Indianapolis Times, Volume 33, Number 28, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 June 1920 — Page 2

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DR. BUTLER OUT OF G. 0. P. RACE, BARNES STATES Informs New York Delegates They Need No Longer Cast for Him. FREES ABOUT 20 VOTES CHICAGO, June 12— Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler has withdrawn from the race for the republican presidential nomination, according to announcement made today by William H. Barnes of the New York delegation. Dr. Butler has informed the New York delegation that he is no longer a candidate and that the delegation from New York is no longer under obligations to vote for him, Barnes stated. The withdrawal of Bntler from the race will release shout twenty votes. Butler received only twenty votes on the fourth ballot last night, all from New York state. It is reported that the bulk of the Butler votes will go to Lowden on the •e.rly ballots today. .ELWELL MURDER BAFFLES POLICE Sjiicide of Sportsman Scouted When Pistol Is Missing. NEW YORK, June 12.—Two bafTling crimes that contain all the elements of a “Sherlock Holmes" mystery confronted the New York police today. There were: The murder of Joseph B. Elwell, international authority on bridge whist and owner of a great racing stable, who was shot to death in his luxurious home in West Seventieth street, yesterday; and the robbery of $450,000 worth of jewels from the summer home of Enrico Caruso at East Hampton, L. I. Three women, who were said to possess keys to the Elwell home, are being sought by the police. It was first thought that the whist expert might have committed suicide, but the absence of the automatic pistol with Which the sbootiug had been done confuted the officials to the murder theory. Elwell was separated from his wife four years ago. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Lewisohn. who attended a theater with Elwell, said he was cheerful when they left him Friday. Elwell on reaching his apartment undressed, neatly folded his evening clothec and placed them on a bed with a 1 roll of about S4OO in bills and Jewelry worth $7,000. "j These were untouched when the police entered the place, showing that robbery , was not the motive. Beside Elwell were found several letters which the postman shoved under his door at 7 :30 a. m. He was reading one of the letters when shot. Twcl painters working near the place said they heard a sound like a shot about 8 a. m. There was no sign of a struggle. A reward of $4( 000 may be offered today in the Caruso case. CAR SHORTAGE HITS BUILDING ‘Situation Desperate’ Truck Shipments Being Made. The tying up of several large bdlld- ! ing operations in Indianapolis because of the inability of building contractors to obtain cement through car shortage has resulted in the shipment of cement by truck from Limedale to Indianapolis and other points. “The situation has been desperate,” ( aald C. N. Elliott, local representative of the Limedale plant.“In the last tew weeks we have been ' compelled to turn down orders for thousands of barrels from failure to get the necessary cars, and we have been unable to take care of our open contracts. “There is plenty of cement to be had If we could Becure the cars. “There must be 300.000 or 400,000 barrels in the bins at Limedale, and probably 800,000 at the Buffington plant. “We have been delivering cement by truck to some points near Limedale for re-shipment by rail.” “C. W. Bed wick has arranged for shipment by truck from Limedale of several hundred barrels, to be used in the erection of the plant for the United j Butchers’ association, and F. Rauh is arranging for a truck shipment from Limedale to the stockyards, arrangements having been made through Tom Snyder of the Indianapolis Chamber of Com- j nierce.” Mr. Snyder said that the highway transport division was also arranging for a shipment by truck to go from Limedale to Sheridan, Ind., to permit of a resumption of building operations there, since Sheridan is entirely out ot cement. He said shipments would also be made by truck next week from Limedale to Ogden Cambridge City, Newcastle and other points. “We are now In position to offer the building Contractors of almoe t unlimited service in motor truck transfer,” said Mr. Snyder. “Since the recent congestion in freight traffic the chamber has been able to render great assistance In moving goods in and out rs Indianapolis by trnck, averaging hundreds of tons weekly.” Shelby County Will Receive No More Fish k Unless Shelby county officials enforce fish protection laws of Indiana, their will not be restocked from the , Bti> hatcheries. VThls was the ruling of the Indiana Banservation commission, which met to- ! 'day. “Inasmuch as sentiment in Shelby county is against the enforcement of the state fish laws, no fish will be planted in the streams of that county,” the commission declared. It was declared that dynamiting and seining of fish had been prevalent in Shelby county.

