Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 1, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 May 1930 — Page 7
MAY 12,1930
DEADWOOD DICK BURIED AMONG PINES HE LOVED Frontier Mates Mourn as Scout Is Buried on Mountain Top. Tin United Press DEADWOOD. S. D, May 12Close under the stars where the mournful howl of a coyote after nightfall drifts like a lost soul through the scrub pines, hard granite held today for all eternity the body of Deadwood Dick Clark. Sunday night there trailed away into gathering darkness the last note of taps and the last echo of a military salute that bid farewell to the spirit of the famous frontiersman, whose deeds of daring and hairbreadth escapes gave him dime novel immortality. Deadwood Dick went to his lonely grave on a lumber wagon, just as he would have fifty years ago had he died with his boots on. His old friends among Black Hills pioneers, of whom but few are left, went in their fringed buckskins to his funeral. Sang Favorite Hymn They stood around his casket in the Episcopal church and sang with quavering voices his favorite hymn —“Nearer My God to Thee.” Stalwart sons of men who were Indian fighters and stagecoach drivers with Deadwood Dick in ’76, took up the casket in strong hands and loaded It on the lumber wagon. The crude hearse went slowly, jolting along the rocky trail up Sunrise mountain and creaking behind it was the old DeadwoodSpearfish stagecoach that used to careen madly over the prairies when the west was wild and young. Those who rode in the coach were men, now old and slow moving like the coach, who once drove a “four-in-hand” themselves. Among them was Diamond Dick Tanner of Norfolk, Neb., one of Deadwood Dick’s friends of long ago. Buried at Sunset Up through the sagebrush on the mountain side the funeral procession crawled under the slanting rays of the setting sun. It halted among the rocks#* few hundred yards away from the log cabin where Deadwood Dick had lived the last of his eighty-four years, looking down on the historic place where the Deadwood pony express route and the stagcoach trail had met. A bugler from Ft. Meade sounded taps. A firing squad sent a volley reverberating into the twilight silence. , And as the sun went down the body of Deadwood Dick was sealed in the flinty breast of Sunrise mountain. EAGLE AERIE IN SESSION Otto Deluse. Boyd Gurley Speakers on Mother’s Day Program. Mother’s day exercises sponsored by the Indianapolis aerie. Fraternal Order of Eagles, in the Eagles temple Sunday afternoon, were attended by 300 persons. Otto P. Deluse. Indianapolis Board of Trade president and a former national president of the Eagles, and Boyd Gurley, editor of The Indianapolis Times, were the speakers. Accountants Hear Author “Prohibition is a social problem and should not be made a political football,” Meredith Nicholson told members of the Indiana Association of Certified Public Accountants Saturday night at the Indianapolis Athletic Club. G. S. Olive. Indianapolis, was elected president of the organization. “My daughter Magdalen did not seem to develop 3S she should. At times she had no pep at all and couldn’t get her school work very easily. For four years we doctored her off and on. Then a friend told us how much Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound had helped her years ago, so I got a bottle for Magdalen. Her nerves are quieting, her general health is better and she is now as normal as other girls.”-—Mrs. J. Bartholdi, Thompson's Addition, The Dalles, Oregon.
