Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 143, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 October 1932 — Page 4

PAGE 4

HIGH OFFICIALS PAY HONOR TO FATHERGAVISK Pass Bier in Tribute to Famed Priest; Body Lies in State. Body of Monsignore Francis H. Gavisk, pastor of St. John’s Catholic church, who died Saturday, was to be removed today from the rectory to the church, where it will lie in state until 11 tonight, and again Wednesday morning until time for services. Thousands of friends and associates of Father Gavisk passed by his bier in the rectory and paid tribute to his memory Monday. The procession Included mourners of both high and low estate. Among those in the line were Mayor Reginald H. Sullivan, Federal Judge Robert C. Baltzell, and members of the state charities board, George Rogers Clark memorial commission and Red Cross executive committee. Bishop to Give Sermon The office of the dead will be read at 9:30 a. m. Wednesday and at 10 the Rt. Rev. Emanual B. Lcdvina, bishop of Corpus Christi (Tex.) diocese, will be celebrant at a pontifical requiem mass. Funeral sermon following the mass will be given by the Rev. Joseph Chartrand, bishop of Indianapolis. Father Gavisk will be buried in the priests’ plot in Holy Cross cemetery. Resolutions honoring Father Gavisk were adopted Monday by the Clark commission, state charities board and Red Cross executive committee. He held membership in each of these groups. Union Adopts Resolution Another resolution was adopted by the Central Labor Union. The venerable priest, who was beloved by Catholics and Protestants alike for his life of unselfish devotion to mankind, had servett as arbiter in many labor disputes, and his decisions were accepted without question. In many Instances, it is said, labor unions requested that he be named the only arbiter in disputes. STATE, LOSER IN CASE, TO PAY $5,000 FINE Federal Court Order Enjoins Rates Set by Service Commission. The state of Indiana, loser in a rate case against the Southern Indiana Telephone and Telegraph Company, must pay $5,000 of a $6,000 fee to Samuel Dowden, attorney, who served as special master in chancery. The company will pay the other SI,OOO. This was part of a formal decree issued today in federal court enjoining the Indiana public service commission from enforcing rates it set for the company in October, 1930. Hearing in the case was held before three judges sitting en banc— Robert C. Baltzell of the southern Indiana district, Thomas W. Slick of the northern district and Will M. Sparks of the United States circuit court of appeals, Chicago. VOTING MACHINES ARE INSTALLED BY PARTIES Instructions to Be in Charge of Each, Election Chiefs Rule. Voting machines were to be installed at the two major party political headquarters today for instruction of voters, preparatory to. the Nov. 8 election. Election commissioners have authorized that machines also be placed at the courthouse, city hall, central Y. W. C. A., third floor State Life building and third floor of the Washington. Instructors will have ’ charge of each machine and voters may ask assistance in studying the use of the machines. HOSPITAL ‘RAIDING’ HIT Medical Society Charges Misuse by War “Veterans.” By Scrippu-Houarit Xewspapcr Alliance EL PASO. Oct. 25.—The El Paso County Medical Society has denounced, through resolutions, the hospitalization of veterans with non-service connected disabilities as “treasury raiding,” ,a tax burden and unfair competition with physicians and private hospitals. The resolutions, asking repeal of laws permitting such hospitalization and protesting proposals for additional government hospitals, will be sent to Senators Sheppard and Connally, Representative Thomason and other medical societies in Texas. Doctors said 70 per cent of the patients now in government hospitals are patients whose disabilities are not connected with thenwar service. PATIENTS GO ON STAND Six Addiional Witnesses Testify in Embezzling Trial. By United Press MARION, Ind., Oct. 2f.—Six additional witnesses were placed or the witness stand today by the prosecution in the trial of Miss .Elizabeth Springer, former superintendent of the Huntington county hospital. Miss Springer is accused of embezzling $132.75 in the institution’s funds. Witnesses today were former patients at the hospital. Two of them, Fred Swain and A. W. Picker, testified that amounts they said they paid for hdfepital services did not appear on the institution’s cash book. Records of patients were checked against the cash book as the state presented its case. GAS OVERCOMES CLASS High School Chemistry Teacher, Pupils Recovering at Summitville. By l nited Press SUMMITVILLE. Ind., Oct. 25.-A high school chemistry teacher and several pupils overcome by chlorine gas during laboratory experiments were reported recovering today. Ralph Settle, 38. teacher of the class, was revived with a pulmotor. Fred Ellsworth and Gale Bogue, both 17, who became unconscious, were revived by first aid. Several other members of the class were ill.

Brooding Woman Ends Life in River

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Scores of persons assembled on a bank of White river today after police recovered the body of Mrs. Anna Schwarz 57. of Beech Grove. She committed suicide because of a domestic triangle. She had shot and wounded- her son-in-law six months ago.

