Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 71, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 August 1930 — Page 20

PAGE 20

CITY WILL BE HOST TO NEGRO TENNISTOURNEY National Meet Scheduled for Douglas Park, Aug. 18-23. Th American Tennis Association’ will hold its fourteenth annual national championship singles and* doubles tournament here at Douglas park Aug. 18 to 23. with the Indianapolis Racquet Club as host. Fifteen hundred persons, players, officials and visitors from practically every state, is the usual attendance of this group, which is holding its third national meet in the wesf. Though the south continues to furnish the greatest number of players, the east has claimed all previous national engagements. The event here is second only to the eastern college football game which is held on Thanksgiving day each year. With the tennis match being played this year on the same dates and in the same city as the rational Negro Medical Association convention. Indianapolis is to benefit by the influx of more than 2,000 visitors, professional, sports and social leaders of the Negro group. Brown Is Champion Edgar G. Brown, a former resident here, is the present national singles champion. He won his first championship honors in 1922 and 1923, losing in 1924 and winning again in 1929 at Bordentown, N. J. All match** during the tournament will he nlaved on the six spacious courts at Douglas park. Numerous social affairs have been sctfeduled for the weex at the Phvllls Wheatly Y. W. C. A.. Trinity hall, and Walker casino. Mrs. Georgia Martin, chairman of the entertainment committee, will direct social activities. Official headquarter! will be at 450 North Senate avenue, with Dr. M. D. Battles In charge. Dr. J. L. McOrlff of Portsmouth. Va.. is national president and Robert Marbury is president of the Indianapolis Racquet Club. Other local officers Include Miss Juanita Bobson. Wfrs. Lillian Briscoe. Hobson Ziegler. Miss Ann Johnsonne. Dr. Theodore Cable. Ward Wilson. Miss Phyllis Waters, Paul Battles. Jesse Martin Samuel Grizzle and M. L. Stevenson. Batties Funeral Held Funeral services for Mrs. Henrietta Battles. who died Thursday night at her home. 1710 Boulevard place, were held Sunday afternoon at the home. The Rev. S. B. Butler, pastor of Mt. Zion Baptist church, officiated. Mrs. Battles was born in Madison. Irtd.. in 1857 and made her home there until the family moved here, twenty-one years ago. Survivors are a daughter. Miss Pauline Battles, with whom Mrs. Battles made her home, and a son. Dr. Mark D. Battles, a member of the committee of management of the Y. M. C. A. The body was taken to Madison Monday for burial, accompanied by relatives. Charles Wlnburn. Kokomo, was elected grand chancellor of Indiana Pythlans at the annual convention in Shelbyvllle. Wi iburn succeeds E. O. Tidrington. deceased, who headed the order for more than twenty years. Other officers elected Included Sanford Jackson. French Lick, vice-chancellor: the Rev. C. L. Upthegrove. Terre Haute. G. K. R. and 8.: Silas Pritchett. Indianapolis, exchequer: William Kelly. Washington, prelate. and Otis Johnson. Columbus, grand lecturer. Dr. Penn Is Dead Dr. I. Garland Penn, one of the secretaries ol the board of education of the Methodist Episcopal church, was buried Friday from the Calvary Methodist Episcopal church. Cincinnati. He was known as tha oldest and most distinguished member in point of service of the M. E. general conference. • He succeeded the late Dr. M. C. B. Mason as secretary of the Freedman Aid Board. He was an enthusiastic leader of the Negro race, educator, author and a close