Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 87, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 August 1933 — Page 14

PAGE 14

LAST RITES FOR J. A. JAMIESON SET FOR TODAY Chevrolet Official's Burial Will Be in Detroit Cemetery. Funeral services lor James A. Jamieson. 37. general manager of the commercial body division of the Chevrolet Motor Company in Indianapolis. who died Sunday morning In the Methodist hospital after a week's illness, be held at the residence, 2266 Wynnedale road, at 2 oclock today. The body will be taken to Detroit at 3:30 foi burial. Mr Jamieson was born in Galt, Ontario. Jan. 27, 1396 He joined the Chevrolet company fourteen years ago as a stenographer and clerk on construction in the Flint plant. Holding similar positions in the Tarrytown <N. Y> and Janesville (Wis.i plants, he entered accounting work at me gear and axle plant in Detroit, wnere he became plant controller. He advanced to divisional controller in cnarge of all accounting operations in the Chevrolet Motor Company* its nine assembly plants and its manufacturing plants in Detroit, Flint, Saginaw and Bay City, Mich., and Toledo. O. With organization of the commercial body division here in 1930, Mr. Jamieson was sent here to head the plant and branches over the United States. He was a member of the Indianapolis Athletic Club, Rotary Club of Indianapolis, Highland Goli and Country Club and Meadowbrook Country Club. Recess Club and Au Sable Club of Detroit. He is survived by the widow, Mrs. Margaret Dunn Jamieson; a son, James Alexander Jamieson, both of Indianapolis; ihree sisters, Mrs. Edward McCracken, Mrs. Gordon Logan and Miss Anne Jamieson; two brothers, David Park Jamieson of Sarnia. Can., and Roland Craig Jamieson of Toronto. Heart Attack Fatal Stricken with a heart attack. Miss Amanda Poe. 78. died suddenly Sunday morning at her home. 11l East Sixteenth street. She had lived with her sister, Mrs. Jennie Perry, widow of Colonel Oran Perry, who was for many years superintendent of tlie Soldiers and Sailors Monument. Miss Poe was a member of a Richmond family and had relations living in Bethesda, Md. Funeral arrangements have been deferred pending arrival of the Maryland members of the family. She was a member of Christ Episcopal church. Dies After Long Illness Following an illness of three years. Mrs Josephine Burger Low - ery. 28. formerly of Goodland. died Sunday at her home. 238 East Twelfth street. Mrs. Lowery >va.. oorn in Remington. the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Burger. The family moved to Goodland and Mrs. Lowery was graduated irom the Goodland high school and attended Rogers Hall. Lowell, Mass. She came to Indianapolis eight years ago. Survivors besides the parents are three sisters. Mrs. Hiram D Keehn of Indianapolis. Mrs George H. Fisher of Minneapolis and Miss Ann Burger of Goodland; a brother. John Burger, also of Goodland. and a grandmother. Mrs. George Hempbili of Remington. Overmire Rites Tuesday Funeral services for Mrs. Isabella Overmire, 65. who died Sunday at her home. 1624 Park avenue, will be held at the home Tuesday at 12 o'clock and in Yorktown church at 3 o'clock Burial will be in Yorktown cemetery. Mrs. Overmire was born at Yorktown. the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Stewart. She was married forty - five years ago to William Overmire. who operated a coal business before retiring several years ago. She was a member of Central Avenue M E church, the church circle, the Park Avenue Neighborly Club and D. A. R, chapter of Muncie. She is survived by the husband, two sons. W. J Overmire of Indianapolis and Edwin Overmire of Yonkers. N. Y.; a daughter. Mrs. Warren Hayworth of Yorktown: two brothers. Daniel Stewart of Yorktown. and Claude Stewart of Muncie. and two sisters. Mrs Claude Cranton of Muncie and Mrs. William Gibbs of Indianapolis. Warfel Funeral Tuesday Funeral services for Mrs. Dora May Warfel. who died Sunday at her home. 4229 Broadway, will be held in the Flanner A: Buchanan mortuary at 1 30 Tuesday afternoon. Burial will be in Martinsville. Surviving her are a sister, Mrs. E May Hahn of Indianapolis; a brother. W. W. Keener of Anderson; three daughters. Mrs W. S. Christie. Mrs. J. K. Grubb and Mrs. Kathryn Willingham, all of Indianapolis. and three grandchildren. Mrs. Warfel was a member of St. Paul's Episcopal church, but had been inactive three years because of illness. Long-Time Resident Passes Arrangements for the funeral ot Mrs Elizabeth Balfour. 74. wife of A. C. Balfour. 1401 Fairfield avenue. who died at her home Sunday afternoon, have not been made Mrs. Balfour was born in Clydebank. Scotland, and had lived in Indianapolis for fifty years. She was a member of the Second Church of Chnst. Scientist. Survivors are the husband, a brother. John Kerr, and a sister. Mrs. Andrew Taylor, all of this city.

