Indianapolis Times, Volume 34, Number 16, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 May 1921 — Page 11

MARION VOTES ON COMMISSION PLAN First Election Under Knapp Bill Closely Watched. Special to The Times. MARION, Ind.. May 31—Marion, the first city in the State to take advantage of the Knapp bill providing for com-mission-manager form of government, is casting her ballots today. Scattering reports from voting places conflicted. In some precincts the voting is heavy, in others light. A heavy total vote is not expected by either side and both factions set up advance claims of victory. It is understood that the Citizens’ League, favoring the commission-manager plan, bases its hope on the ballot of the new voters —the women. It is predicted that not more than 8,000 votes will be cast. Every city in the State is watching with keen interest the result of the battle here. Twelve other cities will have elections within the next month.

SPEED KING TO BE CROWNED AT C. OF C. SMOKER (Continued From Page One.) his final lap. Wrecks and mechanical troubles accounted for the car casualties, although fortunately not a single driver or mechanic was injured in any of the smashups. To Ralph De Palma more than to any other factor is chargeable the small number of cars that were on the track at the finish. With his trim cream-colored Balot running as smoothly as clockwork he hit a killing pace on the very first lap of the race, a pace that was to surpass all records as long as he was in the lead. In the long run he went out with a broken connecting rod, but not before he had put to rest permanently the hopes of many contestants who attempted to follow the pace cut out by him. De Palma wasted no time in getting under way. He captured the very first lap of the race closely followed by Sarles and Boyer. Sarles managed to pass the flying Ballot in the stretch on the second lap and Boyer got his lone $100 lap prize money of the day on the seventh. But outside of those two laps there was nothing to it but De Palma until after the race was half run. The terrific speed which he was clipping off is shown in that the first twenty-five miles were run at the rate of 91.6 miles and hour, and this average steadily increased to the 225 mile mark, where it reached its apex at 93.66 miles. By this time De Palma had lapped the entire field and he eased down a trifle on tha next twenty-five miles but at the half way mark it stood at 93.52 miles an hour, which was more than two miles an hour faster than last year.

RACING THRILLS IN FIRST HALF. A little later De Palma went out of the race and from that time on the race began to assume the appearance of a procession. In all frankness it must be admitted that the real racing thrills came in the first half of the race. For example at the 100 mile mark five cars driven by De Palma, Sarles, Alley, Hearne and Milton were all on the same lap, a thing unprecedented in the history of the great motor event. But with De Palma gone the pep was out of the race to a great extent. Sarles made one successful bid for first place on the 117th lap, but relinquished the lead almost as soon as he had taken it, and after that seemed content to play it safe for second place. Milton drove a careful, heady race, holding his lead and gradually increasing it until at the end he was almost 4 minutes ahead of his nearest competitor. But from a spectator's standpoint it would have been much more thrilling had he set out to make a runaway of the race or had Sarles made a desperate effort to take away the lead. Milton made only two stops, once on the seventy-ninth lap, when he changed tires and took on gas and oil and again near the end of the race, when, with a comfortable lead, he made a "safety'' stop for supplies. It was a matter of comment that only one of the real speed boats that had fought so bitterly for the qualifying honors on last Wednesday finished. Of the six proud possessors of positions in the first two rows, Sarles was the only one to finish.

