Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 103, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 September 1934 — Page 3
SEPT. 8, 1934.
200 FEARED BURNED TO DEATH AS LUXURY LINER GOES DOWN IN FLAMES Passengers Trapped in Cabins as Blaze Sweeps From One End to the Other on Giant Morro Castle. ffnnlinucd from Par** One)
for at th** Monmouth Memorial hospital at Lons; Brath. A majontv of the survivors who were taken to the Fifkin hospital at Neptune were suffering from burns on hands and faces. One. an unidentified sailor, was believed dying from his burns. Ambulances waited on the shore line at Asbury Park, to pick up wounded or burned survivors. The surf was pounding so hard that it was believed many of those who were successfully taken aboard the Ilf* boats might be seriously hurt when their little craft came ashore. Shark River fishermen and coast guardsmen found it impossible to put out their motor launches because of the heavy seas. One or two of the heavv-power ships were able to breast the breakers however. City Pair on Rescue Ship Mr. and Mrs. Charles Du Puy, honeymooning after their wedding here last Saturday, were among the passengers on the SS. Monarch of Bermuda, which early today as- | sisted in rescuing passengers from the ill-falcd SS. Morro Castle. Mr. and Mrs. Du Puy. figures in Indianapolis’ junior social set, were married at the home of Mrs. Du Puy s father. Dr. Alois B. Graham 1040 North Delaware street. Mr. Du Puy is the son of Mrs. W. A. Atkins, Golden Hill. Mr. Du Puy plays polo with the Rolling Ridge team The couple will make their home in Greensburg. Pa., when they return from Bermuda, to whirh the SS. Monarch of Bermuda was bound when it interrupted its trip to aid in picking up survivors from the Morro Castle Lowell h. Stormont. 412 North DISCARDED FURNITURE SOUGHT BY VOLUNTEERS Needy Families Must Have Stoves, Says Plea. Co-operatio nos Indianapolis citizens in a campaign to obtain discarded furniture, particularly stoves, for the use of needy families in the; city, is asked in a statement today j by Colonel Earle P. Hites, Volunteers of America executive director. Investigators for the organization report that many worthy families in the city are facing the winter without stoves for either cooking or heating. Persons desiring to contribute are requested by Colonel Hites to call at the Volunteers of America headquarters. 320 North Illinois street, or to telephone Ri. 5378. NEW FRENCH COURSES ON EXTENSION LIST Hr. Lander MacC'lintock to C onduct Two Classes. Two new French courses, one on modern life in France and the other on English translations of French literary masterpieces, will be offered at the Indiana university extension division this fall by Dr. Lander MacClintock. assistant modern languages professor. Both courses will begin Sept. 21. That on modern French life is designed to acquaint the student with the point of view and problems of contemporary France. The literature course, whirh will include lectures and readings on works from earliest to modern times, requires no knowledge of French. SCHEDULE OF CANNING EXHIBITIONS ARRANGED Demonstration to Be Held for Instruction of Needy. Canning demonstrations for the instruction of needy families in the use of equipment in cold-packmg vegetables from subsistence gardens have been announced. They include: Jewish Community House. 1" West M->rr - str-e- Sep’ II Brookside commmiv house Brookside park. Sept 10 ,nd .’<• Third Christian church. Sc- enteentu and Rrnadwav. Sent 11 and 25 Seventh Christian church. 8.--> l de,. s-rec- scp- 12 and 26 Christamore house SO2 North Tremonl. Sept 13 and ?7 Wavne ronship out-ide. Sep- 14 i.\ nnhurs- Baptist church. Lvnnhurst hre so -.th of Morris street. Sept 23 Harden Cn School 8 on Rockih.e road ei-c of High School road, and Boys club, t too rnglish a\en e Sep- 17. Brgmood ra-lroatt Y M C A Station street and Ror-seeSt avenue. Sept 18 Planner t.go2 Nor*h West street, and Rhodius p-rs South Belmont atenue and Wilkins street. Sept 20 GARRISON IS NAMED TO COUNTY TAX BOARD Appointed to Succeed Mm. Maude Miller. Resigned. Samuel E. Garrison. Indianapolis school board member, has been appointed to the Marion county tax adjustment board to succeed Mrs Maude E Miller, resigned The designation was made by Circuit Judge Earl R Cox in court yesterday, making the membership of the board five Democrats and two Republicans. Consideration of tax budgets will be started by the board Sept. 18. according to diaries A. Grossart. county auditor. ROBINSON WILL TALK Pritchard Also to Appear at Irvington Session Monday. Senator Arthur R. Robmson and Walter Pritchard. Coffin candidate for mayor, will be principal speakers at the annual watermelon feast of the Irvington Republican Club at 8 Monday night in Ca r rs hall. All state and local candidates have been invited. ANIMAL PARTY HELD Celebration Staged in St- Louis Zoo for Baby Orang-1 tan. Kv f Oil -a #*rc ST. LOUIS. Mo.. Sept B—When Patti* Sue. prize orang-utan of the St Louia zoo. celebrated her first birthday, attendants held a party lor the animal. Patti Sue wore a dress and bonnet especially made lor the occasion.
