Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 280, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 April 1933 — Page 7
r 'APRIL 3, 1933.
SIX KILLED BY AUTO MISHAPS ON WEEK-END Five of Fatalities Occur on Highway 67 Near Anderson. Automobile accidents killed six persons in Indiana during the weekend and resulted in serious injury to many others. Five of the fatalities occurred on highway 67 within a short radius of Anderson. The dead: James Armstrong, 28, Anderson. Mrs. Della Johnson, 60, Fairmount. Lela May Chambers, 12, Newcastle. Sheridan Reed, Muncie. Raleigh George, Muncie. Paul E. Thompson, 7, Evansville. Armstrong died in an Anderson hospital from injuries received early Sunday when his car skidded on Road 67 and overturned into a ditch. A few hours previously Mrs. Johnson and the Chambers girl were killed when an automobile driven by Ovid Chambers, Newcastle, and Fred Hannan, Fairmount, collided at the intersection of Roads 67 and 38 Hannan still is in critical condition at St. John's hospital, Anderson Nine others were injured. Reed and George were killed late Sunday night when their car sideswiped a truck on state Road 67, ten miles northeast of Muncie. Two companions, Madeline Strong, 21, Albany, and May Johnson, Muncie, were cut and bruised. The Thompson boy was struck by an automobile driven by Lawrence Stafford, 22, Evansville. Stafford was exonerated. City Toll Boosted Death Sunday of John Snapp, 54. of 2633 North Gale street, of injuries incurred March 17 when he was crushed between a truck and trailer brought the traffic ac-
cident fatality total to thirty-two m Marion county in the first three months of this year, one-third of the total of ninety-six for 1932.
32
Mr. Snapp was injured as he started to fill the gasoline tank of the truck at a filling station where he was employed as attendant. Driver of the truck, Clarence Boyer of Ft. Wayne, moved the machine in an effort to place it so filling the tank would be easier, and Mr. Snapp was caught between the truck and trailer. He is survived by his widow, Mrs. Nora Snapp, and two daughters, Mrs. May Milne, Indianapolis, and Mrs. May Smith of Plainfield. Arrangements for the funeral have not been completed. If motor vehicle fatalities continue at the same rate throughout this year as for the first quarter. the county total for 1933 will be 128 against ninety-six in 1932 and 176 in 1931. Os the thirty-two deaths so far this year, fifteen occurred in March.
Fishing the Air
WFBM (1200) Indianapolis IndianapolJi Power and Light Comoanv —MONDAY—r m s:3o—Skippy (CBS). 5 45—Polkadots. 6:oo—Bohemians. 6 25—Transcription. 6:3o—Phil Porterfield, baritone (CBS). f> 45 Brown County Revelers. 7:00 Columbians (CBS'. 7:ls—Stngln' Sam (CBSi. 7 30~ Fu Manchu (CBS). 8 00—chesterfield program (CBS'. B:ls—Sam and Carlile. 8 30—Transcription. 8 35—Transcription. B:4s—Transcription. S 00—Bous Concert orchestra (CBS). 9 15—Ben Pollack orchestra (CBS'. 9 30—Edwin C. Hill (CBS). 9 45—Myrt and Marge (CBSi 10 00 —Columbia Symphony iCBS). !0 30—The Columnist. 0 45—Leon Belasro orchestra (CBSi. 1 00—Christian Men Builders. il 30—Orrie Nelson orchestra (CBS). 2.oo—Sign off. WKBF (1400) Indianapolis (Indianapolis Broadcasting. Ine.) MONDAY 4 00 -'Twilight. Treasure hour. 4 30—Tea Time Tunes. 4 45—News finshes. 5 00—Musical menu. 5 15—Cecil and Sallv. 5 30— Aunt Dessa and Uncle Connie. 5 45—Dinner melodies. 6:ls—Harry Bason. 6 30—Paul Whiteman recordings. 6 45-The Sportshght. 7 00—Silent. 8 00—The Old Pathfinder. 8 15—To be announced 8 30- Master's Music room. 8 45—Art Oillham 9:oo—Happiness Parade 9 15—Hoosiet Melody Boys. 9 30—Connie's orchestra. 10 00—Sunshine Singer. 10 15—Money Brennan's orchestra. 10 30—Radio Rangers 11:00—Morrey Brennan's orchestra. 11 30—WKBF Night Club. 13 30—Sign off. WLW (700) Cincinnati MONDAY r. m. 4 OO—The low -down. 4 15—Three Moods in Blue 4 30—The singing ladv iNBC' 4:4s—Little Orphan Annie (NBC). s:oo—Contest. 5 05—Jack and Jill. 5:15—01d Man Sunshine (Ford Rush) 5 30—Bob Newhall. snorts commentator. 5 45—Lowell Thomas NBC. 6 00—Amos n' Andv (NBC). 6 15—Gene and Glenn. 6 30—Chandn. the magician 6 45—Detective' Btack and Blue. 7 00—Jack Berch and hts orchestra. 7:3o—Voice of Firestone (NBC'. 8 00 -Weiner Minstrels iNBC B:3o—Melodv moments. Joseph Pasternack orchestra (NBC 9 00—Morgan L, Eastman's orchestra ■NBC-Red). 9 30—Croslev Roamios 10 00—. tan Garber's dance orchestra. 10 30—Serenade 11:00—Park Centra! hotel dance orchestra (NBC 11 30—Hotel Shorcham dance orchestra ■ N'BC 12 oo Midnight—Sunshine bovs A M 13:15—.Tan Garber's dance orchestra. 12 45—Moon river. 1 00—Sign off. Two brand new numbers will be introduced on the air during the Greater Minstrels program Monday it S p m . over WLW and an NBC network.
