Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 311, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 May 1930 — Page 8

PAGE 8

ITALIANS CHEER TOSCANINI AND LI. S. ORCHESTRA Great Ovation Is Given Former ‘Home Town Boy’ in Milan. Bu t'nilrd Prrnu MILAN. Italy, May 9.—Milan, where Arturo Toscanini received hi.; early musical training, welcomed him back with loud applause today. and praised his American orchestra as unrivaled by any other in the world. The return of Toscanini as director of the New' York Philharmonic orchestra was a gala musical occasion here. All the authorities, the musicians —of which there are many here—the critics and the aristocrats of the city crowded into La Seala opera house for the orchestra’s first Milan performance Thursday night, and scores of others came up from Rome. Toscanini was director of La Seala for many years before he finally yielded to the persuasions of New York. Twenty-two times the audience demanded his appearance, and twenty-two times he ascended the podium to acknowledge their applause. Toscanini, while director at La Seala, had refused for years to go to America. He said there was no music there; that he preferred to remain in Italy. Auto Strikes House Btu Time* Sprrinl GREENCA STLB, Ind., May 9 Two automobiles were damaged and occupants injured in an attempt to avoid a collision at a street intersection here. The car. driven by Robert Stevens, hit a telephone pole and that of Donald Whitted, a house. A 10-year-old boy was thrown from Whitted’s car to a sidewalk.

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Identify Paramount Stars and Get Cash for Your Knowledge

THE newest pastime for Times readers is s he identifying of Paramount movie stars. You, too, are invited to join the fun and try for one of the prizes offered in this contest. The third series of stars is printed today, but it is not too late to enter the contest. The first ten pictures were print?'! in Tuesday and Wednesday issues of The Times. Here’s what it’s all about. “Paramount on Parade’’ opens at the Circle theater today, and it includes in the cast every star and featured player on the Paramount lot. Twenty-five of these stars, featured in this production, are having their pictures printed in The

2 ARMY PILOTS DIE Third Hurt as Planes Lock Wings in Maneuvers. Bu United Pres* LANGLEY FIELD, Va., May 9. Two army aviators are dead here today and another lies seriously inlured in the Ft. Monroe hospital as the result of a crash between two planes engaged in air maneuvers. The ships locked wings just 200

Times. Each picture is numbered, one to twenty-five, and you are asked to identify the stars. The next series w r ill be printed in Saturday's Times. When you have collected the twenty-five pictures, identify the stars, either by putting the name under the photograph, or by the number, and mail them to the “Paramount on Parade” Editor of The Times, along with a fifty-word essay on the star of the series you like the best, telling just why you like that star best. In case of a tie, in naming the winners, the essays and neatness of presentation will determine them. First prize is $25 in cash; second, $10; the next two $5 each; five

I feet above the ground in concluding an air review staged Thursday for a notable array of visitors, principally the American Bankers Association. They immediately crashed to earth. The dead: Lieutenant-Colonel Phra Amara, 35, distniguished veteran of the 1 Siamese air corps. Lieutenant Robert J. Brown Jr., 36, Farmington, Mass. The injured man is Captain Percy G. Black, 36, Eighth Field artillery, the son of Major-General William M. Black, U. S. A., retired.

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of $1 each, and ten prizes consist of two tickets to the Circle theater. Do not mail in anything until you have the completed list. All entries must reach The Times office not later than 6 o'clock Tuesday evening, May 13. “Paramount on Parade,” which opens today at the Circle, is said to be one big party of the stars. It includes several new song hits. Many of the scenes are produced in technicolor.

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BLASTS HOOVER ASSURANCES OF TRADEJJPTURN Joe Robinson Says Cry of Prosperity by President Loses Him Confidence. WASHINGTON. May 9.—President Hoover's continued assurances that the effect of the stock market crash rapidly would disappear have not been justified and the country is losing confidence in administration predictions, Senator Minority Leader Robinson believes. He made this statement Thursday night through the Democratic national committee. Apparently, it marked the beginning of a Democratic fight on the Republican administration’s economic policies. Robinson chose the second monthly anniversary of the President’s prosperity prediction of March 8 to issue his statement. At that time Secretary of Commerce Lamont and Secretary of Davis joined with Mr. Hoover, after a

conference at the White House, In a formrl statement predicting that the worst effects of the stock market crash would be over in sixty days. “The sixty-day period expired Wednesday,” Robinson said, “and the price of a number of leading securities and commodities is lower than ever and the employment situation steadily is becoming worse.” FEARS SON IS SUICIDE Worried Over Arrest, Vanished, Says Mother. Fears that John C. Robinson, 34, of 3158 East Fall Creek boulevard, has ended his life were expressed to police today by his mother, Mrs. Mark Robinson, who reported him missing. Worry and regret over an automobile accident after which Robinson was arrested on charges of driving while intoxicated may Jhave caused him to end his life, the mother said. Laundry Fire Burns Clothing Fire breaking out in four laundry containers at the Paul H. Krauss laundry, New Jersey and Market streets, at an early hour today caused damage of SIOO, confined to ; clothing. Origin is undetermined.

CHORUSES TO SING Program at Tech Part of Music Week Program. Mothers’ choruses, band concerts, and a sunset carillon program will feature today’s observance of Music week in Indianapolis. Tonight at 8. the Federation of

Mainsprings

MAY 9, |L93O

Mothers’ Choruses of the, Indianapolis public schools will sing in a massed concert in the Technical high school auditorium. The carillon program is scheduled for 5 to 5:30 tonight from the Scottish Rite cathedral. Crowds downtown were entertained today with band concerts by the Butler university and Sahara Grotto Pirate bands on the south steps of the Monument.