BELIEVE IT OR NOT
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Times Radio Dial Twisters
WFBM (1230) Indianapolis (Indianaooiis Power and Light Company) MONDAY P. M. s:oo—Current Events (CBS). s:3o—Dinner music. s:4s—Commodore ensemble (CBS). 6:oo—Henrv-George (CBS'. 6:3o—CeOo Couriers (CBSi. 7:oo—Concert, trio. 7:os—Newsacting. 7:IS—WFBM mixed quartet. 7:3o—Marott Shoemen. B:oo—Burns Panatela program (CBS). B:3o—Hv-Red bovs. , , B:4s—Jesse Crawfords, poet of the organ iCBS). 9:oo—The Columnist (CBS). 9:3o—Paramount orchestra (CBS'. 10:00—Ben Pollack's orchestra 'CBSi. 10:30—Midnight melodies (CBS). 11:00—Time, weather. 11:01—The columnist. 11:15—Request organ program. WKBF (1400) Indianapolis (Indianapolis Broadcasting, Inc.) MONDAY P. M. 4:4o—News flashes. 5:05 —Town topics. 6:oo—Harrv Bason at the piano. 6:2o—Connie’s orchestra. 6:so—Marmon Sales Branch. 7:00 —Silent for WBAA. B:oo—Beard's Brake Liners. B:3o—Citv market hour. 9:3o—Baker Bros. 10:30—The Jug band. 11:00—Sign off. WLW (700) Cincinnati MONDAY P. M. 4'o0 —Mormon Tabernacle choir (NBC). 4 30—Livestock reports. 4:4o—Program chats. 4:4s—Musicale. s:oo—Vocal solos. 5 15—Judge J. Ezra Butternut (WORK s:3o—Benrus time announcement. pinner concert. s's9—Hv Grade weather forecast. 6:oo—University of Cincinnati talks. 6:ls—Variety. 6:3o—Hotel Gibson orchestra. 7 00—Duro Automatics. 7:3o—Real Folks iNBCI. 8:00—Nlsley Dream shop B:3o—Empire Builders iNBC). 9:00 —Estate weather man. Crosley singer.s 9:ls—Great states lawn party. 9:4s—Brooks and Ross. 10:00—Benrus time announcement. Castle Farm orchestra. 10-30—Heermann trio with Melville Ray. 11:00 —Hotel Gibson orchestra. 11:30—Sweet and low down. AM. , 12:00—Thirteenth hour Jamboree. I.oo—Benrus time announcement; sign off.
DISTANT STATIONS
MONDAY —6 P M.— WLS (870). Chicago—Water Witch Time. —6:30 P. M.— KYW (1020), Chicago Grocers. NBC System—A. A- P. Gypsies to WEAF. WSAt, WGN. WTAM. WBBM (770*. Chicago—Gendron's orchestra. Columbia —Ceco Couriers to WFBM. WLS (870). Chicago—Men s Glee Club. —7 r. m.— Columbia—Magazine hour to WMAQ WBBM 770). Chicago—The Chicagoans; Funstets. NBC Svstem Mavtag orchestra to WJZ. KDKA. WJR. KYW. WLS (870). Chicago—Chambe. music. —7:30 P. M.— Columbia—An Evening in Paris to WABC, WMAQ. WBBM (770), Chicago—Chicogans. WENR '870), Chicago—WENß players. NBC Svstem —Motors party to WEAF. WTIC. WGN, WHAS. NBC Svstem—“Real Folks” to WJZ. KYW. WLW, WJR. —8 P. M.— Columbia —Burns program; Lombardo's orchestra f WFBM ' WBBM (7 r . Chicago—Gems of music. NBC Sys* —Ovaltine program to WEAF, WWJ. ..SAI. WENR *B7OI. Chicago—Smith Family. WGN '72o*. Chicago—Musical program. NBC Svstem—Stromberg-Carlson Rochester Civic orchestra to WJZ. KDKA, WJR. KYW, WHAS. WSM. —8:30 P. M WBBM (770), Chicago—News drama. NBC System—Sign of the Shell to WEAF. WWJ, WSU, WENR. WHAS, WSM, WTAM. WGN (720). Chicago—University of Chicago program. NBC Svstem—Empire Builders to WJZ, KDKA, WJR, KYW. WLW. Columbia—Jesse Crawford to WFBM. —8:45 P. M.— WBBM (770), Newark—Weem's orchestra. —9 P. M.— KDKA *9Bo*. Pittsburgh— Snorts: Gerun's orchestra. KYW (1020) Chicago—Bot -nan; news; features. Columbia—The Columbians. WENR 1870', Chciago—Mike and Herman. 4% Paid on Savings Aetna Trust & Savings Cos. 23 N. Pennsylvania St.