J. P. DAVEY Optometrist 4 th* comfort ol> tai noil from 1 /U-aea Jt jw-nJe l xrsflx upon the A kind ..f ev* ox- * m I nations re I J 1 405 Kahn Building HI ley 3123

U. S. KEEPS FINGER IN CUBAN PIE

Islanders Find That Curb Is Placed on Their Freedom

■ ■ Ij LTS an* • *r.dard* nr .Tar. I*9 Nar.v pSTO~ i ■ ■-■ ■ i— ■ - • four centuries of colonial rule thus came ■ " ' tional convention with four re- JEf °by'‘the

The blood r.d gold banner ot Spain fluttered down for the last time from Havana standard* on Jan 1. 1*99 Nearly four centuries of colonial rule thus came to an end The Star* and Strlne* replaced the Iberian flag nominally for three veers snd more actuailv as the shadowy guarantor of Cuba's restricted freedom ever nnee. Cuba's government In 1933 responds to the Arm Intimations of Sumner Welles Repeatedly in the generation of time elapsing since the Snamsh-Amerlcan war. United State* has Interposed In Cuba The storv of that relationship up to the recent rising against Machado is told herewith In the third article of a series

BY FORREST DAVIS Times Special Writer HAVANA, Aug. 21—Good souls. stepped in the nineteenth century legend of Anglo-Saxon benevolence, rejoiced in 1901. as they cycled to work, that Leonard Wcod had “cleaned up” Cuba and opened schools for the benighted offspring of a backward neighbor They read that a great concourse of volunteer firemen had paraded Havana's narrow highways. ending their march by presenting the military governor with a shiny helmet and a lacquered fire axe. The demonstration indicated to the American feader the simplehearted gratitude of the Cuban masses for tidy streets, punctual trains, reformed courts, and an honest collection of duties and taxes. In Havana and the provinces the incident amused fiery revolutionaries, now disband-■d and politically helpless. Cartoons poked fun at the dourly efficient administrator in his patent leather headgear. Discontent over the protracted stay of the American forces rose until, in the governor's palace. Havana, and in Washington, fears openly were expressed that a Cuban Aguinaldo might at any time pop up to challenge the "pacificators.” Fortunately none did. The moderate counsel of Maximo Gomez, the large-hearted "Fox” of the Cuban rebellion; of Bartolome Maso and Estrade Palma prevailed. Moreover, no Cuban could deny the material blessings which flowed from American rule. a a a CUBANS, town dwellers, planters and peasants, once more were safe in life and property. The Americans, sweeping out the rubbish left by the retiring Spanish, set to work to feed the hungry, clothe the naked, enforce the planting of crops and rebuilding of dwellings. Highways were repaired, the ruined tobacco valleys of Pinar del Rio in the west, the sugar plantations in Santa Clara province. the grazing ranches in the east presently were flourishing. Law and order rigorously were enforced, by all accounts. Pilfering American soldiers were shot. But. most significant of all. W’ood. himself a doctor, fathered the experiments of Dr. Walter Reed which proved that yellow fever was borne by the Stegomvia mosquito. The theory was that of a Cuban physician, Carlos Fmdlaye. Two of the experimenters died, but Wood, with the help of Dr. William C. Gorgas. stamped the Stegomvia out of the islands and

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Colonel Leonard Wood

thus banished that most widespread of tropical plagues. For dacaclrs Cuba, crossroads of the Canbb an and Latin America, had been ;jgarded in the United States and Europe as the prime : seat of pestilence. a a a THE benefits of American oversight were numerous and tp:n to the eye. And so, although American officers grown truculent in their cups assured Cubans that • Old Glory, ones up, never came down,” and. although the military regime preferred the interest of the “best people” to that of the revolutionaries. Cuba did not deeply resent the capable sway of Wood and his subordinates. The governor and many Americans. official and lay. favored annexation. But they omitted to intrigue for it, and on May 20, 1902. when Old Glory descended from the fiagstaffs at Morro Castle and the palace, to be replaced by the lone star of Cuba libre, a part of the cheers arisins from the Prado were reserved for the departing Americans. Estrada Palma, so recently a private schoolmaster in Orange county, N. Y.. moved into the palace as president, after bidding Wood godspeed aboard the warship Brooklyn for home. Cuba for the Cubans! The self rule which had been won generations before by virtually all other dependencies of Spain in the NewWorld belatedly had come to Cuba —but only with the help of the scarcely disinterested giant of the north. The Cubans were not likely to forget for a long time by whose offices they had won such freedom as they had. u n n IF the gentle patriot Palma and the brusque Ooir.ex reflected, as the Brooklyn steamed northward* past gray Morro end the pink walls of Cabana fortress, that this was the end of American rule they permitted themselves illusions. For General Wood left behind him the Platt amendment, oroduct of his own and longsighted Elihu Root's imperialism, to gird Cuba's international freedom and trouble her domestic politics thereafter. Behind the Platt amendment—attached by the bland Connecti- ; cut senator to an army appro--1 priation bill—stood the Monroe Doctrine; still further behind loomed the manifest interest of j the United States in its southerj ly neighbors, an interest soon to be magnified by the rape of Panama and the digging of the canal. ' The Platt amendment, adopted

