Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 April 1939 — Page 15
‘i
(7) MAYOR SILENT
REDAY, APRIL 6
~ ON MERIT BASIS FOR PARK JOBS
Peclares He Hasn't Received Communication From Women's Council.
© Mayor Sullivan today was silent
on the request of the Indianapolis] 3
Local Men Foil Would-Be Robber
Council of Women for the selection | JENN
of park and playground employees on a straight merit basis, Ill at home yesterday, the Mayor shid he had not received the coms Munication which was mailed Tues« day by the Council. In the letter, the Council. representing 25000 Indianapolis women, Ohjected to the awarding of play. Ras Jobs on a patronage basis. asserted that the installetion of the merit te would improve the etticiene summer playground personne whieh was severely eriticized last year by A ©. Sallee, City Parks superintendent.
Joseph Also Silent
_ Comment was also declined by Jackiel W. Joseph, Park Board pres. fdent, and Mr, Sallee. H. W. Middlesworth, recreation director, said he wished to reserve comment until he confers with Mayor Sullivan. Meanwhile, as applications for summer playground jobs continued to arrive at the Park Department office, Mr. Sallee announced that as far as he was concerned, no one under 21 years of age would be hired this year as a playground instructor. Several persons under 21 were given jobs as instructors last year,” he said. “They proved for the most Part unsatisfactory. I am stiekin tO my recommendation of last fal that no youngsters will be hired to fill these responsible positions.”
+ Final Choice Up to Mayor ‘The Council's letter to the Mayor and the Park Department followed the announcement by Mayor Sullivan that worthy Democrats who
supported him in the last campaign would receive preference for play-
ground jobs “ The merit system has been cone sidered by the Park Board and ad. yocated by Mr. Salles. However, the
final selection of playground pers | sonnel is in the hands of the Mayor, |
who makes appointments. ' It was reported, meanwhile, that geveral precinet committeemen are seeking to force My. Sallee to modi
fv his position on the merit ssytem |
Br get out as park superintendent.! Ita Haymaker, Democratic County! chairman, denied the report, terme fhg it “ridiculous.”
FIRM FIGHTS FINDING MADE BY ARBITRATOR
The Van Camp Hardware Co. today had filed a suit asking a declaratory judgment of its rights under a labor contract signed last year
with the Amalgamated Association of Iron, Steel & Tin Workers
and fied.
fimes Special
alities,
Yam A feature of the programe will be a chorus of 1500, including a large choir singing the hymns and anthems, a choir of 100 Negro voices,
a group of 100 St. Paul's Parochial] § and girls!
| School students, boys choruses of 100 each, and a women's chorus of 50 singing selections from “The Holy City.” All scenes in the pageant have been adopted from the Bible, on the basis of research by clergymen. The Christus will be portrayed again this year by the Rev. James R. Furbay, First Friends Church pastor
The giant stage will represent a scene of the streets of Jerusalem, with buildings and architecture of
Union, Local 1472 {that period.
The suit, filed in Superior Court |
3, grew out of the discharge by the company of a foreman After his discharge, the suit states, and after refusal to reinstate him. an arbitrator was appointed under terms of the contract. The arbitrator, Stanley V. White, returned a report in which he declared the workman had been discharged unjustly, the suit stated. The company charges that Williams was discharged “for cause”
Scenes in the pageant will in clude “The Triumphal Entry of Jesus Into Jerusalem on Palm Sune day,” “The Last Supper” (in tableaux and pantomime), “The Be. trayal Kiss of Judas” and the “Are fh of Jesus by the Roman Sol ers.”
WIRES IGNITE GASOLINE
Crossed electric wires ignited gas oline at the garage of J. N. Bateman
The suit contends that the finding | of the arbitrator was void, and asks the court to define the company's rights under the contract
WANTS SISTER HELD ON KIDNAP CHARGE
BOSTON, thorities today pondered a 22-year-old mother's plea that her sister be extradited to Virginia to stand trial for kidnaping her daughter. Testifying at an extradition hear ing, Mrs. Virginia Eley of Ports. mouth, Va, accused her sister, Mrs Flossie Mae La Bonte 39 Attleboro. of fleeing to Massachusetts with 8-vear-old Frances Eley while custody proceedings were pending before the | Virginia Circuit Court. Custody of |
the child subsequently was awarded | fo
the mother,
April 8 (U., P).—Au-|
& Son, rear of 427 KE. Ohio St, today. ‘The blaze was extinguished without Gamage.
