Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 39, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 June 1934 — Page 6
PAGE 6
BEAUTY BARES LOVE SCENES IN PREMIER'S HOME Quotes Canadian Official as Saying He ‘Needed Her as a Pal/ I ttifrrt Prrtm EDMONTON. Alberta. June 26 Vivian MacMillan, beautiful Xl-year-oid stenographer. continued the story of h*T alleged clandestine amours with John E. Brownlee. 50. prime minister of Alberta province, from the witness box today. She was testifying in her suit against Brownlee in which she and her father allege the statesman seduced her on threat of depriving her of a government job The seduction, she charged, took place in Brownlee's home. Plajnly embarrassed. Miss MacMiilan said Brownlee had induced her to come from her home in Edon, where her father had been mayor, to take a government job. Bhe stayed at his home. “He said he needed me as a pal because his wile was an invalid and that I should do what he wanted out of gratitude to her for her kindness to me.” she said. Miss MacMillan # stated that Brownlee met her secretly while the rest of the family was asleep. She described being takm through the dark, silent house from her own room to one in which Brownlee's 18-year-old son was asleep. She was made to walk in unison with him. she said, so the footfalls would appear to be? made by one person. “I objected at first to going into the same room where his boy was asleep, but he overruled me," she said. Miss MacMillan said her alleged improper relations with Brownlee continued over a period of three years. She tried to break away, but he terrorized her. she said. Brownlee listened with immobile face. At his side was his wife. He has filed a counter claim against her and her father, alleging libel. He maintains the charge was instigated by his political opponents. CREEK IS DRAGGED FOR BODY: CLOTHING FOUND Boy, 9. May Have Drowned During Midnight Swim. Is Relief. Police are investigating the possibility of a drowning in Eagle creek beneath the Pennsylvania railroad bridge after finding the clothing of a 9-year-old boy left on tile bank early today. Four men who hal come to the creek to swim reported the ilothing to police, who learned that a group of boys had been swimming there about midnight. Police dragged the creek but could find no body. SHOT BY JEALOUS WIFE Angry Woman Held by Police; Man in Critical Condition. A wife’s jealous fury resulted in the critical injury of Walter Cantrel, 42. Negro, 438 Smith street, yesterday. His wife. Mrs. Marie Cantrel. is alleged to have shot him with a shotgun because she had seen him embrace another woman. Cantrel was sent to city hospital. Mrs. Cantrel was charged with assault and battery with intent to kill. PURDUE WORKER KILLED College Employe Electrocuted Fixing Transformer. F'l I niW Prrt* LAFAYETTE, Ind., June 26 George S. Rhoda. 48. an electrician for Purdue university, was electrocuted yesterday at the new agrieultural engineering building. A defective transformer carrying 2.200 volts was blamed.
Gone, but Not Forgotten
Automobiles reported to po.ice as stolen be long to; Char;*-* Andrr*s. R R. X. Danville Ind . Forr roadster. from 1421 East Washington atreet. C. Earl Rruner, ?< Wrst Ninth street Auburn sedan. R7-11*. from rear of 1102 North Illinois freer. Fowler Pennington, R R I. box 114 Plymouth sedan, from in front of 1011 User plare.
BACK HOME AGAIN
Stolen automobiles recovered by police belong to: T Lish filling station attendant at New York and Meridian streets Pontiac sedan, found at California and Washington atreets. _ . J C Mather. 327 Downier avenue. Ford coupe.' found at Ritter avenue and Washington afreet. City Woman Hurt in Collision Mrs. Bernard Beasley. 26. of 2836 Macpherson avenue, suffered an arm fracture vesterday when the automobile in which she was riding, driven by her husband. collided with parked car at Twenty-eighth street and Cornell avenue.
/ ON A STRENUOUS ROUND OF GOLF Camels taste mighty good. Even tiredness drops away! For Camels have a remarkable "energizing eftect.” And steady smokers find that Camel’s costlier tobaccos never jangle the nerves. '"Get a LIIS with a Camel !”
