Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 114, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 September 1933 — Page 8
PAGE 8
AST RITES FOR MRS. SHERWOOD SET FOR FRIDAY Burial in New York Will Follow Funeral at Home of Son. Funeral services for Mrs. Sarah Palmer Sherwood. 85, civic' and church worker, will be held at 2 Friday in the home of her son. R. Hartley Sherwood, 2847 North Meridian street. Burial will be in Keneico cemetery. New York. Sunday. Mrs Sherwood died Wednesday in the home of her son. Since the death of ker husband. Robert Hartley Sherwood. Mrs. Sherwood had lived with the son. and a daughter, Mrs Albert N. Connett Jr., Barbizon, France. Mrs. Sherwood was bom in Carbondale, Pa. She established the first circulating library in Bensonhurst. L. I, her former home. She also organized the first woman's club/there. Surviving her are the son, who Is president of the Central Indiana Coal Company; two daughters, Mrs. Connett and Mrs. Frank S. Connett. New York; eight grandchildren and six great-grandchildren. C. Erman Smith Dies Word was received here Wednesday of the death of C. Erman Smith, 47. of 925 East Thirty-sixth street, secretary-treasurer of the Equipment Service Company, 727 North Illinois street, on a train, while en route to the Mayo institute at Rochester, Minn., where he was to receive a physical examination. Mr. Smith suffered a heart attack several weeks ago, while vacationing in Michigan. He was born and reared in Richmond, and was a graduate of Earlham college. Funeral arrangements have not been completed, but will be held in Richmond. Burial will b? there. Long Illness Fatal Following a long illness, Mrs. Olive Sullivan. 37, wife of Ted Sullivan, member of the Indiana state boxing commission, died Tuesday at her home. 4066 Park avenue. Funeral services will be held at 9 Friday in the St. Joan of Arc Catholic church of which she was a member. Burial will be in Holy Cross cemetery. Surviving her are the widower, her mother, Mrs. Hannah Meyer, and a sister, Miss Helen Meyer. Indianapolis. Doctor’s Widow Succumbs Mrs. Mathilde R. Stillson, widow of Dr. Joseph O. Stillson. and resident of Indianapolis forty years, died Wednesday at her home, 4245 North Meridian street. Funeral services conducted by Dr. F. S. C. Wicks, pastor of the All Souls Unitarian church, will be held at 4 Friday in the home. Burial will be in Crown Hill cemetery. Surviving her are a daughter. Miss Blanche Stillson. Indianapolis; three sisters. Mrs. David M. Gilbert. Philadelphia; Mrs. Henry Rumcie, Drexel Hill. Pa., and Mrs. Frank Lawton Germantown. Pa., and a brother. Victor Bisch, Chicago. Member of Old Family Dies A bru f illness preceded the death Wednesday of Mrs. Lizzie M. Howland, 76. member of an old Indianapolis family, at her home, 5223 Matthews street, Edgewood. Mrs. Howland was born in Indianapolis. Her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel P. Howland, settled here in 1836. Her father was state librarian in 1845 and 1846. Funeral services will be held at 2 Friday in the Harry W. Moore funeral parlor. 2050 East Michigan i street. Burial will be in Crown Hill cemetery. Surviving her are thp widower. Thomas P. Howland, and a daughter, Mrs. Hazel M. J. Abbot, with whom she lived.
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Smiling jovially and apparently in the best of health and spirit! former President Herbert Hoover is shown above as he arrived in Chi cago with Mrs. Hoover to visit friends and see the Century of Progres exposition.
.‘Generals’ Threatened City Hall-Courthouse Baseball Battlers Have Reached Kidnaping Stage. FEARING kidnaping of the “generals,” private guards have been assigned both to John <Balk> Noonan, manger of the city hall ball team, and Tom (Sweety) Scanlon, courthouse team manager. Each team has been holding secret practice, for the championship contest at Perry Stadium. Sunday afternoon. At Wednesday’s practice by the city hall team at Noblesville, Noonan was advised that some of “Buck" Sumner's deputy sheriffs were waiting for him at the county limits to arrest him. Noonan stayed in Noblesville all night.
