Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 June 1938 — Page 13
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 1938
GINGER LOOKS BIT WISTFUL
Fay Bainter Wins Praise
In New Film
Veteran Actress Finally |
Impresses Hollywood In Hoosier s Story.
By JAMES THRASHER On June 18, C. Douglas discovered that he was No. 1 Citizen of his birthplace, Columbia City. The occasion, celebrated with parades, bands speeches, story, “White Banners,” movie
done into
On or about the same date, Hol- |
lvwood discovered that Fay Bainter is an excellent actress. Again, the occasion was the showing of “White Banners” in the film capital. Possibly Indianapolis audiences will make the same discovery when the picture begins a week's engagement at the Lyric on Friday. Hollywood might have discovered this long ago, were it not for producers’ fabled gift for passing over obvious talent on occasion. For one thing, Miss Bainter was born in Los Angeles, a wild pitch’s distance form the movie center. Furihermore, she has been an Actress for 29 years, and a Broadway star for 22. She was in a succession of ! hits from “Arms and the Girl” in 1016 on through “Bast Is West,” “She stoops to Conquer,” “Lysistrata” a lot of others up to “Dodsworth.” with Walter Huston,
Talk of Academy Award
and
Hollywood might have rememhered her for her Walbrook's mother in and the Lady,” one of that few pleasant memories; or for performance in ‘Quality Street” Katharine Hepburn, soon ward After that Tomorrow”
“The Soldier
her | with after-
came “Make Way for and “Jezebel.” Nobody) paid much attention. Months passed hetween each film engagement, Now, with “White Banners” unfurled, there is talk of the Academy's s award for a supporting performance next There also is a new con-
winter. : Miss Bainter with War-
tracy for ner Bros. The contract calls for two pic- | tures a vear, the privilege of story | approval, permission to work for other studios and time to return to the stage. It's a more pleasing setup than that enjoyed by many vouthful and big-name Stars. And the salary is reputed to be around £2200 a week, which is nothing to | sneeze at, even if you happen to be allergic to money
Began at 16 in Stock
It took Miss Bainter 46 years to reach her present enviable state And she came up the hard way. She went on the stage when she was 16. Her early experience was with stock companies, playing town halls. tent shows, amusement parks and what-not in tank towns up and down the country. Her first days in New York found her with a job so small that she walked 80 blocks a day to rehearsals, caving subwav money for food. Eventually she received bit parts with Mrs. Fiske on tour, but each summer found her playing stock She once lived for two weeks on ovsters alone while waiting in Washington for a show to open.
Gets Leading Role
Fin ally she saved a little money, splurged it all by registering at the Algonquin in New York, and im- | pressed the manager to the extent of getting the lead in “Arms and | the Girl.” After that it was comparatively easy sailing until her movie days. Miss Bainter's next film will be “Mother Carey's Chickens,” in which she plays the first two-thirds of the title role. And she stands a chance of repeating Marie Dressler's late-in-life film triumph. Incidentally, the actress has been married for 17 years, and to the same man—Lieut., Comm. Reginald Gardner Hugh Venable, U. S. N,, reThey have a l4-vear- -old son
SCREEN WRITERS TO CHOOSE UNION
HOLLYWOOD, June 29 (U. PP.) .- A group of men who are paid from | £150 to $3000 week voted today 10 determitie which of two unions shall bargain for them with the 18 | movie studios for which they write scenarios. The privilege was claimed by both | the Screen Writers Guild and | Screen Playwrights, Inc, so the National Labor Relations Board ordered an election. Neither union | is affiliated with the American Fed- | eration of Labor or the Committee for Industrial Organization,
JENKINS WINNER IN STORK WAGER
HOLLYWOOD, June 28 (U, P).— Allen Jenkins, movie actor, was the winner today of a stork wager with Dick Powell Mrs, Jenkins gave birth to an eight-pound girl at Hollywood Hospital. Mrs. Powell, who is the film actress Joan Blondell, has been expecting the stork momentarily. Mr. Jenkins is a New York-born actor whose true name is Al MeGonegal. His wife is not in films.
TINY TOT CAST
Five-vear-old Ricardo Cezan has heen cast as Robert Benchley's son in the humorist's latest short, “How to Raise a Baby.”
tired.
“ ~
| they saluted.
