Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 December 1939 — Page 34
PAGE 34
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
BUTLER GROUP | Engineers’ Head 18 ARE EMPLOYED | Real Home May Replace [FIGURING BENEFITS BY NIB LOCALLY Byqve Family's Tiny Hut| BEB
T0 MEET HIGH SCHOOL HEADS
Preparation for College Will Be Discussed With Freshmen.
Indianapolis high school prinelpals Monday will confer with several hundred Butler University
freshmen who are graduates of their schools. The principals will endeavor to learn from their former pupils how Righ schools can better prepare their seniors for university work and how Butler can better aid recent high school graduates. Conferences between principals and former students are to be held in the morning at the Arthur Jordan Memorial Hall. Following the conference periods, the prineipals will attend a luncheon to be given for them by the university in| the Campus Club. | Principals who will take part in| the conference are: H. H. Ander- | son, Tech High School; E. H. K.| McComb, Manual High School; K. V. Ammerman, Broad Ripple High School: Walter Gingery, Washington High School, and Russell Lane, Crispus Attucks High School.
Butler Collegian Helps Feed Needy Families
Several hundred needy Indianapolis families are expected to benefit again this year from the Butler University Collegian Cheer Drive, which has been going on at the | Fairview Campus for the last month Under direction of Co-chairmen James Farmer and Miss Margaret Millikan, the campaign is being carried on among school organizations on a competitive basis. The fraternity, sorority or unorganized group which is awarded the most points for collecting food, clothing or toys for the drive will be given the Cheer Drive trophy.
| §
Skabo . . . he'll do the introducing.
H. H
H. H. Skabo, chairman of the |
Central Indiana Section of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers, will preside at the December dinner meeting of the society at 7 p. m, today at the Athenaeum. Seven members of the local section will speak. They are Prof.
Carl Wischmeyver, Rose Polyvtech- |
nic Institute; Prof. W. J. Cope, Purdue University; Paul
Indianapolis Power & Light Co;
J. A. Drogue, RCA Manufactur- | Eli | Lilly & Co.; Homer Ruppard, In- | | dianapolis Water Co., and Frank | Weaver, Hibben-Holweg & Co.
ing Co.: John Siegesmund,
1 FOREIGN-BORN STUDY AT EARLHAM
Timer Special RICHMOND, Ind, Dee. 15.— Eleven foreign-born students are attending Earlham College here. Several of them, however, are
| American citizens.
Six of the students were born in Cuba, and one was born in each Italy, England, Germany, Austria
and China.
Helm, |
| Times Special
WASHINGTON, Dee. 15. — The] 11th Region National Labor Relations Board office at Indianapolis has 18 employees and a total annual 'payroll of $45.240, records of the House Committee investigating the
INLRB disclosed today.
tively.
2 FROM HERE GET
| Timer Special
|nois College of Optometry.
| They were among a class of 78
graduated from the school.
Your Christmas Shopping Problems
Top salary of $5200 goes to Rob- charity, | ert H. Cowdrill,- regional director. father, mother, two minor children, | His staff includes six field examiners at salaries ranging from $2800 __ went to a private dump owner in to $3800; one clerk stenographer at $1800: 7 stenographers and typists at from $1440 to $1500; regional attorney, $4000. and two other attorneys at $3400 and $3000, respec-
OPTOMETRY DEGREE ‘beds made of salvaged junk.