HIGH SPOT* ON MONDAY NIGHT'S PROGRAM. 6:3O—NRC (WJ7J—The Two Marx Brothers. 7:3O—NBC >WRAP)—Lawrence Tibbett. Columbia— Fu Manchu Mvsterv stories. 745 NBC (W.TZI Phil Cook and the Shavers. 8:00—NBC fWJZi—Minstrel show Columbia—Leonard Havtons orchestra with Ruth Etting 8:11 —Columbia—Mill* brothers. 9 W—Columbia—Richfield Countrv Club, roll lessor* 9:SO—NBC (WEAK —Cabinet series Wm H. Woodin. secretarv. treasure. 11 SO—NBC i WEAPi— Hollywood on the Air.
DEPORTED FOR REVENGE
Many Immigration haw Victims Trapped by Spite
“Reception Room at Ellis Island”—a drawing made for the N. Y. World-Telegram by Margaret Lowengrund
The strange stories and fabrications which immigration inspectors hear as they question aliens. A. .1. I.iebling reports in this, the second of six articles. BY A. J. LIEBLING Times Special Writer THE child, four feet six inches tall, weighing seventy-five pounds, stands before three immigration inspectors. Gene Willard, spatted, bald, precise, his upper lip adorned with a small mustache, propounds the questions, which are relayed by Dow, the interpreter. “What is your name?” “Too Doe Choy.” “Here you are referred to as Doe Wen Bew'.” “That is my ceremonial name.” “Again, in the statement of your father, King Lee, he names his sons Doe Choy, Doe Fong" “My student name is Doe Choy.” “Who is Doe Yuen Young?” “That is my marriage name.” “And was Jim Wong your father?” “That was his jail name.” “Your father was born in this country. He w'ent to China. When did he return?” “In 1917.” “How old are you?” “Twenty years old.” The inspectors exchange glances. “What is your business?” “I am a farmer.” “What is your native place?” “The Nom Chu Village.” “Where is the Nom Chu Village?" In Hok San province. From Shoo Gum Hin Village south fifteen li. From Han Lung Village north ten li.”
Radio Dial Twisters
—6:15 P. M NBC-Sketch to WEAP. NBC—Jesters to WJZ. —6:30 P. 51 KYW (1020)—Canton orchestra. CBS—Martin's orchestra and ouartet. Allman to 1 WGN i 720 i Kemp's orchestra: Tom Dick and Harry. l NBC—Groucho and Chico i Marx to WJZ. —6:15 P. M.— CBS—Boake Carter NBC—The Goldberg* to W EAF. WMAO (670)—Song fellows —7 P. 51 KYW (10201— Talk: orchestra. CBS— Columbians. \\ BBM (770 1 —Westphai's orchestra, NBC—Soconvland sketches! to WEAF. NBC Dance orchestra to' WJZ. WGN (720)—Concert orchestra. WMAO (670)—Poetry magic —7:15 P. M CBS—Singin’ Sam WBBM (77n> Snort review —7:30 P. 51. KYW 10201 —Three Strings 1 Chandu. CBS Fu Manchu mystery drama WBBM '77ol—Charlie Hamp NBC -- Lawrence Tibbett.; Daly's orchestra to WEAF.! NBC Carney's Dog Chats to WJZ. —7:15 P. 51. NBC—Phil Cook and Ingram Shavers to WJZ. -8 r. m KYW 1020)—Fisher's orchestra CBS -Ruth Etting and Havton's orchestra. WBBM 770 1 —Jack Brooks. songs: Jill and udv. NBC—Gypsies to WEAF ! NBC-Wiener Minstrels to
Stngin Sam will sing the song inspired the fsd °f the day when he offers Jugglin a Jigsaw' 1 during his program over \VFBM and the Columbia network at i 15 p m., Monday. What was to have been a quiet weekend in the eountry will turn into an inferno of death plots and intrigues during the Monday episode of the "Fu Manchu Mvsterv Stories" over WFBM and the Columbia network from 7:30 to 8 p. m Amateur radio operators and fans—anyone interested in radio and its development—will gather at Purdue university, April 8 and 9 for the first annual radio roundup or "hamfest." to be held at the university. Plans for the affair were announced today as the first requests for room reservations in hotels and homes were received.
