Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 298, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 April 1931 — Page 9
Second Section
WAR BETWEEN TWO AMERICAS IS RISING PERIL Monroe Doctrine Is Threat to Peace of Western Hemisphere. LATIN WRATH FANNED State Department Policy Stirs Hatred South of Rio Grande. BY WILLIAM PHILIP SIMMS. Bcrlopii-Howard Foreign Editor WASHINGTON, April 23.—Armed eorfiict between North and South unwfss the United States modifies the Mcviroe doctrine in keeping with present-day conditions. With a finger dipped in blood, Nicaragua today is writing this message on the Pan-American wall. And whether or not it properly is translated and understood in this country, our Latin neighbors warn us that it is not going undeciphered south of the Rio Grande. War between Mexico and the United States in 1927 was averted by only one thing. Mexico simply was too weak to back up her own Nicaraguan policy, as against ours by force of arms. That is all. Clash with Mexico Acting under his own interpretation of the Monroo doctrine, Secretary of State Kellogg dispatched 5,000 marines and fifteen warships to Nicaragua to bolster up President Diaz. According to what later turned out to be a majority of Nicaraguans, Diaz was unconstitutionally in office. As Mexico saw it, Dr. Juan B. Sacasa was the constitutional president by virtue of having been vice-president when the duly elected president, Solorzano, resigned. So she supported Sacasa as far a* she dared. , . While the United States supplied arms to Diaz, from some mysterious source or other, arms were smuggled in to General Moncada, Dr. Sacasa s commander in the field, and President Coolldge bluntly accused Mexico of backing such shipments. Trouble Will Rise Again Hot notes passed. War talk was In the air. But while Mexico had the will, she did not have the means, and a conflict was avoided. Time was to prove Mexico more nearly in the right than the United States. The Diaz faction, which we supported, was to go. The Sacasa-Mon-caia faction, which Mexico supported, was to come into power. Mexico, for the time being, had to a similar situation is bound to arise again, sooner or later, is obvious, if the United States persists in its arbitrary Interpretation of the Monroe doctrine. The other twenty republics of this hemisphere simply will not continue to take intervention lying down. Every president since Monroe has harped on the absolute equality of the Americas, our Latin neighbors observe. So if the United States has the right to intervene in Nica ragua to support a Diaz, Argentina* Brazil, Chile, Mexico or any of the other countries to the south of us, Can equal *l* ‘° support of a Sacasa or a Moncada. Something Worse Possible Yet something worse than international chaos would result If such rizhts were acted upon. Indeed, Sera promptly would be war If ong one other country, in addition to the United States, were to make the attempt. Nevertheless, the Nicaraguan incident was a clear warning of what o expect, once the fast growing powers of the western world reach a point where one of them, or a coalition of them, feels it has a fighting chance to challenge the Colossus of the North” and get away with it. Manifestly, friendly Latins earnestly contend, some understanding with regard to the Monroe doctrine must be reached, and soon, as history records time, if tragedy is to be avoided. Rebel Rout Reported (Coovrlcht. 1931. by United Press* Si/ United Press TEGUCIGALPA. Honduras, April 23. The government claimed today to have repulsed a massed attack of revolutionary forces in a desperate battle at Chamelecon. The fighting continued, however. In the heart of the Cortes region of northern Honduras, and loyalist reinforcements were speeding to the scene to protect the highly important railroad line to San Pedro Sula. Government troops inflicted “great losses” on the rebels, the official advices said, and it was believed the outcome of the engagment might be of a decisive character. The engagement at Guaymas, near the seaport of Tela, where American residents have been protected by the U. S. S. Memphis, lasted about three hours and resulted in defeat of the revolutionaries, with the loss of Colonel Salvador Canales, their leader, and about fifteen of his men. The federals lost four, including Captain Constatino Urbina, and ten were wounded. ask city to buy site FOR RILEY MEMORIAL Steps Taken by Officials of Northwest Civic League of City. Steps to have a tract on the west side of Northwestern avenue, opposite Crown Hill cemetery, purchased by the park board, were being taken today by officials of the Northwest Civic League. The board will be asked to purchase the property, remove buildings and landscape the ground as “The Riley Memorial Gardens.” The site is opposite the grave of James Whitcomb Riley, the Hoosler poet.