Alabama street, advertising manager for the Real Silk Hosiery Mills, and a P. O. Ferrell, also a Real Silk official, also are listed as being aboard the Monarch of Bermuda from Indianapolis. Loss at 53.000.000 U<f l mi..l Prr LONDON, Sept. 8 —lt was estimated today that the loss of the Morro Castle, an almost new vessel, would rost Lloyd's about $3.00,000 *n insurance. U, S. AGENTS SET TO SPRING ! NELSON TRAP End for ‘Baby Face’ Hinted Near; Hamilton Is Reported Wounded. R't ■ nitrrt J*. f*n CHICAGO. Sept. 8. The sur- j , vivors of John Dillinger's mur- I derous gang, almost penniless and i split bv dissension, have degenerated into prow ling hoodlums and! petty thieves. Only one, George (Baby Face) Nelson, appears determined to write the final bloody chapters of the gang and his trail is being hounded by a relentless force of federal 1 agents. Those in hiding fear to emerge and stage a holdup because of the ’•heat" upon them. Funds are dwindling and hideouts are getting scarce. They’re always on the ! jump, trying to keep ahead of the j law. Others of the underworld, ruefully observing the fate of those who shielded Dillinger and his mobsters, are reluctant to give them shelter especially now that there is no big money to be had from them. Hiding in Wisconsin Nelson, plump-cheeked killer and prize quarry of the government agents, is in Wisconsin with three or four henchmen and is getting ! ready for anew holdup to recoup his dwindling funds, the United Press learned today from an official : source. The department of justice has knowledge of Nelson’s plans and the many hideaways of the Wisconsin woods—they have provided refuge for the gang on numerous occasions —are being searched. Baby Fare is known.ter be well supplied with machine guns and ammunition and, based on experience, the government manhunters anticipate that his next raid will be in Wisconsin. Illinois or Indiana. Because of several instances of double-crossing and short-changing in the division of loot Nelson is not in good graces with other followers of Dillinger. Hamilton Near Death Perhaps, federal agents admit, he may be killed by outlaw guns before they can run him to earth. Because of the split in the gangs ranks. Nelson has recruited his own crew of outlaws. Meanwhile, John Hamilton, another member of the original DilImger gang and one of the ten convicts who made a sensational escape from the Indiana state prison a year ago. is near death in the west from gunshot wounds. Hamilton, for a time believed by the government to be dead, was i badly wounded in the holdup two months ago of the Merchants' National bank at South Bend. Ind. KUNKEL MAY QUIT, HINT AFTER PARLEY Warden in Session With McNutt, Greenlee. Reports that Warden Louis Kunkel of the Michigan City state prison would resign to “take the heat off" the state administration of Governor Paul V. McNutt were revived by a lengthy conference yesterday between the two in the Governors office here. The executive and the warden were closeted more than half an hour with Picas Greenlee, the Governors patronage secretary and political adviser. At the conclusion of their conference. Governor McNutt refused to say what the topic of their conversation had been. RAT DEFEATS SNAKE IN WINDOW BATTLE Reptile Loses to Enemy. Supposed to Be His Next Meal. fly I'nitcfi Pm WICKENBURG. Am. Sept. 8 When a local merchant discovered his rattlesnake exhibit dying in a show window apparently from a i hunger strike, he set out to find some new delicacy to whet its appetite. Finally he caught a pack rat and tossed it in with the snake. Next morning only the pack rat was left. MORGUE WEDDING HELD Rites for Mortician. Bride Staged in Burial Establishment. />' ( Prrtt OLYMPIA. Wash.. Sept. B—Not exactly the most cheerful place for a wedding, but O. H. Mittelstadt. mortician, and Miss Dorothy Thom- , son. both of Seattle, were married in 1 a local morgue.
