trent, Louise Troemel. Merrill Tucker. Elizabeth White, Sally Williams.

BOY VICTIM OF ICE BOX TO BE BURIED Rites Today for Child Who Suffocated in Chest. Funeral services for Edward E. Miles, 6. who was suffocated when he closed himself in an empty refrigerator in his home, 1808 College avenue, Saturday, were to be held at 2 this afternoon in the residence. The body w'as to be taken to Amo for burial. The child was found by his mother, Mrs. Floyd Miles, about three hours after he had craw'led into the refrigerator and closed the door. Insulation of the walls kept his cries from being heard. Mrs. Miles was taking a nap in the next room. When she awoke, she searched for the boy, locating him in the refrigerator. His shoes were on the floor in front of the Icebox. Efforts to revive the child were unsuccessful. The father, Floyd Miles, Is an employe of the Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Company. NEW HOME OPPOSED BY OVERSEAS WOMEN Disabled Can Be Cared for in Existing Institutes, Is Decision. Movement to establish a national home for disabled overseas women w'as opposed yesterday in the annual meeting of the Hoosier unit of the Women's Overseas Service League at the Lincoln. Resolution was passed stating that since there are already established in most states fraternal church and general homes for women, it W'ould be more practical to purchase space in them, if necessary. Mrs. Otto Gresham was re-elected president. Miss Florence Martin was elected vice-president; Mrs. Carolyn Reed, secretary: Mrs. Tulie Roberson, treasurer, and Mrs. John T. Day and Miss June Gray, directors. PRI MARY A IDS TO ME ET Attorneys Appointed by Board Will Receive Instructions. Attorneys appointed by the county board of election commisisoners to aid in the primary w'ere to meet at 2 this afternoon in superior court one for final instructions. Insurance Man Promoted Announcement of the promotion of William E. Welch Irom agent to superintendent in the Indianapolis district of the Western and Southern Life Insurance Company, was made today.

1 TT I T)T , TYO 80® ahhmsaky LlljiDlißoSPeClAL CAKE or PIE , SERVING KNIFE SPOON rtCT) WITH I : Sterling Silver jj j si ii II jUf < ft \_nuiLe p- Handles it of 4 P I Designs w $195 51.00 ilS)! % Now I Each p7|j ALSO GRAVY LADLE AND COLD MEAT FORK Jit H UEBER CAM.pAnV 24 W. WASHincrTon St.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

CARLOS LANE BADLY INJURED AT AIRPORT Times Sports Writer May Lose Use of Left Arm. Carlos Lane, Times sports writer, suffered a double fracture and severe lacerations of the left arm yesterday when he w'as struck by an airplane propeller at Municipal airport. Mr. Lane was attending the Kroger aviation show' and raised his arm without realizing that he was close to the idling propeller of a small Waco ship owmed by the Central Aeronautical Corporation. Attaches at the Methodist hospital, w'here Mr. Lane w r as taken, said that the sports w’riter might lose the use of his arm. Mr. Lane lives at the Sheffield Inn.

ECONOMIC ADVANTAGE OF PROBATION CITED Director Francis D. McCabe Tells of Taxpayer Gains by System. Economic advantages of probation as well as the social reclamation aspects were stressed yesterday by Francis D. McCabe, state probation director, in launching observance of state probation week. Mr. McCabe pointed out that 14,390 persons w'ere put on probation in Indiana in 1933 at an actual cost of $8.90 each. If these same persons had been committed to penal or correctional institutions, he said, the cost to the taxpayer would have been $3,925,304.20 or $272.78 each, in addition to the cost of supporting the offender’s dependents. EAGLES HEAR SPEECH BY FRANK E. HERING 300 Listen to Appeal for ‘Adequate Aid’ for Aged Persons. Strengthening of Indiana’s old age pension law ‘‘to provide adequate aid” will be urged upon the state legislature at its 1935 session by the Fraternal Order of Eagles. This policy was announced yesterday afternoon by Frank E. Hering, South Bend, tw'ice national Eagles president, and editor of the lodge magazine, in an address to 300 members from all parts of the state w'ho met in the lodge home of Indianapolis aerie, 43 West Vermont street. 421,404 COOKIES SOLD Girl Scouts Conduct Drive to Secure Funds for Camps. More than 1.600 Girl Scouts sold 35.117 dozen cookies Saturday in celebration of annual Girl Scout Cookie day. This total exceeded last year’s total by 12,000 dozen. Proceeds go to help support Camp Dellvood. Girl Scout summer outing headquarters. Warning Given Germany WASHINGTON, May 7.—The state department revealed today that Germany has been w'arned that the United States continues to demand equal treatment for American holders of German bonds.