Here's a Cop Who Isn't Likely to Die of Smallpox An interurban conductor telephoned police headquarters that some boys at a greenhouse on Martindale avenue, north of Thirty-third street, had bombarded his car with rocks. Patrolman Coleman was sent to Investigate. Within thirty minutes he called the operator and said: “If you want that rock-throwing investigated send some other policeman to do it." “What is the matter?” asked the operator. “There are nine boys living at that house,” answered Coleman, “and they tell me every one of them has the sAallpox and I haven’t been vaccfiated In a long time.”

HARDING LEADS DARK HORSE LINE (Continued From Page One.) i would be the nominee of a majority of | the convention many ballots were : taken today. Visits were paid by some of the senators to the Wood and Lowden headquarters. as well as to those of other presidential aspirants, while the conferences were on. Several of the conferences were held iin the room of Senator Brandegee on j the fourth floor of the Blaekstne, which I became eventually the headquarters of | the conferees. Borah was a visitor to the Blackstone, but he denied he had participated in any cf the conferences. ! He said he had gone to the hotel to : confer with Johnson. The conferees did not reach an agree- | ment on Harding, it was said, until by j a process of elimination they had disposed of all other candidates except i AVood and Lowden, neither of whom was considered seriously. It was the belief of the conferees, it : was reported,othat both AVood and Lowden would begin to weaken after the j first few ballots today, although the : campaign managers of each were said ! to have refused to enter Into any “deal” : to swing to any other candidate. EXPECT TICKET WILL BE READY. ! It was the consensus of opinion among j delegates who talked with the group of senators afterward that by the time the convention reconvened there would be a ticket ready which republican leaders seeking to prevent the nomination of Johnson would unite in trying to put across. j That ticket would most certainly be : headed by Harding, It was Ftated positively by one senator favorable to Harding’s candidacy. | “The situation looks very favorable to i my candidacy,” was the only statement Harding would make. It was thien 2 a. m. and Harding and | the other Senators appeared worn out 1 by the long hours they had put in wltht out &leep since early yesterday lu an , effort to develop a “deal” a majority of ' the convention would accept . If the Harding deal failed it was agreed a “dark horse” should be nominated, it also was learned. Another "bit of information permlttojl to trtckle from the conferences was that Senator Penrose, from his sick room in Philadelphia, had communicated his approval of the choice of Harding as a compromise candidate. SPROUL‘B IMPRESSION GENERALLY FAVORABLE. Gov. Sproul said he was gratified with the action of the Pennsylvania delegation in agreeing to continue to give him “moral support" as long as it "were necessary." Spronl has made a favorable impression on those delegates he has personally met, and his nsme was freely mentioned around the Blackstone while the conferences were on. “Lowden Is liable to develop considerable strength on the first few ballots today,” one conferee said. “His greatest strength probably will come on the first two or three ballots and he may receive as high as approximately 400 votes, bnt that will be his maximum and then watch Harding.” It was admitted, however, by even the most optimistic parties to the "deal,” j that Johnson would not be sidetracked by them without the possibility of a bitter fight on the convention floor which would plunge the crowded building into a turmoil precipitated by Johnson personally appearing and joining with Borah in hurling defiance at the old : guard leaders entrenched on the platform. BRYAN THINKS SPROUL LIKELY (ContlDued From Page One.) ( standing leaders of extreme conservatism. has his hand on the throttle. His delegation showed its knowledge of practical politics hy dividing its vote between Wood, Lowden and Harding. At this writing it seems unlikely (remember this is only a guess) that the leading candidate will be nominated. The large expenditures disclosed by the investigating committee would seem to bar his progress toward the .whitehouse. He is also handicapped by the (act that the convention failed to Indorse the compulsory military training policy, of which he had been the leading champion. His vote has risen from 2871-4 on the first ballot to 314)4 on the fourth—a small increase for a leading candidate. Gov. Lowden will probably be the choice of the reactionary element If they dared to risk his nomination. But his financial connection with big business, added to the large sum that he admits to have invested in his campaign, makes bis nomination highly improbable. His vote his risen from 211)4 on the first ballot to 253 on the fourth, but his increase has already commenced to slow down. Senator Johnson's vote rose from 132)4 on the first ballot to 148 on the third, and then fell to 140)4 on the fourth. There seems no likelihood of bis vote reachipg a much higher figure. * Senator Harding started at 64)4 and has reached 68)4. He may receive some votes from both AVood and Lowden when they drop out, but there is no reason to believe that his vote will ever reach what theirs is now If Mr. Hoover had not entered the Oaliforina primary he might have had a chance as a compromise, but there seems to be no enthusiasm for him among the delegates. At present Gov. Sproul of Pennsylvania has the lead among the dark horses, although Justice Hughes is frequently mentioned. Gov. Coolidge and Dr. Butler may be considered for the vice presidency if a western man should receive the first place. Judge Pritchard of North Carolina and Gov. Morrow of Kentucky may have a chance for the second place if the convention decides to go south for the vice presidential candidate, but no southern state is close enough to Wall street to give one of its citizens much of a chance for either place in this convention. We shall soon know the worst.

