Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 234, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 February 1933 — Page 16

PAGE 16

SEEK DIRECT NEGOTIATIONS IN PERSIA ROW Persia Wants League to Cut Knot of Legal'"s on Oil Dispute. TM* th* first of ? '■ifrirs nf Storie* on thr -^nrlo-f'rr'ian Hi>pilU writtrn nr a I nitrd PreM rnrrf..pnndfnl who *rnt to Tfhrran to invr<li(t(f tho hackrmund of thaw conflict. TEHERAN. Persia. Feb. 8. The government of Persia entered the lists in Geneva in the apparent hope that the league council will find a. formula clearing the way for direct negotiations with the Anglo-Persia Oil Company, without loss of race to th" Teheran regime. His Imperial Majesty, Risa Shah, said: I hope that the council of the League of Nations will not. take a position hampering the efforts of the Persian government to bring, about, an amicable and equitable, adjustment,." Later the minister of foreign af-‘ fairs. In* Highness Muhatned All ■ Khan Forougbi. underlined these, words. In effect they amount, to a plea | that. Oenpva eut the knot of le- 1 galitie*; without, loss of prestige to either government a.nd encourage a settlement of oil royalties, control of expenditures and other prartiral issues.

Persia Demands Justiee Frank discussion of the question with government leaders has revealed that Persia feels incontestibly strong on the moral ground of sheer justice. It believes that it, has received the short end of a one-sided bargain and that it no longer can tolerate Ihe exploitation of its largest, almost, its only, natural resources on past terms. On the formal ground of legalities, however, Persia has less assurance. The Shah said that the annulment of the D Arcy Concession Nov. 27 'did not come suddenly and impulsively.” Whatever Ihe behind-the-scenes story of the annulment may be—and Teheran reeks with rumors—it certainly came unexpectedly to Anglo-Persian officials here, to the diplomatic corps and even to some of the Shah's leading ministers. Seeks Direct Negotiations The formalities of a warning before the denunciation apparently were overlooked in the haste for a popular stroke. Since then the Persian leaders have had time to estimate their legal position and they have found it more shaky than their moral one. That, explains the undisguised anxiety for direct negotiations with the company, over the heads of the British government, and the Geneva council. If Downing Street can not gracefully retire from the fray in the interests of a practical settlement perhaps Geneva ran discover a method for achieving the same result. Such, it seems to observers, is Persia's strategy. The Shah's government can not withdraw the annulment without serious, perhaps disastrous, loss of political face. The act of annulment has become, even more strongly than the Shah anticipated, a symbol and a test of the nationalism. But if it can not “withdraw” the annulment, perhaps it can "suspend” it when requested by Geneva in a friendly spirit to enable direct negotiations. CITY HEADS TO SPEAK Mayor Sullivan and .laekiel Joseph on Garfield Park Program. Mayor Reginald H. Sullivan and Jackiel Joseph, park board president, have been invited to speak tonight at 8 at the meeting of the central committee of South Side civic clubs at Garfield park. Sullivan, Joseph and A. C. Sallee, parks superintendent, will explain details of the new city beautification plan that has been worked out by the board. The purpose is to utilize unemployed men in improving property in Indianapolis.

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Players in ‘Sign of The Cross’

Left—Frederic Marsh as Marcus Superbus, Center—Charles Laughton as Nero, and, Right—Claudette Colbert as the wicked Empress Poppaea.

De Mille's Latest Movie Opens Friday at the Indiana. Cecil B. De Mille's “The Sign Os The Cross,” a spectacle of pagan Rome in the days of Nero, last of the Caesars, is being brought to the Indiana theater Friday for a week's engagement. Fredric Marsh, Elissa Landi, Claudette Colbert, and Charles Laughton play the leading roles and are supported by a cast of nearly 7,500 persons. The picture is a Paramount production and is taken from the play by Wilson Barrett. “The Sign of the Cross” has been produced on a lavish scale and the sets used by De Mille are said to be even more gigantic than those used by him in “The Ten Commandments” and ‘.'The King of Kings.” Included among the beautiful sets| are an elaborate Roman bath, used! by Miss Colbert in the picture, a j duplication of the Circus Maximus: which was for several hundred years j the scene of the bloody gladiatorial j combats and chariot races, and duplications of certain sections of Nero’s famed Palace of Gold. De Mille has used all the vaunted spectacular trappings for which he , is noted and as a result “Sign of the ; Cross” has beauty, action, romance,: all being staged against an elaborate J background. Fredric Marsh has the role of the! virile, handsome Prefect of Rome, : second in command only to Nero, j who falls in love with the innocence and beauty of a Christian girl and | who walks hand in hand with her j to meet the fierce Numidian lions — j and death —on the sands of the Cir-: cus Maximus arena. Ed Resener and the Indiana Con- j cert orchestra will present another ] musical presentation, with Loren j Griffith, tenor. a a tt INDIANAPOLIS SYMPHONY GIVES SPECIAL CONCERT The Indianapolis Symphony or-J chestra. in its concert, at. Caleb Mills hall last, night, again proved that it is an organization with a future. | The concert, under the direction of j Ferdinand Schaefer, was well played | and most interesting. The opening selection, the “Over- | tore to Phedre" was done with the ; base of Grecian terseness, which is j a necessary element in producing its kind. I was impressed with the work of the cellos in this piece. In fact, the cello section seemed outstanding throughout the concert. Anew side of the much heard Edward MacDowell was shown by the orchestra in playing the “Second (Indian) Suite." This characterization, for it is almost that, was vividly carried through the various events in the life of the early Indian. It is said that some of the movements retain European influ-