VOTE County Ballot No. 60 carl w. SGHWENZER Republican Candidate for STATE SENATOR Primary, May 8, 1934 I’aid Political Adv.

RITES HELD FOR EX-PRESIDENT OF BUTLER U. Dr. Thomas Carr Howe Is Laid to Rest in Crown Hill. Funeral services for Dr. Thomas Carr Howe, former president of Butler university, were held yesterday afternoon in the Central Christian church. Burial was in Crown Hill. Dr. Howe died as the result of injuries sustained when he w'as struck by an automobile near his home, 4226 North Meridian street, Thursday night. Services were in charge of Dr. William A. Shullenberger, pastor of the Central Christian church: Dr. A. E. Cory, executive director of the pension fund of the Disciples of Christ church, and Dr. Ernest N. Evans, executive secretary of the Church Federation of Indianapolis. Insurance Man Passes Following a long illness, James M. Armstrong, 72, service representative for the Mutual Life Insurance Company of New' York, died Saturday in his home, 1508 North New Jersey street. Funeral services were to be held at 2 this afternoon in the Third Christian church. Surviving him are the widow, Mrs. Louise M. Armstrong. and a half-brother, C. Martin Keys, Danville. Rites for John Reinacker Funeral services for John M. Reinacker, 56. Terre Haute, were to be held at 1:30 today in the home of Mrs. William F. Handy, 3118 Central avenue. Mr. Reinacker died Friday in his home, w'here he had been ill for ten days. He formerly lived in Indianapolis. Surviving him are the widow, Mrs. Evelyn Reinacker, a stepdaughter, Mrs. Walter Handy, Dayton; a stepson. John T. Rickitt, Terre Haute, a sister, Mrs. Timothy O'Keefe. Indianapolis, and four brothers, George. Fred and Walter Reinacker, Indianapolis, and Charles Reinacker, Detroit. Mrs. Daisy Franklin Dead The funeral of Mrs. Daisy Wigginton Franklin, 56, of 220 Nortt Illinois street, will be held at 10 tomorrow morning in the Hisey & Titus funeral home. Mrs. Franklin died Saturday in her home. She had been ill five weeks. Surviving her are the w'idow'er, Captain Harry M. Franklin, member of the Indianapolis police department for many years, and a sister, Mrs. Amos Remler. Mrs. Mary A. Iloran Passes Mrs. Mary A. Horan, 30 North Mount street, died Saturday in her home, where she had been ill several years. Funeral services will be held at 8:30 tomorrow in the home and at 9 in St. Anthony’s Catholic church, of w'hich she was a member. She w'as a member of the Ancient Order of Hibernians auxiliary, and the altar society of the church. Surviving her are the widower, Mi-

