Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 November 1937 — Page 7

THURSDAY, NOV. 11, 1937

CEREMONIES SET AT WASHINGTON hs SCHOOL TODAY

Annex Cornerstone Is Laid: | | Pupils at Shortridge | Show Exhibits.

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Cornerstone laying ceremonies for $335,000 Washington High addition features today’s | celebration of Education Week in | Indianapolis Earl Buchanan, School Board! member, was to speak on “Signifi- | cance of This Building to the Com- | munity,” and School Superintendent | DeWitt S. Morgan, on “Cornerstones | and Milestones.” Carl Wilde, School | Board vice president, was to lay the | cornerstone. This program, starting at 3:30 p. m., also was to mark the 10th | anniversary of the school’s founding. | Others to take part in the program | include Miss Vivian B. Eby and | William H. Bock, faculty members; | Mrs. D. H. Badger, Parent-Teacher | X Association president; Dr. L. M.| | Sarter, George Washington Club president; Cecil Whaley, a pupil; | Mrs. L. A. Pottenger, P.-T. A. past president and the Rev. C. G. Baker, | George Washington Club former | president. Pageant Scheduled

A Horace Mann pageant is to be | presented at 7:45 o'clock tonight by | Washington pupils in the school |

the

School

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auditorium. | With 400 eighth-grade pupils from | East Side elementary schools looking on, the cornerstone for the Thomas C. Howe High School in Irvington was laid yesterday. Hil-

classes next year.

ceremonies vesterday. nerstone laying program.

They inspected the cornerstone of the new building at School officials and patrons attended the core

Get Early View of New School

ol RL

Times Photo.

Carlos Engle (left), 4163 Otterbein St., and Harry Weber, 2558 S. | Meridian St.. are getting “in on the ground floor” literally at the new Howe High School building in Irvington, where they expect to enter

special

ton U. Brown, Supt. Morgan and Alan W. Bovd, School Board president, participated in the program. Mrs. Mary OD. Ridge, School Board member: A. B. Good, School Business Director; the Rev. Abram S. Woodard. and the Technical High School Concert Band also participated. Speaking at a School 43 Fathers’ Night program, Supt. Morgan said last night that “the undeveloped abilities of men and women are the ————— — onlv undeveloped resources of the

lr ini Tit 1 NEW PATENTS TO AID oA FLYING APPROVED

through education. Democracy “and ignorance never can exist together.” WASHINGTON, Nov. 11 (U, P). —The U. S. Patent Office has

observance of Education Week. The exhibits, done with the aid of the (faculty, illustrate classroom work. Among the displays are pottery. Alan W. Boyd, School Board president, was to speak at the open house in Crispus Attucks High School tomorrow night. Mr. White is to be guest speaker at School 39, at 601 S. State Ave, at its open house, tomorrow, 7 to 9 p. m.

Represent

Board Supt. Morgan, Mr. Buchanan and John F. White are to rep- | granted three patents on inventions resent the board at the dedica-|gesigned to increase transpori flytion of the new auditorium in|, 9 . > School 35. at 2201 Madison Ave. at | 8 safety, it was disclosed today. § tonight. MM. B. Stump, principal, | Intended to overcome major will preside. | flying difficulties, they are a wing A number of window exhibits by de-icing device, a liquid compass Shortridge High School pupils are [and an altimeter which shows dison display in the school halls in! tance from the ground to the plane.

Just 200 VELVETS and FELTS REDUCED

C

‘BAN FORMALDEHYDE TO SUBDUE CONVICTS

JACKSON, Mich., Nov. 11 (U. P), —Southern Michigan Prison officials | today banded the use of formalde- | hyde to subdue unruly prisoners, ex- | cept under the direction of competent physicians, The prohibition followed an inquest into the death of James Parks, 57, Negro inmate, who died a week ago of pneumonia. Freall [ Robinson, chief officer of the mental [ block, admitted he had been using a formaldehvde spray upon unruly prisoners. He had not received authority from prison officials to do so, he said.

