Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 90, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 August 1931 — Page 2

PAGE 2

U. S. TO SEND 157 PLANES TO CITY DEDICATION Giant Air Fleet to Be Here for Exercises at Municipal Port. Indianapolis will see 157 of Uncle Sam's trimmest military airplanes when it .dedicates municipal airport Saturday, Sept. 26, Lieutenant Stanton T. ‘ Smith, commanding the Three-hundred ninth observation squadron, United States reserve air service, promised city officials today. Lieutenant Smith returned today from an eastern trip on which he obtained promises of army, marine ■ and naval authorities to send planes here for the military portion of the three days’ dedication program, Bcpt. 25-27. It will be the largest contingent of fighting ships ever to be seen here. Flights of more than fifty planes, the largest to appear above Indianapolis thus far, flew over the city during the air corps classic maneuvers last spring. The planes will come from Langley field, Va; Selfridge field, Mich., home of the crack First pursuit group; Chanute field, Rantoul, 111.; Great Lakes; Quantico, Va.; Wright field, at Dayton, and three Curtiss Helldivers, new bombing ships, will ; be sent down from Grosse Ille, near Detroit, Lieutenant Smith said. James W. Carr, chairman of the program committee, said his committcee planned lavish programs of the dedication, to be financed with advertising, but without profit. Pro'fits from the dedication will be turned into a fund for construction of an auditorium and show building at the airport. Arrivals and Departures Municipal Airport—Embry-Riddle: R. E. McElwain, Chicago, and C. S. Stritz, Miss Margaret Friedman, Miss Agnes Andrew, Miss Eleanor Andrew, Robert Andrew and Howard McEwen, to Cincinnati. Clarence Dowden, Eaglet, Terre Haute to Indianapolis. Stout Field—Lieutenant Matt G. Carpenter, One hundred thirteenth observation squadron, flying MajorGeneral William G. Everson, chief or United States militia, to Washington, D. C., took off early today in a Douglas 0-38. Hoosier Airport—Gordon Lackey, Travelair, Seymour and return; Carl S. Millikan, Curtiss-Robin, Madison, Delphi, Attica and return; Fred Bottoms, Air King, Attica and return. Snoke to Cincinnati H. N. Snoke of the Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce, was to fly via Embry-Riddle to Cincinnati today to represent the Chamber of Commerce at a meeting of Chamber of Commerce representatives from cities on American Airways lines from Ft. Worth, Tex., to Cleveland, and Memphis to Chicago. • The Chamber of Commerce men Were transportation guests of American Airways of which Embry-Rid-dle is a subsidiary, and of the Cincinnati Chamber of Commerce, Poised for Sea Hop By United Press LISBON, Portugal, Aug. 24. Willy Rody and Christian Johansen, preparing for a flight across the Atlantic, arrived at Amadora military airdrome at 4 p. m. today. They started from Berlin on r Saturday. Weather conditions in the air at 9:15 a. m.: West wind, 10 miles an hour; barometric pressure, 30.15 at sea level; temperature, 72; ceiling, 6,000 feet, with broken cloudiness and haze; visibility, 6 miles; field, good. NINE ABE ARRESTED IN TWO GAMING RAIDS Indiana Avenue Smashes Pull City Men Into Law’s Hands. ■ Nine men were arrested Sunday in two gambling raids by police squads. Joe Mitchell, 410 Massachusetts avenue, was charged with keeping a room for pool selling and James Tucker, 246 Indiana avenue, was arrested for operating a lottery and gift enterprise, after a raid on the Indiana avenue poolroom. Lieutenant Dan Cummings and squad nabbed seven when they raided the soft drink place of Arthur Derr, at 206 Indiana avenue. Earl Sears, 43. of 420 North Grant street, manager, was charged with ke?ping a gaming house and gaming and six men in a rhum game were charged with gaming and visiting a gaming house. Butler Staff Is Named Forty-nine instructors have been named as the staff of Butler university evening course division, which opens Sept. 21. Class work will be offered at Benjamin Harrison school, Butler teachers’ college and at the Fairview campus.

