Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 March 1940 — Page 4
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: required for each bond and cou-
_ing you untold misery and suffering.
full-size bottle of his medicine. Mr.
LAW AUDITING PLAN IS ASKED
Request Based on Shortage - 0f $118,000 Attributed to Quirks in Statute.
A new accounting method has yr
been instituted in the City Barrett Law Department as the emai ‘of the disclosure last year of a $118,-
000 shortage in the .Barrett Law
Fund. ‘This was discolsed today in an ordinance appropriating $3500 to
odd Lowyer
|
set up new accounting procedure in! %
the department. The ordinance is
expected to be approved by the
council tonight.
The shortage, the result of quirks
in the Barrett law itself, has been accumulating since 1920. It was caused by the loss to the City of interest payments through prepayment of Barrett Law bonds.
. 10-Year Payment Plan
Little understood, the Barrett Law is simply a 10-year payment plan whereby property owners may finance their ctreet improvement assessments at 6 per cent interest. The City pays the contractor for the improvement with bonds in lieu of cash. Each year, the property owner pays one tenth of tlie assessment plus interest to the City controller who in turn uses the money to pay off the bonds. Under one of
the numerous
amendments to the law, however,
the property owner after two years may pay off the unpaid balance in a lump sum and escape further interest charges. But the City must continue to pay 6 per cent interest to the bond holder and is held for the interest lost in prepayment. During the course of two decades, the accumulation of lost interest to the City has added up to a small fortune. In 1939, the Indiana Supreme Court ruled that cities were liable for msking good the lost interest to the bondholder.
Deficit Recognized
Indianapolis’ large deficit was recognized by Mayor Reginald H. Sullivan and City Controller James E. Deery when they assumed office in January 1939. They supported a bill which was passed by the 1939 legislature giving cities power to recover the amounts lost through prepayments by a tax levy or bond issue. The City now is: conductng an audit which began more than a year ago to determine
“the full amount of the deficit in-
curred over the past 20 years.
Grace Tainsh, once voted the most beautiful coed at Washington Square College, New York University, pictured as she was admitted to the bar of New York. Although fees as an artists’ model helped pay her way throvgh law: school, she said, “Everybody has forgotten that beauty title by now.”
School News—
318 AT MANUAL ON HONOR ROLL
‘Senior Play to Be April
25-27; Tech Music Group to Meet.
Three hundred ‘and eighteen school pupils attained high scholastic ranking for the first six-week grading period of the spring semester. Edward Schumann and Alice Miedema received highest senior high honor rating. Junior high pupils were topped by. Albert Tavenor and Elsa Hubert. On the senior high honor list were: Robert Baker, Harold Bretz, Glenn Craig, Robert Crossen, Robert Bauer, Martin Boatman, Arvine
At the same time, it has set up the machinery to determine each!
year in the future how much is lost|
through prepayment of bonds. As the loss is determined, it will be recovered through a slight in-| crease in tax levy. To keep the | records straight in the future, the | system of accounting will be much more detailed than the old system.
One Ledger Sheet
Under the old system one ledger sheet was used for each assessment roll consisting of 10 bonds. Under the new system, a ledger sheet is
pon maturing at the same time. At present, there are approximately 4000 assessment rolls money is being collected. The $3500 will go toward the purchase of new calculating machines and of special printed records which officials hope will enable them to determine annual interest losses without making audits.
TWO HERE PLEDGED BY PHI BETA KAPPA
Times Special
.GREENCASTLE, Ind., March 18. —Indiana ‘Alpha Chapter and Phi, Beta Kappa today announced the! pledging of 18 DePauw University seniors to membership, including two from Indianapolis and six from the State. Those chosen on the basis of their scholastic records are Donald Matthius and Lois McCaskey, Indianapolis; Jack R. Pearce, Terre Haute; Clarence S. Cook, Clifford; John H. Darnall, Lebanon; Glenn F. Lambert, Ft. Wayne; Donald Nelson, Gary, and Harold Wittcoff, Marion.