WILCOX FIRST TO DROP FROM RACE. Hopes for a victory by an Indianapolis driver were dashed early when Howdy Wilcox coasted down the home stretch and without even hesitating at the pits turned his car off the track and parked in the grass, out of the race with a broken connecting rod. This was on his twenty-second lap and his blue Peugeot was the first car to drop out. As a matter of fact, it was no day at all for former winners and the jinx that long ago decreed that no winner should repeat was on his job from the very first. Four former winners were entered and none finished. Dario Resta, who has not been well since coming to Indianapolis, did not even start, but gave the wheel to Ora Haibe, an Indianapolis boy. who pulled the green Sunbeam through into fifth place; De Palma went out with a broken connecting rod just after the halfway mark was past; Wilcox suffered the same fate before the race was fairly under way, and Rene Thomas, after working into third place, was forced to the sidelines with a broken water line. The first accident of the day was staged by Joe Thomas in a Duesenberg. Just as Joe got well into the first turn on his twenty-fourth lap a steering knuckle snapped, the car hit the top wall, then crashed to the bottom, but no one was hurt. Next on the list came Louis Fontaine in a Richards Junior Special. Frozen brakes caused him to crash into the retaining wall at almost exactly the same point where Joe Boyer had his accident last year. The car hit the wall going backwards and the rear part of the machine was driven over the wall. Barring a bump on Fontaine's head he was unhurt as was Cotton Henning, his mechanician. Other cars forced out of the running were: Talbott Darracq, Andre Boillot driving, forty-first lap, connecting rod bearing burned out; Jean Chassagne's Peugeot, sixty-fifth lap, lost hood and after making many efforts to replace it Chassagne gave up and withdrew the car; Joe Boyer's Dnesenberg. sixty-fourth lap rear axle trouble; Frontenac, driven by Van Ranst, eighty-eighth lap, broken water connection; Richards Junior Special, hit the wall while driven by Thicksten and damaged steering knuckles so that they were declared by the officials; Tom Alley, while running in third place in his Frontenac burned out a connecting rod bearing on his 134th lap; Eddie Hearne's Revere, 111th lap, valve trouble, Jules Ellingoe, Frontenac, forty-ninth lap, broken oil line. GREATEST CROWD WITNESSES RACE. Beyond any question the greatest crowd ever gathered together in the Speedway grounds witnessed the race. Last year's record breaking figures were exceeded and it was estimated that between 125,000 and 150,000 persons saw the race. The crowd was better handled than ever before and there was far less congestion than in past years. This unquestionably was due to two things: first, better facilities and better roads for handling crowds, and second, the fact that race goers have learned that it is necessary to start early. In fact many early comers parked their cars at the Speedway gates and stayed all night. Every road leading to the race was crowded with automobiles by o'clock and thousands upon thousands

WINNERS IN 500-MILE RACE The official time and average of each of the nine drivers who finishedrs who finished follows: Position. Car. Driver. Time Avr. Purse. 1 Frontenac, Milton 5:34:44.65 89.62 $20,000 2 Duesenberg, Sarles 5:38:34.30 88.61 10,000 3 *Frontenac, Ford .. - 5:52:50.30 85.03 5,000 4 §Duesenberg, Miller 5:54:24.98 84.65 3,500 5 Sunbeam, Haibe 5 55:58.20 84.00 3,000 6 Duesenberg, Guyot 6:01:17.70 83.03 2,200 7 Leach Special, Vail . 6:14:17.47 80.15 1,800 8 ••Duesenberg, Hill 6:19:06.74 79.13 1,600 9 fFrontenac, Mulford; awarded 9th place 1,500 *Relieved by Burk, who was relieved by Ellingboe. §Relieved by Murphy. 6Relieved by Boyer, who was relieved by Miller. **Relieved by Wonderlich for last two laps. 9Flagged in 177th lap.

came out on street cars and by shuttle train. Barring the heat it was an ideal day, but even with the hot sun there was a fresh west breeze blowing that kept the weather from being stifling. Considering the size of crowd very few cases of heat prostration were treated at the hospital. and all in all the race was a wonderful success. FILE PROTEST AGAINST CHICAGO FRONTENAC CAR. Because they say the Chicago Frontenac car, driven to third place by Percy Ford and Jules Ellingboe, was pushed from the pits in order to start the engine when the crank failed to give it a start, Louis Coatalen, owner of the English Sunbeams and the French TalbotDurac, and Fred Duesenberg, owner of the Duesenbergs, have filed protests with Speedway officials in an effort to have the car disqualified. Their action was taken under the A. A. A. rules, which require that a car must travel under its own power in a race. Ford's pitmen declare in their defense that the car was pushed back about thirty feet before it was pushed forward and that considerable time was lost in this way. The Sunbeam and the Duesenberg cars, which followed the Chicago Frontenac in, would benefit from additional prize money should Ford's car be disqualified. Besides the cash prizes given by the Speedway, Milton won trophies as follows: the Wheeler-Schebler silver cup; the Prest-O-Lite trophy, which is a massive silver cube engraved with a racing machine, and the clock and group given by L. Strauss and Company. The winner has permanent possession of the latter two trophies but the Prest-O-Lite cup is retained until the next Speedway king is crowned.

