Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 21, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 June 1934 — Page 3
JUNE 5, 1934.
LAST RITES ARE SET TODAY FOR ‘CHICVIACKSON Further Service to Be Held Tomorrow at Muncie for Artist. Last rites for Charles B. (Chic) Jackson, creator of the Roger Bean comic strip, were to be held at 2 today in the Hisey & Titus funeral home. Dr. William F. Rothenburger, Third Christian church pastor, will officiate. Following the service the body will be taken to Muncie, where services will be held at 10 tomorrow morning. Burial will be in Beech Grove cemetery there. Mr. Jackson died of a heart attacK as he was leaving the offices of the Indianapolis Star Sunday. He had been associated with the Star twenty-one years. Dugan Rites Tomorrow Final services for Kenneth Dugan, 24, captain of the Indiana university baseball team, will be held in the home of his mother, Mrs. C. C. Nave, 5401 Central avenue, at 8:30 tomorrow morning and at 9 in the St. Joan of Arc Catholic church. Pallbearers will be members of the university baseball team. Mr. Dugan was injured fatally when an automobile in which he was riding with three other students, overturned on East Thirty-eighth street Sunday. Mathilda Bakemeyer Rites Funeral services for Mrs. Mathilda E. Bakemeyer, who died Sunday, will be held at 2 tomorrow afternoon in her home, 1340 North Dearborn street. Burial will be in Concordia cemetery. She is survived by two daughters, Mrs. Harry Steinsberger and Miss Clara Bakemeyer; a sister, Mrs. Amelia Heger, and a brother, William Holtman, all of Indiaanpolis. Mrs. Celia Joseph Dies Mrs. Celia O. Joseph, 66, died yesterday in the home of her daughter, Mrs. Morris Dee, 5421 Washington boulevard, after a short illness. Mrs. Joseph came to this city fifteen years ago and was a member of the Indianapolis Hebrew Congregation. She is survived by the daughter, a son, Edgar S. Joseph, and two sisters. Mrs. Sig Schilling, Butte, Mont., and Miss Blanche Oppenheimer, New York. Funeral services will be held at 4 tomorrow in the residence. ANNUAL IS RECEIVED BY SHORTRIDGE STUDENTS John Ewbank Is Editor of Yearly Publication. The Shortridge high school year book, the “Annual,” was issued to the Shortridge students yesterday. The book was edited by John Ewbank, who was chosen as editor by the seniors in an election held last fall. His assistants were Aline Bailey, liner editor; Charles Huston, copy editor; Edward Brown, boys’ sports; Elnore Hopwood, girls’ sports, and Marynette Hiatt, club editor. The faculty sponsors were Joel Hadley, assistant principal, and class sponsor; Miss Katherine Allen, literary sponsor; John Kuebler, publication; George Crossland, business sponsor, and Miss Essie Long, art sponsor. The printing was done in the Shortridge print shop. This year’s “Annual” was dedicated to Emmett A. Rice, assistant principal. Mr. Rice has been with Shortridge since 1917. He was a ■former member of the history department. URGE K. OF C. TO WAR ON INDECENT MOVIES Speakers Also Ask Aid for Gibault Home; Officers Elected. Support for the Gibault home, Roman Catholic institution for delinquent boys at La Porte, and war on indecent movies were urged on the Knights of Columbus here yesterday in the thirty-third annual state convention. Speakers included the Most Rev. Joseph Elmer Ritter, bishop of Indianapolis; retiring State Deputy John P. O'Donnell; the Rev. Edward Mungovan, Hammond, state chaplain; the Rev. Michael Gorman, Gibault home director; William J. Mooney Sr., treasurer of the home, and Mike Stepanic, La Porte. Officers chosen for the coming year were Otho D. Dorsey, La Porto, state deputy; Gilbert Powell, New Albany, secretary; Matthew Young, Hammond, treasurer; Gerald Olvaney, Michigan City, advocate; Charles W. Biltz, Tipton, warden. CHURCH FETE PLANNED Southport Presbyterians to Visit McAfee, Ky„ for Ceremony. A delegation from the Southport Presbyterian church here will travel to McAfee, Ky., this week-end for the celebration there Saturday and Sunday of the sesquicentennial of the New Providence Presbyterian church, “mother church” of the local congregation. The visit will return that of a delegation from the McAfee church which came here last fall when the Southport church celebrated its centenary. AIR OFFICIAL PROMOTED William H. Roose Named Local Airways Representative. William H. Roose, formerly assistant local representative of American Airways, Inc., here, has been promoted to local representative to succeed Ted E. Griffin, transferred to Louisville, Ky. Greece Orders 16 Ships By United Press ATHENS, June s.—Greece joined the rearmament movement today when the government introduced a bill in parliament for sixteen destroyers of 1,600 tons each. Alliance Francaise to Elect Alliance Francaise will elect officers at the organization’s last meeting of the year at 8 Thursday night in the Washington. Dinner willl be served at 6:30.
