Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 88, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 August 1934 — Page 3

AUG. 22, 1934

U. S. JOINS IN INTERNATIONAL LABOR LEAGUE Nation Active Member of Geneva Group for First Time. BY WILLIAM PHILIP SIMMS &<-r ipt>t-Hn ard fomin Miltr WASHINGTON. Au*. 22—Fifteen after its founding through the efforts of Woodrow Wilson, the League of Nations today for the first time numbers the United States among its official, active, permanent and paying supporters. President Roosevelt formally has notified the international labor organization, one of the league s most important branches, of America's acceptance of membership. This does not constitute membersnip in the league. The ILO. as it is called, is an autonomous section of the league. But its charter comes from the Treaty of Versailles and it has a permanent secretariat sitting side by side with the league at Geneva and co-operating with it for the peace of the world. The next step will be to appoint Americans as permanent officials of the ILO and doubtless of the Geneva secretariat. Then, for the first time m history, the United States will co-operate with the League of Nations with power to vote in a branch thereof and pay its way as an active member. Membership Is Important Membership in the Geneva labor body, in many ways, us vastly more important than membership in the world court which sits at The Hague. The world court likewise is an autonomous segment of the league, but it prides itself upon being utterly independent, whereas the international labor organization is intimately associated with the work of the league. In fact, part XIII of the peace treaties virtually creates a league within a league to carry out a very important part of its task. “Whereas." says section 1 on the “Organization of Labor." “the League of Nations has for its object the establishment of universal peace and such peace can be Established only if based upon social justice. . . “And whereas conditions of labor exist involving such injustice, hardship and privation as to produce unrest so great that the peace and harmony of the world are imperiled. . . . “And whereas also the failure of any nation to adopt humane conditions of labor is an obstacle in the way of other nations which desire to improve the conditions in their own countries. . . . Perkins to Represent U. S. “The high contracting parties . . . agree to the following:” What follows is a charter for a world labor League of Nations complete in itself. ft is this which the United States just has joined. All league members must be members of the ILO, but all ILO members are not necessarily members of the league. Germany was a member of the labor body several years before entering the other. The ILO has a governing body which meets four times a year. The next meeting will take place in October. Like the assembly of the league, it has a conference annually, generally in June. Secretary of Labor Frances Perkins likely will make every effort to attend either the October meeting of the governing body or the June conference. CAPITALISM IS TARGET OF COUGHLIN ATTACK Detroit Priest Blames System for Communism. By United Press CHICAGO. Aug. 22.—Capitalism was described as the cause of Communism by the Rev. Charles E. Coughlin. Detroit priest, in an address at the world, fair last night sponsored by the American Legion.. Twenty thousand persons stood through a thunder shower in the fair's court of states to hear the priest denounce the banking system and predict that the federal reserve system will be nationalized w ithin a year. FEAR SUICIDE EFFORT Police Asked to Search for Missing City Man. Fearing that Frank Gearis. 36. of 3605 North LaSalle street, may attempt suicide, his family has asked police to search for him. He left home last night after telling his children that they never would see him again, according to police reports.

Indianapolis Tomorrow

Real Estate Board, luncheon. Washington. Democratic Association, luncheon. Washington. Engineering Society, luncheon. Board of Trade. American Business Club, luncheon. Columbia Club. Rainbow Division Veterans, dinner. Washington. Acacia, luncheon. Board of Trade. Illini Club, luncheon. Columbia Club. Sigma Nu. luncheon. Washington. Sigma Chu luncheon. Board of Trade.

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Heads Up! Dionne Quintuplets Pose for Their First Portraits!

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Personality palm among the Dionne quintuplets goes to Marie—prettiest, smallest, liveliest of the world's most famous babies Pert is the word for Mane She's the type that will grow up to be an actress, say her nurses, who already are guessing at careers for the quintet

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Peaceable, steady-nerved and calm—that’s Annette, second in size of the Dionne infant quintet. She just takes life in her stride and the nurses vision her as a typical farm woman, hard-working and uncomplaining as they are in the Ontario bush, but with a spark of temper.