friend of Dr. Booker T. Washington, founder of Tuskegee Institute. Burvivors are the widow and a son. the Rev. I. Garland Jr., presiding elder of the Ohio M. E. church district, and five daughters. Mrs. Wllhelmina Franklin. Miss Elizabeth H. Penn. Mrs. Louise Sandipher. Mrs. Marie Miller and Mrs. Anna Belle Maxwell. Among those attending the funeral services were Bishops M. W. Clair Sr.. W. P. Thlrkfleld and Robert E. Jones. Dr. Robert E. Skelton, pastor of Barnes M. E. church here, a friend of the famllv also attended. Doctor Visits Here Dr. and Mrs. A. H. Maloney and children spent the week-end here with relatives at 3812 Paris avenue, following a motor trip from Madison. Wls.. where Dr. Maloney is doing research work In the medical school of the University of Wisconsin. Mrs. Maloncv. who taught in Douglas high school at Baltimore last winter, also Is studying at the Wisconsin school. They were accompanied on their trip by Mrs. W. L. Harris a resident of Madison. The Maloneys wtll return her in August, when Dr. Maloney is to address the Negro Medical National convention. Mrs. R. L. Bat lev and children. 1802 Boulevard place, have returned from a month’s vacation with Mrs. Bailey relatlevs at Richmond. Ind. Mrs. Katie Bover. Mrs. Lucv Porter. Mrs. Carrie White. Mrs. Lulu White, and Mrs. Julia Reed have returned from the Pvthlan state convention at Shelbvville. Mrs. Reed was re-elected to the leadership of th* Calanthians as arand worthy counsellor. Visits in Bloomington Miss Phyllis Waters of North California street spent the week-end in Bloomington as the guest of friends. Miss Waters Is ladles' auxiliary chairman of the citizens' night program which will be given during the National Medical Association. Miss Hazel Alexander of West Pratt street ts expected to return home thffc week, following a vacation spent with triends In Chicago. Misses Gertrude Harris and Bessie Coleman of Highplace have moved to their new residence at 3715 Boulevard place. Mrs. M. W. Clair Jr. of Boulevard place entertained Mra. A. O. Moselv of St. Louts. Mrs. G. W. Ward and Mrs. J. F. Johnson Monday with a sightseeing tour and picnic at Douglas park. Mrs. Moselv is the house guest of Mrs. Ward. Members of the Sorosis Club are planning a benefit garden party at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Shirley Winfrey next Thursday afternoon. The Eastern Star degree team will hold annual picnic In Douglas nark Thursday afternoon. Mrs. Dora Edmonds is prestdent. Entertain at Breakfast Mr. and Mrs. William Wright at Bellefootatne street, entertained at breakfast Tuesday for tbetr daughter. Mrs. Odessa Donnelly of New York Ctty. who before her marriage was Miss Odessa Wrlgbt of tbls city. Mrs. Wright has been entertained at a number of social affairs since her arrival and ia to be entertained at a picnic tonight at Douglas park, with Miss Murray Atkins as hostess. Mrs. Donnelly Is a member of the branch Y. W. C. A. staff in New York City and Is expec.ed to return east Aug. I. Dr. and Mrs. Clarence Lucas are on a motor trtp to eastern cities, where they arc spending their vacation. They are accompanied by their son and daughter and plan to return here tor the national medical convention in August. Mr. and Mr*. Fred Williamson and t£eir daughter and son. Lillian and Earle, all of New Albany. Ind.. motored here Sunday to attend funeral services of Mrs. Henrietta Bishop Lynwood W. Kyles, superintendent of the Second Episcopal district of the A. M. E. Sion church, with headquarters at Winston Belem. N. C_ will be the guest speaker at Jane* Tabernacle Sunday mornBe ia a trustee of the International So-

