Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 August 1939 — Page 14
PAGE 14
Fe 5
{=
Charles E. Gibson (center), Cincinnati, national president, tells
two other national officers about
the National Association of Postoffice and Railway Laborers at the Hotel Severin. They are Willis Bohall (left), Indianapolis, vice president, and Herbert E. Taylor, Cleveland, executive board chairman. |
JOB ‘REFORMS
WILL BE SOUGHT
De- |
Postal Laborers Will mand Pay Increases and Other Changes.
Mail ‘Shock Troops Meet’
major issues at the convention of
! Three of the secretaries attending the Hardware Dealers Associa- | tion's annual convention here at the Hotel Lincoln discuss their views on the proposed National Hardware Week being planned at the fiveday meeting. They are (left to right) Henry Lewis, Steven Point, Wis, Miss Louise Thompson, Grand Forks, N. D,, and C. G. Gilbert, Chicago.
Power Engineers’ Session Hails Progress
The boys who do the heavy work |
when it comes to handling the U. 8.
mail are holding their 18th biennial]
convention at the Hotel Severin.
i
|
They're members of the National |
Association of Postoffice and Rail-!
way Mail Laborers. There are about | 75 delegates fro mevery state in the! Union, representing the Association's 2000 members and fighting for the welfare of the 68000 in this branch’ of mail service. | Salary increases, improved retirement clauses and longevity provisions are major demands to be) made in resolutions scheduled for | introduction at the convention which continues through Wednesday. Handle Heavier Mails | “We handle the mail in bulk,” | said Charles E. Gibson, Cincinnati, | now serving his sixth term as presi- | dent of the 27-year-old organiza-| tion. “We receive those heavy mail | sacks at the postoffices. We throw it in and we handle the outgoing mail sacks. We handle it at the, terminals, too : “The clerks sort the mail and put’ it in the sacks. We assist the | clerks, too. If we make a mistake | send the pouch to a West Side eta) tion when it should go to one on the East Side, then your mails going to be awful late.” The branch labelled as “laborers in the postal service has {ts complaint. The workers believe they are the next thing to clerks, heip the clerks in their work and thev'd like to have recognition as being!
DEALERS’ AIDS
More Than 14,000 Stores
1 Three former presidents of the National Association of Power Engineers inspected some of
mes Photos. the 70 ex-
hibits in the Murat Temple today as the Association's 37th annual convention opened. Among the 300 delegates in attendance were (left to right) Thomas Herlihy of Los Angeles; C. A. Nelson of Minneapolis,
and H. W. Wilds of New York City. »
CONFER IN CITY
trol, fuel costs could be slashed] nearly 50 per cent,” Thomas G.
To Take Part in Fete { Thurston, National Engineer editor, |deciared today as 300 delegates to |
Set for Next May. iT {the 57th annual convention of the
Excellence of Equi Noted at Convention Here
“If power engineers today were as so they will be as efficient as our ana : i y econ- equipment. The machines are way IE a head of the men who own, use or joperate them. Even the best men |are unable to keep abreast of the (rapid changes.”
a
[be at
Mr. Herlihy and Mr. Nelson are now Association trustees.
ment
”
The convention's first session will 2 p. m. tomorrow. Past
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES Map U. S. Hardware Week
mm
1
RE. A
MONDAY, AUG 48 1630
Film Stars Get Taste of War at Sea
Normandie Douses Lights, Keeps Position Secret, Speeds to U, S.
NEW YORK, Aug. 28 (U. P).— The great Frénch liner Normandie sped into port today with a cargo of notables including five film stars after a trip accomplished under actual war conditions.
It had been feared that war might break out while the ship was on the high seas, with Constance Bennett, George Raft, Roland Young, James Seward, Sonja Henie and Josef.von Sternberg aboard.
Miss Bennett said half the staff of her hotel in Cannes was called | to the colors the day she left.
Races Across Atlantic
A rich potential marine prize in| the event of war, the Normandie raced across the Atlantic on one of its fastest trips with radio communication from the ship prohibited so that its position would be secret, with lights extinguished at night and with the portholes of rooms that required lighting tightly shuttered.
