Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 June 1940 — Page 13
: | 1
(Ernie Pyle is on vacation and at the request of rales we are reprinting some of his favorite colS. : : .
DANA, Ind., June 9, 1939.—My father is getting to be quite a gadabout. He has been to Indianapolis two or three times this year. And recently he drove a Hl bunch of women lodge members over. to the city, || stayed a couple of days in the Hotel English, and had Hi | a wonderful time. He's got so he stays out late at night, too. The Sunday before I got “home, he and Oscar Holladay drove to Bloomington, Ill, to see the annual “Passion Play.” They left at 6:30 in the morning and didn’t oy home until midnight.
They would have been home sooner, except they stopped in for supper, and then decided to/go to a movie. By the time the movie was qver, they Y were both/|so sleepy they almost ; ran off the road several times coming home. My mother and Aunt Mary got pretty worried before they got home, and didn’t sleep a wink. Finally they heard car - drive. up, and somebody come in the dining| room door. But no ‘light came on. They called out, and nobody answered. Aunt Mary was conviriced a burglar was in the house, and she jumped out of and went ramming around, and I expect, if she’d| had. a skillet in bed with hey somebody. Finally the light cdme ys: my father, looking sort of be . _ What happened was that (he missed the light switch wher he came in, and his hunting around for it he got completely lost inj the room, and wound up by not knowing which room he was in, or even what house. My mother says she isn’t going to let him go at night any more. But he was out with the Eastern Stars last ‘night till midnight. We finally may have to report him to the authorities.
Champa
» Father Not Impresse . My Aunt Mary is 73 years | horse. 8he drives the car all around the country by herself, takes women to club meetings, and is chairman of the temperance commi tee at the church.
old, and works like a
that might reward when the Brown organized with head-
ANOTHER PHENOMENON study is the gold rush of 1 County Gold Mining Co. was| quarters in Indianapolis. |
The articles of incorporation contemplated a
k of five (5) million dollars. The par value of a share was $5., Toward the :end, you could pick up all you wanted for 3 cents ajishare., “The legefd of gold in Brown County is almost as old as the . hills themselves. As early as 1850, the newspapers | began spilling the secret and with 1t came stories, tod, of the finding of diamonds, ies, opals, garnets and goodness [knows | what else. As late as 1930, the legend still persisted. Indeed, not more than a dozen years ago, a native by the name of John Dine panned $8.50 worth of gold in five (3) hours without leaving ithe bed of Salt Creek. It’s supposed to be the record ey Another time he made $2.70 out of a half gallon of dirt. Ordinarily, however, he was mare than satisfied to get from 40 to 60 gents worth of ‘goid out of & cubic yard of Brown County soil. " »
{+ He Wanted to |
. By ail odds, the best and certainly. the jolilest account of early prospecting in Brown County is the one written by George S. Cottman who, up until a number of years ago, was one of the pillars of Irvington. For some reason, he moved to Madison. The article appears in the Indiana Historical Magazine (Vol. XXXI, No. 1). | Mr. Cottman, who celebrated his the other day (May 10), Indianapolis in 1882 or thereabouts to learn fo himself what all the hullabaloo was about. He entered Brown County on foot by way of Morgantown and picked his way gingerly toward Bear Creek, the
- Washington
WASHINGTON, June 4—The plain blunt fact is that we may have to be using American troops in the Western Hemisphere for the purpose of protective occupation. Nothing is to be gained by longer delay I: facing that possibility. | Abrupt changes have taken place and old patterns of thinking #nd old attitudes have been outmoded by these changes. Conditions which we could once view with tolerance become, in the new times, dangerous to the security of the Western Hemisphere. o ~ « This isn’t a matter of hysteria here but is based -upon cold calculation, upon recognition of the sharply altered face of affairs. Actually the Administration has leaned over backward, and has indulged in vague understatement to avoid fanning up excitement over the matter.
capital s
83d birthday ju
In asking Congress for authority to call out the.