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Popplewell, Carl Maier, Edward Reich, Jim Foxlow, Arthur Lamb, Harry Mark, Chagles Hamer, Harold Van Treese, Elmer Eisenbarth, James Bottin, Clifford Matthews, Edward O’Nan, Morris Sachs. Fannie Plott, Margaret Douthitt, Mary Bunning, Beatrice Gamble, Ione Colligan, Imogene Elkins, Laura Manion, Florence Willard, Doris: Hubert, La Verne Morical, Marian Rieck, Marilyn Sampson, Helen L. Mennell, Mildred Hull, Betty Irish, Alice Nordholt, Esther Siegel, Marcella Smith, Mary Rose Kelly, Donnie Douglas and Rita Fahy, - ” » » “Young April” ‘has been selected the Manual senior class play to be presented the nights of April 25-27. Different casts will give the April 25 and 26 performances. A committee in the audience at both will ‘select the best players who will repeat the play for the evening of April 27. Mrs. William Devin, Indianapolis soprano and voice teacher, will be the featured soloist at the meeting of- the Ynomrah Club of TECH HIGH SCHOOL on Monday afternoon in Room 300 of Stuart Memorial Hall.
WILDLIFE STAMPS
NOW ON SALE HERE
Wildlife poster stamps, commemorating progress of fish and game conservation in the United States, have been put on sale at 14 places in Indianapolis. Sale of the stamps in Indiana is being sponsored by the organized conservation clubs which will receive 40 per cent of the revenues. The clubs’ activities are under direction of the State Conservation Advisory Committee. The stamp$, bearing pictures of wildlife and vegetation, are sold in sheets of 100 stamps at $1 per sheet. They will remain on sale until March 30. The ‘stamps can be purchased at the following places: Em-Roe Sporting Goods Co., Vonnegut Hardware Co., Bush-Feezle Sporting Goods Co., Hoffman Sporting Goods Co., Smith-Hassler Co., Stewart’s, Inc. Indiana Tire & Rubber Co., Arnette & Pratt Gun Co. Stamps are also on sale through the Indianapolis
Hunting & Pishing Club, the Capi-|-
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TI
PENSION PLAN TALKED IN OHIO
|Campaign for $30 Weekly
Based on Two-Cent Warrant Levy.
CLEVELAND, O., March 18 (U. P).=A “ham-and-eggs” pension plan may be offered in November to Ohio voters, who last year rejected the Bigelow pension plan. Chief sponsor of the plan is be-
spectacled, gray-haired E. L. Lansing, president of the Pension Action Bureau. “If we can overcome the barriers being thrown in. our way we will put the plan before the voters in the fall,” he said. “Our plan does not have the defects of the Townsend Plan, the Bigelow Plan,-or the California Plan.” Mr. Lansing’s plan calls for $30 weekly pensions ‘to all unemployed Ohioans past 57. The money, he said, would be provided by a 2-cent tax stamp attached to warrants each week for a year.
Called Forced Saving “It amounts to forced saving,” he said. “The trouhle with most of us is that we won't save. Those who say that the pension plan offers something for nothing are mistaken. We would all pay a small weekly income tax on the warrants, just as we pay premiums on insurance. Then when we're old and when we would be dependent on others we instead receive the $30 weekly.” Lansing said that the defect in the Townsend - Plan is that the transaction tax would penalize the small manufacturer and merchants. “Large operators like Henry Ford have a minimum of transactions in the manufacture of their products,” he said. “Ford, for instance, has his own rubber plantations, his own foundries and his own mines. He would not have to pay much under the Townsend Plan, but small assembly operators, who buy from many different companies, would be
{driven out of business by the taxes.”
Scorns Bigelow Plan The Bigelow Plan, which would have been financed by a tax on land, was termed a “crack-pot idea” by Mr. Lansing. “That plan would penalize the landowners, who instead should receive special consideration for their thriftiness in acquiring property,” he said. “The only thing wrong with ‘the California Pension Plan was the way it would have been administered. “The last time the plan was submitted it would have set up a virtual dictatorship had it passed.” Our plan has none of these defects. Mr. Lansing quoted Alexander Hamilton, George Washington and Abraham Lincoln to defend his proposed issuance of “warrants which in effect would be money without gold or silver backing.