Orphaning of Tftree Children Blamed on Road Wage Cutting

Paving Employe Died Trying to Save 30-Cent Job, Widow Charges. Three children and a widow at Bloomington arc charges upon their poverty stricken relatives as a direct result, the relatives charge, of the wage cutting among road paving contractors. -Speed up your work” was the order of the contractor on a spur connecting College avenue in Bloomington with state road 37, the relatives say. And John Bennett, 35, of 1401 I North Walnut street, Bloomington, father of three small children, driving a truck for the road project at a wage of 30 cents hourly, speeded up his work to retain the job which provided a pittance for support of his family. Drove Over Embankment His relatives declare he was required to make three trips hourly—trips that ordinarily would consume twenty-five minutes each. Rivalry between the 30-cents-an-hour truck drivers to get ready “loads” became intense under the order "speed up or lose your jobs,” and Bennett’s truck passing another truck, went over an embankment and he was killed instantly, his relatives claim. W, C. Stewart Construction Company was the contractor for the paving of the spur, a cut-off for Road 37. The contract price, Bloomington residents declare, was sufficient to maintain a labor wage of 45 to 50 cents hourly. Truck Had Been Leased With unemployment prevailing, the workmen were paid 20, 25 and 30 cents hourly, relatives of Bennett declared today. The truck Bennett drove was owned by John Kennedy, Bloomington merchant, and had been leased by the Stewart company to haul supplies for the paving job. The Bennett family lived in a small cottage on North Walnut street. Deprived of the meager wage he brought home, his wife, Mrs. Mandy Bennett, has been compelled to close the home and to reside with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Abe Pelfree. in a poverty-stricken hovel at 939 North Fairview avenue. Compensation Sought Bennett had three children, William Oscar, 9; Robert, 5, and Esther, 2. Compensation claims filed by Mrs Bennett now are pending for her husband's death. The claims set out that’ the desire of the contractor to “speed up work” wa/ the underlying cause of the accident, relatives declare. Mrs. Bennett's father, Abe Pelfree, declares his son-in-law was told “the men who make the records here for production will get work on the next job; those who fail, will be out.” The contract for construction of the spur road from State road 37 was not a 3*ate contract, but the state furnished inspection service for the county, which let the contract. 2,000 LINK BELT CO. EMPLOYES TO PICNIC Annual Outing Will Be Held Saturday at Broad Ripple. More than 2,000 employes of the Link Belt Company and their families will attend the annual picnic at Broad Ripple park, Saturday. Athletic contests will be held, climaxed by a tug of war between teams from the Dodge plant at West Michigan street and Holmes avenue, and the Ewart plant at South Belmont street and the Big F.our railway. A baseball game will be played during the afternoon by employes from the two plants. BLACKBIRDS ‘PICK CROW Nest Destroyed, Feathered V’arriors Attack Wisconsin Home Bu United Press CORNELL, Wis., Aug. I.—Blackbirds enraged by the destruction of their nest, laid siege to the Edward Porter home here. The birds attacked members of the family when they attempted to leave the house. Dozens of other blackbirds joined in the fight and finally town officials with shotguns, rescued the Porters. y the Federal Council of Churches of Christ in America, a member of the North Carolina Interracial committee, chairman of the board of of the A. M. E. Zion church and trustee of Livingstone college. The bishop Is a graduate of Lincoln university and at one time presided over the Indiana conference of his church. “The Symbolism of the Cross’* is to be the subiect of the Sunday morning meditation of the Rev. M. W. Clair Jr., pastor of Simpson M. E. church. Communion services are to be observed at the morning hour. At night the pastor will speak on "The Atonement.” Beginning Sunday. Aug. 3, only morning sen-ices will be held at St. Philip’s Episcopal church, according to the vicar. M. Mitchell. The Rev. R. L. Pope, pastor of Bethel A. M. E. church is expected to preach at the Sunday service following his motor trio to points in Canada. New York, Vermont and Ohio. Guest in Cleveland He was accompanied on his trip by Mrs. Willie A. Roberts and Miss Faith Jackson of Cleveland, cousins. While in Cleveland Mr. Pope was the dinner guest ol Dr. and Mrs. John Taylor and Mrs. Dianond Cox. the latter the mother of Mrs. I. B. Ransom. ••Is There No Balm in Gilead: Is There No Physician There?” is the Sunday morning subject of the Rev. Robert E. Skelton, pastor of Barnes M. E. church. At | night the pastor will speak on •’Victory.” Thirty persons will make up the cast. •The Talk of the Town.” a plav to be presented by the usher board Thursday night. Aug. 7. Special services are to be held at Simpson M. E. church Sunday morning. Aug. 10. to which all employers and employes will be guests of honor. A special sermon will feature the morning program. All businesses wrill be represented. Dr. Roberts Improves Dr. Earl Roberts. 2549 Boulevard place, president of the Indiana State Medical Society, is expected to return to his home this week, following serious illness at city hospital. Dr. Roberts, who operates dental parlors at 1348 North Illinois street, has been busy making plans for the National Medical Association, which convenes here In August. Clarence Brooks, screen star lor the Artsto Film Company of Los Angeles, a Negro concern, gave a private showing of his recent picture. “Georgia Rose.” at the Walker Wednesday. Brooks was to attend the showing, but was suddenly stricken wtttm illness at Cincinnati. Mr. ar and Its Brooks are guests of Mr. ** n of i^ Tlrenty -

