Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 8, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 May 1933 — Page 2
PAGE 2
FLOOD WALL TO AID WARFLEIGH SAFETY ASKED Residents Want City Action to Minimize Danger of Deluge. Residents of Warfleigh today are mobilizing for a battle to the finish against “Ole Man River,'' and the periodical damage and inconvenience caused by water seeping through the Warfleigh levee. Meeting at the home of Louis N. Grossman, 6465 Riverview drive, a group of residents of the section Friday night mapped plans for petitioning the city to construct a wall of steel or concrete between the present levee and White river. They will seek to have it erected from College avenue to the new Meridian street bridge, a distance of seven or eight blocks. Since the levee w-as raised after the 1913 flood, the section never actually has had a flood as result of the river overflowing or breaking through the earthen dike, it was pointed out. The seepage through muskrat holes and other imperfections in the levee has resulted in flooded basements, streets, and lawns, however. Benefit to Many “Construction of a waterproof wall would benefit not only the several hundred property owners living in Warfleigh proper,” Grossman said, “but, probably 3,000 families in the section from the river south to Fifty-seventh street, and from Broad Ripple W'est to Butler.” Results of a conference with A. H. Moore, city engineer, Friday, were reported at the meeting by Grossman. It w'as stated that Moore considered the plan for a solid wall practical, and that he offered full cooperation, but said the biggest problem would be financing the project. It was estimated the wall could be constructed for from $40,000 to $50,000. Survey Is Promised Grossman said Moore promised to make a careful survey of the river bank to determine more definitely the cost of the w'all. Accompanying Grossman at the conference with the engineer were D T. Conrow, 6345 Riverview drive, and Walter McClure, 6449 Riverview drive. Plans for circulating a petition for the improvement were discussed at the meeting.
HOLD 2 FOR SELLING PARTS OF STOLEN AUTO Pair Is Held to Grand Jury by Judge Sheaffer. Two men charged with selling parts from a stolen automobile are held to the grand jury today under bond of $2,000 each by Municipal Judge William H. Sheaffer. The man who bought the parts was sentenced to the penal farm for ninety days and fined a total of slOl and casts. Those held to the grand jury were John Paul Jameson and Bruce Fisher, both of 5124 Sheldon street. They face auto theft charges. Raymond Hollorhan, 819 Edison street, operator of a garage at 826 Massachusetts avenue, accused of buying three tires, three wheels and two horns from Jameson and Fisher, was fined $1 and costs and sent to the farm for ninety days on a charge of receiving stolen property. He also was fined SIOO for failure to report purchase of used goods.
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Conservation Fight to Finish on State Stream Pollution Urged
This is Ihp second of a scries on conservation of state resources, one of which will appear in The Times each Saturday. BY WILLIAM F. COLLINS NOTHING quite so bores me to tears as a fanatic. Having hobbied about with the outdoors so many years, I have met my share of them. Something in conservation develops the symptoms of fanaticism in many people or posi sibly we are the fanatics and they, because of a potent urge to do something for natural resources, possess a foresight not given to most of us. They work so hard for their desire with so slight an opportunity for self gain, that we can not understand them. The subject of stream pollution brings to my mind a small company of men and women, native-born Hoosiers, who long have labored in a vineyard that even now fails to bring forth fruit. Some past occurrence planted in their breasts the fervid desire to clean up the streams and clean out the polluters. The subject of their desire is amalgamated closely with