WHAT, WHEN, WHERE
APOLLO
“Yom and Me.’ with Sylvia Sidney, George Raft Barton McLane, at 11:16, 1:24 3:32 5:40 7:48 and 9:56 Lowis- -Sehmeline, Shut Qickutes. at
11:01, 1 133 and CIRCLE
“The Birth of a Baby.” with Ruth King. Richard Gordon. at 11:35 1:20, 3:05 450 635 8:20 and 10
LOEW'S
“Lord Jeff with Freddie sarthol-
pint ew b
t 1 “Making the Headlines,” at 12:35 3.20 6:05 and 8:50
LYRIC “Gold Diggers in Paris,” with Rudy Lane. Hugh Herwl 45, 7:40 and 10:25.
le. with by w charles” empnr, at 12:55 3:40, 6
Hol
¥
Si Si
role of Anton |
fiim's |
| business district | gray uniforms long ago when their |
along
|
Hoosier-born Lloyd |
§
and | was the premiere of his |
Wg
-
Wonderful Time"
Ginger Rogers looked slightly wistful at the prospect of with Douglas Fairbanks Jr. and Lucille Ball. | open at the Circle beginning Friday.
“Having It is to
Insurance Available Now
Timex Special HOLLYWOOD, June 29 —Followi of Paul Mantz for a single stunt a suddenly lifted the ban against stun history of motion pictures has comple the screen's daredevils. Nineteen men and three women, t in the business, have been chosen to®* receive insurances. No others will be accepted, it was stated, unless
| they measure up later to the rigid |
standards required. First to take out the new policies were Paul Mantz, famous stunt fiver; Frank Clark and Tex Rankin, who signed for $15,000 accident pol- | icies preparatory to going into par-
| ticularly dangerous stunt fiving for
the new Richard Dix “Ground Crew.” Policies paying $5000 for death or dismemberment, $400 weekly indemnities for 12 months and medical | reimbursement may be secured for annual premiums ranging from $200 | to $400 depending upon the extent of coverage. Stunt policies will be offered to only . 22 in the profession. according
picture,
ng an experimental risk on the life
month ago, Lloyd's of London has! t men and for the first time in the; | opposite the Court House on Ala-
ted plans to insure a select group of
he most courageous and experienced
to Harold Barham of Earl W. MecGary Co. brokers representing Lloyd's. “After thorough Mr. Barham explains, "
investigation,” Lloyd's de-
| cided to offer this new service to a
our study experience, | to constitute |
limited number who, shows, have sufficient judgment and ability reasonable risks.”
Other stunt men and women to |
whom the new insurance is available are Mary Wiggins, Betty Danko, Ione Reed. Duke Green, Wesley Hopper, Allen Pomeroy,
Johnny Sinclair, Cliff Lyons, Chick Collins, Gilman and
Billy Jones, Yakima Canutt, Rose, Harvey Parry, Victor Metzetti, Matt Gordon Carveth
Tr ramp of Feet Heard Once Again at Historic Gettysburg
GETTYSBURG, Pa, June 29 (U.
| the battlefield at Gettysburg for the
P).—Two aged armies came back to | last time today with the sound of |
| dusty drums in their ears but with peace in their hearts. They came—veterans of the Grand Army of the Republic and the | | men of Robert E. Lee—for a final reunion in the little Blue Ridge foot-
| hills towns to which weary soldiers
trudged 75 years ago in search of
shoes and where they found, instead, the bloodiest battle of the Civil War.
Many of them had been here be-$——
fore. A few of them clanked through the little diamond-shaped in dusty blue and
cheeks were as smooth as the ripe | peaches which they saw shaken to the ground by the rumble of artillery. Hundreds more toiled slowly across the battlefield in 1913 on the 50th anniversary of Lee's last vain bid for victory. Today there were less than 2000 converging on the spot where James Gettyvs stopped his ox cart in 1780 at the end of his search for a fertile, peaceful farm.
Last Reunion
Thev will not come again. This
| T5th anniversary reunion is the last,
and Gettysburg—which once trembled at the clump of soldier boots her dust-white pikes—-wel- | comed Confederate and Union vet- | erans with a sunburst of flags in|
| the sunlight beside Old Glory. All of yesterday the advance! | guard drifted in from the West, |
| the South, the Northeast and today |
they were coming in full strength.