Smith Market Cos. Downtown Market a t urner g Corner §§ 1058 a 2 407 IIIINOIs T.g Mlt II It. \ \ 1 NEH \nKK=5 IKI.INI kl STATION O|on Till Midnight S a iul NOItI.K 3 ami HI RU. \\ km K NTKEFT TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY SPECIALS PORK SAUSAGE SLICED LIVER Your 4 y PORK HEARTS Choice BACKBONES
I “Is it a large village.” “Ten houses and one large cerej monial hail.” “In how many row's?” “Six rows of houses.” “Is there a duck pond?” “No duck pond.” tt u n F EISURELY the apparently I meaningless interrogatory pro- ! ceeds. When finished, it may con--1 sume fifty typewritten pages. Hours later the 20-year-old child goes back to the detention room. The immigration inspectors compare the transcript of the interrogatory with the similar questionnaire answered by the alleged father, w'ho w'as born in the United States which would entitle his China-born offspring to entry. In every respect the answers tally. Carefully, through the medium of endless letters, Too Doe’s friends have prepared this enormous mass of detail, so that there will be no discrepancy to show father and son are not in fact countrymen. But they have made the slight error of assuming that the immigration authorities could not distinguish a boy of 14 from a man of 20. Teo Doe Choy is excluded. The relatives who have paid his expenses, and also a handsome gratuity to Jim Wong for assuming the role of the father, now may finance an appeal. There will be habeas corpus proceedings, and in order to prove the boy is not a 20-year-old man the immigration authorities must cause X-ray photographs to be taken of his bones.
MONDAY —8:15 P. M |KYW (1020)—Mrs. Austin' Aoung. jCBS —Mills Brothers. —8:30 P. M.— CBS—Mysteries in Paris. , WBBM (7701-Pageant: Adi venturers Club. I NBC —Feature to WEAF. ; NBCj z Mel°dy Moments to —9 P. 51. KYW .1020) Gloze Trotter LBS—Alex Morrison and! i Ctolnen orchestra. N ?9tr.9. ontented Program to v\ EAF NBC--Song Without Words to WJZ. —9:15 P. 51. !WBBM 1 77°, Jackie Heller Big Leaguers. NBC—Vialinist to WJZ —9:30 r. 51 KDKA (980) —Bridge school tenor. I CBS—Edwin C Hill. i'AJ'NR _‘B7oi Morin Sisters.’ N^?;,Natl Radio Forum! j H - Wood in to; NBC- Arlene Jackson and! : the Old Stager to WJZ. WSM if 50' —Two Pianos: | Southern Singers. —9:45 P. 51 CBS -Myrt and Marge to WFBM WGN (720 —Minstrel Show. ■ —lO P. 51 KDKA 1 980 Sports review; News; Bailew s orchestra, i KYW 1 1020 1 Sports; Fish-i er's orchestra. CBS—Barlow and Columbia Symphony. NBC—Johnson's orchestra to! WEAF. NBC—Southern Singers to I WJZ. ' NBC—Amos 'n' Andv toi WENR. WSB. WMAO j WSM —10:15 F. 51. i WGN (720)—Milligan and i Mulligan.