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Indiana in Brief Lively Spots in the State’s Happenings Put Together ‘Short and Sweet/
Hy Timrn Special * KOKOMO. June 26.—Formal opening of the Sterling Prosperity Club house set for July 13 and 14, will mark the advance of an unique experiment in the field of education for industrial workers. The club is composed of employes of the Reliance Manufacturing Company which has outlined a program of cultural education for the workers. The Griffin course has been chosen for the work. Miss Elizabeth Griffin has been here nearly six months organizing the educational project. There are twenty-two rooms in the club house, including a large ball room and a dimng room. The house is across the street from the Reliance factory and formerly was used by the company for office purposes.
a a a Suit Brings Reunion Hy / ime* Special LEBANON, June 26.—A suit of l clothes made in Lebanon has re- ; suited in the reunion of two friends 9 | after a separation of twenty-seven 1 years. The friends are Joe lacobelli and Dan Fusco, who were born in the same town in Italy. Mr. lacobelli came to America in 1907 and was followed a few months later by his friend, Mr. Fusco. For a time they worked together iu Anderson. Then Mr. lacobelli went to Franklin, and the other friend to Pennsylvania. Mr. Fusco, now located at Mansfield. 0., operates a cleaning and pressing business. A few days ago a suit of clothes bearing the lacobeili label was brought to the shop. “Wouldn't it be funny if that’s Joe,” Mr. Fusco remarked to his ] son. They decided to find out and came to Lebanort. Entering the lacobelli shop, they asked for jobs, not being recognized at first by the proprietor. It was Only when Mr. lacobelli inquired as to the names* of the applicants that his memory awoke. a a a Railroad Business Rises 1 By Time* Sprawl | MARION, June 26—Increased industrial activity is credited by agents of railroads serving Marion for increased freight business which at one time since April exceeded j by 100 per cent the volume for the same time last year. All roads also reported a marked increase in passenger traffic. a a a Divorce Sought Again By I nnex Special SEYMOUR, June 26 Meedy S. Blish. prominent in social and business life, here is again the defendant in a divorce suit filed by Mrs. Lorita B. Blish. who seeks a decree, SIO,OOO alimony and restoration of her maiden name. A few months ago a divorce suit involving the Blislies was tried in Monroe circuit court at Bloomington. and ending in a refusal to grant either party a decree. The second suit, filed in Jackson
circuit court here, alleges habitual drunkenness and association with immoral women. The wife charges hat while in an intoxicated condition the husband becomes involved in automobile wrecks and in consequence is a subject of notoriety. a a a Odd Accident Revealed lln 7 inn* special MARION, June 26.—Damages of $2,000 as a result of injuries incurred in an unusual manner are asked in a suit filed in Grant superior court by Miss Mary Stegemoller against the Central Indiana Gas Company. Miss Stegemoller was a passenger in an auomobile forced from the road by another machine. Two wheels of the car in which she was riding ran along a ditch for some distance, finally striking and breaking a gas pipe. As the engine of the car was started after the crash, the gas was ignited, setting the automobile on fire. Miss Stegemoller incurred burns on the face and a hand. ACCOUNTING PROCEDURE WILL BE CLUB'S TOPIC * New Treasury Department Tax Decisions to Be Discussed. Accounting procedure in making tax returns in accordance with recent treasury department decisions will be the topic before the Indiana Association of Certified Public Accountants’ luncheon Friday at the Columbia Club. Discussions will be led by George S. Olive, chairman of the association public affairs committee. Clarification of the treasury department circular 4422, dated Feb. 28, is expected. The decision provides that deductions for depreciation shall be “reasonable” and that burden of proof shall rest on the taxpayer. Boy Falls Into Well* Injured While playing in the yard of a vacant house at 143 McLean place yesterday, James Trilby, 6. of 137 McLean place, fell into a dry well. He was treated by a city hospital ambulance doctor for cuts and bruises.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
'FRANCE CLAMPS TIGHT EMBARGO ON U. S. FILMS 80 Movies in Six Months Is Limit; Mickey Mouse Escapes Ban. K<i Vnitro Prrtt PARIS, June 26.—A cold govern- | ment, determined to reduce the country’s unfavorable trade balance, made provision today to let MickeyMouse slip through a customs cordon so severe that American motion | picture men said it meant the “ex- ! tinction” in Fiance of their indus- | try. By special provision, it was de--1 creed that animated cartoons ! should continue to enjoy unre- : striated entrance and exhibition. So severe was tlm decree concerning films generally that Harold Smith, representative of American j producers, cabled Will Hays during | state department intervention to | save the American film trade in | France. An official decree prescribed that ! during the entire six months beI ginning July 1 only -ninety-four | films could be imported from foreign countries for “dubbing’’—for completion in me French language here. The same decree doubled the import duties on foreign films. Showing of nondubbed films, with their limited appeal, is restricted to five theaters in the Seine department, which is the Paris district, and ten elsewhere in ’ranee. The United States share of the ninety-four films to be admitted during the last half of the year was expected to be 85 per cent, or eighty films. Mr. Smith, discussing the decree, j said that it was the worst treatment ! United States producers ever had | experienced. Last year, France allowed 242 foreign films, and author- | ized English language films in five Paris theaters. PTench exhibitors had asked a quota of 325 films a | year. THRIFTY VAGRANT FINED ON DONOR'S COMPLAINT Kentuckian Explains He Was Saving Up for “Grub Stake.” Hungry enough to beg, but not i hungry enough to eat, Herschel Loy, j Lebanon, Kv., was convicted of va- [ gra'ncy and fined $lO yesterday In ! municipal court. E. R. Chamberlain, 1136 North Temple avenue, testified that after | giving Loy a dime on the" street 1 Saturday, he followed him past three restaurants and then called police. Loy, who had $4.45 in his pocket, said that he was gathering a “grub j stake” so that he would not have to beg for several days. Loy was remanded the Marion | county jail, w : here he will work out the fine at $1 a day.