Proud Parents of Quintuplets Dazed by Sudden Fame, $50,000 World Fair Offer
It’s No Easy Task to View World-Famous Infants, Reporter Finds. BY HELEN ALLYN Times Special Writer NORTH BAY, Ontario., June 5. —After waiting here twentyfour hours, I have seen the worldfamous Dionne quintuplets. They are tiny, wrinkled, and red, but every one is perfectly normal. Covered to their chins with soft woolen blankets, they look like any new born babes, but their nurse told me their bodies, are pitifully thin. When Byron Filkins, the photographer who flew the six hundred miles from Cleveland, and I arrived at the ramshackle old frame house, Dr. A. R. Dafoe kindly, but firmly, refused to let any one see the infants then. He promised, though, that if we would wait a day, we could get just a short peek at the famous infants. Saw Tiny Babies After waiting on the porch while the doctor made sure everything was all right, he ushered us into the plain boarded bedroom where the pretty 25-year-old mother is lying. She speaks only French, but she waived us a friendly greeting and pointed to her “new” family. I was allowed to look through the glass at the three tiniest babies which are in the incubator. To show us the other two, Nurse Yvonne Larous carefully lifted back two woolen blankets covering the clothes basket for just a second and then quickly pulled the blankets back again. “Were doin;r our very best," Dr. Dafoe told me, “to keep these girls from catching pneumonia. That’s why we allow few people to look at them.” As the photographer stood ready, the real heroine of the event, Mrs. Elzire Dionne, talked happily with the nurse in French, apparently not worried in the slightest. Rabbits Feet, Too Her eyes sparkled as she pointed to the tiny pink blanket, several outfits of baby clothes and even three rabbits’ feet that have been sent to her by interested Ontario people. “We need nothing,” she had the nurse interpret to me, “every one has been so kind. I’m sure we will be far better off with ten children than we were with five.” Out in the big bare kitchen, a huge black iron tea kettle boils constantly. When a little of the water is used, the hired girl quickly pours in more and puts more wood on the fire. On another part of the stove, a double-boiler always is in use, sterilizing the tiny eye-droppers with which the nurse feeds the babes their bi-hourly rations and other instruments needed in their care. Keep It Secret When the nurses and doctor finally asked us to leave, Dr. Dafoe said, “Don’t tell any one in the whole dominion that you saw the babies, or we’ll be swamped with requests.” Then we went out to the barnyard to have a talk with the father. We found him still in a daze over the sudden increase in his family. When he talks about his children, he calls them the “new family and the “old” family. After spending a day with promoters from the World’s fair, who hope to exhibit the babies in Chicago this summer, the 31-year-old father didn’t know which way to turn. “They offered me $50,000,” he told me, “but the doctor says it may mean the death of at least one child. What am I to do?” “Whichever way I guess, it would be wrong.” Some of his neighbors have told the father that if he doesn’t sign the contract he’s crazy. Others tell him no amount of money on earth is worth the risk of transporting the babies. SIOO a Week Mr. Dionne left all arrangements to the priest from Corbiel, who later told me that a contract has been signed and that the Dionnes will get SIOO a week until they go to the fair and $250 a week for the time they are there. Up here in the country, such a sum is comparable to almost millions in a city. Mr. Dionne told me he slaves ail year to clear SIOO on his farm. “Then that goes for taxes,” he says. Even the doctor admits the problem of whether or not to accept this $50,000 offer has a different aspect when viewed from this locality. “Death of a baby in these parts isn’t taken so hard. They save all they can, but a child is seldom mourned. There are too many of them,” he declared. Town