Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 300, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 April 1933 — Page 9

APRIL 26, 1933.

FAMOUS GEM OF TRAGEDY IS IN PAWNSHOP Evalyn Walsh McLean in Desperate Battle for Ready Cash. BY HARRY FERGUSON United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, April 26.—The famous Hope diamond, whose chill, blue gleams have cast misfortune on every one who own*>d it since the day it was carried out of medieval Asia, came to rest here today in a side street pawnshop. Mrs. Evalyn Walsh McLean, pressed for ready cash, sent it there Tuesday In an attempt to raise money until she can get loans on her extensive Washington real estate holdings. By so doing she hopes to save for her children the Washington Post, now in receivership. Superstitious persons, who lay great store by the legends ot how death, poverty and disaster have trailed the Hope diamond like bloodhounds on the scent, pointed to another ill-iavored omen today. Even while the $300,000 jewel, weighing forty-four carats, rested among the trinkets, silver and dusty watch cases of the pawnshop, Mrs. McLean sat anxiously by a bed in Baltimore, where lay her 14-year-old son, weak and white from an appendicitis operation. Disaster Strikes Often The •'Hope curse'’ was at its evil work again, they said, and recalled how another one of Mrs. McLean’s children had been killed in an automobile accident shortly after her husband put chased the diamond for her in 1912. The path of the Hope diamona has twisted through the most brilliant social scenes of the old world and the new'. Queens, actresses and society women have draped its pendant around their necks, and pretended to laugh at the dire history of the gem. •Invariably disaster has struck at them, and the diamond has been passed along. Oriental princes have coveted the gem and paid fantastic prices for it, and a Greek jeweler w'ho handled it for appraisal died in an automobile crash. Refused to Be Frightened Mrs. McLean refused to be frightened by legends. Years ago she appeared at a reception at the Russian embassy for which 4,000 yellow lilies were imported from England, and the Hope diamond was a dazzling pool of blue at her throat. Life was peaceful and gay for the McLeans in those days, and the world thought the tragic chain of the Hope diamond had been snapped. Then misfortune crowded on the McLeans. Today McLean’s health is broken, their estate has been the cause of countless suit and counter-suit, divorce actions have followed rapidly, and now Mrs. McLean is seeking a quick means of getting money. Like ali famous gems, the early history of the Hope diamond is obscure. A caravan carried it out of Central Asia in the seventeenth century and it went along ancient trade routes to Paris, where, in 1669, Louis XIV purchased it. Found Way to England Louis XV, engrossed in the intrigues of Madame Du Barry, passed the gem nonchalantly to his queen. The curse asserted itself again, and a humiliated France was forced to sign the peace of Paris that deprived the empire of India and Canada. Then the diamond disappeared for almost two centuries, but finally found its way to England, w’here it received the name it now bears. Lord Francis Hope inherited the gem, and handed it to his bride as a wedding gift. She was the famous May Yoke, the American actress who could dance an Irish jig so comically that John L. Sullivan could forget that Corbett knocked him out at New Orleans and roar with laughter when she appeared on the stage. Lady Hope dazzled royalty with the gem, but the last year of her life she was a poverty-stricken old woman, scrubbing floors in Chicago. GOVERNMENTAL COSTS IN STATE SHOW DROP $13,494,248 Decrease in 1932 Revealed in Tabulations. Governmental expenditures in Indiana in 1932 totaled $249,385,757. a drop of $13,494,248 from the total of the previous year, a tublation at the statehouse showed today. Included are all costs of state, county, township, city and town governments. Greatest expenditure was for schools, representing 26.44 per cent, of the total, or $57,009,035. Highways, streets and bridges were next with $42,604,043. or 19.76 per cent. Bond, loan and interest payments totaled $38,5722220. or 17.94 per cent. Poor relief expenditures increased about $3,000,000. the total being $8,363,742 or about 3.88 per cent as compared with 2.4 per cent the previous year. BATTLE BURNING OIL Fire Apparatus from Ail Parts of City Answer Calls. Burning oil in a dramage ditch which cast a heavy pall of smoke over northeastern Indianapolis resulted m fire appartus from all sections of the city responding to three alarms Tuesday afternoon. The oil had collected or been dumped in a pit near an oil refinery in the vicinity of Twentyfirst street and Ralston avenue. TREASURERS TEST LAW City Officials File Suit on Bill Passed by Assembly. By United Press HAMMOND. Ind.. April 26. Faced with abolition of their offices Jan. 1. city treasurers of Whiting, East Chicago, Gary and Hammond have filed suit to test constitutionality of the law. The 1933 Legislature voted to transfer their duties to the county treasurer.

