Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 119, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 September 1931 Edition 02 — Page 3
SEPT. 26,1931.
AIR PARITY TO BE DEMAND OF JAPAN'S ENVOYS Plan for Increasing Navy Force to Be Submitted at Geneva Parley. BY WILLIAM PHILIP SIMMS Seripon-Hnward Foreign F.ditor WASHINGTON, Sept. 26.—From Japanese sources it has been learned that at the coming arms conference, Japan will demand parity with the United States and Great Britain in naval aeronautical strength. At Washington in 1921, the relative naval ratio of Britain, America and Japan was established at 5-5-3. At London last year, the Japanese demanded a considerable inrrease and wound up by having the ratio raised to 10-10-7. At Geneva next February, it is understood, the Japanese delegation will insist upon parity so far, at least, as certain categories of craft are concerned, in addition to submarines, in which she already enjoys complete equality. Accordingly, it is stated, the navy ministry at Tokio now is working on a memorandum for presentation at Geneva, setting forth that recent improvements in aircraft render Japan's present aerial force perilously weak. Point to Ocean Hops The Pacific flights of Wiley Post and Harold Gatty, and the Lindberghs, and the Habrovsk-Tokio hop of Pangborn-Herndon are regarded as proving the need for additional strength. It is said that at the conferences, held twice weekly at the admiralty, | details were discussed by the naval j gen >ral staff, the army general staff j and the supreme war council. | Japan's needs, both offensive and j defensive, were gone into exhaus- ; tively. The attitude of Japan is causing uneasiness here where it is felt that It may prove a stumbling block at Geneva. The military and naval party appear to be regaining its position of dominance in Tokio. The war in Manchuria was undertaken in utter disregard of Pre- ] mier Wakatsuke and Foreign Min- ; Jster Shidcharan, the more liberal members of the cabinet, and prob- I ably even without their knowledge, j Attitude Causes Concern Given the steadily increasing tension in the far east and the domestic difficulties in which Europe and America find themselves at this time, the generally militaristic trend of recent Japanese policy is causing concern. Until a decade or so ago the military and naval factions of Japan ran the country. First one would be in power, then the other. Laterly, however, a less warlike ; group, composed principally of ci- j vilians, steadily has been gaining i strength. It has the backing of Japanese merchants and industrialists whose main desire is to sell goods at home and abroad, particularly in China and America. At present the militarists are attempting to regain the upper hand.
5-DAY WEEK SCHEDULE IS SPREADING IN U. S. \ 5.6 Per Cent of Workers in 77 Industries are Affected. lly Bcrippa-H award Newspaper Alliance \ WASHINGTON. Sept. 26.—The five-day week as a permanent labor policy in industry is steadily gaining ground, according to a survey just completed by the U. S. bureau of labor statistics. The bureau circularized 37,587 establishments in seventy-seven different industries and found 2.4 per cent of these had permanently adopted the five-day week for part or all of their employes, and that 5.6 per cent of all of the employes covered in the survey were on a five-day week basis. The automobile industry had the higher percentage—44.3—of workers on the five-day week basis, followed by the radio industry, 34.4, the dyeing and finishing textiles industry, 27.0, and the aircraft industry, 24.9. $5,000,000 HEALTH FOUNDATION FORMED Bernarr MacFadden, Physical Culture Publisher, Is Donor. By United Press NEW YORK, Sept. 26.—Benarr MacFadden, who amassed a fortune publishing magazines devoted to health. Friday announced formation of the Bernarr MacFadden Foundation. Inc., a $5,000,000 charitable organization, "to propagate the principles of health building by natural means." The foundation, announced Thursday by Joseph Schultz, counsel for the publisher, has been given property from MacFadden's estate with an income indicating its value is approximately $5,000,000. Sanitaria, health camps, gymnasia and similar institutions will be maintained by the foundation. Books, magazines and pamphlets hpalth culture will be published. Commute Mutineers’ Death Penalty By l nited Press 4 SANTIAGO. Chile. Sept, 26.—The government has decided against inflicting the death penalty on any of the mutineers condemned for their part in the recent naval revolt, it was disclosed today. The culprits will be sent to Juan Fernandez Island, Chilean Penal colony. Nabbed for Pool Sales After a "customer” is alleged to have admitted buying twenty-one baseball tickets from him, William Penish, 707 West Twenty-seventh street, was charged with operating a lottery and gift enterprise by Sergeant Kent Yoh todey. Itvsiead of meeting for their weekly lunchei.. in the Claypool Tuesday. Indianapolis Rotarians will be guests of the Coca Cola Bottling Company at its new home at Massachusetts and Ashland avenues, where James S. Yunker, president, will be host. A small Berlin theater has been fitted with reversible seats so that their occupants can face a moving picture screen at one end of the building or a lecture platform at the other.
