Indianapolis Times, Volume 47, Number 295, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 February 1936 — Page 18
PAGE 18
MANUAL ALUMNI TO CELEBRATE FOUNDINC SATE
Graduates of City School to Meet in Observance of 41st Anniversary. Many Manual Training High School graduates are expected to attend the alumni association's meeting tonight celebrating the school’s 41st anniversary. Victor R. Jose, alumni president, and Principal E. H, Kemper McComb are to preside. The program is to open with a dinner in the school cafeteria, with alumni groups of 40 graduated classes sitting together. Alumni are to take part in an amateur hour program in the auditorium following dinner. W. Fineley Wright, alumnus and faculty member, is to appear as “Major Knows.” Skits are to be presented by Manual clubs, including Lo-Per-Mans Club, Class of 1904, Travel Club, Saturday Afternoon Literary Club and Roines and Masoma Alumni Associations. 1904 Poem to Be Read A poem written by Walter Guedel, which apepared in the 1904 annual, Is to be contributed by the class of 1904. A present Manual pupil, Harold Yeagy, is to read the verse, “Uncle Joshua's Town Adventure.” Unique because it is the only class which has remained organized since graduation, the 1904 class assists the school each year through its student aid fund. Edith Huggins, president; Hattie Thudium, treasurer, and Gretchen Scotten, Manual teacher, secretary, are class officers. Miss Thelma Tacoma is chairman of the program committee. Her assistants are Bert Kelly and Don Menke, who is to be announcer on the “Major Knows amateur hour.” Arthur Madison and John Herrmann have charge of annual alumni fees and admission tickets to the auditorium performance. C. D. Vawter is in charge of cashiers. Registration committee includes Elsie Goett, Gertrude Hartman, Helen Neale, Alma Gebhardt, Ruth Rankin, Daisy Wahl, Lillian Rieman and Helen Adolay. Serve on Committee Doer committeemen are Harry F. Miedema Jr., H. Reidenbach, B. R. Davy, Glenn Baker, Stanley Wilson, Charles E. Manges, Arthur L. Strauss, Charles Stuart, Cecil Bird, Norman Koepper, Melvin Henselmeier and John Nackenhorst. Besides President Jose, officers of the alumni association are Mrs. Bessie Sherman Lorenz, vice president; Miss Anna J. Schaefer, secretary, and Principal McComb, treasurer. Copies of a special six-page edition of the Booster, weekly publication of the school, were distributed to students this morning as a feature of the birthday celebration. Copies are to be available for visiting alumni tonight. Staff members include Dorothy Newel, editor; Charles Johnston, associate editor; Verlin Hershberger, feature editor, and Robert Crouch, sports editor. Principal McComb addressed a Junior high school assembly this morning as a part of the student body’s celebration of the birthday.
Gone, but Not Forgotten
Automobiles reported to police as stolen belong to: Pearl English, 318 N. California-st, Ford coach, from in front of her home. Morris Elmore, 1718 N. Tibbs-av, Ford coach, 74-027, from in front of the Circle Tower building.
BACK HOME AGAIN
Stolen automobiles recovered by police belong to: F. D. McCurdy. 750 N Dequincy-st, Ford coupe, found at Ohio-st and Capitol-av. INDIANAPOLIS TOMORROW American Legion, Twelfth District, luncheon, 136 N. Delaware-st. League for the Hard of Hearing, 7:30 p. m.. Board of Trade. Lions Club, luncheon, Washington. Kiwanis Club, luncheon, Columbia Club. National Association of Cost Accountants, dinner, Washington. National Emergency Council, luncheon, Washington. Purdue Alumni Association, luncheon, Severin. Zeta Kappa Psi, dinner, Washington.
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Regional officials of the Works Progress Administration had returned to their districts today after conferences Sunday and yesterday at regional headquarters, 217 N. Senate-av. Washington officials present were Lieut. Col. F. C. Harrington, assistant administrator and chief engineer; Jacob Baker (above), assistant administrator in charge of professional and service projects, and Ross Fox, chief examiner COLD WAVE REDUCES CITY BUILDING ACTIVITY 66 Permits Issued in Week Against 141 for Preceding Period. Building activities have been hampered seriously by the cold wave, William F. Hurd, City Building Commissioner, told the Safety Board today. In the week ending Feb. 15, there were 66 permits issued on property valued at $31,028, as compared with 141 permits for $39,260 for the corresponding week of 1&35. Total building operations from Jan. 1 to Feb. 15 this year were $668,206 higher than in the same period last year, he said. YOUTH SENTENCED FOR ASSAULT ON FIANCEE Lack of Funds for Marriage Permit Blamed for Attack. By United Press HUNTINGTON, Ind., Feb. 18.— Earl Clore, 23, was under sentence of 1 to 10 years in the Indiana State Reformatory today after pleading guilty to charges of assault and battery against his fiancee, Miss Eloise Hensel, 29. Clore confessed that despondency over lack of funds to purchase a marriage license led the attack on the girl and his attempted suicide, police said.
