Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 37, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 June 1931 — Page 8
PAGE 8
DELAY HEARING OF STEPHENSON PLEA FOR WRIT Venue Change Asked; Names of Three Judges Are Presented. By United Preen MICHIGAN CITY. June 23. Hearing on a habeas corpus petition for D. C. Stephenson, serving a life term In state prison for the murder of Madge Oberholtzer of Indianapolis, was continued until Thursday morning in La Porte superior court today by Judge Harry L. Crumpacker, after the defense counsel had asked a change of venue. Stephenson appeared in the courtroom with John Moorman, prison trustee; Warden Walter Daly and two guards. Attorneys for the prisoner immediately asked change of venue and Judge Crumpacker presented the names of Judge Albert J. Link of La Porte circuit court; John C. Richter, former La Porte circuit :ourt judge, and Judge Grant Crumpacker of Porter circuit court as candidates to succeed him on the bench during the proceedings Thursday. Stephenson's attorneys struck off the name of Judge Link, and Joseph Hutchinson and V. Ed Funk, deputy attorney-general, asked that they be given two days to consider which name the state would strike off. Thursday morning at 9:30, the state will announce the result of its consideration and Judge Harry Crumpacker will advise the judge whose name remains on the list that he has been chosen to take the bench. At that time, Judge Crumpacker also will set the date for hearing on the habeas corpus petition. Attorneys for Stephenson have said they washed Judge Harry L. Crumpacker to appear as a material witness, but court followers said they thought the change of venue was asked because the superior court judge had heard previous arguments in the case.
BRANDED AS ATTACKERS Two City Men Charged With Slugging Another in Park. Charged with having beaten William Moslander, 718 Bosart avenue, with automobile jacks and wrenches, two men were held by police today on vagrancy charges and a third ts sought. Moslander. police said, identified Albert Stuck, 1648 Holliday street, and Alfred Lawson, 1715 Cruft street, as two of the trio that attacked him after they asked him to meet them in Garfield park late Monday. Police declared Moslander could give no reason for the alleged attack. BUTLER GAIN SHOWN Summer Enrollment Increase of 40 Per Cent Revealed. Increase of 40 per cent in enrollment of the summer school at Butler university was announced today when records revealed 879 persons are attending the sessions. In 1930, the summer school enrollment was about 600. This* year 170 different courses are being taught by seventy-seven instructors.
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$4380 ROUND TRIP to NEW YORK Similar low fares to: WASHINGTON, D. C. PHILADELPHIA BALTIMORE ATLANTIC CITY LONG ISLAND TICKETS on sale each Saturday and Tuesday to September 29, inclusive. RETURN within 30 days. STOP-OVERS permitted at anv stations en route. WASHINGTON, D. C. at no extra cost on all tickets to Philadelphia and beyond. These tickets good in either Pullman cars or coaches. Ask about new' low fare tickets to New York and Boston. Go one way, return another —limit 60 days. For tickets apply City Ticket Office, 116 Monument Place, phone Riley 9331; Union Station, phone Riley 3355, or address J. C. Millspaugh, Div. Pass. Agt., 116 Monument Place, Indianapolis. Pennsylvania Railroad W-I2S
PUTTING THE TEST TO A VARIETY ACT Carleton and Ballew Give Proof Success on Vaudeville Stage Is No Accident But Theater Science. BY WALTER D. HICKMAN HAVE always maintained that there is a definite standard of vaudeville and the acts that follow such a standard of the variety theater are the ones that live. That thought came back to me again very strongly as I saw the honest reaction of the audience to the work of Carleton and Ballew, a man and the “dumbbell reciting" woman. These two follow that definite standard of the vaudeville stage—definite personality backed up by material and individual delivery. These tw'o people have just that. Miss Ballew insists on reciting goofy poetry and Carleton goes nuts as he dangles over the piano. Doesn't sound like
much in cold print, but watch the way these two put over their material. They stopped the show so cold that Carleton had to come back and acknowledge applause after Klutings dogs had started.
