Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 216, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 January 1929 — Page 11

JAJS. 26, 1

BILL PROPOSES STATE TAX ON MALTEXTRACT Measure Would Skim Revenue From Home-Brev; Crocks of Hoosiers. Proposal to skim increased state revenues from Indiana home brew crocks confronted legislator:, today as they returned to the capital to shape new laws, mako appropriations and devise means of financing them. Both houses reconvened at 2 pm. Representative H. Curtis Bennett. Dillsboro, announced he is preparing a bill to place a state ; sales tax on malt sirup and malt extract. He has in mind demanding a tax of 5 cents on each No. 3 can and is undecided how to tax malt sirup sold in bulk. “Whiie malt products have legitimate uses in baking,” Bennett said, *'a large precentage is used in the manufacture home brew. Malt products are being shipped into Indiana by the carload and approximately fifty companies are engaged in its manufacture.” Recheck Appropriations Bennett first contemplated entering a bill to prohibit the sale or transportation of malt in Indiana because of its widespread use by the homebrewer, he said, but gave up the idea because malt products also are widely used in the baking industry. The malt tax proposal came at the moment when the state budget committee began its final r°check of items on the biennial appropriation bill. Although requests are reported to have been pared down approximately $8,000,000 from their first total of $37,170,727, they remain approximately $1,500,000 a year higher than the amounts appropriated two years ago. Since a 1 cent tax levy raises approximately $500,000 annually, a 3 cent tax increase would be needed to meet prospective appropriation items. But that is not all. Operating expenses have Increased substantially in the last year, it is pointed out. At the start of the present fiscal year there was a balance of $4,000,000 in the general fund. But by the end of the fiscal year, Sept. 30, it is estimated, this balance will have shrunk to $1,500,000 and by Jan. 1, 1930, there will be a bookkeeping deficit of $1,500,000. So an increase in the tax rate from the present figure of 23 cents to approximately 30 cents is in prospect. Amend Judges’ Measure Appropriation requests this year, $10,546,813 higher than in 1927, are exclusive of the $40,000,000 asked by the state highway department which operates from special revenues and spends all the gasoline tax and automobile license fees it received. Its requests represent an annual increase of more than $5,000,000. Proposals for increasing the gasoline tax to provide the increased revenue are encountering opposition in the legislature although gas tax and license fee bills are not yet out of committee. Minor amendments to the bill which would increase the state’s annual bill for judges’ salaries by $183,600 were promised by its author Senator Earl Rowley, La Porte. The bill was held in committee when it was found it would increase the salaries of some judges to SII,BOO a year. Rowley’s amendments will restrict the salaries of county judges in Lake and Marion counties to SIO,OOO, while judges in some populous counties now receiving $7,000, will be limited to that amount. Intent of the measure was to increase that part of judges’ salaries paid by the state from $4,200 a year -to $6,000. By an act of 1921, populous counties may pay their local judges $2,800 in addition to the state paid salary. No Kick Against Board Disclosure that the workmen’s compensation bill, awaiting second reading in the'senate, contains no prevention for ret lining the present industrial board brought explanations from labor leaders, backing the measure, that they have no grievance against the present personnel of the board. The bill includes practically all amendments that have been added to the 1915 compensation act, Adolph J. Fritz, secretary of the State Federation of Labor, declared. “We have no grievance against any member of the present board and are not interested in whom the Governor might appoint on the new board if the present bill becomes a law, Fritz said. River Holds Three Bodies Bv United Press MARION, Ind.. Jan. 28.—After five days of dragging the Mississinewa river and searching along the banks, workers have abandoned hope of finding the bodies of Jewel Todd. 16. Myron Todd, 14 and Baley Officer, 16. who drowned a week ago, when their rowboat struck an abutment and capsized.

