Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 April 1938 — Page 16
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COUNTY PUPILS WILL BE GIVEN BUTLER AWARDS
Southport Pregram to Honor ~ Achievement Contest Winners.
Awards are to be presented Monday to Marion County pupils who placed in the recent achievement contest at Butler University. A pro-
- gram for them is to be held at 7:30 p. m. Monday at Southport High ‘School. 4 The contest was sponsored by the Marion County Parent-Teacher Association, the Board of Education and Butler University. Those who won first, second or third place were: ; Achievement 3A—Alberta M. Justus, Castleton; Barbara Les Jones, Center 3; Joy Lou Weevie, enter 4. 4B — Constance Brinly, Garden City; Marilyn Jo Grimes, Fleming Garden; Clarernice Taylor, Fleming Garden. 4A—Floy Gray, Mars Hill; Ruth Cooley, Lawrence: Thelma Phillips, Southport. 5B—Ernest Grosdidier, Fleming Garden; Martha J. Starkey, John Strange; Robert E. Kellems, Fleming Garden. 5A—Eugene Reilly, Lowell; Warren Rumford. Cumberland; Mary Jo DeaVtz, Cen-
ter 2. 6B—Joan Walters, Garden City; Robert Konrad, Fleming Garden; Barbara Wells,
ora. ~ 6A—Barbara Downtain, Flackville; Billy Rigot, Mars Hill; Joan Caldwell, Southport. 7B — Harriet J. Schuh, Garden City, Myrtle McCoy, Fleming Garden; Ronald Dusendschon, John Strange. 7A—John ‘Snyder, Nora; Robert Woliver, Decatur Central; Mary E. Ward, Warren Central. > 8B—Mary Maxwell, John Strange; Virfinia Conrad, Crooked Creek; Dorothy ernon, Fleming Garden. 8A—Marjorie Upshaw, Lawrence; Betty ; Strange; Doris Willsey, Pranklin Township. 9B—Margaret Kime, Nora; Betty Rippy, Ben Davis; Marilyn Pickerel, Ben Davis. . © 9—Paul: M. Vos, Warren Central; Dorothy Wright, Southport; Thelma Dugan, Warren Central. 0—Grace Whyland, Ben Davis; Robert Hunter, Warren Central; Phyllis Angleton;
Ben Davis. 11—Forest Rogers, Southport; Rose Mary Turner, Lawrence; James Tandy, Franklin Township. | 12 — Virginia Louise Poe, Ben Davis; Nancy Jane Conarroe. Warren Central; Wilma Herschel Lowes, Franklin Township.
Composition
6A—Mary Francis Baker, Edgewood; Lucille Henderson, Nora; Beatrice Waterman, Bluff Ave. 7B—Robert Gregg, John Strange; Betty Jane Stinson, Garden City; Marjorie Elrod, Fleming Garden. 7A—Eleanor =~ Ewing, Mars Hill; Mary Lou Thurston, Center 3; Wallace Watkins, Center 2. /
Cleo Vitalaru, Fleming Garden; Phyllis Patton, Garden City; Doris L. Jones, Fleming Garden. 8A—Charles Arensman, Nora; Zoe Smith, Edgewood; Mary Ellen ® Plymate, Warren Central. 9B—Marguerite Badens, Flemin den; Paul Gosney, Ben Davis; Bland. Ben Davis. > 9—Phyllis Blair. Southport; Jane SockJer. Ber Davis; Edna’ Fisher, Ben Davis. 10—Betterose Forrester, Ben Davis; Jean Tompkins, Franklin Township; Patricia Phelps. Oaklandon. 11—Russell Foster, Southport; - Frances Lovan Stiko, Warren Central.
* 12—Fave Herr. Lawrence; Eleanor Vansickle, Warren Central; James R. Bayless, Warren Central. i
CHAIRMEN NAMED FOR AIR MAIL WEEK
* ‘Adolph Seidensticker, postmaster, today announced chairmen of leading committees for observance of Indiana of National Air Mail Week, May 15 to 21. Mr. Scidensticker is state chairman. Postmasters in all county seat towns and cities will serve as county chairmen. George W. Purcell, Bloomington postmaster, is state vice chairman and William W. Houk of Brazil is treasurer. ‘ Members of the honorary committee include W. W. Jones of South Bend, Clarence F. Cornish of Ft. Wayne, I. J. Dienhart, Indianapolis; Walker W. Winslow, Indianapolis, and Adjt. Gen. Elmer F. Straub.
