Indianapolis Times, Volume 48, Number 50, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 May 1936 — Page 27
MAY 8, 1936.
72 PUPILS AT MANUAL RANK HIGHIN WORK Placed on Top Ten Because of Excellence in Scholarship. Seventy-two pupils won positions on the Top Ten at Manual Training High School for the middle marking period of the current semester. They mnked highest in general scholarship. -**ose Ellen Berndt, senior, placed first with 42 points among the girls. Edgar Siegel led the boys with 39 points. In the senior high school division, there was an equal number—23—of girls and boys on the roll. They are Miss Berndt, Dorothy Egger, Marie Moates, Siegel, Myrtle Brier, Robert Kuntz, Ruth Hale, Estelle Levin, Clarice Reimer, William Leukhardt, Floyd Phillips, Ralph Sission, Ida Caito, Alma Deßaun, Frances Kritsch, Ruby Miller, Betty Stich, Thelma Wiebke, Don Emery, Alfred Hubert. Moses Levy, Thomas O'Nan, Oscar Segal, Leslie Stallwood, Sophie Camhi, Charlotte Craig, Nina Marie Drcsslar, Loretta Herndon, Genevieve Stumps, Lsidore Camhi, Herschel Kopp, Merle McKinley, Morris Salzman, Theodore Voida, Jennie Groas, Mcnka Guleff, Eleanor Kinney, Caroline Patnick, Charles Brouhard, Max Stein, Denzil Young. Sam Hyman, Albert Nahmias, Elmer Parks and Alva Stoneburner. Girl Ahead in Junior High Junior High School pupils were led by Mildred Reimer with 38 points. Others in the section were Mildred Alice Boyl, Lucille Cubel, Alma McKee, Elizabeth Collins, Edith Morgan, Virginia Lindemann, Dorothy Perdue, Evelyn Gkillman, Russell Burtis, Betty Lou Baker. Margaret Chapman, Donnie Douglas, Betty Hall, Julia Haynes, Jean Hoeferkamp, Annetta Thornberry, Benjamin Nahmias, Joe Shupinsky, Jake Alboher, Albert Mordoh, Marcus Goldman, Charles Scheible, Lawrence Daum, Jack O’Neill and Delbert Schneider. In the Senior High School honorable mention group, which is next in scholastic rank to Top Ten, were Stonko Angelkovich, Jimmie Angelopolous, Ann Wheatley, Regina Bauchle, Evelyn Achgill, Harold Arnold. Robert Poett, Albert Burzlaff, Gilbert Backemeyer, Harry Hawkins, Una Baskerville, Robert Pardieck. Joseph Sexson, Mike Rubenstein, Lena Waiss, Jean Scott, Mart Tilly, Frederick Raker, Norman Burger, David Adler, John Amt, Robert Mills, Richard Bauchle, Mildred Ostermeier, Russell Skipworth, Pauline Mitchell, Maxine Ferguson, Frank King, Kenneth Kuebler, Alice Westra, Maxine Lang, Mildred Eggert, Margaret Dongus, Frederick Boyd Collins, Robert Rooker. Richard Yeager. Plarcd on Roll Saffel Carter. Mary Rogers, Lucille Schwab, Helen Tipton, Kathryn Stewart, Angelo Angelopolous, Thomas Stevens, Ralph Brown, George Voida, Jep Cammack, Robert Mathews, Chester Moore. William Tavenor, Margaret Posimi, Geraldine Gilliatt, Jessie Winkler, Louise Bourgonne, Ruth Reimer, Hope Brown, Margaret Branstetter, Victoria Calderon, Esther Katz, Irene Raesner, Constance Glazer, Martha Gallamore, Tosca Guerrini, Velma Iverson, Rosemary Johnston. Dorothy Newel, Maurene O’Dwyer, Ruth Finchum, Rosemary Carney, Marjorie Ayers, Doris Falting, Mona Jupin, Bernice Knight, Josephine McKee, Mary Whittaker. Margaret Sansone, Edward Manning, Nathan Lockman, Albert Teal, Jane Flora, Florence Fahrner, Joyce Ketchum, Lucille Dranke, Martin Dorfman, Margaret Kramer. Genevieve Guenther, Alice Kent, Mike Camhi, Veryl Sturdevant. James Maschmeyer, Robert Fetchman, Leo Browning, Dorothy
f Everybody’s / CREDIT IS GOOD \ / AT RITE S, WHERE YOU \ r GET GOOD VALUES ) ON LONG TIME CREDIT • 1 " ■ • Rite has been serving the public with GOOD VALUES on CREDIT since 1910 .. . and besides keeps your JEWELRY REPAIRED “FREE” U FORONE^EAR LADIES’ 10 DIAMONDS \ !sse. tx Ku*r- s \t watches - w complete 4'° n am ,° nd dd 1n * est dPSl f n i ases - full 7 with band to mitch. Band match guaranteed. Both Rings for *l2= *24=” *lo= Pay as Little as 50c a Week BUY YOUR JEWELRY WILL CONFIDENCE Radios A Batrala *2O FJTfITf? 'fflIn lame ■ p| p |y9P. M. MARYLAND ST. V* r 43-45 SO. ILLINOIS ST.
