Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 44, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 July 1929 — Page 10
PAGE 10
SCHOOLMA'AMS LAUNCH DRIVE FOR ‘LIBERTY' Seek Higher Wages and to Lift Restrictions on Personal Affairs. B > T pitt.il f’rrts CHICAGO. July 2. American echool teachers opened a nationwide campaign today to safeguard personal liberty rights, obtain higher wages and lift restrictions that obtain in certain states. The occasion for the campaign |ws the opening of the annual convention of the American Federation e at which Mrs. Florence C Hanson, secretary-treasurer of the federation, attacked the system of annual contracts for teachers and a: ked for sound tenure laws. Mrs. Hanson cited conditions existing in lowa. Michigan and North Carolina as grounds for the campaign. In North Carolina, she said, teachers have to go to bed at 8 oclock every night. In lowa they can not play cards or dance. Tn the little town of Hope, Mich., they have to wear smocks that come to the ground. There is no group so restricted as to its personal liberty as teachers,” said Mrs. Hanson. Referring to salaries. Mrs. Hanson declared the highest wages are paid in New' York where the federation is strongest. The maximum salary there,” she said, "is $5,000 and the minimum 53.500. Chicago ranks second with a top of $3,800 and a minimum of $2,000.” Miss Mary C. Barker of Atlanta, Ga , is president of the federation. July 4 Peruvian Holiday / H f nit, ,7 Tress LIMA, July 2.—A presidential decree has named July 4 as a Peruvian national holiday, commemorating the United States’ Independence day and the tenth anniversary of President Augusto B. Leguia's assumption of office.
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CAPONE TRIAL APPEAL DELAYED TILL OCTOBER Writ Denied, Al Will Be Star Pitcher on Prison Team. B I nited l J rt ss PHILADELPHIA. July 2. Alphonso t Scarf ace) Capone will have to content himself this summer with being the star pitcher on the Holmesburg prison baseball team. Efforts of his attorneys now to obtain his release through action of the superior court were postponed until October. The three judges on the bench Monday refused a writ of supersedeas. In October an appeal for anew trial will be heard by all seven superior judges.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
DRESS CLOTHES FIRE WRITERS TO ‘RED’ DUEL Pens for Two, Java for One Are ‘Deadly Weapons’ Used in Clash. BY HARRY FERGUSON t’nited Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, July 2.—The radical writers of New York are having a private civil war and Greenwich Village gutters' are wet with vitriolic ink. Floyd Dell, author of "Moon Calf” and other books, and Michael Gold, editor of the New Masses, a radical publication, have ordered fountain pens for two and coffee for one and apparently intend to write it out to the death. The issue seems to be whether or not Dell committed high treason by wearing a dress suit. Gold says he did and goes on to charge that Dell, once the reddest of the Reds, has faded to a pale pink and become “a cheap literary careerist.” They are battling up and down the columns of the New Masses, the conflict having been precipitated by Dell resigning as contributing editor. He explained his action as follows: Dell Starts Warfare ‘‘l at first wished to have my name associated with the magazine because it represented a partly communistic and at any rate rebellious literary tendency with which I am in sympathy. However, what it seems chiefly to represent is a neurotic literary and pictorial estheticism with which I am completely out of sympathy and with which I would rather not be associated ” Gold appeared to be particularly infuriated because Dell had the audacity to sign the foregoing letter “yours for the revolution.” Now, Gold reasoned, no one had any right to sign his letters that way if he was going to repudiate the radical movement by wearing a dress suit. He replied: "Mr. Dell, the ‘revolutionist,’ has not had a moment’s time in the last five years to walk a picket line of a strike or to write a single article for a revolutionary paper or to lecture to a group of workers. He has been too busy ‘authorizing’.” Free Love Rampant Gold admitted Dell had “a brief period of significance during his adolescence,” but went on to point out he was chiefly "a Greenwich Village playboy. Gold revealed that "it was daring then to indulge in free love, but now every Babbitt goes in for affairs. And then he brought up the matter of Dell’s absence from the picket line at the Sacco-Vanzetti demonstrations in Boston. John Dos Passos was there. Gold wrote triumphantly. Dorothy Parker was there. John Howard Lawson and Edna St. Vincent Millay were there. But was Floyd Dell there? He was not? Why? He was too busy being “a dress suit author.” "Floyd Dell is just another victim of American prosperity,” Gold wrote, putting all his strength into one final thrust. Pulmotor Fails to Save Woman By Times Special ANDE ISON, Ind.. July 2—A pulmotor Lorn headquarters fire station was employed without result in an effort to revive Mrs. Ida O. Jones, 61, who died suddenly of heart disease at the family home here.
