Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 166, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 November 1930 — Page 10

PAGE 10

POLISH‘CZAR 1 ' BECOMES NEW ‘MAN OF HOUR’ Wave of Pilsudski's Baton Will Start Europe’s * Armies Marching. , BY WILLIAM PHILIP SIMMS Scrippt-Howard forelrn t.ditor WASHINGTON, Nov. 20—Mar-f-tyai Josef Pilsudski of Poland has become the man of the hour in Europe. Today, more even than Benito Mussolini, the new Polish autocrat is being watched by old world chancelleries. By a wave of his baton, he can set vast armies marching. Poland is recognized as the key to Europe. faarshai Pilsudski's personally managed elections last Sunday resulted in the complete smash of the old sejni. or parliament, which was hostile to him, and the creation of anew one. which will do what he tells it to do. In Power Since 1926 Pilsudski came into power in May. 1926. by a coup and ctat. Since ; that time, though, he never has had more than approximately a third' of parliament with him: he has been boss of Poland, just the same. Once, when he saw parliament was on the point of voting a lack of confidence in his regime, he calmly marched into its corridors at the j head of 110 army officers, all in mil uniform and wearing swords.! Instead of voting, the sejm ad-; journed. , ■ That is a sample of the marshal's; wav. But he is 1,01 likely to find his j pathway easy. Conditions in Poland j are extremely unsettled, both po-; litically and economically. Born at Zulov, Pilsudski is 63 When a boy at school at Vienna, he made a vow never to quit fighting until his land should be free. At 13 he was expelled from college for political activities. Exile in Siberia At 20 he was exiled to Siberia. Five years later he returned and became an editor. During the RussoJapanese war, he went all the way , to' Japan to enlist against Russia ; only to be refused. Home again, he raised a company oi 200 youths like himself to ham- j string the caar’s forces in guerilla warfare. It is said that his cam- j .paign" tied up 250,000 Russian troops which Had to be used to hold Poland in check. In 1914 he organized a Polish legion, proclaimed the independence of his country, and, under misleading promises, put himself at the J disposal of Austria. As that power had a Polish question of her own, he found his men eiiberatcly were being sent to their ocm to end, once and for all, Po- j d’s dream of restoration. Then i he found himself in a German j prison. After the war he helped oust the j German regency at Warsaw, became j dictator for a few days, helped de- , feat the red invasion, installed the j great pianist Paderewski as premier, ; then faded from the picture, not to j return until 1926, when he believed his country needed saving again. JOBLESS AID TALKED BY LEGION OFFICERS Groups to Create Work in Each State Favored. Ways and means whereby the American Legion can aid in relieving the unemployment crisis were discussed Wednesday by department commanders and adjutants from all * parts of the United States at the closing session of their annual threeday conference here. Resolution recommending that the Legion in every state organize an employment system which not only will register applicants for jobs, but also create work, was adopted by the conference. The report also agreed the federal government and the several state governments should be urged to speed construction of public building for which appropriations have been made. CAN'T STOP TALKING: POLICE RESCUE HIM Telephone Booth Occupant Unaware When Store Closes. WASHINGTON. Nov. 20.—Men have been known to talk themselves into trouble Or out of jobs, but it remained for Arthur Jarrell to talk himself into an embarrassing situation where lie was in danger of being mistaken for a burglar. So intent was Jarrell on his telephone conversation in a drug store Wednesday night that he talked well on beyond the store's closing time. Emerging from the both, he found the clerks gone and the store locked, jarrcll used the instrument which had caused the difficulty and informed the police of his plight, meanwhile congratulating himself that he hadn't previously talked himself out of his last nickel.

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Two More Radio Sets for You to Identify! Get in This Contest Now!

PLEA RENEWED ON GRAND STAND V Fair Board Asks $250,000 to Build Structure. Indiana state fair board again will try to get anew grand stand appropriation from the state legislature. Request filed with A. C. McDaniel, state budget clerk, today by Secretary E. J. Barker of the fair board asks $259,000 for a fireproof grand stand for the fairground here, with 12.000 seating capacity. A request for $350,000 for a 15,000-seat stand was refused in the 1929 session. Superintendent A. F. Miles of the Indiana state reformatory filed a biennial budget request for sl,133,380. of which $258,000 would be spent for anew cellhouse, industrial building, dining room addition, power plant equipment and a talking motion picture machine. The proposed reformatory appropriation is a $267,000 increase over the resent institutional budget. Ball Teachers’ college of Muncie asks $954,875, an increase of $65,783. Pastor Will Go to Ohio Bp Times Special NOBLESVILLE. Ind., Nov. 20— The Rev. N. C. Trueblood, who resigned as pastor of the Friends church here in September after having served the congregation for four years, has accepted a call to Jamestown, O.