Swede Sixteen
It's a beautiful country, Sweden! And no wondei 4 Hollywood looks in that direction for screen talent, now and then, with the Swedish beauty crop turning out such lovely products as 16-year-old Aiano Taube. She’s already one of Sweden’s most popular film actresses.
‘SCIENCE SAVED MY • life; says woman
Cortin, Rushed to Chicago Mother by Plane, Checks Dread Disease. By United Press CHICAGO, Sept. 26—Science and mother love have done wonders for Mrs. Andrew Nelson, mother of six children, in the last three weeks. On Sept. 9 an airplane landed at municipal airport with a supply of cortin, a gland extract that is one ■ of the two known treatments for Addison’s disease, with which Mrs. Nelson was dying. The cortin had been located in the laboratories of Dr. Frederick Hartman at Buffalo, by the United Press. It was rushed here by plane and administered to Mrs. Nelson at the Billings Memorial hospital of the University of Chicago. “Why, I feel like a different person altogether,” Mrs. Nelson said today. “Three weeks ago I was hopeless, ready to die. Now I feel almost strong enough to go home and get a big meal for Andrew and the children.” But it will be some time yet, doctors said, before Mrs. Nelson can be released from the hospital. She has gained enough strength to spend a part of each day in a wheel chair. Her husband, a carpenter who has been out of work for months, and her children come to see her every day or so. Because the doctor’s fear infection, all visitors must wear surgeon’s cloaks while with the patient. “That seems funny to me,” said Mrs. Nelson. “But it's science and it was science that saved my life—science and the interest everybody took in my case.” HUSBAND TRADE MAY ‘CRASH’ BLUE BOOK Society Matron Hopes to Marry Mate of Her Closest Friend. By United Press RENO, Nev., Sept. 26.—Legalized husband trading will achieve the distinction of recognition in the New York social re rr,e4 ~” shortly after Oct. 1 if Mrs. Virginia Wilson Dinkins, Montclair (N. J.) society matron, carries out her avowed intention to wed the present husband of her closest friend. Mrs. Dinkins and Mrs. Margaret M. Overton, also of Montclair, arrived in Reno about a month ago to see about divorces. They came together, live in the same apartment and are constant companions. After their divorces, expected about Oct. 1. Mrs. Dinkins plans, she says, to become the second Mrs. Overton, “in spite of friendly warnings from wife number one about his shortcomings.” Satisfactroy arrangements have been made regarding the custody of the Overton child, 12, and the Dinkins child, 2. AKRON TO FLY SUNDAY Third Trial Flight Is Set; Mechanics, Experts Go Over Airship. By United Press AKRON, 0., Sept. 26.—The third trial flight of the U. S. S. Akron will be Sunday, probably at sunset, Rear Admiral G. C. Day, chairman of the navy board of inspection and survey, announced today. The announcement w ! as made as inspectors and mechanics carefully went over the airship, checking effects of its moonlight cruise Thursday night. FIRE TOWER FOR STATE Forestry Station to Be 90 Feet High, Wilcox Announces. Indiana conservation department’s | new Jackson county state forest will protect itself with a fire tower made : from its own trees, it was anj nounced today by Ralph Wilcox, The tower will be ninety feet high and made from approximately 13,000 feet of white oak hewed from j the forest. Timbers in it will be as large as 10 by 10 inches and 20 feet ! long, Wilcox said.
