Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 111, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 September 1932 — Page 3
SEPT. 17, 1932_
ALCOHOL TAKES ’ GREATER TOLL IN CITY HOMES t , Percentage Also Is Higher Among Foreign-Born Residents. By Beirnee Birrire PHILADELPHIA, Sf-pt. 17.—1n more than two-thirds of the states, the degree of prevalence of alcoholic mental disease is proportionate to the percentages of foreign-born persons and of city dwellers in those states, Frederick W. Brown, director of the department of information and statistics of the National Committee for Mental Hygiene, found as the result of a survey, made public here today by the American Academy of Political and Social Science. Furthermore, Brown found that “the present general tendency in the prevalence of alcoholic mental disease in the several states is in accord with the trend of public opinion in those states with regard to • restriction of the sale and use of alcoholic beverages as revealed by state legislation existing at the time } of the enactment of the federal prohibition laws.” For example, Brown found in his ' survey that in Alabama, where only 0.6 per cent of the population is foreign-born and only 28.1 per cent of the total population lives in cities, the average number of admissions to state hospitals for mental disease for 1928, 1929 and 1930 was only 0.3 per 100,000 general population. But in Massachusetts, where a little more than a fourth of the population is foreign-born and nearly all the people, more than 90 out of every 100 persons, live in cities, the rate of admlssioas of rases of alcoholic mental disease to state hospitals was 5.7 per 100,000 general population. Os the twenty-five states in which the amount of alcoholic mental diseases, measured by hospital admissioas, and the percentage of foreign born and city-dwellers were below the average for the United States as a whole, seven were bone dry at the time federal prohibition laws went into effect. These were Colorado. Georgia, Idaho, Kansas, Nebraska, South Dakota and Utah. Thirteen of these twenty-five states had state-wide restrictions, and five were wet. Os the eight states in which the hospital admissions for alcoholic mental disease, the percentage of foreign-born and the city-dwellers r were above the average for the country as a whole, seven were wet and the other had state-wide restrictions. SEEKS $35,000 DAMAGES Woman Sues for Alleged Loss of Hair in Accident, Damages of $35,000 for alleged loss of her hair in illness resulting from a fall on the sidewalk at 117 North Illinois street June 1, were asked in a suit filed today in superior court one by Mrs. Alma Strong, 3951 Ruckle street. . Defendants are the Pullis Realty Company and the Schiff Company, owner and lessee, respectively, of the building at the Illinois street address. Mrs. Strong asserts she tripped on raised letters on the sidewalk. REVOKE DRIVER LICENSE Man Fined on Drunkenness Charge After Auto Accident. Harry Schwab, 1845 North Pennsylvania street, was fined $lO and costs on drunkenness charges Fidday by Judge William H. Sheaffer in municipal court four, as the result of an auto accident in which f Schwab figured at Tenth street and Capitol avenue. Schwab's driving license was re- - voked for one year, and a fine of $lO and costs and thirty days imprisonment were suspended on conviction of operating a car under the influence of liquor. OH, CHARGE IT, OFFICER! F.vanston Abandons “Cash-Carry” Plan for Traffic Violators. By Uniti and Press EVANSTON. 111., Sept. 17.—Protests by women today brought installation of a “charge account” system for traffic violators. For many years, all fine have been N on a “cash and carry” basis, but Evanston women complained they were arrested often for minor offenses after they had been on a shopping trip, and had no money to pay fines or bonds. Asa result the “charges” system went into effect today.