Knotty fingers fumbled at the | brims of black campaign hats as Grey hats came oft | to the weak cackle of a Rebel yell. | At the corners of the village ° dia- | mond” and along the road between the gray and blue camps they gathered to touch hands where once they had struck with shot and steel.
100 From Indiana and Ninois Attend Service
| Carpenter's charts, | mally increase the number of their
LIGHT LABOR CHANGE IN JULY PREDICTED
Changes in Indiana employment levels during July will be only slight,
Martin F. Carpenter. State Employment Director, predicted today. Of 137 industries included in Mr, 21 lines nor-
employees in July and 31 usually decrease their rolls, making only a slight change from June levels, he said. “If the conditions that ordinarily prevail in July are maintained this summer, there will not great amount of labor turnover Indiana industry next month.” Industries that reach peak employment curves during July in- | clude, beverages, brick, cement, dairy products, garages, ice cream, machine tools, petroleum refining |
in
| which the Stars and bars shook in| and quarrying.
'DOLLMAN'S ESTATE VALUED AT $110,000
Estate of Henry L. Dollman, In-
dianapolis contractor and real es-|
tate dealer, wh odrowned last week in White River, is valued at $110,000, according to the will on file in Probate Court today. The wife, Mrs. Harriett Dollman, is to receive the home at 4243 Washington Blvd. and personal effects Stock in the Federal Collateral Society was divided equally among the wife, a daughter, Mrs, Maxine Hazelwood, and a son, Henry Dollman
i It further was provided in the will
About 100 Civil War veterans
from central Indiana and Illinois, among them 12 from Indianapolis, are in Gettysburg today for the 75th anniversary celebration of the bat- | tle of Gettysburg. They left here
| yesterday afternoon on a special | train. | 8.S. Rhodes, 99, is the oldest vet- | eran in the local delegation, none of | which is under 90, Mr. Rhodes ex- | plained.
Didn't Fight There | “I didn't fight at Gettysburg, but! | I was born only 20 miles away, at
| Chambersburg, Pa., so the trip will | be something of a home-coming for | me.” The next oldest veteran from here | is the Rev. Matthew Johnson, who is 98. Each man is accompanied by a companion, at the insistence of the | Government, which extended the | invitations .o the celebration. Frank | Shellhouse and the Rev. Frank C. | Huston, past commanders in chief, | |B lead 3 ficiegation of more than | nion Veterans to the
that the residue of the estate be divided between the son and daughter.
STEPHENSON CASE PUT OFF TO JULY 7
NOBLESVILLE, June 29 (U. P) — | Judge Cassius M. Gentry has delayed until July 7 the arguments in the case of D. C. Stephenson,
i former grand dragon of the Indiana
Ku-Klux Klan who is serving a life sentence for the murder of Madge Oberholzer. Attorneys for Stephenson are trying to win a new trial, claiming he was afraid to testify in his own behalf at his trial. The State has filed a request for dismissal of the rehearing petition.
SWIM—DANCE
WESTLAKE
Chuck Haug Or Jrshestrs
Jimmie | | Dundee, Otto Metzetti, Jack Woody,
Bob |
be a!
JUNE CAGWIN, 36, DIES HERE AFTER BRIEF ILLNESS
William Bell to Be Buried Tomorrow; City Resident For 32 Years.
Miss 111 BE. 15th i St. | employment Compensation Division early today died at St. Vincent's Hospital after an illness of four days. She was 36.
Born in Joliet, Ili,
June Cagwin,
Miss Cagwin
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
an employee of the State Un- |
| had lived here more than 30 years. | She was a member of SS. Peter and
| Paul Cathedral.
After graduating from Tech High |
| School, | Art Institute. | Surviving are her mother, | Creed M. Cagwin of Indianapolis; | a sister, Mrs. T. M. Liddell of Philadelphia, and a brother, Fred M. Cagwin of New York. Funeral arrangements have not been completed.
WILLIAM BELL, 26 N. Kealing Ave, who died yesterday while en route to City Hospital in an ambulance, is to buried at Memorial Park tomorrow following services at 2 p. m. at his home. He was 56. Born in Mattoon, Ill, Mr. Bell had been a resident here 32 years and hed been employed as a mechanic for the Sunshine Cleaners, Inc. Surviving are the wife, Mayme; a daughter, Miss Una Bell. and foster son. Francis Schneider, of Indianapolis.
