Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 179, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 December 1930 — Page 20
PAGE 20
WORLD COURT ISSUE SPLITS G. 0. P. RANKS Senate Leaders at Odds Over Hoover’s Demand of Prompt Action. By United Free* WASHINGTON, Dec. s.—Dissension over the world court has split Republican leadership in the senate so completely that the burden of acting for the administration is passing to freshman members of the upper house. As cleavage continues there 1s disclosed a real threat of a special session of congress resulting from President Hoover’s insistence that the court issue be taken up by the senate this winter. Senator Vandenberg (Rep., Mich.), serving his first term in the senate and a member of the once-famous Republican young guard, outlined the senatorial dilemma to Mr. Hoover Thursday. He emerged from the executive office confident the court would not be acted on this session. Watson Opposed to Court Vandenberg ranks next to last on the senate foreign relation committee. Majority Leader Watson, who vigorously counseled Mr. Hoover not to submit the court project this session, might have rendered the White House a report on senate developments, but Watson opposes the court. He also apparently is theratening to let Mr. Hoover suffer, without assistance, any consequences which may arise from submission of the project. Chairman Borah of the foreign relations committee scarcely could plan strategy with the President because he will vote against the project. Next in seniority on the committee are two more of the irreconcilables who figured in the League of Nations fight and who oppose the court, Senators Moses (Rep., N. H.), and Johnson (Rep., Cal ). Harrison Backs Robinson Rumors of Democratic dislike of Minority Leader Robinson’s tactics in the senate has brought from Senator Harrison (Dem., Miss.) the statement that not “a corporal's guard’’ would join a movement to retire Robinson to the ranks. Robinson is from Arkansas. He wears spats. President Hoover appointed him a member of the American delegation to the London naval conference and Robinson returned to defend the treaty in the senate. But for his support, Democrats would have dealt more severely with that document, although there might not have been sufficient votes to reject it. The spatg and Robinson’s defense of the treaty aroused some caustic but guardedly private criticism of Robinson among his senate followers. Referred to as Republican His signature to the Democratic leaders’ statement just after the election pledging co-operation in enactment of emergency measures renewed criticism. This week Robinson sought to lead Democratic senators to vote against delaying administration of the oath to Senator-elect Davis, (Rep., Pa.) whose campaign expenditures were under investigation. Only twenty Democrats followed Robinson on Davis and seventeen refused to join. In the half-serious, half-facetious gossip in the lobbies Robinson is being referred to as one of the Republican leaders because of the post-election statement and the Davis incident. The senate Is In recess until Monday. FRENCH OCEAN FLIER MISSING OVER DESERT Lefevre Feared Lost in .Country of Hostile Arabs. By United Press ORAN, Algeria, Dec. s.—Rene Lefevre, who piloted the French monoplane Yellow Bird on its transAtlantic flight, was missing today on a flight across a desert region inhabited by unfriendly Arabs. Lefevre left Oran Tuesday for Colomb-Bechar, flying a low-pow-ered tourist plane along the edge of the Sahara desert. Colomb-Bechar Ls south and west of Oran. LEGION POST TO AID NEEDY RELIEF WORK Acton Veterans Vote to Support Police, Firemen’s Campaign. Support to the relief work being performed by the Police and Firemen’s post of the American Legion was pledged by legionnaires at a district meeting in the quarters of the Bunker Hill post in Acton Thursday night. Charles E. Jefferson. Seventh district relief and welfare chairman, was instructed to aid in the campaign for clothing and food to be distributed to the needy. HITS SOVIET OPPOSITION Former World Court Judge Says V. S. Should Recognize Government. By United Press NEW YORK. Dec. s.—John Bassett Moore, former judge of the world court, believes America should recognize the Soviet Russian government and dispel its fear about the wave of Communism in the United States. In an address before the New York Bar Association, he said it was a mistake to impose embargoes on Soviet goods. Free speech and free press are being endangered, he asserted. by the congressional investigation of Soviet activities in this country.
