Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 130, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 October 1929 — Page 6

PAGE 6

PEACE PARLEY’S FULL SUCCESS NOT REVEALED Expectations Exceeded in Naval Tonnage Pact, Is Report. BY RAYMOND CLAPPER, Cal ted Prevs Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, Oct. 10.—More .as achieved during the good-will mission of Prime Minister MacDonald than has been revealed officially, according information in authoritative quarters today. It is understood here. President Hoover and the prime minister have reached a lower basis of cruiser tonnage than had been thought possible before MacDonald left London. Details are not known definitely, but it Is understood the 30,000 tons of cruisers in dispute may be eliminated from the parity minimums, suggested in negotiations, before MacDonald came to the United States. This, if it develops, will be in the direction of actual reduction of authorized building programs sought by President Hoover. The prime minister and Miss Ishbel left Washington today, having built up tremendous stores of good will against the time when inevitable controversies may test the patience and forbearance of the two countries. Issue Statement President Hoover and the prime minister issued a joint statement declaring the danger of war and naval rivalry had been banished—they hoped, forever. “I have achieved more than I hoped,” said the prime minister after his farewells Wednesday night. He and Miss Ishbel took formal leave of the President and Mrs. Hoover at the White House late on Wednesday, while Miss Ishbel was at the theater witnessing a comedy built around life on a British cruiser, her father was having his last heart-to-heart talk with a group of high American officials at the home of Secretary of State Stimson. President Hoover, departing from White House custom which makes the President virtually a ‘‘social r oner,” dropped in informally at the stag dinner as a mark of personal esteem. Built Good Will The departure of the prime minister and his daughter. Miss 'shbel—who was second only to her father in building good will heredosed one of the most unusual international missions in history. It was the first time a British prime minister ever came to America, the first time Britain has greeted any naval rival except w r ith guns, the first time heads of these two governments ever talked face to face with such frankness, meeting pleasant and ugly facts with equal directness. It was an unconventional mission, summarized in the picture of these two men, one with a pipe the other with a cigar, sitting on a moss-covered log in the wilderness of the Blue Ridge mountains sealing the peace of the two great naval rivals. The starting point of the discussions was the Kellogg peace pact in which fifty-eight nations pledge themselves to abandon war as an Instrument of national policy. Hoover and the prme minister set out to make that pledge mean what It said, so far as Britain and the United States were concerned. Injured Child Recovering pjj Time* Special ANDERSON, Ind.. Oct. 10.—Dallas Pierce, 8, is enjoying the comforts of home after spending five months in a hospitnl as a result of injuries suffered in an automobile accident in which his father, Harry Pierce, w as killed. The child’s skull was fractured, both legs were broken and pelvis fractured.

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MEIGHAN’S FIRST TALKER DUE HERE “The Argyle Case” Will Give Tom and H. B. Warner a Chance to Talk and Act at the Same Time. THE Lyric stage show for the week beginning next Saturday boasts of three distinct headliner vaudeville attractions. Each of these three stellar acts are individual features and have been headlined on many big time Keith show's. Thomas Meighan in his first talking picture, “The Argyle Case,” is to be the screen attraction. Trains from Ch kar-go, Sinsi-nat-ti-burg and way stations. If one happens to be working for the railroad in that exceedingly important capacity of porter, this frequent unintelligible cry is the sign to get busy. The porter's scepter is a long-handled soft-haired brush and Glenn and