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

President Taft by a 16 to 11 vote in the constitutional convention with four recalcitrants absent, bound Cuba not to engage in foreign treaties or undertake loans abroad without consent of the United States. It further, under the moot Article 111, stipulated: "That the government of Cuba consents that the United States may exercise the right to intervene for the preservation of Cuban independence, the maintenance of a government adequate for the protection of life, property. and individual liberty, and for discharging the obligations with respect to Cuba imposed by the United States, now to be assumed and undertaken by the government of Cuba.” a a a r T"'HAT is the hobble on Cuban freedom which despots, notably Machado, have used to continue themselves in power. Under it, the United States may judge w-hether a government is “adequate for the protection of life,

L A u Progress” under the blue Eagle w ELL, FOLKS, we’ve learned ONE thing already. NRA sure does increase pay rolls. It’s been quite forcefully called to our attention THREE TIMESTx’OW! The Prog- • ress Laundry pay roll has been MUCH larger these past THREE WEEKS. TANARUS“ But, we’re getting new customers in all parts of the city—which convinces us that thousands of other Indianapolis enterprises are increasing their pay rolls, too. Business IS getting better, no question aboutjt. / The laundry business is a good criterion. When people are desperately “hard up” they (unwillingly) do their own washing, or part of it. When they have money they call the laundry. Thanks, folks. We appreciate your business. And, remember, we need still more customers to meet THIS week's increased pay roll. Riley 7373 & W PROGRESS LAUNDRY I

property and individual liberty.” In 1930. Secretary of State Henry L. Stimson, announcing a “hands-off” policy with Cubans on the verge of armed revolt against Machado's repressive rule, judged that the seated government was fulfilling the terms of Article 111. The Platt amendment, held over the heads of Cubans but seldom used, is the overt link tying Cuba to America. In 1906, President Theodore Roosevelt, appealed to by President Palma and Consul-General Frank Maximilian Steinhart for warships, sent William Howard Taft and Robert L. Bacon as a commission. ass PALMA, faced with a revolution by the Liberal party, threatened to resign with his cabinet. And as the .Liberals, led by the revolutionary veteran. Jose Miguel Gomez, had abstained from voting in a manifestly corrupt election, or taking the seats they won in the congress, there would be no native authority left in the Uland to carry on. With Taft in Havana, Palma resigned on Sept. 28. carrying the vice-president and the cabinet. The Moderates—Palma's partyabstained from voting in congress, leaving that body without a quorum. a a u THE next day Taft proclaimed a provisional government, with himself as governor under the Cuban flag. Two thousand marines w-ere landed. Later 5,600 American soldiers were distributed throughout the island to support the Cuban guards. Taft soon turned the governorship over to Charles Edward Magoon. Cuba remained under American rule until Jan. 28, 1909.