DR. WAHEEB SALIM ZARICK, 3358 Ruckle St., Indianapolis phycician and leader among Syrians in the United States, who died yester- | day at his home of a heart attack,
all
{is to be buried at Crown Hill to- | morrow | at 10:30 a. m. at St. George's Syrian | Orthodox Church. | Until the funeral the body will be | | at the Moore & Kirk Funeral Home, |
To Hollywood Stunt Men
following funeral services
He was 44,
2530 Station St.
HOMER T. BEACH, 1849 Shelby St., died yesterday of a heart attack at the Allied Wire & Iron Goods, 1118 Beecher St. He was 54.
A native of Marble Hill, Mo., Mr. |
Beach had lived since 1911.
in Indianapolis He had a barber shop
bama St. for many years. Survivors are his wife, Mae; a son, Wilburn; a stepson, Ray Rosebrook; two sisters, Mrs. Emil H. Soufflet and Mrs. Ernest W. Fullenwider, | and a brother, Buford E. Beach, all of Indianapolis. Funeral been made.
JAMES MERRITT GLOIN, who | died yesterday at Ann Arbor, Mich., after an illness of two weeks, is to be buried at Crown Hill following services at 10 a. m. tomorrow at the Flanner & Buchanan Mortuary. He was 3. | James was the son of Mr. and Mrs. | James A. Gloin, 151 W., 47th St. Mr. | Gloin is assistant treasurer and con- | troller of L. S. Ayres & Co. fort, Ind. Presbyterian Church, when he was 2 years old. Survivors besides the parents are | the grandparents. Mr. and Mrs. | James M. Gloir of Indianapolis and | Mr. and Mrs. Bon Merritt of Frank- | fort, Ind.
THIEVES STEAL SAFE AND TRUCK
Man Slugged and Robbed of
Money While Walking On Commons.
Police today thieves who
were searching for | not only broke into | Haeckl's Express, Inc., 942 Daly St. but used one of the company's trucks to haul away their loot. The burglars carried off an iron
Mrs. |
arrangements have not | | flooding his eyes, could only nod in
she attended John Heron |
PAGE 13
Appointed to Conduct Election Probe
Bar
Fae W. Patrick (left) and Harold K. Bachelder, appointed by Criminal Court Judge Frank P. Baker as Special prosecutors for the grand jury _probe of i
_members are to
Times Photo.
alleged primary election irregularities, conferred today on the procedure of the investigation.
Jury be named soon.
CRLKILLED BY | CIRCLING THE CITY
BASEBALL BAT
‘Twins Sob Out Death Story
James was baptized in the Frank- |
| Wegener,
Of 12-Year-0ld Sister at Willard Park.
Twin brothers of 11-year-old Elinor Moore sat on the front porch of their home today and sobbed out the story of how their younger sis-! ter was killed when struck in the head by a baseball bat at Willard | Park last night. Meanwhile, the parents, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Moore, of 402 Leeds Ave attempting to hide their grief from the twins, Billy and Bobby, who are | 12, completed funeral arrangements.
Rites are to be held at Woodside |
M. E. Church at 2 p. m. tomorrow,
with burial at Amo, home of Mrs. |
Moore. “We never did like ,that park)” Billy said today, while Bobby, tears
assent. After dinner last evening, Mr. and Mrs. Moore took their three children for a ride. On the way home they stopped at Willard Park. While game between the Crane and Grain | Dealer's Mutual teams in the Bush-
Feezle Tuesday Softball League, the |
parents strolled away from the | | diamond. “Be careful,” Mrs. Moore told Eli- | | nor after buying her an ice cream cone and seeing that she was out of | the way of the action of the players.
While 100 persons watched, Ralph
came up to bat for the Crane team.
safe containing between $80 and $90 |
and valuable papers, and two boxes of inner tubes, according to Frank Stehlin. manager. The truck was { valued at $800 Entrance to the office was gained by prying open the double doors, police said, The office also was ransacked.
Armed robbers who called him by | name held up Thomas Casey, 864 | Middle Drive, Woodruff Place, at the | rear of his home and took $20, his | driver's license and bank book, he reported to police. After warning | him that his family would be harmed if he notified the police, the
| masked bandits drove away. Mr. | Casey told police he believed he
| knew the license number of the car. | gat
race St. several dollars by walked through the commons between Blake and Geisendorfl Sts, he told police.
