Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 April 1937 — Page 36
FRIDAY, APRIL 2, 1937
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
EDITORS OF TWO PARTIES DUE AT MEETINGS HERE
Both Scheduled April 10; Press ‘Shop Talk’ Preceding Day.
Hoosier editors, Democratic and Republican, are to convene here ||: April 9 and 10 for the mid-winter | meetings of “their respective polit- | ical editorial associations: in Indianapolis. Both the Indiana Republican Ed- | torial Association and the Indiana Democratic Editorial Association | meet April 10, with the Democrats | in session-in the Claypool Hotel and | the Republicans at the Butler Uni- | versity Fieldhouse. Political leaders of both parties | are to attend. Meanwhile dailies | ¢ me and wecklies will be discussed in
| |
Boston F ire-Boat F ights Poison Gas
a ‘“‘shop-talk” at the annual meeting of the Hoosier State Press on April 9 in the Spink Arms Hotel. |
A fire-boat of Boston's fire department is seen in a spectacular attack on one of the greatest dangers that ever threatened the port—a combination of
created by the fire in the hold of the Danish freight«er Laila. The ship was laden with nitrates and sugar, both highly inflammable cargoes, and was destroyed. Nitrates burning created poison gas.
Editors of both parties are members of this association.
Senators to Speak
Terming their editorial meeting | the Demo- |
a “victory jollification.” cratic editors and party workers are
tog feature in their banquet April |
10 in the Riley Room. addresses by Senators Minton and VanNuys, and Governor Townsend.
Headline speaker at the Republi- | can dinner is to be 39-year-old Sen- |
ator Bridges.
‘Democratic leaders forecast 1000 |
diners at their banquet, while Republican editors and party work-
ers estimate 1500 reservations for !
their -rally. On April 9, the night preceding
the political editorial banquets, the |
H. L
Hoosier association offers " Di-
McCarthy, Chicago, Regional
rector of Social Security. as head- |
line speaker. Mr. McCarthy is scheduled to discuss the Social Security Act as it affects newspapers. : Officers to Be Advanced Present officers of the Indiana
Democratic Editorial group are to be advanced in offices with Dean
Barnhart, Goshen News, first vice |
president, taking the place of Scott W. Chambers, Newcastle, as president. r Frank G. Thompson, Bluffton, floor, leader in the last three sessions of the General Assembly, is scheduled to be the only new offi-
cer with his election as treasurer. | - The association leaders for the |
new year are to be Mr. Barnhart, president; Jack Dolan, Hartford City, first vice president; George Crittenberzer, Anderson, second vice president; E. C. Gorrell, Winimac, third vice president; Paul Feltus, Bloomington, - secretary, and Mr. Thompson. A cup for the best political editorial, is to be presented at the banquet, with past presidents of the association feted at.table presided over by William G. Minor, Cannelton. Wives to Be Entertained - Wives of editors @nd Democratic leaders are to be entertained with a lecture, tea. reception and style show at the Wm. H. Block Co. Mrs. Emory Scholl, state chairman, is in charge of the entertainment for women, aided by Mrs.
John Bingham, county vice chair- |
man. Mrs. Henry Schricker is chairman of the reception committee. J Ivan Morgan, G. O. P. State
vice |
poison gas, explosions and an inferno of flames
By United Prods
| his picturesque. cowboy empire, the | ‘work today.
| States Deputy Marshal, acting for | a life insurance company. Dismissal’ of an appeal by the . United States Circuit Court of Ap- | peals was the last of a series of | legal .reverses that blocked his ef- | forts to cling to his dwindling es-
| ernor of New Hampshire, has gained | fame as liberal in the field of util- | ity regulation. Five cups are to be awarded durling the Republican meeting, for the | best first pages, editorial pages, and | general makeup. The cups are 1 known as the Lindsay, Schorte- { meier, Remmel, Republican State Committee, and Association cups. Other Speakers Named Other speakers, besides Mr. Mc- | Carthy, on the Hoosier State Press | meeting April 9 and<10 are: Wil(liam S. Neal, International News | Service Washington bureau; John { Benson, New York, American Asso- { ciation of Advertising Agencies | president; G. Victor Lowry, Chicago advertising man; A. E. Johnston, Cincinnati, Kroger Grocery { Co.; Prof. Russell Hammargren, Butler University; E. M. Claypool, | Illinois Central Railroad assistant | public relations director; L. A. Lyon, | Chicago, Mergenthaler Linotype Co.; | Frank R. Elliott, Indiana University | publicity . director; Charles L. Al-
llen, Fisher, III, Illifois University 1°
[instructor in journalism, and Orrin R. Taylor, Ohio Weekly Press As- | sociation president. | Pour members’ to. the Hoosier | association directorate are to be named at the meetings. is composed of three members from each of the two party editorial as- | sociations, the independent dailies {and weeklies: | Tickets to the Democratic editor-
Col. Zack Miller Hunts Work After Losing Famed 101 Ranch
One-Time Boss of Colorful Cowboys May Open Ozarkian ‘Hoss University.’
