Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 June 1941 — Page 6

GRE :

CHURCH MARKS TS 200TH YEAR

Urges Fewer Insurance Men

DETROIT; June 10 (U.P). Elimination of one-fourth of the nation’s insurance agents was

. Portraits

HOOSIERS WIN

E RADIO HERRON AWARD Ee

THIS EVENING :

(The Indianapolis Times is not responsible’ for inaccuracies in program announcements ued by station changes after press time.) p -

TONIGHT a 6:00—Court of Missing Heirs, WFB ;

or — le

Divide $1000 to Pursue Art ~~ Work, as 11 Students Are Graduated.

The John Herron Art School, which yearly adds a list of new names to a distinguished group of ' Hoosier contemporary artists, graduated 11 art students and announced special awards at commencement exercises last night. | Forbes Watson of Washington D. C, Magazine of Art associate ~ editor, made the commencement address. Feature of the ceremony

was the announcement of recipients of the annual $1000 Mary Milliken scholarship, top award at the local ~ school. : Miss Henrietta Savidge and Rob-

ert Van Sickle divided the award |

to pursue art studies at some point, as the scholarship reads, at least 500 miles from Indianapolis.

Award Other Scholarships

"~The graduates were Lillian Alford, ~ Robert Martin Earl Noffsinger, Miss . Bavidge, Mr. Van Sickle, Mary Johnston Brown, John Grepp, Mary Stanfield, Richard Head, Robert Lohman and Wilson Galluzzi. | Other scholarships, in addition to the Milliken award, were presented in the painting department to John Seneff, first year class; Herbert Demuth, second year, and Jane Palmer, third year. In sculpture, Mr. Lohman received a scholarship. Miss - Jane Hewitt and George Whitcomb received awards in the commercial ~ art department. _ The degrees and scholarship awards were presented by Evans Woollen Sr., chairman of the school board of directors.

Milliken Winners Hoosiers

The winners of the Milliken award are both Hoosiers. Miss Savidge is from Indianapolis and is a graduate of Shortridge High School. Last summer she did art design work in New York. Mr. Van Sickle, who is from Anderson, studied at the Tiffany Foundation . at Oyster Bay, N. Y., last summer. Both are top students in the fifth year class. Work from all classes at the school went on exhibit at the Herron. school today and will open to the public this summer.

TROOPS AID BOMBER HUNT SALT LAKE CITY, June 10 (U. P) —A detachment of 40 soldiers . from the Ft. Douglas air base today joined civilians and CCC workers who are searching the rugged hs Svyoming Mountains between Ly“man and Robertson for a missing Douglas B-18 bomber with six men

0 2h

6:00—Johnny Presents, WIRE. 6:30—First Nighter, WFBM. 6:30—Horace Heidt, WIRE. | 7:00—~We, the People, WFBM. 7:30—Fibber McGee and Molly,

8:00—Bop Hope, WIRE..

Lansing Hatfield, young American baritone, will sing three selections in a guest appearance next Sunday, 2:30, WFBM, on Andre Kostelanetz’ program. Mr. Hatfield was the recent winner of a contract with the Metropolitan Opera, defeating 800 ontestants in a nauon-wide series of auditions. . . . Bob Hawk, Take It or Leave It quizm aster, has completed tours but is