Times Radio Dial Twisters
WFBM (1200) Indianapolis > Indianapolis Power and Liiht Company —SATURDAY— L P. M. k s:3o—Transcription, f 5:15 Do-Re-Mi (CBS>. 6 00—Edwin C. Hill (CBS'. 6 15—Vaughn De Leath (CBS’ v.V s:3o—Gus Arnkeim orchestra (CBS). 7:oo—Music that Satisfies tCBSt. 7:ls—Ann Leaf (CBS'. 7:3o—Democratic County Committee. 7:3s—Ana Leaf (CBS'. 7:4s—Syracuse Varieties .CBS). B:ls—Public Affairs Institute (CBS). B:4s—Coral Islanders iCBSt. 0 00—Gus Arnheim orchestra (CBS'. 9:3o—Harold Stern orchestra (CBSi. 10:00—Guy Lombardo and Koval Canadians tCBSL ' 10:30—Columnist. 10:45—Noble Sissle orchestra iCBSi. 11:00—Atop the Indiana roof. 11:30—Sign off. SUNDAY A M. B:oo—Church of the Air tCBS:. B:3o—Salon orchestra (CBSt. 9:oo—Entertainers. 9.3o—Christian Men Builders. ▼ 10:30 to Noon—Silent. 12:00 Noon—Coommunitv center recital (CBS). P. M. J/C 30—Records. I:3o—Symphonic hour (CBSi. 2 00—Cathedral hour (CBS'. 3 00 —Round Towners (CBS)'. 3 30—Poets Gold (CBSi. Little Jack Little (CBS). f Wheeler City Mission. J-2® - s ose * * nd Drums (CBS), f Jwhus Klein (CBS'. iit~£ hl 9 a S.° Knights (CBS). * £? rl Gordon pianologue. 5 22 — H#ll * nd orchestra (CBSi. # 30—Roxv SvmDhonv (CBS'. ‘ 95 —Dramatic laboratory (CBS'. 7:3o—Parade (CBS' *.o<V—Ernest Hutcheson and orchestra (CBS). /t JO—Oauchos (CBS). 9 OO—Ann Leaf iCBSi. 9 15—'■Bohemians. l 9 45—Dance orchestra. lO ?-Bernie Cummins orchestra (CBS'. F 10:15—The columnist. L 10 JO— Gus Arnheim orchestra (CBS'. 00 —Dance orchestra. Wi; 30—Sim off. i
Fans’ Interest Is at Fever. Heat in Times’ Scrambled Letter Contest
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Sixteenth and Illinois to Be Frolic Scene Tonight
Street Widening and Jog Elimination Will Be Celebrated. Widening of Sixteenth street and elimination of the jog at Illinois street will be celebrated tonight at a street carnival sponsored by the Sixteenth and Illinois Streets Merchants Association. Opening at 6 with a parade and drill by firemen from Engine House 5, the program will continue until midnight. Street dancing will be included in the program. Speakers on the program will be Mayor Reginald H. Sullivan, Louis J. Borinstein, president of the Chamber of Commerce, and the Rev. John G. Benson, superintendent of the Methodist hospital. Concerts will be given by the Children's Civic orchestra and the newsboys’ band. At 10 a bathing beauty contest will be held, with winners being chosen by applause. Sixteenth between Meridian street and Capita* avenue, and Illinois street between Fourteenth and'Seventeenth streets, will be closed to traffic, it is announced. Special lighting effects will be arranged in the blocked area, according to H, Wiegand, president of the association. MINE ZONE TROOPS TO BEGIN EVACUATION Removal of National Guard to Start Saturday, Tombaugh Declares. Removal of the Indiana national guard “army of occupation” from coal mling sections was to begin today, it was announced by Adju-tant-General Paul Tombaugh, who said 100 men will be sent home, leaving only fifty on duty. Two companies of the One hundred fifty-second infantry, F of Anderson, and G of Newcastle, will go home Saturday. The state troops have been on duty several weeks due to clashes wh\ch arose at mines employing men not members of the miners’ union. Recent acceptance of anew wage scale by the union miners has resulted in several hundred being returned to work. DEMANDS $15.000 FOR INJURIES! A^ACCIDENT Highway Commission Worker Sues City Trucking Concern. Suit demanding $15,000 damages from the American Aggregates Corporation, near Broad Ripple, was filed in superior court three today by Herbert Klotsche, 1837 West Wilkins street, who charges he received permanent injuries in an accident caused by one of the company’s trucks. . Klotsche, a state highway commission worker, was painting a bridge north of Broad Ripple when an American Aggregates truck, driven by Lester Gard, whipped up a rope end on the bridge, loosing a scaffold on which Klotsche and two others were working and throwing them into a slough underneath, the suit charges. IT’S HARD TO BEAT HER Oldest Woman in Town Has 22-Year-Old Piece of Cake. By United Press AINSWORTH, Neb., Sept. 17. Mrs. Rachel Trussed claims two records. She is 83 and the oldest person in town, and she also has a piece of a friend’s wedding cake that is twen-ty-two years old.