ence. suggested to the Indians by the sailors of northern Europe, but to my mind and ear, they bear trace of no such imitation. They are truly primitive. The fourth movement was to me. the most interesting of the entire group. Its funeral qualities were well handled without being overdone. The last movement in this series seemed a let-down from the others. There was little fire or life to it, perhaps the fault of the musicians. The 'lntermezzo Symphonico” was not particularly moving. From its story one would suppose that it would be. There was something lacking and I don't know what it was. The traditional “Sinfonietta, C Major” was artificial to a certain extent, but as. good an emotion in music as is possible, perhaps. The relaxation from the classical trend was found in “Swanee River” and, "Old Black Joe,” both of which were splendidly played. There certainly is a place in American music for such grand old songs. The top of the evening came with the playing of "Bolero,” that strange monotony of sound, color and rhythm. Its almost w'eird chain of expanding melody holds one's interest. The concert was a presentation of the Indiana State Symphony society. (By the Observer). Indianapolis theaters today offer: Earl Carroll's Vanities at English's, “Hallelujah, I’m a Bum” at the Palace, “Luxury Liner” at the Circle; “Hello, Everybody” at the Indiana, “The Penguin Pool Murder” on the screen at the Lyric with Raynor Lehr on the stage, "Dangerously Yours” at the Apollo, “Man Against Woman” at the Belmont, and. “The Night Club Lady” at the Talbott.

25 MADE-WORK MEN STRIKE FOR PAY RAISE Claim Wage Amounts to Only 16 and Two-thirds Cents an Hour. Hji I nilrrf I'rrss VALPARAISO. Ind.. Feb. B. Twenty-five men employed in a made-work program, engaged in lowering the Gary-Valparaiso traction line tracks, were on strike today for higher wages. The men. paid in poor relief orders, said their salaries amounted to only 16 2-3 cents an hour, as compared to 35 to 40 cents an hour paid railroad workmen.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

7TT)TDK BY BRUCE CATTON

MRS. VAN KLEEK w r as a grossly improper woman who was, nevertheless, a stickler for the proprieties. Her hotel was the only one in the South Pacific seaport, and she was famous as the woman who had more than any one else on the Pacific. This lady, who kept her figure when she was 65, and smoked cigars incessantly, appears in “Mrs. Van Kleek,” a brittle and entertaining novel by Elinor Mordaunt. At the beginning, -we find Mrs. Van Kleek an imperturbable and unchangeable person, supremely confident that she can control any situation that life can bring her—for she always has, in the past. But the runaway wife of a missionary comes to her for shelter, and before she gets through Mrs. Van Kleek finds that life isn’t so easily managed, after all. The missionary comes after his wife. Mrs. Van Kleek discovers that he is her own son, whom she abandoned some forty years ago. The plague hits the seaport, the missionary performs prodigies of bravery fighting it and at last dies of it, his wandering wife prepares to marry a young British subaltern —and Mrs. Van Kleek, who hasn’t managed any of this as she planned to, realizes that she is old, lonely, and less wise than she had supposed.

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SHOALS JOB IS BIGGEST UNDER NEW PRESIDENT Frank P. Walsh or Norris Mentioned to Take Over Post. Bij Bcrlpp*-Tfoicnrd Xncspaper Alliance WASHINGTON. Feb. B.—One of the most important jobs Franklin D. Roosevelt will have to fill after he becomes President, and after he signs a Muscle Shoals bill, will be that of an administrator of the great power and nitrate properties in Alabama. Since Muscle Shoals is the key to tlie improvement of the whole Tennessee river valley, and since Mr. Roosevelt plans to undertake there the greatest project of a like nature in the world, the administrator's job will be doubly important. Senator George W. Norris (Rep., Neb.) expects to reintroduce his Muscle Shoals bill at the outset of the special session, and he will change it slightly, he said, to eliminate the leasing provisions. Task to Be Big The measure will be one for straightforward government operation. It also, is expected to carry the necessary authorization for improvement of the whole stream, as contemplated by the President-elect. Under the Norris plan, a corporation is set up to operate the Shoals, make hydro-electric power and nitrates for fertilizer; it will have the power to construct transmission lines, and manage the whole Shoals property and its production. Thus, the chairman of that corporation, appointed by the President with the advice and consent of the senate, would be expected to be in enthusiastic accord with the government operations ideas of Norris and Mr. Roosevelt. His would be the task of carrying to successful completion the theories of govern- j ment ownership that progressives have been pushing for years. Norris Is Mentioned Already one person is being men- j tioned for this job: Frank P. Walsh, | head of the New York Power Authority, .and Mr. Roosevelt's representative in the controversy over the St. Lawrence waterway project. ■ Senator Norris himself once of- j sered to resign his senate seat to! take over a place on the Muscle j Shoals corporation that his bill! proposed. But the condition was that j President Hoover should sign the j bill that would have permitted the : government to operate the Shoals j power properties and control leas- j ing of the nitrate plants. The offer i was not accepted.

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