Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 260, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 March 1929 — Page 6

PAGE 6

DRYS CRITICISE LAWYERS’ FIGHT ON JONES ACT Characterize Activities as Conspiracy: Fear Spread of Move. Hu Times fivccfat WASHINGTON. March 20.—While high government officials today took steps to end the confusion which marks enforcement of the Jones prohibition law, Representative Louis F. Cramton of Michigan characterized the anti-Jones law vtivities of prominent New York Tfiwyers as a “conspiracy to thwart the law” and called on the New York Bar Association to penalize the participants. Though more reticent in his comment, Dr. J. M. Doran, federal prohibtion commissioner, said the “drive to educate juries” not to convict defendants under the jailsentence statute was apparently based on a feeling that “judges cannot be depended on to play fair.” Judges Responsible With Secretary Andrew W. Mellon and Seymour W. Lowman, federal dry czar, Doran pointed out that full responsibility for administration of the new act rests on judges and district attorneys and not on his army of agents. “The New York movement/’ continued Doran, “infers that judges can not be trusted to sentence a man in proportion to the degree of crime of which he is charged and convicted, and that district attorneys will not present charges in accord with the facts submitted by the federal or state officer who made the arrest.” Despite hesitaiton of federal officials to discuss the situation, it is known that the consequences of a spread of the New York movement on the eve of the national crime survey to be launched by President Herbert Hoover has caused considerable concern here. Fear Clash on Law It is feared that extreme dry and wet forces will be locked in a clash over the new law that may handicap efforts to obtain a commission of unbiased investigators. Dry administrators who have staged raids with a threat to proceed under the Jones law against offenders received an implied rebuke from Dr. Doran. Referring to the announcement by Maurice Campbell, New York administrator, that future arrests would be made under the jail-sentence provisions of the new act, the prohibition commissioner said there was no basis for such a remark.

INDIAN CHIEF TALKS Mohican Sachem Says Red Men Regarded Whites as Gods. The Indian of colonial times looked upon the white man as a god. and welcomed him as such, Samuel A. Miller, last living sachem of the Mohican tribe, said Tuesday night at St. Paul’s parish hall, Weghorst and Wright streets. Mr. Miller appears in full Indian costume of eagle feathers, bear claw necklace and buckskin. Only 450 Indians of the Mohican tribe are still living, he said. He will speak at the Zion Evangelical Lutheran church tonight and at St. Peter’s parish hall Thursday night.

ASK $50,000 FOR CRASH Suit against the Cincinnati. Indianapolis and Western! 'abroad seeking $50,000 damages was filed in superior court one Tuesday qfternoon by Mrs. Edna Bennett, guardian for Albert Bennett. , The complaint alleged that Bennett was permanently injured when a bus he was driving was struck by a train at the Emerson avenue crossing, Jan. 15, 1927.

;Gone, but Not Forgotten

' Automobiles reported to police as Stolen belong to: John H. Max, 92D East drive Woodruff Place, Chevrolet coach, ffl-646. from Woodlawn and Virginia avenue. ! Paul C. Towsley. 3422 Euclid avenue, Ford coupe. 67-844, from Pennstreet near South street. ; Laura Werst, 1846 North Delaware street. Ford sedan, 78-137, from in fj-ont of 1338 Parker avenue. Walter C. Cusack. 3750 Guilford avenue, Ford coupe. 78-165. from in front of 717 South Alabama street. - Elba V. Caster. 6124 Haverford avenue. Ford roadster, 86-861, from Roanoke and Ohio streets. , Shirley Pearcy. Plainfield. Ind.. Ford touring, 731-121, from Capitol aivenue and Ohio street. Joe Foppiano, 25 South Alabama street. Nash coupe, 95-418. from garage on East New York street. J. P. Mahady. 4103 Broadway, Graham-Paige sedan, 84-650, from Georgia and McCrea streets.