Food Stamps Approved “We have been interested in the Government's experiment with food stamps,” he said. “In that experiment the Federal Government in effect is subsidizing the underfed portion of the populace by making available to them the surplus food —and more recently—the surplus cotton. “This plan is meeting with success. But throughout the: country there are other surpluses and persons who need them. Surplus radios, surplus automobiles. Our plan is a subsidy to distribute these to a group—those above 57. “If anyone can show me where the plan would not work, ri resign.” Mr. Lansing also is the president of the Ohio Association for Tax Reduction, which has been in existence for seven years and claims a membership of about 60,000 merchants and property owners.
TWA SEEKS NEW AIR LINE VIA EVANSVILLE
A new direct air route linking Washington, D. C,, and the West Coast and passing through Evansville, Ind., appeared likely today as Transcontinental and Western Air, Inc., sought permission to operate the proposed line. Jack Frye, airline president, said he would ask the Civil Aeronautics Authority to authorize a line between St. Louis and Washington. It would connect with the main route at Philadelphia, Pa. It would be the first air route to go through Evansville, Mr. Frye said. The line also would stop at Louisville, Ky., Cincinnati, O., and Parkersburg, W. Va. The airline also has applied for routes linking Indianapolis and Washington by way of Detroit.
TEACHERS TO HEAR ‘SCIENCE REVIEW
Times Svecial FT. WAYNE, Ind, March 18.— Dr. Gerald Wendt, director of science and education for the New York World's: Fair, will address members of the Ft. Wayne Teach-
ers’ Association, March 28. Dr. Wendt, an internationally known writer and lecturer on scientific subjects, will speak on “A
Science Review, 1930-40.”
FSA OFFICIAL HERE
CALLED TO CAPITAL
| . Appointment of Carl N. Gibboney,
assistant regional director of %the Farm Security Administration here, as associate director of rural rehabilitation in the Washington Farm Security Administration office. Mr. Gibboney has been with the Farm Security Administration in this area since 1936. In his new position he will do rural rehabilitaSion work in 12 regions of the counry.
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EXTRA! “Drums of. Fu Manchu.” News
Birth of Pinocchio
Gepetto, the Kindly old wool carver, fashions a puppet which is his pride and joy, and which he christens Pinocchio.
Aha! The Villains ra
But on the way to school, Pinocchio falls afoul J. Worthington Foulfellow and Gideon, two miscreants who lead him astray.
| Endowed with life by the Blue cat, Cleo the goldfish, and Jiminy
. Nothing But Trouble . . . .
happens after that will be revealed at the Indiana, starting Friday.
At length Pinocchio winds up
Fairy, Pinocchio meets Figaro the Cricket, his conscience.
inside Monstro, the whale. What
MUSIC
Chamber Music Group Makes |
By JAMES THRASHER
Splendid Start in Filling Gap Here
THE FIRST really significant chamber music series given by Indianapolis musicians in several years came to an end yesterday with a concert at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Eli Lilly. Participants were 10 members of the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra, and the sponsoring organization was the Indianapolis Cham-
ber Music Association. new year, this organization has made a splendid start toward filling in a noticeable gap in local musical activity. The series, though ‘brief, was inclusive and interesting. And the players, who naturally made no claim to the hair’s-breadth unanimity of exclusive chamber music artists, still performed in a highly competent manner. Yesterday's program was +he lengthiest and most varied of the
‘ three. ‘Reversing chronology, the pro-.