CAN’T BARE BAER
Jj m & y -> J Wf \ ■s% dSF ' /■j%%X6£’;i'''', ■■ ’' l\ 1 ' " jj <%; .. .% ..v,Mk; • jfti Jli
It might be “finis" to her romance with Max Baer, world heavyweight champion pugilist, that Dorothy Dunbar Baer is writing here. Despite rumors of reconciliation, the actress who once was Baer’s wife, has petitioned a Los Angeles court for permission to drop the “Baer” from her name.
FUR PRIZES TAKEN RV RALLARD HORSES SI,OOO Awards Annexed by French Lick Woman. Two horses owned by Miss Mary Ballard, French Lick, won SI,OOO in prizes posted by the Indiana Saddle Horse Association last night in the final horse show of the Idiana state fair. Belle Le Rase won the five-gaited stake and Flashing American won the three-gaited stake. The Dixiana Farms, Lexington, Ky., was second in the five-gaited class and the three-gaited class. Other winners in the five-gaited class, in order, were the Bettydot stables, Dayton, 0., third; Audrey’s Choice stables. Providence, R. 1., Dixiana stables; aurice Weinberger, Nashville, Tenn., and Charles E. Saville, Dayton, O. R. E. Moreland, Lexington, took third in the three-gaited class, and other winners were Audrey’s Choice stables, fourth, fifth and sixth, and Dixiana Farms, seventh.
Home Financial Setup Proposed by Contractor
Plan to Revive Building Industry Laid Down by City Man. A plan to revive the building industry by financing home constructon through a propased National Home Finance Corporation was suggested today in an article by H. L. Seeger, 801 North Bradley avenue, Indianapolis contractor, in the current issue of Wood Construction, a lumber publication. ‘•The sale of securities by the united producers of materials, their distributors and their employes through a National Home Finance Corporation, similar to the Home Owners Loan Corporation, is the solution for the construction industry,” writes Mr. Seeger. “The loans would not be based on mortgages, and the title to the property would vest in the corporation. The prospective builder would become a stockholder in the corporation up to within 50 per cent of the value of the total price of his lease purchase. “Upon the purchase of $2,500 of stock from the corporation as an investor, he (the prospective builder) becomes eligible to a credit for $2,500 additional stock to complete payment for a $5,000 home. The titie is placed with the corporation, and a (sale) contract of lease with option to purchase on conditions is made. “If the lessee forfeits by default, his lass is SI,OOO. as $1,500 of the stock received is retained by the stockholder, which makes him a partner with all other stockholders in the title ownership of all property owned by the corporation. “The control of the title by the corporation stabilizes the price values of the total holding and its income value, plus its control of excess construction.” Mr. Seeger is a not infrequent contributor to the Message Center of The Indianapolis Times.
Real Estate Mortgages WE SOLICIT APPLICATIONS FOR PREFERRED MORTGAGE LOANS ON CITY PROPERTY. INTEREST RATE 6%—NO COMMISSION. THE INDIANA TRUST JSS SURPLUS $2,000,000.00 THE OLDEST TRUST COMPANY IN INDIANA
Fletcher Ave. Savings & Loan Assn. Jsvsaa 10 E. Market St.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
NEW YEAR'S IS TO BE OBSERVED BY CITYJEWRY Services to Be Held in All Synagogs; Celebrate Arrival of 5695. INDIANAPOLIS JewTy will celebrate from tomorrow night to Tuesday night the arrival of the year 5695 of the Hebrew calendar. Special services will be held Wednesday, Sept. 19, for the Day of Atonement. The Congregation Sharah Tefilla, Meridian and Merrill streets will hold New* Year services at 5:30 p. m. Sunday, 7 a. m. Monday and 6:30 a. m. Tuesday. Cantor A. Portnoy will conduct the ceremonies, and a special holiday choir will sing. Rabbi Samuel A. Katz will speak Monday and Tuesday. Rabbi Elias Charry will conduct the services at the Beth-El Zedeck Congregation, Thirty-fourth and Ruckle streets. He will preach Monday morning on “Old-Fashioned Remedies,” and Tuesday morning he will talk on “The Gaspel of Work and Hope." The Indianapolis Hebrew congregation, Tenth and Delaware streets, will hold services tomorrow night and Monday. Rabbi Morris M. Feuerlicht will speak at both services. The Rev. Abraham Lazar