A special arrangement by Conductor Josef Pasternack or the Irish "Kathleen Mavoureen." will be a solo of John L. Fogarty when he appears as guest of the Melody Moments program Monday at 8:30 p. m.. over WLW and an NBC network. Operas and musical revue* will be featured by Morgan L. Eastman's or- ' chestra during the program Monday at 9 p. m.. over WLW and an NBC network. Following "Danee of Helen" and "Bacrhanale.’’ ballet music from "Faust," the orchestra will turn to selections from "Scandals." ■ Melodies from the operettas of Lehar. Herbert and Friml will be featured in Howard Barlows presentation of lighter 1 symphonic music over WFBM and the | Columbia network, Monday, from 10 to 1 10:30 p. m.
—10:15 P. M l'NßC—Welcome Lewis to WJZ. WMAQ (670)—Dan and Sylvia. WSM (650)—Bill and Bob. —10:30 P. M KYW (1020)—Beachview or--1 chestra. CBS—Belasco s orchestra. NBC—Denny's orchestra to WEAF. ’ NBC—Manhattan Guardsmen to WJZ. WMAO (670)—Dance orchestras (2'i hoursi. WSM (650)—Piano time; dance orchestra. —ll P. 51. KSTP (1460i—Dance program. KYW ilo2o)—Canton or- ; chestra. CBS— Lvman's orchestra. iNßC—Lopez orchestra to I WEAF. | WGN (720)—Kemp's orches- >: tra. NBC—Loan’s orchestra to WJZ. —11:15 P. M.— j WSM (650)—Meet the boy friend. —11:30 P. M.— KMOX (1090)—Dance proj gram. KYW (1020)—Fisher's orchestra. ! CBS—Nelson's orchestra. NBC—Lowe's orchestra to | WJZ. ! WGN (720) —Dance program. NBC—Hollywood on the air j to WEAF. —l2 Midnight—- > KYW (1020)—Canton orI chestra. i WBBM (770)—Around the town. j WENR (870) Organist; i dance orchestra. JWDAF (610) Nighthawk II frolic. 1 WSM (650)—D-X tips.
; THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
The doctor of the public health service will draw up an elaborate report detailing the physical indications that he has barely attained adolescence. “And ten to one,” says Inspector Willard, “his friends will show up in court with a specialist to testify that this is a unique case of arrested physical development.” For adult Chinese picked up within the United States there is a universal alibi. “Me born Fi-si-co, ninetee foah,” or nineteen anything before 1906. a a tt 'T'HE Hall of Records in San -*• Francisco was destroyed in the earthquake, and with it all records of nativity. Comparatively few Chinese seeking entry to the United States come to Ellis island. San Francisco and Seattle are the usual ports of entry. Also, there is in progress a series of anti-Chinese pogroms in Mexico which has resulted in hundreds crossing the border and delivering themselves to the United States immigration authorities. Most of the work of the Chinese division at Ellis island concerns deportations. An impression exists that immigration inspectors in plain clothes and false beards swarm throughout the land in search of aliens who have entered the country. In fact, the bureau has no men for such work, even if the result to be achieved justified the outlay. Most deportations, Chinese as well as European, result from information furnished the bureau by countrymen of the deportable alien. “His name Chin Dock Fu and nickname Sing Sam. He is quite thin fellow, his age about 33 or 34 years old. This person is a native of Canton, China, and he is a bad guy, as he stealed into the U. S. Please return him back to China immediately if possible.” Inspector Willard opens a batch of similar notes each morning, each giving the address of the victim. a tt GAMBLING debts, laundry rivalries, personal dislikes, motivate the denunciations. Undoubtedly. Inspector Willard says, there is a great deal of blackmail. Chinese who have entered the country illegally are held in a state of peonage. If they refuse to hand over the major share of their earnings. the blackmailers report them to the immigration inspectors. There are narcotic cases, too. An alien convicted of violating either of the two federal narcotic acts is deportable under a special act passed in 1931. This does not apply to violators of the state law against possession or sale of narcotics. Fear of the informer poisons the
