Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 March 1940 — Page 2
CHANGE IN BUS ROUTE, SEWAGE
Irvington Group to Investigate Delay on Pleasant Run Project.
Three Indianapolis civic clubs met last night to discuss community and _ organizational problems:
Nearly 50 residents of the Irving-|
ton district heard complaints on the vicinity’s sewer system at a meeting of the North Irvington Civic League. . At a meeting of the South. Side Civic Club, a proposal of a merger with the South Central Club was dropped. Proposed bus changes were discussed at a meeting of the East 21st Street Civic League. : The increasing problem of sewage draining into Pleasant Run from the Ellenberger Plaza addition was discussed by Harold J. Schlicht and Dr. O. E. Simons, two new members of the Irvington group.
Drainage Problem Explained
Mr. Schlicht said that cement tile for the sewer, needed to correct the situation, had been lying in Ellenberger Park since September and that speed was necessary if Pleasant Run was to be “pleasant” this summer.
It was explained that new houses have been constructed in the addition and septic tanks do not prevent the drainage into the creek. A committee composed of Dr. Simons, Mr. Schlicht, Bernard Zimmer and J. C. Beck was appointed to investigate the delay. Plans for a sidewalk along East 10th St. were temporarily dropped when Olaf R. Olsen, Irvington Club member, reported that the estimated cost of from $250 to $300 per property owner for the sidewalk was prohibitive. He was the only person living on East 10th St. to sign the improvement petition.
Bridge Estimate Promised
W. E. Hart, League president, said that the Arlington Bridge over Pleasant Run was to be improved and a City Engineer's estimate on the cost of a new structure would be ready in the near future. The bridge which “is too narrow and a constant threat to traffic safety, should be replaced,” League members believe. A new bridge was one of the objectives which stimulated organization of the month-old lub. At the South Side meeting held in the South Side Turners Hall, the proposed merger with the South Central Club was opposed on the grounds that the South Side Civic Club always had been for men only. Sheriff Al Feeney aiscussed home conditions as they affect children and urged the organization of recreational clubs to decrease delinquency. Bus Route Discussad
The East 21st St. group met at School 68 and heard representatives ef the Indianapolis Railways dis-| cuss the company’s proposed bus route change in that community. The proposal, at first indorsed by the civic league, was strongly opposed by ' many residents who charged that the league did not represent them and they wanted “the route to remain as it is and per-
Bird H. Lybrook
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Scaatland, of Anderson, are believed to be the first couple in Indiana married under the terms of the new hygienic marriage law. They had their blood tests made last week and got the required certificates so that they could be married at 8 a. m. yesterday by Justice of the Peace Albert George. They persuaded
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Scantland. . - office an hour carly.
"| the real stunts.
. . County Clerk opened
#
* : Madison County Clerk Ray Miller to open his office an hour early. Mr. Scantland, an Anderson real estate dealer, is 24. Mrs, Scantland, the former Miss Elizabeth Featherston, is 23. Mrs, Scantland is a registered nurse. They said they intended to be the first married under the new law and that they belieyed they had succeeded.
LOCAL DEATHS
Services will be held Monday for Bird H. Lybrook, 5222 E. Washington St., electrical engineer and resident of Indianapolis for 15 years, who died Thursday, while on a visit in Chicago, Ill. He was 52. Mr. Lybrook, an employee of the Public Service Co. of Indiana, was born at Young America. - He was a member of the Masoni¢ lodge there. The services at 2 p. m. will be at the Moore & Kirk Funeral Home. Burial will be at Washington Park. Survivors include his wife, Hazel; two sons, Robert and Phil, and one daughter, Miss Shirley Jane Ly-
brothers, Dr. D. E. Lybrook of Young America and John C. Lybrook of Gary, and two sisters, Mrs. Stella Kitchel and Mrs. Beth Kitchel, both of Dalton.
Mrs. Herman A. Roland Mrs. Herman A. Roland, 1418 Kennington St. a native of Germany and resident of Indianapolis for 60 years, died yesterday at St. Francis Hospital. She was 78.
She was a member of the Sacred Heart Catholic Church, the Third Order of St. Francis and the Christian Mothers’ Society. Services will be at 8:30 a. m. Mon-
haps additional busses added to the! line to cut down waiting time.” Charles W. Case, president of the company, said the change would bring faster service and would benefit 88.3 per cent of the bus users. No action was taken.
