Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 June 1939 — Page 11

FRIDAY, JUNE 2, 1939

19 PASS TESTS, | CLEAR WAY TO FIREMEN'S JOBS

Those With Highest Ranking 10 Be Selected First as Vacancies Occur.

Seventy-nine men are eligible for jobs in the Fire Department during the next year. These men passed the Fire Department training school tests last month, were certified by the Merit | Board and then approved as eligibie for employment by the Safety | Board at its meeting yesterday. Ap- | proximately 360 persons started in| the school. The men will be given jobs as vacancies occur. They will be selected | according to their ranking on the | training tests, Board members said. | Those who passed the tests and | the order in which they are ie) by their grades:

illiam Wyss 1434 Union St.: Morris Princell, 2636 E. 40th St.; Kenneth Williams, 924 Hervey St.: Halbert Price, 1011] N. Rural St.; Frank Marren as, English | Ave.. Dolpha King, 904 E. 10 neth Tull, 2317 N. New Jorvey Be : Melvin | Wilkerson, 2023 N. Harding St., and Harold Sparks, 1419 N. Ewing St Richard Sites, 1031 N Denny st. 3 sosenn Krebsbach, 1914 Av a Sant, .925 Dext er St John RN hi 1 Central Ave K. Jolliff, wb Shel by | t." Jack Reno 1422 E. Ne Yo St.., and Robert McDonnell, 2504 N 51

Jersey St Harold Unversaw, 332 W. 31st St.: Andrew Johnson, 912 Muskingum St. James Tobin. 36 S. Euclid Ave.. Robert Adler, Eugene St.: Lee Ragsdale, 1420 N. Mount St Franklin Stanisha, 1318 N. Grant Ave.; Pelman Johnson, 928 Locke St.. Charles Hill, 540 S. West St.: George Stumpf, 143% English Ave.: Charles Mas-| terson, 471 N. State St, and Charles O Britton. 2519 E. Washington St Felix Lyles, 913 Locke St.; Charles Speer, 2415 Shelby St.: Robert Woods 1914 Arrow Ave.: Sanford Metcalfe, 101 N Bradley Ave.; Basil Reiss, 437 N Alton Ave : Wilbur Bohne, 242 S. Gray St Donald Smith, 251 N. Holmes Ave.: Lathan . 621 W. 29th St.: Marshall Kealing . 10th St.: Hugh Moore, 1237 Temple Ave.: William Brown, 1419 Her- | schell St.: William McDonald. 2335 Shelby : and Glenn D. Brown, 1403 N. Colorado ve William E. Gearns, 1201 S. Warne Spencer, 4126 E. Washington St; Francis Healy, 1721 S. Meridian St.; John McKinley. 718 N. Denny St.: Vincent " , 2247 Broadway: William Ball, 31st St... and Otto Riegger, 617

1466 N. Drexel Ave.: net Ss, 6183 Locke St Wilbur r. 1429 S. Talbott St Thomas Shuf1142 N. Pennsylvania St.; Fred . 2618 Indianapolis Ave George | . 2365 Adams St.: Arthur Temple, 550 Minerva St.; Thomas McCormick, 1410

Naomi St 1463 Shannon Ave.:. Roy |

James Walsh, Torrence, 1225 Wade St.; Leonard Roll { John

2531 Ransdell St.: Leeds Ave Carl Donnelly, 201 St William E. Taylor, 628 W Robert Hopwood. 351 N. Beville Ave Sullivan, 3626 Kenwood Ave.: Harry Dobbs, 912 Warren Ave., and Frederick Egeert. 749 Pleasant Run Blvd. William Walker. 1936 Mansfield Harry Wallace, 1328 Cornell Ave. Lindenschmidt, 1313 S. Alabama : Charles C. Haas, 2622 Carrollton Ave.: Henry Simon, 637 N. Rural St.; Earl Dickinson, 1440 N. Illinois St. Robert Godbv , S318 Guilford Ave.: Walter hss. 963! N. Tuxedo St.: Edward Schenk 1 New York St.; Albert Albin, 763 Concord St.; David Russell, 2156 Sugar Grove Ave.: Herman March 724 Blake St., and LeRoy Phillips, 514 Cottage Ave