WKBF (1400) Indianapolis (Indianapolis Broadrastlng. Inc?) SATURDAY P M. 4:3o—Tea Time Tunes. 4:4s—News flashes. s:ls—Vaughn Cornish. s:3o—Dinner Melodies. 6:oo—Cecil A- Sally. 6:2o—Baseball scores 6:2s—Democratic county committee. 6:3o—Ward B. Hiner. 6:4s—Golden Melodies. 7:ls—Sport's Spotlight 7:3o—Russ-Dol-Rav Trio. 7:4s—Louise Spellman. B:oo—Orchestra. B:ls—Alice Arnold. 8:30 —Jewel Box. * B:4s—Radio Rangers. 9:oo—Sign off. SUNDAY A M 9:3o—Brown County Reve.ers. 9: •‘s—Varieties. 10:00—Watchtower program. 10:15—Sacred concert. 10:30—Crystal melodies. 11:30—Late releases. 12:00 Noon—Announced. P. M. 12:15—Dessa Bvrd. I:oo—Melodies of Merit. I:ls—Concert hour. 2:oo—Harry Bason. 2:3o—Moment Musicale. 3:00 —C. H. Erickson. 3:3o—Cadle Tabernacle. 4:4s—Memories of Victor Herbert. s:oo—Silent. 6:oo—Beautiful Thoughts. 6:ls—Baseball scores. 6:3o—Marshall players. 7:oo—Vaughn Cornish. 7:ls—Louise Spillman. 7:30 —Twilight reveries. B:oo—Cadle Tabernacle. B:ls—Vocal varieties. 10:00—C. H. Erickson. 10:30—Sign off. WLW (700) Cincinnati SATURDAY P M. 4:oo—Saturday Serenade. 4:30 Doctors of Melody 4:4s—"Law for the Layman.’* 5 00— Amos 'n' Andy 'NBC'. s*s— M * n Sunshine (Ford Rush). 5 SO—Bob Newhall. 5 45—Southern Singers.
Fight for Life By United Press CHICAGO, Sept. 17.—Scientists were studying the blood of 5-year-old Bushman, a gorilla in the Lincoln park zoo, in hope of prolonging his life beyond the 7-year period the animals usually live in captivity. In its natural jungle in Africa, the gorilla often lives to the age of 40, Floyd S. Young, zoo official, explained. With only two more years of probable life, Bushman' is to be submitted to several tests in an effort to reveal the cause of the early deaths of his brothers in captivity.
DISCORD ROUTS •SONGOF LOVE' Convict Trombone Flayer of Sinking Bride. Sour notes made “Love's Old Sweet Song” a jangling discord soon after the marriage of Elmer Pruitt, 21, of 2218 Parker street, a trombone player, and his wife Stella, testimony Friday in the municipal court of Judge William H. Sheafler developed. Elmer, a slick-haired youth with long sideburns, was convicted of assault and battery charges, and fined sls and costs by Sheaffer. The discord appeared, according to testimony, about six weeks after the wedding bells had rung. The couple had separated and Elmer with a “boy friend” and two “girl friends” had gone to Brightwood to a ball game. Mrs. Pruitt, she said, followed them and recognizing Elmer’s car, ordered the girls out. They refused and Mrs. Pruitt, it was testified, was unable to enter the car because all windows were up and the doors locked. When Elmer appeared, and tried to drive off, she is alleged to have tried to enter the car by crawling in the driver’s side window and Elmer rtailated by striking her several times. STOCKS CHIEFS OPEN POLITICS NEWS PROBE B;r Vnitfd Press NEW YORK, Sept. 16.—The New York Stock Exchange committee on business conduct today requested all New York City members to send in by noon all telegraphic communiications dealing, in any way, with topics of a political nature sent or received by them between Sept. 1 and Thursday. Out-of-town members must submit similar data by s¥pt. 19. The Stock Exchange refused to elaborate on its announcement requesting the information, or to explain its significance. Political opinions expressed in brokerage literature were alleged by some observers to have inspired professional attacks on the stock market, causing a sharp break in prices. The majority of conjmentators, however, held that the recent reaction of the market was more in the nature of an over due technical correction after a prolonged advance.
