Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 10, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 May 1932 — Page 7
MAY 23, 1932
STATE TROLLEY SYSTEM FIGHTS FOR RECOVERY United Lines Promising Faster and Safer Service. Indiana's traction system, once known the world over, has passed through the boom stage and today is a settled, grim business of put* ting the state on its “trolley feet." More than half the tracks now are rusting. As weeks pass more , miles of track are abandoned and the companies realize the inter-; urban no longer is an "easy come—easy go" method of transportation. Bonds, once worth tens of millioas now, in many cases, are merely paper with vague par values and contractual phrasing printed thereupon. System Raise* Head That is m contrast to the time when Hoosiers would accept stock in a traction line as quick as they would accept a gold piece. The Indiana Railroad System has raised its head above the graveyards of rusty track, and its officials believe the day has come when the interurban is looked on as safe, reliable and fast way of getting there. These officials follow the footsteps of Charles L Henry, who, at the beginning of this century, had an idea about trolley cars in Anderson and traiked them out from there, and is krown as the father of the Indiana nterurban. The first cars began to ply between Indiana cities and towns In the early part of the century. Horse and mule cars went by the board an early as 1838. and electrics replaced them on the city thoroughfare. but it was not until 1902 and 'O3 that trolleys began to carry the traveler* between cities of the state. Line* Spread Oat The T. H., I <fc E. furnished a fair example of what has happened to the two principal electric state arteries. This was a company of many subsidiaries. The first was built from Indianapolis to Lafayette, with a branch line running from Lebanon to Crawfordsvllle. That was in 1902 and 'O3. In 1903 lines were built from Indianapolis to Martinsville and Richmond. And then there was an orgy of binding the state together by trolley tracks: Terre Haute to Sullivan, Terre Haute to Clinton and Sanford, at the Illinois state line. Lebanon, CrawfordsvilJe. Martinsville. and Danville all came into the system. They went along for nearly three decades riding on air. With few exceptions there were no such interurbans in the country. Indiana, more than any of its possible interurban rivals, gained the reputation of having man-sized trolley cars disrupting the rural quiet of its highways. L. T. Hixon, former vice-presi-dent of the old T H.. I. fc E., points out that the levelness of the countryside may account in a measure for the growth of the trolley system in the state. But the fact remains that In 1929. when the bubble began to be pricked, the interurbans were riding virtually on tracks of gold, and within a brief twelve months the lowliest railway pawnshop wouldn't take them for 98 cents on the hundred dollars. Trackage I* Reduced The T. H.. I. & E., once operating about 360 miles, now operates about one-third of that. Take a s a fair example of the whole system, the Indiana and Northwestern Traction Company. Its original bond Issue was for $2,470.000. In the final liquidation $8 86 was paid to each SI,OOO bondholder, a free coinage of copper as far as the bondholders were concerned. After a decade of booming In 1913, owing, perhaps to a temporary reaching of the point of saturation, there came a halt; persons looked at the lines for a brief year with normal eyes and prices of their stocks and bonds declined. In 1914 came tha war, and America was launched on one of its greatest booms, destined to run, excepting the Interlude of 1920. for fifteen years. Everything increased In valve; the interurbans again were on the march upward. But another force was beginning, even then, to operate and make itrelf felt—the automobile. In • few years every state was to begin the construction of motor highways as assiduously ss Indiana built tracks. It was a slow operating force for the first few years, and the full measure of its potential strength only waa dimly visualized. Pride Shown In Trains Tn those years Indiantans talked less of the new six and eight-cyl-inder automobiles than of their pet interurban fliers. Vast local pride was evinced in the crack interurban trajjjjs. Every day pas-vngers gathered on the ’•car platforms to hold stop watches on iSe time made by their pet iron lines christened their best trains. There were the Muncie Meteor and the Honey Bee. the Cannonball, the Hoosler and Dixie Filers. Regular commuters on these lines would take only their favorite train and would argue long and loudly that this and no other was the best interurban in service. On the Indiana Railways lines today some of these names still are retained. The Indiana Railroads, a unification of four lines, now is the eplv of the Indiana traction magnates to depression, automobile and airplane. Faster cars, shorter traveling time, more convenient schedules—these are the weapons being used by the Interurbans. Old time residents of Indiana shake their heads and declare that -thing* ain't like they used t # be." But when somebody says that the next few years w-ill see the demise of the interurbans. the argument Is on. You may point to the collapse of the old T. H.. I. & E.. and of the Union. You may mention the hundreds of miles of track which the reorganized system has been forced to abandon. But at the Terminal building they will tell you that they are getting down to brass tacks and that the interurbans have settled down after their meteoric rise.
