Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 May 1937 — Page 16
NOTED DENTISTS ASSEMBLE HERE FOR CONVENTION
State Association to Hear Dr. Weston A. Price at Dinner Tonight.
Members of the Indiana State Dental Association gathered here today for their 18th annual convention. The three-day sessions, which are to close Wednesday, brought to Indianapolis, men outstanding in dentai circles, including Dr. Weston A. | Price, Cleveland, who is to give the | principal address at tonight's din- | ner meeting, and Gordon J. Laing, general editor of the Chicago University Press, who is to speak at tomorrow night's dinner session. The anual frolic will follow. Today’s program included clinics on various phases of dental work, a past. presidents’ luncheon, and an afternoon discussion session. Speakers were to include Dr. Louis R. Hill, Los Angeles; Dr. Stanley D. Tylman, Chicago, and Dr. Charles Shepard Tuller, New Orleans.
Minor Group to Meet
The organization's board of trustees yesterday disposed of the con- | -vention’s preliminary work, getting | ready reports of officers and com- |
at: tomorrow's business session.
—Acme Photo.
| sect of / German Baptists who live
'| will offer opposition to the proposal
OLD DUNKARDS TOBACK BAN ON OWNING RADIOS
Lifting of Restriction to Be Proposed During Logansport Parley.
By. United Press LOGANSPORT, Ind, May 17— Thousands of Dunkards, a religious
in rigid simplicity and practice numerous “antimodern” customs, gathered in national convention near here today. Dust-covered automobiles from nearly every state bearing delegates yesterday converged on the Adam Block farm near Camden for the opening session. y Hundreds of old members of the order, adhering to ° the ageold Dunkard custom of prohibiting musical instruments, indicated they
to permit ownership of radios when the question comes to a vote tomorrow. Against their opposition at the national convention here 20 years ago, however, delegates voted permission to members of the order to place telephones in their homes.
Hitching Racks Gone
A filling station—only recently were members granted permission to use automobiles—has been estab-
‘HE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
5
~ Gadget King
Chief of Inventors to Explain Ideas to Rotary.
Those who have wondered where the American home would be without the can opener will be interested to know that the American gadget king, Albert G. Burns, president of the American Inventors Congress, is coming to town. Mr. Burns is to address the Rotary Club tomorrow noon on ‘Ideas Are More Important Than Cash.” Tuesday night at 8 o'clock he is to speak at a mass meeting of Hoosier inventors in-the Claypool Hotel concerning the possibility of arranging a convention of inventors and an idea exhibit here in 1938. The national inventors group is sponsoring a movement for the creation of a Department of Invention and Industry, and it is "vir. Burns’ contention that the basic ideas of inventors could “be worked out to solve most of the present economic problems. :
washing rites held in connection
with that service. Several hundred |
members of the order participated. The first session was devoted to registration of the visiting “messengers” of the church. Children and women were assigned to private homes for lodging. The men, however, were quartered in barns and granaries on the farm where they slept last night in crude wooden
LIBRARIANS PLAN MEETING SERIES
Extension of Service to Be One Discussion Subject.
Librarians and library trustees of the state are to begin a series of meetings tomorrow at Danville to discuss recent books, extension of library service and other problems of library work. Subsequent meetings are to be held at Columbus, Cambridge City and Decatur May 19, 20 and 21 respectively. Mrs. Joseph Ferree, Danville Public Library librarian, is to be chairman of the meeting tomorrow. Mrs. George Bridwell, Bloomington Public Library trustee, and others are to speak. Miss Cleo Rogers, Columbus Public Library librarian, has arranged the program at Columbus, while Miss Nellie L. Jones, Cambridge City Library librarian, is to
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MONDAY, MAY 17,1937 preside at the Cambridge City | under the direction of Miss Ruth meeting in the new library given | Winnes, librarian. Regional meetto the city by Joseph Hallowell |ings of librarians and trustees are and others. being planned at Kokomo May 23,
Better library service is to be the | Monticello May 26, Hebron May 27, subject for discussion at Decatur land Syracuse June 1. .