Jenkins are a pair of comedians who have brought the railroad porter into fame as a stage character and through their superior capability of fun they have succeeded in making ''Working for the Railroad” one of the best travesties to be found in the theater. Glenn and Jenkins are to be one of the trio of features on the Lyric bill next week. In song and dance and dialogue they unfold the trials and tribulations and the pleasures of those who sacrifice themselves in the service of the railroad. They are not only vaudeville bill-toppers but recording and musical comedy artists as well. The newest dancing ensemble is to be brought into being by Lee Gail, a danseuse of the modern school. Lee Gail Ensemble, the second stellar act on this bill, is described by a company of seven, and it includes a variety of numbers both terpsichorean and vocal. It is a production composed of high spots, with two particularly high-lights, the adagio dancing and the whirlwind number. The Loos brothers, Ernie and Billy, the third star act on the bill, are from the land of ether. For several years they were staff artists of several radio stations in Chicago, and were favorites because of their keen vocal ability and the distinctive style in which their numbers were rendered. Thomas Meighan, once the reigning favorite of the silent screen, makes his first debut in the talkies in ‘‘The Argyle Case,” to be shown on the Lyric screen with the above vaudeville bill. It is anew Vitaphone production with dialogue throughout. Lila Lee, H. B. Warner, Zasu Ottis, Bert Roach and a large cast of stage and screen favorites appear in the supporting cast. st a a MYSTERY VAMPIRE TO BE HERE MONDAY “Dracula,” the vampire mystery play that was the outstanding dramatic success in New York the past season at the Fulton and now in its fourth year in England, is to be the attraction at English’s Oct. 14, 15 and 16. The play Is founded on Bram Stoker’s novel of the same name—a famous novel that has thrilled two generations of readers with the indescribable horror of its story, and it is safe to say that the play is the most weird and spine-creeping drama ever presented to an audience. It differs from all other thrillers In that It deals with the supernatural and consequently there is no awkward denouement, no dream explanation at its conclusion. “Dracula” is the story of a vampire, a restless, roaming spirit, that in human form infested the countryside from midnight to dawn, casting forth ominous w’aming of his coming and leaving terror and moaning mortals in his wake. He fastens hie pale lips to the throats of sensitive girls and draws them with menacing hynotism toward a frightful doom. Hamilton Deane and John Balderson dramatized “Dracula.” St ft St Tonight at English's the New York Theatre Guild will offer Shaw's '‘Major Barbara.” The engagement will close Saturday night. Other theaters today offer: “The Isle of Lost Ships” at the Circle, ' The Great Divide” at the Indiana, “Fast Company” at the Ohio, “The Girl From Havana” at the Lyric, “Say It With Songs” at the Apollo, “Girls in Blue” at the Mutual, “Three Live Ghosts” at the Palace, and movies at the Colonial. PEACE SOCIETY LAUDS NAVAL CUT EFFORTS William Fortune Praises Hoover and Prime Minister. Commendation of the conference of President Herbert Hoover and Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald in efforts to bring about banishmen tof war. was made today in a statement issued by William Fortune of Indianapolis, president of the American Peace Society. “Step by step, it is evident, we are proceeding in a practical, sane and effective manner to do what we pledged to do in the Paris pact, bring an end to war,” Fortune said. ‘ The American Peace Society warmly commends the President and Prime Minister MacDonald for the steps they have taken. “They are bringing into working operation the idea of using arbitration and conciliation in settlement of international differences” THREE MISSING BOYS SOUGHT BY PARENTS Two Are Believed to Have Left Their Homes Together. Parents of Glenn W. Kiefer, 14. of 630 South Lyons avenue, and Charles M. Osborn. 15. of 817 South Rybolt avenue, today asked police to search for the youths, nvssing since Monday. Charles R. Kiefer, father of Glenn, said he believed the boys were together. ECONOMY IS PLEDGED Economical operation of schools was promised by Mrs. Bloomfield Moore, independent candidate for shod commissioner, Wednesday nicht before the neighborhood meeting, at the home of Ben Thompson, 2111 Broadway. Open bidding will be favored if she is elected, she declared. Employment of teachers who reside in Indianapolis was advocated.

