Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 65, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 July 1933 — Page 7

JTT.y 26, 1033

SCHOOL OFFICES ARE CLOSED IN STUART TRIBUTE Last Rites Held Today at Central Avenue M. E. for Educator. OfTiers of thr board of school commissioners are to be closed today from 130 to 3 30; Arsenal Technical high school offices are cU < and ail rtav, and activities in In- ( dianapoi. libraries halt for one minutes a* 2 n tribute to Milo H Stuart. Mr. Stuart's funeral servi were to be i.< id at 2 this afterm>on in Central Avenue M. E church. Mr. Stuart was assistant superintendent of Indianapolis schools in charge rs secondary education and 111 ' pn:.' ipal of Arsenal Technical high sciiool. He ril'd* Monday in the Methodist hosipnil. after an illness ol five weeks, following an op* ration. The body will be taken to Sheridan. his birthplace, for burial. Paiib' arers include K V. Ammerman. principal of Broad Ripple high -ehool; I• Witt S. Morgan, principal of Technical high school; Han on H Anderson. Edward E Greene, Virgil Stembaugh and Harry E Wood. l)i<kM>n Kites Thursday Funeral ervires for Mrs Bertha Dickson. 78. who died Monday at her > immer home in Minocqua. Wis . will lx- held at 11 Thursday in Manner and Buchanan mortuary, with the Rev. F. R. Darios, pastor of Zion Evangelical church, in chaige. Burial will be in Crown Hill cemetery. Mrs Dukson was born it Indianapolis. She was the widow of Georg*' A Dickson, and the mother of Fred C Dickson, president of the Indiana Trust Company. Mrs. Froelieh Dies Private funeral services at 8 tonight are to be held in the Kriger funn 1 home for Mrs. Mathilde Froelieh, who died Tuesday at the home of her sister. Miss Rose Webb. 1920 North Meridian street. The bodv will be taken to Cincinnati for burial. Mr Froelieh was born in Indianapolis. At the time of her marriage m 1905. she went to Cincinnati to make her home. Her husband. He.iry F. Froelieh. was a former leader of tlv* Cincinnati Symphony orchesra. He died in October. Survivors are Miss Webb and three daughters. Mrs. Fred Livezey of Huntington, W. Va.; Mrs. George W. Stevens and Miss Esther Froelieh -ot Richmond, W. Va. E\-Railroader Dies Final services for Henry Samuel Wlut* house. 64. who died Tuesday at the home of his daughter. Mrs. Mimic Glendy. Scottsburg, will be held at 10 Friday in the residence, 2410 North Gale street. Burial will be in Crown Hill cemetery. Mr. Whitehouse was retired from the Big Four railway eight years ago. He was a member of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers. Surviving him are Mrs. Glendy; two other daughters, Mrs. S. D. Herb* r and Mrs. Abbie Ax of Indianapolis, and three sons. G. E. Whitehouse of Ontario. Cal., and Lee and Charles Whitehouse of Indianapolis

Doug Was Plunger in Picture Game; Mary Played Safer on Her Ventures

BY AI. ANSON EDWARDS I nllrd l’rr%\ StjlT ('orrfpomlrnt Hollywood. July 26—The . world probably never will know when the "perfect romance” of Douglas Fairbanks and Mary Pickford began to fade. They probably do not know themselves—or any definite reason why their thirteen years of married life should end in separation and a possible divorce. For more than a decade after their wedding in 1920. the love of Mary and Doug almost was proverbial They were one of the most famous couples in tit? world. Their devotion was taken for granted. The happy task of being movie celebrities and great monatics rested lightly on their shoulders. They had common sense views about business, but their attitude toward each other was so singlomir.ded that friends often expressed uneasiness. a a a DOUG and Mary always danced together at parties, and with no one else. They sat next to each other at dinners. Neither went anywhere without the other for more than a few hours, and even th :i they exchanged telephone calls. Once Mary was "on location” at a railroad station. She telephoned Doug twice, but the third time failed to reach him. Her company hastily was returned to the studio, where the anxious movie queen was reassured by Doug that he was all right. Their refusal to be separated resulted in a motion picture "revolution.'' Doug balked at a location trip because Mary couldn't go along. Studio managers contrived to reproduce the location scene right on the lot. From then on Fairbanks' crews built mountains, meadows, and gardens. Sections of ships placed in tanks were bruit for The Black Pirate For long "shots" the company went on location, but a double played Doug's part. Other studios learned Doug saved money doing this and soon all were building more sets at home and making fewer location trips.