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WGN (720). Chicago—Tomorrow's Tribune; entertainers. WMAQ (670). Chicago—Dan and Sylvia. —9:15 P. M.— WMAQ (670). Chicago—Style hour. —9:30 P. M.— Columbia —SpeCht's orchestra to WABC. WFBM. WGN (720). Chicago—Goldkette’s orchestra; Nighthawks. NBC System—Amos 'n’ Andy to KYW, WSM. WMAQ. WHAS. —9:43 r. M.— 9:45 KYW 11020). Chicago—Wayne King’s orchestra. NBC System—Prohibition Poll to WREN. WHAS. WMAQ (670), Chicago—Concert orchestra. —lO P. M.— WENR (870), Chicago—Air vaudeville. NBC Svstem—Russo’s orchestra to WEAF. KYW. WSM. WMAQ (670). Chicago—Dance music (3 hours). —10:20 P. M.— WGN (720). Chicago—Hogan and Goldkette’s orchestra. —10:30 P. M.— Columbia—Midnight Melodies. —11:00 P. M.— KYW *1020). Chicago—Panico and Stones' orchestra. WBBM (770), Chicago—Dance orchestras (l'i hours). WGN (720), Chicago—Nighthawks: Hogan’s orchestra. WJR (750). Uttroit—Easy chair hour; Holst orchestra. WSM (650), Nashville—WSM orchestra. —11:45 T. M.— WDAF (610). Kansas City—Nighthawk Frolic. —l2 P. M.— KSTP (1460), St. Paul—Dance Feature. WLW (700), Cincinnati—Jambouree. —12:30 P. M.— KMOX (1090), St. Louis—The Sun Dodgers.
Day Programs
WFBM (1230) Indianapolis (Indianapolis Power and Light Company) TUESDAY A M. 7:oo—Pep Unlimited Club. 9:oo—lda Bailey Allen (CBS). ' 9:ls—Dramatic interpretation. 10:00—Aunt Sammy hour. 11:00—Jim and Walt. 11:15 to 12:00—Silent. 12:00 Noon—Farm community network (CBS*. P. M. 12:45—Farm topics. I:oo—American School of the Air (CBS). I:3o—For your Information (CBS). 2:OO—U. S. Army band (CBS). 2:3o—Salon music. 3:oo—Rhythm Kings (CBS). 3:30 to s:oo—Silent. WKBF (1400) Indianapolis TUESDAY A. M. 6:4s—Church Feedration morning worship. 7:oo—Talk o’ Town. B:4s—Stewart's Radio. Inc. 9:05—K0-We-Ba program. 9:ls—Your English. 9:2s—Morrison’s style talk. 9:3s—Hoosier Coffee Club. 9:46—Standard Nut Margarine cooking chat. 9:ss—Home message. 10:00—Pomal Makes Pomalay. 10:05—Indianapolis Paint and Color Company. 10:15—L. S. Ayres & Cos. 10:30—Market quotations. 10:35—Organ recital. 11:00—Part II Women's Club. 11 15— De Voe Paint Girls. 11:30—Announcements. 11:45—Jackson Supply Company. 11:55—Sue Carolyn. P. M. 12:15—The Farm Adviser. , 12:30—Jansen-Overman Company. 12:35 —Midday records. 12:40—The Service Man. I:oo—Walter Hickman. Indianapolis Times theatrical review. I:3o—Market quotations. I:3s—Rov Robertson, golf lesson. I:4s—Furnas Ice Cream Girls. 2:oo—Organlogues 2:3o—Tom k Wash Laugh Club. 2:4s—Silent. 3:4s—The Rhythm King. WLW (700) Cincinnati TUESDAY A. M. s:3o—Top o’ the Mornin’. 6:3o—Organ program. EXPERT TRUSS FITTING AT 129 W. WASH. ST. STORE Abdominal Supports and Shoulder Braces HAAG’S CUT-PRICE DRUGS ALL NEW MODELS ATWATER KENT RADIO $lO Down—s 2 Week Call Ei for Demonitratloa Public Service Tire Cos. 118 E. New York St. Lincoln 5118 3-ROOM OUTFIT I Living room, bedroom and kitchen f complete. Recon- Cl 1 A dltlooed Jill/ EASY TERMS 1 Lewis Furniture Cos. ratted Trade-la Store 844 S. Meridian St. Phone Dr. 8827
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
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7:oo—Aunt Jemima Man (NBC). 7:ls—Exercise program. 7:3o—Morning devotion conducted by Dad Kershner of Y. M. C. A. B:oo—Crosley woman's hour with musicale (cooking chat, poems, household hints and instructive talks). 9:oo—Forecast cooking school (NBC). 9:3o—Live stock reports. 9:4o—Good ioks work shop. 10:00—Organ. 10:30—Weather and river reports. 10:55—Time signals. 11:00—Organ concert. 11:30—Hotel Gibson orchestra. 11:50—Live stock report. 12 Noon—National Farm and Home hour (NBC). P. M. 12:30—Town and Country. I:oo—Matinee players. I:3o—Hilly and Billy. 