Still Excited Nevertheless, Dr. Dafoe insists that while the babies are under his care, they are not going anywhere —regardless of fabulous offers of money. “If the father doesn’t want to follow my good sense,” he told me, “I’ll see to it that the Canadian government steps in.” Newspaper men and photographers have flocked to the backwoods shack from all parts of Canada and several United States cjties. The whole town is excited with the prospect of so many out-of-town visitors. Flames Near Babies By United Press NORTH BAY, Ont., June 5. Clouds of smoke hovering over burnt timberlands a mile from the rough home of Mr. and Mrs. Oliva Dionne today added another element of danger in the fight to save the lives of their quintuplet daughters, born eight days ago. The determined fight to keep the babies alive, complicated by signs of yellow jaudice yesterday, appeared a step nearer victory. Not only have traces of the disease disappeared, but Baby Marie, smallest and ewakest—she weighs but one pound ten ounces—showed slight improvement.
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Under the glass top of an old-fashioned incubator sent them from Chicago, three of the famous Dionne quintuplets are seen above taking their ease. Despite slight attacks of colic, all five of this unusual brood are believed by Dr. A. R. Dafoe to have an even chance to survive if they can weather the first three weeks.
BROAD RIPPLE GRADUATES 53 Commencement Is Held at City School; Dr. Benson Is Speaker. The American educational program makes for better citizenship and a more stable outlook, graduates of Broad Ripple high school were told last night by Dr. John G. Benson, Methodist hospital superintendent, at their commencement exercises in the Butler university field house. Diplomas were awarded to the following by Schools Superintendent Paul C. Stetson: Margaret Albert, Mary Alley, Ellen Ammerman, Elsie Applegate, John Barnett, Gladys Blanton, John Bowen, John Brittenbach, Ona Butler, Edward Campbell, Alberta Clark, Morris Conly, Margery Davis, Fairetta DeVault, Ledward Drullinger, Eleanor Earle, Dorothy Elliott, Ruth Ferris, Matilda Fischer, Helen Fisher, Paul Fisher, Ruth Glaubke, Dorothy Golden, Margaret Graham, Calvin Grimme, Mary Jane Hennessey, Charles Herrin. Mary Jean Hoffmeyer, Henry Hohlt, Imogene Kopp, Jack McAnally, Maxwell McCord, Wreatha McKelvey, Jack Perkins, Alice Remy, Vernon Reynolds, Virgie Reynolds, Thomas Robertson, Theckla Roetter, Dan Rowland, Fred Sampsell, Harry Schoeneman, Mildred Scott, Jean Sheard, Donald Simmons, Josephine Skelly, Paul Spaulding, Dorothy Steinmeier. Janet Sutherland, Phil Wagoner, Melvin Ward, Gilbert Weis and John Yelvington.
HEAT ‘GETS’ GOLFER; NOW HE MUST BUY NEW CLUB, TEE BOX
The heat wave’s best story thus far came out ofr the park department office today, and it had to do with a golfing gentleman who went completely berserk on the Pleasant Run municipal course Sunday. This gentleman missed the ball completely on a vital stroke. Then the heat got him and he went into action. He not only broke the offending club, but also he demolished the tee box, receptacle for sand and water. Finally, he tore up and splintered a small fence near the tee. His friends calmed him after the fence had been sacrificed. The game was resumed. A course attendant came running. Tne attendant reported to Arthur Lockwood, golf superintendent. Mr. Lockwood reported to Parks Superintendent A. C. Sallee. Mr. Sallee and Mr. Lockwood agreed that the golfer should pay for his damage or else be barred from the city’s courses. • • Yesterday was cooler and the man paid up. Noted Playwright Is Dead By United Press RUTHERFORD, N. J., June 5. Funeral services were planned today for Arthur Henry, 67, author and playwright, who died at his Narragansett, R. 1., summer home yesterday after a heart attack. Phi Gamma Delta to Meet Members of the Indianapolis graduate chapter of Phi Gamma Delta will hold their June meeting at 6 Thursday night in the Athenaeum. Floyd Call is in charge of the arrangements.
