Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 January 1938 — Page 19

INDIANAPOLIS TIMES me ACE 19

FRIDAY, JAN. 28, 1938

Hero of Play Is All Growled Out

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FISHER NAMED TO LOGAL HOME LOAN BANK POST

Detroit Man to Be Federal Public Interest Director.

Times Rpecial WASHINGTON, Jan. 28. —Charles T. Fisher Jr. Detroit, was named a public interest director of the Federal Home Loan Bank of Indianapolis today. The appointment was made by the Federal Home Loan Bank Board here. He will serve the unexpired portion of a four-year term ending Dec. 31, 1939, it was announced. Four of the 12 directors of the Indianapolis bank are named by the board here to represent the public interest. Mr. Fisher has been a director of the Reconstruction Finance Corp. since March, 1935. He graduated from Georgetown University here in 1928 and was with the Guardian National Bank of Commerce in Detroit from 1928 to 1931. In 1931-32 he was with the National Credit Association in Detroit, going with RFC there in 1932. From 1932 to 1933 he was vice president of the First National Bank of Detroit and in 1933 became manager of the Detroit loan agency of RFC. He was born in Detroit Feb. 14, 1906.

JOB PROSPECTS FOR HOOSIERS BRIGHTEN

41 State Firms Normally Expand in February.

Indiana job hunters may expect “better than an even break” in February, Martin F. Carpenter, State Employment Service director, said today. A survey of seasonal variations indicated that 41 Indiana industries normally expand and 10 decrease their employment 2 per cent or more during February as compared with January levels, he said. “February should be the first month since October in which the job hunter may get ‘his break,’” Mr. Carpenter said. “A few lines normally reach employment peaks during February. These are automobiles and parts, leather, smelting and refining, and wire and wire work.”

CAB DRIVER TAKES RUNAWAY GIRL HOME

NEW YORK, Jan. 28 (U. P.) —A taxicab driver took a newspaper picture from his pocket today, looked at it, then shouted at a passing girl: “Hey, Florence!” The girl turned. “Get in my cab,” said Driver Harry Rosenthal. “I'm going to take you home. I'm the father of a family myself.” The girl obeyed. There was joy among members of the Weiditz family when Mr. Rosenthal and his passenger arrived. For the girl was 14-year-old Florence Weiditz, whose picture appeared in newspapers Tuesday when she ran away from home after failing in French in junior high school.

$100.000 APARTMENT PLEA UP TO BOARD

Business Properties, Inc, today had applied to the City Zoning Boar dfor permission to erect a $100,000 two-unit apartment at Linwood Ave. and Pleasant Run Blvd. The petition, requesting a zoning variance at that location, was filed by Thomas A. Moynahan and J. R. Moynahan. The Board is to consider the application Feb. 10. Sixty-six apartments are to be included in the two four-story units, according to plans.

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BUDGET 4 9.

WHEN BUYING YOUR FURNITURE

South Side Furn. Co.

932-934 S. Meridian St. \

Times Photo. ”

It's Not Surprising—He Was

3 Tigers and a Wolt Last Night

By JOE COLLIER

Lawrence Earl Larson, 5, is all growled out today.

was three tigers and a wolf, with Dream,” Miss Cook’s Kindergarten’s Methodist Church. This caused him to work in four shifts. He really brought it on himself, because he out-growled all other members in the class during tryouts. He was voted the growler most likely to frighten parents and immediately was cast in the play.

Animals Hard to Cast

Ever since Christmas, Miss Vesta Cook, the teacher, has been casting the play which marked the completion of a semester and was followed by presentation of diplomas. Miss Cook found that the animals were the hardest to cast because everyone wanted to be an animal. Even some of the girls wanted to be one or more of the three bears. It was settled by a growling contest that pealed over the North Side for several days. Master Larson won a role as one of the tigers in “Little Black Sambo.” When the other two boys who were to growl like tigers didn’t show

up, he had to growl for all three. Also, he had to be a wolf when the other wolf was delayed. Little Miss Muffit was another hard one to cast, Miss Cook said. None of the girls could be frightened by a spider. Helen Deal won the role when she declared that “I'm trying to look frightened.” Ruth Young wanted to be Goldi-

locks, but the class said not, since,

she had red, not golden, curly hair. Billy Grant was chosen little bear because the class decided unanimously that he “sounded just like a baby bear.” Pretty much to the amazement of all parents, Tom Tom the Piper's Son stole no pig. Instead, he played bagpipes. Christopher Denny got the part when he said his mother knew how to make bagpipes, which she didn’t, but which she found out how on an emergency basis.

Gets Mother Role

Lee Burke was chosen mother because the class decided that “she

was a good mother and knew how to talk like one.” Gordon Peck was Peter Rabbit, but he got the role only after one of the most strenuous tryouts on record. The only thing that really went wrong was a little improvisation on the part of Goldilocks. She was supposed to say “That's a pretty house.” She said, with all the enthusiasm of a first appearance before the footlights, “Gee, that’s a pretty house.”

THEFT LAID TO CLERK IN NEW ALBANY BANK

NEW ALBANY, Ind. Jan. 28 (U. P.).—While Herold H. Reinecke, head of the Indianapolis office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, addressed a banquet here, his agents arrested Herbert M. Bryant, 33, on charges of embezzling $1000 from the closed Second National Bank of New Albany. Bryant, who was assistant to the rece.ver, allegedly forged names on claims against the bank. He is held under $3000 bond.

BARGAINING UNIT AT SHOWERS CO. NAMED

Times Special WASHINGTON, Jan. 28.—United Furniture Workers, Local 496, was designated by the National Labor Relations Board today as the exclusive bargaining agency for production employees of Showers Brothers Furniture Co., Bloomington, Ind. The decision was based on results of plant balloting, in which the C. I. O. affiliate out-voted the A. F. of L. union.

Last night he sound effects, in “The Little Girl's

production in the Fifty-First Street

POLICE CAPTAIN HELD INBOMBING

$15,000 Bail Set as State Assembly Committee Sifts Terrorism.

LOS ANGELES, Jan. 28 (U. P.) .— A legislative committee heard evidence today that citizens unfriendly to the Los Angeles Police Department ‘were terrorized ‘with threats of death, imprisonment and faked obscene pictures. Capt. Earle Kynette, chief of the police intelligence squad, was arrested and placed under $15.000 bond, charged with planting a bomb that critically wounded Harry Raymond, a private investigator work-

ing for a citizens’ reform committee. ||

District Attorney Buron Fitts, who clashed with the police authority over Capt. Kynette’s arrest, opposed reduction of bail from $25,000 to $15,000.

An interim committee of the State Assembly, headed by Speaker William Moseley Jones, convened yes= terday to investigate the scandal, which the citizens’ group said was attributable to collusion among police, politicians and the underworld.

Terrorism Charged

The first witness was John G. Packard, an attorney for labor organizations. He said he had represented John Langdon, a mining man, who once sued Chief of Police James E. Davis for damages. Mr. Packard said that after Mr. Langdon filed the suit, Capt. Ky-

nette began terrorizing the Lang- :

don family. He threatened to kill the Langdons’ 3-year-old child, threatened Mrs. Langdon with deportation to British Columbia, and tried to have her sommitted to an insane asylum, Mr. Packard said. ———————— BRIDGE ARRANGED

Service Post 128, American Legion, is to sponsor a benefit bridge party

at Legion Hall, Oaklandon, tonight. |

Early Spring Flowers For the Sick Room and For Saturday's Party!

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79: