Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 December 1939 — Page 27

FRIDAY, DEC. 15, 1989

HE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

ENVOYS’ PARTY | Con APPEARS CALM JE

‘Roped-In’ Reporters View ; Dazzling Display but | No Incidents. | Sagan, |

naway

NN

By EVELYN PEYTON GORDON Times Special Writer WASHINGTON, Dec. 15.—If one ambassador erred so grievously as not to speak to another ambassador when the entire diplomatic corps gathered night the White House no member of the press will tell the tale. The press didn't see*the diplomats at the crucial moments when they were assembling in the state dining room after being received by the Roosevelts in the annual reception. The number of invited newspapermen was boiled down this vear from the usual large group to a handful Cc“ society ‘editors, and these were stationed In the Green Room, behind crimson velvet ropes, for the first time in the Roosevelt regime.

Yo ad JAS at

Array Ts Dazzling

There, of course, they could see the corps file past on their pilgrimage from East Room through Green Room to Blue Room, to say howdydo, through Red Room, and) thence to dining room. But oh!| what a lot of ladies of the press Jay Hall Connaway, a boy who may have missed! | continually exasperated Manual As it was, by the time the press| High School teachers back in 1908 Joped around to the dining room| by drawing instead of studying, the entire diplomatic corps, wuni-| is having his first one-man exhibit formed, jeweled plumed and| at the John Herron Art Institute. trained, was in such a delightful] The exhibit, consisting of 29 oil welter that it would have been hard | paintings of marine life, will be to tell the Soviet staff from the | on display until Jan. 1. ¥rench. Uniforms, gold braid and | Mr. Connaway, now 46 and a orders were so brilliant, gowns so| resident of Monhegan Island, off bouffant, that more eves were fixed | the coast of Maine, is rapidly beon &itire than on attitudes. | coming one of the best known So far as one could see, every| marine painters in America, acfittle diplomat acted the little gen-| cording to Wilbur D, Peat, insti-

tleman. Every bow from the waist,| tute director.

Exhibit O

A scene on the coast of Maine . . . typical of Jay Hall Connaway’s work.

He has had several one-man

exhibits in New York and Chicago |

and has two pictures in the permanent exhibit of the Paris Lowre. Most of his work deals with marine scenes off the coast of Maine. Nearly all of them are large and colorful. He was born in Liberty, Ind. in 1893. He left Manual High School before graduation to study at the John Herron Art Institute and the Art Students’ League in New York. He went overseas with the Rainbow Division and was c¢onnected during the war with Base

S

PAGE 27

at Herron

WILL 60 ABROAD 100 GENTS ONS1

‘Hoover Says Administrative Costs Will Be Borne by | Private Donations.

NEW YORK, Dec. 15 (U. P)— (Former President Herbert Hoover | |announced today that all adminis- | [tration expenses of the Finnish Ret [lief Fund drive would be borne by private subscription in order | \that “every dollar of donations will 130 one hundred cents to the Finns.” | | Mr. Hoover, chairman of the drive, E | disclosed at the same time that Bernard M. Baruch, former chair- | E [man of the War Industries Board, . | had sent a check for $5000 to the | [New York chapter of the fund. “I have arranged that a leading |e of auditors will not only audit | | the accounts, but will actually keep | {all the books,” Mr. Hoover added. ‘Finland Days’ Planned

Three more states, it was an-| nounced, have officially designated | Sunday as “Finland Day.” They are | Utah, Pennsylvania, and New Jersey. | | Mr. Hoover will speak at a “Let's| | Help Finland” mass meeting in New York Dec. 20 and will go to Minne|apolis for a similar meeting on Dec. | |29. San Francisco, it was announced, | {will hold an entertainment and ball! ’ | Dec. 29 under the direction of a| [committee appointed by its mayor, | land Detroit and Los Angeles also | have scheduled entertainments. Fifty-two communities have of- | ficially proclaimed Sunday “Finland

NW

Times Photo.

! Hospital 32 as a surgeon's assistant. He remained in France after the Armistice and studied art.

He has lived in Maine since his return to the U. S. He married Miss Louis Boehle, Meriden, Conn. in 1928. They have one daughter, Leonebel, A brother, Hugh W. Connaway, is chief photographer of The Times. Herron Art Institute officials do D not expect him to visit here during | { the exhibition.

ay. | Mr. Hoover has asked a former [associate in European relief work to!

every Kiss of the hand, seemed in| order, : {the French ambassador, Count Rene | If Constantine 'Oumansky, the pa saint Quentin, hesitated near Boviet Ambassador, and Hijalmar| rw the German charge d'affairs, Hans

formal black and white), deponent cannot sav.

Sooooo—after all the weeks of

surmise, of worry on the parts of |

take charge of the drive in Finland. | Mr. Hoover talked by trans-At-| lantic telephone with his one-time

House reception seemed to go off

{without “‘incident.” so ‘1001 X ted to announce him Mrs. Roosevelt wore or 5 aid and expected : | ore cream Salih, administrator in Finland within |

GIFTS FOR FINNS New Lodge Head SEIZE ‘YELLOW KID

Fred F. Smith. . shipful Master.

. next Wor-

Capital City F. & A. WM. to

Install Officers on Tuesday.

Fred F. Smith will be installed as Worshipful Master of Capital City Lodge 312, F. & A. M,, Tues=day evening at the Masonic Tem=ple, North and Illinois Sts. John R. Hunter, Most Worship= ful Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of Indiana, will preside at the ceremonies. Other officers to be installed are Edwin T. Oarmichael, senior warden; Homer

H. Hastings, junior warden; Wal= ter Fuller, treasurer; Albert

| Smith, secretary; Ralph C. Wright,

senior ‘deacon; Jerman H. C. Borkes, junior deacon; George Deming, chaplain; Sheldon Miner, senior steward; Edwin V. Leinhos, Junior steward, and Frank Mellis, tyler. A dance and card party will fol= low the installation.

FOUND: OLD GRAY MARE

suave exconvict who has appeared alternately affluent and bedraggled since his conviction for complicity |in a $3,000,000 mail robbery in Chie {cage in 1926, was dressed im=- | maculately again.

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CHICAGO, Dec. 15 'U. PI=— Surrounded by evidence of luxury, vet owing a $600 rent bill, Joseph (Yellow Kid) Weil, who police say once “sold” three ‘Chicago Loop | buildings and all the yachts on Lake |) Michigan, was taken into custody ye by the Federal Government today 0 Postal inspectors seized the al- N 4 leged confidence operator on mail i; - fraud charges based on the alleged v swindling of Warren Edmonds, New | { York advertising executive, in ah

for the youngster

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Mexican oil deal four years son Two other men served prison | terms in connection with Edmonds’ i VELOCIPEDES [is VELO-KING—ALL SIZES | plicity and was held for a removal » Rubber Tires $5 45 { hearing before U. 8. Commissioner |} Front mud-guard ® up | Edwin K. Walker. % = 3 heard which won him the nick- |» Em Roe GOODS CO. name two decades ago, when Weil [i 209 W. WASH, LI-3446 was taken into custody today. The Puy 20 P20 BANK 3 AC AI RRC VA

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loss of $4000. Weil denied com13 * Grey flaked the blond Van Dyke | SPORTING

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Procope, the Finnish minister, met | Thomsen (who didn't wear the some diplomats, of anxiety on the

in the crowd, it is not recorded and orchids, with a wide scarf of 24 hours. Temporarily, his name newly prescribed Nazi uniform, just|parts of sympathizers, the White

rich cream lace over her shoulders. was withheld. Following the Roosevelts came the] Distress Called SECLOtATY S 1 iy =) . : - . o Secretary of State and Mrs. Hull—| pycpss in Finland is “enormous,

MIDDLETOWN, O., Dec. 15 (U. | P.).—The “old gray mare” really exists for Mrs. Martha Hess, who owns Babe, 30 years old. “She's been

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the latter in white satin and bro- since 70 per cent of the people— cade; the Secretary of the Treasury, mostly women and children—have with Mrs. Morgenthau in black and | pag to be evacuated, Mr. Hoover | gold lame; the Secretary of War, said Mr. Woodring, with Mrs. Henry A.| Risto Rvti. prime minister of Wallace in shell pink lace; the At- minjand, cabled Mr. Hoover, saving |

torney ‘General, Mr. Murphy, es- ihe Binns “rejoice” that he is head- | 1

corting Miss Frances Perkins, the i : en. | INE & movement to help them in Secretary of Labor; and the Chief (hair «uneven struggle against the of Naval Operations, Admiral Stark, outrageous attacks.” | acting for the Secretary of the At the first meeting today of NN with Mrs. Stark in black yravor FH. La Guardia's local coi sama aa | Operating committee, Mr. Hoover assailed the technique of modern THREE ARE INJURED verter | | “In modern war, an air attack is| AS AUTOS COLLIDE a threat and a vengeance,’ the a | former President said. “Seventy to | ; Ce per cent of the women and | Three men were injured today children have been removed from | when they were thrown from their|every town in Finland in the midst automobile in a crash at Empler O Hg Vg? winter. Their Ave. and Harding St. | whole life as een disarranged They W D a r 3 [and charity is their only help. We ey were Delbert Curts, 33, of ape extending aid to the whole 961 N. Belle Vieu Place, driver of field of refugees in and out of one car; Clyde Cassner, 52, of 125 N. inland.” * Miley Ave. and George Jones, 60, ‘gengrik Willem Van Loon, auof 2601 Jackson Place, passengers. thor and chairman of the New They were treated at City Hospital York committee. said: The second car was driven by Daniel = As Finland goes '¥o woes the SN TE on He rest of the world. If we don't save a : . . Finland, then Norway and the rest of the neutral countries will go.”

GARY COOPER PLANS TO BUY NEWSPAPER

| HOLLYWOOD, Dee. 15 (U. P.) — | Gary Cooper, the newspaper cartoonst whe turned actor, tinkered today wth the idea of buying a newspaper and becoming an editor as a hobby. Samuel Goldwyn Studios announced that Mr. Cooper was negotiating for the purchase of the historic Brewery Gulch Gazette of Bisbee, Ariz, one of the Wests famous papers. Fred MacKinney,

editor and publisher of the paper, went to confer with Mr. Cooper at Goldwyn City near Tucson, where the actor is on location for a West. | ern film.

EX-RAIL WORKERS

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A Christmas party and dinner will be given by the International | Association of Retired Railroad Employees from 1:30 to 4:30 p. m. | Tuesday in the Spencer House banquet room. The association membership is

opsn to retired employees of both railroad and express companies, Tee Hauck, 32280 Forest Manor Ave. is chairman of the entertain- | ment committee, Officers include Jessie Baldwin, president. and George Holder, secretary-treasurer. UNKNOWN FRIEND STAYS BAN CLEVELAND, O, Dee. 15 (U. P) | — Cyrus Jirousek, held up by two gunmen, still is wondering who his | “friend” was Who, leaning out of a passing car, shouted, “Let him go, | Bones! I know him.” The bandits] fled.

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