LAP PRIZES WON BY MILTON. The lap prizes Milton won were given by J. B. Edwards, Drivers' Day, Taylor Belting Company, Hoosier Sub-Carbu-rerot Comapny, B. F. Goodrich Rubber Company, O. A. Chillson, Progress Laundry Company, Hoosier Motor Club, L. Strauss & Co., Lilly Hardware Company, Circle Theater, Keyless Lock Company, Peoples State Bank, L. S. Ayres & Co., C. F. Kettering H. Lieber Company, Claypool Hotel, Drivers' Day, The Indianapolis Star, Barbre Dairy Lunch, Drivers’ Day, Western Electric Company, Russel M. Seeds Company, Indiana Daily Times, Hamilton Harris Company, Drivers' Day, Van Camp Hardware and Iron Company, Sidener-Van Riper Advertising Company, “Exide,” StewartCarey Glass Company, Charles S. Crawford. president Indiana Aeronautical Association, Sun Company, Toledo branch, Drivers' Day, Firestone Tire and Rubber Company, Brannum-Keene Lumber Company, Washington Hotel, Driver's Day, R. V. Law Motor Company, Merchants Heat and Light Company, the Wadley Company, Baker Brothers, Huetter Machine and Tool Company, Cornelius Printing Company, E. W. Steinhart Company, Indianapolis Engraving and Electrotype Company, Prest-O-Lite Company, Cole Motor Car Company, Yellow Cab Company, E. Rauh & Sons' Fertilizer Company, Robbins & Meyers Company, Col. E. A. Deeds, Indianapolis News, Carl Fisher,’ Julius C. Walk & Sons, Inc., Hotel Severin, Seth Klein “Pedders Radiator,” Lexington Motors Car Company, Standard Steel and Bearings Company, Central Rubber and Supply Company, Drivers’ Day, Puritan Bed Spring Company and James A. Allison. Joe Boyer won the sixth lap prise, offered by the Indianapolis Automobile Trade Association, and Roscoe Sarles the second lap contribution, offered by the Premier Motor Corporation. DE PALMA COPS MANY PRIZES. Ralph De Palma's lap prizes were contributed by: Pettis Dry Goods Company, White's Restaurant Company, Weidely Motors Company, Drivers Day, H. C. S. Motor Car Company, Coburn Photo and Film Company, H T. Hearsey & Cos., Drivers’ Day, Kiefer-Stewart Company, Indianapolis Athletic Club, Vonnegut Hardware Company, Douglas Wheeler, Louis G. Deschler Company, Arthur Chevrolet, Fisher Auto Company, A. C. Newby, The Fishback Company,, Guarantee Tire and Rubber Company, Betsy Ross Candy Shops, Selig Dry Goods Company, Porter

ASPIRIN Name “Bayer” on Genuine f Take Aspirin only as told in each package of genuine Bayer Tablets of Aspirin. Then you will be following the directions and dosage worked out by physicians during 21 years, and proved safe by millions. Take no chances with substitutes. If you see the Bayer Cross on tablets, you can take them without fear for Colds, Headache, Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Earache, Toothache, Lumbago and for Pain. Handy tin boxes of twelve tablets cost few cents. Druggists also sell larger packages. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid.—Advertisement.

Freed From Torture Eatonic Cleared His Up-Set Stomach "The people who have seen me suffer tortures from neuralgia brought on by an up-set stomach now see me perfectly sound and well— absolutely due to Eatonic,” writes R. Long. Profit by Mr. Long's experience, keep your stomach in healthy condition, fresh and cool, and avoid the ailments that come from an acid condition. Eatonic brings relief by taking up and carrying out the excess acidity and gases—does it quickly. Take an Eatonic after eating and see how wonderfully it helps you box costs only a trifle with

