Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 September 1936 — Page 11

PATRONS ASK SCHOOL BOARD FOR NEW BUS

. Milk Lunch Contracts Are Awarded to Local Firms.

A request for a bus to transport children from the neighborhood of Prospect-st and Sherman-dr to School 21, at 2815 English-av, was made to the School Board last night by a delegation of patrons. “There are 40 children in the neighborhood who have to walk at least one mile to school along streets where there are no sidewalks and where traffic is fast and dangerous,” Walter W. Mobley, 1157 S. Kealing-av, spokesman for the 8roup, said. Carl Wilde, School Board president, told the delegation that their request would receive immediate consideration. He appointed Paul C. Stetson, superintendent, and A. B. Good, business director, to investigate and report at the next meeting. ‘Cost of the bus would be approximately $1000 a year, Mr. Wilde said. Contracts for milk lunches in the schools were awarded to the Polk Sanitary Milk Co., at 2.75 cents a half pint for milk and to the Continental Baking Co. Inc, at 9.7 cents a pound for crackers. The following changes in school personnel were approved by the ‘board:

Resignations—Marjorie Cassady, Myrtle Short, R. M. Kunse, E. Charlene Cofling, Lorena Bass and William 8tockleman; leave of absence, Irene Hardy Beard, to Jan. 22; appointments, Arsenal Technical School, Thelma Adams and Prank Atherton; Shortridge High School, Helen Zitzlaff, and Crispus Attucks High School, Roberta Jane Pope: elementary schools, Jr.,, Mary Crites, Ruth . Milliner, Pauline M.

Adair and Marion K. Mathas; studerc

assistants, George Washington High School, Willlam Graney and Dorot Handy; Shortridge, Robert Martin, Irene Karns, Paul Reinken and William MecDermott; Crispus Attucks, Sylvia McCann; transfers, Sidney Eaton, from No. 39 to Technical, and Edward S. Howe, from elementary industrial art to Technical.

ARREST OF 1500 IN CRIME DRIVE SEEN

By United Press WASHINGTON, Sept. 30.—Treasury officials today estimated their three-day nation-wide law enforcement drive will net between 1500 and 2000 arrests. With more than 1000 arrests, chiefly for narcotics and liquor tax violations, within the first 24 hours, Harold N. Graves, special assistant to the Secretary of Treasury in charge of enforcement, said the figure would be nearly double by to-night-when the “mopping up” is finished.

MANUAL PUPILS GET PERSONALITY HINTS

Jill Edwards, lecturer and author of personality pointers, spoke at Manual Training High School's first educational convocation yesterday. Mrs. Edwards is known to [radio fans as a member of the “Jill and Judy” team. Mrs. Edwards, mother of three children, discussed different ways of | developing personality. “We grow according to our thoughts,” she said, “and you are now at the age where you have to master yourself.”

STATE CITY MAY GET CAR BUILDING ORDER

By United Press WASHINGTON, Ind. Sept. 30.— | Construction of 10,000 freight cars, | 4000 of which will be built in “shops | here by the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad over a period of three years, was reported under consideration

F | today:

The construction will provide employment for approximately workers here during the three-year period.

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ROPER HITS CHURCH

ACTIVITY IN POLITICS |"

By United Press ‘ WASHINGTON, Sept. 30.— Church activity in politics can result only in harm to both, Secretary of Commerce Daniel C. Roper told

a religious mass meeting of Protes- |’

| tants, Catholics and Jews last night. “When the pulpit is transformed into a political forum, religion is unjustly subjected to the influence of temporal factors,” Mr. Roper :said. “If religion allows itself to: bscome engulfed in the tide of economic and social and political changes, it will undermine itself and destroy its effectiveness.”

5000 SCOUTS

Tenth Annual Program Arranged; Scholarship to Be Given.

Times Bpecial BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Sep. 30.— Indiana University Saturda, is to

be host to approximately 507) Boy Scquts and junior and senic: high

I

15 to be the The principal event Centre-Indiana football game, to which Scouts will be admitted free. High school pupils will be accorded a special 25-cent admission rate. The Scout program is to begin at 10 a. m. when a committee will select this year’s Boy Scout scholarship winner, valued at $75. Each state Scout council is entitled to

‘ | one candidate, who must be a high

school senior. The selection is to be based on character, financial need, scholarship and scouting achievement. Members of the Scout scholarship selection committee, which is to interview the candidates, are Gover-

: Mc a. 3 President William Lowe Bryan and | aps,

Dean C. E. Edmondson, Indiana University; F. Jay Nimtz, Alpha Phi Omega Fraternity and Dwight Ramsey, regional Boy Scout executive, Chicago.

CONTRACTS AWARDED FOR PORTLAND. PLANT

Contracts for construction of the Portland, Ind, light and water plant have been awarded by the Public Works Administration. . Successful bidders = were Brothers, Decatur, Ind, construction, $33,615.80; ert

and peal or, $72,160: Chalmers Co. Milwaukee, a $27,200; Worthington Pump and Machinery Corp. Cincinnati, condensers, $30,040. Work is scheduled to begin Thursday.

COMMUNISTS SEEK = TO BOLSTER RANKS

By United Press

MOSCOW, Sept. 30.—The population of the Soviet Union today was

ral | afforded an opportunity to take part in ruling the nation when the Com-

The invitation was issued because in the last four years a number of Communists have died and many others have been expelled during the various “chistkas” or cleanings, in which elements suspected of dislovaisy, were deprived or member.

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