Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 19, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 June 1934 — Page 3
JUNE 2, 1935.
MANUAL HIGH GRADUATES 231 MONDAYNIGHT Franklin College Chief to Speak at Exercises in Tabernacle. Two hundred and thirty-one seniors will be graduated from Manual training high school at exercises to be held in Cadle tabernacle Monday night when diplomas will be awarded by Russell Willson, representing the school board. The principal address will be made by Dr. William G. Spencer, Franklin college president. Music will be furnished by the school orchestra, directed by Harold E. Winslow. The Rev. R. C. Windhorst, Pleasant Run Boulevard Reformed church pastor, and father of Kenneth Windhorst, a graduating senior, will give the invocation. Announcement of John Hampden Holliday Jr. scholarships, awarded each year in memory of a Manual graduate who was killed in service, will be made at the exercises. January Graduates Members of the January graduating class are: Thelma Albertson, Esther Bernstein. Carnell Black, Clarice Buck, Thelma Caviness. Lillian Chaplik, Helen Clark, Paul Collester, Silvio Costantino Sarah Craig, Irving Crouch. Fay Davis, Mary Margaret Davis, Pauline Duke, Ann Dziewas, Harry Eades, Richard Emery, Catharine Ferraro, Nathan Fogle. Madge Gallamore, Mary Ann George, Molly Gold, Arthur Gordon, Josephine Graber, Alex Greenberg, Frederic Greve, Elsie Jane Grubbs, Boris Guleff. Annabeth Hashman, Imogene Hastings, Robert Hines, Eugene Hooper, Idonia Jeffries, Martha Kays, Gertrude Kelley, Eugenia Lalu, Lillian Landy, Lillian Levinsky, Dorothy E. Liese, Mildred McDaniel, Tyrus McKay, Niles Manion, Dorothy Marks, Delores Mellis, Harry Miedema Jr., John F. Nackenhorst Jr., James Pearcy. Carlo Presti, Vera Raesner, Morris Riskin, Edna Roark, Dorothy Rollings, Mildred Rugenstein, Justine Sachs, Violet Schmidt, Charlotte Schwomeyer, Irving Selig, Helen Shaner, Kenneth Simon, Dorothy Slifer, Dorothy E. Stewart, Dorothy P. Stewart, Maxine Strait, Lloyd Thomas, Russell Thompson, Imogene Truman, Francis Van Brunt, Paul Von Dielingen, Albert Wendel, Houston Whitson, Bernice Williams, Wilma Williams, Ralph Wise, Mabel Yount and Helen Marie Zimmer.
June Graduates Those who will be members of the June graduation class are: Edwin Adams, Delia Agnelneri, Mildred Alderton, Geraldine Allanson, Francis Angerer, Wiliam Armstrong, Virginia Ayres, Wilbur Baker, Wilma Baker, Paul Barmann, Kathleen Barnes, Elizabeth Bartacovitch, Maynita Baumgart, Edward Beckman, Carl Berdel, Dora Berman, Mable Beymer, Curtis Bowen, Oeta Mae Brattain, Arthur Bredy, Mary Brethauer, Esther Brink, Geraldine Brisbin. Frederic Browdues, Lloyd Cain, Ida Mae Caito, Othelmarie Castleman, Marie Chapman, Felix Chiplie, Ralph Chupp, Leo Cohn, Lucille Conover, Brainard Cooper, Cope, Vivian Cox, Alma Croak, Dfothy Cross, Lucile Davis, P/arl Demetrius, Frank Deter, Groldie Dichner, Albert Drake, Vernon Elbrecht, 'Sol Eshowsky, Maurice Etherington, Helen Fechtman, Phyllis Fetta. Leßoy Fisher, Thelma Foster, Francis Glavin, Mildred Gephart, Estella Gerbofsky. lola Gillaspy, Fannie Goldstein, William Goldstein, Charles Green, Curt Guelden, Leona Margaret Hall, Norma Hall, Doris Hanson, Kenneth Harlan, Alice Harms, Gertrude Hartman, Richard Hasse, Frances Hawthorne, John Hayes, Lawson Helms, Mildred Hibner, Doris Hooser, George Hoyt, Helen Huber, John Huffman, Robert Hughes, Mildred Jackson, Charles Jenkins, Martha Johnson, Viola Johnson, Norma Johnston, Ruth Karr, John Karstedt, Hazel Kemper, David King, Elvera Kirschner, Harry