‘GOLD’ IS DISCOVERED "AT ATLANTIC BEACH
WINTHROP, Mass., April 5 (U. P)—With $250 in bills washed ashore in four days, Winthrop Beach became the scene of a new “gold” rush today. Two of the 23 bills recovered were large $20 gold certificates withdrawn from. circulation in 1929. Federal authorities believe the money had been washed up from the ocean’s bottom, possibly from a strong box, during recent storms. Yesterday five $10 certificates were found on the beach.
DISCIPLES OF GHRIST TO CONVENE MAY: 16
Times Special : NEWCASTLE, April 5—A sta meeting of the Disciples of Christ will be held at the First Christian Church here May 16-18. Jesse M. Bader, New York, evangelistic secretary of the Federal Council of the _ Churches of Christ in America, will
speak. ; - A goal of 1000 registered delegates has been set by the Rev. Robert T. Beck, host church pastor. . f
N. Y. GOVERNOR SIGNS ANTILYNCHING BILL
ALBANY, April 5 (U.P) .—Governor Lehman signed the Kreinheder antilynching bill today providing prison terms for persons involved in mob violence. The measure provides-that members of a mob can be sentenced to from 20 years
Garary E.
Davis;
placed in readiness for the annual
The three-story frame house at 503 N. Capitol Ave., former home of two Indianapolis Mayors. and a landmark for many years, is to be torn down soon, former Mayor Regnold H. Sullivan disclosed today. Mr. Sullivan and his father, Thomas L. Sullivan, Indianapolis Mayor two terms in thé 1890s, lived in the home with other members of the family. Reginald Sullivan again is a candidate for the Democratic nomination for Mayor. The real estate upon which the house stands will be leased for an open-air automobile sales lot. ’
The number of people afflicted with syphilis in Indianapolis, will be reduced by 60 per cent in two years if the present - progress against the disease is maintained, Dr. Herman G. Morgan, Health Board secretary, said today. “We are making the same headway in our fight against syphilis as we did in our campaign against tuberculosis once we had turned the spotlight on it,” he said. “If it were not necessary to fight syphilis from the public health standp<int it would be necessary from an economic standpoint, for it is a matter of rate preservation.”
Officers of the Miami University Alumni who will assume their duties today are Miss Helen Elliott, president, and Mrs. Ruth Byerly, secretary. They were elected last night at a dinner-meeting | at Kopper-Kettle. ¢. W. Kreuger, assistant dean of the liberal arts college at the university, was guest speaker, and Robert Garrett, university student, discussed extra-curricular activities.
Twenty-six new members of the National Honor Society will be initiated at George Washington High School Thursday night. They are: Helen Austin, Marion Carter, Harold Dowden, Janis Lee Hawhes, Barbara Stocker, Marijane Badger, William Beasley, Thelma Bloomenstock, Mary Jane Boese, Beatrice Brittain, Herschell Brittenback, Robert Brockman, Marjorie Burton, Eugene Cotton, Dallas Duffin, Betty Fielder, Kenneth Goslin, Dorothy Handy, Louis Kunstek, Robert McCalip, Dorothy - McCalment, Lois McCreery, Dorrell Roach, . Myron Scarbrough and Joan Smith.
Vacancies for 200 Indianapolis and Marion County youths exist in the Civilian Conservation Corps, Miss Helen Lowell, CCC selection supervisor, announced today. Applicants must be between the ages of 17 and 23. Applications may be made at 257 W. Washington St. Those chosen will be sent to western states.
Sixty-third annual meeting of the Indianapolis Presbyterial Soeiety is to open today at 7:15 p. m. at the the Meridian Heights Presbyterian Church, Central Ave. and 47th St. Sessions are to continue through tomorrow. Mrs. Fred D. Stiltz, president, is to preside. Special guests and speakers are to include Mrs. F. W. Backemeyer, synodical president, Gary; Mrs. F B. McCuskey, Dehra Dun, India, and Mrs. Henry W. Greist, Monticello. Music 4s to be provided by Mrs. Fern’ S. Kappes, Mrs. Sidney B. Harry and Mrs. Harry B. McNeely.
A committee of six is to arrange the annual picnic of the Indiana Casualty Adjusters Association. Herbert Krauch is chairman. Other committees named recently are membership, headed by Thomas Stewart,, and program, headed by George H. Wesendonk.
Indianapolis Real Estate Board members will hear Josephine W. Catharine, Brooklyn, N. Y. National Association of Real Estate Boards president at a special lunch-eon-meeting at the Home Show at State Fairgrounds Thursday.