JOBLESS FIND A ROOFTREE

Central Lodge Is Home, Sweet Home for Workless

BV ARCH STEINEL Times Staff Writer Whitewash curtains the brick walls. Lives, and hopes to end joblessness, are whitewashed, too, at 222224 East Wabash street. Bunked on cots and eating 3%cent meals—harvest hand meals—--300 men live just back of the city market waiting for the rainbow—a job. Two hundred fifty of the men would be homeless, living in areaways and river huts in Indianapolis, if it were not for the Central lodge of the Central Registration of Housing Foundation. They are the city’s men without homes. The other fifty are the vagrant waywards hitting the main “stems” of the country for a night’s lodging. a a tt BUT this isn’t a yarn of the Central lodge. It’s a bit of how the city’s homeless have made a home and how they’ll fight for it. A man can pray at Central lodge and pray alone. One bearded old fellow does it daily at meal-time. He says Grace. And while the words roll, the fork of a cot-mate at his elbow rolls macaroni mouthward. “It’s his business if he prays and the other fellow’s if he likes macaroni,” vouches a former marine sergeant and one of the staff of the hotel for the homeless. “Flop-house” is a fighting word. More than one black eye that was said to have bumped against a wall-post was colored by a fist of one of the homeless, who objected to an epithet being applied to his home. And they’re buddies together in their joblessness. B B B WHAT’S one's belongs to another. Fags, precious as “tailor-mades" were in French sectors during the war, are split in half. They double up on cigars. Each man carries a cot number. That number entitles him to two meals a day, books to read, use of the recreation room, free barbering, baths and nightly medical inspection (army style). For example, a man can't get a book to read without pawning his bed ticket for the book. When ne brings the book back to the library, he gets his bed back. Clean dormitories, segregation of races, change of linen weekly and nightgowns are provided for sleeping. A bath is required of every man before he goes to bed. “And you’d be surprised, but there's a rush to go to bed long before 9:45 taps.” said Paul H. Moore, director of the lodge. B B B EACH man must work three hours daily for his bed and board. “Deck-swabbing," window washing and peeling "spuds'’ constitute a few of the duties. After he's worked the three hours, he is permitted to leave the lodge to hunt work or spend his time as he sees fit. Organized last fall, the lodge lost but one article through theft. It was an overcoat, and "we got that back,” explains an attache. College graduates, former salesmen, clerks, and every trade in the union is represented in the heme. And do they stick together? For instance, there was Sam—we’ll call him. He left his son in college when the falling stock market ruined him. “Here, take all I’ve got. son. and go on through school. I’ll get by,” and Sam moved to the lodge. The son thought he'd left town, b b a THE son went to an Indiana college. He’ll be graduated this year. Every month or so he sees his dad. Sam dresses up for him. He'll be dressed up for him on graduation day. too. Sam hasn’t a job. He’s hoping for a lucky break. How does he get the clothes to see his son? Well, you see they’re all buddies at the lodge and when Sam makes his monthly visits they “doll” him up. The marine sergeant donates shoes or something, the dishwasher something else, somebody chips in a Sunday-go-to-meeting

suit, another a tie, and a shirt comes from someone else. And Sam lives again for a few hours his prosperous days and no one’s the wiser except in the little back street lodge where they sort of whitewash things and make them look up again.