BRITISH HEIRS FOLLOW IN FOOTSTEPS OF KING EDWARD
% ; :> .; ■ '•' :
Heirs to the British throne all seem to inherit th e love of riding. King Edward VIII was a famous horseman until persuaded, in the public interest, to refrain from the risks of the hunt. And here is a picture, taken by special permission in the Royal Lodge at Windsor, that proves Princess Elizabeth and her father the Duke of York, the two direct heirs to the throne, also are saddle enthusiasts Their canter was a preliminary to the Princess’s tenth birthday celebration.
Craig, Jane Helperu, Fedora Herman, Virginia Hershberger, John Reick, Clifford Gribben, Mary F. Neelan, Ruth Hummel, Roselynn Sanders, Helen Kerkhoff, Charles Ludlow, Hazel Hardcastle, Violet Throm, Hazel Hendrickson, Luella Harper, Ruth Kleinschmidt, Frances Ford. Georgia Cooney, Fred Henry, Joe Mighano, Mildred Hull, Frances Moore, June Grady, Glen Ball, James Hancock, Edward Rugenstein, William Eggert, Mildred Moon, Helen Ann Cohn, Adeline Weaver, Louise Bray, Emma Ellis, Miriam Bernstein, Dellamae Arnett, Marjorie Bell, Virginia Davis, Mary Crane, Marian Kephart Linson, Jane Hatten, Margaret Lahmann, Pauline Link, Myrtle Gresham, Mary Lewis. Get Honorable Mention Fred Kehl, Mary Beecher, Sylvia Studebaker, Elizabeth Felska, Ruth Monroe, Raymond O’Neal, Lawrence Berndt, Henrietta Schwartz, Hortense Ruth, Jeanette Patnick, Mae Nell Fisher, William Patterson. Mike Vinci, Eileen Simmons, Hollis Browning, Charles Baker, Juanita Truitt, Mary Lois Allee, Maurice Spurney, Helen Sells, Mary Zimmerman, Helen Guerrini, Kathleen Shaw, Charles Berger, Frances Davis, Ailecne Brazeal, Frances Ballinger, Albena Giuliani, Dorothy Ressler, Herman Jeffries, John Ernest Mills, Ted Etherington, Charles Tedrowe, Dorothy Holycross. Gertrude Johnson, Betty Reed, Iva Reynolds, Jean Smith, Joseph Galvin, Paul Manson, Wilfred Robinson, Bertha Tyra, Anna Schneff, Hildagarde Kleffner, Finora Shirely, Thelma Keith, Betty Vitz, Mary Sprenger, Virginia Fox, Elnore Sanner, Nathan Stein, Marshall Snoddy, George Weber, Robert Sexson, Wilma Wellman, Mary Alice Sauter, Harry Kirch, Harry Walther, Alvin Wegner, Marie Whitley, Rosa Jane Miller and Geraldine Xix. Junior School Pupils Those who won honorable mention in the junior high school were Lois Atkinson, Nida Abell, Delores Sannon. Celia Camhi. Alma Czinzvoll, Janice Conner, Florence Christoph, Bernard Baker, Helen Barbender, Mabel Arnold, Martha VanderSchoor, Charles Edmunds, Ruth Fleck. Doris Coffey, Christine Gershanoff, Mildred Embry, Leilamae Fox,
