Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 March 1938 — Page 8

Bt the World” will be discussed by.

CIRCLING THE CITY ;

Governor Townsend has solved a problem. Or rather, Gus Robp, his driver, has solved one for him. It seems that in many meeting places there is scarcely enough light. for the speaker to read his notes. So Mr. Ropp rigged up a portable table with dry cell batteries that gives the Governor plenty of light for his talks. It has been dubbed “the pulpit.” *

Apartment Owners’ Association members will hear an address by R. E. Bauman, business manager of WIRE, at their luncheon tomorrow. at Hotel Washington. Mr. Bauman’s subject will be “Radio, Past, Present and Future.” President J. Allen Dawson will preside.

Indianapolis’ five Lutheran congregations will observe National Prayer Day tomorrow as part of their Lenten services. Churches holding special prayer services will be Bethany, First English, Pleasant View, St. Mark’s and Bethlehem.

Hayward Barcus Post 55, Amer- » ican Legion, will observe its 18th birthday with a reunion tomorrow at World War Memorial Plaza Auditorium. Post and auxiliary members will meet at 7:30 p. m. to honor past commanders and presidents. Mrs. J. E. Barcus, past state auxiliary president, will be guest of honor, +:

Member magicians will perform when the Indiana Society of Magicians meets tomorrow night at the Y. M. C. A.

Indianapolis White Shrine of Jerusalem No. 6 patrol will hold a card party at 6 p. m. tomorrow at the Food Crafts Shop. Mrs. Bessie Hensel is chairman.

Indiana poultrymen, several thousand strong, are to take part in the Seventh World's Poultry Congress at Cleveland, July 28 to Aug. 7.

Madden-Nottingham Unit N. 348, American Legion Auxiliary will meet at 8 o'clock tonight at the World War Memorial.

An NYA-WPA job information and vocational guidance program for young people between 16 and 25 has been announced by- John K. Jennings, Indiana WPA administrator.

Patrick J. Fisher has béen named general courts deputy prosecutor to succeed Leo J. O'Connor, who has resigned to enter private practice, Prosecutor Herbert M. Spencer / announced today. Mr. Fisher is to work in Municipal, Juvenile and Justice of the Peace Courts.

A Shanghai, China, pastor, Dr. E. W. Luccock, will describe his experiences in Nanking and in base hospitals for wounded Chinese soldiers at the First Presbyterian Church midweek convocation at 7 p. m. Thursday.

The School Board will receive bids tonight for construction of a $275,000 addition to Crispus Attucks High School.

Republican Veterans of Marion County are to meet at 8 o'clock tonight at Hotel Washington. Maj. Clinton Wunder is to speak.

: 4 *Unusual Social Customs Through-

est Cohn at the. Lions Club

luncheon, ‘forgen only, at Hotei:

* Washington tomorrow. Mr. Cohn is assistant advertising manager of Pitman-Moore Co.

“Stages of the Love Life” is to be the topic of a sermon by the Rev. + David R. Covell, executive secretary of the Protestant Episcopal Diocese of Southern Ohio at 8 p. m. tomorrow. He is to preach at the Interparochial Service at the Church of the Advent.

Fireman Salvatore Amato, 27, of 733 E. Georgia St., was recovering today from a foot injury received yesterday when, upon returning to Engine House 11, 1030 E. Washington St, he stepped from a truck and fell.

Indianapolis Girls Scouts and leaders inaugurated the organiza-

Indianapolis Athletic Club today. Miss Katie Lee Johnson, Chicago, Girl Scouts regional director, outlined preliminary plans.

Whoever found $60 in the purse of Mrs. Tillie Frisch, 5514 Washington Blvd.,, may keep it, but Mrs. Frisch would like to have the papers in it, she told police today. The purse was lost Friday. In it were keys to a bank safety deposit box. . The keys were returned to the bank today by a man who said he found them on a sidewalk.

Properties valued at about $505,000 have been sold by members of the North Side Realtors since Jan. 1, records showed today.

There will be no beauty shop in Winthrop Ave. between 44th and 46th Sts. This was decided yesterday when a delegation of residents successfully stopped the granting of a permit by the Planning Commission for the construction of the proposed shop.

“The Federal Government may be destined to be in the relief business permanently,” John K. Jennings, Indiana WPA administrator, predicted, today. He said the Indiana WPA rolls are only 5000 less than the all-time peak of 85,000 in February and March, 1936.

The Kiwanis Club will hold Ladies’, Day tomorrow noon at the Columbia Club. Students of the Normal College of the American Gymnastic Union are to present a demonstration. .

The Y. M. C. A. Young Men’s Discussion Club will hear Dr. William A. Shullenberger, Central Christian Church pastor, speak at 6 p. m. tomorrow. His topic is to be “Do Not Be a Made-to-Order Man.”

A certificate of award for outstanding accomplishment has been presented to the Indianapolis Agency of the Connecticut General Life Insurance Co. for} the second consecutive year.

The town meeting, finest demonstation of democracy, is impossible in Russia, Germany and Italy, Lloyd D. Claycombe, attorney, told the: Brookside Civic League last night.

Behavior problems of adults were discussed last night by Dr. Frederick B. Knight, Purdue University psychology and education department professor, at a meeting of the Indianapolis Dairy Technology Club.

North Methodist Church World Missionary Workers are to present a three-act play, “Tourists Accommodated,” at 8 p. m. Friday in the church. - The high school girls’ choir is to sing.

Dismissed from Methodist Hospital for the sixth time in 19 months, Emma Jane Hunt, 11-year-old South Bend girl, was looking forward to reunion with her pet Persian cat,

Peat. Injured in an auto accident when she was 5, Emma Jane must return to the hospital twice more so surgeons can complete plastic reconstruction of her left leg. Her parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Hunt came here to > her home.

‘Broad Ripple High School, because of “the steady northward growth of the city will be one of the foremost high schools in. Indianapolis some day,” Governor Townsend said yesterday. He was a luncheon guest of Principal K. V. Ammerman yesterday.

Speaking of “Fortune Telling,” at the. First Baptist Church yesterday, Dr. James Whitcomb .Brougher, evangelist, said: “There is one fundamental principle that will enable you to read the future accurately. Thai ‘Whatsoever a man: soweth, that shall he also reap.’ ”

“The Character of Judas” ‘ig to be the topic of a sermon by the Rev. R. Daries, Zion Evangelical Church pastor, at the second midweek Lenten service at 7:45 p. m. tomorrow.

Attorney Harvey Grabill today accepted appointment as special judge in the suit to require Leonard A. Hohlt, Perry Township’ trustee, to increase his hond. The suit was filed by County Clerk Glenn Ralston on orders of County Commissioners when Perry Township citizens complained that the trustee’s $75,000 bond actually was worth about $38,000, because of ex-: emptions. :

An Indianapolis Gun Club receivership was sought today in Probate Court by the Union Trust Co., executors of the William B. Burford estate. Charging that taxes are unpaid on the Club’s land, and that the Burford estate owns. 240 of the 1000, outstanding shares, the company said that the club appears to be bankrupt.

BRADFORD IS NAMED TRADE TRAFFIC HEAD

Freeman Bradford, Sioux City, Ia. will become Indianapolis Board of Trade traffic manager March 15, succeeding Leonard E. Banta.

Mr. Bradford served the Sioux City Grain Exchange as secretarytraffic manager 14 years.

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