Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 February 1940 — Page 6
FILLING STATION OPERATOR SHOT BY HOLDUP TRIO
W. Washington St. Liquor Store Clerk Robbed: Purse Snatchers Active.
Louis Gocke, 29, of 538 S. Alabama St, was recovering at his home today from a bullet wound in his right arm, inflicted Saturday night by one of three bandits in an attempted holdup of the filling station he managed at 3707 E. 30th St. He was treated at City Hospital following the shooting. Police said the three bandits drove into the station and one placed a gun in Mr. Gocke’s side, ordering him into the room back of the pumps. The manager started to run and the bandit fired. Three men answering the description of the bandits drove into a filling station at 30th St. and Martindale Ave. shortly before shooting Mr. Gocke and left after asking for & road map.
Liquor Clerk Held Up
A bandit obtained $25 in the holdup of a liquor store at 417 - W. Washington St. Saturday night. Police said the man entered the store, stood beside the cash register with his hand in his pocket as if holding a gun and said, “Give me the money in the register.” Glenn Franklin, 1027 N. Gale St., the operator, picked up the money and threw it on the floor. The bandit ordered him to. pick it up and hand it to him, meanwhile scooping the change from the register. Then he fled. A slender, shabbily dressed youth grabbed a purse containing $62 from Mrs. Emma Middleton, 1916 Corneil Ave., last night as she walked around the side of her home. Ethel Schuman, 1322 Union St. told police a man seized her gn the 1100 block S. Meridian St. and took her purse containing $4.
VICTIM OF FREEZING DIES AT HOSPITAL
r John Frost, a World War veteran and a native of Rushville, Ind., who was admitted to the City Hospital Jan, 26 for treatment of frozen feet, died there Saturday night. He was 67. H= had been at the Marion County Infirmary since November, 1939, shortly after he was released from the Veteran's Hospital in Dayton, O. Mr. Frost left the Infirmary Jan. 24 and was found the next day in Greenfield, Ind., with both his| Jeet ‘frozen. The body has been taken to Royster & Askin Funeral Home. Funeral arrangements have not been made.
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In Antarctic
Letter ‘Mailed by Passels Today May Not Reach Geologist for Year.
It may be six months before his mother and father here get another letter from Charles Passel, local geologist with Admiral Richard E. Byrd's expedition to the South Pole, * It may be even a year before he gets the letter they're sending him
today. : But nevertheless, separated by 19,000 miles, they’ll “hear” from each other frequently. That's because a startled Noble Burkhart, licensed amateur radio operator of 3500 Shelby St., perked up his ears the other night to hear this code message: “Mr. and Mrs. Howard F. Passel, 3720 N. Pennsylvania St. Indianapolis, Ind. ................ Charles, U. 8. Antarctic Service, Antarctic Regions.” Telephones Parents
Mr. Burkhart immediately telephoned the message to the parents, but regulations prevent him from revealing. its content to others. He told Mrs. Passel she could
sent one Saturday night and will do so frequently. Mr. Burkhart relays the message to Columbus. It goes from there to Washington, then is started on its way to “the ice,” as explorers and relatives refer to the Antarctic. The delay in the travels of the letters is because they go to Dunedine, the down-underest point of New . Zealand. The delay from there to the expedition’s base depends on how often the. supply ship stops. The longer delay in getting mail from the Pole to here is because of the more infrequent sailings of the supply ship from the ‘base to New Zealand. The letter which the Passels received from their son the other day, the first since he left Philadelphia, had been mailed from there. They also received more than a dozen letters from him to forward to friends whose addresses he didn’t have or lost and his picture taken “down under.”
Describes Epochal Voyage
The geologist in his letter of more than a dozen pages written on both sides, related of his epochal voyage. He said he didn’t realize he was getting so far down | there, until passing through the Panama Canal and then crossing the international state line, Then came Christmas. in the South Pacific and he opened the box of presents, fruitcake and candy his mother had given him before he left. The men aboard the North Star swapped gifts and the Indianapolis scientist drew a pipe—and he doesn’t smoke.
