Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 224, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 January 1933 — Page 24
PAGE 24
NINE LEISURE HOUR CLUBS TO MEET TONIGHT Institute Conducted by Recreation Expert Is Continued. LFISI'RE hoi r calendar tonight Christian Park. It. Havne and Walnut Club. Municipal Gardena. • School ! at 410 I.aat Vermont atrect. School 16 at 11 O'! West Market atrect. Nehraaka Cropacy Club, at School 22 at li'il South lllinoia atrect. School >6 at 1601 Fast Sixteenth atrect. School 6t at Kelly and Rovd street* • Oak Hill (lub at School 68 at 2060 Winter avenur. Practical demonstrations of having * fun without money” are being given at the recreational institute being held this week at the Y. W. *C. A. by Robert K. Murray, recreational expert, under the sponsorship of twelve civic organizations, headed by the Leisure Hour Clubs. Today Murray demonstrated the rhythm games that children have played many years, and showed the additional benefits to be gained from these games when they were used with the stories in back of them. “These games originated by some mother or nurse who was attempting through play to teach a child someone particular thing,’’’ Murray said, in explaining the importance of the games. The stories of other song-games Were told by Murray, demonstrating their use in giving children educational recreation. Simple games to be played with discarded calendars, old rubber heels, milk bottle tops and tiddly winks and golf tees were demonstrated at the Thursday night session of the institute. Murray will speak at the annual Y. W. C. A. meeting tonight on “The Importance and Recreation in the Work of the Y. W. C. A.” Mrs. J. E. Snyder will direct the North Side Kiddie Revue in a program for Christian Fark Leisure Hour club tonight. Broad Ripple High School will present the program at the Ft. Wayne 'and Walnut club. The program at Municipal Gardens will include Perry’s Knothole band, under the direction of Herman Rinne; Moon Medley Four, 'composed of George Brown, Arthur Winter, Dutch Eaglin, and Frank Feist, and Steiner’s String Harmonists. Broadway Players will present the program at School 9, 740 Vermont street. Nebraska Cropscy Club, at School 22 at 1251 South Illinois street, will have a program presented by the Federation of Civic Clubs Young People's Orchestra, under the direction of Leslie C. Troutman. Boy Scouts of the Central district will present a program at School 26, j 1301 East Sixteenth street. A three-act play will be presented at School 34, Kelly and Boyd streets,! ; tonight, by the dramatic club of School 85. Sergeant Frank Owen’s safety program will be presented tonight at .the Oak Hill club meeting at School 38. A program will be given at School 16 at 1402 West Market street by the mothers’ chorus of School 41. WETS DEMAND REPEAL OF WRIGHT DRY LAW “Unconditional" Action Is Plea of Indiana Unit of Organization. Unconditional repeal of the Wright “bone dry’’ law. regardless of what the general assembly may do regarding “intoxicating beverages,” is demanded today by the Indiana Division of the Association Against the Prohibition Amendment. The demand resolution, adopted by directors at their annual meeting Thursday night at the Columbia Club, will be sent to both branches of the Indiana legislature, Director Morton F. Hayman, Terre Haute, . asserted. Also seeking repeal of the eighteenth amendment, thirty-five directors of the association issued warnings today against bills that “st raddle." The association will oppose any “straddle repeal” resolution in congress, directors reported. Auto Injuries Are Fatal NEW ALBANY. Ind„ Jan. 27. Injuries received when he was hit by an automobile were fatal Thursday to John Bedaine, 51, world war veteran.
Mechanic Fixes Cough FAST
“Crawling under cars in a drafty garage is almost a sure way to catch coughs. Every winter, so far, I’ve had my troubles. This winter, on the boss’ recommendation, I got a bottle of Smith Brothers’ Cough Syrup. It certainly worked
R. H\ Cornbs
like extra-heavy oil on my ‘valves’. In no time at all, my cough stopped; my coldgot better; and I have been hittingon all cylinders ever since.” R. W. Combs, 6451 Wentworth Avenue, Chicago, 111. BACKACHE | IT MAY BE YOUR KIDNEYS - TRY DIUREX SOLD AND Guaranteed by HAAG DRUG CO. 6V. V. turns. 20S Indiana avc- Bj nib-, city efficient watch repair man and jeweler for many Ift-' years. conscientious. honest above reproach, says: "After I’ using Pll It EX I’ills. a preparatfon of merit, I found desirable Hi results ami am willing to ree- B owmend them.” fi. TRY FOR YOURSELF mi:REX PILLS act while you Hw sleep, being used in Indianapolis In bv hundreds of people, and is RSi sold under a guarantee. I'll RFX PILLS. diuretic Brj stimulant so mur kidnevs.