1:45—01d Friends and Faces. 2:oo—The Classic hour. 3:00 —Woman’s Radio Club. 3:ls—Ted De Turk, songster. 3:30 —The Old Rocking Chair. WRITERS TO HOLD ’BEE’ Washington Women Reporters Wifi Spell Against Men. Bil United Press WASHINGTON, May 12. The newspaper women who “cover” Washington are convinced they are as good or better spellers than the men of the National Press Club who recently defeated a congressional team and will undertake to prove it on the night of May 17. The match will be broadcast by the National Broadcasting Company. Toscanini Visits Rome Bn United Press ROME, May 12.—Arturo Toscanini, famous conductor, and the New York Philharmonic orchestra arrived in Rome today for the local concerts of its European tour. Saturday they had played before Crown Prince Humbert at Turin.
A lovely, clear skin is within your reach' \X7ITH the last blemish gone, confidence returns. More friends, more invitations —• more good times. With the joy and pride of possessing a clear skin, self-respect increases. may be found in First impressions cannot be good without a ~ >j clear skin—first impressions are quickly made yg ug an( j are not soon f or g o tten. Old friends may exsro r e in cuse pimples and secretly sympathize, but new America. Thou - acquaintances may not be so charitable. Skin sands of users blemishes are not inviting. Neither can they be have testified to covered up. They embarrass. Hold people back. _ its benefits in Steal away joy and happiness. unsolicited let- A lovely, clear skin is within the reach of all. ters of "grati- To y° u ' have lost it, hope is offered, that t j 7 you, too, may have a beautiful skin, rose-petal in a .oe eK texture, pretty as a picture and without a single energy, vitality p i mp l e . and a clear skin Skilled physicians recognize the appearance of through the skin eruptions as being an indication that the remedy which is body’s power of resistance is low. made from The natural way to remedy this condition is strictly fresh t 0 restore the red-blood-cells to normal. vatre+ahi* Jnto-c- This is why so many thousands have been en j abled to free themselves of these unsightly blemana nas : stood ishes and pa ; n f u i s ki n annoyances by taking a. the test tor over course of S.S.S. 100 years. Sold S.S.S. helps Nature restore the blood to its in two sizes. normal state. Healthy blood nourishes the body Ask for the and works against infection and disease. larger size. It Without plenty of rich, red blood there would is moreeec - n0 strong, sturdy, powerful men, or healthy, beautiful women. If you are troubled with so-called skin dis- © s.s.s. Cos, orders, take a few bottles of S.S.S. A Clear Skin Comes from .Within
HOUSE CONTROL BY ‘BIG THREE' DRAWS CENSURE Powerful Triumvirate Idea Gained Currency in Tariff Debate. Tin United Pres* WASHINGTON, May 12. The idea that an all powerful triumvirate controls the course of legislation in the house of representatives has gained currency at the Capitol since the early stages of the tariff debate, when limitation was placed on the right of amendment from the floor. Recent senatorial criticism of house leaders strengthened the idea. Nicholas Longworth, speaker of the house; John Q. Tilson, Republican floor leader, and Bertrand H. Snell, chairman of the rules committee, together get credit for political omnipotency which, whether’or not a fact in reality is substantial enough in effect to sustain the tradition of “The Big Three.” Escape Attack These leaders, supported by a clear Republican majority of one hundred, have been skillful enough and fair enough to escape a decisive political attack thus far, but the large