Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 May 1937 — Page 4
-
/£00D FOOD AND EXERCISE HELD
VITAL TO TEETH
- Dental Dr. Westfall Discuss Child Health.
Dr,
and Child is
Bureau of Maternal Henlth, of which she health director. The bureau’s program, she said, is divided Into three branches— demonstration, = organization and education. The dental unit, oper= ated by Dr. Robert L. Peden, demonstrates the care of the teeth to children between the ages of 3 and 10. Act as Council
Under the organization work of the bureau, lay and professional health nurses act as dan advisory council in directing health programs.
Educational work is conducted by |
lectures to children in the schools and instructing their teachers in "the program. However, Dr. Westfall said, a great deal here depends on the ingenuity of the teacher. “Without question health, and I include dental health, can be so integrated with almost everything in the curriculum that the child absorbs it in spite of himself and does not know he is doing it,” Dr. Westfall said. “We must teach values so that the children desire health as they desire good looks, popularity, ete.” :
Proper Food Urged
The major points in the bureau's. program for . better dental health consists of proper food, exercise, home care and regular visits to the dentists. The bureau has distributed literature to more than 100,000 children in 700 schools in the state. Plans are now in progress for lectures to visit four teachers’ colleges in the state this summer, while next fall a dental poster will be sponsored in the schools. Dr. Edward lacey Pettibone, Cleveland, speaking on child dentistry, said that the dentist should gain the confidence of the child and not betray it, should not talk down to a child but up to him as he would address an adult, and should reward him with presents for good behavior and bravery. > The convention was to close this afternoon with chair clinics at the Indiana University School of Dentistry.
ONE INJURED WHEN
Association Hears
Mary H. Westfall, Indianapolis, addressed the Indiana State | Dental Association today on ac- | tivities of the State Health Board's |
dental |.
| Named President by Dentists
! | 5% | : : —Times Photo. Dr. A. A. Spears, Brazil, named president elect of the Indiana Dental Society, is shown here with Dr. H. J. Longcamp, Aurora (left), following his selection yesterday.
U. H. Smith Resigns Post as Treasurer of Indiana University
Q Times Special BLOOMINGTON, May 19.—Thirty-eight years of service in the business office of Indiana University was ended today by U. H. Smith, treasurer of the school. His resignavion was accepted yesterday by the board of trustees. Mr. Smith was assistant registrar in charge of accounting from 1899 to 1910, was bursar then until two
TT msepiing hie sevignasion, the HOOSIERS T0 HEAR TOWNSEND'S TALK
trustees adopted a resolution which said in part, “His colleagues on the faculty. the administration staf and the board of trustees have appreciated the warmth of his personality and the sincerity of his friendship.-. . . The university has been enriched by the unselfish service of Mr. Smith.”
= Graduated in 1893
After spending his boyhood on a farm near Bloomington, Mr, Smith received his A. B. degree from Indiana in 1893. While in college, he owned the Indiana Daily Student, then a student's enterprise. He taught in Anderson public schools four years, then founded the Whitehorn News at Whitehorn, near Cripple Creek, Colo. He lett the West to return to his alma mater .two
For Capital Party.
Times Special WASHINGTON, May 19.—Members of the Indiana Congressional delegation are forming parties and | reserving tables at the Women's | National Democratic Club for Governor Townsend's address there tomorrow night. Mrs. William W. Hubbard, club
FOUR AUTOS CRASH
Lone Accident Reported,’ But 27 Drivers Arrested.
MARION COUNTY TRAFFIC TOLL TO DATE 1937
; May 18 Accidents. ............ iicveveny Injured TRAFFIC ARRESTS Speeding Running red light. . ............. : Running preferential street. ... Prunken driving ............... . Reckless driving ......... Svein Improper parking Improper lights
[local home loans insured by the
Charles Hoffman, 48, of 1036 N. Illinois St., is recovering in his home today from injuries received in the only traffic accident -reported to | police overnight. Twenty-seven motorists were to | sface traffic violation charges before Municipal Judge Charles J. Karabell today. Mr. Hoffman was cut and brhised when four automobiles crashed at LaSalle and New York Sts. He wa5 treated at City Hospital. An unidentified woman was injured slightly about 1:30 a. m., when an auto went out of control on E. 28th St., jumped the curb, struck a no-parking standard, hroke off a utility pole and tore up/ the front yard at 120 E. 28th, leaving two wheels on the sidewalk and two in the yard. William Segal 116 E. 28th St., told police he saw two young men and two young women leave the car on foot. .
BANQUET IS ARRANGED Kappa Kappa Psi, band iraternity at Butler University, is to hold its annual banquet: Friday at 6:30 p. m. in the Campus Club. Ellis E. Carroll, director, has announced that John Crawford, sophomore, will be in charge of the dinner.
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REPORTS GAIN HERE"
| tor.
| anapolis savings and lean associa- | | tions totaled more than $1,196,400 |
| . struction on 52 homes, Mr.
president, will preside and introduce the Hoosier Governor. At noon, Mrs. William H. Larrabee, wife of the Eleventh District Congressman, has arranged a luncheon for the ladies of the Governor's party in the Congressional Club. Guests from the Governor's party will be Mrs. Townsend, Mrs. Dick ington Rotary Club, he is a member Bene and MIS. Alex Gordon. / All of the Protestant Episcopal Church | he wives of the Indiana Congress; and is a trustee of the diocese, a Men have been invited. member of the Bishop's council and |
cf the local vestry. | 2 Mr. Smith was married to miss | WIFE CONFIDENT OF
Mary Louise List in 1899. Tey | LOST FLIER’S RETURN
have one daughter, Winifred, Indianapolis. A
vears later te enter the business office. Mr. Smith is a member of the Columbia Club, the Phi Gamma Delta social fraternity, the Phi Beta Kappa honorary scholastic society, and the Sigma Delta Chi professional journalistic fraternity. A former president of the Bloom-
: By United Press | LOS ANGELES, May 19. — The | wife of Sir Charles Kingsford- | Smith, who vanished in 1935 while on a flight from England to Mel- | bourne, Australia, says she was still | waiting for his return. _ “I am sure that he Is still alive Federal “Housing Administration | and will come back to me. He must during the first quarter this year | have been forced down in the was announced today bv R. Earl | Malayan jungle and it may take Peters, State Housing Administra- | him several years to reach civiliza- | tion again.”