1% February of 1203, Mrs. Lillian Thomas Fox, a Negro resident of Indianapolis, returned from a nawomen’s convention fired with the idea of starting a local club for the improvement of Negro women. A Founder's Day pageant will be held Feb. 28, at the Crispus Attucks High School auditorium, celepbrating the 37th anniversary of the work of the Women’s Improvement Club has done toward helping tubercular Indianapolis Negroes. During the first year, the Club devoted its time to “mentally, physically, morally and spiritually assisting colored women.” The next year a convalescent cap for Negro tuberculosis was founded on Oak Hill. According to club members this was the first outdoor facility for tuberculosis treatment for Negroes in Indiana. Meanwhile Daisy Brabham was carrying on house-to-house work under the auspices of the club. A statement made by Mrs. Mattie Dangerfield, one of the present members, reads in part: “Mrs, Brabham collected bedding, linens and such things for tubercular families in the neighborhood. She taught members of the families to care for one another in ways that would have been impossible otherwise for them to learn. “She had them build tents in their front yards and when she came she would care for the children. She did things that money
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could not buy.”
According to Mrs. Dangerfield, =
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Charles Passel . . . . Hoosier in the Antarctic.
The motorship struck the equator and Mr. Passel and 14 others who hadn't crossed before were given the sea’s traditional ducking and diplomas signed by “Davey Jones” showing them to be fullfledged shellbacks. It was 13 days after leaving Panama before they saw any land, the Hendernon Island and made a brief stoD. Then came the Pitcairn Islands, and Mr. Passel said he was thrilled at seeing the descendants of “Mutiny on the Bounty.” The natives, wearing their traditional knives, came aboard to play the ship's radios, make themselves at home and barter. Mr. Passell wrote that he obtained wood carvings and beads. The natives were startled, because isolated by changed sea lanes due to the war, they hadn't seen a ship since last August. After a short stop there the North Star reached Rapa, a French Island, two days later and stopped again. The local explorer said a ship hadn’t stopped there fore more than a year and the 240 inhabitants of the island didn’t even know there was war in Europe. Wellington, New Zealand, was next. . And here Mr. Passel had to spend a half-hour in a dentist's chair replacing a-filling which the Hoosier candy had pulled out. At Wellington, he wrote, he saw Ginger Rogers in “Fifth Avenue Girl.” Dunedine was the next stop—and the last until his destination at the
east base.
Crispus Attucks Pageant To Mark Club's 37th Year
club had a “hospital” at the corner of California and Michigan Sts. Later they bought ‘a cottage at 535 Agnes St. They maintained it for hospitalization and received funds from the. Community Fund until the Flower Mission was established. Through the efforts of the club a chair and table and the use of a Negro doctor were obtained for Flanner House, the Negro settlement house here, members say. The club now has 23 members. It continues to provide clothing, bedding, fresh eggs and milk to tubercular Negro families. Mrs. Ethel Roy Cox is club president. Other officers are Mrs. Alice Brokenburr,* vice president; Mrs. Rose ‘Hummons, secretary; Mrs. Artie Taylor, assistant secretary, and Mrs. Francis Berry Coston, treasurer.
HARRISON MEMORIAL IDEAS REQUESTED
Public suggestions for a suitable memorial to former President Benjamin Harrison were being sought today by the Benjamin Harrison Memorial Commission, which held its first meeting yesterday. The Commission, recently authorized by Congress, elected Stephen C. Noland, editor of the Indianapolis News, chairman, and J. Russell Townsend Jr., Junior Chamber of Commerce president, as secretary. Other members are Mrs.
regent; Thomas McCullough, Anderson publisher, and Ross F. Lockridge, New Harmony, historian, The group will have its next meeting Feb. 18. It already has under consideration a Benjamin Harrison ‘memorial park north of the City from White River to the Indiana State School for the Blind between College Ave. and the Monon Rail-
Robt. Taylor—Greer Garson Lew Ayres ‘“‘Remember’’—B. Rathbone. B. Karloff, “TOWER OF LONDON.”
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William | H. Schiosser Franklin, D. A. R. state]
HOSPITAL FUND | PLEA STUDIED
County Council Expected to Act Tomorrow on $13,000 Request.
quest for a $13,000 additional appro-
:|priation for the Marion County
Tuberculosis Sanitarium before taking final action tomorrow. When the request came up for first consideration today, Dr. Frank L. Jennings, hospital head, and Dr.
managers president, explained the money was neeced to equip an idle ward to care for 15 of the more than 35 tubercular patients on the waiting list. Dr. Marshall said it is cheaper to take infected persons “out of circulation than to permit them to live unquarantined and infect others.”
Association research director, protested that it didn’t “look like an emergency request to me,” but more like the institution is “just coming back for restoration of budget cuts made by the Council last fall.”
FRIENDLY-VOIGED SWINDLER SOUGHT
Private and City detectives today sought the possessor of a “friendly telephone voice” who has been obtaining money by representing himself as the Rev. Fr. Albert V. Deery, = assistant pastor of St. Joseph's Catholic Church. The man, who has been operating here for the last two weeks, according to police and Father Deery, calls a prospect on the phone and informs him, “This is Father Deery. ” The voice, which sounds very friendly, according to those approached, then asks for contributions to aid the poor children of the church. If the prospect agrees to contribute, the “voice” then sends a messenger boy and a printed ticket which serves as a sort of receipt. The Rev. Pr. Deery said he had no idea how much money the individual may have obtained and that he understood most of the taverns in town had been approached. The priest learned of the scheme when several persons approached called him for more details. He immediately notified the Better Business Bureau and the police.
FOUR ACCIDENTALLY BURNED IN HOMES
Eightesnsyear-old Sm Samuel G. Mustard, 4208 E. Michigan St. was burned on the face yesterday when gasoline which he threw in a stove at his home exploded. His condition is reported as fair at City Hospital. Three other persons received less serious burns and also were treated at the City Hospital. A one-year-old child, Danny Pinkham, of 322 N. Davidson St., were burned on the chest when he tipped over a cup of hot tea. Vernon Tidd, 20, of 2 Plum
_|St., was burned on the right hand
when he spilled boiling water. Harry Mays, 50, of 816 Torbett St. was burned on the face when he threw kerosene on a 2On § Hire,
PASTORS TO MEET . IN LOCAL JCAL SYNAGOG
The Indianapolis Mi Ministerial "Association today unanimously accepted an invitation of Rabbi Maurice Goldblatt to hold a meeting Feb. 19 at the Temple of the Indianapolis Hebrew Congregation. The invitation was extended at the association meeting in the Robert’s Park Methodist Church. It was proposed that the ministers hold a seminar on such subjects as the “Talmud,” the “Pharisee.,” or the “Relationship between Jewish and Protestant Religions.”
The County Council is going to ‘| “sleep over” the controversial re-
A. L. Marshall, hospital board of |}
Walter Horn, Indiana Taxpayers|
.The “Five Graces,” who appear
starts at the Coliseum tomorrow through Saturday night.
of the Sonja Henie Hollywood Ice Revue which
in the ensemble
night and runs on Page One).
Harrison Thomson, reared, whom the Sonja Henie revue lists as the greatest male ballet dancer in the world.
Chicago-born, Canadian-
(Story
‘Gone With---' Gowns Here
Wm. H. Block Co. to Show Costumes Tomorrow.
