Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 May 1937 — Page 4

“PAGE” 4

10S WILL HEAR

: A = ‘ROBBER: STIALS KISS bars" Nichols, ‘queen of the. ost | ABOR COUN a t ssumes % Duiles By United Press Tournament of Roses, was awake PASADENA, Cal, May 21. —|ened at 3 in the morning by a roy= Beauty queens beware. Miss Bar- ber who stole a kiss from her.

LUDLOW SPEAK ON PEACE PLAN

Mass Meeting of Backers Of War Vote Proposal To Be in New York.

Times Special ; WASHINGTON, May 21.—Rep. Louis Ludlow will be érincipal speaker at a mass meeting of backers of his war referendum amend-

ment in New York City May 30. The meeting is under auspices of

the Bronx Council of the Emergen-

cy Peace Campaign. The Rev. Leon Land, New York City, is to preside and the opening address will be by James J. Lyons, president of the Borough of the Bronx. Other speakers will be Mrs. Caroline O'Day, representative-at-large from New York State; Edward R. Maguire, principal of the Herman Ridder Jr., high school and Col. Edward C. O. Thomas, retired Army officer. Mr, Ludlow has obtained 103 ‘signatures to a discharge petition in the House to bring his proposed amendment from committee. This is 31 more than last session. He expects to obtain the necessary 218, he said.

JOHN SHANKS WINS LILLY FELLOWSHIP

By United Press BLOOMINGTON, Ind., May 21.— John A. Shanks, Indiana University chemical student, has been awarded

the $1000 annual fellowship in chemistry offered by the Eli Lilly Co. of Indianapolis, members of the state selection committee announced today. The fellowship provides for graduate study at Johns Hopkins University. Mr. Shanks, who is to receive. a B. S. degree in chemistry from Indiana University this June, will be given $1000 annually in four installments. Applicants are limited to students in Indiana universities and colleges.

BANK REPORT FILED Times Special LOGANSPORT, . Ind., May no The final report, recording 100 per cent payment to depositors of the Rockfield State Bank, has been filed in Carroll Circuit Court.

Ready to take up the complex task of administering the Vinson-Guffey Coal Act, the Bituminous Coal Commission is pictured at Washington. are, left to right, Percy Tetlow of Ohio and John C. Lewis of Iowa ‘of the miners, and John Carscn;

WISCONSIN AGGEPTS GIFT FROM DAVIES

University Given 70 Russian Paintings by Alumnus.

By United Press MADISON, Wis, May 21.—A gift of 70 to 100 -paintings collected in Russia by Ambassador Joseph E. Davies was accepted today by the University of Wisconsin. The offer was made in a letter to Governor La Follette, Mr. Davies, a Wisconsin alumnus, said there would be from 70 to 100/pictures, four or five of which would be large canvases, possibly eight by ten feet. He inquired concerning wall racilities, adding that he believed the collection should be kept intact. * “Russian painting is extraordinary in its imaginative vigor, strength and color,” Mr. Davies told the Governor in his letter. “My purpose,” Mr. Davies said, “has been to have a group of paintings which will more or less cover the various fields of the activity and the life of the country; the

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standing, Pleas E. Greenlee of Indiana, C. E. Smith of West Virgmnia, representing the public; Thomas S. Haymond :of Kentucky and C. S. Hosford of Pennsylvania, representing the producers, and Walter H. Maloney, representing the public.

Four Winners Are Selected In ‘Milk Builders’ Contest

Those who have wondered what to do with old milk bottle caps and butter and cheese cartons now may ccnsult the winners of the recent “Milk Builders” contest, conducted by the Marion County Milk Marketing Area. Edwin Kelb, ‘13, of 5510 N. Delaware St, won first prize in the boys’ class for his complete model of a miniature suburban cottage and lot, surrounded by a picket fence, made entirely of milk bottle caps and dairy cartons. Roberta Inman, 10, of 1443 Kenyon Ave., was the winner of the

people, the soldiers, activities of the revolutionary movement, The building of these great plants, life in the remote sections of Russia, the caucasus, the Orient and the cald snows of the north, et cetera. “The pictures, I think, would have a real educational value ior I b.lieve that they interpret and explain many of the reasons for, and developments in, these great

ev vents which are ® iranspiring here.”

first girls’ prize for her model of a pioneér scene. Second prize in the boys’ class went to John Plymate, 11, of 101 S. Ninth St., Beech Grove, and Mary Hill, 15, of 330 Congress Ave., won second prize in the girls’ competition. All four winners were awarded bicycles. Judges were Miss Cleta Marsh of the Warren Central High School art department; George Binger, advertising ‘manager, William H, Block Co., and C. Morrison Davis, advertising manager of L. S. Ayres & Co. Other major prize . winners included Louise White, 15, of 1924 N. Talbot St., and Edward Blackburn, 14, of 526 E. 22d St. All entries are

on display at the Banner-Whitehill

Co.

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New Body iv. Includes 40 C. I. 0. and Progressive Unions, Officers Claim.

The Indianapolis Industrial Labor Council, made up of C. I. O. and progressive American Federation of Labor organizations, today had been organized with 40 local unions as members. Twenty steel unions, two locals of the United Automobile Workers of America, the Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America, the Federation of Hosiery Workers, United Electrical and Radio Workers, United Rubber Workers, International Ladies’ Garment Workers, Textile Workers Organizing Committee, Amalgamated Glove Workers, Amalgamated Cleaners and Dyers and United Paper Box Workers are included, officials said. Representatives of the new group announced it was organized when the Central Labor Union refused to seat their representatives. Officers of the group are Basil Booher, president; Henry Bond, treasurer; Edward Hall, vice president, and George Addis, secretary and treasurer. A mass meeting and picnic is to be held in Columbia Park at 10 a. m. tomorrow, with Frank Rosenblum, Textile Workers Committee regional director: as a speaker.

Mrs. Hattie V. Dunkin, Lafa-

yette today began her duties as

secretary of institutional employment for the State Division of Institutions. She was narfled yesterday by Thurman Gottschalk, Supervisor of State Institutions, Mrs. Dunkin is treasurer of the Indiana Women’s Democratic Club, president of the Tippecanoe County Women’s Democratic Club, and a member of the Indiana League of Women Voters and the Parent-Teacher Association. She taught school 11 years. Before taking her new post she was affiliated with the FHA educational program,

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