Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 May 1937 — Page 2

I" DELEGATES TO

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- conference

~ SPEEDWAY GLASSIC

| Miss Betty Lapinska was accorded honorable mention in the Bamberger Mr. Steinkeler and Miss Cooler each had an average

PAGE 2

PRINT MEETING SEE CITY SHOPS

Business Sessions Open Fifth District Parley Of Craftsmen.

Printing craftsmen from five states toured city print shops, met in open forum discussions, and laid plans for the 1937 Cleveland convention today at the fifth district of the _ International Association = of Printing House Craftsmen.in the Claypool Hotel.

In Quest of America’s Cup

Several hundred delegates from Ohio, I entucky, Pennsylvania, | Michigan and Indiana attended | business sessions which opened at 10:30 a. m. with Joseph F. Lutes, | Indianapolis, presiding. A tour of city engraving and, printing plants prefaced the busi-! ness sessions. 1 District officers were to be selected and the 1938 conference city was to be named today.

Delegates to Visit Speedway

At 3 p. m. delegates and their wives were to be taken on a visit of the Indianapolis. Speedway. A *luncheon and style show were to be held at 1 p. m. for women visitors at L. S. Ayres & Co. Tonight the annual banquet is to be held with Mr. Lutes as toast- | master. Al H. Wynkoop, Lebanon editor and radio commentator, is to speak. A dance is; to follow the] banquet entertainment. | One feature of the conference was an exhibit of printing crafts in ‘the Claypool’s Assembly reom. | _ Merle B. Rose, Lafayette, Indian- | apolis club president, is vice chair- | man of the conference. Other com- | mittee chairmen are Mrs. Stephen | Hopkins, ladies; H. G. Bradley, pro- | gram: Glenn M. Pagett, publicity; | Robert J. Heuslein, entertainment; | Harry Ostermeyer, banquet; Edward | P. Everett, finance; David Esterline, | educational trips; Louis Fahrbach, | reception, and Mr. Rose, exhibits. |

RACERS TO TALK ON

Duray, Shaw to Be Heard By Engineers’ Sotiety.

| Leon Duray and Wilbur Shaw are |

to represent the drivers in a discussion of the 500-nfile race at a meeting of the Indiana and Dayton | sections of the Society oi American Engineers, Thursday at 8 p. m. in the Athenaeum. They are'to discuss the race with | Lee Oldfield and Louis Schwitzer, A. | A. A. technical committee mem- | bers. ; | The subjects for discussion, first | by the drivers and technical com- | mittee members and later in an | open forum, are “The Coming 500- | Mile Race” and “Rules for the | Next Three Years.” .

ARRANGE RITES FOR | APPARENT SUICIDE

Funeral arrangements were to be | completed today for Lawrence Symmonds, 802 Berkley Road, who died | yesterday in Methodist Hospital | from a bullet wound in the right | temple which police said was self-! inflicted. He was 50. - Police : who investigated said he]

was found by his wife about 5 a. m. | adoption of a universal | service |

Friday after she heard a shot fired | in the basement of their home. | Relatives told: officers, they said, | that he had talked of taking his own life several fimes. ; Dr. E. R. Wilson, coroner, is to investigate today.

CHILDREN TO GET HELP [IN READING

Dean William L. Richardson of |

the Butler University College of Education has established a reading service designed to aid children experiencing difficulties in reading. Assisting consultants who will aid Dean Richardson are Dr. Amos B. Carlile, associate professor of psy. chology and educational adminis--tration; Miss Emma Colbert, assis-

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The Endeavour II, T. O. M. Sopwith's newest challenger for the

America’s Cup, Is towed out of the harbor at Gosport, England, to start its trip to the United States for another attempt to win the most famous of all yachting trophies. The Endeavour’s towering racing mast has been replaced by rigging for the ocean crossing, which it is required

to complete under its own power.

12 Years of

2 Get Medals tor Completing

Religious Study

Herman Steinkeler and Miss Phyllis Cooler today held Herman Bam-

| berger medals for scholarship attainment marking completion of 12 years of religious study in the Indianapolis Hebrew Congregation Temple.