RIES HEADS KROGER OLD-TIMERS' CLUB;

George Ries today assumed his| duties as president of the Old] Timers’ Club, made up of Kroger | employees who have been in the] service of the company for 10 years | or longer. | Other officers elected for the rest of the year are Cecil Martin, vice president; B. A. Arnold, treasurer, | and J. R. Commons, secretary. Organized in May, 1938, the club| now has 133 members. The nomi- | nating committee was composed of | Charles Jones, Gene Holdaway and Theodore Cox.

PENSIONS SAFE, SAY CHURCH FUND KEEPER

NEW YORK, June 2 (U. P) Bradford B. Locke, executive vice| president of the Protestant Epis-| copal Church Pension Fund, said | today that “there is no question of reducing any of the present pen-| sions, or of the fund's ability to earn | sufficient amounts to pay the future pensions promised under the rules| of the fund.” Mr. Locke's statement was] prompted, he said, by an erroneous impression drewn from the annual | report of the pension fund made] May 29. The fund, because of low- | ered interest rates, showed a total] net reduction of $17,000 for the year, | Mr. Locke said, instead of $500,000. He said this was negligible.

State St.: |

Clyde Henninger.

|

Ashcraft 3 Mc Ki zs 20th St.: : John

|

' | be given by William Henry Harrison, |

[phone and Telegraph Co.

{and the dedication of Rockne Me- |

peo a -

> ST TOS AFL

Before Graduates PHONOGRAPH LURES

|

|

The Most Rev. Bernard J. Sheil, D. D. Auxiliary Bishop of the Archdiocese of Chicago, is to preach the baccalaureate sermon at the University of Notre Dame's | 59th commencement Sunday. |

11 CITY YOUTHS 10 GET DEGREES

41 States Are re Represented In This Year’s Class At Notre Dame.

{| Times Special NOTRE DAME, June 2.—Eleven | Indianapolis youths are among the | 527 University of Notre Dame | seniors to graduate Sunday. Forty-|

x | one states, the District of Columbia

and four foreign countries are rep-

resented in the graduating class.

The commencement address is to,

vice president of the American Telein New | York and the Most Rev. Bernard J.! Sheil, auxiliary Bishop of Chicago, | will preach the baccalaureate ser-|

|mon at a solemn pontifical mass on

the morning of commencement day. | The exercises will cover three] days, beginning with alumni activities today, followed by class day exercises tomorrow and graduation |

| | | |

morial Fieldhouse Sunday.

Those in the graduating class

e.: | from Indianapolis are James Elmer | DX | Rocap,

5427 Washington Blvd.; | Thomas Riley Bulger, 640 E. 34th | St.: Emmett Patrick Barton, 1618] N. Delaware St.; Thomas Gerard | Gillespie, 2054 N. Meridian St.;

{Francis Joseph Habig, 4601 S. Me. |

ridian St.; Robert John Langer, 1 E. 36th St.; Francis Joseph Lauck, 1485 S. Meridian St.; John Edward MecMahon, 24 N. Belmont Ave.: John Joseph O'Connell, 3936 Contin Ave; | John Carr O'Connor, 1423 N. Pennsylvania St.. and Francis Sanford Pittman, 5671 Washington Blvd.

ARRESTED IN FATAL LOGANSPORT CRASH

LOGANSPORT, June 2 (U. P).| —Arrested at Cass County Hospital | {shortly before he was removed to| his home in Chicago by an ambu-| lance, William J. Schukraft, 61, | | posted $200 bond on charges of reckless driving. Pulaski County officers filed the charge following an automobile accident Monday that resulted in the] deaths of Mrs. Schukraft and Mrs. E. I. Aiken of Joliett, Ill, and injuries to the Rev. E. I. Aiken and | to Schukraft, who suffered a crushed leg and loss of an eye.