Delicious New Gum Has Important Health Benefits ' “ORBIT” VITAMIN “D” GUM Aids Digestion... Fights Tooth Decay... Improves the Appetite. Builds Strong Bones in Children. Vitamin “D”, Lacking in Every-Day Foods, Now Within Reach of All.
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Administering milk to such mites of humanity with an eye-dropper requires careful skill, but Dr. A. R. Dafoe and his assisting nurse patiently labor to keep the Dionnes’ new quintuplets lusty and strong.
MANUAL HOLDS COMMENCEMENT Six John H. Holiday Jr. Scholarships Are Awarded. Commencement exercises for Manual Training high school were held last night in Cadle tabernacle with Dr. William G. Spencer, Franklin college president, as principal speaker. Diplomas were presented to graduates by Russell Wilson, school commissioner. Principal E. H. Kemper McComb announced awards of six scholarships through the John H. Holiday Jr. scholarship foundation, a memorial to a Manual graduate killed in the World war. Norma Hall and Martin O’Neill received scholarships to Indiana university; Thelma Lavrenz and Wilma Williams, Butler university; Esther Stotler, Indiana Central college, and John Hayes, Rose Polytechnic institute. William Goldstein received the Riley medal for excellent scholarship throughout high school. DELEGATES NAMED FOR CREDIT PARLEY City to Be Represented at Los Angeles Meeting. A delegation of Indianapolis credit men will leave this week for the National Association of Credit Men’s convention in Los Angeles, June 11 to 15. Fred J. Hamerin, newly-elected president of the Indianapolis association, will head the party. Mr. Hamerin is credit manager of the Lilly Varnish Company. Other new officers of the city association are Paul Stokes, first vice-president; M. D. Fields, second vice-president, and William B. Schiltges, treasurer. Merrit Fields continues as executive manager.
LIONS CLUB TO MEET Report on State Session to Be Heard Tomorrow. Report of the state Lions Club state convention, which opened Sunday in Marion, will be heard at the local Lions Club luncheon tomorrow in the Washington. NRA CHIEF CONFERS WITH STEEL RARON Johnson Uses Caution in Seeking Peace Basis. By United Press WASHINGTON, June s.—General Hugh S. Johnson was negotiating cautiously today, seeking a basis for settlement of the steel strike threat. The NRA administrator, who had a lengthy conference with President William W. Irvin of the United States Steel Company yesterday, was expected to announce the trend of developments today. The growing seriousnes of the strike threat was emphasized by union representatives, who asserted that if the government did not take action they were prepared for a finish fight.