DOOM OF CAPITALISM VISIONED
World Upheaval Sure to Come, Says Norman Thomas
What have America's political <Jlnter* to offer the nation as a war out of our present economic dilemma’ For years. In good time* and in bad. they have raised their voice* agatnat the existing order. What do they think Is wrong now’ . . , Yfte United Pre.se has interviewed several of them, including Norman Thoma*. H L. Mencken. John Dos Psssoe. and Max Eastman, and present# their Ideas and opinions in a settee of article*, the first of which follow*: BY H. ALLEN SMITH fatted Press Staff Correeoondent NEW YORK. May 23.—1f Norman Thomas, head of the Socialist party in America, were head of the government and had $5,000,000,000 placed in his hands, he would split it three ways for spending. "Three billions," he said, “would t go into a program of housing in * crowded metropolitan areas. One billion would be spent on reforestation. The fifth billion would go into a federal program of road building, bridge construction, and such other federal enterprises as would provide immediate work for as many men as possible." Tall and spare. Thomas sat in a drab office in Nineteenth street. The rough pine floor was bare and his books occupied a somewhat rickety series of shelves back of his chair. The desk probably could be had for S2O in a secondhand store. This colorless background, however. served only to accentuate the personality of the man who, next fall, may poll the largest Socialist vote in the party’s history. a a a WHAT will come out of it all?" he repeated the question. "One of four things. Catastrophe, Fascism. Communism or Socialism. One of the four is inevitable. Capitalism is doomed irrevocably." The picture of catastrophe ahead is not a he explained. It can come, lie believes, in the form of anew world war—a war the like of which mankind never has dared to imagine. "Fascism." he said, “is only a kind of Indian summer of capitalism which the rise of an American Mussolini, with the aid of certain great industrialists and a demagogic appeal to the little man, might bring to pass in this country. “Or it can be Communism,
WILLIAM PROVES HE IS A GOOD ACTOR •Attorney for the Defense' Has a Surprise Ending That Nearly Knocks One Out of Seat. BY WALTER D. HICKMAN SINCE Hollywood has gone courtroom minded with a bang, "The Mouthpiece" contains more dynamite than any three of its kind. The story is so amazingly frank melodrama and the work of Warren William as Vincent Day, an attorney who betrayed his profession in order to free crooks and grafters, is rx> splendidly done that "The Mouthpiece" will probably beeome the talk of the town. William, by his work in "The Mouthpiece." has proved that he is not only a good actor, but a master when it comes to putting realism into melodrama.