concentration of power in their hands is a latent issue of the forthcoming congressional eampaign. Closer partisan strength in the house undoubtedly would lead to an attempted “shake-up” in the machinery of legislative administration. Members of the “Big Three” undoubtedly would discredit the extent of their political power and would point to their intimate association with perhaps a dozen prominent congressmen in charting the course of house legislation. , Necessity Conceded Few observers would question the fact that the triumvirate, if it chose, could at any time wield tremendous authority, particularly since there are eight Republicans and four Democrats on the important rules committee. Owing to the large membership of the house, 435. and the tremendous number of bills introduced before each congress, reaching as high as 25,000 bills and resolutions during two sessions, political experts generally concede the necessity for well-disciplined organization and effective machinery to eliminate nonessential matters. T 5 MOTORISTS LOSE LIGENSES Accidents Reduced During Two-Months Period. Seventy-five motorists surrendered their auto operator’s licenses within the last two months in Judge Clifton R. Cameron’s criminal municipal court three, the judge’s report made public today disclosed. Conicident with these suspensions, most of which were from periods of from five days to six months, records of city police and the sheriff’s office accident prevention bureaus reveal that accidents since March 1 have been reduced noticeably. “Testimony of police in some of the cases before me makes me wonder how on earth it happened that seme one was not killed in each instance,” Judge Cameron commented on the suspensions. “Racing down streets forty and fifty miles an hour can not be tolerated.” Municipal court records show that sixty-eight persons were convicted of speeding in the two months, three were convicted of disobeying traffic signals, two of reckless driving and two of drunken driving.
Fishing the Air
Rlmsky-KorsakofT's “The Sea and Sindbad's Ship” from “Scheherazade” is the high spot on the Bernhard Levitow concert to be broadcast from WFBM and the Columbia broadcasting system at 5:45 p. m. Monday. The only other number on the program is Griegs "Wedding Day at Troldhaugen,” which opens the broadcast. a a a u a a Henry and George, the two itinerant minute men of the minute dramas, will reach Albany, N. Y., as the next stop on their good-will tour of the country in their broadcast at 6 p.m. Monday over WFBM and the Columbia broadcasting system. The theatrical bellhops will be joined by Flo, the telephone operator; Malzie. the cigar girl; Pete, the orchestra leader, and the latest member of their company, Bill, for their music and dramaettes. eon ao “Pale Mooon” and “De Coppah Moon” suggest the tone of the romantic program to be broadcast by the A. & P. Gypsies over WGN and an NBC network Monday night at 6:30 o'clock, BBS B B B Selections from “Sweet Adeline. The Vagabond King" and a medley from "Hot Chocolates" are featured on the program which the Maytag orchestra will present from KYW and the NBC Chicago studios Monday at 7 p, m.
HIGH SPOTS OF MONDAY NIGHT’S PROGRAM S:3O—NBC (WJZ)—Roxy and his gang. 6:3o—Columbia—Ceco Couriers, to WFBM. 7:3O—NBC (WEAF) —Motors party, with Richard Bonelli, baritone. NBC (WJZ)—Real folks. B:oo—Columbia —Guy Lombardo’s orchestra (Burns’ program), to WFBM. NBC (WEAF)—Ovaltine plane of dreams (Premier). NBC (WJZ)—Rochester civic orchestra. 8:45 —Columbia —Jesse Crawford, poet of the organ, to WFBM. NBC (WEAF)—Sign of the shell. WGN (Chicago)—University of Chicago program. NBC (WJZ)—Empire builders.