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A Very Bad Woman and the Three Men She Catches

BUILDING-LOAN BILLJPPQSED Move Seen as Only New Expense for State. Watchdogs of the general fund are gathering to defeat the bill introduced in the senate by State senator William H. Hill, Vincennes, C. Oliver Holmes of Gary, and Carl M. Gray of Petersburg, which creates a separate department of the building and loan department. The bill still is in committee and has not been reported out. Opponents are declaring that it merely will add expense to a governmental unit which is now a subsidiary of the state banking department, and requires no added cost for upkeep. The salary of the secretary is $2,500 a year and if the department is made separate he will receive a salary between $3,000 and $5,000 a year, as he will rank as a commissioner. He will need separate office space, clerical aid and furniture. At present the department uses banking department space and clerical aid. Revenue of the building and loan department for the 1927-1928 period was approximately $50,000. It supervises building and loan assets totaling $289,502,217.96, has 423,634 members and ranks among the first six in the nation. Its growth has been made possible by constant supervision of the banking department. In view of the added overhead, the bill will not be met with great favor if it reaches the house of representatives, it has been said.

WILL IRWIN SPEAKS Hoover Good Will Tour Discussed by Journalist. Contacts established by Presi-dent-Elect Hoover during his good will tour in South America will result in understandings of inestimable value in later years, Will Irwin, journalist and editor, who accompanied Hoover on the trip, said Sunday when he spoke at Caleb Mills hall at Shortridge high school. Settlement of a possible revolution in the Honduras resulted from the trip, Irwin said, and he also predicted an air mail line will be in service between the United States and the southern continent within a year. Graham McNamee, radio announcer, for whom Irwin substituted Sunday after McNamee temporarily lost use of his voice, will speak next Sunday afternoon. DIFFER ON PENALTY Prison Wardens Divided on Death Chair. Opinion of nineteen prison wardens in the United States regarding retention of capital punishment is evenly divided according to letters received by State Representative John L. Benedict of Indianapolis, chairman of the house of representatives committee on criminal code which has under consideration a bill introduced by Representative Joseph R. Scott of Floyd, abolishing the death penalty. A letter from Warden Walter H. Daly of the Indiana state prison has been received by Benedict in which the former says that capital punishment is necessary and should not be abolished.' Benedict plans to ask money from the Governor’s emergency fund to defray expenses of Warden Lewis M. Lawes of Sing Sing prison, who will be asked to appear before the criminal code committee. Waden Daly will be invited to appear at the same time to express his views.

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Lest —Harry C. Bannister as Edmund Darrell, the doctor, in “The Strange Interlude.” This is the man who also does something for Nina —gives her a child under another name. Center—Pauline Lord as Nina Leeds, the cause of “The Strange Interlude” in the lives of at least that many men. Upper Right—Donald McDonald as Sam Evans, whose ancestors were all insane. The real cause for all the goings-on of Nina. He marries her. Lower Right—Ralph Morgan as Charles Mardsden, whose sex life never functioned in the schemes of Nina.

BY WALTER D. HICKMAN Meet Nina Leeds. I hope that you have accepted the invitation of the Theatre Guild to meet Nina, starting at 5:30 o'clock on Thursday, Friday and Saturday afternoon at English’s thfo week. Now Lina is no Sunday school character. She is drama, she is life, she is wise, she is cruel and she is selfish. To get the line on this character that has caused New York to rave, gasp, yell and scream as well as praise for over a year, and the only play on tour this season that has not played to a vacant set for any performance so far, I journeyed to Cincinnati Saturday. I did more time in theaters Saturday in one day than I have for a long time. I started in at 2:15 at Tolstoy’s “Redemption” at the Shubert. Leaving there at 5:10 p. m. I rushed over to the Grand to see Eugene O’Neill’s “The Strange Interlude” as presented by the Theatre Guild of New York. As you know, we take time out at 7:30 until 9 o’clock for dinner or what you call it and then stay on until 11 p. m. First of all be in your seats at English’s during the local engagement of this play by 5:20, because you are not seated while the curtain is up. No kidding about this. The curtain goes up promptly the first time at 5:30 and the second time right on the dot at 9. And they would not seat even the mayor of a city. So be seated in plenty of time. First of all I beg of you not to buy this play just because you think it is a freak. It is the soundest drama, the most compelling theater that any American playwright has given the stage. In the next place do not buy “The Strange Interlude,” because some people may consider it plain spoken. It is that because O’Neill uses the asides to show every thought of his

Verdict of the New Movies APOLLO —“Captain Lash,” as portraj-ed by Victor McLaglen, is a hard-fisted, trouble-hunting sailorman, who will be liked by all who see him this week. INDIANA—“Show Folks” is one of the weaker attempts to bring the atmosphere of back-stage life to the screen. Not much of a story and a little convincing work done in the picture. PALACE—No excuse for ever making “The Rescue” as it is in its present shape. Avery poor picture. . CIRCLE—There will be no unanimous verdict on “The Doctor’s Secret.”