Fall Leased Wire Serrlcs of tbe United Press Association
HEART IS MENDED
Solace Found by Stage Beauty
1
Lillian Roth and her husband, William Scott.
SWINDLE STORY PROBE^STARTED Chicago Grocer, 75, Claims $37,000 Loss Here. Story of an alleged stock swindle on Indianapolis streets was being probed today by Chicago authorities, although police here confessed they knew nothing of the venture. Matthias Reinert, 75, wealthy retired Chicago grocer, claims he was relieved of $20,000 in cash and $17,000 in Liberty bonds by three strangers who offered to accumulate for him a fortune in the stock market. For many years a visitor at French Lick, Reinert this year sought Martinsville, a quieter spot, he said, because he frequently lost as much as SIOO in poker games at the other resort. At Martinsville he met J. A. Kirk, and started back to Chicago with him. In downtown Indianapolis Kirk suddenly stopped the auto. “Why, there’s G. E. Mayo, the man who made millions in Mexican oil,” he said. “Something must be doing.” There was, so Reinert claims. Kirk, Mayor and a third man, who presented liimself as a broker, did Reinert for the $37,000, in a hotel room In Gary, where the party went from Indianapolis, Reinert told Chicago police. BIG MONEY STILL USED 95,581,861 Large Sized Bills Out Two Years After New Issue. By United Press WASHINGTON, April 23—There are still 95,581,861 of the old, largesize bills outstanding nearly two years after the new smaller sized paper currency began to circulate, treasury records showed today.
FAKES HOLDUP TALE TO WIN BACK WIFE
Two thousand dollars dwindled to seventeen cents and a battle with three Negro bandits became but self-inflicted safety razor blade slices and mud in the eye early today when William Orion La Follette, R. R. P, Box 125, Beech Grove, admitted to police that he faked a holdup story to effect a reconciliation with his wife. La Follette—shirt awry, mud in. the eye, and neck cut—told police Wednesday night that three Negroes beat him up and took $2,000 which he had buried on a vacant lot on Walnut street between Pennsylvania and Delaware streets. He said he had hoarded the money and that he owed debtors SSOO and another $250 to his wife. He said she left him because of financial matters. With her leavetaking he decided to dig up his hoard, pay his bills, and get his wife back. Two hours later he admitted to city detectives John Gish and Wil-
LEADER IN REVOLT DECLARED BANDIT
Sandino, leader of the anti-United States forces in Nicaragua, was termed a “rotten bandit and nothing else,” by William Richards Castle Jr., undersecretary of state, in addressing the Indiana World peace committee at the Columbia Club Wednesday night. He told of Sandino swooping down upon a town and looting and burning it while American troops were busy in the earthquake stricken capital. There has been no change in the traditional American policy of protecting our nationals throughout the world, and the impression that such protection would be with-
The Indianapolis Times
By DAN THOMAS NEA Service Writer
Hollywood, April 23 About a year ago, almost to the day, a beautiful young blues singer made the hit of her life when she sang the tragic love song from “The Vagabond King” to a critical New York audience. That night marked the peak of Lillian Roth’s triumphant return to Broadway after nearly two years in movieland. It also marked the turning point in her life. Never was a Broadway audience as still as the one which watched hot tears roll down Lillian’s face as the notes of her song floated over them. For an instant after the song was finished, a deathlike silence gripped the spectators. Then a roar of applause burst from hundreds of throats. The curtain went up again—but there was no Lillian. The audience was dumfounded. Never before had they known of an actress who wouldn’t respond to a curtain call. u tt tt BUT the audience couldn’t see behind the scenes, where others in the cast were trying to quiet the sobbing girl and get her out on the stage again. And even the cast didn’t know that as Lillian sang her love song her fiance was lying dead in a hospital nearby. For years Lillian had been in love. They were to have been married soon. Then he became ill. Just before leaving the hospital, which she visited every day, for the theater on that memorable night Lillian was told that there was no hope. Just before she went on to sing the tragic love song, a phone call told her that he was gone. “He told me,” Miss Roth said afterward, “that I was young and would find someone else. But that’s not true. He has taken with him my very ability to love.” A few days ago Hollywood received the news that Lillian had married William C. Scott of Pittsburgh, son of a wealthy lumber merchant. And Hollywood wonders.