As the Normandie moved up the scanties for
harbor, it passed a German liner! New York, which had slipped from | its pier at 9 a. m., two davs ahead! of schedule, without passengers and | with a hastily loaded cargo of oil.|
Bremen Late Arriving
On Thursday, the Normandie churned by the slower North German Lloyd liner Bremen, also bound for New York, and exchanged the usual courtesies. The Bremen will not arrive until tonight, six hours behind schedule. The reason for the
By PAUL HARRISON
OLLYWOOD, Aug. 28 (NEA). — 80 far as Ann Sheridan is con-
cerned, her studio can wrap up all this Oomph Girl business and send it to Shirley Temple. Miss Sheridan is thoroughly tired of being considered the embodiment
of an abstract commodity which constantly is being oversold but which she is given no opportunity to deliver. And she has almost made up her mind to do something about it. “Oomph!” she oomphed, scowling fetchingly at your correspondent. “I don't know whether I've got it. Why, I don't even know quite what it is! “But I do know one thing: I certainly haven't had much chance to show it, or use it, or what you do with oomph.” Annie Oomphley lit a cigaret, puffed a minute, and went on to disclaim any false modesty about the attention she has been receiv ing. It's flattering, of course, to be the most publicized actress in America and to have one's picture on the cover of three national magazines at the same time. But why all this extravagant bally-hoo, she wonders, when she's still doing brief roles as a gangster’s gal in routine cops-and-robbers pictures. She has been around Hollywood six years now, part of it at Para« mount where she amiably posed in publicity stills, and then at Warner Brothers where she became a utility actress who could be rushed into a role on 10 minutes’ notice. She never complained, never gave a bad performance. ” n o TTERLY frank, always friendly and amusing, the level-headed redhead became the darling of the correspondents (male) and press agents long before she ever got an executive nod. “Umph” not “oomph” -was a word in general usage as
| ANN SHERIDAN MAY POSSESS OOMPH BUT JUST WHAT DO YOU
DO WITH IT?
B pictures there remained a good deal of doubt about whether Miss Sheridan ever would amount to LC © © much. Some said she was lazy, or ; J that she lacked ambition. d ba A former casting director suge gested that maybe she didn't take her work seriously enough because she ol maintain her moods.” After playing a heavy emotional scene, he had noticed, she often walked off the set smiling and joking! The ability for quick creation or abandonment of a mood is admired in a player such as Bette Davis or Jimmy Cagney, but evidently Miss Sheridan was expected 3 i to spend her time between scenes % #5 sobbing in a corner. ” un ”
ER first loan-out, to Universal for “Letter of Introduction,” brought her best role and a lot of comment. Her own studio soon ise sued a general order for a Sherie dan build-up. It began gradually with still pictures which were vamp ish, voluptuous and revealing enough to bring a good many ree Jjections by the Hays Office censor. Miss Sheridan even posed on a tigers skin rug in the manner of the sirens of silent days. When Walter Wanger, who had introduced Hedy Lamarr successe fully in “Algiers,” wanted to borrow Miss Sheridan for the lead in “Wine ter Carnival,” the studio assented. She now is playing a gangster’'s gal in “20,000 Years in Sing Sing.” “Johnny Garfield goes to the chair and I get left out on a limb, as usual,” she commented. “Now I hear the studio is prepare ing a picture for me to be called ‘Oomph Girl’! I just won't stand for it. “Maybe the time has come for me to get up and do some fighting. I can stand a suspension or two, but
Na
Ann Sheridan . . . utterly frank.
delay was not known, but it was sug- [long ago as 1035. It seemed to degested that the Bremen turned back |scribe the sultry, sexy, uninhibited, for Germany in mid-ocean and then |animal-attractive quality which resumed her western voyage on new | Jean Harlow had. “Umph” was unorders from Berlin. (like “glamour” in that there was
| nothing languid, aloof or mysterious
about it. Everybody agreed that Ann Sheridan had “umph.” But for a long time after she had become a romantic fixture in
By JAMES THRASHER
‘White Steed,’ Broadway Hit, May Come Here Next Season
DRAMA
HIS may be no time to talk of ill winds and silver linings, but the fact remains that the present European tenseness has put a good thing in the way of Middle Western theater-goers. Specifically, Paul Vincent Carroll's “The White Steed,” which was a Broadway hit last season, has canceled a proposed engagement in England and Ireland for this fall. Instead Producer Eddie Dowling is going to tour the show. Apparently the delightful and inimitable Barry Fitzgerald will resume his part in the show; at least he has announced that he will stay in this country for the 1930-1940 season. Mr, Dowling is vacationing at present. But a note from his secretary brings the information that the producer probably will stable “The White Steed” at English'’s in the course of its trip. However, this word is by no means official. Anyone who knows all the things that can happen (and often do) before English's curtain goes up, will realize that theatrical sched-
driver and flyer in the World War. Returning, he turned to journalism. He wrote a series on industrial spies and covered the Pennsylvania coal strike for the New Republic; he did a drugring expose for the Hearst newspapers; he was a member of the
THEATER TO SHOW 'MISS INDIANA' bik
“Miss Indiana Sees the New York | World's Fair,” starring Miss Katy |
Lou Matlock, will open a week's engagement at the Fountain Square |
announced today. Miss Matlock is the Indianapolis] girl who won the state title at the
cently. The special
the Fair, part of her prize award.|
month for an appearance at the International Pageant of Beauty at |
will be given a screen test in Holly- | wood. 1,200 SEATS 300 AFTER 6
Fo | sib La NG
LAST 4 DAYS!