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life of the alien who has entered the country illegally. This strain, as much as the depression here, accounts for the acquiescence of most deportees. Unless they have some special reason for wishing to stay, deportation comes almost as a relief. Katharine Schiapelli, the Italian Welfare League social worker at the island, remembers the bridegroom, clad in topper and tails, rice still nestling in his lapels, who was brought over to the island bv inspectors tipped off by an unsuccessful rival. The bride, although Americanborn, elected to go to Italy with the deportee. Then there was the case of the junkman who invaded the route of a competitor, and iound himself on the island shortly thereafter. “TTE had an old horse,” says Miss Schiapelli, “and it was his chief worry. He had a wife, too, but she didn't seem to bother him much. “ 'My poor horse, he would say, ‘mv poor horse. My mother-in-law will take care of her daughter, but she will not feed the horse!’ "Sure enough, the mother-in-law turned up on the next visiting day ‘I am a poor miserable woman,’ she wept. 'Please take the horse off my back. Eight dollars a week for feed. The horse is breaking my back.’ ” And the young gigolo, kept by a comfortably fixed and more than comfortably upholstered widow who punished him for his infidelities by denouncing him to the authorities. He was lodged on the island. There were grounds for appeal. He could have been released on bond. But he declined. The widow relented. She came to the island, offering to put up a bond for the young man. "Don’t be angry with me, Paolo,” she pleaded “I will hire the best lawyer in the United States.” Safe in the detention ward with the Swedish ship jumpers and a couple of anarchists, Paolo was adamant. “Here in prison for the first time I feel free,” he defied his old mistress. “In Italy I shall have to join the army. It will- be a pleasure. Addio, signora, and many thank for having informed against me.” n no MORE melodramatic was the escapade of Vito Palumbo, a black-browed Italian seaman. For months Palumbo lingered on the island last spring while the officials awaited his passport from Italy. Several times Commissioner Corsi talked to him about his case. Palumbo, the guards told Mr. Corsi, was visited by a woman who said she was his wife. From remarks of the Palumbos, they gathered she was not his wife, but the wife of the man who had denounced him to the authorities. On the night of August 1 Palumbo escaped through a skylight of one of the dormitories, dropped to the roof of the screen porch. He swam the back channel to the Lehigh Valley railroad yards- in Jersey City—the island is nearer New Jersey than New York—avoided the railroad police who patrol there, and made his way to Brooklyn. There he staobed the supposed informer six times. Police picked him up in the morning and returned him to the immigration station. He was satisfied. NEXT: Mothers and babies on the way out.
MOTION PICTURES -Cohi£>STARTING TODAY 5-11 P. M. THE GERMAN-MADE “RASPUTIN” Flayed by Members of The Moscow Art Theatre WITH ENGLISH TITLES 4 DAYS ONLY Our 25c Admission Remains
JUmUo* WHERE DIG PICTURES PLAT! ICT 1 | Kiddies, ”with ANITA PAGE In “The BIG CAGE” Plus WALTER WIXCHELL in “I KNOW EVERYBODY” NEXT FRIDAY* PRE-EASTER FIN FF.STI SALLY JAMES EILERS—DUNN in “SAILOR’S LUCK”
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DEATH TAKES OLD PRINTER AT HOME HERE Funeral Services Will Be Held Tuesday for Francis Acklin, 79. Francis Acklin, 79, one of the oldest printers in Indianapolis, died Saturday in his home, 606 Virginia avenue. He was a heart disease victim. Funeral services will be held at 2:30 Tuesday in the Hisey & Titus funeral home, 951 North Delaware street. Burial will be in Crown Hill cemetery. W. R. Tucker Is Dead Last rites for William Arthur Tucker, 67, a retired miner and engineer, w'ho died Sunday in his home, 1218 Villa avenue, will be held at 2 Tuesday in the Bert S.. Gadd funeral home, Churchman avenue and Prospect street. Burial will be in Memorial Park cemetery. Seeks Money for Funeral Mrs. Anna Trusty. 78, who died Sunday in a small shack at Eagle Cresk and Miller street, will not be buried by the county. Despite the poverty which five years of illness brought about, her husband. Elmer Trusty, formerly a moderately well-to-do property owner and manufacturer of cement blocks, will raise the money for her burial, he said today. At one time Trusty owned most of the property near their shack. For the last two years they have been aided by the county. Death of Mrs. Trusty followed illness of several years. Banker’s Funeral Tuesday Services for Joseph N. Addison. 81, president of the Citizens State bank at Charlottesville, who died Sunday of heart trouble in his home at NewcaStle, will be held in the Charlottesville Christian church at 2:30 Tuesday. Burial will be in Knightstown. Mrs. Hayes Succumbs Following a brief illness, Mrs. Jessie Hayes, a native of Scotland, died Saturday in her home, 5020 Park avenue. Last rites will be held at 9:30 Tuesday in the St. Joan of Arc Catholic church. Burial will be in Holy Cross cemetery. Law' Senior Buried Today Services for Paul Adomatis, 22, vice-president of the Indianapolis