BELLHOPS TO FORM UNION: PROTECT TIPS 8,000 In Chicago Hotels are Asked to Join Organization, Bu United Press \ CHICAGO, Jan. 28.—Eight thousand Chicago bell boys have been asked to organize themselves as a branch of the American Federation of Labor to protect their tips and rights to union hours and wages. Edward M. Sein, president of the bell boys” 2 •real, said the bell boys were the only hotel employes vho remained unorganized and at vhe mercy of the public. He said the organization would offer legal support to the bell boys’ demands and would back them in their attempts to abolish the “unfair split” of tips with captains and the price some must pay to obtain jobs in larger hotels. BANKRUPT STUDY BEGUN U. S. to Probe Causes to Find Way of Reduction. Bu United Press WASHINGTON. Jan. 28.—A detailed and extensive study of bankruptcies to determine their cause and, if possible, to find a method of reducing them, will be undertaken immediately by the commerce department, Secretary Whiting said today. Private specialists in bankruptcy, including the Yale university law faculty, will co-operate with the department in its autopsy of defunct retail establishments, it was said. COPS COP COPPERS Police and vandals played a game of penny ante Sunday night. The police won. The thieves began the game by attempting to rifle a set of penny scales in front of the Capitol Clothing Company, 117 West Market street. Police arrived to find the scales overturned. As they righted it 260 pennies fell from the machine and rolled on the sidewalk. It took police half an hour to pick •ip the “winnings.” Are you looking for an apartment or house? The Rental columns in tonight’s want ads will solve the question for you no matter what location you desire, __

THE INDIAN AEOLUS TIMES

characters and all of them are human. And you know the unspoken thought often can not be published. I ask you to see “The Strange Interlude,” because it is honest theater. The very soul of all the characters as they live within themselves, is exposed. There are plain words, but the words are honest as applied to the characters. I ask you to see “The Strange Interlude,” because it will make one face certain problems of the theater more honestly. I ask you to see this one because Nina Leeds i$ a woman, who would do anything to capture happiness. Nina Leeds is not Sunday school picnic. She is a living woman, who accepts the strange interlude of life. She uses men, at least three of them for her own selfish way in getting what she causes happiness for herself and her husband, Sam Evans. Nina Leeds marries Sam ' and when she learns that all of hi? ancestors have gone mad, she destroys his child within herself. Then she starts her campaign to find a “male” so she could produce a healthy man child so that she and Sam could be happy. She finds him in Edmud Darrell, a doctor. Around her always is a man by the name of Charlie Marsden, one of those chaps who goes through life trying to find out what sex he really belongs to. And Charlie makes a charming salad for lunch and just loves to have funerals in in his family. I will tell you that the cast headed by Pauline Lord as Nina; Ralph Morgan as Charles Marsden, Donald Macdonald as Sam Evans and Harry Bannister as Edmund Darrell, as the doctor, is one of the most powerful casts ever to visit this city while I have been telling you about shows. Se sure and meet Lina. Hate her if you will. Call her anything and everything. They all do in the show but see “The Strange Interlude” that is coming to English’s.

Japanese Prince Dies Bit United Press TOKIO, Jan. 28.—Prince Kuni, father of the Empress Nagako of Japan, died here yesterday.

Announcement In order to give the very best of service to our many patrons it has become necessary to move our Service and Parts Departments into larger quarters. We have, therefore, estaolished the various.divisions of the Service Department, formerly at 1030 North Meridian Street, in the Cole building at 730 East Market Street. In this new location 25,000 square feet of floor space is devoted entirely to the servicing of Graham-Paige, Paige and Jewett automobiles. Here we have all of the equipment and tools, much of it special, for rendering highly efficient service. Too, we have a corps of men, especially trained, who know our cars and are, therefore, capable of doing the exacting work that you exp: ’ ~.nd we demand. We cordially invite you to visit this new service plant and inspect our facilities. AAAMAM-PAl££ OF INDIANA, INC. Factory Branch The Retail and Wholesale Sales Departments Remain at 1030 North Meridian Street .

