Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 17, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 May 1933 — Page 14
PAGE 14
DEATH TAKES CITY RESIDENT FOR 63 YEARS Funeral Set for Today for Mrs. Laura J. Holden; Two Sons Survive. Funeral services for Mrs. Laura J. Holden. 63, lifelong resident of Indianapolis, and widow of Charles L. Holden, were to be held at 2.30 today in the First Congregational church. Burial was to be in Crown Hill cemetery. Mrs. Holden died Monday in her horr.'', 226 Kenwood avenue, following :in attack of heart, disease. She was a member of the Congregational church. Survivors are two sons. Paul Holrion. Palo Alto, Cal., and Harry Holden. Kansas City, Mo., and a brother, Edwin Williams, Chicago. Fred E. Schaub Dies Following an illness of three weeks, Fred E. Schaub, 74, of 2036 East Washington street, a lifelong resident of Indianapolis, and retired employe of the New York Central tailroad, died Tuesday in the Methodist hospital. Survivors are a son, Albert C. Schaub; two brothers, Joseph H Schaub and Gustave Schaub, and a grandson, Robert Schaub, all of Indianapolis. Funeral arrangements have not been made. Dies En Route to City En route to visit a sister here, John W. Chubb, 65, Los Angeles, Cal., died Tuesday in Hot Sprmgs, Ark. He was to visit his sister, Mrs. Minnie Keers, 2333 North Pennsylvania street. Funeral arrangements have not boon completed, but services and burial will be here. Mr. Chubb had boon in the insurance business in California many years. He had visited Indianapolis often. Drops Dead at Gas Plant Pot,or Micks, 48, of 1617 North Rural street. Citizens Gas Company employe, dropped dead from a heart attack early today at the Prospect street plant of the company. Civil War Veteran Dead Another Civil war veteran joined the dead on Memorial day. He was Daniel Keller, 85, who died at his home, 1614 Winfield avenue. He served in the 28th Massachusetts infantry. He had been a resident of Indianapolis four years, coming here from Boston, Mass. Funeral services in charge of the CL A. R. w’ill be held at 10 Thursday morning at the Moore & Kirk undertaking establishment, 2530 Station street. Burial will be in Crown Hill. THREE HELD BY POLICE Arrested for Investigation in Passing of Fake $5 Bill. Three persons are held on high bond on vagrancy charges for investigation in the passing of a counterfeit $5 bill at the Club lunch, 160 North Illinois street. Those held are Mr. and Mrs. Dominic Zitto, 414 North Illinois street, and Russell Higggins, 20, of 649 Blaine avenue. All three, according to police, are at least acquaintances of four men who passed the bogus bill. Rooms of the four were searched by police at a downtown hotel, but the occupants had left.
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One day a year Indianapolis basks in the International spotlight. It owes much to those sportsmen who conceived and constructed the World’s Largest Racing Plant. Wherever you go folks know or have heard of the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. We need more of that kind of advertising. a a a It was a great race all the way and our congratulations go to the winner, Louis Meyer. Our only regret was that it had to be marred by tragedy and our sincere sympathy is extended to those who suffered injury and to friends and relatives of drivers who met with tragedy. n n a The Art Rose Special No. 08 came in Sixth, working up from ninth place to third at the 400-mile mark. The credit goes to Dave Evans, driver; Ted Jones, mechanic, and to the pit crew. a a a Tonight at the annual Race Dinner it was our pleasure to present an R. C. A. VICTOR Auto Radio, with the compliments of the Rose Tire Cos., to Fred Frame, leading at the 100mile mark and winner of the 1932 classic. We have other sets just like it, folks, at the Station and we invite you to come in for a demonstration. The R. C. A. VICTOR is certainly everything you could ask for in an all-electric auto radio. We'll be glad to arrange terms to fit your purse. Model M-34 is only $34.95. a a a CHIEF TIRE CHANGER f MILLER TIRE DISTRIBUTORS
Suitors Flock Like Flies Around Honey Wherever Woolworth Heiress Travels
‘ ’ mmmW Y\ V * \ Degrees will be received by ei| Barbara Hutton as she ap- Jr iK® ' / Indianapolis students at the ann prand at the charity carnival in f. W A<- commencement exercises in Dyi Madison Square Garden, New , -AvVKH 4W\ X/ V< Vl stadium at Northwestern univers if* " Xi: WhA // K ) Students included are: f I Robert of Princes. I Dearborn street, bachelor BV DOLGLAS GILBERT a 2826 North New Jersey street, ba Times Special Writer elor of arts; Robert H. Hammil, 3 Frank W. Woolworth “cut up,” as \ commerce; Miss Helen Loi the English say. for $58,000,000. Os l Langston, 101 Hampton dr .ui- u;. harhelnr nr arts' Ptharlos Tthat
