Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 216, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 January 1935 — Page 11

JAN. 18, 1935

MUSIC FESTIVAL IS ARRANGED BY GERMANGROUPS 25 Societies to Take Part in Entertainment Here Next Sunday. The Federation of German Societies of Indianapolis, an organization 0/ 25 singing, musical and beneficial groups, will hold its annual Winter Festival Sunday afternoon at the South Side Turner Hall, 306 Prospect-st. Among the organizations to participate in the program are the Indianapolis Turnverein, the South Ride Turners, the Indianapolis Liedcrkranz men’s chorus, the Indianapolis Saengerbtmd ipale and female choruses, directed by Rudolph Heyne. and the Indianapolis Little Symphony Orchestra under the direction of Charles Bromley. Carl Kiefer is orchestra manager. A featured performer wil be Miss Roberta May Bland. 11-year-old harpist. Addresses will be given by Henry Klohe, Cincinnati, 0., and Henry Hagemeier, societies president. 'Die Studentenlore,” a one-act German operetta, will be presented. The cast will include Sonja Grigo, Paul Esenwein, Frank Hilgemeier, Frank Scheer. Ernest Schaefer, Walter Fink. Irwin Burkahart and Henry V. Bank. Dancing will begin at 8. The public is invited.

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SYMPHONY LEADER

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Charles Bromley

The program of the Winter Festival to be staged Sunday afternoon in the South Side Turner Hall, 306 Prospect-st, will include a performance of German classical music by the Indianapolis Little Symphony Orchestra under the direction of Charles Bromley.

Police Seek Stolen Jewelry

Police were searching pawn shops today for jewelry valued at $lO5 stollen last night from Miss Edna Horton. a roomer at the home of H. B. Berryman, 35 N. De Quincy-st. Included in the loot is a watch taken from Mr. Berryman’s room.

BREAK FOILED BY GUARD AT STATEPRISON | Two Halted in Escape Plot by Rifle Shot From Wall Tower. By United prcts MICHIGAN CITY, Ind., Jan. 18.' —A rifle shot by a tower guard thwarted the escape of two convicts from the state prison, it was disclosed today. The convicts. Clifton Mitchell, 31, Lake County, and Harold Steine, 36, Monroe County, were placed in solitary confinement. The men were missed from the dining hall Wednesday night and i thorough search was started immediately, Deputy Warden Lorenz Schmul announced. The tower guard discovered the convicts attempting to scale a wall with an improvised ladder and fired once. They dashed back to their cells and were caught by other guards. Mitchell was sentenced to the state reformatory in 1921 to 20 yeais on a robbery charge. He was transferred to the prison in 1931. Steine was sentenced to 15 years in the reformatory in 1929 on a robbery charge and was transferred to the prison Feb. 22, 1934. County War Mothers to Mjet The Marion County Chapter, American War Mothers, will meet for luncheon at 12:30 Tuesday in 1 the Columbia Club.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

APT TO RULE SAAR

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Joseph Buerckel (above), plenipotentiary representing Chancellor Hitler of Germany in the Saar prior to Sunday's plebiscite, was named as prospective governor of the rich mining area, anticipating that the vote would favor rejoining the Reich. Masons Meet Tonight Joint inspection of Indianapolis Chapter 5 and West Side Chapter 138, Royal Arch Masons, will be held by Grand Lecturer Herbert A. Graham at the Masonic Temple, North and Illinois-sts, at 7:30 tonight. E. Paul Boerner, high priest, will be in charge of the Royal Arch degree.

SAAR REFUGEES STREAM ACROSS FRENCHJRDER Poor, Destitute Anti-Nazis Leave Region at Rate of 200 Daily. fCopvrisht. 1935, NEA Service. Inc.) FORBACH, Franco-Saar Frontier, Jan. 18.—Refugees, mostly hopelessly poor or destitute, are pouring across the border from the Saar into France today at the rate of 200 a day. Hundreds were barred. Scenes of pitiful desolation occurred as men, women and children knelt in the snow and implored French guards to let them enter, as they had disposed of all their family belongings hastily in the Saar and fled in fear of Nazi reprisals. Those who were admitted were taken as rapidly as possible toward southwest France, where they will

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establish on vacant farms as wards of the French government. The exodus grow so in volume that French frontier guards were reinforced by mobile police and many were turned back because their passports failed to show the proper French visa by the consul at Saarbrucken. Guards were under strict orders to admit only those with visas. Long lines of hopeful refugees waited at the border. Those admitted weie provided with temporary shelter at the Forbach gymnasium, where huge coke stoves heated the hall into which dozens of families were piled pell mell with their household effects. Children ran around playing, babies wailed and men and women sat despondently on their possessions, awaiting the French government's gift of railway tickets and assignment to farms in southwest France. They will arrive in midwinter and face several months of hardship before spring planting begins. The entire family of the anti-Nazi Catholic leader, Hoffman, including four children, were among the first arrivals here.

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URGES TRANSPORTATION FOR CRIPPLED PUPILS Measure to Be Introduced to Liberalize Statute. A bill will be introduced in this session of the Legislature which would change the school law to provide transportation for all permanently crippled school children, and also wouia provide for transportation for high school pupils in town-

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ships where no high schools are maintained. Under the present school law, crippled children are not provided with transportation unless they live more than a mile and a half away from the school building and are transported in the regular school busses. Floyd I. McMurray, state superintendent of public instruction, has recommended that a measure of tills sort be adopted.