Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 165, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 November 1934 — Page 10
PAGE 10
STATE SCHOOL ANNIVERSARY CHIEFS NAMED District Chairmen Selected to Plan Celebration Next Year. Plan* for the statewide calibration next year of the 300th anniversary of the establishment of public secondary schools in the United States had been furthered today with the appointment by V R Mullins, state elementary and secondary school inspection director, of district chairmen to aid in planning the program
State organization for the celebration Is plahned An pyramid style, according to Mr Mullins, who explained that every high school principal in the state had been asked by the department of secondary principal to serve as chairman ex-officio for local observance of the tercentenary. The activities of the local chairmen will be co-ordinated by these district chairmen under Mr Mullins appointments: District I—Mildred Harter Wirt, Gary, Ind.; Charles Lutz, principal, Horace Mann high school, Gary District 2—Ray Kuhn, superintendent of schools, Plymouth. District 3—John M French, principal. La Porte high school. District 4—R Nelson Snyder, principal. South Side high school. Ft. Wayne. Dis* net 5—T. A Dicus, county superintendent of schools. Marion. District 6—o. G Jamison, principal. Training school. Terre Haute. District 7—V L. Tatlock, Bloomington. District B—Ralph Irons, superintendent of schools. Evansville. District 9—Jackson A. Raney, county superintendent of schools, Versailles. District 10 —Jeanne S. Luekey, Richmond. District 11—Frank O. Medsker, superintendent of schools, Alexandria District 12—Bertram Sanders, Manual Training high school, Indianapolis. Boy Runs Wire in Eye Two-year-old Clifford Shuler ran a wire in his right eye while he was playing on the floor of his home at 2215 Miller street yesterday. He was taken to city hospital for treatment. Dog Worm Capsules < NOW COMBINED IN 1 rT'iWrt rmr dtW* b*lth fr< him es worm* >ll auar 7*25. of til doc aUmwM *ir him ■n pp 'V- *m him with the arm Put*® < oaMaatton worm ' apauW- UV> only nopmtm that opal Topo. Rmwd iml Bonk Warm* Bo pan ao tstfas an harmful At tUWdlai pot Acpo mm) dro Anna —Advertisement.
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TAKE LEADING ROLES IN MANUAL PLAY
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Virgil Dampier
Leading roles in the Manual high school January ’35 senior class plav, 'Skidding, - ’ by Miss Aurania Rouverol, will be enacted by Mary Aldea and Virgil Dampler. The play is to be presented Thursday and Fridav Dec 6 and 7. in the school auditorium with Miss Lola I. Perkins, faculty member as director.
CANAOA-AUSTRALIA FLIGHT TO START Trio to Leave Montreal After Tests. Hy I #* it* and Prfii QUEBEC. Quebec. Nov. 20.—Captain Charles P. T. Ulm, Australian aviator, who will attempt to blaze a new aerial trail from Canada to Australia thus week, planned to take off from St. Louis airport today on a short flight to Montreal, where final tests on his twin-motored, eight-passenger Airspeed Envoy will be made. After final tests. Captain Ulm will take off for Vancouver. He hopes to arrive in Melbourne, Australia., on Saturday, he said. Captain Ulm will be accompanied on the 9.500-mile flight by George M. Littlejohn, co-pilot, and L. Leon Skilling, navigator. Captain Ulm will make three stops en route. The first at Vancouver, the second at Honolulu and again at Suva, Fiji islands. . HONOR REPEAL LEADER Mrs. Charles Sabin Receives Award From Woman's Association. Hi f I nitrd Press NEW YORK. Nov. 20.—The American Woman's Association aw'ard for eminent attainment was presented last night to Mrs. Charles H. Sabin for her leadership in the fight to repeal prohibition. The award was made at the eighth annual friendship dinner.
Mary Aldea
COP SUGGESTS TOSS OF COIN: RESCUES PROSPECTIVE SUICIDE
By United /’re** LOS ANGELES, Nov. 20.—A flip of the coin saved Mrs. Roberta Strickland, 40, from suicide. She was poised on the guard rail of a thirteen-story office building when radio patrolman W. L. Patterson, summoned by horrified pedestrians, clambered up the fire escape. "If you come another step nearer. I'll jump,’ the woman shrilled. "My husband is dead and I'm going to join him. - ’ Patterson’s mind worked at a lightning clip. "Why don’t you be a good sport?" he suggested. “I’ll match you to see whether you jump or don't." Mrs. Strickland hesitated. The patrolman pulled a quarter from his pocket. She fumbled in her purse. “All right.” she assented. Taking advantage of her search, Patterson edged toward her. The woman extracted a half-dollar just as the officer seized her. The crowd, far below, cheered. FIRE DESTROYS SCHOOLS SIOO.OOO Blaze Razes Two Buildings; Believed Incendiary. By United Presi MT. CARMEL, Pa., Nov. 20,—Fire destroyed two school buildings today at Kulpmont, near here, with a total loss estimated at SIOO,OOO. State police said a preliminary investigation indicated incendiarism was responsible.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
RUTLER SENIORS SELECTED FOR CLASSOFFICERS Committee Jobs Assigned to Twenty-Four by President. Names of twenty-four Butler university students, who have been chosen for senior class committees for the 1934-35 school year, have been announced by Karl Sutphin. class president. Committee chairmen will be Charlene Heard, senior gift; Marigrace Majonnier, cap and gown; ‘Robert Chambers, commencement invitations; Edgar Baum, senior ball, and Karl Stipher, class day. Ann Doudican has been named class historian. Other students on the various committees include Marguerite Ham, Barbara Baumgartner, Wright Cotton. Sylvia Orr, Dudley Hutchinson, Nathaniel Fick, Mary Helen Karnes, Edna Cabalzer. Harry Garman, June Willcutts. Wallace Raiser, Jane Moore, Ashton Gorton. Rosemary Ford, Olive Steinle, Frances Stalker. Gene Demmary and Frances Messick.