Jrt PAY CASH—SAVE HALF ).l) | DIAMONDS % Watches and Jewelry a? * Buy Sow Jor Christmas | DAVID ml A Ptionp Call to Klthcr . iY V: Number v* Aft TAlboi 6442—HArrfson 1127 J.|J tAT, Will Open My Jewelry Case % t _ In Vour Home 9k 1
HOLLYWOOD MAKES FESTIVE FETE OF YULE SEASON, DESPITE LACK OF SNOW
By United Press , Hollywood, caij Dec. 4 Christmas comes to Hollywood just as it does to Kokomo—once a year—and is considerably merry. Kokomo, for all its snow, holds the Yuletide no merrier than does the film capitaT, where Santa Claus is tempted to change his furs for a bathing suit. This year, the film capital has gone modernistic. The usual Christmas trees which are stretched from one end of Holly-
Adventurous Air Cronies Will Explore Ancient Peruvian Ruins
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Her eare the five members of the Shippee-Johnson Peruvian expedition, pictured in front of one of their planes at Red Bank, N. J. Left to right are Max Distal, 24, mechanic; Robert Shippee, 20, son of a wealthy New York broker; Valentine Van Keuren, 30, pilot and civil engineer; Irving G. Hay, 24, chief pilot and navigator; George R. Johnson, 30, aerial photographer.
SISTERS, LOVER slain at mm Hammond Worker and Two Women Found Dead, Bv Vnited Pre CHICAGO, Dec. s.—Mysterious deaths of two sisters and the sweetheart of one of them confronted police here Thursday night when neighbors called them to investigate shots heard in a bungalow on the edge of the city. The police found in the house the bodies of Miss Mathilda Holm, 24, and Mrs. Caroline Anderson, 35, sisters who lived in the bungalow, and Gunar O’Berg, 28, machinist, who worked in Hammond, Ind. While the police were looking at the bodies, 16-year-old Vincent Anderson, Mrs. Anderson’s son, returned to the house. He said his mother had sent him on an errand only a few minutes before the shooting occurred. Vincent told the officers that O’Berg had been Miss Holm’s sweetheart. He knew of no quarrels. In the Air Weather conditions in the air 9 a. m.: East northeast wind, 8 miles an hour; barometric pressure, 30.11 at sea level; temperature, 44; ceiling, 3,000 feet; visibility, three-fourths miles; field, good. Plane Wings Variable Bti XEA Service WASHINGTON, Dec. s.—Waldo D. Waterman, famous pilot, has developed a plane with variable wings which, it is said, results in greater safety and efficiency in aviation. , Each wing is hinged at an angle of 25 degrees to the line of flight. At the trkeoff, the wings are horizontal, but in the air the wing is bent to a variable angle by the pilot. Fly to Hunt Deer A party of Indianapolis men recently flew to Brainerd, Minn., for a five-day deer hunting trip into the northern woods on which they brought down a 200-pound buck. Leaving Indianapolis in a TravelAir cabin monoplane, the party reached Brainerd six and one-half hours later after stops for business tat Culver, Ind., Milwaukee and West Bond, Wis. The party included McFarland Benham of the Benham-Pray Company, and F. Holland Buck and Walker Winslow of the Indiana Air Corporation. Mrs. Miller at Miami. By l iii ted Prees f M*AMI, Fla., Dec. s.—Mrs. KeithMiller, Australian aviator, landed here at 9:10 a. m. today from Havana via the Bahama islands, where she was forced down last Saturday. Mrs. Keith-Miller left Havana for Miami six days ago. lost her way in a storm and landed on the island of Andros in the Bahama group. She left Andros early today. Navy Tests Diesels Bv XEA Service WASHINGTON, Dec. 5. Two Packard Diesel aircraft engines are being tested out by the United States navy to check their suitability for lighter-than-air craft. If they prove satisfactory, it is thought the engines will be installed on the "ZRS-5,” the second of the navy's huge dirigibles now being built at Akron, O. STUDY REVOLVING FUND Farmer Leaders Consider 5200.000,000 Sum for Land Bank Bonds. By Vailcd Prets BOSTON, Dec. s.—Congress may be asked to create a $200,000,000 revolving fund from which the United States treasury can purchase federal land bank bonds from time to time, as the interest rate in the open market becomes too high. A resolution carrying this provision was considered here today by the resolutions committee of the American Farm Bureau Federation preliminary to the federation’s annual meeting next Monday.
