Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 125, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 October 1932 — Page 7
OCT. 4, 1932
LINCOLN'S NOME WARD LEANING TO DEMOCRATS Polls in Springfield Show Roosevelt Far Ahead in Illinois Sentiment. BY RAY TUCKER Tim"* Staff Correspond?nt SPRINGFIELD, 111., Oct. 4 Abraham Lincoln's home ward In this city apparently has turned against the Republican party, as led by Herbert Hoover. Polls taken in the shady streets where Lincoln used to walk, and in cheap, frame houses, the walls of which once echoed to his voice, show- Governor Franklin D. Roosevellr far in the lead. Canvasses in outlying counties, where Lincoln's debates against Douglas brought about the formation of the Republican party, reveal the same result. Some optimistic Republicans declare this situation may be upset by the last-minute offensive which Hoover himself is heading. They insist that what they term Roosevelt's ‘'radical” speeches in the west will check the rush to the Democratic ticket. They are attacking him for his so-called inconsistencies in his tariff and railroad speeches. Democratic Hopes High They expect to be well supplied with funds, and insist that door-to-door work in the last few/ weeks will overcome existing sentiment. The most amazing feature of the present situation is that Roosevelt is expected to sweep normally Republican territory down-state, and arrrive at Democratic Chicago's boundary line with a plurality. Such an outcome would defy all political tradition. It is this prospect that sends Democratic plurality estimates into fantastic figures ranging from 250,0(f0 to 500,000. For no recent leader ever haa such control in Chicago as Mayor Cermak, and he is said to be going down the line for Roosevelt. A straw vote taken by the Illinois State Journal, which has been published here as a Republican organ for more than a century, shows Roosevelt leading by four to one among the men, and three to one among the women. Quit Taking Polls Other newspaper polls in the rural regions have been so adverse to Hoover that Republican editors have quit taking them. tjaugamon county, which includes Springfield, went for Hoover by 10,000 in 1928, but it is counted on to to fo^ - Roosevelt, by 5,000. It is the in:,-* -■- end tally in other counties where a Democratic machine or victory have been unknown. • Democratic candidates are drawing tremendous crowds, while a recent picnic appearance of Secretary Arthur M. Hyde was a dismal affair. In short, canvasses are so favorable to the Roosevelt-Garner ticket that Democratic county bosses are afraid to believe them. The causes are the same as elsewhere. Though possessing the best of corn-growing land, farmers are impoverished. Mines have been closed down, or have been centers of disturbances, in w'hich local Republican officials have made enemies for themselves. Factories are black and bleak. There are about 1,000,000 people requiring relief, and the bill for their care runs about $1,500,000 a day, including private and public funds. The Democrats hope to elect Judge Henry Horner as Governor and William H. Dieterich as senator with Roosevelt's aid. Uen Small’s Crowd The Republican gubernatorial candidate is Len Small. He is given a better chance to carry the state than Hoover, even though, as Governor a few years ago, he was forced to return $850,000 of withheld interest on public funds after he had been indicted. Around him are gathered all the forces and figures who have denounced Hoover for years. They include Frank L. Smith, national committeeman, who was barred from the senate for accepting campaign contributions from Sam Insull while serving as chairman of the public service commission; William H. Lorimer, who was expelled from the senate many years ago, and ex-Mayor William Hale Thompson. It s rather hard on the President, for none of these men are supporting him. In fact, he has no state champion, who knows practical politics or has contacts W'ith the county organizations. His one loyal friend. Governor Lou Emmerson. is confined to the executive mansion with a serious illness.
