Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 160, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 November 1934 — Page 7

NOV. 14, 1914

NEW MEMBERS WELCOMED BY SCHOOL BOARD Incoming Officials Credit Success to Record of Predecessors. A combination school board meeting and love feast” for three of the five commissioners-elect vu held last night featured by a pep talk by Attorney Russell Willson, a retiring board member. Mrs Mary D Ridge. Carl Wilde and Alan W. Boyd, the commissioner s-elect. who attended, drew up their cha.rs and listened to routine reports. Both the incumbent board and the new members were elected on the Citizens' School Ticket. Mr Willson spoke of the trials and tribulations of a board member, while the new members responded graciously that It was the record of the incumbent board which elected them The three new board members will take office Jan. 1. Two o'her new board members will not take office until 1937. Appointees named last night are Paul Cripe. 3145 North Illinois .• treet. t< mporarv office clerk;'Arthur H. Rusche, 1517 Reisner street; Joseph M. Trcvan, 2119 Aifree avenue; George E. Gates. 431 North Hamilton avenue; William Jarred. 1412 Naomi street; Willis Boone. 606 East Minnesota street, and Wilbur J. Cook. 323 North Sherman drive, Mibstitute Janitors; George Crider 2310 North Capitol avenue, caretaker at the Broadway branch library, and R. C. Gibbs. 2282 Union street, and Alonzo E. Durham. 1520 East Seventeenth street, full-tync janitors. The board approved the construction of a three-room brick addition to School 63, at 1115 Traub avenue, to cost $9,000. Labor provided by the Fedeial Emergency Relief Administration will amount of $5,445. Upon the recommendation of I uther L. Dickerson, city librarian, - Helen Van Camp was appointed as junior assistant librarian to replace Opal P. Buck, granted a leave of absence. A p'an whereby the library will co-operate with emergency educat.on classes was outlined by Mr. Dickerson. COMMITTEES NAMED TO AID PLAY CAST Manual Senior ( lass Will Present "Skidding” Dur.ng Term. Committees to aid in the Manual j Training high school January '35 j sensor class play. "Skidding,” have i been chosen, it was announced today at the school. The costume committee is com- ! posed of Myrtle Marshall, chairman; Donne Lockhart. Evelyn Spangler and Florence Mills. Miss j Gladys A. Denny, faculty member,! is sponsoring this group. Miss Margaret Kellenbach is in charge of the students managing the properties. They are Sofie Blase, chairman; Lorene Shaw, Stanley Jones and Chester Owan. The two prompters. Anna Shapiro and Dorothy Shrarin are under the tutulege of Miss Lola I. Perkins, director of the senior class play. Lewis L. Finch, faculty member, will have charge of the back stage crew.

Gone, but Not Forgotten

Automobiles reported to police as stolen belong to. O E S.'u*h.trd Sheridan. Ind Whippet sedan 590-999. from Ohio street and Capitol a\enue. Rav Roberts. 1129 North Alabama street. Hudsoft coupe. 591-493. from in front of home. Jack Graham 3750 Fall Creek boulevard. fhns.fr sedan. 27-o*l7. from Thirty-fourth and Meridian streets. Fd Brrden. IMS Linwood avenue. Buick sedan. 29-590. from in front of 1008 BroadCharles j Murphy. 542 East Thirtysecond street. Ford coupe. 92-947. from in front of home. Ernes* R Jones. TSO3 Central avenue Apsrment 316. Buick coach, from in front cl home. R'r Richards 1504 Ewing street. Olds- j mobile coach. 114-496. from Tenth and Tuxedo streets.