Barbara Hutton as she appeared at the charity carnival in Madison Square Garden, New York, last year. But Barbara Hutton Still Is Single, Despite Pleas of Princes. BY DOUGLAS GILBERT Times Spcrial Writer NEW YORK. May 31.—The late Frank W. Woolworth “cut up,” as the English say, for $58,000,000. Os this his granddaughter, Barbara Hutton, the live-and-ten girl, received a third. She too, has felt the chili of these sere and yellow times; proba- | bly she isn't worth today a chain ; store sales check above $10,000,000. j It isn't the money that makes I Barbara important. It is her ro- j inantic flair, plus a curious social j significance. She is our best known play-girl. Right now she is prominent in the headlines, reported one day as ready to wed and the next day witn marriage far from her mind. She is pretty, very desirable (not alone for her dough), unmarried and 21; a buxom, comely lass as you observe her, swaying to the soft susurrous of Meyer Davis’ strings at a party. She's Scrappy Blonde A blue-eyed baby blonde, she is the ultra of our poor little rich girls whose exceeding femininity gives the necessary lift to the run of the mill news of markets and politics, murders and thefts. So, in a week or two, when she is expected to return from her South Seas cruise, w'hich has taken her to Paris, her blithe smile will beckon from page one of our newspapers, as it has so many other times. Little is known of her childhood, upbringing, schools, pinafores or ponies. She was not the world’s richest baby and no photographs exist of her with pail and shovel toying on the golden sands of any beach. The press never babied the baby. Franklin Laws Hutton, her father, was an estimable Wall street broker associated with his brother in the firm of E. F. Hutton & Cos. And a lively one, according to a delightfully mellow clip from the New York Herald of 1908. He Danced Well Under the head, “Can Clog Well,” a story sets forth his heel-and-toe prowess on the floor of the Exchange. An illustration accompanying the article further attests his nimble grace. The year before Mr. Hutton married Edna Woolworth. and the nuptials, of course, rated social mention in the 1907 news columns. Barbara's birth in 1912, however, seems to have escaped public notice. Apparently, the Huttons were living a simple life of social quiet until the tragic death of Barbara’S mother in 1917, an instance unusual to medical science. Mrs. Hutton then was living at the Plaza hotel. On May 2 a maid entered her room and found her dead on the floor. Coroner Feinberg found that she had died of an ear ailment which, curiously, caused suffocation. The infection, he said, hardened the bones of the ear, causing severe contraction of the tongue muscles. Weds Detroit Divorcee Hutton remained a widower until 1926, when he married Mrs. Irene Bodde, Detroit divorcee. Barbara, who lives with her father and stepmother at 1020 Fifth avenue, continued to be just a sub-deb, providing, by her and her parents’ quiet life, no "copy” for the newspapers. Besides, Woolworth had two other daughters, who married, and it was not to be foreseen that for Barbara only, of the issue of those marriages, the Woolworth cash register ultimately would ring up a hundred million dimes. Her run-arounds nettle the curious and puzzle her friends. “Why the hell can't she be happy in New York?” they ask. Likes Globe Trotting Sober reasoners figure her globetrotting too be some sort of an escape. though from what they throw up their hands. If her get-away-from-it-all tours are designed to free her from the ’entangling alliances” meanies forever are cooking up against her they are futile. The cable tolls reporting her alleged romances while abroad would meet the cost of another debut. Currently sne is “reported to be accepting the advances of Alexis Mdivani, of the Georgia * Black Sea) Mdivanis, a wholesale line of princes. object matrimony. Alexis' brother, Prince David, was the husband of Mae Murray. Another brother. Prince Serge, married Pola Negri. Both women, if your memory is taxed, were motion picture actresses. Anyway, Alexis, whose former wife, Louise Astor Van Alen, of New 1
Miss Hutton photographed on deck just before one of her many voyages,
York, divorced him last Novemoer> in the Hague, supposedly joined ner in the Orient—Shanghai, or Siam, and recently has been seen with her in Paris. Alexis by no means has been her only suitor. For Barbara is an heiress and another prince is always just around the corner. Phil Plant, playboy ex of Connie Bennett, has been mentioned. Another denial of Barbara’s recently scouted a proposed union with
Strike Spoils Speedway ‘Always on Time" Record
