Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 November 1937 — Page 23

Third Section

CORNERSTONE SERVICES FOR THOMAS CARR HOWE SCHOOL UNIT TO BE HELD ON MONDAY

Delegations From Six East S

sented; Hilton U. Brown to Speak; Ralston Monument Dedication Tuesday.

$450,000 unit of Thomas Cai intendent of Schools DeWitt S.

Alan W. Boyd, School Board president, and Supt. Morgan are to lay the cornerstone after documents are by A. B. Good, school business director. Ceremonies are sched-

uled at 2 p. m.

Mrs. Mary D. Ridge, School

Board member, was to introduce Hilton U. Brown, who is |

to deliver the principal address. The Rev. Abram S. Wood- | ard, pastor of Irvington M. E. Church, is to give the benediction. Among the guests of honor invited are: Mrs. Thomas Carr Howe, Addison A. Howe, Mrs. Paul C. Stetson, | Mrs. William Forsyth, Mrs. Hilton U. Brown, Mrs. John Paul Ragsdale, Mrs. Louis Bruck, Mrs, Witt W. Hadley, Mrs. Calvin R. Hamilton, Dr. Silas Carr, Arthur F, G. Gemmer. Mrs. Rerman P. Knecht, Mrs. Roscoe R. Mills, Mrs. H. C. Percival, Mrs. Harlin Hogue, Mrs. Edgar J. Rennoe, Mrs. Edward James and Mrs. Ive Chambers. Dedication of the monument honoring Alexander Ralston, designer of | the “mile square” city of Indian- | apolis in 1821, scheduled for | Tuesday. Boetcher to Speak

Emmett A. Rice, vice principal of Shortridge High School! and chairman of the Ralston Memorial Committee, announced speakers would include Mayor Boetcher, W. Harold Gossett, president of the Teachers’ | Federation, Supt. Morgan and him- | self. Opening of the new auditorium and two new classrooms in School | 35, 2201 Madison Ave. will be| marked by ceremonies, Thursday at | 8 p. m. M. B. Stump, school prin- | cipal, will preside. Earl Buchanan, member, and Messrs. Good and | Morgan are to speak. Mrs. Joy | Stoddard, president of the school's Parent-Teacher Association, and] Miss Alma Wallman, teacher, are to represent, the teachers and pupils. | The Rev. Roscoe Kirman is to give the invocation.

URGES FBI AS HUB FOR RADIO

Hoover Says U. S. Natural Center for System Linking 23 Nations.

is

school board |

[ lor.

|

WASHINGTON, Nov. 5 (U. P).— The hub of a proposed international police radio-telegraph system, connecting 23 countries in the Western Hemisphere. should be located in the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Director J. Edgar Hover sdid today. The United States delegation to the regional radio conference in Havana proposed the system. “I believe it is only natural that any international communication should center in the Federal Bureau of Investigation,” Mr. Hoover | said, “because of international requirements and the success which | the Bureau has experienced in deal- | ing with identification bureaus and | other branches of law enforcement agencies in the various parts of the world.” Exchanges Fingerprints

He pointed out that the FBI now ! exchanges fingerprints and other identification material with 83 foreign countries and United States

possessions. Tentative proposals for United States’ participation in the inter- | national system provide for trans- | missions between such points as Ha- | vana and Miami, Fla.; Detroit and | Windsor, Ontario, and ‘Albany, N. Y.| and Montreas. by the use of state and local police transmitters. The Federat Bureau of Investigation has no radio station, but has | developed a widespread teletype | system. The teletype system of the Federal Bureau of Investigation con- | nects the headquarters here with 47 | field divisions. Connections have | not yet been made with territorial |

offices at San Juan, Juneau in Alas- |

ka, and Honolulu.

rT Howe High School,

| zens contributed to relieve flood suf-

| capita average of giving.’

| membership in the Red Cross, citea

| ‘SCHOOL TO OBSERVE ‘HOME FRIENDS’ DAY

12:30 p. m.

ide Institutions to Be Repre- |

SuperMorgan, announced today.

sealed

FORTUNE KEEPS RED GROSS POST

Re-elected to Chairmanship He Has Held Since Chapter Formed.

AR RR RI RA SO RA AV OR

Continuing as chairman of the | Indianapolis chapter of the Amer- | ican Red Cross, a post he has held | since its establishment in 1916, Wil- |

| lam Fortune today was returned to | | the helm of the organization fol- | annual meeting last B |

lowing the night. Others re-elected were William H. | Book, vice chairman; Arthur V. Brown, treasurer, and Miss Agnes | Cruse, secretary. New members elected to "the | executive committee included Wil- | liam H. Thompson, Felix M.| McWhirter, Myron R. Green, Mrs. Frank T. Dowd and Louis J. Borinstein. Re-elected were William J. | Mooney, Rabbi M. M. Feuerlicht, | Eugene C. Foster, Mrs. Wolf Sussman, Mrs. Hugh McGibeny and E. H. K. McComb,

Reviews Flood Aid

Mr. Fortune reviewed the generosity with which Indianapolis citi-

ferers early this year.

“They gave all we asked for every |

need, and more,” he said. “Thev | put Indianapolis at the top of the iist of American cities in the per Mr. Fortune hailed the growth of

a local increase to the rank of sixth

of all large cities in percentage of |

new enrollments. He introduced the new members | of the board, Mrs. E. Kirk McKin- | ney and Brig. Gen. William K. NayGen. Naylor described conditions during the flood last winter | and urged a program of prepared- | | ness.