MOTION PICTURES
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The ANTLERS Hotel Announces THE OPENING of the TALLY-HO ROOM on the Mezzanine Floor—Decorated in Modern Style FRIDAY, APR|L7th, at 6 P. M. s —>v Serving a .Si Table d’Hote Dinner, with- \ o9y-o ! ou t cover charge, from 6to 9. After 9 P. M., SI per person. The very highest quality foods prepared by experts of Jff 1 culinary art. Includes Dancing and y ( Floor Shows at 8 I*. M., 10:30 P. M. and 12:30 A. M., featuring— Music by Carleton Coon Junior and His 12-Piece Recording Orchestra and 5 ACTS OF NEW YORK RKO VAUDEVILLE Phone me your reservation early to assure choice table location. R. I. Griffith, Mgr. LI. 2331
DIRECTOR IS SELECTED Martin M. Clinton to Be in Charge of Young People’s Work. Martin M. Clinton, formerly of New York and Washington, has been appointed director of the young peoples activities
division of the Indiana council on international relations. He will assist that organization in its annual spring conference at the Lincoln May 11, 12 and 13. Clinton, formerly a resident of Greenwood, is 23. He was graduated from a Detroit high school in 1923 and went to New York to en-
gage in young people's work. He came to Indianapolis last fall from Washington. Remodeling Company, and Benjamin Harrison law school senior, who died Saturday in his home. 1310 North Beville avennue, will be held at 2 this afternoon in the Free Methodist church. Burial will be in Memorial Park cemetery. Duncan Burial Rites Today Following an illness of several years, Mrs. Emma F. Duncan. 67. died Saturday in the home of her sister, Mrs. Phil Kerz, 806 East Maple road. Services were to be held at 3 this afternoon in the Royster & Askin undertaking establishment, 1902 North Meridian street. Burial will be in Crown Hill cemetery'. Heart Disease Fatal at Church Mrs. Elizabeth Stem. 70. of 1223 North Temple avenue, died of heart disease Sunday night, having been stricken while she was attending services at the Apostolic Faith church at Thirteenth and Rural streets. Civil War Veteran Dies Bl! T'liitrti I'rrs/t NOBLESVILLE. Ind., April 3 John P. Bradfield, 88. Civil war veteran and former sheriff of Hamilton county, died at his home here today.
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NEIGHBORHOOD THEATERS NORTH SIDE ' Talbot 22nd Double Fra? ore <lin gp r Rogers “13TH GUEST” Clark liable—Carole Lombard j “NO MAN OF HER OWN” Noble at Mass. ■kj Si Double Feature BBEMfcwßMflnaUtti Boris Karloff •THE MUMMY” [ JOEL M't.'RF A in ”SFORT PARADE” | WEST SIDE BNMKBPINBB939 Wash. A Belmont ■ Mh-hg "THE MUMMY” j Geo. Brent “Luxury Liner” ■■■■■■PM 2510 W Mich. St. , “SIGN OF THE CROSS __ 15c Till R J J.JI Illinois and H (j p, M. UiJjjiJuUaU Market Jack Oakie in ! J “UPTOWN NEW YORK” Ij I P omedv—New s—Organice. |H I U 15c _ Till VrCMT.Vy.KI Illinois at ' ■B r> P. M. UhkSLuaanaa Ohio i Fj Tom Mix M “TERROR TRAIL” 33 ' BMP Comedy—News—Serial.
JUDGE GARVIN TO QUIT BENCH' WITHIN MONTH Announces His Plan to Return to Private Life on May 1. Announcement that he would resign May 1 and return to private practice of law has been made by Judge Thomas E. Garvin, who has presided in municipal room one for nearly seven years. Garvin's move came as a surprise in view of his repeated denials that he planned to leave the bench. During the period prior to the passage of the "skip-election” law w r hen Garvin was mentioned prominently as a mayoralty candidate, he declared that lie expected to complete his term of appointment. Personal reasons were given by Garvin for his planned resignation before expiration of his term in 1936. In his statement, he declared: "I feel that our period of business depression has reached the bottom and that conditions are on a rapid road to recovery and that an era of substantial economic recovery' and a following prosperity is ahead of the American people. I feel I owe it to myself to establish myself again in the practice of law and to benefit thereby." In December, when approached regarding his candidacy for mayor. Garvin stated that it was his belief that private practice, under existing business conditions, was unprofitable. "At the time of my original appointment I believed, and still do, that a young man can stay upon the bench for a longer period of time than is to his best personal interest." Garvin said in announcing his plans to resign. Garvin declared that the time until May 1 would be devoted to arranging affairs of the court for his successor.
Clinton
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