Start Delayed When Pilots Clamor Against Entry of Mauri Rose. History was made at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Tuesday, when, for the first time on a clear day since the race’s inception, the field started its pace-making lap late. At no other time, with the exception of days when rain fell at the starting time, have the cars failed to leave their posts “on the dot” at 10 a. m. But Tuesday it was different. After the smoke of the argument between drivers and officials had cleared, the pacer left his post at 10:09 and the race officially was started at 10:15. The argument started when the drivers protested against disqualification of Howdy Wilcox in his Gilmore Special and the substitution of Mauri Rose as driver. Wilcox had been pronounced unfit physically for the grind, physicians a&serting they had learned that he suffered from fainting spells. When Rose prepared to climb into the car, a howl of protest went up from fifteen or more drivers. Eddie Edenburn, A A. A. official, and Eddie Rickenbacker, president of the Speedway Corporation, entered the battle. The drivers claimed they would not take to the bricks with Rose, who never had driven the car previously in competition. Rickenbacker told them that, regardless of their attitude, the race would start, even if the field consisted only of two racers. Drivers and officials finally compromised, with Rose being permitted to drive. His car was placed at the end of the field at the start. He drove a remarkable race, pulling his car from last place to fourth
Visit the World's Fair A Century of Progress Exposition CHICAGO Exceptionally Low Fares Good in coaches and in Pullman cars at reduced Pullman fares for round trip. '5.50 -1 On sale for 10:45 A M train Fri. to noon Sun. Return following Monday. 6.90 “ On sale Saturdays only. Return Limit 10 Days. 5 7.30 “ On Sale Daily. Return Limit 15 Days. ‘8.85 “ On Sale Daily. Return Limit 30 Days. PARTY FARES $ 5.00 Round-Trip For 3 or more persons traveling together. On sale daily. Return limit 15 days. Big Four Station adjoins the Exposition grounds —a few minutes walk from main entrance. Complete information at City Ticket office, 112 Monument Circle, phone Riley 2442, and Union Station, phone JUley 3355. BIG FOUR ROUTE
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Count Emanuel Borromeo D'Adda, ‘of an ancient Italian family.” They swarm about her like flies around a -honey pot. Unsuccessful in shooing'’em away the Huttons have at times recoursed to sequestration of their charge at their shooting box, Adam’s Run, near Charleston, S. C. Newport, where the Huttons rented for a season or two, Barbara seldom visits now. It is chilly in Newport and Barbara revels in warmth.
in forty-seven laps. At this point timing gears gave away, but Rose said he felt that he was able “to show some of these people that he could drive, good start or bad.” CITY REALTORS WILL ATTEND CONVENTION Stale Delegations to Meet at Chicago June 14. A large group of Indianapolis and Indiana realtors are arranging to attend the annual three-day convention of the National Association of Real Estate Boards at Chicago June 14. J. Frank Cantwell is organizing the local delegation for the trip. Other Indiana cities to be represented include South Bend, Ft. Wayne, Anderson. Muncie, Richmond and Terre Haute. Indianapolis realtors who have indicated they will attend include J. Harry Miles, local president; Gavin L. Payne, national director; Henry E. Ostrom, vice-president; Joseph J. Schmid, Lawrence G. Holmes, executive secretary; Joe Rand Beckett, Emerson W. Chaille, William Low Rice, Frank E. Gates, J. H. Albershardt, Thomas F. Carson, George Kuhn, Robert L. Mason. Fred L. Palmer and Joseph J. Argus.
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A characteristic picture of Miss Hutton.
8 CITY STUDENTS TO BE GIVEN DEGREES Finish College Work Saturday With Northwestern U. Commencement. Degrees will be received by eight Indianapolis students at the annual commencement exercises in Dyche stadium at Northwestern university Saturday. Students included are: Robert Ball, 1131 North Tacoma avenue, bachelor of science; Richard Clayton Bireley, 4415 East New York street, bachelor of science; Miss Mary Elizabeth Edwards, 3465 North Dearborn street, bachelor of science; Miss Virginia May Fox, 2826 North New Jersey street, bachelor of arts; Robert H. Hammil, 3120 Park avenue, bachelor of science in commerce; Miss Helen Louise Langston, 101 Hampton drive, bachelor or arts; Charles Ithamer Parrish, 2823 East Sixteenth street, doctor of philosophy, and William H. Scheigert, 444 West Forty-fourth street, bachelor of science in commerce. VENUE CHANGE ASKED Attorney for Alleged Slot Machine Keepers Takes Action, Paul Rochford. attorney for nineteen of twenty-three alleged operators of slot machines, today petitioned a change of venue from Charles J. Karabell, who was judge pro tem in municipal court three when the cases were continued. The nineteen were rounded up in a series of raids outside the city limits conducted on orders of Prosecutor Herbert Wilson. Cycle Hits Pole; Two Hurt Max Krecioch, 23, Detroit, Mich., incurred a fracture of a leg and John Goliski, 29, Detroit, was cut and bruised Tuesday when a motorcycle on which they were riding left the pavement at Emerson avenue and road 67 and crashed into a pole.