BACK fIOME AGAIN

Stolen automobiles recovered by police belong to: C. C. House, 817 Villa avenue, Chevrolet coach, found on Georgia street near Capitol avenue. C. A. Dailey, Martinsville, Ind., Chevrolet coach, found at Market and New Jersey streets. Walter Reiner, 2418 Union street, Chevrolet sedan, found at Sanders and Shelby streets. Three Negroes arrested.

DANCE TONITE Monty’s Casino Formerly Day’s Casino The Rfontanians 9-Piece Band ‘ Are They Hot? En How! Southeastern and Emerson Avc.

“MACBETH” WILL BE A VERY BIG EVENT Teachers and Students of City and State Are Interested in the Gordon Craig Production. THE most important theatrical event of the Indianapolis season will undoubtedly be the outstanding educational event in theatricals. Macbeth,” with the settings designed by Gordon Craig, and with an allstar cast headed by Florence Reed, Lyn Harding and William Famum, will be at the Murat three nights beginning Thursday, with a Saturday matinee. This is the production which recently completed the record of 100 performances consecutively at the Knickerbocker theater, New York City and which packed the immense Auditorium theater, Chicago, for three weeks. Criticisms have been unanimous in its favor.

In recent years “Macbeth” has been seen only with repertoire companies. The Gordon Craig “Macbeth” on the contrary, stands on its own merit and enlists the services of nearly one hundred people in support of the thirty speaking roles. The production is enormous, comparable only with “The Miracle,” done by Max Reinhardt, who, incidentally, is a disciple of Craig. Os great interest to the teaching fraternity is the fact that this “Macbeth” is being shown only in the largest auditoriums where it can be properly displayed on immense stages and where the seating capacity warrants reduction in price scales. In Indianapolis the prices will range from $1 to $3 for all performances. There will be further reductions for groups of twenty-five or more who will be enabled to secure a 50-cent reduction on the $3 and $2.50 seats and a 25-cent decrease in the $2 and $1.50 seats. This brings the price down to about one-naif of the prices charged during the New York run. The Gordon Craig designment has been carried out by Dougles Ross, former dramatic coach at Yale, who is also in the cast. It is at once lavish, stupendous, spectacular and drenched with the supernatural mood which is the theme of “Macbeth.” It is receiving the indorsement of all educational bodies. Charles F. Miller, superintendent of Indianapolis public schools, has written: “I think it is indeed fortunate that the lovers of the dramatic art and of the beautiful are to have the opportunity of seeing Gordon Craig's wonderful designmentof “Macbeth.” Judging from experience in other cities, it is not too early to start making up parties now. Full particulars can be obtained at the Murat theater, where reservations can be held pending completion of party arrangements. Other Indianapolis theaters today offer: “Wanted,” at English’s; “Blockade,” at the Lyric: *‘Jazztime Revue,” at the Mutual: “The Barker,” at the Fountain Square; “Stark Mad.’’ at the Apollo: “The Bellamy Trial,” at the Ritz; “Desert Nights,” at the Palace; “The Naughty Duchess,” at the Isis: “Cohens and the Kellys,” at the Circle; “The Wolf of Wall Street,” at the Ohio, and “Chinatown Nights,” at the Indiana. REDUCE FREIGHT RATE Lower Cost on Sand Will Save Industries SIOO,OOO Yearly. Indiana glass, pottery and molding industries will benefit approximately SIOO,OOO a year by freight rate reductions ordered by the interstate commerce commission on silica sand from the Ottawa (111.) sand district, the Indiana State Chamber of Commerce announced today. The new rate schedule, carrying reductions of from 10 to 50 cents a net ton on washed sand and from 44 cents to $1 on crude sand, will go into effect May 1. The state chamber was an intervening petitioner in the case, R. B. Coapstick, traffic manager, said.