The Theatrical World July Circus Month for Indianapolis, It Seems 1 Y WALTER D. HICKMAN
JULY seems to be circus month for Indianapolis as three days of next month will be devoted to circuses. The first circus to come in next month will be the Sam B. Dill three-ring circus with Tom Mix as the chief attraction. This circus will play four performances. The tent will be pitched on the first day, Friday, July 6, on the 'West Washington street circus grounds. On the following Saturday, the Dill circus moves to the grounds on East Tenth street near Linwood avenue. The next circus will be Ringling Brothers, which comes for two performances on Tuesday, July 31. Judging by the records of the Dill circus in various towms and cities this season. Tom Mix has the right to be proud of his popularity and box office record. Some people may think that the good old-afshioned western is a Indianapolis Tomorrow Retail Lumber and Building Material Code Authority, Claypool, all day. Kiwanis Club, luncheon, Columbia Club. Apartment Owners, luncheon, Washington. Lions Club, luncheon, Washington. Home Builders* dinner, Washington. Purdue Alumni Association,! luncheon, Severin. Twelfth District Legion, luncheon, : Board of Trade. Mutual Insurance Association, j luncheon, Columbia Club. Indiana 4-H Club, market lamb show. Union stockyards, all day. Cost Accountants, luncheon,* Washington.
I DANCE -fIJI Tonight 1 All Evening NAT GRIFFITH anil Hi IJ-Picne Orchestra at BROAI) RIPPLE PARK PAVILION Free Admission to Park
\V. Washing- E. 10th Street ton Street Near Showgrounds Linwood Ave. FRIDAY P SATURDAY l JULY U JULY / Tom mix Afln TOfW. HEADING -J&3§ggf SAffl B.DIIL6^4Tm tine CIRCUS, >¥| I CliMren * A TICKETS ON SALE CIRCUS DAYS AT THE CLAYPOOL PHARMACY TOM~MIX AND TONY WILL POSITIVELY PERFORM IN PERSON IN THE MAIN SHOW AT EVERY PERFORMANCE
DANCE SPONSOR
| /
Helen Mattingly
Young Peoples Club of St. Anne's church will hold a dance at Walnut Gardens tomorrow night. Miss Helen Mattingly will have charge of arrangements.
LIQUOR AND GIGARET THIEVES BUSY AGAIN North Side Drug Store Is Raided Again. The whisky and cigarct thieves who have been robbing Indianapolis drug stores with great persistency during the last few- weeks paid a return visit early today to Fisher's pharmacy, 4850 College avenue. They took $125 worth of liquor and a quantity of cigarets. Last week they took S2OO in liquor and cigarets from the same store. The robbery was observed by Russell Howe, 3835 North Keystone avenue, a Roberts Dairy Company driver, whose attention was attracted by the crash of breaking glass as three men entered the store. Mr. Plowc notified police. RARE CHINESE SILK TREE BLOOMS HERE, ATTRACTS HUNDREDS A lovely Chinese silk tree has burst into bloom at the home of J. W. Harvey, 31 Ritter avenue, attracting the attention of persons throughout the city and even from out in the state. The blooms are pink, resembling bunches of pink silk. The seeds w-ere brought to this country twenty-six years ago by missionaries who had been in China. From the original seeds, Mr. Harvey has grown eighty small silk trees which have not reached sufficient growth to produce blooms.