Col. J. H. Davidson, executive officer, 10th infantry brigade, F't. Ben-
to’ life.
jamin Harrison, is to give an Army Day address at the ‘12th District
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES:
LEISURE TO BE TOPIC OF STATE
Edward Lindeman, National Directar, to Speak; 175 Lakes Being Built.
Leisure-time activities are. to be hy volunteer lay commit-
| tee members of the Indiana WPA ‘| recreation division, meeting at Pur-
“apron” 500-mile race on a concrete
American Legion meeting at the 40 & 8 Chateau, 119 E, Ohio St. at 8 p. m. Thursday.
The Central Indiana Chess Assocjation’s annual city tournament is to begin next Monday and continue throughout the week.
The Rev. Harold Ranes, new Central Baptist Church pastor, is to address the Bible Investigation Club meeting at the Y. M. C.. A. tomorrow at 6 p. m.
Lions Club members will hear Charles W. Chase, Indianapolis Street Railway Co. president, discuss «public Transportation” at a luncheon tomorrow in the Hotel Wash-
ington.
“Simon of Cyrene” is to be the topic for a sermon by the Rev. Frederick R. Daries, Zion Evangelical Church pastor, at the sixth midweek service at 7:45 p. m. tomorrow. Mrs. Jane Johnson Burroughs and the youth choir are to sing.
Taylor University’s president, Dr.
Robert Lee Taylor, is to. speak at the Broadway Methodist Church dinner at 6 p. m. Thursday. The university male quartet from Upland is to sing.
Indiana Aero Club members meeting at Stout Field tonight are to hear a talk by Capt. Fred R. Bailey, American Airlines chief pilot, Burford Cadle, club president, announced today. Dick Merrill, ocean flier, is to address the club next month.
Marion County Fish and Game Association today had honored George J. Marott, business and civic leader, by naming him honorary life member. Mr. Marott, assocation member more than 25 years, was awarded a gold lapel button at a meeting at the Hoosier Athletic Club last night.
Sales Executives’ Club members meeting at the Indianapolis Athletic Club last night were told by J. P. Aspley, Chicago, that many failures of salesmen could be blamed upon sales managers. Lack of care in selection, training, education, industry and determination are the principal cause of failures, he said.
Dr. Robert E. Cavanaugh, Indiana University extension director, is to speak at 7:45 p. m. Friday at James E. Roberts School, 1401 E. 10th St. The Marion County Society for the Physically Handicapped is to sponsor the meeting. .
Construetion League of Indianapolis members are to hear Frederick Wallick, Indianapolis architect, discuss “Building Industry Solidarity” at a luncheon tomorrow at the Architects and Builders Buildne. .
Fire at Schuvssler’s Market, 407 E. Washington St. today caused damage estimated at several hundred Firemen believed the blaze started in a wall. Firemen who left the scene of a blaze at the Ideal Equipment Co., 310 N. New Jersey St., looked like thie cast of a “black face” musical. Their faces were klackened from cork burned to crispness.
Knights of Columbus members at a luncheon today at Hotel Washington heard the Rev. Albert J. Murphy of Washington discuss “What the Church Is Doing for the Safeguard of Welfare Institutions.” Father Murphy, & member of Catholic University faculty, is a repre-«
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has been built in back of the cars are to be pulled off the track and into this safety zone for repairs. ? : i
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CITY
sentative of the National Conference of Catholic Charities. New officers installed at the meeting were: Edward Troy, president; Vincent Farrell, vice: president; Joseph Culligan, secretary-freasur-er; Francis Schmidt, sergeant-at-arms, and the Rev. Robert Hartman, chaplain. }
. Jonathan Richard Mills, 28, and Russell Mills, 21, both .of 2226%: E. Washington St., Apt. 4, today had been bound over to the Marion County grand jury on charges of armed robbery of a hat store at 9 N. Meridian St. Saturday night. Bond for each was set at $5000 by Judge Charles Karabell in Municipal Court.
Brookside Civic League members, meeting at Brookside communify house last night, heard George Smith, Indianapolis. supervisor - of the State Employment Service, discuss activities of the local office.
Kiwanis Club members are to be entertained by a lecture and motion pictures of the Berlin Olympic games at luncheon at the Columbia Club tomorrow. C. R. Bearmorer, photographer, who accompanied the American team, is to present the pictures. : :
Ladies of Rotary heard The Master Singers, male sextet from Chicago, and Miss Harriet Bard, book reviewer, at a luncheon today at the Claypool Hotel. Miss Bard reviewed “Journalist’s Wife,” by Lil= lian Mowrer, wife of the foreign correspondent.