BEAUTY AND TALENT DO NOT MIX WELL Lily Damita Is Not the Right Type of a Leading Woman for Ronald Colman in ‘The Rescue.’ BY WALTER D. HICKMAN ADMITTING that Lily Damita is a beautiful woman on the screen, I still confess that she is not the right type of a leading woman for Ronald Colman. The first time that I have seen these two players together is in “The Rescue,” which is now on view at Loew's Palace. Sometimes beauty is sacrificed for realism, but Miss Damita, even when she is on a strange island, looks as if she has just left a beauty parlor and ten maids. I doubt seriously if any two leading people could have placed any life or realism in the tray this story has been brought to the screen.

And I shout it loudly from the housetops that if Ronald Colman is going to stay on top of the movie world he better be careful about

the nature and type of his photoplay stOiies as well as the ability of his leading women. Miss Damita has beauty, no denying that, but she has no conception of how to put over realism on the screen. Os course I judge this by her work in “The Rescue.” Personally, I see no spark of great acting in anything

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Lily Damita

that she does. And for Ronald Colman, if he does not snap out of his posing and get down to creating real characterizations he will soon be forgotten by his public. And he will deserve it, too. I am getting tired and disgusted with this patent-leather type of realistic acting on the part of so-called leading players. With the talking pictures a fact, the time is here when the actor must fit his voice to the character just as Pauline Lord did and the stage for “Anna Christie” and is doing now as Nina Leeds in “The Strange Interlude.” And I am service notice right now that the movie actor must be as honest in his characterization, voice and makeup as the legitimate actor as I am not going to have a double standard for the two different acting groups. Asa story, “The. Rescue” is nothing. It is filled with native superstition. There is a strange mixture of all kinds of racial influences in this movie. And it does not ring true for any one second. I blame Miss Damita for not dressing her part as to arrive at realism in creating a character. She will not last long on the Americon screen if she does not do that thing. You know by this time what I think of “The Rescue.” It is a poor job, a mighty poor one. Now at Loew’s Palace. 8 8 8 JUST HOW SMART MAY A MOVIE BE? On leaving the Circle theater late yesterday afternoon a gentleman in the audience made this remark after seeing “The Doctor’s Secret”—“And so this is an example of what we are to expect on the screen in wise sarcasm. If so, deliver me from evil.” This throws some interesting light upon a question that is troubling producers of movies these days. The question is, “just how much smart and wise-cracking sarcasm will the public swallow in an all talker? Judging by “The Doctor’s Secret,” the audience yesterday found a much too large dose of the wisecracking highbrow stuff. “The Doctor’s Secret” is devoted to filming and recording the terrible disgusting domestic fights of a titled English lady and her husband. He is a brute and she feels justified in carrying on an affair with an engineer, not locomotive, but civil. After hubby becomes a brute one night, she decides to run away with her sweetie, the engineer, to India. When he goes out to call a taxi, he is struck and killed. The Lady of the story does not return home until a doctor in evening clothes arrives on the scene. When she goes down

to dinner she finds the same doctor a guest of her husband. The husband becomes suspicious as the doctor tells of the accident. The suspense is held up by the fact that the wife had placed a note and her jewelry in a drawer of her husband’s desk. Just how the doctor in a very polished way compels the husband to believe his wife and forces the wife back into the good graces of her rotter of a hubby furnishes several very smart scenes. I believe that there is too much talking in “The Doctor’s Secret” and not enough action. Just any type of a story, even when the dialogue is very smart wise cracking, does not make a good all talker. It’s going to be a job to find out just what stories will make good all talkers. This one does not come within a mile of equaling “Interference” or “Mother Knows Best” and others. The cast is smart, very smart. This good cast has the services of Ruth Chatterton, H. B. Warner, John Loder and Robert Edeson. Good acting, and the actors know how to talk. There will be no general agreement upon this one. Some will like it because it is smart and others will hate it for the same reason. Bill includes short subjects and Dessa Byrd at the pipe organ. Now at the Circle. 8 8 8 “SHOW FOLKS” NOW AT INDIANA “Show Folks” shoe’s promise of what might have been a fine picture but the necessary qualities needed to lift it from the ore?' lary photoplay class are lacking. Lina Basquette misses fire with precise regularity and Eddie Quillan would be a great deal better in this picture if the story had been changed a bit. Picture attempting to show the lives of vaudev'Ue performers are getting too numerous, and when the right spirit is not caught, as in “Show Folks,” the result will be nothing. Eddie Quillan has the part of an egotistic vaudeville “hoofer,” who imagines he is so good that it is hurting his act. Instead of trying to think up things to please his audience he spends most of his time verbally patting himself on the back. In time the idea soaks into his thick skull that a partner, a good looking one with a flashy figure, would be an asset to the act and perhaps help a little toward the goal of “big time.” So Eddie adds a good looking woman to the act, played by Lina Basquette, and changes the name to “Kehoe and Partner,” with the word “partner” in very small type in all the billing. The magnificent Kehoe then teaches his new partner all the tricks he has learned of the stage and they start out to conquer the theater going public. The girl makes a change in the AMUSEMENTS