In retaliation, Police Chief Mike Morrissey ordered squad cars to bring in Scanlon. Scanlon, however. must have been “tipped off’’ as he could not be found. The hunt continues today and both 'sides - have counsel ready for habeas corpus proceedings should either • ‘general'’ be apprehended. u a a TOM TARPY, “water boy,” has been chosen by Noonan as bodyguard. Looking alike, Noonan feels that in a tight place he can substitute Tarpy for himself. “The city hall team can do without a water boy if necessary, but not a ‘general,’ according to Mayor Sullivan, who has decreed that thus year’s game must be won by city hall. Sullivan has promised to place Noonan on the sewer gang if he Joses. Sumner has announced that Scanlon—“cuddled baby” of the court house now, will be “buried in jail so deep that he will wish he was dead" if he loses the game. Both “generals” have arranged for transportation “to the world's fair” after the game. The loser will wish it was being held in China, according to outsiders. Diamond Stolen From Home A diamond ring valued at SSO and a purse containing $1.75 were stolen from the heme of Mrs. Olla Miller, 2141 North Temple avenue, Wednesday night, while she was out shopping. according to police.
STATE SOIL AIDED BY BAIN THIS WEEK Wheat Sowing Started in Northern Indiana. A general improvement in soil conditions of the state resulted from the showers during the week ended Tuesday, it was announced today by J. H. Armington, United States ! meteorologist. Sowing of winter wheat was be- | gun in the extreme north. Corn now is up to 90 per cent safe in the 5 north and to 60 per cent safe in ! the south, he reported. In the latter section, however, there is much late corn requiring an extended seaj son for maturity. Late green crops were benefitted generally by the rain and meadows and pasture lands showed improvement. The tomato harvest is nearing its height, with some canneries reported running twenty-four hours i daily. Anew piece of German army equipment is a motorcycle with a sidecar that can be detached and < used as a boat.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
CITY THEATER DISPUTE OVERREACH TRUCE Operators, Owners Erase Trouble With Signing of Agreement. Contract and wage scale troubles affecting the motion picture machine operators at the Indiana and Circle theaters today were erased under anew agreement. Under the agreement anew contract will extend from Sept. 1 to Sept 1 of 1934. The current contract wage scale, under which houses of the identification of the Indiana and Circle theaters have been operating, continues until Dec. 1. If anew wage scale has not been entered into by that date, all theaters of that class will continue to operate under the present scale until an agreement is reached which will be retroactive. The agreement, effective at once, permits the Indiana and Circle theaters to continue operation. Charles Olson, who closed the Lyric theater when an ultimatum was served on him by the motion picture operator, was called out of the city and tne future opening of the Lyric is not known at this time. It is understood that the same terms as affecting the Indiana and Circle theaters, will be available to Olson when he chooses to operate.
A LW_ BY BRUCE CATTOK IN “The Farm,” Louis Bromfield laments the passing of the old middle west—the middle west that blossomed before the Civil war, a land of independent farmers, where no one was very rich and no one was very poor and all men admitted their mutual equality. Mr. Bromfield's novel describes that period by tracing the history of an Ohio farm from 1815 to the present day. It is a loose, rambling sort of story. It lacks a plot, in the ordinary sense of the word. But it does present a unified picture, and it is a well-written, interesting and moving story. The old middle west, says Mr. Bromfield, came about as close to exemplifying the Jeffersonian ideal of democracy as any society that ever existed. It was, perhaps, as good a place to live as the earth ever saw. And it is gone, now, forever. The rise of industrialism is the villain in Mr. Bromfield’s piece. America, he says, was corrupted by the love of riches. It lost sight of the pioneer virtues to become grasping and mercenary. It ruined its farmer class and put in its place a sordid commercialism that had neither ideals nor integrity. Mr. Bromfield has made the old Ohio more idyllic, possibly, than actually was the case. Since he needed to put highlights in his picture I believe he was justified. My one objection to his book is that it is so good that it ought to be just a little bit better. American still is moving. The aftermath of the pioneer era is about to resolve itself into something new. We have a right, I think, to expect a first-class novelist to sense that change and to interpret it. Has Mr. Bromfield crippled himself by exiling himself from the Ohio which is not what it used to be, and settling in Europe?? Printed by Harpers, “The Farm,” sells for $2.50.
