Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 May 1941 — Page 4
PAGE 14
13 RED CROSS | Honored by I AWARDS GIVEN
Local Residents Complete Hygiene and Care of Sick Courses.
Completion certificates for Amer- | fcan Red Cross courses in home hy- | glene and care of the sick have been | Issued to 13 Indianapolis persons! by the local office. |
Those holding the certificates are! :*
3 1
INSIDE OF NEWS
Local Group Wili Speak At Butler Journalism Field Day.
Representatives of Indianapolis newspapers will address Hoosier high school pupils Saturday at the eighth annual Butler University Journalism Field Day, Prof. Charles V. Kinter, Field Day chairman, anThey include: Stephen Noland,
monies of the annual May Day festival at the First Baptist Church at
Eh SHE he CN RO Rh omnes oe a RE io
"THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES _
Magi
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Nestman Directs [DIRECTORS INCREASE May Day Festival | gRyAN AWARDS TO 4
Ralph Nestman is master of cereThe number of scholarships to be
awarded by the William Lowe Bryan Scholarship and Fellowship Fund of Indiana University this year will be increased from two to four, Fund directors voted at a meeting at the Columbia Club during the week-end. At the same time, the board voted three new directors for the fund. They are Byron K. Elliott of Boston, Mass.; Donald W. Thornburgh of Los Angeles, Cal, and J. Dwight Peterson of Indianapolis. During the last two years, scholarships amounting to $125 each have been awarded each year .to two stu-
6:30 p. m. Friday. The festival is sponsored by the Baptist Young Peoples Union and decorations for the program center around “A Night in Hawaii.” Miss Lora Maass is general chairman. Committee chairmen are Miss Clara
If You Had Any Doub#, Here Is What a Farmer Really Is
WASHINGTON, May 13 (U. P.). —If you have been wondering all these years just what a farmer is, here is a definition by the Supreme Court of the United States: “A farmer is not only an individual who is primarily bona fide personally engaged in producing products of the soil, but also any individual who is primarily bona fide personally engaged in dairy farming, the production of poultry or livestock, or the production of poultry products or livestock products in their unmanufactured
With that definition the High Court reversed the ruling of the
lower courts that Mrs. Carlota Benitez Sampayo of Ponce, Puerto Rico, was not a farmer and ordered her case remanded “for consideration of other questions in the light of our decision.” Mrs. Sampayo held an interest in a company that grew and processed sugar, but she also raised chickens in the backyard of her city home. She netted about $50 a month from the latter enterprize and contended that it made her a farmer. Mrs. Sampayo became involved
TUESDAY, MAY
RL J
13, 1941
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Mr. Nestman Maass, decorations and favors; Gordon McKinney,| The Bryan foundation was ortickets; Miss Florence Easterday, ganized in 1936 by Indiana Univerprogram; Miss Esther Waggoner, | sity alumni for the encouragement menu, and Mrs. Irene Wilcurt and land administration of gifts to the Miss Betty Reed, publicity. "University.
nounced today. Indianapolis News editor, who will ! |speak on “Fundamentals for High ! School Journalists”; Miss Rosemary Redding, women’s editor, The In|dianapolis Times, “Places for Wom1 War ; To wrviv {en in Journalism”; Herbert Kenney, ard, Minnie Waymire and | News radio and movie editor, “Radio Myrtle Lee Wooster, and the Misses land Movie Work in Journalism.”
Laura Belle Bunnell and Velma Dr. Mary Hamilton Swindler Herbert Walker, Times classified Smith . advertising manager, “FundamenFirst Woman Speaker tals of Advertising”; Robert Kellum, For Commencement.
| | Indianapolis Star city editor, “High | ert Stranahan, Star sports desk, |
dents. state, or the principal part of when the concern in which she held whose income is derived from any an interest went into bankruptcy, one or more of the foregoing oper-|and as a farmer she sought the ations, and includes the personal protection of the debt moratorium representative of a deceased farm-| provisions of the Frazier-Lemke
er. Act,
I. H. Millikan of the State Welfare Deparment and Mesdames Ethel Austin, Lula Coffman, Margaret Colvin, Marie Crouch, Beula Durand, Bweetie Hodge Hetty Ryan, Berta
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School News Correspondents”; RobTimes Special “Tips on Writing a Sports Column.” BLOOMINGTON, Ind. May 13.—| Joseph Cravens, Star staff phothe first time in history, a|tographer, “Newspaper Photog- { woman will deliver the commence- raphy”; Edwin Heinke, Times city | ment address June 2 at Indiana editor, “The Work of the Reporter, University, when diplomas are|/and Leonard Castle, United Press awarded for the 112th time. (bureau head, “Wire Services.” President Herman B Wells an-| Prizes will be awarded high school
| nounced today that Dr. Mary Ham- pupils for stories written in compe- |
| For
ST
EE
ilton Swindler, a native of Bloom- [tition during the Field Day and for stories printed in their school news-
papers.
ington, an I. U. alumna and now | | archaeology professor at Bryn
| | Mawr College, will deliver the ad-| .