National Guard if needed, President Roosevelt was so cautiously indefinite in his language that some jumpy legislators thought he had in mind ‘sending an A. B® to SDurpve. |Gen. George C. Marshall, Army Chief of Staff, tried to clear the confusion jn & statement that hinted at the possibility of dangerous developments in the Western Hemisphere. rd ss =»
‘t Fears for. Latin America.
Three sources of anxiety exist with regard to Latin America: | J) First, there is a large amount of German, Italian aid Japanese penetration in Latin America. With fotalitarian governments, there is no" difference be{ween economic and political penetration. Economic deals by totalitarian governments are political deals, A trade arrangement between a Latin’American * country. and Great Britain- used to be a matter of purely economic competition, so far as we were con-
' My Day
WASHINGTON, Monday.—It was a really thrilling experience yesterday afternoon to look out over _ the Court of Peace at the New York World's Fair and to see thousands and thousands of people gathered there for the program which the International Ladies : ‘Garment Workers Union had arranged for the afternoon. Very lovely music was given ‘by the professional artists as well ‘as the talent the garment workers, | themselves, so,ably develop. Senator Wagner gave an inter‘esting address. I received more than T was able to give, however, for as I looked out over those faces and listened to them sing “The .Star-Spangled Banner,” it seemed to me that my faith in the reality of our democracy was ro deepened. When you: feel something deeply, it is doubly hard to be articulate. Here stood a eross-section of our people from many lands, bringing us an infinite variety of backgrounds and cultures. However, in all of them one felt a confirmation of our determination to remain free and ,co-operatively to work out our destin the world. * Some of us forget occasionally that this co-opera- , tion for the good of all of us is the basis of our strength. A meeting, such as the one yesterday, re-
© TUESDAY, JUNE 4, 1940
Hoosier Vagabond
Aunt Mary has definitely made up her mind to}
* see it again. But they aren’t going to leave.
says he started from -county.” |
By Ernie Pyle
take a big trip to the West Coast this summer. She's going up by way of Lake Louise in Canada, and I hope she has better luck with it than my father did. He came through there two years ago, and at my insistence, stopped over for a day to see what I consider the most beautiful sight in the world.
But he wasn’t much impressed, and said the best | time he had that day was when he got over to Banff |
in the evening and went to a movie. I could have
kicked him. . I haven't any fears at all about my Aunt Mary traveling at her age. If she wants to know something ‘she’ll just stop the first 1000 people she sees and ask them. She was telling me about het trip to Minnesota last fall. She had to transfer Irom ge depot to another in Chicago, and she was a lil% fearful she might nof do it right. ’ The reason I'm telling this is new word of Aunt Mary's. got it, but it’s a might good word is “juberous.” ® )
Aunt Mary Gets Juberous
“I tell you,” Aunt Mary says, “I got a little juberous before we got to Chicago. I didn’t know whether I'd get the right Parmalee taxi or not. I did feel pretty juberous.” i
to tell about this anyway. The word
” 8
But she wasn’t juberous long. She started asking : -questions,
and before they got to Chicago she had three different families of fellow-travelers all fighting to take her over to the Northwestern Station-in their cars. I won't be surprised if the San Prancsico Fair finds itself putting on an “Aunt Mary Day” before she gets away. ? ] My mother has said all her life that she never wanted to leave the farm. But now, much to my amazement, she talks of wanting to move to town. It didn’t take me long to see through it, though. She merely. figures that’s the only way to stop my father from working so much. - : But he®wouldn’t be happy to do. He can’t bear the thought of leaving the farm. And somehow, although I left it 20 years ago, I can't bear the thought of somebody else living in
our house. . If my folks left it, I don’t believe I'd ever want to
1 don’t know where she
in town, with nothing !
