Indianapolis Times, Volume 47, Number 314, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 March 1936 — Page 3

MARCH 11, 1930.

BELGIUM AND FRANCE INSIST ON PENALTIES Powers to Meet in London, Consider Paris Demands for Firm Action. (Continued From Page Onr) by an alternative: That Germany promise not to fortify the Rhineland, that she return to the League, that she negotiate limitation of armaments and that she participate in a European defensive air force treaty that would unite the air fleets of the powers aeainst an aggressor. It was indicated <ii France’s first demands, as the pre-condition to any negotiations, was a more firm guaranty that Britain would give her military, aerial and naval aid against Germany in any war. Belgium Swings Tide By I iiihrt Press PARIS. March 11.—It is the view of the French government that if the Locarno Treaty is allowed to be torn up, such an act would be a serious blow to the League of Nations and the whole system of collective security, Pierre Comert, head of the press department of the foreign office, said tonight. Comert, reiterated an earlier denial that France is threatening to withdraw from the league. ‘ Any such statement is ridicu- j lous," the official said, ‘‘and ap- , parently is based on an erroneous j interpretation of Foreign Minister | Flandin's statement earlier today ' in which he referred to the ‘death j of the League’ in outlining the dis- \ Acuities which confront the so- | eiety of nations as result of Ger- j many's renunciation of Locarno I and the League system. By United Pre ss PARIS, March 11.—Germany’s ! occupation of the Belgian portion of the Rhineland zone was a chief sac- | tor in the dramatic switch of Lo- ! carno Treaty negotiations to London, it was understood today. France and Great Britain were | far apart in their .views because of j French insistence on firm penalties ; against Germany unless she agreed to concessions and to negotiation of a satisfactory program of pacifi- ; cation. / It was reported that the French delegation produced army \ gpneral staff information that Germany’s “symbolic” occupation was really a military concentration of importance. France's anxiety over j the crisis was made evident by ac-! tivity of censors, so nervous thatj they suppressed some news dispatches containing information: that had been published in Paris! newspapers. Belgium backed up the French stand and swayed negotiations by pointing out that Germany gave; as its excuse for the reoccupation of the Rhineland the RussianFrench military alliance. Premie* Paul Van Zeeland pointed out that Belgium had no part in fhr alliance, was protected under! the Locarno Treaty, but German troops appeared on her Rhineland frontier. No Answer for That Other delegates had no answer to the statement. Hence Belgium, as in 1914 when Germany invaded it, was a key factor in the crisis. Van Zeeland, hacking France, demanded that the Locarno signatories oblige Germany to respect the treaty. British delegates were astonished at the French firmness and at the demand for military penalties if necessary. Another French argument which i may loom importantly in the next 1 few days is that if Germany is not j to be penalized at all for occupying j the Rhineland. League penalties against Italy must be canceled. Hitler Stands Firm By f tiitrd Prr** BERLIN. Mrch 11—Adolf Hitler stood firm today in his occupation of the German Rhineland. It was indicated he would send no representative to London to indulge in what were called "any post-mortems over the Locarno Treaty” but would ! be represented if any hope of fruit -i fill peace negotiations were offered, i Nazi Planes Sighted By 1 nitni /'rrs.t PARIS, March 11.—Six times in the past two days German planes! have crossed the French frontier,! it was learned today. In each instance, French aircraft have ascended to intercept the German planes and chase them across the border. Anti-aircraft guns were not brought into action. BODY IS IDENTIFIED Man Found Slain at Bloomington is Herman Johnson, Ex-Convict. B;i J n ited Press BLOOMINGTON, Ind.. March 11—The body of a transient pencil peddler, found slain here last week, was identified through fingerprints today as that of Herman Johnson, an ex-convict from Madisonville, Ky. Local authorities forwarded the prints to the Department of Justice at Washington, and were advised that Johnson served terms in the Indiana State Prison, Indiana Penal Farm and the Federal Penitentiary at Atlanta, Ga. DAVIS TO GO TO EUROPE Former Aid to Direct New Soil Conservation Program. By United Press WASHINGTON. March 11. —The task of directing the new soil conservation program in its early stages was shifted today from AAA Administrator Chester C. Davis to Howard R. Tolley, soil expert and former assistant administrator. Davis is to leave March 20 at the request of President Roosevelt to study economic policies of European nations and international trade relationships. He will be gone about two months. Court Considers Securities Act Bn t nited Press WASHINGTON. March 11.—Validity of thp New Deal’s truth-in-securities act of 1933 was taken under advisement by the Supreme Court today after a denunciation of the law as a "perversion of Federal power by James M. Beck, American Liberty League lawyer.