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Stork Strays B.y Science Service BERLIN, Sept. 25.—A German stork that got lost on its way to Egypt, the usual winter-ing-ground of its species, and wound up in India, recently was reported here. It was picked up at a little lake near Bikaner, Rajputana. On its leg was a numbered band, giving a key to its record in the archives of a German natural history society. It has been caught, legbanded and released in Beinrode, near Hattorf, in northern Germany. When flying-time came in the autumn it foregathered with thirty-four other storks, but not until a week after they had gone, did it depart. General direction of migration apparently had been indicated by the flight of the other birds, which flew southeastward until they reached Asia Minor and then “turned the corner” toward Egypt. The solitary belated stork seems to have followed the same course, but having nobody to show it where to change its course for Egypt, kept on flying until it passed clear over Persia and • Baluchista*n and landed in India.
WAYNFGITIZENS FIGHT TAX HIKE Protest Is Filed by 200 Township Residents. Remonstrance against an increase of 56.6 cents in the Wayne township tax levy for next year was filed Friday with County Auditor Harry Dunn for presentation to the state tax board. The appeal was signed by more than 200 taxpayers enlisted by the Wayne Township Taxpayers Association, recently formed to protect interests of taxpayers. W. F. Bornkamp, association chairman, announced that a mass meeting of the township’s taxpayers will be held at the Bridgeport community house next Tuesday night to outline plans for fighting the high tax rate. The township's total rate levied for next year by the advisory board is $2.27.6 on each SIOO taxable property, as compared with a total $1.71 rate this year. The protest is against the township's civil, school, and poor relief rates. Wayne’s levy for poor relief is 13 cents for next year, highest in the county. A hike of $1 in the poll tax in Wayne, making it $4 next year, also is protested. RESIGNATION, 'REVOLT’ FEATURE BRIDGE WAR Detroit Expert Quits Anti-Culbert-son Group; Woman Rebels. By United Prcbs NEW YORK. Sept. 26.—A resignation and a “revolt’’ were" two new developments in the bridge “war” today. R. R. Richards of Detroit, author of books on the game and founder of the American Bridge League, announced his approval of the. approach-forcing system as propounded by Ely Culbertson made him unable to continue as a member of the advisory council of Bridge Headquarters Inc., Culbertson’s bitter antagonist. Mrs. Katherine Friend, a softvoiced diminutive young woman hardly to be suspected of such violent convictions, started the “revolt” by organizing a national committee for recognition of women’s leadership in bridge teaching.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
FASCISM HAS FIRM HOLD ON GERMANYOUTH Hitler’s Hordes Dream Only of Empire Ranked as World Leader. This is the fifth of a. series of six articles on present-day Germany. BY PAUL KECSKEMETI United Press Staff Correspondent BERLIN, Sept. 26.—The magnitude of Hitler's Fascism to the young, post-war generation is disturbing the family circles of thousands of solid, middle-class German homes, bringing anxiety and worry to fathers and mothers, who themselves did not want the war, and who now can not realize what this thing is—the war's aftermath. The gulf between the younger generation and the older one in Germany today is something more than he craze for jazz and speed, which is its American expression. It is the revolt of a youth. To mention any one of the postwar rxhievements in the field of international organization to a young Hitlerite is enough to bring him to his feet indignantly. These young people dream of an entirely new Europe, without League of, Nations, Hague Tribunal, and foreign ministers’ week-end visits. Would be Leading Power Germany, of course, would be the leading power in Jhis new Europe. But how to achieve this end? Young nationalists are far from agreeing on the best method. Os course, they agree, Germany must have allies in order to overthrow the French hegemony. But there are differences of opinion as to who the best allies would be. England, the United States, and Italy are regarded by them all as very welcome and plausible partners. The opinion is widespread that these three are longing for the first opportunity to punish France for her “unbearable arrogance.” The argument often is heard that a combined Soviet-German army, relying on Russia’s inexhaustible human reservoir, and on Germany’s technique, would be invincible. Think in Army Terms Nationalists, thinking in terms of army units, therefore are willing to silence their feeling against Bolshevism and look on Soviet Russia as a possible ally. However, many young Hitlerites are opposed to alliance with Soviet Russia, not only because they dislike Bolshevism, but also on the basis of racial theory. Race prejudice is one of the political mainstays of Hitlerism. One of the chief concerns of Thuringia’s former Hitlerite minister of interior, Wilhelm Frick, was to banish jazz from the country in order to preserve Teuton racial purity. Hitlerite youths have staged furious demonstrations in theaters where modern operas using jazz motif as Krenek’s “Johnny,” were performed.
