Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 215, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 January 1934 — Page 3

JAN. 17, 1931

U. S. PROTESTS CUBAN UTILITY PLANT SEIZURE American-Owned Company Is Involved in New Political Dispute. By t m U,4 Press HAVANA, Jan. 17.—Strikes, demonstrations, ominous rumors and a vital matter of policy affecting United States interests today complicated the efforts of Carlos Hevia, Annapolis graduate and new provisional president, to form a government. The strikes, so far minor, were against the alleged military dictatorship of Colonel Fulgencio Batista. chief of staff of the army, who aided m putting Mr. Hevia in power. Demonstrations were by radical students, against Colonel Batista particularly and Mr. Hevia incidentally; and in favor of Ramon Grau San Martin, whom Colonel Batista and other new political leaders ousted. Rumors were of an imminent breach in the apparently precarious friendliness of those behind Mr. Hevia. The American phase was the settlement to be made of the dispute between the Cuban government and the American-owned Cuban Electric Company, $200,000,000 utilities corporation . which supplies countless towns with electricity and gas. Former President Grau, just before his still somewhat mysterious departure from the palace, ordered that the government take over the company's plants because of its alleged delay in reaching a settlement of its employes' demands for higher wages and better working conditions. Jefferson Caffery, President Roosevelts personal representative here- he will be ambassador when a government is recognized was understood to have sent President, Hevia a message, protesting against seizure of the company's property.

REPUBLICANS ELECT SENATOR IN VERMONT Democrat looses by 8.000 Votes in Special Election. Bp 1 nit rd rr> •* MONTPELIER, Vt., Jan. 17—Republican candidates for congress, one for the senate and pne for the house, won a comparatively easy victory in yesterday's special election, virtually complete returns showed today. Representative Ernest W- Gibson, running for the post left vacant by the death of Senator Porter H. Dale, defeated Harry W. Witters. Democrat. by approximately 8.000 votes. By a similar margin, Charles A. Plumley, resigned president of Norwich university and the Republican candidate for the house position Mr. Gibson vacated, defeated the Democratic aspirant, Robert W. Ready. OFFICERS ARE RENAMED Business Increase Reported by Belt Railroad, Stock Yards Company. Re-election of all officers and all but one director, and an increase in business for the last year, was announced following annual meeting of the Belt Railroad and Stock Yards Company yesterday. Officers renamed were S. E. Rauh, chairman of the board: C. S. Rauh, president; W. A. Guthrie, vicepresident; C. C. Holstein, auditor; Harvey Melvin, secretary, and Mrs. Mary H. Carey. S. E. Rauh. C. S. Rauh. Mr. Guthrie, G. A. Schnull, W. G. Irwin, Walter A. Swartz, C. C. Holstein and E. C. Barrett, directors. Mr. Barrett replaced J. I. Disaette.

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IT'S THE WOMAN WHO PAYS ANO PAYS—BUT JUST FOR ONE NIGHT AT BUTLER

ENJOIN RECEIVERS OF MISSOURI CO. Goett and Counsel Must File Accounting. Henry Goett, city clerk, and Michael E. Abrams, attorney, have beep enjoined by the supreme court from acting as receivers in the case of the Missouri State Life Company and ordered to make an accounting of their receivership of Indiana holdings of the concern. Mr. Goett and Mr. Abrams were appointed receivers last September, and brought action in behalf of Hazel Hankin, a policyholder and Jeanette Iglestark. a stockholder, for alleged default of a policy issued to Miss Hankin. On Oct. 4, the life insurance company appealed to the supreme court for an order to restrain Mr. Goett and Mr. Abrams from acting as receivers. The restraining order was issued yesterday and J. E. O’Malley named as receiver. The company had 7,064 policies, totaling $11,797,506, in force in Indiana in 1932. >. M'NUTT TO SPEAK AT EVANSVILLE MEETING Leading Democrats to Attend Eighth District Banquet. Governor Paul V. McNutt is scheduled for the principal address at the Eighth district Democratic meeting and banquet at Evansville tonight. State officials and leading Democrats from throughout the state will attend. Arrangements are in charge, of District Chairman George Wagner, Japser, and Vice-Chairman Gertha Powers. Ollie Reeves, president of the Evansville school board, will be toastmaster. INSTALLATION IS SLATED V. F. W. Chiefs Will Take Posts at Ceremony TonightColonel Shelby post. Veterans of Foreign Wars, will be instituted and ! first officers installed at a public ceremony in the Garfield park shelter house tonight at 8. Among the guests of honor will be Department Commander Charles Michaels, District Commander Carl Cary and Major H. A. Green.