Kirschner. Esther Koch, Merl Korc, Irene Kuchler, Roy Lagle, Helen Lamb, Hazel Landregan, Thelma Lavernz, Marylouise Leachman, Kenneth Lee, Paul Leim. Jessie Levin, Herman Lewis, Goldie Lieberman, Anna Luise Lorenz, Douglas Lowe, Evelyn McKinzie, Harold Menzel, Mary Mike, Chestine Miller, Juanita Miller, Lillian Miller, Lucile Miller, Edward* Moore. John Mullin, Veneta Nelson, Anita O'Dwyer, Martin O'Neill, Charles Ozment, Mildred Parsley, Lucille Pasch. Others to Graduate Earl Patterson, Samuel Patterson, Geneva Pattison. Sylvia Phillips, Rebecca Plott, Clara Poggemeyer, Angelo Presutti. Katie Price, Doris Ray, Floyd Redenbach, Gladys Reimer, Lilyan Reiser, Mary Ellen Roark, Plezant Roberts, * Alfred Robinson, Eileen Robinson, Ruth Roeckel, Ruth Russell, Virginia Russett, Lena Saboe, Zelda Sacks. Julia Sarvich. Albert Shemelson, Jean Simmonds, Esther Skaggs, Helen Smith, Inez Smith, Abe Stein, Lavina Steinke, Esther Stotler, Ralph Striggo, Clinton Switzer, Virginia Taylor, Alma Thomas, Charles Thoren, John Ticusan, Hollace Voorhies, Donald Wagener, Eugene Wahl, Beatrice Waiss. Evangeline Weber, Etherl Weigel, Bernadine Weiland, Henrietta Welland, Lucille Welch, Alberta Wellman, Mabel Welton, eVra Wheatly, Alma Wheeler, Mary White, Dorothy
Real Estate Mortgages WE SOLICIT APPLICATIONS FOR PREFERRED MORTGAGE LOANS ON CITY PROPERTY. INTEREST RATE 6%-NO COMMISSION. THE INDIANA TRUST JBR. SURPLUS $2,000,000.00 THE OLDEST TRUST COMPANY IN INDIANA
FIRST GARDEN FARM COLONY IN U. S. LAUNCHED
ment in rural rehabilitation, along I the Kanawha river, near Charles- 1 der FERA supervision and modern U ’’ ■'S ?7 homes will be provided for 140 fam- rwßfeS&S ilies. Above is an architect's sketch •, j
W'ORK on the 400,000 Red House Garden Farms experiment in rural rehabilitation, along the Kanawha river, near Charleston, W. Va., has been launched under FERA supervision and modern homes will be provided for 140 families. Above is an architect’s sketch of the project and at right one of the houses with its grounds which each settler will purchase on a fif-teen-year payment plan. Five-acre farms have been marked out and colonists will raise their produce, and work part-time in one of the twenty shops. Auditorium, civic center, school and parks are planned.
LAW STUDENTS AWAITDEGREES Commencement Exercises to Be Held Monday at Columbia Club. Forty-three members of the senior class of the Benjamin arrison law school will hold commencement exercises Monday night in the ballroom of the Columbia club. Frederick K. Landis, Logansport editor, will be the commencement speaker. A dinner at 6 will open the exercises. William R. Forney, acting dean, will preside and confer the degrees. A dance will follow the exercises. Joseph M. Howard is class president. Members of the class are: Norbert H. Basey, Robert E. Brown, John M. Burke, Raymond Cook, Charles D. Corwin, Lewis D. Dellinger, Frederick A. Doebber, LaVerne K. Feichter. William R. Fogarty, Harold C. Gray, Arthur H. Group, Harold C. Hansen, Cale James Holder, Joseph M. Howard, H. Gregory Hurst, Frederick G. Jeffrey, Harold K. Jones. John M. Kelley, Madge W. Kretsch, Ernest E. Laughlin, Eugene F. Ley, Charles W. Long, John W. Lyons, Elmer E. MacGrogan. John J. McVey, Richard B. Maxwell, William McFeely, George M. Ober. William G. O'Nan, Marylou C. Patterson, David Probstein, t ßernard W. Schotters, Frank Z. ‘Sims, Marion E. Slocum, Alden J. Smith. Paul R. Smith, Richard G. Stewart, Walter E. Vasbinder, Joseph C. Wallace, Hollis P. Warner, Judson H. West, Glenn T. Williams, and William F. Woods.