—Let’s Go Fishing—

COPPERS LEARN ABOUT FISHING FROMJVIVES Policemen Forced to Take Back Seat on Trips to Lake. BY LEFTY LEE Times Fishing Editor Members of the Indianapolis police department are thinking seriously of barring their wives, when they make fishing trips in the future. as the women folks rapidly are stealing their thunder. Sergeant Noel Jones took his wife and his daughter with him to Barbee lake to spend their vacation. Jones loves to get out and battle the bass at this spot, and figured that the only way he could get them was to slip off alone. His strategy worked, and he returned with three beauties, but forgot to display them when his wife showed him a limit catch of standard blue gill. Patrolman Carl Elder had the same experience, his bass measuring inches under the one taken by Mrs. Elder. Announcement of a stag fishing party can be expected from headquarters any time now. We have a report that Ralph Jones caught twenty-seven blue bill at Asbury Park lake on a recent trip. That is one big mess of blue gill; in fact, if the report is correct. Jones would better watch out for the game warden, as the limit still Is twenty-five. D. H. Robey also found the fishing good at Asbury Park lake, his limit catch of bass averaging 2 l s pounds. This true story may be a laugh to most of us, but the victim was far from enjoying it. Bryant Gantz went squirrel hunting last week, and Dick Johnson was a member of the party. The boys were away to an early start, to be ready for their game at daybreak. Johnson was busy at his place of business the night before, and requested one of the family to pack his gun for him. You can imagine his feelings when he unpacked the gun in the woods, and found the barrel of a pump gun, and the stock of a double barrel shotgun. Carl White has a six-pounder that he will display proudly to his friends. Yes, it is a boy, and Carl says he will cut his eye teeth on a fly rod. Sorry, but it will be impossible for us to enter this one in our contest, old top. Harry Collins has returned from Nipigon lake, one of Canada’s best. One thrill that will remain for a long, long time was his battle with an eight-pound lake trout, on a sixounce Granger flyrod. a feat that would provide a stove league story for any angler. Try as he would, the best poundage he could secure.

BUILDING & LOAN WILL BUY AND SELL: Railroadmen’s, Fletcher Avenue, Celtic, Indiana Savings, Union National, Atkins, Arsenal and Plymouth Terre Haute and Shelbyville. Schloss Bros. Investment CQ. Lincoln 231* IST E. Wash. St.

RECORD CATCH MADE vSV, The largest catch of years in Big Walnut creek, near Greencastle. Is boasted by Fred Long of that town, who nabbed the forty-six-pound catfish shown in the photo. With him is, Lewis Long, who was with him when the catch was made. The fish was fortyeight inches long.

of the rainbow species, was at threepound scrapper. Collins received some wonderful service on this trip and recommends that any anglers who are making a trip to this lake, outfit at Oriente bay. Another party of local sportsmen left Sunday for some fishing where the big ones grow. Birch Point inn. Vermillion lake. Tower, Minn., was the destination of Donald Christie, treasurer of the Koosier Rifle and Pis*'l Club, his wife and two childrrr.; Mr. and Mrs. Paul Korby and junior, Joe Christie; Louis Koerner of the State Auto title department, his son, Louis Jr., his wife and Louis 111. Roscoe Williamson, supervisor of the drivers’ license department, also was scheduled to make the trip with this party, but his duties were so heavy that he was forced to remain behind. The party will stay at the lake for two weeks. George Bunting tried out his new Granger fly rod on Little Eagle creek Wednesday night, and had a picnic with a three-pound smallmouth bass that battled for twenty minutes before conceding defeat. Bunting also took two smaller bass. Hildebrant’s pickaninny black bass bug was the lure that enticed them.

Watch Repairing High-Grade Work Moderate Price* ROY F. CHILES 530 Lemcke Bldg.

T 6494 FOR GOOD DRY CLEANING FRENCH rsrt*OYE WORKS L £—£&£ -C m I Main I’lunt. 317 West Maryland St. | RI OS. I)R.\ I’FRIKS, t \ RI’KTS l_n_VTS__Clcancl and l)ycd Ft HS I

CONN Band and Orchestra INSTRUMENTS PEARSON Plano Cos, 128 N. Penn.

MOTION PICTURES Mar! 15* No nr Thru W>tl. V Till Clark Jean Harlow “Hold Your Man” Story of a One-Man Woman!

IPPhsMoNS' ii/f\ NEIGHBORHOOD

NORTH SIDE i. ■ _ j —. Talbot A 22nd 3alb6tt| •SONG or THE EAGLE" Fny Wray—Ral ;>h lUllar.iy ■ BELOW THE SEA" STRATFORD iEL^SsT **" —‘ Jack Oakle • FROM HELL TO HEAVEN” Fav Writ in “ANN CARVER'S PROFESSION” "MECCA KiVLRsT Mary Brian "GIRL MISSING" <>•*• rire Sldnry-CliarlM Murray "COHENS ANO KELLYS IN TROCHEE” 111. at anth f T A KQlfg Doublr Feature VRnWIWW... Sail* Ellen "CENTRAL AIRPORT" and Hardy "DEVIL'S BROTHER" I .ni" ■ '■gi'-toth A Northwestern D P A— - Double Feature - Fair Wra? BELOW THE SEA" Zaau —SUm Sumrnerrllle HI T AI L NIGHT" ■■ _ — . . 111. at Stth It IT X T Double Feature ' 1 i— Marion Nixon BEST OF ENEMIES" ZASC PITTS in "OCT ALL NIGHT” i U , 42nd and Cotle*e *f| D*AUf||f Warner Baxter ¥r. lVfTl li EIUa Landl i I.OXED IOU WEDNESDAY" __ ■' —SI. Clair at Ft. Wayne <T. CLAIR i Double Feature 1 Fredrir Marrh •EAGLE AND THE HAWK” ■COHENS AND KELLYS IN TROUBLE” _ EASTJSIDE .eiH Dearborn at 10th CUu B d ;:'Lx r ,; ,her ‘ • I COVER THE WATER FRONT” - **> E Tenth im ***9jL *" r S!rr • BELOW THE SEA" Ch. Murray—George Sldney “COHENS AND KELLYS IN TROUBLE" ■■IBiB Cast •THE WORKING MAN" • BE MINE TONIGHT” i .i ■ w:tn E lOth St. fMpIIIIIU Irene Dunn n P- Joel MrCrea "THE SILVER CORD"

