Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 4, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 May 1930 — Page 8
PAGE 8
‘3-POWER PACT of tolerance: RELIGIOUS AIM Catholics, Jews, Protestants Meet in ‘Disarmament’ Conference. Bu Untied Preen ST. LOUIS, Mo , May 15. A "three-power treaty of tolerance’’ was the hope today of Catholics, Jews and Protestants attending a "religious prejudice disarmament conference” here. Leaders of the three faiths, conducting a seminar in an effort to erase differences and improve relations between their peoples, strongly condemned religious bigotry and dogma when they joined a fraternity of good will at a banquet Wednesday night. Sr. Reinhold Niebuhr of the Union Theological seminary, New York, said, “there is no great benefit to mankind if tolerance merely results in the dissipation of the noble spiritual resources which we have inherited from our fathers. We must learr to preserve what is good in our own tradition and loyalty, even while we learn to appreciate the positions of others.’’ Rabbi Stephen S. W.se of the Free synagogue, New York, warned that both Jew and Christian must co-, operate to raze the barrier of racial differences that now exists between them. "The policy of calculated unfriendliness toward the Jew must be fought,” he said. "The processes of education must end the Christ - killing lie about the Jew.” The two-day seminar opened Wednesday and will continue through today with informal round table meetings.
Economy Food Specials Old-Fashioned Bean Soup, cup . I C Fried White Ofl _ Fish dUC Minced Beef nr Tenderloin £DC Cold Ham Plate, nn Potato Salad dUC Stewed in. Corn 14. C Au Gratin 1 n Potatoes IUC Cottage Cheese in. Salad IUC Ice 1 Hr Hot Rolls, Biscuits or r Bread with butter DC Coffee 5C (No charge for second cup) GUARANTY CAFETERIA Guaranty Building Meridian at Circle Open 7 A. M. to 8 P. M.
: AMUSEMENTS 1533 1 3 I 1 Cooled By Refrigeration i . juk HVRRY —L AS T (2) DAYS jj Anniversary Week! —On the Stage— fn QC GREAT CZA if © ACTS © P rl A Whale of a Show! M II BETTY COMPSONI •1 I Monte Blue —Lila Lee if fjj “THOSE WHO DANCE” \ If I All Talking Thrill Drama P* ■ I jn<ul FHKK Ujj P xm* /nr AITO i r. lip, M.fcUU PARK C IJL Next Saturday i ID WARNER BAXTERf if “THE ARIZONA KID” W In Dancing Every Night m . L l —Ballroom
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Famed Radio Orchestra Heads Reach •Peak by Opposite Roads
This is the first of two articles on Freddie Rich and Howard Barlow, two famous radio orchestra leaders whose careers have been alone directly opposite paths. The second will appear Friday. These articles will appear lor several weeks In The Times, giving Intimate stories of the leading radio personalities. BY ISRAEL KLEIN NEA Service Writer NEW YORK, May 15.—The slow, soothing strains of music from a email group of string instruments form the background of an announcement made over the network of the Columbia Broadcasting system. Suddenly, just as the announcement is over, there is a crash of brass and the quick tempo of a modern dance is on the air. Just as opposed as the music are the two orchestral directors and composers responsible for these types of music. One, Howard Barlow, is a human picture almost, of the restrained symphonic selections with which fans of the stations on the Columbia network have become familiar. The other, Freddie Rich, is as unconventional, as nervous and active as his lighter music. Have Little in Common The two have very little in common, and that little is the important fact that they have concentrated all their time and efforts on the development of their individual types of music to the highest degree in broadcasting. Their lives are different, their thoughts vary, their temperaments are opposed, their spare time is spent differently. "New York’s lower east side has been my playground for many years,” Rich reveals. "Those east side days were a picnic—gang fights, bare feet, hookie, swimming in the East river, fighting our own battles and getting home for another licking by our parents —oh, it was great. Played Piano at 5 "I started playing piano when 5, and I used to try getting out ot the j hourly lessons after only ten or fit -; teen minutes of practice. But my ■ father, who was a musician himself j once locked the piano on me - and; that nearly broke my heart.” ! There were ten children in th", Rich family, a typical Jewish east j