Dunn Sadly in Need of a Rousing Good Film Story

‘Hello, Sister' is a Patched Up Affair That Moves Slowly and Then Becomes Melodrama of An Ancient Type. BY WALTER D. HICKMAN 11 T TELLO, SISTER,” comes under the head of being a w'eak vehicle ■*T for James Dunn. In my opinion it is just another movie. What James Dunn really needs above everything is a rousing good he-man story. And this one is not. It is the ancient story of a young girl and a young feller living in New York. Both are lonesome. Just innocent youngsters, I thought, until Boots Mallory, who plays the role of the little small town gal went to a doctor's office and doc told her that she would soon be blessed eventing. Then he asked her the name of her husband. And then I knew that the two youngsters (the other being James had been

other places than Coney Island. Then drama—Jimmie becomes foolish and thinks that our little gal is common and our little gal goes weeping to her dingy room. Then

old melodrama to the rescu e—the cheap rooming house burns down. Then Jimmie rescues our little gal. Oh me. Oh my. Then the happy ending. Oh, hum. Boots Mallory has to look lonely as well as happy. Dunn seldom gets any sparkle into the role. Zasu Pitts has another dumbpan comedy role. There is one scene that I cer-

\

Janies Dunn

tainly do not like. And that is a fight between a man and a woman. This is all in bad taste. Here is hokum romance that has been badly handled. That’s my idea. Be your own judge. This one certainly did not get me excited. “Hello, Sister” opens today at the Ohio. I saw it at a preview. o tt a Other theaters today offer: “Parole Girl" at the Circle, “Today We Live” at the Palace. Louie Lowe and band at the Terminal. “Girl Missing” at the Indiana, “King Kongo” at the Apollo, and burlesque at the Colonial. FRAT HEAD DUE HERE Grand Chancellor of Chi Sigma Chi to Visit in City. Nelson Knapp. Cleveland, 0., grand chancellor of Chi Sigma Chi, national secondary fraternity, will pay a three-day visit to the local chapters of the fraternity this week. A joint meeting of the active and alumni chapters of Indianapolis will greet Mr. Knapp tonight at 8 at a meeting in the Clavpool. Edward Brantner of Nu Sigma chapter. is chairman of arrangements. TWO GUEST TICKETS to the Palace theater given with each seven-time rental ad placed this week. Your rental also listed free of charge in Rental Guide. For detais call RI. 5551.

MOTION PICTURES STARTING Continuous TODAY |OHIQ^ S .|| PJi a Tonight it will hop- te . Kiddies pen to other young- 0c the some questions. JAMES DUNM.|H®|H ZASUNTC MMUGOMKU / \ * k.TjWJ eooTSMALioer

THE INDIANAPOLIS TDIES

Upper Left—Chow time at Central lodge. “Seconds” and “thirds” can be had at the cost of 3 V2 cents a meal. Upper Right—The lodge’s “nightgown” brigade has nothing to do with a well-known Indiana organization of the past. They wear the garb when doing their washing and ironing. Lower Left—Trading his bed for a book. Lower Right—A free shave at the home of the homeless.

Paid in Full Mongrel Saves Lives of Benefactor When Fire Breaks Out. ; By United Press CHICAGO. April 26.—Emil Reimann saw a mongrel dog wandering in an alley several years ago. The dog appeared hungry. Reimann took the dog home. He and his wife, .Emma, treated the dog kindly, fed him, named him Jack, and kept him. Early today, Jack paid his debt. When fire broke out in the Reimann home, he barked outside the Reimann’s bedroom door until they awakened. All escaped unhurt. "If he hadn't been there we would have been burned to death,” was Emma Reimann’s simple tribute to the mongrel. ENGLISH’S WILL UNDER FIRE IN PRINCE SUIT Widower Files Action Attacking Bequests; Charity Section Hit. Bequests to charitable organizations. under the will of William E. English, who died in 1926, are attacked in a suit filed in probate couri Monday. Frank J. Prince, widower of Mrs. Helen Orr English Prince, who died a year ago, is demanding that the court construe provisions of the will. Mrs. Prince was the widow' of Mr. English. Section of the will bequeathing the English theater block to the Indianapolis Foundation is attacked by the suit. The suit alleges the will is not specific concerning what charitable institutions shall share, ir. the estate. The hotel property is not thus limited by the will, the complaint states. Under the will, the hotel property was to be converted into a home for organized charities.