THEY TELL ME

BY BEN STERN THE 1932 presidential campaign has come to Indiana. Official opening of the season took place this week at South Bend, when an organization boosting Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Governor of New York, for the Democratic nomination for president, came into being. Prominent among the sponsors is Mayor W. Riley Hinkle, and memr bers of the South Bend group, known as the Mayr-Montgomery-Ackerman Codd gang. Ever since Secretary of State Frank Mayr Jr. was social sponsor for Roosevelt at the Governor’s conference at French Lick, he has been a perfervid booster of the New York Governor. His “pals” were introduced to ftoosevelt and they also entered the field. The first move in their campaign to pledge the Indiana delegation to him is seen in formation of the club. n m • From all indications, they are trying to beat the “other fellows’’ onto what they believe to be the band wagon. 4ut most of the “other fellows” > have been closely watching po-

Stunting of Girl Flier, 19, to Be National Air Race Feature

NBA Service Writer CLEVELAND, Aug. 24.—0f the thrills spectators will experience at the ‘national air races here, perhaps the most exciting will be the stunting of 19-year-old Dorothy Hester of Portland, Ore. Dorothy is a shy, blue-eyed girl who, after a short period of training by the famous Tex Rankin, set a record for women fliers of sixty-two consecutive outside loops, and one for both men and women of fifty-six inverted barrel rolls. Now Dorothy Intends to break both these records, and perhaps the record of 124 outside loops set by Roy Hunt. But these attempts will be only supplementary to her string of forty-two different stunts she has in her bag of tricks. There stunts will be features of the air race events every day. Among her tricks are such difficult ones as the double roll, vertical roll, tail spin, spiral glide, faling leaf, Immelman turn, reversement, figure eight, perpendicular whipstall flying on her side, vertical outside and inside figure eights, chandelles, wingovers and inverted phases of most of these stunts. Some of her tricks are all her own, never having been tried by others.

58 STILL ARE INAIRDERBY Actual Standings in Race Are Kept Secret. By United Press CALEXICO, Cal., Aug. 24.—Their actual standings shrouded in secrecy, fifty-eight men and women aviators today prepared to take off for Phoenix, Ariz., on the second lap of the Santa Monica-Cleveland air derby. Sixty fliers left Santa Monica at minute intervals Sunday. Two men made forced landings on the 196mile leg to Calexico. Official standing of the fliers will not be announced until the night control point, Tucson, Ariz., is reached, it was announced by Earle Ovington, official timer. Because the flight is conducted on a handicap basis, elapsed times mean nothing, although a special award is posted for the fastest time flier. Experience of the pilot, horse power of the engine, and other technicalities must be checked, Ovington said. Mrs. Gladys O’Donnell, Long Beach, Cal., winner of last year's Long Beach-Cleveland women’s derby, set her ship down here late Sunday, one hour seven seconds out of Santa Monica, averaging 162 miles an hour for the hop. MOTHER OF VICTIM IN OIL DISASTER IS DEAD Mrs. E. E. Lamb, 111, Succumbs When Told of Tragedy. Unaware they were dead, Mrs. Elizabeth E. Lamb, 60, of 2902 North Illinois street, joined her husband, son and daughter-in-law when informed of their deaths. Mrs. Lamb was so critically ill that when her son, Thomas Lamb, and his wife were burned fatally in the disastrous Michigan oil well fire in July she was not told. Nor was she informed that her husband, David E. Lamb, grieved so at the death of the young couple that he died within a few weeks after the son and wife were buried here* Funeral services will be held for Mrs. Lamb at 2 Wednesday afternoon, with burial following In Crown Hill cemetery. Two daughters, Mrs. C. H. Reimerth. and Miss Janet E. Lamb, survive Mrs. Lamb. BOOTLEGGER PINCHED AS INEBRIATED DRIVER Makes Mistake of Mixing Booze, Gasoline and His Business. Because he mixed booze, gasoline and business and entangled the result with a downtown fire plug, Charles Frank, 60, of 5740 East Thirtieth street, today faced these charges: Drunken driving, drunkenness, transporting liquor and operating a blind tiger. Frank's car hit a fire plug at Maryland and Delaware streets Sunday night. Two deputy sheriffs saw the accident and sauntered over to the wreck. In the car they saw two gallons of alcohol which Frank admitted he was delivering to an address he declined to reveaf A search warrant was obtained after Frank was jailed, and at his home authorities found a flftygallon still, whisky mash, alcohol and a quantity of beer brewing.