will conduct the services tomorrow night and Monday and Tuesday at the United Hebrew congregation, 601 Union street. The Rev. Samuel Levin will hold services at the Knesses Israel congregation, 1039 South Meridian street. Services celebrating the New Year will be held also at the Central synagog, Central avenue and Twen-ty-first street. Etz Chayim Sephardim, Morris and Church streets, and the Ezres Achim congregation, South Meridian and Norwood streets. CHURCH TEACHERS TO BE PAID HIGH HONOR Sunday School Association to Hold Meeting Sept. 17. Recognition of services of teachers in the church schools of Disciples of Christ churches in the country will be paid at the meeting of the Marion County Christian Sunday School Association to be held in the Englewood Christian church at 7:45 p. m. Sept. 17. The program is being arranged by P. A. Wood, president of the association. Special music will be furnished by the Young People’s Glee Club of the Englewood Christian church, composed of fifty voices. Dr. Marion Stevenson, St. Louis, will speak. The program is in line with a suggestion of the Federal Council of Churches of Christ in America.
1,021 KILLED IN 1904
By United Press Fire at sea, one of the most dreaded of disasters, has taken a heavy toll of life over the years. One of the worst disasters was the burning of the excursion steamer General Slocum at New York in 1904. when 1.021 lives were lost. Other disasters by fire or explosion at sea in the last ten years include: Explosion of U. S. S. Mississippi, off San Pedro, Cal., 1924, fortyeight dead. Explosion of excursion steamer Mackinac, Narragansett bay, 1925, forty-seven dead. Troop ship blown up in Yangtse river, China, 1926, 1,200 dead. Principessa Mafalda exploded off Brazil, 1927, 314 dead. Georges Philippar burned in Arabian sea. 1932, forty-one dead. Steamer Obesrvation explonded at New York. 1932, seventy-two dead. L’Atlantique burned in English channel. 1933, seventeen dead. COUNTY OFFICIALS OFF FOR ANNUAL OUTING Burdens Left Behind as Party Goes on Ohio River Frolic, Official burdens Mill be left in Indianapolis today when county judges and other Marion county officials leave on their annual Ohio river outing. The party will motor to Cincinnati, where a river steamer will be boarded for Huntington, W, Va. The return trip will be started after three hours in Huntington. Several attorneys and newspaper men will accompany the officials.
Safe Deposit Boxes The Indiana National Bank of Indianapolis
PAGEANT ARRANGED
Mr ; . * *
Mrs. Walter Sims
The spirit of Methodism during the colonial days will be portrayed by Mrs. Walter Sims in the pageant of the Indiana Methodist conference. “The Spreading Flame.” to be held at the Columbus high school next Thursday. The pageant is in observance of the one hundred fiftieth anniversary of the Methodist Episcopal church in America. The conference will be held in Columbus Sept. 11 to 17.
METHODIST NURSES PICK CUSS OFFICERS Frances Van Pelt Is Elected Senior President. Class officers for the year at the Methodist hospital school of nursing have been elected. For the senior class they are Frances Van Pelt, president; Helen Goodpasture, vice-president; Margaret Peters, secretary-treasurer, and Emma Beaver, student council member. Junior class officers are Frances Harrold, president; Emma Lou French, vice-president; Priscilla Mitchell, secretary-treasurer, and Beatrice Thompson, council member. .For the freshman class, officers are Phyllis Risser, president; Charlotte Anderson, vice-president; Thelma Weidner, secretary-treas-urer, and Anna Marie Stohry, council member. Carolyn Davis, a senior, has been named chairman of the student body organization for the year. CENTRALIZE COUNTY ASYLUMS, IS PROPOSED McNutt Studies Plan Put Before Him by Committee. A program of partial centralization of county infirmaries was being considered today by Governor Paul V. McNutt and the governmental economy committee. The 1935 legislature may be asked to establish district infirmaries, financed by a group of counties, the Governor announced. Forty per cent of the county asylums in the state are substandard, according to the committee and maintenance casts vary widely. Only 617 of the 5,833 residents of infirmaries are able-bodied, the committee reported.