MODEL PLANE RULESSET OUT Young Builders at Work for Indoor Flying Contest, May 27. A number of youthful miniature model airplane builders of the city are at w T ork on models to be entered in the fourth annual city recreation department indoor flying contest May 27 at Butler fieldhouse. Rules for the contest, w'hich is under direction of Herschel S. Knight, model plane chairman of the National Aeronautics Association, local chapter, are: Indoor Tractor—1. Wing area must not exceed 125 square inches. 2. Motor must not exceed fifteen inches from end hook to front of thrust bearing. 3. Tail boom permitted, no restriction on length. 4. Models will be hand launched and will not require landing gear. Flying Scale Model—1. A flying scale model airplane is an exact replica of a man-carry.ng machine, every part being proportional in size to the corresponding part of the large machine. 2. Propeller and landing gear mav be increased 50 per cent in size, but if the propeller is increased in size, the landing gear must be increased also. 3. Wing area must act exceed 125 square inches. 4. Four square inches may be added to the tail surface. Rules—1. Contest will be held at the Butler fieldhouse Saturday. May 27. at 1 p. m. 2. Senior diyision will include contestants over 15 years and under 21 years old. Junior division will include all contestants under 16 years old. 3. Each contestant mav enter each type model. 4. Each contestant will be permitted three flights in each type and may use a different model for each flight. 5. A delayed flight will be charged against the contestant for: (a) a flight of less than 15 seconds, (b) failure to fly in proper turn. 6. Three delayed flights during the contest, in each type to coufit as one flight. 7. Best time of the three 'flights to count. 8. Judges to rule in regard to obstructions and qualifications of models. The decision of the Judges shall be final. French Club to Give Flay Le Medicin Malgre Lin,” a playlet, will be presented by members of Le Cercle Francaise, French club at Technical high school, Thursday, May 4. The Tech string quartet, under direction of Richard Orton, will play.

MOTION PICTURES NOW! LAST 2 DAYS "PAROLE GIRL" with RALPH BELLAMY MAE CLARKE Comedies —News STARTS FRIDAY MAURICE CHEVALIER with BABY LE ROY in “A BEDTIME STORY”

INDIANA LAST 2 DAYS! “GIRL MISSING” with Glenda Farrell—Mary Brian Ben Lyon and ????? ED RESEXER and the Indiana Concert Orchestra 25c till 6 | 40c after 6 | Starting FRIDAY “THE CRIME £ CENTURY” with France* Dee—Wynne Gibson Jean Hersholt—Stuart Erwin

OIL PROMOTER, SAFE IN CHINA, DEFIES 0, S. C. C. Julian, Fugitive, Will Seek New Fortune in Shanghai. BY DON KING United Press Staff Correspondent (Copyright. 1933, by United Press) SHANGHAI. April 26.—C. C. Julian, one-time millionaire and noted as a sensational American promoter before he became a hunted fugi-

tive, has come to booming Shanghai to recoup his fortune, he told the United Press today. Julian became wealthy in oil promotion. His tide of fortune turned. He was jailed in San Francisco as a vagrant, released and fled Oklahoma City when he was charged with using the mails to defraud.

Shanghai is the greatest boom citynow. Industrial expansion is rapid. And Julian, who has achieved wealth in other businness bonanzas, seeks another fortune. His attorneys advised him it w’ould be impossible for the United States to extradite him. A Canadian citizen, only the British may order him taken from this free port. And British statutes, lawyers said, do not cover frauds by mail. “I understand I can’t be extradited,” he said. ‘‘That's why I came to Shanghai.” “I intend to remain, recoup my fortunes, then return to the United States and fight the charges against me. ‘‘l’m penniless now, but I’ve always made money,.and I can do it again.”

COES TO PLEAD FORSONi HURT Mother Is Injured While on Way to Petition Clemency Board. The mother of a man serving a term in the Indiana reformatory for stealing a communion table from a church, was injured here Tuesday before she had an opportunity to appear before state clemency board to plead for her son’s release. Mrs. Hattie E. Chapman, 68, Washington, Ind., is the mother. The son is John V. Chapman, serving a three to ten-year term for burglary. The mother was injured when an automobile in which she was riding collided with another car at North and Illinois streets. She suffered bruises and shock. Squire Chapman, brother of the prisoner, incurred cuts and bruises in the accident, but appeared before the beard with an explanation for delay, which was accepted. Paul Leighty, Loogcotee, Ind., w'as the driver of the car in which the Chapmans were riding. Other passengers were Mrs. Mange Leighty, wife of the driver, and Mrs. Marie Bratton, 40, Washington, Ind. The other car was driven by Anthony Hotopp, 703 North Gladstone avenue. John Chapman and a companion, said to have been intoxicated, broke into the Bethany Christian church near Bicknell. Ind., and stole the communion table and some rugs. VETERANS TO GATHER Republican Ex-Soldiers to Be Addressed by Ogden Mills. State meeting of Republican veterans will be held at the Claypool at 2:30 Friday, John M. Caylor, veterans’ chairman of Marion county, announced. Ogden L. Mills, former secretary of the treasury, who will speak at the Indiana Republican Editorial Association dinner Friday night, also will address the veterans. Tech Parents to Attend Forum “The Program of Studies at Tech High School” will be the topic for discussion at the fourth of a series of forums, attended by parents, Thursday afternoon in the student center room.