New Area to Be Served by Trackless Car Line

Latest Type Trolleys to Inaugurate Service Tomorrow. With the opening of the South East street trackless trolley line tomorrow morning. Indianapolis Railways will give service to a section of the city formerly not provided with transportation facilities, James P. Tretton, general manager, announced today. The new line will be combined with the Northwestern avenue route to form a crosstown line, known as the Northwestern-South East line. The new lirfe will run south on South East street to Garfield park, replacing a part of the present Garfield park street car line. The Madison avenue section of the old Garfield park line will continue to be used, but service will terminate at Lincoln and East streets. These cars will be known as "Lincoln” instead of "Garfield Park" as they have been marked in the past. Arm Broken in Accident Ross W. Soper, 54. Rutland, Pa., principal of an eastern school, sustained a broken arm yesterday when he walked into the side of a taxicab while crossing Meridian street near Washington street.

“But.” you say, “how can a tablet, taken internally, improve my complexion?” The answer is, that, “pimples, blackheads, sallowness, blotches and the like, are not surface conditions, therefore cannot be remedied with external treatments." These conditions are due to impurities in the blood svstem. therefore. THOR'S VITAMIN B COMPOUND does correct them, because it goes right to the seat of the trouble. The blood is purified. Unsightly, beauty -marring blemishes fade away. Bowels begin to move regularly. Energy increases. Shattered nerves

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CARNIVALS SHUN STATE DUE TO OLD TAX LAW Lutz Credited With Discovery of Ancient Statute. Carnival companies touring Indiana this summer have found the going anything but easy, thanks to Attorney-General Philip Lutz’s ability to turn up old law’s. Mr. Lutz, during one of his rambles through the state’s legal maze, came across a statute providing that various amusement devices such as merry-go-rounds, ferris wheels and other amusement devices should pay a license fee of $1 to $5 a day. The tax amounts to about $l5O a week for an ordinary carnival. Records in the state auditor's office show that approximately $6,000 has been collected this summer. NAB CAR THEFT SUSPECT City Man Atempted to Steal Auto, Police'Claim. Police early today arrested Walter Kelly, 41, of 610 East Market street, as he is alleged to have attempted to steal an automobile owned by Mrs. Margaret Rheese, 348 North State avenue, and parked in front of her house. Kelly is charged with vagrancy and held under high bond.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

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Grave and circumspect, Cecile is one of the quietest of the quintuplets, joining only mildly in the clamor that goes up as mealtime approaches in the Dionne nursery. Os the unworried type that takes things as they come, me could imagine her a nurse when she reaches w-omanhood.

EMELIE # : A y: * 3 ' ' ('Copyright. 1934 NEA Service. Inc)

Least imperious of the five little Dionnes is Emelie, demure, selfcontained, last to cry at mealtime, a plain little creature with tilted nose and narrow chin, but with a charm all her own. When the nurses who guard her so carefully look at her, they say, “Likely she’ll be a nun.”

CRASH INJURIES KILLCjTY MAN Motorist Hurt Sunday in Collision With Truck Dies in Hospital. Ivan Jordan, 27, of 134 West Twenty-seventh street, died last night in Methodist hospital of injuries suffered in an automobile ac-

cident Sunday. He is the seventy-fourth person to die as result of traffic accidents in Marion county this year. A car driven by Mr.

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Jordan was in collision with a truck driven by Ed Lewis, 34, of 1633 North Capitol avenue, at Massachusetts avenue and Michigan street. The truck was overturned, Mr. Jordan was injured fatally and Lewis suffered cuts and bruises. Lewis was held on a vagrancy charge. BARBER CLASS ELECTS Jesse Leach Named President by School Graduates. Jesse E. Leach was elected president of the first graduating class of the barber science school of the International Journeymen Barbers union at the school, 342 East Washington street, last night. William Emery was chosen vice-president and William L. Arnold, treasurer.