Copyright, 1936, B. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem. N. C. DIGESTIONis often overtaxed it/ our tense... .hurried existence/ Aids in Assuring Natural i btcs thc naturjl r roccsscs - gg? i v ' 'C* *** ‘'Hurry—hurry—hurry” seems to be the order l ' o?> " §s&&£ | ( * j|| ** **' -*" ‘ " of the day. People get caught in the lockstep of f modern life. Tension finds the weak spot, so often ■; l||p : 4: Irll JBj —digestion. It has been show n that smoking 4flHS9h '/'IbPBk K. BT fi Camels improves digestion.. .wards off the con- | ® jmV ||jjg jell v 'p' sequences of hurried, nervous living. Camels stim- | WSrßb f S * f m ulute digestive action. They promote the feeling ji ~ W -hB /f|l % i IfeJiaßlii of well-being and good cheer so necessary to il.'S.alW jjj^s)PPllllll Ml • ' the proper assimilation of food. Camels set you S£j|jjtfft v> 'v' I right! And, in smoking Camels for digestion’s v ***** - an enticing mildness. Enjoy the appealing flavor Maine, says: "It’s eat-and-run IPiLJP > ‘ of costlier tobaccos! They never tire your taste! pH with me, but I always top off ~ A i s ~ Wm with Camels. Camels are good m v... ..,v' /- I/ JBf for digestion—help along the ''// xamat natural processes —and ccr* /■' tamly have a great flavor!” 'vj^j HERE DELICIOUS FOODS APPETITE— the famous Gold 8 I Coast Dining Room (above) a* the Drake Hotel in Chicago, where HP to digest my meal. And the art of presenting luxurious foods with deft service is devel- *f Camels taste grand!” oped to the heights *f perfection. And—as a fitting accent to d'Ji the scene—the fragrant, delicate smoke of Camels rises from jeweled fingers as w omen of chic and fashion join their escorts * WbBSBBBBbE&& ia smoking Camels. Erik, famous nuitre d'hottl, watches to see Camels,” Erik says, "for they have found that choice tobaccos add to thc p.easure of the meal. Camels are a leading fas onte here. - E.S.T., 8 p.m. C.S.T., 9:30 p.m. M.S.T., BJO jp.m. P.S.T. —over WA B C-Columbi* Network T)u?es6o7tiS SaheWl^fS—smehe (d&mtds jgr mmk >
OUST TUGWELL, FARM SPEAKER DEMANDS HERE
Stanley F. Morse Condemns Nation’s Agricultural Leadership. Stanley F. Morse, executive vice president of the Farmers’ Independence Council of America, this afternoon told Indiana farmers gathered at the Claypool that they should demand “that Rexford Guy Tugwell, farm overlorri No. 2, be immediately arrested and tried for high treason, charged with plotting to overthrow the government of the United States.” James R. Howard, former president of the American Farm Bureau Federation, who was to have spoken critically of Henry A. Wallace, Secretary of Agriculture, was snowbound in lowa and could not attend. His speech was read. Mr. Morse said in part: “A few years ago if some comic opera had included a skit depicting the United States Senate hastily passing an unneeded, unsound, unconstitutional farm bill it would have been most ludicrous —a shocking burlesque on that wise, dignified deliberative body. Now this has actually happened. No only is this action ridiculous; it is highly unpatriotic. Refers to Indebtedness “To sensible farmers it is a disgusting spectacle to see these socalled statesmen voting to waste half a billion more of our money at a time when the indebtedness of the nation is approaching the danger point. That our national legislators could so forget their public trust as to prostitute their country’s welfare in a bare-faced attempt to gain votes for their own re-election is unthinkable—but true. “The crowning insult to the intelligence of the American people has been not the enactment of an outrageously dishonest farm relief bill, but the vicious attack on the Supreme Court by some of our meddling, muddled misrepresentstives in Congress. “What about Henry Wallace, who not only sets himself up in judgment on the Supreme Court, but who would turn loose his pack of bureaucrats to hound us farmers into economic scarcity and peasantry? The powers that be should remove from office this menace to AA/I SALVE 000 OLDS LIQUID-TABLETS SALVE-NOSE 5 C Iq c 25r DROPS 1
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
American agriculture instead of tacitly approving his acts. “As for Rex Tugwell, farm overlord No. 2, you farmers should demand that he be immediately arrested and tried for high treason, charged with plotting to overthrow the government of the United States.” Mr. Howard’s address said in part: “Edward A. O'Neal, present head of the farm bureau, and some of our other farmer ‘friends’ had better consider seriously what they have said about farm peasantry before even suggesting amendments to the Constitution in the special interest of agriculture. “I am fearful that anew and dangerous political philosophy is being slyly injected into our governmental veins.” The address traced the inception of the Constitution, "a farmers’
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Constitution,” and said “it put a demoralized agriculture on its feet and built the greatest agrarian civilization the world has ever known” and is as vital to agriculture today as when it was drawn. GUEST PASSENGER WINS Right to Collect From Reckless Driver Upheld on Appeal. The Indiana Appellate Court today had affirmed the right of a guest riding in an automobile to recover damages suffered when the driver is reckless. The court yesterday upheld an award of $2500 in the Sullivan Circuit Court to Stella T. Binzer, Terre Haute, who sued Harry D. Armstrong, Coal City, as the result of an accident in 1932.
JOINT COMMITTEE RETURNS TO TASK Job Insurance Scheduled to Be Topic Today. Unemployment insurance is to occupy the chief place on the program today when the joint legislative committee, drafting legislation for Indiana's social security program, reconvenes in the Supreme Courtroom at the Statehouse. The committee, preparing for a special session expected early in March, adjourned last week after preliminary work on an old-age pen-
sion bill and proposed bills for its administration. A representative of the Federal Social Security Board in Washington is expected to arrive Friday to inspect the committee’s work and see if the bills comply with Federal requirements.
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-FEB. 18, 1903
Edgewood School Bonds Retired. The final payment on the Edegood school bonds has been made, Leonard A. Holt. Perry Township trustee announced today. A $60,000 bond issue was sold 13 years ago, and the final payment of S9OOO retires the indebtedness.
