Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 November 1937 — Page 11

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FRIDAY, NOV. 12, 1937

G00D OUTLINES | SCHOOL HOUSING GAININT YEARS

Business Director Talks at

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PAGE 11

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

No. 35 Auditorium ] w

Dedication.

School 35 had a new auditorium today, part of Indianapolis’ education expansion program that officials forecast continue. | In dedication ceremonies last night, A. B. Good, School City business director, reviewed the building program since 1930. He pointed out that 83 per cent of children attending school in frame portables In 1930 are now in classes’in five new school buildings and six new addi- | tions He spoke of the $331,000 addition | to George Washington High School now under construction, the new Irvington high school and a junior | high school addition to School 26. School Superintendent DeWitt S. Morgan declared that only through | education can democracy be safe-| guarded. “Enlightenment is the only hope for democracy,” he said.

A. W. Boyd to Speak

In other parts of the city, Naional Education Week observations were coming to a close. Alan W. Boyd, School Board president, is to | speak on “Crispus Attucks High | School in the Indianapolis School | Svstem” at the school tonight. Open | house is to be observed. i Shortridge High School held its| annual service flag unveiling services yesterday. George Buck, principal, told students they should be proud of their wartime predecessors’ I'eCony McGuffey Club members went hrough a revival of one-room

wild

last night. It was a program of conrasts as modern pupils studied

ments, dramatized literature and heard lectures on industrial arts and home economics.

Roosevelt and Wife Rivals in Press Unions,

1 8 Special ! WASHINGTON, Nov. 12. — The President and Mrs. Roosevelt today | were on opposite sides of a laoor | quarrel, through their memberships | in rival organizations of newspaper workers. Mr. Roosevelt, on the advice of Stephen T. Early, his press secretary, has just accepted honorary membership in the American Press Society. Mrs. Roosevelt for nearly two years has been a member of the American Newspaper Guild, now a

Cornerstone for New School Unit Laid

SEEK 2 YOUTHS = Shows Capaci AFTER ‘HATCHET SS

Police Start Hunt When Motorman Reports Attack on Car.

Two young men who beat a street car motorman with a hatchet and | {robbed him of more than $35 in | cash while he lay on the car floor, were hunted by police today. George Stone, 42, of 542 N. Illi-| nois St., the victim, told officers the youths boarded his car at the Broad Ripple loop, one of them announc- | ing “this is a stickup.” Without warning, the operator said, one of | them began beating Him on the head | with the blunt side of a hatchet. | Stunned, he fell to the floor and |§ the youths took the cash and four | @& rolls of tokens and filed on foot. Suffering from head lacerations, | tte motorman operated his car to | 52d St. and College Ave, where he

O., where they are to demonstrate for field artillery cadets of Ohio State University Reserve Officers’

|OHI0 CADETS TO SEE | 2 FORT BATTERIES fa Corps this afternoon and | a tomorrow. Capt. Halstead C. Fow-

Headquarters and B Battery of |ler was in command of Headquarters the 19th Field Artillery left Ft. Ben- | Battery and Capt. David S. Bagjamin Harrison today for Columbus, | cock headed Battery B.

'6.0.P. WARD CLUB | 10 DRAFT POLICIES

Program to Be Suggested as National Platform.

| First and Second Ward Repub- | [ican Club members are to meet | at 8 p. m. today to vote on a plat- | form of suggested national party | policies. The meeting, to be held at 1207 | | Newman St, is to be in charge of Harry Alford. | | He said the resolutions committee already has drafted a platform | which club members will be asked | to ratify. An open forum is to bé held, and refreshments are to be ' served, he said. |

| COAL BOARD RULES | | ON SALES IN OHIO

| WASHINGTON, Nov. 12 (U.P). | —The National Bituminous Coal | | Commission, assuming jurisdiction {on coal sold in Ohio, today estab- | lished a precedent which may enable it to regulate coal in intrastate | commerce. | The unanimous commission order, | | effective Dec. 15, was based on the | | theory that intrastate sales of coal] { in Ohio have a direct effect on intrastate commerce.

told police of the holdup.

JEWISH NEWS OFFICE IS CLOSED BY NAZIS

BERLIN, Nov. 12 (U. P.).—The Beriin branch of the Jewish Tele- | graphic Agency, incorporated under German law for the purpose of dis-

| tributing “news of foreign origin” | in Germany, has been closed by the | Nazi secret police, it was disclosed

today. Five police agents detained a representative of the organization, an Austrian named Otto Schick, and k him to the offices of the agency where they read him an order closing the place. The order | was based on an emergency decree of the late President Paul Von Hindenburg for the protection of the State.

PERSHING RETURNS, HOPES FOR PEACE

NEW YORK, Nov, 12 (U. P).— Gen. John J. Pershing, commander

|of American troops in the World |

War, expressed hope today that there would “never be another war.”

He returned on the liner Washington last night from a six-months |

visit abroad. While the guns of Ft. Jay on Governors Island boomed

(a 19-gun salute in his honor, Gen. | |

Pershing said: “Nobody wants war and while things do not look so promising for the moment, will be a war for some time.”

Times Photns. Cornerstone for George Washington High School's $325,000 addition was laid yesterday as part of the National Education Week observ- | ance here. Shown above is part of the crowd and the framework | of the new building. Below, Carl Wilde, Schoel Board vice president, | wields the trowel as Principal W. G. Gingery (right) looks on.

C. 1. O. affiliate. The Guild has frequently attacked the Press Society as a competing organization set up to embarrass the earlier organization. i A protest against the President's | action has been made by the New York Newspaper Guild, and another was voted here last night by the Washington Guild's executive committee. Chief Justice Hughes also has accepted honorary membership in the Press Society, Oliver Holden of the society disclosed in New York. The Chief Justice was quoted as writing: “I am glad to know of the organization of the American Press Society, which is to concern itself ‘with elevation of standards of journalism and journalists.” The Press Society's constitution provides for a qualified form of collective bargaining, with restrictions on strikes. Its president is Paul Scott Mowrer, an executive of Col. Frank Knox's Chicago Daily News.

OPTIMISTS MEET TODAY

The Rev. W. C. Calvert, Grace M. E. Church pastor, is to address the Optimist Club on the subject: “Discontented Optimist,” at a luncheon in the Columbia Club today. Felix M. McWhirter is program chairman.

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HOOVER TO SPEAK AT of cmap and pubic Aras st SCHOOL DEDICATION] He conferea wi

"He conferred with upstate Re- | | publican leaders shortly after his | |

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. . arrival. SYRACUSE, N. Y.,, Nov. 12 (UG. Training college graduates for | P.).—Former President Herbert! service in public administration Hoover arrived here today with | Was the theme of the sessions at the ! his secretary. Laure Ri _ | university, Mr. Hoover was sched- | felwry, Latent W Richey, | ed to participate in a private | to deliver an address tonight at the | afternoon symposium on the sub- | dedication of the Maxwell School | ject. |

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| (U. P.).—Roger Lumbard, 17, honor | | student whose unauthorized experi-

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I don’t think there |

Herbie—Did you know that Frank Sims of | 731 Terrace Ave. is the new manager of the Martin Narva, 7, can go ‘round | and around better and faster than | South Side Furniture Co.? any other East Side New York | youngster. He's proving it above, | eating his way around the hole in a doughnut to become the doughnut dunking champion of the | Boys’ Club. He put away four more “sinkers” than his nearest rival.

BLAST VICTIM DIES

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died today shortly after receiving a fifth blood transfusion.

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