= ”
Metallurigst to Speak
DR. ARTHUR E. FOCKE, reA the Tabernacle Presbyterian search metallurgist of the Diamond { Church, Indianapolis, will deliver |Chain Manufacturing Co., will ad- | the baccalaureate sermon, Sunday, dress the Butler student chapter of June 1, {the American Chemical Society at The daughter of a baker, Dr.|8 o'clock tonight in the Chemistry Swindler was born in Bloomington | Auditorium. and received the A. B. degree in 1905 and the A. M. in 1906 at I. U. She has been professor of classical archaeology at Bryn Mawr since | MAX WILDMAN of Peru, Ind. 1931 and has been editor of the pytler senior class president, today American Journal of Archaeology | announced chairmen for Class Day for a number of years. activities, June 7. Although she has been a member Allan P. Dreyer, Greenwood will of the Bryn Mawr faculty since|pe giftorian; Miss Betty J. Foster, 1907. Dr. Swindler has served as Oak Park, Ill, historian, and Foracting dean of women at I. U. dur-|rest Dukes, Indianapolis, giftorian. ing two summer terms. | Senior committee heads are: Dr. Vale has been Tabernacle! Charles Hepler, invitations; Ed Presbyterian Church pastor at Indi- | Turner, gift: Miss Betty Rose Maranapolis for the past year, having tin, reception; Miss Anna Sander, previously served pastorates at De-|senior jackets: Ray Hogan, procestroit; Oak Park, Ill; Knoxville, sion; Miss Mary Clay, baccalauTenn, and in New Jersey. reate; Miss Eileen White, alumni Approximately 1350 are expected relations, and Burdette Charles, to receive degrees from I. U. this ceremonial procedure. vear. The commencement program | General chairman for the Senior will open Saturday, May 31, with |Ball is John Carr. alumni reunions, election of an| Senior activities include: Senior alumni trustee and selection of picnic, Turkey Run State Park, June alumni association officers, {1; Senior Ball, Ulen Country Club, ee —— | Lebanon, June 5: Class Day, June SAILORS, SOLDIERS MAY FISH 7, Butler campus; baccalaureate, RALEIGH, N. C. (U. P.).—Sol- Field House, June 8, and commencediers and sailors temporarily sta- Ment, Field House, June 9. tioned in North Carolina will have! *r * = {the same hunting and fishing privileges as regular residents of the Dr. Ingholt to Lecture state, State Game Commissioner, pR. HAROLD INGHOLT, Danish John D. Chalk said in response to achaeologist and Semitic scholar, queries from army and navy offi- | will speak on “Danish Excavations cials, {at Hama (Hamath of the Bible) Syria” at 3 p. m. tomorrow at But-
5 S ler. His illustrated lecture is spon-
sored by the College of Religion and GUITARS INCLUDES vocate says it is the one organizaHAWAIIAN | Church comprised of 8,000,000 memcnly those matiers which are remembers may render private opinSTRINGS C Methodist Episcopal and Methodist § those who are one-time Southern WITH PURCHASE OF J J Such a chinery” is said to have operated PROGRAM TO HONOR "ne vr . A apolis and the vicinity will hold a the First Presbyterian Church. known among the young folk as | as director of Christian education of an anthem honoring Dr. Me- | Young People’s Choir; and a testi- | Landress is to respond to the adAt the 6:30 p. m. supper, Dr. and Rev. F. A. Pfleiderer is to talk: and
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President Wells also announced that Dr. Roy Ewing Vale, pastor
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METHODIST CHURCH "HAS HIGHEST COURT
If Bishop Titus Lowe of the Indianapolis Methodist Area becomes puzzled about some point of church law, he now has recourse to supreme court called the “Judicial Council of the Methodist Church.” The first meeting of the new Judicial Council was held recently in the Palmer House, Chicago. Eight of the nine members were present, The council performs the same service for the Methodist Church that the Supreme Court does for the United States Government. But while it is new and its functions little understood, the Christian Ad-
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