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FAINT-HEARTED
OLIS TIMES Auto Wreck Is Shock to
‘Bystander’
BANDIT HUNTED AFTER FLEEING
Runs When Two Men Fight Rather Than Yield $1250 ing the owner of the demol.
In Cash. Treesh, He looked closer and paled
a little. It was his car, stolen from his garage, it turned out, and wrecked by the thief, who escaped.
Times Special ARGOS, April 6-<Among the crowd looking at a wreck in a ditch near here and pity«
A bandit who was manhandled by two intended victims and escaped without $1250 in cash they carried was sought by police today. Fred Hager, 1117 BE. 10th St, and Sam Mason, 238 McKim St, who had returned to Hager's Restaurant, at Stillwell and E. 10th St, with the
Brunson, R. R. 13, and Mrs. Sophia Wdowka, 1021 N. Drexel Ave. Harold Gibbs of Plainfield, proprietor of a gasoline filling station at 2002 Capitol Ave, reported that
MEXICAN DIPLOMAT FAGES AUTO CHARGE
FT. WORTH, Tex, April 6 (U, Pp). «A plea of “diplomatic immunity” failed today to circumvent a court trial for Mexican Corzul A. G. Dominguez of Dallas, charged by State Police with driving 70 miles an hour, attempting to elude officers, refusing to identify himself and ignoring a declaration of arrest, Capt. John Reed of the State Highway Patrol, said today after conferring with highway patrolmen W. D. Beasley and E. J, Banks that Senor Dominguez would be haled into a peace justice court and be prosecuted “just as anyone else.” Patrolmen Beasley and Banks said they caught Senor Dominguez after
the gunman yesterday afternoon.
cash from the bank, were held up by cigarets and auto accessories were
E. E. VAN LONE OF PURDUE DEAD AT 44
LAFAYETTE, April 6 (U. P.).— Funeral arrangements were being made today for E. E. Van Lone, 44, animal husbandry professor at Purdue University, who died from a
heart attack last night. widely known as a geneticist and Yas. & Wisconsin University gradua .
He was|!
WONDERFUL MODERNISTIC AND MARBLE DESIGNS
Fred Hager (left), of 1117 E 10th St, and Samuel Mason, of 238 McKim St, don't believe in obeying a pandit’s orders even if he is armed. When a guhman stepped up to their automobile at Stilwell and E. 10th St yesterday afternoon and demanded their money-—-they had a total of $1250—Mr. Hager grabbed for the gun and Mr Mason grabbed the bandit by the coat collar.
2000 Rehearse Easter Sunrise Rite at Marion
MARION, Ind. April 6.--A cast of more than 2000 was rehearsing! - today for the third annual Easter pageant to be presented here in Me« PF morial Coliseum Easter morning as a sunrise service, | The cast includes representatives of all religious faiths and nation«| f Fifty churches and various civic and business groups are spon | ye soring the religious drama, to be broadcast over WLW from 5:45 to | a
ndL to eave thei
obtained at all
ol LAR SB
stolen when the station was entered
ti - last night. he had led them on a hair-raising
eight-mile chase at “better than T0-miles per hour” on a crowded arterial pike.
ASY TO use
Cy ee 3 at a SAPS
PRED FEAR & CO. 0Wyn, NY. (ETS
Instead of oveying 3 command to turn over the cash, they grappled Theft of cigarets by burglar / ) ) glars who with the bandit and put him to ransacked his grocery at 18 W.
flight. Neither, however, could give|qe BE. th : police a good description of the 22d St. was reported by Alfred Hale,
gunman, Meanwhile State Police were seeking two men who last night at tempted to break into a filling station at Rushville and exchanged shots with Patrolman Russell Aide ridge, who surprised them, Patrolman Aldridge said he bhelieved he wounded one of the men. State Police said no further re ports had been made on two gun= wen who, since March 5, have abe ducted and robbed four Hoosiers, one of them an Indianapolis man. They reported, also, that the oar of Leo V. Rogers, 641 N. Hamilton Ave, stolen from him Monday night when the pair abducted him at the Butler Field House and released him near Noblesville, still was missing. Burglar who entered the Wink« ler Motor Sales offices at 1526 N. Meridian St, last night, were unable to crack the safe and left. Police were searching for a purse thief” who yesterday stole three women's purses from downtown stores. The purses were valued at $7, the total cash loot amounted to $34 and property valued at about $30 was taken, The victims Groh, 1308 Ss Fast St.
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Times Photo.
The bandit broke loose
were Mrs, Helen Mrs. Mildred
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