Contrasting the work of American chemists with those in England, S. Gordon Stevenson of London spoke at a luncheon of the American Chemical Society today at the Severin Hotel. 1
Real estate transactions totalling $113,500 for last: week were reported by members of the North * Side Realtors, division of the Indianapolis Real Estate Board, meeting yesterday at. Canary Cottage. ~~
. An appeal to halt persons sending anonymous letters of complaint and criticism . to Indiana WPA headquarters here was made today by John K. Jennings, state administrator. While welcoming constructive criticism and complaints, Mr. Jennings asked correspondents to “either sign their names or refrain from sending such unsatisfactory forms of communications.”
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SEE THE NEW RCA MIDGET SETS
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due University April 28, John K. dministrator, announced | today. Preceding the meeting, to which itteemen have been .| Edward C. Lindeman, n, D. C., national WPA division director, is to speak on “The Function of Lay Commit in Leisure Time.” The meeting of Indiana committees is to| be held in conjunction a a joint regional conference of A recreation leaders and : Department lof Agriculture extension representatives of 13 Midwestern states, which meets April 28 to -30. The regional conference is to ascertain rural recreation -needs and to plan development of techniques for a program, Mr. Jennings said. Allen’ Bloom, Indianapolis, state chairman lof WPA recreation committees, is to preside as chairman of the lay meeting. gon
More than 4300 Indiana WP. workers are constructing approximately 175 lakes in Indiana south of Lafayette and Ft. Wayne as a part of the State Conservation Department | water conservation program, according to John K. Jennings, Indiana WPA administrator. “The lakes, 11 to be created within 50 miles of Indianapolis, are to be formed by constructing earth-fill dams and’ are to range from five to 140 acres! in size. Work is expected to be completed before the end of summer. Most projects are sponsored by conservation clubs and landowners, Mr. Jennings said, with clubs and landowners providing material and landowners donating acreage. ;
SIX LOCAL TORTURE ROBBERS SENTENCED
MARTINSVILLE, April 5 (U. P.). —8ix men who tortured James M. Jones, 55-year-old cripple, until he gave them $15.50, were under sentence of 10 years in prison today after five had switched their pleas from not guilty to guilty and the sixth was convicted by Judge Omar O’Harrow in Morgan Circuit Court. Those who switched their pleas were Benjamin Owens, 49; Charles Gaalema, 26; Otto Herold, 24; Harold Johnson, 22, and Eugene Ratliff, 28, all of Indianapolis. Floyd Owens. 21, son of Benjamin, pleaded ‘not guilty, but was convicted by Judge O’Harrow, who also rejected an attorney's request that he extend mercy. All will be sent to the State Reformatory except the elder Owens who will go to the State Prison at Michigan City. airy
ENGINEER PARLEY . SET
recreation
Times Special . LAFAYETTE, April 5—An. engineering conference to discuss “Time and Motion Studies” is to be held on the Purdue University campus April 15. ; The sponsored by the general engineer-
ing extension departments of the |
university.
‘| had receivd a
one-day meeting is being |
3
Martyr: Comes
10-Day Rites HANKOW, China, April 5 (U. P. —A Chinese “national martyr,” who “killed” himself weeks ago rather than surrender to the Japanese,
|telegraphed his wife today that he
was alive and leading ‘a Chinese
guerrilla unit harassing the Japa-
nese in Southern Shantung province. Pe re The “widow” of Chow Tung, former Chinese magistrate in Tenghsien, had just completed 10 days of
Government. Li Chow told his wife that he jumped over Tenghsien’s. wall on March 17, when the Japanese occupied the city, to kill himself. Death was better than surrendering or facing capture. But the wall was too low and the fall merely stunned him. He stayed in a moat for two days, hiding from the Japanese until he saw his chance to escape.
ADDIS ABABA GROWS
ADDIS ABABA, April 5 (U. P).— The white population of Addis Ababa has reached nearly 17,000, it
only 4000 white persons lived here.
v4
To Life After |
PUBLISHERS NEXT IN. "OBSCENITY CAMPAIGN
Val Nolan, U. 8. District Attorney, today announced plans to extend his campaign agajnst obscene. literature to include publishers. ,
He said he would seek prosecution
of publishers of salacious matter under Federal conspiracy laws. Magazine distributors and retailers, offering to .co-operate in the
drive, have appealed for aid against |
publishers who force dealérs to .include offensive publications instheir crders for-acceptable magazines, Mr. Nolan said. © - ST
Buddhist funeral ceremonies She | | pension from the
was disclosed today. A year ago.
He said he would confer with
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