Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 May 1937 — Page 3
“PAGE 3
- The Morning After
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
WALLIS, DUKE WILL MARRY AT CANDE. CASTLE
‘ NLRB CALLS FOR T Staunchest T rouper on Stage of Life NIGHT HEARINGS | * INRAIL DISPUTE
~ U. S. Attorneys Speed Quiz On Union Charges of Wagner Violations.
Mrs. Simpson Signs Paper Permitting Ceremony on French Soil.
By United Press MONTS, France, May 8.—The Duke of Windsor and Mrs. Wallis Simpson have decided finally to be married at the Chateau de Cande here, it was believed today. Place, and date, were a secret which they shared only .with the Duke of Kent, the Duke’s youngest, favorite brother, who is expected to be best man. : The fact that Mrs. Simpson had her | birth certificate attested at Vendome yesterday was believed, however, to make it certain that the marriage would take place at the chateau. Such attestation is required under French law.
June Date Favored
Also, despite intimations that the ceremony might be held soon after the coronation, May 12, there are ; formalities under French law which ®
ar ps lle gy ) "5 9 Oh, Mom, How's Fer Cuttin The Grass?’ (Circus Is Coming)
an early day in June. (Continued from Page One)
William Seagle, trial examiner, | today ordered night sessizas next 4+ | Week to hear union chrrges of Labor Relations Act violations against Bowman Elder, Indiana | Railroad receiver. | ‘The half-day session scheduled , today in the Statehouse was post- | poned. Hearings will be resumed ' ¢ | Monday. > Attorneys for the Federal board and the railroads receiver are | to attempt to speed the hear- | ing by stipulations on testimony | contending that company officials intimidated employees into signing an agreement for a 125 per cent wage increase. } Through testimony of Amalgamated Association of Street, Electric Railway and Motor Coach Employees members, the Labor Board | attorney, I. S. Dorfman, yesterday sought to bring out additional evidence seeking to prove that agents | for supervisory officers of the ‘re- | ceiver attempted to “pack” or | intimidate union meetings.
TEPPELIN BLAST | DEATHS NOW 35
Sabotage Probe Pushed; Formal Inquiry to Open Monday.
Reports from the chateau were that the Duke strongly favored an Austrian wedding on the ground that, at some secluded place, there would be less publicity. Mrs. Simp- | son, it was said, held out for a wedding at the chateau and won her point. People who had not seen the Duke | ania will be asleep. People will |of cross-my-heart-hope-to-die fersince his abdication have been | a]l be asleep, too, except the {rain | vor. astonished to see him here—smiling, | engineer and the circus man who| It is an established fact that the hevien Withouy ines of worry in stays awake with the elephants. following headline acts, all acclaimed 1s face and looking years younger. enthusiastically in Chicago and New More and more he seems to joel |, There Sr tobe, three separate |S in, tS on free of the weight of responsibility | “0 they aré to be parked on | €ach and every performance, by one and worry lifted from him with his | 4" gio" pour Giding at Keystone [2nd all, at the Cole Brothers-Clyde abdication and his reunion with Ave Beatty Circus. : Mrs. Simpson. :
Television Record
Business Agent on Stand
Lloyd Rosencrans, Anderson, business agent of Amalgamated Local | 1069, testified he was reprimanded | by (Ira Babcock, Anderson ticket agent, for posting a notice to em- | ployees urging them to continue to | work at their jobs while “threats” "| of strike were in the air. | He testified he was called on the | telephone on one occasion by Louis | Rappeport, receiver's auditor, .and urged to approve a petition for the | 1212 per cent wage increase. He said Mr. Rappeport told him “you'll be out of a job and so will I” if the agreement was not ac-
(Continued from Page One)
on the disaster he said that the likelihood of deliberate destruction of the giant airship “seems very small.” Nevertheless, he said ‘“ob=-
Beatty on Program To wit and viz.:
. As soon as every one awakens, the tents and animals, kitchens .and
| cepted.
| about a job.”