The 400 loans, made through Indi- |
IN INSURANCE LOANS
An. increase of 8 per cent -in| | |
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| ALL-VEGETABLE CORRECTIVE
and included $149,400 for new con- ‘i : Peters | js said.
TROOP 96 SPONSORS 0 LONaACRE FESTIVAL! ftom
; ? ~ : OLKS just can’t Boy Scout Troop 96 is to hold a | * Finileve what an
community festival and fish fry at | amazing difference there is in the way they feel
Many Make Reservations
JEWISH SOCIAL WORK LEADERS CONVENE HERE
National Meeting Brings Representatives of Three Welfare Groups.
(Continued from Page One)
tion president - and educational director of the Zionist organization in America. Jacob L. Mueller, Indianapolis Jewish Community Center Association president, is to preside at this session, the first of the national group in Indianapolis since 1916. Mrs. J. A. Goodman, association vice president, and Isidore Feibleman, Jewish Federation president, are to greet the delegates.
Three Associations Meet
Meeting in conjunction with the National Conference of Jewish Social Welfare are the National Association of Jewish Community Center Workers, the National Council for Jewish Education, and the Association of Practitioners in Jewish Social Agencies. Prof. William I. Newstetter, Western Reserve University, Cleveland, was to address a meeting of the firsu of those associate groups at a luncheon today. The general theme for the conference will be tendencies toward integration in Jewish communal activities. In his report this morning .to the conference executive committee, Dr. Joseph J. Schwartz, executive director of the Brooklyn Federation for the Support of Jewish Philanthropic Societies, described the conference ‘as ‘“‘a significant series | of meetings which will give to those who attend a clear picture of the | state of Jewish social work today | and point—particularly to the forward strides now being made in the direction of closer co-operation of Jewish social service and commun- | ity activities.” Center Picks Directors
. Last night Mr. Glucksman, addressing the annual meeting of the Jewish Community Center Associa- | tion of Indianapolis, urged the re- | organization of Jewish society through the education of young people to a broader social understand- | ing. Twelve new directors were elected. They were Philip Alder Jr., Joseph M. Bloch, Robert Efroymson, Theo- | dore Dann, Mrs. Victor Goldberg, S. | Carroll Kahn, Julius Medias, Max | Plessey. Mrs. Arthur Rose, David | Sablosky, Sidney J. Sternberger and Jacob Weiss.
Leaders Announced
Prominent among those who will participate in the Jewish Conference are: Dr. Maurice J. Karpf, director of | the Graduate School for Jewish | Social Work, New York; Dr. Maur- | ice Taylor, executive director of the | Federation of Jewish Philanthro- | pies, Pittsburgh; Maurice Bisgayer, recently appointed national secretary of B'nai B'rith, Cincinnae®s: Joseph C. Hyman, executive director, Joint Distribution Committee of New York; Rabbi Milton Steinberg, formerly of this city, and now
TH™ INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
| tender of the Park Avenue Syna- | gogue, New York; Morris D. Waldman, executive director, American Jewish Charities, Baltimore, Md. Rabbi Leon rram, Detroit; Morris | Raphael Cohen, City College of i New York, president of the Con-
ference on Jewish Relations; Samuel A. Goldsmith, executive director, Jewish Charities, Chicago, and
| Grace Coyle, Western Reserve Uni- |
| versity. |
CHICKEN PURLOINER ESCAPES GUN BLAST
A chicken thief who escaped a shotgun blast last night was hunted by police today. Mrs. Nellie Marshall, 3248 W. Washington St., - told officers the alarm in her chicken house sounded about 9:30 p..m. last night. She said she opened the window and fired both barrels of a 12-gauge shotgun in the direction of the house. Police found no evidence that the intruder had been struck. Damon Smith, 4249 Sunset Ave, reported to police today burglars had entered his home some time be{ween Sunday and Tuesday and had taken a purse containing $20 in cash and a diamond ring valued at $500.
| EIR, rt
‘GOES TO EUROPE AT 86 ‘BEFORE TOO OLD’
Bu United Press KENDALLVILLE, Ind. May 19.— “I want to get to Europe before I'm too old,” said former Mayor M. C. Case, 86, today, as he left for New i York. He will sail tomorrow with his family for France to attend the International Rotary Convention at Nice as an Indiana delegate.
PURDUE MAN GETS REMC POST HERE
J. C. Ashby Named Engineer Of Rural Power Unit.
Times Special
C. Ashby, Purdue University grad- | uate and former resident of Craw- | fordsville, has left the engineering I staff of the Rural Electrification | Administration to become chief en- | gineer of the Indiana Rural Elec- | tric Membership Corp., it was an- { nounced here today. His headquarters will be at Indianapolis, where REMC operates under auspices of the Indiana Farm Bureau. A complete reorganization of the engineering department of these co-operatives is contemplated, it | was said. | mes
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