RECESS AFTER EIGHTH BALLOT (Continued From Page One.) headed by Senator Wadsworth, who wore a wide smile. Lodge then announced that Secretary Gleason of the convention would make an announcement. Gleason, his arms folded across the front of his Palm Beach coat and the sunlight from a crack In the roof glinting against his eyeglasses, waited patiently for silence. The New York delegation was the center of inquisitive groups at once. Replying to questions Senator Wadsworth said that "Lowden probably will show a gain on the first ballot.” He refused to explain or amplify his statement. The delegates still milled about In the aisles, while Lodge stood beside Gleason, gavellng with rhythmic beats and Increasing noises ascended from the galleries. Quiet was finally restored. Gleason's announcement was a word of advice to the delegates who bad failed to get their mall at the convention postoffice. \ “Go get it,”ifce said. “It may be something important.”

G. 0. P. CAN’T WIN WITH WOOD OR LOWDEN-RORAH Idaho Senator Asserts Dark ShadoAv of ‘Big Money’ Will Trail Either. MUST BE HI, HE WRITES By WILLIAM E. BORAH, United States Senator from Idaho. (Copyright. 1020.) CHICAGO, June 12.—The balloting yesterday disclosed unmistakeably no enthusiasm but rather on the other hand, a great reluctance upon the part of the delegates to accept either AA r ood or Lowden as their candidate. Both of these candidates have been In the field for a year. Each has made a thorough campaign in many respects. One of them —Wood -has made a thorough canvass of forty-seven states. And yet there was no enthusiasm among the delegates for either Wood or for Lowden. Today—as the convention assembled again—you hear upon every hand, “AYe ought to name another candidate —we ought not to name AA’ood or Lowden—we ought to nominate Mr. Johnson',” whose election, in my judgment, Is already assured. The thought seems to haunt the minds of the delegates who are voting for either Wood or Lowden that they may be carrying the republican party to disaster and defeat in November. DOUBT IF EITHER COULD BE ELECTED. It does not require much trouble to find a supporter of either Wood or Lowden—l mean a supporter in the sense that he is voting for one or the other of them at the present time—who will refuse to say that he seriously doubts if either can be nominated, or if either were nominated, he could be elected. No candidate and no supporter of any candidate has a right to demand—unless he desires his loyalty to the republican party to be questioned—thut his particular candidate be accepted as the nominee of the convention. But every republican and every good citizen has a right to demand tfcnt whoever be the choice of the convention for president shall be a man whose integrity and honesty, and the manner in which he secured his nomination, cannot be questioned. Tlie republican party—every good republican and every good American citizen—has a right to demand that whoever the convention names for president is u man who is clean. ' „ It isn’t enough that he be individually clean. The method by which he secured his nomination myst be clean. The perfectly brutal and shameless use of money which characterized the pre-couventlon campaign—and which Is, for that matter, still characterizing the campaign—notwithstanding the startling disclosures of the lavish use of money before the senate committee appointed to investigate preconvention campaign expenditures and contributions makes it imperative that when the convention ends the questionable employment of “slush funds” shall have been so condemned once and for all by the character of the nominee that It cannot be raised again during the campaign—at least so far as the republican party la concerned. SHADOW WOULD FOLLOW EITHER. If either Wood or Lowden were to be nominated by the convention there would beau interrogation point placed opposite : either of them in the mind of every voter in the United States as to how be got bis nomination. It is simply inconceivable to me that with a number of men of high standing —either of whom would make a clean candidate- from which the Convention may choose there should be a determination apparently in certain quarters with which we are all too famlllAr to put over men like Lowden anil AVood who are already under investigation by a senate committee and who will still be under Investigation when the committee resumes Its hearing at Chicago In July. AVhat a pitiable, miserable mess it would be for the republican party to be a.sked to staud behind a man to whom has been traced the use of money to buy the nomination for president of the United .States? It Is a condition about which good American citizens can not be too much concerned and to which the convention must pay heed unless it wishes to Invite defeat for the republican party in November.

