Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 143, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 October 1934 — Page 15
OCT. 25, 1934
OBSERVANCE OF NAVY DAY SET FOR SATURDAY Indiana to Participate in National Celebration of Anniversary. Plans for the local celebration of Navy day Saturday wore announced today by James E Fischer, chairman of the Indiana Navy day committee. Mr. Fischer, an official of the United Mutual Life Insurance Company and a former governor of Indiana Kiwams, has tx-en named to the committee. Other members are: Robert W. Chambers Evansville; A E Kress. Terre Haute; Raymond W* Springer, Connersville; Dr. Howard A Denbo, South Bend, and Glenn E West, West Lafayette.
Mr. Fischer has announced that a number of speeches reviewing the development and progress of the navy will be made in Indianapolis and other cities by officers of the United States navy and naval reserve stationed in Indiana. Lieutenant-Commander Guy B Hoover, in charge of the naval recruiting station here, was to make a number of talks at public schools in the city today, with other talks tomorrow, and Lieutenant H D Templeton, medical corps. U. 8. N . will speak Sunday night at the Edwin Rav Methodist Episcopal church. Broad Ripple. Lieutenant Firman Knachel and Lieutenant Malcolm Moore, both of the naval reserve, spoke yesterday before luncheon clubs at Bloomington and Muncie, respectively. Lieutenant-Commander O. F. Heslar. U. S. N. R., was to review the Indiana university R. O. T C. unit at Bloomington this afternoon. The Indianapolis naval reserve unit has extended a general invitation to the public to attend its weekly drill Monday night at the naval armory. 730 East Washington street. These weekly drills of the unit are always open to visitors but officers hope that the drill next week will be especially well attended as an added feature of the Navy day celebration. Navy day is observed Oct. 27 each year throughout the United States in celebration of the navy's birthday in 1775 when the continental congress passed legislation establishing a naval force. Naval vessels and planes will be open for public inspection in seaboard cities, and special drills and maneuvers will be held better to acquaint the American people with what the navy is endeavoring to do. Countess Gets Suspended Term VIENNA. Oct. 25.—Countess May Von Wurmbrand-Stuppach, mother-in-law of Clendenin Ryan .Jr., of New York, received a suspended sentence of one year’s imprisonment today on charges of fraudulent nonpayment of debts.
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Russian Stage Reflects Life, Ex-Princess Says
BY WALTER D. HICKMAN
THE theater of Soviet Russia has gone in for historical realism and a freedom In reflecting life in Russia under the old order.
This was the message that Irina Skariatina, In private life the wife of an America. Victor Blakeslee, gave me at the Columbia Club yesterday. The author of "First to Go Back” and the just published "Little Era in Old Russia," Just has returned from a summer in Russia, Germany, Italy and other European countries. A former member of Russian aristocracy. Princess Irina is in the midst of a lecture tour. She lectured yesterday at Ayres in connection with The Book Fair and last night she appeared at Anderson. She told me that in Moscow and the other Soviet cities she visited people and conditions appeared normal. "In Moscow, we ithe author and her husband) went to the Moscow 7 Art theater and saw 7 a performance of The Days of Turbiny’," she said. "There were 3.000 people in the theater at the time. The play has to do with a Russian family with three sons at the time the" White army and the Red army were fighting for control. "Here was a family of White Russians living their lives, and at one time the actors in their parts lifted their glasses and sang ‘God Save the Czar.’
"I have not heard that song since the revolution, but it had a definite place in the story 7 and it was acted. "Near the close of the story, the three brothers made decisions to go their own way. One wanted to go to Germany because he saw 7 that old Russia was dead. Another left to join the White army, and the third remained in new Russia singing the Internationale." She said that she asked many people about singing “God Save the Czar,” and they said that it represents a past historical order and had the right to be so presented on the stage. * The former princess was in Berlin at the time of Hitler’s "party purging,’’ and was in Vienna when Chancellor Engelbert Dollfuss was assassinated. There she found trouble, troops and rules. In Vienna she witnessed martial law and said she realized then the normal conditions she witnessed in Soviet Russia. The Bobbs-Merrill Company of Indianapolis is the publisher of both books written by Irina Skariatina. a a a r | TOMORROW, Loews Palace will A be one of the few 7 theaters in a limited number of cities which will have a pre-release on “Transatlantic Merry-Go-Round," with Jack Benny as one of the many stars. Indianapolis theaters today oiler: “What Every Woman Knows," at Loew 7 ’s Palace; “Gift of Gab’’ and “Wagon Wheels,” at the Circle;
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‘The Theatrical World -
"Judge Priest.” final day, at the Apollo, and "The Gay Divorcee,” at the Indiana. Tomorrow, the Granada theater will change its opening date to Friday and all pictures will be shown for three days. Friday, Saturday and Sunday. The bill opening tomorrow will present Bing Crosby in "She Loves Me Not,” "Com on the Cop” and a Mickey Mouse comedy.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
ASSESSMENT POLL IS APPROVED FOR STREET Works Board Answers Protest of Property Owners. The works board yesterday approved the assessment roll for the recently improved stretch of North Pennsylvania street from St. Clair to Sixteenth street. This was done in spite of the protests of some
PEOPLES REMOVAL SALE Includes Entire Store and Warehouse Stocks Furniture Stoves Rugs Everything, Except a Few Items on \\ hich Manufacturers Control Prices. EASY TERMS FREE STATE-WIDE DELIVERY SERVICE We publish no list of “specials”—lt isn’t pos- anyhow. This is a GENERAL SALE. It tell their friends and neighbors. They’re so sible to list several thousand bargains in a covers the store. It is unbelievably SUC- well pleased they’ll be our loyal customers newspaper announcement—And a few dozen CESSFUL. People decide what they want— when we get moved into the big corner items would not give a true idea of the sale they come—they buy—they go home and building. PEOPLES OUTFITTING CO. 133-135 West Washington Street
property owners who claimed that their assessments were greater than they had been led to believe they would be. In approving the roll, the board pointed out that the city had assumed 75 per cent of the cost of the work with the exception of $4,672 paid by the street railway company, and the property owners 25 per cent. The property owners could have been assessed 50 per
cent of the $73,000 biU under the law. TWO~~BANDITS~GET~ $35 Armed Negroes Hold Up Filling Station Attendant Two armed Negroes earlv todayrobbed William Chattain. 20. of 1403 Broadway, attendant at a filling | station at 321 West Michigan street, of $35 in cash, he reported to police. H. C. Braum, 1115 North Linwood
avenue, reported the theft of a news reel film valued at $75 which was
Phest Colds Best treated without “dosing" jSgvMass
PAGE 15
'taken from his car parked at Tenth and Delaware streets late last night.
TMEDFORD’S N/BLACK
