Indianapolis Times, Volume 48, Number 19, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 April 1936 — Page 19

APRIL 2, 1936.

CORNER STONE TO BE LAID BY SCHOOL BOARD Ceremony at Building for Crippled Children Set for Tomorrow. The corner stone of the new iemes E. Roberts Bchool for Crip'ded Children, 10th 8,-1 Oricntalsts, is to be laid tomorrow at 2:30. The Indianapolis School Board has arranged an appropriate ceremony. The new building, which will replace the present ofie at 612 W. Washington-st, is to cost about $218,000. It is being financed by a $65,000 bequest left by the late Mrs. Henrietta West Roberts, a $55,000 bond issue and a Federal grant of $98,000. Children from the present school are to attend. Mrs. J. Don Miller, Russell Willson and Julian Wetzel, former school board members, also are expected. Modernistic in Design Modernistic in design, the school will include special features for the education of about 200 physically handicapped children. Representatives of the Indianapolis Foundation, civic and service clubs and of other interested organizations are to be invited. Alan W. Boyd, school board member and chairman of the committee on school buildings, will be assisted by two children from the present school in placing a copper box containing pertinent documents in the corner stone. Rapid work on the construction of the building has made it necessary 1o lay the stone now, according to A. B. Good, business director. The concrete of the first floor has been laid, he said. Other Schools Visited Plans were drawn after visits by W, A. Hacker, assistant superintendent in charge of special education, Mr. Good and the architects to other modern schools for the crippled in September. It will be 224 feet long and 64 feet wide, built in an L-shape so that additional units may be added. The construction will utilize large areas of glass with steel sashes so that the maximum of sunlight may be admitted. It will be two stores high and will have a large playroom in the basement. Stairways are to be supplemented by ramps and an elevator. The first floor is to contain six classrooms, the administration unit, a visitors’ room, lunchroom and kitchen. Auditorium Contemplated A special feature will be a large auditorium equipped with cots to be used during rest periods. The second floor is to include a rhythm room, three classrooms and rooms for occupational therapy, hydrotherapy, physiotherapy, home economics, industrial arts, visiting doctors’ and teachers’ and nurses' rest rooms. Corridors and classrooms are to be equipped with hand rails. A sun deck. 18 by 40 feet, is planned for the roof. The building faces E. lOth-st with I the main entrance under a portecochere at the west end of the building. A driveway entering from E. lOth-st and opening on Oriental will give easy access to cabs and busses.

Electric BHMhh i 6m * zm 9 new Economy ft in 9 costs "’*“' ,f' j Good News.' Whatever the month- \ ~*)\ ly budget on which you manage your I 1 home ’ y° u can now have the flameyn lhe BH money savings. Then you decide if You can change to an Elec- ._ . ._ Learn h advantage o‘ Electric ‘ trie range right now at sur- COME IN AND SEE THE BEAUTIFUL houiaktepi** at the prisingly low cost, because of _. our NEW.ELECTRIC RANGES . . . BOTH 1936 .ELECTROHOME ■ Tnd-ln ABaw.nt. WESTINGHOUSE AND HOTPOINT INDIANAPOLIS HOME E.. Monthly Torn,. MODELS FOR YOUR SELECTION COMPLETE EXPOSITION fctiy Monthly Termi Fairground*, April 16-26 Low Electric Rate *-■ for Cookint ‘_ ;., ffTr installation in homes HI || 1 111 k l fil 11191 flf ?1S I1 1 tfw meeting our installation re- Bj k ■ "Jf ■! k fMt w| 1 H te ■ Electric Building, 17 North Meridian

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ELLIOTT ENTERS CONGRESS RACE Former U. S. Attorney Plans ‘Regular’ Republican Campaign. Homer Elliott, 4131 Carrollton-av, former United States attorney, today announced he would seek the Republican nomination to Congress from the Twelfth District. Declaring he would run as a “regular” Republican. Mr. Elliott said: “I shall advance no personal platform of my own; I shall make no promises that I can not perform, and I shall make no appeal to class prejudice, on the contrary, I shall stand for those fundamental principles of government upon which both Democrats and Republicans were agreed before the advent of the New Deal.” Mr. Elliott spent his boyhood on a farm in Morgan County. He attended the Morgan County schools and Indiana University. Formerly Taught School For four years he taught school in Morgan County, and then began to practice law at Spencer. Later

Mr. Elhott moved to Martinsville and continued there until 1922, when he was appointed United States attorney. Resigning at the end of three years, he was named special assistant to the United States Attorney General, a posiiton he held for one year. He was a presidential elector in 1920. Mr. Elliott, who is a senior member of the law firm of Elliott, Weyl & Jewett, is affiliated with the Methodist Church, Masonic Lodge, Columbia Club and the Indianapolis, Indiana State and American Bar Associations. 11 OFFICES OPEN WHERE VOTERS MAY REGISTER Locations of Branches Available Tomorrow Are Listed. Branch offices open from 10 a. m. to 10 p. m. for voters’ registration tomorrow are as follows: Craven's Service Station, 86th-st and Spring Mill-rri. Wagle Bros.’ store. New Augusta. Decatur Central School (near) Valiev Mills. Rudy's Drug Service. 5501 Madison-av, Edgewood. Gibson's Restaurant. Lawrence. Ind. Wm. F. Rosner Pharmacy. 16th and Main-sts. Speedway. Merz Quality Pharmacy, 5750 W. Wash-ington-st. Walters Pharmacy, Holt-rd and Lafay-ette-blvd. Koester’s Drug Goods Cos., Cumberland, Ind. Huffman Drug Store. Acton. Ind. Wanamaker State Bank, Wanamaker. Ind.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