FORM TECH CLASS IN INDUSTRIAL HISTORY 29 Enrolled in Study Dropped by School Several Years Ago. Reorganization of a class in industrial history, a subject which has been discontinued for a number of years at Arsenal Technical high school, has been made this fall, with O. S. Flick as instructor. Twentynine students are enrolled in the course. The class will study the history of the United States, with particular reference to industrial matters. After the two-year commercial course was discontinued several years ago, the demand for an industrial history class was not great enough, until this year, to warrant its existence. ARGUE RADIO LICENSE “Fighting Bob” Shuler Given Chance to Defend Air Statements. By United Press WASHINGTON, Sept. 26.—The Rev. Bob Shuler of Los Angeles, whose vigorous radio utterances have brought demands that his station be removed from the air, was given an opportunity to defend his practices today before the full membership of the federal radio commission. Chief Examiner Ellis A. Yost has recommended that the license of Schuler’s station, KGEF, be renewed. A number of exceptions to the report have been filed and oral arguments were ordered by thq commission. ATHEARN DINNER OCT. 7 Butler President to Be Honor Guest of C. of C. Committee. Dr. Walter Scott Athearn, president of Butler university, will be honor guest at a dinner Oct. 7 to be given by the education committee of the Chamber of Commerce. Louis J. Eorinstein, president of the Chamber of Commerce, will be toastmaster. Grover A. Millett has been appointed 'chairman of the committee on arrangements.
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Just a Boy By United Press ST. LOUIS. Sept. 26.—Some of the delegates to Governor William H. (Alfalfa Bill) Murray's unemployment conference held a kicking contest Friday. Governor Murray, after several trials, kicked a felt hat held six feet above the floor. “You’re a good man for your age,” one of the conference delegates said. “Hell, I’m a good man for any age,” replied the Governor.
75.000 JOBS TO BE CREATED BY ‘ALFALFA BILL' Invites Governors of Other States to Join ‘Make Work’ Campaign. BY F. O. BAILEY United Press Staff Correspondent ST. LOUIS, Sept. 26.—Governor William H. (Alfalfa Bill) Murray, self-styled “people’s Governor” of Oklahoma, assumed today the leadership in a campaign to provide employment for more than a million idle workers in ninteen midwestern, southern and southwestern states. “I’ve got it all worked out to give every man and woman a job in Oklahoma—and there are more than 75,00 of them—and I invite the Governors of the other states to co-operate with me in doing the same for their state,” declared the Governor. “It is as much the obligation the governments, city, county, state and federal to take care of their citizens in "distress as it is of the taxpayer to pay his taxes,” Murray told 150 delegates from twelve of the nineteen states invited to send representatives. Boosted for President The meeting assumed the proportions of a “Murray-for-President” meeting, with more than a third of the delegates registered from Oklahoma and boosting their colorful favorite son for the Democratic nomination. “Murray-for-PresidentP-buttons were prominently displayed. Murray was reluctant to discuss presidential aspirations, but declared “what this country needs is a forceful leader who is unafraid to act on his own initiative in relieving the acute unemployment siuation” His proposals for bringing workers and work together in nthe Mississippi valley section were adopted without a dissenting vote. Resolutions adopted by the con-* ference and containingn Governor Murray’s proposals included one urging immediate speeding up of all government work on flood control, public buildings and road construction. Urges Shorter Hours The conference recommended the Governors of the various states appoint county chairmen to co-oper-ate with city, county, state and federal officials in providing employment. Employers were urged to add emplopes by shortening hours and to add approximately 20 per cent more men to their pay rolls at the “prevailing w r age scale.” A. six-hour day, five days a week, industrial program “for the duration of the emergency” was urged. The federal government was urged to extend the operation of the federal land bank act to permit farmers to retain their farms through more liberal loan terms. Secretary of agriculture Arthur M. Hyde was petitioned to extend repayment of seed loans by farmers in the drought section for one year. PLEADS NOT GUILTY IN MANSLAUGHTER CASE Fort Harrison Soldier Denies Blame in Car Death of Girl. Delmas Holland, Ft. Harrison soldier, pleaded not guilty at arraignment in criminal court Friday to an involuntary manslaughter charge in the death of Mary Catherine Markey, a school girl. The girl was killed Sept. 21 when struck by an automobile driven by Holland as she crossed North Rural street. FOREST FIRE TOLL HIGH Huge Areas are Ravaged by Flames in Last Two Years. By Scripps-llaward Newspaper Alliance WASHINGTON, Sept. 26—Forest fires last year destroyed a total of 52,000,000 acres in the United States, according to a report just made public by the United States Forest Service for 1930. The destroyed area was greater than the states of Indiana and Ohio. Reports for the 160,000,000 acres of National forests for the summer of this year indicate that an equal toll will be taken in 1931. Up to Sept. 10, fires had consumed the timber on 561,680 acres of national forests; while this is below the average of 594,000 acres for the last five years, it gives little hint of the decimiation of forests in the northwest and Pacific coast region, the nai tion’s last stand of virgin timber.