EVANS' EWE FOR ALL PURPOSES

CLOTHING ON EASY CREDIT ASKIN & MARINE CO. 127 W. WjLhiogrto© St.

Ruin Is Spread in Famed Limberlost Region by Pollution of Its Streams

l’7 * r ; ■-' : ‘ v 5 * . " ' * -- • r : *V? * • , . ' . .. •*** * ” v/ <t ,•*.-*■ * UAL 4/ . > -.1 • - J \ -- ■■ ' ~ •*. a, t . . \iy . - , , ■■■* ■* xo' m— “T .jpkj• I Upper—View "of Caine and Lower Left—Gene Strattoi m Sylvan lakes at point faring Lim- Porter shortly before her death fc gt*?HE berlost cabin, home of Gene Lower Right—Limberlost cabin *Stratton Porter. north, in the shade of its trees. from it. The milk, creamery offl- stallation of a sewage disposa rials said, had an unDleasant odor. ! system for Kendallville. the snr

Fishing and Bathing. Once Great Attractions, Are Periled by Infection. iContinued From Page One) ville dump into Henderson lake, with the resultant release via Henderson ditch of the town's wastes into the lake that borders the last Indiana home of the 'Lady of the Limberlost." The ditch resembles an open conduit in a city sewage system. Mosquitoes that would chase a bull hibernate there. Snake-feed-ers. dragon flies, skim over the stagnant pool near its outlet into Sylvan lake. eaa this year a $25,000 suit was filed bv Arthur Fredericks, a farmer living along the ditch, against the city because of his lass in revenue when Kcndallville's ice cream plant refused to buy milk from his cattle because of a claim that it was contaminated by the ditch. The ditch skirts Fredericks’

Doug and Mary — No. 3

At home the Fairbanks managed to be both honeymooners and leaders of the film colony's elite social set. All their entertaining was done at Pickfair. and their guest book held names of celebrities the world around. When they went out it was only to homes of a select few—the Swansons, the Chaplins, the Bill Harts. a a a "VTIGHT spots never saw them. In Doug never drank, because he didn't particularly care for it and because he always kept In top condition for those heroic screen antics of his. Mary didn't like drinking either. At the studio they had separate bank accounts, separate producing units. That was their common sense. They financed their pictures from their separate personal funds. This usually was an easy matter for Mary, because she made less pretentious films. Dougs pictures were so vast that his whole private fortune was at stake in them. He usually was "broke." or close to it. when a film was completed. He had to wait for box office receipts to get hark his mnnev

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from it. The milk, creamery officials said, had an unpleasant odor. In a survey by the sanitary engineering division of the state health board, extending from 1928 to 1931. the following conclusions are typewritten: ‘‘Henderson lake, Henderson ditch—Serious odor nuisances are caused, which interfere with health. Conditions are created which adversely affect use of the lake and ditch for agriculture purposes, watering live stock. Beneficial animal and vegetable life are jeopardized and the use of Henderson lake interfered with for recreational purposes.” Scavenger fish have seized Henderson lake and populated it. And yet old-timers of Kendallvill, between sips of 3.2, relate of days when sunfish, perch, and bass fougnht duels there as they do now with the fishermen of Sylvan and Caine lakes. a a a " r T''HE condition of Sylvan lake J. at Rome City,” continues the state report, "bathing and lake outlet at the present time, is not materially affected by the wastes of Kendallville.” With the suggestion of the in-

He always did get it back, and more, because his pictures were successes. But there was a constant. nerve strain in the knowledge that should just one picture fail, Doug would have to start all over again at the bottom. a a a WHEN United Artists was formed. Doug's brother, John Fairbanks, was made treasurer of the Fairbanks unit. As such he handled ali business details and Doug knew few of the financial worries. Suddenly, in 1924. John Fairbanks died. The whole weight of the film company, both finances and production, fell on Doug. Fairbanks lost the boyish exuberance that was much of his charm. The winning smile was slower in appearing, he became more serious. There was no hint then of a change of Doug's attitude toward or in her feelings for Doug. They still were the great lovers for many years to come. But from the day of his brothers death, Doug was a changed man. Next: A Great Hollywood love epic, with an unhappy ending.

