Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 June 1938 — Page 12

SCE SANE SR NTR 1 A

PAGE 12

Win Butler

Miss Thelma Balay (left), School,

college

ss of Shortridge High

versity teachers’

HOOSIER BOYS' STATE T0 OPEN

Youths Will Hold Election, Study Governmental Functions. > second annual Hoosier Boys’ including more than 500 In-

1s and sponsored by the

open to-

functions will be the bovs, who are to be iivided into two factions, the Fedlist the Nationalists. Following a caucus the parties are to an election Monday, using 12 machines stored at the Fair-

and

will elect municipal e officials and operate penal system Georae ast Chicago publisher, is to the state ler tate universities and college in charge of various i Howard M. Mever, Inoli chief co lot ov. Henry F or Boetcher are Q le week. Other speakers ide the Rev. Harry Rowe, EmerBaptist Church pastor; Sayer, American Legion state adjutant, and B. W. Breedlove, physical education program head Charles R. Ettinger, chief deputy county clerk, will demonstrate the voting machines The Rev. George Moorman, Legion state chaplain, is to conduct mass for

Catholic bovs

counts

Law student the i < tn be

to spe ak

Special for SATURDAY and MONDAY

of 3637 Kenwood Ave. and Miss Mary nn Lookabill of 5209 Woodside Drive, members of the 1938 graduating

fi UD

FURNITURE CO

414 E. WASH. ST,

Scholarships

were awarded scholarships to the The scholarships are valued at

2 YOUTHS QUIZZED IN STATE HOLDUP

ANDERSON, June 17 (U. P).— I'wo youthful bandits, captured yesterday after their companion, Willard Worl, 24, of Albany, was killed in an attempted filling station robbery, were to be questioned today in connection with several other robberies near here recently. The vouths, Robert Clouse, 19, of Muncie, and James Hudgel, 20, of Yorktown, were caught in Muncie and returned here after they attempted to rob a filling station on

STATE DENIE ROBBER'S PLEA FOR LENIENCY

‘Two Convicts Paroled, One Sentence Commuted At Hearing.

Newman Adkins, sentenced in | Marion County Criminal Court Feb. | 23, 1931, to 15 years for robbery, is ‘among 10 persons whose petitions | for p#role have been denied by the | State Clemency Commission. | The Commission yesterday paroled two, commuted one sentence and continued three cases. In denying Adkins’ petition, the

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Commission said trial records showed he and an accomplice attempted to rob an Indianapolis grocery, and fired several shots at the proprietor when he resisted. The grocer was uninjured. Adkins escaped from a State Prison farm Nov. 2, 1936, and was taken into custoday later the Commission said.

Embezzler Paroled

Ernest Wray, former financial secretary of the United Mine

Feet Hurt, So Salesman Asks Office Work

A salesman who wants an office

| job because his feet hurt was a

Workers of America No. 414, was | client of the Indiana Employment

was sentenced in Vigo County Circuit Court, Jan. 29, 1035, for embezzlement. According to trial re-

ports Wray appropriated some of the union's funds to his own use. Arthur Dague, sentenced in Delaware County Circuit Court, May 18, 1937, to two to 14 years for forgery, also was granted a parole with the understanding that use of intoxicating liquors will be considered a parole violation. Commission members said Dague issued forged checks when drunk.

paroled. The Commission said he | Service, 148 E. Market St. today.

The man, about 40, asked to see George J. Smith, district manager of the local office, and announced he is a door-to-door salesman. “After I am on my feet a while, they get filled with shooting pains, and I can't take a step until the circulation is restored,” he told Mr. Smith. The manager told him that his chances of finding employment in a new vocation are slim and suggested he get a selling job where he doesn’t have to walk.

SET CITY RAILWAYS HEARING FOR MONDAY

Hearing on the petition of Indianapolis Railways, Inc. to issue notes to buy 10 new busses was set for Monday by the Indiana Public Service Commission. The company asked to issue securities. bearing 6 per cent interest per year for a principle of $94 - 525.90. Total principle and interest over a five-year period, when all the notes will have matured, was fixed in the company’s petition at $108,94107. The new busses are to be used to replace old equipment if the petition is granted by the Commission.

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raction Terminal Building or. Illinois and Market Sts.

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Highway 67. They stopped at Muncie to treat Clouse’s arm, injured when he leaped through the filling station window. Worl was killed when J. V. Brown, owner of the station, opened fire after being awakened by a burglar

alarm |

Clouse told police. they said. that Worl had robbed a Danville filling | station recently |

FUNERAL TRIP FATAL CLEVELAND, June 17 (U. P) —| While on the way to attend the funeral of her stepfather, Mrs. John F. Gill, 49, died of a heart attack in Jamestown, N. Y

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