gram builders opened the performance with Jacques Ibert’s Three Short Pieces for flute, oboe, clarinet, horn and bassoon, played by James Hosmer, Arno Mariotti, Julio Mazzocca, Frank Brouk and
Jacob Nabokin, Still within the
present century was. the work which followed, a Phantasy by the 26-year-old Englishman, Benjamin Britten, with Mr. Mariotti, Leon Zawisza, violin; Julian Salkin, viola, and Ernest Friedlander, cello. The three string players returned with Renato Pacini, violin, and Mr. Hosmer for a performance of the late Arthur Foote’s “A Night Piece.” And finally, getting back to the “classics,” there was heard the Beethoven Septet, Opus 20, which en< listed the services of Messrs. Zawisza, Salkin, - Friedlander, Mazzocca, Brouk “and Nabokin, and Ray Ciegel, bass. The Ibert music offered considerable enjoyment and few puzzling moments. It is not only typical of the modern French school, but typical Ibert as well, tart as to tonality, skillful in workmanship and bubbling over with a saucy good humor. ” ” t
ON A FIRST HEARING, the British Mr. Britten's Phantasy is more translucent than lucid. Its beginning and end are something of a ghostly processional; an American Indian (though it might be East Indian) influence seems apparent; it is music which makes the listener set about in search of the composer's “program.” But that may wait for another time and another hearing. Enough now to say that the work was enjoyable, and that Mr. Britten has achieved some arresting tonal effects with his meager instrumentation. The only really familiar item on the list was the. “Night Piece,” which one hears occasionally at orchestra concerts. Too much of it is conventionally pretty—a la Chaminade—but there are brief passages of original beauty which
are more welcome with repeatal
hearings. But, as so often happens, Beethoven ran off with the honors in
the day’s parade of music. The .
Septet is delightful although, in this impetuous day, somewhat long. There are eight movements, and in the matter of repeats, the players observed all the indications. In Beethoven’s day; however, it is likely that the length was less noticeable. Concert-goers in those times took their music in generous doses. For instance, the Septet had its first - public performance at the first concert
which Beethoven gave in Vienna
In its three Sunday performances since the
(April 2, 1800). And on the program in addition were a piano concerto, the First Symphony and an improvization by Beethoven, a Mozart symphony and an air and duet from Haydn’s “Creation!” FE : THE SEPTET abounds in spontaneous melody and inexhaustible inventiveness of construction. The Theme and Variations and the Scherzo are particularly charming. And it was interesting to recognize in the Septet’s Tempo di Menuetto the little rondo-minuet of the Piano Sonata, Opus 49 No. 2, which was composed about the same period. Yesterday's concert was the occasion for the most satisfying playing of the entire series. The performance, therefore, left a particularly pleasant taste and ‘the hope that next year the Chamber Music Association will be back with more of the same, and perhaps in a central location more accessible to the entire city. The association can, and doubtless will, serve a valuable purpose. Following up the admirable work done by others in making the city “orchestra conscious,” it can disclose to the public new musical treasures symphonic literature.
GANDHI TO BE IN. FILM
RAMGARH, India, March 18 (U. P.) —Mahatma Gandhi, attending the Indian Nationalist congress here, is to star in a ‘movie film, “Mahatma Gandhi.” The film is to be released in India and abroad and it was reported that it would be flown to Washington for presentation before President Roosevelt. It depicts,” among other things, Gandhi’s Chaplin
WINTER AIR TRAVEL GAINS KANSAS CITY, Mo. March 18 (U. P.) —Winter air travel increased 76.7 per cent during the last three months for Transcontinental and Western Air, vice president V. P. Conroy of the company announced today. He said 22,568,023 passen-
1ger miles were flown from December
through February compared with 12,769,465 a year ago.
€ . Chas. M. Olson's
4 LAST DAYS!
[an New 1940 Tropical : nl Ty
Musical Revue!
wiZ% Andree Andrea Rhythmeers * Don Galvan * Eimer Cleve
N. B. C. Singing Stars
Joe E. Brown “BEWARE SPOOKS”
ROBERT TAYLOE—MYRNA LoY ) “LUCKY NIGHT”
Cpe : Ea FEE
outside the |
meeting with Charlie|
Sheridan
| TUXEDO
WHEN DOES IT START?
APOLLO,
“Three Cheers for the Irish.” Yith. Priscilla Lane, Thomas Mitchel Morgan. at 12:28. 3:43. Fi
e Mad Empress.” with Medea Novara. Conrad Nagel, at 11:09, 2:24, 5:39 and 8:54. CIRCLE
“The House of the Seven Gables,” with Goons e 12 ]ies and Margaret Lindsay. 1:50. 4:35. 7:25 and
“Black Friday,” with Boris Karloff and Po Lugosi, at 12:35, 3:25, 6:15 and 9 5 INDIANA “The Story of Dr. Ehrlich’s Magic Bullet.” with Edward G. Robinson, Ruth Gordon. Gtto Kruger. at 12:22, 3:35, 6:48 and 10:01. “Double Alibi * with Wayne Mo 1 Marzatel Lindsay. at 11:21, 2:3 LOEW'S “The Man from Dakota,” with Wallace Beery. John Howard, lores Del Rio. at 11. 1:45, 4:30. 73 20
“Blondie on a Budget.” with Penny Singleton. Arthur Lake, at 12:30, 3:15. 6:05 and 8:50.