Electric Company, Taggart Baking Company, State Life Insurance Company, "Delco,” Merchants Printing Company, American Sanitary Lock Company, Allison Engineering Company, Frontenac Motor Company, Vonnegut Machinery Company, Butler Manufacturing Company, “A.C. Spark Plug,” Drivers' Day, Drivers’ Day, Morton & Brett, Drivers’ Day, Western Oil Refining Company, Willard Storage Battery Company, Pittsford Purity Pie Company, Imperial Drop Forge Company, Drivers’ Day, Gibson Company, George J. Mayer and General Motors Service Company, Losey-Nash Motors Company, Drivers’ Day, Keith's Theater, Martin-Parry Corporation, Zen - lte Metal Company, W. H. Block Company, Drivers’ Day, Nordyke & Marmon Company, Drivers' Day, Drivers’ Day, Indianapolis Live Stock Exchange, Thomas Taggart, National Motor Car and Vehicle Corporation, Alemite Lubricating Company of Indiana, Duesenberg Auto and Motors Company, Marott Shoe Shop, Hibben Hollweg Company, Diamond Chain and Manufacturing Company, Robbins Body Corporation, J. H. Aufderheide, Stutz Motor Car Company, George Kanouse (Kanouse Auto Company), I. Wolf Auto Parts and Tire Company, MaddenCopple & Co., Payne's Busy Bee Lunches, Long-Knight Lumber Company, Hook Drug Company, the Oldfield Tire Company, Southport Lumber Company, Book-walter-Ball Printing Company, Indianapolis Ford Dealers, United States Tire Company, Leo Krauss, Bingham & Cohen's Colonial Theater, Charles Mayer & Cos., Drivers' Day, Hotel Lincoln, William Secker, general manager; Indianapolis Motor Speedway, W. A. Zumpfe, Drivers' Day, People's Outfitting Company, W. K. Stewart Company, H. P. Wasson & Co., Drivers’ Day, W. B. Burford ($50 prize), John J. Madden Manufacturing Company, Hollenbeck Press, Polk Sanitary Milk Company, William Small Company, Drivers’ Day, Standard Oil Company, Hide, Leather and Belting Company, Thomas Madden Sons & Co., Taylor Carpet Company, Drivers' Day, Indianapolis Coal Company, L. H. Trotter, Drivers' Day, Mooney-Mueller-Ward Company, Updyke Auto Company. Robert H. Hassler, Inc.; Drivers' Day, Pioneer Brass Works, Kabn Tailoring Company and Indianapolis Drop Forging Company.

THE BASEMENT STORE Men's and Young Men's All-Wool Suits

Odd Lots of $35.00 and $40.00 SUITS, Sale Price $19.75

They were previously on our THIRD FLOOR—which at once establishes the fact that they are exceptionally fine in quality. They were sent to The Basement Store because we are intent upon clearance. Single and double-breasted models —various fabrics and colors. Special, $24.75 and $19.75

All-Wool TROUSERS For Men and Young Men Plenty of SERGES—plenty of other wool fabrics—it’s an easy matter to match your suit $3.95

The Wm. H. BLOCK CO.

INDIANA DAILY TIMES, TUESDAY, MAY 31, 1921.

ESfoociety Sil Mrs. Julia T. Cartinhour, 3760 North Pennsylvania street, has gone to Boonville, Mo., to attend the graduation of her son, Gaines T. Cartinhour, from Kemper Military School. • * * Miss Eleanor Shockney, daughter of James Nelson Shockney, 2338 Central avenue, and Alexander Bell Irvine will be married quietly at 2 o'clock tomorrow in the home of the bride's father, the Rev. Lewis Brown of St. Paul’s Episcopal Church officiating. Mrs. J. M. Jordan of Norfolk, Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Segrist of Crawfordsville, and Mr. and Mrs. E. E. V. Shockney of Westfield have come for the wedding. A called meeting of the Writers’ Club will be held in the Public Library tonight, in honor of Mrs. Scottie McKenzie Fraisier of Alabama, Miss Demaris Knobe of New York and new members of the club. • • • Mrs. George Lutz, 2524 College avenue, will be hostess for the meeting of the Ladies’ Aid Society of the Moravian Episcopal Church tomorrow afternoon. • • Mrs. J. L. Hunter, 5607 East Washington street, entertained the Irvington Tuesday Club at her home today. Mrs. C. M. Cunningham read a paper on “Instilling Patriotism In the Foreign School Child” and Mrs. Elmer Gay led the current events. ... Mrs. Leo Praff of Monmouth, Ill., is the guest of Dr. and Mrs. William J. Stark, 1727 North New Jersey street. Mrs. Hattie Wangelin and Miss Elizabeth Wangeolin, who have been spending several months In Columbus, Ohio, have returned to their home, 659 East TwentySecond street. * * • Members of the Mendelssohn choir and their guests will be entertained at dinner this evening at the Athenaeum. J. Irving Holcomb will preside as toastmaster and brief talaks will be made by officers of the choir. * • • Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Jackson, 3029 Broadway, who have been spending several days at the country home of Mr. and Mrs. C. R Heath, north of Noblesville, have returned home. Miss Mary Heath and Ralph Heath will come this evening to be the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Jackson for the remainder of the week. Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Christena, 1554 College avenue, have returned from a camping trip on Blue River. Ray Ayres of Chicago who has been the guest of his mother, Mrs. Emma Ayres, 1452 Central avenue, will return home this evening. • • • W. A. Savage of Charleston W, Va., is the house guest of Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Reedy, 1332 Bellefontalne street. Central W. C. T. U. will meet with Mrs. A. U. Doughtery, 2424 College avenue for an evangelistic service Friday afternoon.