liam Miller in a statemer.t that the robbery was a fake. “It was false. I reported it because I’ve been separated since April 19 from my wife. I thought that the newspapers would publish the story of the robbery and that she w*ould come back to me,” he said. “Last night I was nervous and I walked on various streets. I used a safety razor blade to cut myself in several places. I buried the safety razor blade. I threw* my billfold away with some change. I rubbed dirt on my face then I told a man to call police. I never had $2,000. The change I threw away near the billfold is all the money I had,” he said. The detectives found the “hoard” —l7 cents. “I’m sorry I reported the robbery to police,” La Follette apologized, as police released him. At an early hour today Mrs. La Follette had not returned to her husband.
drawn is due to bad publicity given the state department, the speaker explained. Asked about American entry into the world court, Castle said: “I have not talked about that because it is regarded at Washington as a controversial subject. When the senate comes to its senses, then I shall talk about it.” High praise was given the court by Dr. William Cullen Dennis, president of Earlham college, and a distinguished international lawyer. Arthur H. Sapp. Huntington, chairman of the Indiana committee, presided.
INDIANAPOLIS, THURSDAY, APRIL 23, 1931
DIPLOMAS TO BE GIVEN AT I.UJNEIS| Episcopal Bishop to Deliver Annual Sermon on Preceding Day. ALL CHURCHES UNITE Special Services Will Be Held By Bloomington Congregations. By Times Special BLOOMINGTON, Ind., April 23 Indiana university’s one hundred and second commencement exercises will be held at 5 p. m. Monday, June 15, in Memorial stadium, according j to the commencement committee, j Dr. Gordon Jennings Laing of the ! University of Chicago will be the commencement speaker. The baccalaureate address on Sunday evening, June 14, will be given by the Rev. George Craig Stewart, bishop of the Chicago diocese of the Episcopal church. Alexander announced the threeday commencement program for returning alumni and other commencement visitors. It will open at 7:30 Saturday morning with the annual senior co-eds’ breakfast in the Student building. At 9 there will be an election of an alumni trustee in Assembly hall and this will be followed by a business meeting of the alumni association. At 11 the alumni council will meet and Saturday noon there will be class luncheons and reunions. Program Saturday Saturday afternoon’s program will consist of a baseball game at 2 on Jordan field, a barbecue supper in the stadium at 6, an all-university sing in the stadium at 7 o’clock, and a play at 8 in Assembly hall. Sunday’s program will open at 10:30 a. m. with special services in all the Bloomington churches. From 2 to 3 in the afternoon, members of the faculty will be at home to commencement visitors and returning alumni. A sacred concert will be given at 4 Sunday afternoon and the annual Mortar Board reunion supper is scheduled for 5 at the home of Dean Agnes E. Wells. The baccalaureate exercises will be at 8 Sunday evening. Band on Program The annual alumnae breakfast will start Monday’s program at 7:30 a. m. in the auditorium of the Student building. There will be a concert by the university band*at 9 that morning and at 11 there will be the flag raising, tree planting, and class oration exercises of this year’s class. At noon Monday the annual alumni luncheon will be given in the auditorium of the Student building. A second concert by the university band will be given on the campus at 2 p. m. Between 3 and 4 President and Mrs. William Lowe Bryan will hold open house for visitors. The induction of this year’s class into the alumrl will be at 4:30 on Dunn Meadow, with the commencement exercises scheduled for 5 p. m. This year’s commencement speaker is a graduate of the University of Toronto and of Johns Hopkins university. He has been a lecturer in Bym Mawr college, professor in the American Academy in Rome, Sather professor in the University of California, dean of the faculty of arts in McGill university, Montreal, and now is professor of Latin, dean of the humanities division and general editor of the university press, University of Chicago. Perfect School Record By Times Special MONTICELLO, Ind., April 23 Delbert Davis, 12, one of this year’s eighth grade graduates in Cass township, was never tardy or absent during his eight years in grammar school.