| By Anton Scherrer
abt of the county known as the “gold region” at the time. He put up at Richard's Postoffice which he believes is ‘where Trevlac now stands. 'Richard’s Postoffice: took its name from Johnny Richards who had lived there since 1830, and it was from Johnny’s own lips that Mr. Cottman learned that “for more than a generation men had been prospecting up and down the creek with their pans washing for gold.” Mr. Richards opined that “an expert could count on making ordinary wages at the business.” Johnny had another story, too—something to the effect that after accounts of gold in Brown County] spread (presumably around 1850), “a group f Indianapolis. leased of Richards a stretch ot Bear Creek and constructed a long flume of picked oak timber for gold washing. Just as they completed it, however, one of the typical freshets came along and carried the whole, structure away.” The gold syndicate must have lost heart after that because, to hear Johnny Richards tell it, he never saw or heard of
them again,
Im Ean" # ¥ | Now, Will You Believe? | | 1 On the same trip, Mr. Cottman ran. across a goldsmith at Georgetown who manufactured frames
for spectacles. Believe it or not, all the gold he used
in his business was picked up in Brown County. Will R. Irwin, also were expected
Mr. Cottman's greatest discovery, however, was Dr. A. J. Ralphy. ja country practitioner living in Belleville. “On the gide,” says Mr. Cottman, “he was a naturalist, taxidermist, collector and all-around scientist. His office looked like an aviary with its hundreds or more |Brecwn County birds, all of his own mounting. He also had a cabinet of insects ndigenous to the| region and quite a surprising ollection of precious stones—small, but genuine, such s opals, garnets, rubies and one diamond. All of em had been gathered.from the creek beds of - the
vou're living in a fools’ paradise the tall tales they tell in Brown
Mo gf <
he fg aymond Clapper
e deal between a Latin American alitarian government becomes’ a political event of interest to us. Japan -is buying Mexican oil. A pipe-line to the west coast of Mexico is being suggested. | Suppose Japan finances the pipeline? Suppose, as has been rumored, Japan insists upon. placing some naval protection around the port at the mouth of the pipe-line? Second, there is| immediate concern over possibilities in Mexico, which lies between the United States and the Panama Canal. Conditions are exceedingly unstable. A Mexican presidential election is to be held July 7 if a Communist outbreak isn’t set off earlier to frustrate the election. American Communists know what is going on, because at their national convention in New York over the week-end they adopted resolutions opposing defense preparations and any intervention in Latin America. 8 8 =
Take it from m if you don’t believe] County. |
By R
cerned. But a trad country and a tof
press
Some Cold Realities
Wouldn't it be nice if the Communists got away with a political blitzkrieg right at our door? It was mainly with this situation in mind that the request for authority to call out the National Guard was made, although officials hesitate to say so. Third, is the possibility that we might be compelled, upon short notice, to occupy: some of the Western Hemisphere islands and mainland possessions of European powers. We need them anyway and some of our best naval minds have urged that President Roosevelt acquire them by purchase now. In event of an Allied defeat we would \have to be ready to occupy them promptly, because we will not permit any foreign aggressor power. to acquire title to them. : These are not hysterical chatterings but cold | realities which grow out of recent history. Events have changed the situation not only in Europe but in the Western Hemisphere. What once was of no concern to us is now a matter of defense of this hemisphere. All of the countries on this hemisphere are tied together into one destiny now. .
By Eleanor Roosevelt
minds us how great is our power when we work together. Our citizens come from many lands where sacrifice and oppression and resistance are nothing new. They have met these conditions with determination through generations, and this generation will find strength to meet whatever comes to us.. I get such a sense of power and solidarity from a meeting
like yesterday's, that I can face the uncertainty of the future with far more strength and courage. From the purely personal point of view, seeing again many of the people who are now leaders in their unions and whom I used to see more often when I lived in New York City, was a great pleasure. I always feel like saying, “thank you” to David Dubinsky for what he has accomplished through his leadership in this great union of organized workers. Before this meeting I saw the. WPA Contemporary Art .and Craft show at the Fair. The crowds made it a little difficult to see all the things easily and I felt a little guilty each time kindly people tried to push aside other people who, like myself, were trying to see the show. I enjoyed the exhibition very much, however, and thought it far superior to the one they had last year. : I also saw again the General Motors “Futurama.” It is fresher in color and all the little automobiles now actually run. I am sure vastly complicated ma= chinery accomplishes this feat, which is so amusing to
watch.