GOOD FISHING BRINGS SMILE TO HOOVER'S FACE
The worries of war debts and economic problems were forgotten by President Hoover during the happy, active days he spent fishing off the Florida coast. And these pictures, taken by Lawrence Richey, one of the White House secretaries, show cleifrly and intimately how the chief executive enjoyed his vacation. At left, on the d n ck of the Sequoia, he proudly exhibits one of the five large sailflsh he caught; and at the right he grins delightedly as he begins a battle with another big one.
Barbara Falls in Love With a Missionary This Time •The Bitter Tea of General Yen,’ With Scenes Laid in Modern China, Opens Saturday at the Circle. THE Bitter Tea of General Yen,’’ Barbara Stanwyck's latest starring vehicle for Columbia, opens Saturday at the Circle, with Nils Asther heading the supporting cast. Miss Stanwyck is cast as a conventional New England girl, who goes to Shanghai in order to marry a missionary. On ner arrival lie fails to meet her, and she is swept into a mob of infuriated Chinese at a time when hostilities are centered around the city. In the ensuing melee, she is injured and rescued by the celebrated General Yen, the intelligent and unscrupulous leader of the Nationalists, who takes her to his home and places her in charge of his favorite, the clever Mah-li.
An unwilling host and an involuntary guest between whom there is a chasm of centuries, General Yen (Nils Asther) and Megan Davis (Miss Stanwyck), provide a situation over which hangs the threat of a violent clash between Orient and Occident. After her first feeling of revulsion at being in the power of a yellow man passes. Miss Stanwyck is attracted by him, and inevitably falls in love with him. He is a man she hates one minute and admires the next, who moves her from pitty to scorn and yet stirs her in some strange way. She is swept by a wave of emotional rebellion against her New England training. What the two decide about the barrier of race between them brings the film to a dramatic and unexpected climax. In the supporting cast are Walter Connolly, Helen Jerome Eddy. Toshia Mori, Gavin Gordon and Lucien Littlefield. On the program are a sound news, a screen song, Ethel Merman singing “Time on My Hands" and a Betty Boop cartoon. u tt tt Indianapolis theaters teday offer: Raynor Lehr in anew offering and "No Other Woman” on the screen at the Lyric, James Cagney in "Hard to Handle” at the Indiana, “The Kid From Spain” with Edaie Cantor featured at the Palace, “Billion Dollar Scandal" at the Circle, and “The Mummy” with Karloff in the leading role at the Apollo.
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JOINT EXPEDITION TO STUDY CARIBBEAN LIFE Problems in Central America Seas to Be Investigated. /:’<’/ Science Service, NEW HAVEN, Conn., Jan. 27. Marine life and the physical conditions of the sea in West Indian and Central American waters will be the objective of anew joint expedition participated in by Yale university and the Woods Hole Oceanographic institution. The expedition will make' use of the institution’s research ship “Aalantis,” leaving Woods Hole about Fob. 1. The investigations will be concerned chiefly with the general oceanographic circulation in the Central American seas, particularly as it affects transportation of water from the inflow of the north equatorial current through the passage between the Windward islands at the southeastern end to the outflow of the gulf stream through the straits of Florida in the north. Special attention also will be given to the problem of the origin of the cold bottom water in the isolated chains of deep sea basions extending through the gulf and Caribbean region. Blind to Give Minstrel Show Senior athletic association of the Indiana School for the Blind will present the Black Diamond minstrels in the auditorium of the school at 8 Friday night, Feb. 3.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
For a Price •Tambourine’ Bills Said to Be Prepared for Legisature. REPORTS of “tambourine bills” having been presented, or being considered for presentation, in the legislature reached Governor Paul V. McNutt, and aroused his ire today. To those unfamiliar with lobbyist jargon, a “tambourine bill” is one introduced for the purpose merely of “making a collection.” This is done" both by direction and indirection. Backers push the measure to passage, and then kill it en route when they secure their price, or friends of theirs may organize a lobby against it, and thus get on some pay roll. This latter method sometimes is resorted to by former members of the legislature, who feel that they “know the ropes.” A watchful eye is being kept on such things this session and possible prosecution looms for those caught. Governor McNutt expressed contempt for special interests, which will permit themselves to be shaken down by “tambourine bills.” Marion Man Killed by Auto By I iiitcil Press MARION, Ind., Jan. 27.—Henry Kelly, 47. Marion, was killed Thursday night when he was struck by an automobile driven by Janet Smith, 21, Lebanon. An electric device for matching colors has been produced by engineers of the Westinghouse Electric company.