He said a railroad foreman told him that because of his union ac- | tivities he wag “hunting an excuse to get rid of me.”
Tells of Opposition
He testified an employee. Frank Anderson,
Norviel,
Mr. Rosencrans testified he told | Mr. Rappeport, “I'm not worrying
Thousands of patrons of the drama have passed through the lobby of English’s Theater. many of them have failed to noticé the bronze tablet (above) which honors the staunchest trouper on
Perhaps | was dedicated.
the stage of life.
On Mother’s Day, 1931, the tablet
It commemorates the origin of the day, which took place here in 1904. Tomorrow, again, the nation pays tribute. <{o
The weather was sultry this morn- | horses will .all be moved to the show
ing and the Duke stayed indoors. It was understood that he had consulted engineers as to the possibility of viewing his brother-suc-cessor’'s coronation by television. British television experts will record the coronation. The Duke hopes to have a set sufficiently powerful installed in the ancient kitchen of the chateau, now made. into a bar and informal grill room,
grounds, Keystone and Southeastern Aves. Everyone connected with the circus insists it will not. take an awfully
long time to set it wp. The.big top, which goes up ie balloon, seats nearly 11,000 persons. There are to be two performances tomorrow and two Monday. At 11:30 a. m. Monday there will be a street parade,
“In addition to Clyde Beatty, the world’s greatest wild animal trainer, and Ken Maynard, celebrated movie star and his congress of Wild West folk, there will ne Mlle. Rita La Plata, European aerial sensation; the Jorgen Christensen liberty horse display; the world-famous Gretona family, nigh-wire thrillers; the famed Beehee-Ben Hamid troupe of Arabian acrobatic stars; Mlle. Cyse Odell, sensational aerial
viously the possibile of sabotage also must be examined.” Col. Johnson said many of the survivors and eyewitnesses of the ‘crash already had been questioned by Dr. Fred Fagg Jr., chief of the Air Commerce Bureau. A board of three—South Thimble Jr., solicitor for the Department of Commerce, chairman; Maj. R. W. Schroeder, Assistant Director of the Bureau of Air Commerce, and Den=-
wish the enough to give the Amalgamated
"a ni mee mer noua VIOther’s Day Brings Appeal have money enough with $250,000 . : x For Lower Childbirth Toll
Ora O. Parks, circus press agent, | gymnastic headliner; the Flying [Dis Mulligan, chief of the regulasays the circus this year is the |Harolds and the Peerless Illingtons, | tions and enforcement division of greatest in its history and when he | troupes of stars on the high and | the Bureau—will start formal hearsays it his eyes get wide with a sort | lofty trapeze. ings without the testimony which “Anna Butler, expert rider of | Capt. Lehman might have been rearing and high-jumping horses; | able to add to the record. ‘| Harriet Beatty, famed wild animal | Capt. Lehmann died in a Lake-
company had money 7 2 a
Wallis to Forego Royalty Title
GIRL SCOUTS TO BE |Rovaity Ti IN "YOUTH | REVIEW | 2p Mor somes, fogs
“Her Royal Highness” after her
on hand, for ine employees didn't have the money,” he said.
Circus Facts
Through other witnesses : the
. torneys
*mob” [that
Zy United Press
- PARIS, May 8.—Catholic lay leaders, defying a government ban, today ordered their followers to join "in the traditional parades tomorrow on the anniversary of the birth-of
Joan of Arc.
Because of the troublotis political situation the procession was banned. Leaders of the Catholic Nationalist groups retorted by followers to parade in small groups of less than 150 each.
GARBAGE AND ASH PICKUP TO CHANGE
Garbage and ash colections are to go on summer schedule Monday, W. H. Winship, assistant _superinendent of collections, announced to-
day.
“Garbage, under the change, will be collected twice weekly and ashes every two weeks. There will be no, change in the collection districts, Mr. Winship said.