MOTION PICTURES 1 m -flw -me 8E % HC m\ M. 1;-™ J LAST 2 DAYS JOAN CRAWFORD and GARY COOPER In “TODAY WE LIVE” A iletro-Goldicyn-ilayer Picture * . nVC A picture with the charm of “SMILIN’ THROUGH.” V .fit/ The sweep of “COIAR--10& BOX!" MAR.Y PICKFORD Ci teeners m LESLIE HOWARD Wmm * Mark ioiiagi rtooocno*

COMMCT BRIDGE BY W. E. McKENXEY | Secretary American Bridge League DON'T let high cards wreck you. Instead, make them work for I you. i Here is an interesting hand that ' came up in a recent Cleveland tournament. Most tables bid for a game in hearts North and South, but the most surprising thing to me was that several tables actually made four hearts. Personally, I don’t like to open the bidding with the South hand. While it has three high-card tricks and a biddable five-card suit, it doesn’t have the necessary soundness or flexibility. Let us look at it in this manner j —if I bid a heart and my partner I were to bid two diamonds, what i would I do? I cannot rebid the I "weak five-card suit. I don’t want I to bid two no trump with a singlej ton in my hand (especially when ) the other two suits are headed only with aces and have no tenace positions at all), therefore I would prefer to pass and enter the bidding on the next round. Os course, at every table where I they were using weak first and sec-ond-hand opening bids, the dealer j opened with one heart. Most of i the one over one players, however, I passed the hand, and then West j opened with one diamond. a a B NORTH doubled. South then showed his heart suit and North i and South in most cases arrived at four hearts. When South opened the bidding

Julian

AK-J-6 VlO-9-6-4-3 ♦ 10-5-3 *J-9 NORTHI A ♦ 10-2 A Q-8-V 7 S > 4-3 ♦ A-K-Q- u (fl vk-Q 9-7-4 £ H ♦ 8-6-2 ifcK-10- Dealer *Q-6. 7-2 I SOUTH 5.4 ♦ A-9-7-5 VA-J-8-5-2 ♦ J ♦A-8-3 21

with one heart, and West overcalled with tw'o diamonds. North w’ould bid tw'o hearts, and North and South again would arrive at four hearts. In the play of the hand. West will open the king of diamonds and follow' it with the queen of diamonds, w'hich the declarer will trump with a small heart. His only in-card in dummy is the king of spades, and he must not play it at this time. He has ten trump and had better take a chance on the trump being split, so he lays down the ace of trump, leaving East with the good king of trump. oca THE next play is the ace of clubs, the nine of clubs being played from dummy. Declarer follows with a small club, and it is surprising to note the number of West players who jumped in with that king of clubs. In other words, going in with the king of clubs is simply a case of wrecking yourself, because now you will lead another diamond, w'hich declarer will ruff. He then will trump a club in dummy, lead a trump, putting East in the lead with the king, and East is forced to lead a spade into durrtmy’s king-jack. If West will play low and allow East to win the trick with the queen of clubs, East must be careful now not to let high cards wreck him. If he immediately returns a diamond, the declarer will get the same play on him. Declarer will trump the diamond, ruff a club, and then put East back in the lead with the good heart. The real defense is for East to win the trick with the queen of clubs and then play his good heart, before exiting with the diamond. In other words, it often pays to get rid of your high cards so the declarer cannot throw you in the lead at will. (Copyright, 1933, by NBA Service. Inc.) F. Mclntyre sold a Ford Model T truck for $lO cash from a Want Ad costing but 27 cents.