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AUG. 21, 1933

MOTION PICTURES Last 4 Days to See the Year's Sensation /flPrk Yfjgjr HUNDREDS OF LAFFS DOZENS OF STARS

Next Friday CIRCLE’S 17 th ANNIVERSARY SHOW ON STACK. SEVEN STAR ACTS OX SCUFFN Doug. Fairbanks Jr. IN “The Life of Jimmy Dolan”

“MIDNIGHT MARY” with Loretta Young Ricardo Cortex-Franchot Tone —Also — Laurel - Hardy Comedy Riot Crtgrt LEE TRACY Mae Clarke in F®"^*T Urn Back the Clock” M<‘t ri-♦ ioldw yn Ma >rr IVlurr

Last 4 Days! BRUCE CABOT ,T IDtlf NNI AMIS |M I tmilAM HAIRtOAN NEXT FRIDAY ‘‘Her Bodyguard” With Edmund Lowe, Wynne Gibson

Hurry! Last 4 Hays! 9 ■ Those (limfy Ixivr 31 9 Birds are at it Ag-ulat ix&rv n zasu pins Pj * rst Mate' ItiViH I *'! CHMicmu mm mini ■QIgV^jPILGRIM

TRY A WANT AD IN THE TIMES. I THEY WILL BRING RESULTS.

EAST SIDE .11 2l ’* ,o,h St * HAMILTON Oouhlr Ir.tur. OiOi--* * - * J Hr hr Daniels • "COCKTAIL 1101 R" Rill Rovd— Wynne Oibwn "EMERGENCY CALL” _ _ ■l - *E. Wash. St STRAND f, nr Jovre WKX..a, ... Stewart Erwin "INTEKNA i lONAI. HOISE" >4 - E. Wash St. „7t HtUMAI Double Feature “ Brlte Da via • EX-I AD V ' Wra. .n • 'RE LOW Till \ -a. . i' in • lurk 3EMME n <z b !'Z:iX: “MELODY CBI'ISE” BEBE DANIELS in ‘‘COCKTAIL HOI H *. SOUTH SIDE ~i7i ~ 11 Fountain Square COONTAI aXZ Double Feature aJT JtUARt ItUi Conrad Narlr Leila llyam. ‘CONSTANT WOMAN” Ruddle Roger*—Marian Nixon ‘ BEST Os ENEMIES'* W .. —~ar~( Pfoapect and Shelby Stampers ?:rir. f ß7o t^ •‘EI.MER THE GREAT” Miriam Hopkins “STORY OF TEMPI LJDRAKE" SL A m J. a ' f Vir at Fountain Squ VKANADA Claudette Colbert S7r ' * Ben l.von ‘‘l COVER IHE WATER FRONT iw.sMoir s ' M,r ORUNTMii ..FtH'. J j?r r ? i. , „ .->= stewsrt Erwin •‘INTERNATIONAL HOC RE" . ——— ~ *303 -belbv St &AHPIFLD Double Feature v ”' *• **• -. Janet Gavnor ••ADORABLE” JAMES Dt'NN in ' HELLO SISTER' WEST SIDE - I W Wash at ~ Bel. ;IEL'UONT Double Feature *— t ha. Ruxdes MELOtn CRt ISE" I Me Sale "LfCKT DOG" - - Wjl ■■■* • *M W Hteh | J T * Double Feature "—— Lee Tracy • THE M ISANCE” It hosier Moreis-Mae < larke ”BREA< H OF PROMISE" **ji !- _ 'ji-se- " loth at Holmes. PRINCESS Double Feature Marv Brian • SONG OF rilE EAGLE" JANET GATNOR In ’ ADORABLE"