Louis Goldstein, Claris Hancock, Betty Gran, Alice Hausman, Richard Matthews, Herbert Jeppesen, Bernice Gigerich, Lillian Loeper, Louis Koss, Doris Longere, Rose Kleis, Ruth Kitchell, Charles McDaniel, Nick Muslin, Carol Miedema, Alma Morris. Patricia Pearson, Betty Jane Reid, Freida Harvey, Nadejda Popcheff, Winnifred Ragsdale, LaVaugha Richey, Geneva O’Brien, Ivy May Perkinson, Olga Phillips, Ruth Price, Gerald Horton, Richard Kattau, Jane Kirchbaum, Jane Holl, Jean Kline, Betty Jane Faires, Betty Leaman. Rebecca Levy, Elizabeth Kehl, Harold Miller, Betty Lou Poppaw, Bettie Shirley, Martha Scotten, Elizabeth Scott, Virginia McSpadden, Louise Works, Alma Childers, Louise Maier, Bernadine Magness, Virginia Volpp, Arletha Stamm, Lucille Talkington, Wanda Spurgeon, Phyllis Ferrell, Mary Thomas, Kathleen Sponsel, Lucille Williams, Marion Wood and Helen Weyreter. PANHANDLERS PUBLISH GUIDE ON GENEROUS “Little Red Book” Is Then Sold to Others of Fraternity. By United Press LONDON, Ontario, May B.—Ontario panhandlers are abandoning secret signs to mark the homes of “good-hearted householders” in favor of “little red books.” David Saunders, 38, arrested lor begging here, told police that panhandlers were drawing up lists of addresses of homes in Ontario where they are well treated and are selling the lists among themselves.
Schiff's Outlet Shoe Stores OFFER A NEW SERVICE Announcing the Opening OF A NEW, MODERN Shoe Repair Dept. at 259 E, WASHINGTON ST.cg, F £?I" ~ J Men’s. Women's or | THESE you wLt CHILDREN'S I ARi service- Wis J OAK LEATHER I ™ ,Ml ' SRVC ’ or composition I PRICES! w HALF m m I w s e "' s I RUBBER TT I HEEL I "EELS __LIFTS I OAc N kepwrs &Id C I Pair LARGE | Pair I Attached and Guaranteed B rMn VAI . ... . . , _ , B L I FOR YOU Attached and Guaranteed ß Hi i JB bl J
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
MOCK WEDDING TO FEATURE PROGRAM Citizen’s Fraternity Will Meet at 8 Tonight. The mock wedding of Joan Norton, 4-year-old bride, and Dick Collier, 4-year-old bridegroom, is to feature the program of the Citizens Fraternity at 8 tonight at 40th-st and Capitol-av. The wedding, with participants ail under 5 is to be presented by the Brookside Community Center Mother’s Club. In addition, a recreational program directed by Norma Koster of the City Recreation Department is to be given. At 8 Sunday night, Edward Edwards is to address the organization on “The Youth Problem.” Mr. Edwards is state National Youth Administration director. A week from tomorrow night, the organization is to sponsor an amateur contest. BOOK NEARLY FINISHED War Memorial to Be Placed in Canadian Capital. By United Press VANCOUVER, B. C., May B.—Following four years of work, James Purves, heraldic artist and illuminator, virtually has completed the Book of Remembrance that will be placed in the memorial chambers of the Parliament Buildings at Ottawa. The book will contain the names of 68,000 Canadians who lost their lives in the war from Aug. 4, 1914, to April 30, 1922.