Make Your Vote Count By Supporting This Group The Unified Eleven REPUBLICAN LEGISLATIVE CANDIDATES # COUNTY COUNTY BALLOT x BALLOT a r TED EMERSON BARKER n LAURENS L. HENDERSON n n ssi’ o u ?rr : tSI'SF : Mm Mm Tress Mm Bar Association and American Legion. ** mm DUANE J BELLINGER Q O RALPH M. LETT "J UUANL J. DLLLIAIVIEiIV MM Associated with Claude Lett in the Coal M Trominent Insurance agent in Indianapolis ■ ■ MM business. J M over fifteen years; operates his own insur- Mm anceagency 4 #ia FORMAN D. McCURDY CO ALBERT J. BEVERIDGE, JR. 1 lI A member of the Lawyers' Society of Indl\m anapolis and Reserve Oncers’ Association. Newspaper correspondent. DR. MAYNARD F. POLAND . 7 J ROBERT LEE BROKENBURR 11 A t.SS *g M I Lawyer; member Indiana State Bar Asso- | ■ SaAi St Franrjs Hospitals: member Indianap- ■ I riation: member National Y. M. C. A. SHI olis. Indiana and American Medical Asso- ■ ■ Council. riations. 70 KEVIN D. BROSNAN 1 OC ADELE STORCK MM _ , I M Member of the law firm of Storek and Maa M Member of the General insurance Firm of | M_W B son : member Indianapolis Bar Assoeia- | mm McGowan and Brosnan. | GMM Mm tion. 1 OH RALPH S. WHITTAKER I I I Representative of the International Trad- | \m ing Company; member American Legion. THE CONSTRUCTIVE PROGRAM OF THIS GROUP The place to correct existing evils in the State government is in the legislature. This group favors abolishing the dictatorial power of the Governor, forcing a moratorium on needless expenditures in local taxing units, reorganizing the state police on a merit system, curtailing expenses for new highway building during these times of stress,, freeing state hospitals and penal institutions from the political spoils system, repealing the gross income tax l aw, maintaining the $1.50 tax law without the emergency clause which now permits increases and abolishing the present monopolistic liquor control set-up by substituting a fair and just regulatory law in the interest of the public. (Paid Political Advertisement) '

CATHOLICS HONOR VINCENNES ANNIVERSARY

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The government memorial hr noring George Rogers Clark and his compatriots at Vincennes is pictured above. It stands on the site of Ft. Sackville, WTested from the British in 1779. Vincennes was the scene yesterday of the celebration of the 100th anniversary of the old Vincennes diocese of the Catholic church.

chael Horan, and a brother, John T. Dwyer. Taul Reis-s Burial Held Funeral services for Paul Reiss. 77. of 3745 North Illinois street, were held at 10 this morning in the residence. Burial was in Crown Hill. Mr. Reiss had been ill a year. He died Saturday in his home. Surviving him are the widow'; a son, Frank Reiss, and two daughters, Mrs. Flora Mueller and Mrs. Bertha Myers, all of Indianapolis. Power Lineman Succumbs The body of William Hamilton, 42, of 814 North Jefferson avenue, has been sent to Pittsburgh. Pa., for burial. Mr. Hamilton died late Saturday night in the Methodist hospital of burns sustained Saturday when he fell against a cable carrying 33,000 volts of electricity. The accident occurred at the substation of the Indianapolis Power and Light Company at 520 East Wabash street, Mrs. May Pollock Dead Injuries sustained in a fall tw'o weeks ago caused the death Saturday in Methodist hospital of Mrs. Mary Pollock, 73, of 2354 Central avenue. Mrs. Pollock w'as a member of the Third Christian church, and had lived in Indianapolis seventeen years. Funeral services will be held at 8 tonight in the home, and at 2 tomorrow afternoon in the Vallonia Christian church. Surviving her are a daughter, Mrs. Elva True, and two sons, Murl Pollock and Claude Smith, all of Indianapolis. S4OO IN RINGS STOLEN Employe of Downtown Store Reports Loss to Police. Three diamond rings valued at S4OO were stolen from Mrs. Artie Lloyd. 552 North Keystone avenue, Saturday afternoon at a downtown store, she told police. Mrs. Lloyd, an employe of the store, had removed the rings to wash her hands. Peddlers Hurt Trade, Firms Say The Indianapolis Poultry, Butter and gg Asociation, Inc., has complained to Mayor Reginald Sullivan that nonenforcement of the itinerant peddler ordinance has affected seriously business of local firms.