! GARBO The Mysterious Her T ST R O^ By ELISABETH VON CAUB

(Continued From Page Onel with century-old pine forests. Behind the lawns stood Tistad Castle. They led her into the hospitable hall, with its noble staircase, its paintings and frescoes. Seated in an armchair beside the marble fireplace with the scented breezes stealing in through the open casement. Greta sank into meditation. Gradually the whole panorama began to unfold itself. This was the tangible fulfilment of a long-ago dream of a little girl in a tenement dwelling, and the little girl was herself. a a a THERE are no slums in Stock-holm-only some rather mean, barrack-like buildings of one-room flats in the drab artisan quarter of the town. In such a building Greta Louisa Gustafsson was born. It was situated in the district known as Soder, on the southern hills beyond the Malar, described as the Montmarte of Stockholm It Is not so much the Bohemian quarter today; but when Greta was a child it abounded in every kind of interest to stir the imagination of a sensitive, dreamy youngster. The mean streets of Soder rose on the rocky slopes. Some of them were little more than alleys ascending by series of steps. Here and there among the rocks one came across unexpected glimpses of Old Stockholm—unbelievably tin* houses with roofs of redfluteo tiles, age-marked by patches of green moss. Blekingegatan was a typical street of workmen’s dwellings. The Gustafsson’s fiat at No. 32 overlooked a declevity, covered with boulders and loose rocks. There was a wood yard at the far end. An iron worker, too, hid rigged up a repair shop there, and the space outside his door was littered with broken gates, motor car and cycle parts, and other old iron indicating the mechanic’s trade. The Gustafsson children were not carelessly brought up. They were not allowed to loiter after dark, like other street gamins. Frau Gustafsson would stand in tiny kitchen, preparing the modest evening meal of “bouna honor,” stewed fish or pea soup and pancakes. She baked her own bread, and the coffee pot was always kept hospitably hot on the stove. Carl Gustafsson liked to see his family around him at night; and he also liked to bring his friends home. His position as a minor government official made the neighbors look up to him. He was a handsome man, who could make even a unizorm look distinctive, and in the privacy of his home he could be sociable and entertaining. a a RET A was the baby of the J family, her father’s darling. He liked to develop her little parlor tricks, and encouraged her charming ways when he brought friends home. She had invented a little name for herself. Unable to articulate "Greta,” she would say her name was “Kata.” And "Kata” she remains to this day in the intimate family circle. Asa slim child of 5, with straight hair and solemn eyes, little Kata was never looked upon as a coy, troublesome child. Sometimes vistitors asked her to sing a little song. She obeyed without any fuss. Her reward would be a 5-ore piece, which she would straightway spend at the local sweet shop on a hammer-shaped lollipop called a "klubba”—a delicacy very popular with every Swedish child. The change from complete ease and childish self-possession to sudden shyness seems to have coincided with the commencement of Greta's school life. For the first time she found herself herded with a lot of other children, no longer able to follow her own inclinations in the choice of company or solitude. The highly strung and sensitive Greta had not been taugnt to give way to her brother and sister at home. On the contrary, in her little corner behind the stove, where no one thought of disturbing her, she had already learned the fascinating but dangerous game of dreaming. But like all other children, of course, she soon learned to hold her own in most sports and games. Yet at school it was not easy to persuade the powers that be or the teasing schoolmates that she needed privacy. a a a HER emotional reactions were temperamental to a degree. She alternated between the heights of bliss and the depths of despair, and there is no doubt she was a difficult child, both to her parents and teachers. The strange thing is that she met with so little intolerance in her highly unsympathetic environment. “They knew," she says, “that I was only unhappy. They never put my moods down to naughtiness or ill nature.” Fru Gustafsson must, however, have found it hard at times to understand her difficult little daughter. Greta was reserved and self-centered; her mother expansive and communicative, full of sympathy and generous impulses, big in every way. Os peas-