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Eleanor Holm . . . She's in the theatrical swim now.
crown for the fourth consecuvtive year. She followed this with a victory in the 100-yard back stroke. Thus she came nearer her main objective—the Olympic games next year.
Traffic Setup in Compromise Plan
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I. U. SPEAKER BACKS OXNAM De Pauw Head Is Called Fearless and Fair, By Times Special MUNCIE, Ind., April 23—Addressing the Muncie branch of the American Association of University Women, Dr. Earl G. F. Franzen of Indiana university defended Dr. G. Bromley Oxnam, head of De Pauw university, who was criticised recently because speakers of liberal thought were brought to his school. Speaking on the subject of “After College, What?” Dr. Franzen declared the greatest danger today Is mental stagnation and the greatest need, intellectual Integrity. He said Dr. Oxnam is a man who could create such integrity through the fearless facing of problems. He branded the attack on the De Pauw president as one of the saddest occurrences of recent years, and said the critics were victims of mental stagnation. “It is shameful that courageous leaders of youth should be frowned upon,” Dr. Franzen declared. FOOTPADS GET $298 City Man Slugged, Robbed of Money, Jewelry. Slugged by two bandits, George H. Hamilton, 59, of 820 South West street, told police he was robbed early today of $298 in money and jewelry, near Wilkins and West streets when he was attacked by the footpads. Burglars ransacked offices of the American Electrical Company, 328 West Court street, today but obtained only $lO in change from an open safe. Suits, valued at SIOO, were stolen Wednesday night by three men who smashed a window in the Towne 'tailor shop in the Spink-Arms.
Splash Into Follies Goes Diving Star ?!/ NEA Service NEW YORK, April ’23—Miss Eleanor Holm, one of the youngest but one of the greatest of America’s women swimmers, has landed with a considerable splash in the new Ziegfeld Follies. But not as a diving star, to pose and plunge, or even as a pretty bathing girl. Eleanor is to be cast in little girl parts, with hair ribbons and ruffles. It was at the national swimming championships at Long Beach, Cal., last summer that Florenz Ziegfeld first saw Eleanor. She never had given a thought to a stage career. But when Mr. Ziegfeld began casting the other day, he offered the 17-year-old maid a job. Assuming that he wanted her as a swimmer, she refused. For that might affect her amateur standing, and, Follies or no Follies, Eleanor had no Intention of giving up competitive swimming. Then it was explained that although she might have to hang most of her clothes on a hickory limb, Miss Holm wouldn’t have to go near the water. She has, M. Ziegfeld assured her, plenty of the necessary requisites looks and personality. Standing 5 feet 2 inches, Eleanor looks like a candidate for the pany ballet. She weighs 112 pounds and her method of training is very simple. She doesn’t. Just the other day. In celebration of her selection for the Follies, Miss Holm donned a bathing suit and won the 300-yard medley
New parking regulations agreed on by city councilmen Monday night and to be acted on at a special meeting this afternoon are shown in the above map. The compromise ordinance bans parking In the congested traffic area, District B, from 7 to 9:15 a. m. to halt all-day parking. The sections where parking is banned at all times are Monument circle and its approaches and the plaza block bounded by
We choose worms
Embattled Indians Side With Cal
BY FREDERICK C. OTHMAN United Press Staff Corresnondent CHICAGO, April 23.—-Poor Chief No Water! And poor, poor Chief Young Skunk! If those two Sioux braves from the Pine Ridge reservation in the South Dakota Black Hills didn’t have their own troubles in the wilds of Chicago Wednesday, then the Izaak Walton League doesn't know anything about fish. Chief No Water and Chief Young Skunk, full-fledged members of the league, and exponents of the worm school of anglers, wore their leather pants and their war paint and their feathers to help advertise the ’Waltonians’ convention and then, of all places, their hosts took them to the luxurious Hotel Sherman to sleep.