RITES SET MONDAY | FOR JEANNE SHEA!
‘Services for Jeanne Elizabeth Shea will be held at 8:30 a. m. Mon- | {ay at her home, 5132 Norway Drive, where she died ‘yesterday after an illness since childhood. Services also will be held at 9 a. m. at Our Lady of Lourdes Church, where she was a member. She will
be buried at Memoriai Park Cemetery. Miss Shea, who was 18, was the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William A. Shea. She was born here. Other survivors are her brother, Courtland; a grandmother, Mrs. ‘Mary J. Shea, and the following aunts and uncles: Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Spangler, Mr. and Mrs. Nilliam Hausner, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hausner and J, Pearl Shea. |
| Mrs. Charles E. Talbert
Mrs. Charles E. Talbert, resident of Indianapolis for half a century,| died yesterday at her home, 3361 Kenwood Ave. She was 60. The daughter of James and Mary Calderhead, she was a member of *he Tabernacle Presbyterian Church. Survivors include her husband; a son, Charles E. Talbert Jr.; two sisters, Mrs. Edward F. Erler and Mrs. Margaret Wall, both of Indianapolis, and three brothers, John N. and Thomas N. Calderhead. both of Indianapolis, and James A. Calderhead of Chicago. The services will be conducted at the Flanner & Buchanan Mortuary at 19:30 a. m. Monday. Dr. Alex-
ander Sharpe of the Tabernacle |
Church will officiate. Burial will be at Crown Hill
irs. Charles W. Eaton
Services for Mrs. Charles W. Eston, who died yesterday, will be held at 10 a. m. Monday at the Shirley Bros. Central Chapel, Illinois and 10th Sts, with burial at Crown Hill Cemetery. Mrs. Eaton was 58 and lived at 108 S. Bancroft St. She was born mm Virgin‘a. She is survived by her husband, her father, - Carrol L. Hounshell; two brothers, Stuart and Elmer, and a sister, Mrs. Scottie Hagner. X
Mrs. Anna C. Steinmetz
- Services for Mrs. Anna C. Steinnetz, who died yesterday at City Hospital, were to be held at 3 p. m. today at Shirley Bros. Central Shapel, Illinois and 10th Sts. Burial, was to be at Crown Hill Cemetery. Mrs. Steinmetz was 79 and lived { 238 N. Illinois St. She was born
at the Sacred Heart Church, Prayer
| Loogootee,
day at the residence and at 9 a. m.
brook, all of Indianapolis, and two
Louis J. Kren Louis J. Kren, said to have been responsible for the planting of hindreds of thousands of trees in In-
diana, died yesterday at Veterans Hospital, where he had been a patient two weeks. Mr. Kren was publisher of the North Judson News, a weekly newspaper, and was American Legion Second District Commander and head of the American legion State Conservation division. One of his last official acts was to place a marker in the name of the Necrth Judson Post; on a tulip tree planted outside Governor M. Clifford Townsend’s window on the State House grounds. Funeral services will be held at 2 p. m. Tuesday at North Judson, with burial there. Survivors are his wife, Mildred; a daughter, Shirley, and two sons, Thomas and Ivan, all of North Judson. -
Barrett W. Ball
Funeral services for Barrett W, Ball, retired Indianapolis police-! man, will be held at 10 a. m. Monday at the Royster & Askin Mortuary. Burial will be at Riverside Cemetery at Cambridge City. Mr. Ball died yesterday at City Hospital after a three months ’illness. He was 52 and had lived at 3310 Broadway. : Survivors are his wife, Neva: a stepdaughter, Miss Virginia Puck-
will be conducted at the residence tomorrow night by members of the Third Order. Survivors include her husband; a daughter, Mrs. Fred Mendenwald of Indianapolis and one son.
Jasper D. Merrill
Services for Jasper D. Merrill, | who died yesterday at his home, 2327 Prospect St., will be held at 3 p. m. Monday at the Tolin Funeral Home with burial at Crown Hill. Mr. Merrill, who was 83, was a former paintroom foreman at the Beech Grove shops of the Big Four Railroad. He came to Indianapolis from Carbondale, Ill, 30 years ago. He was a member of the Shekina Masonic Lodge at Carbondale. Survivors include two daughter, Mrs. William G. Brenneman and Miss Carrie Merrill, both of Indianapolis; a brother, Charles Merrill of St. Louis, Mo.; two sisters, Mrs. Mary Slaughter, and Mrs. Emma Bomer, both of Fresno, Cal, and a granddaughter, Miss Avelle Brenneman of Norwood, O.