8% e Er Glasses B
Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt arriving at the National Girl Scout [lished on the convention grounds, beds. on straw ticks and on straw- : A subsidiary organization, the | Little House in Washington, D. C., Saturday, passed between a guard |replacing the hitching racks of for- | fijjed grain sacks. . AE Indiana State Association of Den- | - of honor of Girl Scouts that nave won their “citizenship” badges. mer years. : or tal Assistants, is to hold its 17th | At the two concession stands, annual convention in connection : delegates partook of refreshments
with the 25 Picens in the [ SCHOLARSHIP IS WON ingens Wk init he hut, in Reeping ain Boe od Claypool. rs. Alice Martz o BY SOUTHPORT PUPIL | studies business administration. custom, none of them drank bevAt tomorrow's morning meeting, nie MOORMAN RITES HELD
Kokomo, is president. erages from bottles. . Highlight 'of yesterday's cereDr. Hill is to discuss: practice build- Girevble L. McFarland Jr.. South i monies was the pentecostal meal : : y Tre} . oy =| By United I’ress . : ing and Dr. Tuller the basic prin- | ort Hizh School. today was named! served in the. evening and the feet ciples involved in taking impres- | > £9, 5enoo, tovay a | WINCHESTED, Ind, May 17.—
pe aul > | winner of the _seventh annual | puneral services were conducted sions. An officers’ conference is oolaiship’ award of the Grain here today for Jesse Tarleton Moor- FOR GRADUATION GIFTS
Scheduled Jo? Hi The Jnnusl Dealers National Fire Insurance| ma), leader in Republican party i poet: is to i a Co., James W. Putnam, Butler Uni- | jj; Indiana for nearly half a cenOTTO .lornoon, | 85 Will slgction | versity and examining. board chair= | yu who died in Indianapolic Satof association officers. and dele- Lo jLuty, ; : : man, announced. lurday. James E. Watson, former
ates to the American Dental As- : vii ; Charles R. Abrams, South Bend. U. S. Senator and close friend of | was named alternate. The award | Mr. Moorman, was a speaker for
Wednesday's program includes a | | 7 ~~ | : discussion of children’s dentistry IS $500. the winner to select any | the services.
mittee chairman for a
HANDY WITH TEETH
Unless you hide your mouth behind a set of whiskers it is always in view; and when open, the teeth, if any, show—and there's the rub, if you know what I mean. We come in mighty handy when teeth need attention.
If It's Good Dentistry We Can Do It
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WEEKLY
By Dr. Edward Lacey Pettibone, Cleveland, and a report by Dr. Mary H. Westfall. Indianapolis, pn her activities in Indiana as chairman of the Education. and Oral Hygiene Committee of the I. S. D. A. Dr. Joseph E. Schaefer, Chi- | cago, is to discuss mouth lessons. | Clinics are scheduled for Wednes- | day afternoon. A feature is to | be the traveling clinic of Cleve- | land on “Dentistry for Children.” | { {
LIVE WITHIN INCOME, SCHOOLS WARNED
C. of C. Calls Attention to] Tax Limitation.
The Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce today pointed out to School City officials the need for living within the 1937-38 budget and the tax limitation law in an article in the chamber’'s monthly magazine, “Activities.” Reciting the ‘new laws, the chamber deciared that a proposed $200,009 restoration in teachers’ salaries must be deducted from some other item of expense, and says it “appears likely that the adjustment must be made in outlay for new school buildings.” “The school board's problem.” the article continues. ‘“‘apepars to be to vide the $200,000 more money for salaries which has been voted; and to reduce the tax rate, nevertheless, to the extent of at least 7 cents. An expected deficit in operating funds, which probably will materialize if state officials hold to their position that the school building money being raised this year cannot be used |
for any other purpose. would com- |
plicate the problem still further. “Increases in expenditures, which the Legislature has made mandatory and any other increases which the local officials vote, must be more than .counter-balanced by reductions in other items of expenditure.” |
BEAUTY SHOPS PLAN MIDWEEK HOLIDAY
A group of 16 barber and beauty shops located in the vicinity of Brightwood, have announced that they will be closed on Wednesday afternoons. On ahy week in which there is a holiday, the shops are to remain open all day on Wednesday.
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