K
~ GROWS T0 $39,788
! School's College of Bible.
IRWIN HOST TO 6. 0. . GAUCHS
Indiana Delegates Expected To Clarify Position, Name Resolutions Aid.
Indiana’s 28 uninstructed delegates to the National G. O. P. Convention, meeting in Brown County today, were expected ‘to clarify their . alignments for the Presidential nomination in Phila-
delphia June 24. The delegates, who were holding a closed caucus at the summer home of National Committeeman
to elect Rep. Charles A. Halleck (R. Rennselaer) as the Hoosier representative on the convention resolutions. committee which will draft the National G. O. P. platform. Mr. Irwin has openly supported Wendell L. Willkie, New York utility executive and former Hoosier, as the Indiana favorite son for the Presidential nomination. Another Willkie backer among the Indiana delegation is Jerome Beeler of Evansville. However, party leaders said a poll among delegates recently showed a “majority of them? were for Senator Robert A. Taft (R. 0.) and that several of the delegates had voiced a preference for Thomas E. Dewey, of New York. ‘Also considerable Indiana sentiment has been expressed for Senator Arthur H. Vandenhurg of Michigan and .for Governor John Bricker of Ohio. 3 Also likely to be igh at today’s session was the étection of a new national committeeman if Mr. Irwin retires. Mark Honeywell of Wabash, an alternate delegate, and Ernest M. Morris of South Bend have been mentioned. Also it. was reported that Robert F. Lyons, Indianapolis and Washington attorney, was seeking the post. Mrs. Grace Reynolds, of Cambridge City, is seeking re-election as national. .committeewoman. Others mentioned for her post include Mrs. Eleanor B. Snodgrass, state vice chairman, and Mrs. Clarence Benadum of Muncie.
RED CROSS WAR FUND
The Indianapolis shar nn the na-
citizens-and erganizations. _The total now raised is $39,788.26; the Indianapolis Chapter of the American Red Cross reported. Today’s donations included subscriptions of $50 from Mrs. Henry L. Dollman, Zimmer Paper Products and Mr. and Mrs. John S. Wright. Eskenhazi & Mordon, Inc., gave $30 and contributions of $25 were received from C. F. Eveleigh, Mrs. A. M. Glossbrenner, the National Society of Colonial Dames. of America in the State of Indiana and Judge Herbert M. Spencer of Superior Court 2. : The Marion County Treasurer's Office y gave $35, the ‘Bituminous Coal Division of the U. S. Interior Department gave $26 and a total of $4150 was received from the teaching staffs of Schools 181, 86 and 22. :
C. 0. HAWLEY GETS DEGREE AT DRAKE
Times Special © : 3 DES MOINES, Iowa, June 4.—C. O. Hawley of Indianapolis, director of unified promotion of the Disciples of Christ, was granted an honorary Doctor of Divinity degree at Drake University yesterday. J. Edgar Hoover, director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, was given a: Doctor of Laws degree. Dr. Hawley is a graduate of Drake University and the degree was con= ferred by President D. W. More~ house on recommendation of the
la
3
N
1. Butler University coeds catch up on their spring fever. to right are Marilyn Alstadt, 104 N. Hamnton Drive; Dorothy Evans,
3864 Park Ave., and Jean Swelser,
2. Another sign of spring—the June bride! Madonna Feld, 638 Home Place, will be on June 16. She will marry Anothony Rea, 23, of 517 Woodlawn Ave. getting a license at the County Clerk’s office. 3. Spring to Deann See, means she will be 3 years old tomorrow t an ice cream cone is mighty good. . See, 1301 N. Illinois St.
and, mostly, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James H
Din Goes on Without End, Like Beat of Jungle Drums
+
Bergues a Flaming Ruin as Germans Enter, Dive Bombers
Fill Sky on Way
By RICHARD United Press St
WITH THE GERMAN ARMY STORMING DUNKIRK, June 2 (und in transmission.).—I stood on an open road within sight of the towérs of Dunkirk this afternoon and watched German
censored but dela
forces occupy Bergues.
