Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 190, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 December 1930 — Page 14

PAGE 14

FRANK GREENE. SENATOR FROM VERMONT. DIES New England Leader of G. 0. P. Was Veteran of Spanish War. Untied Press ST. ALBANS. Vt.. Dec. lor Frank L. Greene <Rep.), died late Wednesday at St. Albans hospital after suffering a relapse from iiis operation for a hernia. Senator Greene was born in St. \ibans, Feb. 10. IP7O. Family reverses forced him to quit public school at the age of 13,

md he served as errand boy, later > stenographer an and, Anally, a chief clerk in the Central Vermont Railway. In 1891, he entered the newspaper business as a reporter for ih e St. Albans Daily Messenger. Eight years later he became editor. Greene became interested in !>olitics at an

Senator Greene

early age and attended several state and national Republican conven- : ions as a delegate. He never sought nor held office until elected to the Sixty-second congress to serve the unexpired erm of the late David J. Foster, m 1912. Since then he served in the house until 1922 when he was elected to ucceed the late Senator Page. Greene was re-eiected to the senate ior the term ending March 3, 1935. He was married and had three children. Greene attained a rank of captain during the Spanish-American war in which he saw active service. At the close of the conflict he was commissioned colonel. Undecided on Successor />■// Vnlted Press RUTLAND. Vt., Dec. 18.—Governor John E. Weeks, here on a prison inspection tour, announced today he was undecided as to a successor to Senator Frank L. Greene, who died late Wednesday. Rum Battle Caused Death By United Press WASHINGTON. Dec. 18.—A bullet tired nearly seven years ago was largely responsible for the death of Senator Frank L. Greene. Green never had recovered completely from the effects of the wound received Feb. 15, 1924, when he was struck by a bullet during the liquor battle on Pennsylvania avenue here. MRS. BEN LINDSEY IS IN CRITICAL CONDITION Wife of Famous Former Judge on Verge of Nervous Breakdown. By United Press LOS ANGELES, Dec. 18.—Mrs. Ben Lindsey, wife of the foremost advocate of companionate marriage, is on the verge of a nervous breakdown and her condition is critical, it was learned here today. It was said that Mrs. Lindsey, who soon is to become a mother, has been in poor health since her husband was disbarred from the courts of Colorado more than a year ago. His arrest in New York for causing a disturbance in the cathedral of St. John the Divine aggravated the illness, her physician said. BANK CASE IS PROBED U. S. Grand Jury to Study 570.000 Evansville Fraud Charge. Federal investigation has been started in the alleged embezzlement of national bank funds by Louis G. Otto, former assistant cashier of the Citizens National Bank of Evansville. A national bank examiner Wednesday went to Evansville to obtain evidence for presentation to the federal grand jury which will meet early in 1931. Otto, held in lail at Evansville, is said to have confessed taking $70,000 of the bank's money. Printers Aid Needy I'y Times Speeinl FT. WAYNE. Ind., Dec. 18.—One per cent of the earnings of members of the typographical uHon here will be donated for a period of ninety days to create a fund for aid of the needy.

PV DR. FORSHEE’SLEADERSHIP >3! V!V HIGH-CLASS PAINLESS DENTISTRY f I Y(\ advanced ideas jQUr ! s °” v \ilA. PRICES THAT DEFY one i £ Wk. COMPETITION "av 5 l| 11 Yo ° ' lkc 1n iiisoun SERVICE j IDEAL PLATE Rcst-E.il) § THE MAN WHO KNOWS HOW JRr T)r. Forshees method of painless extraction NBP ►- qpc St^BT' is the most successful known today. JN I Jfflr Dr. I 'jfggT 221/2 N. PENN. Rl ley 5708 FOUNTAIN SQUARE OFFICE i 1108 SHELBY ST. DREXEL 7360 Vlm **t Meridian iJbdrrM. OTe— riinn- .TOM ■■■; -■,

