Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 October 1940 — Page 5

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WEDNESDAY, OCT. 30, 1940

COMPENSATION

UNIT ORGANIZES |

Walker, State Legion Head, Named Chairman of Advisory Council.

John A. Walker, ‘Bloomfield publisher, last night was elected chairman of the recently appointed 17m er State Advisory Council to the “Indiana Unemployment Compensation Division. Mr. Walker, who is State Commander of the American Legion, was elected at an organization meeting in the Indianapolis Athletic Club, Charles C. Winegardner, Indianapolis, vice president ef the Diamond Chain and Manufacturing Co., was elected vice chairman. J. Brad-

ley Haight, assistant director of the|.

division, . will serve as secretary. Managers of the 25 employment offices attended the dinner. After the organization meeting Council members attended the Conference on Employment Problems of the Negro, sponsored by the division. Lieut. Lawrence Oxley, Washington, supervisor of Negro placement for the Social Security Board, addressed this conference. He said that Negroes must maintain | their present jobs through increased efficiency, that efforts must be made to regain the so-called traditional Negro jdb and that opportunity must be offered for training to the Negro for employment on a broader occupational base. . Wilfred Jessup, unemployment diYision director, presided at both sessions.

PRATHER IS DENIED BOND IN SLAYING

James Prather, 26, of 1414 English Ave. today was held without bond on a charge of having murdered his wife, Mrs. Rosalind Prather, ,24, from whom ‘he was estranged. He waived preliminary

~ examination on the charge yester-

day in Municipal Court and the case was sent to the Marion County Grand Jury. Prather signed a statement, police said, detailing how, because of jealousy, he shot and killed his wife last Friday in a restaurant on N. Illinois St., and then hitch-hiked to Baltimore, Md.

6 There, he said, he confessed the

slaying to a Catholic priest, who advised him to return and surrender and paid his bus fare back.

Directs Pa nel

Allan Bloom . i . supervises discussion at conference.

STATE CLINICAL GROUP TO MEET

Psychologists’ ‘Session Set For Nov. 6 to 9 at Hotel Lincoln.

A panel discussion in which the Indiana Association of Clinical Psychologists will take part will be held Nov, 8 at the Hotel Lincoln under the supervision of - Allan Bloom, past president of the State Conference on Social Work. The panel will be a feature of the conference which holds its annual session here Nov. 6-9. Principal speaker at the clinicalsocial discussion will be Miss Margaret Svendsen of the Institute of Juvenile Research, Chicago. She will talk on “Meeting Individual Needs Through Group Work.” The conference itself will be open officially Nov. 7 with a general meeting at Keith's Theater. However, study classes will be held Nov.

Murray A. Auerbach, conference president, will preside at the gen-

eral meetings. ? :

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WAR HOLDS UP SCHOOL ORDER

Needed Magazines Cannot ~ Be Delivered Until Fighting Ends.

By EARL HOFF The School Board last night voted to advertise for contracts for magazines that won’t reach Indianapolis until the end of World War II. The magazines were included in a list of 575 periodicals fo the City Library that Librarian Luther Dick= erson estimated would cost $3500.

Two French, three German and 35 British periodicals were included. No Continental periodicals, reports or books have reached the United States since Italy entered the war, Mr. Dickerson said.

Hold Magazines in Leipzig

The Continental magazines the School Board will order will be held at a depository at Leipzig, Germany, or at Rome, Italy, and sent to the U. 8S. after the war ends. The situation, Mr. Dickerson said, is a ramification of the war that is working a hardship on this country since no scientific reports have been able to cross the ocean from Europe since July. Only the; numberof magazines ordered are being printed, because of a paper shortage, which will make issues of the war months collectors’ items, Mr. Dickerson said. Since Italy entered the war, the only route open for shipment of valuable periodicals, reports and. books from Europe is via Siberia and Japan, and that is uncertain, Mr. Dickerson said. The Board also approved payment of $24,274.98 to contractors for work at School 86; $38,204.66 for work on the Howe High School addition; $526.97 for equipment for Crispus Attucks High School; $211.20 for purchase of supplementary books and $251.50 for rental books. A delegation of P.-T. A. members from School 87, headed by the Rev. Roscoe Henderson, petitioned the Board to reopen the eighth grade at the -school so their children would not have to spend their last year © in grammar school “at School 42.