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Above—The years and her daughter’s fame have not changed Greta Garbo's mother, pictured here as she sits in her mooest dwelling in the Soder quarter of Stockholm. She prefers living there still to occupying any luxurious abode which could be hers for the wishing. ant stock, from the lovely district of Varmland, she spoke with the warm, vibrant accent of her province, and to this day she has never contracted the artificiality and sophistication of a bourgeoise. In the household she was thrifty, ingenious with her needle and able to make a kronor stretch where most other women would have needed at least two. Fru Gustafsson knew very little of her daughter’s secret yearnings to be an actress. She found far more companionship in her elder daughter, Alva, who had a talent for writing little stories. Greta's bent did not lie in this direction. She was rather a lazy child. She did not play with toys like other little girls. She wanted to be an actress! This was all the more remarkable because no one could remember any one in the Gustafsson family ever bfing connected with the stage. It was certainly not an inherited tendency. And then as the summer days lengthened, she wandered farther and farther from home, until one evening she stood beside the famous Soder theater, and anew chapter opened in her career. a a a WHAT interested Greta most was to watch the actors and actresses as they passed in, talking rather loudly, posing a little. She soon got to know them all by sight. As time went on, and she grew up in these surroundings, the actors and theater staff seemed to think she was connected with the playhouse in some way. Greta was 9 when the World War broke out; and although Sweden was not engaged in the conflict, the economic repercussions were such that the northern cities felt them almost as much as the combantant areas. Everything rose in price. The years between 1914 and 1918 were particularly difficult for the struggling Gustafsson family. With all his exertions Carl Gustafsson could not earn enough to keep the wolf from the door. To make matters worse so far as Greta was concerned, she began to outgrow her strength. Neighbors remember her as “the lanky little girl who was always hungry.” Greta’s pride might help her to hide her hunger at times; but she could not hide her rapidly increasing inches! The one place where she could really forget her childish troubles was the theater yard. Little by little she grew' bolder. The stagedoor keeper was a friendly soul, and once he actually let her pass the sacred portal. “This,” she said long afterwards, “was the door of heaven for me.” a a a SHE declares that the idea of watching a play from the stalls never entered her remotest dreams at this time. She was actually 12 years old before she had a seat “in front’’—and in the gallery at that! The experience left her curiously cold. It was not half so thrilling to see the show r as it was to stand behind, near a half-open dressingroom door, sniffing the lovely smells of make-up. imagining but not daring to watch the mysteries going on within. In Sweden the cinema is known as biograph and curiously enough this did not attract Greta nearly so much as the stage door where she could feel herself in contact with living actors. Mary Pickford. Charlie Chaplin, Douglas Fairbanks and Asta Nilsen were the great screen favorites of Stockholm at the time. But their appeal for Greta could

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THE INDIA\A?OLIS TIMES

Brown Bros. Above—“ The Door of Heaven” —So the little girl who was to become Greta Garbo called this shabby entrance to the Soder Theater. In the dreary courtyard outside it she stood for hours as a child, just for a glimpse of the performers entering or leaving. not be compared with the real players she met every day. In 1919 the war was over. But food continued scarce and economic conditions were just as difficult. Carl Gustafsson had done his best in the fight against overwhelming odds; now, quite suddenly, he gave up the struggle. He died at the age of 48. For the first time real grief entered Greta’s life. Because Greta had so got into the habit of bottling up her thoughts and emotions within herself, the blow hit her all the harder. She did not know where to turn for encouragement and comfort. Though still a schoolgirl she looked as tall as a woman. She ceased growing about this time. a a a FRAU GUSTAFSSON immediately adjusted herself to the situation, and went out to work. Alva and Sven, too. were already ■wage-earners. Sven was apprenticed to a baker, Alva obtained a job in an office. Only Greta was not yet old enough to contribute her share to the meager family income. If she could only earn a few coppers! There was, however, a practical strain in Greta’s character. She had often demonstrated it. So Greta found a job which would only take up her evening hours, after school, and her Saturdays and Sunday mornings. It happened that her father’s friend, who kept a neighboring barber shop, needed an assistant to put out clean towels, keep the shaving cups washed, and generally make herself useful to his wife while she lathered the customers’ faces. Greta hated the work; but she carried on. and the two kroner a week which were her first wages came in useful. They helped to pay for many little extras. They enabled her to have a white frock for her confirmation which took place shortly after her fifteenth birthday. Altogether, too, the work gave | her a fresh interest in life and ! made her feel a little more imporI tant. Her cheeks rounded out, her j eyes lost their far-away unhappy j look. She began to step out into I the world with anew confidence. Tomorrow—Greta’s first picture, ture. (Copyright. 1936. by United Feature Syndicate. Inc.) Burglar Gets Articles Worth SUM) A burglar yesterday entered the home of Mrs. Martha Hanna, 1301 College-av and stole articles valued at nearly SIOO. she reported to police today.