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side household. And all were musical. Today Freddie’s three remaining brothers are in the New York Philharmonic orchestra. It was only natural, therefore, for Freddie, the youngest boy of the family, to continue the study of music. He went to the Damrosch Conservatory of Music, where he studied with George Gershwin under Charles Hambitzer. Picks Up Technique There he picked up the theory and technique that today enables him to arrange the complicated scores for his forty-five-pieqe orchestra from any melody he might select. It sounds quite difficult, but he does it in about thirty hours. Dark-eyed, dark-haired, almost bald, but with a round ruddy face, Rich seems to fit into the type of programs over which he rules. On the stand, facing his orchestra, and without a baton—he never uses the baton —he quickly gets into the mood of the music his men play, clenches his fists, strikes almost a Billy Sunday pose and pounds out the rhythm with his men. Every muscle in his body is strained as he moves his arms and stamps his feet with the music. Married Four Years "By the end of the day, my feet are so tired and I feel so limp and worn cut that I can hardly drag myself home,” he says. As if that weren’t enough, Rich spends many hours preparing programs, rehearsing, arranging, conferring. What time he has left, which is very little, he spends with his wife, whom he married nearly four years ago, going to prize fights,
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playing golf, attending bridge parties. “I have traveled a lot and have played before the king of England,” he says. “But my one great ambition is to take a year’s vacation on a trip around the w T orld, picking up the various noises, tones and other sounds that are typical of the countries and their inhabitants, and put them all together into an original symphony.” (To Be Continued) NAME NEW OFFICERS Gai! H. Morehead Honored by Rite Council. Selection of Gail H. Morehead as soverign princA of Saraiah council, princes of Jerusalem of th ß Scottish Rite, was announced today following the annual meeting of the council Wednesday night. Other officers are John C. Hobson, high priest; Clarence R. Martin, senior warden; Edward D. Moore, re-elected treasurer; Stanley G. Myers, junior warden, and Fred I. Willis, re-elected secretary. $20,500 for Cemetery Bu Times Svccial CENTERVILLE, Ind., May 15. A bequest of $20,500. SIO,OOQ of which is to be used for erection of a mausoleum, has been made to the Centerville Cemetery Association, by Joseph Spears, a former Centerville citizen and nationally known showman, who ended his life by suicide in New York a year ago.
MOTION PICTURES
“The Big Pond,” Maurice Chevalier’s sensational new picture, will be presented at the Indiana theatre tonight after the regular performance for the first time. All attending the last regular show will be invited to remain for the premiere without additional charge.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
CITY BAR TO BITU) Fifteen Sites Considered for New Clubhouse. Fifteen sites are, being considered by the -Indianapolis Bar Association for the building of a SIOO,OOO clubhouse, it was announced today by William L. Taylor, president, following a meeting of the association Wednesday night. Bequests have been made to the association by two persons, Taylor said, and among plans for use of the fund is the immediate construction of the clubhouse Six attorneys were voted memberships in the association as follows: Martin H. Mark, James G. CampFree to Asthma and Hay Fever Sufferers Free Trial of a Method That Any One Can Use Without Discomfort or Loss of Time. We h®ve a method for the control of Asthma, and we want you to try it at our expense. No matter whether your case is of long standing or recent development, whether it is present as Chronic Asthma or Hay Fever, you should send for a free Trial of our method. No matter in what climate you live, no matter what your age or occupation, if you are troubled with attacks of Asthma or Hay Fever, our method should help you. We especially want to send it to those apparently hopeless cases, where all forms of inhalers, douches, opium preparations, fumes, ‘/patent smokes/’ etc., have failed we want to show every one at our expense, that our method will end all difficult breathing, all wheezing, and all those terrl°*e Paroxysms in many Instances. This free offer is too important to neglect a single day. Write now and begin ine method at once. /Send no money, simply mail coupon below. Do it today. FREE TRIAL COUPON FRONTIER ASTHMA CO., 1695 J Frontier Bldg., 462 Nigara St. Buffalo, N. Y. Send free trial of your method to: —Advertisement.
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bell, Frank T. Sisson, Charles O. Studevant, Donald R. Mote and William T. Stoops. Sues in Clinic Blaze Bu United Press , CLEVELAND, May 15.—Suit of Mrs. Anna Rodgers against the Cleveland clinic asking $30,000 damages for the loss of her husband who was killed in the fire which took 129 lives, was on file in common pleas court here today.
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DR. WILDMAN IS NAMED Pern Man New President of Stale Eclectic Medical Group. Dr. R. E. Wildman, of Peru, was elected president of the Indiana Eclectic Medical Association, succeeding Dr. George C. Porter, Linton, Ind., at the two-day state session which closed here Wednesday. Dr. J. Stanley Brown of Carlisle was re-elected secretary and Dr.
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MAY 15,1930
< Morse Harod, Fort Wayne, was named delegate to the national convention. busy dentists COR .WASHINGTON AND PtffW.JTJ 204. Kttfcfot BiPO
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