‘Instructor Gets Leave

The grade, which was closed this year, will be restored if the school enrollment drops, DeWitt S. Morgan, Schools Superintendent, assured them. This trend should be indicated within the school year, he said. A leave of absence was granted to Robert B. Shepard, Washington High School music instructor, for “the duration of military service.” Leave also was granted to Ruth C Hatcher, Social Service home visitor. Appointments approved by the Board were Frances Johnson, School 49; Ruth Tanner, School 76; Ruth Courtney, home visitor, and Evelyn Fisher, Tech High School clerk.

JOHN ROOSEVELT NO. 1874

NAHANT, Mass. Oct. 30 (U. P.). —John™ Roosevelt the President's youngest son, held draft No. 1874 which was drawn 7298th early today. .

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

ARCHDUKE FELIX HERE SATURDAY

Austrian to Discuss U. S. Of Europe in Town Hall Speech.

Archduke Felix of Austria, son of the late Emperor Karl of Austria,

‘| will address the Town Hall at Eng-

. Mrs. Christina Patino apparently is maintaining her reputation as one of the world’s best dressed women. Mrs. Patino, a niece of former King Alphonso of Spain and wife of Antenor Patino, Bolivian tin magnate, is shown flying from Lisbon to New York recently.

RELIGION TERMED AID TO DEMOCRACY

Without the freédom of church and religion democracy would fail, Dr. Daniel S. Robinson, Butler University president, told the Y. M. C. A. good citizenship forum last night. “It is a reciprocal arrangement,” Dr. Robinson said. ‘Democracy must maintain a free church which will devote itself to building the character of man who in turn will become the leader of the government. Thus both benefit and help strengthen the other.” More than 50 persons attended meeting, sponsored by the young men's division of the Y. M. C. A. in an effort to encourage a stronger feeling of democracy.

Wears Hoosier Badge at Draw

WASHINGTON, Oct. 30. — Rudolph Blick, formerly of Muncie but now a Washington resident, represented Indiana in drawing the capsules in the selective service lottery. Each state had a man designated to take part in the drawing. 2 Mr. Blick was one of the American Legion corps bedecked in uniform and medals who were present from the start and helped police the place while President Roosevelt took part in the inauguration of the lottery. A member of the Navy in the World War, Mr. Blick has a son at the University of Indiana, but he is too young to register, he said.

DEFER HAGUE PROBE UNTIL AFTER NOV. 5

NEWARK, N. J, Oct. 30 (U. PJ). —A U. S. Senate subcommittee’s investigation of New Jersey politics, centered about Jersey City’s Mayor and Democratic boss, Frank Hague, was abandoned today until after the Presidential election. At adjournment yesterday evening, Mayor Hague was on the stand, wrangling violently with Senator Charles Tobey (R. N. H.), who had tried in vain for three hours to get the Mayor to tell the source of his “private income,” the size of Jersey City’s debt, and what he knew of ‘alleged Jersey City election frauds. . Mayor Hague parried, heckled, or ignored the questions. The argument grew so bitter that at one time the two men stood face to face, Mayor Hague shaking his finger and Senator Tobey shaking his fist. : The committee had been hearing evidence of alleged registration list padding and other irregularities in Jersey City and in Republican south New Jersey for two weeks, Mayor

_:| Hague, vice chairman of the Demo-

cratic National Committee,

little information.

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FINN ARMY CHIEF ILL

HELSINKI, Finland, Oct. 30 (U. P.).—Baron Carl Gustaf Emil Mannerheim, 73, leader of the Finnish

was seriously ill today of gastric ulcers.

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Garbo Wants to Be Citizen— ‘Tank Ay Go Home No More'

HOLLYWOOD, Oct. 30 (U. P)— Greta Garbo doesr/’t think she wants

to go home any nore. She wants. to

become a citizer. of the United States and make it her home, permanently. “Ay tank ay wart to be-a citizen,” the langorous Swedish star told a clerk at Federal Court yesterday when she filed an application for citizenship. It looked as if producer’s headaches were over. Por years she had been announcing, to: their everlasting consternation: “Ay tank ay go home.” Alone and unheralded, she appeared at the Federal Building in a tailored sports cosiume of ®blue and tan, wearing dark glasses. The clerk didn’t know who she was until she signed the application, and then he was too dumfounded to question her before she left. The actress said she is 35 years old, five feet seven inches tall, and weighs 127 pounds. She was born in Stockholm and carae to the United States in 1933. :

She - went home to her rented]

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2 MORE YOUNG GOP *

CLUBS CHARTERED

Charters were granted two newlyorganized Young Republican Clubs yesterday by Harold W. Geisel, County Young Republicans chair man, i ‘ One is the East End Young Republican Club of the 23d Ward. The Sixth Ward. ”

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