A display of costumes worn by Clark Gable, Vivien Leigh, Leslie Howard and other stars in making “Gone With the Wind,” will be opened to the public tomorrow only, on the second floor of the Wm. H. Block Co., from 10 a. m. to 5: 30 p. m. The costumes are being taken on
an extensive tour so that fans throughout the country may see the gown and dresses which formed such an important part in making the technicolor production. They are being transported in a specially designed Metro - Goldwyn - Mayer float and already have been seen by hundreds of thousands of spectators in other cities. | Included in the dollection are gowns worn by Vivien Leigh, as Scarlett O’Hara, and Olivia de Havilland as Melanie; the midnight blue dress suit worn by Clark Gable as Rhett Butler, the striking Confederate Captain's uniform in which Leslie’ Howard ‘appears, and many others. The gowns, exhibited in conjunction with the opening of “Gone With the Wind” at Loew's Theater, represents months of research and many thousands of dollars in design and dressmaking; each garment is the work of expert craftsmen and historians have declared them to be some of the! finest copies of Civil War fashions in existence. The decision to send the costumes on tour, the first of its kind in motion picture history, came after requests were received from all: sections of the nation for| the exhibition. So much Tiere has been aroused by the motion| picture, its colorful characters and the fabulous amount of money spent in producing it, demands were received that some important feature of the production be made available to the public. Because they cannot be replaced, the costumes are protected carefully day and night in the elaborate traveling wardrobe in which they are carried. It is estimated that by the time they are returned to the wardrobe department, at the studio, the outfits will have been seen by approximately 15 to 20 million people.
ESSAYS TO WRITE
Robert Buckner, author of “Virginia City,” is writing a series of essays on the little known facts about the old mining town.
STEWART'S NINTH FILM
‘The Shop Around the Corner” is | Stewart’s ninth picture in two years.
COLUMBIA CLUB’S ELECTION THURSDAY
New officers of the Columbia Club will be chosen by the ‘board of diréctors Thursday. Three directors were re-elected to three-year terms at a stockholders’ meeting yesterday. They were Harry S. Hanna, Arthur V. Brown and John C. Ruckelshaus. Other hoard members {are Fred C. Gardner, Benjamin N. | Bogue, Irving W. Lemaux, Maj. Gen. Robert H. Tyndall, Ernest D. Snider, Columbus, and Robert G. Wolcott. . The Club is preparing for its 51st annual beefsteak dinner Feb. 19. Rep. Joseph W. Martin (R. Mass.) will be the speaker.
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CAGN PAT O'BRIEN re GEORGE BRENT
MUSIC
Five Young Musicians Will Be Given!
Auditions by Fabien Sevitzky Feb. 22
THE UNEXPECTED HIGH QUALITY of women’s voices in the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra’s young musicians’ contest held Saturday in Caleb Mills Hall, resulted in a tie between Mary Godfrey Kreiser and Suzon Osler, both sopranos and both residents of Indianapolis. ~~ As a result, five, instead of four musicians, will be given final auditions by Fabien Sevitzky, conductor of the orchestra and originator of the contest, Feb. 22, in the Murat Theater. Thre other contestants who were declared eligible to proceed to the final auditions are Marian Boyden, pianist, of East Gary; Herman Berg, violinist, of Greencastle, and Marvin Smith, lyric tenor, of Lafayette. These five were chosen from a field of 32 entries, all of whom, according to the judges, were of unusual excellence. One of the finalists will be chosen by Mr. Sevitzky to be soloist with the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra at its popular concert on March 10. ; » » » MISS KREISER is 25 years old. She was born in Dayton, Ind., now lives in Indianapolis and studies in Chicago with Thomas MacBurney. Miss Osler is 24 years old.
LOOKS FOR BABY NOT YET BORN
HOLLYWOOD, Feb. 5 (U. P).— Producer Sol Lesser today was looking for an actor who hasn’t been born yet: He needs a baby that will be 10 days old on Feb. 14. A baby even younger than 10 days would be better, Mr. Lesser said, but the State law requires that babies must be at least that old to work in he movies. The baby must play the part of a new-born child in the movie “Our Town.”
PLENTY OF FLYING . AHEAD OF JAMES
HOLLYWOOD, Feb. 5 (U. P.). — Producer James Roosevelt, who flew 87,000 miles in 1939, said today that he would fly 500 miles a day for about three weeks after he finishes his first motion picture. ’ Like his air-minded mother, Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt, he is a confirmed air traveler. It may be some time, however, | before his weeks of iniensive travel begins.