THE IN DT ANATOLIS TIMES

Lower Left—Gene Stratton Porter shortly before her death. Lower Right—Limberlost cabin, north, in the shade of its trees.

stallation of a sewage disposal system for Kendallville, the survey says, "Unless remedial meas- j ures are taken ... the unsatis- !. factory condition . . . will become worse as Kendallville in- 1 creases in size and new industries j start operation.” j Kendailville surveyed for the j cost of installation of a plant to prevent its city and industrial | wastes from placing "for sale” I signs on summer cottages of the ! lake resort. Fearing an over-burdened, taxridden citizenry would protest the cost of the plant during the present economic stress, Kendallville I postponed its cleanup day. But the gasoline bought in the I summer from Kendallville filling I stations, much of the supplies purchased by summer cottagers at j Rome City, are paid for from ' pockets of vacationers from every i section of Indiana. a a a THEY go to Sylvan lake, the cool of its treces in Limber- \ lost, north, to hear the throaty . notes of the bob-white, to see a ' reel's glint in the sun arching : toward a spot where someone has j s'aid. "They’re biting today.” Sightseers flock to the lake to j browse in the cabin of the "Lady of Limberlost.” They catch a 1 bit of her books, her spirit, in a violet that peeps near a mossy | bank. They search for the goldfinches of her stories. They learn to snap water lilies from their home without upsetting the boat, in i much the same manner in which the "Lady of the Limberlost” : taught her grandchildren to get those lilies. They go to hear what she heard and what may not be heard years from now: "His waters whisper songs of cheer." GENERAL IS STRICKEN Japanese Dictator in Manchuria in Serious Condition. CHANGCHUN, Manchuria, July 26—Kwantung army headquarters j announced today that General No- I buyoshi Muto. Japanese ambassador to Manchouquo. commanding gen- 1 eral and virtual dictator of Manchuria, was seriously ill of cholecy- j stitis.

ALL-METAL UTILITY CABINETS Specially Priced ■&= for THURSDA Y Only ll| SjHA? I 50c DOWN! 50c A WEEK! I Choice of two sizes. This one 1 measures 64 inches high, 14 inches *1 wide, 12 inches deep. Has 6 shelves. Green or Ivory finish. iw % This metal cabinet has four shelves 2| ill —Measures 42 inches high, 18 inches wide, 12 inches deep. Finjsh e( i i n Green or Ivory. • 111 • 133-135 WEST WASHINGTON STREET

AUTO INJURIES CAUSE DEATH OF CITY YOUTH Traffic Toll in County Is Raised to 67 for Year. Death of Max Bock. 21, of 3739 Brill road, in city hospital today, from injuries incurred Saturday night in an auto crash at Meridian street and Pleasant Run boulevard, raised the county's traffic toll to

sixty-seven for the year. Bock was riding in an auto driven by Clarence Weaver, 25. of 17 West Troy avenue, which

67

crashed into another operated by Edward A. Veaeh, 27. Columbus. Ind. Bock incurred a fracture of the skull and internal injuries and lost two fingers on his right hand. Following the accident. Weaver was slated by police on charges of reckless driving and vagrancy and other

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charges were expected to be filed today. Death of Bock was the second auto fatality in four days. Sergeant Clarence H. Vint. 48. of Ft. Harrison, was injured seriously Tuesday night when the car he was driving collided with a truck on State Road 67. near Forty-sixth street. The truck was operated by Ernest Wavmire. 55. Anderson, who was not hurt. Vint, who was removed to the hospital at the fort, incurred a mangled left arm. which may have to be amputated, physicians said. Drunkenness and operating a motor vehicle while under the influence of liquor were the charges against Vernon McConnaha. 32. of 5053 East New York street, today, following his arrest Tuesday night in an automobile accident investigation. McConnaha's car. police said, collided with one driven bv Raymond J. White. 42. of 3803 East Eleventh i street, in the 900 block North Pennsylvania street.

MOTION PICTURES

2 GMB On Our Stage! 4 Shows Daily World s Foremost All Colored Revue “SHUFFLE ALONG” N. Y. & Chicago Cast of 50 ENTERTAINERS On Screen “It’s Great to Be Alive” 25tTl‘,!'!25tl4Ui

POISON POTION FATAL Gustave Reichel. 65. Dies at City Hospital; Found on Street. Gustave Reichel. 65. of 2169 Singleton street, died at city hospital Tuesday night after taking poison He was found at Kentucky avenue

The first 200 attending PAY NITE DANCE tonite at RIVERSIDE receive pay envelopes containing from lc to sl.