Tonight’s Radio Excursion
THURSDAY P M. 4 00—Child's orchestra (NBC) WJZ. Viennese ensemble ‘NBCi WEAF. WMAQ 4:ls—Freeman's orchestra iCBS) WABC. 4:30—01d church songs INBCI WJZ. Eddie Dooley, football reporter i CBS i WABC John B. Kennedy (NBC) WEAF. 4:3s—Gerston's orchestra (NBC) WEAF, WMAQ 4:4s—Wagner's orchestra (CBS' WABC. Lowell Thomas (NBCi WJZ s:oo—Morton Downey ‘CBSi WABC. Hillbillies (NBC' WEAF s:ls—Treasure Island ‘NBCi WJZ. Dance time CBS' WABC. Soloist i NBC i WEAF. WMAQ. s:3o—Lum & Abner 'NBC. WEAF. Concert footlights (NBC) WJZ, KYW. s:4s—Boake Carter iCBS) WABC, WBBM. Tune detective >NBCt WJZ. 6:oo—Captain Diamond Adventures (NBC) WJZ. 6:3o—Dr. Bundesen (NBC) WJZ. WLS. Dramatic guild (CBSi WABC, WIND. 6:45 —Male quartet and orchestra (NBC) WJZ. WLS. 7:oo—"Show Boat" <NBC> WEAF. WMAQ. 7:oo—Mark Warnow Presents (CBSi WABC. WIND. 7:3O—U. S Marine band (CBS) WABC. WIND. Wavne King and orchestra (NBCI WJZ. WENR. Aimee’s Aim Evangelist Says Temple Will Be Established in New York. By United Pres* NEW YORK. Sept. 21.—Aimee Semple McPherson Hutton had luncheon at a restaurant overlooking the Broadway theater where her name will be in electric lights Friday. She looked out on the famous thoroughfare and said: “It would be a wonderful place for a temple.” The California evangelist said the temple of the Four Square Gospel in New York is inevitable. “New York is our next step,” she said. “I want our temple in the heart of the city. We will start our plans as soon as possible.” Legion Program on Air Mrs. Emily Newell Blair will be the radio speaker in a program sponsored by the American Legion over the Columbia network at 3:45 to 4 p. m. eastern standard time today.
If you want to REDUCE hear Kay Cameron, R.N. GRADUATE NURSE tell women about wnnay THE / NEW SAFE/WAY TO REDUCE CONTAINS NO THYROID OP LAXATIVE DRUGS AW Habit Forming ABSOLUTELY HARMLESS OVER STATION WFBM, 9:15 A. M. Monday—Wednesday—Friday See her fn person at Meridian and Washington Sts. Any day 10 A. M. to 4 P. M. On Sale at All Hook’s Stores
8:00 —Hands Across the Border iNBC) WJZ WENR 8 30—Organist 'NBC> WJZ. WENR 9:oo—Scotti s orchestra <NBC> WEAF. 9:ls—Phil Regan, tenor 'CBS'. WABC Talk on Summer Stars iNBC) WJZ. 9:3o—Davis' orchestra (CBSi WABC. WIND. U. S. Army band iNBC) WJZ, WMAQ. Denny's orchestra (NBC) WEAF. KYW. 10:00 —Dream singer: Cab Calloway's orchestra iNBC' WEAF. Holst's orchestra (NBCi W r JZ. WMAQ 10:30 —Gluckman's orchestra iNBC' WEAF. Dancing in the Twin Cities iNBC) WJZ. WENR. WKBF (1400) Indianapolis (Indianaoolis Broadcasting. Inc.) Pending installation of anew transmitter to increase its efficiency, WKBF will run on an indefinite schedule at times during the next few days. THURSDAY P. M. 4:3O—J B. Kennedy NBC (WEAF). 4:45—T0 be announced. s:oo—Twenty Fingers of Harmony NBC (WEAF). s:ls—Dinner melodies. s:3o—Concert Footlights NBC iWJZ). 6:oo—Marvel Mvers. 6:ls—Devore Sisters. 6:3o—Soloist NBC ‘WJZ)). 6:4s—Soloist NBC (WJZ). 7:00—Hilo Hawaiian?. 7:ls—Dick Harold. 7:3o—Evening Moods. B:oo—Hands Across the Border NBC (WJZ). B:3o—Echoes of the Palisades NBC (WJZ). 9:oo—Montclair orchestra NBC 'WEAF). 9:ls—Lum & Abner NBC (WEAF). 9:3o—Harry Bason. 9:4s—Sign off. WFBM (1230) Indianapolis (Indianapolis Power and Light Comnanj) THURSDAY P. M. s:3o—Mills Brothers (CBS). s:4s—Ballad Boys. 6:oo—Walkathon. 6:ls—Singin' Sam (CBS). 6:30 —Revue (CBS'. 7:15—A1 Feeney sports talk. 7:3o—Taxation talk. 7:3s—Bohemians. B:oo—Willard Robison and orchestra I CBS) 8:30 —Ted Husing and Leon Belasco orchestra i CBSi. 8:45 —Gladvs Rice and concert orchestra (CBS). 9:ls—Little Jack Little (CBS). 9:3o—Walkathon. 9:4s—Charlie Davis orchestra (CBS). 10:00—Casa Loma orchestra (CBS). 10:30—Arnold Peek orchestra.
Catchinq
Furniture—Rugs Draperies Sander & Recker Furniture Cos.
MR. PRESIDENT Do Our Part WE DO OUR PART The following members of the Building Contractors Association of Indianapolis, an organization composed of representative contractors in various branches of the building industry, hereby announce that they are operating under the President’s Re-employment Agreement, as modified for the Construction Industry by the N. R. A.