SECURITY BILL PASSES HOUSE, NDW IN SENATE Consideration of Measure in Upper House Is to Be Delayed Somewhat. (Continued From Page One) cratic nominee would not have the advantage of being carried along so strongly bv the Roosevelt prestige. Lieut. Gov. M. Clifford Townsend, presiding at the moment, grinned broadly. He is one of the leading Democratic gubernatorial candidates. A public hearing was to be held at 1 on the unemployment insurance measure. The House was to convene again at 3 p. m. Storm Clouds Gather Storm clouds gathered around the insurance measure when the Republican minority as well as Democratic rebels threatened to press for an amendment providing for inclusion of employers with fewer than eight employes as the bill now provides. Rep. Roy J. Harrison (R., Attica) is to offer an amendment seeking to make the bill apply to all employers of one or more persons. The rebellious farm bloc and “home-rulers" lined up w'ith the administration in passing the welfare measure. Rep. C. Nelson Bohannon (D., Jeffersonville), insurgent chieftain, in voting for the bill said, "Last night the strong-arm from downstairs (he referred to the Governor’s office) reached up here and opposed one of the good amendments >;o this bill. But despite failure to place it in the bill. I feel that the benefits of the measure to the aged is such that it overweighs all else.” Roll Call Votes Shown Rep. James M. Knapp, G. O. P. House leader, explaining his favorable vote said: “ I don’t like this bill because of the lack of homerule in it and because it serves to build up a political machine, but I feel that we can not afford to let this opportunity go by without doing all we can for those aged persons of the state.” Roll call on the welfare bill follows: AYES Republicans Andrew. Babcock, Brembeck, Coons, Gilbert, Guernsey, Harris, Janies, Johnson, Jordan, Knapp, Matthews, Mayhill, Millis, Mills, Newmann, Nottingham, Parker, Price, Shull, Slenker. (21.) Democrats Barrett, Barry, Baumgartner, Black, Bohannon, Braun, Byers, Carter, Coers, Colbert, Datterer, Downey, Flock, Gettinger, Gibbons, Griffith, Gutzwiller, Hill, Hoffman, Kent, Kirch. Klen, Krueger, Lee, Linke, Lomont, Lutz, Modisett, Mohr, Morgan, Nicholson, Nordhoff, Patterson, Pickens, Radabaugh, Reichmann, Reisinger, Richardson, Rockey, Roszkowski, Rowley, Sahm, Shafer, Sigler, Simpson, Smith, Stanton, Stephens. Strickland, Sturm, Thompson of Adams, Thompson of Brown, Treadway, Willan, Wolf, Wood, Woodard, Speaker Stein. (59.) No Democrats Opposed NOES: Republicans—Coffin, Creighton, Dilley, East, Evans, Goddar, Harrison, Hoover, Jeffrey, Moody, Roberts, Scermerhorn, Stearns (13). Democrats —None. ABSENT—Bauer (D). Dausman (R), Dyer (D), Emig (D), Groves (D), Morris (D) (6). The Townsend pension plan was injected for the second time in the special .session when Rep. Jacob J. Reisinger introduced a bill to enact the plan in Indiana to pay S2OO monthly to indigent persons more than 60 with a 2 per cent transactions tax. Assurances that House members will not be compelled to listen to a Communist speaker, as was permitted in the Senate, was given by Speaker Ed Stein when Rep. Herbert H. Evans (R., Newcastle) criticised the Senate’s action. “No Communist will appear in this house as long as I am speaker,” Speaker Stein told the House

