Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 January 1952 — Page 8

PAGE .

Mrs. Burpee, ‘Child Sigh-chologists'—

on of Boy by Bus Driver

Servicemen's

Friend, Dies Recalls Famed Lines of State ig On the Highways |

Mrs. Hortense Rauh Burpee, | long active in civic and social life and best known for her work | in the Service Men's Center, died] yesterday in St. Vincent's Hos-| pital During World War II, she took charge of the Pantry Shelf at the Center after the death of the Shelf's founder, Mrs. Robert Masters. For an average of 10 hours g day Mrs. Burpee worked to arrange food and entertainment for hundreds of GIs at the Center. She was also a director of Traveler's Aid Society and active in Indianapolis Symphony Society. Born here, she was the daughter of Samuel E. and Emma} Sterne Rauh. Her father was] president of Indianapolis Union (Belt) Railroad & Stock Yards Co. The Rauhs' formger home at 3024 N. Meridian St., given to the city, now is Rauh Memorial Library. Mrs. Burpee is survived by a daughter, Mrs, David L. Chambers; two grandchildren, her brother Charles, a nephew and a niece. All live here. She lived at the Athletic Club Friends may call at Flanner & Buchanan Mortuary between 6 p. m. today and 8 p. m. tomorrow. Services will be private. Cremation will follow. Friends .are asked to omit flowers and pay their respects by giving to charity. Her son-in-law said today that a spontaneous campaign for a Service Men's Center fund dedicated to her memory had already | begun. {

Dr. Osborne Is Dead at 64

Times State Service CRAWFORDSVILLE, Jan. 28 —8ervices for Dr. James Insley Osborne, 64, English Department] chairman at Wabash College, will be at 2:30 p. m. tomorrow in the College Chapel. | He died early] Sunday after a long illness.

Mrs. Burpee

from Wabash in| 1906, studied at Oxford Univer-

Scholar, received| his Dr. Osborne Columbia University in 1919, In World War I he served as firat lieutenant in military intelligence, later becoming an attache of the American Peace Commission in Paris, He had been a member of the Wabash English Department since 1919. He was a member of Phi Beta Kappa, Beta Theta Pi and Ouiatenon, a men’s literary club of which he had been president and secretary. Dr. Osborne is survived by his wife, Mrs. ‘Frances Doane Osborne; a son, James Jr. Seattle; daughter, Deborah, Columbia University gradute student; two sisters, Mrs. Harry W. (Elsie) Anderson, Champaign, Ill, and Mrs, Helen O. Ristine, Crawfordsville,

By DONNA MIKELS “NEW FANGLED child sigh-chologists.” That's who some of the

state's backward school heads blamed for the hue and cry last week over disclosure that in Morgan County a school bus driver was permitted to hickory switch a 12-year-old school boy. . But the frowns on corporal

| punishment as a prerequisite to

discipline go much too far back in Hoosier history to be labeled “new fangled.” © “The law still tolerates corporal punishment in the school room , . . The public seems to cling to a despotism in the government of schools which has been discarded everywhere else.”

i o - ” NO MODERN faddist,” fhe author of these lines. Stern,

prudent Indiana Supréme Court Justice Willlam Z. Stuart penned those lines back in 1853, in a case which established precedent for later high court rulings on the. matter of the overzealous use of the rod. What the learned judge had to say against whipping was directed at teachers, persons trained in child discipline. What ° wrath would have been evoked could he rise up 100 years later to see a school bus driver, with no formal education. in child care, accused of applying the switch, can only be imagined. ~ » » IN SUCH fire and brimstone language as this did Judge Stuart write for posterity his opinion, in the celebrated case of a teacher named McJunkin who chastised an Allen County

9

LOCAL DEATHS

WILLIAM ER N ES T|Burial, (JESSIE A.) BELL, 53, 3 ifm tery.

MRS.

W. Michigan St, Services 9

tomorrow, St. Anthony's th-|

lolic Church. Burial, Holy Cross W. Kansas St., Ariver salesman

Cemetery. n ” ”

PETER BLUE, 177, Pearson St.;

of

Bros. West Side Chapel. |New Crown Cemetery, ” ” »

Burial,

MRS.