Ps miles farther nerthward. I was with the center column of fhe Army which was unleashing hammer blows on the Allied front from three sides—east, west and south. ! A German officer told me that the greater part of the - British troops either were dead or captured or had embarked for England.
Town Called Flaming Ruin °
A patty of foreign correspondents, of which I am a member, arrived two and a half miles south of Bergues two hours after the first German patrol entered the city. ‘The area still was no-man’s land, since we were between the French and German artillery positions, each of which were subjecting the other to terrific shelling. German machine gunners on our left were trying to cover the crossing of the enemy's last line of defense—a narrow canal running parallel to the coast immediately north of Bergues. The town itself was a flaming ruin, its smoke visible miles away. Over our heads as we halted for a view of what was going on, German dive bombers escorted by Messerschmitt fighters flew over in recurrent waves, headed for Dunkirk Harbor. These machines attacked in formations of about nihe planes each. Each of the Stukas carried three
heavy bombs and eac ade three dive attacks before rning back to
vy
the bases. | pit Spectacle Tie anti-aircraft fire filled a| large
area of blue sky with small
black or white puffs from bursting
shells, | The whole thing was a fearful spectacle. A few miles ahead of us ingessant firing sounded like the dull beating of jungle drums. Over our heads wave after wave of German bombers were flying north at 280 miles per hour. Ee The Stukas climbed to 2500 feet and then dived. : 1 The hellish screaming of their power dives could be heard miles away—like a death wail. I [could understand why it was said that the French colonial troops broke ranks in terror under mass attacks by these machines. . ‘At the moment when it seemed he certainly would plunge to destruction, the pilot pressed his bomb release and the machine automatically flattened and commenced. to climb. When one after another the Stukas in each formation had delivered their deadly loads all nine planes, hugging the ground to escape, French anti-aircraft fire, headed northward, dancing and weaving in and out like a swarm of giant hornets buzzing and whining. Meanwhile French anti-aircraft guns set up a barrage which failed to bring down any planes. In the twilight, German heavy artillery behind us shelled the French antiaircraft gun positions. At the same time French heavy artillery popped shells into a woods on our left. We did not see a single Allied airplane and German anti-aircraft batteries of heavy 8.8 caliber fired a} ships off shore. ~ INJURED AT TRUCK DOCK
Walter Goens, 22, Edinburgh, Ind, was injured severely last night when he as pinned between a tractortrailer and a loading platform at the Southern Transportation Dock Co., 420 W. Merrill St., police. re-
Jergues was the last fortified town between the Germans and Dun-
imes Photos. Left
333 Beverly Drive. That's what Miss
The couple is seen here
She is the
to Blast Dunkirk.
C. HOTTELET |
aff Correspondent
Ny
GRIDER RECOUNT VOTES MISSING
Count Goes On as Ballots In 10th Precinct, Fourth ‘Ward, Are Sought.
The recount of primary election ballots cast in the race for the Republican nomination for County Treasurer hit a snag today.
of the Fourth Ward were reported missing." The Recount Board an
hurriedly began a search for sent ballots. . : . Mr. Ettinger and both Democratic and Republican members of the Board declared they felt sure the ballots had been misplaced and would be found shortly. | _ However, the Board continued its recount and at the completion of five wards of 22 wards and nae townships, Neal Grider, defeated candidate for the Treasurer's nomination, had lost 53 votes. Mr. Grider asked for the recount. His opponent, Paul E. Tegarden, the successful candidate, lost 22 votes. The third candidate in the race, Burke H. Robison, gained six votes. The loss of votes by both leading candidates is the result of action by the Recount Board in throwing out as invalid mutilated | ballots which were originally counted by workers in the Central Counting Bureau. . ; ?
" HURT AS SWING FALLS | Mi# Edith Lerner, 66, Chicago, Ill, was treated at the City Hospital yesterday for a scalp laceration after a porch swing in which she was sitting at the home of her sister, 843 N. New Jersey 3t., collapsed.
Ballots cast in the 10th Precinct |
BUILDING IN MAY TOPS $1,000,001
Exceeds 1939 Month and April, 1940; Residence § Permits $491,250.