litical developments are not so eager to climb aboard. At Anderson today, where the Legionnaires are meeting, the tone reflected in discussions oi the possible presidential candidates was strongly pro-Newton Baker. This, of course, is in a large measure due to the series of articles on the war secretary which have appeared in the American Legion Monthly. a * Unstinted praise was accorded Baker in these articles, and the recent edition of “Washington Mirrors,” which is the quadrennial political gossip and dope encyclopedia, was generous in finding no fault with Baker. Backed by these two factors, legion politicians are “talking Baker.” Many of the rabid wets in that organization, however, are already voting for Roosevelt. Surprising little Owen D. Young comment is heards There is a distinct feeling among legionnaires that he is another Herbert Hoover. And it appears that there is no demand here for another edition of the incumbent.

Dorothy Hester, 19, *wHh a bay of 42 tricks

STORE CONTEST WON BY SHORTRIDGE SENIOR 1 SSO Prize Offer by New Local Merchandising House. Because she suggested that The Store Without a Name remain “without a name,” Miss Freida Wexler, Shortridge senior, of 2807

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North Talbot street, is winner of a SSO. first prize in a contest conducted by the store. “Positive proof of success, I suggest you kfcep the present name, wrote Miss Wexler. “It has attracted statewide attention, and to change would mean cost to establish again. The name applies to your store because you

Miss Wexler

sell to the masses as well as the classes.” I. C. Wolfe, barber, of 906 North Gray street, also suggested the store keep its original name, and won second prize, $25. Mrs. J. Nickel, E. R. 10, Box 358, won third prize, $lO. Fifteen $1 prizes also were awarded. DBCADE SHOWS DROP IN FARM POPULATION 3.8 Per Cent Decrease Since 1920 Is Reported by Censes Bureau. By United Press WASHINGTON, Aug. 24.—The extent of the movement from farm to city in the last ten years was revealed today in an actual decrease from 31,614,269 in farm population in 1920 to 30,447,550 in the 1930 census, despite an increase of 16.1 per cent in total population of the country. The number of people engaged in farming dropped 3.8 per cent, a census bureau analysis showed. Os that total population, 24.8 per cent now live on farms, compared with 29.9 per cent in 1920. s During the same period there was an 18 per cent increase in the rural nonfarm population—those who live in the country, bpt not on farms. This type is drawn both from the city and the farm. The total in the 1930 census was 23,662,710. In 1920 it was 20,047,377. Men predominate on the farm. Girls have left for the city in greater number than boys in the trek in the last ten years. The ratio is now 111 men to 100 women on the farms. In 1920 it was 109.1 to 100. $6,000 Loss in Fire SHERIDAN, Ind., Aug. 24.—Fire, which is believed to have originated from sparks from a threshing machine, destroyed a barn on the farm of Roy Hershman, near here. Many hogs, chickens, several throughbred calves and other live stock as well as a large amount of hay, corn, wheat and oats were burned. The loss is estimated at $6,000, less than half of which is covered by insurance. Breaks Hip in Fall J. F. Montgomery, 72, of 1602 English avenue, sustained a broken left hip Sunday afternoon when he fell in Brookside park. His condition is' serious, city hospital attaches said. Veteran, 82, Dies By United Press BRAZIL, Ind., Aug. 24.—Jonathan Tallman, 82, Civil war veteran, is dead here.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

PLOT TO BREAK JAIL DISCLOSED Prisoner at Columbus Made SIOO Offer for Weapon-. By Times Special COLUMBUS, Ind., Aug. 24.—William Payne, 35, and Hubert Riley, 31, of Winston-Salem, N. C., arrested here on instructions of officers of that city, made an attempt to break jail here, it was learned when a hack saw blade was found in the county jail. The blade was produced by Chester Peck, Negro, who is being held on a charge of second degree burglary, who said he found it near a cell occupied by Payne. Other prisoners informed Sheriff J. W. Foust that Payne had offered them SIOO if they would have a revolver smuggled to him and an additional SIOO if any one of them would have an automobile stationed at the south side of the jail at a certain time. The prisoners also claim that Payne had three SIOO bills hidden in a pack of cigarettes. Payne also told the prisoners, they said, that there were two SIOO bills in the back of his watch which officers took from him at the time of his arrest. The watch and other belongings of the two prisoners were turned over to North Carolina officers who came here after the prisoners both of whom were wanted for escaping from thf state prison and on robbery charges. * EDISON IS WELL TGAIN Recovering Health and Vigor Rapidly, His Physician Announces. By United Press WEST ORANGE, N. J., Aug. 24. —Thomas A. Edison, noted scientist, is on his way to complete recovery from his recent illness, Dr. Hubert S. Howe, his physician, announced today. Dr. Howe said he was satisfied with the manner in which the inventor appears to be regaining his health and vigor. PRESSMEN HOLD PICNIC Judge Geckler Speaker at Frolic at Broad Ripple. Newspaper pressmen of the city held their annual picnic Sunday at Broad Ripple park. More than two hundred persons attended the outing of the Indianapolis Newspaper Pressmens’ Union, No. 37, including employes of The Times, the News and the Star. Juvenile Judge John F. Geckler spoke.

i 117 Years Ago Today The United States Capitol, ! department buildings and the i White House at Washington, D. C. were burned by British I troops on the evening of | Aug. 24, 1814. VhlcL jgjyTHt HOMt OF THOUCHTrUL.~StSV>Ct Funeral Directors 1619 North 1222 Illinois Street Union Street TAlbot 1876 DRexel 2551

LOW FARE EXCURSION TO NIAGARA FALLS Saturday, September 5 $9.50 Round Trip Leave Indianapolis 6:00 p. m.; arrive Niagara Falls 8:10 a. m. Returning leave Niagara Falls 11:00 p. m., Sun. day. Sept. 6; arrive home LABOR DAY morning. See the Falla illuminated at night in all the colors of the rainbow. ALL-EXPENSE TRIP TO CHICAGO Saturday, September 5 $15.20 j Includes two nights lodging and all meals in first class hotel; transfer to land from hotel: complete sightseeing i trip; evening dinner in dining car in i both directions. j Leave Indianapolis 5:00 p. m.; returnI ing leave Chicago 1:00 j>. m. or 5:05 . m., Monday. LABOR DAY. Full particulars at City Ticket Office, • 112 Monument Circle. Phone RI ley 1*322, and Union Station. Riley 3355. JBIG FOUR ROUTE

TRIO SHOT BY FIRINO SQUAD IN GANGLAND Bullets of Assassins Sound Defiance to City Pledged to Smash Crime. By United Press % NEW YORK, Aug. 24.—Gangsters re-enacted Chicago's Valentine day massacre in miniature Sunday night in a blazing, deadly defy to New York’s crime-sickened citizens mobilizing tonight for a war on crime. Their ghastly sense of humor led them to back three young men against a wall opposite a slaughterhouse in a deserted section of Brooklyn, where the victims faced a firing squad of four. One was killed. The other two may die. Seven died in the Chicago massacre. The three Brooklyn victims stepped from a gangster sedan in the pitch black stench of the slaughterhouse deistrict, their faces reflecting their fear of the death they faced, their hands held high in the air. Face Firing Squad Four men stepped from the waiting automobile to the curb; a fifth remained at the wheel. There was just one moment of deadly silence, broken only by the easy idling of the motor of the car at the curb. Then guns blazed. They blazed their defiance of a city aroused by the bandit outrage of last Friday night, when six were killed and a dozen were wounded during the deadly running barrage; they mocked a federal and local drive against crime, intended to be the greatest in history. Three men against the wall toppled to the ground at the first burst. The blazing guns continued to spit their lead until thirty bullets had been imbedded in human beings or the wall behind them. Then the four men leaped into their automobile and speeded away. One Target Lives One of the three crufnpled figures screamed, stumbled to his feet and staggered down the street. A night watchman on his rounds found him. He called police. Os the other two limp figures, one was dead, the second suffering wounds probably fatal. The slain man was identified as Anthony .Ferari, 25, Brooklyn. His companions were identified as Murray Leonardi, 21, Brooklyn, and Angelo Currano, 22, Brooklyn. Both are in critical condition. No weapons were found on the victims, but police said Ferari and Leonardi had served terms in Elmira reformatory. Police got their story of what happened from Leonardi, who refused to give the names of their assailants. Mass Meeting Called The attempted duplication of Chicago's St. Valentine’s day massacre broke on a city organising a fight on crime, and salvaging the broken hearts, broken hopes and broken families tossed up as wreckage in the backwash of Friday’s crime wave. A mass meeting expected to pack facilities of Central park was organized for tonight. Funerals of the shooting victims who fell along the twelve-mile battle front were to be held during the day.