~ ” MRS. N. FE. chusetts Ave.

east Chapel. Burial in Columbus, | Ind. | ~ » »

erator. day, Jacobs Chapel. row night Floral Park. ” » ~

Bros.

in chapel, Burial,

317 N. Illinois 8t., refrigerator repairman.- Services 10 a. m. Wednesday, Hamilton Funeral Home. Ed » » FREDERICK W. ROTH, 73, of 722 E, Terrace Ave. Operated Genere & Roth Sheet Metal Works before retiring six years ago, Services 1:30 p. m. Wednesday, G. H. Herrmann Funeral Home. Burial, Crown Hill.

Fannie Ward, Actress, Dies

NEW YORK, Jan, 28 (UP)— Fannie Ward, the world-cele-brated actress who gained fame) in the gaslight era and went on to become America's perennial flaper, died in Lenox Hill Hospital here yesterday. The little blond who claimed “eternal youth” had been in a coma since she was brought to the hospital last Monday after a friend found her unconscious in| her Park Ave. apartment. Mis Ward, a stage star of two continents at the turn of the century who( scored again. in the movies in the

a guarded secret, but it was esti-

mated at between 76 and 80,

Like a real life “Peter Pan" she never wanted to grow up ard remained spry in her old age. She| attributed her youthful appearance to a regulated diet that apt her weight at 100 pounds and to the use of special facial creams which ‘ironed out” her face.

Man Killed in Mishap |

At Hammond Plant

HAMMOND, Jan. 28 Kenneth Roberts, 39, Highland, was killed when he was caught in an agitating machine huge spaper pulp mixing vat at

the Keyes Fiber Co. here yester-

day.

Mr. Raberts was working inthe

mixing vat when a fan-like machine was turned on acc identally.

RELIEVES L1:D]14, 1: NTLY IEC) LPR 2:1

1920's, kept her age |

(UP) --

in a

» ” # MRS. GUSTAV (IDA J) SCHAEFER, 72, of 1637 E. Ray-

mond St., sister-in-law of Ferdi-

nand Schaefer, Indianapolis Symphony Orchesira conductor emeritus. Services 2:30 p. m. tomorrow, | Harry W, Burial, Memorial Park,

» n » | MISS MARGARET [SWARTZ, 3102 College Ave, re[tired School 51 teacher. Services 1:30 tomorrow, Flanner & Buchanan Mortuary. {Ridge Cemetery, Goshen,

MRS, FLOYD ( Fa NNI Tr) |SCOTT, 47, of 16813 Draper 8t., inspector at Richardson Rubber {Co. Services 8 p. m. today, Moore | |& Kirk Northeast Chapel. Burial in McMinnville, Tenn.

» » n | MRS. LUCILLE GRACE KAINATZA, 74, of 1413 Newman St.

|

{Services 10 a. m. Wednesday, |

(Moore & Kirk Northeast it Chapel. | | ‘Advertisement

| More Comfort Wearing

FALSE TEETH

| Here is a pleasant way to i ag due to® external causes.: Makes improved powder, sprinkled on upper and|th® skin look better, feel better. | [lgwer plates holds them firmer so that| Also good for burning, tired feet |they feel more comfortable. Ne gummy,/and cracks between toes.

[gooey, pasty tasts or feeling. It's alkaline| Paterson’s Ointmen Does not sour. Checks “plate t, 40a and 70c

| loose plate discomfort. FASTEETH,

(non-acid), odor” (denture breath). todsy_ at any drug stor

Get FASTEETH

2453 Central retired coal miner. Hill. Services 1 p. mi. tomorrow, Jacobs)

JOSEPHINE BOVA-p. m. Wednesday, {CONTI, 73, of 948 8S. East St.Moore Peace Chapel. Dr. Osborne geryices 9 a. m., Holy Rosary morial Park. was graduated church, Burial, St. Joseph Ceme- | tery. College Ave., caretaker of courts (ALMA MAE) at Hawthorne Tennis Club for 15 sity as a Rhodes BRANNOCK, 59, of 5818 Massa- years. Born in Peru, Ind. Services Services 10 a. m.[11 a. m., Thursday, Flanner & Ph.D fromitomorrow, Moore & Kirk North-! Buchanan,

|624 N. Jefferson Ave. ARTHUR L. EILISON SR., 47, contractor 25 years. of 148 Blackford St. tavern op-rora. Lived here 32 years. Funeral 1 p. m. Wednes-{ices 10 a. m. Thursday, Flanner West Side/& Buchanan Mortuary. Masonic services tomor- Riverview Cemetery, Aurora.

Harrell Resigns

ROBERT H. GIBSON, 46, of

Moore Peace Chapel. |

x.