FOUR SEEK POST ON BUTLER PUBLICATION Student Council to Name Business Manager for Drift. Four members of the sophomore class at Butler university have announced their candidacy for the position of business manager of the 1935 Drift, junior class annual which will be published next June. They are Kenneth Harlan, nonfraternity man; Bertram Behrmann, Butler independent association; Harry McClelland, Sigma Chi, and Fred Ryker, Phi Delta Theta. Selection will be made by the student council Monday night in Arthur Jordan memorial hall at the final meeting of the year. Installation of new members for the 193435 school year will also take place at the meeting. The new members are Karl Stipher, president; Edgar Baum, Nathaniel Fick, Mildred Grayson, Olive Steinle, Ann Doudican, John Hutchens. Ora Hartman, Esther Hoover, Betty Kalleen, Albert Mendenhall, Luther Marohn and Louise Rhodehamel. TRAVIS IN JUDGE RACE Seeks G. O. P. Nomination for Appellate Court Bench. Julius C. Travis, La Porte, former Indiana supreme court judge, today announced his candidacy for the G. O. P. nomination for appellate court judge, northern district. The Republican convention will be held Tuesday. Mr. Travis served two six-year terms on the supreme court bench. He has practiced law in Indianapolis since expiration of his last term in 1933. Whitinger, Clifton Swhitzer, Nellie Wilder, Conva Willoughby, Kenneth Windhorst, Gertrude Winklehaus, John Woerner, Harvey Wyant, John Yovan, Eunice Zick, Lula Zoitos and Harold Zukerman.
Education Chiefs to Address 4-H Members
Training Conference Will Be Held at Scout Camp Next Week. Educational leaders will address members of the 4-H Club at the third 4-H Club junior leaders’ training conference to be held at the Marion county Boy Scout camp next Monday to Friday, inclusive. Dr. Z. M. Smith, state 4-H Club leader, and Walter I. Fegan, governor of the Indiana district, Kiwanis Internationale, will address the group on Monday night. T. R. Johnson, Purdue university publicity director, and Mr. Smith will be the speakers Tuesday at the morning session. On Tuesday afternoon, Dr. G. C.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Brandenburg, head of the department of education. Purdue university, will speak on “Family Relationships.” In the evening Albert Stump, Indianapolis attorney, and T. A. Coleman, assistant director of agricultural extension, Purdue, will give an address. At the night session Wednesday, Noble E. Kizer, Purdue football coach, will speak on “The Value of Athletics in a Community.” A. B. Graham. United States department of agriculture, also will speak. His subject will be “The Agricultural Adjustment Act.” Floyd McMurray, state superintendent of public instruction, will speak at the night session Friday. A round table discussion on the psychology of leadership will follow Mr. McMurray’s speech.
STATE MAN IS HELD IN AUTO DEATHOF TWO Aurora Driver Quizzed in Hit-Run Slaying of Little Girls. By United Press SHELBYVILLE, Ind., June 2. Arrested here after a chase over several city blocks, Walter D. Major, 4, Aurora, was turned over to Decatur county authorities today on a charge of killing two small girls with his automobile at St. Omer. The girls, Jessie Clapp, 9, and her sister Katie, 11, were killed when struck by an automobile while walking along State Road 29 in St. Omer last night. The driver of the car did not stop. Shelbyville police were notified and a detail was stationed at the eastern edge of the city. Wiliam Holland, local postoffice employe, who had witnessed the accident, aided police in forcing Major’s car to the curb after a chase. The two girls were carrying a gallon of milk to a neighbor when struck. The body of one of them was carried 150 feet on the front of the car, police were told.
NUTRITION CAMP OPENSJUNE 20 Thirty Boys to Be Sent to Bridgeport for Stay of Five Weeks. Thirty boys will enter the seventh annual summer nutrition camp of the Marion County Tuberculosis Association at Bridgeport June 20, for a five weeks’ stay. At the end of the five weeks, thirty girls will be sent to the camp. Plans for the opening camp were completed yesterday at a meeting of the nutrition- camp committee in the Lincoln. Miss Lois Parker was appointed recreational director to succeed Miss Stella Glasson, who resigned after six years’ service as director, to be married. Remedial defects are corrected by medical supervision, extra rest, good food and outdoor play. Only children from homes where the care will be continued are selected for thescamp. They are undernourished and have a history of absence from school because of illness, are recovering slowly from an illness, or are tuberculosis contact cases, sufferers from cardiac diseases, chorea and minor nervous tendencies.