dynamite, as a cursory examination of our legislative acts directed toward control of pollution will disclose. This chapter can go into the Indiana statutes designed to permit the anti-pollutionists to accomplish their desires, sufficient it is that we know there are Indiana law's bearing sizable teeth to give us back our streams. The department of health now' has a fighting chief engineer in the sanitary corps from w'hom w'e will hear much on the subject of stream pollution in the next four years. tt tt tt IAM convinced firmly that citizens of Indiana no longer can ignore stream pollution. We have lived in a spendthrift age. We have spent our birthright to pure water as recklessly as we have ignored our right to control our everyday utilitarian necessities. The gathering voice of protest has not risen above a whisper, but it is there none the less and is giving the polluting industries bad dreams. A whisper comes from Peru. A fighting lawyer there has filed three suits in the last year against gross pollutionists, one on Little river, one on Cicero creek, and one on the Mississinewa. The riparian owmers employed him and his fees are only the enjoyment he gets out of the fight and the satisfaction of accomplishment. Another w'hisper comes from Newcastle. A few days ago I stepped into the auto license bureau there to renew my driver’s ticket. The efficient young woman in charge responded to my inquiry as to whether I could obtain a fishing permit with the statement, "Another fisherman, just like my husband; I wonder there are any fish left alive.” As an afterthought, she voiced, in almost the same words I frequently have heard expressed by others in Indiana. “But there is no fishing left around here. My husband brought, in three diseased bass last week and our doctor friend ordered us to throw them away. “He told us Sugar creek, out by the chapel where these fish came from, was polluted badly and dangerous and I think the state should condemn it. don’t you?” n tt tt \ ND therein lies the entire story. T\ In swift kaleidoscope. I see boys rafting on the Mississinewa below Marion on water I know contains typhiod bacillus; I see the death of my friend from septic ulcers in the frontal sinus gained from swimming in White river north of Indianapolis; I see my own children swimming in a hole on Big Lick creek southwest of Indianapolis, a stream, in my blissful ignorance, I believed to be free from pollution. I thought the water was clean and pure until one day to my utter disgust I found human sewage cast up on a gravel bank above our swimming hole. And it came from .one of our state institutions, the boys’ school at Plainfield.
I see the circuit court records of Hancock county, where damages were awarded a farmer for poisoning of his cattle, hogs, and ducks that drank once from the beautiful Blue river in Henry county and died in their tracks. A factory in Newcastle furnished the poison. I see the records of many Indiana cities, in one of which $70,000 in damage claims for stream pollution by that city have been settled since 1925. tt tt tt UP to this moment it has been cheaper for a polluting industry or city to settle damage claims out of court with tnose whom they have damaged by pollution than to be rid of the offense by proper disposal. But what about the rest of us? It is not lawful for me to throw' my garbage into the street, brush my hands, hold my nose and w'alk away. There is no essential difference in my mind between that act and the act of running filth into the w'aters that make every vacation a delight. The desert is not a summer resort. The story book always takes the w'eary traveler out of it into the cool shade of the mountains W'here gushes a crystal stream of pure water. So long as Riley’s “Old Swimmin’ Hole” remains grossly polluted there is nothing we can brag about; but so long as we sing, “I love thy rocks and rills, thy w'oods and templed hills,” instead of “I love thy canning factories, thy mills and profittaking directories,” there still is hope.
