Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 June 1936 — Page 4

ANDIDATES [0 STUDY FOR POLICE BERTHS

en Monday; Firemen Seek Promotion.

school for 60 candidates is to open |

Monday, Theodore H. Dammeyer, fety board president, announced

city council appropriated $450 Monday to defray expenses of the school. . Instructions and tests are to be “held on Monday, Wednesday and Friday evenings from 7 to 9:30 for one group of 30 candidates and on Tuesday, Thursday and | Saturday for a like number of applicants. On Sunday the candidates are to be . taken to the rifle range near the _ egity sanitation plant, where their marksmanship is to be tested.

Four-Week Course Set

~The school is to be conducted at night because the majority of class . members are at work during the day. The course of instruction is - to continue over a four-week pe- . riod, Mr. Dammeyer said. + He pointed out that every candidate had been investigated thor“oughly - before being accepted for the school. Fingerprints of each applicant were taken and sent to the Department of Justicein Washington. Capt. Otto Petit is to be in charge of the school and Sergt. Harry W. Canterbury is to be in charge of firearm and first-aid instruction. Virgil Sheppherd, of the. Chamber of Commerce, and Prof. J. J. Robinson, of Indiana University, also + are to serve as instructors. ‘

Other Schools Arranged

One more police school and two schools for candidates for the fire department are to be held this year, Mr. Dammeyer said. At the present time there are 17 vacancies in the fire department and 32 in the police department. Seventeen lieutenants in the fire department now are taking written examinations in the first officers’ school conducted here, he said. The - two making the highest grades are to be made captains, Mr. Dammeyer said. The examinations started yesterday and are being conducted by the . department merit board, composed of Chief Fred C. Kennedy, Assistant Chief R. A. McKinney, Acting Assistant Chief Wallace Fisk and Battalion Chief Robert Hansell. The \ merit system for police and fire departments was made obligatory by a bill passed at the 1935 session of the General Assembly.

Candidates Are Listed

Lieutenants taking the examina‘tions are Edward E. Springer, Paul Bolong, Fred F. Fries, John J. Monahan, Joseph Hickey, John E. Kirk, Daniel O'Donnell, - William Miller, ‘Cecil M. Gresh, Dennis J. Lyons, ‘Henry Murray, George J. James, Leroy A. Meenach, Harry E. Rhodes, William C. Stiegelmeyer, John C. ‘Ponlan and Henry W. Pruitt. Starting next Monday 26 firemen are to start examinations for the two lieutenancy vacancies. «At yesterday's safety board meeting Thomas E. Haefling, Gamewell division superintendent, reported 57 fire alarms were turned in during ~ the week ending May 20. Three of the alarms were false.

ASK PROBE OF

Keep Artificialities Out of

Times Special

PARKS URGED

Historic Spots, Col. Lieber Says.

HARTFORD, Conn., June 3—The

1 president, pointed out that national

IN THE PARIS

ZOOLOGICAL GARDENS

Whales can not be kept in confinement, therefore it is impossible to make studies of their living habits, and the fact that they travel over such wide areas, and dive to such great depths, adds to the difficulty of checking up on them. Although they continue to gro believed that the creatures mature at less than three

for years, it is ars of age. :

POLICE ACTION

Local Anti-Fascist Chapter Sends Message to State Group.

Stirred by the alleged action of Terre Haute and Anderson city officials in forcing labor urlion organizers and officers out of those cities, the Indianapolis chapter of the League Against War and Fascism, today sent a telegram to the La Follette Senate committee urging investigation of the incidents. The league met at Kirshbaum Center last night, The La Follette committee was formed recently to investigate Fascist organizations in the United States and the infringement upon civil liberties of American citizens. The league also voted to name a committee to present a resolution to the Indianapolis Central Labor Union pledging support in any ac-

7

Terre Haute ang Anderson incidents. Two Anderson police officers are said to have forced Bart Fuery, in+ ternational organizer of the United Auto Workers of America, to leave the city May 26 under threat of detention in jail. The Terre Haute chief of police was alleged to have ordered R. H. Lowman, business agent for the Retail Clerks International Association, and Warren G. Desepte, union president, from the city. Representatives of the Teachers’ Union, the Office Workers’ Union and the Amalgamated Clothing Workers’ Union attended the meeting. Miss Frances Allen, league secretary, presided.

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tion the labor group may take in the

The board also approved the in-

gtallation. of Gamewell boxes at the City Hospital detention ward and in matron’s and’ turnkey’s offices at police headquarters.

"FOUNDRY TO EMPLOY

15 TO 25 MORE MEN

New Addition Expected to Provide Moré Employment.

The C. and G. Foundry, . Yandees-st, is to employ from 15 to ' 25 more men when a new plant ad- . dition is completed, Charles J. Gis-

Jer, president, said today. Construction was started yester‘day by the George I. Kegg Co. on * the addition, which will add 6000 - square feet to the plant. The . building is to be of steel, brick and ~ cement, and is to have modern fac- - tory lighting equipment. Alloyed _ light castings are to be made in the new addition, Mr. Gisler said.

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natural monuments.

social value of parks is enhanced by preservation of unspoiled bits of nature with historic pasts, Col. Richard Lieber of Indianapolis said last night at a ‘session of the sixteenth

National Conference on State Parks. Col. Lieber, who is conference

and state parks are our outstanding national monuments. “A thousand years from now,” he said, “there will I little, if anything left of man-made monuments of our times. The face of the country will be so changed that no one could possibly reconstruct the America of our day were it not for these great

“Don’t Gilt the Lily” ; “Let us be firmly determined to keep out of our parks all artificialities. Do not attempt to gilt the: lily. Compact your material needs in a service area, and remember

of a great inheritance” . Park work, whether national or state, Col Lieber pointed out, is part

care and protection of American scenery is inherently of ‘historic and social importance “Historic feeling added to any worthy enterprise acts like a flood light of information, and gives greater security to the proper direction of our efforts,” he said

our destinies” History, a Living Thing

Hanks Lincoln Burial Grounds, the

grew the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution. It is a constant reminder of the very source from which our present day Somiors snd rOEpertiy have flowed,” Col. Lie

Members of the conference today

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