!l STARTING SATURDAY! | | BEASTS ■ : s > £*s- jS^.’‘ , ■ ILI I I RWE ILji jpgf ROBERT AMES I

last NORMA' TALMADGE IN JL. “DU BARRY, WOMAN OF PASSION" WITH CONRAD NAGEL AND WILLIAM FARNUM

Today The Times prints the third set in the series of radio sets for you to identify. If you have not entered the contest call the Circulation Department of The Times, Riley 5551, and ask for Tuesday's and Wednesday’s copies of The Times, in which the first two pairs of radio sets were printed. The last photographs appear Saturday, Nov. 22, and the contest ends at midnight, Tuesday, Nov. 25. The contest is open to all except employes of The Times and their families. You do not have to be a subscriber of The Times to enter. Set No. s—This is a super-hetro-dyne receiver with nine tuned circuits. Screen-gi'id tubes with preselection and band-pass tuning arc featured. The cabinet is a lowboy finished in walnut. Watch this one carefully: it may fool you. Ask your radio dealer for a clew. Set No. 6—This receiver is manufactured by one of the largest electrical manufacturers and was introduced for the first time at the June radio show this year. The circuit is a super-hetrodyne, offering many improvements and features. More than twelve dealers in Indianapolis sell this receiver. It is not compulsory to cut the photographs from The Times. To enter the contest, you may trace or draw copies of the different sets from files of The Times at the public library or The Times office. Nine-Year Illness Fatal BU 'l imes Special FT. WAYNE, Ind.. Nov. 20.—Matilda Kramer, 62, is dead after being a patient in the Lutheran hospital for nine years. The nature of her illness was never diagnosed. An autopsy is planned in an effort to determine the disease.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

NEWTON COURT NOT RECOGNIZED ‘No Suob Circuit Exists,’ Leslie Declares. Governor Harry G. Leslie has refused to recognize Terrence B. Cunningham as judge of the seventyninth judicial circuit court ‘ because no such circuit court exists,” it was announced today by L. O. Chasey, secretary to the Governor. This action is in line with the Leslie policy of opposition to the creation of new courts, with more judges’ salaries to pay. The seventy-ninth judicial district was created by the 1929 legislature, but the Governor did not sign the bill, attempting a "pocket veto.” But a similarly treated bill creating a superior court in both Muncie and Marion was held enacted without the Governor’ signature by ruling of the supreme court. Leslie holds that this action does not apply to the seventy-ninth circuit in Newton county. Jasper and Newton counties have been served by the same circuit judge, who refuses to function in Newton since the election of Cunningham, it is reported Litigation may be necessary to settle the matter. The Lincoln highway is said to be the most direct route to San Francisco from the Atlantic coast.

PENSION DILL FOR AGED TO DE ADVANCED Defuse, Eagles' Head, Pledges Move Will Be Pushed in Legislature. A bill designed to remove old men and women from Indiana's poorhouses' and lessen the burden on taxDaycrs in caring for those no longer able to earn a living, is pledged by Otto P. Deluse, Indianapolis, to be the result of a meeting here Sunday of the old age pension commission of the Indiana aerie. Fraternal Order of Eagles, of which he is chairman. “Old age pension bills sponsored bv the Eagles are in effect in twelve states.” Deluse said. “Statistics show that the pension system costs per person a little more than half the expense of poorhouse maintenanace. And, from a little more than half the expense of poorhouse maintenance. And, from the humanitarian standpoint, the poorhouse hasn't a leg to stand on.” The bill will be introduced in the 1931 general assembly in January. Reviewing the history of the old age pension movement in Indiana, started by the Eagles seven years ago, Deluse declared that the coming session of the legislature affords the best opportunity yet for enactment of the legislation. “At last the people of Indiana are beginning to realize,” he said, “that an institution which had its inception in England three centuries ago, is out of place in modern life, with its high ideals of humantarianism and efficiency. “As to the first point, newspapers of the state in the last few months alone have revealed enough regarding conditions in poorhouses to convince any fair minded person that the poorhouse is inhuman. “We can prove that 25 cents of each dollar appropirated for poorhouses goes for administrative expense: under the pension system, the administrative cost is under l'i per cent. $46,500 for Race Ticket Dp United Press DUBLIN, Nov. 20.—James O'Leary, a hotel porter in Cork, who drew the ticket on Saracen, hot choice r? win in the Irish sweepstakes on the Manchester November handicap, sold a half-interest in the ticket today for 9,300 pounds (about $43,500).