M'NUTT TO BECOME MEMBER OF AHEPA Governor to Be Honored at Banquet Sunday. Governor Paul V. McNutt will be honor guest at a banquet in the Riley room of the Claypool Sunday night on the occasion of joining the Order of Ahepa, of which President Roosevelt is a member. Among those who will be initiated with the Governor will be one of his advisers, Frank M. McHale; R. Earl Peters, Democratic state chairman: Municipal Judge William H. Sheaffer. and A1 Hosinski. South Bend, recently appointed United States marshal. Speech of McNutt will be broadcast over station WFBM at 9. Other speakers will be McHale and Achilles Catsonia, Washington, D. C., supreme secretary of the order. The banquet is being sponsored by the Ft. Wayne chapter of Ahepa. Other chapters to be represented are the James Whitcomb Riley of this city, and those at Anderson, Muncie. Kokomo. South Bend. Gary, Hammond and East Chicago. William Zilson of Indianapolis is head of the order in Indiana
The City in Brief
A man who bought a package of cigarets Friday night at the Hook pharmacy, 101 West Washington street, passed a counterfeit half dollar in money accepted when he offered $3 to help the store's supply of change. While Henry Yorger, 3145 West Sixteenth street, was mowing the lawn at his home Friday, a thief who entered by a rear door took loot valued at $27.50, including a revolver and a watch. The Indiana Historical Society and the Society of Indiana Pioneers will make a joint pilgrimage to the Century of Progress June 13. Headquarters in Chicago will be at the Hotel Del Prado. INTRODUCE"NEW FLOWER African Plant Feature in New York Botanical Gardens. I\u Science Service NEW YORK. May 20. Bright orange daisy-like flowers, each with a rich crimson-purple ring surrounding the central disk, on slender. wiry stems surmounting an attractive mass of feathery leaves, are offered by a newly introduced South African plant featured this year by the New York botanical garden. To botanists the plant is known as ursinia anethoides. It can be grown in greenhouses for early spring blooming, and is well adapted for use as a cut flower; or it can be planted outdoors for summer use. In outdoor beds it reaches a height of eighteen inches. Individual flowers have a dameter of as much as-two and one-half inches.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
HUGE FRAUD IS LAID TO DEFUNCT BANKOFFICERS $1,750,000 Loss to Patrons of Washington Trust Is Held Criminal Act. (Continued From Page One) the directors knew' of the acts •purged’ Morris?” Miller asked. “No, but in my opinion I thought that there was a fine point to be decided as to whether the time of giving notice of default had not expired with the knowledge of the directors, even before the bank went into receivership.” Morris ‘Needed the Money’ Conder then corroborated Downey's testimony regarding an admission by Morris that he had released mortgages totaling $70,000. “We (Conder and Downey) asked him why he did it, and he replied, ‘I had to, because I needed the money,’ ” Conder said. ’T told him that he must make restitution,” Conder continued. “I thought it was better to have a bird in the hand. I knew he had his home, which was valued at $125 and, at our suggestion, he deeded it to the trust.” At conclusion of Codner’s testimony, a general discussion followed regarding the possibility of collect-* 1 ing on the bonds. Cox announced at the conclusion of the hearing that he would order suit immediately upon receipt of information from the attorneys regarding legal points. Losses Pass Million In a summary handed to Cox during the hearing the auditors listed acts of the officers and directors, with the note that losses specifically accounted for totaled $1,114,261.25. Other losses “not specifically assigned” amount to $636,831.16, bringing the total loss to $1,751,092.41. Among the charges are: “Permitting president to borrow for himself and corporations in which he was interested and to give worthless paper, $48,565.02. “Permitting the president to sell worthless paper to the bank, $154,377.33. “Permitting the president to sell worthless paper to the bank, $47,072.42.
Relative Borrows Money “Permitting loans to corporations in which directors were interested and accepting worthless paper, $375,395.31. “Permitting relatives of the president (Irvin Morris, a brother) to borow for himself and for a corpartion in w'hich he w'as interested and to give worthless paper, ‘545,840.76. “Authorizing dividends to be paid contrary to law', $48,00.” Other acts for w'hich specific losses were not assigned include: “Carrying bad notes at face value. “Omission of liabilities from the records. “Permitting officers to pledge assets twice as collateral." Reveals Large Payment Downey also was questioned about a specific act during his term of receivership, in which payment of a large sum of money had been made to the Fletcher American National bank to release collateral held on a \oan. In his final report, submitted recently, Downey explained that the payment w'as made because it was his opinion that the collateral was of greater value than the amount of the loan. He admitted from the stand that no court authority had been given for the payment. Downey also declared that Scott Brewer, former president of the State Savings and Trust Company, owes a personal note for $17,000 to the Washington bank. Brewer later was connected with the State Savings and Trust Company, also defunct, and now' is associated with a Louisville bank.