Burial Oak|

——|at ease in your daily contact with

VOICE OF THE PAST—Justice | William Z. Stuart.

school boy named Cooper: “In one respect the tendency of the rod is so evidently evil, that it might, perhaps, be arrested on the grounds of public polic y. ‘The practice has an inherent proneness to abuse.

“The very act of whipping engenders passion and very * generally leads to excess.”

u n » REMEMBER—This was 99 vears before a school bus driver gave a 12-year-old boy who “meowed” at his back a “welt - raising” flogging and ejected him and a brother from the tax-supported bus. He continued: , “* .. Such a system of petty tyranny cannot be watched too cautiously nor guarded too strictly. The tender age of the

Washington Park Ceme-

s = ”

JOHN D. HARMON, 44, of 8

(for Best Beers, Inc. Services 1:30 |p.m. Wednesday, Shirley Bros. Chapel. Burial, Crown

» ” v MILTON E. SMITH, 68, of 54 N. Hamilton Ave. retired streetcar motorman. Services 1:30 Harry W. Burial, Me-

td ” »

FRED W. YEAMAN, 68, of 2532

» ~ ” FLETCHER W. DILLS, 73, of building Born in Au-

Serv-

Burial,

Acme-Evans Post

Samuel R. Harrell, who announced his candidacy for the Republican nomination for Governor last Friday, resigned today as chairman of the executive committee of the Acme-Evans Co.

“I am freeing myself of all executive duties so that I can give my entire time to my candidacy for Governor,” he said.

~ WOOD- STEEL — ALUMINUM

Ueneliun yo!

= 4 Custom Made to Fit Your Windows TERMS-GUARANTEED FREE ESTIMATE

Just Call Penwall GL-1900 |

ECT 21

Hemorrhoids “Cramp”,

Your Style

{Because of them you may feel ill

(others. Soothing Peterson's Ointment may help you by bringing quick relief for piles, itchy pimples, eczema, angry red blotches and other skin irritations when

Get |

all druggists. satisfied.

Money back if not,

-

Regularly 99¢ Each

COUPON MUST BE BROUGHT IN WITH . DRESS ORDERS.

COUPON NOT GOOD ON CLEANING ALREADY ORDERED.

VOID AFTER FEB. 29

| J— Re INDIANA'S

DA VIS WAH

ml 7 72 PT

Beautifully Cleaned, Spotted & Pressed

1

A

ie - te Pm

sufferers forbid that its slightest abuses should be tolerated. So long as the power to punish corporeally in school exists, it needs to be put under wholesome restriction ...” Picking up momentum, the Judge continues in language which somehow reads like the quill-penned script in which it must have been written. ~ ¥ » “ONE THING seems. obvious. The very act of resorting to the rod demonstrates the incapacity df the teacher for one of the most- important parts of his vocation, namely, school government. For such a teacher the nurseries of the republic are not the proper element. They are above him. His true position ° will readily suggest itself. (Boldface ours.) Judge *Stuart)s next sentence

has failed to come to pass in |

the passing years: 5 » “IT CAN yardly be doubted but that public opinion will, time, strike the ferule from A hands of the teacher, leaving him as the true basis of- government, only the resources of his intellect and heart. Such is the only policy worthy of the state and her otherwise enlightened and liberal institutions.” Otherwise “enlightened” Indiana, in almost 100 years and more than half a hundred General Assemblies, still has not got around to justifying the Judge's vote of confidence here. “It is a policy of progress,” says the judge in a final burst of oratory. “The husband can no longer moderately chastise his wife, nor according to the more recent authorities, the master his servant or apprentice. Even the degrading cruelties of the naval service have been arrested.”

n » = “WHY THE person of the school-boy, ‘with his shining

morning face,” should be less scared in the eye of the law » + « is hot easily explained. “It is regretted that such are the authorities—still courts are bound by them. All that can

| be done, without the aid of leg-

islation, is to hold every case strictly within the rule: And if the correction be in anger, or in any other respect immoderately or improperly administered, to hold the unworthy perpetrator guilty of assault and battery.”

VIII IIIII SELF-CONFIDENCE

To aM invited to be one = Pg She Da Cie om he ol et Speaking, ton Opening Session—Tues., Jan. 29

# /

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

AT CANARY COTTAGE Ne obligation excepts cost of dinner,

INDIANA INSTITUTE

8348 Wash. Blvd.

It's

MURDER

FT. WAYNE — Four-year-old {Charles D. North wis killed when he fell from his parent's auto on {Ind. 14 into the path of another

lear yesterday. The son of Mr.

land Mrs. Wilbert D. North was {riding in the back seat of a four|door sedan when the accident occurred near South Whitley.

