Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 185, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 December 1930 — Page 13

■EC. 12, 1930.

COMPANIONATE WAVE INVADES BISHOHFLOCK Daughter of Minister in Manning’s Diocese Weds and Tells Views. - ny United Press METUCHEN, N. J, Dec. 12.—A marriage ceremony performed here taro months ago, with the full rites ' of the Episcopal church may serve to heighten the bitterness of the controversy between Bishop William T. Manning and ex-Judge Ben B. Lindsey over problems of marriage reformFor the bride is the daughter of a minister In the bishop's own diocese, and the marriage, according to the principals, Is a companionate one. When Shirley White, 22, and Chester G. A. Zucker, her fiance, ■went to the Rev. D. Eliot White to discuss plans for their wedding in October, they found somewhat to their surprise, that he approved their ideas of birth control -and easier divorce. On Companionate Order Why," he told them, “my own marriage in 1904 was in some ways companionate, only the term by which it now is known hadn't been invented then." So Dr. White performed the ceremony, and it was not until Lindsey, fiery champion of marriage reform, was kicked from the Church of St. John the Divine into court on a charge of distributing public worship that any public mention of it was made. But Dr. White feels deeply, about the minor riot that ended in the ejection of Lindsey. It was he who, as chairman of the speakers’ committee, invited Lindsey to address the New York Churchmen’s. Assoiatlon. Minister not Concerned Mr. and Mrs. Chester Zucker, however, are but little concerned ’with the significance of the example they have set. “We’re happy,” declared the minister's daughter. -“Why should we worry?" “We never have thought of ours as a trial marriage. We intended "it to be permanent, and we think it will be permanent. “But we do feel that divorce, when married persons consider it necessary to their happiness, should be made easier, and by mutual consent, instead of through the present farcical methods- “ The really ‘companionate’ part of our marriage is our plan to postpone having children until we are prepared for them. It is not a question of religion and love, but of 'economics." JUST AS CLEAR AS MUD It’s Easy to Understand Einstein’s Theories—According to Scientist. • PM Times Special LONDON, Dec. 12—FOr those who have trouble understanding the .theories of Professor Albert Einstein of the fourth dimension, a famous English scientist explains it in the following planner: “It means,” he says, “that in a tour-dimensional world we could -turn a tennis ball inside out without . cutting it." There you are.- As easy as falling off a log.

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• Sensational charge that members of the New York police vice squad employed him to “frame" vice charges against women have been made by Chile Mapocha Acuna, above, alleged “informer" for the police. His testimony in a court investigation collaborated that of five women who told of being arrested when no evidence # had been, obtained against them.

AVIATION COSTS U. S, BIG SUM I—‘Next Year’s Appropriation May Be $100,000,000. Bu Scrinrt.i-Howard Newsoacer Alliance WASHINGTON, Dec. 12.—Avia- ; tion during the next fiscal year will delve into the federal treasury to ! the tune of a hundred million dol- ! lars. The army and navy air services alone will account for more than | two-thirds of it. The postoffice de- | partment will spend a fifth of it on | the air mail. The commerce department, in | aiding commercial aviation, will use | a tenth of the total. The total asked by the various government agencies for the next fiscal year amounts to $100,187,320. i Most of the items already have been approved by the house appropriaj tions committee. The total appropriated for aviation for use during the current I year was $93,628,095. The current | fiscal year is the one which started ! July 1, 1930, and ends July 1, 1931. I Appropriation figures now being considered by the house are for the fiscal year starting in the middle of next year. SEE 104 ‘DUDE RANCHES’ Real Estate Survey Along Northern Pacific Route Reveals Galaxy. By United Press CHICAGO, Dec. 12—There are 104 ‘dude ranches” along the Northern Pacific route, according to a real estate survey.

‘WE WANT BIG toys; clamor HOOVER TOTS Wagons and ‘Train Injuns’ Are Heart’s Desire of White House Kids. By Unitec'. Press WASHINGTON, Dec. 12.—Santa Claus today received his orders from the White House. And the orders call for no mere Christmas dolls. The President’s grandchildren would like wagons and “train injuns." Furthermore, they do not want little ones; they want “great big" ones. And to complete his list. Herbert Hoover, 111, aged 2’i, thinks it would be pretty nice if he could have a policeman’s uniform and billy clubHerbert 111, and his sister, Peggy, aged 4made'their desires known when they posed for talking pictures with their grandmother on the White House lawn. They are

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staying there with their baby sister, Joan, while their father, the President’s oldest son, recuperates at Asheville, N. C., from an illness. Arrangements were made for them to appear before the camera to tell what they wanted for Christmas. At first the arrangements did not work out. A man repeatedly asked them questions while the cameras ground away, but he could get no replies. Herbert was busy pulling the tail of a large White House collie. And then the shiny buttons on the coat of a White House policeman attracted him and he struck up an acquaintance with the patrolman. At this point the President’s wife was called Upon to help. She elicited the information for Santa Claus without difficulty. RADIUM ORES FOUND Additional Deposits Are Expected to Yield Rich Stores; By Times Special PRAGUE, Dec. 12. Additional deposits of ' radium ore which are expected to yield rich stores of radium have been found in Bohemia, near where Madame Curie made her first discoveries. - Discoverers of the ores claim that the quality of them is unique and that water In which they are placed becomes radio-active at once.

STALIN’S FALL HERALDED BY TRAITOR TRIAL Diplomats Foresee Radical Change in Policies by Soviet. BY WILLIAM PHILIP SIMMS Scripps-Howard Foreign Editor WASHINGTON, Dec. 12.—The end of the iron rule of Joseph Stalin, dictator of Red Russia, or else a drastic change of Communist policy is expected in diplomatic circles here as a result of recent events. While the curtain has rung down on the Moscow “farce,” as the trial of the eight engineers is dubbed in the chancelleries, observers are predicting that it merely Is a matter of time before it will ring up again on a dramatic, if not tragic, epilog enacted on the same stage. Had the alleged traitors been lined up against a wall and shot, like other red traitors have been up to now, as one observer expressed

it to the writer, the Kremlin masters would have been given credit at least for believing in their own case. But as that was not done, a perfect wave of conjecture, speculation, and prediction is sweeping the world capitals, in some of which the astounding commutation of the death sentence to ten years in prison has produced an impression of angry cynicism. In Paris there is talk of breaking off diplomatic relations, while in London, Foreign Minister Henderson has had to answer angry question after question, with more ! to come. The feeling seems to be that the Russian regime, facing difficulties, deliberately has involved neighboring states in an effort to placate opinion at home, and further international developments are regarded as inevitable. In France and Great Britain, particularly, bitter resentment is reported. The trial is pictured as a deliberate frame-up to save Stalin’s face abroad and his scalp at home. It was designed, they say, to cover the failure of the five-year plan, on which Moscow was staking everything, and to place the blame for its failure, and the resulting hunger and suffering on foreign countries. An ounce of gold now is worth about fifty ounces of silver.

MAKES ROUGE FOR GEMS Englishman Practices Old Craft; Women Use Carmine, He-Says. LONDON, Dec. 12.—Thomas Anthony Hutchinson practices one of the oldest crafts in the world—

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that of malting rouge and polishes for jewels. His is a traditional trade that has~been carried on for 130 years by his family. He explains that what women put on their faces Isn’t rouge at all; it's carmine.