Services honoring seven students were held in the Temple yesterday.

medal competition.

©f 94 points, making necessary the unusual double tie-award.

| First prize in an essay contest? i sponsored by- Dr. Edgar F. Kiser |

in memory of: his brother, Arthur, was won by Miss Cooler. Miss Carolyn Yaeger received honorable mention. 5 Diplomas were awarded to Robert Borinstein, Mis Mildred Freeman and Henry Schildmeir. Each gave a short talk on Jewish problems. - : : A two-day observance of Shovous, the feat of weeks, was concluded in reformed and. conservative Jewish temples. yesterday. Orthodo Hebrew groups were to continue observance of the holiday through today.

DRAFT ALL FOR WAR DUTY, BOEHNE SAYS

Times Special GARY; May 17.—Drafting of capital, industry and manpower in a complete program of ‘universal service” in wartime. was advocated here by Rep. John W. Boehne Jr., Eighth District Congressman from Evansville. : Mr. Boehne addressed the Indiana Reserve Officers convention here Saturday night. ~~ After a plea for adequate national defense, he closed by urging

plan.

WIFE DIES HALF HOUR AFTER MATE

By United Press PAXTON, May 17.—Alexander McDonald, 67, died of a heart attack yesterday while working in his garden. Thirty minutes later his wife Eunice, 47, died from a paralytic stroke induced by the shock. They formerly lived in Brazi]. . Fay

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STATE MEN TO GIVE

Job Service Aids to Hold Tests in Other States.

Four members of the Indiana State Employment Service have | been assigned to conduct Federal | merit examinations in other states, it was announced today. Martin F. Carpenter, State director and George J. Smith, -supervisor, are to examine applicants fer positions in the recently organized Texas State Employment Service. John Collins, supervisor, is’ to conduct examinations in Virgiana and J. Bradley Haight, assistant director, in North Carolina.

BRICK MASON, FOUND UNCONSCIOUS, DIES

James Edmond Prindle, ‘a brick mason, died today shortly after he had been found unconscious on the | floor of his home, 2405 Butler Ave., iby a friend. Mr. Prindle lived alone. George | Fecker, R. R. 2, box 658, found him | when he called to take him to work. | Deputy = Coroner Norman Booher !said death was due to natural | causes.

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GO-ORDINATION OF ACTIVITIES

Five-Day National Conclave Of 1000 Delegates to Open Wednesday.

Current trends in the co-ordina-tionof Jewish communal activities is to be the general theme of the five-day National Conference of Jewish Social Welfare, to convene at the Hotel Severin Wednesday. An average of 10 sessions daily are scheduled, in which the theme is to be discussed as it pertains to Jewish social service agencies, welfare and philanthropic federations, Young Men’s and Young \Women's Hebrew Associations, Jewish community centers, educational. institytions and individuals. At least 250 organizations in the United States and Canada will send a total of approximately 1000 delegates. The National Association of Jewish Center Workers, whose president is Allan Bloom, Indianapolis; the National Council for. Jewish Education, headed by Dr. Jacob S. Golub, New York, and the Association of Practitioners in Jewish Social Agencies, whose chairman is Mrs. Henrietta L. Gordon, of New York, are to meet simultaneously.

"Eight General Sessions The program committee for this

eph J. Schwartz, executive director | of the Brooklyn Federation of Jewish Charities. : Eight general sessions, in which members of the conference and all ‘its adjunct groups will participate, will be held during the annual meeting. - The annual dinner -is to be held Saturday night, with Prof. William Heard Kilpatrick of Teachers’ College, Columbia University, as the guest honor. Harry L. Glucksman, president of the National Conference, will preside and the speakers will include Dr. Solomon Lowenstein, executive vice president of the Federation for the Support of Jewish Philanthropic Societies of New York City; Isaac S. Berkson, of New Rochelle, N. Y,, and Israel S. Chipkin of the Jewish Education Association. Preliminary meetings are to be held Wednesday morning and afternoon, and the first general session

with Jacob. L. Mueller of the local

' Jewish Community Center, presid- | ing. Mr. Glucksman, Mr. Bloom and

Dr. Golub are to deliver their presidential addresses at that session. Jewish problems and activities overseas will be discussed at the next general session, Thursday at 4:30 p. m. when Dr. Lowenstein will preside. Harry Greenstein, of the Associated Jewish Charities, Baltimore, will preside over the general session Thursday night.