That is where he excels in this movie. Take the scene in the eourt-
room where he drank the poison which was the evidence in the case. He then calmly sits down as the jury goes to its room. He starts calmly to work dictating and then when he learns that the jury is aware that he is still alive, he rushes out with his bodyguard and hurries to a doctor, who pumped
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the poison out of his system. He admits as he rushes to the doctor that it was a good thing that the jury didn't know that it requires fortyfive minutes for the poison to start work. William by his artistry of putting realism into melodrama actually makes this scene convincing. The doctor saved him that time, but when he decided to become an honest lawyer and not accept blood money from the gang, the gang filled him full of their compliment—compliments that probably nobody could remove. Aline MacMahon is simply grand as the efficient secretary to the crooked lawyer in this story. Everything she does is perfect. Sidney Fox is just a "sweet young person" in this movie. I am considering every character as just fiction. But here is a story that is packed full of melodramttic dynamite. You will get a thrill when you see it at the Apollo. a a a ‘HUDDLE’’ GIVES FOOTBALL THRILLS You may not rate the story of "Huddle" very- hot but the work of a fine cast puts it over to the rank of corking good theater. Ramon Novarro. fresh from the Gary steel mills, lands at Yale to get
educated. He is called Tony. He get* the big head and discovers that girls are ladies. His crudeness in this respect prevents him from becoming a social lion. He then turns to football and when Coach Malcolm (Ralph Graves) gets through with him. all the yellow and pretense has left and Tony is a real
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man. Acting honors in this picture goes to Graves. He certainly makes this movie what it is—fine theater. It is difficult to photograph four years at college and not repeat too often. The acting is so fine on the part of the cast that the words and situations roll off as if newly oiled. The football scenes are well handled and the fraternity spirit is sincerely and intelligently presented for a change. This is anew type of role of Novarro. but he gets by with it in good shape. Una Merkel, acting more and more like Zasu Pitta, is a joy. This woman is becoming important. I Here is Just clean, good fun—a succey because of the acting. | Now at the Palace.
which, by Its own creed, can come only out of catastrophe and which, logically enough, will require the most rigorous dictatorship to put into effect." There remains Socialism. "Socialism.” Thomas defined, "believes that there still is time to improve and extend rather than to scrap democracy.” m m m ‘‘ r T'HE man who is wise,” he conX tinued. "is tempted to one of two philosophies—either the philosophy of Spengler, who holds that the process of decay of civilization is inevitable, or the philosophy of Lenin, which is the philosophy of salvation under the dictatorship of a working class party, born of the inevitable catastrophe to which capitalism hurls us. "Both philosophies have truth. Neither has the whole, the inevitable truth for America. We near the end of an epoch, but we better may emerge into the new cooperative society of doing all that is in us to stave off and minimize catastrophe. "We must improve democracy rather than embrace dictatorship. The drift to disaster has not brought us yet to inevitable cataclysm. There still is time. That’s why I'm a Socialist, and not a Communist." an* HE always has been aggressively concerned over the housing problem in American cities, and he believes circumstances are favorable now for a huge federal program designed to eliminate tenement and slum districts. Money spent in Improving homes, he reasons, Is money spent on the future of our civilization, and money spent to employ many men who now are idle. Reforestation, he feels, Is another Important problem. "There are immense areas of land.” he explained, "that can not be farmed, yet they are splendid for forest land. If we invest in forests, we invest wisely. Forests yield a positive return. “The land lies there, but what is being done about it? Wouldn’t it be wise for us to look ahead, beyond the immediate problem at hand?"
HERE IS SOME MIGHTY CLEVER DIRECTION I will confess that during the last half of "Attorney for the Defense," Edmund Lowe, as the attorney who is on trial for the murder of Val Lorraine (Evelyn Brent), kept me on the edge of my seat. That is the way to enjoy melodrama and one of the tests of successful melodramatic theater. We
know that Lowe is not guilty but that he is protecting a young lawyer, Paul Wal- | lace, from taking the rap. Things look bad for the > lawyer when he suddenly calls s Wallace to the, stand, and to the ( lad’s surprise tells | him to tell all. The prosecution i m mediately brands this as a clever trick to pin the crime on another. Then by ;
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tw'o clever strokes Lowe proves his theory—that any defendant can go free when he has a clever attorney. The theory is made acceptable because Lowe is innocent. Am not going to tell you the big moment: of this story, but it is when Lowe takes a ring off the finger of a witness and then—. Well, aee "Attorney for the Defense" and sit j on the edge of your seat as I did. I had a corking time seeing this one. And find time to study the di- , rection because it Is a fine lesson in creating and maintaining suspense. And the story rings true. Now at the Circle. a m a LOOKING OVER CHATTERTON’S LATEST The two best things about Ruth Chatterton s "The Rich Are Always With Us" is the smart conversation which lifts a love affair out of the sex class to a glorified mental con- I flict between a man and a woman, : and. the work of George Brent as anew leading man. The fact is., that Ruth Chatterton again is just Ruth Chatterton. That may be enough for most of us. but it may
get tiresome in time. Personally. 1 am getting to feel that way a wee bit. How about; you? Be your own judge. Miss Chatterton is cast as the world's j richest girl, who ; ma r r ies Greg. : played by John' Miljan. Greg is: not a rotter, but! he falls in love with a featherbrained so c iety girl, and Caroline (Miss Chatterton)!