“Um —too soft,” said Chief No Water, feeling his bed. Chief Young Skunk felt and agreed. So they settled on the floor for the night. But the floor was too hard, not spongy enough. Sleepy, weary and stiff, they struggled outdoors with their troubles just beginning. They rowed a birch bark canoe a couple of miles down choppy Lake Michigan, up the greasy Chicago river, and then had to make a portage down Randolph street with the heavy canoe on their heads. a tt a THEY maneuvered stop lights, swirling crowds, astonished traffic cops and blase taxicab drivers, until finally they got to the Sherman house, where the convention was held. “Hey, you can’t bring that tiling in here,” exclaimed a gold-braided doorman upon perceiving the perambulating canoe with two pairs of leather-clad legs beneath it. But the canoe barged past him and into a revolving door. And that just about flabbergasted perspiring Chief No Water and wild-eyed Chief Young Skunk. They finally got extricated, brought their canoe up to the convention floor, heaved it down and repaired to the soda fountain, where they imbibed copiously of lemon pop. The embattled chiefs applied themselves to their drinks while all the great big outdoor men did their stuff with gold-incrusted shotguns and chromium-plated fishing reels in the grand ballroom of the de luxe hotel. Their equipment was so fancy that a trout probably would consider it a privilege to be caught on some of their hooks, and a bear or a polecat would hold it an honor to be shot with one of the guns the Waltonians had on display. 9 0 0 IT developed that the presidential fishing controversy still is raging among the men who know their trout. Calvin Coolidge, they said, is the last prominent member of the worm school. Herbert Hoover is among the best known of the fly school. And Grover Cleveland was a strong adherent of the casting school.
MORE LOTS NEEDED FOR city gardens
News that more lots have been offered for gardens than there are unemployed applicants to plow and sow them, swamped The Times Garden Editor with applications for plots of ground, and today he needs more vacant lots in all sections of the city, so that every needy man may have an opportunity to support himself and family this summer. Already many landowners have told The Times they rather would see their vacant lot planted In neat rows of vegetables than overrun with weeds, but again the appeal
Second Section
Ente-ed as Second-Clasa Matter at Poetofflce, Indianapolia
North. Pennsylvania, Michigan and Meridian streets. The ordinance also provides for impounding cars improperly parked, not including overtime parking, and requiring all traffic on four-lane streets to keep to the right except when overtaking and passing other cars. About thirty days will elapse before the ordinance can become effective.
A member of the worm school, is seems, just sits and fishes. A member of the fly school dances in the water and displays a technique similar to that of a fencer. But the member of the casting school! Ah, he gets to play with more pretty red and white and yellow* toys than a 4-year-old does at Christmas time. Which explains why the casting school perhaps is the most popular. It is subdivided into three divisions, those of the spinners, the wigglers, and the wabblers. And when a man who fishes with wigglers gets into an argument with a man who fishes with wabblers, then the man who fishes with spinners would better stay away if he values his life. But as far as Chief No Water and Chief Young Skunk are concerned, give them worms, if there are any fish to be caught, said they, upon finishing their lemon soda pop. PREACHES FOR MUTES Silent Retreat to Be Held In St. John’s Church Tonight. Silent retreat for deaf-mutes will be preached in St. John’s church tonight, Friday night and Satur-
day night by the Rev. Dan D. Higgins. a Redemptorist, from St. Louis. Nat ionally known as an expert in the sign language, Mr. Higgins preaches to deaf-mutes throughout the United States. Hymns will be sung by the congre g a tion, executed in unison in the f i-n ge r
Mr. Higgins
signs. Services begin at 8 nightly, with the closing service at 4 Sunday afternoon. C. of C. Officers Chosen NEW CASTLE, Ind., April 23.—Directors of the Chamber of Commerce have elected Dr. Herman W. MacDonald president; Gilbert HewIt, vice-president; John R. Millikan, treasurer, and Guy Baker, secretary.
goes out to Indianapolis citizens for co-operation in relieving distress among hungry families. Many of the applications for lots have been disappointed because lots offered are not near their homes, and they have no mode of daily transportation to and from the plot. Landowners and unemployed men and women in all sections of the city, will you give your ground or will you till a vacant lot this summer? Write The Times Garden Editor today.