The board |
OKLAHOMA CITY, April 2.—Col. Zack Miller, parted forever from
world-famous 101 Ranch, hunted for
He surrendered his ancestral Ponca City ranch home to a United
&
tate, once larger than some European principalities. State officials planned to create, if possible, a job for him. If the plan materializes, Mr. Miller, former miillionaire boss of the world’s most colorful broncho-busters, will | become an agricultural engineer for the State Board of Affairs, superintending farm operations at a dozen institutions. Mr. Miller, 59, said he was “not licked yet.” “Not by a long shot,” he said, “I'm winding up one chapter, and getting ready to start another.” He said he might start a ‘“hoss university” in the Ozarks to teach boys how to ride, shoot and rope. It is an idea that long has appealed to him.
BUFORD CADLE NEW HEAD OF AERO CLUB
Buford Cadle is the new president of the Indianapolis Aero Club. He was elected, with other officers and directors, at a meeting in the Hotel Lincoln last night. The club also voted to sponsor a contest for sportsman pilot members May 2. Cliff Mays was named vice president; Nancy O'Donnell, secretary; John Hedrick, treasurer, and Irma Kinsford, sergeant-at-arms. And Baking
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REPORT DUKE TO QUIT AUSTRIA ON APRIL 26
Ri United Press ST. WOLFGANG, Austria, April 2.—Usually dependable informants said today that the Duke of Windsor intended to leave for France April 26 or 28. It had been reported previously from Monts, France, where Mrs. Simpson is staying, that the Duke would go there for their expected marriage. The six-month period after which Mrs. Simpson may apply for a final divorce decree will end April 27, and today’s news indicated that the application would be waiting for the deadline.
HOPES TO FIND TUBERCULOSIS CURE IN ALASKA
Dr. Victor Levine will Investigate Diet of Eskimos.
By United Press ‘ SALT LAKE CITY, Utah, April 2. —An Arctic island where Eskimo
children subsist on animal fats and seal oil and never,suffer tuberculosis drew the attention today of Dr. Victor Levine, Creighton University scientist, who is seeking a cure for the disease. He announced he would accompany the Rev. Father Bernard J. Hubbard, the “glacier priest-ex-plorer” to the Northland this spring. Their laboratory will be lonely King Island, off the northernmost tip of Alaska: Father Hubbard is going there to study the Eskimos’ means of travel across ice floes. He is planning a 1940 expedition farther north, in search of an undiscovered land that he believes lies somewhere between Alaska and the North Pole. In 18 months he hopes to learn from King Island Eskimos the best modes of traveling across the Arctic wastes to his goal.
- Seal Oil Link Sought Dr. Levine, who received Columbia University’s award for outstanding service to humanity, will spend his time on the island studying the natives' diet. Seal oil, one of the chief items, is rich in Vitamin D and the doctor thinks there may be some connection between that and the
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lack of tuberculosis among the people. Father Hubbard is pursuing a theory that the northern flight of birds from Alaska. proves the existence of land to the north. He has obtained one clue in the discovery of the body of a drowned Eskimo on the North Alaskan coast. The Eskimo wore clothes that have been obsolete in Alaska for 200 years, indicating that he may have lived beyond the sphere of the white man’s influence. The expedition will sail from Seattle May 20. Kenneth Chisholm, former Santa Clara University student; Edgar Levin, San Francisco, and Bernard Stanley, Santa Clara undergraduate, will accompany the priest and scientist. ’
MRS. HARRIMAN LIKES NORWAY POST HINT
By United Press : : NEW YORK, April 2.-—Mrs. J. Borden Harriman, widow of the New York banker, member of the Democratic National ' Committee for the District of Columbia and prominent in eastern society, said today she would be “much pleased” if reports that she will be named minister to Norway turn out to be true.
YOUNG MOTHER SHOT IN FAMILY DISPUTE
KOKOMO, Ind. April 2,—Mrs. Marguerite Giles, 26, was reported in ‘a ‘critical condition today, suffering from a bullet: wound in the abddmen = which officers were told she received during a family dispute.
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