Labor Bpard counsel and union atpete to prove charges that supervisory employees of the receiver | were part of a so-called “stormed” meeting in Anderson on January 25. The witnesses testified of attempts to force a strike vote at the | meeting. The vote was not taken.
"FRENCH CATHOLICS DEFY PARADE BAN
ordering their
(Continued from Page One)
able for expectant mothers, how to prepare for healthy babies. Yet, every year the maternity death rate of the United States is second highest on the world list for civilized countries. Science has advanced, but we have not kept pace.
With utter frankness, the Maternity Center Association announces that this seeming paradox can be attributed to the fact that the good care which is every woman's right is limited to the very few.
Such care is not expensive, the assertion continues. In New York, it says, this care can be provided for as little as $65, and the cost range is lower in smaller communities. What, then, -has been our difficulty? How have we made Mother's Day a time of sorrow for many who would hold it as a day of joy? Briefly, we have been slack in giving the women of the nation a chance to avail themselves of the new knowledge. We have been more interested in the addition of a battleship to the navy than in saving mothers. Files of maternity clinics bear mute testimony of the fact that women everywhere are reaching out for help as they prepare for moth-
.erhood. Frequently they write that
they. are in benighted areas where no clinic is situated within a radius that they can travel. They are afraid. They don’t know what to do or whom to ask. That situation occurs in America
N
IN INDIANAPOLIS
MEETINGS TODAY
George R. Lee, 79, at 2020 N. Tacoma, chronic nephritis.
where we bemoan, sometimes, that!
all our pioneer trails have joined civilized highways and we have no wilderness to conquer today. Here is a field worthy of our best efforts. much lower rates of maternity mortality have occurred wherevet good care has been provided for expectant mothers - through the enfire pregnancy period, a campaign to make such a program nation-wide is a worthy honor to render mothers on Mother's Day.
New Legislation Benefit
A great public health expert, Dr. Hermann M. Briggs of New York, once stated that within certain limitations any community can determine its own death rate. We, as a nation, can decide our own maternity mortality if we will study our health resources, co-ordinate them, and provide funds for their successful operation. As part of the Social Security Act, Congress has appropriated $3,800,000 for nation-wide maternity education and care. The states must equal the Federal outlay in dollars. Thus, we only can beseech them to take advantage of the generous assistance of the Federal powers. Some states there are which are keenly aware of woman's plight. There is a bill béfore the New York State Legislature today which would provide an appropriation of $75 toward the expenses incurred for hospital, medical and nursing services for every mother and child. This payment is not offered as a birthrate incentive or bonus— merely to better the care of maternity patients. Such legislation, kindly though it
Since a survey reveals that
1300 Rehearsing for Part in
Pageant at Butler.
Nearly 300 local Girl Scouts are
| rehearsing their act for “Youth on
Review,” a pageant to be given Sunday afternoon, May 23, at the Butler Fieldhouse. The pageant cast is to include 3000 boys and girls from Marion County high schools and youth organizations such as the Y. M. C. A,, Y. W. C. A, Boy Scouts and Camp Fire Girls. Girl Scouts will appear in Sellinger’'s Round, an English May Day festival dance popular in ‘the time of Queen Elizabeth. Its tune is believed to be one of the oldest in existence. Fourteen groups representing 40 troops are holding scheduled rehearsals. Dance instructors are Miss Lois Chesterfield, WPA Marion County recreation department; Miss Jean Bassett, Orchard School teacher; Miss Marilyn Knowlton, Scout leader; Miss Jenny Lind and Miss Dorothy Hande, Scout field workers, and Mrs. Irene Jones, School 42 teacher. The “lost and found” bureaus to be set up in the Fieldhouse the day of the performance will be conducted by senior Girl Scouts. Miss Ruth Pease, director, will have charge of Girl Scout activity.