Feightner Publicity Man for Democrats Harold C. Felghtner, formerly a member of the editorial staff of the Indianapolis Star, today assumed charge of tbe publicity bureau of the democratic state committee, having been appointed by Benjamin Bosse, democratic state chairman. Felghtner will attend a meeting of tho democratic editors of the Eleventh district at Wabash, Ind., Sunday.

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INDIANA DAILY TIMES, SATURDAY, JUNE 12, 1920.

REPUBLICANS TIRE OF FIGHT (Continued From Page One.) Lowden today, but this was discounted by other New Yorkers. There is little chance of New York’s getting together on any candidate, according to the A’iews of most of them. The “old guard,” what is left of it, was in a quandary today, switching about and unable definitely to decide anything. The old guard proved by the adjournment that it was in mpre or less control of the parliamentary situation on the floor, but it has not shown that it can pick a man from out of the ruck and make him the 1020 candidate for president. The old guard leaders are frantically engaged in trying to find an open road on which to get out of this delicate situation. It Is a delicate situation, so delicate that a crude movement may send Hiram Johnson and Senator Borah Into the vanguard of anew political party. Above ail else, the party managers want to avoid a repetition of 1012. The most generally accepted plan of the old guard leaders this morniug was this: To muster all the strength possible on the early balloting today, kill off both Lowden and AVood by showing them the hopelessness of their respective situations without organization support, and then get behind either Harding or Sprout. Both Harding and Sproul are acceptable to the “organization.” The old guard frankly doss not want Wood and will not have him if they can possibly get out of it. The same is true of Hiram Johnson. Lowden it would like to have, but there Is always the fear that even If nominated Lowden could not be elected because of the mud which has clung to the skirts of the Illinois governor of the “Missouri mess.” Ever present In the.tr perspiring deliberations was the admonition of Boise Penrose, coming over miles of telephone wires, that whoever the candidate Is he must be a man who can move Into the whitehouse next March. Adding to the confusion of the situation, was the fear that many of these delegates, while to Lowden, to Wood, to Johnson or to Harding, are not bound to the extent thnt they can be delivered to another man like so much property. It Is feared that comparatively few of the delegates, outside of the southern states, enu lie delivered and probably none of the state delegations In their entirety. It is doubtful If even the favorite sons can command tbelr delegates to vote for another man. As had been predicted for many weeks, the convention’s first four ballots, tfkeo at the conclusion of a day of oratory, failed to show anything except the presence of a large number of conflicting interests in the convention. On the first ballot the vote was merely a confirmation of the opinion of every one—that no candidate stood ont over another. In the scope of the fonr ballots there was little change of significance, the tendency to go to Lowden having been expected and regarded n too slight to have a material bearing on the result. The gains ot AA’ood and Lowden an., the fortunes of Johnson In the balloting are shown hy the following tabulation of tbe vote for the principal contenders on each ballot: F'rst. Second. Third Fourth. Wood 287)4 289)4 303 314)4 Lowden 211)4 250)4 282*4 289 Johnson ....133)* 146 148 140 U "Lowden and Wood are through,” wn* tbo consensus on the floor of the Coliseum upon adjournment. The only hope of either. It hart been eonced<*d, was in snreess on either the third or fourth ballot. A dark horse was the general opinion. Indiana's delegation voted 22 for Wood and 8 for Johnson on the first and second ballots. On the third ballot Indiana gave Wood 18. Lowden 2, Johnson 2 and Harding 2. On tbo fourth ballot Indiana’s vote was, AVood 18, Lowden 3, Johnson 6 and Harding 3. NEW YORKER GUEST OF HONOR. Speaking on “Chemistry and Civilization,” Ellwood Hendrick of New York was the guest of honor and principal speaker before the Indiana section of the American Chemical society at the Chamber of Commerce yesterday. TO PLAN LEGION CONVENTION. Preliminary plans for the second national convention of ;be American legion In Cleveland next September will be taken up next week, when Lemuel Bolles, national adjutant; George H. Ilennlek, assistant national adjutant, and 11. H. Up degrafT of the publicity division confer in New York City with Franklin D’OUer, national commander.