Paul Rhodes, 34, of 814 E. New York St. was the hero in the foiling of an attempted burglary today at a grocery store at 301 N. Davidson St. The store is owned by Oliver Riggs, 413 N. Pine St. Mr. Rhodes reported he heard someone in a grocery store at 301 N Davidson St, early today. | he rushed in and scared away iwo | alleged burglars.
| 48 | Schrock: brother,
| Joseph Altenhofer
Hildred Howard, “58, of 352 Mill- | was slugged and robbed of |
| Survivors: two men as he
He said!
One ran into the arms of Officer |
Michael Burns who arrested Clar- | ence Rappole, 20, of 434 N. Pine St, lon a burglary charge,
Theft yesterday of clothing, furniture and a watch with a total value of $131.50 was reported to police today by William Thurston, 29, Negro, of 220 W. North St.
| Rain. Lon
He swung hard at a pitched ball, the bat slipped and hurled HOUR the air into the crowd. It struck Elinor in the forehead, heavy end first. She was dead when the ambulance arrived. Dr. Frank | Ramsey, deputy coroner, said she received a fractured skull. “I saw the bat coming,” Billy said, “but she didn't.”
State Deaths
BOSWELL—Mrs. Ella D. Smith, 66. vivors: Daughters, Mrs. Vivia Mrs. Pearl Rush, s. Goldie Kerr, rs. Hazel Luck Mrs. Lucy Seaver, and Misses Mary,, Ivia and Minnie Smith: Orval, Charlie, Eimer and Everet BROOKSTON -Harry lag. Survivors: ife; daughters, Mrs, Ferguson and Misses Florence and Anna Mae: sons, Robert, Merrill, Wayne and Merle; brothers, Henrv., Habben, Will and Amos: sisters. Mrs. H. Sanson and Mrs. Henry Slayton. DELPHI—-Mrs. Effie Doty, Husband. William; parents, James Warden ELKHART Mrs. Frances C. Hathaway, 61. Survivors Husband, Arthur; daughter. Mrs. Albert Fix FT. WAYNE—-Miss Maude Van Dorston, Survivors: arents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Van Dorston: sister, Mrs, . 3 Thomas Van Dorston FT. WAYNE—Mrs, Mary Merz, 71. Survivors: Daughter, Mrs. Julia North: sis ter, Mrs. Elizabeth Sisterhen; brother,
Hus- | Joseph sons,
sons,
34.
Mr. and Mrs,
Mrs. Barbara Bifrid. 51. Survivers band, Michael: daughters, Mrs Chabas and Mrs. Arthur Daennell; Michael Jr. and Sebastian JEFFERSONVILLE—William Conlen, 58. Survivors: Wife. Fronia sons, William, Edward. Claude and Benjamin daughter, Lucille brother, Ernest sister, Margaret. KEMPTON—John E. Johnson, 62. Sure vivors: Son, Kenneth: daugnters. Mrs. Carl Patrick and Mrs. Cleo Whitaker brother, Jess; half-brothers, Paul and Guy | Scott. KOKOMO—Mrs. Sallv G. Pierce, 74. Survivors: Daughters, Mrs. Frances Purcel; sons, John and Fos e. =
LA PORTE Ms. Carolina Cohlgraff, 8 Survivors: Siste Mrs. Minnie 3s: sons, Henry and "George: daughters, Mrs. Edward Hoyer and Mrs. Henry E. Bavlis. LINTON—Willlam McGhee, 77. SurvivSons, David, William K. and James hters, rs. Elizabeth Duncan, Mrs. Don Keller and Mrs. Robert Bryan; sister, Mrs. Janet Horsefleld. LOGANSPORT Mrs. Daughters, M2
Anna Ferris s. Jennie Schmid and Mrs. Kate Kistler; brothers, William, Lewis and Charles Krom sisters, Mrs. Lucy Knight and Mrs. Retta Welsh, MADISON--David Johnson, 79. Survivors: Wife, Caroline: son, Richard daughters. Miss Annie Johnson. Mrs. Frederick Coleman and Mrs. Charles G. Dickerson MARION—Mrs. Emma A vivors: Daughter, Mrs. W sister, Mrs. C. C. Hobart; A. Jones NAPPANEE—Mrs. Christ Survivors Husband. foster son, Millard VanTyne, brother, John C. Weldy NEW ALBANY Hiram Thomas 90. Survivors: Daughters. Miss Maggie Thomas and Mrs. William M. Lan Mrs. Ruth Patton,
4. Brother. Harry Sinex. ROCHESTER—Jamecs Palmer, 32, Sur0 Wife: daughters. Misses Mary , Caroline and Rita Palmer: mother. . Elma Smith: two brothers, Oswald d Cecil Palmer: sisters, Mrs. Carman Mrs. Mary Oswald and Mrs. Doris
Bundy. SurH. Mitchell: brother, Frank
Hartman
Survivors
WINDFALL James vivors: Wife, Florence; Floy Connelly and Mrs. Dorothy Osborn: sisters, Rose Harless, Mrs. Florence Sylvester, Mrs. Sarah McClintock and Mrs. Lillie McCord; brothers, William and Aler
Likens, 60, Surdaughters, Mrs.