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She was born in Indianapolis, at“tended public schools here and is at present g student of Joseph Lautner in the Jordan Conserva-
tory of Music. : Youngest of all contestants is Miss Boyden, who is 18. She was given first place in the piano classification, which included five other entries—from Evansville, Gary, Kendallville, and Indianapolis. She studies piano in Chicago with Mrs. D. M. Stephen. Mr. Berg, 28-year-old violinist, is head of the violin department of DePauw University in Greencastle. He was born in Kansas," studied at the Eastman School of Music in Rochester, N. Y., and has been a member of the DePauw faculty for seven years. Mr. Smith, Chosen as finalist from the group of men’s voices, is 20 years old. He was born in Lafayette. He is a sophomore in the science school, Purdue University. | All contestants, losers and winners, said the judges at the end of the all-day auditions, showed a fine spirit of sportsmanship and generosity toward each other. They entered a difficult contest, and everyone acquitted himself ip] a praiseworthy manner.
2ND GREAT WEEK!
SEE IT TODAY!
GO THE WIND
Weekday matinees are continuous (not reserved) 75c incl. tax (except loges). Come anytime from 9 a. m. up to 2:45 p.m, and see complete show. Doors open 9 a. m. All night shows (8 p.m.) and Sun. Mat. (2 p.m.) are a ed $1.10 incl. tax ALE loges).
Wariger Named, Academy Head
Times Special HOLLYWOOD, Feb. 5.—Walter Wanger, film producer, has been elected president of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Frank Capra, retiring president,
is the new first - vice president.
{Other officers are ¥dward Arnold,
second vice president; Robert Riskin, secretary; John Aalberg, treasurer, and Donald Gledhill, executive secretary. Mervyn LeRoy has ‘been named chairman of the annual Academy Awards Dinner, to be held Feb. 29. * Members of the Academy director-~ - ate are Frank Lloyd, Ronald Colman, Clark Gable, Cecil DeMille, Howard Estabrook, Douglas Shearer, David O. Selznick, James Stewart, Norman Taurog, Sam Wood, Darryl F. Zanuck, Mr. Wanger, Mr. Capra, Mr. Riskin and Mr. LeRoy. The Academy is now in its 13th ° year. :
WHEN DOES IT START?
APOLLO
“The inc 69th,” with James Caghey: Sen, Seorse Brent,
12: 11 2, 7:03 a “Th Man Whe Woulan: 3 Talk.” with Llovd Nolan, at 11:29, 2:40, 5:51
and CIRCLE “The Invisible Man Returns.” with 8ir Cedric Hardwicke, Vincent Price Nan Grey, at 12:45,"3:55, 7:05 and
“Charlie McCarthy, Detective.” with Edgar Bergen ober Cymmings se Moore. at 11:30, 2:40, 5:50
INDIANA
: Lupino, at 12: 32, 3 3 Oh, Johnny.” Tom Allen Jenkins, AH 11: ao 2: <0, 5:51 and
LOEW'S
“Gone With the Wind.” with Clark Gable, Vivien Leigh, lie Howard, Olivia de Havilland: Soniinuons week-day matinees from 10 a. evening performances at 8 p. — Sunday matinee. 2 p. m. LYRIC
Tommy Dorsey, other yaudeyills, on stage at 12: 50, 3:45, 6:40 and 9: “My Son Is Guilty, ” with a2: cabot, Harry Care on screen atl 11:30, 2:25, 5:20, B15 and 10:40,
Greatest Show Value in Town!
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TEESE MON,, TUE, FEB. 12-18
"The finest actor of our day.” > No one has really seen ‘Hamlet |_the uncut version. uncut version.’
—John Mason Brown, N. Y. Post until he has sat enthralled before — Brooks Atkinson, N. Y. Times
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NORTH SIDE
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Jas. Stewart,, “DESTRY RIDES AGAIN” Jo hnny Downs, “LAUGH IT OFF”
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