vacationists are coming back to the city. Students are giving thought to desirable quarters for the ® school year. The autumn business pick-up will make more jobs for more people, many of whom will need to find a comfortable, IBf convenient place to live. If you have suitable rooms to rent, now is the harvest time of your opportunity! Tell these people about your rooms. Tell them through their favorite newspaper ... The Times ... where the 8? cost is the lowest in the city! Tell them NOW . . . before they choose H someone else’s room! M These Recent TIMES Rent Room Ads Got RESULTS NEW JERSEY. N.. 1215—Two attractively ARSENAL. N.. 315—2 lovely rooms, nicely furnished rooms. Steam heat. Next furnished; overstuffed. Private home, , bath. Private entrance. LI-3180. garage. - j COLLEGE. 3553—Warm corner room; pri- PENNSYLVANIA, N.. 4520—Large, desirvate entrance; hot water; garaee. WA- able room; twin beds croeS-vent., j 1645-W. private bath; 1 or 2. HU-1248. MERIDIAN. S . 1601 1 ; —2 rooms, clean; CA s nfff9riT T kiU-h l en E “nri s v^7 2 bath m aU “uUlj everything furnished; reasonable. In- an U 2lok’ Dnvate batn ’ aU utu Your Room quire 9 Palmer. lties, $6.50 week. For Rent Ad Will Cost Only ALABAMA. N.. 2535—We1l furnished large NEW JERSEY N.. rooms: overbedroom: kitchenette: sink: range; good stuffed, utilities furnUhed. or.vate en heat; garage. trance; rent reasonable. RI-3619. / Illinois! n7! ilios—Nice 2-room apart- Broadway. 1326— tw0 pleasant cool 1 I I / * ment with sink. S4; also garage. $1.50 rooms: clean; full kitchen, porch, ya.d, I / rGT Month. HA-3203-J, I / Z Word - Call Riley 5551 The Indianapolis Times
RILEY GROUPS TO CELEBRATE HEREON OCT, 7 Dual Program to Be Held by Memorial Body And by Hospital. A combined program observing the anniversary of the birth of James Whitcomb Riley and the tenth anniversary of the opening of Riley hospital for children will be held Oct. 7, it was announced today. Hugh McK. Landon, president of the James Whitcomb Riley Memorial Association, said that the traditional program in which pupils of Clemens Vonnegut school, Vermont and Davidson streets, participat eannually, will be held Monday, Oct. 8. Nationally prominent speakers are being obtained for the dual program and it is expected that many of the medical leaders who attended the opening of the hospital will return for the tenth anniversary ceremonies. Two improvements are in their formative stage at present. One is the donors' room, a permanent form of recognition for the $40,000 cash contributors. The other is the $40.000 therapeutic pool, construction of which was started receptly through funds provided by the PWA, the hospital and Indiana university. The pool will not be completed, but is expected to attract widespread attention, since it conforms with the Warm Springs (Ga.) institution established by President Franklin D. Roosevelt for the treatment of children suffering from infantile paralysis. James W. Carr, secretary of the Memorial Association, is making plans for the combined ceremony. Preparations are being made for the attendance of several thousand person, Mr. Carr said. TRUCK TERMINAL TO FETE CITY SHIPPERS Celebration of Tenth Anniversary to Be Held Tonight. Indianapolis shippers will. be guests tonight of the Central Union Track Terminal at a celebration of the erminal’s tenth anniversary. The terminal, 430 Kentucky avenue, maintains fifteen freight lines out of Indianapolis to points in Indiana and surrounding states. A program of cards, dacing, a stage show, and a boxing contest has been arranged by a committee composed of R. H. Shinkle and C. W. Whistler. Ovid Hesler is secretary and treasurer of the organization. 350 FRESHMEN WILL ENTER WASHINGTON H. S. w. G. Gingery to Give Greeting in Auditorium Monday. More than 350 freshman will be greeted Monday at George Washington high school by W. G. Gingery, principal, in exercises in the school auditorium. A program has been arranged by Miss Maude Delbridge, in which Fain’ice Fowler, Miss Ruth Brenton and William Peacock will appear. At the close of the convocation the freshman will be taken on a tour of inspection of the building.
. CAMPAIGN AID
ms .