3 Indianapolis Persons Injured. in Accident

Three Indianapolis person s were reported ‘injured at 3:30 |a. m. today in a highway accl{dent near Kentland. v

| State police sald Joseph Frederick Armstrong, 2829 Columbia |Ave., was taken to St. Elizabeth {Hospital in Lafayette in oftical condition.

Two others slightly injured, also taken to St. Elizabeth Hos|pital, were Donald Horn, 814% |W. 12th St, and a 15-year-old girl whose home was listed on E. 13th St.

Advertisement

SCIENCE DEVELOPS ‘A "WRIST-EAR” HEARING AID

A tiny electronic “ear” has been released “which is worn on the wrist hidden under the sleeve of the coat, shirt or blouse. This tiny “Wrist-Ear” Hearing aid, because of the way it is worn on the wrist, eliminates many of the objections the hard of hearing have against conventional hearing devices. You wear it on your wrist to gain advantages that not even your head can give you! In this manner you can hear in all directions, understand everything being said, and it arouses no curiosity because it is always worn under the sleeve.

FREE INFORMATION will be sent by writing to F. A. Bowman, Dept. 2, 16 N. Delaware St., Indianapolis 4, Ind.

ple

Duis arsesie Comms fn Bheitve

6:00 P. M

boro s rr ross

soothing

Now those croupy, coughing spells that attack children without warning are relieved so fast with this home-proved . two heaping spoonfuls of Vicks VapoRub in a vaporizer or bowl of boiling water as directed in package.

It's easy, too . . . Your little one just breathes in the steam. Everybreath carries VapoRub’s relief-giving medications deep into troubled throat and large bronchial tubes. There this wonderful treatment medicates and soothes dry, irritated membranes, eases away coughhelps restore normal breathing. And real comfort

treatment .

ing,

Tone.” Only a lucky purchase of the

price of $8.98. its cofmbinatibn colors

Cordovan on Crystal,

fon! wa

tely limited. We believe ; . them to ! SAME PRICES! You Just 1000 REW $18 Value CAN'T'PAY MORE! $ ARD.} “ocutsts Lensec ground to ‘your exact n ‘J prescriptions regardless of prestription or lens fo yun also filled ab strength required, ow) frame of your more than tame, Dries. CO same prices 0. every- : body! Bifocals, if gro a extra. y Adyartised Dreseription No - APPOINTMENT NEEDED! PT Repairs at

65 OTHER STYLES, SHAPES and COLORS - PRICE INCLUDES FRAMES AND LENSES

Now, for the first time in optioal history, we bring to you. at popular, prices, the famed ‘‘Tu-~

of a New York firm permits us to bring t6 you this expensive frame complete with lenses at the one The highly-styled ‘‘Tu-Tone" of Blonde on Crystal and has fast become America's most stylish and popular seller. It's combined sturd makes it truly a wonderful buy at the one low price of $8.98. Supply

1-30 W. Washington St

bonis i Many Piva Ei

— atte of colds

Special medicated steam brings ng DEEP-ACTION RELIEF

For coughing spasms, upper bronchial congestion and that

choked-up feeling caused by

colds, . there's nothing like

using Vicks VapoRub in steam. |

And always rub it on for continued relief

To insure continued acton always rub VapoRub n throat, chest and back. Works for hours — even | while your child sleeps— to relieve distress. It’s the best-known home remedy you can use when any cold strikes

Vick

ols]

(KNIT

Sud FRAMES and 1831.19 33

$

entire output with

construction and safety

lowest St.

Suite oe fant Hours 9 a

Rgant ’

January Specials!

on Items for Your Home!

Phone (AT. 8311) and Mail Orders Filled Promptly (C.0.D. orders accepted on $2.00 or more)

a

A Best Seller!

Rayon Faille Draperies a.

99

Pair

® Pinch-pleated with buckram top. Hemmed sides. Luxurious rayon faille

« + « cleans beautifully! ® Can be used as Draw Draperies. Full 84 inches wide (pair) and 27/2 yards long.

HUNTER'S GREEN * GOLD ROSE ® GRAY * EGGSHELL ® LIPSTICK RED * BLUE

3-Piece Checkered

“Cannon” Towel Sets

ap Be 3.pe. set

or Buy Them Separately: SUN GOLD Both Towel (2040) 4B FLAMINGO -¢ Hand Towel (15x26) 28¢ BLUE STAR Wash Cloth (302. 20@ GREEN SPRAY

a

Special Purchase and Sale!