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U. $. ENVOYS TO FACE DRY ERA Argue Law Binds American Diplomats Abroad. Bit United r"css WASHINGTON, March 20.—The question whether American ambassadors, ministers and other diplomats abroad should continue to serve liquor in their official residences was raised today in the light of President Herbert Hoover’s insistence upon the strictest enforcement of the prohibition laws. Militant drys believe the antiliquor sentiment expressed in the prohibition laws should be morally binding upon American diplomats abroad, especially in view of efforts here to throw restrictions around the importation of liquor by foreign diplomats in Washington. “We believe America’s representatives in foreign lands should set the example of observing America’s laws and maintaining the policies of the United States,” Dr. Clarence True Wilson of the Methodist Board of Temperance, Prohibition and Public Morals, said. Officials of the state department were unwilling to say whether or not the letter or spirit of the prohibition law is violated by servingintoxicating beverages in American embassies or legations.

EXPLAINS GLAND ACTION Doctor Analyzes Function in Lecture at Central Library. Functions of ductless glands in the human body were discussed by Dr. William Moenkhaus of the Indiana university department of physiology in his lecture in the university’s extension course at Central library Tuesday night. “Tire ductless glands might be called the drug stores of the body,” he said, “for they furnish, in the case of the adrenal glands, an emergency substance that makes it possible for us to perform under stress actions we could not possibly accomplish without such stimulus.” PREPAR’-' LAW DIGEST Digest of the 1929 acts, in phamplet form, is expected to bq ready for distribution by the end of this week. It is being prepared by Charles Kettleborough, director of the legislative reference bureau. The acts then will be printed in volumes and distributed by the secretary of state. They will contain the 221 new laws and twenty-two resolutions passed by the legislature, and approved by the Governor. AMUSEMENTS

JUDIRDA,**

Sih Annual Tour INDIANA UNIVERSITY’S DAZZLING MUSICAL SHOW Greatest of the Big: AilUniversity Productions Company of TO, with 3.> co-ed beauties •SrStSITS-KEITH’S March 23 —Box Office Open Daily,

f oo 6 Big Vaudeville Acts FEATURING JIMMY ALLARD & COMPANY in “JOURNEY’S END’ A Sensational Laugh Hit On the Screen BLOCKADE With Anna Q. Nilsson

MURAT THEATRE 3 Days Only Beg. Tomorrow Might Matinee Saturday MACBETH FLORENCE KEED ' lAN lIAKOING WM. EARN CM DESIGN MEN O R DON CKA Hi DIRECTION—GEORGE C. TYLER Star Cast. iOO People. SIOO.OOO Production SEATS NOW $2.50. s;t

CHOI lOI|C Mat - WedtNuLlOn fi T hur. Sat. Tonite, 8:15—25c, 50c, 99c BERKELL ‘‘WANTED” PLAYERS A 3 Act Comedy Next Week, “Out ot the Night”

i ti it lURLESQIE THEATRE Kitty Madison and her ‘JAZZTIME REVUE’ On the Illuminated Runway

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

AIMEE JUDGE LOSES TILT IN OUSTER TRIAL California Senate Will Set Impeachment Hearing Date Today. BY HOMER L. ROBERTS Lnitcd Press Staff Correspondent SACRAMENTO, Cal., March 20. —The California state senate today was to set a date for the impeachment trial of Superior Judge Carlos S. Hardy of Los Angeles and determine how much, if any, of the famous Aimee Semple McPherson kidnaping tale will be recounted before that august body. Judge Hardy lost the first legal skirmish in his battle to escape removal from office Tuesday night, when the senate unanimously overruled his objections to four of the five articles of impeachment. The fifth article, accusing the jurist of issuing tickets of admis-

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AMUSEMENTS IUATINEE DAILY 2 P. M. [Tumi NOW SHOWING I^BAIRIKiIR T VITAPHONE TALKING PICTURE (""Movietone I Pathe Talking 1 Vaudevillc I News and Fables f ADULTS. 25c KIDDIES. 10c j

NOW SHOWING JOHN GILBERT In the 3IGM Sound Picture “Desert Nights” Metro Movietone Acts Fox Movietone News Charlie Chase Comedy COMING SOON THE BROADWAY MELODY All Talking—Singing—Dancing