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gives him up because she is so concerned in his happiness. While this has been gqing on, Julian, a novelist. as played by Brent, haa been trying to make Caroline realize that he loves her more than anything in the world. There we have the mental battle. Julian throwing his love at Caroline, while another girl is just as wild over Julian. Then for a tang time we are concerned with Caroline saying no to
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
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Julian, and then finally saying yes j in a rather unusual way. It will depend just how much sold you are on this ultra sophisticated stuff. Be your own judge. Now at the Indiana. a a a Indianapolis theaters today offer: ; "The Good Fairy,” at Keith’s; ; Grant Withers, at the Lyric, and “Importance of Being Earnest," at the Civic. mum Neighborhood theaters tonight offer: "The Man Who Played God" and "The Passionate Plumber,” at the Hollywood; "Tar- ; zan, the Ape Man," at the Tuxedo and Tacoma; “The Lost Squadron" and “Amateur Daddy," at the Belmont: "The Passionate Plumber" and "Hotel Continental." at the Talbott; “Sky Devils," at the Stratford; "The Big Shot." at the Daisy; "Disorderly Conduct,” at the Garfield. and “Girl Crazy," at the Emerson. MAP FIGHT TO SAVE VETERAN FROM NOOSE Convicted Slayer of Girl I* Found Guilty at Second Trial. By Pailrd Prem KANSAS CITY. MO., May 23. ; Attorneys for Paul Kauffman today planned a determined fight to save j | the convicted slayer of Avis Wool- ! ery, 17, Webb City, Mo., from the gailows. A jury found Kauffman guilty at his second trial and assessed the extreme penalty. The supreme court bf Missouri previously had 1 granted the w*r veteran, anew ■ trial after he had been sentenced 1 to hang at his first trial. Attorneys said they would file a motion for anew trial, and would appeal to the supreme court again [ if the motion were denied. Kauffman is alleged to have lured I the Woolery girl here by promise of employment, attacked her, and killed i her. LIQUOR LAWS FILLING THIRD OF U. S. PENS Both Atlanta and Leavenworth 109 Per Cent Overcrowded. ; By T'niird Pren WASHINGTON, May 23—More than one-third of the 15,500 prisoners In federal institutions are serving sentences for violation of the prohibition laws, according to data made available today by the justice department. The Atlanta and Leavenworth penitentiaries are about 100 per cent overcrowded, the depar“'ent said. There are 3,500 prisonr 3 in Atlanta and 4,000 in Leavenworth. The department haa under way a $13,000,000 prison construction program to relieve this condition. MILLIONS IN EXPANSION Radio Industry to “Be4" $200,000,000 on Better Business. By United Prrtt CHICAGO. May 23—The radio industry is so confident that American business will improve during the next year that it is “betting $200,000,000” in new machinery, raw material, labor and advertising,” J. Clarke Colt, president of the American Radio Manufacturers Associa- | tion, declared at the eighth annual 1 convention opened. About 15,000 j are expected to attend. HUNT”DROWNING VICTIM Coast Guard* Drag Bay for Body of Erie Woman. By Vailed Prett ERIE. Pa., May 23 —Coast guards today were dragging Presque L*le bay for the body of Miss Thelma Myleas, 35. who with a companion. Wade Smith, 32. Conneaut (O.), was drowned Sunday when their motor boat capsized. Smith’s body was recovered Sunday. A heavy backwash was believed to have caused the srpaJl craft to overturn.