Mrs. Lena May Epsteen Services for Mrs. Lena May Ep-|
steen, who died yesterday, were to be held at 1:30 p. m. today at the G. H. Herrmann Funeral Home, 1505 S. East St. Mrs. Epsteen died at the home of a daughter, Mrs. Charles Carter, 352 E. McCarty St., after a long illness. Burial will be at Washington Park Cemetery. Mrs. Epsteen was 66. She was born at -Rouseville, Pa., and was the widow of George Epsteen. She is survived by three other daughters, Mrs. George Sadlier, Elma Epsteen and Mrs. Goldie Talbert, and two sons, Lewis and Ralph Epsteen.
Frank E. Raney
Services for Frank E. Raney, a foreman at Shakamak State Park,
St. Martin's Catholic Church “at with burial at the churcn’s cemetery. He was 66.
Mr. Raney: died yesterday in the Robert W. Long Hospital after a short illness. He was a lifelong Indiana resident, living here and at Loo . He was a member of St. John's Catholic Church. Mr. Raney is survived by his wife, Mrs. Ruth E. Raney; five daughters, Sister Angelica and Mrs. James Newman, both of Boston, Mass.; Miss May Irma Raney of Cincinnati, O.;
of Indianapolis; three sons, Dr. Rupert B. Raney and Dr. Aiden A. Raney. both of Los Angeles, Cal, and Vincent G. Raney of San Francisco, Cal; four brothers, Virgil Raney of Indianapolis, Homer Raney. of Kansas City, Mo.: Russell Raney and Carl Raney, both of Loogootee, and three sisters, Mrs. Clara Bradley, living in Michigan,
St. Paul, Ind. She was the widow Charles Steinmetz,
Mrs. Alma McAtee of Indianapolis and Mrs. Bertha Lents of Loogootee.
will be held at 9 a. m. Monday in!
Sister Marguerits| and Mrs. Henry Christiansen, both
ett; four brothers, Arch, a member
Harry and Charles of Indianapolis and Joseph Ball of Fi. Wayne, and | a sister, Mrs. John Heim of New Carlisle, Ind.
James W. Keogh
James W. Keogh, for years a foreign manager for the International Harvester Co., died yesterday at St. Vincent's Hospital after a short illness. He was 84 and had lived here with his brother, Thomas V. Keogh, at 5011 W. 16th St. Born at Cleveland, Mr. Keogh came to Indiana as an employee of the old Vandalia Railroad. He later was associated with the International Harvester and came to In-
dianapolis in 1893 as general agent. |
He stayed here six years. Later he served as manager for the company in Australia and in South America. He lived at Sioux Falls, S. D., after his retirement until his wife died in 1931, when he moved here. He was a member of the Knights of Columbus and Sf, Christopher's Catholic Church in Speedway City. Services will be held at 8:30 a. m. Monday at the Blackwell Mortuary and at 9 a. m. at St. John’s Catholic Church. Buridl will be at Holy Cross Cemetery.
Mrs. Sophia Graber
Mrs. Sophia Graber, widow of Fred Graber and resident of this city for 80 years, died yesterday at her home, 302 Sanders St. A native of Germany, Mrs. Graber was 87. She was a member of the Zion's Evangelical Church and the Ladies’ Aid of the Church. Services at 10 a. m. Monday will be conducted at the Finn Brothers Funeral Home. Burial will be at Crown Hill. Survivors are a daughter, Miss Elizabeth Giaber of Indianapolis, and four sons, Fred, George and Henry, all of Indianapolis, and Otto of Chicago. :
Frank X. Erath
Frank X. Erath, retired Indianaplolis grocer, died yesterday at his ‘home, 125 E, 27th St., after an ill[ness of more than a year.
Born in Germany, Mr. Erath came to Indianapolis when he was 12. He was a bricklayer and was em- | ployed at Kingan & Co. before go|ing into the grocery business. He was a member of the University {Park Christian Church. Survivors are his wife; a daughter, |Mrs. Emma L. Hackerd; two sons, Frank W, and Carl, and four grandchildren, all of Indianapolis.
Miss Laura Fisler
Services were to be held today for Miss Laura Fisler, 233 Massachusetts Ave., who cied Monday at her home. She was 72.