6:00 —Tylers on Tour. 6:ls—"Chandu.” the Magician. 6:3o—Two Guitars. 6.4s—Croslev Cadets. 7 00—Over the Rhine. 7:ls—Virginio Marucci's string quartet. 7:3o—The New York orchestra (NBC. B:oo—Castle Farm orchestra. B:3o—Bands of Distinction. B:4s—Josef Cherniavskys orchestra. 9:ls—Crosley Follies. 9:4s—The Whole Town's Talking. 10:00—Doodlesockers, with Sid Ten Evck 10:30—Charles Agnew’s orchestra (NBC. 11:00—Moon River, Slumber Music. 11:30—Castle Farm orchestra. 12:00—Sign off. A 1 SUNDAY 7:OO—NBC Children's hour (NBC). B:oo—Church forum. B:3o—Fiddlers Three iNBC'. B:45—A song for todav (NBC'. 9:oo—Morning musicale (NBC. 10 9° —Organ and Sisters Three. 10:28—River and weather repost. 10:30—Mexican Tvpica oreh. (JNBC). 11:00—Biblical drama iNBC). 11:30—Clyde Doerr saxophone octette (NBC). 12:00 Noon —Pilgrims (NBQ). 12:30—Yeast Foamers (NBC). I:oo—Cincinnati College of Music recital. ' 1:30—48 Highlanders military band (NBC). 2:oo—Singing violin. 2:3o—Afternoon serenade. 3:oo—Choir. 3:3o—Road to Romany (NBC. 4:oo—The Angelus. 4:3o—Roamios. s:oo—Great Composers concert. s:3o—The Goldman band (NBC). 6:00 —Baseball scores. 7:os—Don Gonzales dance orchestra. 6:ls—Squads Rights (NBC). 6:3o—Borah Minnevitch an dhis Harmonica Rascals (NBC). 7:oo—Vera Ross, contralto. ■ 7:ls—Russian Gaieties (NBC. 7:4s—Josef Cherniavsky s orchestra. B:ls—The Old Singing Master (NBC). B:4s—Three Keys iNBC. 9:oo—Vox Humana. 9:3o—Back Home with Frank Luther and his Sylvanians. 9:4s—Singing violin. 10:00—Wm. Bto6ss and his Elvina Dutchmen iNBC). 10:30—Castle Farm orchestra. 11:00—Moon River. 11:30—Castle Farm orchestra. 12.00 Midnight—Sign off..