STATE ROTARY CLUBS ARE TO MEETTUESDAY Large Local Delegation to Attend Conference at Lafayette. Times Special LAFAYETTE, Ind., May B.—Led by a large Indianapolis delegation, Rotarians from 59 clubs in Indiana are to gather here Tuesday and Wednesday for a two-day session marking their twenty-second annual district conference. The program is to open officially at 10 Tuesday morning following registration and a reception at Purdue University’s Memorial Building, the conference headquarters. Chief speaker for the initial session is to be Col. Willard Chevalier, New York, vice president of Mc-Graw-Hill Publishing Cos. He is to discuss “Rehabilitation Today’s Opportunity.” Delegates are to be welcomed here by Dr. L. M. Sears, Purdue history and economics instructor, with a response by Frank P. Manly, Indianapolis, a former district governor. Canadian Is to Speak Meeting highlights are to include the election of district officers and an address Wednesday by William W. Emerson, Winnipeg, Rotary International director. A lively contest is in prospect for the Indiana governorship which is to be vacated by J. Ralph Thompson, Seymour. Two candidates,
A Mother’s Day Feature 6-Pc. Table Set Sugar, Creamer, Salt and Pepper on Rich Handled Tray! 137 W. Washington St. Directly Opposite Indiana Theatre
Maurice E. Louth, Kokomo, and Lieut. Col. C. Seymour Bullock, South Bend, are reported to have strong support. Other speakers who are to appear on the program include Dr. Henry T. Crane, author and lecturer; James E. Gheen, New York, and President Edward C. Elliott of Purdue. The university campus, Tippecanoe battlefield and the Indiana State Soldiers’ Home are to be points of a sightseeing tour Tuesday afternoon. Other recreational features are to be a review of Purdue's R. O. T. C. unit, a television demonstration and the Pur-due-Louisiana Tech baseball game. Memorial Service Set Former district governors who are to preside at four special assemblies and their discussion subjects are William R. Barr, Bluffton, club service; Charles Grafton, Muncie, vocational service; Carl Bimel, Portland, community service, and Leslie Sammons, Shelbyville, international service and newspaper men assembly. A memorial service its to be held under the direction of the Rev. Robert Hall, Michigan City club president. The bulk of conference business is to be transacted Wednesday morning following a breakfast for newly elected officers of individual clubs Committee reports will be given recommendations made for the 1936 international convention and district officers elected. RESIDENTS WILL MEET Widening of Ritter-av to Be Discussed Tonight. A meeting has been called for tonight in Carr’s Hall on E. Washing-ton-st to discuss the widening of Ritter-av. Residents there are said to object to the placing of utility poles in the sidewalk.
PARK SERVICE HEADQUARTERS TOBEMOVED Recreation Division Office Transferred to Omaha for Reorganization. Reorganization of the National Park Sendee and recreational division moving of regional offices from Indianapolis to Omaha was announced today by Conrad L. Wirth, assistant director. Paul V. Brown, director here for three years, Ls to be transferred. He is to be acting director of the new region and assistant director after the change is completed. States formerly constituting the Fifth region, with headquarters here, and those of the Sixth region are to be combined to form the new unit, which is to include 14 states. It is believed the reorganization will result in a 28 per cent reduction in expenses of the 124 CCC camps now engaged in state and national
Ready for Summer WITH 600 BRAND NEW SUMMER DRESSES Here They Are ... Saturday $0 98 3'# • U° r r cU^ nt ' \ \ ss®. \ \ \ Thr ! * l0 ’ \ Gte
PAGE 27
park recreational projects. Mr Wirth said. Red Tape to Be Cut Elimination of red tape and promotion of closer relationships between field workers and the Washington office are expected results. More responsibility will be placed with the field men, Mr. Wirth explained. The new region, to be comprised of three districts with offices in Chicago, Omaha and Denver, is composed of the following states: Indiana. Wisconsin, Michigan, Illinois, Minnesota, lowa, Missouri, North and South Dakota, Kansas, Nebraska, Montana, Wyoming and Colorado. Removal of the local office Ls expected to require a month’s time. Twenty-five clerks and technicians are to be among those transferred. A contact office with one clerk is to remain here. Twenty-two thousand CCC workers and 3000 WPA workers are to be brought under a single director with the change. Co-eds Study Mining RENO, Nev., May B.—Women have crashed the ranks of mine prospectors. In the first class in mine prospecting just started by the Mackay School of Mines, eight of the 93 future prospectors are women.
