Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 247, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 February 1933 — Page 12

PAGE 12

DOCTOR SHOOTS AT BURGLAR HE FINDS IN OFFICE Prowler Escapes, Apparently Unhurt: Several Thefts Are Reported. Finding a burglar hiding behind a door in his office at 610 Massarhasutts avenue Wednesday night Dr, Charles A. Underwood, fired one shot at the man. who fled, apparently uninjured. Dr. Underwood returned to his office and noticed the man hiding. Walking to a desk. Dr. Underwood reached in a drawer, seized the revolver and fired as he whirled on the man. The bull'd passed through the door casing and shattered glass In a window. Trousers pockets of two guests in a downtown hotel were robbed of sums totaling $35.50 Wednesday afternoon, it was reported to police Amos Jackson, staying at the hotel, reported $23 taken from his pocket. Less of $11.50 was reported b;v Irving A. Cox. Savings Banks Looted Burglary at the home of William Meadows, 659 Coffey street, apparently w'as interrupted when he returned home Wednesday night. A quantity of silverware had been wrapped up. but had not been taken. Meadows reported loss of $4 in cash. Shotgun valued at $5; $lO in cash, and $1 in stamps were stolen from the home of Wayne Peisel, 3725 North Grant street, Wednesday night, lie reported. Two small savings banks containing approximately $lO, and a purse containing $4 were looted at the apartment of Abe Frick. 3055 Ruckle street, he reported to police. SI,OOO Check Stdlrn A SI,OOO check and sl2 in cash was taken from the purse of Miss Florence Snyder, 41, of 315 North Senate avenue, late Wednesday afternoon, she told police. The burglary occurred at her home. Glass in a side window was broken by thieves who entered the Dunn Plumbing Company shop at 938 North Illinois street, Wednesday night and stole a gold watch valued at $25 and an overcoat valued at S2O, Edward Dunn, 3667 Kenwood avenue, reported. BARBER BILL IS PASSED License Measure Now Ready for Signature of Governor. After a fight lasting nearly fifteen years, Indiana will have licensed barbers, who must be commissioned by an examining board. Passing the state senate Wednesday, the house bill creating a barbers’ commission, providing for licensing and collection of fees, and in other ways tightening sanitary laws applying to barbers and beauty parlor operators now is ready for action by the Governor.

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Neglect Shakespeare and the Theater Dies Walter Hampden, Famous Star, Gives His Reasons for Presenting ‘Hamlet’ on Tour This Season. BV WALTER HAMPDEN SHAKESPEARE is the perfection of English, and our language is all important to us, more so now than ever. The style is the man and language is the spirit of the race. *‘lr. the beginning was the Word," as the Bible says. Our future as a liberty-loving land, devoted to the ideals of the fathers of our country’, can not be brought to fruition on a basis of another language or upon bastard English. Neglect Shakespeare and the theater as an institution, that is as an Anglo-Saxon one, perishes. Shakespeare is fundamental. The recent development in the dramatist technique is like a return to Shakespeare. Even the soliloquy has been brought back to the stage by the American playwright, Eugene O'Neill.

7TSGDK A DM BY BRUCt CATTON “Machine Age in the Hills," by Malcolm Ross, pictures the plight of the soft coal mining industry as an exaggerated example of the troubles that have fallen on industry generally. There was a tremendous boom, a vast expansion of productive capacity. a great overproduction and a walloping deflation. Asa result, there are thousands of idle men, much red ink on the ledgers, scores of mines that never will be used again and a general state of chaos and loss which calls for a far-reaching program cf rehabilitation. Ross devotes himself chiefly to the Blue Ridge mines. Here the mountain whites had, until a few years ago, a civilization that had not changed since the seventeenth century. 'Bhey wore poor, ignorant, and isolated, but they were self-suf-ficient, individualistic and, presumably, fairly contented. Then it was learned that these mountaineers had been living on top of some of the earth’s richest coal deposits. Mines were dug, the old civilization was destroyed—and now that the crash has come, the mountaineers are left infinitely worse than they were before. Ross’ book is singularly dispassionate and unprejudiced. He does not especially blame the coal operators; most of them, he finds, are decent, enlightened men who simply are up against a problem too big for them. He has scant use for the “liberals’ who dabbled in affairs in Kentucky a year or so ago. He simply remarks that the entire industry must be integrated, that surplus miners must be transferred to other jobs, surplus mines closed, and cut-throat competition must be ended. Otherwise, he says, there is going to be some very serious trouble. Published by Macmillan, this book is priced at $2.