Times Radio Dial Twisters
WFBM (1230) Indianapolis (Indianapolis Power and Light Company) SATURDAY P. M. 5:30 —Lvric program. s.4s—Melodv headlines (CBS). 6:ls—Magic voice (CBS'. 6:3o—Leon Belasco orchestra (CBS). 6:45- Brown County revelers. 7:oo—Easy ares (CBS'. 7:ls—Boswel! Sisters (CBS'. 7:4s—Saturday Frivolities (CBS). B:ls—Public Affairs Institute (CBS). 8 45—Gertrude Niesen (CBS'. 9:oo—Freddie Martin orchestra (CBS'. 9:30 —Ben Pollack orchestra 'CBS'. 10:00 —Ted Fiorito orchestra (CBS). 10:30—Honolulu program 'CBS'. 11:00—Atop the Indiana roof. 11:30—Tallvho Club orchestra. 12:00 Midnight—Sign off. —SUNDAY— A M. 8 00 -Church of the Air 'CBS). 8:30 —Aeolian string quartet 'CBS'. 9:oo—Entertainers. 9:3o—Christian Men Builders. 10:30—Silent to Noon. 12:00—Bohemians. P. M. 12:30—T0 be announced. 1 30—Symphonic hour iCBS). 2:00 —Cathedral hour 'CBSi. 3:oo—Poet's Gold (CBS). 3:ls—Four Clubmen (CBS'. 3:3o—Bakers tCBSi. 4:oo—Wheeler Misison program. 4:3o—Roses and Drums 'CBS'. s:oo—Second Presbyterian church. s:3o—Romany Troupe (CBS'. 5:45—D0 You Know? 6:00 —Gauchos 'CBS'. 6:3o—Chicago Varieties (CBS). 6:4s—Hale Mac Keen. 7:oo—Dramatic Laboratory (CBS). 7 30—Fostelanetz Presents (CBSi. 8:00—John Henry CBS'. B:ls—Quiet Harmonies iCBS>. B:3o—St. Olaf Choir 'CBS'. 9:oo—Eddie Duchin orchestra (CBS). 9:ls—Atop the Indiana Roof. 9:3o—Jerry Friedman orchestra (CBS). 10:00 —Ben Pollack orchestra CBS'. 10:30—Charlie Straight orchestra (CBS) 11:00 —Atop the Indiana Roof. 11:30—Tallyho Club orchestra. 12:00—Sign off. WKBF (1400) Indianapolis (Indianapolis Broadcasting, Inc.) SATURDAY P M. 4:00 —Harold Bentley's revue. 4:30 —Tea time tunes. 4:4s—News flashes. s:oo—Musical menu. s:3o—Aunt Dessa and Uncle Connie. s:4s—Dinner melodies. 6:oo—Knothole gang. 6:ls—Harrv Bason. 6:3o—Recordings 6:so—The sDortslight. 7:oo—Devore sisters. 7:ls—Leather stcoking tales. 7:3o—Master music room. 8 00—The voice of courage. 8:15—To be announced. B:3o—The Old Pathfinder. 8 45—To be announced. 9 00—Memories. 9:ls—Funfest. 9:30 orchestra. 9:4s—Art Berry’s orchestra. 10 00—Morrev Brennan orchestra. 10:30—WKBF barn dance 11:30—Art Berrv's orchestra. 11:45—DeSautelle's orchestra. I 12:00—Sign off SUNDAY A M. 9.30 The Ambassadors. 9 45—Masters Music Room. I 10.00—Wachtower program, j 10:15—Sacred concert [ 10:30—Crystal melodies. I 11 30—Harry Bason 12:00—To be announced. P M 12 15—Dessa Bvrd s organ recital. I:oo—Rame Bennett i 115—Short Short Storie*. 1.30 Connie s orchestra;
Industrial and Business Review
Map Shows Time Taken for Street Car Trips Mjiwch HBl , ts;a£. to H Hirgy?• josc toshop jjjljj lag! itwmn ■■ , -“if Mffr HtH HU i 'Je* -y " " I tirV" tCONOMV §l|g ~~y HfHb &■. i ccNMMMtt SpH wm ~ x ~ m V- 1 ""* KoixxAPGus reß Hi imwkn. ■lk'* - muvav* Iff : v ' ‘ 0 | 111 l
Display Gives Passengers Information on Speed of City Lines. Crowds of interested spectators have been attracted by the flashing lights of the graphic time-map of the Indianapolis Railways, pictured above. The display, showing the time required to reach the downtown district from any part of the city, was exhibited at the Indianapolis home show, in the lobby of the Traction Terminal building and in the lobby of the Claypool hotel. 'lt now is in a window' at Washington and Meridian streets. Designed to stress the faster schedules recently placed in effect by the street railway, the board presents a map of the city showing street car, bus and trackless trolley routes. The time required to reach the dow'ntowm district from various parts of the city by street car or bus is shown by means of flashing lights of red, green, white, blue and amber, plotted along the car and bus routes. A key to the colors in