11:30 a. m. at the Royster & Askin Funeral Home. Burial will follow at New Crown. Survivors are three sisters, Mrs. Callie Moessner, Miss
The services will be conducted at!
PLAN FOR NAVY
HERE REPORTED
To Be Given Tryout At Local Airport.
By ‘SAM TYNDALL There are more reports of exciting’ activity at the Allison plant. whose product smacked the front pages over the country again last week in P-38 stories. The latest report is that there is to be a flight test of one of the new Aliison motors in a Navy pursuit ship now at the plant. It is said that a Navy test pilot will take the plane out to Municipal Airport for mild tests before flying the ship to Norfolk, Va., for It will be the first opportunity for the, local public to see a fighting craft cut the ozone with the sensational engine. It has not been learned when the test will be made. It depends on how soon the motor is fitted in the plane. Although the P-38 has been undergoing tests for many months, the Lockheed twin-Allison-engined pursuit interceptor made page one again last week with the announcement by the Lockheed Co. at Santa Monica, Cal, that the Army had accepted delivery on the first fleet of the 500-mile-an-hour war planes. The statement by Lockheed that the “flying knife” is capable of 500 m. p. h. already somewhat dims the glamour surrounding the Airacobra, “flying cigar” single-Allison-engined P-39 which Bell Aircraft says will do 400 m. p. h. It looks
Allison engine.” 2 = = The 38th Division Air Squadron basing at Stout Field is to get. three more new ships, two slow landing
Stinson observaticn planes, and one basic combat ship to give the pilots aerobatic practice. There are already 15 ships based at the field. 4 8» The Works Board order that private planes using the Municipal Airport must be radio-equipped to contact the airport tower as a safety measure, doesn’t mean that. transient private “ships can’t land unless they have radio communication. The order only applies to ships basing or operating out of Municipal Airport.
» s »
Additional a ir lin e schedules through Indianapolis during the spring and summer months are anticipated here by local traffic managers. Airline officials anticipate an even larger tourist air travel this summer because of the loss of foreign travel husiness by steamship companies due to war,
3 ON PROBATION IN
GHECK ‘KITING’ CASE
Three Indiana men, found guilty Feb. 14 in Federal Court of “kiting” $130,000 worth of checks, today received a suspended sentence of a year and a day each. They were placed on probation for two years by Judge Robert C.
{of the Indianapolis police force,|Baltzell, who said it was the first
time in about 10 years that he had suspended sentence in a bank case. The men are Roy O. Hadley, former cashier of the Union State Bank at Westfield, and Cedric L. Golding and his brother Hanley C. Golding, automobile dealers of Noblesville and Greentown. Judge Baltzell sentenced them after reading a report by Capt. Adolph H. Kruse, Federal probation officer. The Judge said he felt “justice would be done without their serving time in prison.” He said he understood that no one had lost any money through the alleged transactions of the trio. At the trial on Nov. 6 witnesses testified that Hadley - certified checks of the Golding brothers when there were no funds in the Golding account. :
DISCIPLES ADVOCATE UNIFIED EVANGELISM
A complete unification of spirit among the Christian Churches in the Indianapolis area for concerted evangelistic efforts was urged last night at a "Disciples of Christ meeting at the University Park Christian Church. In attendance were about 200 representatives of the Christian Church Union and the Commission on Men's Work, who came from churches in six counties surrounding Indianapolis. The .importance of lay and particularly men’s support in: evangelistic and other church activities was Stressed. Speakers included Dr. G. I. Hoover, Indiana Christian Missionary Association general secretary; Bert Wilson, Disciples of Christ pension fund representative, and the Rev. E. L. Day, Indianapolis Christian Church Union secretary-evangelist, all of Indianapolis; Dr. T. K. Smith of Columbus, and John W. Hussey of Noblesville. The Rev. S. Grundy Fisher, host church pastor, weicomed the. delegates and mass singing was led by the Rev. Leon Weatherman of Fairfax. : Jesse E. Martin, Church Union past president, was toastmaster and the Rev. Glenn Tudor of Martinsville gave the benediction.
5 SUFFOCATED IN APARTMENT BLAZE
. WORCESTER, Mass, March 2
| (U. P.).—Four women and one man
suffocated in .top-floor apartments five-story apartment building.
Redieve Dxtremalty Caused
Margaret Fisler and Miss: Grace Fisler, all of Indianapolis.