MRS. LYDIA TALBOTT IS TAKEN BY DEATH Succumbs at Home of Son: Funeral Rites to Be Held Wednesday. Mrs. Lydia Talbott. 73. died Monday in the home of her son. Earl T. Talbott, 1134 place. She had been ill a year. She was the widow of Charles Talbott. She was born in Ladoga and lived there until Mr. Talbott died forty-five years ago, when she came to Indianapolis. Funeral services will be held in the Talbott home at 10 Wednesday. Burial will be in Ladoga. Only survivor is the son. C. N. THOMPSON DEAD Taken Suddenly While at Work; Lived Here Many Years. Funeral services for Charles N. Thompson, 57. of 1158 North Tremont street, who died unexpectedly Monday noon while working at the Allison Engineering works, will be at 2 Thursday in Memorial Baptist church. Mr. Thompson waii born in Sheffield. England, but lived in Indianapolis a number of years. He was a member of the Red Men and the Masons. Burial will be in Crown Hill cemetery. United States department of commerce figures show that 1,797,380 patents have been issued in' the United States since records have been kept.
FAME OF ‘ZAZA’ NEVER DIMMED
Mrs. Leslie Carters Artistiy Enchants Stage World
ft fly/ I had decided perversely never to ft l// relinquish his name. nan - Mrs. Farter j j* LL make Mrs. Leslie Carter as known, even though Leslie Like phan/oms from a fabulous past, hcr most and she continued in the determen ti.ro ich the net- always well back fpljf jßjßßpjßaellp' . . , mination non aflci she was mar of a rags oi.e thev one? dominated. t ried again. Their name, mav mean little or less- SmmmSBBBHmJm / #f ffl as New Vork The break with Bclasco came to the \ounger generation. but stir Ms *B i&X'i, ’SHj&MU&x knew her „ miEhu ( memories ^ ored °Ut to PortSIn a series of arMcles. of which the. 1 the town nrevionc unnminrenipnt of her foiiow.nc is rhe fourth, wiiiiam Enic . previous announcement 01 ner summons these eiants of other years ®> v Storm. nlnn married William Tkstii* from iheir present obscurity for a re- f-.i plan, mamea wunam .LOUIS tamous f lhf CRlcers that mßde lhem Payne, An actor who was no great B ' V. In the secon( j phaze of her pub-
Mrs. Carter in her later years. Like phantoms from a fabulous past, living men and women flit now and then through the news always well back of a Page One they once dominated. Their names mav mean little or lessto the younger generation, but stir mighty memories among those who know of the influences they exerted on their times. , , , In a series of articles, of which the following is the fourth, William Engle summons these giants of other years from their present obscurity for a review of the careers that made them famous. BY WILLIAM ENGLE Time* Start Writer (Copyrißht. 1932. by the New York WorldTelegram Corporation! “T SAW before me,” said David X Belasco long afterward, ‘a pale, slender girl with a mass of red hair and green eyes gleaming under black brows. She began to cry and then she smiled. Her gestures were full of unconscious grace and her voice vibrated with musical sweetness. Dear, dear!” It was Mrs. Leslie Carter, a lavender memory now, but once the toast of champagne New York, who thus upset him. She had come up from Kentucky. to Echo lake, a divorcee, an impetuous youngster adrift, who never had set foot on a stage, to tell him she wanted to be a star, to implore him to give her a chance on the fabled Broadway of 1888. “I got there that afternoon riding through a thunderstorm,” she, also long afterward, recalled. “I was bedraggled and frightened. I guess it was desperation in my voice that made him relent and listen to me.” For he did relent. He relented so genuinely that for three years thereafter he had her mumming by herself, day in and out, in a studio in Carnegie hall before he let the footlights shine on her. He set out to fulfill her ambition—to star her in her first appearance. “He made me learn dozens of things—Little Eva.eLady Macbeth, Ophelia. I knew each role in the Sheridan comedies. He'd come and call for a certain scene. Then he'd commend or condemn. He was final.” That was the preface of one of the most glamorous lifetimes ever lived on the stage. tt tt tt IT catapulted the girl from Kentucky into a career that made her the despair of the young blades from San Francisco to Boston; it kept her in the public ken for forty-one years; her red hair and her green eyes filled dreams and reams. Now on a crest of popularity, now in a slough of customers’ apathy, she weathered the decades, never forgotten (when the play of the moment faltered) as the concert hall hoyden i: “Zaza” or as the bewitching opportunist in “Du Barry,” and remembered, too, as anew century came in, by her roles in plays a~ disparate as ‘‘Camille” and “The Shanghai Gesture.” Her debut in 1891 made the phantasy of all the stagestruck girls of all the latitudes come true. She came to the stage—the