MYSTERY OF DEATH REFLECTED IN FILM “Outward Bound,” Due at Apollo Saturday, Shows Souls Bound for Heaven or Elsewhere. SUTTON VANE, the English playwright, startled two continents with his stage play, “Outward Bound,” a Warner Brothers adaptation of which comes to the Apollo, Saturday, with Leslie Howard in the leading role. ‘‘Outward Bound” is an attempt to penetrate the veil of mystery that shrouds the “undiscovered country.” In furtherance of his idea, Mr. Vane places seven passengers aboard an unnamed vessel sailing on an unchartered sea in a dense fog. These passengers consist of a lovable ne'er-do-well, for whom his mother, also aboard the ship, a cockney charwoman, has made untold

sacrifices in order that he may live the life of a gentleman; a young woman with a shady past who has not been a good wife; a minister from the slums of London, and a harsh, unscrupulous business man. At first the passengers do lot realize what is in store for them, but are told by the kindly steward of the ship that the examiner, an emissary of the Unknown, will soon board the vessel to pass judgment upon them for their deeds and misdeeds. The findings of the examiner ivre as interesting as they are logical and show the breadth of the author’s vision and the depth of his human understanding. “Outward Bound” is said to be a tense and gripping drama. Leslie Howard heads the cast composed entirely of stage players, with Douglas Fairbanks Jr., and Helen Chandler as the juvenile leads. Others in the cast are Beryl Mercer, Alison Skip worth, T&ontagu Love and Lyoncl Watts. a a a “Here ’tis,'' “Yours Very Truly,” Little Jack Little, radio entertainer, has been booked for a personal appearance on the special Christmas week show which opens at the Lyric Saturday. It is said to be Jack's farewell stage appearance, inasmuch as he has been contracted for by the National Broadcasting Company to entertain exclusively from their studios in New York. Jack has long been a favorite with radio listeners of the station WLW in Cincinnati where he has held forth for several years. A supporting stage show of five RKO Vaudeville acts of merit Will be offered with Little Jack Little. The screen feature for the Christmas week bill is anew Fox movietone production, “The Princess and the Plumber,” and has for its star Charles Farrell, considered to be one of the screen's most popular stars. “The Princess and the Plumber” is a direct screen adaptation of Alice Duer Miller’s widely read magazine story, which has for its locale the castle of Daritza in a small Balkan principality. Charles Farrell- is an American plumbing engineer, who is sent by a New York firm to install a modern heating plant in the ancient castle. He falls in love with the winsome young miss whom he never suspects

A Gift /or Your HOME One of our lovely potted plants will spread sunshine and warmth ' about your home long after Christmas is over. Bring summer indoors with this gift that all the family will welcome! POTTED PLANTS $ J.OO t 0 s*^so soo^\

of being a real princess, and thereby har.gs the tale. Other members of the supporting cast include H. B. Warner, Bert Roach, Louise Closser Hale and Joseph Cawthom, noted stage comedian. The Times-Lyric Santa Claus is still in the lobby cf the Lyric every afternoon from 12 noon till 5:30 talking with the kiddies and presenting each with a gift box of candy. a an Indianapolis theaters today offer: Cecil Spooner in “The House of ; Fear” at English’s, “Derelict” at the ; Circle, Brooks and Ross at the In- i diana r “Life of the Party” at the ; Ohio, “Oh. For a Man” at the Apollo, “Hell’s Angels” at the Palace, “Man to Man” at the Lyric, “Black and White Revue” at the Mutual, and movies at the Colonial.

We Repair All Makes of Furnaces We Install New Victor Furnaces Thirty Years Learning How Neal Furnace Cos. Harry W. Neal, Prop. 2705-7 Northwestern Ave. TA. 0372

CINCINNATI $2.75 Round Trip Sunday, Dec. 21 Leave Indianapolis 6:00 A. M. Returning Leave Cinrinnati, Ita ymiller Station 6:05 I*. M.; Central Union Staton 10:00 I*. MET BALTIMORE & OHIO

•5 SERVICES For Your CONVENIENCE Phone RI. 3591 Excelsior Laundry

Guaranty Economy Dinner Specials Puree of Tomato Soup. CP 70 Fried White Fish with Tomato Sauce 250 Tenderloin Steak with Potatoes 400 Saute Chicken Livers with Mushrooms ..250 Fried Pork Chops with Cream Gravy (each) 20r> O'Brien Potatoes 100 Spaghetti. Italian ... 8c Potato Salad 100 Bread Pudding 100 Health Muffins or Rye Bread with Butter.. 50 Coffee 50 (No charge for second cup) GUARANTY CAFETERIA GUARANTY BUILDING Meridian at Circle Open 7 A. M. to 8 P. M.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

FACTORY HEADS OPPOSE INCOME TAX PROPOSAL Old Age Pensions and State Control of Industry Also Decried. Opposition to the proposed state income tax law, old age pensions and other measures was voiced by the Indiana Manufacturers’ Association in resolutions adopted at the annual meeting Wednesday at the Columbia Club. The resolutions were adopted after the members heard two informal speeches on taxation. The first was by State Senator Joe Rand Beckett, in which he outlined