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
THE scramble is on in earnest. Hundreds of puzzle fans have entered The Times alphabet jumble contest and interest is running high. Here is the third letter in the series today, a sadly scrambled “C” for you to paste together. Clip it out and start work, for it may mean that you'll get a share of the $125 in prizes offered in the contest. If you missed “A” and “B” you can get back numbers of The Times by calling at the circulation department. They’ve been saved for you. Rules of the contest follow: The letters, cut in varying shapes, are to be neatly formed together and kept until you have all twenty-six, when they should be sent to The scrambled Letter Contest Editor of The Times. Any one can participate, without cost, except employes of The Times,. The Times will pay prizes totalling $125 to the persons who send in the nearest correctly solved, complete set of puzzles. This does not necessarily mean that you have to solve all the puzzles to win. Neatness, accuracy, and simplicity are the main requisites. Accurate cutting and correct assembling of the pieces will be considered by the judges, whose dacisions will be final, in naming the victors. Elaborate entries will receive no more favor than simple ones. Take the pieces which appear here and paste them neatly and carefully over the letter which appears by the side of them, until you cover it completely, and follow this system on all twenty-six of the letters. v All entries must be in within ten days after the last scrambled letter appears in The Times, All entries become the property of The Times and will not be returned^ 23 TO FACE U. S. COURT ON MINE RIOT COUNTS Arrangement to Be Held on Charge of Violating Judge’s Ruling. Preparations were being made today for arraignment Monday in federal court of twenty-three alleged rioters arrested several months ago on contempt of court charges in connection with picketing of the Hoosier coal mine, near Dugger, Ind. Similar charges against a number of others arrested in the case, and in the Dixie Bee mine case were dismissed this week by George R. Jeffrey, district attorney. The seventy-five union miners held in the Dixie Bee case were freed of contempt charges because of a technicality in the law which made inoperation a temporary restraining order issued Feb. 17. The arraignment will be conducted in federal court here by Judge Louis Fitzhenry, Peoria, 111. ‘FRAMED,’ SAYS RUM SUSPECT; RELEASED Wins Freedom on Charges He Was Made Victim of Bnemies. Charges of Robert H. Glover, 666 East Thirty-eighth street, that he was “framed” by enemy bootleggers, Friday won his freedom on federal liquor charges. Glover was arrested Thursday night by prohibition agents, who said they sopped up about a teaspoonful of the contents of a halfpint bottle tossed from Glover’s car during a rain. They Said they were given a tip Glover would be transporting a large quantity of liquor. Glover testified before Howard S. Young, federal commissioner, that he had been warned he was to be arrested, and denied any knowledge of the half pint of liquor he said he found in his car after visiting a movie.
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FARMERS TO BE GIVEN HAND IN R. f .^GROUPS Enlargement* of Personnel Is Expected to Include Rural Representatives. By Scripps-Hoteard Xetcspapcr Alliance WASHINGTON, Sept. 17.—Recognition by the Reconstruction. Finance Corporation of the fact that bankers predominate in the newly established agricultural credit corporations is believed likely to lead to an enlargement of the p%rsonnel to include more dirt farmers and stock growers. < This change may be effected, it was intimated at R. F. C. headquarters, either by increasing the number of directors in each regional corporation, or appointing advisory groups of ranchers and farmers to assist the directorates already selected. Practically all the managers and directors for ten of the regional corporations now have been announced, and the boards have been authorized to begin accepting applications for loans immediately. Os the 130-odd men already chosen to operate the new agricultural loaning agencies, however, at least 50 per cent are bankers or former bankers. The selection of the personnel has been accomplished with a minimum of political interference, although the latter, it is understood, has been disclosed in some instances, notably that of Oklahoma City ' The manager and membership of the branch bank there are still to be announced, due, it is said, to controversy arising over demands presented by W. G. Skelly, national Republican committeeman for Oklahoma. With a minimum capitalization from R. F. C. funds of three million for each corporation, the complete setup of twelve agencies, one for each federal land bank district, will make $30,000,000 available for loans to 'stock feeders, cattlemen and farmers. FUR CROP IN STATE PASSES $750,000 MARK More Than 1,000,000 Pelts Reported Purchased; 91 Dealers Still Out. Indiana’s fur crop is worth more than $750,000 this year, the report of Walter Shirts, chief of the fish and game division of the state conservation department, shows. Five hundred twenty-three licensed dealers reported furs purchased in the state amounting to $773,673.73. Ninety-one dealers have not reported. t There were 1,150,694 pelts purchased, as follows: Muskrat, 586.689; opossum, 332,308; skunk, 183,234; raccoon, 27,391; mink, 18,103, and fox, 2,964.
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Floyd Gibbons Dropped as Announcer by NBC BY JACK FOSTER World-Telegram Radio Editor NEW YORK, Sept. H.—Floyd Gibbons has been removed as a radio announcer by the National Broadcasting Company because of his activities at the American Legion convention in Portland, Ore.
iH 1 mi
Floyd Gibbons
understand him. Home again, he found that the radio coffers were not so full as when he was earning his $5,000 a week, and he devoted his days to lecturing and rewriting his adventures. Always a master in keeping himself before the public, at the same time he’s been wisely provident, having accumulated, it is said, more than SIOO,OOO since coming to radio.