A
tonight, Earl Cunningham, manager, ||
Michigan City Water Carnival re-|}: feature . was ||: filmed during Miss Matlock's trip to |}
8he is to go to California next, ii
the San Francisco World's Fair, and |}:
could never stand a picture like
Our Famous Italian Spaghetti
With
Diced Chicken
Chef's Salad Bowl With
Anchovie Dressing
Bread 60¢ Drink
Other Dinners, 60c to $1.25
Air-Conditioned
National Retail Hardware Dealers’ National Association of Power En-
he Murat T national president H. W. Wilds will representing gineers gathered at the Murat Tem-
De py, te wi id preside during a lecture on “Steel—
higher pay old Life Magazine staff.
Last year he joined a distin-
ANN SHERIDAN BRONZE ROOM
ules, like repertory bills and
Cites Salary Difference
“The only difference between us as ti': clerks,” President Gibson argued, about $300 a year in salary.” The “laborers” can take the civil examinations for clerkships, but their argument is that they should be promoted. The pay of the “laborers” now averages 81500 for the first year of service and $1600 thereafter. Resolutions to be introduced will ask that the scale be increased to $1700 and $1809. The organization will agk for retirement at the age of 60 after 30 years of service. Retirement now at $100 monthly starts at the age of 63 and is compulsory at 65 The Association will support the proposed longevity bill which provides a $100 yearly increase after 10 vears of service and another $100 each year until the emplovee has received $300 in salary increases.
Appeals Board Sought
A non-partisan board of appeals to settle all grievances also is to be asked in convention action. Mr. Gibson learned today that he will have opposition at Wednesday's election of officers. His opponent will be Willls Bohall, of the Indian-
he
apolis parcel post station, associa- |
tion vice president The European situation has disrupted the speaking program because none of the Congressmen and Senators scheduled to speak will be here. The chief disappointment of the “laborers” is the inability to attend of U. S, Senator James Mead, New York, who they hail as their champion. The major address tomorrow is to be made by Clinton B. Utley, Washington, superintendent of the division of postoffice service, the “big boss.” Mr. Gibson explained that only about 75 members can attend a national convention other bovs have to be on duty to swing those mail sacks and see that you get vour mail on time”
TWO THOUSAND SETS OF TWINS GO HOME
FT. WAYNE, Ind, Aug. 28 (U. P) ~-Two thousand sets of twins today
feft for their homes after the c¢los- |
ing of the International Association of Twins convention here over the week-end. The convention left to the executive board the problem of election of officers and the selection of a site for next year’s meeting. Board members indicated they probably would make the choice the first week in October.
WIFE DIVES TO DEATH FOLLOWING QUARREL
CHICAGO, Aug. 28 (U. P.) —Mrs. Thomas Hyland, 30, Hammond, Ind. quarreled with her husband on an excursion steamer returning from Milwaukee last night and threat ened: "I'll get even if it's the last thing I do.”
Three miles off shore she leaped
into the lake. An hour's search by Capt. Oscar Byork of the steamer, City of Grand Rapids, and his crew failed to locate her body.
| Lasts Through Friday
“because all the
| Association officials, /more than half the states, todav ™ Arter today's preliminaries and were laying plans for a National social activities, the convention will |
Man's Servant,” Steel Corp. official.
given by a U. 8.