Odd Lots of $45.00, $50.00 and $55.00 SUITS, Sale Price 24.75

Schools Extend Ideal Physical Culture Training

[image: Photograph - Students]

—Photo by Bishop and Pefley. This picture, taken at school No. 31 while the students were going through dumbbell exercises, Is typical of the physical culture training given to all the pupils in Indianapolis.

Long ago enlightened school officials all over America awakened to the fact that there is a great deal more to educating the volatile, temperamental, mischievous, play-loving American boys and girls than injecting a fundamental knowledge of the “three Rs” into their systems. It was realized that after all physical and mental welfare often are very closely related. As a result various systems of physical training came into existence and it is doubtful if anywhere in the land it has been brought to a more successful point than in the Indianapolis schools under the direction of Dr. William A. Ocker, director of physical training in the public schools. 40.000 CHILDREN RECEIVE EXERCISES. Today practically every one of the 40,000 school children of the city take part in regular physical exercise every day of the year., pupils of the four lower grades being given thirty minutes a day while those of the four lower grades are given twenty minutes. In the old days these exercises were given with a Prussian exactitude entirely foreign to the American love of free play, and the result was that in many instances the children looked upon the exercises as nothing more or less than physical torture and did everything in their youthful American ingenuity to avoid taking part in the “hateful things.” For many years many directors were of foreign birth with little understanding of American ideals and no sympathy with them. This did not help the situation. But now all that is changed. The exercises are now devised by Americans, for Americans and are given by Americans. YOUNG AMERICA REBELS AT ROUTINE. The American youth has little or no time for mere routine. The “effry body do der same thing at the same time yet'' idea does not appeal to him. He wants to use some initiative in his play, and he loves the competitive element. Dr. Ocker and his department have met this situation scientifically and skillfully The physical exercises are arranged so that the element of the game enters into many of them, and they are graded care-

[image: Drawing - man in suit]

fully from the little song games of the primary grades on up to those suitable for the needs of the eighth grade pupils. Dr. Ocker says that in 70 per cent of the schools of the city, recess play is organized. This means that the old tripping, loafing around the door steps and “rough stuff” have been eliminated. Before the recess hour the children have selected of their own accord the game they are to play. CHILDREN SELECT THEIR OWN GAMES. Catch the distinction—the children, not the instructor, selects the game. Captains are also selected in advance and every child in the school takes a full share in the play during the recess hour. Splendid results have been obtained from this Dr. Ocker says. He says that high school principals have commented upon the constantly improving physical condlton of students coming in from the grade schools. Last week Dr. Fred Berger, director of physical training in the Kansas City schools, was in Indianapolis and after a visit to various schools of the city he said. "You certainly must have a splendid system here. Your children stand straighter walk straighter and carry themselves better than ours.” CAREFUL WATCH IS KEPT ON EXERCISES. The physical exercises are given the pupils by their teachers, but every two weeks every school is visited by one of Dr. Ocker's six assistants and changes in the exercises are made. This prevents monotony and the exercies are progressive in character. Even the physically defective insist os doing their share, according to Dr. Ocker, and so far as possible their wishes are compiled with. He says that it is astonishing how well a crippled boy or girl can go through some of the exercises, and the devotion of these children to the exercises is at times touching. Ten minutes of outdoor exercise is worth twenty minutes indoors. Dr. Ocker insists, and only on the rainiest or rawest days are the drills and exercises given anywhere except on the playground. Mere cold does not drlve the

children indoors, for it has been found that they have no trouble in keeping warm under the stress of the training. Dr. Ocker is assisted in his work by Miss Ada Crozier, Mrs. Lois Hoelscher, Ernest Hoelscher, Mabel McHugh, Alvin Romeiser and Cart Toll. And so effective has been their work that now the children instead of looking forward to the physical training period with dread and suspicion look forward to it with the utmost interest and all the enthusiasm of the real American child.

