Indianapolis Times, Volume 34, Number 283, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 April 1922 — Page 12

12

HOCKIN ARREST RECALLS PART IN DYNAMITING Alleged Jury Fixer, Held in Los Angeles, Defendant With McNamaras. CONSIDERED ‘CROSSER’

HERBERT S. HOCKIN. The arrest in Los Angeles of Herbert S. Hockin on a charge of attempting to influence prespective Jurors in the case of Arthur Burch, charged with the murder of J. Belton Kennedy, recalls the fact he was a prominent defendant in the famous dynamite conspiracy case tried before Judge Albert B. Anderson in Federal Court in 1912. Hockin at the time was secretarytreasurer of the International Association V*f Bridge and Structural Iron Workers and lived in Indianapolis. The fact, that Hockin was employed by the McLaren agency, has aroused considerable comment In Indianapolis, In view of the fact Malcxm McLsren is head of the agency. It was Malcolm McLaren who captured Ortie McManigal, who afterwards was the star witness for the Government In the dyaami-a cases. At the time Hockin was accused in labor circles of having “crossed” his fellow unibn officials and of working with the detectives. This Hocking strenuously denied. It is considered significant that , Hockin has been employed recently by < McLaren and that he was also employed by the Burns agency, whicn played a prominent part in the dynamite case. Ilockin. despite many rumors he would enter a plea of guilty and testify for the Government In the dynamite cases, stood tripl, was found guilty, anl sentenced to serve six years at Leavenworth. His wife, a remarkably beautiful

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ALA C. NATION DUBLIN, April 7.—Republicans raided the Dublin custom house today, smashing thousands of cases of whisky and wine consigned to Belfast. The raid was sensational. A large force of Insurgents broke Into the huge building where thousands of casks and cases containing wines and whisky of lister firms was stored. With axes and hammers the raiding party smashed everything In sight, flooding the floor of the customs house with valuable liquor, worth more tliun a million sterling.

woman, was a constant spectator at the trial and after he went to the Federal prison at Leavenworth she moved there to be near him. However, within only six months of his sentence left to serve, she obtained a divorce from him. Last summer Hockin was In Indianapolis and called on Judge Anderson and spent almost an hour in conversation with the man who had sent him to prison. Although Hockin stood trial and received. a severe sentence his fellow defendants never seemed to have much confidence In him and It was noticeable that even after sentence was pronounced few of the convicted men would have anything to do with him. According to evidence given at the trial, Hockln's chief duty wltl the conspiracy was to advise various ndlvlduals and organizations what would uappen to them if they failed to use union labor on structural iron work project ‘Ad Copy’ Piracy Is Panned by Speaker Stereotyped expression of ideas and lack of originality in adver.ising were decried at a "pep" meeting of the Indianapolis Advertising Club held at the Chamber of Commerce building by Howard J. Wisebaupt, Cleveland business analyst. His topic was “The Human Element In Business.” “We have too many copyli ts writing advertisements and not enongi. copywriters who write copy right. We have, too many business men who write editorials to their prospects telling them of the trips he takes to get his merchandise,” Mr. Wisehanpt said. Cleared, Miss Stone to ResaimeJVursing NEW YORK, April 7—Freed by a Jury of the charge of killing Ellis Guy Kinkead, former corporation counsel of Cincinnati, Olivia M. P. Stone declared today she would devote the remaindet of her life to the "service of humanity” In her chosen profession, nursing. Expecting to be reinstated In the Graduate Nurse Association, Miss Stone plans to return to Cincinnati and enter the Cincinnati General Hospital. Cotton Men Want ‘Bucketing* Hearing NEW YORK, April 7. Attorneys for the American Cotton and Grain Exchange and six of its officers and directors, induced for alleged bucketing, appeared in General Sessions Court and requested a speedy trial of the charges.

TOT IN FIGHT FOR MILLIONS

I IS wawlßWlHr/ . * ’ll I —Photo by Lareoeh* Studt

BABY ANGELA, CENTRAL FIGURE IN CHICAGO WILL CONTEST.

CHICAGO, April 7.—On one side a 15-year-old foundling baby— And on the other a Polish countess. Those are the queerly assorted principals In a court fight for a $2,000,000 estate now in progress here. The baby is "Lucky” Baby Angela, taken from a New York home for abandoned children by Mrs. Angela C. Gorrnully, now dead, millionaire widow of a bicycle manufacturer.