BACK HOME AGAIN

Stolen automobiles recovered bv police belong to Union Cab Compare Union Cab 260. found .n Brooks de park. Mrs Ed Broden. 1316 Linwood avenue. Bu ck sedan, 'ound at Thirteenth .street and Colorado avenue. H O Butler 1134 North Dearborn street Ford coupe, found on Kentucky avenue, rear Washington street A F Hipes. 1501 South State avenue Essex sedan, found ay Anderson. Ind N W K:dd. 1305 Hoefgcn stree’ Chevrolet sedar. found .n front of 1330 East Southern avenue. Butler. 714‘ North Senate avenue, rit mouth coupe, found at Oregon and Darnell stree-s Carl lockhart. Pleasant Take. led Buick sedan, found in front 0f1333 Spann avenue. J H. Wheeler. 1133 Nor’h Drexel avenue B ack sedan found In rear of 3514 North Capitol avenue. Fester Tavlor. 1202 Saanr avenue. Nash taupe found in rear of 1550 Hoyt avenue. Chevrolet coach, found in front of 2728 Cornell avenue. Albert Coaden. 12* East Southern •venue Che-, rolet sedan, found at Daisy and Raymond streets, stripped Pores’ Coasn. Greenwood. Ind . Ford tuder found at Shelby street and Madison avenue. P P Voorhees. 1317 Congress avenue. Oidsmobi.e coach, found at 2200 Laurel

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WINS RECOGNITION

"'ftW' ~ ” " ! \y . ■ The Rev. A. E. Cowley The only Indiana preacher to win recognition in a "preaching” contest held recently by "Church Management,” an international journal for ministers, was the Rev. Arthur E. Cowley, pastor of the First Baptist church cf Shelbyville, it was arnounced today. Mr. Cowley’s sermon won a place among the foremost seventeen entries. His manuscript, "A Declaration of Dependence,” has been published in a volume called "Prize Sermons.” Mr. Cowley was the author of a pageant presented at centennial celebration of Baptist work in Indiana.

WORKERS INJURED BY STRIKE PICKETS ARE GIVEN COMPENSATION

Employes working during a strike are entitled to workmen’s compensation if injured by strikers’ pickets, the Indiana appellate court has ruled in ar. appeal growing out of the Dixie Bee coal mine strike in Vigo county. Elmer Bedwell. mine employe at work during the strike, was ordered to help protect the mine property from union pickets, according to the evidence, and was shot in the arm. The state industrial board denied compensation, holding the injury was not the result of an accident sustained by the plaintiff in the course of his employment and did not grow out of his employment. The appellate court decision, written by Judge William H. Dudine, .reverses the industrial board ruling and orders compensation.

PROHIBITION LEADERS PIN HOPES ON YOUTH W. C. T. U. Places Emphasis on Education of Children. By Unit * and Pn .** CLEVELAND, Nov. 14.—The temperance movement is looking to the next generation in the hope of placing prohibitory- laws back on the statute books of the nation, it became apparent today at the national convention of the W. C. T. U. Faced with setbacks occasioned by the wave of anti-prohibition sentiment of the last two years, older heads in the crusade against liquor are placing more emphasis on education of youth.

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ARMS CONTROL PACT URGED BY U. SmENGLAND Disarmament Efforts May Dropped in Favor of New Treaty. By United Press LONDON, Nov. 14—A Joint American and British effort to concentrate disarmament work on a ; world treaty for control of the arms traffic seemed foreshadowed today. The meeting of the steering committee of the world disarmament conference at Geneva Tuesday, it was indicated, may mark the tacit abandonment of present efforts for a general treaty in favor of an arms control pact as the sole hope of progress. Secretary of State Cordell Hull’s announcement at Washington of the United States’ advocacy of an arms treaty was in accord with the British view, emphasized by Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald in a speech last night at Southampton. “The only solution," he said, “is control of sale of armaments by the license system. We want to make the British system of export licenses international, so that what we do every country will do. Therefore we are going to Geneva to get that done.” His speech was not on the hopeful side. Earlier, deefnding the governments’ activities in peace negotiations, he said: "I see there Is a feeling growing that the government is not so zealous in the search for peace as it should be. I tell you that is not so. “In Geneva we have no authority beyond that which comes from the successful and accurate handling of negotiations. Our hearts may be sad—mine certainly is—but I am still a soldier in the ranks of the army.” The sadness to which the prime minister confessed was due to the apparent certainty that no advance can be made toward a general disarmament treaty. Because of the growing attention paid to the possibility of substituting an arms control treaty for a disarmament agreement, it .vas expected that Norman H. Davis, chief American disarmament delegate, would go to Geneva for the steering committee meeting. He

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Indiana in Brief

j By Time* Special NOBLESVTLLE, Nov. 14— Gus Seymour, trustee-elect of Nobles vifie township, is believed to hold the record for length of tenacy on a farm. For twenty-eight years, Mr. Seymour has been a tenant on the eightyacre farm of C. W. Howell, east of here. I The landlord and tenant will hold a sale at the farm shortly prior to ! terminating the tenacy, as Mr. Seymour will reside in Noblesville during his term as trustee.

