Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 228, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 February 1935 — Page 12
PAGE 12
TROOPS NAB 15 CARS IN DRIVE ON THEFT RING Kentucky Guardsmen Seize County, Charge Lack of Co-Operation. Hu t nitfd Prtsn MANCHESTER, Ky., Feb. I.—National Guardsmen routing through brush-filled valleys and secluded hamlets of the roiling Cumberlands extended military rule today over all the Clay County feud country. Fifteen stolen motor cars recovered and held in a military compound testified to the efficacy of Gov. Ruby Laffoons coup d'etat yesterday against local officers accused of "lack of co-operation” and worse. Civil authorities were stripjied of power, despite insistence of Brig. Gen. Ellerbe Carter, in command of 150 cavalry and infantry troops, that the county technically is not under martial law. The general curtly refused to permit Sheriff T. C. McDaniel to arrest a state policeman on a warrant obtained afte r the officer was indicted by a county grand jury for housebreaking. Gen. Carter said the policeman, Clyde Jones, was seeking a stolen motor car at the time of his alleged offense. Judge W. E. Begley adjourned Circuit Court when the Sheriff reported the military order. "I don't know what the general and the Governor call it,” the judge remarked, "but it looks to u.e like we're under martial law.” Twenty-four hours after their arrival m Manchester the guardsmen controlled every road and trail entering the county and were sweeping through limestone valleys around the county seat in a search for stolen automobiles and wanted men. The squirrel-shooting residents of the county's badlands greeted the invaders with a rough raillery which did not conceal a bitter hostility. Clay County has been a thorn in the side of state authorities for years, with intermitten bloody feuds and generally lawless conditions unchecked. Criminals from the state s larger cities frequently have found a haven in the criss-crossed valleys of the Appalachian foothills. Adjt. Gen. Henry H. Denhardt said at Frankfort that "the troops will stay until they have cleaned up an auto theft gang headed by a prominent official.” He refused to name the official. The soldiers are armed with rifles, machine guns, hand grenades and nauseating gas. HOSPITAL SUPERVISOR TO ADDRESS NURSES State Group to Hear Discussion on Communicable Diseases. Miss Lillie Martin, supervisor of communicable disease wards at City Hospital, and Miss Enid Smith. Public Health Nursing Asosciation. were to discuss care of patients with communicable diseases in the hospital and the home at today's session of the Nursing Service Bureau of the central district, Indiana State Nurses’ Association. The meeting, which opened yesterday in the Severin. was to close today. Dr. J. W. Jackson, state epidemiologist. yesterday urged the teaching of the public to report infectious diseases early, so the Department of Health could do efficharge of the devotional period.
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"Harbor Light” One of the outstanding examples of Stow Wengenroth's display of lithographs at the H. Lieber galleries is “Harbor Light,” show r n above in which there is a lovely blending of lights and shades.