REVENGE HINTED AS MOTIVE FOR PIRACY MURDER Quiz Swings to Nurse Who Is Said to Have Clew to Collings’ Slayers. By United Press JERSEY CITY. N. J., Sept. 26. Police reports that a local nurse had j said she knew two men who “had ! good reason” to kffi Benjamin P. j Collings brought irWestigators here i today as the inquest at Huntington, i L. 1., into the Collings “pirate murder” was to be resumed. Assistant District Attorney Fred J. Munder of Suffolk county, N. Y., and Felix Di Martini, noted private investigator, hurried early today to question Miss Leonora Muttert, middle-aged nurse, residing aboard a yacht with an elderly man described as her foster father, Dr. Alden Muttert. The woman was quoted by Lieutenant Henry Gauthire of the local police as having knowledge of a father and son in Jersey City who had reason for wanting to kill Collings, whose mysterious death has not teen solved after two weeks of inquiry. Nurse Fears For Life The Huntington investigators were joined here by Gauthier and other local police officers. The group proceeded to the Pavonia yacht club, where the cabin cruiser occupied by Muttert and his foster daughter lay at anchor. Gauthier was said to have talked to the nurse Friday afternoon, when she first intimated a knowledge of Collings’ murderers. She would not give any details regarding the two men, however, saying she would be “bumped off—my life wouldn’t be worth anything” if she talked. Later she informed him her attorney had advised her to say nothing. The second meeting had been arranged at the first aboard the yacht. Later Friday night Gauthier, accompanied by other Jersey City and Bayonne police officials, rowed out to the yacht but the doctor ordered them not to board. The police returned to the city to obtain ,a search warrant. Illegal Operation Hinted They could think of no valid reason for a search warrant, so in a drizzling rain they stood later today in front of an apartment in which the nurse rested, waiting for something to happen. The nurse insisted she would not admit them there, warrant or no warrant. One of the questions Gauthier asked Miss Muttert concerned a doctor supposed to have performed an illegal operation on a young Italian girl of this city. The girl, believed to have died from the operation, was said to belong to a family in which the father, mother and two brothers were living. Widow Repeats Story The lack of an apparent motive in Collings’ murder has made the case a standing mystery. Even the dead man’s attractive young widow was unable to furnish any clew to a possible motive in her five-hour account at the Huntington inquest Friday—an ordeal which resulted in her partial collapse. Collings was killed the night of Sept. 10 aboard the yacht Penguin in Long Island sound. Two “pirates,” one an elderly man and one younger, boarded, beat the retired engineer, tied him and threw him overboard, to drown, she said. Then they took Mrs. Collings away in a canoe, leaving her child, Barbara, alone on the Penguin, to drift helpless until rescued. Mrs. Collings was found abandoned in a motorboat, the 80-Peep, in the morning, across the sound from where the Penguin was located. MILLIONS ILLITERATE 4,283,783 in United States Can’t Read or Write, Census Shows. By Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance WASHINGTON, Sept. 26.—There are 4,283,783 persons in the United States over 10 years of age who are unable to read or write in any language, census tabulations reveal. This, however, represents a reduction of 648,122 from 1920. A drive by committees in twentyone states and by the National Advisory on Illiteracy has been going on for the last eighteen months. It is claimed that the figures for 1931 would show nearly 1,000,000 more literates than in 1920. * lowa stands at the top with only 15,879 or eight-tenths of 1 per cent illiterate. South Carolina stands at the bottom, with 192,878 illiterates, or 14.9 per cent of its population.
