Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 October 1939 — Page 8
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Other Officers Chosen by Central Normal Group; - Vacation Shifted. i
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Times Special
. DANVILLE, Ind., Oct. 16.—Gerald
Doeden of Attica, senior class president at Central Normal College, is President of the newly formed Student Ccuncil. - Other members are Mary Lou Smith; Ladoga; Philip Shaw, Danville; Marian Edmondson, Clayton; Tom Janeway, Hillsboro; Da Hastings, Greenfield; Margaret Mar- ” tin, Lebanon; William Goff, Danville; Norman Bell, La Porte; Betty Cox, Danville; Mary Alice Huston, Logansport; Steve Tomala, Gary; Loraine Deer, Bargersville, and James Wisehart, Monrovia. The seventh annual convention and conference of Kappa Pi Beta. honorary journalistic fraternity, and the National Duplicated Press Association will be held Nov. 10 and 11. Sterling Shaw of Arcadia will = be toastmaster at the Kappa Pi Beta dinner. Donald Burchard, Butler University journalism professor, will speak at the conference. ¢ Thanksgiving vacation has been changed to Nov. 23 and 24 ip accordance with President. Roosevelt's proclamation.
FIND GIANT CEDAR STUMPS | COEUR D'ALENE, Idaho; Oct. 16 (U. P.).—CCC enrollees have -found that cedar stumps measuring from 25 to 50 feet in circumference are ‘common in the valley of the north
SENIOR
Bnai Brith
Annual Member Drive Will . Start at Meeting on Wednesday.
Maurice Bisgyer, Washington, national secretary of B'nai B'rith, will address the local lodge of B'nai
Kirshbaum Center. Louis J. Borinstein, active in the Supreme Lodge of B'nai B'rith, will introduce Mr. Bisgyer, and Jack B.
vili | Kammins, president,” will preside.
The annual membership drive will be started at the meeting. Delegations from lodges at Marion, Muncie, Kokomo and Anderson are scheduled to attend. Until his appointment as secretary, Mr. Bisgyer was dctively engaged in social work. He was appointed by President Roosevelt as a member of the National Advisory Committee on Education, a delegate to the White House conference on child welfare, a delegate to the President's com-
will 1
Brith at 8 p. m. Wednesday at the |
Maurice Bisgyer . . . Helped F.
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mittee on welfare. mobilization, and
a member of the Presidential In-
augural Committee and President of the Executive’s Council, Community Chest.
—As One Goggle Eye to Another
Times. Special GREENCASTLE, .Ind., Oct. 16. —Members of‘ the Roachdale Conservation Club stood by gog-gle-eyed when - game wardens drained their pond and collected fish raised during the summer.
fork of the Coeur d’Alene River.
TRUCK LINES SIGN PACT WITH UNION
EVANSVILLE, Ind, Oct. 16. (U. P.).—The Teamsters and Chauffeurs Union, an" American Federation -of Labor affiliate, has signed a twoyear contract with Evansville truck
line. operators. The contract provides for wage increases, a closed shop, seniority rights and arbitra-
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Biden onder oor hand and Seal, his, the sixteenth day of October, 1935, in the town of Dogpatch, in the State of Kentucky. eg Post STiPLum: In case any. of you all doubts this is. oficial, we
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Know all Dogpatch MEN what ain't married by these presents, and specially Lil Abner Yokum: A0hETeaS there be inside our town limits a passel of gals what aint married but craves something awful to be, and ADETLAS these gals’ pappies and mammies has been shouldering the burden of their board
and keep for more years then is tolerable, and Ahereas there be in Dogpatch plenty of young men what could marry these gals but n acts ornery and won't, and ADNLTLAS we deems matrimony's joys and being sure of eating regular the birthright of our fair Dogpatch womanhood, Ae hereby proclaims and decrees, as Mayor of Dogpatch,
SADIE HAWKINS DAY
WOHETLON 2 foot-race will be held, the unmarried: gals ‘to chase the unmarried men and if they ketch them, the men by law must marry the gals and it, and this decree is , By authority of the law and the statute laid down by. our tevered first-Mayor of Dogpatch, Hekzebiah Hawkins, who had to make it to get his own daughter Sadie homeliest gal in all these hills and no two ways
appertaining to Sadie Hawkins Day:
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‘COUNCIL TO RECEIVE | HOSPITAL FOOD BIDS
1 presented to the City Council to-
ACTION LINE T0 LOUISVILLE STOPS OCT, 31
Electric Passenger Service Continues. as Far as - Seymour Only.