TRUCE STUDIED IN MILK FIGHT City Operators Confer With Townsend in Move to End Price War. Calculated to end the milk price war which has sent prices tumbling, a peace plan will be submitted this afternon by a committee of milk company representatives to Lieuten- j ant-Governor M. Clifford Townsend. Members of the committee which ] will confer with Mr. Townsend are Arthur P. Holt, chairman; S. O. Dungan, Albert W. Buescher, Homer T. Perry, Earl E. Marple, J. D. Littleton and Alfred D. Schaefer. Representatives of at least one chain store also may attend, it was said. Effect of the milk price war has been to send prices down to 7 cents a quart delivered and 6 cents a quart across the counter.

TIMES EDITOR WILL ADDRESS FELLOWSHIP “Religion and the Press” to Be Subject at Dinner. Talcott Powell, editor of The Indianapolis Times, will speak at the Third Christian church fellowship supper at 6:20 tomorrow at the church. His topic will be "Religion and the Press.” Special music will be furnished by the Christian Men Builders Glee Club. would sit with Hugh R. Wilson, American minister to Switzerland, who, Secretary Hull said at Washington, has consulted British, French, Italian and Japanese governments on an arms control treaty.

u n a Steal Thoroughly By Times Bprrial LOGANSPORT, Nov. 14.—Thieves who stole fifteen pullets from a : bam at the home of Dick Odom, also took'along firewood for use in cooking the feathered loot. ana Administratrix Quits By T i met Special ANDERSON, Nov. 14.—Resignation of Mrs. Florence Kirkpatrick as administratrix of the estate of her husband, Henry Kirkpatrick, nas been accepted in Madison circuit court, upon her declaration that quarrels among her children con- | cerning the estate were “very #n- | pleasant and nan Death Ends Case ! By Times Special COLUMBUS, Nov. 14.—Death of Frank P. Anderson, who filed a charge of embezzlement against Edjward Mattison, Texas oil man, has [resulted in dismissal of the case in Bartholomew circuit court here. Prosecutor Lloyd C. Bryer said lack of evidence also had a bearing on his motion for dismissal. Mr. Anderson, killed here recently when struck by an automobile, accused the Texas man of making misrepresentations in sale of oil stock. ROTARY HEARS LECTURE BY THROAT SPECIALIST Recent Progress Recounted in Talk by Dr. Kearby. Modern methods of removing obstructions from the throat and oesophagus, progress in which has so advanced during recent years that it is possible to save many lives, were explained to Rotarians yesterday by Dr. D. O. Kearby, ear, nose and throat specialist. Dr. Kearby listed lye burns as the j most serious throat trouble, especially among children. "When one considers the hospitalization and | treatment costs, it is doubtful j whether grocers make enough profit to justify the sale of lye,” he said.

ROOSEVELT KIN SAYS FRANKLIN ‘REALLYTRYING’ President’s Fifth Cousin, Republican, Suggests Changes, However. By United Pres * KANSAS CITY, Mo., Nov. 14. Nicholas Roosevelt, a fifth cousin of the President and a Republican, believes the President is sincerely trying to improve a bad situation, but he believes he would get farther if he would "kick out a lot of schoolboy statesmen and surround himself with men of experience.” Os his own Republican party, Roosevelt said he did not believe it would get any place until it is shaken up and remade. "A lot of old dodos who have been running Republican affairs for a generation are sitting back and saying that we must wait until the people get enough of this New Deal. Then, they say. they will swing back to the Republican party. "But they don’t know what is going on,” Roosevelt said. "Os course, there will be a swing back to conservatism, but it won’t go far enough to reach the mossback ideas of the men I have in mind, such men as control the party in New York, New r Jersey and Pennsylvania. Their day has passed and they don’t know it.” Cardinal Lauds Roosevelt By United Press WASHINGTON, Nov. 14.—President Roosevelt has bettered the nation, William Cardinal O’Connell, Catholic archbishop of Boston, said today after a White House visit.

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