Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 June 1939 — Page 10

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SUPREME COURT PLANS STUDY OF BAR ADMISSIONS

Judges to Discuss Proposals For Two Committees On Applications.

Proposals to create two new committees to work with the State Board of Law Examiners in passing on applications for admission to the bar were to be discussed by the Indiana Supreme Court today. The proposals were contained in comprehensive report submitted cently by a special bar examinion study committee appointed by 2 Supreme Court Jan. 18. The study was started shortly or a bill was introduced in the islature to abolish bar examinaBackers of the measure ued that present examination reirements worked a hardship on} » worthy applicants. Urge Changes in Board

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Che study committee, after sev- | I weeks’ hearings, recommended | | at present examinations be connued “for the good of the public.” However, the committee recom- ‘ mended several additions to the ad-| ministrative setup that no member of a law | faculty be appointed to the examining board. | The committee recommended cre-| ation of an Advisory Committee (0 consult with the Examining Board | in drafting examination questions) and to review the grading of papers of all applicants who fail to pass. |

Board of Review Asked

Creation of a Board of Review) also was recommended by the study committee to conduct hearings upon petition of any applicant and re-| view the gradings given by the Ex-| amining Board “The determination of the Board of Review should be final,” the committee’s report stated. ! Members of the study committee! are Chase Harding, Crawfordsville, | chairman; Abraham Simmons, Bluffton; Charles A. Lowe, Law-| renceburg: Clarence F. Merrell, In- | dianapolis, and Albert Cole, Peru. The Committee was to meet the Court today along with deans of the| law schools in the state.

DAUGHTER OF M'RAE | DIES IN NEW JERSEY

MONTCLAIR, N. J. June 6 (U. —Mrs. Helen M. Henderson, widow of Howard M. Henderson of the Peter Henderson Seed Co. of New York, died today at her home here | She was A. McRae,

and proposed! school

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the daughter of Milton who long was associated with E. W. Scripps in the publication of newspapers, and Mrs. McRae. Three children survive, Her nephew, John P. Scripps, publisher of a group of California news- | papers and grandson of both Mr. McRae and Mr. Scripps, was present when Mrs. Henderson died. Funeral services will be Thursday

MOTIVE MISSING IN SPINSTER’S DEATH

CHICAGO, June 6 (U. P y —Police aid today they had not been able

to find a single motive for the mur- |

der of Miss Rose Neary, 50, moder- | ately wealthy spinster, who was | bludgeoned and strangled with a radio cord in her home Friday | Edward J. Donovan, 38, a streetcar conductor, was released after having been questioned for two days. He admitted he was friendly with Miss Neary and had borrowed $2000 from her, but police failed to uncover discrepancies in his story. FOR SELF, MOTHER TORONTO, Ontario, June 6 (U. P).— Nora Morris, 19-year -old beauty prize winner, mixed an egg drink before a birthday for her mother, Mrs Sarah Morris, 58, last night. They both drank it and | died Police said today it was a double suicide, induced by the daughter’s icspondency over her mother's ill- | aess and the mother’s refusal to live vithout her child

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‘OLICE AND FIREMEN VACANCIES FILLED

The Safety Board today filled 15] acancies in the Police Department | nd 11 in the Fire Department The men were chosen following | Vierit Board examinations. Their | jobs become effective at 8 a. m.| sunday on a probationary basis | it $1700 a vear.

HE GOT HIS RIDE IONA, Mich, June 6 (U. P).— Iioping a motorist would stop to in- | vestigate a “corpse,” Gerald McDon- | ald, 19, of Grand Rapids, Mich., laid | on the pavement today as a last resort at hitch-hiking. He got his ride, but :t ended at the County | Jail, where he will remain for 15| days. The motorist was a Deputy | Sheriff, who filed disorderly charges] against the youth.

M'NUTT TO TALK IN VIRGINIA CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va, June 6 (U. ¥.).—High Commissioner Paul V. McNutt of the Philippines, now en route to the United States, will speak before the University of Virginia Institute of Public Affairs| here July 7 on the relation of the| Philippines to Far Eastern problems. |

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REPORT ‘SCARLESS’ SMALLPOX VACCINE

(Copyright. 1939, by Science Service) NEW YORK, June 6—On the heels of news of smallpox outbreaks in New York and Tennessee comes | an announcement of a new smallpox |

TUESDAY, JUNE 6, 1939 A TRumPeT ..

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES vaccine which eliminates the severe 3) AL MINERS AWAIT out the Indiana coal fields in the | Thomas Quinn, of Indianapolis, at-| BANQUET TO HONOR BOYS scars, sickness and other incon- | next few weeks, Col. Everett Gard-|torney for the compensation division, Pr F. Bay 3 venient gemtures of ‘ordinary RULING ON BENEFITS rer of the State Unemployment and Stanley Storris, of Terre Haute, ed F. Bays, new Democratic ent ar) Compensation Division, indicated. attorney for District 11 of the state chairman, will be honored by Instructi 3 vaccination. He heard testimony yesterday United Mine Workers of America. Ninth District Democrats with a ruction The new vaccine was developed| BRAZIL, June 6 (U. P.).—Hear- from 10 employees of the Binklcy | Coal companies are Opposing panquet at Madison tomorrow by Drs. Thomas M. Rivers, R. D.lings to determine whether miners |Coal Co. and the Rio Grande Coal payment of compensation on the o ‘ Yo INDIANA MUSIC co. Baird and S. M. Ward of the hos-|are entitled to compensation for|Co., who had applied for compen- ground that such payment would be evening. The affair was announced 115 E. Ohio St. Ld. 4088 pital of the Rockefeller Institute for unemployment as a result of Isher lation, a heavy drag on the compensation |by L. E. Reeves, chairman of. that Medical Research here. disagreements will be held through-! Arguments were also presented by reserve fund. district.

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