LYRIC “Flying Down to Rio.” revue, on Jape at 12:24, 2:43, 5:02, 7:21 and
“ “Green Hell.” with Douglas Fairbanks Jr.. Joan Bennett. on screen at 11, 1:19, 3:38, 5:57, 8:16 and 10:35.
| TOWN WANTS PREVIEW
HOLLYWOOD, March 18 (U. P.). —Because Lillian Russell was born in Clinton, Ia., that city wants the movie “Lillian Russell” previewed there and also to have the star, Alice Faye, be made a legal native daughter of Iowa. A petition bear= ing 500 names .-has been received asking for the preview. An attorney is taking legal action to make Miss Faye a native.
FIRE WARNING YEAR AHEAD PITTSBURGH, March 18 (U. PJ). —Edward Weinheimer is certain his house and barn will burn down “in a year or so.” Weinheimer, who cultivates 66 acres in nearby Snowden township, based his prediction on the estimated time it will take an underground mine fire to creep to his buildings.
r Martens Concerts, Ine. ENGLISH—TONIGHT AT 8:30
J00SS BALLET
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DEAN JAGGER GETS | FIRST MOVIE ROLE
Dean Jagger, Wabash College alumnus and young Broadway leading man, has been chosen for the title role of “Brigham Young” as his first movie assignment. Mr. Jagger’'s most recent Indianapolis appearance was-at English’s this season as a featured player in “Farm of Three Echoes,” with Ethel Barrymore. ° Louis Bromfield has written the screen play for this movie biography of the Mormon leader, which is to be produced by 20th Century-Fox.
HOLDEN GETS HERO ROLE IN "ARIZONA
HOLLYWOOD, March 18 (U. P.). —William Holden has been assigned the role of Peter Muncie, hero of Clarence Budington Kelland’s “Arizona,” which is Being made into a movie by Columbia Studios. More than 2500 players were taken to Tucson, .to. “shoot” the picture. Most of them are Indians and Mexicans.
CLAN: 34
LANE * MITCHELL DENNIS MORGAN ALAN HALE
| London seaso
lJooss Ballet:
Here Tonight
2 New Dances Are on
English's Program.
The Jooss Ballet will make its third Indianapolis appearance tune der Martens Concerts auspices tonight at English’s. This is the fourth American season for the international dancing group founded and trained by the Dutch choreographer, Kurt Jooss. Tonight's periormance will consist of two new ballets, “Chronica” and “A Spring Tale.” Both were introduced. during the company’s last spring, and are being seen in the United States for the first time this year. : “Chronica,” a three-act dance drama of 16th Century dictators ship, has music by Berthold Goldschmidt, while the music for “A Spring Tale” was Somposed by KE, A. Cohen.
Ban on Prodigies Insult, Boy Says
CHICAGO, March 18 (U. P.).—The National Artists’ Foundation’s notice of “no prodigies wanted” in its search for: musical genius has aroused a protest by Julius Katchen, 13-year-old concert pianist, that “you judge music by quality, no the age of the musician.” It started when Norman Alexzndroff, foundation director, announced a plan to introduce artists who are “ready for the public but unable to
{finance their careers,” and added:
“But not child prodigies. Their playing is insulting to an audience.” He recommended that parents with child prodigies in their homes should keep them there. “Playing one note after the other —even with amazing precision—has nothing to do with musical expression,” Alexandroff said. “How can a child discuss human emotions and profound world problems in the language of music any more intelligently than in any other lane
_{guage?” Young Katchen took it as a pers.
sonal insult when he came to Chia. cago for a professional appearance. “I'll go behind a curtain with any adult artist of Mr. Alexandroff’s choosing and let impartial judges decide which of us is the mature musician,” he asserted. The young pianist said that out of 36 of the world’s greatest contemporary artists, the average age of the first appearance of each was 13 years, 3 months.
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