thing of the past, but the big receptions being given Mix this summer gives one something to think about. He often has told me that: “I’ve always been a cowboy and I always will be just that.” When Mix is not on the road he either is at his beautiful Beverly Hills residence with his wife, the former Mabel Hubbcll Ward, or on his huge California ranch. He even finds time to enjoy himself on his yacht. a a a INDIANAPOLIS theaters today offer: “Baby, Take A Bow,” at the Apollo; "Doctor Monica,” at the Circle; the Baer-Carnera fight pictures and “Affairs of a Gentleman,” at the Lyric, and, “Operator 13,” j at Loew’s Palace. CHURCH WORKER DIES Negro Woman, Active in Lodges, j Tasses Away. Mrs. Minnie Hale, Negro, 56, of 452 West Twelfth street, died Sunday night in city hospital following illness of several months. Mrs. Hale was a member of the Mt. Paran | Baptist church twenty-five years, j James H. Thomas Auxiliary No. 14, j United Spanish War Veterans, and the A. U. K. and D. of A. Funeral will be at 1 tomorrow’ with burial in Crown Hill. Hurled Through Fence in Crash . Thrown through a barbed wire fence in an automobile accident at Bluff road and Troy avenue last night, Burton Whiteside, 23, of 213 East Henry street, was taken to city hospital suffering from injuries to the back and shoulder.
MOTION PICTURES
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— Let's Go Fishing— FAMED DiX LAKE IS IDEAL SPOT FOR SPORTSMEN Kentucky Water Is Full of! Fish: But George Got Nary a One. BY GEORGE H. DENNY Ximrs Fi*hinc Kditnr Before the fishing editor was a fishing editor he us~d to catch a fish once in a while. Since that time his luck has been bad and it must be his skill. The above plaint is a preface to a few remarks about my trip last 1 w-eek-end to Dix lake, that famous bass water near Danville, K.v. I’ve angled just long enough to know that some days they just j won't, so the fact that no one in the j party even had a strike was slightly j lost in our admiration for the country% They’re In There The great Dix dam backs the water up for more than thirty miles in a narrow, limestone canyon studded with cedars and hardwood. In J spots the walls are carved away by I ancient -'loods. forming underwater! caves and pockets for the exclusive j use of the hordes of large mouths. The fact that we couldn't coax them out from their caverns de- ] traded not one bit from the "fishy'' j look of the water. You know they're , there and you are willing, as were j we, to try for them all day with no encouragement. Near the dam the water is 300 feet deep. On the hottest days ! there are cool depths to keep up the fighting spirit of the bronzebacks. (Just happened to think that there are only 200 feet of line on my reel, so if that's where they were, I was helpless.) They Use Plugs Most successful fishermen use plugs in this lake, casting the shore lines closely, or dropping the lure into a school of minnows as the bass charge them. The water is low at this time and | tops of tall trees tower above the | fisherman’s boat. It's a strange j feeling to drop your soft craw or i minnow down through the sunken ; limbs, knowing that if you have a ; strike the odds are high that the j bass will hang you up where birds I used to build. Beside bass, the lake swarms with S bream and “newlights.” Bream are i much like our blue gill and “newI lights" are of the family of crap- | pics. He Wants to Go Again Here’s one place where the cane ; pole fisherman can dangle his bait from the bank with no worries about getting it out into deep water. On the contrary, he may be fifty feet i or so from the bottom if he's sitting on one of the overhanging ledges. In spite of the waterhaul, I want to try it again. No one could coni vince me that the sport wouldn't be well worth the 200-mile trip on days when the bass decide to feed. And if, as we were, you are lucky enough to be guests of a charming Kentucky family, after the third or fourth helping of fried chicken and corn muffins, you won't care whether you fish or not. BROWNING STILL IS IN CRITICAL CONDITION Millionaire “Don Juan” Reported in Semi-Coma. fji/ Unilctl Prrsf NEW YORK, June 26.—The condition of Edward (Daddy) Browning, millionaire celebrated for his adoptions and marriages to various young women, was reported unchanged and critical today. Browning suffered a cerebral hemorrhage Saturday and has been in-a semicoma since.
MOTION PICTURES Y I,n*t \ | !>• / or. m. 1 l MARION DAVIES J f GARY COOPERW in M-G M’s 1 OPERATOR 13 I —FRIDAY— / M-G-M Hilarious Mystery \/ “MURDER in the Vi PRIVATE CAR” ll V CHARLIE RUGGLES J \ Mary Ca iisie—Una Merkel f
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| DINE AND DANCE j SEVERIN ROOF GARDEN Featuring the Severin Serenaders Dinner 5:00 to 9:00 P. M. ' Every Nite No Cover Charge— Minimum Check, SI.OO Dancing Every Nite. Except Monday.