EAT PIE WITH CHEESE, PLEA TO SOUTHLAND Restaurant Convention Speaker Attempts to ‘Educate’ Palates. Bit United Prrn* LOUISVILLE, Oct, 10.—What the United States does eat, should eat, and shall eat, was being decided- here today by restaurant owners at the National Restaurant Association convention sessions opened Wednesday in the historic old armory building, where miles of tables are laden with condiments, and will continue throughout the week. Experts claim the display of gastronomic goodness and dietetics on exhibit is the greatest array of national dishes and the widest variety of national food secrets ever assembled under one roof. The business of educating the country to what it should eat and how it should be eaten was started Wednesday. Miss Marye Dahnke, home economist of the Kraft-Phenix cheese corporation, Chicago, set out to show the southland, a land famous for beaten biscuit and unbeaten horses, hog and hominy, Its possum and watermelon, and its corn and bread—how pie should be eaten. Fourteen small Kentucky boys were enlisted in a pie-eating contest superintended by Miss Dahnke, to prove that pie may be eaten properly, from fingers, knives, or forks, or how would you, provided it is accompanied by the unecessary adjunct, cheese. “Heretofore,” Miss Dahnke said, “The apple pie belt of the world has lain chiefly above the Mason and Dixon line. The south has had its distinctive dishes, as well as the north. Cheese is a national dish, discovered in the south for its true worth. “With all its aristocracy of foods, the south can learn about cheese from the north; cheese not only as a condiment, but also as a food and necessary adjunct to every course, from soup to nuts.” PROSPERITY IS CREDITRESULT Washington Editor Asserts Progress Is Real. Prosperity of the United States is “real, not imaginary,” Merle Thorpe of Washington, editor of Nation’s Business, official magazine of the United States Chamber of Commerce, told members of the Indianapolis Association of Credit Men Wednesday night. He was the principal speaker at the annual fall dinner at the Columbia Club, which was attended by more than 400 persons. “We hear a great deal about prosperity in the United States,” Thorpe said. “It is a real, and not an imaginary, thing. There is, without question, a widely distributing prosperity. “I believe the most important factor in this prosperity is the credit factor. This is not a steel or automobile age. We are living in an age of credit money. “The present - day governmental menace, if there be one, is bureaucracy. The situation has grown because American men and women are inclined to take ‘Let George do it’ attitudes.” SLAYING WIFE FREED Jeffersonville Jury Decides on Acquittal In Ten Minutes. Bn T nited Preen JEFFERSONVILLE, Ind., Oct. 10 —A jury deliberated only ten minutes Wednesday in freeing Mrs. Ollie Burch Mathena. 24, charged with murdering her husband with a butcher knife. During the trial Mrs. Mathena said she killed her husband when he attacked her in a drunken frenzy On several occasions she claimed. Mathena had attacked her and beaten her face until it was a mass of bruises. The fatal quarrel occurred, she said, when she refused to operate a still which her husband maintained in their home. Man Injured in Fall John Gibson, 26 South Capitol avenue, was in city hospital today with a brain concussion, sustained when he fell downstairs in a billiard hall in which he is employed, at 11 South Capitol avenue Wednesday

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

WORKS BOARD ACTION AID IN AIRPORT MOVE Favors Right of Way Grant for Oliver Avenue Extension. Board of works members approved the recommendation of Mayor L. Ert Slack that the city grant a right-of-way for the proposed extension of Oliver avenue to Bridgeport to expedite the Ben Davis airport project. In a letter to the board, Slack declared that at a recent conference, county commissioners asked the city to grant the county authority to run the roadway through the north side of the municipal airport site, south of Ben Davis. The thoroughfare entrance will be at Banner avenue, the north approach and extend west to Bridgeport. Slack said proposed development of the Oliver avenue route from its present terminus inside the city limits will benefit the airport if county commissioners order the project. The new highway would relieve the traffic congestion on West Washington street, he said. The works board granted the National Concrete Company, contractor on the Morris street bridge over White river, an extension on the date for completion until July 31, 1930, because of unusual conditions of the river and delay in starting the work. After repeated requests from City Councilman John F. White, the board of works today took steps to draft a $20,000 appropriation ordinance to provide funds for repairing police headquarters and adding another story to the city prison. PAINTER REPORTS HOLDP Two highway bandits held up and robbed Oscar Butler, painter, Harrison hotel, ten miles northwest of the city on state road 52 Wednesday night, he told police today. They took $470 from a coat pocket, he said. Returning to this city from Chicago, Butler’s automobile developed motor trouble, forcing him to drive slowly. The two men drove alongside his car and one of them boarded it with a gun in his hand, Butler said.