Sphinx Chooses Three Election of three men to honorary membership has been announced by the Butler university chapter of Sphinx, underclassmen's honorary society. They are Professor Norman R. Buchan, instructor in journalism; J. R. Townsend, instructor in economics, and H. H. Ochiltree, Indianapolis business man. Initiation ceremonies for the new members will be held early in December, according to Fred Ryker, Sphinx president. BEER DISAPPEARS; MAN FACES DRUNK CHARGES Police Probe Mystery of Seven Missing Pints. Charles Worland. 1515 Bates street, was held in county jail today on charges of intoxication and vagrancy after, police charged, he stole seven pints of beer from the home of Mrs. Margaret Talley, 217 South Keystone avenue. Mrs. Talley discovered the loss of the beer last night when she returned to her home after a short absence. Entrance was gained by breaking a side window. Police said they recovered four of the seven pints from Worland.
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INSURANCE SPEAKER
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Lester O. Schriver
The Indianapolis Association of Life Underwriters will be addressed by Lester O. Schriver, Peoria. 111., ranking vice-president of the National Association of Life Underwriters, at a luncheon Friday at the Spink-Arms. His subject will be "An Agent’s Ten Commandments.” The speaker will be introduced by P. W. Simpson, Indianapolis general agent of the Aetna Life Insurance Company, of which Mr. Schriver also is a general agent. Howard E. Nyhart, local association president, will preside.
ALCOHOLIC POISONING KILLS STATE BOY, 5 Child, 5, Finds Discarded Bottle in Trash Heap. By United Press PLYMOUTH, Ind., Nov. 20.-Five-year-old Emory Hill is dead here today of alcoholic poisoning. The child found a discarded bottle of diluted alcohol in a trash heap near his home and drank its contents. He staggered home, where he collapsed. He died a few' hours later in a hospital, without regaining consciousness. LEGION SIGNS CEJ NA R Former INS Manager io Return to Indianapolis. John A. Cejnar, for eight years j manager of the Indianapolis buj reau of the International News j Service and tnow Louisville bureau manager for the same agency, will j return to Indianapolis in the near [future to become assistant publicity j director for the American Legion. [ His appointment was announced today by Harold Phillips, legion publicity chief.
KERN TO TALK WITH SULLIVAN ON TVA POWER Both City and Park Board Are Considering Norris Project at Source. Both the city of Indianapolis and the Indianapolis park board have had under consideration since last fall a proposal to buy power from the Tennessee Valley Authority as suggested by President Roosevelt in Warm Springs, Ga. Mayor Reginald H. Sullivan said today that City Engineer A. H. Moore suggested to the city and the park board the possibility of purchasing TVA power, and also pro-
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posed that the city might build a power plant in the western Indiana coal fields and manufacture its own power. • , To consider both proposals. Mayor Suliivan said he expected to confer soon with Mayor-elect John W. Kern. The city’s power contract with the Indianapolis Power & Light Cos. expires next April and the park board's next July. Mayor Sullivan also said that a ievaluation of the properties of the power company now holding contracts was scheduled within a year, and that that might have some bearing on rates and. consequestly. new contracts, a bid on which has been submitted. He declared he was opposed to any long term contract, such as proposed by the light company. Hydro-Electric Engineer Dies By United Press SAN MATEO. Cal., Nov. 20 —Walter B Devereux. 80, veteran mining and metallurgical engineer, died yesterday. He installed the first hydro-electric plant in the United States at Aspen, Colo.
NOV. 20, t:::
BACKFIRE CONFERS STATE FOREST BLAJ CCC, National Guard Joir Volunteers in Fight. By Uttitrd Press COLUMBUS. Ind.. Nov. 20 —Fire which swept approximately 2,000 ; aeies of wooded farm land in southern Bartholomew county had been brought under control today through efforts of national guardsmen. CCC workers and volunteers. Aid of the local national guard unit and volunteers here was enlisted when the fire broke out late yesterday after having been halted once by the civilian conservation corps workers. When the second fire broke out. Mayor Karl Volland obtained permission of Governor Paul V. McNutt to order out the local militiamen.