wood boulevard to the other are of metal, attached to lamp posts. Colored lights play upon them. Hollywood's celebration, at times, included a nightly paiade of Santa Claus and those of filmland who have participated include Nancy Carroll, Mary Brian, Lillian Roth, June Collyer, Kay Francis. Anita Page, Fay Wray, Carole Lombard and Jean Arthur. a u a AMONG the screen players who have lighted Christmas trees ranging from 40 to 100 feet in height
Young Pilots of Shippee- j Johnson Expedition Will Map Rugged Wilderness; Sail for Peru Today. Bv XEA Service RED BANK, N. J„ Dec. s.—lt’s the high road to adventure that five young cronies of an airport here have chosen, for they are going to spend several months in flying over unmapped and unexplored regions in the interior of Peru. The Shippee-Johnson Peruvian expedition has two planes, the encouragement of science, some $50,000 worth of equipment, carefully laid plans and plenty of youthful enthusiasm. For the mean age of the party is less than 26. And four of the five are skilled pilots. In the uncharted wilderness where prehistoric civilizations are believed to have flourished, they expect to add materially to the knowledge of archeologists, geographers ynd geologists. They will make aerial maps and moving pictures, and may find treasure in the age-old ruins which their cameras will reveal. The expedition has the indorse-ment-of the American Geographical Society, the American Museum of Natural History and the Harvard Geographical Society. And the Peruvian government has agreed to assist the adventurers, who will sail for Lima today. Johnson, Photographer It was less than a year ago that George R. Johnson, 30-year-old flying photographer, returned from an assignment with the United States naval mission sent under commande of Lieutenant H. B. Grow to reorganize the Peruvian air service. Johnson, a lieutenant, had served as chief of the photographic division. He was the first to fly over and photograph the crater of El Misti, the 20,000-foot volcanic peak that rises near Arequipa. Again, on a flight to Cuzco, the pilot wandered from his course and Johnson’s films revealed the presence of ancient ruins and two inhabited towns which were absolutely unknown to the Peruvian government. Shippee, Broker’s Son Johnson wanted to return to the Peruvian Altiplano for further research and mapping. At the Red Bank airport, where his plane is frequently seen, he confided his plans to Robert Shippee, 20-ye&r-old son of Carl C. Shippee, wealthy New York broker.' Shippee. who has had two years of geology at Harvard, and who holds q, private pilot’s license, wanted to go along. They enlisted Irving Gerald Hay, 24, who inherited his desire for adventure from hia father, Captain Patrick Irving O’Day, Irish soldier of fortune. Young Hay, who was j chief pilot of a flying service and numbers Mrs. Keith Miller among his students, was named pilot and navigator of the expedition. ; Use Bellanca Planes Next came Valentine Van Keuren, 30. secretary and treasurer of the jted Bank Airport, Inc. During the war he served with the navy air service, is a graduate civil engineer, and holds a limited commercial pilot's license. The fifth member is Max Distel, 24-year-old mechanic. Two new Bellanca planes have been bought, and one equipped with supercharger for flying to an altitude of 20,000 feet. Johnson had the cabin of the latter especially built to his own design to permit the use of his mapping and movie cameras. The expedition in Lima will remain about six months. PROPER ADVERTISING HELD BUSINESS AID | Club Speaker Cites Way to Boost . Sales and Profits. Effective advertising will bolster up business and a brighter era then will come, declared Leslie M. Bar- ; ton, Chicago, managing director of i the -100,000 Group of American Cities at the Advertising Club meeting Thursday. ‘•Advertising has helped countless business concerns to pile up profits and increase sales, but it must be advertising which truly gives the readers an incentive to buy,” he said. Barton discussed evidence of the value of advertising and the fact | that it j>aid. He recommended new 1 methods and avenues of approach lto the buyer.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TDIES
in their yards each season, are Fay Wray, Richard Arlen, Clive Brook, Ruth Chatterton, Clara Bow, June Collyer, Conrad Nagel and Gary Cooper. There are some Christmas features to which Hollywood looks forward. One is the feminine Santa Claus role played by Clara Bow. She and Bebe Daniels probably distribute more gifts than any other players in filmland. Every member of her companies, from director down to laborers, are remembered.