INSURANCE SPEAKER
James Liton Bragg “Forward March" will be the subject of a lecture by James Elton Bragg, New York, prominent life insurance executive and a native of Indianapolis, before the annual luncheon of the Indianapolis Association of Life Underwriters next Friday in the Lincoln.
YOUTH IS ACCUSED OF AIDING GIRLS' ESCAPE City Man Helped Two Kiev From Clermont. Is Charge. Accused of aiding two girls to escape from the Indiana Givis’ School at Clermont yesterdc.y, Francis Hunt. 20, of 459 North Tibbs avenue, ha. been arrested. Hunt is alleged to have met the girls, Blanche Hinson, 412 Spring street, and Martha Smith, Elkhart, at Clermont and driven them to Brightwood.
WITHIN WALVGN6 DISTANCE- OP- TUP* F-Al** IS THE* WORLD'S LAqOE-ST MOT6-L THE* JT&VE-N/ OVg-qLOOUINO LAKfc MICHIGAN i/WORLOS FAIQ a on Michigan Boulevard g AT & E-VC-NTW *STR6-E-T / / ) °° o? Chicago # WRITE- THE- ST E-VE- N J WOTE-L ' f FULL INFORMATION g o ii-m
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NORTH SIDE
~ |... o lllinois at 311 h I\ I I i Double Feature IVAA *-' Buster Crahbe “YOl RF, TFIJ.INfi ME” "TARKAS AND HIS MATE” lIPTOW N “AVE’RE SOT DRESSING” “THREE OX \ HOM V.MOH.V’ DRE\M DVab^*Ftu?e L 1 Gene Ravmond "COMING OUT PARTY” "SHE MADE HER BED” Stratford '"ramii* i s!ll zr JUatlUlU Double Feature “MEANEST GVU IN TOWN” LET'S BE RITZY” rn/V a Noble '< Mas*. MMit.A Family Nite y'AU-'Y>Y>t Double feature ‘MEANEST GAL IN TOWN” “HE COULDN’T TAKE IT” Va . ni| |/<|/ Illinois a> "Th GARRILK K ; t Vn ,re “NANA" NINTH (.1 EST” O L'V ’.nth A Northwestern **®- < '‘* lionet Barrvraore THIS SIDE OF HEAVEN” Vims' All) M Clair al H Maine >1 (.1 AIK Double feature Ot. Vala.VllV Victor Mrl.azlin “LOST PATROL” "TWO ALONE” TALBOTT ‘ Fam'llr* Nite' 1 1 flt.lJv/ 1 1 Norma Shearer •RIPTIDE” ZAKIN (i Geo. Arlis* "HOUSE Os ROTHCHILD” EAST SIDE sn.fl a v’l\ i:t.'J E Wash 1 KAMI Double Feature Victor McEazlin "LOST PATROL” “GLAMOUR” nii.jii i Dearborn at loth KI Y ill I Johnnv Weissmuller IX* r WLI Maureen O Sullivan “TARZAN AND HIS MATE" Irving “GEORGE WHITE'S SCANDALS” EMERSON 'a®? “THRU ON X HONEYMOON” “A YLIU HONORABLE GEY” •* *
-JUNE 26, 10$4
CITY MAN HELD' IN BIGAMY CASE Married Second Wife Without Divorcing First, Is Charge. Because, police say, John Vannostrand, 27. of 257 East Minnesota street, married a second wife without bothering to get a divorce from his first wiYe, he was in city Jail today. accused of bigamy. Vannostrand, whom police quote as confessing freely the charge against him, is said to have married Mits Agues Shirrell. 26, now of 2339 North Illinois street, in Noblesville. July 7. 1932. and to have married Miss Grace Pulliam, 18, now of 722 Elm street, in Franklin. * Police say that friends told the first Mrs. Vannostrand of the second marriage, that the first Mrs. Vannostrand then told the second Mrs. Vannostrand and she, in turn, told police. Sergeant Edwin Kruse and squad investigated and arrested Vannostrand last night. It's a Wonderful Way to Relieve Ugly Eczema Soothing, cooling, healing Zemo irlieves itching distress, usually in five seconds, and clears up stubborn | cases of eczema. For 25 years, this wonderful remedy has produced such amazing results because of its rare ingredients not used in other remedies. Get Zemo today—to clear up Rashes. Pimples. Ringworm, and Eczema. Worth the price because you get relief. All druggists’, 35c, 60c, $1.—Advertisement.
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