AMUSEMENTS KEH LAST 2 DAYS!| DO YOU KNOW Indpl*. New* say*: I that you ran see n “One of the best complete stage and films of Its kind screen show—Week to be shown here days 11 a this year.” I to 1— TALKING I Romance of Sl?P|j/& J the Tropics Hlrmw/"WIfl O w o t >< A Great Stage Show CANE O HELEN JOHNS’ PAUI _ /V GLORIOUS SX) girls yy LS PAUL and other KEITH ACTS Starting SATURDAY Let’s Give Him a Boosing Welcome— Your Old Favorite— Thomas MEIGHAN In His FIRST TALKIE “The ARGYLE CASE” With LILA LEE—H. B. WARNER PLUS—SMASHING TRIPLE FEATURE BILL OF BKO VAUDEVILLE Extra —National Girl Scoot Week ‘‘THE GIRL SCOUT TRAIL.'’ A Beautiful SOUND Picture ENGLISH’S “ THE THEATRE GUILD ACTING COMPANY in BERNARD SHAW’S Sparkling Comedy, ‘MAJOR BARBARA’ With Frieda Inescort IJudley Digges Elliot Cabot Percy W'ararn Jane Wheatley Phy’lis Conaard and Others MATINEE WEDNESDAY THE SENSATIONAL VAMPIRE PLAY with the same cast that played New .York, London, Chicago. Nights—soc to $2.50. Matinee —50c to $1.50 SEATS SELLING

MU jI'UAL BURLESQUE THEATER Dazzling ANN COES© Stunning B ? Pining Beauty •and her Girls in Blue

Motion pictures

Girl Scouts Greet Ishbel

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She proved herself a good scout, did Ishbel MacDonald, on her visit to Washington. Here you see the bonny daughter of Great Britain’s visiting premier, Ramsay MacDonald, in the center of a group of Girl Scouts who called at the White House to greet her. At the right is Mrs. Herbert Hoover in a uniform as honorary president of the Girl Scouts of America and at the left is Mrs. Gerit S. Miller, Girl Scout commissioner for the District of Columbia.

CAR REVENUES DROP Financial report for the month of August was filed today with the public service commission by the Indianapolis Street Railway Company, showing a decrease of $56,-

llpj TOMORROW! I|P ''' * America’s boy-friend and the sweet- ijiVflfjljy rL~E heart of the talkies— BUDDY xg NANCY §1 I ROOEIUCARROUJ "-jjyr in Paramount's crooning, lovlns. Uffing hit— It I ILLUSION' |2mORTJ Es MACK V B Atwo 1 pL4o; crows! m : Why Bring that Up jj with EVELYN BRENT and HARRY GREEN 'trbrtj jljapf Faramount's hilarious New Show World hit from the 411 -'jj §iS§ side-splitting story by Octavus Roy Cohen. U._ 1-U P.-. You've laughed at these two comedians on the H 4tt! pftjty radio, hoveled at their phonograph records, en--tfjv? joyed their comic strips—Now see them on the

195.01 from the report for the corresponding month of 1923, the year with which 1929 reports are compared. From fares the company received $307,497.77 and from transfer sales, $21,795.98, with combined receipts of $329,293.75. the report set forth.

MOTION PICTURES

ROSE DOLLY IS ORDERED INTO FRENCHCOURT Member of Famous Dancing Team Must Appear in Pearl Suit. Bu United Prets PARIS, Oct. 10.—Roszika Dolly's mysterious pearl necklaces and her dancer's temperament provoked another court order today. After the member of the famous Dolly Sisters dancing team had refused to obey previous requests Examining Magistrate Ordonneau ordered her presence in his court Friday to explain whether she ever has returned to Paris jewelers the two pearl necklaces which have been the subject of considerable court aciton the last six months. The necklaces, valued at approximately $280,000, were purchased from two fashionable jewelers and said to have been paid for in notes signed by the dancer and her husband, Mortimer Davis, wealthy Canadian. The jewelers, in demanding return or payment for the necklaces, explained that when they were purchased, Miss Dolly gave them to understand that her father-in-’aw, Sir Mortimer Davis, multi-mil-lionaire, would stand behind the notes.

MOTION PICTURES

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MR. JOHN F. HENDERSON —Photo by National Studio. Illinois Bldg.

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