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Upper Right—Dorothy Jane Lewis, 439 Hampden drive, is shown giving “Doc” Robinson, 3137 Park avenue, a light for the cigarets. which incidentally she bought for him. No, it is no masculine dream of paradise, but part of the Butler university co-eds’ program to pay back their escorts for services rendered during the year. Upper Left—Cecil (Pete) Ray, Butler football captain and half back enjoys the soda for which Johnny Hennessey’s young sister, Jane Hennessey, 340 East Maple road, has paid. Below—While they are willing, and even eager, to buy gasoline for Bert Ferrara, Clinton, Ind., the co-eds take their customary position in the rumble seat. Alice Ruth Johnson, 2258 North Meridian street, is the “pay-off.”

Journalistic Sorority to Foot Sills at Campus Dance Friday. Something of a miracle has struck Butler university, at least in the minds of the male students, for Friday night they will be the guests of generous coeds at the "Riter’s Roundup,” sponsored by Theta Sig-

Fletcher Trust 20-Year Workers Given Gold Pins

Old Timers Organize Club at City Financial Institution. New problems in human relationships resulting from national adjustment were stressed last night by William H. Remy, former prosecutor, before the Fletcher Trust Men’s Club. He spoke on “Public Relations in Banking.” Pupils of the State School for the Blind, directed by Clive Kiler, violin instructor, and Mabel Leive, piano instructor, gave a muscal program. Formation of aFletcher Trust Twenty-Year Club was announced by Rex Young, men’s club presdent. Gold pins were presented to employes who had served the company twenty years or more. Those honored were L. A. Beunnagel. Mr. Young. Harry L. Weber, Albert S. Johnson, A. L. Riggsbee, William B. Schiltges. Charles E. Herin, Burt Richardson, Leland Crawford, Robert B. Kershaw, LITTLE HOPE GIVEN INJURED GYM PUPIL Noblesville Boy Breaks Back at High School. Bp United Prrxx NOBLESVILLE, Ind., Jan. 17 Fred White, 16, senior at Fishers high school, was given little chance to recover today after breaking his back in the school gymnasium yesterday. He is in the Hamilton county hospital partially paralyzed. He was injured doing gymnastic work, TRUSTEE IS SPEAKER Miss Hannah Noone to Talk at Little Flower Event. Miss Hannah Noone. Center township trustee, will address the men of Little Flower parish Friday night at 8. Musical entertainment will be furnished by Harry Bason. Vaughn Cornish and other WKBF staff artists. The pastor, the Rev. Charles Duffev, also will speak. Messrs. John Noonan, John Spaulding, John Remmetter and Pat Mannix will be installed as officers of the Little Flower Men’s Club for 1934. *Y’ HEAD WILL SPEAK India to Be Topic at Altrusa Club Meeting on Friday. Harry M. White Y. M. C. A. secretary, will speak on "What Is India Trying to Do?” before the Altrusa Club Friday night in the Columbia Club. Mr. White formerly was connected with the Y. M. C. A. in India.

Phlldrens Colds Yield quicker to double action of Ha visas

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

ma Phi, women’s professiona' journalistic sorority. Long-time sufferers of dating expenses, tjie men will have the satisfaction of sitting back Friday night while the pampered lassies dig deep in their purses ror all bills incurred in the evening’s entertainment. Giving reverse English to the feminine beauty contests, the coeds will choose the most popular man on the campus. He will receive a loving cup, symbolical of his popularity.

Evans Woollen Sr., Lawrence A. Wiles, Roy H. Moore, John Luack Sr., Sylvester G. Kasberg, Francis A. Ohleyer and Harold B. Tharp. Women employes honored included Katherine L. Reasoner, Clara Johanning, Lillian Reinfels, Iza Williamson, Stella Colman, Emily M. Gammans, Elizabeth Vietmeyer Hill and Claudia Shields.