State Dairymen to Meet on Aug. 17 Special to The Times. LAFAYETTE, Ind., May 3L—Plans are under way for the annual summer meeting of the Indiana State Dairy Association, which will be held at Lebanon, Aug. 17, according to announcement made today by C. R. George, Purdue University, president of the association. A cattle show for Jerseys, Guernseys and Holstein breeders will be held in connection with the dairy meeting. Several agricultural leaders of the country will be present. An effort will be made to make this a general round-up of all dairy interests in Indiana. Meetings The Only Euchre Club will entertain with a card party tonight in Musicians’ Hall, 143 East Ohio street. * * * Ladies of St. Philip Neri will give a card and lotto party in the school hall on Eastern avenue, Wednesday evening.

■THE MBEIEIT STIIE“ Just Unpacked—7oo Wool Walking M) Skrits F° r mcn an^ filSr** SJ.SS Jriiy ful sale J^ j & a == f The smart plaited models. 1 1 / The most favored plaids ’ 11 for summer wearing—plenty of the smart black and white UP a combinations. Also plain "WITHE SERGE SKIRTS in knife plaited models that are the rage. To observe the skirts—to note their good fabrics and excellent tailoring—one would expect their price tags to show far higher markings. The pklrts are from one of the most careful makers In the business —we obtain his overproduction at a sacrifice —and are selling the skirts at so low a price in comparion with the quality that we expect a rush of selling. Side plaits, box plaits, Every imaginable color . . .. combination from the knife plaats and combma- most daring to the quiet _ tion of plaits. est. The skirts will he on racks to facilitate choosing. Sale price $1.95 A Thousand New Silk Blouses For Women and Misses AMAZING VALUES GEORGETTE CREPE qq CREPE DE CHINE tp O TRICOLETTE J ==== SILK PONGEE In beauty, in taste, in trimming, they will merit pricings far in excess of this figure. Tailored styles, semi-tailored effects, frilly affairs, etc. Flesh, white, honeydew, bisque, porcelain, Mrs. Harding blue and many others. Trimmed with novelty braids, hand embrodery, Veniso lace, etc. Special .... $2.98 Tk Wm. H. BLOCK Cos.

SECOND BEATING PROMISED WHITE Husband of French Girl Arouses Ire of Townsmen, NEWBURGH, N. Y.. May 31.- -Residents jf Marlboro, continuing to inte-est themselves in the marital affairs of the Rev. Bonck White, are threatened to administer a second beating to the radical agitator and former pastor. “We ought to beat him up right” one of the leader* of the town’s younger element was quoted as saying. “The others didn't do as good a job as we will. They didn’t have the courage.” He referred to a party of twelve who horsewhipped, then tarred and feathered White a week ago last night because hi* young French bride, who left him, told neighbors that he had struck her. The girl, who married White In Paris last month an dlived with him but five days on his farm near Marlboro, has started suit for annulment of their mrriage on the ground of fraud, in that he Is alleged to have failed to Inform her and her family of hia radical Ideas. White, denying he ever struck his wife, declared she Is the victim of an illusion regarding Americans common to aU French girl*—that life in this country is one of all play and no work. He will not oppose the annulment. Villagers threatened White when he drove into Marlboro late yesterday in his flivver to do some marketing. It was reported that they showered him with over ripe vegetables as he left, but White maintained he knew nothing of this.

Mother Finds ‘Lost’ Soldier in ‘Movie’ Special to The Times. SOUTH BEND, Ind... May 3L—The “movies” may provide the key to the mystery surrounding the fate of Richard Bailey, a South Bend soldier reported missing a few months after he went overseas during the world war. George Cassidy, friend of the missing soldier, thought he recognized him in a news film shown, at a local theater. The soldier's mother, Mrs. Pauline Bailey, and other relatives were notified. At a special showing of the film they also identified their relative, who was among a group of soldiers at a hospital in New York. $80 ADDED TO COST OF BOOZE. HARTFORD CITY, Ind., May 31. James Palmer, 19. of Ft. Wayne, today settled a fine and costs, totaling $80, in the city court, assessed on a charge of having liquor illegally in his possession. Three quarts of bonded whisky were found in his automobile after Palmer had piloted the car against a culvert north of the city. The machine was damaged but Palmer escaped injury.

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