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20,000 MEASLES CASES IN STATE ARE PREDICTED

Dr. Harvey Expects Largest Number of Victims Since 1933.

There probably will be about 20,000 cases of measles reported in Indiana by the beginning of next summer, Dr. Verne K. Harvey, State Health Director, predicted today. Basing his estimate on department statistics compiled within recent years. Dr. Harvey said measles cases are reported here in cycles of three or four years, and this winte: we should have the largest number of cases since 1933. . Although this disease is not gen-

erally classed as dangerous, he said |

there usually is an average of one death to every 500 weeses, Measles fs a disease of childhood,

according to Dr. Harvey, and 97 per cent of the cases are reported in children under 15. Ninety per cent

vear old infants, while records show deaths rarely are reported for pa-

tients between the ages of 5 and 15. |

Dr. Harvey, in explaining the cycle, said in 1931 there were 18277 cases; 1932, 3240; 1933, 19,609; 1934, 11,396: 1935, 875, and 1936, 6059.

Discovers Way to Make

Measles Virus Visible

NEW YORK, Nov. 11 (U. P)) = Jean Broadhurst, bacteriologist of Teachers College in Columbia University, announced today that she had discovered a means to make visible the virus bodies that cause measles, and thus to accelerate diagnosis of the childhood disease. Her discovery, reported in the Journal of Infectious Diseases, will enable doctors to identify the disease even before the characteristic rash of measles appears.

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Drunken Driver Is Sentenced; Lagrange Crash Kills Autorst

Fines of $201 Assessed 15 ‘Second Victim of Car-Truck Speeders; 64 Drivers Collision Reported Face Court. Seriously Hurt.

LAGRANGE, I'nd., Nov. 11 (U.P), -=One man was killed and another injured so seriously that he was not expected to live today when a light passenger car rammed into the rear | of a parked truck on State Road 9, south of here, early today. Morris 1. Bass, 50, Marion, was killed instantly, His head and chest

Of 64 motorists arraigned in Municipal Court on traffic charges today, one alleged drunken driver was given a 30-day jail sentence and 15 speeders were assessed $201 fines and costs, Thirty-four others were assessed $147 on miscellaneous charges and cases of the remainder ‘were o©on- were crushed. Ira Kunkle, 41, Harttinued, ford City, was in a eritical condition Earl Dowden, Kokomo, was sen- | in the Erwin Hospital here with tenced to 30 days and assessed $65 | head injuries, on charges of drunken driving, | The driver of the truck, not imreckless driving and drunkenness, | mediately identified, was being deOzzie Henry, 1812 Somerset Ave, | (ned. Fred Morris of Hartford

City, riding with Mr. Bass and Mr. was bound over to the Grand Jury |g. ; v | Kunkle, disa ph t was under $500 bond on a charge Swppenret Witt 16 WS 1nbt

of | known whether he was injured. failure to give assistance to injured —— persons after an accident last Fri-| FT. WAYNE, Nov. 11 (U, P) = day. | Frank Peterson, 22, FL. Wayne, died The traffic “dawn patrol” will be | 10day of injuries sufféred in an continued to stop speeding and | A a coliacio Re S. Road drunken driving in the early morn- : _ : ing hours, Lieut. Lawrence McCarty, Accident Prevention Bureau head, said today. Mrs. Marie Self, 20, of 207 W. Wisconsin St, was treated in City Hospital for head and body bruises after a car driven by her husband, Robert E. Selt, sollided headon with

THIEVES GET ACCESSORIES Burglars took $315 worth of auto accessories from the Tipps Auto Supply Co., 726 Virginia Ave, last | night, Henry Merkle, manager, re-| ported to police today. Thieves entered through a window, he said. !

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ASKS NEW SLAYING TRIAL

NEWCASTLE, Nov. 11 (U, P)) A motion for a new trial for Carson Smith, 19, Albany, Ky., was on file in Circuit - Court here today. Smith | E was convicted of second-degree |§ murder Oct. 20 for the slaying of | § Bertram L. Soini, transient tomato | picker,

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