I ' ' ' 1 FOLDING ■ ' j OXFORD EYEGLASSES St Oxford Mounting cn jr (Spring Guaranteed Against ‘ fn TX | Breakage) 'Ur——* \J——— i Reading or Distance $0.50 Soldered SO.OO i Vision Lenses O Link Chain £ I ' ; Other Style > Glauses Complete, $7 to sl2 f Satisfaction Guaranteed Fxaminaton Without Charge * *That Eyes Might Find Relief* UOOSIER 144 North Illinois St. Also Branch at Fountain Square, 1043 Virginia Ave.

Through sleet, ice, snow ... GO SAFELY, SWIFTLY! -• CtO! hj the /£■ am green 'ights on the steel \ I highway. And the all-steel nw l— „ electric flyer flashes through Muw.t the storm on cleared tracks! f How much pleasanter to at V”*""- back and read or relax in a \ warm,comfortable train—than V "* to bump oyer icy roads, fearful of skidding and snow-drifts! \ Take the electric highways this 1 winter! You'll make far better time aqd save money betide i Lo W week-end Excursion Fares —loc pin,-' the one-way fare. Indiana Railroad System Interstate Public Service Company Indiana Railroad

recommendations of the Governor’s tax committee, and the other by F. H. Clausen, Haricon, Wis., former president of the Wisconsin Manufacturers’ Association, and a member of its tax commission for several years. Clausen gave the manufacturers details of how industry was driven from Wisconsin by attempts to make the income tax a burden to the wealthy. He admitted, however, that despite the difficulties faced in the income tax, Wisconsin is growing industrially; but said the growth would be greater if it were not for the income tax laws. Resolutions adopted also expressed opposition to government operation of any industry which would compete with privately controlled business. Establishment of a government wage scale which would be operative in every locality, without reference to local wages for the same type of work, was opposed. False emphasis on the value of compensation for those injured in

industry and on the need of added safeguards against accidents in industry, drew fire. The resolutions also opposed pensions for unemployed, the Dill patent bill, and attempts to curtail the present power of the' United States courts. Reduction of public expenditures

SPECIAL SALE g [ ade £ fi * st quality, newmade *° sed a muc h higher price. We bought them at big $ 1 95 $0.95 W And a Few Fine Specials, $3.95 * Correct styles for every holiday occasion, in pumps, oxfords, straps and novelties, including all the favored colors, leathers y HOSIERY skp! 69c -79 c Main Store.. Merchants Bank Bldg. (Downstairs).. .Cor. Wash, and Mer. Sts. 1108 Shelby (Fountain Sq.) 2630 Northwestern Ave. 960 S. Meridian St. 342 Virginia Ave.

BUY A “Commander” Radio —IT’S NEW, -IT’S UP-TO-DATE — IT’S Licensed By RCA — IT’S Guaranteed By The VICTOR A IT’S the greatest radio value AINU ON THE MARKET TODAY! “Commander” Jr. ‘ SCREEN-GRID RADIO ill| II sij[§*s© $3.95 Iwmm §§3 down! j*|M sis “Commander” I I I SCREEN-GRID RADIO I lf|§§ $ % fill $5.00 §pi JiHHI mm DOWN! I ||M ©“Commander”" Superheterodyne $ J %M $5.00 A JWIfDOWN! of “Commander” Radios .id'SsSOSfiaC “The Horae of Guaranteed Furniture” Is conveniently legated on j/W?\ ifid El Washington Street, just blocks west r Illinois r" ninm street, directly opposite Stat .-hoi^. % j St OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT Call Lincoln 7555 or Lincoln 7556

•was advocated. Officers of the association re-elected are: C. O. Grafton. Muncie. president: H. C. Hunt. Richmond, first vice-president: H. C. Stclkel. Terre Haute, second vice-president, and Irvin* W. Lemaux. Indianapolis, treasurer. H. M. Cochrane. Indianapolis, remains as executive secretary of the association.

.DEC: 18, 1930

Twins Bom in Different Towns By United Press RUMFORD. Me.. Dec. 18—Mr*. Arlow Campbell gave birth to twin sons Wednesday. The first was bom in Andover, twenty miles from here, and the second In a Rumford hospital, after the mother had been* hurried by automobile to this town.