That is the test of Carleton and Ballew. giving us real vaudeville. Another vaudeville act that is following the standard vaudeville formula is Fortunello and Cirillino, acrobatic Hooligans. Another act of ability using ihe right formula and the applause for them is honest and right. Children are interested in the members of Our Gang comedies.
At#*
Jean Darling
Jean Darling, the blond sweetheart of the gang, is no exception. Her routine is more adult than juvenile. Mentally, the child is some years older than her age. In other words, she is a trooper. The remainder of the bill includes Howard, Bernice and Sadelle, dancers; Everett Sanderson and company in a musical offering, good; and Kluting's dogs. The movie feature is Warner Oland as Charlie Chan in “The Black Camel.” Here is a corking good mystery story with Oland doing splendid work and uttering a bunch of wise sayings. Easy to recommend this hot weather. Now at the Lyric. tt a t$ MYSTERY STORY NOW AT ENGLISH’S The playwrights have used about everything but the kitchen sink in “The Blue Ghost” to get thrills, laughs and gasps. I have maintained that. “The Bat” was the only stage mystery play I have seen that possessed literary merit. There was a reason for everything that happened in “The Bat.” There really is no reason for anything that happens in “The Blue Ghost.” Here is just a mixture of walking skeletons, wild old men gone a little wilder each second; lights going off and on for no reason whatsoever, and, men being dragged off the stage in darkness only to appear before a man from headquarters with a gun that he seldom uses. I guess mystery plays were born
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only to spend an evening and when a play meets that demand it has the right not to be considered too seriously. Dick Elliott walks away with the comedy end of the bill as he is Jasper, a colored servant. Have your own idea about this play. I have mine. One just can't be too severe on mystery plays because piost of them are brainless and the authors admit it. Now at English’s.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
STOREKEEPER IS! SLAIN IN MINE WAR OUTBREAK Pennsylvania Coal Feud in New Crisis as Police Charge Pickets. PITTSBURGH, June 23.—A store proprietor was snot to death as he stepped from the porch of his store and four miners were wounded today in the second fatal outbreak in the western Pennsylvania bituminous strike in two days. The storekeeper was slain when coal and iron police and special deputies attempted to disperse a picket line of seventy-five men who had gathered in front of his store in Arnold City, Fayette county. In a battle between striking miners and special deputies at Wildwood, Allegheny county, Monday, one miner was slain and eleven wounded. At Arnold City the picketers at-
tempted to stop a truck carrying men to work in the Somers mine of the Pittsburgh Coal Company, near Pricedale, police said. Six officers were guarding the truck. The strikers spread across the highway to prevent the truck passing. As the officers in their car arrived, rocks and stones were hurled.
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police said. The officers charged the group of miners. Mike Philykovich, 40, storekeeper, near whose store the trouble occurred. stepped from the porch into the line of fire. He fell, fatally 1 wounding. Four striking miners were wounded. Then persons were arrested after the fighting was ended.
Over—Fourth of July EXCURSION TO NEW YORK CITY $17.00 R T“"p d LEAVE FRIDAY. JULY 3 RETURN MONDAY. JULY 6 A WONDERFUL 4-DAY TRIP Lv. Indianapolis 6:30 a. m. or 6:00 p. m. Ar. New York 7:29 a. m. or 5:05 p. m. Returning, tickets will be good on train leaving New York 6:30 p. m. Sunday. July 5. or Monday, July 6. Tickets good in coaches only. Children half fare. $30.50 ESCORTED TOUR Includes railroad fare, meals en route, transfers, hotel accommodations, sight-seeing trips. Full particulars at Ticket Office For tickets and complete information, apply City Ticket Office, 111 Monument Circle, phone Riley 3322. or Union Station, phone Riley 3355. BIG FOUR ROUTE
.JUNE 23, l&l