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SUICIDE THREAT IS HURLED BY AXMURDERER Father of Louis Payne Will Comfort Son in Jail at Los Angeles. By United Press LOS ANGELES, June 5. —Shielded from prying eyes, a grief-stricken father was to face his son in county jail here today, seeking an explanation of what prompted the latter to hack his mother and brother to death with a scout ax. No curious spectators were to look on as Lucius F. Payne, St. Louis utilities executive, greeted 21-year-old Louis Rude Payne, in their first meeting since the youth's murderous rampage destroyed the remaining members of their family Mrs. Carrie L. Payne, 46, and Robert, 14. The elder Payne, flying here, was scheduled to arrive at 8 a. m. Louis awaited his father with nervous expectancy. The youth, who attributed his brutal act to a fevered brain, paced . the narrow confines of his cell. Throughout the night guards watched him closely in fear of a suicide attempt. • Threatens Suicide “You’d better put me in a strong cell with good lights,” he told them after he confessed. “And have some one watching me all the time.” “Suicide?” an officer inquired. “Anything—anything,” he groaned. Watchers said he slept fitfully, tossing and gibbering in his sleep. Once he cried out, “Mother!” Police hoped his father would be able to extract a full motive from him, one more satisfactory than his explanation that he became enraged over a “series of little things.” One of the “little things” alluded to in his confession was that his mother was penurious in allowing him only a dollar a week spending money. Slaying Reason Mystery The prisoner professed an undying love for his mother when officers sought a motive. “I don't know, I don’t know,” he repeated. “I had such respect for my mother. I loved her.” Then he would show spasms of remorse. Suddenly his answer would change. “I had dizzy spells in the head,” he moaned. “And pains in my stomach—here.” % Girls never interested him, he insisted. “I never cared about necking,” he said. Officers were considering taking him to the Payne home in Westwood Hills and have h:n repeat his story of the slayings. SOUND MONEY GROUP TO WIDEN ACTIVITIES Executives to Frame Policy Here Tomorrow. The executive committee of the Indiana Sound Money Association will meet tomorrow in the Columbia Club to discuss broadening the scope of the association’s work because of what is described as unusual interest in the association’s program. Will G. Irwin, Columbus, heads the committee, on which Indianapolis members are Arthur V. Brown, James F„ Carroll, James W. Fesler, John R. Kinghan and Nicholas H. Noyes. In the immediate past, its field representative, H. Weir Cook, has established contacts in thirteen cities and towns with two visits scheduled for this week. SPAAN SPENT $952.92 IN PRIMARY ELECTION Engelke Expended $1,249.60 and Schlosser $1,361.78. Late filings of campaign expenses in the May primary election with County Clerk Glenn B. Ralston showed that Ralph M. Spaan, G. O. P. candidate for criminal court judge, spent $952.92. John F. Engelke, candidate for juvenile judge on the Republican ticket, spent $1,249.60. On the Democratic side, Chalmer Schlosser, for judge of superior court five, spent $1,361.78.
SHIRTLESS, BUT—
She “lost her shirt” in his stocks, but Mary McCormick still thinks Samuel Insull “is the grandest guy walking around today.” This was the opinion the opera singer expressed when, as shown here, she arrived in New York from a concert tour abroad.
ST. AGNES TO GRADUATE 57 Exercises Set for Friday in Cathedral High; Bishop to Speak. Commencement exercises for fiftyseven seniors of St. Agnes academy will be held at 8 Friday night in Cathedral high school auditorium. Miss Mary Catherine Bowman, class president, will give the address. Bishop Joseph E. Ritter will speak. The graduates include; Emma Lou Bachelder, Margaret Arm | Barragry. Anna Lucille Barry. Veronica Barton, Dorothy Louise Bechert, Marv Elizabeth Berling. Mary Catherine Bowman, Jane Briggs. Dorothy Butler. Helen Winifred Cochran. Anita Katharine Davis. Rosemary Ann Delaney. Eleanor Ottilia Dietz, Margaret Dowd. Katherine Fitzgerald. Mrv Elizabeth Fitzpatrick. Eleanor Jane Flaherty. Geraldine Marie Flaherty. Antoinette Geiger, Mary Josephine Goodlet, Elfreda Grande. Catherine Marie Hanrahan. Martha Hayes. Marie Cecelia Hegartv. Mary Anne Hoffman, Kathryn Louise Keene. Alice Jean Kelleher, Mary Frances Kennedy. Mary Josephine Kennedy. Blanche Virginia Kernel. Catherine Rose Kirkhoff. Rosemary Klein, Kathryn Cornelia Leich, Mary Elizabeth Lime. Mary Elizabeth McGuire. Eleanor Louise McNamara, Katheryn Susanna M;rill, Elizabeth Ann Murphy. Helen Virginia Murphy. Rosemary Louise Noll. Dorothy Joan Reed. Ann Katherine Reilly. Regina Lois Reilly. Teresa Agnes Ring. Marie Kathryn Rivers. Agnes Roach, Margaret Rohr. Margaret Rose Salladav. Virginia