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MANY HOOSIERS SPEND HOLIDAY AT WORLD FAIR Indianapolis Residents Are Among Throng Which Enjoys Exhibits. BY MRS. MAURICE MURPHY Time, Staff Writer CHICAGO. May 31.—Many Hoosiers took advantage of the Memorial holiday to visit a Century of Progress exposition here. Although the skies were threatening in the ; morning, they cleared as the visitors advanced and the visitors who had \ streamed through the fair gates, determined to make the most of the vacation day, were rewarded with good weather. Not only did Hoosiers come from Gary, Hammond, South Bend and those cities adjacent to Chicago, but from towns all over Indiana--Terre Haute. Danville. Wabash, Plainfield, Muncie. Clayton, Rochester. Marion, Mishawaka, and Lebanon, being among the places represented. Ft. Wayne and Evansville had excellent attendance. Many From Here Present Indianapolis visitors at the fair on Decorration day. or who had been there previously, include Mrs. Susan O'Connor, who is visiting her* daughter, now Mrs. Carlton Hill, of Chicago, formerly Miss Janet O'Connor, of Indianapolis; Mrs. Chester Bradford. Mr. and Mrs. L. P. McClure, J. Albert Crouch, Mr. and Mrs. John K. Wood and son Jack. Mrs. L. M. Maroney and Robert Maroney, J. Lester Williams, Mr. and Mrs. William F. Smith, Miss Bess Graves, Mrs. J. H. Dittman, Mrs. M. E. Holmes, Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Wachstetter, A. N. Robinson, R. J. Hedrick and C. E. Tuttle. Is Colorful Fair One of the Indianapolis men commented in this manner: “I attended the 1893 fair and wanted to take this holiday to see the 1933 fair. They are both tremendously interesting—and so altogether different.
Ninety-One 1933 Recipes Each selected, tested and approved by cooking experts —classified under the following headings in this , : -Tim |yv.rv~ ~' s.:.<<■* ■* 4 • mi Handy Recipe Cabinet )l V V /* Appetizers —/1 # # rf\ y— Beverages i * ■ Breads, Sandwiches, Cereals Cakes, Cookies, Frostings H|| Combination Dishes Confections Desserts Effgs ’ Cheese Meats, Poultry, Fish H ,0 Pastry MEEEmHM Preservation Salads, Salad Dressing One cabinet printed in four colors on Sauces, Dressings extra heavy, high quality cardboard, Soups specially processed so that finger marks Vegetables can be readily removed witn a damp Menus cloth. Size: 514x314x3 inches. Kitchen Hints —■l— .“.I. ~ J Fifty Blank Cards Once you have one of The Times new Recipe Cabinets, you’ll wonder how you ever got along without it. Get yours today. It’s the biggest 25 cents worth of kitchen help and culinary assistance on the market today! Price 25c. By mail, 30c. Obtainable at the Office of The Indianapolis Times THIS BLANK TO ORDER BY MAIL! 1 — The Indianapolis Times, 214 W- Maryland St. Indianapolis. Inclosed is S in stamps ( ) money order ( ) for which please send me postpaid Indianapolis Times Recipe Cabinet fs). My Name Address City ; State
The 1893 exposition might have been 1 described as majestic. The whole spirit of this fair is modern. “My first impression of this fair i was that of color, and I was also impressed by -the manner in which I the paint is used—it reminded me j of the camouflage used during the j World war. but for the fact that at the fair all lines are vertical and during the war the paint was daubed. Even in the midst of their sightseeing. their visits to the foreign pavilions, the Hall of Science. General Exhibits building, and to the Midway, “the City of a Million Lights." fair visitors paused at 5 o'clock to do honor to the soldier dead, at memorial services held in the court of the Hall of Science. The program opened with the singing of “America” by choruses and the audience. A group of Civil war songs was followed by World war songs. The final number sung was “The Star-Spangled Banner” with Miss Helen Protheroe. soprano, j singing the solo and R. C. Hurd leading the audience in the sing- , ing. A fifteen-minute band concert preceded the program and at intervals. throughout the day. patriotic music was heard from the towers over the grounds. An army show was held at Soldier field at 8:15. This. too. being a thrill of the day for Hoosiers and all other visitors. Mount Everest is named for Sir George Everest, who first showed that this peak was separate from Guarisankar. with which it had. been confused.
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MAY 31, 1933
LIFE GUARDS TO BE GIVEN TESTS Examinations to Be Held This’Week: 75 Seek 28 Positions. Examinations for municipal life guards will be held tonight. Thursday and Friday nights at the Butler university pool. H. W. Middlesworth. city recreation director, announced today. Middlesworth said apph. Jons have been received from sixty men and fifteen women. Places will be awarded twenty-three men and five women.
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