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stage of the Broadway theater — a star in her first role. But it was a shoddy piece—- “ The Ugly Duckling”—and the phantasy she made reality a while had a drab sequel. She starred. She did all Belasco had expected her to do. Yet the critics, with their “adequate” and “creaky,” damned her and her play. But within two years she was Maryland Calvert. They could not argue that amusing fact out of the public mind. Maryland, the alabaster heroine of the Belasco Civil war drama, "The Heart of Maryland.” The heroine who was the talk of the Victorian drawing rooms. She did a “curfew shall not ring tonight.” Thirty-five feet above the stage she swung her slender hands gripping the clapper of an iron bell. She stopped the ladies’ and gentlmen’s heartbeats and she stopped curfew for the evening; the papers admitted she was a sensation. They had, not admitted anything yet. They had not seen “Zaza.” a tt tt plot, revealing a conJLj cert hall singer’s joys and woes—called unprcedently rique then—divided public interest with exploits of Theodore Roosevelt’s Rough Riders and by mid season at the Garrick theater there often was not even standing room. New York had not found anythfhg on the legitimate stage quite so deliciously shocking. Ministers and uplift societies railed against its immorality. They said the girl from Kentucky was a menace. And in the revival the next season the first triumphs were surpassed; seat sales averaged more than $16,000 a week. Mrs. Carter became “the American Bernhardt,” though she never liked the title. Rose-laden and applauded, she nightly was handed into her carriage by Belasco. Sherry’s and Delmonico’s awaited her. No one was gayer. London capitulated, too. They yelled “Bravo!” there. Within a year, in December, MOl, she was opening in “Du Barry.” Back there at the turn of the century are the glories' that have
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Mrs. Carter as Zaza, perhaps her most famous role, and, at left, as New York knew her when she took the town by storm.
colored her career through all the later years. "Zaza” and “Du Barry” and Mrs. Carter got into the common speech interchangeably. She and they were symbols of anew public admission that there are two sexes and consequences. tt tt it THE girl with the glowing halo and green gaze in her premiere disconcerted post-McKin-ley Washington. In what was then regarded In awe as a sumptuous reproduction of the court of Louis XV, she, a lowly millloner’s daughter, won the favor of the king. “She became the Countess Du .Barry,” the Washington Star said, “and the countNwas sent away.” By the time she got to New York two weeks later and snugly into the Garrick the critics were believing that her acting eclipsed Mr. Belasco’s play. The New York Herald put it: “She is a fascinating actress. She has outgrown Mr. Belasco both as a teacher of acting and as a maker of plays.” But her way and his did not part for seventeen years. He saw her through triumphs and failures. He brought her out' usually in some thing light, but sometimes in tragedy. In “Adrea” in 1905 he even let her commit a murder on the stage; she killed her lover to save him the ignominy of the death she had ordered when she doomed him to extinction beneath the hoofs of horses on a cobbled street beside the Adriatic sea. Their separation divided the two phases of her career, one under his direction and good stars, and the other as her own producer and in association with others under a variable zodiac. They quarreled when she married the second time. Asa girl Caroline Louise Dudley of Kentucky, she had married Leslie Carter, a young Chicago millionaire, in 1880. They had one child and a few years of pleasant illusion. But their marriage had ended in divorce. He had been given a decree in 1889 and custody of the child. That had embittered her. She