MOTION PICTURES 2!^nJ S:iiHus: through tlie greatest hit he’s EVENINGS I had since "Taxi” . . . Watch Jimmy A A i EVERY tame the dames . . . one blast of his 8> | C ... e uT hot air and they're ready for any- ™■ Mr NlUril thing! • JAMES CAGNEY in Warner Bros’ New Hit —Added subjects— m Mark Sennett MW TO HANDLE .v.v.v "ith NOVIS M MARY BRIAN—RUTH DONNELLY Pop ilar radio tenor I . v’vv. in XvXv 1 ED RESEXER “The Singing \\\\\\ ! and the Indiana Concert Orchestra -with Rover ’* v.r.v. i BILLIE LEONARD and FRANKIE PARRISH Screen Souvenir II a at 12:40—2:50—7:00—9:15 ' 1 " 1 1 Paramount News AMUSEMENTS NOW SHOWING oh! What a Night" ’ll foyffiK BS ON THE SCREEN i w mm: dunne illS iixi ‘Wo Other Woman”
HUUSE CLASH BREAKS OVER MUM BILL Opponents Charge Workers Do Not Want Change in Conditions. One of the most heated clashes of the present session of the general assembly occurred in the house today over a mine safety bill, advanced to third reading. The measure stipulates that shot firing must be done at a time when men are not working, provides telephone communication with the surface, ana prohibits more than ten men working in a mine which has only one outlet. Opponents of the measure charged it mould result in closing of state mines and that miners do not want it. Six groups of workers have written opposing the bill, it was declared. This brought a retort from supporters of the measure that only one of the letters was from a group affiliated with the United Mine Workers of America. Representative William J. Lee (Dem., Princeton), one of the bill’s authors, demanded a roll call on amendments, and they were adopted, 56 to 27. He then demanded absentees be caled. Morning session of the house ended shortly before 11, to permit attendance of a caucus by Democratic members, and this left several measures on second and third reading and introduction of new bills for a session to open at 2. Among favorable reports of committees adopted was one on a bill which amends a 1931 law applying to Indianapolis schools, to make the school business director auditor of the school board instead f the city cntroller.
Bashful Knees Mosquito Peril to Balk Stylists’ Decree for Chicago Golfers. P,y Vvited Press CHICAGO, Jan. 27.—Bare knees won’t appear on Chicago golf courses this summer, say local stylists, because mosquitoes are too numerous. Commenting on an announcement of the International Association of Clothing Designers that knickers will be replaced by socks and shorts, Chicago fashionmakers said: “The weather here is too cool, local golfers are too conservative, and besides—there are too many mosquitoes.”
1 Show Boat Presents MORREY BRENNAN Genial Giant of Jazz and His Columbia Recording Orchestra
Double Taxation Burden .on Citizens Is Studied Smoker in Arkansas Taxed 6 Cents by U. S.. 5 Cents by State on Every Package of Cigarets. BY MARSHALL MNEIL, Time* Staff Writer WASHINGTON. Jan. 27,—The smoker in Arkansas pays 11 cents tax on each package of cigarets he buys. The federal government gets 6 cents of it and the state 5. If he uses one package a day, his total cigaret tax for a year would be $40.15. This is an example of double taxation, the fiscal issue that has forced itself uppermost as states and the federal government hunt elsewhere for new revenue.
It is this search that makes double taxation an issue now. No one especially was perturbed by taxes back in the boom days; then the confusion and clash of state and federal revenue systems was of no particular moment. But now, tax experts and legislators believe some order must be created out of the tax chaos; state and federal revenue systems must be coordinated, synchronized, if the taxpayer is to be relieved of an almost unbearable burden. Double taxation is not illegal, and is, of itself, not vicious if levied on the basis of ability to pay. A man with a million-dollar income or a $25,000 income should be—and in most instances is—required to pay substantial sums to the federal government and his state. But if the fellow with a $2,500 or $3,000 income is made to pay double sales taxes on his cigarets, on his auto, on his radio, on his income, and at the same time pays heavy property taxes directly or through rent, his small wage or salary dwindles alarmingly. The issue of double taxation is inseparable from governmental economy, for unless governmental expenditures are reduced, there will be almost no chance to co-ordinate the various tax systems or scale them down. It is, again, the scramble for new revenue to pay the increasing costs of government that has brought about the present disorder. The problem has become so important that not only has congress, through a special house subcommit-