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John Bennett, with his two children, Robert, 5, and William Oscar, 9, and his widow, Mrs. Mandy Bennett. Another child, an infant, Esther, 19 months, is not pictured.

NEGRO IS SHOT BY POLICEMAN / Bullets Strike Fugitive in Both Legs. Pursuing a fleeing Negro at Twenty-first street and Capitol avenue this morning, patrolman Fred Hess shot the Negro twice, wounding him in each leg. The Negro, Albert Kilcrease, 19, of 857 Colton street, was arrested by Hess after he is alleged to have created a disturbance on an Illinois street car. Boarding the car at Twenty-first and Illinois streets, the Negro engaged the conductor in a dispute over the fare. The conductor attempted to eject the Negro from the car and patrolman Hess aided, arresting the Negro on disorderly conduct charges. Kilcrease broke loose from patrolman Hess and fled and the patrolman fired two shots, hitting Kilcrease in each leg. The Negro was taken to city hospital. CIVIC LEAGUE TO BEFORMED North Side Property Owners to Fight Gas Station. Residents in the territory between Thirty-seventh and Forty-second streets and College and Winthrop avenues will attend a meeting on the lawn at the home of Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Griffith, 4014 Winthrop avenue tonight at 8 to organize a civic league. Property owners of the neighborhood will take steps to avert construction of a gasoline distribution station at Fortieth street and Winthrop avenue. The city board of zoning appeals*has promised a decision on the Indiana Home Oil Company’s petition for the station next Tuesday. Asa Smith, attorney for the property owners, said an organization will be perfected tonight to act in the matter and to take steps toward eliminating alleged infringements of business in residential areas of the neighborhood. Entertainment will be provided at the meeting. NO TAX EQUALIZATION ORDERS THIS YEAR Assessors, County Auditors in Session With State Board. No equalization orders will be issued by the state tax board this year, it was announced today by Chairman James Showalter. The announcement came after conferences had been held at the statehouse with county assessors and auditors from all counties of the state, except Marion. Harry Dunn, Marion county auditor, was unable to attend as summoned, but there will be no change here either, it was announced. In making the announcement of “no change,” Showalter had the following formal statement issued: “While the report in some of the counties was not as good as was anticipated. the valuation, as finally tabulated, will show that there will be very little change in the total taxable property as compared with last yean” Near Half-Way Mark Bu UnitGt Press ROOSEVELT FIELD, L. 1., Aug. I.—Louis Reichers and Robert Black, endurance fliers, neared the halfway mark today in their attempt to better the 553-hour mark of the Hunter brothers. At 9:34 a. m. they had 277 hours of steady flying behind them, almost twelve days in the air. Democratic Leader Dies Bu United Press LOGANSPORT. Ind., Aug. I. John Wade, 52, Democratic leader and former Clay township trustee, died today after an illness of three weeks. He leaves his widow.