STEVE BEGINS NEW FIGHT TO GAINJREEDOM Writ of Goram Nobis to Be Sought by Attorney. Times Special LA PORTE. Ind., April 2.—A new drive to free D. C. Stephenson from the Indiana State Prison is under way, it w*as announced by Alban M. Smith, chief counsel for the former klan dragon, who is serving a life sentence for murder. Mr. Smith said he will file a petition for a writ of coram nobis, writ of error, in Hamilton Circuit Court where Stephenson was convicted in 1925. Recently balked in an Indiana Supreme Court test, in which La Porte Circuit Court was restrained from hearing a habeas corpus petition, Stephenson's counsel said he intends to exhaust all legal remedies in the state courts. If he loses the Hamilton court action, Mr. Smith said, he will go into Federal court with a habeas corpus writ petition. The coram nobis petition, to be filed in the next two or three weeks, will set out that additional evidence has been discovered. Mr. Smith said. FAItH HAS NO MIDDLE GROUND, POWELL SAYS It Can Not Be Diluted, Episcopal Clergyman Asserts. “The Christian faith can not be diluted for this age or any other age to make it palatable for the masses,” the Rev. E. Ainger Powell, Christ Church pastor, said this noon in a Lenten sermon at the church. “We are faced with the alternative of accepting or rejecting Jesus Christ as the very God of very God. There is no middle ground. We must accept Him as God, the same as the people of His time sensed.” JOINS SUNNYSIDE~STAFF Dr. m. C. Thomas, Flora, Ind., Gets Appointment. Dr. M. C. Thomas, Flora. Ind., today is a member of the Sunnyside Sanatorium medical staff, Dr. William McQueen, superintendent, announced. A graduate of Indiana University, Dr. Thomas is a former Methodist Hospital interne and senior resident physician at the Essex Mountain Sanatorium in New Jersey. Seeger to Speak Tuesday H. L. Seeger is to speak on “The Economical Foundation for World Peace at the American League Against War and Fascism, meeting at 8:15 Tuesday night at Kirshbaum Center. Hotel Guest Dies A man, believed to be George W. Brown of Ogden, Utah, died suddenly at the Washington early today. The body was removed to the city morgue, and an autopsy was ordered performed. QUALITY pe ?i f t ect hosiery NISLEY CO. COr 44 N. Penn. St. JT'

AIR TRAVEL REACHES PEAK OF LUXURY IN GERMANY’S NEW AIR LINER

Tiny, but comfortable, quarters are provided in the passenger cabins of the giant Zeppelin Hindenburg, now winging over the Atlantic. After using the built-in writing table to dash off a note to the folks at home, this passenger may wash in a basin supplied with hot and cold water, undress, and either tumble into the lower berth, or mount that light ladder to the upper one. No unnecessary space is wasted, or

weight tolerated, aboard the huge German air line. There must always be a careful, general inspection before the new air monarch soars into the blue. Here, after a checkup, a workman emerges from a giant rudder of the LZ-129. Other mechanics in the crew of 40. inspect powerful Diesel engines which, in the four motor gondolas, develop 4200-horse-power (almost twice that of the Graf Zeppelin), to propel the new Hindenburg through the sky.

The Semi-Annual IB *co. HIGHLIGHT-ing the smart neckwear trends. PRESENT-ing values of a remarkable nature. 69° 100 These events are held semi-annually—in the height of demand—just prior to Christmas—and just prior to Easter! They are presented as a compliment from one of America's great neckwear stores—to the large clientele that it has the pleasure to serve! It's of great value to men who enjoy correct and select neckwear! This event includes the new DEEP TONED ties—that “Esquire" talks so much about. It includes the new MADDER effects—those glowing dark prints—reds and greens! It includes TARTANS and STRIPES and DOTS—in the new versions! There are plenty of those BOLD, DARING COLOR SPLASHED ties that had a big season in Florida and are going to repeat their success here! These WOOL TIES in small designs. There are FOULARDS and CREPES—TWILLS and REPPS—about everything that is new and smart and good to be back of I Right inside the Doors—and you are there I L. STRAUSS & COMPANY THE MAN'S STORE

Many Americ ns soon will view this sight the new German queen of the sky sailing majestically through the heavens. Largest airship in the world, the LZ-129 is pictured above soaring over Friedrichshafen, Germany, during a recent trial flight. With a gas capacity of 7,000.000 cubic feet, the new air giant is 972 feet long by 162 feet in diameter, and its dead weight is approximately 110 tons.

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PUBLIC HEALTH STAFF TO HAVE NEW MEMBERS Security Funds to Provide 12 More Employes, Club Told. Twelve professional and technical employes are to be added to the central administration of public health in Indiana through funds provided by the new social security laws. Dr. Verne K. Harvey. Stato Health Board secretary, told the Caravan Club at luncheon today m the Scottish Rite Cathedral. The entire personnel, he said, will emphasize public health instruction, and will pay special attention “within the meaning and intent of the new laws" to rural districts. More attention can be paid to the milk situation and to child and maternal hygiene when the staff is brought to full strength, he said. Dr. Harvey pointed out it could not be estimated now as to how well local units would co-operate, or what increases they would make to their staffs under the new* law. He said, however, it appeared probable that the local expansion would be great. He expects the new setup in the central division to be fully operative by the beginning of the next fiscal year. Trapped in Shaft Ry United Pres* SHENANDOAH. Pa , April 2.-A score of men, working in one-hour shifts, dug feverishly today in an attempt to rescue George Treskoloski, 26. trapped 35 feet below th* surface in a ‘'bootleg” coal shaft.