Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 298, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 April 1932 — Page 4

PAGE 4

2,000 HARVARD STUDENTS RIOT: RATTLE POLICE Scores Bruised, 12 Arrested in 5-Hour Clash; Jail Raid Repulsed. R\f Knifed Prrsn CAMBRIDGE, Mass.. April 22 One of the worst riots in Harvard's history—a five-hour battle between 2,000 undergraduates and police, firemen and civilians ended early today with many students nursing bruises and a dozen persons under arrest,. Stiff disciplinary action may follow the demonstration. It began with an invasion of dormitories where Radcliffe college girls were preparing to retire. It spread throughout the Harvard square area as students rushed buildings, trolley cars, busses and automobiles. Charles R. Apted, head of the Harvard yard police, was felled by an automobile. Two score students received bumps and minor bruises from police clubs. The climax came when hundreds of *hgry students stormed the police station in an unsuccessful at- | tempt to free others under arrest. | A report that a freshman had found the forty-pound clock bell j hammer stolen last fortnight from ; the belfry of Memorial hall led to i the celebration which later assumed riotous proportions. The hammer today remained listed as missing. PIRATE FISH IN STATE LAKES ARE REMOVEO Three Game Warden Crews Start Drive on Predatory Species. Three game warden crews have started removing predatory fish from public waters, it was announced today by Walter Shirts, chief of the fish and game division of the state conservation department. First work will be done at Clear lake in Steuben county, Big and- - lakes in Noble county and Bruce lake in Fulton county. Shirts also reported the division has contracted with Izaak Walton chapters at Argos, Huntington, Muncie, Terre Haute and Ligonier for rearing flngerling bass. These will be released in public waters to augment the fish from the five state hatcheries. Game wardens made forty-nine arrests in March. There were forty convictions with fines and costs aggregating $962. One case was dismissed and eight are pending.

bill now buys twice as much QUALITY... at RICHMAN BROTHERS A year ago the fabrics we now use in our clothes would have cost you at least *4O. Now you buy them for *2O ... and get better workmanship, better linings, better trimmings and better clothes all around. k 4 You may be the most particular man in the world, we guarantee to fit and please you. Can anything be fairer? Twenty dollars is enough to pay for clothes today. Buy them direct from the people who make them and get f more for your money. They're all J j j Open Saturday Evening Until 9 o’clock 36 East Washington Street Next Door East of Washington Hotel

School 35 8-A Graduates

Top Row (left to right)—Mary Hurley, Ervine Aebker, Mary Boarman, Lois Wheat, Ella Weiland, Frances Gerdts. Second Row—Louis R. Webb, Marvin Pearce, Albert Muegge, Floyd Wharton. Howard Deer.

MARLENE SCOLDED Star, Director Warned New Film Must Be Started. fly United Press HOLLYWOOD. April 22.—Paramount studios today issued an ultimatum threatening to remove Marlene Dietrich, actress, and Joseph Von Sternberg, director, from the studio pay roll unless they begin work Monday on “The Blonde Venus.” Studio officials said production of the picture had been held up for more than a month because the star and director had expressed dissatisfaction with the story. Von Sternberg wrote the original story, but said the picture would prove a disappointment if produced in its present form.

Third Row—Elthie Scott, DelorLs Bailey, Wilda Long, Erma Elkins, Catherine Bender, Norma Bellows. Fourth Row—Herschell Hinkiey, Charles Ludlow, Thomas Pringle, George Brill, Walter Green.

REPARATIONS PARLEY IS SET FOR JUNE 16 Dale Is Reported Fixed in Private Conversations at Geneva. ; By Lnited Press GENEVA, April 22.—The I Lausanne reparations and debts I conference originally scheduled for I last January was expected to-

Z9-i7 NORTH STREET Another History Making V \ We Performed a Miracle With This SPOT CASH K Purchase of Brand New sls to $lB Values! I j Rarely are coats as fine as these found in % Downstairs Sales, but we got them at "our” mM price, and tomorrow you may get them at M They’re the Best '* on * of th * most important sales InVj SdlcT Fd h * fts t dianapolis has ever seen! Think of itl u • /of Spring! gfjßJmKgg tomorrow at one low sale price! %1 ipßp A Ilßft Beautifully Furred Coats! li - Smartly Tailored Coats! hh\\m H Mmi Their waistlines are slim and high . . . and you’ll love the way you can i *. -\j wrap them around . . . They are tailored in rich Crepey Woolens and i , v/ 'nV'S. v \ ‘ PWBBLm diagonals ... in those fashionable new BLUES, black, green, beige, gray, J 't ~& 'WZ \ v‘ > \ / brown and Spanish tile .. . They’re GRAND coats and they really look 'iw ‘ ■ l ‘T T ( “out of place” in our busy bustling Downstairs Store ... But aren’t you Mb-Y' I '** ' v\l Wjt\ glad to know WHERE they are? ... so you can get one of them P* "W V \Y ll tomorrow ... at $7.88 ... DO BE EARLY! .. . it’s to YOUR advanutfa) 5!4 \| ON SALE IN DOWNSTAIRS STORE 34 to 44 | *