Adrian Brothers Aetna Cabinet Cos. Henry R. Behrens John G. Broerse Brandt Bros. & Cos. Baker Forms Cos. L. C. Bakemeier E. A. Carson Leslie Colvin Capitol Engineering & Construction Cos. Crane Service Corp. Coppock Bros. Cooper Construction Cos., Inc. Jos. M. Davis & Son Domestic & Industrial Insulators, Inc. Edward F. Dux Stone Cos., Inc. Engineering Metal Products Corp. Elliott-Myers Construction Cos. Foster Engineering Cos. Freyn Bros., Inc. H. P. Foxworthy Joseph Gardner Cos. General Asbestos & Supply Cos. R. H. Goodrich Cos. Carl M. Geupel Construction Cos. Graham Asbestos Cos. F. E. Gates Marble & Tile Cos. Hayes Bros., Inc. Hatfield Electric Cos.
11:00 —Bohemians. 11:45—American Hawailans. 12:00 Eloise 12:30—Sign off. WLW (700) Cincinnati THURSDAY P. M. 4:00—To be announced. 4 15—Ma Perkins. 4 30—Walkathon orchestra 4:4s—Lowell Thomas (NBC>. s:oo—Amos ’n' Andy iNBC'. s:ls—Joe Emerson and orchestra. 5:30—80b Newhall. s:4s—Lum and Abner (NBC). 6:oo—Rudy Vallee's orchesta 'NBC). 7:oo—Death Valley Days iNBC* 7.30- Tangee musical dreams (Pop' 8:00 —Paul Whiteman orchestra, with A1 Jolson and Deems Taylor iNBC). 9:oo—Vpnida Musical Vagaries. 9:ls—Charlie Koehler's Old Vienna Ensemble. 9:3o—Bryant's showboat. 10:00—Los Amigos. 10:30—To be announced. 11:00—Lincoln Tavern orchestra (NBC). 11:30—Buddy Rogers' orchestra (NBC), 12:00—Moon River. A. M. 12:15—Walkathon orchestra. 12:30—Johanna Grosse, organist. I:oo—Sign off.
OUR EARLY BUYING BRINGS St Record H SHOE VALUES! Ak 7QO PA IP Friday and I WHi Saturday Only tremendous savings on to you by selling shoes at this pumps, straps, or oxfords
Hall Construction Cos. Hetherington & Berner, Inc. Edw. J. Hinton Home Elevator Cos. John Hoffman Hoosier Steel & Wire Cos. Wm. P. Jungclaus Cos. A. C. Johnson Leon Joyce W. H. Johnson & Son Cos. Kirkhoff & W T oelfing William Koch Krebav Construction Cos. James A. Kreglo J. R. Kreglo Kruse & Dewenter Cos. H. W. Laut & Company Frank Layton & Cos. McFerran-Kane Cos. J. E. McGaughey Chas. McGarvey Irvin McFeeters Wm. E. Mick, Inc. Moynahan Construction Company Jesse G. Marshall C. H. Norman T. J. O'Hara & Son Ostrom Realty and Construction Cos. Porter, Glore & Glass, Inc. G. A. Reed
.KEPT. 2T, 1933
AUGUST AUTO SALES EXCEEDJ932 TOTAL Seasonal Decline Revealed in State Report. New passenger car sales in Marion county during August totaled 1,233, it was announced today by Frank Finney, state motor vehicle bureau commissioner. Sales of new cars throughout the state are continuing at a level well above the 1932 figures, Finney reported, although the normal seasonal decline in volume was revealed. Sales throughout the state in August totaled 3.816, an increase of nearly 1,300 over the same month a year ago. A small electric sharpener for raor blades has been produced.
Ralph R. Reeder & Sons, Inc. Ready Mixed Concrete - Corp. ui'"'. Rickey & Chalfant James C. Rybolt Strong Bros. Stackhouse Bldg. Specialties, Inc. A. V. Stackhouse Cos. P. G. Schernekau John A. Schumacker Cos. Sanborn Electric Cos. Schlegel & Roehm, Inc. Standard Roofing and Supply Cos. Lawrence J. Street Henry C. Smither Roofing Cos. Service Construction Cos. Skillman Electric Cos. Santarossa Mosaic and Tile Cos. H. M. Stradling Electric Company C. L. Smith Electric Cos. Sink & Edwards Tarpenning-LaFollette Company Triangle Marble and Tile Company Wm. H. Vehling W. E. YanLandingham Wege Marble and Tile Cos. J. G. West Walter W. Wise Wm. H. Young