Wednesday will be Purdue Day
Hardware Week in which more than open formally at 10 a. m. tomorrow | with William T. Miller, asbociate
14000 hardware stores will take with welcomes by Governor M part. {Clifford Townsend. Mayor Reginald | Meeting for the 15th consecutive H, Sullivan and Chamber of Comtime in the last 15 years at the perce President C. D. Alexander. Hote! Lincoln, the Hardware Deal]
ers Association secretaries imme- paufketter, Association
professor on heating and ventilating at Purdue, speaking on the subject, |“If IT Were Again an Operating Enginzer.” Responses will be made by Fred C. gyrdue engineering school, will speak president; i» the afternoon on “The Problems
A. A. Potter, dean of
diately began their discussion of the carl Daubenmire, national vice pres- Before the Operating Engineer.”
proposed “Hardware Week.” |ident, and Charles F. Bindrich, na-| [tional past president. | | “The power engineer today The “Week” wiil be held during the first part of next May and the exact date is to be set Wednesday The convention which opened at 9 a. m. this morning will last through Friday | | Conducted as informally as pos-| sible the meetings will concern’
said.
involved and complicated.
greater role in the future as the Laws, management of power becomes more and past national President G. Burigess will discuss “Exhibits.” “The biggest job we face today is tion and installation of ofiicers will the improvement of our engineers be held Friday morning.
Thursday morning S. C. Casteel,
state president of the Iowa assohas ciation. is to discuss “The National his finger on the heart of industry Association of Power Engineers and and eommunity life.” Mr. Thurston It's Ideals.” “And he must assume even a Daubénmire will speak on “License
In the afternoon Mr. a Public Safety Measure.”
Elec
themselves mainly with plans for | the “week, of advertising
| Miss Louise Thompson of North
‘Dakota is secretary treasurer of the | Association, and will preside at an’ executive meeting tonight at the Hotel Lincoln. ! A — | Se Enno a Rv searing Entries in the second annual Alland has as its only gotiv ¢ A . |discussion and study of mutual | [Indiana Tomato Show will be re problems of the hardware industry, | ceived until 8 a. m. tomorrow when according to Miss Thompson. | the display will open in the ClayRepresent Many States peel Hotel lobby. | Attending the sessions today were | Tomatoes must come from fields Charles Nelson, Oklahoma; Phil contracted for canning purposes. | Jacobson, Iowa; Gilbert Sheely, In- | Prizes will be awarded at the ban-| diana; ea DIOR quet in the evening and prize-win- | ua Wit nti Moa ning tomatoes will be auctioned. New England; Cc J Christopher, | Miss Judith Wright of Elwood, InMississippi; W. J. Pierce, Pennsyl- diana’s tomato queen, will be guest] vania; John Conklin, Ohio: Robert of honor. Boswell, Georgia and Tennessee; y \ . Louis Kreh, Missouri: David Mans. Speakers will include Lieut. Gov. | Henry F. Schricker, Commissioner |
field, Louisiana; Edward Hermenson, Nebraska: Clarence Thompson. of Agriculture; Paul Wolf, Swans Tens: Su B Lig uw Jerks ville, Indiana Canners Association | laden, Nor and Séuth : | g x | Carolina, and J. M. Stone, Ken. President; F. C. Gaylord, Purdue tucky | University's assotiate chief in hortiRivers Peterson. manasing direc- culture, and Herbert Eickhoff of (tor of the association is presiding Stokely Bios. & Co. Horace E at the meetings and Horace Aikman. Abbott, Marion County agricultural
president, of Cazesnovia, N. Y., and Vice President George Green of agent, will be toastmaster, and Samuel B. Walker, of the Wim. H.
Long Beach, Cal, are attending the convention as observers. ' Block Co., is program chairman.