Indianapolis experienced its second million dollar building month this year in May when new building permits and valuations totaled $1,110,658, according to George R. Popp Jr., city building commissioner, Last month’s building figure exceeded by $183,769 the valuation of May, 1939, which was $956,889. It was also $126,018 above the $1,024,640
for April of this year. New residential construction to-
above the residential construction valuations of last year’s comparable period but $127,650 below April building which totaled $618,900. For the first time t year the construction of business “properties exceeded the $200,000 mark with 14 business buildings totaling $202,050. Business = building in April this year totaled $121,840 and was only $56.450 in May a year ago. The valuation of industrial buildings rose from $2500 in Apri $198,000 in May. Industrial construction in May a year valuation of only $11,800:
William R. Bradley was elected grand knight of the Knights of Columbus last night at a meeting at the K. of C. headquarters at 1305 N. Delaware St. - Other officers elected for the 1940-41 fiscal vear, which starts July 1, are Edward J. Dowd, deputy grand knight; George A. Bischoff, chancellor; Mark Haselman, recording secretary; O. C. Litzelman, treasurer; Edward J. Fillenwarth, advocate; Clarence Beidelman, warden; Anton .Sochar, inside guard, and Joseph Maloof and Anthony Cancilla, outside guards. William J. Greener was Ireelected for his second three-year term us trustee. Other trustees are John Rocap and John H. Blackwell. i
‘I OVERPAID, CLAIMS SCHENCK
NEW YORK, June 4 (U. P.). Joseph M. Schenck, chairman of the board ‘of Twentieth CenturyFilm Corp.,, under Federal indictment on charges of income fraud and perjury, said today that he had “overpaid rather than underpaid my taxes” and denied the
She was struck in the head by a wooden beam. © Le
WASHINGTON, June 4 (U. P.. —The Administration, in the midst of a record peace-time preparedness program, seeks today to avert a threatened shut down of General
Motors Corp. plants. | Dr. John R. Steelmen, director of the U. S. Conciliation Service, an-
nounced that he probably would name a conciliator today to meet company officials and members, of the C. I. Os United Automobile Workers union. 2 Dr. Steelman’s announcement followed a two-hour session with high U. A.'W. officials last night. ‘He declined to discuss the possibilities of a strike, but the U. A.|W. Executive Board, meeting in special session, authorized U. A. 'W. President R. J. Thomas to call a strike if necessary toicbtain a salisfactory agreement. . The board approved the action eof the union’s G. M. Council in rejecting a -proffered contract. = The Administration is plants and‘ those of other Butane: h e Y TN a
e manufacturers. are
especially - Motors gr
allegations of perjury.
U.S. Seeks to Avert Strike ~ Threat Against G. M. Plants
play an important role in the de-
fense program, now getting into high gear. President Roosevelt has said that he didn’t believe there. would be any strikes in defense industries. ? : The chief obstacle between the Union and General Motors, it was understood, is a union demand for a 10 per eent wage increase and streamlined grievance procedure. General Motors has offered a 2% per cent wage increase in the form of vacation pay, it was learned.
Roosevelt Calls Green To White 'House
WASHINGTON, June 4 (U. P). —President ‘Roosevelt called American Federation of Labor President William Green to the White House today for a conference which may represent a new Administration effort for labor peace, or may deal with A. F. L. co-operation in ‘the expanded national defense pro-
am. i Neither Mr. Green nor the White House would reveal the subjects to
$0
i SECOND SECTIO
taled $491,250 which was $64,640]
* {essay contest, sponsor
#4
i
Arrangement Expected tc Aid Tranfser of Credits In Pre-Legal Courses.