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES '

[ Fifth Row—Frank Wollam, Norman Mueller, Arthur May. Richard Wenning, Martha Surface, Thelma Bridges. Bottom Row—Robert Hall, Paul Zumkeller, William Tavenor, Charles Bastin, Herbert Pennington.

day to meet June 16, under the presidency of ex-Premier Theunis of Belgium. The date was understood to have been fixed in private conversations among statesmen here, including Minister MacDonald, Premier Tardieu, Foreign Minister Grandi, and Chancellor Bruening, representing Britain, Fiance, Italy, and Germany, respectively. Secretary of State Stimson participated in the conversations.

BOMB THEATER IN ANDERSON: SSOO DAMAGE Police Seek Trio Seen Near Playhouse: Labor Row Is Blamed. By T'niied Press ANDERSON, Ind., April 22Harper McCune of the state fire marshal’s office joined local authorities today in investigation of the Orpheum theater bombing here Thursday night. Labor difficulties were blamed for the attack, whiefi caused damage estimated by police at SSOO. Front of the theater and toe sidewal kand pavement were damaged. No one was injured. Police reported today that one suspect had been questioned and subsquently released. Meanwhile, police continued their search for : there men reported to have been | seen in an auto near the theater immediately aftr the bombing. The Orpheum theater employs i nonunion men. Thursday night’s attack was the first against this playhouse, but the Ritz another movie house in which nonunion j men are employed, has been the scene of three stench bomb attacks. ORDERS POLICE GUARD Morrissey Takes Precaution on Alleged Red’s Addresses. 4 Police will be on guard at meetings of local unemployed groups during addresses by J. Louis Engdahl, alleged member of the central committee of the Communist party of Moscow, Chief Mike Morrissey said today. Engdahl is scheduled to speak during the next few days and on May 1. “We will not tolerate any disorder,” Morrissey said. Arrest Gandhi’s Woman Aid By United Press BOMBAY, India, April 22.—Sarojini Naldu, woman leader of the Mahatml Gandhi's independence movement, was arrested today.

[IIRIHKS DOmnSTQIRS STo߀|[

Gone Primitive Family of Beavers Sets Up Housekeeping in North Indiana.

TNDI ANA'S great northern ln- *• dustrial area is returning to the primitive, reports from the ■ fish and game department of the state conservation department indicate. According to game wardens, a family of at least twelve beavers now are living on Rock creek in Liberty township, Wells county. Nor are the beavers faced with any unemployment problem. They already have erected three dams and fresh cuttings are noticed on brush and trees bordering the creek. Each of the dams raised the \ water in the creek one foot, so that the water above the upper dam is three feet higher than formerly, the department reports. Farmers along the creek are anxious to protect the beavers with an eye to a rich fur crop, it was said. CLOSE RELIEF DEPOT; 19,360 Given Clothes During Winter, Say Officials. The Red Cross-American Legion clothing relief station on East New York street today has closed for the summer and officials announced that from Dec. 30 to April 16 a total of 19,360 unemployed men and women were served by the station. A total of 47,500 garments was distributed to 6,329 families, the records show, and cobblers in the shoe repair department repaired 4,606 pairs of shoes for jobless persons. Os all the “customers,” 3,349 were former service men, the records reveal. Clothing was gathered mainly in four drives, in which the police department, the fire department, Boy Scouts and the Polk Milk Comi pany co-operated.

DEATH CLAIMS AGED GENERAL J. Warren Keifer, 96, Ex-House Speaker. By United Press SPRINGFIELD. 0.. April 22. General J. Warren Keifer, 96, speak-

When 9ashion and Economy Mfl Charles 4 West Washington Street CUTS THE PRICE ON NEW SPRING =SHOES= That Are Regular $3.00 and $4.00 Value* .99 All Heel* ■ — ~~V, // if Every Wanted Color and i Jj Material. ' F Hundreds of Pairs Included at This Low Price. *

.APRIL 22. 1932

er of th* United States house of representatives in 1881. died *t his home here today. He had been 111 two years. An attorney and Civil war vet- | eran, General Keifer had served sixteen years as a members of congress. His condition became critical late Thursday, and he lapsed into coma pprlv torfflv His son. W. W. Keifer, Springfield attorney, was with him when death came.