7 STATE MEN TO GRADUATE AT WEST POINT
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Jack J. Neely
Among the seven Indiana men to be graduated June 12 from United States Military Academy, West Point, are Jack Neely, son of Captain and Mrs. Robert H. Neely, Ft. Harrison, and Oliver P. Robinson Jr., son of Colonel and Mrs. O. P. Robinson, Ft. Harrison. Other Indiana graduates are Roland L. Martin, Batesville; John T. Hillis, Logansport; William F. Northam, Columbia City; George E. Adams, Muncie, and Joe F. Surratt, Tipton. Cadet Neely was captain of the soccer team and forward on the varsity basketball team. He will be detailed to the air corps. Cadet Robinson was appointed to the academy by former VicePresident Charles G. Curtis. He was elected class historian and is the humor editor of The Pointer. He will be assigned to the infantry.
Indiana in Brief Lively Spots in the State’s Happenings Put Together ‘Short and Sweet.’
By Times Special TIPTON, June 2 —Sharp increases in poor relief expenditures in May, as compared to those in April, are reported by trustees of townships in Tipton county. Cicero township s expense during May was $1,300, and in April 52,101. Only $12.50 was spent by Perry township. Work provided by the federal emergency relief administration is among factors cited by officials in explaining the decreased cost. Others are warm weather, cutting expenses for fuel, and the fact that under anew arrangement, all applications for relief are being investigated.
Studies to Continue 0 By United Press WEST LAFAYETTE, June 2. More than 200 Purdue university students will continue their studies during the summer, divided between the Reserve Officers Training Corps camp at Ft. Knox, Ky.; the Ross civil engineering camp, eleven miles southwest of Lafayette, and the state forest near Henryville. Field artillery problems will occupy the Ft. Knox contingent for six weeks. Eight weeks of surveying will be the activity at Ross camp, and forest instruction from June 11 to Aug. 4 in the state forest. it tt it Tax Paying Improves By Times Special * NOBLESVILLE, June 2. Although tabulation of payment of
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Oliver P. Robinson Jr.
spring taxes has not yet been completed, it is stated at the Hamilton county treasurer’s office that delinquency this year will be less than was the case last year. A delinquency of 28 per cent was shown last year. It is believed the figure this year will be 25 per cent. n tt tt Youth Wounded By Times Special DANVILLE, June 2.—Bueford Majors, Danville high school graduate, is suffering from an abrasion on his face incurred when the wadding from a blank cartridge struck him on discharge of a revolver being used in the class play. Accident occurred between acts of the play. The participants of the California gold rush of 1,849 were known as “the forty-niners.”
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WATSON NOT TO BACK ROBINSON AT CONVENTION Opposed to Acceptance of G. 0. P. Chairmanship, Says Jim. “Jovial James” is back home and ready to cig deep in all matters pertinent to the G. O. P. party but he won’t, he absolutely refuses, to carry out a purported arrangement to place in nomination the name of Senator Arthur R. Robinson in the Republican state convention. “Jovial James,” of course, is none other than James E. Watson, former senator from Indiana, who arrived in the city yesterday from Washington. In spiking the report that he would page Senator Robinson’s name for renomination, “Smiling Jim” said, “Some of my friends might be his opponents.” Despite press reports, Mr. Watson avows that he has a lot of votes sewed up for Republican national chairman at the Chicago vote Tuesday. But he adds that he is not a candidate and does not Want the place. “I have not discussed the national chairmanship with one member of the national committee,'* he said. Senator Arthur R. Robinson called on Don R. Irwin. Republican state chairman, yesterday. Neither would discuss the interview. but it is understood that “Robbie” wished to assure the state chairman that the hatchet has been buried as far as he was concerned/ The senior senator from Indiana is opposed by Harry G. Leslie, former Governor, and William C. Dennis, president of Earlham college, for the senatorial nomination.
STATE HAYMAKERS TO ATTEND CONVOCATION About 600 Expected at Annual Meeting of Order. About six hundred members of the state Haymakers association were expected to attend the forty-second annual convocation of the order in the Lincoln today. An auxiliary organization to the Improved Order of Red Men, the association will decide by vote today whether to admit men to membership who are not members of the parent order. Auto Tools, Radio Stolen Automobile tools valued at $125 and a small radio valued at S4O were stolen last night from the garage of A. D. Nieman, 3607 Rockville road. Mr. Nieman’s garage is located at 1413 West Washington j street.