PARENTS FEAR BABY KIDNAPED Girl, 2, Disappears From Home During Night. By United Press NEWARK, N. J., Dec. 5.—A 2-year-old girl, Evelyn Gaffney, disappeared early today from the second floor apartment in which her parents, to brothers and sister were asleep Police feared she had been kidnaped. The parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Gaffney, were awakened when Frank James and Marie noticed that Evelyn was missing from her bedand they started shouting for her. A search did not result in the finding of the girl, and police believed a robber who was in the neighborhood had entered the home and abducted the girl. THEATERS WILL COLLECT TOYS Camp Fire Girls Arrange to Help Poor Children. Old or new toys will admit children to eight theater parties to be held Saturday under auspices of the Guardians’ Association of Camp Fire Girls to accumulate toys for needy children, it was announced today. Parties scheduled for 10 Saturday morning and persons in charge, follow: Rivoll, Tenth and Dearborn streets: Mesdames Ralph Stratman, G. ~8. Ludwig and Annette Clinton: Strand, 1332 East Washington street. Misses Mary Marshall and Kathleen Klaiber: Savoy. 1223 Oliver avenue: Misses Pauline Mohler and Hazel Smith: Granada, 1045 Virginia avenue, Mrs. Julia Ferris. Miss Martha Scott, Mrs. Edith Derbyshire. Miss Naomi Burton and Miss Ethelmae Miller: Zaring. Twenty-eighth street and Central avenue. Mrs. A. L. Jenkins, Miss Jane Leßlant and Mrs. Sophie Westervelt, and the Irving. Ritter avenue and Washington street. Miss Louise Reiter, Mrs. Harry Hvdron. Mrs. Henry Clark, Mrs. G. R. Randall and Miss Rosalena Voeller. A party will be given at the Dream theater, 233.4 Station street, at 2 Saturday afternoon. At 10 the morning of Dec. 13 a party will be given at the Rex theater. Thirty-first. street and Northwestern avenue. The guardians will be Miss Ruth Ormsby, Mrs. Mary Gordon and Miss Ethelmae Miller. SET PUPILS’ PROGRAM Festival Scene to Be Given at Children’s Museum Saturday. A festival scene of the Indiana, corn ceremony will be given by Jackson graded school pupils at the children's museum Saturday morning at 10:30. A Butler university student will relate Indian legends. The program is free to school pupils. Egypt will be discussed by pupils taking the second course of geography talks at 9:30. The pupils will report to their classmates Monday morning.
Embarrassing Moments You can avoid them. The trick is in knowing what to do, when to do it, how to do it. Good manners and good form are the lubricants that make the wheels of intercourse and pleasurable contact between people go round smoothly. Knowing when and how to do the “proper thing”—the thing that is expected of well bred persons everywhere—is of incalculable advantage in the course of life. Our Washington Bureau has 'ready for you a package of six of its authoriative, interesting, informative bulletins on all phases of ETTQUET. The titles are: 1. Social Etiquet 4. The Etiquet of Dress for all oc2. The Etiquet of Travel casions 3. Dinner Etiquet 5. Etiquet for Weddings 6. Food Manners for Children A packet containing these six bulletins will be sent on request. Fill out the coupon below and mail as directed. CLIP COUPON HERE Department A-4, Washington Bureau, The Indianapolis Times, 1322 New York avenue, Washington, D. C. I want the packet of six bulletins err ETIQUET. and inclose herewith 20 cents in coin of loose, uncancelled. United States postage stamps to cover return postage and handling costs. Name Street and No ~ cit ? State lam a daily reader of The Indianapolis Times, fCode No.)