: Shakespeare helps the actor even iin the most modem naturalistic play. Read Hamlet’s speech to the players once more. I think of the whole speech as the full definition of the actor's art. So far as that was true before ,it was written, it is true now. and will be for all time. One might call it the perfect seed which dropped into the mind of the actor and cultivated, as all seeds i must be to grow, will shoot into the | light and flower always as histrii cnic art. All great acting has never swerved | from these fundamental precepts 1 laid down by the Bard of Avon. After a lifetime of experiment. Stan- | islavsky, in his remarkable book, j "My Life and Art,” gets back at I the end to what one may call the I Shakesperean tradition. It is always desirable to play those classics, like ‘‘Hamlet,” that enlarge | the vision, that are wholesome, sound and beautiful, that reveal the , whole man, and that develops the ' highest and subtlest resources of the | actor. This establishes a place for | the great poet in the vital and for-ward-looking life of today. At the same time I also feel that it is important to present beautiful j and poetic modern dramas like “Caponsacchi.” which was written for me by Arthur Goodrich. # a Hampden will present “Caponucchi" Friday and Saturday night at English’s this week with “Hamlet" Saturday matinee. n n n Indianapolis theaters today offer: “The Mystery of the Wax Museum” at the Circle; “The King’s Vacation” at the Indiana; “Young Woodley” at the Playhouse; “State Fair” at the Apollo; Reynor Lahr at the Lyric; “What! No Beer?” at the Palace; “If I Had a Million" at the Talbott, and “No Man of Her Own” at the Belmont. Youthful Vandal Is Sought A youthful vandal who Wednesday afternoon tossed a sweet potato through the window of a Lexington avenue street car in the 300 block, Virginia avenue, causing injury of Garland Moore, 35, of 950 Elm street, a passenger, is sought by police today. Moore”s hands w r ere cut by particles of shattered glass.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

HOT CONTEST IN CITY DEMOCRAT ELECTION SEEN Two, and Possibly Three, Factions in Fight for Chairmanships. With two, and possibly three, factions ready for a spirited contest Saturday over the seleection of a Democratic city chairman, the names of William E. Clauer, county treasurer, elect, and Dr. William J. Hendricks were being heard today with significant regularity." Clauer likely will receive the jacking of the organization group, and seems certain of election. It was reported that E. Kirk Me- j Kinney, works board president and ! present city chairman, will an- j nounce formally his candidacy for j mayor at the conclusion of the election. Support for Hendricks was being mustered today from the ranks of j the young Democrats’ organization, j Rumors that a third group, dissatisfied party members, is plan- ! ning a surprise move at the meeting, which will be held at 1:30 in the Claypool, also were current.

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Abraham Bortz Services at the Central Hebrew Congregation, Twenty-first street and Central avenue, will be held at 8:15 Friday night with Abraham Bortz acting as cantor. Sidney S- Guthman, student rabbi of the Chicago Theological Seminary, will deliver the sermon.

Trade-In Your Old Radio Sets Now! *1 DOWN Installs a New 1933 Model “CROSLEY” A mill romploto aKBh with tnhoß. MB wH calls. Service HO Ql JEWELRY CO. 18 N. Illinois St. k Claypnol Hotel Bid*.

LOAN INTEREST BILL SHELVED BY ONE VOTE House Tables Motion to Report Out Senate Measure. “By one vote” ruled again today in j conisderation of legislation affecting Ismail loan operators. ?nd the house, 42 to 41, tabled a motion which I would have compelled the banks and ! trust funds committee to report out | a senate bill, passed by one vote. | fixing the small loan interest rate at 2 per cent. As introduced in the senate by Senator William P. Denmgan <Dem.. Vincennes), the bill set a l 1? per

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cent rate, but on amendment this was increased to 2 per cent. Representative H. Baxter Plew (Dem. Hymera). backed by about twenty other representatives, presented the motion demanding committee atcion. He assailed the loan companies as “super Shylocks.” Another scathing attack on the companies was made by Representative J. Clinn Ellvson iDeni. Hammond) and Representative Fred S. Galloway 'Dem . Indianapolis, also assailed them. Galloway is credited with leading the movement for action. Replying to the attacks. Representative Leo M Gardner iDcm., Indianapolis).bank committee chairman. declared a revamped bill introduced Wednesday covers the situation. It places power to fixe small loan inttrest rates with the new department of financial institutions.

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Rates of per cent on loans up to $l5O and 2’ ; above that amount would prevail in case no schedule was fixed by the department.

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