CITY BREWERY SPEEDS WORK Indianapolis Plant Installs Equipment for Greater Production. Shortageof 3.2 per cent beer through the country has spurred the plant rehabilitation schedule of the Indiana Breweries, Inc., here. Equipment is being installed to increase production from 75,000 to 150,000 barrels annually, and its officers have announced that the first product will be ready for distribution about June 1. The brew'maater in charge of production is John J. Geisen, well knoivn nationally. He was educated in Germany and after coming to this country was graduated from the Swartz Institute of New York, the first scientific school for the art of brewing in the United States. Geisen later took a post-graduate course w'ith J. E. Seibel, famous for the Seibel process of brewing. The Indiana Breweries, Inc., w'as organized last year, when it became apparent that beer would be legalized. It took over the plant of C. Maus & Cos., established in 1889, and immediately started reconstruction. Bottles, caps, and other equipment incident to manufacture and | distribution of beer are in the! process of delivery, and thousands of gallons of beer, aging in batteries of vats, will be ready for delivery soon, officials said today.
2:oo—Conte Ensemble. ■ 2:4s—Sunshine Singer. 3:oo—Matinee musical. 3:30 —Cadle tabernacle. 4:4s—Nazarine male quartet. 5:00 —Starost Sisters. s:ls—Front Page Headlines. s:3o—Negro Melody hour. s:4s—Marshall Players. 6:oo—Masters Music Room. 6:ls—Larks trio. 6:3o—Charles Frederick Lindsiey. 6 45—To be announced. 7:oo—Connie's orchestra. 7:3o—Moods of (he Moment. 7:4s—Sunshine Singer. B:oo—Cadle tabernacle. 9:ls—Hoosier Melodv Boys. 9 30—Morrey Brennan s orchestra. 10:00—De Sautelie s orchestra. 10:30—Art Berry's orchestra. 11:00—Sign off. WLW (700) Cincinnati SATURDAY P M. 4:oo—Waldorf-Astoria dance orchestra i NBC i. 4:3o—Joe Emerson. 4:4s—Three Keys (NBC). s:oo—Salon orchestra. 5:30—80b Newhall. 5:45 —University of Cincinnati talk. 6:oo—Buster Locke's dance orchestra. 6:3o—harlie Agnew's dance orchestra. 7:OO—R F. D. hour. 7:ls—Tonv Cabbooch. 7:3o—Croslev Follies (NBC). 8 00—To be announced. 9:oo—Charlie Agnew's dance orchestra. 9:ls—Over the Rhine. 9:3o—Dave Bernie s dance orchestra. 10:00—Rhvthm Club. 10:30—Hotel Sherman dance orchestra i NBC'. 11:00—Charlie Agnew's dance orchestra. 11:30—Dave Bernies dance orchestra. 12:00 Midnight—Buster Locke's dance orchestra. A. M. 12:30—Charlie Agnew's dance orchestra. 12 45—Club Croslev. 1:00—Club Croslev. 2:oo—Sign off. SUNDAY A M. 7:00 —Children's hour iNBCi. B:oo—Church forum. B:3o—Gav Gvpsies 'NBCt. 9:oo—Morning musicals iNBCi. 10:00—Orean. Arthur Chandler. Jr. 10:15—Radio citv concert (NBC). 11:15—Threesome and organ. 11:30—Folks from Dixie > NBC). 12:00 Noon—Tenor (NBC'. P. M 12:15—Int'l. Radio Forum 'NBC). 12:30—Dramatization 'NBC'.