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Leads Fleet
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The new commander-in-chief of the United States fleet. Admiral Frank H. Schofield, is seen here just after the ceremonies aboard the flagship U. S. S. Texas on the Pacific coast. Admiral Schofield succeeded Admiral Jehu V. Chase, who went to Washington for duty on the navy general board.
REJECT OFFER ON T. B. UNIT Operating Cost Too Great, Society Is Told. Inability of the board of public health to maintain the expenses of anew unit for tuberculosis patients at city hospital caused the board Friday to refuse the offer of the Flower Mission Society to construct a $50,000 building. The offer, pending for two years, was refused definitely by board members, with the explanation, “finances of the city health department will not permit us to maintain such unit at this time.” Evans Woollen Jr., president of the board, said there was little hope that funds to maintain anew structure could be incoporated in the budget next year. The society deprived of the use of a frame building by the state fire marshal, proposed to erect a buildings with quarters for fifty patients. Officers of the society weer entertained by the board at a dinner at city hospital. Mrs. David Ross is president of the society. REVIVAL TO CONTINUE Canadian Evangelists Announce Program at Gospel Tabernacle. Continuation of the revival campaign being conducted at the Indianapoiis Gospel tabernacle by the Rev. and Mrs. Watson Argue, Canadian evangelists, another week, was announced today. ‘‘The Virgin Birth, or Who was the Father of Jesus?” will be the subject of Mr. Argue’s address Sunday night. Sunday morning the sermon subject will be “The Seven Spirits of God.” Week-day evening services start at 7:45 p. m.
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CHILD AND FOUR OTHERS INJURED IN AUTO SPILLS 6-Year-Old Girl Struck by Machine as She Crosses Street. Five persons, including a 6-year-old girl, were injured late Friday in auto crashes on city streets and county highways. As she crossed Illinois street. Ruth Barnick, 6. of 151 McLean place, was struck and injured by an automobile driven by Charles Gillespie, 40. of 2307 North Meridian street. The child sustained head cuts and leg and body bruises and was taken to City hospital. When a taxi and automobile crashed at New York and Oriental streets. Miss Alice Jeffrey, 19, of Rushville suffered head and wrist cuts. Negro Walks Into Car Robert Mitchell, Negro, 35, of 2441 Yandes street, was bruised when he walked into the side of an automobile driven by M. G. Haney. 30, of 2526 East Sixteenth street, at Nineteenth street and Martindale avenue. He was taken to his home by police. Lee Hopp, 56. of 1504 North Colorado street, assistant city street commissioner, suffered a severe neck cut Friday night when his car swerved in street car tracks in the 2400 block West Washington street and crashed into another automobile. Hopp was treated at city hospital. The other car was driven by Edward Bowman. 20, of 1720 Ruckle street,. Two Crash Head-On When two autos crashed head-on on East Tenth street, outside the city limits Friday night, Joseph Gilbert, 3641 East Eighteenth street, was cut and bruised when his auto overturned. Charles Cain, 1021 North La Salle street was arrested on counts of drunkenness and operating an auto while drunk by deputy sheriffs Gilbert Thomas and Ed Kassenbrock. MOB HECKLES PEER Shouts “Traitor’’ at Labor Deserter Who Formed ‘New Party’. By United Press BIRMINGHAM, England. Sept. 26.—A hostile crowd threatened Sir Oswald Mosley here Friday night and disrupted a political meeting at which he attempted to explain the principles of the “new party.” The crow T d jeered, booed, sang the “Red Flag,” and shouted “traitor” at the wealthy young peer who deserted the Labor party to form his own organization.
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