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had decided perversely never to relinquish his name. tt tt tt “T’LL make Mrs. Leslie Carter known, even though Leslie Carter isn't,” she had told him, and she continued in the determination even after she was married again. The break with Belasco came when she motored out to Portsmouth, N. H., and there, without previous announcement of her plan, married William Louis Payne, fin actor who was no great shakes. She was 48 and he w f as 35. In the second phaze of her public appearance she touched a few heights and a lot of depths. In Rupert Hughes’ “Two Women,” at the Lyric theater in 1910, she took sixty-eight curtain calls and then opened a great box of roses from an anonymous sender who wrote: “With admiration for a good fighter.” She scored with “Madame X,” “The Gay Lord Quex” and “The Second Mrs. Tanqueray.” No longer ago than 1921 she gave what critics said was her finest performance. Arch Selwyn had come back from England with Somerset Maugham’s sophisticated comedy, “The Circle,” and Mrs. Carter played that lady of generous affections, Lady Kitty. The critics gave her credit for subtleties which, in the old days, never had been her forte. She made Lady Kitty delectable and dilltante. The paths beyond were not so bright. They led into bankruptcy courts and into doldrums. They branched to the Bronx, where she was Mother Goddam* again in “The Shanghai Gesture” in 1928, and last year to Mt. Vernon, where she was Stella Dallas. The feud with Belasco. after twenty-five years, was ended last spring a little while before his death. They met by chance in Los Angeles, after she had taken the initiative in amenity and had sent him a note when he was ill. “He was good enough,” she explained, ‘to say that our quarrel was all his fault.’ Next: Jesse L. Livermore, “Wizard of Wall Street.” Bids Asked on Digesters Bids were received today by the Indianapolis sanitary board for thirty-two new digesters for the city garbage plant with the bids reported between $20,000 and $30,000. Contracts are to be let next Tuesday.
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TWO SLUGGED, TWO BOUND IN SAFEROBBERY Band of Three Yeggs Crack Strong Box of Meier Packing Company. Slugging two employes unconscious and binding two others, three bandits early today blew open with nitroglycerin the safe of the Meier Packing Company, 577 West Ray street, and escaped with $2,000 in currency and checks. The bandits entered the plant shortly after midnight and surprising Joseph Puryear, 5812 West Washington stret, engineeer, and Louis Dawson, 540 Abbott street, night clerk at work, bound and gagged them. As the bandits finished with Puryear and Dawson, Charles Feske, 2310 North Talbott street, another night clerk, entered and one of the bandits slugged him with a blackjack. Thought It Was Joke Clarence Wilson, 441 North Fulton street, night watchman, had been in the plant engine'room and when he entered the office, steam had condensed on his eyeglasses, making it momentarily difficult for him to see. Wilson said he thought the man who drew a gun and said. “Hands up!” was a police officer, and mere ly playing a joke. As Wilson started to take off his glasses, the bandit stunned him with a blow from a gun butt and pressing the revolver against Wilson’s ribs, warned him, “I'll shoot if you try to get a look at me.” Wilson was bound and the bandits then attacked the combination of the safe with a sledge hammer and poured in only enough "soup” to blow the outer safe doors with a minimum of noise. The inner doors were not locked. Descriptions Indefinite Due to elaborate precautions taken by the bandits to prevent their victims from getting more than quick glances at the intruders, employes were able to give police only indefinite descriptions. A suspect arrested on information supplied police by a taxi driver who picked up three men at Morris and Meridian streets and obeyed orders to drive them hurriedly to the Traction Terminal station, was released when the packing firm employes failed to identify him. The taxi driver,, Otto Lull, 327 north Keystone avenue, said he believed two of his passengers caught a bus to Chicago r.fter telling the third good by. Police at Lafayette were asked to check on the Chicago bus passengers. Officials of the Meier company were checking today on the safe’s contents, and said it would be some time before they could estimate the exact amount of cash taken. Bates to Address Kiwanians Sanford Bates, Washington, federal bureau of prisons director, will talk on. “American Prisons” Wednesday noon at the Columbia Club at the Kiwanis club luncheon.
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Mr. Fixit Writ* your troubles to Mr. Fixit. H* Is Th* Times representative at th* city hall and will be glad to present your case to the proper city officials. Write him in care of The Times signing your full name and address. Name will not be published.