■"ii ■ ' _ Young People!
Let nothing keep you from getting youl > education now. You can well afford to make any reasonable sacrifice; work your way over whatever obstacles that may appear; in fact, strain every resource at your command, in order that you may enjoy the fruits of proper training through all the years ahead. .That is exactly what active, far-seeing, full-of-life young men and young women are doing. They realize there is just one right period in life to prepare to the best advantage for the future, They know that any other attitude may be fraught with hazards. This is one of the ten units comprising Indiana Business College. The others are at Marion, Muncie, Logansport, Anderson, Kokomo, Lafayette, Columbus, Richmond and Vincennes—the institution that has served more than 4,000 business firms of Indiana in the past five years. Free Placement Assistance to Graduates. Day and night sessions. If convenient, call at the office of the school you prefer to attend; otherwise, or telephcne'Yor Bulletin. Direct your request to Fred W. Case, Principal Central Business College
You CAN Go to College! Afternoon and Evening Classes in Indianapolis Beginning Sept . 22 Quality: A state university, one of twenty-nine institutions holding membership in the American Association of Universities. Convenience: Classes downtown at the Extension Division Building, 122 East Michigan Street. Variety: Over 90 different subjects in the College of Arts and Sciences, School of Commerce, School of Education, and premedical and pre-dental departments. Popular lecture courses at $3 in Cosmic and Human Evolution, Great Historical Movements, the Modern Movement in Architecture. Low Cost: Fees from $5 a credit hour to $75 for a full freshman program. INDIANA UNIVERSITY Extension Division s Riley 4297
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An Oregonian staff writer took his place on the air this week. According to NBC officials, Gibbons, who was hired as a reporter, adopted, instead, an editorial attitude in bringing up the subject of the bonus army evictions during his speech broadcast from the commanders' dinner Monday night. At the dinner he engaged in a verbal clash over the evictions question with Patrick J. Hurley, secretary of war. And. as an ironic footnote, Mr. Gibbons, was all but signed, before his removal, for a long awaited NBC commercial series. His has been a spectacular and often stormy radio ca’reer. A discovery of M. H. Aylesworth, NBC president, he rocketed to popularity through his daily prohibition poll broadcasts, but after a year broke with his sponsor over a salary disagreement. He went to Manchuria and conducted 'the first broadcast from a battlefront, but spoke so rapidly that few could
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FEAR GAMING RAIDS Slot Machines Stop Clicking on *Booze Row.’ Slot machines clicking on “boozo row,” south of the city, and in other parts of the county today as word passed along “to ease off the gambling" for fear of raids. In this way, it was learned various alleged gambling resorts are folding up following Prosecutor Herbert E. Wilson's announcement of a cleanup campaign. Complaints against numerous liquor dispensing and gambling places, disguised as restaurants, barbecues and soft drink resorts, have been given Sheriff Charles L. Sumner. Wilson stated. Wilson is directing his drive chiefly on slot machines and booze selling.
ART SAYS:
An old bill with the words “please call and settle” looked a bit out of place in a downtown window displaying ar - tides of many years past. It gave the irn-
V-V.] y
ART ROSE
pression that the debtor was not an early settler. B B B Congratulations to our new neighbors. General Auto Service and Bill Engelhart. a a a For your convenience wa are open ulitil 10 p. m. thi3 evening; and all-day Sunday to the same time. All departments including' tires, batteries, lubrication, gas and road service are going full blast. Call Riley 8355 if you want road service that is faster than fast. B B B We are still honoring courtesy discount cards for gasoline. Regardless of where you received your card we will allow you the same discount immediately at our pumps. This offer only at our 930 NT. Meridian St. station. BUB The Chief Tire Changer ROSE TIRE CO., Inc. 930 N. Meridian St. 365 S. Meridian St. MILLER TIRE DISTRIBUTOR#