Irene Rich Believes in Giving Her Two Daughters a ‘Break’

Former Movie Star Uses Common Sense in Rearing Family. B-Y PRUNELLA WOOD Times Staff Waiter NEW YORK, Oct. 25 Movie fans who may have seen Irene Rich, the Hollywood actress, rushing around the city one-day this week would hardly guess what she was celebrating with such gayety. It was Yier forty-something birthday, “of all things,” she said today. * Her suite at the Waldorf-Astoria was filled with flowers in a superHollywood effulgence; but propped against them were the latest snapshots of two grown daughters, Frances and Jane. They are really crazy about their mother, and she is about them, Miss Rich said, and much she cares if they do “date” her. “Frances is 22, and was graduated from Smith college, had one season on Broadway, and is making, a film and working at commissions for portrait busts right now,” Miss Rich said. “I would have a fit if people didn’t know she was my child. “Jane is still in school, but she will be ready for her own career before I know it; she has a very definite intention of having one. “I have had to be both father and mother to toy girls, and I have plenty to say about that. No woman ever should hang on financially to the husband whom she divorces unless she is a hopeless incompetent, for she not only will arrest the spiritual growth of her children through her own bitterness, nursed by monthly payments, but be guilty of embittering their father. “Having made a clean break, a woman should not get autocratic about it. She should stay in the background as a mentor and in the foreground as a friend for her children. “ ‘Do this, don’t do that’ are words she must never utter. Let the children decide their doings; when things go wrong, it is time enough for her to explain just how and why. “Almost the silliest reason that can be given for any taboo or duty is ‘Because I say so, and I am your mother.’ If a working mother takes no more liberties with her children’s intelligence or their confidence than she would in dealing with friends whom she values, she can make a good job of her double-duty life.” This “double-duty” life which

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Miss Rich said she had found so satisfactory began when Jane was born, and there was a long interim of unsatisfactory jobs and big disappointments before Irene Rich, the film star, evolved from the confusion. The girls’ grandmother always has cared for them while Miss Rich “did her stuff,” and when films are completed, and school terms finished, the whole family goes junketing together. The trip this summer was taken on a freighter which called at ports

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

from Southern California to British Columbia, with all the party except grandmamma dressed in the ship’s sailor uniform. “All three of us are so busy with our own affairs that these vacations together are something to look forward to,” Miss Rich said. “More than anything else, they prove to me that my determination to lay off the stern parent stuff was divine inspiration. The last thing in the world I desire is to absorb my daughters which is just as well for me, something tells me.”

LESLIE TO DENY STATE R,' F. C. RELIEF PLEAS No County Is Eligible for Federal Poor Aid Funds, Under His View. Governor Harry G. Leslie will not approve federal Reconstruction Finance Corporation funds for poor | relief in any Indiana counties, it appeared today. He has had data collected to back up his refusal in Lake, Marion, Allen, St. Joseph and Vigo counties. In Lake county the Governor has been accused by the chairman of the county commissioners of “playing politics’’ in turning down tjreir j request for $1,000,003 federal loan. I All loans must have the approval of the chief executive of the state, j Leslies interpretation of the requirements for securing federal loans is such that no county can qualify at present. He insists that the limit of bonded indebtedness must have been reached before all local relief resources are exhausted. Either that, or the county must be unable to find a buyer for poor relief bonds. | It was pointed out at the Gov- | ernor's office that the special session of the legislature made pos- | sible the issuance of poor relief j bonds. Therefore, this method of relief must be exhausted before federal funds can be borrowed. VETERAN DOCTOR DEAD M. A. Freed Had Practiced in Clay City for 53 Years. By United Press CLAY CITY, Ind., Oct. 25.—Dr. M. A. Freed, 75, said to be the oldest practicing physician in Clay county, died in his office here of a heart attack. He had practiced in Clay City for fifty-three years.

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(Answers on Comic Page) PLUNGES TO DEATH Sleeping Man Falls From Third Floor of Vigo County Courthouse. By United Press TERRE HAUTE, Ind., Oct. 25. A fall from a third-floor balustrade of the Vigo county courthouse caused the death of Bryan Ray, 35. West Terre Haute, Monday. A witness told police that Ray apparently had been asleep and lost his balance.

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SUIT HUS POOH AIDJINIT LAW Validity of Couniy Act Is Attacked by Taxpayer. Validity of an act of the 1932 special legislative session by which parts of five townships within the city limits, were made one unit for poor relief, is attacked in a suit filed today in superior court five by Leslie W. Shoppe, Washington township taxpayer. Townships affected by the act are Washington, Warren, Wayne, Center and Perry. The case, described as a friendly suit, asks for a declaratory judg-

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.OCT. 25, 1932

ment that the act is invalid and an injunction against taxing officials of Marion county and the five townships. It is alleged that the legislation is in violation of the state Constitution in that it does not apply generally to the state and is in conflict with other laws. A subcommittee of Mayor Reginald H. Sullivan's relief committse has asserted that attorneys who pass upon pcor relief bond issues are of the opinion that the act is unconstitutional. The subcommittee chairman is Leo M. Rappaport, and members are William J. Mocney, Walter C. Oiarke. A. Kiefer Mayer and Wi liam H. Book. 400 Attend Fall Festival Approximately four hundred persons attended the annual fall festival of the Indiana Association of Cosmetologists and Hairdressers at the Show Boat Monday night.

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