Hastily BBBf ie f amous Varis skin specialist. Read IHUBH about this typical case! : 'iv-;' W llilßiHH TJF.LOW. one of the best known must therefore be corrected."* : : £> dermatologists (skin specialists) And he adds: —"I advi.p people suffrr in France describes an all-foo-typi- ing from constipation and din affections i' cal rase of skin trouble .. . tells IIOW to add to their diet a remarkable food quickly he corrected it! yeast. Its purifying action on the intestines s ‘ ,)r - 1 40,1 Mufna £ el is 1 aureate of is the surest corrector for skin eruptions the Paris Faculty of Medicine and that I kno*. • : IVL Ancien Chef de Clinique of the great So. if your skin is broken out in Saint-I.oiiis Hospital. Me states: "A telltale blemishes —or if jour health *?,- vMPc S poor complexion is usually a sign of is “run-down” in any wax—read the ffe %' poisons in the system. The cause of case below very carefully. Read this the trouble—sluggish intestines— w hole advertisement! TJETOULD YOU LIKE to get rid of —^ ▼ V pimples —boils —skin eruptions? jißßt ~gy ■HEKafI& spPPI.. 1 Thousands have—this way:— A, Fach dav . regularly, thev eat T calcs of pEß|p|fc§i 'i&jjSßmEßk pk Yeast. as directed on the label. s |^ I Faten dailv. Fleischmann's least m?MMa I \ I> -Wk exerts an amazing effect on intestines. EB mßEsm? & 'J$?. ■ ■ ~$ 'Pi It “tones” them. It softens the body's M|K BBBBEsT C, Then, as jour svstem is purified, ' /j W A cleaner blood flows through v our veins. Bjj^" You feel so energetic. \nd those hor- , tS? rid skin blemishes ' erv soon / ■Bjffl? begin to disappear: /***/' You can get Fleischmann's f o nu! 1 o S ri!ir 1’ **//J “THIS PATlENT,”report*Dr.Hufnagel, “SHE STATED SHE HAD BEEN SUBJECT for ”IN THREE WEEKS her erscuatrina were nor. ana L; at grocers, restaurants, Myfca&C a MT ‘‘—Mile. D.— had persistent furunculoU year*, off and on, to constipation. The X-ray mal. Her tkin eruption* rapidly dried up and no soda fountains. Try it HOW. (boll#) and pimples on face and neck. Her showed that her intestines wereclojljlpd and weak- other* appeared in their place. Her headaches yfeyVWr completion was muddy. She also said ened from the harsh laxative* which she had been disappeared and her digestion and appetite tntBrantf i— w ahe augered from acme headachw tfigyelptg preagiped eating yanat ~ , proved vastly ... Utr complexion became clear. 1= • .eflr • u •. * 4 > -

OLD HICKORY CLUB TO STAGE RALLY FEB. 1 Andrew J. Bruce Chairman of Committee. Andrew J. Bruce is chairman of the general committee on arrangements for the funfest to be staged by the Old Hickory Club at Tom-

linson hall Thursday night, Feb. 1, and is overseeing the work of ten subcommittees planning the details of what is promised to be the most elaborate entertainment ever staged by the veteran D e m o c ratic organization. The event w’ill be on a par with a three-ring circus, according to

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Mr. Bruce, and will start at 7 at night and continue until midnight. There will be professional vaudeville acts, a big troupe of clowns, old fiddlers, square dances and many other diversions, and starting at 9 a modern dance orchestra will provide music for dancing. Many of the entertainment features will be in the nature of surprises, it is announced. Sidney Jerome has been engaged to enroll the talent, all of which will be professional, it is stated.' UNION IS SLAIN Kansas City Carpenters’ Official Shot During Meeting. By Z’nitcd Press KANSAS CITY, Mo., Jan. 17.—J. M. Stubblefield, central figure in local carpenters’ union circles, was assassinated as he answered a telephone while attending a meeting here last night. Frank Lauchner, union carpenter, was arrested early today at his home and held for investigation in connection with the shooting. Girl's Leg Broken by Auto Marie Delaney, 8, of 39 South Tremonth street, suffered a broken right leg when she was struck by an automobile at Addison and Washington streets late yesterday. She was taken to St. Vincent’s hospital. Earl Anderson, 53 North Holmes avenue, driver of the car, was not held.