CHICAGO, Ill, Dec. 15.—Two Indianapolis men, Herbert H. Wilberding and Meyer Weismann, today were awarded the degree of doctor of optometry by the Northern Illi-
COMPLICATED
Deputies in the Indianapolis area This is a no-names story about,and the children wore spotless of the Unemployment Compensation | Christmas that has a new slant and clothes, | Division have become market exmay result in a brand new house| The neighbor entered the picture | Perts, Lester Kassing, district manfor an Indianapolis family. It be-lagain He reported to Juvenile 28€r, reported today. gan several months ago when the Court that the children were in| In deducting partial earnings father lost his job. danger of rat bites. from unempioyment benefits, they | Refusing to go on any form of Yesterday a Juvenile Court case have been required to translate “two
the famliy—consisting of worker visited the place. The father bushels of potatoes and a load of took the case worker down a little | ['eWood” into a money equivalent hill and said: * 7 |for entry into records, since many ” : {unemployed persons are being paid No rats get to the house, because in food stuffs and supplies for oc‘I have put a line of lime around it. casional odd jobs, Mr, Kassing said. | Rats won't cross a line of lime. Earnings, figured in units of dolThe case worker reported back jars, are deducted from weekly pay- | aah the family was sober, in-iments of claimants. In reporting q dustrious, clean and deserving. But | earnings as required by law, claim(she reported that the family re-| . : | : a IN ants do not lose anything, Mr. Kass- | fused to accept charity insisted that jn pointed out, since the deductions pines Souid be Dekiar, |are made only from the week the But the case worker, so impressed claimant obtained partial employwith the apparent worth of the | ment. family, took things in her
own | hands. She went to the owner of
married daughter and her husband |
the city. The father was employed as a sort of caretaker of the dump, with the privilege of charging persons 10 cents a load to unload trash. In the succeeding weeks, he an his family built a three-room home |of pieces of tin and scraps, and {furnished it with tables, chairs and
About that time, someone in the neighborhood reported the dump
to the City Board of Health as & tye Jand and a deal may be worked health menace, but the Depart-|qo,¢ The Indianapolis Motor Transporment decided it could operate. | If possible, the land owner is go- tation Club will hold its Christmas Meanwhile, the minor children at-|jng to furnish the family with party for needy children at Fox's (tended school and although water second hand lumber from which Steakhouse, 1207 E. Washington St. {had to be carried for more than & the father and son-in-law will build | next Thursday noon. D. F. McCorblock, the house was as clean as a new house—one that will have mick and J. B. Holmes are cochairpossible under the circumstances. {wood floors and wind-proof walls. men.
PARTY TO AID CHILDREN
|
FRIDAY, DEC. 15, 1939
how long his week-end luck will hold out. Last week he caught a thief robbing a corn crib as he was driving home early in the morning. The week-end before that he captured a fugitive from a Federal Reformatory =!and, the previous week he arrested
OFFICER WONDERS IF LUCK WILL HOLD
Times Special
COLUMBUS, Ind, Dee. 15.
| Patrolman Nate Bush is wondering! two filling station robbers.
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The items contributed bv the? The Cuba contingent includes Miss students will be distributed in the Ruthanna Davis, Richmond; Ralph city during Christmas vacation at and Wilbur McCracken, Fairmount, Butler, | Ind.; Ramiro Diaz, Carlos Ezpeleta
————— {and Manuel Ferrers all Ratives o STATE-WIDE HUNT | Cuba. The former three were m ENDS AT HOME BASE
{in Cuba of American parents and Timer Special
returned to Indiana several years RICHMOND, Ind, Dec. 15—Ten days ago Beriyn Norforth traded for an automobile. A few hours later it was stolen Police couldn't find the car in the city so they asked State Police to be on the lookout. Yesterday, the automobile was found five blocks from where jt was stolen, with gas in it but the starter jammed. Mr. Norforth said that the car had been driven some 170 miles since he last had possession of it.
ago. The other foreign-born students are Miss Gwendolyn Coney, a British subject now living in Maine; Miss Annetta Balestriere, born in Italy but now a naturalized American citizen Sik Woo Ting, native can citizen: Sik Woo Ting. native of Vienna, and Henry Wilhelm Majer, late of Frankfort-on-Main Germany, but now applying for American citizenship papers.
9 NAMED TO AID IN CLUB'S ACTIVITIES
Nine committeemen have been appointed by F. A. Langdon, president of the Indianapolis Motor Transportation Club, to direct ciub activities for the coming vear. They are R. C. Campbell, publicity: J. B. Holmes, luncheons; W. C. Mellender, sports: Ray Mars, employment; L. E. Berry, by-laws; Edgar Harrison, social service; W. J. Healy, legislative; H. B. Nunley, safety, and P. L. Joyce, past president.
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NOLAN TO ATTEND FETE U. S. District Attorney Val Nolan will go to Chicago tomorow to attend the annual dinner of the Indiana Society to be held at the Palmer | House, he society members are Hoosiers or former Hoosiers now living in and about Chicago. More than 1000 are expected. Federal Security | Administrator Paul V. McNutt will ibe principal speaker,
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