si making perS al appear-

py mig TW e xs e’s to be Mr. Hatfield aR] emcee and under the auspices of a New York department store. . . . When Ezra Stone’s Aldrich Family vacations for one month this summer it will mean a rest for most of the cast, but not for Ezra. He plans to play in summer stock and among other plays will appear in “What a Life,” in which he starred on Broadway and which was the forerunner of the Aldrich Family radio series... . . H. V. Kaltenborn will be Eddie Cantor’s guest on the comedian’s- Time to Smile program tomorrow night, WIRE at 7 o'clock. 8.8 8 ; WIBC has signed a contract with ASCAP and the society’s music was broadcast over a local station for the first time since the start of the “music war” yesterday. : WIBC is a member of the Mutual Broadcasting System which signed a contract with ASCAP on the eve of the recent convention of the National Association of Broadcasters. Under this contract WIBC could broadcast ASCAP music on network broadcasts. Under the station license it is now permitted to originate ASCAP music. : The local management announees it will also continue the use of music furnished by BMI, the music outlet set up by the broadcasters. = EJ 2 Commentator Wythe - Williams’ broadcasts will be heard over WIBC from 7 to 7:15 p. m. on Tuesdays and Thursdays, starting tonight. 2 2 2 Draftees at Pt. Knox, Kentucky, have selected the Horace Heidt version of “Goodby, Dear, I'll Be Back in a Year,” as their official theme song. It was introduced by Heidt’s vocalist, Ronnie Kemper, on the Treasure Chest program, heard Tuesdays at 6:30 on WIRE. 2 2 2 Edgar Guest, in his second appearance tonight as host on We, the People, WFBM at 7 o’clock, will interview America’s newest and old-

est Senator, Sam Houston, son and

namesake of the Texas hero. i ees

YN (RENE

. PE ENTS Croquignole Steam Oll Permanent compiete with hair cut. shampoo.

push-up wave and ringlet $1 ap ends ROBERTS BEAUTY

73 MARION COUNTY MEN ENTER ARMY

A total of 73 Marion County Selectees, 36 of whom were Negro youths, were inducted into the Army at Ft. Harrison here yester-

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day and today in the first delivery under the State's ninth Selective

Service call. The Marion County men were a part of 407 selectees inducted

throughout the state. Those local men to be inducted today are all from Local Board 13.

TE re ‘Neal, 1724 S. East St Irwin Michael Neal, . a ad Prederick George Butsch, 2141 S. Delaware St.; Alan Clarence Borden, 1225 Mills Ave.; Kenneth Carl Coy, 1628 E. Elbert 8t.; Charles Edward Norman, 3400 Carson Ave.; Hobart Cleo Brasher, 46 E. Raymond St.; Isaac Pardo, 1033 Church St. , John Elmore Loutt, 314 E. Morris St. Donald Stewakt Wilsoxen, R. R. 5, Box 118, Karl Frank Herrmann, 349 E. Minnesota St.; Paul Andrew Wagner, Meridian St.; Joseph Francis Monahan, 1977 Madison Ave.; Joseph Charles Niehaus, R. R. 6, Box 257, Gerald C. Goodrid. R. R. 1, Box 304, Bernard Herman Kaseff, 1138 S. Meridian St.; Richard C Prospect St.: John Frederick Sauter. St.: Charles Jefferson King, ter Fred Janitz, Tompkins, . Robert Flanary, 1340 R. R. 20,