MOTION PICTURES

c flfroUO* WHERE BIG PICTURES PLAY LAST 2 DATS Robert Armstrong | Kiddies 10c Bruce Cabot KATIiVRINE* HRN In “CHRISTOPHER STRONG”

| TERMINAL ISc^Tm. NOW ! First Indianapolis Showing! I ‘NIGHT OF TERROR’ j A Gripping Drama of a Girl Who Risked Everything for Lore. . . . SALLY BLANE—WALLACE FORD “DRACULA” LUGOSI I LOUIE LOWE BAHO rß '/ sos

mmKzmm Jl BURLESQUE CONCOCTION r~r£?/1

|talbott^EßhM BELMONT ftfj&Sii MM—BTTTT* 4 : i DAISV Mift&ffifll

PAGE 9

DEATH CLAIMS FORMER PASTOR OF CITYCHURCH Last Rites to Be Held Today at Winchester for Dr. A. C. Wilmore. Last rites for Dr. A. Cleland Wilmore. 83. historian of the White River conference of the United. Brethren church, and former Indianapolis pastor, were to be conducti ed at 2 this afternoon in the Main ; Street United Brethren church at j Winchester. He died Monday at his home in Winchester. Pa. Dr. Wilmore was pastor of the First United Brethren church here fifty years ago. and preached his golden anniversary at the church, Jan. 28. He. had been in the ministry fifty-five years. During his long service he also held pastorates in Montpelier, Wabash, Hartsville. Anderson, Noblesville, Newcastle, Saratoga, Selma, Muncie, Greenfield, and Pendleton. He was presiding elder of the White River conference nine years, secretary for eight years, and registrar twenty-two years. He was a trustee of Indiana Central college six years, and chaplain of the Indiana Society, Sons of the American Revolution, five years. He was a thirty-second degree Mason and a member of the Knights Templar. He belonged to the Indiana His- ! torical Society. Y’oung City Woman Dies Following an illness of a week. Mrs. Mildred Kinzel. 24. of 5801 East New York street, died Monday in the Methodist hospital. Funeral services will be held at 2 Thursday in the home and at 2:29 in the Irvington M. E. church. Burial will be in Washington Park cemetery. Mrs. Kinzel was a graduate of Warren Central high school and had attended Butler university. She was a member of the Cumberland Evangelical church, but in recent months had attended the Irvington church. Former City Man Taken Funeral services for Gus Lipp, 76, a former resident of Indianapolis, who died Monday at his home in Shoals, will be held at 8:30 Friday in the home of his daughter, Mrs. Hugo Wuelfing, Jr., 1437 Brookside parkway, north drive. Other services will be at 9 in St. Joseph Catholic church. Burial will be in St. Joseph cemetery. Mr. Lipp was born in Preston, Canada, but moved to Indianapolis in 1860. He lived here for sixtythree years, before moving to Shoals in 1923.

Quality GUARANTEED! “When you are offered a substitute for genuine Kellogg’s, remember it is seldom in the spirit of service.” # / /? OF BATTLE CREEK Very Low Round-Trip Fares EACH WEEK-END CHICAGO .... $5.00 Good Being on all trains Fridays. Saturdays and Sundays, also early morning trams Mondays. Return limit Monday night. Coach service. CHICAGO .... $8.30 Good going on all trains from 10:45 a. m. Friday until 10 45 a. m. train Sunday. Return limit Monday night following. Good in sleeping cars at 257 e reduction in Pullman fares for round trip and in parlor cars at regular seat fares. Coach Fares Next Saturday CLEVELAND . . $4.50 Leave 10:55 and. m. cr 11:00 p m. Return on anv train until 3:00 a m. Mondav DETROIT . . . $4.50 TOLEDO .... $4.00 Leave 11:00 and. m. Return on anv train Sunday. Next Sunday ST. LOUIS . . . $4.50 Leave 12 35 a m . 2 45 a. m.. or 8:15 a. m. Return on any train same day. CINCINNATI . . $2.50 Greensburg, $1.25 Shelbyville, $.75 Leave 7:45 a m. Return on anv train same dav. See the Beautiful New Cincinnati Union Terminal. BASEBALL—Cincinnati v*. Pittsburgh. Full particulars at 112 Monument Circle. Riley 2442. and Onion Station. Riley 3355. BIG FOUR ROUTE

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