PIMPLES CUTiICiRA
SOAP ans OINTMENT
WARPLANE TEST |
New Allison P-38 Expected
early today when a fire destroyed a|
LABOR ACT HIT BY U.S. C. OF C.
To Force House Vote Before Adjournment.
WASHINGTON, March 2 (U. P.). —The United States Chamber of Commerce indorsed four more major changes in the National Labor Relations Act today as the fight to amend the labor law neared a showdown in Congress. Southern Congressmen headed by Rep. Eugene Cox (D. Ga.) mapped strategy for forcing a House vote cn Wagner Act amendments before adjournment. The special House committee investigating the National Labor Relations Board announced that it was attempting to reach unanimous agreement on some proposed changes in the law. The Chamber of Cémmerce said that referendum results showed its membership insisted, if the law cannot be repealed, upon these changes: Prohibitions on “unfair labor practices” by employees and unions. Withdrawal of the Act's protection from employees and union members who violate the terms of a collective bargaining agreement. Repeal of the provision for exclusive bargaining rights for unions which represent a majority of the workers, and substitution of a clause requiring employers to bargain with unions only for their own members. Incorporation of - “direct, certain and substantial standards for clear definition of the extent to which an employer is to be engaged in interstate commerce before he becomes subject to the act.”
GAB DRIVER BEATEN, SUSPECT DETAINED
Police today held a 21-year-old suspect on charges of assault and battery, drunkenness and vagrancy after a taxicab driver was slugged and thrown from his cab last night. Alexander Peacock, 38, of 1623 N.
police he picked up three men at Vermont St. and Indiana Ave. and at 16th and Montcalm Sts., they attacked him. Two of the men then drove away in the taxi. A police emergency squad, under the direction of Sergt. Otis Baker, returning from another investigation in the neighborhood, saw Mr. Peacock and the third man fighting. Sergt. Baker took the cab driver to the City Hospital where he was treated for a laceration on his head. In searching Mr. Peacock’s assailant, police found $30 and a watch concealed in one of his shoes and two one-dollar bills in his mouth. TAX RIDER CONSIDERED - WASHINGTON, March 2 (U. P.). —An attempt may be made in the Senate to attach to the reciprocal trade program bill, now before a Senate committee, a rider calling for taxation of Federal securities, it was revealed today.
like the Army was “waiting: for the Southern Legislators Hope
Tacoma Ave. the cab driver, told
Scores of youthful Hoosier musicians seeking places in the 109piece American Youth Orchestra which will tour South America next summer continued auditions today at the Arthur Jordan Conservatory of Music. The judges are (standing, left to right, above) R. S. Sanders,
dean of the Indiana University
School of Music; Norman Phelps of the Conservatory and Butler University, and Brother Pierre, Cathedral High School, and (seated) Miss
Times Photos. Elizabeth Cochran, Tech High School music department head, and Adama Lesinsky, Whiting, National School Orchestra Association president. One of the aspirants for a place in the wood section was Charles E. Szatkowski Jr., Bloomington, Ind. bass clarinet player (left). The auditions will close at 11 p. m. today and winners will probably be announced Monday, officials said.
Try Out Actors For Rockne Film
HOLLYWOOD, March 2 (U. P.). —Screen tests were conducted today for supporting roles in “The Life of Knute Rockne,” in which Pat O’Brien will play the role of the famous Notre Dame coach. Gale Page was tested for the . part of Mrs. Rockne, and Dennis Morgan and Roland Reagan competed for the role of George Gipp, Notre Dame football star. ‘ Relatives of Mr. Rockne and Notre Dame officials are co-oper-ating with Warner Brothers to make the picture an authentic sketch of Mr. Rockne’s life.
THREE PEDESTRIANS ARE HURT BY AUTOS
Three pedestrians, including an 8-year-old boy, were injured yesterday when struck by automobiles. John Virt, 69, of 413 E. Louisiana St., received a broken right leg when he was run over by an automobile in an alley in S. East St., 300 block. He was taken to the City Hospital where his condition was described as fair, A police emergency squad was forced to lift the machine off Mr. Virt. Police said the car which ran over him was driven by Charles E. Bulmberg, 39, of 408 E. Louisiana St., Apt. 22. Struck by an auto in W. Morris St., 1000 block, Peter Aldio, 53, ‘of 229 Bridge St., received a broken left leg. He was taken to City Hospital. The car which struck him was
driven by Burton Roberts, 21, of 19| :
W. Ray St., police said. Eight-year-old James Colhargen, 215 E. St. Joseph St., was bruised when he stepped into the path of an automobile in N. Delaware St., 800 block. Leo Filcer, 49, of 3455 Kenwood Ave, was taken to St. Vincent's Hospital with head cuts after the car in which he was riding was in a collision at Fall Creek Bivd. and Illinois St.