‘Affiliation of the Indiana Law School with Butler University will be announced tonight by President Daniel S. Robinson of Butler at the Law School's annual Alumni Asscciation; banquet at the Columbia Club. : TE An agreement to affiliate was reached yesterday at a joint meeting of the boards of trustees of the Law School and the University. Officials of the two schools said the purpose of the affiliation was ta facilitate transfer of credits for stu- ° dents who take pre-legal courses at Butler and who 'wish to take the
| Law School training. Remains pdepenins ‘In no sense if the affiliation to
be considered a merger, officials said. The Law School will retain its identity as an independent school, with a separate board of trustees. Hs * Credits for work taken bat either the School or University will be interchangeable where courses are acceptable as part of ‘law or liberal arts curricula. | It was understood the affiliation would aid the Law School procuring endowment funds.
were formerly affiliated. This was terminated in 1931. .Since then, the Law School has operated as a sep‘rate institution, although there ca: been close co-operation in mapping curricula,
Judge Kefinedy to Speak
Affiliation, proposed several years ago, has been considered by both boards of trustees and alumni associations for more than a year. University and School officials said arrangements were being completed to make the affiliation effecbre at the beginning of the fall erm. |
Byron C. Kennedy of the Wabas Circuit. Court will be principa
Association president, will preside. Charles L. Barry, Frank Seidensticker and Huber Patton are in charge of arrangements,
Butler to Hold Senior
Reception Tomorrow
The reception for 274 Butler University graduating students to be given by President and Mrs. D. S. Robinson tomorrow will begin academic and social activities 85th annual graduatiorf week,
p. m. at the Arthur Jorde morial ‘Hall, will be followed\ by annual senior ball at the Lake Country Club from 10 p.
Aveniue Christian Church, will be the principal speaker.
Class Reunion Friday
The class of 1930 will hold a 10th anniversary celebration Friday at the Canary .Cottage. Evan B. Walker, president of the class, will preside. Alumni and Senior Class Day will be held Saturday. A reunion luncheeon for the class of :1910 will be held - at the home of President and Mrs, Robinson. The Butler board of di= rectors will hold their annual meeting at 1:30 p. mm. in the Arthur Jordan Memorial Hall, witli Hilton U. Brown, president, presiding. The alumni supper will be held at 5:30 p. m. in the gymnasium of the Field House. Special tables have been reserved for the classes between 1880 and 1935.
Medals to Be Awarded Following the supper, the annual alumni meeting will be held at 7 p. m. and Golden Legion medals will be presented to members of the 1890 class. The Golden Legion is composed of perséns who graduated 50 years or more ago. Baccalaureate services r the senior class will be held at 4 p. m. Sunday in the Field House with the ReV. Roy -E. Vale as speaker. Witt 8. Morgan, superintendent of the Indianapolis public schocls, will
‘|speak at the Commencement cere-
monies, Monday, at the Field House.
SHORTRIDGE PUPIL’S ESSAY WINS TOUR.
Adah - Madge Phipps, Shortridge High School junior, today was . judged: win:er in the Marion County division of the “‘Gregfer Indiana”
vision of State Publicity. For her essay Miss Phipps, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. M., Phipps, 3332 N. Illinois St., will be awarded a six-day tour of Indiana in company © with winners from cther counties. Her paper dealt with the history of Marion County. Second place in the contest was achieved~by Bert W. Goldberg and
Rouch. - Honorable mention was given to Helen Haley, Louis A. Cohne and Gordon R. McKinney. - Members of the judging committee were DeWitt S. Morgan, publie schools’ superintendent; Luther L. Dickerson, city librarian; Horace Abbott, county agricultural agent; Myron Green, of the Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce, and Henry Davis, direcior of the Indianapolis Convention and Publicity Bureau.
|DEPUTIES TO ARREST
38TH ST. SPEEDERS
‘A crew of deputy sheriffs will patrol 38th St. and Road 67 outside the City beginning ht with orders to arrest all eders, Sheriff Al Feeney announced today. ‘ “The road has become a race track,” the Sheriff said, “and we will arrest drivers going faster than speed limits indicated on roadside signs. I'm giving fair warning 1g. Vio-
De- ,
:
The School and the University
speaker. Charles W. Holder, Alumni
BUTLER, LOCAL LAW SCHOOL TO AFFLTE
# At the banquet tonight, sini] :
Cd
by the Di-
$
third place went to Jon Henry.