Norman Thomas
FILM PAIR RECONCILED Sally Biers, “Hoot” Gibson Are Back Together After Separation. By Vailed Prr* HOLLYWOOD, May 23.—Reconciled after a separation of two weeks, Hoot Gibson, motion picture cowboy, and his wife, Sally Ellers, actress, were together again today. "We really are much in love with each other, and it would be silly not to do everything possible to be happy together,” Miss Eilers explained. ASKS NICKEL: ARRESTED Beggar Finds Evanston’s Woman Alderman a Bad Bet. By United Pren* EVANSTON, 111., May 23.—When Paul Force accosted Daisy Sandldge, Evanston’s new woman alderman, and begged her for a nickel, she remembered that all aldermen are also special policemen. So Miss Sandidge called a patrol wagon, took her prisoner to Jail and charged him with begging.
fivTaißious E ’ S NO secret about YOUR ,T ’ CLAlßE.Millions of ( SNOWY CLOTHES. SNC^°™*J HOW DID YOU EVER JYY , 5^ E GET THAT CLOTH V { I USE RINSO, IT SOAKS \ ) OUT THE DIRT IT SAVES ) v ME, SAVES THE I wON DERFUI! IM GOING i CLOTHFS \ TO GET SOME RINSO / -J _ saves \ \ TODAY 1 I'M SICK OF j \ MONEY, TOO j SCRUBBING AND \ BOILING FOR HOURS " voU r strength* I W 1 I 1 ■ , N ": Rin '> 2Uyou , i v.i>'iSM- u '’ l •“' much I RinsbJ B.
TWO BROTHERS KILLED; TRAFFIC DEATH-TOLL 44 Pair Riding Motorcycle Thrown Under Auto on Highway. Thrown from their motorcycle , beneath wheels of an approaching auto on a dangerous curve on state Road 52 north of the city Sunday morning, two brothers were killed instantly. They are Philip and David Farney, 17 and 19. of Wolcott, Ind., who were A A riding to the Indtanspoils Motor Speedway, j B 1 to watch qualification trials, when the trag- : edy occurred. The deaths brought the county’s accident toll for the year to forty- I four. Other week-end accidents resulted in injury of six persons, none seri- | ously, and arrest of two drivers on ! charges of drunkenness and driving while drunk. Wheels Pass Over Them The Farney brothers, with David j riding tandem on the motorcycle, | were in the rear of a group of cyclists from near Monticello, Ind., all of whom were bound for the Speedway. The boys had owned the machine less than a week. As Phillip approached the turn, he swung the machine into a rough spot at the inside of the turn and swerved toward the center of the road directly into the path of an auto driven by Frank Reick, 47. of Campus, 111. The brothers were thrown from the motorcycle and the wheels of the car passed over both. Other members of the motorcycle party were not aware of the tragedy until they passed another turn and missed the two riders. They returned to find both dead. Coroner William E. Arbuckle and Dr. John Wyttenbach, deputy I coroner, investigated and sent the ! bodies to city morgue. Reich was j not arrested, but was ordered to appear at an inquest today at the coroner's office. After an auto and a taxi collided Sunday afterpoon at Capitol avenue and Ohio street, William Montgomery, 32, of 426 North East street, cab driver, and John Dunn, 47, of Hotel Linden, a driver, were arrested on counts of drunkenness and driving while drunk. Mont-! gomery is alleged to have struck Dunn in an argument. Motorcycle policeman James E. Campton, who was knocked from his machine by a speeder during a 1 sixty-mile-an-hour chase Saturday ; atfernoon, was recovering today at ! city hospital. He incurred body bruises and cuts. Seize Alleged Driver The accident occurred at Twenty- : fifth and Hovey streets, where the motorist swerved his car as Camp- | ton drew alongside to make the ar- , rest. Russell Humbles. 20, of 2017 Hillside avenue, identified by witnesses las the alleged hit-and-run driver, was arrested on a charge of vagrancy pending investigation. Other injured in traffic mishaps are: Leo Graham. 40. of Center, head iniurlea: William Mrßeynold*. 48. of 1127 i Spann avenue, back, lalurie*: Robert Hen*I lev. 22. of Beech Grove, cuts and briMies: Mark. Wohlleder. 32. of 802 Fletcher avenue. fractured ankle and face cuta. and Conner Gallagher. 32, of 806 Centennial , street, head bruUe-s.