AIR CONDITIONED BALC. 30c AFTER ¢
NOW!
RIT JLT
the children watched a |
19, of 241 S. Walcott St, |
Sur- | Bishov, |
55. | John |
Survivors: |
The dairy industry's higgest prob- | lem now is one of consumption, W. Henry Roberts, vice president of the | Roberts Milk Co. said today in | | speaking to the Kiwanis Club at the | | Hotel Washington. He discussed the | “Past, Present, Fufure of the Dairy | | Industry.’ “Consumption in this country, ac- | cording to Government figures, is | about half of what it ought to be] for health, efficiency and long life,” Mr. Roberts declared. Naturally we | are interested in increasing this consumption, he said, not only for our own benefit but for the farmers’. Milk last year produced the largest | single item of income for more than | 75 per cent of the country’s farms. | “The 6300 dairy farmers in the Indianapolis area last year received | $3,600,000, which is about 48 per cent of what the consumer paid for | his milk,” Mr, Roberts declared. The Anderson Mattress Co. today | had been ordered to desist inter- | fering with labor organizations by { Harold Stein, trial examiner of the | National Labor Relations Board. Mr. Stein made an intermediate | report to the Board yesterday. The Textile Workers’ Organizing Committee, Local 169, charged last spring that the company was using | unfair labor practices. The hearing was held April 21 to 27. The company now can request an oral argument if it wants to appeal the case. Among other findings Mr. Stein's | report ordered the company to rein- | state five employees and award
| them back pay.
|
The Marmon-Herrington Co, In- | dianapolis, was awarded a contract | { amounting to $9675 for moto ‘by the U. 8. War Department, i | was announced today.
t|
Mooresville Townsend Club 2 is to sponsor an all-day meeting at the town park July 4. The speaking program is to include a report by E. W. Hildebrand on the national Town- | send convention at Los Angeles, | which he attended.
Officials of the American Airlines, Inc., today announced inauguration of a campaign to promote an increase in air express shipments.
|
Lions Club members at their annual outing tonight at Noblesville will install Lewis G. Ferguson as president to succeed F. E. Thornburgh. Other officers to be installed are James R. McCoy, first vice president; C. E. Ehlers, second vice president, and Dr. William E. Bodenhamer, third vice president.
| The United States Civil Service | Commission has announced open | competitive examinations for posi- | tions in the Departments of Agriculture, Commerce, and the Federal Power Commission.
Lieut. E. H. Kruse, Indianapolis police training school head, is to | attend the Federal Bureau of In- | vestigatiin national police acad- | emy’s retraining school, it was an- | nounced today. Lieut. Kruse at- | tended an earlier Federal Bureau of | Investigation School, Chief Mor- | rissey told the Safety Board.
The Maj. Harold C. Megrew Camp 1 of the United Spanish War Vet- | erans is to hold its regular meeting | at 8 p. m. Friday at Ft. Friendly, | 512 N. Illinois St, A. D. Porter, | camp reporter, announced today. | Sons E. Hicks, commander, is to preside at the meeting.
| The Marion County chapter of | the Republican Veterans of Indiana ! is to meet at 7:30 p. m. tomorrow i at the Hotel Washington, Ernest Lane, secretary of the Marion County organization, announced to-
r trucks |
Fisheries. Navy |
day. Committees for the coming | campaign and for a meeting 22 in honor of Carl Vandivier, County Republican chairman, are to
be named.