REPORT CONFESSION IN HOOSIER SLAYING
GREENSBURG, Ind, March 2 (U, P.).—Sherif Sam Curry said
today that Ambrose Logsdon, 27, of Greensburg had confessed to slaying his brother-in-law, Henry Lawrence, 59, outside a one-room shack near the city dump where they lived with Mrs. Lawrence, and five children of the Lawrence's.” Curry said that Logsdon told him he slugged Lawrence with a rock in an attempt to rob him of approximately $50.
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PLANS RESTAURANT ON N. MERIDIAN ST.
Construction: of a Southern colonial style restaurant at 3710 N. Meridian St. will start about March 15 if permission is obtained from the Board of Zoning Appeals, according to Paul E. Lundmark, owner and operator of the proposed dining establishment. Mr. Lundmark said the project will cost $175,000, including the land, building, furnishings and equipment. The tract has a frontage of 234 feet on Meridian St. and a depth of 272 feet to Salem St. on the west. It was purchased from Mrs. Rosanna Wood, who formerly occupied the brick residence now standing on the site. The Indianapolis architectural firm of Pierre & Wright is drawing plans and specifications. The building will be of brick, painted white; will have two-story porch columns at. the front entrance and will be set back 50 feet from Meridian St. Mr. Lundmark ‘plans a guest lounge 47 feet wide at the front of the building, with a large woodburning fireplace, checkroom, ladies’ powder room and telephone booths. The dining room will be in Southern formal style and the kitchen will have stainless steel equipment. It is planned to use sound-absorbing materials, install air-conditioning facilities in the building and to landscape the grounds.
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TO GIVE EXHIBIT
Members of Camera Society _ Enter 38 Photos for Show at Plant.
The P. R. Mallory Co., Inc., Camera Club will hold its firsi annual exe; hibit at the plant, 3029 E. Washinge" ton St., Monday through Thursday. Prize winners will be announced
|at a 7:30 p. m. dinner Monday at
Joslin’s Chicken Dinner Place on
| Pendleton Pike. Firm officers who - | will be guests of the Club are Jo-
seph Cain, vice president; D. H, Giffin, personnel manager, and Wile liam Yeager, ahtletic director. Winners of the first three places, a first honorable mention and an honorable mention, will be chosen Duplicate awards will be made atthe end of the week on the basis - of employees’ votes. hy Judges are Brandt Steele, - local artist; Earl Robertson of L. S. Ayres & Co. and Clarence Shannon of the H. Lieber Co. : On the exhibit committee are Harold Ortel, chairman; B. V. K. French, R. O. Lewis and R. M, Strain.
SAFETY COACH LINES RESTRICTED BY WRIT,
A permanent injunction restrain ing Tony’s Safety Coach Lines from accepting, transporting and dis<
{charging passengers on W. Washe
ington St. within the City limits was granted the Indianapolis Railways by Judge James A. Emmert in
[Shelby Circuit Court yesterday.
The railways sought the enjoiner on the claim that the Safety Lines which operate a bus service from Kentucky Ave. downtown to Plaine field, picked up and discharged passengers on the W. Washington St, route over which it operates.
EIGHT ELIGIBLE FOR | HONOR AT BUTLER U.
Eight Butler University freshmen are eligible for Phi igma meme bership, John Holly of Indianapolis, Haigniy president, announced toay. | The national freshman scholastic honor society draws its members from students with an average of 2.5 or better for their first semester, Eligible for initiation this spring are Jack M. Alboher, William Bruce Cameron, Isadore M. Cambi, Riche ard W. Hudelson, Harlan Johnson, Gale L. King, Ross D. Stevens and Robert Stump. ’ iE
KILLER GETS LIFE TERM
MARTINSVILLE, Ind, March 2 (U. P.).—Joe Warren of Martinsville - yesterday was senienced to a life prison term on a charge of slaying his wife, Maude, in August, 1839, as the result of domestic troubles. He was found guilty of first-degree murder. A jury at a previous trial
in December disagreed. Warren had pleaded temporary insanity.
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