Times Special DANVILLE, Nov. mal College is to observe “Friends From Home” Day Sunday, sponsored by the school's Y. M. C. A. and Y.W.C. A. Church services at 9 to honor guests, and a basket dinner and short entertainment are scheduled in the girls’ gymnasium for

E. T. Albentson, general secretary, program in the college chapel at 2 p. ‘m. Central Normal students’ friends and relatives have been invited to attend.

MASONIC DEGREES TO BE EXEMPLIFIED

Induction of more than 100! Master Masons into the higher de- |

| grees was to begin tonight at the! Scottish Rite Cathedral at the open- |

ing of the Seventy-second Semiannual Convocation for ritualistic ceremony. Harry A. Phil, dramatic director, said a large group of officers and workers will exemplify the fourth, sixth and seventh grades.

day and Friday night until Nov. 24, he said.

PROBE AMERICAN'S LONDON, Nov. 5

DEATH

woman identified as Ward, 35, Walnut Street, Pittsburgh, whose body was found in an automobile parked on the | roadside off the main BedfordNorthampton route between Turvey and Stagsden. The woman, & smartly dressed blond, was discovered by two truck drivers who stopped when they noticed she was slumped over the steering wheel.

THERE IS NO

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LI-7600

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9:30 a. m. are!

“XY” organizations | is to speak at a |

Cere- | monies will continue each Wednes- |

(U. P).—An | | inquest was ordered today into the | death of a | Lucy

The Indianapolis Times

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1937

AGE OF HOOSIER PARENTS IN 1936

BELOW AVERAGE

Statistics Show Birth Rate Higher; Cancer and T. B. Deaths Drop.

Times Special

WASHINGTON, Nov. 5.—Moth-

Indiana 1936 mothers had a mean

lage of 269 years, compared to the | dianapolis. {national mean of 27.1 years.

ana fathers had a mean age of 31 | | systems diseases were second.

compared to the national of 31.6. Other figures contained in the detailed report for Indiana showed | that: The birth rate is picking up slow-

mean

A RA ER RES RAR RE RA RASS FO SO ON RS FV 7 RS PA TR 5 4 5 FR 5 OU FS SR RA A PA TR OF 57 J, 6 FF OF 57 FF 7 OFA FS Fr 7 Rv A

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BRIDAL PAIR.

: " . | no other types of vehicles involved) Delegations from six East Side elementary schools are {ers and fathers of Indiana children |

to attend the cornerstone laying ceremonies Monday of the [born in 1936 were younger than the|of accidents put together. | national average, according to the | Department of Commerce vital sta- | | tistics report.

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ly after a depression low of 15 for | each 1000 population in 1933, and | the death rate remains about the! same. | Infant Deaths Decline

Infant mortality has decreased steadily during ,the last 10 years | from 72.4 for each 1000 live births to 50.7. Tuberculosis deaths have decreased during 10 years from 83.1 | for each 100,000 population to 494. | More 1936 babies were born in July than in any other month. Fewest were born in May. More people died in July than in any | other month and fewest died in | September. More than twice as many persons were killed in auto accidents (with

than were Killed by all other types

Heat Kills 236

Excessive heat caused 236 deaths.

| One person died of beriberi in In- |

Heart disease led all |

Indi- | others by far in cause of death and |

pneumonia and other respiratory

creased from 116 per 100,000 in 1935 to 115.4 in 1936. The median age | of Indiana population was 28.5

| | The total cancer death rate 5s vears and the national, 26.4.

NYP a wAS AR A A

Entersd ai Postoffice, Indianapolls, Ind.

Lo

us Second-Class Matter

Tech Principal Visits Ex-Pupils | JUVENILE COURT |

H. H. Anderson, Technical High School principal, is shown talking things over with two of his former students now enrolled in Indiana University. with Mr. Anderson are Madge Rutherford (center) and Virgene Moore.

Discussing the gap between high school and college study

The picture was taken during the 16th annual High School Principals’ Conference at I. U. this week. Miss Rutherford, 438 N. Arsenal Ave. is a former Tech Cannon editor and is pledged to Delta Gamma, while Miss Moore, 889 W, Drive, Woodruff Place, is also a freshman at I. J. and is pledged to Phi Mu. .

POST IS SOUGHT BY JOHN LINDER

County Riarmey Anmounces| Democratic Nomination Candidacy.

day announced his candidacy for nile Court Judge. He said that if he was elected he would “cut Court operating costs hy | jone~half; would handle the Court's business in an administrative rather than in & purely judicial way, would attempt to keep families together and would not permit so many children to become public charges. “I fully appreciate the sponsibility of the Juvenile

great re-

County Attorney John Linder to-|

[the Democratic nomination as Juve |

Court '

Third Section

PAGE 23

Judge and I am prepared to serve to the best of my ability.” Mr. Linder never held public of= HW before being appointed County Attorney three years ago, and was an unsuccessful candidate for State | Senator six years ago. He is a meme (ber of the law firm of Linder & Seet,

COL. GREEN'S WIDOW GETS HALF MILLION

NEW YORK, Nov. 5 (U. P) —=The long battle over the $70,000,000 es | tate of the late Col. Edward H. R. Green, eccentric son of the famous woman financier, Hetty Green, ended today. Surrogate Harry E. Owen of Essex County awarded the buik'of the es- | tate to Mrs. Matthew Astor Wilks, a sister, and announced that she had agreed to set up a fund of $500,000 | for Col. Green's widow, Mrs. Mabel | Harlow Green. [ Judge Owen rejected Mrs. Green's contention that a powerful agreement waiving her rights to a dower | interest in the fortune had been | procured through fraud, and ors dered the will admitted to probate,

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