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FORD EDICT SENDS WORKERS TO SOIL

Requires Employes to Till Own Gardens on Penalty of Job. By United Press IRON MOUNTAIN, Mich., Aug. 24.—Seed catalogs out of season today appeared in hundreds of Iron Mountain's industrialized homes. They were the first step in HenryFord’s latest effort to lead his employes to independence of economic cycles through home-made job insurance, With many thousands already idle and Ford's industries her.e .runjiirp, if at all, on sharply curtailed schedules, remaining worke rs were a bit bewildered by the automobile magnate's ultimatum that “every man with a family who is employed at the plant here will be required to have a garden to supply at least part of his winter vegetables; those who do not comply with this rule will be discharged.” While Ford announced that hundreds of acres of land here would be made available for tillage and products of it would be offered at low cost to his employes unable to supply their own garden space, agricultural experts will be in charge, he said. “When the people of our country learn to help themselves they will be benefited far greater than they would be by employment insurance,” the manufacturer asserted. “If our agricultural plan is adopted throughout the country . the dole never need be thought of.” CUBAN REVOLT ENDS Rebel Leaders Imprisoned; Populace Is Loyal. By United Press HAVANA, Aug. 24.—Loyalty of the Cuban army and refusal of a majority of the population to rise against President Gerardo Machado appeared today to have brought the Cuban revolution to an end. Most of the rebel leaders were in prison, two weeks after the revolt started. Migueal Mariano Gomez, former Havana mayor and fugitive rebel, and Mendez Penate were said to be the only important insurgents at liberty. Government officials did not claim complete victory. They expected outbreaks in Oriente and Santa Clara provinces to continue for a fortnight. But danger of renewed fighting on an important scale was believed past. ASKSS2S7oOOJ3AMAGES Woman Files Suit Against Railroad in Crash Injuries. Damages of $25,000 was asked today for injuries resulting from a railroad crossing accident in a suit filed by Miss Dorothea Wurster in superior court two. The suit contends she was injured permanently while crossing tracks of the Chicago, Indianapolis & Louisville railway, defendant in the suit, Feb. 1, 1931, at Thirtieth street. She was riding in an automobile owned and driven by Herbert C. Wurster. No warning bell or whistle was sounded by the train,.the suit states. The plaintiff declares she suffered internal injuries. Rotary Club Program Set A special fraternal program will be given at the weekly Tuesday luncheon of the Indianapolis Rotary Club in the Claypool.

Cat-astrophe? By United Press NEW YORK. Aug. 24.—The private life of the cat—the back fence serenading species—is about to be revealed. He will be exposed as a menace to public health when the international cat investigating society, whose membership includes millionaire insomnia sufferers, will hold its first open session here. Plans will be drawn first to make the people of New York state “cat-conscious.” Then petition;? will be circulated asking the legislature to pass a cat licensing act. Unlicensed felines would be gathered up and summarily executed—all nine lives at a time.