Many SubjJecis Covered

Subjects to be covered at various. other .sessions will include analysis of research studies and projects; “Integrated Approaches to. JewishEconomic Adjustment,” with Prof. Morris R. Cohen presiding; .a report on “Labor Palestine” activities in Jewish community centers; presentation of the social work practitioner’s viewpoint on co-ordination in Jewish communial activity; regional planning for care of the aged; community programs for Jewish education and recreation; lay participation in agencies; service possibilities of vo-

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

JEWS T0 STUDY Prowlers Help Selves to

year's meeting is headed by Dr. Jos- |

is to be held Wednesday evening,

casework’

\

Cold Lunch During Series Of Seven Burglaries Here

$37.25 I” Obtained by Thieves Who Enter Homes And Sorority House; Thugs Grab $43.50 in Two Holdups; One Victim Beaten.

Seven week-end burglaries which netted thieves exactly $37.25 and a plate of beans were being investigated by police today. Thugs obtained $43.50 in two robberies, it was reported. Three men were arrested on vagrancy charges by police who said they

found them hiding in a filling sta-< tion at 401 Kentucky Ave. When Mrs. Lulu Jones, 52, of 462 Blake St, returned from church last night, she found that her home had been entered and ransacked. Nothing ‘was missing, she said, but the burglars had helped themselves to beans and cold meat. They left the dirty dishes, she reported.

Beaten and Robbed =

Four men who met Joe Langer, 37, 1161 Cameron St, as he entered a S. West St. tavern late Saturday night, beat him up and took his billfold containing $40, it was reported to police. Paul H. Appleby, 30, of 828 W. 31st St., taxi driver, told police that a passenger robbed him of $3.50 at Douglas and New York Sts. It was a polite burglar who stole $17 from the Kappa Kappa Gamma Sorority house Saturday afternoon, Miss Carolyn Varian reported to police. She said she returned to the house about 3 p. m._ and found a stranger standing on the front porch. He asked if he might open the door for her since her arms were filled with bundles. He told her he was waiting for his sister.

Visit Nets Him $17

An hour later an investigation revealed that none of the sorority members had a brother visiting that afternoon, but that $12 had been taken from the purse of Miss Lucille Broich and $5 from that of Miss

Ethel Bailey, it was reported. Burglars early yesterday entered clubrooms at 826 S. Meridian St. and obtained $14 from a ball machine, police were told. A 32-year-old man was arrested after Clyde Morris and Harry Van Buskirk, both of 501 S. Harding St., said they had followed him there after hearing a burglar in their house. He was held on a vagrancy charge.

Reports Purse Grabbing

Mrs. Edna Curtis, "811 N. New Jersey St. reported to police that Saturday night two hoys grabbed her purse containing $1.90 and a ring valued at $10 as she walked in the 600 block of Massachusetts Ave. +The purse was found last night. under a boxcar by two children playing in the 300 block of N. Pine St. ‘The money and ring had been removed, it was reported. A woman was held on a vagrancy charge today after Gilbert Metherd, 47, of 1433 E. 12th St., identified her as the woman who robbed him of $157 two weeks ago, according to police. :

cational agencies; and “Positive Aspects of Unity Among Jews in America,” by Robert Gessner. : " A feature of this year’s annual meeting will be a special program of social activities arranged by Charles Zunser, of New York, chairman of the “old-timers” committee which is composed of social. service leaders who have attended at least 21 annual meetings of the con-

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“how well I recall the days and long évenings’ when 1 felt tiredout and looked it.”