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MOTHER. 60. LEARNING ENGLISH IN WPA CLASSES

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You can’t see it in the picture, but her glasses hunch forward on her nose when she thinks. She’s more than 60. She’s learning the English language that her sons and daughters know so well. Now that they're away from home and she no longer has to minister to their needs, she’s studying in the emergency education division of the

HOUSE INDULGES IN ‘HORSE PLAY' Forgets Weighty Matters to Dub Member ‘Admiral of Silver Crick.’ Temporarily forgetting such matters as old-age pensions and social security, the House of Representatives today entertained the galleries and themselves in a half hour of “horse play.” Solemn bestowal of one of former Gov. Ruby B. Lafoon's famed commissions, this one designating- the recipient “Admiral of Silver Crick,” and presentation of an automatic tail-wagging donkey to Rep. H. H. Evans, House minority caucus chairman, were among the highlights. Legislative adjournment was suggested by Rep. James M. Knapp, minority leader, -who urged “that three members from each House wait upon the Governor and request he adjourn the General Assembly and turn all legislation pertaining to social security over to experts.

Resolution Is Tabled The resolution was tabled. Rep. Scott Pickens (D., New Albany), was decorated with a paper plug hat and a to} gun after being commissioned “Admiral of Silver Crick.” Rev. Joseph A. Andrew (R,, Lafayette) did the honors. Rep. Evans slapped at executive department heads under Gov. McNutt, and warned the Democrats that the Republicans intend to “clean the Statehouse.” members shortly before adjournment. In a somersault that was meek and without fireworks, insurgent House Democrats last night jumped through an administration hoop, and reconsidered their revolt on the “home-rule” county board section of the bill. The action placed the boards back into the hands of the circuit court judges, and instead of three county commissioners, county auditor and circuit court clerk sitting on the board, it is to be composed of two women and three men not affiliated with either major party. The flop of the insurgents cost the board members their S6O to S3OO salaries yearly when Rep. Hardin S. Linke (D„ Columbus), who offered the motion to reconsider,* said he would vote only if the members served without pay.

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Works Progress Administration in Indianapolis. Her finger moves down to the next line. The voice stumbles a bit. “Ow dya do.” Here the teacher interrupts. “No. Get that ‘h’ sound in. It is ‘huh’.” The student looks at him critically. There is no such funny sound in her native language.

OFFICIAL WEATHER — t'. S. Weather Bureaii____

Sunrise 6:03 Sunset 5: t; TEMPERATURE —March 11. 193.1 < a. m 45 1 p. m 12 Today 6a. m 49 19 p. m 55 1 a. m 51 11 a. m 56 S a. m 52 12 (Noon) 55 9 a. m 53 1 p. m 45 BAROMETER 7 a. m 29.76 1 p. m 29.61 Precipitation 24 hrs. ending 7 a m... 00 Total precipitation since Jan. 1 4 72 Deficiency since Jan. 1 2.24 OTHER CITIES AT 7 A. M. Station. Weather. Bar. Temp. Amarillo. Tex Clear 30.26 32 Bismarck. N. D Cloudy 30.16 26 : Boston Cloudy 30.32 36 i Chicago Cloudy 29 68 48 I Cincinnati Cloudy 29.78 48 'Denver Clear 30.32 20 Dodge Citv. Kas Clear 30 24 26 Helena. Mont Cloudy 30.36 24 | Jacksonville, Fla. Clear 29,80 58 Kansas City. Mo Clear 30.04 36 Little Rock. Ark Cloudy 29.90 54 Los Angeles Foggy 30.06 52 Miami. Fla Clear 29.90 62 Minneapolis Snow 29,70 32 Mobile. Ala Cloudy 29.86 62 New Orleans Cloudy 29.90 62 New York Rain 30 08 48 Okla. City. Okla Clear 30.18 38 Omaha, Neb cloudy 30.00 34 Pittsburgh Rain 29.86 4R Portland. Ore Cloudy 30.16 42 San Antonio. Tex. ... Rain 29.94 64 San Francisco Clear 30.02 54 St. Louis Cloudy 29.84 44 Tampa. Fla Clear 29.86 60 Washington, D C Rain 29.78 54