500 PAIRS—100-INCH WIDTHS DELUXE PRISCILLA CURTAINS

99

100 Inches Wide (Pair)

21/3 Yds. Long!

Pair

Fine, plain cotton marquisette from one of the nation's leading curtain manufacturers. Made to our specifications. Favorite i ivory shade or new decorator’s colors. Burgundy , green , blue , rose « royal » ivory.

Bleached, Quilted

2. Mattress

IN

White Cotton Sheet Blankets

5% Wool Double Plaid Blankets

® 5%, Wool and 95% cotton, ® Smart rayon satin binding. ® Double-bed size , . , 70x80.

® Plaids in rose, blue, green or rust,

each

size Quilted white ‘350 . cotton for pro- Ea. tection to your valuable mattress. Beauty Rest or regular size.

Big double-bed size, 80x95. Snow-white. Extra fine quality. Whipped edges. Excellent when used as sheets.

Large Size Chenille

Solid Color Bath Sets

"American Beauty"

Mattress Protector

Famous "STARTEX" Part* Linen Tea Toweling

199

2-pc. set 3 e ® Red Sn ® Blue p25 yard o Green Regularly $3.50! Color-fast, solid colors: Cherry Reg. 5% yd.! « Gold

hunter's

red, green, peach, | *35% Linen and 65%, cotton |}. 250 pi or twin size)

green, gray, blue or aqua. All- | for greater absorption. Fiesta over designs. 2-pc. set includes: | or floral pattern. 17 Inches | Washable! Button closings! Tape. Extra size rug, matching lid | wide. Guaranteed color - fast. | bound seams. Cut extra large

Free from lint. do allow for shrinkage.

‘Excell’ Kitchen Towels 35¢, each

(or 3 for $1.00).

cover.

Special Purchase

Cotton Twill Laundry Bags

Ri 3

[bia 40x80 size) Regu $l 98!

" Pre-shrunk. Ready for instant use. \_ Large: 30x30 size. bh Blesched towels, _ hemmed, ready to

"use, Buy i in sets of 3. He

-

Big jumbe size; Attrae-

Color-fast!

EH ear

un vi 5 tive printed cotton twill. © wees WassoNs DOWNSTAIRS STORE,

A ——

\

“Insid

By Ed

“I'LL PI] hill at 5 o'c “You wi Telephone 1 what happe shame, pric and the tal A Mr. F of a drug in the city : of Zionsvill job about Club meetin ing a talk. 1 ‘didn’t idea what h kind of a c whether he anything. houser, he Kendall Co, the Zionsvil

FOUR M my heels we hill. Two made to star and Maryla traffic on MA west on Ma The gray ‘I figured M the curb sic to hop in Cadillac on watching fo Every ca me received into a Tarza Transit syst fat eye.

FIVE AF he be reache store and m standing the would drive front of Ba 15 minutes. What wo joker who f didn’t have had ought tc was quietly where? Why didn ville? Why « office? He st wearing. A that would § girable.

It Ha By Ear

NEW YO Havoc (Mrs. fall—by whi should be ho “She’ll wi her!” June t« d’'you hear liked to see C “Nothing, good on her! Fred Allé walking a do “What kind “A Boxer, good one.”

MANY FI P. Pattersondeath—were ceive letters were appeals tures were st

before he die

BOSOMY Vegas and wrote, “None Mathews, an: his battle v friends, “Hon Frank Costel night. To pr include the questions anc question.”

SOME D! ported by o “She has at bad it never

SARAH ¢ was introduc D. A. Ed Sik client to tal replied: “I d He prefers he

Amer By Rob NEW YO who almost 1 of the Senate an acute an nation’s poli Estes Kefau: his fair whi experiment : going to run on the stren The natic about this T along. But i periments, w as the perfec ver is it, Hi almost entir huster, the = ‘twines rounc

UNDERS legislative bi machine in to-make law gaudy, and i

- and took his

into the kite crime comm and he hit ti casting Co. audience, You ma; Rudolph H: Costello and entertainmer sponsors go Kefauver w captain of tt any other t he had com puppets, Ber!

@

AT FIRS

front pages, out, and fin: true cefebri chaser. He

" a big, calm

+ dose of dig

some discer and conside classic, as Other men Sen, Kef

4 Halley, walk

City solely association mission, He and