DOPE CHARGE PROOF ASKED BY CAGE CZAR Trester Ready to Aid Probe of Report High School Boys ‘Pepped Up/ NET MEET IS ASSAILED State Education Board to Consider Abolition on Moral Grounds. A. L. Trester, commissioner of the Indiana High School Athletic Association, is ready today to aid "in any manner possible” the Investigation into moral conditions surrounding the Indianapolis state tournament, provided "definite charges” are made by the state board of education investigating committee. This was the comment of Trester upon the probe committee’s disclosure Wednesday afternoon of a report that an Indianapolis druggist had provided strychnine to "pep up” the athletes in the final contests here. Disclosure of this charge was made by L. N. Hines, president of the Indiana State Teachers’ college of Terre Haute, member of the investigating committee. Willing to Give Name “I have a letter from an Indianapolis man who is ready to appear before this committee and give the name of a druggist who provided the strychnine for the athletes,” ffines told the committeemen meeting in the office of the superintendent of public instruction. He also stated that he had been deluged with letters both pro and con on the proposed abolition of the tournament here. Majority of the letters, particularly from schoolmen, have favored abolition of the tournament ” he declared. This viewpoint also was expressed by Superintendent William Wirt of the Gary schools, chairman of the probe committee. Wirt for Abolition The investigation was launched upon Wirt’s motion to abolish the tournament on moral grounds. Hines pointed out that two matmittee- 11 ** taken up by the com " !. The effect of the tourr— it on the athletes. h ii Vlo . r * l conditions, particularly in hotels the night before and after the games. of T^ ry f? ine charge wlll be one first investigated if the atmfn! y 'l eneral rules that the com- — Attorney-General James M. OganrpgtHVGf commit teemen assurthe haVe an °Pinion on ime Th? ft P ° Wers ready b y ihe the stafc e education board meeting is held May l. Wirf AskS u P J ,Wer Be defined tha ‘he define the of the committee to summon Isa/ 6 T S and the authority of the state education board to abolish the tournament if deemed wise Hin tlment 0f both Wirt and Frank SI X avor abolition. 5„ anlt Reynolds, Cambridge Citv tanker' thw member of the committee, failed to appear at the meeting probe to wiiTS2 ted X th ® committee with thTlffl Under way in iine whrti the ey 'f neral ’ s npinion There wifi hl te b / ard convenes. thaf time no flnal report at tnat time, however, it was said. .. Wo Wa “ t ” ear Both Sides the V mat2r ” d w to hear both sldes of cne matt er, Hines asserted “Trestappear if witnesses can b e called Meanwhile Trester has conducted investigation of immorality charges by questioning various hotel proprietors. Educator! opp3£tK ““““ ° f 0 toumaE MM out that numerous other activities besides basketball, are on a competition basis. & state ( Trester never had heard of the in IL & “ nt “ he rd S* ** ft properly Investigated,” he declared
HOLD FUNERAL FRIDAY FOR ALLEN A. WHITE Tailor, City Resident Since 1908, When He Came to U. S. TT J^ neral services for Allen A White Sr., 54, tailor, who died Wednesday ftemoon a t his home, 1030 South New Jersey street, after a long illness, will be held privately at the home at 1:45 p. m. Friday and at the Immanuel Reformed church, Prospect and New Jersey streets, at 2 p. m. Burial will be In Crown Hill cemetery. Bom in England, Mr. White came to Indianapolis in 1908. For seventen years he was affiliated with the old Schloss Bros.’ Clothing Company. He was a member of the Immanuel Reformed church, the Bible class of that church and Marion lodge of the Modem Woodmen of America. He is survived by his widow, two sons, Allen A. Jr., Indianapolis newspaper man, and Cedric White; a daughter, Miss Mary White, ali of Indianapolis, and four brothers, Lawrence and Frank White of England: Ernest White of Dayton, 0., and George White of Johannesburg. South Africa. JENSEN TO BE FREED Former Vigo County G. O. P. Chairman Will Be Released From Prison Word that John Jensen, former Republican chairman of Vigo county, will be released from the federal penitentiary at- Leavenworth, June 6, was received at the statehouse today. He was sentenced in 1929 by Federal Judge Robert C. Baltzell for connections with a gambling and liquor protective ring in Vigo and Vermillion counties.