Central Normal College DANVILLE, INDIANA A Teacher Training College Accredited for Elementary and High School Teachers. Business Course for Bookkeepers, Secretaries and Stenographers. Pre-Professional Work in Medicine, Law, Dentistry, Nursing and All Kinds of Engineering. FALL TERM OPENS AUGUST 27th Board, Room, Tuition Books, Per Year, $273.30 Classes for Freshmen. Sophomores. Juniors and Seniors will he given each term in English. Mathematics. Latin. German. Social Science. Physical Science. Biological Science, Music. Art, Physical training. Commerce and Commercial Subjects. Central Normal College is noted for Economy. Service and Friendship. Students are not molested in their religious and political affiliations, but much emphasis is placed upon the development of reverence and patriotism for the constitutional government given us by forefathers. You can get what you need at Central Normal College. A tabulation of the noted Alumni of t’le Teacher’s Training Colleges jn “Whose Who” in America gave the Central Normal College second rank in Indiana. 'Research: Peabody College.) Take your training in a college with a reputation: one whobe graduates get positions and achieye fame. Graduates for 1934 300 Average Enrollment for College Year 673 Different Students Enrolled 1933 1.055 Different Students Enrolled for 1934 1.061 Alumni 52,305 Degrees Conferred—A. B.—B. S. —B. M.—Ph. B. For Information W rite WALDO WOOD , President Danville , Ind.

TAXI DRIVER ACCUSED OF RANSACKING HOME Burglar Suspect Captured by North Side Man. A taxi driver accused of ransacking the home of Charles Van Meter, 6558 College avenue, early today and who was caught‘by Mr. Van Meter, is being held by police on vagrancy charges. He is William McClure, 32, of 4419 Ralston avenue. Seizing a shotgun when he hearej a noise in the house, Mr. Van Meter caught the suspect after he had broken a glass from the front door. Police investigation revealed that earlier in the night a man police said resembled McClure had attempted to ransack a house at 710 Laverock road. MUNCIE IS PICKED FOR AIR TOUR NIGHT STOP Forty Planes Expected to Start Trip on Sept. 11. Muncie, boasting of one of the finest airports in the state; will be one of the night stops of the sixth annual all-Indiana air tour which will leave Indianapolis Sept. 11 for a week’s jaunt around the state. The Muncie municipal airport probably will be the tour’s last stop before returning to Indianapolis after the week’s flying. The forty planes that are expected to make up the air armada will reach Muncie about 5 p. m., spend the night there and leave for home about 10 a. m. the following day.

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Heaviest and sturdiest of the Ontario quintuplets is Yvonne and already she- seems to “know her strength" A self-assured child, she expresses herself forcibly and demands her right when feeding time rolls around. She’s the kind of baby who should grow up to be a strong farm wife.

Willie Mason Escapes From Noblesville Jail

Leads Four Others in Flight; Bars Are Cut With Hacksaw. (Continued From Page One) burst of machine gun fire, which cut down Sergeant Jones. The squad unwittingly had interrupted a holdup. Sergeant Jones staggered across the street and died on the sidewalk. The bandits escaped through the barn and ran west toward College avenue. There, they commandeered a taxicab. The patrolmen with Sergeant Jones shot at them several times. None of these shots are believed to have been effective. Mason was captured near Covington. Ky., in a luxurious gang hangout in a typical southern mansion. He had a festering leg wound at the time. Police believe this was received in a brush with Louisville (Ky.) police, but never w'ere able to make Mason admit this. The expense of amputating Mason’s leg and of providing him with a wooden leg was borne by Marion county. Police believe this wooden leg may make his detection and capture easier. The escaped prisoner was accused by police as being leader of the band of criminals accused in the car barn crime, where a comparatively small amount of money was obtained. The same gang was blamed for a series of holdups here and, police said, they escaped from Indianapolis after the Jones killing in an auto stolen during the holdup of a North Meridian street garage. The car w r hich the gang was forced to leave in the car barns after the Jones killing was loaded with weapons and ammunition. Fred Adams and George Schwartz were arrested as members of the gang along with Mason, Giberson and Dean. Adams and Schwartz pleaded guilty and were given life sentences. Sheriff Is Contradicted Sheriff Frank Hattery’s story of his anxiety to get rid of Willie Mason was contradicted here today by County Prosecutor Herbert Wilson, who said that Hamilton county not only had insisted on keeping Mason, but also had attempted to regain custody of Ernest (Red) Giberson after the latter’s recapture in Cincinnati. Mr. Wilson said the sheriff pleaded with him, with Chief Mike Morrissey and with Sheriff Charles (Buck) Sumner for the chance to take Giberson back to Noblesville so the sheriff could “vindicate" himself. Shortly after that, the prosecutor said, he asked the prosecutor’s office in Hamilton county to aid in obtaining Mason's return and was told that the return would be im-

possible until Marion county settled its bills with Hamilton county for Mason's trial and jail stay. Dean Trial Sept. 10 Criminal fudge Frank P. Baker returned to his office today after a vacation and announced that the trial of Edward (Foggy) Dean, alleged trigger man in the shooting of Police Sergeant Lester Jones, and accomplice of Willie Mason, would be held Sept. 10.