Richard Boneli, baritone of the Chicago Opera company, an Amer-ican-born operatic star, will be guest artist of the General Motors Family Party to be broadcast over WGN, WHAS and stations associated with the NBC Monday night at 7:30 oclock. B B B BUB Guy Lombardo and his Royal Canadians will play the Wisconsin college song during the Robert Burns Panatela program to be broadcast at 8 p. m. Monday over WFBM and the Columbia broadcasting system. The popular duet of Ben Alley, tenor, and Helen Nugent, contralto, will be heard in “Under a Texas Moon” and “You, Dartin’.” B OB a B B “Where E'er You Walk,” the famous aria from Handel’s secular oratorio, “Semele,’ will be sung by Kenneth Loysen, baritone, during the broadcast of the tSromberg-Carison program over WHAS and an NBC network Monday night at 8 o’clock. B B B B B B Popular, operatic and old-tmie favorites are offered by the “Music Lover” in the Sign of the Shell program to be broadcast from WENR, WHAS and the NBC Chicago studios Monday night at 8:30 o’clock. B B a B B B Jesse Crawford, “poet of the organ,” playing from the organ studios of the Paramount theater at 8:45 Monday, via WFBM and the Columbia broadcasting system, will feature “Sing, Y'ou Sinners,” from “Honey”; selections from “Puttin’ on the Ritz,” and a special arrangement of “Telling It to the Dasies.” Paul Small, tepor, will sing one number in the program while Louis A. Witten will be master of ceremonies. BUB B B B A modern rhythmic revision of “The Hymn to the Sun” will be presented by Freddie Rich’s orchestra during the Columbian’s program, featuring, in addition, the Columbia mixed quartet and Helen Nugent, contralto, scheduled over WFBM and the Columbia broadcasting system at 9 p. m. Monday.
SHOALS LEASE FAVORED Officials of Farm Federation Visit Hoover to Back Bill. By Bcripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance WASHINGTON, May 12. The American Farm. Burehu Federation, which worked actively to get congress to pass the bill providing lease of Muscle Shoals to the American Cyanamid Company, favors the Shoals leasing bill recently reported to the house by its military affairs committee. S. H. Thompson, president of the federation, and Chester Gray, its Washington representative, together with two other men, called on President Hoover and told him they approved of the new leasing bill.
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YOUTH SOUGHT FOR STABBING OF YOUNG GIRL Child, 10, Lies Near Death After Stiletto Attack During Night. By United Press ¶ NEW YORK. May 12 —A pair of shoes, carelessly left behind by the assailant who wounded 10-year-old Laura Rubin with a stiletto while she slept, led police today to seek Jack Yanowitz, 19, an acquaintance of the girl’s family. ¶ The child was near death today with five wounds in the legs and thighs and two deep wounds in the abdomen, although her mother. Mrs. Rose Rubin, had given a pint of her blood in an effort to save her life. ¶ Police said Yanowitz entered the room early Sunday where Laura and her brother, Philip, 14, were sleeping, slipped out of his shoes and moved toward one of the beds. ¶ He stabbed seven times through the sheets before Laura shrieked. Then he dropped the stiletto on the floor and fled in the dark, picking up Philip’s shoes by mistake. Identification of the shoes quickly was established. ¶ Mrs. Rubin told police she had forbade her son to associate with Yanowitz and that afterwards he had threatened her son. ¶ Captain David McClunn said the police believe that the assailant intended to stab Philip but picked the wrong bed in the dark. TESTS TO BE OUTLINED Agencies Council to Arrange for Child Health Examinations. Plans for health examinations for children who will attend summer camps in and near Indianapolis will be outlined Friday afternoon at a meeting of the Indianapolis Council of Social Agencies, 323 Meyer-Kiser Bank building. Clinics are held annually preceding camp sessions. It is expected more than 3.000 children will attend camps this summer. SHOW DIESEL ENGINE Packard Plane Creation on Display Today and Tuesday. Packard Diesel aircraft engine will be on display in the showrooms of the Citizens Motor Car Company, 31 West Thirteenth street, today and Tuesday, officials announced.