ANOTHER is Mary Brian’s greeting cards. She sends out thousands each year. Each card to date has contained her autograph. Then there are Jack Oakie's practical Joke gifts. He is the fellow’ who sent Ruth Chatterton an ivory tooth pick, Adolph Menjou a mustache cup, Maurice Chevalier a French dictionary, Leon Errol a knee-brace, William Powell a subscription to a detective story magazine and Kay Francis a set of ear muffs.
BETTER WAGES, PLEA OF HIGH LABORJFFICIAL Policy Would Make More Jobs During Crisis, Woll Says. By United Press PHILADELPHIA, Dec. s.—Labor’s program for the solution of unemployment was presented today by Matthew Woll, vice-president of the American Federation of Labor, at the opening of the national conference on “Security in Industry” under the auspices of the American Academy of Political and Social Science. Labor’s solution, as presented by Woll, is to increase the purchasing power of the masses. That mainly would be accomplished by increased wages and shorter working hours. “The policy labor proposes would affect all industries and all employment,” Woll said. “It greatly would increase the amount of employment during so-called periods of prosperity and would automatically reduce unemployment to a minimum during less favorable periods. 'Advance Purchasing Power!* “Labor’s policy can be stated in a few words: Mass consumption must be enabled to keep pace with mass production; the purchasing power of the masses must be advanced in direct and equal proportion to the economies of labor, made possible by improvements in industrial processes and the organization of industry. “Purchasing power may be advanced either by an increase in the income of the masses or by a lowering of prices or by a combination of the two movements.” In advocating shorter working hours, Woll argued that the increasing efficiency of industry by machine methods, which might otherwise increase unemployment, would be used to increase the leisure time of the American people. Warns of State Control Greater leisure, he contended, would lead to greater expenditure and a ’consequent further increase of purchasing power. In sounding a call for industry and labor to get together in the common interest, Woll warned of a possible form of state control of industry in this country unless progress is made toward a solution. “Industry,” he said, “must work it out within itself. If industry stands with a frozen back to the wall and with a brain paralyzed inthe face of the new condition, then the masses in their desperation may be expected to turn to a congress made responsive by the ballots of enraged people, demanding abdication of private interests in favor of the state.” EX-CHAMP NOW MAJOR TONNE! Connecticut Governor Gives Gene Post on Staff. By United Press NEW HAVEN. Conn., Dec. 5. James J. (Gene) Tunney, retired heavyweight boxing champion of the world, has been appointed a major on the staff of GovernorElect Wilbur L. Cross, Kenneth Wynn, executive secretary, announced today. The Democratic Governor-elect has been acquainted with Tunney for some time, the two having been introduced by a mutual friend, Professor William Lyon Phelps of Yale. As major on the Governor’s staff, the one-time sergeant in the | marine corps will be entitled to wear : a colorful gold-trimmed and | braided blue uniform similar to I that worn by John Coolidge, who j held a similar post under his | father-in-law, Governor John H. ! Trumbull. j “I have known Tunney for .a | good many years and he is a perj fectly splendid sort of fellow,” Gov r ; ernor-Elect Cross said. “I think 1 he’ll make a fine officer.” j “Tunney,” the Governor - elect | added, “has a kesn interest in good > government; he's a Democrat.”
AT Harold Lloyd’s there is a special Christmas custom. The tree which little Gloria has each year is a live one in a box. After Christmas, each year, the decorations are removed and the tree replanted until today she has living trees as memories of each Christmas. Hollywood folk will scatter but little for the holidays. The one who will be farthest away will be Marlene Dietrich. She will be home in Berlin.
Stowaway on Leviathan
If Mrs. Percy Albro, above, can prove that she is a United States citizen, she will be released by immigration authorities, by whom she now is detained. ptherwise she’ll have to-work her passage back to England like any other stowaway. She arrived on the Levithan recently.
Brickbats! Students of 3 Colleges Exchange Views of Each Other.
CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Dec. 5. Groups of Harvard, Dartmouth and Radcliffe students have looked at the student bodies of each school and today made their ratings—some quite uncomplimentary. The Harvard student, for instance, says of the composite Dartmouth man: “He is a rah-rah, wah-hoo-wah collegian, thinks himself ‘heap big rough fellow,’ is athletic, alcoholic, crude, uncultivated, extravagant or wealthy, poor scholar, has large physique, wears shorts, green sweater and a fur coat and likes the outdoors.” Radcliffe girls say about the same thing of the Dartmouth man, whereas Dartmouth men think of their composite man as “he man, democratic, athletic, vigorous and rough and ready.” a a HARVARD men are “intellectual, conceited, snobbish, indifferent poseurs and good fun,” according to Radcliffe students. Harvard students themselves thing their typical man is “indifferent, blase, indolent, conceited, snobbish,” adding he speaks with an accent, wears old clothes and generally comes from an old family. Harvard men said Radcliffe girls “ape” Harvard men, desire to be co-eds, were sophisticated and education conscious and wear hornrimmed spectacles and low heels. Yale got no chance to judge the others, bub Harvard and Radcliffe made up the composite Yale man as one who “uses Slikum, is rahrah, collegiate, a back slapper,” and, according to the girls, is “a social lion, wealthy, learned, indifferent and manly.” Dartmouth’s view of Harvard men was: “Harvard men are small, weak, unathletfc, affected, polished, studious and effeminate.” Kiwanians Aid Relief • NOBLESVILLE, Ind., Dec. 5. The Kiwanis Club of Noblesville has voted an assessment of 50 cents weekly on each member to assist charitable organizations of the city during the winter months. This assessment will raise about SSO a week.
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GARY COOPER plans to be in Montana, going there to hunt with Eugene Pallette. A few, such as Nancy Carroll, Claudette Colbert, Fredric March, Phillips Holmes, Ina Claire. Charlie Ruggles, Stanley Smith and Norman Foster, will be in New York. Two war dering Hollyywood citizens will return in time for Christmas. One is Maurice Chevalier. The other is Charles Rogers.
BERT FULLER IMPROVED Decided improvement in the condition of Bert C. Fuller, well-known Republican leader who has been seriously ill for the past two weens was reported today. It was said that his condition had changed so much that one of the two nurses attending him has been permitted to leave.
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_DEC. 5, 1930
MORROW GIVEN BACK SEAT BY ENVIOUS MATES Jersey Senator Shunted to Unimportant Berths on Senate Committees. Bu Brrinns-Tloteard XetcsDaner Allinnrn WASHINGTON. Dec. s.—lt may be a long time * before Senator Dwight W. Morrow of New Jersey will seek or be given a chance to shine in the senate as brilliantly as he has in the field of law, finance, father-in-lawing and diplomacy. The man hailed as a possible presidential candidate in 1932 and leader of Republican wets sits today in a corner seat under the visitors’ balcony in the rear row of the senate. He has been given unimportant committee assignments, although he is counted on to show his real ability as a committee negotiator rather than on senate floor. “Puddling Jim” Davis of Pennsylvania, whose antics have amused the capital these many years, received far better assignments, and so did Senator Robert Carey from the remote state of Wyoming. Shunted to Rear Ranks v These latter two were placed on banking and currency, to mention only one of fairly decent committeeships given to them. But Morrow, the former partner of J. P. Morgan & Cos., will sene on such lowly bodies as education and labor, military affairs, postoffices and post roads, printing, and public buildings and grounds. The seniority rule, together with some slight soreness at the blowing of trumpets which accompanied the Jerseyman’a entry into politics, is held responsible. There was considerable comment as to whether Republican leaders did not set out deliberately to submerge Morrow and cast a damper on the movement to nominate him two years hence. Hazing Due for Morrow Moreover, numerous members of the senate are set to administer an old-fashioned hazing to the distinguished little figure in their rear ranks, provided he furnishes the opportunity. Not that they hold anything against him personally. Most of his associates, including the Republican progressives, are disposed to like and admire him. But the senate always has hazed those who, in the senate’s opinion, might have an undue opinion of their own greatness. Thus it administered a drubbing to millionaire “Jim” Couzens of Michigan, Dr. Royal S. Copeland of New York, George Wharton Pepper of Pennsylvania, and Henry J. Allen of Kansas, self-appointed presidential spokesman.