BY JOHN W. THOMPSON WHEN Aloys Senefelder, the industrious Bohemian music printer, contrived the idea of lithographic printing, he probably didn’t realize the effect his invention would have on the art world. His was a purely technical invention in 1798. but it has been developed most widely by the artists, map makers and poster printers. The process of lithography includes the drawing with a greasy substance made into what are known as "chalks” on the stone, a limestone, the best quality of which is found in Solenhofen, Bavaria; the placing of lithographic ink on the lines of the drawing and the etching of the white spaces, and the transfer of the drawing from the stone to paper by impression. The H. Lieber Cos. has on display a group of Stow Wengenroth's lithographs done directly from the stone. The grain of the stone is gotten by grinding the surface with sand or other rough substance and gives to the reproduction the aspect of soft pencil or crayon drawing. Mr. Wengenroth has shown, in the group at Lieber's, a distinct personality as far as the composition of his art is concerned. He has gotten, in a manner foreign to v great many foreign lithographers, an atmosphere into his drawings which sets them off as splendid examples of the beauty of light and dark. He has admirably cast off the chains of limitation placed on him by the stone mode of expression and has achieved a lovely rhythm and grace in his landscapes and sketches. The most poignant demerit to Mr. Wengenroth's work is his lack of expansion and flexibility. His subjects. cold and stiff though they are, could have received a bit more life in their reproduction. Nevertheless, the design and technical approach which the artist has made is highly commendable. a an BERTON I. STAPLES, noted lecturer on Indian art, will have the aid of three Navajos who have been with him for eight years when he talks at the John Herron Art Institute tonight at 8. Blanket weaving. silversmithy and a demonstration of one of the famous "sand paintings” will feature the lecture. Wilbur D. Peat, museum director,
is planning to open two new exhibitions at the Institute Sunday. One will be a showing of ancient Chinese art and other will be a very interesting survey of landscape painting, beginning as far back as 1600. a tt a THE art of pastel has taken a sharp curve upward in the chart of public appraisal and pastel portraits are much in vogue. In Indianapolis Miss Helen Briggs, who has a current exhibition of her work at the Lyman galleries, is one of the pioneers in this type of work. The pastel offers a reasonable, rapid and fairly adequate medium by which to catch the features of the portrait-sitter. It is, because of its lack of strength, grace and depth, a difficult medium in which to work. Miss Briggs has done well with her portraits. They contain striking resemblances and good color treatment. They do lack depth and the intricacy which is necessary to make a potrait live. Miss Briggs’ oils are consistently improving and show even a more developed understanding than her pastels. British Author Dies at 72 By United Press DORKING, England, Feb. 1.--J. S. Fletcher, prolific author of detective stories, died last night. He was 72. "The Middle Temple Murder” made him famous.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
HIGHER INCOME. ESTATE TAXES URGED jN BILL Maryland Democrat Ready to Introduce Act in House. By Scripps-Howard X etc spa per Alliance WASHINGTON, Feb. I.—Rep. David J. Lewis <D„ Md.), is preparing to renew his fight for higher income and estate taxes. He wili introduce a measure embodying his tax proposals as soon as the Economic Security Bill, which he introduced in the House is passed. Underlying his program is the belief that the only way to stimulate and continue the present economic system is to prevent the private accumulation of vast sums which can not be spent for consumers’ goods, but instead are put into United States bonds or other capital investments. Mr. Lewis said he does not oppose an individual earning a million dollars a year, but that he is opposed to the individual being able virtually to remove that sum from circulation. The details of his program are not completed as yet, but he has been giving much attention to British taxation. He believes income tax rates should be substantially increased. Persons within the $10.500-a-year bracket, for instance paid only $3,157,000 in income tax in the United States for 1930, he said, whereas the British government harvested $43,235.000 from the same class. The British exemptions are much lower than the American, according to Mr. Lewis. Whereas a married man in the United States was given $2500 exemption in 1930. in Great Britain he was allowed only $750. Mr. Lewis says higher rates are needed, to prevent excess income from "rotting like the nuts buried by squirrels beyond what they can eat in a single winter.” Mothers’ Club to Hold Party The English-av Kindergarten Mothers’ Club will hold a penny I supper and card party at 5 tomorrow night at 1400 English-av. Prizes will be awarded.
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BANDIT SLAYS WOMAN Baker’s Wife Shot Down by Young Thug in sls Holdup. By United Prrss CHICAGO. Feb. I.—A youthful bandit with a nervous trigger finger killed Mrs. Alma Schmitt, 37. when she screamed as he announced a holdup of her small bakery. The killer and a companion fled with sls before Mrs. Schmitt's husband ran into the shop from a rear room.!
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(EYLON RAVAGED BY DISEASE; HORDES DIE l/lany Areas Are Unable to (Bury Victims. COLOMBO. Ceqlon. Feb. t.— here were r.ot enough people in iorne Ceylonese areas today to bury the dead. t Dysentery, smallpox, pneumonia.
famine and a plague of caterpillars have come upon top of an epidemic of malaria which itself has killed thousands.
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It was estimated that 1.000.004 persons of a population of 5.312,000 in all the island were stricken with I illness.
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