DEAD BOY CYCLIST BELIEVED TEXAN
Police today said that the body of a boy cyclist killed on Road 31 near Columbus yesterday answered the description of John Morris of Tex-
marriage to the Duke of Windsor will be published in tomorrow’s issue of the Sunday newspaper Reynolds’ News. The newspaper. will say that the title must be conferred specially by the King. Neither the Duke nor
Mrs. Simpson has raised the ques- |.
tion, it is asserted, and Mrs. Simpson is against such proposal. Hence, the newspaper will say, the present intention is that the honor will not be conferred.
ASKS $25,000 FOR FALL AT FIDELITY
A suit asking $25,000 damages of the Fidelity Building Co. and the Fidelity Trust Co., 148 E. Market St., was filed in Circuit Court today by Herschel Lowish, 833 Carlyle Place. : Mr. Lowish's suit charged that he was seriously injured when he slipped and fell in the lobby of the Fidelity Building Nov. 4, 1935. He claimed that the companies were negligent in’ allowing the floor to become wet and slippery. Mr. Lowish said his right leg was fractured,
SERVICES HELD FOR MRS. LYDIA VANZANDT
Funeral services for Mrs. Lydia VanZandt were held at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Edwin, F. Yetter, 55 LeGrande Ave. | Mrs. VanZandt was widely: known throughout vaudeville circuits as Lydia Nevada and worked with. her husband, James L. VanZandt, 1614 Union St. for more than 3Q years.
TOMORROW AND MONDAY
Circus—The Cole Bros.-Clyde Beatty Circus. .
Arrival—Three special trains of double-length railroad cars to arrive in Indianapolis at an early hour tomorrow morning.
Unloading Point—At the big Four railroad sidings on S. Keystone Ave. Circus Grounds—Southeastern and Keystone Aves. Performances — Tomorrow and Monday and ‘2 and 8 p. m Personnel—Staff, departmental heads and working forces total 480. Stars and performers total 600. Street Parade — Monday morning. Leaving the circus grounds at 10:30 a. m., the procession will proceed on Southeastern Ave. to Washington St.; west on Washington St. to Capitol Ave.; north on Capitol Ave. to Ohio St.; east on Ohio St. to New Jersey St.; south on New Jersey St. to Washington St., east on Washington St. to Southeastern Ave. and thence to the. circus grounds. rE Downtown ticket: office — Haag Claypool Drug Store. Tickets now on sale “for all performances at same prices as at the circus grounds.
| | Troupe of bareback riding marvels,
known and the best of the funI makers
trainer, presenting a new mixed wild | wood, N. J., hospital a few hours
animal display; the famous Aurela
direct from Europe; Georgia Sweet, daring Roman standing rider of the only 16-horse hitch in the world; Harold Barnes, the world’s greatest juvenile tight-wire star, and more than a hundred others. “There are 60 clowns, the best
of all nations. Emmett Kelly and Otto Greibling, two of the greatest in the world, will be on hand at each performance.”
YOUTH ACCUSED IN - HOLDUP OF WRITER
Ry United Press BUFFALO, N. Y., May 8—A 22-year-old Buffalo youth, whose name was not revealed, was arrested today in connection with the alleged beating and robbing of Mrs. Louise Eppley, 35, short-story writer of Littlefield, O. The youth was taken into custody after Mrs. Eppley told Erie; Pa. authorities she. was attacked and robbed by two hitch-hikers she had picked up in her automobile near Toledo. She charged the two hitch-hikers held her prisoner here for three days and then took. her to Erie, robbed her of $1000 worth
after the board had been formed to inquire into the crash—a disaster which Germany had believed impossible. Although he had stumbled from the flaming werckage of the “perfect” airship crying, “I can’t understand it, I can’t understand it,” investigators had counted on his vast technical knowledge for aid in seeking the cause of the tragedy,
LAKEHURST, N, J, May 8.—In the death of Capt! Ernst A. Lehmann, German |lighter-than-air power suffered a greater loss today than that of the dirigible Hindenburg which is replaceable in a short time. = Sh Capt. Lehmann was heir-apparent to the leadership of the great Friedrichshafen docks which turned out 153 airships—starting with the first attempts of Count |Zeppelin, developing through the fleets of World War raiders and culminating in the highly successful Graf Zeppelin and the shattered Hindenburg. Dr. Hugo Eckener, who started with only a tradition atter the war and ended by he the name of Zeppelin across the skies of four continents, is an old man. A few incautious remarks brought him into Nazi displeasure. | * Capt. Lehmann would have been his. successor in building the Zeppelin| empire which Dr. Eckener
of jewelry and threw her from the car. The automobile was found abandoned in Fredonia, N. Y.