AMUSEMENT^

Next Sunday Afternoon ENGUSHTfrOO O'clock CLA! R BERT SOPRANO Cost! Seats On Sale 51,51.50, $2, $2.50, $3 MARTENS OFFICE Baldwin Piano Go. 11. 8921

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I ** * * New York and Chicago Awarded This Colossal I Spectacle Four Stars—the Highest Possible Laurels H Obtainable by Any Motion Ticture r sfsisP' Ing Cattle—2,4oo Plunging Horses—- §§ lispy 4,000 Elk, Moose and Deer—s,o?)o Thun--11l dering Buffalo—2,soo Scalp-Mad, M ar* I Painted Indians—427 Hard-Riding Cow-Punch-ers and Oxen Bullwhackers. k| Followed in a Dramatic Sweep Across 7 States W ith a * Cast of 20,000 Men, Women and Children Jff Featuring H John Wayne—Marguerite Churchill —El Brendel — H Tull. .I*i. 1 1 .' : I'll.. !''**' 1 'i l : Hnllin,

Thurrymwtivel^last^ays^^ Don't Fail to See and Hear the Wonder Kiddie A'&ttgk BABY ROSE MARIE Vamoin V. B. C. Radio starlet, who has captured the heart of all Indianapolis. i "“morrow vaudeville JE'Jp Each patron will receive RTTPT T VT 1 !?! T autosraphed photo of lillTjClj ma3r BABV BOSE MARIE J n ♦•BROTHERS’’ f “Indianapolis’ Only Vaudeville Those Famous Movie Comedians '*4mm Karl DANE and ;$£ Geo. K. ARTHUR . " (IN PERSON) ... in a comedy playlet, “FALL IN.” You’ve seen WOMEN” ,bera on 411 ® s c F een • • • they’re even funnier on. Comedy Drams

World News at a Glance

By United Press CINCINNATI. G., Nov. 20—Dr. Clarence True Wilson, executive secretary of the Methodist board of temperance, prohibition and public morals, savors a national referendum on the eighteenth amendment, he said in an address here Wednesday night. Kentucky Bank Fails Bp United Press LOUISVILLE. Nov. 20—Another correspondent bank of the National Bank of Kentucky here, failed to open it’s doors today. The institution. the bank of Caneyville, was the eleventh to close since the local bank suspended business last Monday. Faces Patent Charge Bp United Press EAST ST. LOUIS. 111.. Nov. 20. Darwin Retherford. Indianapolis, Ind.. was charged with infringement of patent rights in an indictment by a federal grand jury here Wednesday. Summerall Retires Wednesday Bp United Press WASHINGTON, Nov. 20—General Charles P. Summerall, army chief of staff, bade farewell to his officers today prior to surrendering his post PTiday to Major-General Douglas MacArthur. Employment Aid Named Bp United Press WASHINGTON. Nov. 20—Appointment of Harold P. Fabian of Salt Lake City as regional adviser to the President’s emergency committee on employment was announced today by Chairman Arthur Woods. Hoover Leaders to Confer Bp United Press WASHINGTON. Nov. 20—Speaker Longworth and Republican Floor Leader Tilson were expected to return her.e today or, Friday for a conference with President Hoover on the house legislative program. Charge Poison in Milk By I'nitcd Press WASHINGTON, Nov. 20.—An attempt to force unionization of milk drivers by dumping a poisonous substance on milk trucks was disclosed in confessoins attributed by police to three men under arrest here today. Five Drown in Wreck Bp United Press BRUSSELS, Nov. 20.—Five members of the crew of the British steam-continental freighter were drowned when the vessel sank after

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tin;—jjt-r soaha. ■ eJHa—P | 25 . K.NTS TIM. Ir. M. I Hurry! Last 2 Days! I I’arirt romance of the Northwest i RIVER'S Ij/IMS 3®l y .tame* V i illv.r