Mr. Fixit—Ninth street between Denny and Chester streets is much higher than the alley, causing water to stand in the alley after a rain. There is from six to twelve inches of water in the alley. , Street Commissioner Wilbur Winsbip advises that thia condition trill be remedied at once. Mr. Fixit—Will you please see what you can do toward having the 800 block of South Belle Vieu place fixed. I have a vacant house in the block that can not be rented because of the condition of the street. Your letter has been reported to the street commissioner's department and Mr. Fixit has been assured that the condition will be remedied. Mr. Fixit—As a reader of The Times for the last ten years, have seen where you have helped many, so I ask if you can have the garbage collected from the alley, instead of the street in the 1700 block East Tabor street. The board of sanitary commissioners ha* been informed of your request, and will consider changing the collection route in your neighborhood.
HITS UTILITY GOUGE Rates Must Be Cut, Says Springer in Speech. By United Pret* DANVILLE, Ind., Oct. 4.—Readjustment of utility rates “to meet a changed economic condition was promised in a campaign address here Monday night by Raymond S. Springer, Republican candidate for Governor. “Rates now charged by utilities must be decreased," Springer declared. “I shall see that all commissioners and agents are ‘fairminded,’ not ‘utility-minded.’ ” Springer also pledged “strict economy in government consistent with good administration.” CARRY GRANT COUNTY ,TAX FIGHT TO COURTS State Board Order Is Opposed; Suit Filed Before Circuit Judge Here. Fight to enjoin the state tax board from enforcing an order for a horizontal increase in Grant county property assessments was begun in Marion circuit court Monday by Edgar A. Copple, Grant 'county taxpayer. He filed a suit attacking the board's order increasing land and lot valuations in th county’s rural districts 20 per cent, rural district improvements 15 per cent and city and town valuations 10 per cent. The Grant county board of review refused to make the increases Aug. 12, although ordered to do so by the state board. A second order asks tffe court to mandate the board to certify a transcript of its proceedings to the Grant circuit court, where taxpayers are perfecting an appeal from the board’s order.
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COUNCIL VOTES CHANGE IN CITY POLICE LINEUP f'"- ’ Upholds Action of Safety Board in Demotions of Fletcher and Owen. Upholding action of the board ot safety and Chief Mike Morrissey in eliminating the post of Major Herbert Fletcher and reducing Lieutenant Frank Owen to the rank of sergeant, the city council Monday night, by a vote of 5 to 3. passed the ordinance which will make the changes effective soon. It is expected that Mayor Reginald H. Sullivan will sign the ordinance within the next few days, making the shake-up effective nearly three months in advance of the 1933 budget, which also incorporates the changes. Fleteher and Owen were reduced through failure to provide funds for payment of their previous salaries. Fletcher will become one of six police captains. Says Johnson Is in Charge Timothy McMahon, patrolman In the accident prevention bureau, is promoted to a sergeancy. on equal rank with who has been in charge of the bureau. Two eighthour shifts in the bureau will be operated under the new Arrangement. Questioned by councilmen, regarding reason for the change, Morrissey declared that the move was for the increased efficiency of the accident, prevention bureau, and that "the work will go on just the same.” Morrissey said that Captain Lewis Johnson, head of the traffic department, actually is in charge of accident prevention work, with Owen handling activities in the field. A proposed amendment for retention of Fletcher as major, and the creation of two new lieutenancies was killed. 5 to 3. Market Problem Held Over The council unanimously passed an ordinance approved by Dr. Herman G. Morgan, city health officer, requiring that warning gas be used in poisonous fumigating mixtures to prevent accidental asphyxiations. Other ordinances passed transferred $20,000 from the gasoline tax fund to the board of, works, provided thirty-minute parking on streets surrounding the Union station. and corrected an error in the salary reduction ordinance which subjected a number of sanitary department employes to double cuts. Ordinance recodifying regulations for the city market was, held over until the next meeting. The ordinance providing for Sunday closing of grocery stores was stricken from the files. , Veterans Enter G. O. P. Campaign Edward G. Schaub, commander of the National United American Veterans, and Herman Hilles, adjutant. have resigned to participate iri the Republican campaign, it was announced today by the executive committee.