hopes will one day include all conti nents and even a regular round-thes world schedule. :
“I'M SO GLAD JIM CALLED"
Insurance Federation of Indiana, lunch- Earl L. Caldwell, .42, at 946 W. 25th, eon, Indianapolis Athletic Club, noon. #
Junior Chamber of Commerce, dinner,
chronic myocarditis. "1 Cs is, is not enough. Good care must arkams, To¥, Jormerly employed | The husband, who has given his hier Ghapiber of Commatve, ui carcinoma. ati 1ty Hospital, | begin early in pregnancy when dan- | here as a horse trainer. magic act on the stages of the Lyric, aE Vocational Association, meeting, | pei, Prinz, 41, at Methodist Hospital, | Bers can be sighted and develop- The boy was killed when struck | indiana and Keith's theaters he Claypool Hotel, 10 a. m. Anna Sowa, 74, at 1601 Broadway, ar- | MEDt Of toxemias discovered and |by an automobile one mile north of | pesiges all the major circuits, Indiana Federation of Music Clubs, jun- | teriosclerosis. ' cured. The National Federation of | Columbus. The body is in Colum- | ciirvives the deceased. or convention, meeting, Hotel Severin, all Women’s Clubs has done much, this bus pending permanent identificaay. 242 1 : : Atliance. Francais, past year, to prepare communities | ton. to keep Mother’s Day in a construc-
Washington, 1 p. m. is tae tive manner, by sponsoring projects IRVINGTON LEGION
MARRIAGE LICENSES ] ; : : : : —— United States Weather Bure to provide suitable maternity care. | (These lists are from official records 29 Such a service presents the most INDORSES MEURER Members of the Irvington Post
at the County Courthouse. The Times FORECAST—Thunder showers probable priceless tribute to the mothers of happier, and more abundant. It|No. 38 of the American Legion last
is not responsible for any errors of |late tonight or tomorrow; somewhat 3 : : ime warmer tonight, cooler tomorrow. the land. It gives them life—richer, Sunrise oooo--- 4337 | Sunset seheeil, 6:45 | will keep future Mother's Days night voted to indorse Albert F. 4 b TEMPERATURE « {from needlessly ‘being Memorial | Meurer. for the office of 12th DisRobert J. Lawler. 41, of 1145 N. Illinois —May 8, 1936— Days. trict “Commander of the Legion.
tig Sf gs Heke Se ei Fr Tr vivester inl » 8 . o Has : oe BULLET SET OFF BY
Mary Gertrude HAyden, 17. Bridgeport. BAROMETER | commander of the district. Judge BLAZE HITS WOMAN | commander.
Gilbert C. Trennebohl, 21. R. . Indi. CT... 500% Wilfred Bradshaw now is district Mrs. E. S. ‘Schwartz, 71st St. and
anapolis, Helen Joscphine Jones. 19,"R. R.-|. * Webb Road, was in Methodist “1osWe solicit
If circumstances prevent a personal visit, your mother will appreciate a
LongDistance call fromyou tomorrow.
luncheon, Hotel
The Telephone brings the real you across the miles! ;
OFFICIAL WEATHER
harles H. McConnell, 24, of 1915 N. Coto) Ave.; Morrell Bufford, 21, 142 W.