ENGLISH TONITE mil AO TUES.-WED. _|||Sl MAT. WED. Wr,a, ‘ ARTHUR HAMMERSTEIN PRESENTS THE MUSICAL COMEDY SUCCESS—“ROSE MARIE” COMPANY SYMPHONY OE 100 ORCHESTRA NIGHTS—SOc TO 53.00 MATINEE—SOc TO $2.00 3 Days—Jan. 31, Feb. 1-2 The-Theatre Guild of N. Y. Presents The Most Talked-A bout Playin America—'“Strange Interlude” IN NINE ACTS By EUGENE O’NEILLv Evenings Only at 5:30 Sharp— Dinner Intermission 7:40 to 9 Final Curtain at 11 With Pauline Lord, Ralph Morgan, Harry C, Bannister, Donald Macdonald. Standing Room Only

Mon.-Wed., Feb. -5/Mat. Wed. SEATS TRUES.— MAIL ORDERS NOW Wlnthrop Arne# present# A GEORGE Arliss In SHAKESPEARE’S MERCHANT of VENICE NIGHTS: 50c to *3; Wed. - Mat. 50c to $2; Sat. Mat. 60c to $3.50.

SIX BIG VAUDEVILLE ACTS X ON THE SCREEN RESTLESS sm YOUTH •A DRAMA OF THOSE WHO \ Z / THEIR CANDLES I V A *DSf\ J l <■ V

BURLESQUE THEATRE “RECORD BREAKERS" With jack Reid’s Youthful Chorus On the Illuminated Runway

act. Her personality makes up for Kehoe’s lack of talent and the act goes big. Kehoe of course get s a little more pepped up about himseli and one night dismisses his partner, not knowing that she has attracted the attention of legitimate producers who want her in the big productions. And so the story goes. Never any better or worse. It will entertain but is not what the story could be if worked out properly. On the stage another “anniversary program” is in progress with Charlie Davis in charge of the ’anniv rsarying.” The “Indiana Stock Company” is revived again this week and contributes a bit of dramatic art to the performance. At the Indiana. (By J. T. H.) 8 8 8 VICTOR DOES SOME HARD FIGHTING Victor McLaglen successfully brings a hard fisted, fight hunting sailorman to the screen now in "Captain Lash.” McLaglen fits the character perfectly. After seeing this picture no one could by any stretch of the imagination remember anything soft or effiminate about “Captain Lash;” he’s all heman and loves trouble. Clyde Cooke, in a character part of a sort of theoretical bodyguard to his boss Lash, provides the comedy action of the story and is clever at it. .