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SECOND MAN SHOT IN FEUD REVIVAL

Farmer Brought to Hospital . Here After Shooting.

By United Press STILESVILLE, Ind, May 17.—Anderson Kivett, 80-year-old farmer living a mile south of here, was in critical condition at Methodist Hospital, Indianapolis, today with shot-

gun wounds, he received in the re- |

vival of an argument with his neighbor, Wiley Stone, police say. Kivett last week allegedly shot Stone when they argued over planting of an oats crop. Yesterday Stone, who was only slightly injured in the shooting, fired two shots at Kivett when he came on Stone's property hunting for a strayed cow. Stone told authorities he had locked the cow in his barn after finding it on his property. When Kivett, who had been his neighbor for 20 years, came to recover it he fired twice with a shotgun, authorities were told. : Kivett was released on $5000 bond after the shooting scrape last week. When officers arrived at the scene of the shecoting last Monday Kivett said he had been shooting erows and guessed he had “shot a white one.” Stone today was being held witholt bail in the Hendricks’ County Jail at Danville, pending further investigation of the dispute.

POLICE HELP AUTOIST ESCAPE ‘ENEMIES’

It required a police squad to see Alva Coffman safely to the city limits today.

He came to headquarters and told |

officers that he had a fight and a carload of hostile acquaintances were following him around. One of them was standing on the running koard and would break the windows in his car whenever he stopped, he said. ’ He enlisted police protection to the highway leading to his home in Anderson.

SUBMITS POWER REPORT By United Press WASHINGTON, May 17.—Senator Byrd (D. Va.), today submitted to the Senate Committee on Executive Reorganization a recommendation of the Brookings Institution for consolidation of all Federal

power activities into one indepen- |

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‘minute of the slaying, presented the

PARIS SUBWAY KILLING PUZLLE T0 AUTHORITIES

Slayer Stabs Night Club Hostess and Vanishes In One Minute.

By United Press ®

PARIS, May 17.—Murder in the subway, in which an attractive night club hostess was stabbed to death by a killer who vanished within one

famous French secret police today with one of the most puzzling mysteries in years. ” Six persons waiting to board a first-class coach of the train which rolled into the Porte Doree station last night saw through the car window the end of the crime. The victim, 30-year-old Leticia Nourissat, was sitting upright, alone in the carriage. As the train halted, the jolt threw the body to~the floor. The entering passengers, \thinking she had fainted, ran forward to help her but started back in \horror. A six-inch knife had been driven to the hilt into the back of her neck, behind the right ear. Her lips still moved but she was unable to make any sound and died in a few minutes without giving any | clue to the murderer.

Crime Done Rapidly

The crime and the getaway from | the locked ®ar must have been accomplished with lightning speed, because just one minute elapsed between the time when the train left its starting point a Port Charleton station, with the girl alive, and its | arrival at Pore Doree with the vic- | tim drawing her last breath. The position of the knife made suicide out of the question. Police advanced three theories— all, however, merely guesses. One is that the woman was attacked by a sadist. The second was that she was the victim of a crime of passion and was followed and stabbed by one

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MONDAY, MAY 17, 1937

Death Gives Lift to One of Hitchhike Pair

Mrs. Myrtle Johnson sat in | her small room at a hatel today await= ing funeral services for her hus< band, Herbert Johnson, 34. After the services she will con< tinue alone the hitch=hiking journey from Tennessee .to Missouri which the couple had started toe gether. Mr. and Mrs. Johnson arrived here yesterday and rented a room; Then they went to University Park, where they. sat down on a park bench to talk. Suddenly, Mr. John+ son became ill. They went back to their room, where he complained cf a severe headache. A doctor was called and he said Mr. Johnson was suffering from a cerebral hemorrhage. An hour later he was dead.

of the many male friends who filled her life. : The third, suggested by the typical use of the knife, was that as an Italian-born girl, she may have! been mixed in the Italian underworld, on the fringe of which |she spent part of her life.

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