SUNDAY AND WEEK-END EXCURSION FARES TO INDIANA LAKE REGION SUNDAY FARES WEEK-END FARES Tickets on Sale .July 7-14-21 Tickets on Sale July 5-6-7, July 12-13-14, .July 19-20-21 Lv. Indianapolis.. 7;00a. m. To Ar. Marion 8:35 a.m. $1.65 Marion $3.00 Ar. Wabash 9:15a.m. 2.15 Wabash 3.80 Ar. X. Manchester 9:20 a. m. 2.75 No. Manchester 4.45 Ar. Silver Lake... 9:35a.m. 2.75 Silver Lake 4.80 Ar. Claypool 9:40a.m. 2.75 Claypool 4.95 Ar. Warsaw 9:55 a.m. 2.75 AVarsaw 5.30 Ar. Leesburg 10:05a.m. 2.75 Leesburg 5.60 Ar. Milford 10:15a.m. 2.75 Milford 5.80 Ar. Goshen 10:40 a. ra. 2.75 Goshen 6.35 Ar. Elkhart A .... .10:55 a. m. 3.25 Elkhart 6.75 HALF FARE FOR CHILDREN RETURNING iSame dayi- Leave Elk- Tintn*o :11 hart 6:00 p. m.. Goshen 6:10 p. m. Tickets will be good goin,. on all Milford 6:35 p. m„ Leesburg 6:45 p. trains on dates shown above. Rent., Warsaw 7:05 p. m.. Claypool 7:20 turning on all trains to and inp m.. Silver Lake 7:25 p. m.. North eluding Monday following date of Manchester 7:35 p. m., Wabash 7:55 s _i p p. m.. Marion 8:25 p. m. Tickets and full particulars at City Ticket Office. 112 Monument Circle. Phone Riley 3322 and Union Station, phene Riley 3355. BIG FOUR ROUTE
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C. W. Young. 823 Spruce street.! Chevrolet, 14-636. from Ohio and ! New Jersey streets. John Sturm, 452 North Gray | street, Ford sedan, 744-325. from garage at 452 North Gray street. Benjamin H. Rynearson, 3742 North Dearborn street. Chevrolet j coach. 59-044, from Georgia and Illinois streets. SELL HOSPITAL ISSUE $950,000 Bonds to Finance City Institution Unit. The city today had launched its initial bond issue for the first unit of the city hospital building program, amounting to $950,000. An issue of $530,000 bearing 4'4 per cent interest and maturing in thirty years was sold to the City Securities Corporation. This bond issue will be used for the construction of the power plant and connections at the hospital. Merchants National bank and local institutions were awarded the second issue of $420,000. maturing in twenty years and also bearing 4Vi per cent interest. Indiana Trust Company, Fletcher Savings and Trust Company, Fletcher American National bank, and the Bankers Trust Company of New York associated in the bidding. ELEVEN STUDENTS TO SEEK SCHOLARSHIPS | Sons and Daughters of Police and Firemen Are Entered. Two scholarships at Butler university will be sought by eleven Indianapolis high school students who have been designated by their principals as candidates. They are sons and daughters of police or firemen. The scholarship is valued at $250 j a year, sucient to pay for the tuition ; and books. Members of the scholarship com- ; mittee are Meredith Nicholson, j author and city councilman; Police j Chief Claude M. Worley, Fire Chief ; Harry E. Voshell and Mayor L. Ert j Slack. The eleven scholarship nominees are Myrtle Gardner of Shortridge, James Sanford and Edna Henschen of Emmercih Manual, and Richard Sewell, Donna Allen, James A. Walsh, Violet Albers, Eugene Morris, Beulah Reynolds and Robert j Stewart of Arsenal Technical high > school. SERVES AGED SENTENCE Man Begins Term in Jail Received Two Years Ago. Harry Simpson. 601 South Capitol avenue, today is serving a thirtyday jail sentence levied against him for violation of the liquor law in February, 1926. Simpson appealed his case to supreme court and the lower court was upheld a few weeks ago. Simpson was one of seven men who recently began serving sentences on appeals at least tw T o years old. GOOD-BYE ITCHING SKIN when invisible Zemo is applied Soothing, healing and tremendously efficient, invisible Zemo brings quick relief when bites, rash, sunburn, and other summer afflictions cause itching and discomfort. It cools and soothes. It draws out local infection. It smooths away blemishes and clears up the skin. Keep clean, antiseptic Zemo always on hand. Use it freely. It is safe, pleasant. 35c, 60c and sl.oo.—Advertisement.
NEGRO CADET IS SWORN IN AT WEST POINT De Priest Appointee Takes Place With 398 Other Plebes. By United Press WEST POINT N. Y., July 2 Alonso Souleigh Parham, 20, Chicago Negro, has taken his place with 398 other plebes at the United States military academy. He was sworn in Monday, the first Negro to enter the military academy since 1918, when J. B. Alexander of Ohio came here and stayed six months. Parham was placed in an individual room, although it is customary to have cadets share rooms. In all. twenty-two Negroes have
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entered the military academy, but only three have been graduated. Parham was appointed by Oscar j De Priest. Negro congressman from Illinois. FREE DEATH CAR DRIVER Doctor Released on Charges of Manslaughter. Manslaughter charges against Er. j O. L. Dietch, 1211 Oliver avenue, whose automobile struck and fatally injured Mrs. Bundran. 21, of 1508 Everett street, June 13. were dismissed in municipal court Monday afternoon on recommendation of Coroner C. H. Keever.
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