NOTICE— Manufacturers and Jobbers SPACE FOR RENT Complete Housing Facilities for Large or Small Plants Private switches, served by Belt R. R. and traction lines connecting with all railroads. Watghman Service Free Indianapolis Industrial Center 19tb St. and Martindale Arts. CHerry 1945
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the upper right hand corner show's the time each represents. The display was designed by the Indianapolis Railways and constructed in the company’s shops. It is feet high and 9 feet wide, with w'ood frame. Carrying out the same idea of informing the public of the actual speed of street car service, the publicity department has designed a smaller enameled steel sign to be attached to poles at numerous points in the city. The signs show the time required for the trip downtown, as “fifteen minutes to Washington street —seventeen minutes in rush hours.” The panels of the sign are fitted into a steel frame, which hangs from a steel arm attached to the pole. The panels are removable, so that they can be replaced any time there is a change of schedule.
ONE PAYMENT BUYS INSURANCE Single Premium Plan Finds Favor With Holders of Ben-Hur Policies. As one result of the tremendous speculative spree of the pre-depres-sion period, with losses overbalancing gains in most cases, and its gains wiped out during the headache of “the morning after,” the American people have a pretty firm hold on at least tw r o ideas of personal finance. One is that everybody should have more life insurance. The other is that life insurance is not an expense, but a method of saving. A third idea of almost equal importance is that single premium life insurance should have a place in the financial program of every man and woman, second only to life insurance of the customary forms. The Ben-Hur Life Association, a fraternal beneficial society, providing for its members legal reserve life insurance, is doing w’hat it can to stress this idea by advertising single premium life insurance as “The One Best Investment.” You make one payment and your policy becomes paid up for life. No more worry about that part of your property—no change to forget to make the payments—no temptation to lapse the insurance. Your estate immediately is increased from 200 to 400 per cent of the amount you invest and the cash value of your policy increases constantly as long as you live. Its safety is guaranteed by deposits of reserves with the state of Indiana. Burt E. Kimmel is local Ben-Hur j representative, located at 809 K. of I P. building.
I:oo—Ladv Esther iNBCI. I:3o—Rabbi Tarshish. 2:oo—Conservatory of music recital. 2:ls—Mariemont choir. 2:3o—Theater of the air. 3:oo—Hvmn sina. 3:3o—Centaur <NBC>. 4:(io—Svmbhonic Jazz orchestra. 4:30—T0 be announced. 4:4s—Baseball scores. 4:so—Charioteers. s:oo—Borrah Minevitch and his Harmonica rascals iNBCi. s:ls—Slneine violin. 5:30 —Great Moments in History. 6:oo—Bert Lahr and Rubinoff s orchestra i NBC i. 7:00—Will Rogers and orchestra iNBt. 7:3o—Walter Winchell (NBCi, 7:4s—Buster Ldcke s dance orchestra. j
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BEN HUR LIFE ASSOCIATION A Fraternal Beneficial Society providing for its members Legal Reserve Life Insurance An Indiana Institution Established 39 Years Ago. Assets Over $10,000,000.00 Paid to Members and Beneficiaries Over $32,000,000 LOCAL BUSINESS OFFICE—BOO R. of P. BUILDING Arrius Court No. 5 meets every Wednesday evening at 322 EAST NEW YORK STREET Home Office, Crawfordsville, Indiana
W T ■ STEAMSHIP TICKETS Bill |r% LETTERS OF CREDIT FOREIGN EXCHANGE Richard A. Kurtz, Foreign Dept. TRAVELERS CHECKS Opinion trust* 120 East Market St. RI ley 5341
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