MOTION PICTURES

Lionel BARRYMORE and MIRIAM HOPKINS In the Mrtro-Goldwyn-Mayer HU "The STRANGER'S RETURN” 1 KID \Y Th occeful Hroailitay piny that made out-law* of In-law* . . . come* to the screen with these two lavorite Mar* .... ■ I HELEN Hayes ROBERT MONTGOMERY try “ANOTHER LANGUAGE" A Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pletara

COMFORTABLY COOL.. .WOT COIO APOMLOT? tYUERF. 810 TICTLKKS PLAY Hurry! Hurry! T.fc*t 2 DayeJ Liberty Magarlne’e 4-Star Laugh Hit .... Elissa T '“** V®* David Manners Marjorie Rambeau Flu* —‘‘WOßLD'S GREATEST j H THRILLS'* and CARTOON |l

STARS BY THE SCORE! p ’|| BEAUTY! ROMANCE)

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ills.atohio Hpimncmaggn ID AIAMOiBS^ * * SUN.^HOUDAYS

k atoniohts __. *,r qpS PRESENT ATIONS [hi li NEIGHBORHOOD j

NORTH SIDE i—■ ■■ Talbot A '-’2nd ■ f'll i(t| ■ ■ Fumili Mt. sliv Ellen HAT CHECK r.IRI ” iMUfcua '&££; "KISS BEFORE THE MIRROR ’ jpwji ■ .Noble at I * ■ &REV ■ Familv Sit. ■ Itl~n, Sally RUne ‘ NIGHT OF TERROR" II I 111 rn *‘ .'toth HE j! *i i ViBH Iloubl- Imar. Roth Chattertnn "THE CRASH' F*hT Ralston in "AFTER THE BALL" —3otb A Northweitern "-'MTT 3 Ralph Bellamy ■•PAROLE GIRL” at filth i> iicHTip JMIb n roii, i Alexander Kirkland 1 BONDAGE” ■TTTTTTHI ttnd - and College ] \4VU.m *?%•,?£!>- STORV OF TfMPI.E DRAK7" mrwTVTTTHi r it Ft Wirne KlllflWU BrV.V “ELMFR THK GREAT" LEE TRACY In PRIt ATI JONES" EAST SIDE ■sttWffiß v*^ h (ten. Kaimond "EOO IN RI'I) APFST ' M I ' I I 111 1 (EM t. Tenth 11 j rl*l I a!lv Blan* Bela l.ugotl "NIGHT OF TERROR" —l■| |I | ■ | | MB II e I lOtbSt. ■ | 1 Double Fea'ure i *k *mh9 Ji.:t Oakle "I PTOWN NEW YORK” PAIL LI KAS In "GRAND SLAM" M: E Waih. ■HTILiLLnP, „ Hr P' n Mt* ■HIUIMMH M heeler-Waalaey ‘ DiTLOMANIACS ' .

PAGE 7

and South street in a semi-con-scious condition. Mr. Reichel had made hi* home with his daughter, Miss Laura Reichel.

MOTION PICTURES

|£*;, 2 “College Humor”!

nuiirivYr® Tall, Dark and Handsome - • - f $0 V Jll | llninp Owiif*l Home Oprni<s |||

FREE Dancing Thurtdav nlte at Sky Harbor. Drivr out W. Matli. to Ben Dull, follow Municipal Airport sign noutb.

EAST SIDE fayya "m ***■ f Wa.h. fc 11 MIH Family Nile "*•“ “ MA* SWAM Joan Rlondell * BROADWAY ■M Ai' ll' I iHH IT.A2 E IVaah. St. HJJ,f I' I Ilfubl* Ira'.are Lill Damlta "GOLDIE GITS ALONG” ♦ hnter MorrU In •BREACH OF PROMISE” a m *'l I llllja inTiT St. 1 Family Nit* ■■■■■■MaMf t.reta Nltiea "CIKt t i t|I'EEN MI RDER" sol IH SIDE At Fountain Rqsars monnrma H D *t r r r p. B :ru* r “42ND STREET” Proipert and She I lip ■ivi-icitJl r iss* "HELLO SISTER" "FALSE rACES” w.-M.'M.yr vi , *!■■■■■•■•• Gloria Stanton PIRFLCT I NDK>gTAa^PiyG ,> MHMMM ■ Mil Harren William MIND READER" CLYDE BIAITV In BIG CAGJI'J rrrrjijß 'heib sc ICTIIItjIaRII Ftmllr Nle a ■aia ir ii >i,H Either Kaliton "AFTER THE BALL” WF.ST SIDE ■ Charlea FarraD '•WILD OIEL" 2 mo W. Mtah. Familr Nile - : -HLI*I£MHH Rook Maliary "HI MANITV" •■CIUND SLAM"