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EXPECT G. 0. P. TO FILL SECOND BY GEOGRAPHY’ Nominee for Vice President Must Cement Ticket, Leaders Say. FOUR INDIANA SONS UP By DAVID M. CHURCH. CHICAGO, June 12.—A small army of possible A’lce presidential candidates are in the background today awaiting their fate. Before night it is expected that the republican national convention will have chosen a man to run second on the G. O. P. ticket, but the nomination for vice president will hinge on the selection made for the leader of the ticket. There Is a wealth of vice presidential timber under discussion. Senator Harding of Ohio Is being prominently mentioned for the place In the event that he falls to secure the first place prize. Got. Allen of Kansas, Gov. Coclldgo of Massachusetts, Senator Kenyon of lowa and Gov. Morrow of Kentucky all liuve their supporters. Gov. Samuel It. McKeJvle of Nebraska also is a candidate for second honors. Geography is expected to play the trump hand in the selection of the vice presidential candidate The party leaders are striving to secure a running mate for the big candidate who can help the ticket through the doubtful states. If a western man is nominated for president, it is .almost certain that an eastern man will run In second place, and vice versa. Indiana, the usual source of vice presidential timber, is not lacking In candidates. Senator AVatson. Senator New, Gov. Goodrich and ex-Senator Beveridge, all of Jnd!ana, may be offered to the convention.

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Spaan to Discuss G. 0. P. League Plank Henry N. Spaan, candidate for the democratic nomination for representative in congress from the Seventh district, will discuss the league of nations plank in the republican national platform at Danville, Ind., tonight. The meeting will be held at the courthouse there under the auspices of the Central Normal. College Democratic club. Thomas Taggart, democratic nominee for the senate, on a brief visit to Indianapolis, characterized the plank as “the most cowardly, evasive, unprincipled action that any respectable set of

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men ever attempted to put over on the people.” Mr. Taggart returned to French Lick for a conference with Gov. Smith and Charles F. MKrphy of New York. Sorority to Take Care of Children Psi lota XI sorority girls of Muncle will see that children of that city are taken care of. Articles of Incorporation wf filed with the secretary of state todc by the Psi lota Xi day nursery. The girls will care for children whose mothers are forced to work, as well as operate a dispensary for babies.

Man Bound Over aW: Result of Fi9 As the result of a fight which several weeks ego, Manual MargendohW living at the Denison hotel, has beeij bound over to the grand Jury under a SSOO bond. Mergendolar, the evidence showed, had a quarrel with Hubert McGinnis, 20 Easi Michigan street, about room rent which McGinnis claimed Mergendoler owed him. The trouble tesulted in McGlnnie being cut on the back. McGinnis is better known as Hugh McGann, the boxer.