30,000 ATTEND KROGER SHOW

■Free-for-Air Plane Race Silver Trophy Won by Lieutenant Maxwell. Lieutenant Howard H. Maxwell, commercial and national guard pilot, won the Kroger silver trophy in the ten-mile free for all plane race yesterday before a crowd estimated at 30.000. The race concluded the air carnival marking the fifty-second anniversary of the Kroger Grocery and Baking Company. Second place went to Richard A. Arnett, third to French Livezey, and fourth to W. C. Smith. The winner's time was 5:13. Winners in the race for O-X-----motored planes were Ned Bottom first, Harold C. Brooks second, and Robert F. Shank third. Winners ir. the light plane race were Eivan Tarkington, first; Dr. Donald A Musselman, second, and Edward F. New', third. Both w'ere over the ten-mile course. Sergeant Spinner of the national guard made a delayed parachute ■jump from an altitude of 2,500 feet front a plane piloted by Major Oliver H. Stout. The spectators sawstunting by Mr. Arnett, Titus Emerson Frankenfield and Miss Shirley McKittrick. Three plane maneuvers were given by Lieutenants Maxwell, Sidney Stout and Cecil F. Reynolds of the national guard. The show was part of the national celebration of the Kroger stores and was duplicated in tw-enty cities of the central states, according to A. W. Metzger, manager of the Indianapolis branch. SOCIALISTS WILL RALLY Party Meeting Will Hear Address by Charles Robison. Charles Robison will speak on ‘‘Socalism and the Unemployed” at a rally of Fourteenth ward branch of the Socialist party in its new clubrooms, 1250 Oliver avenue, at 8 tonight. The arrangements committee consists of Theodore Murray, C. L. Fout and Charles Hardy.

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20,000 ATTEND CATHOLIC RITES AT VINCENNES Gibault Plaza Rededicated at Centennial: Governor McNutt Among Speakers. B’i Special VINCENNES. Ind. May 7.—ln the presence of 20.000 visitors, the centennial of the Diocese of Vincennes was celebrated here yesterday with the dedication of Gibault Memorial plaza. The hierarchy attending included Archibshop John T. McNicholas, Bishop Joseph Elmer Ritter, Archbishop Amleto Giovanni Cicgonani, apostolic delegate to the United States, and seven other bishops and two abbots. Governor Paul V. McNutt was one of the principal speakers. The granite memorial to George Rogers Clark and the cathedral of St. Francis Xaxicr, built in 1826 and now remodeled, provided the setting for thee ceremonies, which included a pontifical field qiass, dedication of the plaza and a noon banquet. During the morning a procession of the uniformed Knights of St. John paraded downtown streets. At the cathedral the knights presented swords for the procession of prelates who mounted the platform in front of the cathedral where an outdoor altar had been prepared. At the conclusion of the mass the sermon was delivered by Bishop James H. Ryan of the Catholic University of America. He described the founding of the diocese one hundred years ago and paid tribute to the saintly qualities of the first bishop, Simon Gabriel Brute. The music was sung by the abbey chapel choir of St. Meinrads seminary, directed by the Rev. Thomas Schaffers and the Rev. Stephen Thuis, O. S. B. The banquet was served in Gibault auditorium, with Bishop Ritter presiding. Speakers included the apostolic delegate and Governor McNutt. Dedication of the plaza took place at 3. Clement J. Richards of Terre Haute, president of the Clark Memorial commission, delivered the dedicatory address. The Governor also spoke, paying tribute to the early explorers. Including George Rogers Clark, and the founders of the diocese. FOUR ALLEGED TRUCK STRIKERS ARRESTED Police Report Finding Pistol in Prisoners’ Car. Four men said to be employes of the Kibler Trucking Company, which recently had labor trouble, were arrested early today at State avenue and Maryland street. Police searching the car in which the men w'ere riding, stated they found a .38-caliber pistol in the rear seat. The prisoners, all charged with vagrancy, are Troy Coakley, 37, of 1707 Massachusetts avenue; Elzie Mitchell, 30, of 127 South State avenue; Harry Stokes, 37, of 411 West Norwood street, and George Hay* good, 25, of 1239 Brookside avenue.