* After nearly 35 years of service to Jacksofi, Scott and Clark County communities, the 55-mile interurban line between Seymour and Louisville, Ky., will. cease ‘operation at midnight, Oct. 31. "Beginning: Nov. 1. electric passenger cars will run between Indianapolis and Seymour on new sched‘ules, and motor trucks will replace Interurban freight service over the | entire Indianapolis-Louisville line. Announcement’ of the abandonment was made by Bowman Elder, Indiana Railroad receiver, who said the line operated in-1938 under a deficit of nearly $340,000. Cost of providing service had exceeded revenue for several years, and there was no prospect of placing it on a profitable basis, he said. Continued operation of the Sey-mour-Louisville line would necessitate immediate and large expenditures for replacements and deferred maintenance. : Despite motorization of freight service, Mr. Elder said the railroad temporarily will continue to. operate a freight switching service between the Louisville Cement Co. plant at Speed and the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad at Watson Junction.
SIGMA CHI READY
Dedication of the new fraternity home of the Butler University chapter of Sigma Chi at 442 W. 46th St. will be held Thursday night with
active and alumni members attending. The new home was purchased by the fraternity and remodeled last summer in time for occupancy at th» beginning of classes last month. Following a buffet supper, John F. Mitchell Jr, an alumnus and a member of the University board of directors, will make the formal presentation of the house to the fraternity. David Craycraft, fraternity president, will give the response. J. Dwight Peterson, head of the Michigan-Indiana province of Sigma Chi, will present the Balfour National Fraternity Award to Jay Fix, last year’s chapter president. Mr. Fix was ‘chosen as the outstanding president in the province. Dr. D. 'S. Robinson, Butler - University will be the honored guest during the ceremonies. The local Sigma Chi chapter was founded here in 1865 when Butler was known as the. Northwestern Christian University and was located 13th St. and College Ave.
CAR IS STOLEN BY “PAIR HE GAVE LIFT
Maurice Newton, 428 N. Linwood Ave., was slugged and his car was stolen by two men he offered to drive home last night, he told police. He said he was talking to a man at Illinois and Market Sts. and offered to drive him home. They walked to Capitol Ave. and Market St., where his car was parked. There they met an *“‘acquaintance” of the man he was befriending. As they stopped . at the .‘“acquaintance’s home” on 25th St. west of Harding St. the two slugged Mr. Newton and drove away in the car.
Bids for canned foods for City Hospital submitted Saturday will be
night. The bids were somewhat lower than those turned down as too high on Sept. 14. Albert 'Losche, City purchasing agent, said he will tabulate bids received July 14, Sept. 14 and Friday to show councilmen the trends. ‘:
TYPOS’ SPRING MEET TO BE AT FT. WAYNE
Times Special . Lo. HUNTINGTON; Ind., Oct. 16.— The spring conference of the Indiana Typographical Unions will be held at Ft. Wayne, it was decided last night as the 59th semi-annual meeting of the organization closed here. John Conley, Indianapolis, International Typographical Union second vice president, addressed. the
E INDIANAPOLIS
T0 DEDICATE HOME,
Plow—and How
Times Special DECATUR, Ind, Oct. 16.— Farmers from Allen, Wells and Adams Counties will hitch their plows to horses or tractors Oct. 31
on the Harold Stassell farm northeast of Monroeville. Entries are limited to three, tractor outfits and one multiple ‘hitch horse-drawn outfit from each county. Entries may be made with the three county agricultural agents, C. V. Kimmell, Ft. Wayne; M. S. Smith, Cluffton; and L. E. Archbold, Decatur. ; There will also’ be a low corncutting demonstration, weed plowing and talks by L. E. Hoffman and R. H. Wileman of Purdue.
RED CROSS ASKS VOLUNTEER HELP
Local Chapter Will Make Clothing for War's Non-Combatants.
Volunteers to make elothing for non-combatants of the European War will be needed within several weeks, William Fortune, local’ American Red Cross chairman, said to-
ay. . . Z The first shipment of relief supplies from here was sent to New York Saturday. More than 2000 pieces of clothing were shipped to national headquarters at ‘New York where they will be repacked for export. | Be] A temporary office tor make garments has been set up in the Chamber of Commerce building, he said, and will swing into operation as soon as he hears from three representatives now in Europe studying
needed, he stated. “We do not want contributions of clothing,” Mr. Fortune explained. “We have found that it is more difficult to recondition old clothing than to make new garments. We will need women volunteers who can sew.” Mr. Fortune said he doubted whether the office here would make surgical bandages.- These probably can be manufactured cheaper than workers can make them, he said.
FOR REPAIR APPROVED
A $5723 WPA project to repair the Indianapolis Police Station has been approved in Washington. The project will enable the Police
office space in the detective bureau by rearranging partitions and also will finance repairs to walls, floors, plumbing and windows. About seven new offices will be added to the bureau. The City’s contribution as sponsor will total about $2150, according to Posey Denning, Marion County WPA. Administrator...”
ROTARIANS TO HEAR TOBACCO FIRM AID
Albert E. Link, a member of the research department of Philip Morris and Co. Ltd., will speak at the Rotary Club luncheon tomorrow in the Claypool Hotel. Engaged through Edward W. Harris, member of the club and president of Hamilton, Harris & Co., tobacco distributors, Mr. Link will tell of the steps necessary in producing cigarets. He is a graduate of Cornell University. 3
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