ISIS THEATRE * " OPPOSITE TERMINAL STATION Now Showing The NAUGHTY DUCHESS STARRING EVE SOUTHERN ADMISSION - -10 c

APOLtt) First 100% Talking Picture of Its K iud “STARK MAD” With H. B. Warner, Louise Fazenda and a Great Cast Vitaphone Movietone Acts News STARTING SATURDAY in “RED WINE” The Apollo Has the Pictures:

34th and Illinois Streets Leatrice Joy in “THE BELLAMY TRIAL” Mats. Sat.. Son. and Holidays

sion to the murder trial of William Edward Hickman in Los Angeles, was stricken out of the list of charges by vote of 23 to 14. The charges upon which the Los Angeles jurist will be tried are as follows: 1. That Judge Hardy practiced law by giving legal advice to Aimee Semple McPherson and her mother, Mrs. Minnie <Ma> Kennedy, while at the same time sitting on the superior court bench. 2. That he attempted to obstruct justice in the kidnaping trial of Mrs. McPherson by employing detectives, counseling with grand jurors, conferring with her attorneys, making public addresses and giving statements to the press. 3. That he accepted a $2,500 check from Mrs. McPherson and her mother for these services; although the two wohien assert it was a “love gift.” 4. That he attempted to intimidate Wallace Moore, Santa Barbara newspaper reporter, who partly

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W ALL-TALKER T 1 fl WALLACE M U BEERY n In Paramount’* W “Chinatown Nights” an See Shots of Death Crash That B Lj Killed C. S. Tranb and Lee Bible H at Daytona Beach. 'm Baffin’ Room 1 I Only This Week B ■ “The COHENS [ n and KELLYS 1 | ATLANTIC CITY” L with George Sidney—Mack S& Ln Swain —Vera Gordon HE They’re Greater Than Ever in (] This Brand New Cyclone of I I Laughs, for It’s in— JH HjALK and SOUND jT PrGEOItGE BANCROFT U “THE WOLF OF WALL STREET” BB With Baclanova—Nancy Carrol Lm Now You Can Hear This Great MB U 100% TALKER Fl

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4 D JL/ound for New York again?” "Yes, since New York Central Lines put on this de luxe train I’ve been making the trip every month. I never thought railroad travel could be so comfortable. "It’s this level roadbed—it rides like velvet.” Indianapolis to New York on the Water Level Route , Lv. Indianapolis Ar. New York Ar. Bosto* Ohio State Limited 12:00 noon 9:40 a.m. 12:25 p.m. Southwestern Limited 2:00p.m. 9:50 a.m. 12:25 p.m. Knickerbocker Special 6:25 p.m. 9:00 p.m. 7:25 pm. ,Missourian 10:00 p.m. 6:50 p.m. 9:45 p.m. New York Central Lines ‘TSig Tour Route City Ticket Office, 112 Monument Circle. Telephone Riley 3'S'i'i

identified a woman he sa* in automobile with Kenneth Ormiston, Angelus temple radio operator, as Mrs. McPherson. Banner Year at Niagara Bn United Press NIAGARA FALLS. N. Y. March 20.—A banner season, according to reports, is in prospect at the tails. Hotel reservations for the summer point to a big tourist year.

Headaches A lufld.iche does not usually cause alarm. Most people take a * pill or a powder to “kill tbe pain” and forget all about the cause. Very foolish—because headaches frequently warn of conditions [ that threaten to wreck health It is very often a symptom pointing to a disordered, poisoned system. Remove the poisous from your system with the aid of Mountain Valley Mineral Water. For Prompt Delivery and Full Particulars Call 'Mountain Valley Water From Hot Springs, Arkansas • Local Distributors—9ll-913 Massachusetts Avc. Riley 3259 Also on Sale at All Hook Drug Stores