CARRIE NICOLI RITESARE SET Funeral Services to Be Held Tomorrow for Social Worker. Funeral services for Mrs. Carrie A. Nicoli, 84, of 315 East Thirtysixth street, who died Monday at Lake Winona, will be held at 2 tomorrow in the Flanner & Buchanan mortuary. Burial will be in Crown Hill. Mrs. Nicoli, for many years active in church and philanthropic work in Indianapolis, was born near Hamilton, 0., and came here with her family in 1874. Asa young woman she became a member of the old Third Presbyterian church, predecessor of the present Tabernacle church. She was a teacher in the Sunday school several years. Her husband. Lew Nicoli, to whom she w r as married in 1879, is an elder of the church. Surviving Mrs. Nicoli are the husband, a son, Harry Nicoli, both of Indianaoplis, and a sister, Mrs. Charles Compton, Columbus, Ind. Newton Campbell Dies Funeral services for Newton M. Campbell, 83, of 1005 Fletcher avenue, who fell dead yesterday as he was mowing the lawn of his home, will be held at 2 tomorrow in the Bert S. Gadd funeral home, Churchman avenue and Prospect street. Burial will be in Crown Hill. Mr. Campbell, a retired locomotive engineer, had lived here fifty years. He was bom in Guilford and entered the Big Four railroad service when he was 21. He was chaplain of the local chapter of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers, and attended the Presbyterian church. Surviving him are a step-son, a half-sister and tw r o half-brothers. His wife, Mrs. Catherine C. Campbell, died March 1.

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TINY TUMOR ON QUINTUPLET'S LEG ISHEALING Complete Cure Expected As Result of Radium Treatment. B'j Seripps-Hoirard Setcspaprr Alliance CALLANDER. Ont„ Aug. 22. The tiny tumor on Marie's right thigh is slowly shrinking as a result of radium treatment. Dr. Edmund Kelly, Baltimore radiologist, said today after an examination of the frailest of the Dionne quintuplets. The tumor first was taken for a birthmark. “While it has not diminished to any appreciable extent in circumference, it has lost in elevation and seems to be in a receding, quiescent condition," he said. He explained this was a normal and satisfactory result of the radium treatment of two weeks ago. The growth has changed color from deep liver red to dull gray. Dr. Kelly expects the tumor to shrink away entirely in a few months, leaving only a small white scar. If it doesn’t, he will apply more radium, he said. While not dangerous now, the growth if untreated might have led to a fatal hemorrhage. Head Nurse Louise De Kiriline has come back to work bearing ugly red scars from burns received eleven days ago when a bottle of alcohol was ignited. “I see a great change,” she said. “They're much bigger and better already. They're gaining weight. But I’ll be glad when we get into the new hospital. Then we can do things right and they'll grow like mushrooms.” MINTON IS HEARD BY OLD-TIME DEMOCRATS Determined to Win, Saj Candidate at Claypool Luncheon. Sherman Minton. Democratic nominee for the United States senate, expressed himself as determined to win the election this fall at a luncheon yesterday at the Claypool of twenty-nine old-time Democrats, most of whom are well along in years. “We young men will carry the brunt of the campaign,” said Mr. Minton, who was the principal speaker, “but we look to you for encouragement and counsel.” CITY MAN FIRED ON BY FLEEING BURGLAR Comes Upon Robber's Hiding Place After Theft in Home. Charles Messerly, 1920 Houston street, surprised a burglar hiding in the weeds near his house early today, but the burglar escaped after firing at Mr. Messerly. Taken from the house were two revolvers and three pistols valued at approximately $75, a $65 watch and other articles. Police recovered several small articles in the weeds where the burglar had hid. MARTIAL LAW IS LIFTED Vienna Restored to Normal for First Time Since Revolt. By United Press VIENNA, Aug. 22.—Martial law in effect since the Nazi revolt of July 25 was lifted today, and the city moved normally about its business.

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