HOUSE GAG IMPOSED ON TAX INFORMATION Committee Blocked in Work on Corporation Levy. By United Press WASHINGTON, March 11. House tax experts imposed a gag today on Treasury infprmation regarding the effect of “cushion” reserves on the President’s corporation surplus tax proposals to raise $620,000,000 for budget balancing purposes. The Ways and Means Subcommittee. however, indicated privately that every effort would be made to have the yield proposed by the President provided for in the tax bill to be drafted late this week. Under proposals before the committee the graduated surplus tax would be raised from the originally proposed maximum of 40 per cent of net corporate earnings. The committee had anticipated receiving from the Treasury today j material to indicate the effect on the $620,000,000 revenue proposal of congressionally proposed exemptions so that corporations could have “cushion” reserves to protect them ! in time of economic stress.

HOUSE MAKES 6 AMENDMENTS IN PROPOSED LAW Senate Action to Come After Changed Bill Is Printed. The controversial public welfare bill that this morning was passed 80-13 by the Indiana House of Representatives. now is before the Senate. Consideration of the bill in the Seifate was delayed somewhat. Amendments can not be offered until the bill, as amended by the House, is printed and laid on the Senators’ desks. The upper house did. however, study the welfare setup as set forth in the original bill. The major amendments incorporated in the bill by the House of Representatives after a day and night debate are: Reducing the state administrator's salary to S4OOO yearly from $6000; qualifying a .section pertaining to investigators to make it apply only to state investigators; giving the state board the right to a partial merit system for employes, but freeing county boards from classifying or setting up personnel standards for employes. Giving the state the right to supervise the care of dependent children; granting $25 for burial plot in addition to $75 funeral expenses for old-age pensioners; eliminating S6O annual salary for county welfare board members. Major Changes Attempted Major amendments attempted by farm bloc and home-rule Democrats and Republicans and defeated during yesterday and last night's session include: One eliminating the section placing state charitable institutions under the new welfare board; an amendment eliminating a section termed a "ripper” clause giving the Governor the right to transfer agencies to the proposed welfare board; fixing the salaries of welfare board assistants and investigators in counties at SIBOO yearly and limiting investigator to each 300 applications. Amendments to fix the age at 65 years to take effect in 1937 and to pay pensioners not less than S3O and SSO for persons totally disabled; banning property liens of pensioners and an attempt to take out sections for recovery of estates of pensioners by the state; placing the entire burden of cost for old-age pensions on the state and Federal governments with the state bearing the county's portion of the burden.

THREATENING MINISTERS CRITICISED BY BISHOP “Some Preachers Do Not Refresh Listeners.” He Says in Sermon. Ministers who denounce and threaten their congregations were criticised todaly by the Rt. Rev. Robert N. Spencer. Episcopalian bishop of west Missouri, in a Lenten sermon in Christ Church. ‘‘lt is strange that so many preachers do not refresh people. They denounce and threaten these tired people. They pound the pulpit and make angry gestures,” Bishop Spencer said. ‘‘Our work, the work of the toiling multitudes, is so killing because we are not creators. We aren’t making things. We are being ground to pieces by things. Jesus came to rest our minds. “Today we torture our minds. We gloat over horrors until we imagine the world is a horror. And it isn’t. Most people are reasonably happy, or might be. if they would allow themselves to be.” CITY FLIER IN CRASH Commander O. O. Kessing Unhurt in Seaplane Crack-I'p. Timm frprrinl MANILA. P. 1., March 11—Commander O. O. Kessing, Indianapolis, and Lieut. L. C. Simpler, naval pilot, were reported uninjured today after their seaplane crashed in Lipton Bay and w r as destroyed. Commander Kessing, a son of Edward Kessing, 2842 Park-av, Indianapolis, is executive officer of the U. S. S. Augusta.

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Copr. 1936, Standard Ol :Co.