* H Sorry! I’ve got a “date” m |||j You would have thought that Marian played a saxophone, or had read one of those books on How To Be J|||| Wm Popular, to hear her telephone ringing. And yet the explanation of what kept hcr"datedup” was simple. Right at the height of the winter social season, most |H| of the girls in her set were ill at home, down with snif--11111 fles, red-noses, and stopped-up heads. But not Marian. HHI She had found an old and trusted remedy: GROVE’S Whenever she got her feet wet, or felt chilly or vaguely WB, gill! ill, out came the little white box of tiny tablets. The p||l pUpf laxative benefits though mild, were quick. The tonic Pil effects though stronger, were equally quick. So she Wjjm knocked the cold before it really got started. Or threw i|||j it off quickly.... Make sure of the right prescription 111 jig by emphasizing GROVE’S, when asking for GROVE S

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C. OF C. TO FETE TEAMS Five Basketball Groups Will Be Guests at Dinner Tuesday. Five Indianapolis basketball teams will bo guests at a Chamber of Commence banquet Tuesday evening at 6:30 p. m.. Frank E. McKinney.

.MARCH 20,102!)

athletic committee chairman announced. Teams are: Butler university, state college champions: Arsenal Technical high school, Indiana Catholic high school champions; Indiana state school for the deaf, winners of the Central States deaf school tournament, and the South Side Turners, who went to the semi-finals in the National A. A. U. meet in Kansas City. Mo.

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“MY CASE SEEMED HOPELESS, THEN KONJOLA SCORED” Indianapolis Lady Suffered One Year From Severe Complications; Everything Tried Had Failed. “Nothing succeeds like success!” An age old axiom, it is true, but how well it applies to this new and totally different medicine, Konjola, that is creating such a furore in Indianapolis and vicinity. “What

IP

MRS. GEORGIA SHELTON —Photo by National Studio.

makes this medicine triumph when all else has failed?” This question many others arc asked daily by men and women who have read or heard of the many amazing accomplishments of Konjola. It is being answered by the Konjola Man, who is at the Hook Dependable Drug Store, Illinois and Washington streets, Indianapolis, where he is explaining personally the history of Konjola—what it is doing and will do for all who suffer. Konjola contains no harmful drugs and yet it soothes shattered nerves; banishes pain and cleanses the system of impurities. Each one of Konjola’s 32 ingredients, 22 of which are juices from roots and herbs, have their own special duty to perform and yet all work simultaneously on the ailing organs. Just, how this remedy works in the most obstinate cases is described by Georgia Shelton, 1224 Nordyke avenue, Indianapolis, when she called on the Konjola Man and said: “My case seemed hopeless and then Konjola scored a most remarkable victory. For a year I suffered from a severe complication of ailments including stomach, liver and kidney troubles and rheumatism and neuritis. My food never agreed with me. I found it impossible toj retain what I had eaten. I always was subject to vomiting and belching spells. Gas formed and caused wild heart palpitation. An agonizing pain centered in my ankles that kept me awake for days and nights—in fact, I almost went mad with the torture. I was told this trouble came from a condition of my blood. I tried hypodermics in my hip and arm—all to no avail. I spent some time in a hospital taking treatments and when that failed I gave up hope. That, with the other ailments, made life mis-erable-made me a physical wreck. “Constantly I read of Konjola and heard what it was doing for other people—my friends recommended this medicine to me. But I kept putting if off—l did not think it would benefit me. Finally more to please my friends, I decided to give it a brief trial. Well, that was all that was necessary to convince me that Konjola was exactly what I needed. As I continued the treatment the different ailments became less severe and were disappearing one by one. I can truthfully say that I derived more benefits from Konjola than from all else put together. I am stronger in every way —my appetite increased and my digestion was restored. I am eating whatever I wish and never suffer afterward. The pain in my ankle has been eliminated: simply because Konjola enriched and cleansed my blood stream. It is hard to believe that such remarkable results could be obtained, but the facts are before me. How well I know that Konjola is the master medicine—it surely proved itself.” This is the way Konjola pertorms when it is given a trial and that is all this medicine asks—just the chance to make you well. The Konjola Man is at the Hook Dependable Drug Store. Illinois and Washington streets, this city, where he is meeting the public daily, introducing and explaining the merits of this master medicine.—Advertisement

TRY A WANT AD IN THE TIMES. THEY WILL BRING RESULTS.