THOUSANDS DIE IN INDIA QUAKE; TOWNS RUINED Famine and Disease Face Survivors of Major Disaster. By United Press CALCUTTA, India, Jan. 17. Cities, villages and hill stations over a wide area of north central India were devastated today, their populations scattered or seeking dead in the ruins of their homes, after an earthquake that had reached the proportions of a major disaster. Airplanes that surveyed the quake area brought a story of a country prostrated, thousands of its buildings crumbled, whole towns under water, bodies lying in streets, buried in ruins, or floating down streams toward the sea. Captain Frederick Dalton, member of an air circus, who piloted the first plane to penetrate the area, said he believed the dead must total between 8,000 and 10,000. Threat of famine and disease, age-old enemies of crowded India, faced survivors who still were cut off from ordinary communication.

OHIO CO. DEMOCRATS TO SUPPORT RICKETTS •\ Jurist Seeks State Supreme Court Judgeship. William D. Ricketts, Risrng Sun, Seventh judicial circut judge, will be supported in the race for Democratic nomination for state supreme court judge in the state convention in June, by the Ohio county Democratic organization, it was announced today. Judge Ricketts will be a candidate for the post now held by Judge David A. Meyers, Greensburg, the only elective Republican in the statehouse. The Rising Sun candidate is serving his third terms as circuit judge, having been unopposed either for the nomination or election in 1932. U. OF M. CLUB WILL HONOR PROFESSORS Organization to Hold Luncheon Friday at Lincoln. The University of Michigan Club of Indianapolis will entertain Edson R. Sunderland, U. of M. legal research professor, and Dean Herbert Goodrich, Pennsylvania law school, at a luncheon Friday in the Lincoln. Dean Goodrich, former U. of M. faculty member, and Professor Sunderland are on the program of the Indiana Bar Association midwinter meeting Friday. Committee arranging the luncheon includes Victor R. Jose Jr., chairman; Frank H. Davis, Herman Kothe, George E. Palmer, Mark H. Reasoner and E. O. Snethen. Albert J. Wohlgemuth is alumni president.

Mr. Bruce

FREE PUBLIC HEALTH LECTURES HEAR DR. L. SHANKLIN Lincoln Hotel, Parlor 1305 Tonight, Twice Daily, 2:30-8 P. M. Applied Psychology, Metaphysics. Food Chemistrv. Chemical Type of People. PRIZES! WELCOME!

Bars —2 Kinds Love for Jazz Strains Lead to Jail.

HIS confessed love for the haunting lilt of jazz melodies led Robert Grevheart. 25. Negro, 546 Torbett street, to the city prison yesterday. Hanging on to the fire escape of the Palm Gardei\. 145 North Illinois street, listening to the whispering strain of a waltz, he was apprehended by a police squad, who heard his plea with unappreciative ears. The reason was that Sam Koby, restaurant manager, had reported some overcoats missing from the checkroom.

m^GRAs iy new Vm ]||f, ORLEANS $ X $7270 TOUR A—Pullmans from TOUR B —Pullmans en route fr MATTOON, EFFINGHAM or MATTOON, EFFINGHAM or LOUISVILLE for the entire trip LOUISVILLE, Hotel in New Orlea ALL EXPENSES FROM INDIANAPOLIS including the Beautiful Mississippi GULF COAST Banish every worry. Revel in the joyous care' free realm of make'beheve, America's supreme carnival. Six days of merriment. Join Illinois | Central’s sixteenth Mardi Gras party, to the gayest and greatest of festivals. Combined Mardi Gras-Mexieo tour. Two weeks of thrills —three days in New Orleans Other features —six days in Mexico City, $207-60 and up during from Indianapolis. Mardi Gres All tours leave February 11th. Pan-American Air Races New Low Roil Fares are in effect every February 9 to 13 and day to all the sunny south. Pullman sur dedication Shushan Air- charge is abolished —saving one-third, port. Horse Racing daily except Sunday. Visit TWO FINE TRAINS DAILY French Quarter, famous THE CREOLE and THE LOUISIANB restaurants, and other CALL OR PHONB interesting spots. ILLINOIS CENTRAL TRAVEL SBRVICH 1 429 Merchants Bank Bldg., 1 South Meridian St. Phonea Lincoln 43 14-43 15, Indianapolis, Ind. r .-..USE THIS COUPON--I P. R CHANGNON, Commercial Agent I Illinois Central System, 429 Merchants Bank Building ! 1 South Meridian Street, Indianapolis, Ind. Please send, without cost to me, complete information about Mardi Grass □ Tour A Q Tour B □ Combined Mardi Gras-Meuco tour. ....... ....... ... j Street Addre55......................... .......... ! c 53 J City ......... State ...

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TRY A WANT AD IN THE TIMES.