27th S
: i olis. BE : | —— — Robert C! Griffin, 26. Cambridge City: | RUEIPUALION 24 bis, ending 7 4. m.. Frances Elaine Sharp. 27, of 713 Emerson | pyro (ince Jan. 1 : St MIDWEST WEATHER S. ylor, . of 1525 E." Michi- INDIANA—Thundershowers probable 1 i i 1 i © Theresa Matlock, 19. of 1616 Col- | tonight or Sunday, somewhat warmer ean: Dita) today with a bullet wound in ege Ave. : .. | and south portions tonight; cooler Sunday | N€r right ankle. While she was Russel © Holler, 12, of 1207 Colones Als, | atternom. burning debris: in her rear yard yesL. Stillwell, 25, 'o : ; : J Ener E Dill,_ 21, of 265 Minkner St: Se On Thunder showers fonight and | terday a bullet in the fire exploded, Fleanor Marie Carter, 16, © offey extreme south, cooler north portion late inflicting the wound. Cyrus R. Davis, 33. of 815 N. Delaware | tonight; cooler Sunday. Betty Marie Six, 31, of 815 N. Dela- LOWER MICHIGAN — Mostly ware St. showers tonight and probably Sunday Josepn4H. Copeland. 37, of 3234 Broad- | morning. somewhat warmer southeast. E. Copeland, 39, of 3234 Broad- | cooler north portion late tonight; much
5 f 2528 Central cooler Sunday. Mor he Shnnte 92, of 3720 | OHIO—Increasing cloudiness and war-
Ave: M M.A mer tonight, followed by showers Sunday: N. Pennsy Ea, Sir. 26. Indianapolis; | cooler Sunday afternoon’ and night. yi 1 23, of 7725 College Ave. KENTUCKY—Fair this afternoon, ini creasing cloudiness tonight, followed by showers beginning in extreme west portion late tonight or Sunday and in east and central portions Sunday, slightly warmer tonight; cooler in west portion Sunday afternoon, cooler Sunday night.
WEATHER IN OTHER CITIES AT 7 A. M.
Station. Amarillo, Tex.
cloudy,
First Mortgage Loans Send your love
ON MOTHER'S Morton. Goldie Hyatt, at 1225 St. Peter. Bismarck, N. D
3 Noble, Odrus Elder, at 439 S. Keystone. . : . 5 with a box of these fresh, Boston 30. = vs eo ange . Boy Chicago 5 ; delicious, dignified candies. i s, at 2530 Hillside. ncinnati Charles, Mamie Alums, a Cleveland, O. 2 Dodee. City. K odge City, Kas. DEATHS 3 Helena, Mont. Roscoe McClain, 45, at Long Hospital, | Jacksonville, Fla. intestinal obstruction. Kansas City. . Maude Owen Marshall, 49, at City Hos- | Little Rock. Ark. pital, pulmonary tuberculosis. Charles W. Gaddy, 58, at 610 Draxe, chronic myocarditis. Caroline Parker, 76,-at 2341 Indianapolis. carcinoma. : New Orleans Winiford Gamble, 39, at St. Vincent's | New York Hosnital. diabetes mellitus. Okla. City, -t Ida Mae Vedstiad, 76, at 2112 N. Dela- | Omaha, ware, carcinoma. Pittsburgh Marietta P. Adams, 81, at 2607 Carroll- | Portland,” Or=. ton, broncho-pneumonia. : : San Antonio, Tex. .... Lillian Mae Bell, 5, at City Hospital, | San Prancisco acute myocarditis. St. Louis Barbara Ann Meair, 16 days, at City Shmpae Fa. “ee tis, \ Was ton, D.-C.
on well-located
Indianapolis
Edwin, Margaret McShay,” at St. Vinnt's Hospital. : paul. Eleanor Pratt, at St. Vincent's
Hospital.
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