WORK TO START ON STORE WING Sears, Roebuck Addition to Cost $175,000. Construction of a $175,000 addition to the Indianapolis store of Sears, Roebuck & Cos. will begin Tuesday, according to officials of William P. Jungclaus Company, general construction company, awarded the contract for the work. About 100 men will be employed during the perliminary work, although it is probable that more will be put on the job later. The new three-story structure will have an entrance on Alabama street. It will add 38,500 square feet of floor space and will provide for general expansion of the store. Plans for the first floor provide for a grocery and meat market, photography studio and numerous shops. The second floor will be devoted to a ready-to-wear department, carpets and draperies, millinery, musical instruments, wall paper and lingerie. Offices and storage space will occupy the third floor. Local labor will be employed on the work. It is expected that the addition will be finished about the first of December. MELON SEEDS CLEWS Police Trace Fruit Pilferers; Arrest Two Negroes. A police squad recovered a huge pilfered watermelon Sunday night, and arrested William Harker, 18, and William Denton, 24, both Negroes, who confessed they stole the melon at 817 North Capitol avenue, a fruit stand. One thing puzzled the youths. How did police find them. A finger pointing to a long trail of watermelon seeds that led directly from the fruit stand solved the mystery for them. They are charged with petit larcency and vagrancy. CHILD SCALDED IN' BATH Richard Heflin's Condtion Fair; Turned on Hot Water. Condition of Richard Heflin, 1-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Helfin, 826 Harlan street, who was scalded Saturday night, was fair today, city hospital physicians said. While his mother was bathing him, the child turned on a hot water faucet in the bathtub.

AUG. 24, 193?

DEATH CLAIMS FIVE ELDERLY CITYRESIDENTS Retired Inspector for U. S. Bureau Succumbs at Age of 84. Death thinned the ranks of elderly Indianapolis residents over the week-end. five succumbing to Illness at their homes. Captain Jacob Fox, 84, inspector in the United States bureau of animal industry for thirty-five years, died at his home, 2018 North Talbot street, late Saturday, shortly after he had celebrated his birthday. Funeral services will be held at 9 Tuesday morning at SS. Peter and Paul Cathedral, followed by burial in Holy Cross cemetery. Daughters Survive Survivors ate two daughters. Miss Mary Fox and Miss Emma Fox; two sons, Louis and Jacob Fox Jr., all of Indianapolis; a brother, Michael Fox of Columbus, and two sisters, Mrs. Charles Schrader, Franklin and Mrs. Barbara Webber, Indianapolis. Last rites were held today, for Isaac Sorgius, 67, who died from heart disease at the home of a daughter. Mrs. Loral Kidd, 21 North Mount street. Burial was in Crown Hill cemetery. Mr. Sorgius had been a resident of Indianapolis eighteen years, coming here frorh Washington, Ind. Burial at Marion Body of Mrs. Miriah L. Holmes, 78, of 3012 North,Talbot street, was taken to Marion, Ind., where she formerly lived, iloday for funeral and burial rites Tuesday afternoon. Mrs. Holmes died Sunday after a long illness. Mrs. Margaret Wetzler, 68. of 4202 West Morris street, Indianapolis resident for many years, died at her home Sunday after a brief illness. Funeral services will be held at 10 Tuesday morning, followed by burial at Brazil. After an illness of five months. Mrs. Alvena Steinsburger, 72, died Sunday at the home of her son, Fred Steinsburger, 310 North Denny street. Last rites will be held at the son’s residence at 1 Tuesday afternoon, followed by burial at Brazil. SNOKE TO AIR PARLEY i C. of C. Press Man Delegate to Cincinnati Get Together. Harmon E. Snoke, press representative of the Chamber of Commerce and editor of its periodical, will be one of the Chamber of Commerce officials of the central west and south who will attend the aviation get-together at Cincinnati Monday. American Airways is the transportation host for the affair and the officials will be taken to Cincinnati by plane and returned the same way.

~frte ivheelinqly speakinq fyefon Ziezofa, ip just dS ■SOW}

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