Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 126, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 October 1933 — Page 12

PAGE 12

BAILEY JAILER AND A OTHERS ARE INDICTED Named in True Bills for Alleged Complicity in Delivery. H\i f mfr/f Prr*n DAi LAS. Tex. Oct. 5 —Four persons including a discharged Dallas county deputy jailer, two farmers and an amateur detective who held a special commission from the Dallas county sheriff's office were under indictment here today, charged with complicity in the Urschel kidnaping. Tom Manion, the jailer who guarded Harvey Bailey during his imprisonment in the Dallas county jail, was named in two indictments for aiding Bailey in his Labor day escape. Manion’s close friend, Grover C. Bevill, was named as an accomplice in the plot to free Bailey. Cass Coleman and Will Casey, Coleman <Tex.) county farmers, were indicted for conspiring to harbor George (Machine Gum Kelly and his titian-haired wife, Katherine. Both of the farmers are held in jail at Abilene, Tex. On the Coleman farm, $73,250 of Urschel ransom money was found. CLAIMS GLIDER RECORD Russian Flier Does 184 Loops, 13 Tailspins in Single Flight. ft ft f nitcrl f*rr*§ MOSCOW, Oct. 5. What is claimed by the press here as a world record in stunt flying in a glider was achieved bv pilot F Stepanchenko at Koktebel, Crimea, where a glider school functions. Stepanchenko made 184 somersaults, thirteen tailspins and a series of other trick maneuvers in a glider during a single flight. BAD ROAD CAUSES SUIT Wife Rays Soft Spot Brought Death of Husband. K ft t tiUrt! Pri'H* VISALIA, Cal., Oct. 5. Because.it was alleged, a county highway was in defective condition, Tulare county today was named in a suit for damages arising from a man’s death. Mrs. Jessie L. Cullen sued the county, charging that her husband, Clarence A Cullen, was killed when his automobile struck a soft spot in the road and overturned.

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Isa Kremer Reveals the Fact She Is Great Artist Noted Singer of Folk Songs and Ballads of Many Countries Proves Sensation on Her First Visit Here. BY WALTER D. HICKMAN FOR many years I have regretted the fact that I have been unable to hear Isa Kremer, one of the best singers of ballads and folk songs of many countries. Last night she appeared in concert at the Woman's Department Club under the auspices of the Indianapolis ICOR branch of the national organization interested in the founding and building off Jewish Socialist Soviet republic in eastern Siberia. Everything that I had heard and read about this unusual woman I found to be true. Personally. I discovered that Miss Kremer, regardless of what type of song she is singing or in what language, she is essentially a great emotional actress laying the greatest percentage of her attention upon the interpretation of the song.

She possesses two fine expressive hands and eyes which are an index to the mood which matches her voice. She sang in Yiddish, old English, English, Russian, and several of her nest numbers had the swing of Italy. A Russian number with a swing very close to our modern American jazz brought ner program to a sensational close which demanded encores. I do not understand Yiddish, but I was able at all times, because of the intelligent showmanship and expression used in telling the story, to catch the mood, the swing and the comedy of those numbers. The scope of this woman's knowledge of ballads and folk songs is revealed in "Little Sparrow,” a Kentucky mountain song. The artist sits in a chair and impersonates a woman who sings about the sparrows as she sews. She would likp to have wings like a sparrow so she could fly to her false lover. Then she suddenly sticks herself with her needle. All of this is beautifully developed by Miss Kremer. Os course, my ignorance of Yiddish would lead me to say that this number was my favorite, although "No, Sir,” an old English comedy song, was a gem. Here is a great artist and I hope she will return soon when she is able to give her full-length program. Last night she shared her program with I. R. Korenman, a good accompanist and soloist, and Ab Epstein, national organizer for the ICOR, who spoke in Yiddish. a a a Indianapolis theaters today offer: "Stage Mother" at the Palace; "Too Much Harmony” at the Circle; Charlie Ruggles and Mary Boland in “Mama Loves Papa” at Keith's; 'Moonlight and Pretzels" at the Ambassador; "My Weakness" at the Apollo; “Crazy Quilt” on the stage and “Brief Moment" on the screen

at the Indiana, and burlesque at the Mutual and Colonial. COUNCIL SUGGESTS AIRPLANE FOR MAYOR Texas City Asked for Purchase as Economy Measure. By I niti ft Print HOUSTON, Tex., Oct. s.—Mayor Oscar F. Holcombe's frequent trips to other cities have led to a suggestion that the city buy him an airplane as an expense-saving measure. The proposal was made at a council meeting after the mayor returned from the lower Rio Grande valley where he helped organize hurricane relief, and turned in a $460 expense account.. Holcombe traveled the 350 miles on a special Red Cross train.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

RIGHT TO FREE SPEEGH DENIED GERMAN PRESS New Law Wipes Out All Liberal Views: Binds All Publications. By United Prr*n BERLIN. Oct. s.—New' conceptions of the press, completely abolishing I the old theory of freedom, w r as given ! government approval today when the | cabinet passed the first section of Propaganda Minister Joseph Goebbel's new law restricting all German publications. The exact opposite of the former liberal view, guaranteeing freedom of speech, the new law provides for ; registration of all newspaper men, aiming at their co-operative super- | vision. Provisions include that editors must be of "Aryan" descent and that j their wives must be “Aryan.” An ! exception is granted in that respect | to editors working exclusively on j commercial pages of periodicals. The law will govern the daily and periodical press, on the theory that such publications are “instruments for influencing the nation spiritually, and hence, like the theater and radio, public institutions.” All editors must "share the government's conception of the state, I without reservation.”

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_OCT. 5, 1933