Claire Windsor as Cora Nevins, the active member. in a gang of jewel thieves, does her work in good shape. Nothing much to do but what she does do is all o. k. Other players of prominence are Jane Winton, Arthur Stone, Albert Conti and Jean Laverty. Captain Lash is boss of the stokehole on a Pacific liner, and his reputation on board ship is that of the best stoker sailing the seas. But when Captain Lash steps down the gang-plank and gets among the women his technique changes to an altogether different brand of work. In port one day at a little south sea island he meets a girl that almost changes his outlook on the feminine sex. She is, in his imagination, altogether different from the women he has been used to. And the hardened boss stoker feels the gentle pangs of love. At sea the girl, Cora Nevins, is one of a ship’s party making a tour of the ship and Lash saves her from being burned severely in a visit to the stokehole when one of the stokers, in a rage caused by the heat, turns the boiler steam into the room. Lash goes to the hospital and Cora plays up to him, with the result tnat in the end he thinks of nothing but her. But the ending is not what you would suppose and is a good one. “Captain Lash” is excellent movie entertainment for the week. Movietone news reels and Vitaphone acts complete the bill. At the Apollo.—(By J. T. H.) Other theaters today offer: “Rose Marie” at English’s; vaudeville at the Lyric; burlesque at the Mutual; Buddy, Kane at the Colonial, and “The Passion Play” at the Murat, starting at 8 o’clock. Immigration to Canada from the United States last year was 25 per cent greater than the year previous. MOTION PICTURES

wwsmlrnre m [pJiefCße „ULYI>AMIU United Artists Sound Picture United Artists Sound Picture Metro Movietone Presentations GUS EDWARDS Song Revue Produced in Technicolor “CONFESSION” A One-Act Playet Directed by LIONEL BARRYMORE See and Hear Fox Movietone News Lester Huff Organlogue

I fountain! SQUARE £ _ j -1 Hr .KINGS,

“Captain Lash” Stirring all Movietone Romance of the Sea, Seamen and a Siren. VITAPHONE MOVIETONE ACTS NEWS THE APOLLO HAS THE PICTURES

PAGE 11

OFFICERS SPLIT IN WEIRD DEATH PLOTJNQUIRY Michigan Police Follow Two Different Theories in * Wood Case. Bu United Press DETROIT, Jan. 28—The weird case of Ralph P. Wood, master schemer and bank robber or victim of a counter plot launched by his estranged wife, today threatened to split the state police into two camps. Wayne county (Detroit) authorities who have charged Mrs. Grace M. Wood with planning to kill her young husband to collect his $50,600 life insurance already have taken a widely divergent view of Wood's case than St. Joseph county officials who are holding him for bank robbery. Oscar Olander, state commissioner of public safety and head of the state police is due here late today for a conference with Captain Richard Elliott. Elliott arrested Wood and Cecil Holt Friday morning on charges oi complicity in the $75,000 robbery oi the Sturgis National bank last Dec 17. They are being held in jail ai Centerville, Mich. Holt's warning of the alleged murder plot against Wood resulted in the killing of Ambrose Haggerty who was shot to death by Wood on the night of Jan. 7. Holt confessed that he, Haggerty. William Thompson and Taylor Pierce went to Wood’s office to kill Wood, at the instigation of Mrs. Wood. Mrs. Wood whose examination is set for this afternoon on the murder charge claims the men were only seeking evidence to connect Wood with the bank robbery. Another postponement of the examination was scheduled this afternoon because of Mre. Wood's illness and the absence of Holt, the state's chief witness against her. Captain Fred Armstrong, chief of the state police detective bureau, has stated that his investigation showed Wood had no connection with the robbery. Elliott’s laconic reply to this has been to refer to the positive identification made by bank employes.

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MOTION PICTURES k And Now . • • * The Whole Town’s Celebratin’! ‘PUBLIX’ THIRD BIRTHDAY REVUE” Gala Show of Show* WITH CHARLIE DAVIS Harry Downing, Vitaphone Comedian; Jack Powell, Stadler & Rose, Evans & Perez. Giant Stage Production especially produced for this gaia occasion T On the Screen j TALK AND SOUND jj Secret# of “SHOW FOLKS” i WITH /• Lina Basquette—Eddie j i Quillan ML Back Stage Love and Laughter! Jjf ( “S Mk TWO IA Zui GREAT : n5 y\ shows! - * 100% Talking Sensation! j Ask Those Who Saw it “THE DOCTOR’S SECRET” with 5 RUTH CHATTERTON ; Celebrated Stage Beauty j H. P. WARNER Star of “Sorrel & Son” i What was the awful secret that ■ made of this woman a slave to i two men? Hit No. 5 , Big Picture Month , IHIpl!! THE HOME OF VITAPHONE MONDAY ONLY “THE DESIRED WOMAN” —VITAPHONE—TUESDAY “THE FREEDOM OF THE PRESS** 1