Today and Tomorrow Last 2 Days to Get Your 2c Ride Tickets for Crown Laundry and Dry Cleaning Cos. PICNIC DAY Broad Ripple Park Monday, Aug. 4 Get Tickets from Driver or Newest Branca —FREE!

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Fire! Fire! Bu l nitrd Press PITTSBURGH. Aug. I. Fire Truck 8 caught fire from backfire of the motor while cn route to a brush fire alarm. By the time the firemen had extinguished the blaze on the truck the brush fire had burned itself out.

CAMP ENDS SATURDAY hundred and six infantry reserve officers of tne 167th brigade will conclude two weeks’ encampment at Ft. Benjamin Harrison Saturday and return to their homes in Indiana and Ohio. Approximately 140 reserve engineers, drawn from Indiana, Ohio, West Virginia and Ohio will arrive at the fort Sunday for two weeks’ training and maneuvers.

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AMUSEMENTS I The Biggest Show In / \ ( jAA. j I town for the most W V sis leLiVYwffSa Nffly WMHaMRajBSw reasonable price. Every ß Night.. —~ I'prjyp Children Always 15c H A7.IPPY -YtPPY- HAPPY- SNAPPY JAMBOREE Bf Hj/ OF FUN AND FROLIC TO CHEER YOU UP / BllflY MAINEp | if- f 1 mL' * A TAZZY FARCE ABOUT GIRL AND BOY FRIENDS. IT'S A SCREAM FROM START TO FINISH AN 13 A PEACH * IW ATHLETICS -EXTRA - THE MERRY MAD-CAP MUSICAL MONARCH I . COSCIA VSRDI , yj rt . //> 'MUSIC- GLORIFIED-CLASSIFIED - MORTIFIED "MWa 9 /f? ON THE LIVING SCREEN J 8/* A jazz-mad revel of flaming youth a ms hitting the high spots of love and ||| |@l life on high. Come join in the || jp> merrymaking it’s a thrilling F M PEPPY CAST OF YOUTHFUL' FAVORITES—|FSANIt ALBERTSON SHARON LYNN | JOYCE COMPTON KENNETH THOMPSON also H.B.VAQNER amo CLAIRE M c POVELL j^PIfINCESSZtJI£KA^JI^^^^

OPEN BUREAU ON AjRTRAVEL Embry-Riddle to Offer New Service to Public. A consolidated air travel bureau, providing ticket service on the nation's airways, will be established in a downtown hotel in Indianapolis soon, it was announced today by Carl Anderson, Embry-Rlddle Company traffic manager. Similar air travel bureaus are maintained by the company, operating the Cincinnati-Indianapolis-Chicago air mail-passenger line, at Chicago and Cincinnati. Announcement of plans for the bureau was made coincident with inauguration today of the Indianapolis Special, anew round-trip passenger flight from Indianapolis to Chicago. This gives the company three round trips daily and one night trip, the latter for mail only. The new plane will leave Indianapolis at 2:30 p. m., arrive in Chicago at 4:15 p. m„ leave Chicago at 4:45 p. m. and arrive here at 6:30 p. m. Other passenger planes leave Indianapolis for Chicago at 9:30 a. m. and 5:15 p. m., leaving Chicago for Indianapolis at 2:15 p. m. and 8:30 a. m. The additional plane was ordered because of inability to accommodate the passenger demand in Indianapolis for the 5:15 p. m. plane to Chicago.

Arrivals and Departures Mars Hill Airport—Neal Heckman, Columbus to Indianapolis, Waco; T. A. T. passengers eJkgtbound included Miss Katherine Waller, Memorial hall, Bloomington; R. E. Lashley, Indianapolis, and W. L. Bates, New York; Embry-Riddle passengers to Cincinnati included Dr. John Stewart, Indianapolis, and G. B. Browder of the Chevrolet Motor Company; passengers to Chicago included Frank Reinmann, Thomas White, John W. Sykes, J. W. Terry and F. J. O’Grady, all of Chicago. Hoosier Airport—Lieutenant Walter R. Peck, formerly commander of Schoen field, Ft. Benjamin Harrison, and now of Alabama, from Columbus, 0., to Indianapolis;