Lucille Schmidt. Marv Jane Schmitt. Dorothy Virginia Shepperd. Mary Josephine Slupeskv, Dorothy Edith Toolin. Ann Dolores Turpin. Anne Vittetau, Marie Josephine Warren. Dana Elizabeth Wilking. AIR MAIL BILL UNDER ATTACK BY C. OF C. Limiting of Operations Scored by Borinstein and Cox. Limiting of operations of air mail contractors, incorporated in the senate air mail bill, were protested yesterday by Louis J. Borinstein, Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce president, and Charles E. Cox, municipal airport superintendent. Mr. Borinstein and Mr. Cox sent telegrams to Senator Frederick Van Nuys and Representative Louis Ludlow urging the objectionable features be eliminated on the basis that it would injure air mail facilities in Indianapolis. Efforts are being made by the Chamber of Commerce aviation division to obtain overnight air mail service between Kansas City and New York. 7 KILLED - IN EXPLOSION Oklahoma Men Blown to Bits in Dynamite Blast. By United Press NORMAN, Okla., June s.—Seven men were dead today as an outgrowth of an explosion of a dynamite magazine near here. So terrific was the blast that bodies of the victims, blown to bits, were scattered 300 yards across a field. All were members of a seismograph sounding crew. They were preparing dynamite.
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NRA TO FACE NEW CRISIS IN STEELUNREST Workers Have 42-Year-Old Tradition of Fighting for Rights. By United Press WASHINGTON, June s.—This week the government comes up against its hardest labor problem—the threatened steel strike. Labor in this industry has a forty-two-year-old tradition of fighting for what it wants. Steel workers started fighting for recognition in 1892, and received their baptism of fire at Homestead in 1919 and 1920. They understand from bitter experience the technique of industrial war, the dangers they face from civil authorities dominated by steel mills, from coal and iron police, from paid labor spies in their own ranks. The steel strikes of 1919 started when wages were cut at the end of the war. The men and women knew that their employers had made profits averaging 20.2 per cent a year for the past four years. They were working, on an average, 68.7 hours a week. Some worked on twenty-four-hour shifts. Pay Is Inadequate There were about 500,000 steel workers at that time. A survey made later by the federal council of the Churches of Christ in America showed that 32 per cent did not earn enough ‘ to keep their families at the minimum subsistence level for a family of five as found by government departments. When the strike was over—and lost—the government made an es-n fort to have the twelve-hour dayi in steel abolished. It failed. From that time until passage of the recovery act the Amalgamated Association of Iron, Steel and Tin Workers was little more than a name. But even before the old union had a chance to congratulate itself that at last the government was guaranteeing the right of collective bargaining, the steel mill owners marshaled their forces against it. Industry Hurls Challenge The industry flung down its challenge through Robert P. Lamong, speaking for the American Iron and Steel Institute, it warned that if its position were not protected in the bill “the intent and purpose of the bill can not be accomplished.” It threw down another challenge when it prepared a steel code and laid it before NRA. This document had a section providing for organization of company unions and stating that collective bargaining would be carried on in no other way. NRA refused to approve the code with that section in it, but when it was stricken out Mr. Lamong said “it should be understood that omission of the section does not imply any changes in the attitude of the industry.” Labor won an eight-hour day, ! averaged over fixed periods, through I the steel code, and wage cuts have been restored. But recognition of the union and collective bargaining are as far away as they were a year ago. Fair Election Promised Steel mills have arranged to hold company-union elections June 11 and 15, at which workers’ representatives for "bargaining” are to be selected. President Roosevelt, in renewing the steel code last week, promised that workers would have a chance to vote at elections "under the supervision of an appropriate governmental agency.” It was not made clear whether the government plans to act in connection with the stee 1 mill elections set for next week. The government is already engaged in a court battle with Weirton Steel Company over this very issue —and has lost the first round. That’s the way things stand as the week—certain to make history in steel—begins. Twenty Buried in Mountain Slide By United Press BUCHAREST. Rumania, June 5. Twenty peasants were reported buried by a mountain slide near Oraten today while walking * and singing along the road on their way to work.