Samuel D. Jackson Directing the speaking campaign of the Democratic state committee is Samuel D. Jackson, Ft. Wayne. Mr. Jackson is a prominent party worker in northern Indiana and a former Allen county chairman.
13 TEACHERS GET CITY JOBS Appointed to Posts by School Board at Special Session. Ten grade school teachers and three high school teachers appointed by the school board at a special meeting yesterday will assume their duties Monday. The grade school appointees are Evelyn Rabb, Sidney R. Easton, Hiram E. Hensel, Bethel E. Wilson, Mary Wilson, Teena Postman, Alta R. Keeler. Cora A. Treftaz, William A. Faris and Evelyn Heeber. Those who will teach in high schools are Charles G. Yeager, Manual; Enos G. Pray, Shortridge, and Clifford Southwick, Technical. Resignations of Dorothy Ann Lyon, Angeline Shaneff, Edith E. Baker, John I. Redick and Frank Streightoff were accepted and leaves of absence were granted Florence Hill Strupe. Edna G. Henry. Pauline Maginity, Ruth W. Mann and Margaret M. Bergen. Five transfers were made by the board. A resolution calling for a temporary loan of $200,000 to meet demands on the special fund until the fall installment of taxes is received was approved. ALLEGED SLAYER OF WOMAN FACES SUIT Son of Shooting Victim Asks Damages of 810,000. Held in Marion county jail to face trial on a charge of slaying Mrs. Grace Lackey, 40, his common-law wife, Charles Chapman, 59. today planned his aswer to a SIO,OOO damage suit for her death. Chapman, according to detectives, admitted he shot Mrs. Lackey in a garage following an argument. Gordon Harris, 19. son of the dead woman, claims in his damage action that wfis partially dependent upon rs. Lackey lor support. The suit has been started in superior court one.
PAGE 3
'PLAIN bribery: PROBERS BRAND ARMSTACTICS •Doing the Needful*' and ‘Greasing Ways' Two Ways of. Saying It. Pf Cnitrii Vrcß* WASHINGTON. Sept. B.—Writers of novels of international intrigue had a rich new source-book todn’j from which to draw both situations and phrases. Sir Basil Zaharoff's “doing the needful" has captured honors so far as the best hit of colorful understatement turned up in senate munitions committee. Senators interpreted “doing the needful" as synonymous with another phrase used in submarine selling in South America—“greasing the ways." Both idioms dealt with what the less circuitous senators on the committee called plain bribery. The senate exposes have made short shrift of innumerable injunctions on Electric Boat Company correspondence to the effect that the contents were “personal and confidential.” Even a penciled warning to “read the enclosed and don't let your right hand know what your left is doing" was placed in the record along with the document to which it referred. This was a letter from Ernest Lee Jahncke, then assistant secretary of navy, to Majority Leader John W. Q. Tilson of the house, which VicePresident Sterling J. Joyner of the Electric Boat Company copied off at Tilson s office and dispatched gleefully to his superiors as proof j orogress toward a United States sufc marine contract. Mr. Joyner, fond of phrases, took pains to explain, in a chatty letter to Sir Basil Zaharoff, what is meant by “stuffed shirt” —the hint being that some of his Electric Boat' Company superiors answered that description. Joyner's penchant for the secretive was best illustrated by his description, •in a letter to Electric Boat’s vice-president, Lawrence Spear, of conferences in Washington over passible submarine sales to Turkey. The six persons referred to in the letter were mentioned not by name but by number —No. 1, No 2 and No. 3 being Turkish diplomats, Nos. 4 and 5, American admirals, and No. 6 the circuitous Joyner himself—who, being bedridden, has escaped for the moment the prodding of senate questioners. Sir Basil Zaharoff is mentioned many times by name, but often also as “Mr. Z.” or “Zedzed. “Our friend from New Haven" was the discreet designation of Congressman Tilson, who was described as helpful in getting a submarine construction job for Electric Boat. PICNIC SITE IS CHANGED H. A. C. Guild to Hold Party In Club’s Main Ballroom. The bridge party and basket pic-\, nic scheduled to be held by the Hoosier Athletic Club at the estate of Dr. John E. .Wyttenbach, 5200 Grandview drive, tomorrow, will be held in the Chinese room and main * ballroom of the H. A. C. building, instead. Bridge will start at 2, with an indoor picnic at 5.