In the Air Weather conditions in the air at 3 a. m.: Northeast wind, four miles an hour; barometric pressure, 30.10 at sea level; temperature, 79; ceiling unlimited; visibility unlimited; field good. 1

Charles Wethern and R. B. Bedinger, department of commerce inspectors, Indianapolis to Columbus. 0., and return, Travel Air. * Visit Flying School Dr. Edward C. Elliott. Purdue university president, and Professor G. A. Young of the faculty, were guests of Curtiss-Wright Flying Service at Mars Hill airport Thursday and were taken on a flight by Captain H. Weir Cook. The visitors inspected the Curtiss-Wright flying school for work in which the university gives credits in aeronautics. In Air 267 Hours ST. LOUIS, Aug. I.—Maintaining a high altitude to escape rough air, Forest O’Brine and Dale Jackson dropped notes from their endurance monoplane today saying “everything is going smoothly.;’ At 10:11 a. m. central standard time, the former holders of the endurance record had been in the air 267 hours. Asa precaution, Jackson climbed on to the catwalk and placed new points on the magneto.

MOTION PICTURES IT STARTS TOMORROW Masgsßagff&si . RONALD _ COLMAN in a RAFFLES , Supported by “Teacher’s KAY FRANCIS Pet” DAVID TORRENCE ■ Memo-eotAnw-mays* akm> q today I IS YOUR g&VLETiW BE OAYvL LAST CHANCE KfcH marilddcsslui j ROD LAHOCQU& | CSTIT GILBERT EMERY Xw HEP DA HOPPER g . - a

DlA™ CIRCLE art the new *® ason t^j, t^ I tr a e * I^e’ r g ALWAYS get the best! ;now iba I

i.W Vitaphones Amazing Hit with // II&- 1 LORETTA YOUNG // **®*®en IjiM i and JACK MULHALL // Kevue’ /|(S i He loved one, not 11 * ll ring /f ; ;V-\ the olher . . . Tel ' MTlg, l II J,f)D /T s llumlrcred 2 8. .si oui ’ see * hat llutt ]prisi." hundred”” I'* 1 '*

LET CONTRACT FOR PAVING IN MAW WAR Order Shepard Street Work Subject to Decision in Injunction Action. * Award of the contract to pave Shepard street from Morris to Howard with “two-course concrete” to R. W. Bowen & Cos., was ordered today by the works board on recommendation of City Engineer A. H Moore. Although a suit attacking legality of the “two-course” specifications and asking for a permanent injunction against the city is pending on 4 Shepard street, Corporation Counsel Edward H- Knight advised the board to award the contrac 1 .. with a “waiver” from the contractor in event the proceedings are held void. The injunction is not effective until date of hearing because the plaintiffs, represented by Attorney I Merle Walker, failed to file a bond.

AUG. 1, 1930

Charles O. Britton, board member, said. Bowen w lived any claim for damages on the $5,941 job. The suit alleged the "two-course concrete provision Is violated “actually'' because the courses are laid together. Twenty-four property owners petitioned the board for a cement street. “It is possible to lay a two-course pavement, but there is a question whether it will hold up, Knight told the board. “The development of concrete followed passage of the 1905 paving law. If the law* were passed today it likely would be revised to provide for the monolithic type.” The laying of two-course pavements, which the suit contends is necessary to conform strictly to the paving statute, is not in accord with modern engineering practices, Britton commented, pointing out that the state highway commission lays roads in one course. E. Kirk McKinney, board president, said he understood contractors are not agitating the fight, but that the suit was backed by an asphalt company representatives cf Chicago, who was interested in promoting sale of more asphalt. Parrot meat is ordinary diet among natives of some tropical regions.

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MRS. STELLA BOOTS —Photo by National Studio.

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