Ave.; DH) Carl Ed Kiefer, 1738 S. Delaware St

Those inducted yesterday were: Board No. 35, Saymond Winfield Milurn, R. R. No. 10, Bure, R. R. 10, Box 227, Thomas Joseph Winkel, 2206 N. _DeQuincey, Frederick Bernard Schmitz, R. R. No. 11, Box 636, Robert Emmett Snyder, Lawrence, Charles Dennison Lockwood, R. R. Box 94, Allen Muril Ellis, 42d and German Church Road, Cordell Dunham, R. R. No. 1, Box 157, Acton, Ind.. Charles Beekman Shoobridge, R. R. 12, Box 495, Carl Underwood Martin, ‘Acton, Ind. Joseph Osman, 1793 Perkins -Ave., William Harper, Lawrence, Ind. ; (Negro Selectees) Board No. 2, Richard Weathers, 2534 Columbia Ave., Theodore Earl McFerran, 2454 Ralston, Virgil Ross, 1939 Sheldon. Board No. 4, Harry James Watts, 722 Roach, Clarence Hendrix, 948 W. 27th St. Preston Wade Heard, 24168 Rader. William Robert Watkins, 2943 Boulevard Place. Board No. 5, Alfonso McKinney, 501 N. California St., Quinton Paul Taylor, 550 S. Capitol Ave, James Edward Shelton, 525 W. Vermont St., Augustus Mack Johnson, 422 Douglas, Daniel Jones, 429 Blackford, Jesse Siderson: 418 Bape st., Joe Summers, 3 ouglas - os ge Edward White, 459 W . Robert Edward Lee Grimes, 5. Catherwood Ave, Willard Blystone Ransom, 828 N. California St., Cleo Eddie Murphy, 908 N. West St., Otis Allen, 905 Paca St. Board No. 7. Edward Andrew Coleman, 421 W. h St.; Sila 1831 Boulevard Place; Weathers, 901 N. Senate; Charles Wilson, 2845 Boulevard- Place; Joe Poindexter, 2305 N. Capitol Ave.; JohNson, 1002 N. Missouri St. Russell Burris, 1216 N. West 8t.: Reginald Davis, 154 W. 23d St. Botta ed oe ror He Em: roy; Raymon ay es, . - gan Sty Arthur Anderson, 544 N. Senate ve.

Board No. 10. James Sovoyd Gaddis, 193. 8S. Keystone Ave.; Benjamin Franklin Justice Caudle, 1752 Fullenwider. d 12. James Reynolds Smith, Earl Christian Raines, nois o No. 13. Curtis Alfred Parks, 1126 8. Pennsylvania.

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Henry Made Famous Speech, Celebrates.

RICHMOND, Va., June 10 (U. P.). —Old St. John’s, the little white church where Patrick Henry made his historic oration of “Give me liberty or give me death,” marks its 200th anniversary this week with a six-day program highlighted by the presence of Lord Halifax, the

ers at the convention of the

said:

agents?

no ‘income. That number, urged, should be retired. them, of course, should go

Lord Halifax is scheduled to speak at noon Thursday, at the dedication of a bronze plaque to the. time-

marked church’s colonial vestrymen.| he said.

recommended today by Luke J.

Addressing more than 700 in- . surance agents and commission-

Na-

tional Association of Insurance Commissioners, Mr. Kavanaugh

“Without the splendid body of earnest, honest men and women who have sold if, insurance és we know it today could never “have existed. Why weaken it by licensing ignorant, incompetent

Mr. Kavanaugh said that of 100,000 insurance agents in 1938, nearly 14,000 recorded practically

he

“With

the

few who are actually dishonest,”

The plaque is only a few feet from

the box-like enclosed pew where

\

Henry made his famous speech against Britain on March 23, 1775. The anniversary program began Sunday with a sermon by the Rt. Rev. Henry St. George Tucker. Presiding bishop of the Protestant

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Diocese of Virginia. Dr. John Stewart Bryan, president of the College of William and Mary, will speak today. Tomorrow night, a pageant dramatizing the

Patrick Henry episode will be staged by the Richmond Theater Guild.

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MY CIGARETTE HAS TO BE MILD. ( ALWAYS SMOKE CAMELS. THEY'RE

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YOU'VE GOT the right answer there, Ralph Flanagan. Camel’s slower way of burning Hn more coolness, naturally. More flavor, too, for nothing dulls flavor and fragrance like excess heat. And what a treat to a tired smoking taste a cool, flavorful Camel can be . . . how welcome Camel's extra mildness—extra freedom from nicotine in the smoke. Get Camels. For economy and convenience, buy Camels by the carton.

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It’s Ralph Flanagan— swimmer of the world’s

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R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company,

HERE (closest to the camera) is Ralph Flanagan in action at Palm Springs. And they call that stroke a crawl! 5 times All-American — he swam the world’s fastest mile in 20:42.6—and he still says: “I’d walk a mile for a Camel!”

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