AMUSEMENTS

colliding with the steamer Hobble, operated by the London. Midland and Scottish railway, in Antwerp Harbor late Wednesday. Fights Inland Waterways Bp United Press NEW YORK. Nov. 20.—Limitation of expenditures on inland waterways to projects for which there is economic justification was urged before the Railways Business Association by Samuel R. Botsford. executive vice-president of the Buffalo chamber of congres. Botsford decried the present "pork barrel” tendencies of certain propgaganda that related to inland waterways. Mrs. Hoover to New York Bp United Press WASHINGTON. Nov. 20— Mrs. Herbert Hoover will leave tonight for New York to attend a banquet given by the Girl Scouts Friday. Mrs. Hoover is national honorary president of the Girl Scouts. Quiet Restored in Cuba Bp United Press WASHINGTON, Nov. 20—Restoration of quiet in the city of Havana, where students rioted last week, and in the Cuban interior was reported to the state department today by Harry Guggenheim. American ambassador. RITES SET FOR BERT F. SLOAN City Grain Dealer Is Dead in Evanston, 111. Bert F. Sloan, 73. prominent Indianapolis grain dealer, died in Evanston, 111., Wednesday night. Mr. Sloan was a resident of Indianpolis for thirty-five years and was a member of the Indianapolis Board of Trade. Four months ago he became ill, was a patient in several hospitals and finally went to the home of his daughter, Mrs. Mead Arbogast, at Evanston. Funeral services will be held at the Tabernacle Presbyterian church at 2 p. m. Saturday by the Rev. J. Ambrose Dunkel, pastor. Burial will be at Crown Hill cemetery. Survivors are Laurence H: Sloan, a son, of New York, and Mrs. Arbgoast.

MOTION PICTURES WHO = We’ll BTBack Tornorr ow! till „ANDY „ J CK3CK AttD DOiABU CH3CIC all the picture that has all AmwU Sjl ica shaking with laughter!

HURRY! "BUDDY" ROGERS DUCinC IIW” Last Day! HELEN KANE in iILHUO US Charlie Davis Stage Show fmMmAMA 7&%*w Should she reveal her V<rrjr • l($W Past—when Everything had been tacru / C’Mon Everybody! you’re Invited over to ■ Susie's for the strangest night you ever spent! _ ONE MIGHT . AT SUSIES A First National-Vitaphone Ilomavce with Br “f DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS JR. Free! BILLIE DOVE For jour fa- Ym . . Tt's true! She was a rheat. But unrortte chanty derstand this! She did it to save the man she °c7,“: n n , ‘ n oved from disgrace! Br H"**“ k CHAA.U& DAVIX Present} qiwffieaVdiidertUe Freda & Palace I Chilton&Ttiomas Musical Comedy muster* Kin * ' ind <dnr ' n of T "P* ©■ ={ )= 111 ; The Morgan Trio Evans Mermaids Salt Water Tricksters Do*e Danrln* Darling* in "—; mi z=i Charlies His Boys Brd ... Thr ril*rlm Prorressed Hot Tunes In Deep Water —And How!" *■ in *• -■ ni

afi^CIRCU \4flt Joyous Thousands ... §$ s W ,n G reatest t M j parade of all time! m-eyjnarold WUOYD if s 'FEET FIRST a()v Paramount Annual Mirthleat With T*C". .Vwh.™ Barbara Kent

JNOV. 20, 1930

GRILL WIFE OF LONG MISSING i GOTHAM JUDGE Mrs. Crater Is Suffering Collapse in Maine After She Is Quizzed. j Bp United Press PORTLAND. Me., Nov. 20—Mrs. Stella Crater, wife of Joseph Force Crater, missing New York supreme | court justice, is in her apartment in the Eastland hotel here today, sufj sering from a nervous breakdown. Mrs. Crater collapsed after havJ ing been questioned by John L. McDonnell, assistant district attorI ney of New York, j During the interview she denied emphatically that she had any knowledge of the whereabouts of i her husband, who has been missing , since Aug. 6. McDonnell said after the interview that Mrs. Crater had appeared highly nervous during the questioni ing. She denied, he said, that she knew anything of the financial affairs of her husband, but offered to return to New York to assist the investigation in any way possible. McDonnell arrived here Wednesday to investigate the case on behalf of Thomas C. T. Crain, district attorney of New York. Mrs. Crater's proposed return to New York will be dependent upon the advice of her physician, Dr. Adam P. Leighton of Portland, who Wednesday night described her condition as critical. McDonnell said that there Is a “possibility” the missing justice is in this city. BANDIT ROBS GROCERY Negro Holds up Manager, Gets sl2 as Customers Look On. While several customers stood in the store, a Negro bandit Wednesday night held up Clarence Ellis, R. R. 2, Box 600. manager of a Standard grocery, $64 Indiana avenue, qna took sl2 from the cash register. Motorist Robbed by Bandits Two bandits leaped into the auto of H. J. Baker, 4425 College avenue, as he left a parking place at Capitol avenue and Market street Wednesday night, held him up. and robbed him of SB, police were told.