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Beech Grove we Gontraston Strongly Endorses Famous Medicine in Remarkable Statement to Public. Had. Not Been Well for Four Years and Was Finally Forced to Quit Work. Back on Job Now.

Business and professional men, ministers, teachers and prominent citizens from all walks of life, con- | tinue to heap praises upon the famous new roots, herbs and barks] medicine Retonga. In hundreds of | cases, according to the voluntary! testimony of those who have put it to the test, Retonga has promptly overcome long-standing cases of weakened, nervous condition, acid | indigestion, frequent getting up| nights, aching back and painful muscles from the toxic poisons, and similar distressing inorganic com-

MR. GENTRY C. BU} CH |something to keep from falling. I had hard shooting pains all over my body, I was up a lot at night to relieve my kidneys, and my nerves {were all to pieces. I didn’t spare money on medicines and treatments, but I kept getting wors> until I had | to quit work and when I started on | Retonga I had been in bed for! seven days.

“Three bottles of Retonga not |

SERPENT TO DEATH

| NEW YORK. June 2

BENDIGO, Australia, June 2 (U. A. Greenwich village art dealer who of the village. hung a portrait of President Roose- | Eral velt outside his door with some] (these the best of the lot: “He is too much an idealist. “What we need is a realist.” That was written by a Joe Vallon. R. T. Alexander wrote:

“As a man he is good. “As a President he is great.

P.).—A new field and market has | been opened here for the phono-| | graph trade. | Some boys, unable to induce a paper and pencils and a notice asksnake to come out from its hiding |ing passersby to write their opinions |

| place, brought a portable phono- | |scanned the results today. graph and played records until the | Some writers said they liked the | {snake finally emerged and

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES — Poems Tell Opinions of Roosevelt

(U. P.).— the traditional method of expression, “To all you haters

von Brandenberg,

~~

eo I

PAGE 11

The dealer, Maj. | “I say just wait.”

considers! Someone who

“Disgusted Man” wrote:

| spring.” | M. R. scribbled: “Roosevelt? Oh, vanilla.”

well,

I'll

signed himself

“Roosevelt should do something “About the ladies’ hat this

take

| WPA sewing project.

CHARGE YOUTH STOLE | MOTHER'S WPA PAY

BLOOMINGTON, June 2 (U. P). —Federal authorities will receive custody of a 17-year-old youth on a

| charge of stealing and forging a WPA check

sent to his mother, Chief of Police John Rawlins said | today. He said the by confessed he “got drunk and spent the check.” His mother, widowed, is employed on a|

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plaints. The speed of its benefits is{only got me out of bed but I've| often astonishing. Mr. Gentry C.[8ained weight and I never felt bet. | Bunch, widely-known cement and ter in my life. No more sourness, | trucking contractor, who resides at |gas, or constipation; no more pains | 437 Alton St, Beech Grove, Ind. Or getting up nights. I eat, sleep | reports that Retonga freed him from | land feel like a man made over new. | four years’ suffering that had re- |My wife and four or five friends | sisted everything else tried until he are now taking Retonga and I wish | was forced to take to his bed. |T could cell everybody in Indiana | “I had an attack of pneumonia about it. It's the greatest medicine |

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OPEN

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TI eh EY LTT TR

a cozen things ronz with me | afterward,” Ba Mr. “Every time I ate my food turned sour. Meat of any kind, beans, or sour salads nearly killed me. Every night of the world I took a laxative, but even then I had such bilious, dizzy headaches I had to hold to

Bunch.

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|

|

Just call Mr. Gaul at LI4587 before 5:30 for evening appointment and shop when the store fis yours,

PEARSON’

Carrying Charge in 90

133 W. WASHINGTON LI. 4587