Retires Soon
Major-General John L. Hines, above, former chief of staff of the United States army, has returned from command of the Philippines department to be retired May 31 ct Washington,’ D. C. General Hines, 64, a graduate of West Point, saw service in the Spanish - American war. served with Pershing punitive expedition into Mexico and was a regimental, brigade, divisional and corps commander during the World war. NAB KIDNAP SUSPECT Tony Lauri Is Smuggled Over Ohio Line. By Vnitrd Prr YOUNGSTOWN. 0.. May 23 Tony Lauri, 37, was arrested at Wierton, W. Va., early today, and Youngstown across the state line to Youngstown, where he was charged with complicity in the kidnaping last March of Jimmy Dejute Jr., Niles school boy. Tony Demarko, Youngstown racketeer, is serving a ten to •thirty year sentence in Ohio state prison as one of the kidnapers of young Dejute, who was liberated when police raided their hideaway.
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STREET CARS ARE HELD UP, Bus Driver Also Robbed by Negro Bandit. Two street car motormen and a bus driver were among victliua erf robbers over the week-end. Henry Blake, 19 Karcher street, a | motorman, was robbed of s2l by J two Negroes who boarded his car tn ; the downtown section and rode to Pleasant Run on the South Merl- ' dian street line. Forty tokens and $5 was the loot ! obtained by a Negro from Lon Kel--1 lems, 38, of 54 South Warman ave--1 nue, operator of a Minnesota car. Charles Alexander, 2325 Beecher street, only passenger on the car, witnessed the robbery. Oscar Karbox, 2162 Wheeler street, bus driver, was robbed of sl2 when he stopped for the Monon ' railroad crossing at Fifty-second street. A Negro boarded the bus as j it was halted. Harry Amos, 3633 Baltimore avenue. attendant at a filling station at Massachusetts avenue and Davidson street, was held up by two men. who took $6. Amos was forced to remain in a greasing pit to permit the robbers to escape. Another filling station attendant, Orien Doon, R. R. 8, Box 233. foiled a Negro bandit by spraying him with water. Doon was sprinkling the lawn of a station at 326 West Michigan street when the Negro appeared from behind a billboard and demanded money. Doon turned ths hose on the bandit, who fled. Pattison Head* Legal Fraternity Coleman B Pattison is the new president of the Indianapolis Alumni chapter of Blgma Pelt* Kappa, legal fraternity. Other officers are: Othneil Hitch and Russell J. Dean, vice-presidents; Frank E. Blackman, secretary, and George E. Cowan, treasurer.
MOTION PICTURES
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WEST SIDE ■■HBpifpaflpgjwrvr>>b. * Bataan* Dooblr F.ator. Richard Dix In "THE LOST SQUADRON" Warner Baxter and Marian Nixaa in i "AMATEUR DADOV" EABT SIDE ' * I r. New Tarfe U. SHOT*’ MU Waih. St. ■■■■■•■■■feß Jebn Weiemuller In “TARZAN. THE APE MAN" ffWIWfIWfJI IMS Rooaeeelt A?. Double Featxra Ctearxa Artiaa in "THE MAN WHO ELATED GOD" Sinter Keaton—Folly Moran In • THE PASSIONATE PLUMBER" Centennial SpeciaI—"WASHINGTON. THE MAN AND TO CATITOL" IS NOT LISTED. TELL YOUB THEATER MANAGER.