The National Costumers’ Association of the United States and Canada is to hold its annual convention at the Hotel Riley, July 11 to 13, according to Lester C. Essig of Chicago, secretary-treasurer. C. A. Landes, Indianapolis, is national | president,
College students earning part of | their expenses through National | Youth Administration work were among those named winners of fellowships, scholarships and other academic awards, it was announced today. At DePauw, 57 were given scholarships, four at Rose Polytechnic Institute, five at Gary College, two at Marion College, three at John Herron Art School, four at St. Mary-of-the-Woods, one at Anderson College, five at Ball State Teachers College and four at Oakland City College.
Sixteen Indianapolis students have registered for summer school courses at Northwestern University, it was announced today. A total of 152 students from Indiana have enrolled for the summer courses.
NEW I. U. TEACHER | TO BUILD CYCLOTRON
| BLOOMINGTON, June v. P.)—Dr. Franz N, D. Kurie, new A of the Indiana University | physics stafl, is developing plans for a 90-ton “atom smasher” to be used in studying properties of the atomic nucleus. The machine, called a cyclotron, will be able to produce atomic ve- | locities of 10 million volts, Dr. Kurie said. It is essentially a huge elec-tro-magnet, he added. Dr. Kurie came here from the University of California, where he was a research worker,
BUND LEADER FACES SUIT NEW YORK, June 29 (U, P.).— | Fritz Kuhn, leader of the GermanAmerican Bund, faced a $3,000,000 slander suit in Supreme Court today, brought by Dr. Emanuel J. Jack, who charged that Kuhn had libeled and held up to hatred and aversion all members of the Jewish race in the United States.
29
July |
INVESTIGATORS FOR BALLOT QUIZ TO NAME STAFF
Fae W. Patrick and Harold K. Bachelder Are Selected By Judge Baker.
Fae W. Patrick and Harold K. | Bachelder, appointed special prose= | cutors to conduct the Grand Jury | investigation of the primary elec | tion ballots, conferred today on se | lection of their staff of investigators for the inquiry. The attorneys were named special investigators by Criminal Court Judge Frank P. Baker, whose request; for a $15,000 appropriation for the probe is pending before the State Tax Board. The appropriation was passed last Saturday by the County Council, A hearing on the fund will be held by the State Tax Board at 8 a. m. Saturday.
Expected to Name Staff
The special prosecutors are ex pected to name a staff of four or five men to examine ballots and contact witnesses. They said no investigation will be made of Democratic ballots until the sheriff and mayoralty contests have been completed. This will require about three more weeks. | Mr. Patrick said investigation of | Republican ballots probably will start next week as soon as the new jury term Grand Jury is named Tuesday. Albert L. Rabb, special judge in | the mayoralty contest suit, has in structed County Clerk Glenn B. Ralston not to surrender the Demo=cratic ballots until the recount is completed,
Impounds Ballots Judge Baker recently ordered im=- | pounded for investigation by his | court all ballots cast in,the primary election. Prosecutor Herbert M. Spencer has said his office is “ready to conduct the Grand Jury probe without spe=cial prosecutors or investigators.” He said he has not decided what procedure he will take in the investigation, if any, in view of Judge Baker's action, Meanwhile workers for Sheriff Ray in the recount of Democratic mayoralty ballots declared today they had “at least 100” affidavits of persons who will testify concerning joreguarinies at the polls election ay. In a recount of eight more precincts Sheriff Ray gained 70 votes for a new recount total of 12,88L compared with his original total of 12,873. Reginald Sullivan, certified as the winner, lost 34 more votes for a new total of 25,364 compared witin his canvassing board total of 26,343,
ONE FIRED; 7000 STRIKE MARSEILLES, France, June 20 (U. P.).—Seven thousand metals lurgical workers struck today to pro= test the discharge of a fellow em= ployee. The walkout affected all Marseilles metallurgical factories | and authorities feared it would | spread.
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JURY’ SHE da if Fay Wray * Jas Dunn “LIVING ON LOVE”
HAMILTON 2116 EK. 10th St,
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