i
CM.T.C. to End Training Season at Fort Saturday
'
The second Citizens Military 60 members of the First Division of |
Training Camp period at Ft. Har- the A. E. F. Association. ‘vison will close Saturday when 2260: Ata lh Ba ry Ne liven 2 | citizen trainees are demobilized, Col. Albert W. Waldron, 19th Field! Col. L. A. Kunzig, comp commander, | Artillery, Soumanger, was guest of | ‘announced today. | honor. eut. Col. aldron served | .. Demobilization will mark the end Sysiseat with Ae Ds da of the C. M. T. C. summer training \....4 oddresses by Governor Homer season in which a total of more than , Holt of West Virginia and Flovd 5000 civilian reserves participated. |p’ nfeMurray, Indiana Superintend. | The “deprocessing” of trainees will \giit of Public Instruction. begin Thursday when rifles will be, Today's maneuvers will include! cleaned and oiled. Friday, trainees ...ctice marches by the first and Will tyrn in their uniforms and mils second battalions. The drill will itary kit. Final review will be held emphasize marching discipline and on the parade grounds at 9:30 a. Mm. anti-aircraft protection. Friday and trainees will be dis, ‘The field artillery battery is to charged at 5 a. m. Saturday. receive thorough instructions in| Approximately 5000 visitors in- anti-aircraft defense during the re-| pected the post over the week-end mainder of the session. Trainees al- | to watch colorful reviews and ma- so will be instructed in the duties neuvers by trainees, The citizens’ of commissioned and non-tommis-‘camp was inspected yesterday by|sioned officers. L
use A | feature merchandise and “== TOMORROW DEADLINE Its Old Story
For Wilhelm
OORN, Netherlands, Aug. 28 (U. P.) —Former Kajser Wilhelm, a venerable man of 80 years. stuck to his quiet routine today, following world events through newspapers, radio and private advices. He spent his days writing his memoirs, wood cutting and sawing and walking on his estate. Both he and Princess Hermine, his wife, were in excellent health. The former Kaiser refrained customarily from making any expression on such internae tional situations as that which obtained today. The interests of his family are mostly in Nazi Germany, subject to Adolf Hitler's word.
WHEN DOES IT START? APOLLO
“Daughters Courageous,’ with John Garfield, Clauds Rains, Mav Rebsch nd the Daughters.” at 11, 2:38,
i8 and 9 “Naughty But Nice.” with A 8heyidan ah Dick owell, at 160, ie and 8:29. CIRCLE
with
When Tomorrow In . unne, at
Charlest Bove nd Irene 1 Tes 48s hay
and 10:18. pe BARA, THR 13 and 9:08.
Briges, , 3:30, LOEW'S
“Winter Carnival,” with Ann Sher. fdan and Richard Carlson, at 12:24, 3:48. €:3¢ and 9:59. “Miracles For Sale,” with Robes Fyne and Florence Rice, at 11:27, 2:32, : and 8:42.
G 6:
OLE 5s
Zane Grey's “Heritage of the Desert” Basil Ralabore De Fairbanks Jr. “SUN NEVER BETS’
weather predictions, are subject to change without notice.
HE memory of Sidney Howard, killed accidentally on his Massachusetts farm last Wednes-
day, will be honored by his friends and partners in the Playwrights’ Company( through an annual award for the best first play by an American author produced in New York. To perpetuate Mr. Howard's contribution to the American theater, his colleagues, Maxwell Ane derson, S. N. Behrman, Elmer Rice and Robert E. Sherwood. have established the Sidney Howard Memorial Award of $1500. They hope that the new award may take its place beside the two exist ing major honors accorded playe wrights, the Pulitzer Prize and the Drama Critics’ Circle award. Beyond that, the effect of Mr, Howard's death upon the authore producer organization remains to be seen. It is unquestionably true, however, that the successful new unit and the American theater as a whole have lost a gifted, discerning, brave and accomplished artist, There are and will be, of course, a profusion of eulogies from those who knew Mr. Howe ard well. Here in the provinces we knew him as he doubtless would have wished to be known, through the plays and characters he created. Such plays as “They Knew What They Wanted” (which won the 1925 Pulitzer Prize), “Ned McCobb's Daughter,” “The Silver Cord.” “The Late Christopher Bean,” “Yellow Jack,” “Dodsworth” (an adaptation)—all these and more were seen here through such diverse mediums as touring
{ Theater. the Federal Theater and | the movies.
| active one Born in California in | | 1891, | versity there and later enrolled at | Harvard in Prof. George Pierce
| went
professional companies. the Civie
Mr. Howard's life was a full and he attended the state uniBaker's famous “English 47.” He
to Europe, first for his health and later as an ambulance
M-G-M
\
reveal all about. Women —
guished group to form the Playwrights’ Co. These men achieved a first year success which gave proof to the reasonable notion that an experienced playwright should follow his work closely from the first rought draft to opening night, and beyond. Mr. Howard contributed no play to the first season. His colleagues, meanwhile, brought forth three hits in four tries: Robert E. Sherwood’s “Abe Lincoln in Illinois,” Maxwell Anderson's “Knickerbock= er Holiday” and S. N. Behrman's “No Time for Comedy.”
For this season, however, Mr. |
Howard had finished a play for his company's opening production, Its title is “Madame, Will You Walk.” And jt also was said that he had a second work in preparation which would close the Playwrights’ season next spring.
NEILL p] 4 \ = ne - 2
ST TR TY
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ANN A SHERID
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