Concerning This Man VON STROHEIM, the suave Heart Breaker in “FOOLISH WIVES” So great an actor —he is hated as the villain he plays; so great a director —he picks a cast of fine actors, to give with himself the finest acting ever seen on the screen; so great an artist—he has produced the greatest picture ever conceived by the mind of mortal man. J Starting Sunday ohio"™

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The countess is Countess Caslmir Karnszo Svdlawski of Warsaw, Poland, (laugh: r o' Sirs. Gormully. When 'Mrs. Gormully died she left Baby A igela a SIOO,OOO trust fund to insuro Angela's education and keep her In the environment of luxury into which she had been transplanted. But to her countess daughter Mrs. Gormully left only the income from $6,000. And she treated other relatives similarly.

MOTION PICTURES.

INDIANA DAILY TIMES.

SUSPENSE CORNING, Ark., AprU 7.—The famous Arkansas "lipstick case," was on the lap <Vf the gods today. In other words, the application of Pearl Pugsley, 18-year-oid Knobel school girl, for a writ of mandamus compelling the school board of her home town to revoke its rule for. bidding the use of artificial beautltlers was being considered by Judge Bandy. Miss Pugsley was expelled from school because she had powdered her nose. Judge Banudy is expected to hand down a decision tliis week.

Outside of the bequest to Baby Angela she left the bulk of her estate to religious and educational institutions Now Countess Siedlawski with other dissatisfied relatives is trying to break Mrs. Gormully’s will and cause the estate to be divided Vequally among them. While Baby * Angela's attorneys and the institutions that profited by the will are trying to make the will hold. Countess Siedlawski and the other relatives say uudue influence was brought to bear on Mrs. Gormully when she made the will. This is denied by Baby Angela’s attorneys and those associated with them. if the Polish countess wins Baby Angela may have to go back to the poverty from which she was rescued. But Angela's not worrying. All day long she plays with her toys and listens to fairy tales read by her governess. She's always been called “the lucky baby.” Will her luck stay with her now? Detective Nabs Two on Vagrancy Charge Two negmee. James Taylor, 928 East Seventeenth street, and William Muescher, l 1010 East Nineteenth street, were arrested early today at Warnian avenue and the Pennsylvania railroad by Pat Kinney, railroad detective. A largo quantity of tobacco and cigarettes were found on Muescher. The men are held on a vagrancy charge.

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OIL IS LEFT, SAYS EXPERT As High as 80 Per Cent in Some Abandoned Wells. WASHINGTON, April 7.—Great quantities of oil, perhaps as much as 00 or 80 per cent of the original reservoirs, are left underground in the United States when wells are abondoned because no means have been determind whereby it is possible to recover more than a small pereetnage of the oil, according to A. W. Ambrose, chief petroleum teehr ologist of the Bureau of Mines. This failure to effect a greater recovery of t.h eunderground oil, said Ambrose, is due to the exhaustion of the subterranean gas flow. “The manner in wbcih. gas serves as an expulsive medium was recently shown by an experiment at the petroleum experiment station of the Bureau of Mines,” Ambrose asserted. “A steel container about three feet long and three Inches In diameter was filled with sand which was then thoroughly saturated with oil. The amount of oil introduced was known by weight and measurement. After the sand had been saturates, gas was forced into the con-

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tainer under a pressure of 200 pounds to the square inch. Then a valve at one end was opened and the gas allowed to escape, bringing with it perhaps 18 per cent of the .oil put into the container. “In other experiments.” Ambrose continued, “the amount of oil recovered varied from 15 to 25 per cent, depending on the pressure and other conditions. After the gas had forced out 18 per cent of the oil, the container was held in a vertical position for the purpose of determining how much oil would drain out, but the capillary force exerted on the oil was so great that only a negligible quantity of oil drained from the sand. “This simple experiment emphasized the fact that gas is the predominant factor in moving oil to the well and that when the gas is gone the produc-

APRIL 7,1922.

tion Is gone,” declared Ambrose "T* any event, It Is unquestionable that large quantities of oil are left underground, and, whether the figure is 60 per cent or 80 per cent. It la too large, In certain parts erf the Appalachian fields the practice of forcing compressed air or gas into a central well, from where it goes to adjoining wells and carries the oil with it, has caused wells to produce as much oil ds they had up to the point when considered ready for abandonment. “There are undoubtedly other means of effecting a greater recovery,” Ambrose concluded, “and these questions should be studied and applied before the wells, are abandoned.” I Chaos in Ireland Declared Terrible LONDON, April 7.—“ The chaos In Ireland is beyond anything the public can imagine,” said a Dublin dispatch to the Morning Post today. “Michael Collins is helpless and has few supporters. Ip fact he is besieged In Dublin. It is expected a republic will be proclaimed in Ireland within the next few weeks.”