MOTION PICTURES P^gP (prim! 1 HWff :IIWUIB!l. Eddie _ will make; you laugh' /and bum; whistle and dance! JS7 (He's ao funny that he'd make! I /M uNTiie added features • ' j I “OUR GANG” KTDS COMEDY || 40c 1 WIM 111 FITZPAT JCK TRAVELTALK l| \FTFH 6 HEARST METROTONE NEWS 1 All-Star Cast in LAST DAY! “THE BILLION DOLLAR SCANDAL** With Constance Cummings Robert Armstrong; Starts TOMORROW! THEIR FORBIDDEN LOVE V /RaPn TKiJJB Forbidden emotions breaking against barriers that love could M f Wi not break down! J? O|!, OEMERAtYEH MLS ASTHEK an ' l Walter Extra Added Attractions mm ethel merman A 6p. in. WmfiJr “Time on My Hands” U 1,200 Bai. Screen Song: 1 Seats §Swj|SpF Betty Boop Paramount j QC a WhV “Crazy Int entions” News ' gppjv PARK FREE AT DEL-MAR GARAGE /1 till I X RAVID MANNERS ZITA JOHANN f |jj| i JyA 25* 4<y io { Ii
tee on ways and means, already made a preliminary study, but state legislators and tax experts have been scratching their heads over it. A representative group of the latter will meet here Feb. 3 and 4 to talk about double taxation, and to seek a means for composing at least the more glaring disorders presented by the forty-nine separate state and federal taxation systems. Their first problem will be to determine where these revenue systems overlap, where double taxation occurs. CHOSEN PARLEY CHIEF The Rev. E. E. Moorman Named Chairman of Church Session. The Rev. E. E. Moorman of Indianapolis, has been named chairman of the committee on program and arrangements for the annual state convention of the Churches of Christ, to be held at Connersville, May 15 to 17. Other members of the committee are Mrs. James A. Stuart of Indianapolis, vice-chairman; the Rev. Lee Jackson pf Winchester, recording secretary; G. I. Hoover, corresponding secretary; the Rev. L. F. Sargent of Newcastle; and the Rev. G. D. Wyatt, Connersville, Mrs. O. H. Greist of Indianapolis, and the Rev. Bernard P. Smith, of Evansvile, co-operating members.
JAN. 27, 1933
HOME SAVINGS BANKS GROW IN POPULARITY Millions of Coins Being Saved, Big Increase Over 1929. By T'nitrd Prr* NEW YORK. Jan. 27.—The depression has brought millions of coins out of the sex k and into the Tom Thumb saving bank. More than four and a half million toy coin depositories were sold in 1932, a 70 per cent increase over 1929, according to a survey of the American toy industry. ' Banks that refuse to release deposits until five or ten dollars accumulate led in popularity last year. The vogue for saving inspired many new designs, including banks that register five different kinds of coins and hold as much as $75. Fancv chromium plated banks gave a fashion note to thrift. The Zuyder Zee has been cut off completely from the outer sea and converted into Ysel lake.
r— v GARMENTS. OPPORTUNITY any DAY 3* ops l 9 * Cleaned and Pressed Easy In Cash and Carrs' in Hove*. PARIS CLEANERS 2jWj_ _N nrl l> Illinois Street FREE Opportunity Day Only i One Garment Cleaned Free with I every 3 paid for at our special low prices. 39c Guaranteed AVork—Garments Easy to I'asli and Carry in Boxes. SYSTEM'S. Room 425 Occidental Bldg. Washingotn at S. Illinois X. F. Cor. Wash, and Capitol Cj I SATURDAY AND SUNDAY ■ ON THE STAGE—IN PERSON Brown County Revelers I WKBF RADIO STARS New Show Sat.—New Show Son. | “The Waltz Prince’* DICK SNYDER AND HIS DETROITERS Table* Available For Reservation* f s Call Rl. 6.193 || NEIGHBORHOOD THEATERS I | NORTH SIDE Talbot 22nd limmv Gco. M. Cohan j '•PHANTOM rRKSIDKNT" ItiHXWIIWJ Double I ii re wNMnnHi “WEEK END MARRIAGE” Myrna i,ny. “VANITY FAIR” j WEST SIDE Wash, a Belmont. Im..[B]l IB Gary ( <.oprr ■MMHHmMMMMHhH .lark Oakir. "IF I HAD A MILLION” EAST SIDE b2(f F. New York fill Double Feature I “I AM A FUGITIVE FROM CHAIN GANG** Geo. Raft, ‘‘NIGHT AFTER NIGHT’’ Paramount THEATRE I New Jersey and Washington EXTRA SPECIAL //// TONIGHT ONLY FOLLIES of 1933 on Our Stage 25 mostly GIRLS 3 .v iOc & 15c Colonial ' For, New York and Illinois 8. STARTING SATURDAY BURLESK A* You Like It at DEPRESSION PRICES GEO. “BUTTONS” FARES And Hl* Own Rl| BURLESK Company of 2S People In “NAUGHTY NIFTIES” IT’S ALT, NEW The Only Talking Pielure and Bnrleik Show In Indlanapoll* Week Days Midnight Sat., Sun., 4 a j<r Show Every Holiday* lOcjnd 15c Saturday iscand2Qc | RIALTO —KANE BROS.— IBURLESK I “MARY gold" PLAYERS ’ A Brand New Show I MIDNIGHT SHOW SATURDAY [ i Ocj 2-SHOWS-2 | 1 5c
